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Impressions of an Indian Childhood
Zitaka Sa (Gertrude Simmons Bonnin)
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Zitkala-Sa (Gertrude Bonnin). "Impressions of an
Indian Childhood." The Online Archive of Nineteenth-Century U.S.
Women's Writings. Ed. Glynis Carr. Online. Internet. Posted: Winter
1999. http://www.facstaff.bucknell.edu/gcarr/19cUSWW/ZS/IIC.html.
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I.
MY MOTHER.
A wigwam of weather-stained canvas stood at the base of some irregularly
ascending hills. A footpath wound its way gently down the sloping land
till it reached the broad river bottom; creeping through the long swamp
grasses that bent over it on either side, it came out on the edge of
the Missouri.
Here, morning, noon, and evening, my mother came to draw water from
the muddy stream for our household use. Always, when my mother started
for the river, I stopped my play to run along with her. She was only
of medium height. Often she was sad and silent, at which times her full
arched lips were compressed into hard and bitter lines, and shadows
fell under her black eyes. Then I clung to her hand and begged to know
what made the tears fall.
"Hush; my little daughter must never talk about my tears;"
and smiling through them, she patted my head and said, "Now let
me see how fast you can run to-day." Whereupon I tore away at my
highest possible speed, with my long black hair blowing in the breeze.
I was a wild little girl of seven. Loosely clad in a slip of brown buckskin,
and light-footed with a pair of soft moccasins on my feet, I was as
free as the wind that blew my hair, and no less spirited than a bounding
deer. These were my mother's pride,--my wild freedom and overflowing
spirits. She taught me no fear save that of intruding myself upon others.
Having gone many paces ahead I stopped, panting for breath, and laughing
with glee as my mother watched my every movement. I was not wholly concious
of myself, but was more keenly alive to the fire within. It was as if
I were the activity, and my hands and feet were only experiments for
my spirit to work upon.
Returning from the river, I tugged beside my mother, with my hand upon
the bucket I believed I was carrying. One time, on such a return, I
remember a bit of conversation we had. My grown-up cousin, Warea-Ziwin
(Sunflower), who was then seventeen, always went to the river alone
for water for her mother. Their wigwam was not far from ours; and I
saw her daily going to and from the river. I admired my cousin greatly.
So I said: "Mother, when I am tall as my cousin Warea-Ziwin, you
shall not have to come for water. I will do it for you."
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With a strange tremor in her voice which I could not understand, she
answered, "If the paleface does not take away from us the river
we drink."
"Mother, who is this bad paleface?" I asked.
"My little daughter, he is a sham,--a sickly sham! The bronzed
Dakota is the only real man."
I looked up into my mother's face while she spoke; and seeing her bite
her lips, I knew she was unhappy. This aroused revenge in my small soul.
Stamping my foot on the earth, I cried aloud, "I hate the paleface
that makes my mother cry!"
Setting the pail of water on the ground, my mother stooped, and stretching
her left hand out on the level with my eyes, she placed her other arm
about me; she pointed to the hill where my uncle and my only sister
lay buried.
"There is what the paleface has done! Since then your father too
has been buried in a hill nearer the rising sun. We were once very happy.
But the paleface has stolen our lands and driven us hither. Having defrauded
us of our land, the paleface forced us away.
"Well, it happened on the day we moved camp that your sister and
uncle were both very sick. Many others were ailing, but there seemed
to be no help. We traveled many days and nights; not in the grand happy
way that we moved camp when I was a little girl, but we were driven,
my child, driven like a herd of buffalo. With every step, your sister,
who was not as large as you are now, shrieked with the painful jar until
she was hoarse with crying. She grew more and more feverish. Her little
hands and cheeks were burning hot. Her little lips were parched and
dry, but she would not drink the water I gave her. Then I discovered
that her throat was swollen and red. My poor child, how I cried with
her because the Great Spirit had forgotten us!
"At last, when we reached this western country, on the first weary
night your sister died. And soon your uncle died also, leaving a widow
and an orphan daughter, your cousin Warea-Ziwin. Both your sister and
uncle might have been happy with us to-day, had it not been for the
heartless paleface."
My mother was silent the rest of the way to our wigwam. Though I saw
no tears in her eyes, I knew that was because I was with her. She seldom
wept before me.
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II.
THE LEGENDS.
During the summer days, my mother built her fire in the shadow of our
wigwam.
