The children were all down in the
salt-marsh playing at marriage-by-capture. It
was a very good play. You ran just as fast after
the ugly girls as the pretty ones, and you didn’t
have to abide by the result. One little girl
got so excited that she fell into the river, and it
was Andramark who pulled her out, and beat her on the
back till she stopped choking. It may be well
to remember that she was named Tassel Top, a figure
taken from the Indian-corn ear when it is in silk.
Andramark was the name of the boy.
He was the seventh son of Squirrel Eyes, and all his
six brothers were dead, because they had been born
in hard times, or had fallen out of trees, or had
been drowned. To grow up in an Indian village,
especially when it is travelling, is very difficult.
Sometimes a boy’s mother has to work so hard
that she runs plumb out of milk; and sometimes he
gets playing too roughly with the other boys, and
gets wounded, and blood-poisoning sets in; or he finds
a dead fish and cooks it and eats it, and ptomaine
poisoning sets in; or he catches too much cold on
a full stomach, or too much malaria on an empty one.
Or he tries to win glory by stealing a bear cub when
its mother isn’t looking, or a neighboring tribe
drops in between days for an unfriendly visit, and
some big painted devil knocks him over the head and
takes his scalp home to his own little boy to play
with.
Contrariwise, if he does manage to
grow up and reach man’s estate he’s got
something to brag of. Only he doesn’t do
it; because the first thing that people learn who
have to live very intimately together is that bore
and boaster are synonymous terms. So he never
brags of what he has accomplished in the way of deeds
and experiences until he is married. And then
only in the privacy of his own lodge, when that big
hickory stick which he keeps for the purpose assures
him of the beloved one’s best ears and most
flattering attention.
Andramark’s father was worse
than dead. He had been tried in the council-lodge
by the elders, and had been found guilty of something
which need not be gone into here, and driven forth
into the wilderness which surrounded the summer village
to shift for himself. By the same judgment the
culprit’s wife, Squirrel Eyes, was pronounced
a widow. Most women in her position would have
been ambitious to marry again, but Squirrel Eyes’s
only ambition was to raise her seventh son to be the
pride and support of her old age. She had had
quite enough of marriage, she would have thanked you.
So, when Andramark was thirteen years
old, and very swift and husky for his age, Squirrel
Eyes went to the Wisest Medicine-man, and begged him
to take her boy in hand and make a man of him.
“Woman,” the Wisest Medicine-man
had said, “fifteen is the very greenest age
at which boys are made men, but seeing that you are
a widow, and without support, it may be that something
can be done. We will look into the matter.”
That was why Owl Eyes, the Wisest
Medicine-man, invited two of his cronies to sit with
him on the bluff overlooking the salt-marsh and watch
the children playing at marriage-by-capture.
Those old men were among the best
judges of sports and form living. They could
remember three generations of hunters and fighters.
They had all the records for jumping, swimming under
water, spear-throwing, axe-throwing, and bow-shooting
at their tongues’ ends. And they knew the
pedigree for many, many generations of every child
at that moment playing in the meadow, and into just
what sort of man or woman that child should grow,
with good luck and proper training.
Owl Eyes did not call his two cronies’
attention to Andramark. If there was any precocity
in the lad it would show of itself, and nothing would
escape their black, jewel-like, inscrutable eyes.
When Tassel Top fell into the river the aged pair
laughed heartily, and when Andramark, without changing
his stride, followed her in and fished her out, one
of them said, “That’s a quick boy,”
and the other said, “Why hasn’t that girl
been taught to swim?” Owl Eyes said, “That’s
a big boy for only thirteen that Andramark.”
In the next event Andramark from scratch
ran through a field some of the boys were
older and taller than himself and captured
yet another wife, who, because she expected and longed
to be caught by some other boy, promptly boxed the
air where his ears had been. Andramark, smiling,
caught both her hands in one of his, tripped her over
a neatly placed foot, threw her, face down, and seated
himself quietly on the small of her back and rubbed
her nose in the mud.
The other children, laughing and shouting,
rushed to the rescue. Simultaneously Andramark,
also laughing, was on his feet, running and dodging.
