Old Man and the Fox
I am sure that the
plains Indian never made nor used the
stone arrowhead. I have heard white men
say that they had seen Indians use them;
but I have never found an Indian that
ever used them himself, or knew of their
having been used by his people. Thirty
years ago I knew Indians, intimately,
who were nearly a hundred years old, who
told me that the stone arrowhead had
never been in use in their day, nor had
their fathers used them in their own
time. Indians find these arrow points
just as they find the stone mauls and
hammers, which I have seen them use
thousands of times, but they do not make
them any more than they make the stone
mauls and hammers. In the old days, both
the head of the lance and the point of
the arrow were of bone; even knives were
of bone, but some other people surely
made the arrow-points that are scattered
throughout the United States and Europe,
I am told.
One night I asked
War Eagle if he had ever known the use,
by Indians, of the stone arrowhead, and
he said he had not. He told me that just
across the Canadian line there was a
small lake, surrounded by trees, wherein
there was an island covered with long
reeds and grass. All about the edge of
this island were willows that grew
nearly to the water, but intervening
there was a narrow beach of stones.
Here, he said, the stone arrowheads had
been made by little ghost-people who
lived there, and he assured me that he
had often seen these strange little
beings when he was a small boy. Whenever
his people were camped by this lake the
old folks waked the children at daybreak
to see the inhabitants of this strange
island; and always when a noise was
made, or the sun came up, the little
people hid away. Often he had seen their
heads above the grass and tiny willows,
and his grandfather had told him that
all the stone arrow-heads had been made
on that island, and in war had been shot
all over the world, by magic bows.
"No," he said, "I
shall not lie to you, my friend. I never
saw those little people shoot an arrow,
but there are so many arrows there, and
so many pieces of broken ones, that it
proves that my grandfather was right in
what he told me. Besides, nobody could
ever sleep on that island."
I have heard a
legend wherein OLD-man, in the
beginning, killed an animal for the
people to eat, and then instructed them
to use the ribs of the dead brute to
make knives and arrow- points. I have
seen lance-heads, made from shank bones,
that were so highly polished that they
resembled pearl, and I have in my
possession bone arrow-points such as
were used long ago. Indians do not
readily forget their tribal history, and
I have photographed a war-bonnet, made
of twisted buffalo hair, that was
manufactured before the present owner's
people had, or ever saw, the horse. The
owner of this bonnet has told me that
the stone arrowhead was never used by
Indians, and that he knew that
ghost-people made and used them when the
world was young.
The bow of the
plains Indian was from thirty-six to
forty-four inches long, and made from
the wood of the choke-cherry tree.
Sometimes bows were made from the
service (or sarvice) berry bush, and
this bush furnished the best material
for arrows. I have seen hickory bows
among the plains Indians, too, and these
were longer and always straight, instead
of being fashioned like Cupid's weapon.
These hickory bows came from the East,
of course, and through trading, reached
the plains country. I have also seen
bows covered with the skins of the
bull-snake, or wound with sinew, and
bows have been made from the horns of
the elk, in the early days, after a long
course of preparation.
Before Lewis and
Clark crossed this vast country, the
Blackfeet had traded with the Hudson Bay
Company, and steel knives and
lance-heads, bearing the names of
English makers, still remain to testify
to the relations existing, in those
days, between those famous traders and
men of the Piegan, Blood, and Blackfoot
tribes, although it took many years for
traders on our own side of the line to
gain their friendship. Indeed, trappers
and traders blamed the Hudson Bay
Company for the feel- ing of hatred held
by the three tribes of Black-feet for
the "Americans"; and there is no doubt
that they were right to some extent,
although the killing of the Blackfoot
warrior by Captain Lewis in 1805 may
have been largely to blame for the
trouble. Certain it is that for many
years after the killing, the Blackfeet
kept traders and trappers on the dodge
unless they were Hudson Bay men, and in
1810 drove the "American" trappers and
traders from their fort at Three-Forks.
It was early when
we gathered in War Eagle's lodge, the
children and I, but the storytelling
began at once.
"Now I shall tell
you a story that will show you how
little OLD-man cared for the welfare of
others," said War Eagle.
