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INDIAN MYTHOLOGY.

THE PAWNEES.

Wanderings in Kansas and Nebraska.--Origin.--The word "Pani."--Imitation of wolves.--Bands.--Tuhk-pah-huks-taht.-- Skidi-rah-ru.--Tuh-wa-hok-a-sha.--Tu-hi-'ts-pi-yet.--Hunting in ancient times.--Weapons.--Utensils.--Government.--Dress.-- Lodges.--Music.--Courtship and marriage.--Religious ceremonies.-- The Buffalo Dance.--Departure for semi-annual buffalo hunt.--The surround.--Ti-r?-wa, the Pawnee Deity.--The Na-h?-rac.--Sacrifices. --The wonderful horse.--Homes of the Nu-h?-rac.--The Nu-h?-rac doctors.--Medicine men and priests.--Belief in a prehistoric race. --Destruction of the giants.--Human sacrifices.--A Legend of Kansas.--Pit-a-le-shar'-u.--Hostilities against other nations.--Villages of the Iowas and Sacs.--War with the Iowas, 1839.--Battle amid the sunflowers.--Sale of Pawnee lands.--Removal to the Indian Territory.--Success in agriculture. 34

Early home.--Wanderings in the Mississippi Basin.--Present location.--Origin of name.--Meaning of word "Dakota."--Pantomime.--Divisions of nation.--Relation of chief to people.--Disposition of bodies of the dead.--Eagle Eye and Scarlet Dove.--Slavery of women.--Vanity of men.--Language of the feather.--Decoration of the person.--Plural marriage.--Story of Anepetusa.--Belief in four souls.--A typical prayer.--Omens.--Worship.--Animals in Dakota theology.--O-an-tay-hee.--The creation.--Hay-o-kah.--Taku-shkan-shkan.--Wa-keen-yan.--Unk-tay-he. --Chah-o-ter-dah.--Whitte-kah-gah.--Wa-hun-de-dan.--Fairies.-- Giants.--Giant's party.--Feasts.--The Wa-keen.--Initiation of the medicine men.--War parties.--War Dance.--Sun Dance.--Moral code.-- Degree of manhood.--Incidents in the Life of Ta-ton-ka-I-o-ton-ka. --Spotted Tail and Red Cloud.--Betrothal and death of daughter of Spotted Tail.--Water Carrier, the wife of Lone Elk.--Present condition of the Sioux. 67

THE KAWS AND OSAGES.

Origin.--Manners and customs.--Savage proclivities.--Village of American Chief.--Village of Fool Chief.--Removal to Council Grove.--The Victory that made Wa-hon-ga-shee a famous Chief.--The War Dance.--Paying off old scores.--Osages and Kaws on police duty.--Superstitions.--Funeral ceremonies.--Creation story of the Osages.--Territory.--Cessions.--Feasts.--Present condition. 89

THE DELAWARES.

Lineage.--Language.--The term "Lenape."--Subjugation by the Iroquois.--Peace treaty with William Penn.--Migrations.--Legends preserved by missionaries.--The virgin who fell from heaven.--Kikeron.--The tortoise in Algonquin pictography.--Symbol of the earth.--The pristine age.--The earth submerged.--The ancient turtle.--Rescue of the survivors.--Land supported by a turtle.--First home of the Lenape.--Travels and conquests.--Land of giants.--Fortifications of the enemy.--Mounds.--Divisions of the nation.--Legend of the Hairless Bear.--Pictograph system.--Rafinesque.--Walam Olum.--Wanderings of the Delawares.--Tamenend.--The Lover's Leap.--Onoko.--Lenape in Kansas.--The Battle of the Plains.--Removal to the Indian Territory. 103

THE WYANDOTS.

Origin.--Location at the time of the discovery of America.--Alliance with the Senecas.--Termination of peace.--Hatred of the Iroquois.--Settlement at Detroit.--Settlement in Ohio and Michigan.--Clans.--Government.--Religion.--Gods.--Prayer of the Huron.--Legend of Sayadio.--The White Panther.--Hurons leaders in the councils of nations.--Keepers of the Council Fire.--Wampum belts.--Corn Dance.--Clan names.--Visions of the Wyandot maiden.--Wyandots in the War of 1812.--Roundhead.--Warrow.--Walk-in-the-Water.--Big Tree.--War with Cherokees--Chief Splitlog.--Last religious feast and dance of the Wyandots.--William Walker.--Silas Armstrong.--Matthew Walker.--Governor Walker.--Matthias Splitlog.--Emigration to Kansas.--Intelligence and education.--Accomplishments.--Belle of the nation.--Sense of humor.--Elder Dennison and John Grayeyes.--The Triumph of Chudaquana over the Power of Witchcraft.--Romance of a Wyandot girl.--Present location of the people.--Tribal relations.--Absorption by the white race. 127

THE POTTAWATOMIES.

