INDIAN
               NATURE MYTHS

                    BY
            JULIA DARROW COWLES


           With Illustrations by
               Dorothy Dulin


            A. FLANAGAN COMPANY
                  CHICAGO


  COPYRIGHT, 1918, BY A. FLANAGAN COMPANY

    [Illustration: Publisher’s device]




                  INDIAN
                  NATURE
                   MYTHS




                 Books by

            Julia Darrow Cowles


        THE ROBINSON CRUSOE READER
              STORIES TO TELL
      GOING TO SCHOOL IN ANIMAL LAND
          THE QUEER LITTLE TAILOR
            INDIAN NATURE MYTHS


               Published by

            A. Flanagan Company




[Illustration:
                                                            Page 121

“THE THUNDER MAIDEN FASTENED HIS PURPLE WINGS TO HIS SHOULDERS AND
    BADE HIM GOOD-BYE”]




PREFACE


The stories of this book have been chosen for the purpose of showing
how the early Red Men accounted for the phenomena of nature--the
presence of the birds, the moaning of the wind, the whispering of the
leaves. The nature myths of the North American Indian are full of
poetry, and occasionally of a rich humor. In retelling the stories for
children the author has sought to retain the original spirit of the
tales, and through them to give to the reader a better understanding
of the inner life and thought of the primitive Red Man at his best.
The tales have been gathered from many sources, and are representative
of many tribes.

It is well known that the same tale in varying form is told among many
different tribes, just as the folk tales have been carried in early
times from one nation to another and are variously accredited. It is
not always possible to determine the original source.

Before reading or telling the Indian Nature Myths to the children, it
is best to explain that just as they love to wonder and imagine about
the new and strange sights and sounds of the world, so the early races
of men, the children of time, loved to wonder and imagine. And so
these stories of nature grew out of their imaginings; and some of the
stories are so beautiful, and some of them are so odd, that men have
repeated them from one generation to another, ever since,--for even
when they no longer believed them to be true, they loved them.




CONTENTS


                                                                PAGES
  How the Seasons Came to Be (Ojibwa)                             11

  Birth of the Arbutus (Ojibwa)                                   18

  The Maiden with Golden Hair (Chippewa)                          24

  Origin of the Violet (Iroquois)                                 29

  The Beginning of Birds (Blackfeet)                              33

  Why the Wind Wails (Algonquin)                                  37

  Story of the Humming Bird (Shoshonee)                           43

  The Gift of Indian Corn (Chippewa)                              48

  The Stars That Dance (Iroquois)                                 56

  The Pukwudjee and the Morning Star (Ojibwa)                     60

  The White Hawk (Shawnee)                                        65

  How Mosquitoes Came to Be (Iroquois)                            74

  How Birds and Fairies Came to Be (Algonquin)                    78

  Why the Aspen Leaves Are Never Still (Blackfeet)                83

  Why the Baby Says “Goo” (Algonquin)                             88

  Why the Squirrel Coughs (Algonquin)                             93

  Why the Frogs Croak (Algonquin)                                 95

  The Rock of the Measuring Worm; El Capitán, in the Yosemite
    (California Tribes)                                           99

  How the Flying Squirrel Got His Wings (Iroquois)               103

  Why Brother Bear Wears a Stumpy Tail (Ojibwa)                  111

  The Thunder People (Passamaquoddy)                             118

  Keepers of the Winds (Algonquin)                               123




ILLUSTRATIONS


  “The Thunder Maiden Fastened His Purple Wings to His
    Shoulders and Bade Him Good-Bye”                     _Frontispiece_

                                                                  PAGES
  “Omeme Said, ‘I Will Not Shoot You, Tell Me Your Secret’”         13

  “‘The Arbutus!’ Cried the Children”                               21

  “Day After Day ... She Stood and Waited for His Coming”           27

  “There Arose a Great Flock of Winged Birds”                       35

  “The Wind Tried to Catch Her in His Embrace”                      41

  “He Grappled with the Youth and They Wrestled Together”           51

  “‘I Am a Pukwudjee--A Little Man of the Mountains,’ He Said”      63

  “Waupee Heard the Strains of the Magic Song”                      71

  “With a Terrible Cry, the Great Mosquito Flew Down with His
    Enormous Wings Outstretched”                                    75

  “The Older Sister Looked on with Scorn”                           85

  “Wasis Sent Forth Such Piercing Yells and Shrieks, that the
    Warrior Stopped in Amazement”                                   91

  “He Was Fat and Ugly, and His Back Was Covered with Green
    Slime from the Pool”                                            97

  “Little Jo-nis-gy-ont Had His Own Ideas”                         105

  “North Wind Saw Him Sitting There with His Eyes Closed and
    His Tail Hanging Down in the Water”                            115

  “Wabun Wooed Her with His Soft Breezes ... and the Songs of
    Birds”                                                         125




INDIAN NATURE MYTHS




HOW THE SEASONS CAME TO BE

(Ojibwa)


THERE was once a little Indian boy who wanted above everything else to
become a mighty hunter.

His father, whose name was Ojeeg, the Fisher, was the mightiest hunter
of his tribe, and Omeme wanted to be like his father.

Often he went out into the forest with the little bow and arrows which
his father had made for him, to hunt the small creatures of the woods.
But it was too cold for him to stay long; for in those days there were
no seasons, only cold and snow day after day, moon following moon.

So little Omeme often came back to the lodge with fingers stiff and
numb. As he shivered and held his fingers over the fire of the lodge,
he cried, “There is nothing for Omeme to shoot. The birds fly up to
the sun for warmth. The little creatures hide in the forest: they
hide far down beneath the snow blanket. It is cold. Omeme can get no
game.”

One day Omeme met a squirrel in the forest, and the squirrel said, “Do
not shoot me, Omeme. I will tell you a great secret.”

Then Omeme said, “I will not shoot you. Tell me your secret.”

And the squirrel said, “Away up in the Sky Land it is always warm.
There is no frost, no snow. If we could have some of the warmth of the
Sky Land, we should not always be cold. There would be good hunting
for Omeme. There would be plenty for us all to eat.”

“But the Sky Land is far away,” said Omeme.

“Yes,” replied the squirrel, “but Ojeeg is mighty. Could he not go to
the Sky Land and bring away some of its warmth?”

“My father is mighty,” answered Omeme. “I will ask him.”

He ran home, for he had grown cold while listening to the squirrel’s
secret.

Ojeeg was in the lodge.

“Oh, my father,” exclaimed Omeme, “all we little creatures are so
cold! The squirrel tells me there is warmth in the Sky Land. Could
you not go there and bring some of its warmth to the earth?”

[Illustration: “OMEME SAID, ‘I WILL NOT SHOOT YOU. TELL ME YOUR
    SECRET’”]

Ojeeg was silent for a long, long time. He loved Omeme dearly. He was
sorry that Omeme was cold. But the journey to the Sky Land was long.
It was full of dangers.

At length Ojeeg said, “The earth _is_ cold. I will hold a council with
my neighbors.”

So Ojeeg, the Fisher, called together his neighbors, the Otter, the
Beaver, the Badger, the Lynx, and the Wolverine. Long and earnestly
they considered the matter, and at length they decided to undertake
the journey to the Sky Land.

Upon a given day they started. It was a great adventure, and Ojeeg
felt sure that he would never return to his lodge, and never again
would he see the little Omeme.

For a long, long distance they traveled and at last, tired and spent
with hunger, they reached the top of a very high mountain. So high it
was that the sky seemed almost to rest upon it.

There they found meat and a fire, as though some traveler had left
them. So they rested and were refreshed.

Then Ojeeg said to the Otter, “Now we will try to gain entrance to
the Sky Land. It is just above us. Jump, and see if you cannot break
through, and we will follow.”

The Otter tried, but he could not jump high enough, and he fell, and
slid all the way down to the foot of the mountain. So he gave up and
returned to his home.

Then Ojeeg said to the Beaver, “Jump, and see if you cannot do better
than the Otter.” The Beaver jumped; but neither could he jump high
enough, and he too fell, and slid all the way down to the bottom of
the mountain. So the Beaver gave up, and returned to his home.

Then Ojeeg said to the Badger, “Jump. Let us see if you cannot do
better than the Otter and the Beaver.”

The Badger jumped; but neither could he jump high enough, and back he
slid to the bottom of the mountain. So the Badger gave up, and
returned to his home.

Then Ojeeg said to the Lynx, “Surely you are stronger than the Otter,
and the Beaver, and the Badger, and you can jump farther. Try, and see
if you cannot break through into the Sky Land, and we will follow.”

The Lynx jumped; but neither could he break through the Sky, though
he made a deep scratch upon it with one of his sharp claws; and back
he slid to the bottom of the mountain. So the Lynx gave up, and
returned to his home.

Then said Ojeeg to the Wolverine, “You are stronger and more agile
than the others. Jump, and see if you cannot break through, and I will
follow you. Do your best. You must not fail me.”

The Wolverine prepared for a mighty jump. He sprang upward, and
touched the Sky just where the Lynx’s claw had scratched it. He broke
it, and sprang through the opening.

After him sprang Ojeeg, and now they two were in the Sky Land.

It was a beautiful country. There was no snow. The winds blew softly;
the air was balmy; and all about them were flowers, and grass, and
singing birds.

Ojeeg stamped hard with his foot, and a great hole was made where he
stamped. Down through the hole rushed the singing birds, and the warm
air of the Sky Land.

Down went Spring, and after Spring went Summer, and after Summer went
Autumn. But just as Autumn disappeared, Ojeeg heard a great noise and
shouting, for the people of the Sky Land were coming. He knew that
they would punish him for his daring.

The Wolverine slipped through the hole and followed Autumn; but before
Ojeeg could follow, the Sky people came, and the hole was closed.

Ojeeg ran, but the arrows of the Sky people were swift, and overtook
him.

So Ojeeg gave up his life, but he had sent warmth to all the creatures
of the earth, and since that time his people have had the four
seasons, instead of one unbroken season of bitter cold and snow.

The little Omeme was proud of the mighty deed of his father. He was
cold no more: and he grew up to be a mighty hunter, as his father the
great Ojeeg had been before him.

And when the Indians look up at the stars and see the constellation of
the fish, they say, “That is Ojeeg, the Fisher, who gave the summer to
his people.”




BIRTH OF THE ARBUTUS

(Ojibwa)


LONG years ago, when only the red men lived among the hills and
valleys of the land, an old, old man sat shivering over the low fire
of his tepee. The old man was Peboan. He was chief of the winter
spirits.

The outside world was covered with snow. The branches of the trees
bent low with its weight. The sides of the tepee were heavy with snow.
All the tracks of the bear and the rabbit were hidden.

The old man shivered, and bent over his fire. He was clothed in furs,
and furs covered the floor of the tepee. But they could not keep out
the chill winds, for the fire was low. There was no more wood to
replenish it. Snow covered all the fallen branches, and the chief was
old and feeble.

Peboan had been a mighty hunter. He had killed the moose and the bear.
The skins of many deer were about him. But now his hair was white as
the icy fringes of the frozen brook.

He blew upon the coals of his fire and they glowed, bright as the eyes
of a startled deer in the forest. But the glow faded. The old man
shivered.

There was no food in the tepee. The bear and the rabbit were hidden in
the forest. Their tracks were covered with snow. Peboan could not hunt
them.

Then, upon his knees, he cried to the Great Spirit for help. He cried
for help, that Peboan, chief of the winter spirits, might not suffer
want and cold.

As he sank once more upon his furs, he felt a warmth in the tepee. He
looked up.

