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Red Earth or Mocka-Doota-Win
"Good Road" is one of
the Dahcotah chiefs he is fifty years old
and has two wives, but these two have given
a deal of trouble; although the chief
probably thinks it of no importance whether
his two wives fight all the time or not, so
that they obey his orders. For what would be
a calamity in domestic life to us, is an
every day affair among the Dahcotahs.
Good Road's village is situated on the banks of the St.
Peter's about seven miles from Fort Snelling. And like other
Indian villages it abounds in variety more than anything else.
In the teepee the farthest from us, right on the edge of the
shore, there are three young men carousing. One is inclined to
go to sleep, but the other two will not let him; their spirits
are raised and excited by what has made him stupid. Who would
suppose they were human beings? See their bloodshot
eyes; hear their fiendish laugh and horrid yells; probably
before the revel is closed, one of the friends will have buried
his knife in the other's heart.
We will pass on to the next teepee. Here we witness a
scene almost as appalling. "Iron Arms," one of the most valiant
warriors of the band, is stretched in the agonies of death. Old
Spirit Killer, the medicine man, is gesticulating by his side,
and accompanying his motions with the most horrid noises. But
all in vain; the spirit of "Iron Arms," the man of strength, is
gone. The doctor says that his medicine was good, but that a
prairie dog had entered into the body of the Dahcotah, and he
thought it had been a mud-hen. Magnanimous doctor! All honor,
that you can allow yourself in error.
While the friends of the dead warrior are rending the
air with their cries, we will find out what is going on in the
next wigwam. What a contrast!
"The Whirlpool" is seated on the ground smoking; gazing
as earnestly at the bright coals as if in them he could read the
future or recall the past; and his young wife, whose face, now
merry, now sad, bright with smiles at one moment, and lost in
thought the next, gained for her the name of "The Changing
Countenance," is hushing her child to sleep; but the expression
of her features does not change now as she looks on her child, a
mother's deep and devoted love is pictured on her face.
In another, "The Dancing Woman" is wrapped in her
blanket pretending to go to sleep. In vain does "The Flying
Cloud" play that monotonous courting tune on the flute. The
maiden would not be his wife if he gave her all the trinkets in
the world. She loves and is going to marry "Iron Lightning," who
has gone to bring her what? a brooch a new blanket? no, a
Chippeway's scalp, that she may be the most graceful of those
who dance around it. Her mother is mending the moccasins of the
old man who sleeps before the fire.
And we might go round the village and find every family
differently employed. They have no regular hours for eating or
sleeping. In front of the teepees, young men are lying on the
ground, lazily playing checkers, while their wives and sisters
are cutting wood and engaged in laborious household duties.
I said Good Road had two wives, and I would now observe
that neither of them is younger than himself. But they are as
jealous of each other as if they had just turned seventeen, and
their lord and master were twenty instead of fifty. Not a day
passes that they do not quarrel, and fight too. They throw at
each other whatever is most convenient, and sticks of wood are
always at hand. And then, the sons of each wife take a part in
the battle; they first fight for their mothers, and then for
themselves so that the chief must have been reduced to
desperation long ago if it were not for his pipe and his
philosophy. Good Road's second wife has Chippeway blood in her
veins. Her mother was taken prisoner by the Dahcotahs; they
adopted her, and she became the wife of a Dahcotah warrior. She
loved her own people, and those who had adopted her too; and in
course of time her daughter attained the honorable station of a
chief's second wife. Good Road hates the Chippeways, but he fell
in love with one of their descendants, and married her. She is a
good wife, and the white people have given her the name of "Old
Bets."
Last summer "Old Bets" narrowly escaped with her life.
