The little Elves of Darkness, so
says the old Iroquois grandmother, were wise and mysterious. They
dwelt under the earth, where were deep forests and broad plains.
There they kept captive all the evil things that wished to injure
human beings,--the venomous reptiles, the wicked spiders, and the
fearful monsters. Sometimes one of these evil creatures
escaped and rushed upward to the bright, pure air, and spread its
poisonous breath over the living things of the upper-world. But
such happenings were rare, for the Elves of Darkness were faithful
and strong, and did not willingly allow the wicked beasts and
reptiles to harm human beings and the growing things.
When the night was lighted by the moon's soft rays, and the woods of
the upper-world were sweet with the odor of the spring-flowers, then
the Elves of Darkness left the under-world, and creeping from their
holes, held a festival in the woods. And under many a tree,
where the blades of grass had refused to grow, the Little People
danced until rings of green sprang up beneath their feet. And
to the festival came the Elves of Light,--among whom were
Tree-Elves, Flower-Elves, and Fruit-Elves. They too danced and
made merry.
But when the moonlight faded away, and day began to break, then the
Elves of Darkness scampered back to their holes, and returned once
more to the under-world; while the Elves of Light began their daily
tasks.
For in the springtime these Little People of the Light hid in
sheltered places. They listened to the complaints of the seeds
that lay covered in the ground, and they whispered to the earth
until the seeds burst their pods and sent their shoots upward to the
light. Then the little Elves wandered over the fields and
through the woods, bidding all growing things to look upon the sun.
The Tree-Elves tended the trees, unfolding their leaves, and feeding
their roots with sap from the earth. The Flower-Elves
unwrapped the baby buds, and tinted the petals of the opening
flowers, and played with the bees and the butterflies.
But the busiest of all were the Fruit-Elves. Their greatest care in
the spring was the strawberry plant. When the ground softened
from the frost, the Fruit-Elves loosened the earth around each
strawberry root, that its shoots might push through to the light.
They shaped the plant's leaves, and turned its blossoms toward the
warm rays of the sun. They trained its runners, and assisted
the timid fruit to form. They painted the luscious berry, and
bade it ripen. And when the first strawberries blushed on the
vines, these guardian Elves protected them from the evil insects
that had escaped from the world of darkness underground.
And the old Iroquois grandmother tells, how once, when the fruit
first came to earth, the Evil Spirit, Hahgwehdaetgah, stole the
strawberry plant, and carried it to his gloomy cave, where he hid it
away. And there it lay until a tiny sunbeam pierced the damp
mould, and finding the little vine carried it back to its sunny
fields. And ever since then the strawberry plant has lived and
thrived in the fields and woods. But the Fruit-Elves, fearing
lest the Evil One should one day steal the vine again, watch day and
night over their favorite. And when the strawberries ripen
they give the juicy, fragrant fruit to the Iroquois children as they
gather the spring flowers in the woods.