Tout passe comme des nuages...
Sunday, June 30, 2013
The Mountain
Nali was walking with her Papi when she
first saw the little stream partway up the mountain. Nali always
called her father “Papi,” and soon everyone in the village was
calling him that, so that “Papi" became his name. Papi saw the
stream right after little Nali. Papi and Nali had been walking
together all day, looking for the stones that are best to break into
good tools: for cutting, scraping, and making other tools out of
wood and bone. They had gone far from the village, far from the
forests of home, and had come to this distant mountain that was new
to them. They did not know where there was water, or good food, so
they were hungry, thirsty, and tired, and they were both very happy
to find the little stream, rushing with clear, cold water.
They ran together to the edge of the
stream and laughed, splashing the water on themselves and each other.
Only after warming the water a little in their hands did they drink,
so they would not get stomach aches. They were careful not to drink
too much, even though they were thirsty and had not had water all
day.
Nali and Papi sat a while by the
stream, listening to the music of the passing water, watching birds
fly over, hearing the wind pass over the stones and tough grass.
Finally, Nali spoke.
“Papi, we did not have much luck
finding stones today.”
“No, Nali, we did not.”
“But, still, I am happy.”
“Why is that, Nali?”
“Because we have found a beautiful
place with good water, and animals, and food. We can see very far
and the air is cool and delicious.”
Papi smiled. “Yes, Nali, we have
found a good place.”
Papi and Nali stayed by the stream a
while, then went home to the village, and to Nali's mother. They
often went back to the beautiful mountain, and Papi and Nali both
thought of the mountain often, and told Nali's mother and some of the
other people in the village about how delightful and good it was
there.
So it was that one day, as the village
was growing, and people were thinking about places to go and start a
new village, many people thought of the mountain that Nali and Papi
had found, and several people decided they should go out there and
start a village by the stream. They asked Nali and Papi to take them
there. Nali and Papi talked together late that night about what they
should do.
“The mountain is a beautiful place,”
said Nali, “but it is our special place. I'm not sure I want to
share it with everyone.”
“Don't be selfish,” said Papi.
“When people in the village find something good, they want to share
it, so that everyone can benefit.”
Nali pondered and fidgeted a little.
“That's not just it, Papi. It's something else. I want to share
our mountain with the people. But... “ she paused, and wrinkled
her nose. “I'm not sure the mountain wants to have a village
there.”
Papi looked long at his daughter. “You
hear the voice of the mountain,” Papi said. “This is a good
thing for you and all the people. Tomorrow let us set out together,
and you will ask the mountain if it will let the people come and
start a village there.”
Nali smiled. “That is a good plan,
Papi.”
The next day, Nali and Papi set out
toward the mountain. They walked all day, and it was very hard.
Finally, they came to the little stream and sat, and drank, and
listened, as they had done many times before. After a while, Nali
walked a little ways up the stream, and she sat, and she opened her
heart to the mountain. She said, “Oh, great mountain. Our people
would like to come and start a village here. We see how beautiful
you are, and we will always honor and respect you, and keep your ways
in our village. Please tell me if we may come.”
Nali sat and waited all day. She
listened to the wind, to the birds, to the insects, and to the water
rushing in the river. Finally, as the shadows were stretching long,
she heard the voice of the mountain. It was deep and eternal. It
was the sound of the infinite roots of stone that lay under her feet
and her lap.
“I will think about it.” Said the
mountain. “Ask me in a little while.”
Nali told her father what the mountain
had said. They slept that night by the stream, and felt sheltered
and cared for by the mountain, as the night creatures sang their
lullabies, and the flowery breezes cooled their faces. In the
morning they packed their food and tools and got ready to go.
“Mountains probably take a long time to think,” said Papi.
“Let's come back in a month.”
Nali and Papi returned to the village,
and went on about their daily business. People asked about the
mountain, and whether they should go there to start a village, but
Papi would just say, “We'll see.” After a month, Nali and Papi
went back to the mountain, but the mountain still had no answer for
them. They came back month after month, and a year passed, and
another, and still there was no answer from the mountain. Many
people had already gone and started villages in other places. Thus
five years passed. Nali had stopped waiting for an answer from the
mountain. But one day, when Nali and Papi were sitting by the stream
on the mountain, Nali suddenly heard the voice of the mountain. She
was surprised, since she thought the mountain had forgotten about
them. But all of a sudden, and clear as day, the mountain said,
“OK. I have decided that your people
may come and start a village.”
When the village was established, Nali
was already a young woman, and Papi and Nali's mother were starting
to move slower, and were having difficulty walking as far or climbing
as high as they had when Nali was a little girl. But the village was
a good village, and there was plenty of water and food and good
stones and timber, and the people were happy. The people loved the
mountain, and they kept to the ways of the mountain, always
respecting its wishes. The people felt that the mountain loved them
too, and they felt blessed that the mountain had expressly given them
permission to start a village there, and they loved Nali who could
talk to the mountain, and they called the mountain “Nali's
Mountain.”
