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The chief said, "Whom do my daughters wish to marry_ They have refused
all the men." Sun and Star, who were brother and sister, lived in the sky,
and had seen all that had happened. Sun said to his sister, "The chief's
daughters have rejected the suits of all our friends. Let us go down and
arrange this matter! Let us try these girls!" They made clothes, and at
night they descended to earth.
During the darkness they erected a lodge on the outskirts of the camp. It
had the appearance of being very old, and of belonging to poor people. The
poles were old and badly selected. The covering was tattered and patched,
and made of tule mats. The floor was strewn with old dried brush and
grass, and the beds were of the same material. Their blankets consisted of
old mats and pieces of old robes; and their kettles and cups were of bark,
poorly made. Star had assumed the form of a decrepit old woman dressed in
rags; and Sun, that of a dirty boy with sore eyes.
On the following morning the women of the camp saw the lodge, and peered
in. When they returned, they reported, "Some very poor people arrived
during the night, and are camped in an old mat lodge. We saw two persons
inside,--a dirty, sore-eyed boy; and his grandmother, a very old woman in
ragged clothes."
Now, the chief resolved to find husbands for his daughters. He sent out
his speaker to announce that in four days there would be a
shooting-contest open to all the men, and the best marksman would get his
daughters for wives. The young men could not sleep for eagerness. On the
third day the chief's speaker announced, "To-morrow morning every one
shall shoot.
Each one will have two shots. An eagle will perch on the tall tree yonder;
and whoever kills it shall have the chief's daughters." Coyote was there
and felt happy. He thought he would win the prize. On the following
morning an eagle was seen soaring in the air, and there was much
excitement as it began to descend. It alighted on a tree which grew near
one end of the camp.
Then the young men tried to shoot it. Each man had two arrows. The
previous evening Sun had said to Star, "Grandmother, make a bow and arrows
for me." She said, "What is the use_ You cannot shoot. You never used bow
and arrows." He replied, "I am going to try. I shall take part in the
contest to-morrow. I heard what the chief said." She took pity on him, and
went to a red willow-bush, cut a branch for a bow, and some twigs for
arrows. She strung the bow with a poor string, and did not feather the
arrows.
Coyote, who was afraid some one else might hit the bird, shouted, "I will
shoot first. Watch me hit the eagle." His arrow struck the lowest branch
of the tree and fell down, and the people laughed. He said, "I made a
mistake. That was a bad arrow. This one will kill the eagle." He shot, and
the arrow fell short of the first one. He became angry, and pulled other
arrows from his quiver. He wanted to shoot them all. The people seized
him, and took away his arrows, saying, "You are allowed to shoot twice
only." All the people shot and missed. When the last one had shot, Sun
said, "Grandmother, lift the door of the lodge a little, so that I can
shoot." She said,
"First get out of bed." She pulled the lodge mat aside a little, and he
shot. The arrow hit the tail of the eagle. The people saw and heard the
arrow coming from Dirty-Boy's lodge, but saw no one shooting it. They
wondered. He shot the second arrow, which pierced the eagle's heart.
Now, Wolf and others were standing near Dirty-Boy's lodge, and Wolf
desired much to claim the prize. He shouted, "I shot the bird from the
lodge-door!" and ran to pick it up; but the old woman Star ran faster than
he, picked up the bird, and carried it to the chief.
She claimed his daughters for her grandson. All the people gathered
around, and made fun of Dirty-Boy. They said, "He is bedridden. He is
lousy, sore-eyed, and scabby-faced." The chief was loath to give his
daughters to such a person. He knew that Dirty-Boy could not walk.
Therefore he said , "To-morrow there shall be another contest. This will
be the last one, I cannot break my word. Whoever wins this time shall have
my daughters."
He announced that on the morrow each man should set two traps for fishers
an animal very scarce at the place where the camp was located. If any one
should catch a fisher one night, then he was to stay in the mountains
another day to catch a second one. After that he had to come back. Those
who caught nothing the first night had to come home at once.