In the doorway stood a youth, whose red cheeks and sparkling eyes told
of health and strength. A wreath of sweet grass was bound about his
curling locks, and in his hands he held a cluster of flowers. Light
and quick was his step as he entered the lodge of Peboan.

He smiled upon Peboan, and the old man felt a warmth enveloping him.

“Enter, my son,” he said, “and welcome. I have no refreshment to
offer. But come to my fire, and tell me who you are.”

Then the youth said, “The Great Spirit has sent me to Peboan. I am
Seegwun, the Spring. But tell me of yourself, Peboan.”

Then Peboan cried, “I am the great winter spirit. When I come to the
Earth, all the Earth’s children tremble. I breathe upon them, and they
cry out. The trees drop their leaves. The birds fly away. The forest
children creep into their holes.”

“Ah,” cried the youth, “when I come to the Earth, the Earth’s children
laugh and clap their hands. I breathe upon them and they dance with
joy. The trees put forth their leaves. The birds come back. The forest
children awake.”

Peboan continued, “When I come to the Earth, I shake my locks and snow
falls from the clouds. The streams grow hard and still. The wind sings
dirges through the naked trees.”

“When I come to the Earth,” laughed Seegwun, “I shake my ringlets and
warm showers fall from the clouds. The grass awakes. The flowers
bloom. Soft breezes blow. The streams are glad, and sing as they dance
along.

“Peboan,” said the youth, “the Great Spirit has sent me to the Earth,
and you must go.”

[Illustration: “‘THE ARBUTUS!’ CRIED THE CHILDREN”]

Seegwun smiled, and the tepee grew warm. Peboan became silent. His
head drooped lower and lower.

The sun shone forth, and the snow melted beneath its rays.

Then Spring waved his hands over the sleeping Peboan, and he sank upon
the ground. Smaller and smaller he grew. His clothing seemed turned to
furry leaves, and covered the floor of the tepee.

The youth smiled, for Peboan was gone.

Softly he lifted the furry leaves, and beneath each cluster he placed
blossoms of white and pink. He breathed upon them with his fragrant
breath, and they became sweet. Their spicy odor filled all the tepee.

Then the youth laughed gladly, and went his way.

The sun shone, and the children of the little Indian village ran from
their homes, and danced and sang in its warmth. A bird was caroling in
the tree top, and they stopped to listen. The stream shook off its icy
covering and went singing down its course. The children followed it.

They came to the spot where the tepee of Peboan had stood. And lo! all
the ground was covered with fragrant flowers.

“The arbutus!” cried the children. “The arbutus!”

They picked the beautiful, fragrant blossoms, and joyously carried
them home. And when the old people of the village saw them, they knew
that the Spirit of the Spring had returned to fill the earth with joy
and gladness.




THE MAIDEN WITH GOLDEN HAIR

(Chippewa)


LEELINAU stood in the door of the lodge, holding in her hand a bunch
of dandelions which had gone to seed. She blew upon them softly, and
the white-winged seeds went floating into the air.

“Shawondasee’s breath was mightier than thine,” said a voice behind
her. She turned to see her grandmother smiling upon her as she worked
upon a deer-skin moccasin.

Leelinau sat down. “Tell me of Shawondasee,” she said coaxingly. So
the grandmother told her the story of the South Wind and the
Dandelion:

Shawondasee lived far away in the South Land where it was always warm
and bright. His father, Kabeyun, the father of the winds, had given
him this part of the earth in which to dwell. The soft, warm winds of
the South were given him.

But Shawondasee was not strong, and quick, and eager, like his
brothers who governed the North Wind, and the West Wind. He was fat,
and lazy, and sluggish. He liked to take life easily, and moved
slowly, when he moved at all.

Sometimes, because he was so fat and heavy, he sighed deeply, and then
his warm breath would travel far across the land to the North, and the
people would cry, “What a balmy day! How soft and warm the air is!”

One day, as Shawondasee looked far away toward the North, he saw upon
the prairie a beautiful maiden. Her body was tall and slender. She
wore a gown of green, and her hair was a wonderful yellow, like
burnished gold.

Shawondasee looked long upon her, for never had he seen a maiden like
her before. The Indian maidens had hair of deepest black, like the
glossy feathers of the crow, and their skins were dark.

“She is fair and beautiful,” sighed Shawondasee. “I should woo her, if
she were not so far away.”

He stirred a little, and sighed, and the air grew warm, and a soft
breeze blew. The beautiful maiden on the prairie swayed in the breeze,
and her green robe fluttered.

“She is very beautiful,” cried Shawondasee. “I will send her a kiss.”
So with his softest breath he sent a kiss to the maiden of the yellow
hair, and again she bowed and swayed.

Still Shawondasee did not leave his home in the South Land to visit
the maiden. He sent soft breezes to blow upon her, and the breezes
carried sighs and kisses to her; but Shawondasee himself remained at
home. Day after day he wished that he might win the maiden with the
golden hair. Day after day he looked toward the North where she stood
and waited for his coming.

Then one morning there was a change. As Shawondasee looked out upon
the prairie he saw that the beautiful golden hair of the maiden he
loved had turned to snowy white. For once he was startled. “What have
I done?” he cried. “I have put off going to her, and now I have lost
her. Her golden beauty has changed to a beauty which is not of this
earth. It is now too late!”

Shawondasee heaved a mighty sigh as he spoke--a sigh that stirred all
the winds of the South Land--and behold! the air was filled with the
silvery white locks of the Dandelion maiden.

[Illustration: “DAY AFTER DAY ... SHE STOOD AND WAITED FOR HIS
    COMING”]

Far and wide they floated, and wherever one fell, there a new flower
sprang up, and it was called the Dandelion.

The old grandmother had finished her story and her moccasin at the
same time.

“And so Shawondasee never married the Dandelion maiden?” questioned
Leelinau.

“No,” answered the grandmother. “He was far too fat and lazy to win a
maiden of spirit. But then,” she added, “it was no great loss to
either. No Indian of good sense would wed a maiden with yellow hair.”




ORIGIN OF THE VIOLET

(Iroquois)


THREE wonderful deeds had the Indian youth performed: three deeds for
which the older men of the tribe gave him honor.

First of all he had gone forth with his bow and arrow and, taking true
aim with a strong and steady hand, had pierced the heart of the great
heron flying overhead: the great heron that was the enemy of his
people. Often had the bird caught the children of the tribe and
carried them away to devour them. And now the young brave, who was
little more than a lad, had slain the great heron.

On the second occasion he had gone forth alone, and sought out the
cave of the witches. And from the cave he had brought away the roots
which alone would cure his people of the great sickness which we call
the plague. The journey was long and difficult, and food was scarce,
but only the witches knew the secret of the roots.

When the young brave returned with the medicine and the people were
made well, the old men of the tribe gave him honor, and the women of
the tribe blessed him.

On the third occasion the young warrior led a band of his fellows in
combat with a tribe of their enemies, and overthrew them. Those who
were not killed fled in confusion. And again he was honored by all his
tribe.

But now the young warrior’s mind was troubled, and favor and honor no
longer satisfied his heart. Among the tribe of the enemy that he had
conquered, he had seen a maiden who had won his love.

Unknown to her, and hidden, he had watched as she moved about the
wigwam of her father. He had followed the fleeing enemy, and had come
silently to the outskirts of their village, and there he discovered
the maiden who alone had stirred his heart.

“I must have her for my very own! She shall be the light of my
wigwam!” he cried.

So he stayed in the forest near the village of the enemy, and there he
sang all the songs that the Indian lover sings, and always they were
in praise of the graceful maiden whom he loved.

So sweet and tender were the words, and so rich the music, that the
birds of the forest learned to sing them after him. And so often were
they repeated that even the roving animals knew the words, and
wondered of whom the strange warrior sang.

One day the Indian maiden, enticed by the freshness of the woods and
the caroling of the birds, wandered away to the forest alone. Unknown
to her, a young Indian of her own tribe, who long had loved her,
followed at a distance.

When she reached the forest she listened happily to the singing birds,
and she thought she heard, too, a strong, clear voice that was
different from the voice of the birds.

Farther into the woods she went, when suddenly a young brave sprang
toward her, clasped her in his arms, and ran swiftly away, bearing her
with him.

The maiden, looking into his face, saw that it was strong, and
fearless, and loving; and with his voice he reassured her, promising
that he would do her no harm. And the maiden’s heart went out to him,
as his had done to her.

The unseen lover of her own tribe saw what had happened and,
recognizing the young brave who had stolen the maiden from him as the
one who had defeated his people, was afraid. He ran back to the
village to tell the men, and to get help for the pursuit.

“And you came back!” cried the men of the village in a voice of scorn.
“You did not save the maiden you claim to love! Stay here at home with
the women while we ride forth and overtake them!”

So the men mounted their ponies and rode away; and toward evening they
came in sight of the brave young warrior, and the maiden of their
tribe.

But as they drew nearer they saw that the maiden had braided the long
tresses of her hair and had bound them about the neck of the young
warrior who bore her in his arms. And this was the sign to them that
she loved him, and wished to go with him and become his wife.

Then the Indians of her own tribe were doubly angry, and drawing their
bows they shot both the young warrior and the maiden through the
heart, and returned to their own village.

And where the two fell, there sprang from the earth a new flower, the
purple violet, which speaks of courage and of love.




THE BEGINNING OF BIRDS

(Blackfeet)


IN very early times, the Red Children believe, there were no birds.
And this is the way they account for their beginning:

All summer the trees had been full of leaves, shaking, whispering,
dancing, as the winds blew upon them. “I wish I might fly,” said one
little leaf. “I would go sailing straight up into the heavens. But the
tree holds me tightly; I cannot get away.”

“If the tree should let you go, you would only fall to the ground and
die,” said a bigger leaf. “It is better to be content as you are.”

So the leaves fluttered and danced and whispered one to another, day
after day.

One morning the wind was cold, and the leaves had to dance fast to
keep warm. Then the old tree said, “It is the breath of Po-poon-o-ki.
He lives in the ice lodge of the far North. He will soon visit us,
with his war paints. I must hold you tightly, little leaves, as long
as I can.” But the little leaves did not understand what the tree
meant.

Then, one still night, Po-poon-o-ki came. He went from tree to tree,
and over each one he splashed his war paints, till the leaves were no
longer green, but dashed with red, and brown, and yellow, and crimson.

“How beautiful the trees are!” cried the Indian children the next
morning. “See their bright colors.”

For a few days the leaves danced and whispered, laughing over their
beautiful hues. Then Po-poon-o-ki came back, and with his swift, cold
breath, he blew against the trees, and the little leaves were tossed
and torn from the friendly branches. They did not fly up into the
heavens, but frightened and sobbing they dropped to the earth.

“We shall die!” they cried. “We shall die!”

Then a strange thing happened. The guardian spirit of the tree
whispered, “No, little leaves, you shall not die. You shall be changed
into living forms. I will give you breath and life.” And instantly
there arose from the earth where the leaves had dropped, a great flock
of winged birds, red, and brown, and yellow, and crimson, all the
beautiful colors that Po-poon-o-ki had given the leaves. Then they
flew away to the South Land, where winter’s breath could not reach
them.

[Illustration: “THERE AROSE A GREAT FLOCK OF WINGED BIRDS”]

But in the spring, when Ni-poon-o-ki, the spirit of summer, came
stealing up from the South, and Po-poon-o-ki went back to his ice
lodge in the far North, then the birds came back, too. There were new
leaves on the trees, but the birds flew straight to the branches which
had been their home, and there, safely sheltered by the new leaves,
they built their nests.