As the village grew, the people started
having trouble finding enough water for everyone. One of the elders
said, “We could build a dam of wood, stone, and clay that would
hold back the waters of the river. Then there would be plenty of
water for the people, even in the dry season.”
“Yes,” said another of the elders.
But what of the ways of the mountain? Is it right that we should
hold back the flow of the water, and silence its voice?”
Another of the elders answered, “You
speak wisely. But do not the beavers build dams to withhold the
water? Surely they follow the ways of the mountain, since they have
lived by her bounty for centuries.”
“It is so,” said another elder.
“But we cannot decide for ourselves. Let us ask the mountain if it
is permitted to build the dam.”
So the elders came to Nali, and asked
her to petition the mountain for its advice about the dam. Nali said
of course she would ask the mountain, and the next day she went off
to a quiet spot where she could hear the mountain's voice.
After sitting and listening a long
time, she opened her heart and spoke to the mountain. “Oh great
mountain,” she began, “you have been kind and generous to the
people of the village, and we wish to ask you something. May we
build a small dam to hold back the water, so that the people will
always have water and never be thirsty?”
Nali listened all night for an answer,
and finally, as the moon was rising, she felt the earth tremble, and
heard the voice of the mountain again. The mountain said, “I will
think about it. Ask me again in a little while.”
By this time, Nali knew well what the
mountain meant by “a little while,” and so did the village
elders. They waited patiently, and were surprised that within a
year, the mountain had made its decision, and announced it to Nali.
Nali addressed the council of elders.
“The mountain has said that the
people have done well and have abided by the ways of the mountain.
She therefore gives her permission to build the dam.”
The elders were satisfied, and directed
the construction of the dam in the summer, when the waters were low.
The dam was a success, and held water well throughout the year, and
the people were prosperous. They grew grain, they hunted for food,
they built humble dwellings, and they raised their children, Always
they sang songs and held rituals that honored the mountain and its
ways, and they celebrated their good fortune at living in such a good
and loving land.
So things went for generations. After
Nali and Papi passed into the next world, a young man began to hear
the voice of the mountain. In some generations it was a boy, and in
some a girl, but the people always had someone in their midst who
could speak to the mountain. The village continued to prosper, and
people came from many lands to trade, to tell stories, and to enjoy
the beauty and harmony of that place. Whenever the village elders
wanted to change something in the village to aid the people, they
would first ask the mountain for her advice.
But after many more generations, the
people grew tired of waiting for the mountain's lengthy consideration
of every improvement to the village's happiness and prosperity. For
example, one year the elders thought it would be a good idea to
expand the dam and build a mill, so that the people did not have to
work so hard at grinding grain. When, as usual, the elders said they
would have to consult the mountain, one young villager became angry.
“Why should we wait for a year or
five years to hear the mountain's answer?” he shouted at the
elders. “The people are suffering from grinding the grain by hand
day in and day out! Our young men become weary and cannot hunt well.
Our women become exhausted, and their hands are destroyed by the
work and the stones! Why should another year pass with the people
suffering so?”
The villager's words were persuasive,
and it was true that everyone in the village was suffering. The
grinding of grain is very hard, and the people's fingers were worn
and painful at a young age. The elders weighed the suffering of the
people against the patient ways of the mountain, and they made a
fateful decision.
“Go ahead and build the mill,” they
said. “We will ask the mountain later.”
Of course, once the villagers had
broken with the ways of the mountain, there was to be no turning
back. The mountain never answered when the young man asked about the
mill, even thought the mill had already been built. The people went
on building things, saying they would ask the mountain later, and the
mountain went on not answering, and eventually the mountain was
entirely silent, and the people stopped asking. All this took a very
long time, and hardly anyone noticed what was happening.
The village continued to prosper
nonetheless. With the mill in place, people had more time to pursue
art and leisure. Villagers from all over the world came and traded
with the people of Nali's Mountain, and came to get their grains
ground, for which they paid in precious stones and shells, and the
artisans of Nali's Mountain became very skilled, and people traded
great treasures for the famed works of art that came from there.
The people drifted farther and
farther from the ways of the mountain. They built more and higher
dams, until the water hardly reached the foot of the mountain. They
burned much forest to clear for fields and towns, and they killed
many animals for food, even young females and pregnant mothers. The
people became proud and called themselves the “Masters of Nali's
Mountain,” and told everyone they had subdued the mountain and bent
her to their will.
The people of the surrounding villages
became envious of the prosperity and ease of living that was enjoyed
by the people of Nali's Mountain. Many people tried to join the
village from afar, but they were turned away by the ones who called
themselves the “Masters of Nali's Mountain.”
