Once upon a time, all the people
of a certain country had died, excepting two helpless children, a
baby boy and a little girl.
When their parents died, these children were asleep. The little
girl, who was the elder, was the first to awake. She looked around
her, but seeing nobody beside her little brother, who lay smiling in
his dreams, she quietly resumed her bed.
At the end of ten days her brother moved, without opening his eyes.
At the end of ten days more he changed his position, lying on the
other side, and in this way he kept on sleeping for a long time; and
pleasant, too, must have been his dreams, for his little sister
never looked at him that he was not quite a little heaven of smiles
and flashing lights, which beamed about his head and filled the
lodge with a strange splendor.
The girl soon grew to be a woman, but the boy increased in stature
very slowly. It was a long time before he could even creep, and he
was well advanced in years before he could stand alone. When he was
able to walk, his sister made him a little bow and arrows, and hung
around his neck a small shell, saying:
"You shall be called Dais Imid, or He of the Little Shell."
Every day he would go out with his little bow, shooting at the small
birds. The first bird he killed was a tom-tit. His sister was highly
pleased when he took it to her. She carefully prepared and stuffed
it, and put it away for him.
The next day he killed a red squirrel. His sister preserved this,
too. The third day he killed a partridge, and this they had for
their evening meal.
After this he acquired more courage, and would venture some distance
from home. His skill and success as a hunter daily increased, and he
killed the deer, bear, moose, and other large animals inhabiting the
forest.
At last, although so very small of stature, he became a great
hunter, and all that he shot he brought home and shared with his
sister; and whenever he entered the lodge, a light beamed about his
head and filled the place with a strange splendor.
He had now arrived at the years of manhood, but he still remained a
perfect infant in size.
One day, walking about in quest of game, he came to a small lake.
It was in the winter season; and upon the ice of the lake he saw a
man of giant height, employed killing beavers.
Comparing himself with this great man, he felt that he was no bigger
than an insect. He seated himself on the shore and watched his
movements.
When the large man had killed many beavers, he put them on a
hand-sled which he had, and pursued his way home. When he saw him
retire, the dwarf hunter followed, and, wielding his magic shell, he
cut off the tail of one of the beavers, and ran home with the prize.
The giant, on reaching his lodge with his sled-load of beavers, was
surprised to find one of them shorn of its tail.
The next day the little hero of the shell went to the same lake. The
giant, who had been busy there for some time, had already loaded his
sled and commenced his return; but running nimbly forward and
overtaking him, he succeeded in securing another of the
beaver-tails.
"I wonder," said the giant, on reaching his lodge and overlooking
his beavers, "what dog it is that has thus cheated me. Could I meet
him, I would make his flesh quiver at the point of my javelin."
The giant forgot that he had taken these very beavers out of a
beaver-dam which belonged to the little shell-man and his sister,
without permission.
The next day he pursued his hunting at the beaver-dam near the lake,
and he was again followed by the little man with the shell.
This time the giant was so nimble in his movements that he had
nearly reached home before the Shell, make the best speed he could,
could overtake him; but he was just in time to clip another beaver's
tail before the sled slipped into the lodge.
The giant would have been a patient giant, indeed, if his anger had
not been violent at these constant tricks played upon him. What
vexed him most, was, that he could not get a sight of his enemy.
Sharp eyes he would have needed to do so, inasmuch as he of the
little shell had the gift of making himself invisible whenever he
chose.
The giant, giving vent to his feelings with many loud rumbling
words, looked sharply around to see whether he could discover any
tracks. He could find none. The unknown had stepped too lightly to
leave the slightest mark behind.
The next day the giant resolved to disappoint his mysterious
follower by going to the beaver-dam very early; and accordingly,
when the little shell man came to the place he found the fresh
traces of his work, but the giant had already gone away. He followed
hard upon his tracks, but he failed to overtake him. When he of the
little shell came in sight of the lodge, the stranger was in front
of it, employed in skinning his beavers.
As Dais-Imid stood looking at him—for he had been all this time
invisible—he thought:
"I will let him have a view of me."
Presently the man, who proved to be no less a personage than the
celebrated giant, Manabozho, looked up and saw him.