Twice he passed through the whole mob of his pursuers
without, so it seemed to the aged watchers on the
bluff, being touched. Then, having won some ten
yards clear of them, he wheeled about and stood with
folded arms. A great lad foremost in the pursuit
reached for him, was caught instead by the outstretched
hand and jerked forward on his face. Some of
the children laughed so hard that they had to stop
running. Others redoubled their efforts to close
with the once more darting, dodging, and squirming
Andramark, who, however, threading through them for
the third and last time in the most mocking and insulting
manner, headed straight for the bluff a little to
the right of where his elders and betters were seated
with their legs hanging over, leaped at a dangling
wild grape-vine, squirmed to the top, turned, and prepared
to defend his position against any one insolent enough
to assail it.
The children, crowded at the base
of the little bluff, looked up. Andramark looked
down. With one hand and the tip of his nose he
made the insulting gesture which is older than antiquity.
Meanwhile, Owl Eyes had left his front-row
seat, and not even a waving of the grasses showed
that he was crawling upon Andramark from behind.
Owl Eyes’s idea was to push
the boy over the bluff as a lesson to him never to
concentrate himself too much on one thing at a time.
But just at the crucial moment Andramark leaped to
one side, and it was a completely flabbergasted old
gentleman who descended through the air in his stead
upon a scattering flock of children. Owl Eyes,
still agile at eighty, gathered himself into a ball,
jerked violently with his head and arms, and managed
to land on his feet. But he was very much shaken,
and nobody laughed. He turned and looked up at
Andramark, and Andramark looked down.
“I couldn’t help it,”
said Andramark. “I knew you were there all
the time.”
Owl Eyes’s two cronies grinned behind their
hands.
“Come down,” said Owl Eyes sternly.
Andramark leaped and landed lightly,
and stood with folded arms and looked straight into
the eyes of the Wisest Medicine-man. Everybody
made sure that there was going to be one heap big
beating, and there were not wanting those who would
have volunteered to fetch a stick, even from a great
distance. But Owl Eyes was not called the Wisest
Medicine-man for nothing. His first thought had
been, “I will beat the life out of this boy.”
But then (it was a strict rule that he always followed)
he recited to himself the first three stanzas of the
Rain-Maker’s song, and had a new and wiser thought.
This he spoke aloud.
“Boy,” he said, “beginning
to-morrow I myself shall take you in hand and make
a man of you. You will be at the medicine-lodge
at noon. Meanwhile go to your mother’s
lodge and tell her from me to give you a sound beating.”
The children marvelled, the boys envied,
and Andramark, his head very high, his heart thumping,
passed among them and went home to his mother and
repeated what the Wisest Medicine-man had said.
“And you are to give me a sound
beating, mother,” said Andramark, “because
after to-day they will begin making a man of me, and
when I am a man it will be the other way around, and
I shall have to beat you.”
His back was bare, and he bent forward
so that his mother could beat him. And she took
down from the lodge-pole a heavy whip of raw buckskin.
It was not so heavy as her heart.
Then she raised the whip and said:
“A blow for the carrying,”
and she struck; “a blow for the bearing,”
and she struck; “a blow for the milking,”
and she struck; “a blow for lies spoken,”
and she did not strike; “a blow for food
stolen,” and she did not strike.
And she went through the whole litany
of the beating ceremonial and struck such blows as
the law demanded, and spared those she honestly could
spare, and when in doubt she quibbled struck,
but struck lightly.
When the beating was over they sat
down facing each other and talked. And Squirrel
Eyes said: “What must be, must. The
next few days will soon be over.”
And Andramark shuddered (he was alone
with his mother) and said, “If I show that they
hurt me they will never let me be a man.”
And Squirrel Eyes did her best to
comfort him and put courage in his heart, just as
modern mothers do for sons who are about to have a
tooth pulled or a tonsil taken out.
The next day at noon sharp Andramark
stood before the entrance of the medicine-lodge with
his arms folded; and all his boy and girl friends
watched him from a distance. And all the boys
envied him, and all the girls wished that they were
boys. Andramark stood very still, almost without
swaying, for the better part of an hour. His body
was nicely greased, and he resembled a wet terra-cotta
statue. A few mosquitoes were fattening themselves
on him, and a bite in the small of his back itched
so that he wanted very much to squirm and wriggle.
