Once, on a glittering ice-field,
ages and ages ago,
Ung, a maker of pictures,
fashioned an image of snow.
Fashioned the form of a tribesman gaily
he whistled and sung,
Working the snow with his
fingers. Read ye the Story of Ung!
Pleased was his tribe with
that image came in their hundreds to scan
Handled it, smelt it, and
grunted: “Verily, this is a man!
Thus do we carry our lances thus
is a war-belt slung.
Ay, it is even as we are.
Glory and honour to Ung!”
Later he pictured an aurochs later
he pictured a bear
Pictured the sabre-tooth tiger dragging a man
to his lair
Pictured the mountainous mammoth, hairy, abhorrent,
alone
Out of the love that he bore them, scribing them
clearly on bone.
Swift came the tribe to behold them,
peering and pushing and still
Men of the berg-battered beaches, men of the boulder-hatched
hill,
Hunters and fishers and trappers presently
whispering low;
“Yea, they are like and it may
be.... But how does the Picture-man
know?
“Ung hath he slept
with the Aurochs watched where the Mastodon
roam?
Spoke on the ice with the Bow-head followed
the Sabre-tooth home?
Nay! These are toys of his fancy! If
he have cheated us so,
How is there truth in his image the
man that he fashioned of snow?”
Wroth was that maker of pictures hotly
he answered the call:
“Hunters and fishers and trappers, children
and fools are ye all!
Look at the beasts when ye hunt them!” Swift
from the tumult he broke,
Ran to the cave of his father and told him the
shame that they spoke.
And the father of Ung gave answer, that
was old and wise in the craft,
Maker of pictures aforetime, he leaned on his
lance and laughed:
“If they could see as thou seest they would
do what thou hast done,
And each man would make him a picture, and what
would become of my
son?
“There would be no pelts
of the reindeer, flung down at thy cave for a
gift,
Nor dole of the oily timber that strands with
the Baltic drift;
No store of well-drilled needles, nor ouches
of amber pale;
No new-cut tongues of the bison, nor meat of the
stranded whale.
“Thou hast not toiled
at the fishing when the sodden trammels freeze,
Nor worked the war-boats outward, through the
rush of the rock-staked
seas,
Yet they bring thee fish and plunder full
meal and an easy bed
And all for the sake of thy pictures.”
And Ung held down his head.
“Thou hast not stood
to the aurochs when the red snow reeks of the
fight;
Men have no time at the houghing to count his
curls aright:
And the heart of the hairy mammoth thou sayest
they do not see,
Yet they save it whole from the beaches and broil
the best for thee.
“And now do they press to
thy pictures, with open mouth and eye,
And a little gift in the doorway, and the praise
no gift can buy:
But sure they have doubted thy pictures,
and that is a grievous
stain
Son that can see so clearly, return them their
gifts again.”
And Ung looked down at his deerskins their
broad shell-tasselled
bands
And Ung drew downward his mitten and looked at
his naked hands;
And he gloved himself and departed, and he heard
his father, behind:
“Son that can see so clearly, rejoice that
thy tribe is blind!”
Straight on that glittering ice-field,
by the caves of the lost
Dordogne,
Ung, a maker of pictures, fell to his scribing
on bone
Even to mammoth editions. Gaily he whistled
and sung,
Blessing his tribe for their blindness. Heed
ye the Story of Ung!