This is a legend of long, long ago times. Two Indians desired to find the origin of
thunder. They travelled north and came to a high mountain. These mountains
performed magically. They drew apart, back and forth, then closed together very
quickly.
One Indian said, "I will leap through the cleft before it closes. If I am caught, you
continue to find the origin of thunder." The first one succeeded in going through the
cleft before it closed, but the second one was caught and squashed.
On the other side, the first Indian saw a large plain with a group of wigwams, and a
number of Indians playing a ball game. After a little while, these players said to each
other, "It is time to go." They disappeared into their wigwams to put on wings, and
came out with their bows and arrows and flew away over the mountains to the south.
This was how the Passamaquoddy Indian discovered the homes of the thunderbirds.
The remaining old men of that tribe asked the Passamaquoddy Indian, "What do you
want? Who are you?" He replied with the story of his mission. The old men
deliberated how they could help him.
They decided to put the lone Indian into a large mortar, and they pounded him until all
of his bones were broken. They moulded him into a new body with wings like
thunderbird, and gave him a bow and some arrows and sent him away in flight. They
warned him not to fly close to trees, as he would fly so fast he could not stop in time to
avoid them, and he would be killed.
The lone Indian could not reach his home because the huge enemy bird, Wochowsen,
at that time made such a damaging wind. Thunderbird is an Indian and he or his
lightning would never harm another Indian. But Wochowsen, great bird from the south,
tried hard to rival Thunderbird. So Passamaquoddies feared Wochowsen, whose wings
Glooscap once had broken, because he used too much power.
A result was that for a long time air became stagnant, the sea was full of slime, and all
of the fish died. But Glooscap saw what was happening to his people and repaired the
wings of Wochowsen to the extent of controlling and alternating strong winds with
calm.