But that would have been almost as bad an offence
against ceremonial as complaining of hunger during
the fast or shedding tears under the torture.
Andramark had never seen the inside
of the medicine-lodge; but it was well known to be
very dark, and to contain skulls and thigh-bones of
famous enemies, and devil-masks, and horns and rattles
and other disturbing and ghostly properties.
Of what would happen to him when he had passed between
the flaps of the lodge and was alone with the medicine-men
he did not know. But he reasoned that if they
really wanted to make a man of him they would not
really try to kill him or maim him. And he was
strong in the determination, no matter what should
happen, to show neither surprise, fear, nor pain.
A quiet voice spoke suddenly, just
within the flaps of the lodge:
“Who is standing without?”
“The boy Andramark.”
“What do you wish of us?”
“To be made a man.”
“Then say farewell to your companions of childhood.”
Andramark turned toward the boys and
girls who were watching him. Their faces swam
a little before his eyes, and he felt a big lump coming
slowly up in his throat. He raised his right arm
to its full length, palm forward, and said:
“Farewell, O children; I shall never play with
you any more.”
Then the children set up a great howl
of lamentation, which was all part of the ceremonial,
and Andramark turned and found that the flaps of the
lodge had been drawn aside, and that within there was
thick darkness and the sound of men breathing.
“Come in, Andramark.”
The flaps of the lodge fell together
behind him. Fingers touched his shoulder and
guided him in the dark, and then a voice told him to
sit down. His quick eyes, already accustomed
to the darkness, recognized one after another the
eleven medicine-men of his tribe. They were seated
cross-legged in a semicircle, and one of them was thumbing
tobacco into the bowl of a poppy-red pipe. Some
of the medicine-men had rattles handy in their laps,
others devil-horns. They were all smiling and
looking kindly at the little boy who sat all alone
by himself facing them. Then old Owl Eyes, who
was the central medicine-man of the eleven, spoke.
“In this lodge,” he said,
“no harm will befall you. But lest the women
and children grow to think lightly of manhood there
will be from time to time much din and devil-noises.”
At that the eleven medicine-men began
to rock their bodies and groan like lost souls (they
groaned louder and louder, with a kind of awful rhythm),
and to shake the devil-rattles, which were dried gourds,
brightly painted, and containing teeth of famous enemies,
and one of the medicine-men tossed a devil-horn to
Andramark, and the boy put it to his lips and blew
for all he was worth. It was quite obvious that
the medicine-men were just having fun, not with him,
but with all the women and children of the village
who were outside listening at a safe distance,
of course and imagining that the medicine-lodge
was at that moment a scene of the most awful visitations
and terrors. And all that afternoon, at intervals,
the ghastly uproar was repeated, until Andramark’s
lips were chapped with blowing the devil-horn and his
insides felt very shaky. But between times the
business of the medicine-men with Andramark was very
serious, and they talked to him like so many fathers,
and he listened with both ears and pulled at the poppy-red
medicine-pipe whenever it was passed to him.
They lectured him upon anatomy and
hygiene; upon tribal laws and intertribal laws; and
always they explained “why” as well as
they could, and if they didn’t know “why”
they said it must be right because it’s always
been done that way. Sometimes they said things
that made him feel very self-conscious and uncomfortable.
And sometimes they became so interesting that it was
the other way round.
“The gulf,” said Owl Eyes,
“between the race of men and the races of women
and children is knowledge. For, whereas many squaws
and little children possess courage, knowledge is
kept from them, even as the first-run shad of the
spring. The duty of the child is to acquire strength
and skill, of the woman to bear children, to labor
in the corn-field, and to keep the lodge. But
the duty of man is to hunt, and to fight, and to make
medicine, to know, and to keep knowledge to himself.
Hence the saying that whatever man betrays the secrets
of the council-lodge to a squaw is a squaw himself.
Hitherto, Andramark, you have been a talkative child,
but henceforth you will watch your tongue as a warrior
watches the prisoner that he is bringing to his village
for torture. When a man ceases to be a mystery
to the women and children he ceases to be a man.
