Summary of tuwaang attends a wedding?
Tuwaang, after finishing some work, calls his aunt aside and
informs her that the wind has brought him a message: he is to
attend the wedding of the Maiden of Mo:nawon. The aunt tries to
dissuade him from going, for she foresees trouble. Tuwaang,
however, is determined to go. He picks the heart-shaped basket that
can activate the lightning, puts on his headdress and the costume
made by goddesses, arms himself with a long blade and dagger, and
takes his shield and spear. He rides on a flash of lightning and
arrives at the Kawkawangan grassland. While resting there a while,
he hears a gungutan bird crowing. He decides to catch the fowl, but
soon sees the gungutan with a daggerlike spur. The gungutan tells
Tuwaang he came to know of his coming in a dream and that he wants
to go with him to the wedding celebration. Tuwaang agrees to bring
the gungutan along. The two shake their shoulders and are carried
into space.
Upon arriving at Mo:nawon, Tuwaang is admitted into the hall. He
sits on a golden stool while the gungutan perches on a crossbeam.
Meantime, enchanting sounds from afar and flowering trees signal
the arrival of the Young Man of Panayangan. Other gallants-the
Young Man of Liwanon and the Young Man of the Rising Sun-arrive.
Finally, the groom, the Young Man of Sakadna, arrives with a
hundred followers. He haughtily asks the house owner to clear the
house "of dirt," implying the people in the house who do not count.
To this insult, Tuwaang answers there are "red leaves," i.e.,
heroes, in the house.
Preliminaries of the wedding ceremony start. The savakan
(bridewealth consisting of articles and wrapped food to be paid for
by the groom's kinsmen) are offered one by one, until only the two
most costly remain. One is given the value of an ancient gong with
ten bosses and nine relief-rings, the other is redeemable only by a
golden guitar and a golden flute. The groom confesses his inability
to redeem these articles. Tuwaang saves the groom from the
embarrassing predicament by taking his place: through his magic
breath he produces a more ancient gong, which is accepted by the
bride's party. He also produces the golden flute and golden
guitar.
The bride is now asked to come out of her room and serve the
guests some betel chew. She commands her betel box to serve
everyone. Magically, the betel box obeys, with the betel chew
jumping into the mouths of the guests. After two betel chews leap
into the groom's mouth, the betel box moves on to Tuwaang, before
whom it stops altogether. Tuwaang brushes it away, but the box does
not budge. The bride decides to sit beside Tuwaang. The groom
blushes; he is shamed. He decided to fight Tuwaang. He goes down
the house and challenges Tuwaang to come down to the yard.
After the bride unrolls and combs Tuwaang's hair, Tuwaang goes
down to fight. The gungutan, meanwhile, has been fighting the
groom's men and has slain a number of them until only six gallants
remain. Tuwaang and the gungutan engage the six gallants. Finally,
only Tuwaang and the Young Man of Sakadna are left moving about.
Tuwaang is thrown against a boulder, which turns to dust. Trees get
bent and topple. Tuwaang gets hold of his foe, throws him down so
hard that he sinks into the earth. The Young Man of Sakadna
surfaces quickly and confronts Tuwaang once more. Tuwaang in turn
is thrust into the earth and sinks into the Underworld. There he
talks to Tuwaha', god of the Underworld, who tells him the secret
of overcoming his foe. Tuwaang surfaces and summons the golden
flute in which the Young Man of Sakadna keeps his life. Accompanied
by the gungutan, Tuwaang takes the bride home to Kuaman, where he
rules forever