[The following is taken
from the book Black Elk Speaks, by John G. Neihardt (New York: Washington
Square Press, 1972), originally published in 1932. The book is Neihardt's
recreation in English of the oral history that Black Elk, a medicine man (or
"shaman," of the Oglala Sioux Indians, recounted for him in the Sioux
language in 1931. I have selected those chapters and sections of chapters that
deal most directly with Black Elk's visions and this ritual enactment of them
for his tribe.]
From Chapter 2: Early
Boyhood
I was four years old
then, and I think it must have been the next summer that I first heard the
voices. It was a happy summer and nothing was afraid, because in the Moon When
the Ponies Shed (May) word came from the Wasichus [the White Men] that there
would be peace and that they would not use the road any more and that all the
soldiers would go away. The soldiers did go away and their towns were torn
down; and in the Moon of Falling Leaves (November), they made a treaty with Red
Cloud that said our country would be ours as long as grass should grow and
water flow. You can see that it is not the grass and the water that have
forgotten.
Maybe it was not this
summer when I first heard the voices, but I think it was, because I know it was
before I played with bows and arrows or rode a horse, and I was out playing
alone when I heard them. It was like somebody calling me, and I thought it was
my mother, but there was nobody there. This happened more than once, and always
made me afraid, so that I ran home.
It was when I was five
years old that my Grandfather made me a bow and some arrows. The grass was
young and I was horseback. A thunder storm was coming from where the sun goes
down, and just as I was riding into the woods along a creek, there was a kingbird
sitting on a limb. This was not a dream, it happened. And I was going to shoot
at the kingbird with the bow my Grandfather made, when the bird spoke and said:
"The clouds all over are one-sided." Perhaps it meant that all the
clouds were looking at me. And then it said: "Listen! A voice is calling
you!" Then I looked up at the clouds, and two men were coming there,
headfirst like arrows slanting down; and as they came, they sang a sacred song
and the thunder was like drumming. I will sing it for you. The song and the
drumming were like this:
Behold, a sacred voice
is calling you;
All over the sky a
sacred voice is calling.
I sat there gazing at
them, and they were coming from the place where the giant lives (north). But
when they were very close to me, they wheeled about toward where the sun goes
down, and suddenly they were geese. Then they were gone, and the rain came with
a big wind and a roaring. I did not tell this vision to any one. I liked to
think about it, but I was afraid to tell it.
Chapter 3: The Great
Vision
What happened after
that until the summer I was nine years old is not a story. There were winters
and summers, and they were good; for the Wasichus had made their iron road
along the Platte and traveled there. This had cut the bison herd in two, but
those that stayed in our country with us were more than could be counted, and
we wandered without trouble in our land.
Now and then the voices
would come back when I was out alone, like someone calling me, but what they
wanted me to do I did not know. This did not happen very often, and when it did
not happen, I forgot about it; for I was growing taller and was riding horses
now and could shoot prairie chickens and rabbits with my bow. The boys of my
people began very young to learn the ways of men, and no one taught us; we just
learned by doing what we saw, and we were warriors at a time when boys now are
like girls.
It was the summer when
I was nine years old, and our people were moving slowly towards the Rocky
Mountains. We camped one evening in a valley beside a little creek just before
it ran into the Greasy Grass and there was a man by the name of Man Hip who
liked me and asked me to eat with him in his tepee.
While I was eating, a
voice came and said: "It is time; now they are calling you." The
voice was so loud and clear that I believed it, and I thought I would just go
where it wanted me to go. So I got right up and started. As I came out of the
tepee, both my thighs began to hurt me, and suddenly it was like waking from a
dream, and there wasn't any voice. So I went back into the tepee, but I didn't
want to eat. Man Hip looked at me in a strange way and asked me what was wrong.
I told him that my legs were hurting me.
The next morning the
camp moved again, and I was riding with some boys. We stopped to get a drink
from a creek, and when I got off my horse, my legs crumpled under me and I
could not walk. So the boys helped me up and put me on my horse; and when we
camped again that evening, I was sick. The next day the camp moved on to where
the different bands of our people were coming together, and I rode in a pony
drag, for I was very sick. Both my legs and both my arms were swollen badly and
my face was all puffed up.
When we had camped
again, I was lying in our tepee and my mother and father were sitting beside
me. I could see out through the opening, and there two men were coming from the
clouds, headfirst like arrows slanting down, and I knew they were the same that
I had seen before. Each now carried a long spear, and from the points of these
a jagged lightning flashed. They came clear down to the ground this time and
stood a little way off and looked at me and said: "Hurry! Come! Your
Grandfathers are calling you!"
Then they turned and
left the ground like arrows slanting upward from the bow. When I got up to
follow, my legs did not hurt me any more and I was very light. I went outside
the tepee, and yonder where the men with flaming spears were going, a little
cloud was coming very fast. It came and stooped and took me and turned back to
where it came from, flying fast. And when I looked down I could see my mother
and my father yonder, and I felt sorry to be leaving them.
Then there was nothing
but the air and the swiftness of the little cloud that bore me and those two
men still leading up to where white clouds were piled like mountains on a wide
blue plain, and in them thunder beings lived and leaped and flashed. Now
suddenly there was nothing but a world of cloud, and we three were there alone
in the middle of a great white plain with snowy hills and mountains staring at
us; and it was very still; but there were whispers.
Then the two men spoke
together and they said: "Behold him, the being with four legs!"
I looked and saw a bay
horse standing there, and he began to speak: "Behold me!" he said.
"My life history you shall see." Then he wheeled about to where the
sun goes down, and said: "Behold them! Their history you shall know."
I looked, and there
were twelve black horses yonder all abreast with necklaces of bison hoofs, and
they were beautiful, but I was frightened, because their manes were lightning
and there was thunder in their nostrils.
Then the bay horse
wheeled to where the great white giant lives (the north) and said:
"Behold!" And yonder there were twelve white horses all abreast.
Their manes were flowing like a blizzard wind and from their noses came a
roaring, and all about them white geese soared and circled.
Then the bay wheeled
round to where the sun shines continually (the east) and bade me look; and
there twelve sorrel horses, with necklaces of elk's teeth, stood abreast with
eyes that glimmered like the daybreak star and manes of morning light.
Then the bay wheeled
once again to look upon the place where you are always facing (the south), and
yonder stood twelve buckskins all abreast with horns upon their heads and manes
that lived and grew like trees and grasses.
And when I had seen all
these, the bay horse said: "Your Grandfathers are having a council. These
shall take you; so have courage."
