As a punishment for having once
upon a time used that foot against a venerable medicine man, Aggo
Dah Gauda had one leg looped up to his thigh, so that he was obliged
to get along by hopping. By dint of practice he had become very
skillful in this exercise, and he could make leaps which seemed
almost incredible.
Aggo had a beautiful daughter, and his chief care was to secure her
from being carried off by the king of the buffalos, who was the
ruler of all the herds of that kind, and had them entirely at his
command to make them do as he willed.
Dah Gauda, too, was quite an important person in his own way, for he
lived in great state, having a log house of his own, and a
court-yard which extended from the sill of his front-door as many
hundred miles westward as he chose to measure it.
Although he might claim this extensive privilege of ground, he
advised his daughter to keep within doors, and by no means to go far
in the neighborhood, as she would otherwise be sure to be stolen
away, as he was satisfied that the buffalo-king spent night and day
lurking about and lying in wait to seize her.
One sunshiny morning, when there were just two or three promising
clouds rolling moistly about the sky, Aggo prepared to go out
a-fishing; but before he left the lodge he reminded her of her
strange and industrious lover, whom she had never seen.
"My daughter," said he, "I am going out to fish, and as the day will
be a pleasant one, you must recollect that we have an enemy near,
who is constantly going about with two eyes that never close, and do
not expose yourself out of the lodge."
With this excellent advice, Aggo hopped off in high spirits; but he
had scarcely reached the fishing-ground when he heard a voice
singing, at a distance:
Man with the leg tied up,
Man with the leg tied up,
Broken hip—hip—
Hipped.
Man with the leg tied up,
Man with the leg tied up,
Broken leg—leg—
Legged.
There was no one in sight, but Aggo heard the words quite plainly,
and as he suspected the ditty to be the work of his enemies, the
buffalos, he hopped home as fast as his one leg could carry him.
Meantime, the daughter had no sooner been left alone in the lodge
than she thought with herself:
"It is hard to be thus forever kept in doors. But my father says it
would be dangerous to venture abroad. I know what I will do. I will
get on the top of the house, and there I can comb and dress my hair,
and no one can harm me."
She accordingly ascended the roof and busied herself in untying and
combing her beautiful hair; for it was truly beautiful, not only of
a fine, glossy quality, but it was so very long that it hung over
the eaves of the house and reached down on the ground, as she sat
dressing it.
She was wholly occupied in this employment, without a thought of
danger, when, all of a sudden, the king of the buffalos came dashing
on with his herd of followers, and making sure of her by means of
her drooping tresses, he placed her upon the back of one of his
favorite buffalos, and away he cantered over the plains. Plunging
into a river that bounded his land, he bore her safely to his lodge
on the other side.
And now the buffalo-king having secured the beautiful person of Aggo
Dah Gauda's daughter, he set to work to make her heart his own—a
little ceremony which it would have been, perhaps, wiser for his
majesty, the king of the buffalos, to have attended to before, for
he now worked to little purpose. Although he labored with great zeal
to gain her affections, she sat pensive and disconsolate in the
lodge, among the other females, and scarcely ever spoke, nor did she
take the least interest in the affairs of the king's household.
To the king himself she paid no heed, and although he breathed forth
to her every soft and gentle word he could think of, she sat still
and motionless for all the world like one of the lowly bushes by the
door of her father's lodge, when the summer wind has died away.
The king enjoined it upon the others in the lodge as a special
edict, on pain of instant death, to give to Aggo's daughter every
thing that she wanted, and to be careful not to displease her. They
set before her the choicest food. They gave her the seat of honor in
the lodge. The king himself went out hunting to obtain the most
dainty meats, both of animals and wild fowl, to pleasure her palate;
and he treated her every morning to a ride upon one of the royal
buffalos, who was so gentle in his motions as not even to disturb a
single one of the tresses of the beautiful hair of Aggo's daughter
as she paced along.
And not content with these proofs of his attachment, the king would
sometimes fast from all food, and having thus purified his spirit
and cleared his voice, he would take his Indian flute, and, sitting
before the lodge, give vent to his feelings in pensive echoes,
something after this fashion:
My sweetheart,
My sweetheart,
Ah me!
When I think of you,
When I think of you,
Ah me!