Do not tell them what has passed in the medicine-lodge,
but let it appear that you could discourse of ghostly
mysteries and devilish visitations and other dread
wonders if you would; so that even to the
mother that bore you you will be henceforward and
forever a thing apart, a thing above, a thing beyond.”
And the old medicine-man who sat on
Owl Eyes’s left cleared his throat and said:
“When a man’s wife is
in torment, it is as well for him to nod his head
and let her believe that she does not know what suffering
is.”
Another said:
“Should a man’s child
ask what the moon is made of, let that man answer
that it is made of foolish questions, but at the same
time let him smile, as much as to say that he could
give the truthful answer if he would.”
Another said:
“When you lie to women and children,
lie foolishly, so that they may know that you are
making sport of them and may be ashamed. In this
way a man may keep the whole of his knowledge to himself,
like a basket of corn hidden in a place of his own
secret choosing.”
Still another pulled one flap of the
lodge a little so that a ray of light entered.
He held his hand in the ray and said:
“The palm of my hand is in darkness,
the back is in light. It is the same with all
acts and happenings there is a bright side
and a dark side. Never be so foolish as to look
on the dark side of things; there may be somewhat
there worth discovering, but it is in vain to look
because it cannot be seen.”
And Owl Eyes said:
“It will be well now to rest
ourselves from seriousness with more din and devil-noises.
And after that we shall lead the man-boy Andramark
to the Lodge of Nettles, there to sit alone for a
space and to turn over in his mind all that we have
said to him.”
“One thing more.”
This from a very little medicine-man who had done very
little talking. “When you run the gauntlet
of the women and children from the Hot Lodge to the
river, watch neither their eyes nor their whips; watch
only their feet, lest you be tripped and thrown at
the very threshold of manhood.”
Nettles, thistles, and last year’s
burdocks and sandspurs strewed the floor of the lodge
to which Andramark was now taken. And he was told
that he must not thrust these to one side and make
himself comfortable upon the bare ground. He
might sit, or stand, or lie down; he might walk about;
but he mustn’t think of going to sleep, or, indeed,
of anything but the knowledge and mysteries which
had been revealed to him in the medicine-lodge.
All that night, all the next day,
and all the next night he meditated. For the
first six hours he meditated on knowledge, mystery,
and the whole duty of man, just as he had been told
to do. And he only stopped once to listen to
a flute-player who had stolen into the forest back
of the lodge and was trying to tell some young squaw
how much he loved her and how lonely he was without
her. The flute had only four notes and one of
them was out of order; but Andramark had been brought
up on that sort of music and it sounded very beautiful
to him. Still, he only listened with one ear,
Indian fashion. The other was busy taking in all
the other noises of the night and the village.
Somebody passed by the Lodge of Nettles, walking very
slowly and softly. “A man,” thought
Andramark, “would not make any noise at all.
A child would be in bed.”
The slow, soft steps were nearing
the forest back of the lodge, quickening a little.
Contrariwise, the flute was being played more and
more slowly. Each of its three good notes was
a stab at the feelings, and so, for that matter, was
the note that had gone wrong. An owl hooted.
Andramark smiled. If he had been born enough hundreds
of years later he might have said, “You can’t
fool me!”
The flute-playing stopped abruptly.
Andramark forgot all about the nettles and sat down.
Then he stood up.
He meditated on war and women, just
as he had been told to do. Then, because he was
thirsty, he meditated upon suffering. And he finished
the night meditating upon an empty stomach.
Light filtered under the skirts of
the lodge. He heard the early women going to
their work in the fields. The young leaves were
on the oaks, and it was corn-planting time. Even
very old corn, however, tastes very good prepared
in any number of different ways. Andramark agreed
with himself that when he gave himself in marriage
it would be to a woman who was a thoroughly good cook.
But quite raw food is acceptable at times. It
is pleasant to crack quail eggs between the teeth,
or to rip the roe out of a fresh-caught shad with
your forefinger and just let it melt in your mouth.