And after awhile, when there were eggs in all the home nests, the
hearts of the birds became so full of joy that they could no longer be
silent. Their throats swelled, and opening wide their little mouths,
they filled all the air with bursts of happy song.




WHY THE WIND WAILS

(Algonquin)


WHEN the pale moon looks down from the sky, and when the wind cries
mournfully around the wigwam, this is the story that the old man of
the tribe tells to the Indian children:

Many, many moons ago the great chief of our tribe had a very beautiful
daughter.

“She shall marry a great warrior,” said the Chief, “and a mighty
hunter. Then she will be well cared for, and I shall be happy.”

So the great Chief kept watch of the young men of the tribe, to see
which one would prove worthy of his daughter.

One day, as the Chief sat in the door of his lodge, there came a
sudden rushing sound, and a young man stood before him. It was the
Wind, who had made himself visible that he might talk with the Chief.

When he had saluted, he said, “Great Chief, I love your daughter. May
I carry her away to my lodge, and make her my wife?”

The Chief looked at the Wind, and he answered, “No. My daughter is
not for such as you. You are no warrior. You are no hunter. You love
to play pranks. You cannot marry my daughter.”

So the Wind went away sorrowing, for he loved the Indian maiden.

The next day the maiden came to her father and said, “Father, I love
the Wind better than any young warrior of our tribe. May I go to his
lodge, and be his wife?”

The Chief looked at his daughter and said, “No. The Wind is no mate
for you. He is no warrior. He is no hunter. He loves only to play
pranks. You cannot marry him.”

The maiden went away sorrowing, for she loved the Wind.

The next day when the maiden went out to gather sweet marsh grass for
her basket weaving, she heard a sudden rushing sound above her head.
She looked up, and as she looked the Wind swept down and carried her
in his arms far away to his lodge.

There they lived happily together, for the maiden became his wife. But
the great Chief was full of wrath. He hunted through all the land for
the lodge of the Wind, but he could not find it for many moons. Still
he would not give up the search, for his heart was hot with wrath.

One day the Wind heard a great crashing sound among the trees near his
lodge, and his heart stood still.

“It is your father,” he cried, and he hid the Chief’s daughter in a
thicket, while he made himself invisible, that he might stay close
beside her.

The great Chief looked inside the lodge of the Wind, but he found it
empty. Then he went through the brush, striking to right and left with
his heavy club, and calling, “My daughter: my daughter!”

And when the Wind’s wife heard her father’s voice, she answered, “Oh,
my father, strike not! We are here.”

But before her words could reach him, the Chief swung his great club
once more, and it fell upon the head of the invisible Wind, who,
without a sound, dropped unconscious upon the ground. And because he
was invisible, neither the Chief nor his daughter knew what had
happened.

Then the Chief took his daughter in his arms and hastened back to his
tribe. But each day she grew more and more sorrowful, and longed for
her husband, the Wind.

For many hours the Wind lay unconscious beside his lodge. When he
awakened, the Chief and his daughter had gone. Sorrowfully he set out
in search of his wife. He traveled to her father’s tribe, and there at
last he found her. But she was in a canoe with her father, far out
upon the lake.

Then the Wind cried, “Come to me, my loved one,” and his voice swept
out over the water.

The Chief said, “The winds are blowing,” but his daughter knew her
husband’s voice. She could not see him, for he was still invisible,
but she lifted herself up in the canoe and stretched out her hands
toward the shore. As she did so a breeze stirred the water, and the
canoe overturned.

The Chief’s daughter threw up her arms, and the Wind tried to catch
her in his embrace, but he was too late. The Great Spirit bore her far
up into the sky, and there he gave her a home where she would live
forever in the lodge of the moon.

[Illustration: “THE WIND TRIED TO CATCH HER IN HIS EMBRACE”]

The great Chief was drowned in the waters of the lake.

Night after night his daughter looks down upon the earth, hoping for a
sight of her lost lover. But though the Wind still roams about the
earth in search of his bride, he has never, since the Chief’s blow
fell upon his head, had the power to become visible to men.

And now you will understand why the voice of the Wind is so mournful
as it wails about the wigwam; and why the Moon Maiden’s pale face is
always turned downward toward the earth.




STORY OF THE HUMMING BIRD

(Shoshonee)


“SEE!” said the Indian grandfather, as he sat in the opening of his
tepee. “See the little Fire Bird! How swiftly it darts! Now it drinks
honey from the flowers. How fast its wings move!”

A little Indian boy stood quietly at his grandfather’s side. “I see
the fire on its throat,” he said softly, and then, as the bird darted
away, he begged, “Tell me the story of the little Fire Bird,
grandfather. I like the story.”

Then the grandfather told this tale, which his grandfather had told to
him:

Long, long ago the Indian people lived in a country where it was cold,
and the snow fell for many, many days. The falling snow covered the
tracks of the forest children, so the hunters could find little meat.
Many times the Indian children cried to the Great Spirit for warmth,
and for better hunting.

Far to the west of the Indian village there was a high mountain; and
often the people watched the red sun as he sank from sight beyond the
mountain, and all the sky was filled with brightness.

One night a little child went running about the tepees calling, “Come,
come; see the sun! See the sun!”

The people looked toward the west. All the sky was bright; and they
said, “The sun is touching the mountain top.”

But the brightness did not fade away as they watched. Instead, while
darkness fell all about the village, the red fire burned brighter and
brighter at the top of the mountain. The people cried, “The sun is
resting. He does not move. He does not sink behind the mountain!” Then
they were frightened, for they knew not what to think.

All night they watched, and still the bright light shone above the
mountain top. It flashed, and threw fiery darts far into the heavens;
and the Indians said, “The sun is angry. Perhaps he will destroy the
earth’s children.”

Then their wonder grew as far away in the east a light began to glow.
It grew brighter and brighter,--and then the sun arose on the eastern
horizon! The people knew then that the light upon the mountain was not
the light of the sun.

“There is _fire_ in the mountain,” they cried, “and fire is warm. It
is beckoning to us with its hands. Let us move nearer to the fire
mountain. It will not be so cold there.”

So the people of the village marched westward toward the mountain. The
bright light had gone, but a cloud of smoke hung above it.

For several days they journeyed, and at last they reached the foot of
the mountain, and there they camped.

Then two of their bravest warriors climbed up the mountain, until they
came to its very top, and there they looked down into a great opening,
shaped like a mammoth bowl, and it was full of fire! Then they
hastened down and told the people.

The people rejoiced, and said, “The fire in the mountain will keep us
warm. It will be good to live here.” And they made them a new village
at the foot of the mountain.

For many moons the people dwelt there, hunting and fishing, making
their beads and moccasins. Then one day a strange noise was heard. It
was as though the mountain coughed--a great, hoarse, rumbling cough,
like that of some huge giant.

The people stood still and listened! There was another sound like the
first, but heavier, more convulsive.

Then a great flash of fire shot up from the mountain top, and fell
again. Then another, and another, and each time the fire leaped
higher.

“Let us run!” cried the people. “Let us run!” Even as they spoke there
was a great burst of fire and smoke, and huge stones were thrown high
in the air, and a stream came pouring down the side of the mountain--a
stream that looked like liquid fire.

Then the Indians ran, indeed, and there was no time to save anything
but their own lives!

Many streams followed the first one, coming like fiery serpents down
the mountain side, and above were heavy smoke clouds, shot with
bursting rocks.

Far away the Indian people ran, crying, “The Fire Spirit is angry!
What have we done that he should destroy our homes?”

At last they stopped, and turned to look back at the fire mountain.
The flames were gone: only a cloud of smoke hung about. But the fiery
streams had burned all that was in their way; and rocks and ashes had
buried what the fire streams had not destroyed.

Then the people prayed to the Great Spirit, and as the Great Spirit
looked down upon the mountain and saw what destruction had been
wrought, he said, “Your flames shall be put out; your fires shall be
quenched.” And even as the Great Spirit spoke, the fires grew ashen in
color, and the flames trembled and sank away.

But in the center of the great bowl of the mountain, where the fires
had been, one little flame hung quivering. The Great Spirit saw it,
and he said, “Little flame, you alone shall stay. But I will give to
you a new form. You shall have wings, and live among the earth’s
people, and drink the honey of its flowers. Little flame, you shall
carry the color of the fire upon your throat. You shall be known as
the Humming Bird, and every child will love you.”




THE GIFT OF INDIAN CORN

(Chippewa)


IN the far back days, before the white men lived upon this side of the
earth, a young Indian lad stood at the door of his father’s tepee and
gazed out over the far-waving prairie grass.

He was thinking of the morrow when he would begin his fast; for this
was the custom among the Indians. When a youth reached a given age he
went away by himself, and for seven days he ate no food, but spent the
time in prayer to the Great Spirit that his part in life might be made
clear to him, and that it might prove a worthy one.

Now Wunzh, who stood in the tepee door, was an unusually thoughtful
lad, for his father had so taught him; and he was filled with high and
with grave thoughts as he looked across the waving grass.

Beyond his sight, in a thicket, he knew that his father and younger
brother were clearing the ground and raising the little tepee wherein
he would spend the days of his fasting.

Wunzh knew full well what his prayer to the Great Spirit would be, but
how would it be answered? He thought of this long and often.

As he had run about the prairie or made his way through the forests
when a little lad, he had wondered how it was that the grass and the
trees sprang up out of the dark earth. He had wondered why some of the
flowers smelled sweet while others were offensive; why some of the
roots were good for healing, while others caused sickness or even
death, though all came from the same soil. But to none of these
questions could he find an answer.

Wunzh’s father was poor, and so were many other Indians; and some of
them were ill, or very old. But in order to live they must hunt or
fish, for game and fish were their only food. And so life was hard for
many of the Indians.

Since Wunzh was thoughtful and had considered all these things, he
knew full well what his prayer to the Great Spirit would be.

On the following day he left the tepee of his father and went to the
little clearing in the thicket, where he would fast for seven days.
And there he prayed that in some way which the Great Spirit would show
him, he might bring a great blessing to his people and make their
lives less hard. He knew full well that most of his comrades prayed
that they might become great warriors, or that they should be mighty
men of the chase. But Wunzh prayed not for these.

For four days he fasted and prayed, and each day he grew weaker from
lack of food, but his faith and his courage grew stronger.

On the fifth day, as he lay upon his bed of skins, there appeared
outside the door of his tepee a strong, bright youth, clad all in
shimmering greens and golden yellows, and wearing upon his head a
plume of waving green.

“Come,” cried the youth, “let us wrestle, and see who shall overcome.”

Then Wunzh sprang from his bed, for though his body was weak, his
spirit was strong, and he grappled with the youth and they wrestled
together.

At length the youth said, “That will do for to-day. You have wrestled
well, though neither of us has overcome. I will return to-morrow.”

[Illustration: “HE GRAPPLED WITH THE YOUTH AND THEY WRESTLED
    TOGETHER”]

And no sooner had he finished speaking than he vanished from the
sight of Wunzh who dropped exhausted upon his bed.

The next day, at exactly the same hour, the youth came again, and so
suddenly that it seemed to Wunzh he must have dropped from the sky.

Wunzh had less strength in his body than on the previous day, but he
felt sure the stranger had been sent by the Great Spirit, and so he
grappled with him again and wrestled well.

But as Wunzh’s strength was nearly gone, the young man said once more,
“That will do for to-day. To-morrow I will return. ’Tis the last day
of your fast. Be ready.”

Again the stranger disappeared, and Wunzh, trembling with weakness of
body, prayed the Great Spirit that he might yet overcome. And as he
prayed he fell asleep.

