|
| |

|
Old Man Doctors |
| |
Released 17 June 2004
Blackfoot Lodge Tales |
|
Written by<>G.B. Grinnel |
| |
|
A pis'kun had been
built, and many buffalo had been run in and killed. The camp was full of
meat. Great sheets of it hung in the lodges and on the racks outside;
and now the women, having cut up all the meat, were working on the
hides, preparing some for robes, and scraping the hair from others, to
make leather. |
About
this time, Old Man came along. He had come from far and was very tired,
so he entered the first lodge he came to and sat down. Now this lodge
belonged to three old women. Their husbands had died or been killed in
war, and they had no relations to help them, so they were very poor.
After Old Man had rested a little, they set a dish of food before him.
It was dried bull meat, very tough, and some pieces of belly fat. |
"Hai'-yah
ho!" cried Old Man, after he had tasted a piece. "You treat me badly. A
whole pis'kun of fat buffalo just killed; the camp red with meat, and
here these old women give me tough bull meat and belly fat to eat. Hurry
now, roast me some ribs and a piece of back fat." |
"Alas!" exclaimed one old woman. "We have no good food. All our helpers
are dead, and we take what others leave. Bulls and poor cows are all the
people leave us." |
"Ah!"
said Old Man, "How poor, you are very poor. Take courage now. I will
help you. Tomorrow they will run another band into the pis'kun. I will
be there. I will kill the fattest cow, and you can have it all." |
Then
the old women were glad. They talked to one another, saying, "Very good
heart, Old Man. He helps the poor. Now we will live. We will have marrow
guts and liver. We will have paunch and fat kidneys." |
Old
Man said nothing more. He ate the tough meat and belly fat, and rolled
up in his robe and went to sleep. |
Morning came. The people climbed the bluffs and went out on to the
prairie, where they hid
behind the piles of
rock and bushes, which reached far out from the cliff in lines which
were always further and further apart. After a while, he who leads the
buffalo was seen coming, bringing a large band after him. Soon they were
inside the lines. The people began to rise up behind them, shouting and
waving their robes. Now they reached the edge of the bluff. The leaders
tried to stop and turn, but those behind kept pushing on, and nearly the
whole band dashed down over the rocks, only a few of the last ones
turning aside and escaping. |
The
lodges were now deserted. All the people were gone to the pis'kun to
kill the buffalo and butcher them. Where was Old Man? Did he take his
bow and arrows and go to the pis'kun to kill a fat cow for the poor old
women? No. He was sneaking around, lifting the door-ways of the lodges
and looking in. Bad person, Old Man. In the chiefs lodge he saw a little
child, a girl, asleep. Outside was a buffalo's gall, and taking a long
stick he dipped
the end of it in the gall; and then, reaching carefully into the lodge,
he drew it across the lips of the child asleep. Then he threw the stick
away, and went in and sat down. Soon the girl awoke and began to cry.
The gall was very bitter and burned her lips. |
"Pity
me, Old Man," she said. "Take this fearful thing from my lips." |
"I do
not doctor unless I am paid," he replied. Then said the girl: "See all
my father's Weapons hanging there. His shield, war head-dress, scalps,
and knife. Cure me now, and I will give you some of them." |
"I
have more of such things than I want," he replied. (What a liar! He had
none at all.) |
Again
said the girl, "Pity me, help me now, and I will give you my father's
white buffalo robe." |
"I
have plenty of white robes," replied Old Man. (Again he lied, for he
never had one.) |
"Old Man," again said the girl, "in this lodge lives a widow woman, my
father's relation. Remove this fearful thing from my lips, and I will
have my father give her to you." |
"Now
you speak well," replied Old Man. "I am a little glad. I have many
wives" (he had none), "but I would just as soon have another one." |
So he
went close to the child and pretended to doctor her, but instead of
that, he killed her and ran out. He went to the old women's lodge, and
wrapped a strip of cow skin about his head, and commenced to groan, as
if he was very sick. |
Now
the people began to come from the pis'kun, carrying great loads of meat.
This dead girl's mother came, and when she saw her child lying dead, and
blood on the ground, she ran back crying out: "My daughter has been