"It happened in
the fall, this thing I shall tell you,
and the day was warm and bright. OLD-man
and his brother the Red Fox were
travelling together for company. They
were on a hillside when OLD-Man said: 'I
am hungry. Can you not kill a Rabbit or
something for us to eat? The way is
long, and I am getting old, you know.
You are swift of foot and cunning, and
there are Rabbits among these rocks.'
"'Ever since
morning came I have watched for food,
but the moon must be wrong or something,
for I see nothing that is good to eat,'
replied the Fox. 'Besides that, my
medicine is bad and my heart is weak.
You are great, and I have heard you can
do most anything. Many snows have known
your footprints, and the snows make us
all wise. I think you are the one to
help, not I.'
"'Listen,
brother,' said OLD-man, 'I have neither
bow nor lance--nothing to use in
hunting. Your weapons are ever with
you--your great nose and your sharp
teeth. Just as we came up this hill I
saw two great Buffalo-Bulls. You were
not looking, but I saw them, and if you
will do as I want you to we shall have
plenty of meat. This is my scheme; I
shall pull out all of your hair, leaving
your body white and smooth, like that of
the fish. I shall leave only the white
hair that grows on the tip of your tail,
and that will make you funny to look at.
Then you are to go before the Bulls and
commence to dance and act foolish. Of
course the Bulls will laugh at you, and
as soon as they get to laughing you must
act sillier than ever. That will make
them laugh so hard that they will fall
down and laugh on the ground. When they
fall, I shall come upon them with my
knife and kill them. Will you do as I
suggest, brother, or will you starve?'
"'What! Pull out
my hair? I shall freeze with no hair on
my body, OLD-man. No--I will not suffer
you to pull my hair out when the winter
is so near,' cried the Fox.
"'Ho! It is
vanity, my brother, not fear of
freezing. If you will do this we shall
have meat for the winter, and a fire to
keep us warm. See, the wind is in the
south and warm. There is no danger of
freezing. Come, let me do it,' replied
OLD-man.
"'Well--if you are
sure that I won't freeze, all right,'
said the Fox, 'but I'll bet I'll be
sorry.'
"So Old-man pulled
out all of the Fox's hair, leaving only
the white tip that grew near the end of
his tail. Poor little Red Fox shivered
in the warm breeze that OLD-man told
about, and kept telling OLD-man that the
hair-pulling hurt badly. Finally OLD-man
finished the job and laughed at the Fox,
saying: 'Why, you make me laugh, too.
Now go and dance before the Bulls, and I
shall watch and be ready for my part of
the scheme.'
"Around the hill
went the poor Red Fox and found the
Bulls. Then he began to dance before
them as OLD-man had told him. The Bulls
took one look at the hairless Fox and
began to laugh. My! How they did laugh,
and then the Red Fox stood upon his hind
legs and danced some more; acted
sillier, as OLD-man had told him. Louder
and louder laughed the Bulls, until they
fell to the ground with their breath
short from the laughing. The Red Fox
kept at his antics lest the Bulls get up
before OLD-man reached them; but soon he
saw him coming, with a knife in his
hand.
"Running up to the
Bulls, OLD-man plunged his knife into
their hearts, and they died. Into the
ground ran their blood, and then OLD-
man laughed and said: 'Ho, I am the
smart one. I am the real hunter. I
depend on my head for
meat--ha!--ha!-ha!'
"Then OLD-man
began to dress and skin the Bulls, and
he worked hard and long. In fact it was
nearly night when he got the work all
done.
"Poor little Red
Fox had stood there all the time, and
OLD-man never noticed that the wind had
changed and was coming from the north.
Yes, poor Red Fox stood there and spoke
no word; said nothing at all, even when
OLD-man had finished.
"'Hi, there, you!
what's the matter with you? Are you
sorry that we have meat? Say, answer
me!'
"But the Red Fox
was frozen stiff--was dead. Yes, the
north wind had killed him while OLD-man
worked at the skinning. The Fox had been
caught by the north wind naked, and was
dead. OLD-man built a fire and warmed
his hands; that was all he cared for the
Red Fox, and that is all he cared for
anybody. He might have known that no
person could stand the north wind
without a robe; but as long as he was
warm himself--that was all he wanted.
"That is all of
that story. Tomorrow night I shall tell
you why the birch tree wears those
slashes in its bark. That was some of
OLD-man's work, too. Ho!" |