ENGLISH: This picture, made by Akseli Gallen-Kallela (1891), tells the story of Aino, the Joukahainen's sister, engaged with Väinämöinen. Here is the story:
Väinämöinen vio a Aino en el bosque mientras recogía ramas de abedul para la sauna, y se dedicó a cortejarla. Aino, a quien ya le habían dicho que estaba prometida con él, no quería estar con un anciano y salió llorando.
Väinämöinen was an ancient bard, challenged by Joukahainen, but Väinämöinen traps him in a swamp. Desperately, Joukahainen pleges his sister Aino .
Later, Väinämöinen finds Aino in the forest, picking up birch's branches to heat the sauna, and Väinämöinen tries to seduce her, but she didn't want to be with an ancient man, so she run away crying
Corriendo y llorando desconsolada atraviesa el bosque y llega hasta el mar donde se ahoga, convirtiéndose en pez. Otras versiones cuentan como, apoyada en la orilla, escucha la voz de las doncellas de Vellamo (diosa del mar, esposa de Ahti), donde decide morir y reencarnarse en pez a casarse con Väinämöinen
Running and crying she gets through the forest and reach the sea where she drowned herself, becoming a fish. Different sources tell how she listens the voice of the maids of Vellamo (goddess of the sea, wife of Ahti), and there she made her decision to choose death rather than marrying with Väinämöinen, becoming a fish
Väinämöinen, con su caña de pescar, logró sacar del agua un pez, que al no conocer trató de cortar, pero ese pez se escapó, contándole en la lejanía que ese pez era Aino, tras lo cual Väinämöinen no consigue volver a sacarla.
Väinämöinen, using a fishing rod, achieves to catch a fish, but he doesn't recognize it, so he decide to kill it cutting into several pieces, but the fish reach to escape and, far away from the boat, it confessed to be Aino. When Väinämöinen knows the truth, tries to catch the fish again, but he never achieved.
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