Even in the long after years in stately
Christian Spain, Don Ruy was a silent man when his
serene lady in stiff brocades and jewelled shoes would
mock at court pageantry and sigh for the reckless days
when she had worn the trappings of a page and followed
his steps into the north land of barbaric mysteries.
Mystery much of it had remained for
her! The life of the final days in the terraced
village by the great river had been masked and cloaked
for her. Ysobel and Jose had been silent guards,
and Don Ruy could not be cajoled into speech!
But there had been a morning he suddenly
became a very compelling commander for all of them;
and his will was that the cavalcade head for the south
and Mexico as quickly as might be, and that Padre
Vicente de Bernaldez separate from them all and seek
converts where he would. A horse and food was
allowed to him, but no other thing.
Don Diego exclaimed with amazement
at such arrangement, and warned Don Ruy that the saints
above, and Mother Church in Spain, would demand account
for such act on the part of even Don Ruy Sandoval!
“Is it indeed so?” asked
Don Ruy, and smiled with a bitter meaning as he looked
on the padre: “Will you, senor priest,
tell this company it is at your own will and request
that you remain in this land of the barbarians?
Or is your mind changed, and do you fancy Seville as
a pleasant place for a journey?”
But Padre Vicente turned the color
of a corpse, and said openly before them all, that
he asked freedom to journey to other Indian villages.
Thus, white and silent he was let go. He went
without farewell. If he found other villages
none can tell, but the men of a great Order framed
before the building of the Egyptian pyramids, do know
that the traces of a like Order is to-day in one of
the villages of that province of New Spain, and that
there is legend of a white priest who lived in their
terraces of the mesa, and taught them certain things
of the strange outside world so long as they let him
live. But his name is not remembered by men.
What Don Ruy Sandoval said to the
Viceroy of Mexico on his return, was in private conference,
but a royal galleon carried him, and carried a strangely
found Mexic bride, across the wide seas to Spain, where
the wonderful “Relaciones” were made the
subject of much converse, but never printed, and during
the lifetime of the adventurer called Ruy Sandoval,
the province of New Spain along the Rio Grande
del Norte was locked and barred against
the seeker of gold or of souls it was the
closed land of mystery: the province of
sorcerers, where Mother Earth hid beneath her heart
the symbol of the Sun Father.
But there are legends there in the
valley of the Te-hua people to tell of that time of
trial three centuries ago. Also there are the
records written on mesa and mountain. In the
time of that far away, the Spirit People worked together
on Na-im-be Mountain until of the evergreen pine,
a giant figure of a man grew there, and around him
is growing the white limbs and yellow leaves of the
aspen groves. The hands of that figure reach
high overhead and are to the south, and they hold
the great Serpent whose body is as a strung bow in
its arch, and whose head is high on the hill where
the enchanted lake, known by every one, reflects the
sky. Tahn-te, whose mother was the Woman
of the Twilight, said the God of Winter would send
a sign that the people might know the ancient worship
of the creeping Brother was a true thing and
so it was done all men can see it when
the Spirit People turn yellow the leaves.
Other things spoken by him have come
true until the Te-hua priests know that one born of
a god did once live among them as a boy and as a man.
Like children bewildered did the clans
of Povi-whah watch the silent swift departure of their
white brothers from whom they had hoped much.
They thought of many things and had trouble thoughts
while they waited until the mourning of Tahn-te
in the hills would be over, and he would come again
to their councils. But when the waiting had been
so long that fear touched their hearts, then men of
the highest medicine sought for him in the hills,
that his fasts be not too long, and he be entreated
to return: that turned-away face of the
God-Maid on the mesa made their hearts weak, and they
needed the strong prayers of Tahn-te. His
name meant the Sunlight, and their minds were in shadow
after his going away.
With prayer words and prayer music
they sought for him, and sacred pollen was wafted
to the four ways, and all the ways of the Spirit,
that the help of the Lost Others might come also.
They told each other of the promise
of Po-se-yemo and of Ki-pah, that in each time
of stress a leader who was god-sent would come to the
Te-hua people so long as they were faithful to the
Things of the Spirit.
This had truly been a season of stress,
and an appeal of new, strange gods!
Tahn-te, the leader, had been
born and had come to them; the Flute of the Ancient
Gods he had carried as the Sign! and as
they whispered it to each other, their eyes had a
new terror, and they sought wildly for reasons to
justify themselves.
He had come. They had choice,
and they chose the new white brothers, and the new
god promises!
He had come; and they had
closed their hearts against his words they
had driven him away as in other days the Ancient Fathers
had driven Po-se-yemo to the south: for
the gods only live where the hearts of men are true,
and strong, and of faith!
These things they had been told by
the Ancients, but they remembered it now anew as they
followed each other in silence to the hills, and to
the white walls of Pu-ye and to the tomb
there newly built that the Woman of the Twilight might
rest where her people had lived in the lost centuries.
