<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2>TRADITION OF THE FINDING OF HORSES</h2>
<p class="subtitle">Ponca</p>
<p><span class="dropcap">L</span>ong ago, the people followed the Missouri
River northward to a place where they could
step over the water. Then they turned, and
were going across the land. Then they met the
Padouca [Comanche].</p>
<p>At that time the Ponca had no animals but dogs to
help them carry burdens. Wherever they went they
had to go on foot, but the people were strong and fleet.
They could run a great distance and not be weary. One
day when they were hunting buffalo, they met the
Padouca. Then they had many battles with them.
The Padouca were mounted on strange animals. At
first the Ponca thought it was all one animal. The
Padouca had bows made from elk horn. They were
not very long, nor were they very strong. They boiled
the horn until it was soft; then they scraped it, and
bound it together with sinews and glue. Their arrows
were tipped with bone. They fought also with a stone
battle-ax. The handle was a sapling; a grooved stone
ax head, pointed at both ends, was fastened to this with
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</SPAN></span>
rawhides. So the Padouca were terrible fighters.
They protected their horses with a covering of thick
rawhide cut in round pieces, and put together like
fish scales. They spread glue over the outside and then
sand. So when the Comanches fought, the arrows of
their enemies glanced off the horses’ armor. Then the
Padouca made breastplates for themselves like those of
the horses.</p>
<p>When the Ponca met these terrible warriors, they
were afraid. They thought man and horse were one.
They named it “Kawa” because they noticed the odor
of the horse. Then they knew by this odor when the
Padouca were coming. When a man smelled the
horses, he would run to the camp and say, “The wind
tells us the Kawa are coming.” Then the Ponca would
make ready to defend themselves. The Ponca had
many battles with the Comanches. They did not know
how to use the animals, so they killed the horses as well
as the men. Neither could they find out where the
Padouca lived.</p>
<p>One day the two tribes had a great battle. The
people fought all day. Sometimes the Ponca were
driven back, sometimes the Padouca. Then at last a
Ponca shot a Padouca so that he fell from his horse.
Then the battle ceased. After this, one of the Padouca
came toward the Ponca and said in plain Ponca,</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</SPAN></span>
“Who are you? What do you call yourselves?”</p>
<p>The Ponca replied, “We call ourselves Ponca. You
speak our language, are you of our tribe?”</p>
<p>The other said, “No. I speak your language as a
gift from a Ponca spirit. One day I lay on a Ponca
grave after a battle. Then a man rose from the grave
and spoke to me. So I know your language.”</p>
<p>Then it was agreed to make peace. The tribes
visited each other. The Ponca traded their bows and
arrows for horses. They knew where the Padouca
lived. Then the Padouca taught the Ponca how to
ride, and how to put burdens on the horses.</p>
<p>When the Ponca had learned how to ride, and had
horses, they went to war again. They attacked the
Padouca in their own village. They attacked them so
many times and stole so many of their horses that at last
the Padouca fled. We do not know where they went.
The Ponca followed the Platte River toward the rising
sun; then they came back to the Missouri, and they
brought their horses with them.</p>
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