The American Missionary — Volume 43, No. 07, July, 1889 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 67 pages of information about The American Missionary — Volume 43, No. 07, July, 1889.

The American Missionary — Volume 43, No. 07, July, 1889 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 67 pages of information about The American Missionary — Volume 43, No. 07, July, 1889.

DAKOTA WIND.

The next morning we started out for the return to Oahe.  The day was warm and pleasant and uneventful.  I was comfortable and happy, and as we stopped for lunch when we got hungry, I began to wonder where the hardships of my journey were coming in, but people who are never so happy as when they are uncomfortable, ought to get their just deserts.  I got mine.  After we started from James Brown’s, the wind rose.  It rose and it rose.  It kept rising.  How that wind did blow!  It blew us up hill and threw us down hill.  It fairly hurled us along.  It blew Mr. Riggs’s hat off and we chased it for half a mile.  It blew my hat off; it blew my hair down; we put into a ravine for repairs.  We went through long stretches of burned prairie, and clouds of fire-black dust were flying.  We hoped when we got down into the ravine it would not be so bad.  Vain hope.  It was worse.  The dust was blacker and thicker and more dusty.  The gravel stung our faces and blinded our eyes.  For the entire distance of thirty-five miles, that wind howled and raved and tore.  It almost took the ponies off their feet.  I have not exaggerated it one bit.  It would be impossible to exaggerate.  When we reached the house where we had taken dinner going up, we found the dirt blown from the roof, likewise the tar-paper, leaving great cracks through which the dirt rattled.  Everything was an inch deep in dirt, but we were welcomed to the shelter of the four walls, and what was left of the roof.  The dirt did not matter.  We were already done in charcoal.  Mr. Collins was here, caught by the wind, and before dark the Agency farmer came.  It was impossible to cross the river in such a gale, and here I knew we must stay.

The next morning was still and clear and beautiful.  It was difficult to realize that the elements had been on such a tear the day before, so after breakfast we embarked for home, going the seven miles by water this time, and I reached the mission a gladder and a wiser woman.

This glimpse of out-station work is something I have long wanted, and anyone who does not believe in Indian education should see the results of it as they appear here.  In the audience on Sunday, were three young women former students, one at Hampton, one at Santee, one at Oahe.  Their dress, the expression of their faces, their whole appearance proclaimed the power of Christian education, and it is only in the faces of the Christian Indians that there is any expression of gladness.  There is no gladness in their life outside of this.  Oh, that the work at these stations may be blessed!  There are hundreds and hundreds, yes, thousands of Indians who will never be reached by Hampton, Carlisle, Santee, by all the Indian schools put together, and who will never be Christianized or civilized by “edict from Washington.”  Christ must be taken to them, lived among them in such a way that his true loveliness may be made apparent to them.  Without this, all else goes for naught; with this, life and light must come, and darkness and ignorance and superstition must flee away.—­Word-Carrier.

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The American Missionary — Volume 43, No. 07, July, 1889 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.