Then all the horses
went into formation, four abreast--the blacks, the whites, the sorrels, and the
buckskins--and stood behind the bay, who turned now to the west and neighed;
and yonder suddenly the sky was terrible with a storm of plunging horses in all
colors that shook the world with thunder, neighing back.
Now turning to the
north the bay horse whinnied, and yonder all the sky roared with a mighty wind
of running horses in all colors, neighing back.
And when he whinnied to
the east, there too the sky was filled with glowing clouds of manes and tails
of horses, in all colors singing back. Then to the south he called, and it was
crowded with many colored, happy horses, nickering.
Then the bay horse
spoke to me again and said: "See how your horses all come dancing!" I
looked, and there were horses, horses everywhere--a whole skyful of horses
dancing round me.
"Make haste!"
the bay horse said; and we walked together side by side, while the blacks, the
whites, the sorrels, and the buckskins followed, marching four by four.
I looked about me once
again, and suddenly the dancing horses without number changed into animals of
every kind and into all the fowls that are, and these fled back to the four
quarters of the world from whence the horses came, and vanished.
Then as we walked,
there was a heaped up cloud ahead that changed into a tepee, and a rainbow was
the open door of it; and through the door I saw six old men sitting in a row.
The two men with the
spears now stood beside me, one on either hand, and the horses took their
places in their quarters, looking inward, four by four. And the oldest of the
Grandfathers spoke with a kind voice and said: "Come right in and do not
fear." And as he spoke, all the horses of the four quarters neighed to
cheer me. So I went in and stood before the six, and they looked older than men
can ever be--old like hills, like stars.
The oldest spoke again:
"Your Grandfathers all over the world are having a council, and they have
called you here to teach you." His voice was very kind, but I shook all
over with fear now, for I knew that these were not old men, but the Powers of
the World. And the first was the Power of the West; the second, of the North;
the third, of the East; the fourth, of the South; the fifth, of the Sky; the
sixth, of the Earth. I knew this, and was afraid, until the first Grandfather
spoke again: "Behold them yonder where the sun goes down, the thunder
beings! You shall see, and have from them my power; and they shall take you to
the high and lonely center of the earth that you may see: even to the place
where the sun continually shines, they shall take you there to
understand."
And as he spoke of
understanding, I looked up and saw the rainbow leap with flames of many colors
over me.
Now there was a wooden
cup in his hand and it was full of water and in the water was the sky.
"Take this,"
he said. "It is the power to make live, and it is yours."
Now he had a bow in his
hands. "Take this," he said. "It is the power to destroy, and it
is yours."
Then he pointed to
himself and said: "Look close at him who is your spirit now, for you are
his body and his name is Eagle Wing Stretches."
And saying this, he got
up very tall and started running toward where the sun goes down; and suddenly
he was a black horse that stopped and turned and looked at me, and the horse
was very poor and sick; his ribs stood out.
Then the second
Grandfather, he of the North, arose with a herb of power in his hand, and said:
"Take this and hurry." I took and held it toward the black horse
yonder. He fattened and was happy and came prancing to his place again and was
the first Grandfather sitting there.
The second Grandfather,
he of the North, spoke again: "Take courage. younger brother," he
said; "on earth a nation you shall make live, for yours shall be the power
of the white giant's wing, the cleansing wing." Then he got up very tall and
started running toward the north; and when he turned toward me, it was a white
goose wheeling. I looked about me now, and the horses in the west were thunders
and the horses of the north were geese. And the second Grandfather sang two
songs that were like this:
They are appearing, may
you behold!
They are appearing, may
you behold!
The thunder nation is
appearing, behold!
They are appearing, may
you behold!
They are appearing, may
you behold!
The white geese nation
is appearing,
behold!"
And now it was the
third Grandfather who spoke, he of where the sun shines continually. "Take
courage, younger brother," he said, "for across the earth they shall
take you!" Then he pointed to where the daybreak star was shining, and beneath
the star two men were flying. "From them you shall have power," he
said, "from them who have awakened all the beings of the earth with roots
and legs and wings." And as he said this, he held in his hand a peace pipe
which had a spotted eagle outstretched upon the stem; and this eagle seemed
alive, for it was poised there, fluttering, and its eyes were looking at me.
"With this pipe," the Grandfather said, "you shall walk upon the
earth, and whatever sickens there you shall make well." Then he pointed to
a man who was bright red all over, the color of good and of plenty, and as he
pointed, the red man lay down and rolled and changed into a bison that got up,
and galloped toward the sorrel horses of the east, and they too turned to
bison, fat and many.
And now the fourth Grandfather
spoke, he of the place where you are always facing (the south), whence comes
the power to grow. "Younger brother," he said, "with the powers
of the four quarters you shall walk, a relative. Behold, the living center of a
nation I shall give you, and with it many you shall save." And I saw that
he was holding in his hand a bright red stick that was alive, and as I looked
it sprouted at the top and sent forth branches, and on the branches many leaves
came out and murmured and in the leaves the birds began to sing. And then for
just a little while I thought I saw beneath it in the shade the circled
villages of people and every living thing with roots or legs or wings, and all
were happy. "It shall stand in the center of the nation's circle,"
said the Grandfather, "a cane to walk with and a people's heart; and by
your powers you shall make it blossom."
Then when he had been
still a little while to hear the birds sing, he spoke again: "Behold the
earth!" So I looked down and saw it lying yonder like a hoop of peoples.
and in the center bloomed the holy stick that was a tree, and where it stood
there crossed two roads, a red one and a black. "From where the giant
lives (the north) to where you always face (the south) the red road goes, the
road of good," the Grandfather said, "and on it shall your nation
walk. The black road goes from where the thunder beings live (the west) to
where the sun continually shines (the east), a fearful road, a road of troubles
and of war. On this also you shall walk, and from it you shall have the power
to destroy a people's foes. In four ascents you shall walk the earth with
Power."
I think he meant that I
should see four generations, counting me, and now I am seeing the third.
Then he rose very tall
and started running toward the south, and was an elk; and as he stood among the
buckskins yonder, they too were elks.
Now the fifth
Grandfather spoke, the oldest of them all, the Spirit of the Sky. "My
boy," he said, "I have sent for you and you have come. My power you
shall see!" He stretched his arms and turned into a spotted eagle
hovering. "Behold," he said, "all the wings of the air shall
come to you, and they and the winds and the stars shall be like relatives. You
shall go across the earth with my power." Then the eagle soared above my
head and fluttered there; and suddenly the sky was full of friendly wings all
coming toward me.
