Legends of Vancouver eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 93 pages of information about Legends of Vancouver.

Legends of Vancouver eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 93 pages of information about Legends of Vancouver.

“Oh! the Palefaces like them.  They are—­they are—­oh! well, they say they are very proud of having twins,” I stammered.  Once again I was hardly sure of my ground.  He looked most incredulous, and I was led to enquire what his own people of the Squamish thought of this discussed problem.

“It is no pride to us,” he said decidedly, “nor yet is it disgrace of rabbits; but it is a fearsome thing—­a sign of coming evil to the father, and, worse than that, of coming disaster to the tribe.”

Then I knew he held in his heart some strange incident that gave substance to the superstition.  “Won’t you tell it to me?” I begged.

He leaned a little backward against a giant boulder, clasping his thin, brown hands about his knees; his eyes roved up the galloping river, then swept down the singing waters to where they crowded past the sudden bend, and during the entire recital of the strange legend his eyes never left that spot where the stream disappeared in its hurrying journey to the sea.  Without preamble he began: 

“It was a grey morning when they told him of this disaster that had befallen him.  He was a great chief, and he ruled many tribes on the North Pacific Coast; but what was his greatness now?  His young wife had borne him twins, and was sobbing out her anguish in the little fir-bark lodge near the tidewater.

“Beyond the doorway gathered many old men and women—­old in years, old in wisdom, old in the lore and learning of their nations.  Some of them wept, some chanted solemnly the dirge of their lost hopes and happiness, which would never return because of this calamity; others discussed in hushed voices this awesome thing, and for hours their grave council was broken only by the infant cries of the two boy-babies in the bark lodge, the hopeless sobs of the young mother, the agonized moans of the stricken chief—­their father.

“‘Something dire will happen to the tribe,’ said the old men in council.

“‘Something dire will happen to him, my husband,’ wept the young mother.

“‘Something dire will happen to us all,’ echoed the unhappy father.

“Then an ancient medicine-man arose, lifting his arms, outstretching his palms to hush the lamenting throng.  His voice shook with the weight of many winters, but his eyes were yet keen and mirrored the clear thought and brain behind them, as the still trout-pools in the Capilano mirror the mountain tops.  His words were masterful, his gestures commanding, his shoulders erect and kindly.  His was a personality and an inspiration that no one dared dispute, and his judgment was accepted as the words fell slowly, like a doom.

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Legends of Vancouver from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.