On the edge of a forest there
lived a large family of badgers. In the ground
their dwelling was made. Its walls and roof were
covered with rocks and straw.
Old father badger was a great hunter.
He knew well how to track the deer and buffalo.
Every day he came home carrying on his back some wild
game. This kept mother badger very busy, and
the baby badgers very chubby. While the well-fed
children played about, digging little make-believe
dwellings, their mother hung thin sliced meats upon
long willow racks. As fast as the meats were
dried and seasoned by sun and wind, she packed them
carefully away in a large thick bag.
This bag was like a huge stiff envelope,
but far more beautiful to see, for it was painted
all over with many bright colors. These firmly
tied bags of dried meat were laid upon the rocks in
the walls of the dwelling. In this way they were
both useful and decorative.
One day father badger did not go off
for a hunt. He stayed at home, making new arrows.
His children sat about him on the ground floor.
Their small black eyes danced with delight as they
watched the gay colors painted upon the arrows.
All of a sudden there was heard a
heavy footfall near the entrance way. The oval-shaped
door-frame was pushed aside. In stepped a large
black foot with great big claws. Then the other
clumsy foot came next. All the while the baby
badgers stared hard at the unexpected comer. After
the second foot, in peeped the head of a big black
bear! His black nose was dry and parched.
Silently he entered the dwelling and sat down on the
ground by the doorway. His black eyes never left
the painted bags on the rocky walls. He guessed
what was in them. He was a very hungry bear.
Seeing the racks of red meat hanging in the yard, he
had come to visit the badger family.
Though he was a stranger and his strong
paws and jaws frightened the small badgers, the father
said, “How, how, friend! Your lips and nose
look feverish and hungry. Will you eat with us?”
“Yes, my friend,” said
the bear. “I am starved. I saw your
racks of red fresh meat, and knowing your heart is
kind, I came hither. Give me meat to eat, my
friend.”
Hereupon the mother badger took long
strides across the room, and as she had to pass in
front of the strange visitor, she said: “Ah
han! Allow me to pass!” which was
an apology.
“How, how!” replied the
bear, drawing himself closer to the wall and crossing
his shins together.
Mother badger chose the most tender
red meat, and soon over a bed of coals she broiled
the venison.
That day the bear had all he could
eat. At nightfall he rose, and smacking his lips
together, that is the noisy way of saying
“the food was very good!” he
left the badger dwelling. The baby badgers, peeping
through the door-flap after the shaggy bear, saw him
disappear into the woods near by.
Day after day the crackling of twigs
in the forest told of heavy footsteps. Out would
come the same black bear. He never lifted the
door-flap, but thrusting it aside entered slowly in.
Always in the same place by the entrance way he sat
down with crossed shins.
His daily visits were so regular that
mother badger placed a fur rug in his place.
She did not wish a guest in her dwelling to sit upon
the bare hard ground.
At last one time when the bear returned,
his nose was bright and black. His coat was glossy.
He had grown fat upon the badger’s hospitality.
As he entered the dwelling a pair
of wicked gleams shot out of his shaggy head.
Surprised by the strange behavior of the guest who
remained standing upon the rug, leaning his round
back against the wall, father badger queried:
“How, my friend! What?”
The bear took one stride forward and
shook his paw in the badger’s face. He
said: “I am strong, very strong!”
“Yes, yes, so you are,”
replied the badger. From the farther end of the
room mother badger muttered over her bead work:
“Yes, you grew strong from our well-filled bowls.”
The bear smiled, showing a row of large sharp teeth.
“I have no dwelling. I
have no bags of dried meat. I have no arrows.
All these I have found here on this spot,” said
he, stamping his heavy foot. “I want them!
See! I am strong!” repeated he, lifting
both his terrible paws.
Quietly the father badger spoke:
“I fed you. I called you friend, though
you came here a stranger and a beggar. For the
sake of my little ones leave us in peace.”
Mother badger, in her excited way,
had pierced hard through the buckskin and stuck her
fingers repeatedly with her sharp awl until she had
laid aside her work. Now, while her husband was
talking to the bear, she motioned with her hands to
the children. On tiptoe they hastened to her
side.
For reply came a low growl. It
grew louder and more fierce. “Wa-ough!”
he roared, and by force hurled the badgers out.
First the father badger; then the mother. The
little badgers he tossed by pairs. He threw them
hard upon the ground. Standing in the entrance
way and showing his ugly teeth, he snarled, “Be
gone!”
The father and mother badger, having
gained their feet, picked up their kicking little
babes, and, wailing aloud, drew the air into their
flattened lungs till they could stand alone upon their
feet. No sooner had the baby badgers caught their
breath than they howled and shrieked with pain and
fright. Ah! what a dismal cry was theirs as the
whole badger family went forth wailing from out their
own dwelling! A little distance away from their
stolen house the father badger built a small round
hut. He made it of bent willows and covered it
with dry grass and twigs.
This was shelter for the night; but
alas! it was empty of food and arrows. All day
father badger prowled through the forest, but without
his arrows he could not get food for his children.
Upon his return, the cry of the little ones for meat,
the sad quiet of the mother with bowed head, hurt
him like a poisoned arrow wound.
