How the Otter Skin Became Great
Medicine
It was rather late
when we left War Eagle's lodge after
having learned why the Indians never
kill the Mice-people; and the milky way
was white and plain, dimming the stars
with its mist. The children all stopped
to say good night to little
Sees-in-the-dark, a brand-new baby
sister of Bluebird's; then they all went
to bed.
The next day the
boys played at war, just as white boys
do; and the girls played with dolls
dressed in buckskin clothes, until it
grew tiresome, when they visited
relatives until it came time for us all
to go to their grandfather's lodge. He
was smoking when we entered, but soon
laid aside the pipe and said:
"You know that the
otter skin is big medicine, no doubt.
You have noticed that our warriors wear
it sometimes and you know that we all
think it very lucky to wear the skin of
the Otter. But you don't know how it
came to be great; so I shall tell you.
"One time, long
before my grandfather was born, a
young-man of our tribe was unlucky in
everything. No woman wanted to marry
him, because he couldn't kill enough
meat to keep her in food and clothes.
Whenever he went hunting, his bow always
broke or he would lose his lance. If
these things didn't happen, his horse
would fall and hurt him. Everybody
talked about him and his bad luck, and
although he was fine-looking, he had no
close friends, because of his ill
fortune. He tried to dream and get his
medicine but no dream would come. He
grew sour and people were sorry for him
all the time. Finally his name was
changed to 'The Unlucky-one,' which
sounds bad to the ear. He used to wander
about alone a good deal, and one morning
he saw an old woman gathering wood by
the side of a River. The Unlucky-one was
about to pass the old woman when she
stopped him and asked:
"'Why are you so
sad in your handsome face? Why is that
sorry look in your fine eyes?'
"'Because,'
replied the young-man, 'I am the
Unlucky-one. Everything goes wrong with
me, always. I don't want to live any
longer, for my heart is growing wicked.'
"'Come with me,'
said the old woman, and he followed her
until she told him to sit down. Then she
said: 'Listen to me. First you must
learn a song to sing, and this is it.'
Then she sang a queer song over and over
again until the young-man had learned it
well.
"'Now do what I
tell you, and your heart shall be glad
some day.' She drew from her robe a pair
of moccasins and a small sack of dried
meat. 'Here,' she said, 'put these
moccasins on your feet and take this
sack of meat for food, for you must
travel far. Go on down this river until
you come to a great beaver village.
Their lodges will be large and
fine-looking and you will know the
village by the great size of the lodges.
When you get to the place, you must
stand still for a long time, and then
sing the song I taught you. When you
have finished the singing, a great white
Beaver, chief of all the Beavers in the
world, will come to you. He is wise and
can tell you what to do to change your
luck. After that I cannot help you; but
do what the white Beaver tells you,
without asking why. Now go, and be
brave!'
"The young-man
started at once. Long his steps were,
for he was young and strong. Far he
travelled down the river - saw many
beaver villages, too, but he did not
stop, because the lodges were not big,
as the old woman told him they would be
in the right village. His feet grew
tired for he travelled day and night
without resting, but his heart was brave
and he believed what the old woman had
told him.
"It was late on
the third day when he came to a mighty
beaver village and here the lodges were
greater than any he had ever seen
before. In the centre of the camp was a
monstrous lodge built of great sticks
and towering above the rest. All about,
the ground was neat and clean and bare
as your hand. The Un- lucky-one knew
this was the white Beaver's lodge - knew
that at last he had found the chief of
all the Beavers in the world; so he
stood still for a long time, and then
sang that song.
"Soon a great
white Beaver - white as the snows of
winter - came to him and asked: 'Why do
you sing that song, my brother? What do
you want of me? I have never heard a man
sing that song before. You must be in
trouble.'
"'I am the
Unlucky-one, ' the young-man replied. 'I
can do nothing well. I can find no woman
who will marry me. In the hunt my bow
will often break or my lance is poor. My
medicine is bad and I cannot dream. The
people do not love me, and they pity me
as they do a sick child.'
"'I am sorry for
you, ' said the white Beaver - chief of
all the Beavers in the world - 'but you
must find my brother the Coyote, who
knows where OLD-man's lodge is. The
Coyote will do your bidding if you sing
that song when you see him. Take this
stick with you, because you will have a
long journey, and with the stick you may
cross any river and not drown, if you
keep it always in your hand. That is all
I can do for you, myself.'
"On down the river
the Unlucky-one travelled and the sun
was low in the west on the fourth day,
when he saw the Coyote on a hillside
near by. After looking at Coyote for a
long time, the young-man commenced to
sing the song the old woman had taught
him. When he had finished the singing,
the Coyote came up close and asked:
"'What is the
matter? Why do you sing that song? I
never heard a man sing it before. What
is it you want of me?'
"Then the
Unlucky-one told the Coyote what he had
told the white Beaver, and showed the
stick the Beaver-chief had given him, to
prove it.
"'I am hungry,
too,' said the Unlucky-one, 'for I have
eaten all the dried meat the old woman
gave me.'
"'Wait here,' said
the Coyote, 'my brother the Wolf has
just killed a fat Doe, and perhaps he
will give me a little of the meat when I
tell him about you and your troubles.'
"Away went the
Coyote to beg for meat, and while he was
gone the young-man bathed his tired feet
in a cool creek. Soon the Coyote came
back with meat, and young-man built a
fire and ate some of it, even before it
was warm, for he was starving. When he
had finished the Coyote said:
"'Now I shall take
you to OLD-man's lodge, come.'
