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The Haunted Whirlpool
At the mouth of Suck creek, on the Tennessee,
about 8 miles below Chattanooga, is a series of dangerous whirlpools, known as
"The Suck," and noted among the Cherokee as the place where Untsaiyi,
(ûñtsaiyï'),
the gambler, lived long ago. They call it Untiguhi (ûñ'tiguhï'),
"Pot-in-the-water," on account of the appearance of the surging,
tumbling water, suggesting a boiling pot. They assert that in the old times the
whirlpools were intermittent in character, and the canoemen attempting to pass
the spot used to hug the bank, keeping constantly on the alert for signs of a
coming eruption, and when they saw the water begin to revolve more rapidly would
stop and wait until it became quiet again before attempting to proceed.
It happened once that two men, going down the
river in a canoe, as they came near this place saw the water circling rapidly
ahead of them. They pulled up to the bank to wait until it became smooth again,
but the whirlpool seemed to approach with wider and wider circles, until they
were drawn into the vortex. They were thrown out of the canoe and carried down
under the water, where one man was seized by a great fish and was never seen
again. The other was taken round and round down to the very lowest center of the
whirlpool, when another circle caught him and bore him outward and upward until
he was finally thrown up again to the surface and floated out into the shallow
water, whence he made his escape to shore. He told afterwards that when he
reached the narrowest circle of the maelstrom the water seemed to open below him
and he could look down as through the roof beams of a house, and there on the
bottom of the river he had seen a great company of people, who looked up and
beckoned to him to join them, but as they put up their hands to seize him the
swift current caught him and took him out of their reach.
From Myths of the
Cherokee by James Mooney
From Nineteenth Annual Report
of the
Bureau of American Ethnology 1897-98, Part I. [1900]
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