Then, as Wunzh slept, he dreamed. And it seemed to him that he again
wrestled with the strange youth, and he overcame and threw him to the
ground. And a voice spoke to him and said: “Strip off the clothing of
the youth and wear it for your own. Bury his body, and protect the
spot where he is buried. Make the earth soft and mellow; keep it clear
of weeds; and water it day by day. Do all this, and your prayer to
the Great Spirit shall be answered.”

Wunzh slept long, but when he wakened he remembered his dream and the
words that had been spoken.

That morning his father came to the tepee to offer food, but Wunzh
said, “Let me alone until the evening.” So his father went away.

At the same hour, on this day, the stranger once more appeared outside
the door of the tepee, and once more Wunzh went forth to wrestle. He
was weaker than before, but his dream had given him such courage that
he grasped the strange youth and with a supreme effort threw him
prostrate upon the earth.

“I have overcome,” cried Wunzh, for the youth lay dead at his feet.

Then Wunzh stripped off his clothing as he had been told in his dream,
and he dressed himself in the garments of green and yellow, and he
placed the plume of green upon his head.

Then, kneeling, he tenderly buried the body of the youth, and his
tears fell as he did so, for he said, “He was my friend.”

When Wunzh returned to the tepee of his father he was received with
great rejoicing, and given food. His new clothing was looked upon in
wonder, but he did not tell its story.

Day by day he went to the little spot of ground where his own little
tepee had been, and he kept the earth soft and moist and free from
weeds.

And after many days had gone by, green plumes came up through the
earth; and they grew, and became sturdy stalks.

And still they grew, and after many days and weeks the broad green
leaves held ears of juicy grain.

Day by day the ears grew full and the grain ripened; the green plumes
at their ends turned to yellow, and then to brown, and the ground was
covered with the many stalks.

Then Wunzh said to his father, “Come with me. I have something to show
you.” And his father went with him, and he showed him the clearing
where his tepee had stood. And it was all a field of green and yellow,
like the clothing which Wunzh had worn, when he came from his fast.

Then he told his father of the stranger’s visit, and of his dream, and
of his overcoming the youth.

“And now, my father,” he added, “the Great Spirit has answered my
prayer. From this time on life will be less hard for the Indian, for
he shall have other food than game and fish. The Great Spirit has
caused this grain to grow, and it is good for man to eat. Taste it, my
father, and see.”

And this is the story the Red Men tell of the gift of the maize, or
Indian corn.




THE STARS THAT DANCE

(Iroquois)


MANY years ago in the Indian country a company of eleven young men
went out from the village of their fathers. They were going to prepare
themselves for the war dances, and for battle with their foes.

Away into the forest they went, but before they left the lodges of
their people, their leader said, “You, our parents, must prepare food,
that we may have strength for the trial that is before us.”

Then they went away, singing the war songs of their nation, while
their leader beat upon the water drum to give them courage and
endurance.

On they marched until they came to the part of the forest where they
were to begin their training, and there they stopped and prepared a
rude lodge for shelter.

Many days they stayed, practising the light step of the hunter which
falls as softly as a falling leaf, or dancing the war dance to the
beating of the drum.

But at length they grew weary and faint, for day after day had passed,
and no food had been sent them from the lodges of their fathers.

Then their leader sent one of their number back to the village, and he
told the people that the young men were faint and weary, and in need
of food. Yet the people sent them no food, and the young man went
back, weak, and empty-handed.

Once more the young men began their dancing, for their hearts were
full of courage, and Indian youths are strong to endure. Then, once
more, they sent to the people asking for food, but still no food was
given them.

Then a third time they sent, and yet in vain.

That night, as the youths slept, quite exhausted, in their lodge,
their leader was awakened by the sound of singing. Slow, and soft, and
alluring were the voices; and they seemed far above the earth.

The leader wakened his companions, and together they listened. Then,
one by one, the young men arose, and new strength seemed to come into
their limbs, and new courage into their hearts, and dancing, they
followed the sound of the singing. On and on they went, and then they
seemed to be lifted from off the earth, but still they danced as
higher and higher they arose. Now they were past the tree tops, now
they were above the mountain tops, and now high up among the clouds.
And still they danced the war dance of their nation, faster and
faster, as the music led them on.

The Night Wind saw them. “They follow the song of the Sky Witches,” he
cried in alarm, and he hastened to overtake them and turn them back.
But they paid no heed to the Night Wind, for the song of the Sky
Witches had charmed them, and they followed on dancing.

The people of their village caught sight of them as they passed far
over their heads, and they ran from their lodges and called to them.
“Come back! Come back!” they cried. “Look down upon us, and the spell
will be broken. Heed not the song of the Sky Witches!”

But still the young men followed on,--all but one, their leader, who,
hearing the voice of his mother, turned his head and looked back. The
spell of the Sky Witches was broken, and down, down he sped to the
earth.

The other ten followed on, and the Mother Moon, quite dizzy with the
sight of their dancing, turned aside from her steady course and begged
them to heed her voice.

“The Sky Witches are seeking victims for their feasts,” she warned
them. “Turn away; turn away! They will destroy you!”

Yet in spite of her warning the witchery of the music led the youths
on. And then the Mother Moon cried, “I will save you from their wicked
spell in spite of yourselves!” With that she waved her girdle of
vapors, and the ten youths were changed into fixed stars, and set
forever in the heavens.

Seven of the youths were large and strong, and three were small and
less sturdy; and so they were as stars. When the people of their
village looked once more up into the sky, they saw seven bright stars
dancing and twinkling above them. But those whose eyes were very
strong, when the night was clear, could see ten.

And to this day these stars still dance and twinkle in the
heavens--and this is the Indian legend of their origin.

We call these stars the Pleiades, but the Indians call them “The Stars
That Dance.”




THE PUKWUDJEE AND THE MORNING STAR

(Ojibwa)


ONCE upon a time, in the Indian country, two children were left alone
in a village. All the other people had gone to a far-away country.

The sister, who was the older, thought, “I must take good care of my
baby brother,” though she was not much more than a baby herself. And
this she did. She cooked food for him, and she made him little
moccasins, and crooned a song for him when it was time for him to
sleep.

She grew up rapidly, but the baby brother seemed scarcely to grow at
all. He became strong and sturdy, however, though he was so small a
mite.

The sister watched over him carefully, and as soon as he could run
about she made him a tiny bow and arrows, and taught him how to
shoot. At the same time she hung a shell about his neck, for a charm,
and she named him He-of-the-Little-Shell.

For all his small size, he soon learned to use the bow and arrow, and
his aim was very true. He brought home birds and squirrels for food,
and after a time he was able to bring down bigger game, so that they
fared very well.

But He-of-the-Little-Shell did not grow. When he stood beside his
sister he looked no bigger than a squirrel.

While the boy was out hunting, his sister busied herself about their
lodge, but she looked often toward the east, for she loved the clouds
and the sky and the morning sun. She was always outside the lodge in
the early morning, that she might watch the sunrise, for she thought
the eastern sky more beautiful than any other part of the heavens.

So the two lived on very happily, for the little brother was a merry
fellow, full of tricks and mischief.

One morning, as he was hunting, he saw a man fishing for beaver through
a hole in the ice. He watched him, and when the man had caught several
he loaded them upon a sled which he drew away. He-of-the-Little-Shell
followed. He ran up close to the load and, with a slash of his shell,
cut off the tail of one of the beavers, and ran away home with it.

For several days he played the same trick, and the man was very much
puzzled to know how it was that one of his beavers always lost its
tail before he reached home. At length He-of-the-Little-Shell followed
the man home, and when the beavers were unloaded he stepped out and
spoke to the man.

The hunter was astonished to see so tiny a fellow. “Is it you who has
cut my beavers’ tails?” he asked.

“Yes,” answered He-of-the-Little-Shell.

“I have a mind to kill you!” exclaimed the hunter, angrily.

“Oh, but you could not do it,” said the boy quickly, and before the
man could think, he had disappeared.

One day when he came home from the hunt he said to his sister, “The
time has come when I must go away from our lodge. I must go to the
mountains and live among the rocks and caves. That is my true home,
for I am a Pukwudjee,--a little man of the mountains. But,” he
added, “I shall not leave you here alone. You shall go to the home you
would love best of all. Tell we where it shall be.”

[Illustration: “‘I AM A PUKWUDJEE--A LITTLE MAN OF THE MOUNTAINS,’ HE
    SAID”]

Then the sister answered, “I love the eastern sky best of all. I
should love to live there.”

“It shall be so,” replied her brother. “I will go up the mountain,
where the little people dwell. You shall be carried to the eastern
sky; the four winds of heaven shall lift you. I will look up often and
see you there.”

“And I,” said his sister, “will look down upon you and watch over you
every morning. When you see the rosy clouds you will say, ‘My sister
is painting her face’.”

They bade each other good-bye, and He-of-the-Little-Shell ran up the
mountain side, for he was a Pukwudjee, a “little man of the
mountains,” as the Indians call them.

The four winds of heaven carried the sister to the eastern sky, where
she became the Morning Star, and there she watches over her brother
and all his people.




THE WHITE HAWK

(Shawnee)


WAUPEE was an Indian youth, and a mighty hunter. The meaning of his
name was White Hawk. He was tall, and strong as the great oaks of the
forest. He was fleet of foot, and keen of sight. When he drew his bow,
his arrow went swiftly to the mark.

The Chief of the tribe said, “White Hawk will provide well for the
maiden he chooses as his wife. He has the flesh of every animal for
food. He has the skin of every animal for his lodge and for his
clothing.”

But Waupee lived alone in his lodge. He loved the chase, but as yet he
cared for no maiden.

One day, as he followed a deer through the forest, he went far away
from his lodge; far away from his usual hunting ground. Beyond the
forest he saw an open space where the grass grew green, and yellow
blossoms studded it like stars in the sky.

Waupee passed swiftly through the forest until he came to the open
space, and there, as he looked about, he discovered a curious thing.
It was a circle, where the grass bent down as though many feet had
passed lightly over it. He wondered what dancing feet could have made
this circle in the grass. And he wondered still more when he looked
all about and could find no trace of a footstep outside it.

“How did they come? How did they go?” questioned Waupee in amazement.
“I must know more of this.”

So he hid himself among the trees in the edge of the forest and
waited.

He had hunted long: the drowsy insects droned about him, and at length
Waupee fell asleep. Soon he was aroused by the sound of tinkling
music. It was like the ringing of a silver bell.

He started up and listened. It seemed to come from the sky. He looked
up; then he stood still and waited.

Directly over the circle upon the prairie grass there was descending
something--Waupee knew not what. It was like a boat, but its colors
were like the colors of a sea shell, changing from silver to green, to
pink, and to blue.

The wonderful boat came to rest in the center of the circle, and out
of it stepped twelve maidens, more beautiful than any Waupee had seen
before.

Taking hold of hands, they danced lightly round and round, while the
silver bells kept time to their steps. Their eyes were bright as the
stars, and a star rested upon the breast of each maiden. But though
all were beautiful, Waupee was attracted by one alone, and she was the
youngest.

“I must have this maiden for my own!” cried Waupee. He ran from the
shelter of the trees and would have clasped her in his arms, but he
was too late.

The startled maidens sprang into their boat, which lifted instantly
and carried them away.

Waupee watched until they disappeared among the clouds. Then slowly he
returned to his lodge, but he could think only of the beautiful maiden
with eyes like stars, and he determined to use all his powers to win
her.

The next day, at the same hour, he was again at the edge of the
forest, but this time he had changed to the form of the white hawk,
whose name he bore.

“I will wait until they dance,” he said to himself, “and then I will
fly to the maiden of my choice. I will change to my own form and clasp
her in my arms.”

