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More Native American Folklore
* The Bear Family
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Chipmunk's Back is Striped
Why the Chipmunk's Back is Striped "Napa, Old-man, is very old indeed. He made this world, and all that is on it. He came out of the south, and traveled toward the north, making the birds and animals as he passed. He made the perfumes for the winds to carry about, and he even made the war-paint for the people to use. He was a busy worker, but a great liar and thief, as I shall show you after I have told you more about him. It was Old-man who taught the beaver all his cunning. It was Old-man who told the bear to go to sleep when the snow grew deep in winter, and it was he who made the curlew's bill so long and crooked, although it was not that way at first." "Old-man used to live on this world with the animals and birds. There was no other man or woman then, and he was chief over all the animal-people and the bird-people. He could speak the language of the robin, knew the words of the bear, and understood the sign-talk of the beaver, too. He lived with the wolves, for they are the great hunters. Even today we make the same sign for a smart man as we make for the wolf; so you see he taught them much while he lived with them. Old-man made a great many mistakes in making things, as I shall show you after a while; yet he worked until he had everything good. But he often made great mischief and taught many wicked things. These I shall tell you about some day."
"Everybody was afraid of Old-man and his tricks and lies, even the
animal-people, before he made men and women. He used to visit the lodges of
our people and make trouble long ago, but he got so wicked that Manitou grew
angry at him, and one day in the month of roses, he built a lodge for
Old-man and told him that he must stay in it forever. Of course he had to do
that, and nobody knows where the lodge was built, nor in what country, but
that is why we never see him as our grandfathers did, long, long ago." "'Ho!' said Old-man, 'tell me how to make Bad Sickness, for I often go to war myself.' He lied, for he was never in a battle in his life. The Person shook his ugly head and then Old-man said, 'If you will tell me how to make Bad Sickness I will make you small and handsome. When you are big, as you now are, it is very hard to make a living, but when you are small, little food will make you fat. Your living will be easy because I will make your food grow everywhere.'" "'Good,' said the Person, 'I will do it. You must kill the fawns of the deer and the calves of the elk when they first begin to live. When you have killed enough of them you must make a robe of their skins. Whenever you wear that robe and sing -- 'now you sicken, now you sicken,' the sickness will come. That is all there is to it.'" "'Good,'" said Old-man, "'now lie down to sleep and I will do as I promised.'" "The Person went to sleep and Old-man breathed upon him until he grew so tiny that he laughed to see how small he had made him. Then he took out his paint sack and striped the Person's back with black and yellow. It looked bright and handsome and he waked the Person, who was now a tiny animal with a bushy tail to make him pretty." "'Now,'" said Old-man, 'you are the Chipmunk, and must always wear those striped clothes. All of your children and their children, must wear them, too.'" "After the Chipmunk had looked at himself, and thanked Old-man for his new clothes, he wanted to know how he could make his living, and Old-man told him what to eat, and said he must cache the pine-nuts when the leaves turned yellow, so he would not have to work in the winter time." "'You are a cousin to the Pine-squirrel,'" said Old-man, "'and you will hunt and hide as he does. You will be spry and your living will be easy to make if you do as I have told you.'" "He taught the Chipmunk his language and his signs, showed him where to live, and then left him, going on toward the north again. He kept looking for the cow-elk and doe-deer, and it was not long before he had killed enough of their young to make the robe as the Person told him, for they were plentiful before the white man came to live on the world. He found a shady place near a creek, and there made the robe that would make Bad Sickness whenever he sang the strange song, but the robe was plain, and brown in color. He didn't like the looks of it. Suddenly he thought how nice the back of the Chipmunk looked after he had striped it with his paints. He got out his old paint sack and with the same colors made the robe look very much like the clothes of the Chipmunk. He was proud of the work, and liked the new robe better; but being lazy, he wanted to save himself work, so he sent the South-wind to tell all the doe-deer and the cow-elk to come to him. They came as soon as they received the message, for they were afraid of Old-man and always tried to please him. When they had all reached the place where Old-man was he said to them: 'Do you see this robe?'" "'Yes, we see it,'" they replied." "'Well, I have made it from the skins of your children, and then painted it to look like the Chipmunk's back, for I like the looks of that Person's clothes. I shall need many more of these robes during my life. Every time I make one, I don't want to have to spend my time painting it, so from now on and forever your children shall be born in spotted clothes. I want it to be that way to save me work. On all the fawns there must be spots of white like this (here he pointed to the spots on Bad Sickness' robe) and on all of the elk-calves the spots shall not be so white and shall be in rows and look rather yellow.' Again he showed them his robe, that they might see just what he wanted." "'Remember,' he said, 'after this I don't want to see any of your children running about wearing plain clothing, because that would mean more painting for me. Now go away, and remember what I have said, lest I make you sick.'" "The cow-elk and the doe-deer were glad to know that their children's clothes would be beautiful, and they went away to their little ones who were hidden in the tall grass, where the wolves and mountain-lions would have a hard time finding them; for you know that in the tracks of the fawn there is no scent, and the wolf cannot trail him when he is alone. That is the way Manitou takes care of the weak, and all of the forest-people know about it, too." "Now you know why the Chipmunk's back is striped, and why the fawn and elk-calf wear their pretty clothes." "I hear the owls, and it is time for all young men who will some day be great warriors to go to bed, and for all young women to seek rest, lest beauty go away forever. Ho!"
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