Now I knew the sixth
Grandfather was about to speak, he who was the Spirit of the Earth, and I saw
that he was very old, but more as men are old. His hair was long and white, his
face was all in wrinkles and his eyes were deep and dim. I stared at him, for
it seemed I knew him somehow; and as I stared, he slowly changed, for he was
growing backwards into youth, and when he had become a boy, I knew that he was
myself with all the years that would be mine at last. When he was old again, he
said: "My boy, have courage, for my power shall be yours, and you shall
need it, for your nation on the earth will have great troubles. Come."
He rose and tottered
out through the rainbow door, and as I followed I was riding on the bay horse
who had talked to me at first and led me to that place.
Then the bay horse
stopped and faced the black horses of the west, and a voice said: "They
have given you the cup of water to make live the greening day, and also the bow
and arrow to destroy." The bay neighed, and the twelve black horses came
and stood behind me, four abreast.
The bay faced the
sorrels of the east, and I saw that they had morning stars upon their foreheads
and they were very bright. And the voice said: "They have given you the
sacred pipe and the power that is peace, and the good red day." The bay
neighed and the twelve sorrels stood behind me, four abreast
My horse now faced the
buckskins of the south and a voice said: "They have given you the sacred
stick and your nation's hoop, and the yellow day and in the center of the hoop
you shall set the stick and make it grow into a shielding tree, and
bloom." The bay neighed, and the twelve buckskins came and stood behind
me, four abreast.
Then I knew that there
were riders on all the horses there behind me, and a voice said: "Now you
shall walk the black road with these; and as you walk, all the nations that
have roots or legs or wings shall fear you."
So I started, riding
toward the east down the fearful road, and behind me came the horsebacks four
abreast--the blacks, the whites, the sorrels, and the buckskins--and far away
above the fearful road the daybreak star was rising very dim.
I looked below me where
the earth was silent in a sick green light, and saw the hills look up afraid
and the grasses on the hills and all the animals; and everywhere about me were
the cries of frightened birds and sounds of fleeing wings. I was the chief of
all the heavens riding there, and when I looked behind me, all the twelve black
horses reared and plunged and thundered and their manes and tails were whirling
hail and their nostrils snorted lightning. And when I looked below again, I saw
the slant hail falling and the long, sharp rain, and where we passed, the trees
bowed low and all the hills were dim.
Now the earth was
bright again as we rode. I could see the hills and valleys and the creeks and
rivers passing under. We came above a place where three streams made a big
one--a source of mighty waters--and something terrible was there. Flames were
rising from the waters and in the flames a blue man lived. The dust was
floating all about him in the air, the grass was short and withered, the trees
were wilting, two-legged and four-legged beings lay there thin and panting, and
wings too weak to fly.
Then the black horse
riders shouted "Hoka hey!" and charged down upon the blue man, but
were driven back. And the white troop shouted, charging, and was beaten; then
the red troop and the yellow.
And when each had
failed. they all cried together: "Eagle Wing Stretches, hurry!" And
all the world was filled with voices of all kinds that cheered me, so I
charged. I had the cup of water in one hand and in the other was the bow that
turned into a spear as the bay and I swooped down, and the spear's head was
sharp lightning. It stabbed the blue man's heart, and as it struck I could hear
the thunder rolling and many voices that cried "Un-hee!," meaning I
had killed. The flames died. The trees and grasses were not withered any more
and murmured happily together, and every living being cried in gladness with
whatever voice it had. Then the four troops of horse men charged down and
struck the dead body of the blue man, counting coup; and suddenly it was only a
harmless turtle.
You see, I had been
riding with the storm clouds, and had come to earth as rain, and it was drought
that I had killed with the power that the Six Grandfathers gave me. So we were
riding on the earth now down along the river flowing full from the source of
waters, and soon I saw ahead the circled village of a people in the valley. And
a Voice said: "Behold a nation; it is yours. Make haste, Eagle Wing
Stretches!"
I entered the village,
riding, with the four horse troops behind me--the blacks, the whites, the
sorrels, and the buckskins; and the place was filled with moaning and with
mourning for the dead. The wind was blowing from the south like fever, and when
I looked around I saw that in nearly every tepee the women and the children and
the men lay dying with the dead.
So I rode around the
circle of the village, looking in upon the sick and dead, and I felt like
crying as I rode. But when I looked behind me, all the women and the children
and the men were getting up and coming forth with happy faces.
And a Voice said:
"Behold, they have given you the center of the nation's hoop to make it
live."
So I rode to the center
of the village, with the horse troops in their quarters round about me, and
there the people gathered. And the Voice said: "Give them now the
flowering stick that they may flourish, and the sacred pipe that they may know
the power that is peace, and the wing of the white giant that they may have
endurance and face all winds with courage."
So I took the bright
red stick and at the center of the nation's hoop I thrust it in the earth. As it
touched the earth it leaped mightily in my hand and was a waga chun, the
rustling tree, very tall and full of leafy branches and of all birds singing.
And beneath it all the animals were mingling with the people like relatives and
making happy cries. The women raised their tremolo of joy, and the men shouted
all together: "Here we shall raise our children and be as little chickens
under the mother sheo's wing."
Then I heard the white
wind blowing gently through the tree and singing there, and from the east the
sacred pipe came flying on its eagle wings, and stopped before me there beneath
the tree, spreading deep peace around it.
Then the daybreak star
was rising, and a Voice said: "It shall be a relative to them; and who
shall see it, shall see much more, for thence comes wisdom; and those who do
not see it shall be dark." And all the people raised their faces to the
east, and the star's light fell upon them, and all the dogs barked loudly and
the horses whinnied.
Then when the many
little voices ceased, the great Voice said: "Behold the circle of the
nation's hoop, for it is holy, being endless, and thus all powers shall be one
power in the people without end. Now they shall break camp and go forth upon
the red road, and your Grandfathers shall walk with them." So the people
broke camp and took the good road with the white wing on their faces, and the
order of their going was like this:
First, the black horse
riders with the cup of water; and the white horse riders with the white wing
and the sacred herb; and the sorrel riders with the holy pipe: and the
buckskins with the flowering stick. And after these the little children and the
youths and maidens followed in a band.
Second, came the
tribe's four chieftains, and their band was all young men and women.
Third, the nation's
four advisers leading men and women neither young nor old.
Fourth, the old men
hobbling with their canes and looking to the earth.
Fifth, old women
hobbling with their canes and looking to the earth.