The Dahcotahs having nothing else to do, were amusing themselves
by recalling all the Chippeways had ever done to injure them;
and those who were too lazy to go out on a war party, happily
recollected that there was Chippeway blood near them no farther
off than their chief's wigwam; and eight or ten braves vowed
they would make an end of "Old Bets." But she heard of their
threats, left the village for a time, and after the Dahcotahs
had gotten over their mania for shedding blood, she returned,
and right glad was Good Road to see her. For she has an open,
good humored countenance; the very reverse of that of the first
wife, whose vinegar aspect would frighten away an army of small
children.
After "Old Bets" returned, Good Road could not conceal
his satisfaction. His wife's trip had evidently improved her
good looks, for the chief thought she was the handsomest squaw
in the village. Her children were always taunting the sons of
the first wife, and so it went on, until at last Good Road said
he would stand it no longer; he told his oldest wife to go that
he would support her no longer. And for her children, he told
them the prairies were large; there were deer and other game in
short, he disinherited them cut them off with their last meal.
For the discarded wife, life had now but one hope. The
only star that shone in the blackness of her heaven, was the
undefined prospect of seeing her rival's blood flow. She would
greatly have preferred taking her life herself; and as she left
the wigwam of the chief, she grasped the handle of her knife how
quick her heart beat! it might be now or never.
But there were too many around to protect Old Bets. The time
would come she would watch for her she would tear her heart from
her yet.
The sons of the old hag did not leave the village; they
would keep a watch on their father and his Chippeway wife. They
would not easily yield their right to the chieftainship. While
they hunted, and smoked, and played at cards, they were ever on
the look-out for revenge.
"Red Earth" sits by the door of her father's teepee;
while the village is alive with cheerfulness, she does not join
in any of the amusements going on, but seems to be occupied with
what is passing in her own mind.
Occasionally she throws a pebble from the shore far
into the river, and the copper-colored children spring after it,
as if the water were their own element, striving to get it
before it sinks from their view.
Had she been attentive to what is passing around her,
she would not have kept her seat, for "Shining Iron," the son of
Good Road's second wife, approaches her; and she loves him too
little to talk with him when it can be avoided.
"Why are you not helping the women to make the teepee, Red
Earth?" said the warrior. "They are laughing while they sew the
buffalo-skin together, and you are sitting silent and alone. Why
is it so? Are you thinking of 'Fiery Wind?'"
"There are enough women to make the teepee," replied
Red Earth, "and I sit alone because I choose to do so. But if I
am thinking of 'Fiery Wind' I do right he is a great warrior!"
"Tell me if you love Fiery Wind?" said the young man,
while his eyes flashed fire, and the veins in his temple swelled
almost to bursting.
"I do not love you," said the girl, "and that is
enough. And you need never think I will become your wife; your
spells cannot make me love you.3 Where are
Fiery Wind and his relations? driven from the wigwam of the
Chief by you and your Chippeway mother. But they do not fear you
neither do I!"
And Red Earth looked calmly at the angry face of her
lover. For Shining Iron did love her, and he had loved her long.
He had loaded her with presents, which she always refused; he
had related his honors, his brave acts to her, but she turned a
deaf ear to his words. He promised her he would always have
venison in her teepee, and that he never would take another
wife; she was the only woman he could ever love. But he might as
well have talked to the winds. And he thought so himself, for,
finding he could not gain the heart of the proud girl, he
determined she should never be the wife of any other man, and he
told her so.
"You may marry Fiery Wind," said the angry lover, "but
if you do, I will kill him." Red Earth heard, but did not reply
to his threats; she feared not for herself, but she trembled at
the prospect of danger to the man she loved. And while she
turned the bracelets on her small wrists, the warrior left her
to her own thoughts. They were far from being pleasant; she must
warn her lover of the threats of his rival. For a while she
almost determined she would not marry Fiery Wind, for then his
life would be safe; but she would not break her promise.
Besides, it was hard for her to destroy all the air-built
castles which she had built for her happy future.
