Legend of the Flute
SIOUX
Well, you know our flutes; you've heard
their sound and seen how beautifully they're made. That flute of ours, the
siyotanka, is for only one kind of music. Love music. In the old days, the men
would sit by themselves, maybe lean hidden, unseen, against a tree in the dark
of the night. They would make up their own special tunes, their courting songs.
We Indians are shy. Even if he was a warrior who had already counted coup on an
enemy, a young man might hardly screw up enough courage to talk to a
nice-looking winchinchala. Also, there was no place where a young man and a girl
could be alone inside the village. The family tipi was always crowded with
people. And naturally, you couldn't just walk out of the village hand in hand
with your girl, even if holding hands had been one of our customs, which it
wasn't. Out there in the tall grass and sagebrush you could be gored by a
buffalo, clawed by a grizzly, or tomahawked by a Pawnee, or you could run into
the Mila Hanska, the U.S. Calvery.
The only chance you had to meet your winchinchala was to wait for her at
daybreak when the women went to the river or brook with their skin bags to get
water. When that girl you had your eye on finally came down the water trail, you
popped up from behind some bush and stood so she could see you. And that was
about all you could do to show her that you were interested- standing there
grinning, looking at your moccasins, scratching your ear, maybe.
The winchinchala didn't do much either, except get red in the face, giggle,
maybe throw a wild turnip at you. If she liked you, the only way she would let
you know was to take her time filling her water bag and peek at you a few
times over her shoulder.
So the flutes did all the talking. At night, lying on her buffalo robe in her
parents' tipi, the girl would hear that moaning, crying sound of the siyotanka.
By the way it was played, she would know that it was her lover who was out there
someplace. And if the elk medicine was very strong in him and her, maybe she
would sneak out to follow that sound and meet him without anybody noticing it.
The flute is always made of cedarwood. In shape it describes the long neck and
head of a bird with an open beak. The sound comes out of the beak, and that's
where the legend comes in, the legend of how the Lakota people acquired the
flute.
Once many generations ago, the people had drums, gourd rattles, and bull-roarers,
but no flutes. At that long-ago time a young man went out to hunt. Meat was
scarce, and the people in his camp were hungry. He found the tracks of an elk
and followed them for a long time. The elk, wise and swift, is the one who owns
the love charm. If a man possesses elk medicine, the girl he likes can't help
but be with him. He will also be a lucky hunter. This young man had no elk
medicine. At all.
After many hours he finally sighted his game. He was skilled with bow and
arrows, and had a fine new bow and quiver full of straight, well-feathered,
flint-tipped arrows. Yet the elk always managed to stay just out of range,
leading him on and on. The young man was so intent on following his prey that he
hardly noticed where he went.
When night came, he found himself deep inside a thick forest. The tracks had
disappeared and so had the elk, and there was no moon. He realized that he was
lost and that it was too dark to find his way out. Luckily he came upon a stream
with cool, clear water. And he had been careful enough to bring a hide bag of
wasna (dried meat pounded with berries and kidney fat), strong food that will
keep a man going for a few days. After he had drunk and eaten, he rolled
himself into his fur robe, propped his back against a tree, and tried to rest.
But he couldn't sleep; the forest was full of strange noises, the cries of night
animals, the hooting of owls, the groaning of trees in the wind. It was as if he
heard these sounds for the first time.
Suddenly there was an entirely new sound, of a kind neither he nor anyone else
had ever heard before. It was mournful and ghost-like. It made him afraid, so
that he drew his robe tightly about himself and reached for his bow to make sure
that it was properly strung. On the other hand, the sound was like a song, sad
but beautiful, full of love, hope and yearning. Then before he knew it, he was
asleep. He dreamed that the bird called wagnuka, the redheaded woodpecker,
appeared singing the strangely beautiful song and telling him: "Follow me and I
will teach you."