Sixth, myself all alone
upon the bay with the bow and arrows that the First Grandfather gave me. But I
was not the last; for when I looked behind me there were ghosts of people like
a trailing fog as far as I could see--grandfathers of grandfathers and grandmothers
of grandmothers without number. And over these a great Voice--the Voice that
was the South--lived, and I could feel it silent.
And as we went the
Voice behind me said: "Behold a good nation walking in a sacred manner in
a good land!"
Then I looked up and
saw that there were four ascents ahead, and these were generations I should
know. Now we were on the first ascent, and all the land was green. And as the
long line climbed, all the old men and women raised their hands, palms forward,
to the far sky yonder and began to croon a song together, and the sky ahead was
filled with clouds of baby faces.
When we came to the end
of the first ascent we camped in the sacred circle as before, and in the center
stood the holy tree, and still the land about us was all green.
Then we started on the
second ascent, marching as before, and still the land was green, but it was
getting steeper. And as I looked ahead, the people changed into elks and bison
and all four-footed beings and even into fowls, all walking in a sacred manner
on the good red road together. And I myself was a spotted eagle soaring over
them. But just before we stopped to camp at the end of that ascent, all the
marching animals grew restless and afraid that they were not what they had
been, and began sending forth voices of trouble, calling to their chiefs. And
when they camped at the end of that ascent, I looked down and saw that leaves
were falling from the holy tree.
And the Voice said:
"Behold your nation, and remember what your Six Grandfathers gave you, for
thenceforth your people walk in difficulties."
Then the people broke
camp again, and saw the black road before them towards where the sun goes down,
and black clouds coming yonder; and they did not want to go but could not stay.
And as they walked the third ascent, all the animals and fowls that were the
people ran here and there, for each one seemed to have his own little vision
that he followed and his own rules; and all over the universe I could hear the
winds at war like wild beasts fighting.
And when we reached the
summit of the third ascent and camped, the nation's hoop was broken like a ring
of smoke that spreads and scatters and the holy tree seemed dying and all its
birds were gone. And when I looked ahead I saw that the fourth ascent would be
terrible.
Then when the people
were getting ready to begin the fourth ascent, the Voice spoke like some one
weeping, and it said: "Look there upon your nation." And when I
looked down, the people were all changed back to human, and they were thin,
their faces sharp, for they were starving. Their ponies were only hide and
bones. and the holy tree was gone.
And as I looked and
wept, I saw that there stood on the north side of the starving camp a sacred
man who was painted red all over his body, and he held a spear as he walked
into the center of the people, and there he lay down and rolled. And when he
got up, it was a fat bison standing there, and where the bison stood a sacred
herb sprang up right where the tree had been in the center of the nation's
hoop. The herb grew and bore four blossoms on a single stem while I was
looking--a blue, a white, a scarlet, and a yellow--and the bright rays of these
flashed to the heavens.
I know now what this
meant, that the bison were the gift of a good spirit and were our strength, but
we should lose them, and from the same good spirit we must find another
strength. For the people all seemed better when the herb had grown and bloomed,
and the horses raised their tails and neighed and pranced around, and I could
see a light breeze going from the north among the people like a ghost; and
suddenly the flowering tree was there again at the center of the nation's hoop
where the four-rayed herb had blossomed.
I was still the spotted
eagle floating and I could see that I was already in the fourth ascent and the
people were camping yonder at the top of the third long rise. It was dark and
terrible about me, for all the winds of the world were fighting. It was like
rapid gunfire and like whirling smoke, and like women and children wailing and
like horses screaming all over the world.
I could see my people
yonder running about, setting the smokeflap poles and fastening down their
tepees against the wind, for the storm cloud was coming on them very fast and
black, and there were frightened swallows without number fleeing before the cloud.
Then a song of power
came to me and I sang it there in the midst of that terrible place where I was.
It went like this:
A good nation I will
make live.
This the nation above
has said.
They have given me the
power
to make over.
And when I had sung this,
a Voice said: "To the four quarters you shall run for help, and nothing
shall be strong before you. Behold him!"
Now I was on my bay
horse again, because the horse is of the earth, and it was there my power would
be used. And as I obeyed the Voice and looked, there was a horse all skin and
bones yonder in the west, a faded brownish black. And a Voice there said:
"Take this and make him over; and it was the four-rayed herb that I was
holding in my hand. So I rode above the poor horse in a circle, and as I did
this I could hear the people yonder calling for spirit power, "A-hey!
a-hey! a-hey! a-hey!" Then the poor horse neighed and rolled and got up,
and he was a big, shiny, black stallion with dapples all over him and his mane
about him like a cloud. He was the chief of all the horses; and when he
snorted, it was a flash of lightning and his eyes were like the sunset star. He
dashed to the west and neighed, and the west was filled with a dust of hoofs,
and horses without number, shiny black, came plunging from the dust. Then he
dashed toward the north and neighed, and to the east and to the south. and the
dust clouds answered, giving forth their plunging horses without number--whites
and sorrels and buckskins, fat, shiny, rejoicing in their fleetness and their
strength. It was beautiful, but it was also terrible.
Then they all stopped
short, rearing, and were standing in a great hoop about their black chief at
the center, and were still. And as they stood, four virgins, more beautiful
than women of the earth can be, came through the circle, dressed in scarlet,
one from each of the four quarters, and stood about the great black stallion in
their places; and one held the wooden cup of water, and one the white wing, and
one the pipe, and one the nation's hoop. All the universe was silent,
listening; and then the great black stallion raised his voice and sang. The
song he sang was this:
My horses, prancing
they are coming.
My horses, neighing
they are coming;
Prancing. they are
coming.
All over the universe
they come.
They will dance; may
you behold them.
(4 times)
A horse nation, they
will dance.
May you behold them. (4
times)
His voice was not loud,
but it went all over the universe and filled it. There was nothing that did not
hear, and it was more beautiful than anything can be. It was so beautiful that
nothing anywhere could keep from dancing. The virgins danced, and all the
circled horses. The leaves on the trees, the grasses on the hills and in the
valleys, the water in the creeks and in the rivers and the lakes, the
four-legged and the two-legged and the wings of the air--all danced together to
the music of the stallion's song.
And when I looked down
upon my people yonder, the cloud passed over, blessing them with friendly rain,
and stood in the east with a flaming rainbow over it.
Then all the horses
went singing back to their places beyond the summit of the fourth ascent, and
all thing sang along with them as they walked.
