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<h1 style="padding-bottom: 3em;">MYTHS AND LEGENDS<br/> OF THE GREAT PLAINS</h1>
<p class="center"><b>SELECTED AND EDITED BY</b></p>
<h2 style="padding-bottom: 3em;">KATHARINE BERRY JUDSON</h2>
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<h3><SPAN name="BIANKIS_VISION" id="BIANKIS_VISION"></SPAN>BIANKI’S VISION</h3>
<p class="center">(Kiowa Drawing)</p>
<p><i>The ghost-dance among the Sioux was based on the belief that the dead
Indians would all come to life and drive out the white intruders. Then
the buffaloes, which were disappearing, would come back in the immense
herds of the olden time.</i></p>
<p><i>The vision of one of the dreamer priests is represented. After
reaching the spirit world, Bianki found himself on a vast prairie
covered with innumerable buffaloes and ponies. He went through the
herds (dotted lines) until he came to a large Kiowa camp, with its
ornament tepees. He met four young women who had died years before,
and asked about two of his brothers, also dead. He soon met them
coming into camp, with buffalo meat hanging from their saddles.</i></p>
<div class="figcenter"> <SPAN href="images/mlgp03.jpg"> <ANTIMG src="images/mlgp03th.jpg" width-obs="400" height-obs="271" alt="" /></SPAN></div>
<p class="center"><i>Courtesy of the Smithsonian Institution</i></p>
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<h2>PREFACE</h2>
<p><span class="dropcap">F</span>rom the edge of the Darkening Land, where
stand the mountains which encircle the earth-plain,
eastward toward the Sunland, lie the great
plains of America. Smooth and flat and green they
stretch away, hundreds of miles, rising from a dead
level into a soft rolling of the land, then into the long
green waves of the prairies where rivers flow, where the
water ripples as it flows, and trees shade the banks of
the gleaming water.</p>
<p>Here, amidst the vast sweep of the plains which
stretch away to the horizon on every side, boundless,
limitless, endless, lived the plains Indians. Standing
in the midst of this vast green plain on a soft May
morning, after the Thunder Gods have passed, when
the sun is shining in the soft blue above, and the
sweet, rain-swept air is blown about by the Four
Winds which are always near to man, day and night,—standing
far out on the plains with no hint of the
white man or his work—one sees the earth somewhat
as the Indian saw it and wonders not at his reverence
for the Mysterious One who dwelt overhead, beyond
the blue stone arch, and for the lesser powers which
came to him over the four paths guarded by the Four
Winds. It was Wakoda, the Mysterious One, who
gave to man the sunshine, the clear rippling water,
the clear sky from which all storms, all clouds are
absent, the sky which is the symbol of peace. Through
this sky sweeps the eagle, the “Mother” of Indian
songs, bearing upon her strong wings the message of
peace and calling to her nestlings as she flies. Little
wonder that to some tribes song was an integral part of
their lives, and that emotions too deep for words were
expressed in song.</p>
<p>Other songs there were, with words, songs of the
birds which fly through that soft, tender blue:</p>
<div class="poem">
<div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">All around the birds in flocks are flying;</span><br/>
<span class="i0">Dipping, rising, circling, see them coming.</span><br/>
<span class="i0">See, many birds are flocking here,</span><br/>
<span class="i0">All about us now together coming.</span><br/></div>
</div>
<p style="margin-left: 15em;">[<i>Pawnee</i>]</p>
<p>The power to fly has always inspired Indians of all
tribes and of all degrees of civilization with wonder and
reverence. The bird chiefs have their own places in
Indian myths. Owl is chief of the night; Woodpecker,
with his ceaseless tattoo on the trees, is chief of the trees;
Duck is chief of the water; but Eagle is chief of the
day. It is always Eagle who is chief of the birds, even
though Wren may outwit him in a tale told by the
fire glimmering in the tepee, when the story tellers of
the tribe tell of the happenings in the days “way
beyond.” It is Eagle who inspires admiration, and
becomes the most sacred bird.</p>
<div class="poem">
<div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">Round about a tree in ever widening circles an eagle flies, alert, watching o’er his nest;</span><br/>
<span class="i0">Loudly whistles he, a challenge sending far, o’er the country wide it echoes, there defying foes.</span><br/></div>
</div>
<p style="margin-left: 15em;">[<i>Pawnee</i>]</p>
<p>In the breeze that rippled the long grass of the prairie
and fluttered the flaps of the graceful tepee, waved
also the corn, sent by Old-Woman-Who-Never-Dies,
the ever returning life of the green thing growing. In
the ravines and on the lower slopes of the grassy waves
of the prairie bellowed the buffalo, or grazed in silence,
having long since come up from the underground
world and become the source of the Indian’s food,
clothing, home, utensils, and comfort. Endless were
the charms and enchantments to bring the buffalo herds
near his camping ground. Severe was the punishment
meted out to the thoughtless warrior whose unguarded
eagerness frightened the herds and sent them away.</p>
<p>Over the plains and prairies, at other times, swept
the Thunder Gods, with their huge jointed wings,
darkening all the land, and flashing fire from angry
eyes which struck down man and beast. Terrified were
the Indians when the Thunder Gods rolled. Vows
made to them must be kept, for relentless were they.</p>
<p>“Oh, grandfather,” prayed the Indian when the
sky was black and the lightning flashed, as he filled
a pipe with tobacco and offered it skyward, “Oh,
grandfather! I am very poor. Somewhere make
those who would injure me leave a clear space for me.”
Then he put the sacred green cedar upon the fire—the
cedar which stayed awake those seven nights and therefore
does not lose its hair every winter—and the smoke
from the sacred, burning wood, rolling upward, appeased
the rolling Thunders.</p>
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<p>The authorities used in this compilation are those
found in the annual reports of the Bureau of American
Ethnology and the Publications of the United States
Geographical and Geological Survey: contributions to
North American Ethnology. Of the various ethnologists
whose work has been used, those of especial importance
are Alice C. Fletcher, whose wonderful work
among the Omaha and Pawnee Indians is deserving of
the most careful study, J. Owen Dorsey, James Mooney,
and S. R. Riggs.</p>
<p>No claim whatever is made for original work. Indeed,
original work of any kind in a compilation such
as this would impair the authenticity of the myths, and
therefore destroy the value of this work. Nor has any
effort been made towards “style.” The only style
worth having in telling an Indian legend is that of the
Indian himself.</p>
<p style="text-align: right;">K. B. J.</p>
<p><i>Seattle, Washington.</i></p>
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