In the early morning our simple breakfast was spread upon the grass
west of our tepee. At the farthest point of the shade my mother sat
beside her fire, toasting a savory piece of dried meat. Near her, I
sat upon my feet, eating my dried meat with unleavened bread, and drinking
strong black coffee.
The morning meal was our quiet hour, when we two were entirely alone.
At noon, several who chanced to be passing by stopped to rest, and to
share our luncheon with us, for they were sure of our hospitality.
My uncle, whose death my mother ever lamented, was one of our nation's
bravest warriors. His name was on the lips of old men when talking of
the proud feats of valor; and it was mentioned by younger men, too,
in connection with deeds of gallantry. Old women praised him for his
kindness toward them; young women held him up as an ideal to their sweethearts.
Every one loved him, and my mother worshiped his memory. Thus it happened
that even strangers were sure of welcome in our lodge, if they but asked
a favor in my uncle's name.
Though I heard many strange experiences related by these wayfarers,
I loved best the evening meal, for that was the time old legends were
told. I was always glad when the sun hung low in the west, for then
my mother sent me to invite the neighboring old men and women to eat
supper with us. Running all the way to the wigwams, I halted shyly at
the entrances. Sometimes I stood long moments without saying a word.
It was not any fear that made me so dumb when out upon such a happy
errand; nor was it that I wished to withhold the invitation, for it
was all I could do to observe this very proper silence. But it was a
sensing of the atmosphere, to assure myself that I should not hinder
other plans. My mother used to say to me, as I was almost bounding away
for the old people: "Wait a moment before you invite any one. If
other plans are being discussed, do not interfere, but go elsewhere."
The old folks knew the meaning of my pauses; and often they coaxed
my confidence by asking, "What do you seek, little granddaughter?"
"My mother says you are to come to our tepee this evening,"
I instantly exploded, and breathed the freer afterwards.
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"Yes, yes, gladly, gladly I shall come!" each replied. Rising
at once and carrying their blankets across one shoulder, they flocked
leisurely from their various wigwams toward our dwelling.
My mission done, I ran back, skipping and jumping with delight. All
out of breath, I told my mother almost the exact words of the answers
to my invitation. Frequently she asked, "What were they doing when
you entered their tepee?" This taught me to remember all I saw
at a single glance. Often I told my mother my impressions without being
questioned.
While in the neighboring wigwams sometimes an old Indian woman asked
me, "What is your mother doing?" Unless my mother had cautioned
me not to tell, I generally answered her questions without reserve.
At the arrival of our guests I sat close to my mother, and did not leave
her side without first asking her consent. I ate my supper in quiet,
listening patiently to the talk of the old people, wishing all the time
that they would begin the stories I loved best. At last, when I could
not wait any longer, I whispered in my mother's ear, "Ask them
to tell an Iktomi story, mother."
Soothing my impatience, my mother said aloud, "My little daughter
is anxious to hear your legends." By this time all were through
eating, and the evening was fast deepening into twilight.
As each in turn began to tell a legend, I pillowed my head in my mother's
lap; and lying flat upon my back, I watched the stars as they peeped
down upon me, one by one. The increasing interest of the tale aroused
me, and I sat up eagerly listening for every word. The old women made
funny remarks, and laughed so heartily that I could not help joining
them.
The distant howling of a pack of wolves or the hooting of an owl in
the river bottom frightened me, and I nestled into my mother's lap.
She added some dry sticks to the open fire, and the bright flames leaped
up into the faces of the old folks as they sat around in a great circle.
On such an evening, I remember the glare of the fire shone on a tattooed
star upon the brow of the old warrior who was telling a story. I watched
him curiously as he made his unconscious gestures. The blue star upon
his bronzed forehead was a puzzle to me. Looking about, I saw two parallel
lines on the chin of one of the old women. The rest had none. I examined
my mother's face, but found no sign there.
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After the warrior's story was finished, I asked the old woman the meaning
of the blue lines on her chin, looking all the while out of the corners
of my eyes at the warrior with the star on his forehead. I was a little
afraid that he would rebuke me for my boldness.
Here the old woman began: "Why, my grandchild, they are signs,--secret
signs I dare not tell you. I shall, however, tell you a wonderful story
about a woman who had a cross tattooed upon each of her cheeks."
It was a long story of a woman whose magic power lay hidden behind the
marks upon her face. I fell asleep before the story was completed.