So Waupee waited, and as before he heard music like the tinkling of
silver bells, and the boat with its changing silvery colors floated
down within the circle.

Out stepped the twelve maidens and began their dance.

Waupee was too eager to wait, and he flew at once from the tree. But
the moment the maidens heard the sound of his wings, they sprang into
their boat and were carried swiftly back to the sky.

Waupee, resuming his form as a man, sat down in the forest, and drew
his blanket over his head, as the Indians do when they mourn. He
feared that the maidens would nevermore return.

But after a time his courage and hope came back, and he determined
that he would not give up until he had captured the maiden who had won
his heart.

On the third day he was again at the edge of the forest, and there he
noticed the half-decayed stump of a tree. In and out, about the
stump, a dozen field mice were playing.

“Now you must help me, little brothers,” said Waupee. He lifted the
stump and set it down near the magic circle in the field. The little
field mice continued to play about it as before. Waupee changed
himself into the form of a field mouse, and began running about with
the others.

He soon heard the tinkling music, and looking up saw once more the
silvery boat floating down from the sky.

When it touched the earth the star maidens sprang out and began their
dance. But one of them saw the old stump.

“That was not there before!” she cried, and running from the circle
she looked closely at it.

“Let us return!” said the youngest maiden, but the others replied,
“But look! Here are field mice running about. Let us chase them!”

The little mice ran in all directions, and the maidens ran after them,
laughing, and threatening them with their silver wands.

And the one that the youngest maiden chased ran far from the others.
Then, just as the maiden reached him, and would have struck him with
her wand, the little field mouse changed suddenly to the form of a
man,--and it was Waupee.

He caught the maiden in his arms, and he told her how she had won his
heart by her loveliness, and begged her to stay with him.

The other maidens, frightened at the sight of Waupee, sprang into
their boat, and it rose and bore them away.

Then the youngest maiden wept, but Waupee comforted her, for he was
strong and brave, and a mighty hunter. And her heart was won, and she
went with him to the village.

So Waupee was wedded to the Star Maiden, and she was the loveliest
maiden in all the tribe.

The next year Waupee and his bride were made still happier by the
coming of a baby boy, and the White Hawk was the proudest father in
all the tribe.

But after many moons had passed, the Star Maiden grew lonely for her
father, and for the scenes of her star home in the sky. And so, one
day, she took her little son by the hand and led him to the magic
circle in the grass of the prairie. In the center of the circle she
placed a boat which she had woven from the grass and rushes of the
meadow, and she and her little son stepped into it. Then she sang the
song of the silvery bells which had been always in her heart, and the
boat of woven rushes began to rise.

[Illustration: “WAUPEE HEARD THE STRAINS OF THE MAGIC SONG”]

Up and up it went until it carried the Star Maiden and her son far
away to the Sky Land.

Waupee, far away at the chase, heard the strains of the magic song and
ran to the spot, but he was too late. He saw the boat with its
occupants disappear among the clouds, and then he sat down upon the
prairie, covered his head with his blanket, and mourned. And no one in
all the tribe could comfort him.

The Star Maiden and her son were welcomed by her father, and for some
time they were happy. Then the boy began to long for his father, the
White Hawk, who was so strong and brave. And his mother, too, secretly
longed for Waupee and the home he had made for her.

One day her father, who had noticed, said to her, “Go, my daughter,
back to the Earth country. Tell your husband that I want him to visit
me in the land of stars, and bring him here to dwell with you and your
son. But before he comes have him shoot one of every kind of bird and
beast, and bring a specimen of each to our Sky Land.”

So the Star Maiden gladly took her son and stepped into her boat. Then
singing the magic song which was always in her heart, they were
carried back to Earth.

Waupee’s heart leaped up like a deer when he heard the music of the
song, and running to the magic circle he clasped his wife and his son
in his strong, loving arms.

The Star Maiden gave him the message from her father, and though
Waupee loved the forests and the prairies, he prepared to go to the
Sky Land. He hunted day after day, and from each bird or animal that
he shot he cut a wing, or a foot, or a tail, to carry with him. At
last he was ready, and with the Star Maiden and their son, he stepped
into the magic boat and was carried far up to the land of stars.

All the people of that far-off country gathered to greet him, and to
welcome the return of the Star Maiden and her boy. Her father took the
great bundle of strange objects that Waupee had brought, and he said
to his people: “Come, I will let you choose! Those of you who wish to
stay in the Star Land may remain as you are. The others may select one
object from this strange bundle, and according to your choice, so
shall you be in the future.”

Many of the people crowded forward, and one took the tail of a deer,
and immediately he was changed into a deer, and bounded away to the
Earth country. Another took the claw of a bear, and at once he became
a bear, and shuffled off to find his way to the Earth. And so it was
with the choice of every one. Some became birds and flew away.

“Come,” said Waupee, to the Star Maiden, “let me choose the wing of
the White Hawk, and do you the same, and our son. Then we may visit
both the Earth and the Sky, and be always together.”

So they chose. And so they have lived, ever since.




HOW MOSQUITOES CAME TO BE

(Iroquois)


IN the long-ago time, the Red Men tell us that their fathers were
greatly troubled by the visits of an enormous bird called Mosquito. No
one knew whence it came, or where it went. But always it brought
terror and destruction.

Sometimes it would fly over the growing corn and with the great force
of its wings beat it all to the earth. Sometimes it would swoop down
and strike a child playing beside the lodge. Again it would come
swiftly and throw a man or a woman of the tribe to the earth, and
leave them bleeding and torn.

At length its visits became so frequent that the people were afraid to
leave their lodges, and so a great council was called, to see what
could be done to get rid of the monster.

At this council one of the young braves said, “I will go out and try
to snare the bird. I will offer my life to save my people.”

[Illustration: “WITH A TERRIBLE CRY THE GREAT MOSQUITO FLEW DOWN WITH
    HIS ENORMOUS WINGS OUTSTRETCHED”]

The young man cut strong bands of rawhide. He said, “I will try to
throw one of these bands about the great bird, and snare him before he
ends my life. Then you must come and kill him.”

So the young brave started out, and when he reached a bare place on
the mountain side he sat down on the ground and sang his death-song
while he waited.

Presently, with a terrible cry, the great Mosquito flew down with his
enormous wings outstretched, and just as he buried his talons in the
young warrior’s flesh, the brave youth sprang erect, threw one of the
rawhide thongs about the foot of the bird and bound him to the rock.

The men of the tribe who had watched the conflict ran to the mountain
side and let fly their arrows. Soon the great Mosquito lay dead upon
the rocks.

There was great rejoicing in the village. The news was spread by
runners, so that braves both young and old came from neighboring
tribes to see the body of the monstrous bird.

“The body should be burned,” counseled one of the old men of the
tribe; but so proud were they of the young warrior who had given his
life to free the Red Men of this great foe, and so eager were they to
show the huge size of the monster, that they gave no heed to his
advice.

One day they noticed that small stinging flies began to buzz about.
Nothing like them had ever been seen before. Their number increased,
and then the people noticed that they came from the body of the great
bird. And the insects bit and stung them.

“It is a new plague,” said the Indians. “We should have given heed to
the counsel of the old man of the tribe, and burned the body, for we
know that all evil things are cleansed by fire.”

And so the little stinging insects were called mosquitoes, and to this
day they are a trouble and an annoyance to mankind.




HOW BIRDS AND FAIRIES CAME TO BE

(Algonquin)


ONCE--oh, a very long time ago--there were no birds and no fairies
upon the earth. Now I will tell you a story of their beginning, as the
Indian grandmothers tell it to the Red children.

Ten beautiful sisters lived in the lodge of their father, and no
maidens in all the tribe were so good to look upon as they.

Young warriors came and sought them in marriage, and one by one the
sisters went away to the lodges of their husbands, until only one was
left in the lodge of her father.

This one was Oweenee, the youngest of all, and the most beautiful.
Many warriors had sought her favor, but she was not easily won. Her
sisters mocked her, but she cared not for that. “I shall know when the
right suitor comes,” she said to her own heart, and went about her
duties in her father’s lodge.

One day an old man came to the lodge door and talked with the
youngest sister, and though he seemed old and bent with years, her
heart told her, “He is the one for whom you have waited.” And so, when
he asked her to go to his lodge and be his wife, she consented.

Her sisters mocked her more than before, but they and their husbands
went with Oweenee and the old man along the path.

The married sisters led the way, and the old man, whose name was
Osseo, and the youngest sister, Oweenee, walked behind, and the girl
was kind and thoughtful, and watched the steps of Osseo with care.

But what was her surprise, as they were about to pass a hollow log, to
see him suddenly dart into its open end and almost immediately come
from the farther end--not old and bent, but the youngest, the
strongest, and the most active of all the warriors in the company.
Then he took the hand of the youngest sister, and together they led
the way to his lodge.

The eyes of the youngest sister were bright with happiness, but the
older sisters were dumb with astonishment.

When they entered the lodge of Osseo, they found a feast prepared. The
food was plain, and the dishes were of wood. The lodge, too, seemed
shabby and poor. But while they ate, the lodge began gently to rise
from the ground. Up and up it went, and its shabby sides began to
gleam like silver. The food became the richest and choicest, and the
dishes became like shells of radiant colors.

Up and up the lodge continued to go, until at last it reached the Sky
Land, and stopped before the doorway of the Evening Star.

The Evening Star greeted them and spoke to Osseo. Then the sisters and
their husbands, who had scoffed at Oweenee, knew that the old man whom
she had married was no other than Osseo, the Son of the Evening Star.

And Evening Star said, “You and your beautiful bride are welcome to my
lodge, but these others who have scoffed at her and at you may not
come inside. They may stay at the lodge door.”

Then the lodge of Osseo became a wonderful silver cage, and the
sisters and their husbands were changed into singing birds, with
plumage of brightest colors, blue, and red, and orange, and scarlet.
And they flew about in their silver cage, and sang to Osseo and his
bride.

Now Osseo grew stronger and more manly day by day, and his bride grew
sweeter and lovelier to look upon. After many moons had come and gone
there came to Osseo and his wife a little son. As the boy grew he
seemed brighter than the starlight, and Osseo and Oweenee loved him
dearly; but his grandfather, the Evening Star, loved him best of all.

One day Evening Star said to Osseo, “You must be careful not to let
the light beams from the small Star that dwells near by fall upon the
cage of singing birds, or upon yourself, or your wife, or your son.
The Star is an evil spirit, and the light beams are his enchanted
arrows. They change the form of all those upon whom they fall.”

So Osseo promised to be careful. But after many moons had passed, he
forgot about the light beams of the Star neighbor.

He made a bow and arrows for his little son, who loved to play at
shooting. Then one day the boy said, “I want to shoot some living
thing. How shall I learn to be a hunter if I have no game to shoot?”

“I will open the silver cage,” said Osseo, “and you may shoot at the
flying birds.”

Then the little boy was pleased, and he drew his bow, and Osseo
opened the door of the cage.

Out flew the birds, glad to stretch their wings, and the boy sped his
arrow after them. But swifter than his arrow was the light beam of the
little Star, and it fell upon the birds and the boy.

Immediately they became enchanted. The birds flew swiftly down to
earth and lighted upon an island in the midst of a green sea, and the
little boy, the grandson of Evening Star, floated softly down after
them.

Then Osseo was full of sorrow, and he said to his father, “Oh, father!
let us go also, my wife and I, that we may not be separated from our
son.”

So Evening Star permitted Osseo and Oweenee to enter the silver cage,
and silver wings were given it, and it flew down to the island in the
midst of the green sea.

