My mother had a saying: “Never stifle a generous impulse.” She never said if that was advice for the giver or the potential receiver! Maybe this Wonder Story of the Iroquois can clear that up.
WHY THE WOODPECKER BORES FOR ITS FOOD
Sometimes he found the Indians sitting around the fire, telling stories and talking of the Great Spirit. Then th eman would pass by unseen.
One day he came to a wigwam in which a woman was baking cakes.
“I am very hungry,” the man said. “Will you please give me a cake?”
The woman looked at the man, and then at the cake. She saw it was too large to give away. She said, “I will not give you this cake, but I will bake you one, if you will wait.
The hungry man said, “I will wait.”
Then the woman took a small piece of dough and made it into a cake and baked it. But when she took his cake from th ecoals, it was larger than the first.
Again the woman looked at her cake. Again she saw it was too large to give away. Again she said, I will not give you this one, but I will bake you one, if you will wait.”
Again the man said, “I will wait.”
Then the woman took a small piece of dough and made it into a cake and baked it. But when she took his cake from th ecoals, it was larger than the first.
Again the woman looked at her cake. Again she saw it was too large to give away. Again she said, I will not give you this one, but I will bake you one, if you will wait.”
Again the man said, “I will wait.”
This time the woman took a very, very tiny bit of dough, and made it into a cake.
“Surely, this will be small enough to give away,” she thought, yet when baked it was larger than both of the others.
The woman stood and looked at the three cakes. Each was too large to give away.
“I will not give you any of the cakes,” she said to the man. “Go to the woods, and find your food in the bark of trees.”
“I am the Great Spirit,” said he, “and you are a selfish woman. Women should be kind, and generous, and unselfish. You shall no longer be a woman and live in a warm wigwam, with plenty of cakes to bake. You shall go to the forest and hunt your food in the bark of trees. Summer and winter you shall eat worms of the same size as the cake that you would have made for me.”
The woman began to grow smaller and smaller. Feathers grew upon her body, and wings sprang from it. The Great Spirit touched her head and it became red.
“Always shall you wear this red hood,” he said, “as a mark of your shame. Always shall you hide from man. Always shall you hunt for little worms, the size of the cake you made for me.”
At this a sharp cry was heard, and a bird flew into the fireplace of the wigwam, and up the chimney. As it passed out of the chimney, the soot left those long streaks of black which we now see on the woodpecker's back.
Ever since then, this woodpecker has had a red head, and has been hiding from man on the farther side of the tree trunk, and boring in the bark for little worms.
“Always shall you wear this red hood,” he said, “as a mark of your shame. Always shall you hide from man. Always shall you hunt for little worms, the size of the cake you made for me.”
At this a sharp cry was heard, and a bird flew into the fireplace of the wigwam, and up the chimney. As it passed out of the chimney, the soot left those long streaks of black which we now see on the woodpecker's back.
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