Ever after that night I felt suspicious of tattooed people. Wherever
I saw one I glanced furtively at the mark and round about it, wondering
what terrible magic power was covered there.
It was rarely that such a fearful story as this one was told by the
camp fire. Its impression was so acute that the picture still remains
vividly clear and pronounced.
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III.
THE BEADWORK.
Soon after breakfast, mother sometimes began her beadwork. On a bright
clear day, she pulled out the wooden pegs that pinned the skirt of our
wigwam to the ground, and rolled the canvas part way up on its frame
of slender poles. Then the cool morning breezes swept freely through
our dwelling, now and then wafting the perfume of sweet grasses from
newly burnt prairie.
Untying the long tasseled strings that bound a small brown buckskin
bag, my mother spread upon a mat beside her bunches of colored beads,
just as an artist arranges the paints upon his palette. On a lapboard
she smoothed out a double sheet of soft white buckskin; and drawing
from a beaded case that hung on the left of her wide belt a long, narrow
blade, she trimmed the buckskin into shape. Often she worked upon small
moccasins for her small daughter. Then I became intensely interested
in her designing. With a proud, beaming face, I watched her work. In
imagination, I saw myself walking in a new pair of snugly fitting moccasins.
I felt the envious eyes of my playmates upon the pretty red beads decorating
my feet.
Close beside my mother I sat on a rug, with a scrap of buckskin in one
hand and an awl in the other. This was the beginning of my practical
observation lessons in the art of beadwork. From a skein of finely twisted
threads of silvery sinews my mother pulled out a single one. With an
awl she pierced the buckskin, and skillfully threaded it with the white
sinew. Picking up the tiny beads one by one, she strung them with the
point of her thread, always twisting it carefully after every stitch.
It took many trials before I learned how to knot my sinew thread on
the point of my finger, as I saw her do. Then the next difficulty was
in keeping my thread stiffly twisted, so that I could easily string
my beads upon it. My mother required of me original designs for my lessons
in beading. At first I frequently ensnared many a sunny hour into working
a long design. Soon I learned from self-inflicted punishment to refrain
from drawing complex patterns, for I had to finish whatever I began.
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After some experience I usually drew easy and simple crosses and squares.
These were some of the set forms. My original designs were not always
symmetrical nor sufficiently characteristic, two faults with which my
mother had little patience. The quietness of her oversight made me feel
strongly responsible and dependent upon my own judgment. She treated
me as a dignified little individual as long as I was on my good behavior;
and how humiliated I was when some boldness of mine drew forth a rebuke
from her!
In the choice of colors she left me to my own taste. I was pleased with
an outline of yellow upon a background of dark blue, or a combination
of red and myrtle-green. There was another of red with a bluish gray
that was more conventionally used. When I became a little familiar with
designing and the various pleasing combinations of color, a harder lesson
was given me. It was the sewing on, instead of beads, some tinted porcupine
quills, moistened and flattened between the nails of the thumb and forefinger.
My mother cut off the prickly ends and burned them at once in the centre
fire. These sharp points were poisonous, and worked into the flesh wherever
they lodged. For this reason, my mother said, I should not do much alone
in quills until I was as tall as my cousin Warea-Ziwin.
Always after these confining lessons I was wild with surplus spirits,
and found joyous relief in running loose in the open again. Many a summer
afternoon, a party of four or five of my playmates roamed over the hills
with me. We each carried a light sharpened rod about four feet long,
with which we pried up certain sweet roots. When we had eaten all the
choice roots we chanced upon, we shouldered our rods and strayed off
into patches of a stalky plant under whose yellow blossoms we found
little crystal drops of gum. Drop by drop we gathered this nature's
rock-candy, until each of us could boast of a lump the size of a small
bird's egg. Soon satiated with its woody flavor, we tossed away our
gum, to return again to the sweet roots.
I remember well how we used to exchange our necklaces, beaded belts,
and sometimes even our moccasins. We pretended to offer them as gifts
to one another. We delighted in impersonating our own mothers. We talked
of things we had heard them say in their conversations. We imitated
their various manners, even to the inflection of their voices. In the
lap of the prairie we seated ourselves upon our feet; and leaning our
painted cheeks in the palms of our hands, we rested our elbows on our
knees, and bent forward as old women were most accustomed to do.