And then the enchantment of the little Star changed all of them to
Fairies, and joining hands they danced and sang in the starlight,
while the Evening Star looked down upon them from his far-away home in
the sky.




WHY THE ASPEN LEAVES ARE NEVER STILL

(Blackfeet)


“WHY are the leaves on the aspen tree never still, Grandmother?” asked
one of the Indian children of the old basket weaver. “I have watched
them so many times, and they always talk together.”

“You are right, my daughter. When there is no breath in the heavens,
the aspen leaves still talk.”

“Is there a story about the aspen tree, grandmother?” asked the little
girl. “Will you tell it to me, if there is?”

“Yes daughter,” replied the old woman, “there is a story about the
aspen tree which it is good that you should hear.”

Taking her basket upon her knees and continuing her weaving, the
grandmother told her story:

“Many, many moons ago there was a young warrior who was lonely in his
father’s lodge, and he said to himself, ‘I will seek a maiden to wed,
and make ready a lodge of my own.’

“So he watched the maidens of the village, and he found two sisters
who seemed so modest, and kind, and good, that he knew not which of
them to choose.

“When he went to their father’s lodge, he was kindly treated by both.
They gave him words of welcome, they smiled upon him, and they
prepared food and set it before him. Both could weave fine baskets for
the lodge, and make rich embroidery of quills.

“Many times the young brave went to the lodge, but he could not tell
which maiden would make the better wife. And at last he said to
himself, ‘I will try magic. I will get the medicine man to help me.’

“So he visited the lodge of the Medicine Man, and after a time there
came away from the Medicine Man’s lodge an old man, bent, and leaning
upon a stick. He walked feebly, and his garments were ragged. His hair
was white, and his chin quivered with age.

[Illustration: “THE OLDER SISTER LOOKED ON WITH SCORN”]

“The old man went to the lodge of the two maidens and begged a bit of
food. The younger sister asked him to come inside the lodge and
rest. Then she prepared some nourishing food and gave to him, and
while he ate it she noticed that his feet were barely covered with
pieces of skins tied about the ankle. She hastened to finish the
moccasins that she was embroidering, and gave them to him, so that his
feet should not be bruised with walking.

“The older sister looked on with scorn, and made unkind remarks. She
asked her sister why she should spend time upon a forlorn old man who
could never repay her. She laughed at his ragged garments and at his
quivering chin and feeble knees. Then in a sharp voice she bade him
begone before her lover should come from the hunt.

“The old man went away, after thanking the younger sister for her
kindness.

“A short time later, the young warrior came to the door of the lodge,
bearing upon his shoulders a deer which he had shot. Both sisters
smiled at him and bade him enter. He passed the older sister without a
glance, and laid the deer at the feet of the younger.

“As they looked down at the deer, both sisters discovered that the
young man had upon his feet the moccasins that the younger sister had
just given to the strange old man.

“‘I seek a maiden to be the light of my lodge,’ he said, ‘and by magic
I have found that one. I was the old man who came hither for shelter
and comfort, and so I learned how to escape a sharp tongue and bitter
words.

“‘But the Medicine Man’s charm has not yet finished its work,’ he
added. ‘I do not want another to suffer the fate I have so narrowly
escaped.’

“He took the younger sister by the hand and led her from the lodge.
The older sister followed, and as she stepped outside, her feet became
rooted to the ground, and she was turned into an aspen tree.

“The younger sister became the light of the young warrior’s lodge; but
the aspen tree, like the older sister, while beautiful to look upon,
has since that day had a whispering and unruly tongue.”




WHY THE BABY SAYS “GOO”

(Algonquin)


MANY, many moons ago there lived among the Red people a warrior who
was greatly respected and admired by all his tribe.

When an enemy came to attack them, this warrior was always the first
to resist. His arm was strong, and his arrows went true and straight
to the mark. He had gone alone on many a daring hunt, and had
contended with the fiercest beasts of the forest and slain them. But
greatest of all, he had fought alone with mighty giants, and overcome
them, so that his tribe was rid of their evil magic. It was no wonder
that the people thought him great.

But then, as so often follows, the warrior became puffed up with
thoughts of his own courage and power, and he was filled with pride,
and boastings.

“There is no one, among men or beasts,” he said, “who does not fear
me. All men obey me. They tremble at the sound of my voice.”

Now there was in the tribe of this warrior an old grandmother to whom
age had given great wisdom. And she thought within her heart, “Our
warrior is becoming puffed up. He thinks too well of himself. It would
be good for him to be humbled.” So among the women she said, “There is
one whom I know, who is greater than the mighty warrior. _He_ would
not tremble at his voice, nor obey his word.”

This saying was repeated to the men of the tribe, and in time it came
to the ears of the great warrior himself. Immediately he went to the
lodge of the grandmother.

“What is this, that I hear?” he enquired. “Show me who it is that will
not obey my voice! Tell me his name!”

“His name is Wasis,” replied the grandmother, “and he sits inside my
lodge.”

The warrior threw back the hanging of deer skin covering the entrance
of the lodge, and strode within. There, upon the ground, sucking a
piece of maple sugar, sat Wasis, the baby. The warrior looked at him
in surprise. He knew nothing about babies, having been too busy all
his life with battles and adventures to pay any attention to the
little people of the tribe. But here was just a tiny fellow. It would
be no trouble to get him to obey!

So without any ado, the warrior said, “Ho, baby, come here to me!”

The baby looked at him, but did not move. He repeated his command. The
baby stopped sucking his maple sugar long enough to say “Goo, goo,”
but he did not move.

Then the warrior said, “I will show him that I am to be feared, and
then he will obey me.” So he began a war dance, and uttered fierce war
cries, and Wasis opened his mouth and sent forth such piercing yells
and shrieks, that the warrior stopped in amazement. And when he had
stopped the baby began sucking his maple sugar again.

“Ho, baby, come here to me!” he repeated once more, but at that the
baby again opened his mouth and cried so lustily that the great
warrior covered his ears and ran from the lodge. “It is worse than the
war cries of the Frost Giants!” he exclaimed.

“Did he obey you?” asked the grandmother.

“No,” said the warrior. “He is a little fellow, but he is mightier
than I.”

[Illustration: “WASIS SENT FORTH SUCH PIERCING YELLS AND SHRIEKS, THAT
    THE WARRIOR STOPPED IN AMAZEMENT”]

“Yes,” answered the grandmother, “Wasis, the baby, conquers us all,
and no one can resist him.”

And the baby, left alone in the lodge with his maple sugar, stopped
now and then to say, “Goo, goo!” For had he not conquered the mighty
warrior, the great brave of the tribe?




WHY THE SQUIRREL COUGHS

(Algonquin)


A GREAT trickster was Manabozho. He loved to play jokes upon his
friends of the forest.

One day he invited them all to a feast in his wigwam. And every one
came, from the woodpecker and the tiny mouse, to the great moose with
branching horns.

It was a time of scarcity of food, and all were glad to be asked to a
banquet.

But the meat that Manabozho had ready for his guests, he had prepared
by magic--though of that no one knew except himself.

When all had assembled, Manabozho gave to each a portion of meat. The
woodpecker was the first to taste of his, and as he took the delicious
looking morsel in his mouth, it turned to ashes on his tongue, so that
he was choked and began to cough. But the meat looked so good, and he
was so hungry that he tasted again, and again it turned to ashes and
choked him.

Every guest had the same experience. The little mouse, the otter, the
badger, the fox, the wolf, and even the moose tasted his portion and
it turned to ashes on his tongue.

In vain the guests tried to be courteous and to stifle their coughing,
but it grew worse and worse as first one and then another ate of the
meat.

At length there was such a deafening noise in the wigwam, caused by
the chorus of coughing and strangling from so many throats great and
small, that Manabozho picked up a club in pretended anger. Threatening
them with it, he drove them out of doors, where he changed them all to
squirrels.

And that, the Indians tell us, is the reason that the squirrel coughs.




WHY THE FROGS CROAK

(Algonquin)


“MO-O-O-O-RE, mo-o-o-o-re!” croaked a big frog in the marshes. “’Tis
enough, ’tis enough, ’tis enough!” answered a smaller frog.

But the big frog called again, “Mo-o-o-o-re, mo-o-o-o-re!” And again
the smaller frog answered, “’Tis enough! ’Tis enough!”

“What is it the frogs are quarreling about, grandmother?” asked a
little Indian girl, and the grandmother replied, “About the water, I
suppose.”

“Why do they quarrel about the water? Is it a story, grandmother?”

“Yes,” said the grandmother, “it is a story. Listen and I will tell it
to you!

“In the long-time-ago all the waters of the land were tied up. The
Indian people grew thirsty, and more thirsty. Their fields were drying
up. The flowers withered. The people said, ‘We shall die!’

“Then there came to one of the villages the giant, Rabbit, and he
said, ‘What is this I hear about the waters being tied up?’

“The Chief answered, ‘For many days there has been no water. The
streams are empty. No little rivers come down the mountain side. Our
corn is drying up. Our people’s throats are parched.’

“The giant, Rabbit, said, ‘I will go into the mountains and see who
has tied up the water.’ Then he strode away, taking such great steps
that he was out of sight in a moment.

“Up the mountain went the giant, and when he came to the top he found
a tribe of men there, and they had tied up the water so that it stood
in great pools which had grown green and slimy, because it was no
longer fresh.

“‘What are you doing with the water?’ asked the Rabbit, and his voice
rolled down the mountain like thunder. ‘Do you not know that the
tribes below you are dying for want of it?’

“The Chief of the strange tribe came out to answer the Rabbit. He was
fat and ugly, and his back was covered with green slime from the pool.

[Illustration: “HE WAS FAT AND UGLY, AND HIS BACK WAS COVERED WITH
    GREEN SLIME FROM THE POOL”]

“‘We need the water for ourselves. It was running away down the
mountain, so we stopped it,’ said the Chief.

“Rabbit reached out and caught the Chief by the back of his neck and
shook him. The giant’s grasp was strong, and the Chief’s eyes bulged
from his head, and he swelled up till he was puffed out all over, from
trying to get his breath.

“‘So shall you look, you and all your tribe, hereafter,’ said Rabbit,
holding him off and looking at him. Then he threw him into the green
pool, and all his tribe with him.

“After that Rabbit untied the water, and all the little streams began
to flow down the mountain. Our people, at the foot of the mountain,
saw them coming, and they gave thanks to the Great Spirit, because he
had helped the giant, Rabbit, to give them water again, that they
might live.

“The tribe at the top of the mountain became frogs, as you see them
now, and they have traveled to many parts of the land; but wherever
they go they keep on quarreling about the water, as you have heard
them this day.”




THE ROCK OF THE MEASURING WORM

EL CAPITÁN, IN THE YOSEMITE

(California Tribes)


TWO small Indian boys were seated before the tepee fashioning bows and
arrows.

“Mine is not good!” exclaimed one of the boys, throwing aside the
stick with which he had been working. “Besides, I am tired of sitting
still. Let us go for a swim in the river.”

Away they dashed, running swiftly, as the Indian child is taught to
run. Into the water they jumped, swimming, diving, splashing, and
stopping now and then for a water battle.

At length they had had enough of the water, so out upon the bank they
came.

“Let us climb upon this rock to dry ourselves. Its top is flat, and
the sun is warm upon it.”

So they climbed upon the flat rock, and in a few moments both boys
were fast asleep. Then a strange thing began to occur. The rock slowly
and gradually commenced to stretch itself up, up, up, higher, and
higher, and higher. And the boys continued to sleep.

