XIV

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XIV

The Death of Crazy Horse

And now ’twas done.

Spring found the waiting fort at Robinson

A half-moon ere the Little Powder knew;

And, doubting still what Crazy Horse might do

When tempted by the herald geese a-wing

To join the green rebellion of the spring,

The whole frontier was troubled. April came,

And once again his undefeated name

Rode every wind. Ingeniously the West

Wrought verities from what the East had guessed

Of what the North knew. Eagerly deceived,

The waiting South progressively believed

The wilder story. April wore away;

Fleet couriers, arriving day by day

With but the farthing mintage of the fact,

Bought credit slowly in that no one lacked

The easy gold of marvelous surmise.

For, gazing northward where the secret skies

Were moody with a coming long deferred,

Whoever spoke of Crazy Horse, still heard

Ten thousand hoofs.

But yonder, with the crow

And kiote to applaud his pomp of woe,

The last great Sioux rode down to his defeat.

And now his people huddled in the sleet

Where Dog Creek and the Little Powder met.

With faces ever sharper for the whet

Of hunger, silent in the driving rains,

They straggled out across the blackened plains

Where Inyan Kara, mystically old,

Drew back a cloudy curtain to behold,

Serene with Time’s indifference to men.

And now they tarried on the North Cheyenne

To graze their feeble ponies, for the news

Of April there had wakened in the sloughs

A glimmering of pity long denied.

Nor would their trail across the bare divide

Grow dimmer with the summer, for the bleach

Of dwindled herds⁠—so hard it was to reach

The South Cheyenne. O sad it was to hear

How all the pent-up music of the year

Surged northward there the way it used to do!

In vain the catbird scolded at the Sioux;

The timid pewee queried them in vain;

Nor might they harken to the whooping crane

Nor heed the high geese calling them to come.

Unwelcome waifs of winter, drab and dumb,

Where ecstasy of sap and thrill of wing

Made shift to flaunt some color or to sing

The birth of joy, they toiled a weary way.

And giddy April sobered into May

Before they topped the summit looking down

Upon the valley of the soldier’s town

At Robinson.

Then eerily began

Among the lean-jowled warriors in the van

The chant of peace, a supplicating wail

That spread along the clutter of the trail

Until the last bent straggler sang alone;

And camp dogs, hunger-bitten to the bone,

Accused the heavens with a doleful sound;

But, silent still, with noses to the ground,

The laden ponies toiled to cheat the crows,

And famine, like a wag, had made of those

A grisly jest.

So Crazy Horse came in

With twice a thousand beggars.

And the din

Died out, though here and there a dog still howled,

For now the mighty one, whom Fate had fouled,

Dismounted, faced the silent double row

Of soldiers haughty with the glint and glow

Of steel and brass. A little while he stood

As though bewildered in a haunted wood

Of men and rifles all astare with eyes.

They saw a giant shrunken to the size

Of any sergeant. Now he met the glare

Of Dull Knife and his warriors waiting there

With fingers itching at the trigger-guard.

How many comrade faces, strangely hard,

Were turned upon him! Ruefully he smiled,

The doubtful supplication of a child

Caught guilty; loosed the bonnet from his head

And cast it down. “I come for peace,” he said;

“Now let my people eat.” And that was all.

The summer ripened. Presages of fall

Now wanted nothing but the goose’s flight.

The goldenrods had made their torches bright

Against the ghostly imminence of frost.

And one, long brooding on a birthright lost,

Remembered and remembered. O the time

When all the prairie world was white with rime

Of mornings, and the lodge smoke towered straight

To meet the sunlight, coming over late

For happy hunting! O the days, the days

When winds kept silence in the far blue haze

To hear the deep-grassed valleys running full

With fading cows, and thunders of the bull

Across the hills! Nights given to the feast

When big round moons came smiling up the east

To listen to the drums, the dancing feet,

The voices of the women, high and sweet

Above the men’s!

And Crazy Horse was sad.

There wasn’t any food the white man had

Could find his gnawing hunger and assuage.

Some saw a blood-mad panther in a cage,

And some the sulking of a foolish pride,

For there were those who watched him narrow-eyed

The whole day long and listened for a word,

To shuttle in the warp of what they heard

A woof of darker meaning.

Then one day

A flying tale of battles far away

And deeds to make men wonder stirred the land:

How Nez Perce Joseph led his little band,

With Howard’s eager squadrons in pursuit,

Across the mountains of the Bitter Root

To Big Hole Basin and the daylong fight;

And how his women, fleeing in the night,

Brought off the ponies and the children too.

O many a heart beat fast among the Sioux

To hear the way he fled and fought and fled

Past Bannack, down across the Beaverhead

To Henry’s Lake, relentlessly pursued;

Now swallowed by the dreadful solitude

Where still the Mighty Spirit shapes the dream

With primal fires and prodigies of steam,

As when the fallow night was newly sown;

Now reappearing down the Yellowstone,

Undaunted yet and ever making less

That thousand miles of alien wilderness

Between a people’s freedom and their need!

O there was virtue in the tale to feed

The withered heart and make it big again!

Not yet, not yet the ancient breed of men

Had vanished from the aging earth! They say

There came a change on Crazy Horse the day

The Ogalala village buzzed the news.

So much to win and only life to lose;

The bison making southward with the fall,

And Joseph fighting up the way to Gall

And Sitting Bull!

Who knows the dream he had?

Much talk there was of how his heart was bad

And any day some meditated deed

Might start an irresistible stampede

Among the Sioux⁠—a human prairie-fire!

So back and forth along the talking wire

Fear chattered. Yonder, far away as morn,

The mighty heard⁠—and heard the Little Horn

Still roaring with the wind of Custer’s doom.

