
Devils Tower
Located in the Northeast corner
of Wyoming this curious stone tower
was central in the movie "Encounters of the Third Kind".
The tower is
huge and many climbers test their skills on the monolith daily.
When
you stand at the bottom and look up at the people who bravely
cling
to the rocks, they look smaller than an ant at your feet. It
takes
about three hours to walk completely around the stone mountain
but it
is a beautiful and easy hike.
The Native Americans have a legend concerning
the tower, and it goes like this:
There were seven brothers. One
day when the wife of the oldest brother went out to fix the smoke
wings of her tipi, a big bear carried her off to his cave. The
man mourned her loss greatly, and would go out and cry defiantly
to the bear.
The youngest brother, who had great power, then told the oldest
one to make a bow and four blunt arrows. Two arrows were to be
painted red and set with eagle feathers; the other two were to
be painted black and set with buzzard feathers. The youngest
brother then took the bow and the four arrows, told the other
brothers to fill their quivers with arrows, and they all set
out after the big bear.
At the cave the youngest brother told his brothers to sit down
and wait. Then he turned himself into a gopher and dug a big
hole to the bear's den. He crawled in, and found the bear lying
with its head in the woman's lap. The young Indian put the bear
to sleep, and changed himself back into an Indian. He then told
the woman that her man was mourning and that he had come to take
her back. He told her to make a pillow of her blanket and put
it under the bear's head. Then he had her crawl backwards through
the hole he had dug. So he got her out to where the six brothers
were waiting. Then the hole closed up.
The woman now told the brothers
they should hurry away as arrows would not go into this bear.
After they had all gone the bear woke up, went out of his den,
and walked around it. He found the trail of the Indians. He started
after them, taking with him all the bears of which he was leader.
The youngest brother, with the
four arrows, kept looking back. Soon they came to the place where
Bear Lodge now stands. The youngest boy always carried a little
rock in his hand. He told the six brothers and the woman to close
their eyes. He sang a song and finished it. When the others opened
their eyes the rock had grown. He sang four times, and when he
had finished the rock was just as high as it is today.This the
younger brother could do because he was a holy man.
When the bears reached Bear Lodge
they all sat down in a line, but the leader stood out in front.
He called, "Let my wife come down!" The young Indian
mocked the bear, saying that he might be a holy being but that
he couldn't get her.
Then the brothers killed all of
the bears except the leader. It growled and kept jumping high
up against the rock. His claws made the marks that are on the
rock today.
While he was doing this the youngest
brother shot the black arrows at him. They did not hurt him,
and by taking a run the bear went further with every jump. The
third time he jumped, the young Indian shot a red arrow at him,
but it did not enter the bear. At the fourth jump the bear almost
got up on the Tower. The young Indian then shot his last arrow.
It went into the top of the bear's head and came out below his
jaw, and the bear fell dead. The youngest brother then made a
noise like a bald eagle, and four eagles came. They took hold
of the eagle's legs and were carried down to the ground.
Now the young Indian told his
brothers to pack in wood and pile it on top of the bear leader.
This was set on fire. When the bear got hot it burst, and small
pieces, like beads of different colors, flew off. The younger
brother told the rest to put these back in the fire with a stick.
(If they had picked up these pieces with their hands the bear
would have come to life again). Finally the bear was burned to
ashes.
After this there were a great
many young bears running around. The Indians killed all but two.
The younger brother told these two not to bother the people any
more, and he cut off their ears and tails. That is why bears
have short ears and no tails to this day.

Webster, back to Scenics
Contact: PLH-Photos@bigfoot.com
This World Wide Web Page complete
with all photographs, content and intellectual
property cannot be copied without express permission from Phil
& Loretta Hermann.
Copyright © 1998 By Phil & Loretta Hermann all rights
reserved.