And a Voice said:
"All over the universe they have finished a day of happiness." And
looking down, I saw that the whole wide circle of the day was beautiful and
green, with all fruits growing and all things kind and happy.
Then a Voice said:
"Behold this day, for it is yours to make. Now you shall stand upon the
center of the earth to see, for there they are taking you." I was still on
my bay horse, and once more I felt the riders of the west, the north, the east,
the south, behind me in formation, as before, and we were going east. I looked
ahead and saw the mountains there with rocks and forests on them, and from the
mountains flashed all colors upward to the heavens. Then I was standing on the
highest mountain of them all, and round about beneath me was the whole hoop of
the world. And while I stood there I saw more than I can tell and I understood
more than I saw; for I was seeing in a sacred manner the shapes of all things
in the spirit, and the shape of all shapes as they must live together like one
being. And I saw that the sacred hoop of my people was one of many hoops that
made one circle, wide as daylight and as starlight, and in the center grew one
mighty flowering tree to shelter all the children of one mother and one father.
And I saw that it was holy.
Then as I stood there,
two men were coming from the east, head first like arrows flying, and between
them rose the daybreak star. They came and gave a herb to me and said:
"With this on earth you shall undertake anything and do it." It was
the daybreak-star herb, the herb of understanding, and they told me to drop it
on the earth. I saw it falling far, and when it struck the earth it rooted and
grew and flowered, four blossoms on one stem, a blue, a white, a scarlet, and a
yellow; and the rays from these streamed upward to the heavens so that all
creatures saw it and in no place was there darkness.
Then the Voice said:
"Your Six Grandfathers--now you shall go back to them."
I had not noticed how I
was dressed until now, and I saw that I was painted red all over, and my joints
were painted black, with white stripes between the joints. My bay had lightning
stripes all over him, and his mane was cloud. And when I breathed, my breath
was lightning.
Now two men were
leading me, head first like arrows slanting upward--the two that brought me
from the earth. And as I followed on the bay, they turned into four flocks of
geese that flew in circles, one above each quarter, sending forth a sacred
voice as they flew: Br-r-r-p, br-r-r-p, br-r-r-p, br-r-r-p!
Then I saw ahead the
rainbow flaming above the tepee of the Six Grandfathers, built and roofed with
cloud and sewed with thongs of lightning; and underneath it were all the wings
of the air and under them the animals and men. All these were rejoicing and
thunder was like happy laughter.
As I rode in through
the rainbow door, there were cheering voices from all over the universe, and I
saw the Six Grandfathers sitting in a row, with their arms held toward me and
their hands, palms out; and behind them in the cloud were faces thronging,
without number, of the people yet to be.
"He has
triumphed!" cried the six together, making thunder. And as I passed before
them there, each gave again the gift that he had given me before--the cup of
water and the bow and arrows, the power to make live and to destroy; the white
wing of cleansing and the healing herb; the sacred pipe; the flowering stick.
And each one spoke in turn from west to south, explaining what he gave as he
had done before, and as each one spoke he melted down into the earth and rose
again; and as each did this, I felt nearer to the earth.
Then the oldest of them
all said: "Grandson, all over the universe you have seen. Now you shall go
back with power to the place from whence you came, and it shall happen yonder
that hundreds shall be sacred, hundreds shall be flames! Behold!"
I looked below and saw
my people there, and all were well and happy except one, and he was lying like
the dead--and that one was myself. Then the oldest Grandfather sang, and his
song was like this:
There is someone lying
on earth
in a sacred manner.
There is someone--on
earth he lies.
In a sacred manner I
have made him to walk.
Now the tepee, built
and roofed with cloud, began to sway back and forth as in a wind, and the
flaming rainbow door was growing dimmer. I could hear voices of all kinds
crying from outside: "Eagle Wine Stretches is coming forth! Behold
him!"
When I went through the
door, the face of the day of earth was appearing with the daybreak star upon
its forehead; and the sun leaped up and looked upon me, and I was going forth
alone.
And as I walked alone,
I heard the sun singing as it arose, and it sang like this:
With visible face I am
appearing.
In a sacred manner I
appear.
For the greening earth
a pleasantness
I make.
The center of the
nation's hoop
I have made pleasant.
With visible face,
behold me!
The four-leggeds and
two-leggeds,
I have made them to
walk;
The wings of the air, I
have made
them to fly.
With visible face I
appear.
My day, I have made it
holy.
When the singing
stopped, I was feeling lost and very lonely. Then a Voice above me said:
"Look back!" It was a spotted eagle that was hovering over me and
spoke. I looked, and where the flaming rainbow tepee, built and roofed with
cloud, had been, I saw only the tall rock mountain at the center of the world.
I was all alone on a
broad plain now with my feet upon the earth, alone but for the spotted eagle
guarding me. I could see my people's village far ahead, and I walked very fast,
for I was homesick now. Then I saw my own tepee, and inside I saw my mother and
my father, bending over a sick boy that was myself. And as I entered the tepee,
some one was saying: "The boy is coming to; you had better give him some
water."
Then I was sitting up;
and I was sad because my mother and my father didn't seem to know I had been so
far away.
from Chapter 4: The
Bison Hunt
When I got back to my
father and mother and was sitting up there in our tepee, my face was still all
puffed and my legs and arms were badly swollen; but I felt good all over and
wanted to get right up and run around. My parents would not let me. They told
me I had been sick twelve days, lying like dead all the while, and that
Whirlwind Chaser, who was Standing Bear's uncle and a medicine man, had brought
me back to life. I knew it was the Grandfathers in the Flaming Rainbow Tepee
who had cured me; but I felt afraid to say so. My father gave Whirlwind Chaser
the best horse he had for making me well, and many people came to look at me,
and there was much talk about the great power of Whirlwind Chaser who had made
me well all at once when I was almost the same as dead. Everybody was glad that
I was living; but as I lay there thinking about the wonderful place where I had
been and all that I had seen, I was very sad; for it seemed to me that
everybody ought to know about it, but I was afraid to tell, because I knew that
nobody would believe me, little as I was, for I was only nine years old. Also,
as I lay there thinking of my vision, I could see it all again and feel the
meaning with a part of me like a strange power glowing in my body; but when the
part of me that talks would try to make words for the meaning, it would be like
fog and get away from me.
[From this point much
of Black Elk's narrative is taken up with the description of the suffering that
his people endured at the hands of the "Wasichus" or White Men. By
the time Black Elk was sixteen years old his tribe had been decimated, and what
remained of his people would soon be subjected to living on the terms of the
White Man, on what were to become Indian reservations. All during this time
Black Elk avoids speaking of his vision to anyone, although he often draws
strength from it privately. Eventually, however, his uncertainty about its
significance and the continued secrecy begin to be too much for him.]