When the hunter awoke, the sun was already high. On a branch of the tree against
which he was leaning, he saw a redheaded woodpecker. The bird flew away to
another tree, and another, but never very far, looking back all the time at the
young man as if to say: "Come on!" Then once more he heard that wonderful song,
and his heart yearned to find the singer. Flying toward the sound, leading the
hunter, the bird flitted through the leaves, while its bright red top made it
easy to follow. At last it lighted on a cedar tree and began hammering on a
branch, making a noise like the fast beating of a small drum. Suddenly there was
a gust of wind, and again the hunter heard that beautiful sound right above him.
Then he discovered that the song came from the dead branch that the woodpecker
was tapping at with his beak. He realized also that it was the wind which made
the sound as it whistled through the holes the bird had drilled.
"Kola, friend," said the hunter, "let me take this branch home. You can make
yourself another."
He took the branch, a hollow piece of wood full of woodpecker holes that was
about the length of his forearm. He walked back to his village bringing no meat,
but happy all the same.
In his tipi the young man tried to make the branch sing for him. He blew on it,
he waved it around; no sound came. It made him sad, he wanted so much to hear
that wonderful new sound. He purified himself in the sweat lodge and climbed to
the top of a lonely hill. There, resting with his back against a large rock, he
fasted, going without food or water for four days and nights, crying for a
vision which would tell him how to make the branch sing. In the middle of the
fourth night, wagnuka, the bird with the bright red top, appeared, saying,
"Watch me," turning himself into a man, showing the hunter how to make the
branch sing, saying again and again: "Watch this, now." And in his dream the
young man watched and observed very carefully.
When he awoke, he found a cedar tree. He broke off a branch and, working many
hours, hollowed it out with a bowstring drill, just as he had seen the
woodpecker do it in his dream. He whittled the branch into the shape of a bird
with a long neck and an open beak. He painted the top of the bird's head with
washasha, the sacred red color. He prayed. He smoked the branch up with incense
of burning sage, cedar, and sweet grass. He fingered the holes as he had seen
the man-bird do in his vision, meanwhile blowing softly into the mouthpiece. All
at once there was the song, ghost-like and beautiful beyond words drifting all
the way to the village, where the people were astounded and joyful to hear it.
With the help of the wind and the woodpecker, the young man had brought them the
first flute.
In the village lived an itanchan- a big chief. This itanchan had a daughter who
was beautiful but also very proud, and convinced that there was no young man
good enough for her. Many had come courting but she had sent them all away. Now,
the hunter who had made the flute decided that she was just the woman for him.
Thinking of her he composed a special song, and one night, standing behind a
tall tree, he played it on his siyotanka in hopes that it might have a charm to
make her love him.
All at once the winchinchala heard it. She was sitting in her father's tipi,
eating buffalo meat, and feeling well. She wanted to stay there, in the tipi by
the fire, but her feet wanted to go outside. She pulled back, but the feet
pulled forward, and the feet won. Her head said, "Go slow, go slow!" but the
feet said, "Faster, faster!" She saw the young man standing in the moonlight;
she heard the flute. Her head said, "Don't go to him; he's poor." Her feet said,
"Go; run!" and again the feet prevailed.
So they stood face to face. The girl's head told her to be silent, but the feet
told her to speak, and speak she did, saying: "Koshkalaka, young man, I am yours
altogether." So they were together. The young man, and his winchinchala under
one blanket.
Later she told him: "Koshkalaka, warrior, I love you. Let your parents send a
gift to my father, the chief. No matter how small, it will be accepted. Let your
father speak for you to my father. Do it soon! Do it now!"
And so the two fathers quickly agreed to the wishes of their children. The proud
winchinchala became the hunter's wife, and he himself became a great chief. All
the other young men had heard and seen. Soon they too began to whittle cedar
branches into the shape of bird's heads with long necks and open beaks. The
beautiful love music traveled from tribe to tribe, and made young girl's feet go
where they shouldn't. And that's how the flute was brought to the people, thanks
to the cedar, the woodpecker, and this young man, who shot no elk, but knew how
to listen.