She knew Shining Iron's bravery, and she doubted not he
would fulfill his promise; for a moment prudence suggested that
she had better marry him to avoid his revenge. But she grasped
the handle of her knife, as if she would plunge it into her own
bosom for harboring the dark thought. Never should she be
unfaithful; when Fiery Wind returned she would tell him all, and
then she would become his wife, and she felt that her own heart
was true enough to guard him, her own arm strong enough to slay
his enemy.
All women are willful enough, but Dahcotah women are
particularly so. Slaves as they are to their husbands, they lord
it over each other, and it is only when they become grandmothers
that they seem to feel their dependence, and in many instances
yield implicit obedience to the wills of their grandchildren.
They take great delight in watching over and
instructing their children's children; giving them lessons in
morality,4 and worldly wisdom. Thus while Red
Earth was making her determination, her old grandmother
belonging to the village was acting upon hers.
This old woman was a perfect virago an "embodied
storm." In her time she had cut off the hands and feet of some
little Chippeway children, and strung them, and worn them for a
necklace. And she feasted yet at the pleasant recollections this
honorable exploit induced.
But so tender was she of the feelings of her own flesh
and blood, that the thought of their suffering the slightest
pain was death to her.
Her son ruled his household very well for a Dahcotah.
He had a number of young warriors and hunters growing up around
him, and he sometimes got tired of their disturbances, and would
use, not the rod but a stick of wood to some purpose. Although
it had the good effect of quelling the refractory spirits of the
young, it invariably fired the soul of his aged mother. The old
woman would cry and howl, and refuse to eat, for days; till,
finding this had no effect upon her hard-hearted son, she told
him she would do something that would make him sorry, the next
time he struck one of his children.
But the dutiful son paid no attention to her. He had
always considered women as being inferior to dogs, and he would
as soon have thought of giving up smoking, as of minding his
mother's threats.
But while Red Earth was thinking of her absent lover,
Two Stars was beating his sons again and when the maiden was
left alone by Shining Iron after the warning he had given her,
she was attracted by the cries of one of the old women of the
village, who was struggling 'mid earth and heaven, while old and
young were running to the spot, some to render assistance,
others to see the fun.
And glorious fun it was! the grandmother had almost
hung herself that is, she seriously intended to do it. But she
evidently did not expect the operation to be so painful. When
her son, in defiance of her tears and threats, commenced
settling his household difficulties in his own way she took her
head-strap,5 went to a hill just above the
village, and deliberately made her preparations for hanging, as
coolly too as if she had been used to being hung for a long
time. But when, after having doubled the strap four times to
prevent its breaking, she found herself choking, her courage
gave way she yelled frightfully; and it was well that her son
and others ran so fast, for they had well nigh been too late. As
it was, they carried her into the teepee, where the medicine man
took charge of her case; and she was quite well again in an hour
or two. Report says (but there is a sad amount of scandal in an
Indian village) that the son has never offended the mother
since; so, like many a willful woman, she has gained her point.
Red Earth witnessed the cutting down of the old woman,
and as she returned to her teepee, her quick ear warned her of
coming footsteps. She lingered apart from the others, and soon
she saw the eagle feathers of her warrior as he descended the
hill towards the village. Gladly would she have gone to meet him
to welcome him home, but she knew that
Shining Iron was watching her motions, and she bent her steps
homeward. She was quite sure that it would not be long before he
would seek her, and then she would tell him what had passed, and
make arrangements for
their course of conduct for the future.
Fiery Wind was the nephew of Good Road, but he, like
the sons, was in disgrace with the chief, and, like them, he had
vowed vengeance against "Old Bets."
The gun is now generally used among the Dahcotahs as a
weapon of warfare. But those bands in the neighborhood of Fort
Snelling considered it as a necessary part of their war
implements, before the distant bands were at all acquainted with
its use.
