In a region of country where the
forest and the prairie strived which should be the most
beautiful—the open plain, with its free sunshine and winds and
flowers, or the close wood, with its delicious twilight-walks and
enamored haunts—there lived a wicked manito in the disguise of an
old Indian.
Although the country furnished an abundance of game, and whatever
else a good heart could wish for, it was the study of this wicked
genius to destroy such as fell into his hands. He made use of all
his arts to decoy men into his power, for the purpose of killing
them. The country had been once thickly peopled, but this Mudjee
Monedo had so thinned it by his cruel practices, that he now lived
almost solitary in the wilderness.
The secret of his success lay in his great speed. He had the power
to assume the shape of any four-footed creature, and it was his
custom to challenge such as he sought to destroy, to run with him.
He had a beaten path on which he ran, leading around a large lake,
and he always ran around this circle so that the starting and the
winning-post was the same. Whoever failed as every one had, yielded
up his life at this post; and although he ran every day, no man was
ever known to beat this evil genius; for whenever he was pressed
hard, he changed himself into a fox, wolf, deer, or other
swift-footed animal, and was thus able to leave his competitor
behind.
The whole country was in dread of this same Mudjee Monedo, and yet
the young men were constantly running with him; for if they refused,
he called them cowards, which was a reproach they could not bear.
They would rather die than be called cowards.
To keep up his sport, the manito made light of these deadly
foot-matches, and instead of assuming a braggart air, and going
about in a boastful way, with the blood of such as he had overcome,
upon his hands, he adopted very pleasing manners, and visited the
lodges around the country as any other sweet-tempered and harmless
old Indian might.
His secret object in these friendly visits was to learn whether the
young boys were getting old enough to run with him; he kept a very
sharp eye upon their growth, and the day he thought them ready, he
did not fail to challenge them to a trial on his racing-ground.
There was not a family in all that beautiful region which had not in
this way been visited and thinned out; and the manito had quite
naturally come to be held in abhorrence by all the Indian mothers in
the country.
It happened that there lived near him a poor widow woman, whose
husband and seven sons he had made way with; and she was now living
with an only daughter, and a son of ten or twelve years old.
This widow was very poor and feeble, and she suffered so much for
lack of food and other comforts of the lodge, that she would have
been glad to die, but for her daughter and her little son. The
Mudjee Monedo had already visited her lodge to observe whether the
boy was sufficiently grown to be challenged to the race; and so
crafty in his approaches and so soft in his manners was the monedo,
that the mother feared that he would yet decoy the son and make way
with him as he had done with his father and his seven brothers, in
spite of all her struggles to save him.
And yet she strove with all her might to strengthen her son in every
good course. She taught him, as best she could, what was becoming
for the wise hunter and the brave warrior. She remembered and set
before him all that she could recall of the skill and the craft of
his father and his brothers who were lost.
The widow woman also instructed her daughter in whatever could make
her useful as a wife; and in the leisure-time of the lodge, she gave
her lessons in the art of working with the quills of porcupine, and
bestowed on her such other accomplishments as should make her an
ornament and a blessing to her husband's household. The daughter,
Minda by name, was kind and obedient to her mother, and never failed
in her duty. Their lodge stood high up on the banks of a lake, which
gave them a wide prospect of country, embellished with groves and
open fields, which waved with the blue light of their long grass,
and made, at all hours of sun and moon, a cheerful scene to look
upon.
Across this beautiful prairie, Minda had one morning made her way to
gather dry limbs for their fire; for she disdained no labor of the
lodge. And while enjoying the sweetness of the air and the green
beauty of the woods, she strolled far away.
She had come to a bank, painted with flowers of every hue, and was
reclining on its fragrant couch, when a bird, of red and deep-blue
plumage softly blended, alighted on a branch near by, and began to
pour forth its carol. It was a bird of strange character, such as
she had never before seen. Its first note was so delicious to the
ear of Minda, and it so pierced to her young heart, that she
listened as she had never before to any mortal or heavenly sound. It
seemed like the human voice, forbidden to speak, and uttering its
language through this wild wood-chant with a mournful melody, as if
it bewailed the lack of the power or the right to make itself more
plainly intelligible.