Descent.--Alliances.--Branches.--Location.--Part in War of 1812.--Suna-we-wone.--Treaty of peace.--Cessions.--Emigration to Kansas.--Present location.--Belief in Kitchenonedo and Matchemondo.--First inhabitants of the earth.--Submersion.--New World.--Legend of the five young men.--Menweshma.--Encounter with the Pawnees.--Wa-baun-see.--Story of the Flat-Boat.--Defeat by the Osages.--Revenge upon the Osage chief.--Wa-baun-see's journey to Washington.--Death. 155

THE SHAWNEES.

First emigrant tribe in Kansas.--Ancient home of the nation.--Defeat by the Iroquois.--Flight southward.--Return.--Settlement near Cape Girardeau.--Removal to Kansas.--Removal to the Indian Territory.--Shawnees of Algonquin stock.--Gypsies of the wilderness.--Creation theory.--Doctrine of pre-natal existence.--An incident of war with the Pawnees.--Belief in descent from one of the lost tribes of Israel.--Holy of Holies.--Language.--Adventures of a trader.--Maun?, the Chippewa Girl.--A Fragment of History from the War of the Races.--Chinwa, the White Warrior.--The Tragic Death of the Son of Chief Lay-law-she-kaw. 167

Scene in the Kansas Valley Frontispiece

A Pawnee Buffalo Hunt 40

Pit-a-le-shar'-u 64

Ta-ton-ka-I-yo-ton-ka 80

Sioux Infant 88

Wa-hon-ga-shee 96

Ni-co-man 114

Tecumseh 190

The Shawnee Prophet 202

Che-la-tha 210

"Ye whose hearts are fresh and simple, Who have faith in God and Nature, Who believe, that in all ages, Every human heart is human, That in even savage bosoms, There are longings, yearnings, strivings, For the good they comprehend not, That the feeble hands and helpless, Groping blindly in the darkness, Touch God's right hand in that darkness, And are lifted up and strengthened;-- Listen to this simple story."

INTRODUCTION.

A legend, according to Webster, is any story, be it truth or fiction, which dates back to early days. In this connection, it may be of interest to the reader to know that the stories of adventure in this volume are founded upon real events; but, wherever it has seemed best, names have been changed. In committing to paper the histories of Maune?, the Chippewa girl, and Henry Rogers, there has been practically no deviation from the facts as related by their descendants.

The incidents described in the last story were narrated by the daughter of an Indian agent, who lived many years with the Shawnees. The writer has spent a portion of her life in the West, and having been located for a number of years in an old mission town, has witnessed the bean dance, the corn dance and the war dance. Her small strength has been exerted, more than once, to assist in beating back the edges of a great fire, which threatened to creep over the narrow strip of plowed ground outside the fences enclosing a prairie home. Reliable information has been obtained through conversation with old settlers and their families. An army officer, whose long life in the Indian country renders his statements of great value, detailed many facts concerning the Sioux. Interviews with the natives and their descendants have brought out strange traditions and superstitions. The works of Henry R. Schoolcraft--regarding the habits, customs and languages of the aborigines,--the writings of George Bird Grinnell and Daniel G. Brinton have proved exceedingly helpful.

Although statistics show, within the last few years, an apparent increase of the Indian population of the United States, comparatively few included therein, are of purely Indian extraction. The red race, as a separate people, is fading from the earth; and there will come a time when the mythology of America will be almost as eagerly studied as that of Greece and Rome.

The general public has an erroneous idea of the Indian of the present time. He has passed through the first period--that of wildness and barbaric splendor,--and, emerging from the second epoch--the state of drunken semi-civilization,--has entered upon a career of greater mental activity. With the exception of a few strong inherited tendencies, he now differs but little from his paler-faced brother. The prevailing notion concerning the natives has been formed from the worst class--the idle, uncleanly beggars. It is unjust to judge a whole people by the most degraded specimens. Through intermarriage, the remnants of the aborigines are rapidly becoming a part of the white race and engrafting upon it, not only their peculiarities of temperament but also their strength and determination.