Some time ago, one of the Mun-da-wa-kan-tons gave a gun
to a Sisse-ton, who, proud of the gift, went out immediately to
use it. On his return to his village he came up with a drove of
buffaloes. His first impulse was to use his bow and arrow, but a
moment's thought reminded him of the gift of his friend. He
loaded the gun, saying at the same time to it, "Now, the
Dahcotahs call you 'wah-kun' (supernatural), kill me the fattest
cow in the drove." He waited a few moments to see his orders
executed, but the gun was not "wah-kun" enough to fire by order
alone. Seeing that it did not go off, the Sisse-ton flew into a
rage and broke the gun into pieces. "I suppose," said he "that
if a Mun-da-wah-can-ton had told you to kill a buffalo, you
would have done it, but you do not regard what a Sisse-ton
says." So he threw the pieces of the gun away, and found his bow
and arrows of far more service.
However naturally the usages of warfare may come to the
Indians, they are also made a part of their education.
The children are taught that it is wicked to murder without a
cause; but when offence has been given, they are in duty bound
to retaliate.
The day after the return of Fiery Wind, the boys of the
village were to attack a hornet's nest. This is one of the ways
of training their sons to warfare. One of the old warriors had
seen a hornet's nest in the woods, and he returned to the
village, and with the chief assembled all the boys in the
village. The chief ordered the boys to take off all their
clothes, and gave them each a gun. He then told them how brave
their forefathers were that they never feared pain or danger and
that they must prove themselves worthy sons of such ancestors.
"One of these days you will be men, and then you will go on war
parties and kill your enemies, and then you will be fit to join
in the dog feast. Be brave, and do not fear the sting of the
hornet, for if you do, you will be cowards instead of warriors,
and the braves will call you women and laugh at you."
This was enough to animate the courage of the boys some of them
not more than five years old pushed ahead of their elder
brothers, eager to show to their fathers, who accompanied them,
how little they feared their enemies, as they termed the
hornets. And formidable enemies they were too for many of the
little fellows returned sadly stung, with swollen limbs, and
closed eyes; but they bore their wounds as well as brave men
would have endured their pain on a battle-field.
After leaving their village, they entered the woods farther from
the banks of the river. The guide who had seen the nest led the
way, and the miniature warriors trod as lightly as if there was
danger of rousing a sleeping foe. At last the old man pointed to
the nest, and without a moment's hesitation, the young Dahcotahs
attacked it. Out flew the hornets in every direction. Some of
the little boys cried out with the pain from the stings of the
hornets on their unprotected limbs but the cries of Shame!
shame! from one of the old men soon recalled them to their duty,
and they marched up again not a whit discomfited. Good Road
cheered them on. "Fight well, my warriors," said he; "you will
carry many scalps home, you are brave men."
It was not long before the nest was quite destroyed,
and then the old men said they must take a list of the killed
and wounded. The boys forced a loud laugh when they replied that
there were no scalps taken by the enemy, but they could not deny
that the list of the wounded was quite a long one. Some of them
limped, in spite of their efforts to walk upright, and one
little fellow had to be assisted along by his father, for both
eyes were closed; and, although stung in every direction and
evidently suffering agony, the brave boy would not utter a
complaint.
When they approached the village, the young warriors
formed into Indian file, and entered as triumphantly as their
fathers would have done, had they borne twenty Chippeway scalps
with them.
The mothers first applauded the bravery of their sons;
and then applied herbs to their swollen limbs, and the mimic war
furnished a subject of amusement for the villages for the
remainder of the day.
It would be well for the Dahcotahs if they only sought
the lives of their enemies. But they are wasting in numbers far
more by their internal dissensions than from other causes.
Murder is so common among them, that it is even less than a nine
days' wonder; all that is thought necessary is to bury the dead,
and then some relative must avenge his quarrel.