“You were not born on this mountain,”
they said. “You did not build the dams and the mills. You are not
skilled in crafts and farming, as we are. Go back to you poor
villages, and come back here only when you have some rich treasures
to trade with us.”
Also, the “Masters of Nali's
Mountain” began demanding more and more precious stones and shells
and feathers for their arts and for the use of their mill and water.
The people in the surrounding lands became very angry at this. “You
are the reason we have no water for our crops and no mill of our
own,” they said. “Your dams have blocked every stream that flows
from this mountain, and you have cut down all the trees, and now
there is no water for the surrounding villages, and no food and no
game. It is you yourselves who are to blame for this, yet you demand
treasures from us for the water that is rightfully ours!”
The anger of the surrounding villages
grew, and so did the pride of the “Masters of Nali's Mountain,”
and it happened that people from the surrounding villages started
coming to steal from the people of Nali's Mountain, and when they
were caught stealing, they were punished by the “Masters of Nali's
Mountain.” So the people of the surrounding villages became more
angry and more determined, and they came in greater numbers to Nali's
Mountain, demanding that the people give up their riches and share
with the people below.
Since the people of Nali's mountain
refused, the people of the surrounding villages attacked the people
of Nali's Mountain with weapons, and there was blood and harm, and
killing.
And that is when the mountain spoke so
that everyone could hear.
“Enough!” cried the mountain. The
stones and rivers trembled, and the air became tense with
impending storm. “You have broken your promise! You have not
lived by the ways of the mountain, and now you violate my body with war! You shall live here no longer!”
And with that, the mountain shook
itself to its foundations, and threw forth fire and terrible storms,
and threw the people from its side. The devastation was limitless,
and continued for years. After many years of storms, floods, and
streams of burning stone, nothing remained of the village or any of
the villagers. The surrounding lands were also destroyed, and there
was nothing but desert for many miles.
The people never came back to Nali's
Mountain. Generation after generation passed, and the people stayed
far away, and they could not remember what had happened there, but
they knew it was terrible. The people now called it “The Dead
Mountain,” and they had no memory that it had ever been called
“Nali's Mountain.”
As the generations passed, everyone
forgot everything that had ever happened there. But the region
around The Dead Mountain was believed to be haunted, and there
certainly was no food or water or other good things, so no-one ever
went there to say if it was really haunted or not.
But one day there was a young man who
had gotten lost from his village. He had been out looking for the
old bones that people sometimes found, that were so old they had
turned to stone. These bones were found sometimes, and seemed to
belong to fantastic beings, and some people believed they came from
magical beasts, and some people believed they were relics of an
ancient time, and held great mysteries. So this young man was out
looking in the wastes and dead places, and he was known for his
courage as well as his wisdom, and his name was Rica.
It is dangerous to wander in the wastes
and dead lands, and Rica had lost his way. Where he was there was no
water, no food, no shade or safe place. He wandered up the slopes of
an old dead mountain, and wondered if he had strayed so far as the
roots of The Dead Mountain, and he wondered if it were true that the
mountain was really haunted. The sun fell, and the moon rose late,
and a chill descended, and Rica heard strange vibrations in the night
air. But he dared not stop, for he had great need of water, and he
must find water or die.
As he climbed higher up the barren
slopes of The Dead Mountain, Rica began to fancy that he heard voices
of crying and lamentation, and also voices of rejoicing and
celebration. But they seemed to be distant, lost in time or from
another dimension. Slowly the voices resolved themselves into a
clear and consistent music. Rica could hardly believe his ears, for
he had become convinced that he was to die, and join the ghosts of
this old, dead mountain. But there was no mistaking the music. It
was the music of a running stream.
Exhausted and elated, but also
cautious, lest he be deluded by spirits, Rica made his way toward the
music of the water. Finally, he crested a small rise of barren rock,
and there he beheld an awesome sight.
A small stream was issuing forth from
the side of the mountain. As Rica looked down the moonlit stream, he saw
that the land was transforming under the steady influence of the
water. Near the edges of the stream, the land was not so hard.
Small, hardy plants had taken root, and even some flowers were to be
seen. Furtive insects skirted among the tough leaves.
His eyes agape, Rica ran up to the
stream, and splashed the cool water on his dry face and arms. The
cooling powers of the water were deeply restorative. Rica took a
cupful of water in his hands and held it a while to warm it, then
drank only a little, so as not to upset his dry stomach.
Rica laughed with joy and rolled onto
his back in the warm soil at the edge of the river, smiling up at the bright moon.
“It is a wonder!” he said to
himself. “All these generations, we have known this land as a dead
place, and no-one goes here. Yet here, beneath my very eyes, this
land is beginning to change. It is becoming a living place!”
Then, as he drifted off into grateful
sleep, with his back pressed against the earth, he heard a vibration
rising up through his spine, and the voice he heard was the voice of
the mountain. The voice of the mountain said,
“Shhhh. Don't tell anyone.”
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