An old man was sitting in his
lodge, by the side of a frozen stream. It was the end of
winter, the air was not so cold, and his fire was nearly out. He
was old and alone. His locks were white with age, and he
trembled in every joint. Day after day passed, and he heard
nothing but the sound of the storm sweeping before it the new-fallen
snow.
One day while his fire was dying, a handsome young man approached
and entered the lodge. His cheeks were red, his eyes sparkled.
He walked with a quick, light step. His forehead was bound
with a wreath of sweet-grass, and he carried a bunch of fragrant
flowers in his hand.
``Ah, my son,'' said the old man, ``I am happy to see you.
Come in! Tell me your adventures, and what strange lands you
have seen. I will tell you of my wonderful deeds, and what I
can perform. You shall do the same, and we will amuse each
other.''
The old man then drew from a bag a curiously wrought pipe. He
filled it with mild tobacco, and handed it to his guest. They
each smoked from the pipe and then began their stories.
``I am Peboan, the Spirit of Winter,'' said the old man. ``I
blow my breath, and the streams stand still. The water becomes
stiff and hard as clear stone.''
``I am Seegwun, the Spirit of Spring,'' answered the youth.
``I breathe, and flowers spring up in the meadows and woods.''
``I shake my locks,'' said the old man, ``and snow covers the land.
The leaves fall from the trees, and my breath blows them away.
The birds fly to a distant land, and the animals hide themselves
from the cold.''
``I shake my ringlets,'' said the young man, ``and warm showers of
soft rain fall upon the earth. The flowers lift their heads
from the ground, the grass grows thick and green. My voice
recalls the birds, and they come flying joyfully from the Southland.
The warmth of my breath unbinds the streams, and they sing the songs
of summer. Music fills the groves where- ever I walk, and all
nature rejoices.''
And while they were talking thus a wonderful change took place.
The sun began to rise. A gentle warmth stole over the place.
Peboan, the Spirit of Winter, became silent. His head drooped,
and the snow outside the lodge melted away. Seegwun, the Spirit of
Spring, grew more radiant, and rose joyfully to his feet. The
robin and the bluebird began to sing on the top of the lodge. The
stream began to murmur at the door, and the fragrance of opening
flowers came softly on the breeze.
The lodge faded away, and Peboan sank down and dissolved into tiny
streams of water, that vanished under the brown leaves of the
forest. Thus the Spirit of Winter departed, and where he had melted
away, there the Indian children gathered the first blossoms,
fragrant and delicately pink,--the modest Spring Beauty.