Taller, and taller grew the rock, carrying the boys upward on its flat
surface until at last their faces were bathed by the clouds that
floated in the sky. And still they slept.

For many moons they slept; for a whole snow.

In the meantime the people of their village missed them and began to
search. They searched by the river, and in the forest, but no one
could find the missing boys. There was great sorrow in the village.

None of the people knew of the great rock. Only the animals knew.

Then one day the animals came together, and they said, “What is to be
done? The people are sorrowing because of the boys that are lost. Can
we not return them to their friends?”

So the animals decided to try to get the boys off the great rock.

“You are littlest,” said the lion to the mouse, “you try first.”

So the mouse made ready and sprang as high as she could up the side of
the rock. Just a hand-breadth she jumped, and fell back into the
valley.

So the rat tried next, and he made a mighty effort, and jumped two
hand-breadths, and then he too fell back into the valley.

Alter that every sort of animal jumped in turn, the otter, and the
badger, the fox, and the wolf, and the bear, and though each one
jumped as high as he could, he jumped only against the side of the
rock, and went tumbling back into the valley.

Last of all came the lion. With a mighty roar he sprang--but it was of
no use: he too struck the side of the great rock and fell back with
the others.

They were about to give up and go back to their homes in the river and
in the forest, when a tiny measuring-worm came creeping over the
grass. “By your leave,” she said quite humbly, addressing the lion, “I
should like to try and see what I can do.”

“Ho-ho,” laughed all the animals together. “Ho-ho!”

But without waiting for their consent, the measuring-worm made her way
slowly to the foot of the great rock, and then, little by little,
little by little, she drew herself up, up, up the side of the mighty
rock.

Up, and up, and up she went, until she was lost to sight of the
animals waiting below.

At last she reached the top, and drew herself over the edge. And there
lay the two boys, still sleeping.

Then the measuring-worm took the two boys, and started back. She
climbed with them down the side of the rock, little by little, down,
and down, and down.

At last she came within sight of the waiting animals.

Down, and down still she climbed until she was in their midst.

So mighty was the noise made by the assembled animals that it wakened
the sleeping boys, and brought the men and women of the village to the
foot of the great rock.

And so the boys were restored to their people.

But the great rock with its almost perpendicular sides stands to-day,
lofty and imposing.




HOW THE FLYING SQUIRREL GOT HIS WINGS

(Iroquois)


LONG ago, in the Indian country, Nuk-da-go was chief of the squirrel
tribe. One day he was passing through the woods to see how all the
little squirrels were faring, and how they prospered in laying up
their store of nuts for the winter.

Now when Nuk-da-go went about the woods he often made himself
invisible, for by this means he heard and saw many things which would
not have been said or done if the woods people had known that he was
near.

On this day Nuk-da-go chanced to pass by the home of a little
squirrel, Jo-nis-gy-ont, who had worked very hard all the autumn
laying up nuts for his winter’s food.

Little Jo-nis-gy-ont lived all alone in a hollow tree close beside a
great pine. On one side, near the edge of a bit of marsh, lived
Brother Frog, and on the other side, under some rocks near the pine,
lived Brother Woodchuck.

Now for some days Jo-nis-gy-ont had been noticing that his stock of
nuts, instead of growing bigger, was growing smaller, though he worked
hard every day.

The big hickory-nut tree, from which he carried his stores, was a
half-hour’s journey away from the hollow tree. To be sure, there were
acorns and cone seeds much nearer home, but, as every one knows, the
hickory nut is the sweetest nut of the woods.

But of late, when Jo-nis-gy-ont returned from one of his long trips
with his cheeks bulging with hickory nuts, he would find _fewer_ nuts
in his storehouse in the hollow tree than he had left there when he
started away. Little Jo-nis-gy-ont had his own ideas, but he thought
it best to be frank and friendly.

One evening, as he and Brother Frog and Brother Woodchuck were sitting
at the doors of their houses, little Brother Squirrel said,
“Neighbors, I have found that there is a thief about. My store of nuts
is being robbed.” Then he looked hard at Brother Frog and Brother
Woodchuck--for in those days, you must know, the frog tribe and the
woodchuck tribe were also eaters of nuts.

[Illustration: “LITTLE JO-NIS-GY-ONT HAD HIS OWN IDEAS”]

Brother Frog tried to look very much surprised as he said, “Who would
be so mean as to steal from little Jo-nis-gy-ont’s store of hickory
nuts? Such a thing would be a shame!” Then he managed to squeeze two
big tears from his eyes and let them roll slowly down his fat cheeks.

And Brother Woodchuck said, “Surely no one in the forest would steal
from you, little Brother Squirrel! There must be some mistake. Should
I see any robber taking your store of nuts, it would go hard with
him!”

But little Jo-nis-gy-ont had his own ideas still,--and so did
Nuk-da-go, chief of the squirrel tribe, who was listening, unseen.

That night Nuk-da-go came back to the forest to look into the matter.
He found little Jo-nis-gy-ont fast asleep; and down beside the rocks,
where Brother Woodchuck had his home, he could see the dirt flying
fast. Brother Woodchuck was digging for dear life. Nuk-da-go watched,
and as soon as the hole was big enough, Brother Woodchuck began
filling it with hickory nuts. Then he ran to the hollow tree, and in a
few minutes was back with more nuts, which he dropped into the hole
and covered carefully from sight.

Then Nuk-da-go went over to the edge of the marsh, where there was a
stirring in the thick moss. Nuk-da-go watched. Soon he saw Brother
Frog carefully lifting the moss, while he pushed under it a quantity
of hickory nuts. Then Brother Frog hopped away in the direction of the
hollow tree, and soon he was back, with his cheeks bulging. Then he
dropped more hickory nuts, which he pushed carefully under the moss.

“The hickory-nut tree is a half-hour’s journey away,” said the wise
Nuk-da-go. “I will look into this matter further.”

The next day Nuk-da-go went about among all the forest people and told
them that little Jo-nis-gy-ont’s store of nuts was being robbed.
“Shall we call a council?” he asked. “Shall we bring all the forest
people together to find out who is the robber?”

And all the forest people said, “Yes, yes.”

That night the council was held, and all the forest people came except
Brother Frog and Brother Woodchuck, who begged to be excused.

“No one can be excused from the council,” declared Nuk-da-go, who had
been appointed Chief. “Jo-nis-gy-ont, as you are their nearest
neighbor, I appoint you to go and bring them.”

Jo-nis-gy-ont hastened back, but when he told his errand, Brother Frog
jumped far out into the marsh and pretended not to hear, and Brother
Woodchuck slipped into his home under the rocks, out of sight.

But Nuk-da-go would be obeyed, so he went after them himself, and,
being Chief of the Council and Chief of the tribe, Brother Frog and
Brother Woodchuck had to come out when he called them, and they
followed him along to the council, looking very meek and very mean
indeed.

Then Nuk-da-go stood up before all the woods people and told them why
he had called them together, and what he had seen. And when he had
finished telling them about little Jo-nis-gy-ont’s store of nuts, and
about the nuts that were under the rocks, and under the moss, the
woods people looked at Brother Frog and Brother Woodchuck and they
said, “We will go and look into this, too.”

So all the company of woods people went to the hollow tree near the
pine and looked at Jo-nis-gy-ont’s poor little pile of nuts. Then they
went and uncovered the nuts by the rock, and the nuts that were tucked
beneath the moss. Then they looked at Brother Woodchuck and Brother
Frog, and asked, “What have you to say?”

But Brother Woodchuck and Brother Frog hadn’t a word to say! They just
looked mean, and ashamed.

Then the woods people decided that Nuk-da-go should be the judge. So
he told Brother Frog to sit before him, and he said, “I pronounce you
guilty of stealing your neighbor’s nuts, and you must be punished. You
are fat and lazy. Your food flies past your door, and you have only to
put out your tongue and catch it. Your little neighbor has to travel
far for his food. You sleep all winter and have no need to store
supplies. Jo-nis-gy-ont stays awake, and must eat. So your crime is
doubly bad, and this shall be your punishment: Hereafter you shall not
be able to eat nuts, for you shall lose all your teeth. Go to your
home now, and steal no more.”

Brother Frog hopped away, very sad and very much ashamed, and with the
first hop every one of his teeth dropped out,--and the frog tribe have
had no teeth from that day to this.

Then Nuk-da-go turned to Brother Woodchuck, and said, “You, too, are
found guilty of stealing your neighbor’s nuts, and you shall be
punished. Like Brother Frog, you are fat and lazy. You sleep through
the winter and need no food, while Jo-nis-gy-ont must work hard for
his. Go home. You shall not lose your teeth--for Brother Woodchuck was
holding his paws tightly over his mouth and quaking with fear--but
from this day on you and your tribe shall live upon leaves and grain
and the growing things of the fields and forests, but no more shall
you enjoy the taste of flesh, or the sweet meat of nuts.”

Sad and ashamed, Brother Woodchuck turned away when Nuk-da-go finished
speaking, for this was a hard punishment indeed.

Then Nuk-da-go turned to little Brother Squirrel and said,
“Jo-nis-gy-ont, you should have been more watchful of your store of
nuts, and not have slept so soundly when robbers were about. But the
woods people are sorry for you, and so I shall give you something that
will help you to go quickly from tree to tree, and to hasten home in
time of danger.”

Then Nuk-da-go spread a web of skin from the fore legs to the back
legs of Jo-nis-gy-ont, to form wings when he leaped, so that he could
jump swiftly and far.

From that day to this the tribe of Jo-nis-gy-ont has had wings, and
this is the Indians’ account of the first flying squirrel.




WHY BROTHER BEAR WEARS A STUMPY TAIL

(Ojibwa)


IN times long past Brother Bear was a famous fisherman. He had a large
stock of patience, and great good nature. He was never in a hurry.

But Brother Bear was honest as he was slow, and always ready to
believe what others told him, and so he was often imposed upon by the
slyer animals--Brother Fox, for instance.

One day as Brother Fox was walking beside a stream, he saw a group of
plump little animals slip into the water and disappear from sight.

“Young otters, I do believe!” cried Brother Fox, smacking his lips.
“What a meal they would make!” Then he sat down beside the stream and
began to think. He did want those otters so badly! He could not think
of anything else that would taste half so good. But how to get them!
That was the question.

Presently, while he was thinking, along came Brother Bear shuffling
down the path with a load of nuts and honey.

“Good morning, Brother Bear,” said Brother Fox. “I see you have a load
of excellent food--excellent for you, I mean. My tribe never eats nuts
or honey. But perhaps you would not mind adding a bit of tender meat
to your load.”

“Meat? No, indeed,” replied Brother Bear. “But where am I to find it?”

“Why,” said Brother Fox with his craftiest smile, “there are some
young otters in this stream. I just saw them slip into the water. It
seems to me that they would make very good eating for you and your
family.”

Brother Bear smacked his lips. “But how am I to get them?” he asked.

“I am no fisherman, as you well know,” said Brother Fox, “but you are
a famous fisherman. Why can you not fish for them?”

Brother Bear thought for a moment. “But I have no bait,” he said.

“That is true,” replied Brother Fox, “but I will tell you what to do.
Just go out upon that log that lies near the shore and drop your fine
long tail into the water. I feel sure the otters will think your tail
good bait, and when one comes to nibble it, you can jerk up your tail
and just whip the otter over to the shore. I will guard your game for
you until you finish fishing.”

“Very good,” agreed Brother Bear, “I will try that.”

So Brother Bear laid down his load of nuts and honey, made his way to
the log, and climbed upon it. Then he let his fine long tail drop down
into the water--for this was in times long past, you must remember,
when the tails of the bears were long--and then he closed his eyes and
sat very still.

