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Star-Boy and the Sun Dance
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STAR-BOY AND THE SUN DANCE
[12]
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NCE long ago, when the Blackfeet Indians dwelt on the
Canadian prairies, it happened that a band of the
people were camped near the mountains. It was
spring-time, and the warm winds blew over the prairies
laden with the scent of wild flowers. One hot cloudless
night two girls slept in the long prairie grass beside
their tents with no covering but the sky. The elder
awoke before dawn, and saw the Morning Star just
rising. Very beautiful and bright he looked in the
clear morning air, with no smoke or dust to hide him.
The girl looked long at the Star, and she had strange
fancies, and imagined that he was her lover. At last
she called her sister and said, "Look at the Morning
Star. He is bright and wise. I love only the Morning
Star, for he is more beautiful than man."
One
day in the autumn when the flowers were faded and the
grass was yellow with age and the cool winds blew over
the prairie and the birds were flying south, as the
girl was returning home from a long walk she met a
young man on the trail. In his hair was a yellow plume,
and in his hand a small shrub with a big spider-web
hanging to it. He was very beautiful, and he wore fine
clothes of soft skins, and the
[13] odour of his dress was
that of the sweet-grass and the pine. As the girl drew
aside from the trail to pass, he put forth his hand and
stopped her. "Stand aside," she said, "and let me
pass." But he answered, "I am the Morning Star. One
night in spring when the flowers were blooming, I saw
you sleeping in the long grass outside your tent, and I
loved you. I heard you say you loved only me, and now I
have come to ask you to come with me to the sky to the
home of my father, the Sun, where we shall live
together and you will have no more troubles nor cares.
It is the Land of Little People, the Land of the
Ever-Young, where all are happy like children, and
no one ever grows old." Then the girl remembered the
hot cloudless night in the spring-time when she slept
in the tall grass, and she knew now that Morning Star
was to be her husband.
And
she said, "I must first say good-bye to my father and
mother." But Morning Star said, "There must be no
leave-taking," and he would not let her go home. He
fastened his yellow plume in her hair, and gave her the
shrub to hold. He told her to place her feet upon the
lowest strand of the spider's web and to hold the
uppermost strand in her hands. Then he told her to shut
her eyes. After a brief time when he asked her to open
her eyes, they were in the sky. They passed on to a
large tent. Morning Star said, "This is the home of my
father and mother, the Sun and the Moon," and he asked
her to enter. As it was day, the Sun
[14] was away on his
long journey, but the Moon was at home and she welcomed
the girl as her son's bride. And the girl lived happy
in the Star country with her husband, and she learned
many wonderful things. Not far from her home, near the
tent of the Spider Man who weaved webs, a large turnip
was growing about which she wondered greatly. But the
Moon seeing her wonder said, "You may dig any roots
that grow in the sky, but I warn you not to dig up the
large turnip. If you do, unhappiness will follow you."
After
a time a son was born to the girl, and everywhere the
girl went she carried the child. She called him
Star-Boy. She often saw the large turnip near the tent
of the Spider Man who weaved webs, but mindful of the
Moon's warning, she was afraid to touch it. One day,
however, her wonder overcame her, and she decided to
see what was underneath the turnip. She tried to pull it up
but it stuck fast, and she was unable to move it. Then
two large cranes, flying from the east, came to her
aid, and catching the turnip with their long bills they
moved it from side to side, loosened it, and pulled it
up. The girl looked through the hole, and saw the earth
far beneath her. It was the same hole through which
Morning Star had brought her to the sky. She looked
long through the hole, and she saw the camps of her
people, the Blackfeet, on the plains far below. What
she saw was well known to her. It was summer on the
prairies. The men were playing games; the women were
tanning skins or
[15] gathering berries on the rolling
hills. She grew very lonely as she watched, for she wanted
to be back on the green prairies with her own people,
and when she turned away to go home she was crying
bitterly.
THE GIRL LOOKED THROUGH THE HOLE, AND SAW THE EARTH FAR BENEATH HER.
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When
she reached home, Morning Star and his Mother the Moon
were waiting for her. Morning Star at once knew from
her face what had happened, and he said, "You have
pulled up the sacred turnip." When she did not answer,
the Moon said, "I warned you not to dig it up, because
I love Star-Boy and I do not wish to part with him." It
was day, and the Sun was away on his long journey. When
he came home in the evening, he asked what was the
matter with his daughter for she looked sad and
troubled. And the girl answered that she was lonely
because she had looked down that day upon her people on
the plains. Then the Sun was very angry, and said to
Morning Star, "If she has disobeyed, she must go back
to her people. She cannot live here." Morning Star and
the Moon pleaded with the Sun to let her remain, but
the Sun said that it was better that she should go back
to the prairies, for she would no longer be happy in
the sky.
