Many years ago the manito of the
Indians lived in the sun. Every morning the wise men of the tribe
went to the top of a mountain, and as the sun rose in the east, they
sang, "We praise thee, O sun! From thee come fire and light. Be good
to us, be good to us."
After the warm days of the summer had come, the sun was so bright
that the Indians said to their wise men, "When you go to the
mountain top, ask the manito to show us his face in a softer,
gentler light."
Then the wise men went to the mountain top, and this is what they
said: "O great manito, we are but children before you, and we have
no power to bear the brightness of your face. Look down upon us here
on the earth with a gentler, softer light, that we may ever gaze
upon you and show you all love and all honor."
The bright sun moved slowly toward the south. The people were afraid
that the manito was angry with them, but when the moon rose they
were no longer sad, for from the moon the loving face of the manito
was looking down upon them.
Night after night the people gazed at the gentle face, but at last a
night came when the moon was not seen in the sky. The wise men went
sorrowfully to the mountain top. "O manito," they said, "we are
never happy when we cannot gaze into your face. Will you not show it
to your children?"
The moon did not rise, and the people were sad, but when morning
came, there was the loving face of the manito showing clearly in the
rocks at the top of the mountain.
Again they were happy, but when dark clouds hid the gentle face, the
wise men went to the foot of the mountain and called sadly, "O
manito, we can no longer see your face."
The clouds grew darker and fell like a cloak over the mountain, the
trees trembled in the wind, the forked lightning shot across the
sky, and the thunder called aloud.
"It is the anger of the manito," cried the people. "The heavens are
falling," they whispered, and they hid their faces in fear.
Morning came, the storm had gone, and the sky was clear. Tremblingly
the people looked up toward the mountain top for the face of the
manito. It was not there, but after they had long gazed in sorrow, a
wise man cried, "There it is, where no cloud will hide it from us."
In the storm the rocks had fallen from the mountain top. They were
halfway down the mountain side, and in them could be seen the face
of the manito.
Then the people cried, "Praise to the good manito! His loving face
will look down upon us from the mountain side forever-more."
For a long time all went well, but at last trouble came, for they
heard that a great tribe were on the war-path coming to kill them.
"Help us, dear manito," they cried but there was no help. The
warriors came nearer and nearer. Their war-cry was heard, "O manito,"
called the people, "help us, help us!" A voice from the mountain
answered, "My children, be not afraid." The war-cry was still, and
when the people looked, for the warriors, they were nowhere to be
seen. The people gazed all around, and at last one of the wise men
cried, "There they are, there they are!"
They were at the foot of the mountain, but the people no longer
feared them, for now they were not warriors but rocks. To keep from
harm those whom he loved, the manito had made the warriors into
stone. They stood at the foot of the mountain, and to-day, if you
should go to that far-away country, you could see the rocks that
were once warriors, and above them, halfway up the mountain side,
you could see the face of the manito.