The voice of the bird rose and fell, and circled round and round,
but whithersoever floated or spread out its notes, they seemed ever
to have their center where Minda sat; and she looked with sad eyes
into the sad eyes of the mournful bird, that sat in his red and
deep-blue plumage just opposite to the flowery bank.
The poor bird strove more and more with his voice, and seemed ever
more and more anxiously to address his notes of lament to Minda's
ear, till at last she could not refrain from saying, "What aileth
thee, sad bird?"
As if he had but waited to be spoken to, the bird left his branch,
and alighting upon the bank, smiled on Minda, and, shaking his
shining plumage, answered:
"I am bound in this condition until a maiden shall accept me in
marriage. I have wandered these groves and sung to many and many of
the Indian girls, but none ever heeded my voice till you. Will you
be mine?" he added, and poured forth a flood of melody which
sparkled and spread itself with its sweet murmurs over all the
scene, and fairly entranced the young Minda, who sat silent, as if
she feared to break the charm by speech.
The bird, approaching nearer, asked her, if she loved him, to get
her mother's consent to their marriage. "I shall be free then," said
the bird, "and you shall know me as I am."
Minda lingered, and listened to the sweet voice of the bird in its
own forest notes, or filling each pause with gentle human discourse;
questioning her as to her home, her family, and the little incidents
of her daily life.
She returned to the lodge later than usual, but she was too timid to
speak to her mother of that which the bird had charged her. She
returned again and again to the fragrant haunt in the wood; and
everyday she listened to the song and the discourse of her bird
admirer with more pleasure, and he every day besought her to speak
to her mother of the marriage. This she could not, however, muster
heart and courage to do.
At last the widow began herself to have a suspicion that her
daughter's heart was in the wood, from her long delays in returning,
and the little success she had in gathering the fire-branches for
which she went in search.
In answer to her mother's questions, Minda revealed the truth, and
made known her lover's request. The mother, considering the lonely
and destitute condition of her little household, gave her consent.
The daughter, with light steps, hastened with the news to the wood.
The bird lover of course heard it with delight, and fluttered
through the air in happy circles, and poured forth a song of joy
which thrilled Minda to the heart.
He said that he would come to the lodge at sunset, and immediately
took wing, while Minda hung fondly upon his flight, till he was lost
far away in the blue sky.
With the twilight the bird lover, whose name was Monedowa, appeared
at the door of the lodge, as a hunter, with a red plume and a mantle
of blue upon his shoulders.
He addressed the widow as his friend, and she directed him to sit
down beside her daughter, and they were regarded as man and wife.
Early on the following morning, he asked for the bow and arrows of
those who had been slain by the wicked manito, and went out
a-hunting. As soon as he had got out of sight of the lodge, he
changed himself into the wood-bird, as he had been before his
marriage, and took his flight through the air.
Although game was scarce in the neighborhood of the widow's lodge,
Monedowa returned at evening, in his character of a hunter, with two
deer. This was his daily practice, and the widow's family never more
lacked for food.
It was noticed, however, that Monedowa himself ate but little, and
that of a peculiar kind of meat, flavored with berries, which, with
other circumstances, convinced them that he was not as the Indian
people around him.
In a few days his mother-in-law told him that the manito would come
to pay them a visit, to see how the young man, her son, prospered.
Monedowa answered that he should on that day be absent. When the
time arrived, he flew upon a tall tree, overlooking the lodge, and
took his station there as the wicked manito passed in.
The mudjee monedo cast sharp glances at the scaffolds so well laden
with meat, and as soon as he had entered, he said, "Why, who is it
that is furnishing you with meat so plentifully?"
"No one," she answered, "but my son; he is just beginning to kill
deer."
"No, no," he retorted; "some one is living with you."
"Kaween, no indeed," replied the widow; "you are only making sport
of my hapless condition. Who do you think would come and trouble
themselves about me?"
"Very well," answered the manito, "I will go; but on such a day I
will again visit you, and see who it is that furnishes the meat, and
whether it is your son or not."
He had no sooner left the lodge and got out of sight, than the
son-in-law made his appearance with two more deer. On being made
acquainted with the conduct of the manito, "Very well," he said, "I
will be at home the next time, to see him."