The light brightened. It was
a fine day. It grew warm in the lodge, hot, intolerably
hot. The skins of which it was made exhaled a
smoky, meaty smell. Andramark was tempted to
see if he couldn’t suck a little nourishment
out of them. A shadow lapped the skirts of the
lodge and crawled upward. It became cool, cold.
The boy, almost naked, began to shiver and shake.
He swung his arms as cab-drivers do, and tried very
hard to meditate upon the art of being a man.
During the second night one of his
former companions crept up to the lodge and spoke
to him under its skirts. “Sst! Heh!
What does it feel like to be a man?” chuckled
and withdrew.
Andramark said to himself the Indian
for “I’ll lay for that boy.”
He was very angry. He had been gratuitously insulted
in the midst of his new dignities.
Suddenly the flaps of the lodge were
opened and some one leaned in and set something upon
the floor. Andramark did not move. His nostrils
dilated, and he said to himself, “Venison broiled
to the second.”
In the morning he saw that there was
not only venison, but a bowl of water, and a soft
bearskin upon which he might stretch himself and sleep.
His lips curled with a great scorn. And he remained
standing and aloof from the temptations. And
meditated upon the privileges of being a man.
About noon he began to have visitors.
At first they were vague, dark spots that hopped and
ziddied in the overheated air. But these became,
with careful looking, all sorts of devils and evil
spirits, and beasts the like of which were not in
the experience of any living man. There were
creatures made like men, only that they were covered
with long, silky hair and had cry-baby faces and long
tails. And there was a vague, yellowish beast,
very terrible, something like a huge cat, only that
it had curling tusks like a very big wild pig.
And there were other things that looked like men,
only that they were quite white, as if they had been
most awfully frightened. And suddenly Andramark
imagined that he was hanging to a tree, but not by
his hands or his feet, and the limb to which he was
hanging broke, and, after falling for two or three
days, he landed on his feet among burs and nettles
that were spread over the floor of a lodge.
The child had slept standing up, and
had evolved from his subconsciousness, as children
will, beasts and conditions that had existed when
the whole human race was a frightened cry-baby in its
cradle. He had never heard of a monkey or a sabre-tooth
tiger; but he had managed to see a sort of vision
of them both, and had dreamed that he was a monkey
hanging by his tail.
He was very faint and sick when the
medicine-men came for him. But it did not show
in his face, and he walked firmly among them to the
great Torture Lodge, his head very high and the ghost
of a smile hovering about his mouth.
It was a grim business that waited
him in the Torture Lodge. He was strung up by
his thumbs to a peg high up the great lodge pole, and
drawn taut by thongs from his big toes to another
peg in the base of the pole, and then, without any
unnecessary delays, for every step in the proceeding
was according to a ceremonial that was almost as old
as suffering, they gave him, what with blunt flint-knives
and lighted slivers of pitch-pine, a very good working
idea of hell. They told him, without words, which
are the very tenderest and most nervous places in
all the human anatomy, and showed him how simple it
is to give a little boy all the sensations of major
operations without actually removing his arms and
legs. And they talked to him. They told him
that because he came of a somewhat timorous family
they were letting him off very easily; that they weren’t
really hurting him, because it was evident from the
look of him that at the first hint of real pain he
would scream and cry. And then suddenly, just
when the child was passing through the ultimate border-land
of endurance, they cut him down, and praised him,
and said that he had behaved splendidly, and had taken
to torture as a young duck takes to water. And
poor little Andramark found that under the circumstances
kindness was the very hardest thing of all to bear.
One after another great lumps rushed up his throat,
and he began to tremble and totter and struggle with
the corners of his mouth.
Old Owl Eyes, who had tortured plenty
of brave boys in his day, was ready for this phase.
He caught up a great bowl of ice-cold spring-water
and emptied it with all his strength against Andramark’s
bloody back. The shock of that sudden icy blow
brought the boy’s runaway nerves back into hand.
He shook himself, drew a long breath, and, without
a quiver anywhere, smiled.
And the old men were as glad as he
was that the very necessary trial by torture was at
an end. And, blowing triumphantly upon devil-horns
and shaking devil-rattles, they carried him the whole
length of the village to the base of the hill where
the Hot Lodge was.
