MYTHS AND LEGENDS (AMERICAN INDIAN)
TWO GHOSTLY LOVERS
[Brule Sioux]
Long ago there lived a young, good
looking man who no woman could
resist. He was an elk charmer - a man who had
elk medicine, which
carries love power. When this man played the styotanka,
the flute, it
produced a magic sound. At night a girl hearing it would just
get up and
go to him, forsaking her father and mother, her own lover or
husband.
Maybe her mind told her to stay, but her heart was already
beating
faster and her feet were running.
Yet the young man the elk
charmer himself, was a lover with a stone
heart. He wanted only to conquer
women, the way a warrior conquers an
enemy. After they came to him once, he
had no more use for them. So in
spite of his wonderful powers, he did not act
as a young man should and
was not well liked.
One day when the elk
charmer went out to hunt buffalo, he did not return
to the village. His
parents waited for him day after day, but he never
came back. At last they
went to a special kind of medicine man who has
"finding stones" that give him
the power to locate lost things and lost
people.
After this holy man
had used his finding stones, he told the parents "I
have sad news for you.
Your son is dead, and not from sickness or an
accident. He was killed. He is
lying out there on the prairie." The
medicine man described the spot where
they would find the body, it was
as he had said. Out on the prairie their son
was lying dead, stabbed
through the heart. Whether he he had been killed by
an enemy warrior, or
a wronged husband from his own tribe, or even a
discarded, thrown away
girl, no one ever knew.
His parents dressed him
in his finest war shirt, which he had loved more
than all his women, and in
dead man's moccasins, whose soles are beaded
with spirit-land designs. They
put his body up on the funeral scaffold,
and then the tribe left that part of
the country. For it was a very bad
thing, this killing which was probably
within the tribe. It was, in
fact, the very worst thing that could happen,
even thought everybody was
thinking that the young man had brought it on
himself.
One evening many days' ride away, when the people had already
forgotten
this sad happening and were feasting in their tipis, all the dogs
in
camp started howling. Then the coyotes in the hills took up
their
mournful cry. Nobody could discover the reason for all this yowling
and
yipping. But when it finally stopped, the people could hear the
hooting
of many owls, speaking of death and ghostly things. The laughter in
camp
stopped. The fires were put out, and the entry flaps to the tipis
were
closed.
People tried to sleep, but instead they found themselves
listening. They
knew a spirit was coming. Finally they heard the unearthly
sounds of a
ghost flute and a voice they knew very well - the voice of the
dead
young man with the elk medicine. They heard this voice
singing:
WEEPING I ROAM
I THOUGHT I WAS THE ONLY ONE
WHO HAD KNOWN
MANY LOVES,
MANY GIRLS, MANY WOMEN,
TOO MANY OF THEM.
NOW I AM HAVING A
HARD TIME
I AM ROAMING, ROAMING,
AND I HAVE TO KEEP ON ROAMING
AS LONG
AS THE WORLD STANDS.
After that night, the people heard the song many
times. A lone girl
coming home late from a dance, a young woman up before
sunrise to get
water from the stream, would hear the ghostly song mixed with
the sound
of the flute. And they would see the shape of a man wrapped in a
gray
blanket hovering above the ground, for even as a ghost this young
man
would not leave the girls alone.
Well, it all happened long ago,
but even now the old timers at Rosebud,
Pine Ridge, and Cheyenne River are
still singing this ghost song.
Now, there was another young man who also
had a cold heart. He too made
love to many girls and soon threw them away. He
was a brave warrior,
though. He was out a few times with a girl who was in
love with him, and
he said he would marry her. But he didn't really mean it,
he was like
many other men who make the same promise only to get under a
girls
blanket. One day he said "I have to go away on a horse stealing
raid.
I'll be back soon, and then I'll marry you." She told him "I'll wait
for
you forever!"
The young warrior went off and never came back, he
forgot all about her.
The girl, however, waited for a long time. Well, this
young man roamed
about for years and had many loves. The one time when he was
out
hunting, he saw a fine tipi. It had a sun and moon design painted on
it.
He recognized it immediately. It was the tipi of the girl he had
left
long ago. "Is she still good-looking and loving?" he wondered "I'll
find
out!"
He went inside, and there was the girl, lovelier than ever.
she was
dressed in a white, richly quilled buckskin dress. She smiled at him
"My
lover, have you come back at last?"
After serving him a fine meal,
she helped him take off his moccasins and
his war shirt. She traced his scars
from many fights with her fingers,
"My warrior", she said, "lie down here
beside me, on this soft, soft
buffalo robe." He lay down and made love to
her, and it was sweeter than
he had ever experienced, sweeter than he could
have imagined. Then she
said "Rest and sleep now."
The young man -
though not so very young anymore - woke up in the
morning and saw the morning
sun shining into the tipi, but the tipi was
no longer bright and new; it was
ragged and rotting. The buffalo robe
under which they had slept was almost
hairless and full of holes. He
lifted the robe and pulled it aside to look at
the girl, and instead of
a living, beautiful woman, he found a skeleton. A
few strands of black
hair still adhered to the skull, which seemed to smile
at him. The young
girl had died there long ago, waiting for him to come back.
He had made
love to a spirit. He had embraced bones. He had kissed a skull.
He had
coupled with a skeleton!
As the thought sank in, the warrior
cried aloud, jumped up, and began
running in great fear, running he knew not
where. When he finally came
to, he was witko, mad. He spoke in strange
sounds. His eyes wandered.
His thoughts went astray. He was never right in
his mind again.
~ Told by Lame Deer at Winner,
Rosebud Indian
Reservation, South Dakota, 1970.
Recorded by Richard Erdoes.
~