Both the mother and the wife urged Monedowa to be aware of the
manito. They made known to him all of his cruel courses, and assured
him that no man could escape from his power.
"No matter," said Monedowa; "if he invites me to the race-ground, I
will not be backward. What follows, may teach him, my mother, to
show pity on the vanquished, and not to trample on the widow and
those who are without fathers."
When the day of the visit of the manito arrived, Monedowa told his
wife to prepare certain pieces of meat, which he pointed out to her,
together with two or three buds of the birch-tree, which he
requested her to put in the pot. He directed also that the manito
should be hospitably received, as if he had been just the
kind-hearted old Indian he professed to be. Monedowa then dressed
himself as a warrior, embellishing his visage with tints of red, to
show that he was prepared for either war or peace.
As soon as the mudjee monedo arrived, he eyed this strange warrior
whom he had never seen before; but he dissembled, as usual, and,
with a gentle laugh, said to the widow, "Did I not tell you that
some one was staying with you, for I knew your son was too young to
hunt."
The widow excused herself by saying that she did not think it
necessary to tell him, inasmuch as he was a manito, and must have
known before he asked.
The manito was very pleasant with Monedowa, and after much other
discourse, in a gentle-spoken voice, he invited him to the
racing-ground, saying it was a manly amusement, that he would have
an excellent chance to meet there with other warriors, and that he
should himself be pleased to run with him.
Monedowa would have excused himself, saying that he knew nothing of
running.
"Why," replied the mudjee monedo, trembling in every limb as he
spoke, "don't you see how old I look, while you are young and full
of life. We must at least run a little to amuse others."
"Be it so, then," replied Monedowa. "I will oblige you. I will go in
the morning."
Pleased with his crafty success, the manito would have now taken his
leave, but he was pressed to remain and partake of their
hospitality. The meal was immediately prepared. But one dish was
used.
Monedowa partook of it first, to show his guest that he need not
fear, saying at the same time, "It is a feast, and as we seldom
meet, we must eat all that is placed on the dish, as a mark of
gratitude to God for permitting me to kill animals, and
for the pleasure of seeing you, and partaking of it with you."
They ate and talked, on this and that, until they had nearly
dispatched the meal, when the manito took up the dish and drank off
the broth at a breath. On setting it down he immediately turned his
head and commenced coughing with great violence. The old body in
which he had disguised himself was well-nigh shaken in pieces, for
he had, as Monedowa expected, swallowed a grain of the birch-bud,
and this, which relished to himself as being of the bird nature,
greatly distressed the old manito, who partook of the character of
an animal, or four-footed thing.
He was at last put to such confusion of face by his constant
coughing, that he was enforced to leave, saying, or rather
hiccoughing as he left the lodge, that he should look for the young
man at the racing-ground in the morning.
When the morning came, Monedowa was early astir, oiling his limbs
and enameling his breast and arms with red and blue, resembling the
plumage in which he had first appeared to Minda. Upon his brow he
placed a tuft of feathers of the same shining tints.
By his invitation his wife, Minda, the mother and her young son,
attended Monedowa to the manito's racing-ground.
The lodge of the manito stood upon a high ground, and near it
stretched out a long row of other lodges, said to be possessed by
wicked kindred of his, who shared in the spoils of his cruelty.
As soon as the young hunter and his party approached, the inmates
appeared at their lodge-doors and cried out:
"We are visited."
At this cry, the mudjee monedo came forth and descended with his
companions to the starting-post on the plain. From this the course
could be seen, winding in a long girdle about the lake; and as they
were now all assembled, the old manito began to speak of the race,
belted himself up and pointed to the post, which was an upright
pillar of stone.
"But before we start," said the manito, "I wish it to be understood
that when men run with me I make a wager, and I expect them to abide
by it—life against life."
"Very well—be it so," answered Monedowa. "We shall see whose head is
to be dashed against the stone."
"We shall," rejoined the mudjee monedo. "I am very old, but I shall
try and make a run."
"Very well," again rejoined Monedowa; "I hope we shall both stand to
our bargain."
"Good!" said the old manito; and he at the same time cast a sly
glance at the young hunter, and rolled his eyes toward where stood
the pillar of stone.