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While one was telling of some heroic deed recently done by a near relative,
the rest of us listened attentively, and exclaimed in undertones, "Han!
han!" (yes! yes!) whenever the speaker paused for breath, or sometimes
for our sympathy. As the discourse became more thrilling, according
to our ideas, we raised our voices in these interjections. In these
impersonations our parents were led to say only those things that were
in common favor.
No matter how exciting a tale we might be rehearsing, the mere shifting
of a cloud shadow in the landscape near by was sufficient to change
our impulses; and soon we were all chasing the great shadows that played
among the hills. We shouted and whooped in the chase; laughing and calling
to one another, we were like little sportive nymphs on that Dakota sea
of rolling green.
On one occasion, I forgot the cloud shadow in a strange notion to catch
up with my own shadow. Standing straight and still, I began to glide
after it, putting out one foot cautiously. When, with the greatest care,
I set my foot in advance of myself, my shadow crept onward too. Then
again I tried it; this time with the other foot. Still again my shadow
escaped me. I began to run; and away flew my shadow, always just a step
beyond me. Faster and faster I ran, setting my teeth and clenching my
fists, determined to overtake my own fleet shadow. But ever swifter
it glided before me, while I was growing breathless and hot. Slackening
my speed, I was greatly vexed that my shadow should check its pace also.
Daring it to the utmost, as I thought, I sat down upon a rock imbedded
in the hillside.
So! my shadow had the impudence to sit down beside me!
Now my comrades caught up with me, and began to ask why I was running
away so fast.
"Oh, I was chasing my shadow! Didn't you ever do that?" I
inquired, surprised that they should not understand.
They planted their moccasined feet firmly upon my shadow to stay it,
and I arose. Again my shadow slipped away, and moved as often as I did.
Then we gave up trying to catch my shadow.
Before this peculiar experience I have no distinct memory of having
recognized any vital bond between myself and my own shadow. I never
gave it an afterthought.
Returning our borrowed belts and trinkets, we rambled homeward. That
evening, as on other evenings, I went to sleep over my legends.
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IV.
THE COFFEE-MAKING.
One summer afternoon, my mother left me alone in our wigwam, while
she went across the way to my aunt's dwelling.
I did not much like to stay alone in our tepee, for I feared a tall,
broad-shouldered crazy man, some forty years old, who walked loose among
the hills. Wiyaka-Napbina (Wearer of a Feather Necklace) was harmless,
and whenever he came into a wigwam he was driven there by extreme hunger.
He went nude except for the half of a red blanket he girdled around
his waist. In one tawny arm he used to carry a heavy bunch of wild sunflowers
that he gathered in his aimless ramblings. His black hair was matted
by the winds, and scorched into a dry red by the constant summer sun.
As he took great strides, placing one brown bare foot directly in front
of the other, he swung his long lean arm to and fro.
Frequently he paused in his walk and gazed far backward, shading his
eyes with his hand. He was under the belief that an evil spirit was
haunting his steps. This was what my mother told me once, when I sneered
at such a silly big man. I was brave when my mother was near by, and
Wiyaka-Napbina walking farther and farther away.
"Pity the man, my child. I knew him when he was a brave and handsome
youth. He was overtaken by a malicious spirit among the hills, one day,
when he went hither and thither after his ponies. Since then he cannot
stay away from the hills," she said.
I felt so sorry for the man in his misfortune that I prayed to the Great
Spirit to restore him. But though I pitied him at a distance, I was
still afraid of him when he appeared near our wigwam.
Thus, when my mother left me by myself that afternoon, I sat in a fearful
mood within our tepee. I recalled all I had ever heard about Wiyaka-Napbina;
and I tried to assure myself that though he might pass near by, he would
not come to our wigwam because there was no little girl around our grounds.
Just then, from without a hand lifted the canvas covering of the entrance;
the shadow of a man fell within the wigwam, and a large roughly moccasined
foot was planted inside.
For a moment I did not dare to breathe or stir, for I thought that could
be no other than Wiyaka-Napbina. The next instant I sighed aloud in
relief. It was an old grandfather who had often told me Iktomi legends.
"Where is your mother, my little grandchild?" were his first
words.
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"My mother is soon coming back from my aunt's tepee," I replied.
"Then I shall wait awhile for her return," he said, crossing
his feet and seating himself upon a mat.
At once I began to play the part of a generous hostess. I turned to
my mother's coffeepot.