“I’ll beg meat for you!”
said he in an unsteady voice. Covering his head
and entire body in a long loose robe he halted beside
the big black bear. The bear was slicing red
meat to hang upon the rack. He did not pause
for a look at the comer. As the badger stood there
unrecognized, he saw that the bear had brought with
him his whole family. Little cubs played under
the high-hanging new meats. They laughed and pointed
with their wee noses upward at the thin sliced meats
upon the poles.
“Have you no heart, Black Bear?
My children are starving. Give me a small piece
of meat for them,” begged the badger.
“Wa-ough!” growled the
angry bear, and pounced upon the badger. “Be
gone!” said he, and with his big hind foot he
sent father badger sprawling on the ground.
All the little ruffian bears hooted
and shouted “ha-ha!” to see the beggar
fall upon his face. There was one, however, who
did not even smile. He was the youngest cub.
His fur coat was not as black and glossy as those
his elders wore. The hair was dry and dingy.
It looked much more like kinky wool. He was the
ugly cub. Poor little baby bear! he had always
been laughed at by his older brothers. He could
not help being himself. He could not change the
differences between himself and his brothers.
Thus again, though the rest laughed aloud at the badger’s
fall, he did not see the joke. His face was long
and earnest. In his heart he was sad to see the
badgers crying and starving. In his breast spread
a burning desire to share his food with them.
“I shall not ask my father for
meat to give away. He would say ‘No!’
Then my brothers would laugh at me,” said the
ugly baby bear to himself.
In an instant, as if his good intention
had passed from him, he was singing happily and skipping
around his father at work. Singing in his small
high voice and dragging his feet in long strides after
him, as if a prankish spirit oozed out from his heels,
he strayed off through the tall grass. He was
ambling toward the small round hut. When directly
in front of the entrance way, he made a quick side
kick with his left hind leg. Lo! there fell into
the badger’s hut a piece of fresh meat.
It was tough meat, full of sinews, yet it was the
only piece he could take without his father’s
notice.
Thus having given meat to the hungry
badgers, the ugly baby bear ran quickly away to his
father again.
On the following day the father badger
came back once more. He stood watching the big
bear cutting thin slices of meat.
“Give ” he
began, when the bear turning upon him with a growl,
thrust him cruelly aside. The badger fell on
his hands. He fell where the grass was wet with
the blood of the newly carved buffalo. His keen
starving eyes caught sight of a little red clot lying
bright upon the green. Looking fearfully toward
the bear and seeing his head was turned away, he snatched
up the small thick blood. Underneath his girdled
blanket he hid it in his hand.
On his return to his family, he said
within himself: “I’ll pray the Great
Spirit to bless it.” Thus he built a small
round lodge. Sprinkling water upon the heated
heap of sacred stones within, he made ready to purge
his body. “The buffalo blood, too, must
be purified before I ask a blessing upon it,”
thought the badger. He carried it into the sacred
vapor lodge. After placing it near the sacred
stones, he sat down beside it. After a long silence,
he muttered: “Great Spirit, bless this little
buffalo blood.” Then he arose, and with
a quiet dignity stepped out of the lodge. Close
behind him some one followed. The badger turned
to look over his shoulder and to his great joy he
beheld a Dakota brave in handsome buckskins.
In his hand he carried a magic arrow. Across his
back dangled a long fringed quiver. In answer
to the badger’s prayer, the avenger had sprung
from out the red globules.
“My son!” exclaimed the badger with extended
right hand.
“How, father,” replied the brave; “I
am your avenger!”
Immediately the badger told the sad
story of his hungry little ones and the stingy bear.
Listening closely the young man stood looking steadily
upon the ground.
At length the father badger moved away.
“Where?” queried the avenger.
“My son, we have no food.
I am going again to beg for meat,” answered
the badger.
“Then I go with you,”
replied the young brave. This made the old badger
happy. He was proud of his son. He was delighted
to be called “father” by the first human
creature.
The bear saw the badger coming in
the distance. He narrowed his eyes at the tall
stranger walking beside him. He spied the arrow.
At once he guessed it was the avenger of whom he had
heard long, long ago. As they approached, the
bear stood erect with a hand on his thigh. He
smiled upon them.
“How, badger, my friend!
Here is my knife. Cut your favorite pieces from
the deer,” said he, holding out a long thin blade.
“How!” said the badger
eagerly. He wondered what had inspired the big
bear to such a generous deed. The young avenger
waited till the badger took the long knife in his
hand.
Gazing full into the black bear’s
face, he said: “I come to do justice.
You have returned only a knife to my poor father.
Now return to him his dwelling.” His voice
was deep and powerful. In his black eyes burned
a steady fire.
The long strong teeth of the bear
rattled against each other, and his shaggy body shook
with fear. “Ahow!” cried he, as if
he had been shot. Running into the dwelling he
gasped, breathless and trembling, “Come out,
all of you! This is the badger’s dwelling.
We must flee to the forest for fear of the avenger
who carries the magic arrow.”
Out they hurried, all the bears, and
disappeared into the woods.
Singing and laughing, the badgers
returned to their own dwelling.
Then the avenger left them.
“I go,” said he in parting, “over
the earth.”