Blood Clot
Southern Ute
Unlike the tale of Rabbit Boy
coming from a blood clot, here
the baby is born from a clot of buffalo blood and derives his
power from the mighty buffalo tribe.
*****
Long ago a very old man and his wife lived alone and hunted
for game, but it was scarce and they were hungry.
One day
the man discovered some buffalo tracks and followed them to
the place where the animal had stopped. There he found only
a big clot of blood, which he wrapped in his shirt and
carried home.
The old man told his wife to boil the blood, and she put it
into the kettle with water from from the creek. But before
it came to a boil over the fire, they heard cries inside the
kettle.
The man ran up to it and pulled out a baby, a little
boy, who had somehow formed out of the blood clot.
The old couple washed the baby and wrapped him up. By the
next morning he had grown much larger, and that day he
continued to grow until he could crawl about by himself. The
second day he was able to walk a little; by the third day he
was walking with ease. The couple called himn Blood Clot and
came to treat him as their son.
The old man made little arrows so that the child could learn
to shoot. Soon Blood Clot needed much larger arrows, and with
them he began to hunt birds and other small game. He never
brought the game home himself, but sent the old man for it.
One day Blood Clot returned from hunting and said, "I have
killed something with a striped back."
The man went out and fetched an animal bigger than a mouse,
which he cooked for the three of them. The next day the boy
announced, "I have killed a white short-tailed animal." It
was a cottontail, which the man also cooked.
The day after that, Blood Clot went farther and killed a
badger. "I have killed an animal in a hole in the ground," he
said, and the man brought the creature home and cooked it.
The following day when the boy returned, he said, "I have
killed animal with black ears and a black tail." To the old
man's joy, it was a female deer. The three of them ate and
were happy.
Next Blood Clot said, "I have killed a big fellow with big
antlers." It was an elk, so again the family feasted on meat.
The old man gave the boy a full-sized bow and arrows, and Blood
Clot went into the mountains and shot a mountain goat. "I have
killed an animal with big horns in the mountains," he said when
he came down. "Every day," the old man said proudly, "he kills
a different kind of animal."
Now their troubles were over, and they had an easy time. Blood
Clot killed a mountain lion. Then he tracked and shot an otter:
"I have killed an animal with nice fur, living in the water."
The old man tanned the skin to make strings for tying the boy's
braids. The following day Blood Clot found a beaver: "I have
killed a water animal with a tail of this size."
At last there came a day when Blood Clot said, "I want to
visit the village where many people live. Before that, I will
go on my last hunt for you, all day and all night. First I
want you to tie up the tent, put rocks on the edge, and
fasten the door lest the night wind carry it away. Though the
wind will be strong, don't go outdoors and don't be afraid. I
will call when you can come out."
The old couple obeyed, and he hunted all night while they
were sleeping. About daybreak they heard a big noise,
forerunner of a wind that threatened to tip over the tent.
The man was frightened and wanted to go out, but the wife held
him back, reminding him of what their son had said.
When daylight came, they heard their son's voice: "Come on
out; I'll show you something." They unfastened the door and
saw dead buffalo lying all around.
"I have done this for you," Blood Clot said. "Dry the meat
and hides; save the meat and it will last you for a long time."
The young man asked his mother to fix him a lunch, and she
gave him pemmican. "Now my parents have plenty of food," he
said. As he left, they cried and asked him to return.
Wearing buckskin leggings, carrying a quiver of mountain lion
skin, Blood Clot began to travel. After a few days he reached
the village. At the outskirts he asked for the chief's house,
and a man told him, "It is in the center." There he found the
chief with his wife and daughter. They invited him to sit down,
and the chief asked him where he came from and what his tribe
was.
"I don't know what tribe I belong to. I have come to visit
you," Blood Clot replied. The chief stepped outdoors and
shouted to the people to come and meet their visitor. The
villagers were starving for lack of game, but all gathered at
the chief's house and sat down.
The chief said, "Do any of you know the tribe of this young
man?" People named the tribes - Deer, Elk, Otters, Beavers,
and others. They asked him whether he belonged to any of these,
but he thought not. At last one old man said, "I think I know
from the power in him, although I may be mistaken. I think he
is one of the Buffalo." Blood Clot thought about it, and
finally agreed. The people of the village asked Blood Clot to
stay and marry the chief's daughter. He agreed to this as well,
and the wedding was held.
That evening he asked his father-in-law to bring one arrow
from the tipi. When the chief returned, Blood Clot told him to
have all the tipis fastened and to warn the people that they
should stay indoors, for there would be a great storm. The
chief told the villagers, and at daybreak when they heard a big
noise, they cried out in fear but did not leave their tipis.
Then Blood Clot called to the chief, who came out to find dead
buffalo before every lodge. At his son-in-law's bidding he
summoned the whole village for a feast, and all were happy.
Blood Clot stayed there until one day when a group of villagers
went out to hunt buffalo. Long before this, he had told his wife,
"You know the buffalo calf? I am part of that, it is part of me,
so you must never say the word 'calf'." When the party killed
some buffalo and were butchering, another herd came running
past. His wife pointed and called, "Kill that calf!" Immediately
Blood Clot jumped on his horse and galloped away, changing as
he did so into a buffalo.
His wife cried and attempted to catch him, but in vain. From that
time on, Blood Clot ran with the buffalo.
s.
- Based on a story reported by Robert Lowie in the 1920
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