"They started,
even though it was getting dark. Long
they travelled without stopping - over
plains and mountains - through great
forests and across rivers, until they
came to a cave in the rough rocks on the
side of a mighty mountain.
"'In there,' said
the Coyote, 'you will find OLD-man and
he can tell you what you want to know.'
"The Unlucky-one
stood before the black hole in the rocks
for a long time, because he was afraid;
but when he turned to speak to the
Coyote he found himself to be alone. The
Coyote had gone about his own business -
had silently slipped away in the night.
"Slowly and
carefully the young-man began to creep
into the cave, feeling his way in the
darkness. His heart was beating like a
tom-tom at a dance. Finally he saw a
fire away back in the cave.
"The shadows
danced about the stone sides of the cave
as men say the ghosts do; and they
frightened him. But looking, he saw a
man sitting on the far side of the fire.
The man's hair was like the snow and
very long. His face was wrinkled with
the seams left by many years of life and
he was naked in the firelight that
played about him.
"Slowly the
young-man stood upon his feet and began
to walk toward the fire with great fear
in his heart. When he had reached the
place where the firelight fell upon him,
the OLD-man looked up and said:
"'How, young-man,
I am OLD-man. Why did you come here?
What is it you want?'
"Then the
Unlucky-one told OLD-man just what he
had told the old woman and the white
Beaver and the Coyote, and showed the
stick the Beaver had given him, to prove
it.
"'I will tell you
what to do. On the top of this great
mountain there live many ghost-people
and their chief is a great Owl. This Owl
is the only one who knows how you can
change your luck, and he will tell you
if you are not afraid. Take this arrow
and go among those people, without fear.
Show them you are unarmed as soon as
they see you. Now go!'
"Out into the
night went the Unlucky-one and on up the
mountain. The way was rough and the wind
blew from the north, chilling his limbs
and stinging his face, but on he went
toward the mountain-top, where the
storm- clouds sleep and the winter
always stays. Drifts of snow were piled
all about, and the wind gathered it up
and hurled it at the young- man as
though it were angry at him. The clouds
waked and gathered around him, making
the night darker and the world lonelier
than before, but on the very top of the
mountain he stopped and tried to look
through the clouds. Then he heard
strange singing all about him; but for a
long time there was no singer in sight.
Finally the clouds parted and he saw a
great circle of ghost-people with large
and ugly heads. They were seated on the
icy ground and on the drifts of snow and
on the rocks, singing a warlike song
that made the heart of the young-man
stand still, in dread. In the centre of
the circle there sat a mighty Owl -
their chief. Ho! - when the ghost-people
saw the Unlucky-one they rushed at him
with many lances and would have killed
him but the Owl-chief cried, 'Stop!'
"The young-man
folded his arms and said: 'I am unarmed
- come and see how a Blackfoot dies. I
am not afraid of you.'
"'Ho!' said the
Owl-chief, 'we kill no unarmed man. Sit
down, my son, and tell me what you want.
Why do you come here? You must be in
trouble.
"The Unlucky-one
told the Owl-chief just what he had told
the old woman and the Beaver and the
Coyote and OLD-man, and showed the stick
that the white Beaver had given him and
the arrow that OLD-man had given to him
to prove it.
"'Good,' said the
Owl-chief, 'I can help you, but first
you must help yourself. Take this bow.
It is a medicine-bow; then you will have
a bow that will not break and an arrow
that is good and straight. Now go down
this mountain until you come to a river.
It will be dark when you reach this
river, but you will know the way. There
will be a great cottonwood-tree on the
bank of the stream where you first come
to the water. At this tree, you must
turn down the stream and keep on
travelling without rest, until you hear
a splashing in the water near you. When
you hear the splashing, you must shoot
this arrow at the sound. Shoot quickly,
for if you do not you can never have any
good luck. If you do as I have told you
the splasher will be killed and you must
then take his hide and wear it always.
The skin that the splasher wears will
make you a lucky man. It will make
anybody lucky and you may tell your
people that it is so.
"'Now go, for it
is nearly day and we must sleep.'
"The young-man
took his bow and arrow and the stick the
white Beaver had given him and started
on his journey. All the day he
travelled, and far into the night. At
last he came to a river and on the bank
he saw the great cottonwood-tree, just
as the ghost Owl had told him. At the
tree the young-man turned down the
stream and in the dark easily found his
way along the bank. Very soon he heard a
great splashing in the water near him,
and - zipp - he let the arrow go at the
sound - then all was still again. He
stood and looked and listened, but for a
long time could see nothing - hear
nothing.
"Then the moon
came out from under a cloud and just
where her light struck the river, he saw
some animal floating - dead. With the
magic stick the young-man walked out on
the water, seized the animal by the legs
and drew it ashore. It was an Otter, and
the young-man took his hide, right
there.
"A Wolf waited in
the brush for the body of the Otter, and
the young-man gave it to him willingly,
because he remembered the meat the Wolf
had given the Coyote. As soon as the
young-man had skinned the Otter he threw
the hide over his shoulder and started
for his own country with a light heart,
but at the first good place he made a
camp, and slept. That night he dreamed
and all was well with him.
"After days of
travel he found his tribe again, and
told what had happened. He became a
great hunter and a great chief among us.
He married the most beautiful woman in
the tribe and was good to her always.
They had many children, and we remember
his name as one that was great in war.
That is all - Ho!" |