Only two traps were allowed to each man; and two fishers had to be
caught,--one a light one, and one a dark one,--and both prime skins. When
all the men had gone to the mountains, Sun said to his sister,
"Grandmother, make two traps for me." She answered, "First get out of
bed!" However, she had pity on him, and made two deadfalls of willow
sticks. She asked him where she should set them; and he said, "One on each
side of the lodge-door."
On the following morning all the men returned by noon; not one of them had
caught a fisher. When Star went out, she found two fine fishers in the
traps. Now the chief assembled the men to see if any one had caught the
fishers. He was glad, because he knew that Dirty-Boy could not walk; and
unless he went to the mountains, he had no chance to kill fishers. Just
then the old grandmother appeared, dragging the fishers. She said, "I hear
you asked for two fishers; here are two that my grandson caught." She
handed them over to him, and then left.
Coyote had boasted that he would certainly catch the fishers. When he went
up the mountain, he carried ten traps instead of two. He said, "Whoever
heard of setting only two traps_ I shall set ten." He set them all,
remained out two nights, but got nothing.
The chief said to his daughters, "You must become the wives of Dirty-Boy.
I tried to save you by having two contests; but since I am a great chief,
I cannot break my word. Go now, and take up your abode with your husband."
They put on their best clothes and went. On the way they had to pass
Raven's house, and heard the Ravens laughing inside, be cause the girls
had to marry Dirty-Boy. The elder sister said, "Let us go in and-see what
they are laughing about!" The younger one said, "No, our father told us to
go straight to our husband."
The elder one went in, and sat down beside Raven's eldest son. She became
his wife. Like all the other Ravens, he was ugly, and had a big head; but
she thought it better to marry him than to become the wife of a dirty,
sickly boy.
The younger one went on, entered Dirty-Boy's lodge, and sat down by his
side. The old woman asked her who she was, and why she had come. When the
old woman had been told, she said, "Your husband is sick, and soon he will
die. He stinks too much. You must not sleep with him. Go back to your
father's lodge every evening; but come here in the daytime, and watch him
and attend him."
Now, the Raven family that lived close by laughed much at the younger
daughter of the chief. They were angry because she had not entered their
house and married there, as her elder sister had done. To hurt her
feelings, they dressed their new daughter-in-law in the finest clothes
they had. Her dress was covered with beads, shells, elk's teeth, and
quill-work.
They gave her necklaces, and her mother-in-law gave her a finely polished
celt of green stone (jade) to hang at her belt. The younger sister paid no
attention to this, but returned every morning to help her
grandmother-in-law to gather fire-wood, and to attend to her sick husband.
For three days matters remained this way. In the evening of the third day
Sun said to his sister, "We will resume our true forms to-night, so that
people may see us to-morrow." That night they transformed themselves." The
old mat lodge became a fine new skin lodge, surpassing those of the
Blackfeet and other tribes, richly decorated with ornaments, and with
streamers tied to the top and painted. The old bark kettle became a bright
copper kettle; and new pretty woven baskets, and embroidered and painted
bags, were in the house.
The old woman became a fine-looking person of tall figure, with clothes
covered with shining stars. Dirty-Boy became a young, handsome man of
light complexion. His clothes were covered with shining copper. His hair
reached to the ground and shone like the rays of the sun. In the morning
the people saw the new lodge, and said, "Some rich chief has arrived, and
has camped where the poor people were. He has thrown them out."
When the girl arrived, she was much surprised to see the transformation.
She saw a woman in the door, wearing a long skin dress covered with star
pendants, with bright stars in her hair. She addressed her in a familiar
voice, saying, "Come in and sit with your husband!" The girl then knew who
she was. When she entered, she saw a handsome man reclining, with his head
on a beautiful parfleche. His garments and hair were decorated with bright
suns. The girl did not recognize him, and looked around. The woman said,
"That is your husband; go and sit beside him." Then she was glad.
Sun took his wife to the copper kettle which stood at the door. It
contained a shining liquid. He pushed her head into it, and when the
liquid ran down over her hair and body, lines of sparkling small stars
formed on her. He told her to empty the kettle. When she did so, the
liquid ran to the chief's lodge, forming a path, as of gold-dust. He said,
"This will be your trail when you go to see your father."
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