From Chapter 13: The
Compelling Fear
I was sixteen years old
and more, and I had not yet done anything the Grandfathers wanted me to do, but
they had been helping me. I did not know how to do what they wanted me to do.
A terrible time began
for me then, and I could not tell anybody, not even my father and mother. I was
afraid to see a cloud coming up; and whenever one did, I could hear the thunder
beings calling to me: "Behold your Grandfathers! Make haste!" I could
understand the birds when they sang, and they were always saying: "It is
time! It is time!" The crows in the day and the coyotes at night all
called and called to me: "It is time! It is time! It is time!"
Time to do what? I did
not know. Whenever I awoke before daybreak and went out of the tepee because I
was afraid of the stillness when everyone was sleeping, there were many low
voices talking together in the east, and the daybreak star would sing this song
in the silence:
In a sacred manner you
shall walk!
Your nation shall
behold you!
I could not get along
with people now, and I would take my horse and go far out from camp alone and
compare everything on the earth and in the sky with my vision. Crows would see
me and shout to each other as though they were making fun of me: "Behold
him! Behold him!"
When the frosts began I
was glad, because there would not be any more thunder storms for a long while,
and I was more and more afraid of them all the time, for always there would be
the voices crying!: "Oo oohey! It is time! It is time!"
The fear was not so
great all the while in the winter, but sometimes it was bad. Sometimes the
crying of coyotes out in the cold made me so afraid that I would run out of one
tepee into another, and I would do this until I was worn out and fell asleep. I
wondered if maybe I was only crazy; and my father and mother worried a great
deal about me. They said: "It is the strange sickness he had that time
when we gave the horse to Whirlwind Chaser for curing him; and he is not cured."
I could not tell them what was the matter, for then they would only think I was
queerer than ever.
I was seventeen years
old that winter.
When the grasses were
beginning to show their tender faces again, my father and mother asked an old
medicine man by the name of Black Road to come over and see what he could do
for me. Black Road was in a tepee all alone with me, and he asked me to tell
him if I had seen something that troubled me. By now I was so afraid of being
afraid of everything that I told him about my vision, and when I was through he
looked long at me and said: "Ah-h-h-h!," meaning that he was much
surprised. Then he said to me: "Nephew, I know now what the trouble is!
You must do what the bay horse in your vision wanted you to do. You must do your
duty and perform this vision for your people upon earth. You must have the
horse dance first for the people to see. Then the fear will leave you; but if
you do not do this, something very bad will happen to you."
So we began to get
ready for the horse dance.
Chapter 14: The Horse
Dance
There was a man by the
name of Bear Sings, and he was very old and wise. So Black Road asked him to
help, and he did.
First they sent a crier
around in the morning who told the people to camp in a circle at a certain
place a little way up the Tongue from where the soldiers were. They did this,
and in the middle of the circle Bear Sings and Black Road set up a sacred tepee
of bison hide, and on it they painted pictures from my vision. On the west side
they painted a bow and a cup of water; on the north. white geese and the herb;
on the east. the daybreak star and the pipe; on the south, the flowering stick
and the nation's hoop. Also, they painted horses, elk. and bison. Then over the
door of the sacred tepee, they painted the flaming rainbow. It took them all
day to do this, and it was beautiful.
They told me I must not
eat anything until the horse dance was over, and I had to purify myself in a
sweat lodge with sage spread on the floor of it, and afterwards I had to wipe
myself dry with sage.
That evening Black Road
and Bear Sings told me to come to the painted tepee. We were in there alone,
and nobody dared come near us to listen. They asked me if I had heard any songs
in my vision, and if I had I must teach the songs to them. So I sang to them
all the songs that I had heard in my vision, and it took most of the night to
teach these songs to them. While we were in there singing, we could hear low
thunder rumbling all over the village outside, and we knew the thunder beings
were glad and had come to help us.
My father and mother
had been helping too by hunting up all that we should need in the dance. The
next morning they had everything ready. There were four black horses to
represent the west; four white horses for the north; four sorrels for the east;
four buckskins for the south. For all of these, young riders had been chosen.
Also there was a bay horse for me to ride, as in my vision. Four of the most
beautiful maidens in the village were ready to take their part, and there were
six very old men for the Grandfathers.
Now it was time to
paint and dress for the dance. The four maidens and the sixteen horses all
faced the sacred tepee. Black Road and Bear Sings then sang a song, and all the
others sang along with them, like this:
Father, paint the earth
on me.
Father, paint the earth
on me.
Father, paint the earth
on me.
A nation I will make
over.
A two-legged nation I
will make holy.
Father. paint the earth
on me.
After that the painting
was done.
The four black-horse
riders were painted all black with blue lightning stripes down their legs and
arms and white hail spots on their hips, and there were blue streaks of
lightning on the horses' legs.
The white-horse riders
were painted all white with red streaks of lightning on their arms and legs,
and on the legs of the horses there were streaks of red lightning, and all the
white riders wore plumes of white horse hair on their heads to look like geese.
The riders of the
sorrels of the east were painted all red with straight black lines of lightning
on their limbs and across their breasts, and there was straight black lightning
on the limbs and breasts of the horses too.
The riders of the
buckskins of the south were painted all yellow and streaked with black
lightning. The horses were black from the knees down, and black lightning
streaks were on their upper legs and breasts.
My bay horse had bright
red streaks of lightning on his limbs, and on his back a spotted eagle,
outstretching was painted where I sat. I was painted red all over with black
lightning on my limbs. I wore a black mask, and across my forehead a single
eagle feather hung.
When the horses and the
men were painted they looked beautiful; but they looked fearful too.
The men were naked,
except for a breech-clout; but the four maidens wore buckskin dresses dyed
scarlet, and their faces were scarlet too. Their hair was braided, and they had
wreaths of the sweet and cleansing sage, the sacred sage, around their heads,
and from the wreath of each in front a single eagle feather hung. They were
very beautiful to see.
All this time I was in
the sacred tepee with the Six Grandfathers, and the four sacred virgins were in
there too. No one outside was to see me until the dance began.
