Why the Kingfisher Always Wears a
War-Bonnet
Autumn nights on
the upper Missouri river in Montana are
indescribably beautiful, and under their
spell imagination is a constant
companion to him who lives in
wilderness, lending strange, weird
echoes to the voice of man or wolf, and
unnatural shapes in shadow to
commonplace forms.
The moon had not
yet climbed the distant mountain range
to look down on the humbler lands when I
started for War Eagle's lodge; and
dimming the stars in its course, the
milky way stretched across the jewelled
sky. "The wolf's trail," the Indians
call this filmy streak that foretells
fair weather, and tonight it promised
much, for it seemed plainer and brighter
than ever before.
"How - how!"
greeted War Eagle, making the sign for
me to be seated near him, as I entered
his lodge. Then he passed me his pipe
and together we smoked until the
children came.
Entering quietly,
they seated themselves in exactly the
same positions they had occupied on the
previous evenings, and patiently waited
in silence. Finally War Eagle laid the
pipe away and said: "Ho! Little Buffalo
Calf, throw a big stick on the fire and
I will tell you why the Kingfisher wears
a war bonnet."
The boy did as he
was bidden. The sparks jumped toward the
smokehole and the blaze lighted up the
lodge until it was bright as daytime,
when War Eagle continued:
"You have often
seen Kingfisher at his fishing along the
rivers, I know; and you have heard him
laugh in his queer way, for he laughs a
good deal when he flies. That same laugh
nearly cost him his life once, as you
will see. I am sure none could see the
Kingfisher without noticing his great
headdress, but not many know how he came
by it because it happened so long ago
that most men have forgotten.
"It was one day in
the wintertime when OLD-man and the Wolf
were hunting. The snow covered the land
and ice was on all of the rivers. It was
so cold that OLD-man wrapped his robe
close about himself and his breath
showed white in the air. Of course the
Wolf was not cold; wolves never get cold
as men do. Both OLD-man and the Wolf
were hungry for they had travelled far
and had killed no meat. OLD-man was
complaining and grumbling, for his heart
is not very good. It is never well to
grumble when we are doing our best,
because it will do no good and makes us
weak in our hearts. When our hearts are
weak our heads sicken and our strength
goes away. Yes, it is bad to grumble.
"When the sun was
getting low OLD-man and the Wolf came to
a great river. On the ice that covered
the water, they saw four fat Otters
playing.
"'There is meat,'
said the Wolf; 'wait here and I will try
to catch one of those fellows.'
"'No! No!' cried
OLD-man, 'do not run after the Otter on
the ice, because there are airholes in
all ice that covers rivers, and you may
fall in the water and die.' OLD-man
didn't care much if the Wolf did drown.
He was afraid to be left alone and
hungry in the snow - that was all.
"'Ho!' said the
Wolf, 'I am swift of foot and my teeth
are white and sharp. What chance has an
Otter against me? Yes, I will go,' and
he did.
"Away ran the
Otters with the Wolf after them, while
OLD-man stood on the bank and shivered
with fright and cold. Of course the Wolf
was faster than the Otter, but he was
running on the ice, remember, and
slipping a good deal. Nearer and nearer
ran the Wolf. In fact he was just about
to seize an Otter, when SPLASH!--into an
airhole all the Otters went. Ho ! the
Wolf was going so fast he couldn't stop,
and SWOW! into the airhole he went like
a badger after mice, and the current
carried him under the ice. The Otters
knew that hole was there. That was their
country and they were running to reach
that same hole all the time, but the
Wolf didn't know that.
"Old-man saw it
all and began to cry and wail as women
do. Ho! but he made a great fuss. He ran
along the bank of the river, stumbling
in the snowdrifts, and crying like a
woman whose child is dead; but it was
because he didn't want to be left in
that country alone that he cried - not
because he loved his brother, the Wolf.
On and on he ran until he came to a
place where the water was too swift to
freeze, and there he waited and watched
for the Wolf to come out from under the
ice, crying and wailing and making an
awful noise, for a man.
"Well, right there
is where the thing happened. You see,
Kingfisher can't fish through the ice
and he knows it, too; so he always finds
places like the one OLD-man found. He
was there that day, sitting on the limb
of a birchtree, watching for fishes, and
when OLD- man came near to Kingfisher's
tree, crying like an old woman, it
tickled the Fisher so much that he
laughed that queer, chattering laugh.
"OLD-man heard him
and - Ho! but he was angry. He looked
about to see who was laughing at him and
that made Kingfisher laugh again, longer
and louder than before. This time
OLD-man saw him and SWOW! he threw his
warclub at Kingfisher; tried to kill the
bird for laughing. Kingfisher ducked so
quickly that OLD-man's club just grazed
the feathers on his head, making them
stand up straight.
"'There,' said
OLD-man, 'I'll teach you to laugh at me
when I'm sad. Your feathers are standing
up on the top of your head now and they
will stay that way, too. As long as you
live you must wear a headdress, to pay
for your laughing, and all your children
must do the same.
"This was long,
long ago, but the Kingfishers have not
forgotten, and they all wear war
bonnets, and always will as long as
there are Kingfishers." |