After regarding him with attention, "Who are you, little man?" said
Manabozho. "I have a mind to kill you."
The little hero of the shell replied:
"If you were to try to kill me you could not do it."
With this speech of the little man, Manabozho grabbed at him; but
when he thought to have had him in his hand, he was gone.
"Where are you now, little man?" cried Manabozho.
"Here, under your girdle," answered the shell-dwarf; at which giant
Manabozho, thinking to crush him, slapped down his great hand with
all his might; but on unloosing his girdle he was disappointed at
finding no dwarf there.
"Where are you now, little man?" he cried again, in a greater rage
than ever.
"In your right nostril!" the dwarf replied; whereupon the giant
Manabozho seized himself by the finger and thumb at the place, and
gave it a violent tweak; but as he immediately heard the voice of
the dwarf at a distance upon the ground, he was satisfied that he
had only pulled his own nose to no purpose.
"Good-by, Manabozho," said the voice of the invisible dwarf. "Count
your beaver-tails, and you will find that I have taken another for
my sister;" for he of the little shell never, in his wanderings or
pastimes, forgot his sister and her wishes. "Good-by, beaver-man!"
And as he went away he made himself visible once more, and a light
beamed about his head and lit the air around him with a strange
splendor; a circumstance which Manabozho, who was at times quite
thick-headed and dull of apprehension, could no way understand.
When Dais-Imid returned home, he told his sister that the time drew
nigh when they must separate.
"I must go away," said Dais-Imid, "it is my fate. You, too," he
added, "must go away soon. Tell me where you would wish to dwell."
She said, "I would like to go to the place of the breaking of
daylight. I have always loved the East. The earliest glimpses of
light are from that quarter, and it is to my mind the most beautiful
part of the heavens. After I get there, my brother, whenever you see
the clouds, in that direction, of various colors, you may think that
your sister is painting her face."
"And I," said he, "I, my sister, shall live on the mountains and
rocks. There I can see you at the earliest hour; there are the
streams of water clear; the air is pure, and the golden lights will
shine ever around my head, and I shall ever be called 'Puck-Ininee,
or the Little Wild Man of the Mountains.' But," he resumed, "before
we part forever, I must go and try to find what manitoes rule the
earth, and see which of them will be friendly to us."
He left his sister and traveled over the surface of the globe, and
then went far down into the earth.
He had been treated well wherever he went. At last he came to a
giant manito, who had a large kettle which was forever boiling. The
giant, who was a first cousin to Manabozho, and had already heard of
the tricks which Dais-Imid had played upon his kinsman, regarded him
with a stern look, and, catching him up in his hand, he threw him
unceremoniously into the kettle.
It was evidently the giant's intention to drown Dais-Imid; in which
he was mistaken, for by means of his magic shell, little Dais, in
less than a second's time, bailed the water to the bottom, leaped
from the kettle, and ran away unharmed.
He returned to his sister and related his rovings and adventures. He
finished his story by addressing her thus:
"My sister there is a manito at each of the four corners of the
earth. There is also one above them, far in the sky, a Great Being
who assigns to you, and to me, and to all of us, where we must go.
And last," he continued, "there is another and wicked one who lives
deep down in the earth. It will be our lot to escape out of his
reach. We must now separate. When the winds blow from the four
corners of the earth, you must then go. They will carry you to the
place you wish. I go to the rocks and mountains, where my kindred
will ever delight to dwell."
Dais-Imid then took his ball-stick and commenced running up a high
mountain, and a bright light shone about his head all the way, and
he kept singing as he went:
Blow, winds, blow! my sister lingers
For her dwelling in the sky,
Where the morn, with rosy fingers,
Shall her cheeks with vermil dye.
There my earliest views directed,
Shall from her their color take,
And her smiles, through clouds reflected,
Guide me on by wood or lake.
While I range the highest mountains,
Sport in valleys green and low,
Or, beside our Indian fountains,
Raise my tiny hip-hallo.
Presently the winds blew, and, as Dais-Imid had predicted, his
sister was borne by them to the eastern sky, where she has ever
since lived, and her name is now the Morning Star.