It is a source of regret to those who are awake to the knowledge that there is a valuable field of literature in Indian folklore, that so little has been recorded. Even the best libraries contain few works upon the subject.

Inspired with a desire to contribute an atom to this slowly accumulating literature; to preserve the stories which herein appear in print for the first time; and to awaken a deeper interest in the old, oft-recounted traditions--the author, trusting to the indulgence of the public, ventures to submit the following.

LEGENDS OF THE KAW.

INDIAN MYTHOLOGY.

The history of Kansas has been of peculiar interest to the world at large, by reason of the struggles of ante-bellum days. The adventures of John Brown of Osawatomie and the achievements of General Lane, Governor Robinson, and other heroes of that period have formed the nucleus of many a story and song. All honor to the men who labored so successfully in the cause of freedom! There is another, equally brave, though less fortunate, race that wandered over the rolling prairies of the Sunflower State and camped along its rivers; a race stern, taciturn, and ever ready to do battle for home and liberty. Like the buffalo, former monarch of the plains, it has gradually diminished in numbers. Extinction or amalgamation is now a question of only a few brief years. This nation furnishes a romantic background, full of rich though somber color, to the later record of the great West.

There was an idea, current among the Indians who roamed over the central portion of the United States, that at one time in the long past, the rivers of the Mississippi basin filled the entire valley, and only great elevations were visible. Geology substantiates this teaching. The theory of a dual soul approached very close to the teachings of modern psychologists. While one soul was supposed to remain in the body, its companion was free to depart on excursions during sleep. After the death of the material man, it went to the Indian elysium and might, if desirous, return, in time, to earth, to be born again.

A description of heaven--by Wampasha, an Iowa Indian--was found in the diary of Reverend S. M. Irvin, a devoted missionary among the Iowas and Sacs. It reads:

"The Big Village is situated near the great water, toward the sunrise, and not far from the heads of the Mississippi River. None go there until after they die. A smart person can make the journey in three or four days; if, however, his heart be not right at death, the journey will be prolonged and attended with difficulties and stormy weather till he reaches the land of rest. Infants, dying, are carried by messengers sent for them; the old or infirm are borne upon horses; they have horses, plenty, and fine grass, and infirmities will all be healed in that village. The blind will receive new eyes; they have plenty of good eyes and ears there. Good people will never die again, but the bad may die three or four times and then turn into some bird."

Father Allouez, one of the first missionaries among the Algonquins, entered a village never before visited by a white man. He was invited to a council, and the old men, gathering around him, said:

"It is well, Blackrobe, that thou dost visit us; thou are a Manito; we give thee to smoke. The Iroquois are devouring us. Have mercy upon us. Hear us, O Manito! we give thee to smoke. Let the earth yield us corn; the rivers give us fish; sickness not slay us; nor hunger so torment us. Hear us, O Manito! we give thee to smoke."

The character of a nation is engraven upon its literature, which, like a mirror, reflects the thoughts, emotions and progress of a people. The folklore of the North American Indians was their literature. The myth, grounded upon the unchanging laws of the universe, was conscious, however vaguely, of great principles that are forever true. Physical existence formed the basis of each important fable. The earth, air, water and other elements were personified. Every image had its moral significance.

Mythology has been said to be simply the idea of God, expressed in symbol, figure and narrative. That of primitive America was founded upon the conviction that there was, in pre-historic times, another world inhabited by a people strong and peaceable. So long as harmony reigned, comfort and happiness were theirs, but when discord entered this Eden, conflict succeeded conflict, until, to punish his disobedient children, the Master of Life transformed them, one by one, into trees, plants, rocks and all the living creatures. It was said that each person became the outward embodiment of what he had previously been within himself. For instance, from the head of one sprang an owl, from another a buzzard, a third became an eagle, and in this manner was the present world with its three kingdoms, vegetable, animal and mineral, evolved.

Another tradition says that in the days of turmoil, a powerful man, or demi-god, ran to the place where the earth and sky meet, and with a lighted torch, set fire to the tall grass, igniting the earth itself. Those worthy of preservation were caught up to a place of safety. Sparks, rising from the flames, and finding lodgment high above, became the twinkling "sky-eyes," which, in the language of the white man, are called stars.