This was a little cave, in the mouth
of which was a spring, said to be very full of Big
Medicine. The entrance to the cave was closed
by a heavy arras of bearskins, three or four thick,
and the ground in front was thickly strewn with round
and flat stones cracked and blackened by fire.
From the cave to the fifteen-foot bluff overhanging
a deep pool of the river the ground was level, and
worn in a smooth band eight or ten feet wide as by
the trampling of many feet.
Andramark, stark naked and still bleeding
in many places, sat cross-legged in the cave, at the
very rim of the medicine-spring. His head hung
forward on his chest. All his muscles were soft
and relaxed. After a while the hangings of the
cave entrance were drawn a little to one side and
a stone plumped into the spring with a savage hiss;
another followed another and
another and another. Steam began to rise from
the surface of the spring, little bubbles darted up
from the bottom and burst. More hot stones were
thrown into the water. Steam, soft and caressing,
filled the cave. The temperature rose by leaps
and bounds. The roots of Andramark’s hair
began to tickle the tickling became unendurable,
and ceased suddenly as the sweat burst from every pore
of his body. His eyes closed; in his heart it
was as if love-music were being played upon a flute.
He was no longer conscious of hunger or thirst.
He yielded, body and soul, to the sensuous miracle
of the steam, and slept.
He was awakened by many shrill voices
that laughed and dared him to come out.
“It’s only one big beating,”
he said, rose, stepped over the spring, pushed through
the bearskins, and stood gleaming and steaming in the
fading light.
The gantlet that he was to run extended
from the cave to the bluff overhanging the river.
He looked the length of the double row of grinning
women and children the active agents in
what was to come. Back of the women and children
were warriors and old men, their faces relaxed into
holiday expressions. Toward the river end of the
gauntlet were stationed the youngest, the most vigorous,
the most fun-loving of the women, and the larger boys,
with only a negligible sprinkling of really little
children. Every woman and child in the two rows
was armed with a savage-looking whip of willow, hickory,
or even green brier, and the still more savage intention
of using these whips to the utmost extent of their
speed and accuracy in striking.
Upon a signal Andramark darted forward
and was lost in a whistling smother. It was as
if an untrimmed hedge had suddenly gone mad.
Andramark made the best of a bad business, guarded
his face and the top of his head with his arms, ran
swiftly, but not too swiftly, and kept his eyes out
for feet that were thrust forward to trip him.
A dozen feet ahead he saw a pair of
little moccasins that were familiar to him. As
he passed them he looked into their owner’s face,
and wondered why, of all the little girls in the village,
Tassel Top alone did not use her whip on him.
At last, half blinded, lurching as
he ran, he came to the edge of the bluff, and dived,
almost without a splash, into the deep, fresh water.
The cold of it stung his overheated, bleeding body
like a swarm of wild bees, and it is possible that
when he reached the Canoe Beach the water in his eyes
was not all fresh. Here, however, smiling chiefs
and warriors surrounded the stoic, and welcomed him
to their number with kind words and grunts of approval.
And then, because he that had been but a moment before
a naked child was now a naked man, and no fit spectacle
for women and children, they formed a bright-colored
moving screen about him and conducted him to the great
council-lodge. There they eased his wounds with
pleasant greases, and dressed him in softest buckskin,
and gave him just as much food as it was safe for him
to eat a couple of quail eggs and a little
dish of corn and freshwater mussels baked.
And after that they sent him home
armed with a big stick. And there was his mother,
squatting on the floor of their lodge, with her back
bared in readiness for a good beating. But Andramark
closed the lodge-flaps, and dropped his big stick,
and began to blubber and sob. And his mother
leaped up and caught him in her arms; and then once
a mother, always tactful she began to howl
and yell, just as if she were actually receiving the
ceremonial beating which was her due. And the
neighbors pricked up their ears and chuckled, and
said the Indian for “Squirrel Eyes is getting
what was coming to her.”
Maybe Andramark didn’t sleep
that night, and maybe he did. And all the dreams
that he dreamed were pleasant, and he got the best
of everybody in them, and he woke next morning to
a pleasant smell of broiling shad, and lay on his
back blinking and yawning, and wondering why of all
the little girls in the village Tassel Top alone had
not used her whip on him.