Presently he felt a nibble at his tail, and he whipped it up, as
Brother Fox had told him. Sure enough, a fine young otter went flying
across to the bank where Brother Fox lay waiting behind a bush.

“That was pretty well done!” thought Brother Bear, as he dropped his
tail into the water again and waited. Presently he felt another
nibble, and another otter went flying across to the bank. And soon it
was followed by a fish, and then by another fish.

“What a fine dinner I shall take home to my family,” thought Brother
Bear to himself, as he began trying to count the number of times his
tail had been nibbled, and he had sent something flying across for
Brother Fox to guard.

While he was trying to count, North Wind came along and saw him
sitting there with his eyes closed, and his tail hanging down in the
water.

“I shall have to play a trick on Brother Bear, I do believe!” chuckled
North Wind to himself, and he sent a cold breath over the water, so
that it became quite still. Then he sent another breath, and a cold,
shining crust formed all across its top. After that he sent another
breath, and another, and the cold, shining crust grew thicker and
thicker.

Presently Brother Bear stopped trying to count and opened his eyes.
“Brother Fox,” he called, “there seems to be no more game in the
river. I have not felt a nibble for a long time.”

But Brother Fox was just finishing a nice bone, and he called back
earnestly, “Oh, be patient, Brother Bear! I am sure you will catch
more game if you wait a little longer.”

[Illustration: “NORTH WIND SAW HIM SITTING THERE WITH HIS EYES CLOSED
    AND HIS TAIL HANGING DOWN IN THE WATER”]

So Brother Bear closed his eyes again and sat still for several
minutes. Then he called, “Brother Fox, I am sure there is no more game
in the river. I am coming ashore now.”

There was no answer from Brother Fox, so Brother Bear moved a little
on the log, but it was a very little, for his tail felt heavy as lead.
“Why,” he exclaimed, “I must have an enormous fish now, my tail is so
heavy!” And with that he gave a great jump, intending to carry the
game with him to shore, when, snap! his tail broke right off short,
for it was frozen fast in the ice. And that was the trick that North
Wind had played.

Brother Bear felt terribly at losing his tail, it had been such a
beautiful, long one! But at last he comforted himself by thinking,
“Well, at any rate, I have a wonderful feast to carry home to the
family: nuts, and honey, and fish, and game.” So he licked his lips,
in spite of the loss of his tail.

But when Brother Bear reached the shore, he could not find Brother Fox
anywhere! And neither could he find the fish, nor the tender young
otters. Instead, he found a heap of fresh bones back of the bush where
Brother Fox had been lying. And then he knew that Brother Fox had
played a bad trick upon him, too.

He gathered up his load of nuts and honey and went sadly home. And
from that day to this Brother Bear has refused to do any more fishing,
and has worn a stumpy tail.




THE THUNDER PEOPLE

(Passamaquoddy)


ONCE upon a time a young Indian warrior was hunting with his bow and
arrows. He followed far after a fleet deer, until he found himself
standing upon a great rock, high above the plains.

The clouds were gathering thickly. The sky was black with clouds. The
Indian youth was far away from his lodge.

Again he saw the deer, and he drew his bow. But as he did so the deer
was changed into the form of a maiden, standing against the rock.

The youth dropped his bow in wonder. He looked at the maiden. In the
distance he heard the voice of the thunder.

“Who are you?” he asked in amazement.

And the maiden answered, “I am the sister of the Thunder Men. Will you
come with me and visit our home?” The youth consented, and the maiden
struck the great rock against which she had stood.

There was a flash, like a flash of lightning, and the rock opened and
made a passage for them.

The maiden led the way, and the youth followed; and when they had
passed through the rock, they came into a strange country--to the home
of the Thunder Maiden. The floors and walls were of clouds, and the
clouds were of every shade, from silver gray to the deepest purple
black. They were soft to walk upon, and smooth as the smoothest
velvet. And their changing shades were more wonderful than any artist
could paint.

The maiden’s robes were of trailing silver, and her hair was black as
midnight.

She led the youth to her father, who sat upon a throne formed from the
deepest purple clouds. His hair and beard were white like the mists
that float across the sky. But his robe was black, with here and there
a dash of brilliant gold.

“Welcome, my son,” said the old man. “Have you come to dwell among
us?”

The youth looked at the beautiful maiden, and he answered, “Yes, my
father.”

So he became one of the Thunder People.

After a time the brothers of the maiden returned home. And when they
saw the youth and knew that he had come to dwell among them, they
proposed a game of ball.

Now their balls were big and black, and very heavy; and they did not
throw them, but rolled them back and forth across the clouds. And the
noise was very great.

When the father of the Thunder Men saw that the youth was strong, and
could roll the ball well, he said, “You shall go with my sons
to-morrow. You shall see greater sport than this.”

In the morning, when the Thunder Men put on their great purple wings,
the maiden brought forth another pair and fastened them upon the
shoulders of the youth. Then they all flew away to the south. They
carried bows, and their arrows were of gold.

Their wings made a mighty roaring and crashing as they flew, and the
people on the earth said, “Listen, how the thunder roars and crashes!”

Then they shot their golden arrows from their bows, and the earth
people cried, “See, how the lightning flashes across the sky!” And
some of the earth people ran and hid, for they were afraid.

But the old man of the Thunder World had said to his sons: “Shoot your
arrows only at the great bird of the south, which is our enemy.
Destroy not the people of the earth. And fly not too low. Touch not
the trees, for they are our friends.”

So they flew about for a time, taking care where they sent their
arrows. And when they had grown tired of their sport, they flew back
to their home in the clouds and took off their great purple wings.

For many moons the youth enjoyed the company of the Thunder Maiden,
and took part in the sports of her brothers. But at last there took
possession of him a great longing to visit again his brothers and
sisters of the earth. He longed to chase the deer in the forest, to
follow his chief in battle, to smell the fire of his lodge.

He told his longing to the old man of the Thunder World, and the old
man said he should have his way. So for the last time the Thunder
Maiden fastened his purple wings to his shoulders, handed him the
golden arrows, and bade him good-bye. Then away he flew with the
Thunder Men.

Closer and closer to the earth they went, and the people covered their
ears to keep out the crash and roar of the thunder; and they covered
their eyes to keep out the sight of the dazzling, flashing lightning.

“Oh, what a storm!” cried the earth people, as they looked toward a
hill outside their village where the noise seemed most deafening, and
the glare seemed most blinding.

And there, on the hill, the Thunder Men left their Indian brother;
then, with many a rumble and flash, they flew away back to their home
in the clouds.

When the people looked again, the storm had lifted, and a warrior was
seen descending from the hill to the village. They recognized him as
the youth who had been lost for many, many moons.

As they sat together around the fire of the lodge, the youth told them
the tale that I have told you, of the Thunder People who dwell in the
purple clouds.




KEEPER OF THE WINDS

(Algonquin)


MUDJEKEEWIS, father of the four winds of heaven, had three sons. Their
names were Wabun, Kabibonokka, and Shawondasee. Mudjekeewis said to
the chiefs of his people, “You have named me Kabeyun, the West Wind,
and have given to me all the four winds of the heavens. I will appoint
my three sons to be keepers of the north wind, the east wind, and the
south wind.”

So to Kabibonokka he gave the north wind, to Wabun he gave the east
wind, and to Shawondasee he gave the south wind.

Wabun was a hunter. He liked to rise early and to leap upon the
mountains in pursuit of the wild deer. He liked to shoot with his bow
and arrows. He was glad that the east wind had been given to him, for
he loved to watch the heavens in the early morning when the sun shot
its first rays across the mountain tops where he hunted. He said to
Mudjekeewis, “I am most grateful, my father, that the east wind has
been given into my keeping. When I hunt in the early morning I will
shoot away the clouds of darkness with my silver arrows; I will chase
away the shadows.”

So Wabun cared for the east wind, and each morning he painted the sky
with wonderful colors. He sent his silver arrows down to the earth to
waken the people, and to light up the lakes and meadows.

At last Wabun grew lonely in his home in the eastern sky, and he began
to watch day by day for a beautiful maiden who walked upon the prairie
gathering grasses for her baskets. And Wabun wooed her with his soft
breezes, and with sweet flowers, and with the songs of birds. And when
he had won her heart he changed her into a beautiful star, which he
set in his home in the heavens.

Kabibonokka, the second son, was very different from Wabun. He was
cold and cruel, and he was glad that the north wind had been given to
him. When he sent his winds across the earth the leaves upon the trees
turned to crimson and gold, and were very lovely, but they whirled and
twisted in the wind and said to each other, “Our days will soon be
at an end. We shall soon turn dry and brown and fall to the earth.
Kabibonokka laughs when we put on our beautiful colors.”

[Illustration: “WABUN WOOED HER WITH HIS SOFT BREEZES ... AND THE
    SONGS OF BIRDS”]

Then Kabibonokka sent icy blasts, and the waters of the lakes froze,
and the snows fell, and the winds came through the door of the tepee,
and life became hard for the people. And Kabibonokka laughed, and his
laugh was like the whistling of the wind through the bare tree tops.
The fish were deep beneath the frozen waters; the snow covered the
tracks of the animals of the forest. Food was scarce, and hard to
obtain.

Only the bravest of the Indians could fish and hunt when the north
wind blew its coldest. Shingebis was one of these, and he never lacked
for fish or fuel.

“I will get the best of Shingebis,” said Kabibonokka, and so one
morning he went to Shingebis’ tepee. And Shingebis asked him to eat
with him, and he gave him a meal of fish. And Kabibonokka ate
greedily. But the warmth of Shingebis’ tepee was too great for him,
and he had to go away. As he left he tried to put out the tepee fire,
but Shingebis blew upon it and it burned more brightly, so that
Kabibonokka had to hasten. In revenge he froze the waters more deeply,
but Shingebis only laughed, for no weather was too cold for him to
find fish for his dinner.

But the Indians did not love Kabibonokka, for he was cold and cruel.

Shawondasee was not like either of his brothers. He was fat and lazy.
He loved to lie upon green banks under shady trees. He loved the sweet
flowers, and the warmth of the South Land. He was far too lazy to send
strong winds such as came from the North Land. His breezes were soft
and traveled slowly, and they were sweet with the perfume of southern
groves and meadows.

Shawondasee, like his brother Wabun, saw a beautiful maiden that he
loved. Do you remember the story? Her hair was of golden yellow, and
she nodded and swayed in the breeze. Her home was in the meadows, and
Shawondasee looked for her day by day, and wafted sweet odors and fair
flowers to her, and he won her love, even as Wabun won the love of the
prairie maiden. But he was too sluggish to go himself to win her, and
to bring her to his home in the South Land. Instead he said to
himself each morning, “To-day I will go and seek the golden-haired
maiden, and bring her to my home,” but each day he was too indolent.

The days went by, and at last the golden hair of the maiden turned
silvery white, and when Shawondasee saw this he heaved a great sigh,
so great a sigh that it reached even to the maiden, and lo, all the
silver white of her hair was scattered over the meadow!

So Shawondasee still lives alone in the South Land, and sends gentle
sighing breezes to the meadows of the North.




Transcriber’s Note

Minor punctuation errors have been repaired.

Pukwudjee was also spelled as Puckwudjee in the table of contents and
illustration captions. These have been amended to Pukwudjee for
consistency with the story _The Pukwudjee and the Morning Star_.

On page 15, be amended to he--... but neither could he break ...

The list of other books by the author and the frontispiece have been
moved to follow the title page. Other illustrations have been moved
where necessary so that they are not in the middle of a paragraph.