Right in the middle of
the tepee the Grandfathers made a circle in the ground with a little trench,
and across this they painted two roads--the red one running north and south,
the black one, east and west. On the west side of this they placed a cup of
water with a little bow and arrow laid across it; and on the east they painted
the daybreak star. Then to the maiden who would represent the north they gave
the healing herb to carry and a white goose wing, the cleansing wind. To her of
the east they gave the holy pipe. To her of the south they gave the flowering
stick; and to her who would represent the west they gave the nation's hoop.
Thus the four maidens, good and beautiful, held in their hands the life of the
nation.
All I carried was a red
stick to represent the sacred arrow, the power of the thunder beings of the
west.
We were now ready to
begin the dance. The Six Grandfathers began to sing, announcing the riders of
the different quarters. First they sang of the black horse riders, like this:
They will appear--may
you behold them!
They will appear--may
you behold them!
A horse nation will
appear.
A thunder-being nation
will appear.
They will appear,
behold!
They will appear,
behold!
Then the black riders
mounted their horses and stood four abreast facing the place where the sun goes
down.
Next the Six
Grandfathers sang:
They will appear, may
you behold them!
A horse nation will
appear, behold!
A geese nation will
appear, may you
behold!"
Then the four white
horsemen mounted and stood four abreast, facing the place where the White Giant
lives.
Next the Six
Grandfathers sang:
Where the sun shines
continually,
they will appear!
A buffalo nation, they
will appear, behold!
A horse nation, they
will appear,
may you behold!
Then the red horsemen
mounted and stood four abreast facing the east.
Next the Grandfathers
sang:
Where you are always
facing,
an elk nation will
appear!
May you behold!
A horse nation will
appear,
Behold!
The four yellow riders
mounted their buckskins and stood four abreast facing the south.
Now it was time for me
to go forth from the sacred tepee, but before I went forth I sang this song to
the drums of the Grandfathers:
He will appear, may you
behold him!
An eagle for the eagle
nation will appear.
May you behold!
While I was singing
thus in the sacred tepee I could hear my horse snorting and prancing outside.
The virgins went forth four abreast and I followed them, mounting my horse and
standing behind them facing the west.
Next the Six
Grandfathers came forth and stood abreast behind my bay, and they began to sing
a rapid, lively song to the drums, like this:
They are dancing.
They are coming to
behold you.
The horse nation of the
west is dancing.
They are coming to
behold!
Then they sang the same
of the horses of the north and of the east and of the south. And as they sang
of each troop in turn, it wheeled and came and took its place behind the
Grandfathers--the blacks, the whites, the sorrels and the buckskins, standing four
abreast and facing the west. They came prancing to the lively air of the
Grandfathers' song, and they pranced as they stood in line. And all the while
my bay was rearing too and prancing to the music of the sacred song.
Now when we were all in
line, facing the west, I looked up into a dark cloud that was coming there and
the people all became quiet and the horses quit prancing. And when there was
silence but for low thunder yonder, I sent a voice to the spirits of the cloud,
holding forth my right hand, thus, palm outward, as I cried four times:
Hey-a-a-hey!
hey-a-a-hey! hey-a-a-hey! hey-a-a-hey!
Then the Grandfathers
behind me sang another sacred song from my vision, the one that goes like this:
At the center of the
earth,
behold a four-legged.
They have said this to
me!
And as they sang a
strange thing happened. My bay pricked up his ears and raised his tail and
pawed the earth, neighing long and loud to where the sun goes down. And the
four black horses raised their voices, neighing long and loud, and the whites
and the sorrels and the buckskins did the same; and all the other horses in the
village neighed, and even those out grazing in the valley and on the hill
slopes raised their heads and neighed together. Then suddenly, as I sat there
looking at the cloud, I saw my vision yonder once again--the tepee built of
cloud and sewed with lightning the flaming rainbow door and, underneath, the
Six Grandfathers sitting, and all the horses thronging in their quarters; and
also there was I myself upon my bay before the tepee. I looked about me and
could see that what we then were doing was like a shadow cast upon the earth
from yonder vision in the heavens, so bright it was and clear. I knew the real
was yonder and the darkened dream of it was here.
And as I looked, the
Six Grandfathers yonder in the cloud and all the riders of the horses, and even
I myself upon the bay up there, all held their hands palms outward toward me,
and when they did this, I had to pray, and so I cried:
Grandfathers, you
behold me!
Spirits of the World,
you behold!
What you have said to
me,
I am now performing!
Hear me and help me!
Then the vision went
out, and the thunder cloud was coming on with lightning on its front and many
voices in it, and the split-tail swallows swooped above us in a swarm.
The people of the
village ran to fasten down their tepees, while the black horse riders sang to
the drums that rolled like thunder, and this is what they sang:
I myself made them
fear.
Myself, I wore an eagle
relic.
I myself made them
fear.
Myself, a lightning
power I wore.
I myself made them
fear,
Made them fear.
The power of the hail I
wore,
I myself made them
fear,
Made them fear!
Behold me!
And as they sang, the
hail and rain were falling yonder just a little way from us, and we could see
it, but the cloud stood there and flashed and thundered, and only a little
sprinkle fell on us. The thunder beings were glad and had come in a great crowd
to see the dance.
Now the four virgins
held high the sacred relics that they carried, the herb and the white wing, the
sacred pipe, the flowering stick, the nation's hoop, offering these to the
spirits of the west. Then people who were sick or sad came to the virgins,
making scarlet offerings to them, and after they had done this, they all felt
better and some were cured of sickness and began to dance for joy.
Now the Grandfathers
beat their drums again and the dance began. The four black horsemen, who had
stood behind the Grandfathers, went ahead of the virgins, riding toward the
west side of the circled village, and all the others followed in their order
while the horses pranced and reared.
When the black horse
troop had reached the western side, it wheeled around and fell to the rear
behind the buckskins, and the white horse band came up and led until it reached
the north side of the village. Then these fell back and took the rear behind the
blacks, and the sorrels led until they reached the east. Then these fell back
behind the whites, and the buckskins led until they reached the south. Then
they fell back and took the rear, so that the blacks were leading as before
toward the western quarter that was theirs. Each time the leading horse troop
reached its quarter, the Six Grandfathers sang of the powers of that quarter,
and there my bay faced, pricking up his ears and neighing loud, till all the
other horses raised their voices neighing. When I thus faced the north, I sent
a voice again and said: "Grandfather, behold me! What you gave me I have
given to the people--the power of the healing herb and the cleansing wind. Thus
my nation is made over. Hear and help me!"
And when we reached the
east, and after the Grandfathers had sung, I sent a voice: "Grandfather,
behold me! My people, with difficulty they walk. Give them wisdom and guide
them. Hear and help me!"