And there were troopers moving in the gloom

Of midnight to the chaining of the beast;

But when the white light broke along the east,

There wasn’t any Ogalala town

And Crazy Horse had vanished!

Up and down

The dusty autumn panic horsemen spurred

Till all the border shuddered at the word

Of how that terror threatened every trail.

They found him in the camp of Spotted Tail,

A lonely figure with a face of care.

“I am afraid of what might happen there”

He said. “So many listen what I say

And look and look. I will not run away.

I want my people here. You have my guns.”

But half a world away the mighty ones

Had spoken words like bullets in the dark

That wreak the rage of blindness on a mark

They can not know.

Then spoke the one who led

The soldiers: “Not a hair upon your head

Shall suffer any harm if you will go

To Robinson for just a day or so

And have a parley with the soldier chief.”

He spoke believing and he won belief,

So Crazy Horse went riding down the west;

And neither he nor any trooper guessed

What doom now made a rutted wagon road

The highway to a happier abode

Where all the dead are splendidly alive

And summer lingers and the bison thrive

Forever.

If the better hope be true,

There was a gate of glory yawning through

The sunset when the little cavalcade

Approached the fort.

The populous parade,

The straining hush that somehow wasn’t peace,

The bristling troops, the Indian police

Drawn up as for a battle! What was wrong?

What made them hustle Crazy Horse along

Among the gleaming bayonets and eyes?

There swept a look of quizzical surprise

Across his face. He struggled with the guard.

Their grips were steel; their eyes were cold and hard⁠—

Like bayonets.

There was a door flung wide.

The soldier chief would talk with him inside

And all be well at last!

The stifling, dim

Interior poured terror over him.

He blinked about⁠—and saw the iron bars.

O nevermore to neighbor with the stars

Or know the simple goodness of the sun!

Did some swift vision of a doom begun

Reveal the monstrous purpose of a lie⁠—

The desert island and the alien sky,

The long and lonely ebbing of a life?

The glimmer of a whipped-out butcher knife

Dismayed the shrinking squad, and once again

Men saw a face that many better men

Had died to see! Brown arms that once were kind,

A comrade’s arms, whipped round him from behind,

Went crimson with a gash and dropped aside.

“Don’t touch me! I am Crazy Horse!” he cried,

And, leaping doorward, charged upon the world

To meet the end. A frightened soldier hurled

His weight behind a jabbing belly-thrust,

And Crazy Horse plunged headlong in the dust,

A writhing heap. The momentary din

Of struggle ceased. The people, closing in,

Went ominously silent for a space,

And one could hear men breathing round the place

Where lay the mighty. Now he strove to rise,

The wide blind stare of anguish in his eyes,

And someone shouted “Kill that devil quick!”

A throaty murmur and a running click

Of gun-locks woke among the crowding Sioux,

And many a soldier whitened. Well they knew

What pent-up hate the moment might release

To drop upon the bungled farce of peace

A bloody curtain.

One began to talk;

His tongue was drunken and his face was chalk;

But when a half-breed shouted what he spoke

The crowd believed, so few had seen the stroke,

Nor was there any bleeding of the wound.

It seemed the chief had falleasick and swooned;

Perhaps a little rest would make him strong!

And silently they watched him borne along,

A sagging bundle, dear and mighty yet,

Though from the sharp face, beaded with the sweat

Of agony, already peered the ghost.

They laid him in an office of the post,

And soldiers, forming in a hollow square,

Held back the people. Silence deepened there.

A little while it seemed the man was dead,

He lay so still. The west no longer bled;

Among the crowd the dusk began to creep.

Then suddenly, as startled out of sleep

By some old dream-remembered night alarm,

He strove to shout, half rose upon an arm

And glared about him in the lamp-lit place.

The flare across the ashes of his face

Went out. He spoke; and, leaning where he lay,

Men strained to gather what he strove to say,

So hard the panting labor of his words.

“I had my village and my pony herds

On Powder where the land was all my own.

I only wanted to be let alone.

I did not want to fight. The Gray Fox sent

His soldiers. We were poorer when they went;

Our babies died, for many lodges burned

And it was cold. We hoped again and turned

Our faces westward. It was just the same

Out yonder on the Rosebud. Gray Fox came.

The dust his soldiers made was high and long.

I fought him and I whipped him. Was it wrong

To drive him back? That country was my own.

I only wanted to be let alone.

I did not want to see my people die.

They say I murdered Long Hair and they lie.

His soldiers came to kill us and they died.”

He choked and shivered, staring hungry-eyed

As though to make the most of little light.

Then like a child that feels the clutching night

And cries the wilder, deeming it in vain,

He raised a voice made lyrical with pain

And terror of a thing about to be.

“I want to see you, Father! Come to me!

I want to see you, Mother!” O’er and o’er

His cry assailed the darkness at the door;

And from the gloom beyond the hollow square

Of soldiers, quavered voices of despair:

“We can not come! They will not let us come!”

But when at length the lyric voice was dumb

And Crazy Horse was nothing but a name,

There was a little withered woman came

Behind a bent old man. Their eyes were dim.

They sat beside the boy and fondled him,

Remembering the little names he knew

Before the great dream took him and he grew

To be so mighty. And the woman pressed

A hand that men had feared against her breast

And swayed and sang a little sleepy song.

Out yonder in the village all night long

There was a sound of mourning in the dark.

And when the morning heard the meadowlark,

The last great Sioux rode silently away.

Before the pony-drag on which he lay

An old man tottered. Bowed above the bier,

A little wrinkled woman kept the rear

With not a sound and nothing in her eyes.

Who knows the crumbling summit where he lies

Alone among the badlands? Kiotes prowl

About it, and the voices of the owl

Assume the daylong sorrow of the crows,

These many grasses and these many snows.