"I am ready," said Monedowa.
The starting shout was given, and they set off at high speed, the
manito leading, and Monedowa pressing closely after. As he closed
upon him, the old manito began to show his power, and changing
himself into a fox he passed the young hunter with ease, and went
leisurely along.
Monedowa now, with a glance upward, took the shape of the strange
bird of red and deep-blue plumage, and with one flight, lighting at
some distance ahead of the manito, resumed his mortal shape.
When the mudjee monedo espied his competitor before him, "Whoa!
whoa!" he exclaimed; "this is strange;" and he immediately changed
himself into a wolf, and sped past Monedowa.
As he galloped by, Monedowa heard a noise from his throat, and he
knew that he was still in distress from the birch-bud which he had
swallowed at his mother-in-law's lodge.
Monedowa again took wing, and, shooting into the air, he descended
suddenly with great swiftness, and took the path far ahead of the
old manito.
As he passed the wolf he whispered in his ear:
"My friend, is this the extent of your speed?"
The manito began to be troubled with bad forebodings, for, on
looking ahead, he saw the young hunter in his own manly form,
running along at leisure. The mudjee monedo, seeing the necessity of
more speed, now passed Monedowa in the shape of a deer.
They were now far around the circle of the lake, and fast closing in
upon the starting-post, when Monedowa, putting on his red and blue
plumage, glided along the air and alighted upon the track far in
advance.
To overtake him, the old manito assumed the shape of the buffalo;
and he pushed on with such long gallops that he was again the
foremost on the course. The buffalo was the last change he could
make, and it was in this form that he had most frequently conquered.
The young hunter, once more a bird, in the act of passing the manito,
saw his tongue lolling from his mouth with fatigue.
"My friend," said Monedowa, "is this all your speed?"
The manito made no answer. Monedowa had resumed his character of a
hunter, and was within a run of the winning-post, when the wicked
manito had nearly overtaken him.
"Bakah! bakah! nejee!" he called out to Monedowa; "stop, my friend,
I wish to talk to you."
Monedowa laughed aloud as he replied:
"I will speak to you at the starting-post. When men run with me I
make a wager, and I expect them to abide by it—life against life."
One more flight as the blue bird with red wings, and Monedowa was so
near to the goal that he could easily reach it in his mortal shape.
Shining in beauty, his face lighted up like the sky, with tinted
arms and bosom gleaming in the sun, and the parti-colored plume on
his brow waving in the wind. Monedowa, cheered by a joyful shout
from his own people, leaped to the post.
The manito came on with fear in his face.
"My friend," he said, "spare my life;" and then added, in a low
voice, as if he would not that the others should hear it, "Give me
to live." And he began to move off as if the request had been
granted.
"As you have done to others," replied Monedowa, "so shall it be done
to you."
And seizing the wicked manito, he dashed him against the pillar of
stone. His kindred, who were looking on in horror, raised a cry of
fear and fled away in a body to some distant land, whence they have
never returned.
The widow's family left the scene, and when they had all come out
into the open fields, they walked on together until they had reached
the fragrant bank and the evergreen wood, where the daughter had
first encountered her bird lover.
Monedowa turning to her, said:
"My mother, here we must part. Your daughter and myself must now
leave you. The Good Spirit, moved with pity, has allowed me to be
your friend. I have done that for which I was sent. I am permitted
to take with me the one whom I love. I have found your daughter ever
kind, gentle and just. She shall be my companion. The blessing of
the Good Spirit be ever with you. Farewell, my mother—my brother,
farewell."
While the widow woman was still lost in wonder at these words,
Monedowa, and Minda his wife, changed at the same moment, rose into
the air, as beautiful birds, clothed in shining colors of red and
blue.
They caroled together as they flew, and their songs were happy, and
falling, falling, like clear drops, as they rose, and rose, and
winged their way far upward, a delicious peace came into the mind of
the poor widow woman, and she returned to her lodge deeply thankful
at heart for all the goodness that had been shown to her by the
Master of Life.
From that day forth she never knew want, and her young son proved a
comfort to her lodge, and the tuneful carol of Monedowa and Minda,
as it fell from heaven, was a music always, go whither she would,
sounding peace and joy in her ear.