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第4章

Such was the Indian's wild life!When game was to be had and the sun shone,they easily forgot the bitter experiences of the winter before.Little preparation was made for the future.They are children of Nature,and occasionally she whips them with the lashes of experience,yet they are forgetful and careless.Much of their suffering might have been prevented by a little calculation.

During the summer,when Nature is at her best,and provides abundantly for the savage,it seems to me that no life is happier than his!Food is free--lodging free--everything free!All were alike rich in the summer,and,again,all were alike poor in the winter and early spring.However,their diseases were fewer and not so destructive as now,and the Indian's health was generally good.

The Indian boy enjoyed such a life as almost all boys dream of and would choose for themselves if they were permitted to do so.

The raids made upon our people by other tribes were frequent,and we had to be constantly on the watch.I remember at one time a night attack was made upon our camp and all our ponies stam-peded.Only a few of them were recovered,and our journeys after this misfortune were effected mostly by means of the dog-travaux.

The second winter after the massacre,my father and my two older brothers,with several others,were betrayed by a half-breed at Winnipeg to the United States authorities.As I was then living with my uncle in another part of the country,I be-came separated from them for ten years.During all this time we believed that they had been killed by the whites,and I was taught that I must avenge their deaths as soon as I was able to go upon the war-path.

I must say a word in regard to the character of this uncle,my father's brother,who was my ad-viser and teacher for many years.He was a man about six feet two inches in height,very erect and broad-shouldered.He was known at that time as one of the best hunters and bravest warriors among the Sioux in British America,where he still lives,for to this day we have failed to persuade him to return to the United States.

He is a typical Indian--not handsome,but truthful and brave.He had a few simple princi-ples from which he hardly ever departed.Some of these I shall describe when I speak of my early training.

It is wonderful that any children grew up through all the exposures and hardships that we suffered in those days!The frail teepee pitched anywhere,in the winter as well as in the summer,was all the protection that we had against cold and storms.I can recall times when we were snowed in and it was very difficult to get fuel.We were once three days without much fire and all of this time it stormed violently.There seemed to be no special anxiety on the part of our people;they rather looked upon all this as a matter of course,knowing that the storm would cease when the time came.

I could once endure as much cold and hunger as any of them;but now if I miss one meal or accidentally wet my feet,I feel it as much as if Ihad never lived in the manner I have described,when it was a matter of course to get myself soak-ing wet many a time.Even if there was plenty to eat,it was thought better for us to practice fast-ing sometimes;and hard exercise was kept up continually,both for the sake of health and to prepare the body for the extraordinary exertions that it might,at any moment,be required to undergo.In my own remembrance,my uncle used often to bring home a deer on his shoulder.The distance was sometimes con-siderable;yet he did not consider it any sort of a feat.

The usual custom with us was to eat only two meals a day and these were served at each end of the day.This rule was not invariable,how-ever,for if there should be any callers,it was Indian etiquette to offer either tobacco or food,or both.The rule of two meals a day was more closely observed by the men--especially the younger men--than by the women and children.

This was when the Indians recognized that a true manhood,one of physical activity and endurance,depends upon dieting and regular exercise.No such system is practised by the reservation Indians of to-day.

III:My Indian Grandmother AS a motherless child,I always re-garded my good grandmother as the wisest of guides and the best of protectors.It was not long before I began to realize her su-periority to most of her contempo-raries.This idea was not gained entirely from my own observation,but also from a knowledge of the high regard in which she was held by other wo-men.Aside from her native talent and ingenuity,she was endowed with a truly wonderful memory.

No other midwife in her day and tribe could com-pete with her in skill and judgment.Her obser-vations in practice were all preserved in her mind for reference,as systematically as if they had been written upon the pages of a note-book.

I distinctly recall one occasion when she took me with her into the woods in search of certain medicinal roots.

"Why do you not use all kinds of roots for medicines?"said I.

"Because,"she replied,in her quick,charac-teristic manner,the Great Mystery does not will us to find things too easily.In that case every-body would be a medicine-giver,and Ohiyesa must learn that there are many secrets which the Great Mystery will disclose only to the most worthy.Only those who seek him fasting and in solitude will receive his signs."With this and many similar explanations she wrought in my soul wonderful and lively concep-tions of the "Great Mystery"and of the effects of prayer and solitude.I continued my childish questioning.

"But why did you not dig those plants that we saw in the woods,of the same kind that you are digging now?""For the same reason that we do not like the berries we find in the shadow of deep woods as well as the ones which grow in sunny places.The latter have more sweetness and flavor.Those herbs which have medicinal virtues should be sought in a place that is neither too wet nor too dry,and where they have a generous amount of sunshine to maintain their vigor.

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