What can I do, do, do?
How I love you,
How I love you,
Ah me!
Do not hate me,
Do not hate me,
Ah me!
Speak—e'en berate me.
When I think of you,
Ah me!
What can I do, do, do?
In the mean time, Aggo Dah Gauda had reached home, and finding that
his daughter had been stolen, his indignation was so thoroughly
awakened that he would have forthwith torn every hair from his head,
but, being entirely bald, this was out of the question, so, as an
easy and natural vent to his feelings, Aggo hopped off half a mile
in every direction. First he hopped east, then he hopped west, next
he hopped north, and again he hopped south, all in search of his
daughter; till the one leg was fairly tired out. Then he sat down in
his lodge, and resting himself a little, he reflected, and then he
vowed that his single leg should never know rest again until he had
found his beautiful daughter and brought her home. For this purpose
he immediately set out.
Now that he proceeded more coolly, he could easily track the
buffalo-king until he came to the banks of the river, where he saw
that he had plunged in and swam over. There having been a frosty
night or two since, the water was so covered with thin ice that Aggo
could not venture upon it, even with one leg. He encamped hard by
till it became more solid, and then crossed over and pursued the
trail.
As he went along he saw branches broken off and strewed behind,
which guided him in his course; for these had been purposely cast
along by the daughter. And the manner in which she had accomplished
it was this. Her hair was all untied when she was caught up, and
being very long it took hold of the branches as they darted along,
and it was these twigs that she broke off as signs to her father.
When Aggo came to the king's lodge it was evening. Carefully
approaching, he peeped through the sides, and saw his daughter
sitting disconsolate. She immediately caught his eye, and knowing
that it was her father come for her, she all at once appeared to
relent in her heart, and, asking for the royal dipper, said to the
king, "I will go and get you a drink of water."
This token of submission delighted his majesty, and, high in hope,
he waited with impatience for her return.
At last he went out, but nothing could be seen or heard of the
captive daughter. Calling together his followers, they sallied forth
upon the plains, and had not gone far when they espied by the light
of the moon, which was shining roundly just over the edge of the
prairie, Aggo Dah Gauda, his daughter in his arms, making all speed
with his one leg toward the west.
The buffalos being set on by their king, raised a great shout, and
scampered off in pursuit. They thought to overtake Aggo in less than
no time; but although he had a single leg only, it was in such fine
condition to go, that to every pace of theirs, he hopped the length
of a cedar-tree.
But the buffalo-king was well assured that he would be able to
overtake Aggo, hop as briskly as he might. It would be a mortal
shame, thought the king, to be outstripped by a man with one leg
tied up; so, shouting and cheering, and issuing orders on all sides,
he set the swiftest of his herd upon the track, with strict commands
to take Aggo dead or alive. And a curious sight it was to see.
At one time a buffalo would gain handsomely upon Aggo, and be just
at the point of laying hold of him, when off Aggo would hop, a good
furlong, in an oblique line, wide out of his reach; which bringing
him nearly in contact with another of the herd, away he would go
again, just as far off in another direction.
And in this way Aggo kept the whole company of the buffalos
zig-zagging across the plain, with the poor king at their head,
running to and fro, shouting among them and hurrying them about in
the wildest way. It was an extraordinary road that Aggo was taking
toward home; and after a time it so puzzled and bewildered the
buffalos that they were driven half out of their wits, and they
roared, and brandished their tails, and foamed, as if they would put
out of countenance and frighten out of sight the old man in the
moon, who was looking on all the time, just above the edge of the
prairie.
As for the king himself, losing at last all patience at the absurd
idea of chasing a man with one leg all night long, he called his
herd together, and fled, in disgust, toward the west, and never more
appeared in all that part of the country.
Aggo, relieved of his pursuers, hopped off a hundred steps in one,
till he reached the stream, crossed it in a twinkling of the eye,
and bore his daughter in triumph to his lodge.
In the course of time Aggo's beautiful daughter married a very
worthy young warrior, who was neither a buffalo-king nor so much as
the owner of any more of the buffalos than a splendid skin robe
which he wore, with great effect, thrown over his shoulders, on his
wedding-day. On which occasion, Aggo Dah Gauda hopped about on his
one leg livelier than ever.