Between each quarter,
as we marched and danced, we all sang together:
A horse nation all over
the universe,
Neighing, they come!
Prancing, they come!
May you behold them.
When we had reached the
south and the Grandfathers had sung of the power of growing, my horse faced
yonder and neighed again, and all the horses raised their voices as before. And
then I prayed with hand upraised: "Grandfather, the flowering stick you
gave me and the nation's sacred hoop I have given to the people. Hear me, you
who have the power to make grow! Guide the people that they may be as blossoms
on your holy tree, and make it flourish deep in Mother Earth and make it full
of leaves and singing birds."
Then once more the
blacks were leading, and as we marched and sang and danced toward the quarter
of the west, the black hail cloud, still standing yonder watching, filled with
voices crying: "Hey-hey! hey-hey!" They were cheering and rejoicing
that my work was being done. And all the people now were happy and rejoicing,
sending voices back, "hey-hey, hey-hey"; and all the horses neighed,
rejoicing with the spirits and the people. Four times we marched and danced
around the circle of the village, singing as we went, the leaders changing at
the quarters, the Six Grandfathers singing to the power of each quarter, and to
each I sent a voice. And at each quarter, as we stood, somebody who was sick or
sad would come with offerings to the virgins--little scarlet bags of the chacun
sha sha, the red willow bark. And when the offering was made, the giver would
feel better and begin to dance with joy.
And on the second time
around, many of the people who had horses joined the dance with them, milling
round and round the Six Grandfathers and the virgins as we danced ahead. And
more and more got on their horses, milling round us as we went, until there was
a whirl of prancing horses all about us at the end, and all the others danced
afoot behind us, and everybody sang what we were singing.
When we reached the
quarter of the west the fourth time, we stopped in new formation, facing inward
toward the sacred tepee in the center of the village. First stood the virgins,
next I stood upon the bay; then came the Six Grandfathers with eight riders on
either side of them--the sorrels and the buckskins on their right hand; the
blacks and whites upon their left. And when we stood so, the oldest of the
Grandfathers, he who was the Spirit of the Sky, cried out: "Let all the
people be ready. He shall send a voice four times, and at the last voice you
shall go forth and coup [hit] the sacred tepee, and who shall coup it first
shall have new power!"
All the riders were
eager for the charge, and even the horses seemed to understand and were rearing
and trying to get away. Then I raised my hand and cried hey-hey four times, and
at the fourth the riders all yelled "hoka hey," and charged upon the tepee.
My horse plunged inward along with all the others, but many were ahead of me
and many couped the tepee before I did.
Then the horses were
all rubbed down with sacred sage and led away, and we began going into the
tepee to see what might have happened there while we were dancing. The
Grandfathers had sprinkled fresh soil on the nation's hoop that they had made
in there with the red and black roads across it, and all around this little
circle of the nation's hoop we saw the prints of tiny pony hoofs as though the
spirit horses had been dancing while we danced.
Now Black Road, who had
helped me to perform the dance, took the sacred pipe from the virgin of the
east. After filling it with chacun sha sha, the bark of the red willow, he lit
and offered it to the Powers of the World, sending a voice thus:
"Grandfathers, you
where the sun goes down, you of the sacred wind where the white giant lives,
you where the day comes forth and the morning star, you where lives the power
to grow, you of the sky and you of the earth, wings of the air and four-leggeds
of the world, behold! I, myself, with my horse nation have done what I was to
do on earth. To all of you I offer this pipe that my people may live!"
Then he smoked and
passed the pipe. It went all over the village until every one had smoked at
least a puff.
After the horse dance
was over, it seemed that I was above the ground and did not touch it when I
walked. I felt very happy, for I could see that my people were all happier.
Many crowded around me and said that they or their relatives who had been
feeling sick were well again, and these gave me many gifts. Even the horses
seemed to be healthier and happier after the dance.
The fear that was on me
so long was gone, and when thunder clouds appeared I was always glad to see
them, for they came as relatives now to visit me. Everything seemed good and
beautiful now, and kind.
Before this, the
medicine men would not talk to me, but now they would come to me to talk about
my vision.
From that time on, I
always got up very early to see the rising of the daybreak star. People knew
that I did this, and many would get up to see it with me, and when it came we
said: "Behold the star of understanding!"
From Chapter 18: The
Powers of the Bison and the Elk
I think I have told
you, but if I have not, you must have understood, that a man who has a vision
is not able to use the power of it until after he has performed the vision on
earth for the people to see. You remember that my great vision came to me when
I was only nine years old, and you have seen that I was not much good for
anything until after I had performed the horse dance near the mouth of the
Tongue River during my eighteenth summer. And if the great fear had not come
upon me, as it did, and forced me to do my duty, I might have been less good to
the people than some man who had never dreamed at all, even with the memory of
so great a vision in me. But the fear came and if I had not obeyed it, I am
sure it would have killed me in a little while.
It was even then only
after the heyoka ceremony in which I performed my dog vision, that I had the
power to practice as a medicine man, curing sick people; and many I cured with
the power that came through me. Of course it was not I who cured. It was the
power from the outer world, and the visions and ceremonies had only made me
like a hole through which the power could come to the two-leggeds. If I thought
that I was doing it myself, the hole would close up and no power could come
through. Then everything I could do would be foolish. There were other parts of
my great vision that I still had to perform before I could use the power that
was in those parts. If you think about my great vision again, you will remember
how the red man turned into a bison and rolled, and that the people found the
good red road after that. If you will read again what is written, you will see
how it was.
To use the power of the
bison, I had to perform that part of my vision for the people to see. It was
during the summer of my first cure that this was done. I carried the pipe to
Fox Belly, a wise and good old medicine man, and asked him to help me do this
duty. He was glad to help me, but first I had to tell him how it was in that
part of my vision. I did not tell him all my vision, only that part. I had
never told any one all of it, and even until now nobody ever heard it all. Even
my old friend, Standing Bear, and my son here have heard it now for the first
time when I have told it to you. Of course there was very much in the vision
that even I cannot tell when I try hard, because very much of it was not for
words. But I have told what can be told.
It has made me very sad
to do this at last, and I have lain awake at night worrying and wondering if I
was doing right; for I know I have given away my power when I have given away
my vision, and maybe I cannot live very long now. But I think I have done right
to save the vision in this way, even though I may die sooner because I did it;
for I know the meaning of the vision is wise and beautiful and good; and you
can see that I am only a pitiful old man after all.
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