The portal of it was closed, and the
sign of her order was cut in the rock at the portal.
The priests made many prayers, but
no trace of the lost Ruler could they find. All
was silence in that place of the dead, but for the
song of a bluebird flitting from one ancient dwelling
to another.
Younger men went far to the west where
the people of the Hopi mesas had loved him; somewhere
in the world he must be found!
But the Hopi people mourned also,
for they had heard the strange call of a flute across
the sands in the night time, and had feared to answer
to the call, and in the morning there was no sound
of the flute, and no priest of the flute to be found: only
a trail across the desert sand and the
trail led the way of the sun trail, and the Winds
of the Four Ways blew, and swept it from sight and
they knew in their hearts that Tahn-te had sent
his good-bye call ere he went from the land of men
to the land of gods.
They knew also that he went alive for
the god-born do not die.
This word the couriers took back to
the Te-hua people of the Rio Grande, and fires were
lit for him as they have been lighted for centuries
that the god Po-se-yemo might know that their
faith in the valley of the great river was yet strong
for the ancient gods.
Three centuries of the religion of
the white strangers have not made dim the signal fires
to those born of the sky!
The walls of Povi-whah have melted
again into Mother Earth. Silent are the groves
where the Ancient Others carved their homes from the
rock walls of the heights. Wings of vivid blue
flit in the sunlight from the portal of the star to
bough of the pinyon tree and a brooding
silence rests over those high levels; only
the wind whispers in the pines, and the old Indians
point to the bird of azure and tell of a Demon-maid
who came once from the land of the Navahu, and wore
such wings, and sang a song of the blue bird, and
enchanted a god-born one with her promise to build
a nest and wait for him at the trail’s
end!
An ancient teller of Te-hua legends
will add that the trail of Tahn-te was covered
by the sands of the Four Ways and no living people
ever again looked on his face, and that
the Te-hua priests say the strong god of the men of
iron swept him into the Nothing because he alone stood
against the new faith in that time of trial.
The teller of tales does not know
if this be true or not all gods can be
made strong by people, and it is not good to battle
against the god of a strong people: they
can send strange sorceries and wild temptings, and
the Navahu maid had such charm she was never forgotten
by men who looked upon her face. It is also well
known that the bluebird is a sacred bird for medicine,
and does call at every dawn on those heights, and
the wings worn in the banda of Tahn-te might,
through strong love, have become a true charm; and
might have led him at last to the nest of the witch
maid in some wilderness of the Far Away; who
can tell?
But all men know that the prophecies
of Tahn-te are true to-day in the valley of the
Rio Grande and that his vision was the vision
of that which was to be.
Aliksai!
GLOSSARY
| Alikasai! |
Hopi ceremonial word for a story telling, equivalent to Once upon a
time, or Thus it was. |
| Alvarado, Hernando de |
A lieutenant of Coronado, 1540. |
| Atoki |
The Crane. |
| Ah-ko |
Acoma, N. M., a village of the Queres people. |
| Apache |
A warrior tribe of Athapascan stock in Arizona. |
| Awh-we |
Mountain Place. |
| By-otle |
(see Py-otle). |
| Chinig-Chinik |
A Pacific coast tribe of Nature worshippers. |
| Chilan Balam |
Indian priest and propheth Century. |
| Ci-bo-la |
Zuni, N. M. The only surviving village of the Seven Cities of
Cibola of the early Spanish, chronicles. |
| Ci-cu-y |
Indian village and river. Pecos, N. M. |
| Cabeza de Vaca |
Alvar Nunez:the first European to cross the land and make record
of the natives of the Arizona region. (1528-36). |
| Dok-os-lid |
Navaho sacred mountain of the west. San Francisco Mt., Arizona. |
| Doli |
The blue bird. (Navaho). |
| Estsan-atlehi |
Navaho Earth Goddess. |
| Go-h-yahs |
Spirit People, or mediators between earth people and the Sun Father. |
| Han-na-di Set-en-dah-nh! |
Te-hua ceremonial beginning of a legend or sacred myth story. |