After the conflagration had subsided, one whose duty in the upper sphere had been to provide water, carried it in a basket; and as she walked, drop after drop fell through upon the parched region below, causing it to revive. Awakened Nature blossomed into new beauty, and all who had escaped the terrible fire fiend, returned to take possession of the country. The Water-Maiden still carries the basket; and its contents, which never grow less, still fall in gentle showers, to refresh the land.

There are numerous narratives in which heat, cold, light and darkness appear as leading actors. A powerful god of the Algonquins was the maker of the earth, Michabou , toward whom the Spirit of Waters was ever unfriendly.

In Mexico, the worship of the sun and other heavenly bodies was practiced, sacrifices of men and women with white faces and hair being particularly acceptable.

Almost all aboriginal people believed that dogs occupied a peculiar position with regard to the moon, possibly because of the canine habit of baying at that planet.

The bird and the serpent were especially honored. The former, no doubt, because of its power of floating through the air and the latter for its subtlety. The Hurons told the early Jesuits of a serpent with a horn capable of penetrating rocks, trees and hills--everything it encountered. The person fortunate enough to obtain a portion for his medicine bag was sure of good luck. The Hurons informed the missionaries that none of their own people had ever seen the monster; but the Algonquins occasionally sold them small portions of its horn for a very high consideration. The Shawnees, who had unquestionably practiced on the credulity of their neighbors, led roving lives and had become familiar with the myths of many nations. It is not unlikely that the serpent fable originated with the Creeks and Cherokees, who thought the immense snake dwelt in the waters. Tradition says that old people stood on the shores and sang sacred songs. The creature came to the surface, showing its horns. The magicians cut one off and continued to chant. The serpent again appeared, and the other horn was secured and borne away in triumph.

These tribes asserted that in the fastnesses of their mountains was the carefully guarded palace of the Prince of Rattlesnakes. On the royal head shone a marvelous jewel. Warriors and priests endeavored in vain to get possession of the glittering trophy. Finally, one more thoughtful than the rest encased himself in leather, passed through the writhing, hissing court, unharmed by poisoned fangs; tore the coveted charm from the head of the prince, and carried it home. The gem was ever preserved with great care and brought forth only on state occasions.

The story of Hiawatha , which Schoolcraft gives as an Iroquois legend, is found among the traditions of many tribes, the leading character being called by different names. In the East he was known as Glooskap, about the lakes as Manabozho, in other localities as Chiabo; but, as in certain Aryan myths--of which this may be one--the principal features of the story are the same in all nations. Their hero came to them as did Buddha to the East Indian, and Christ to those prepared to receive the gospel, bearing messages of peace, good will to men; teaching justice, patience, conformity to truth, and to the laws of the red man; instructing them in various manual arts, and destroying hideous monsters that lurked in the woods and hills, or lay concealed amid the tall prairie grass. He lived as a warrior, hunted, fished and battled for right, changing when necessary, to any animal or plant. While seated in his white stone canoe on one of the Great Lakes, he was swallowed by the King of Fishes. Undaunted, he beat its heart with a stone club until it was dead, and when birds of prey had eaten the flesh, and light shone through, climbed out with the magic boat.

The struggle with fire-serpents, in order to reach the wicked Pearl Feather, whom he fought the livelong day, has been recounted again and again. How a woodpecker flew overhead, screaming "Shoot at his scalp-lock!" How, obeying this admonition, Hiawatha saw the enemy fall in the throes of death, and dipping his finger in the blood, touched the bird, and to this day a red mark is found on the head of the woodpecker. He slew the Prince of Serpents, traveled from village to village performing good works, and having wedded a beautiful Dakota woman, presented a perfect example of faithfulness and devotion. A league of thirteen nations was formed through the influence of this remarkable man; and as he stood among the assembled chiefs, addressing them with supernatural eloquence, encouraging them in a voice of sweetness and power to lives of rectitude, the summons came. Promising to return at some future time, Hiawatha stepped into his white stone canoe and was lifted heavenward, the air trembling with soft music as he floated from sight. To this final pledge are attributable many ghost dances and outbreaks against the whites, notably that at Pine Ridge Agency, when the coming of the Messiah was expected with full confidence.

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