Then
Morning Star led the girl to the house of the Spider
Man who had weaved the web that had drawn her up to the
sky. He placed Star-Boy on her breast, and wrapped
around them both a bright robe. Then he bade them
farewell, saying, "We will let you down where your
people on the
[16] plains can see you as you fall." Then the
Spider Man with his web let her down as she had come,
through the hole in the sky.
It
was a hot still evening in midsummer when the girl
returned to her people. Many of the people were outside
their tents, and they saw a bright light in the
northern sky. They watched it slowly drop until it
reached the ground. They thought it was a shooting
star. They ran to the place where the bright light
fell, and there they found a strange bundle, inside of
which were the woman and her child. Her parents knew
her, and she returned with them to their home and lived
with them. But she was never happy. Often she took
Star-Boy to the top of a high hill in the west, where
she sat and mourned for her home in the sky. And daily
she watched Morning Star rise from the plains. Once she
begged him to take her back to the country of the
stars, but he answered, "You disobeyed, and therefore I
cannot take you back. Your sin is the cause of your
sorrow, and it has brought great trouble to you and
your people."
So
the Star-woman lived alone and unhappy upon the earth
because she had disobeyed. After a time she died, and
her son, Star-Boy, was left alone. Although born in the
home of the Sun, he was very poor. He had little of the
world's goods, and but few clothes to wear. He was so
timid that he never played with other children, and he
lived much by himself. On his face was strange scar
which became
[17] more marked as he grew older. Because of
this and his shy and timid ways, he was laughed at by
everybody; other boys stoned him and abused him and
called him Scarface.
When
Star-Boy became a man he loved a girl of his own
people. She was very beautiful, and many young men
wanted to marry her, but she refused them all. She told
Star-Boy that she would not marry him until he removed
the strange scar from his face. He was much troubled by
this answer, and he talked about it to an old
medicine-woman who knew many things. The medicine-woman
told him that the scar had been placed on his face by
the Sun, and that only the Sun himself could take it
off. So he decided to go to the home of the Sun.
He
went across the prairies and over the mountains for
many days, meeting many dangers and suffering great
hardships. At last he came to the Great Water in the
West—the Pacific Ocean. For three days and nights he
lay on the sand fasting and praying to the Sun God. On
the evening of the fourth day he saw a bright trail
leading across the water to the west. He ran along this
path across the water until he came at last to the home
of the Sun, where he hid himself and waited. Early next
morning the Sun came out of his tent, ready for his
day's journey. He saw Star-Boy, but he did not know
him, for Star-Boy had grown since he left the country
of the stars. The Sun was angry when he saw a creature
from the earth, and calling his wife, the Moon, he
[18] said, "We will kill him, for he comes from a
good-for-nothing race." But the Moon, being kind,
prevented it and saved the boy's life. Then Morning
Star, the boy's father, handsome and bright, came from
his tent. He recognized his child. And, after the usual
fashion in the sky, he brought dried sweet-grass and
burned it so that the smoke curled around the boy and
cleansed him from the dust of the earth. Then he
brought him to his father and mother, the Sun and the
Moon, and told them who the boy was. And Star-Boy told
his story of his long journey, and of the marriage
refusal of the girl he loved because of the scar on his
face. And they took pity on him, and promised to help
him.
Star-Boy
lived in the home of the Sun and the Moon with Morning
Star. Once he went hunting and killed seven large birds
which had threatened the life of his father. He gave
four of the dead birds to the Sun and three to the
Moon. And the Sun, glad to be rid of these pests,
resolved to pay him well for his work. As a reward, he
took the scar from his face, as the medicine-woman had
said. And he made him his messenger to the Blackfeet
people on the Canadian plains, and promised that if
they would give a festival in his honour once a year,
he would heal their sick. The festival was to be known
as the Sun Dance. He taught Star-Boy the secrets of the
dance and the songs to be used in it, so that he could
tell his people. And he gave him two raven feathers to
wear, as a sign that he came from the Sun, and a very
wonderful
[19] robe. And he gave him a magic flute and a
wonderful song, with which he could charm the heart of
the girl he loved.
So
Star-Boy returned to his people, the Blackfeet of the
plains, running along by the Milky Way, the short,
bright path to the earth. When he had taught them the
secret of the Sun Dance, he married the girl he loved,
and the Sun took them back to live with him in the sky.
And he made him bright and beautiful, just like his
father Morning Star, and gave him work to do. Sometimes
the father and son can be seen together in the sky; the
people of earth sometimes call the father Venus, and
the son Jupiter, but Indians call them Morning Star and
Little Morning Star. And since that time, once a year,
the Blackfeet of the plains hold the Sun Dance that
their sick may all be healed, as it was promised to
Star-Boy by the Sun God in the old days.
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