Lifting the lid, I found nothing but coffee grounds in the bottom. I
set the pot on a heap of cold ashes in the centre, and filled it half
full of warm Missouri River water. During this performance I felt conscious
of being watched. Then breaking off a small piece of our unleavened
bread, I laced it in a bowl. Turning soon to the coffeepot, which would
never have boiled on a dead fire had I waited forever, I poured out
a cup of worse than muddy warm water. Carrying the bowl in one hand
and cup in the other, I handed the light luncheon to the old warrior.
I offered them to him with the air of bestowing generous hospitality.
"How! how!" he said, and placed the dishes on the ground in
front of his crossed feet. He nibbled at the bread and sipped from the
cup. I sat back against a pole watching him. I was proud to have succeeded
so well in serving refreshments to a guest all by myself. Before the
old warrior had finished eating, my mother entered. Immediately she
wondered where I had found coffee, for she knew I had never made any,
and that she had left the coffeepot empty. Answering the question in
my mother's eyes, the warrior remarked, "My granddaughter made
coffee on a heap of dead ashes, and served me the moment I came."
They both laughed, and mother said, "Wait a little longer, and
I shall build a fire." She meant to make some real coffee. But
neither she nor the warrior, whom the law of our custom had compelled
to partake of my insipid hospitality, said anything to embarrass me.
They treated my best judgement, poor as it was, with the utmost respect.
It was not till long years afterward that I learned how ridiculous a
thing I had done.
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V.
THE DEAD MAN'S PLUM BUSH.
One autumn afternoon, many people came streaming toward the dwelling
of our near neighbor. With painted faces, and wearing broad white bosoms
of elk's teeth, they hurried down the narrow footpath to Haraka Wambdi's
wigwam. Young mothers held their children by the hand, and half pulled
them along in their haste. They overtook and passed by the bent old
grandmothers who were trudging along with crooked canes toward the centre
of excitement. Most of the young braves galloped hither on their ponies.
Toothless warriors, like the old women, came more slowly, though mounted
on lively ponies. They sat proudly erect on their horses. They wore
their eagle plumes, and waved their various trophies of former wars.
In front of the wigwam a great fire was built, and several large black
kettles of venison were suspended over it. The crowd were seated about
it on the grass in a great circle. Behind them some of the braves stood
leaning against the necks of their ponies, their tall figures draped
in loose robes which were well drawn over their eyes.
Young girls, with their faces glowing like bright red autumn leaves,
their glossy braids falling over each ear, sat coquettishly beside their
chaperons. It was a custom for young Indian women to invite some older
relative to escort them to the public feasts. Though it was not an iron
law, it was generally observed.
Haraka Wambdi was a strong young brave, who had just returned from his
first battle, a warrior. His near relatives, to celebrate his new rank,
were spreading a feast to which the whole of the Indian village was
invited.
Holding my pretty striped blanket in readiness to throw over my shoulders,
I grew more and more restless as I watched the gay throng assembling.
My mother was busily broiling a wild duck that my aunt had that morning
brought over.
"Mother, mother, why do you stop to cook a small meal when we are
invited to a feast?" I asked, with a snarl in my voice.
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VI.
THE GROUND SQUIRREL.
In the busy autumn days, my cousin Warea-Ziwin's mother came to our
wigwam to help my mother preserve foods for our winter use. I was very
fond of my aunt, because she was not so quiet as my mother. Though she
was older, she was more jovial and less reserved. She was slender and
remarkably erect. While my mother's hair was heavy and black, my aunt
had unusually thin locks.
Ever since I knew her, she wore a string of large blue beads around
her neck,--beads that were precious because my uncle had given them
to her when she was a younger woman. She had a peculiar swing in her
gait, caused by a long stride rarely natural to so slight a figure.
It was during my aunt's visit with us that my mother forgot her accustomed
quietness, often laughing heartily at some of my aunt's witty remarks.
I loved my aunt threefold: for her hearty laughter, for the cheerfulness
she caused my mother, and most of all for the times she dried my tears
and held me in her lap, when my mother had reproved me.
Early in the cool mornings, just as the yellow rim of the sun rose above
the hills, we were up and eating our breakfast. We awoke so early that
we saw the sacred hour when a misty smoke hung over a pit surrounded
by an impassable sinking mire. This strange smoke appeared every morning,
both winter and summer; but most visibly in midwinter it rose immediately
above the marshy spot. By the time the full face of the sun appeared
above the eastern horizon, the smoke vanished. Even very old men, who
had known this country the longest, said that the smoke from this pit
had never failed a single day to rise heavenward.
