Blackfoot Lodge Tales eBook

George Bird Grinnell
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 372 pages of information about Blackfoot Lodge Tales.

Blackfoot Lodge Tales eBook

George Bird Grinnell
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 372 pages of information about Blackfoot Lodge Tales.

Kyi!" said Mik-a’pi.  “For days and nights I have heard your mourning, and I too have silently mourned.  My heart has been very sad.  Your husband was my near friend, and now he is dead and no relations are left to avenge him.  So now, I say, I will take the load from your hearts.  I will avenge him.  I will go to war and take many scalps, and when I return, they shall be yours.  You shall paint your faces black, and we will all rejoice that Fox-eye is avenged.”

When the people heard that Mik-a’pi was going to war, many warriors wished to join him, but he refused them; and when he had taken a medicine sweat, and got a medicine-pipe man to make medicine for him during his absence, he started from the camp one evening, just after sunset.  It is only the foolish warrior who travels in the day; for other war parties may be out, or some camp-watcher sitting on a hill may see him from far off, and lay plans to destroy him.  Mik-a’pi was not one of these.  He was brave but cautious, and he had strong medicine.  Some say that he was related to the ghosts, and that they helped him.  Having now started to war against the Snakes, he travelled in hidden places, and at sunrise would climb a hill and look carefully in all directions, and during the long day would lie there, and watch, and take short sleeps.

Now, when Mik-a’pi had come to the Great Falls (of the Missouri), a heavy rain set in; and, seeing a hole in the rocks, he crawled in and lay down in the farther end to sleep.  The rain did not cease, and when night came he could not travel because of the darkness and storm; so he lay down to sleep again.  But soon he heard something coming into the cave toward him, and then he felt a hand laid on his breast, and he put out his hand and touched a person.  Then Mik-a’pi put the palm of his hand on the person’s breast and jerked it to and fro, and then he touched the person with the point of his finger, which, in the sign language, means, “Who are you?”

The strange person then took Mik-a’pi’s hand, and made him feel of his own right hand.  The thumb and all the fingers were closed except the forefinger, which was extended; and when Mik-a’pi touched it the person moved his hand forward with a zigzag motion, which means “Snake.”  Then Mik-a’pi was glad.  Here had come to him one of the tribe he was seeking.  But he thought it best to wait for daylight before attacking him.  So, when the Snake in signs asked him who he was, he replied, by making the sign for paddling a canoe, that he was a Pend d’Oreille, or River person.  For he knew that the Snakes and the Pend d’Oreilles were at peace.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Blackfoot Lodge Tales from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.