| Hopi or Hpit |
The desert people of Tusayan, often named Moki or Moqui by outsiders
or tribal enemies. |
| Ho-tiwa |
Arrows (being) made. |
| Kat-yi-ti |
Cochiti Pueblo, N. M. |
| Ka-yemo |
Falling leaves. |
| Kah-po |
Santa Clara Pueblo, N. M. |
| Ki-pah |
A legendary civilizer and prophet of Te-hua people. |
| Kat-yi-mo |
The solitary Mesa Enchanted, three miles north of Acoma. |
| K[=a]-ye-povi |
Spirit Blossom. |
| K[=a]-ye-fah |
Wings of the Spirits. |
| Koh-p |
Red shell beads. |
| Khen-yah |
Shaking trail. |
| L-lang-h |
The Spirit Leader of the Flute Ceremony for rain in the desert. He
was the first to make prayers through the reed to the Spirit People of
the Elements. The gods granted the prayer, and the Sacred Order of the
Flute was instituted. It exists to-day in Tusayan. |
| Lost Others. |
Those who have gone from earth life to the spirit land. |
| Lo-lo-mi, |
A Hopi word indicating that all is good or beautiful.A blessing. |
| Mo-wa-th |
Flash of Light. |
| Mother of the Starry Skirt |
Milky Way. |
| Moon of the Yellow Leaves |
September. |
| Navahu |
Navaho, a nomadic tribe of Athapascan stock in Arizona. |
| Na-im-be |
Nambe Pueblo, N. M. |
| Nahual |
Spirit Ministrant, or unexpressed personal power. |
| Oj-ke |
San Juan Pueblo, N. M. |
| O-ye-tza |
White Ice. |
| Oh-we-tahnh |
Indian writing. (Pictographs) |
| P[=o]-s[=o]n-g |
The river that is great, Rio Grande. |
| Po-Ahtun |
An esoteric cult known from N. M. to Central America. The Lords of
the Water and the Four Winds. |
| Po-Ahtun-ho |
The high priest of the order. The spiritual ruler. |
| Po-se-yemo |
Dew of Heaven. The earth-born Te-hua Christ. |
| Povi-whah |
Moving Blossom. |
| Po-tzah |
White Water. |
| Po-pe-kan-eh |
Where the water is born. Springs at the foot of
Tse-c[=o]me-[=u]-pi. |
| Po-eh-hin-cha |
Santa Clara creek, N. M. |
| Po-etse |
Box Caon, Santa Clara Creek. |
| Po-ho-g |
San Ildefonso Pueblo, N. M. |
| Phen-tza |
Yellow Mountain. |
| Pi-pe-y |
An instrument of grooved stone and a reed, by which astronomical
calculations were made by the Milky Way and stars. |
| Pu-y |
A cliff dwelling on Santa Clara Reservation, N. M. |
| Py-otle |
A powerful drug known by Indian medicine men from the great lakes to
Yucatan. |
| Quetzal-coatl |
A God of Light of Mexico. |
| Qui-ve ra |
A mythic land of gold in the desert. |
| Queres |
or Que-ran-na. An ancient house building people of N. M. Their
principal pueblo is AcomaThe sky dwellings of White. |
| Sh-pah |
The Frost. |
| S[=aa]-hanh-que-ah |
The Woman of the Twilight. |
| Sea of Cortez |
Gulf of California. |
| Se-po-chineh |
The Place of Ancient Fire, a sacred mountain, Mt. Taylor, N. M. |
| Sik-yat-ki |
A ruin in the Tusayan desert, near Walpi, Arizona. |
| Sten-ahtlihan |
The supreme goddess of the Apache pantheon. |
| Sinde-hsi |
The Ancient Father:the Power back of the Sun. |
| Shufinne |
A pre-historic cliff dwelling near Pu-y, N. M. |
| So-ho-dah-tsa |
Dark Cloud. |
| Ta-ah-quea |
The Goddess of the Young Summer. |
| Tahn-t |
Light of the Sun. |
| Tain-tsain Clan |
Antelope Clan. |
| Te-hua |
Children of the Sun. A house building people of the Tanoan Group,
Rio Grande valley, N. M. |
| Te-get-ha |
Taos Pueblo, N. M. One of the best examples of the terraced, five
storied, pre-Columbian architecture, still inhabited. |
| Tiguex |
A ruin near Bermalillo, N. M., called by the natives Po-ri-kun-neh:the
Place of the Butterflies. |
| Te-tzo-ge |
Tesuque Pueblo, N. M. |
| Tsa-mah |
A Te-hua village at the junction of the Tsa-mah and Rio Grande, now
Chamita, N. M., interesting as the site of the first colony of Spanish
pioneers in N. . |
| Tsa-fah |
Chicken Hawk. |
| Ts-ye |
Caon de Chelle, Arizona. The home of the Navaho Divine Ones. |
| Tse-c[=o]me-[=u]-pi |
A sacred mountain west of Pu-y, N. M. |
| Towa Toan Clan |
High Mesa Clan. |
| Tusayan |
Province of. A territory in Northern Arizona, now the Hopi Indian
Reservation. |
| Tuyo |
The Black Mesa of San Ildefonso, N. M. |
| Ui-la-ua |
Picuris Pueblo, N. M. |
| Ua-lano |
Jemez Pueblo, N. M. |
| Wlpi |
The ancient stone village of First Mesa in Tusayan. |
| Yahn Tsyn-deh |
Willow Bird. |
| Yutah |
Ute, a Colorado tribe of the sone linguistic stock. |