Red Earth told her lover of the threat of Shining Iron, and the
young man was thus put on his guard. The sons of Good Road's
first wife were also told of the state of things, and they told
Fiery Wind that they would take up his quarrel, glad of an
opportunity to avenge their own and their mother's wrongs. It
was in the month of April, or as the Dahcotahs say in "the moon
that geese lay," that Red Earth took her place by the side of
her husband, thus asserting her right to be
mistress of his wigwam. While she occupied herself with her many
duties, she never for a moment forgot the threat of Shining
Iron. But her cares and anxieties for her husband's safety were
soon over. She had not long been a wife before her enemy lay a
corpse; his life was a forfeit to his love for her, and Red
Earth had a woman's heart. Although she could but rejoice that
the fears which had tormented her were now unnecessary, yet when
she remembered how devotedly the dead warrior had loved her, how
anxiously he had tried to please her, she could not but shed a
few tears of sorrow for his death. But they were soon wiped away
not for the world would she have had her husband see them.
The oldest sons of Good Road were true to their word and the son
of Old Bets was not the only subject for their vengeance. His
sister was with him at the moment that they chose to accomplish
their purpose; and when an Indian commences to shed blood, there
is no knowing how soon he will be satisfied. Shining Iron died
instantly, but the sister's wounds were not fatal she is slowly
recovering.
It was but yesterday that we visited the grave of the
dead warrior. On a hill near the St. Peters his body is buried.
The Indians have enclosed the grave, and there is a "Wah-kun
stone," to which they sacrifice, at his head. No one reposes
near him. Alone he lies, undisturbed by aught except the winds
that sigh over him. The first flowers of Spring are blooming on
the spot where he played in childhood, and here, where he
reposes, he often sat to mourn the unkindness of Red Earth, and
vow vengeance on his successful rival.
But he is not unwatched. His spirit is ever near, and
perhaps he will again live on earth.6
His friends believe that he may hold communion with Unk-ta-he,
that from that God he will learn the mysteries of the Earth and
Water; and when he lives again in another form, he will instruct
the Dahcotahs in their religion, and be a great medicine man.
Good Road is quite reconciled to his sons, for he says
it was a brave deed to get rid of an enemy. In vain does Old
Bets ask for vengeance on the murderers. Good Road reminds her
that Shining Iron had made a threat, and it was not proper he
should live; and the chief insisted more upon this, when he
added that these children of her's were by a former husband, and
it was natural his sons should resent their father's preference
for them.
So after all Old Bets doubts whether she, or the
Chief's first wife, has got the best of it; and as she dresses
the wounds of her daughter, she wishes that the Dahcotahs had
killed her mother instead of adopting her lamenting, too, that
she should ever have attained to the honor of being Good Road's
wife.

3: The Sioux have great faith in spells. A
lover will take gum, and after putting some medicine in it, will
induce the girl of his choice to chew it, or put it in her way
so that she will take it up of her own accord. It is a long time
before an Indian lover will take a refusal from the woman he has
chosen for a wife.
4: The idea is ridiculed by some, that an
Indian mother troubles herself about the morals of her children;
but it is nevertheless true, that she talks to them, and,
according to her own ideas of right and wrong, tries to instill
good principles into their minds. The grandmothers take a great
deal of care of their grandchildren.
5: The head-strap is made of buffalo skin. It
is from eight to ten, or sometimes twenty-four feet long. The
women fasten their heavy burdens to this strap, which goes
around the forehead; the weight of the burden falls upon the
head and back. This occasions the figures of the Indian women to
stoop, since they necessarily lean forward in order to preserve
their balance.
6: The Sioux believe in the transmigration of
souls. Many of the Indians near Fort Snelling say they have
lived before on earth. The jugglers remember many incidents that
occurred during some former residence on earth, and they will
tell them to you with all the gravity imaginable.
Dahcotah Notes About the Book:
Source: Dahcotah, Or Life and Legends of the
Sioux around Ft. Snelling, Mary H. Eastman,
1849
Online Publication: The manuscript was scanned and
then ocr'd. Minimal editing has been done, and readers can and should expect
some errors in the textual output.
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