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As retold by Marie L. McLaughlin in "Myths and
Legends of the Sioux" in 1913
The Story of
the Peace Pipe
Two young men were out
strolling one night talking of love affairs. They passed
around a hill and came to a little ravine or coulee.
Suddenly they saw
coming up from the ravine a beautiful woman. She was
painted and her dress was of the very finest material.
"What a beautiful
girl!" said one of the young men. "Already I
love her. I will steal her and make her my wife."
"No," said
the other. "Don't harm her. She may be holy."
The young woman
approached and held out a pipe which she first offered to
the sky, then to the earth and then advanced, holding it
out in her extended hands.
"I know what you
young men have been saying; one of you is good, the other
is wicked," she said.
She laid down the pipe
on the ground and at once became a buffalo cow. The cow
pawed the ground, stuck her tail straight out behind her,
and then lifted the pipe from the ground again in her
hoofs. Immediately she became a young woman again.
"I am come to
give you this gift," she said. "It is the peace
pipe. Hereafter all treaties and ceremonies shall be
performed after smoking it. It shall bring peaceful
thoughts into your minds. You shall offer it to the Great
Mystery and to mother earth."
The two young men ran
to the village and told what they had seen and heard. All
the village came out where the young woman was.
She repeated to them
what she had already told the young men and added,
"When you set free the ghost (the spirit of deceased
persons) you must have a white buffalo cow skin."
She gave the pipe to
the medicine men of the village, turned again to a
buffalo cow and fled away to the land of buffaloes.
Click here to continue with "A Bashful
Courtship"
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