told me that the white man, in his greed,
has killed--and not for meat--all the Buffalo that our people knew.
They have said that the great herds that made the ground tremble as
they ran were slain in a few short years by those who needed not. Can
this be true, when ever since there was a world, our people killed your
kind, and still left herds that grew in numbers until they often
blocked the rivers when they passed? Our people killed your kind that
they themselves might live, but never did they go to war against you.
Tell me, do your people hide, or are the young-men speaking truth, and
have your people gone with mine to Sand Hill shadows to come back no
more?"
"Ho! red man--my people all have gone. The young-men tell the truth
and all my tribe have gone to feed among the shadow-hills, and your
father still has meat. My people suffer from his arrows and his lance,
yet there the herds increase as they did here, until the white man came
and made his war upon us without cause or need. I was one of the last
to die, and with my brother here fled to this forbidding country that I
might hide; but one day when the snow was on the world, a white
murderer followed on our trail, and with his noisy weapon sent our
spirits to join the great shadow-herds. Meat? No, he took no meat,
but from our quivering flesh he tore away the robes that Napa gave to
make us warm, and left us for the Wolves. That night they came, and
quarrelling, fighting, snapping 'mong themselves, left but our bones to
greet the morning sun. These bones the Coyotes and the weaker ones did
drag and scrape, and scrape again, until the last of flesh or muscle
disappeared. Then the winds came and sang--and all was done."
End of Project Gutenberg's Indian Why Stories, by Frank Bird Linderman
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