As I frolicked about our dwelling, I used to stop suddenly, and with
a fearful awe watch the smoking of the unknown fires. While the vapor
was visible, I was afraid to go very far from our wigwam unless I went
with my mother.
From a field in the fertile river bottom my mother and aunt gathered
an abundant supply of corn. Near our tepee, they spread a large canvas
upon the grass, and dried their sweet corn in it. I was left to watch
the corn, that nothing should disturb it. I played around it with dolls
made of ears of corn. I braided their soft fine silk for hair, and gave
them blankets as various as the scraps I found in my mother's workbag.
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There was a little stranger with a black-and-yellow-striped coat that
used to come to the drying corn. It was a little ground squirrel, who
was so fearless of me that he came to one corner of the canvas and carried
away as much of the sweet corn as he could hold. I wanted very much
to catch him, and rub his pretty fur back, but my mother said he would
be so frightened if I caught him that he would bite my fingers. So I
was as content as he to keep the corn between us. Every morning he came
for more corn. Some evenings I have seen him creeping about our grounds;
and when I gave a sudden whoop of recognition, he ran quickly out of
sight.
When mother had dried all the corn she wished, then she sliced great
pumpkins into thin rings; and these she doubled and linked together
into long chains. She hung them on a pole that stretched between two
forked posts. The wind and sun soon thoroughly dried the chains of pumpkin.
Then she packed them away in a case of thick and stiff buckskin.
In the sun and wind she also dried many wild fruits,--cherries, berries,
and plums. But chiefest among my early recollections of autumn is that
one of the corn drying and the ground squirrel.
I have few memories of winter days, at this period of my life, though
many of the summer. There is one only which I can recall.
Some missionaries gave me a little bag of marbles. They were all sizes
and colors. Among them were some of colored glass. Walking with my mother
to the river, on a late winter day, we found great chunks of ice piled
all along the bank. The ice on the river was floating in huge pieces.
As I stood beside one large block, I noticed for the first time the
colors of the rainbow in the crystal ice. Immediately I thought of my
glass marbles at home. With my bare fingers I tried to pick out some
of the colors, for they seemed so near the surface. But my fingers began
to sting with the intense cold, and I had to bite them hard to keep
from crying.
From that day on, for many a moon, I believed that glass marbles had
river ice inside of them.
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VII.
THE BIG RED APPLES.
The first turning away from the easy, natural flow of my life occurred
in an early spring. It was in my eighth year; in the month of March,
I afterward learned. At this age I knew but one language, and that was
my mother's native tongue.
From some of my playmates I heard that two paleface missionaries were
in our village. They were from that class of white men who wore big
hats and carried large hearts, they said. Running direct to my mother,
I began to question her why these two strangers were among us. She told
me, after I had teased much, that they had come to take away Indian
boys and girls to the East. My mother did not seem to want me to talk
about them. But in a day or two, I gleaned many wonderful stories from
my playfellows concerning the strangers.
"Mother, my friend Judéwin is going home with the missionaries.
She is going to a more beautiful country than ours; the palefaces told
her so!" I said wistfully, wishing in my heart that I too might
go.
Mother sat in a chair, and I was hanging on her knee. Within the last
two seasons my big brother Dawée had returned from a three years'
education in the East, and his coming back influenced my mother to take
a farther step from her native way of living. First it was a change
from the buffalo skin to the white man's canvas that covered our wigwam.
Now she had given up her wigwam of slender poles, to live, a foreigner,
in a home of clumsy logs.
"Yes, my child, several others besides Judéwin are going
away with the palefaces. Your brother said the missionaries had inquired
about his little sister," she said, watching my face very closely.
My heart thumped so hard against my breast, I wondered if she could
hear it.
"Did he tell them to take me, mother?" I asked, fearing lest
Dawée had forbidden the palefaces to see me, and that my hope
of going to the Wonderland would be entirely blighted.
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With a sad, slow smile, she answered: "There! I knew you were
wishing to go, because Judéwin has filled your ears with the
white men's lies. Don't believe a word they say! Their words are sweet,
but, my child, their deeds are bitter. You will cry for me, but they
will not even soothe you. Stay with me, my little one! Your brother
Dawée says that going East, away from your mother, is too hard
an experience for his baby sister."
