Retrospection
It was evening in
the bad-lands, and the red sun had
slipped behind the far-off hills. The
sundown breeze bent the grasses in the
coulees and curled tiny dust-clouds on
the barren knolls. Down in a gulch a
clear, cool creek dallied its way toward
the Missouri, where its water, bitter as
gall, would be lost in the great stream.
Here, where Nature forbids man to work
his will, and where the she wolf dens
and kills to feed her litter, an aged
Indian stood near the scattered bones of
two great buffalo-bulls. Time had
bleached the skulls and whitened the old
warrior's hair, but in the solitude he
spoke to the bones as to a boyhood
friend:
"Ho! Buffalo, the
years are long since you died, and your
tribe, like mine, was even then
shrinking fast, but you did not know it;
would not believe it; though the signs
did not lie. My father and his father
knew your people, and when one night you
went away, we thought you did but hide
and would soon come back. The snows have
come and gone many times since then, and
still your people stay away. The
young-men say that the great herds have
gone to the Sand Hills, and that my
father still has meat. They have told me
that the white man, in his greed, has
killed - and not for meat - all the
Buffalo that our people knew. They have
said that the great herds that made the
ground tremble as they ran were slain in
a few short years by those who needed
not. Can this be true, when ever since
there was a world, our people killed
your kind, and still left herds that
grew in numbers until they often blocked
the rivers when they passed? Our people
killed your kind that they themselves
might live, but never did they go to war
against you. Tell me, do your people
hide. or are the young-men speaking
truth, and have your people gone with
mine to Sand Hill shadows to come back
no more?"
"Ho! red man - my
people all have gone. The young-men tell
the truth and all my tribe have gone to
feed among the shadow-hills, and your
father still has meat. My people suffer
from his arrows and his lance, yet there
the herds increase as they did here,
until the white man came and made his
war upon us without cause or need. I was
one of the last to die, and with my
brother here fled to this forbidding
country that I might hide; but one day
when the snow was on the world, a white
murderer followed on our trail, and with
his noisy weapon sent our spirits to
join the great shadow-herds. Meat? No,
he took no meat, but from our quivering
flesh he tore away the robes that Napa
gave to make us warm, and left us for
the Wolves. That night they came, and
quarrelling, fighting, snapping among
themselves, left but our bones to greet
the morning sun. These bones the Coyotes
and the weaker ones did drag and scrape,
and scrape again, until the last of
flesh or muscle disappeared. Then the
winds came and sang - and all was done." |