killed! My
daughter has been
killed!" Then all the people began to shout out and run around, and the
warriors and young men looked in the lodges, and up and down the creek
in the brush, but they could find no one who might have killed the
child. |
Then
said the father of the dead girl: "Now, today, we will find out who
killed this child. Every man in this camp every young man, every old man
must come and jump across the creek; and if any one does not jump
across, if he falls in the water, that man is the one who did the
killing." All heard this, and they began to gather at the creek, one
behind another; and the women and children went to look on, for they
wanted to see the person who had killed the little child. Now they were
ready. They were about to jump, when
someone cried out, "Old Man is not here." |
"True," said the chief, looking around, "Old Man is not here." And he
sent two young men to bring him. |
"Old
Man!" they cried out, when they came to the lodge, "a child has been
killed. We have all got to jump to find out who did it. The chief has
sent for you. You will have
to jump, too." |
"Ki'-yo!"
exclaimed the old women. "Old Man is very sick. Go off, and let him
alone. He is so sick he could not kill meat for us today." |
"It
can't be helped," the young men replied. "The chief says every one must
jump." |
So
Old Man went out toward the creek very slowly, and very much scared. He
did not know what to do. As he was going along he saw a ni'-po-muk-i
1 and he said: "Oh my little brother, pity me. Give me some
of your power to jump the creek, and here is my necklace. See how pretty
it is. I will give it to you." |
So
they traded; Old Man took some of the bird's power, and the bird took
Old Man's necklace and put it on. |
Now
they jump. Wo'-ka-hi!
They jump way across
and far on to the ground. Now they jump; another, another, another! Now
it comes Old Man's turn. He runs, he jumps, he goes high, and strikes
the ground far beyond any other person's jump. Now comes the
ni'-po-muk-i. "Wo'-ka-hi!" the men shout. "Ki'-yo!" cry the women, "the
bird has fallen in the creek." The warriors are running to kill him.
"Wait! Hold on!" cries the bird. "Let me speak a few words. Everyone
knows I am a good jumper. I can jump further than any one; but Old Man
asked me for some of my power, and I gave it to him, and he gave me this
necklace. It is very heavy and pulled me down. That is why I fell into
the creek." |
Then
the people began to shout and talk again, some saying to kill the bird,
and some not, when Old Man shouted out: "Wait, listen to me. What's the
use of quarrelling or killing anybody? Let us go back, and I will doctor
the child alive." |
Good
words. The people were glad. So they went back, and got ready for the
doctoring. First, Old Man ordered a large fire built in the lodge where
the dead girl was lying. Two old men were placed at the back of the
lodge, facing each other. They had spears, which
they held above their heads and were to thrust back and forth at each
other in time to the singing. Near the door-way were placed two old
women, facing each other. Each one held a puk'-sah-tchis, 2 a
maul, with which she was to beat time to the singing. The other seats in
the lodge were taken by people who were to sing. Now Old Man hung a big
roll of belly fat close over the fire, so that the hot grease began to
drip, and everything was ready, and the singing began. This was Old
Man's song: |
Ahk-sa'-k[=e]-wah, Ahk-sa'-k[=e]-wah,
Ahk-sa'-k[=e]-wah, etc. I don't care, I don't care, I don't care. |
And
so they sung for a long time, the old men jabbing their spears at each
other, and the old women pretending to hit each other with their mauls. |
After
a while they rested, and Old Man said: "Now I want
everyone to shut their eyes. No one can look. I am going to begin the
real doctoring." So the people shut their eyes, and the singing began
again. Then Old Man took the dripping hot fat from the fire, gave it a
mighty swing around the circle in front of the people's faces, jumped
out the door-way, and ran off. Everyone was burned. The two old men
wounded each other with their spears. The old women knocked each other
on the head with their mauls. The people cried and groaned, wiped their
burned faces, and rushed out the door; but Old Man was gone. They saw
him no more. |
|
|
|
(Courtesy Tiger Lilli Sakima) |

Webmaster: Thurman P. Woodfork
View My Guestbook Sign My Guestbook

|