Thus my mother discouraged my curiosity about the lands beyond our eastern
horizon; for it was not yet an ambition for Letters that was stirring
me. But on the following day the missionaries did come to our very house.
I spied them coming up the footpath leading to our cottage. A third
man was with them, but he was not my brother Dawée. It was another,
a young interpreter, a paleface who had a smattering of the Indian language.
I was ready to run out to meet them, but I did not dare to displease
my mother. With great glee, I jumped up and down on our ground floor.
I begged my mother to open the door, that they would be sure to come
to us. Alas! They came, they saw, and they conquered!
Judéwin had told me of the great tree where grew red, red apples;
and how we could reach out our hands and pick all the red apples we
could eat. I had never seen apple trees. I had never tasted more than
a dozen red apples in my life; and when I heard of the orchards of the
East, I was eager to roam among them. The missionaries smiled into my
eyes, and patted my head. I wondered how mother could say such hard
words against them.
"Mother, ask them if little girls may have all the red apples they
want, when they go East," I whispered aloud, in my excitement.
The interpreter heard me, and answered: "Yes, little girl, the
nice red apples are for those who pick them; and you will have a ride
on the iron horse if you go with these good people."
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I had never seen a train, and he knew it.
"Mother, I'm going East! I like big red apples, and I want to ride
on the iron horse! Mother, say yes!" I pleaded.
My mother said nothing. The missionaries waited in silence; and my eyes
began to blur with tears, though I struggled to choke them back. The
corners of my mouth twitched, and my mother saw me.
"I am not ready to give you any word," she said to them. "To-morrow
I shall send you my answer by my son."
With this they left us. Alone with my mother, I yielded to my tears,
and cried aloud, shaking my head so as not to hear what she was saying
to me. This was the first time I had ever been so unwilling to give
up my own desire that I refused to hearken to my mother's voice.
There was a solemn silence in our home that night. Before I went to
bed I begged the Great Spirit to make my mother willing I should go
with the missionaries.
The next morning came, and my mother called me to her side. "My
daughter, do you still persist in wishing to leave your mother?"
she asked.
"Oh, mother, it is not that I wish to leave you, but I want to
see the wonderful Eastern land," I answered.
My dear old aunt came to our house that morning, and I heard her say,
"Let her try it."
I hoped that, as usual, my aunt was pleading on my side. My brother
Dawée came for mother's decision. I dropped my play, and crept
close to my aunt.
"Yes, Dawée, my daughter, though she does not understand
what it all means, is anxious to go. She will need an education when
she is grown, for then there will be fewer real Dakotas, and many more
palefaces. This tearing her away, so young, from her mother is necessary,
if I would have her an educated woman. The palefaces, who owe us a large
debt for stolen lands, have begun to pay a tardy justice in offering
some education to our children. But I know my daughter must suffer keenly
in this experiment. For her sake, I dread to tell you my reply to the
missionaries. Go, tell them that they may take my little daughter, and
that the Great Spirit shall not fail to reward them according to their
hearts."
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Wrapped in my heavy blanket, I walked with my mother
to the carriage that was soon to take us to the iron horse. I was happy.
I met my playmates, who were also wearing their best thick blankets.
We showed one another our new beaded moccasins, and the width of the
belts that girdled our new dresses. Soon we were being drawn rapidly
away by the white man's horses. When I saw the lonely figure of my mother
vanish in the distance, a sense of regret settled heavily upon me. I
felt suddenly weak, as if I might fall limp to the ground. I was in
the hands of strangers whom my mother did not fully trust. I no longer
felt free to be myself, or to voice my own feelings. The tears trickled
down my cheeks, and I buried my face in the folds of my blanket. Now
the first step, parting me from my mother, was taken, and all my belated
tears availed nothing.
Having driven thirty miles to the ferryboat, we crossed the Missouri
in the evening. Then riding again a few miles eastward, we stopped before
a massive brick building. I looked at it in amazement, and with a vague
misgiving, for in our village I had never seen so large a house. Trembling
with fear and distrust of the palefaces, my teeth chattering from the
chilly ride, I crept noiselessly in my soft moccasins along the narrow
hall, keeping very close to the bare wall. I was as frightened and bewildered
as the captured young of a wild creature.
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