Well, as I got the
story, years after Carson’s round-up one of his soldiers guided some
interested travelers in here. When they left they took an Indian boy
with them to educate. From what I know of Navajos I’m inclined to
think the boy was taken against his parents’ wish. Anyway, he was
taken. That boy was Nas Ta Bega. The story goes that he was educated
somewhere. Years afterward, and perhaps not long before I came in
here, he returned to his people. There have been missionaries and
other interested fools who have given Indians a white man’s education.
In all the instances I know of, these educated Indians returned to
their tribes, repudiating the white man’s knowledge, habits, life,
and religion. I have heard that Nas Ta Bega came back, laid down
the white man’s clothes along with the education, and never again
showed that he had known either.
“You have just seen how strangely he acted. It’s almost certain he
heard our conversation. Well, it doesn’t matter. He won’t tell. He
can hardly be made to use an English word. Besides, he’s a noble red
man, if there ever was one. He has been a friend in need to me. If
you stay long out here you’ll learn something from the Indians. Nas
Ta Bega has befriended you, too, it seems. I thought he showed unusual
interest in you.”
“Perhaps that was because I saved his sister–well, to be charitable,
from the rather rude advances of a white man,” said Shefford, and he
proceeded to tell of the incident that occurred at Red Lake.
“Willetts!” exclaimed Withers, with much the same expression that
Presbrey had used. “I never met him. But I know about him. He’s–
well, the Indians don’t like him much. Most of the missionaries are
good men–good for the Indians, in a way, but sometimes one drifts
out here who is bad. A bad missionary teaching religion to savages!
Queer, isn’t it? The queerest part is the white people’s blindness–
the blindness of those who send the missionaries. Well, I dare say
Willetts isn’t very good. When Presbrey said that was Willetts’s way
of teaching religion he meant just what he said. If Willetts drifts
over here he’ll be risking much. . . . This you told me explains Nas
Ta Bega’s friendliness toward you, and also his bringing his sister
Glen Naspa to live with relatives up in the pass.
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