TWO WOLVES, A Love Story That Became A Legend


TWO WOLVES
A Love Story That Became A Legend
Robert Joseph Thompson
 
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in memory of
JOSEPH THOMAS KOEBLER
1911-1981
 
 
 
Who took the time,
many times,
to teach us 
about animals.
 
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INTRODUCTION
 
Several persons, who read the original manu- script, suggested that an introduction be written to inform readers that wolves are truly capable of doing all the things included in these pages. They are quite able. Indeed, as I researched the literature on wolves, it bacame increasingly apparent that they are capable of much, much more.  
Of particular importance, are the impressions of those who knew the wolves best; teh Indians who hunted the same lands. They respected wolves for their:
 
                  Intelligence
                Hunting Ability
                   Stamina
                   Loyalty
                 Parenthood
 
The word "wolf" is one of the more frequently used in Indian names, and the Indian's believed that name giving was a sacred rite, linking the individual to the Divine.
 
Robert Joseph Thompson
 
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Page 1
 
TWO WOLVES
A Love Story That Became A Legend
 
 
 
The great black wolf
finally reached the cave.
 
His short journey
had taken a long time,
costing him much blood.
 
He inspected the floor carefully,
as if choosing a first,
or last,
resting place.
 
Completing this ritual,
he slowly turned full-circle,
and then sank, exhausted,
to the sandy floor.
 
A shadow moved to his side.
The she-wolf washed his face
and cleansed his wound.
 
Sharp rib-bones protruded
from his crushed side.
Around their whiteness
the black pelt was matted
with a much flowed wetness.
 
The dark wolf
no longer remembered
the she-bear
killing the wolf-pup.
 
No longer did he hear the screams
of his dying daughter.
 
Experience
was drowned in rage...
...and he had been careless.
 
The snow was tinted
for miles now
with the price
of his error.
 
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Page 2
 
Each time his shattered self
trembled with pain,
she leapt to her feet,
and stood, attentively,
over him,
 
Only after yet another washing
of face and wound
would she again
lay beside him.
 
The time before them
would bring change,
to a worsening,
or a bettering.
 
Of again leading the pack,
or, with his absence,
force the pack
to choose a new leader.
 
He, himself, had twice hunted
for crippled wolves,
but they rarely lived a year,
and never survived
a hard winter.
 
Now, fitfully sleeping,
he dreamed of pain-free days,
of their days,
together.
 
Visions from times past
flowed through him:
romping puppy-like
through dark forests,
swimming rivers
and wading lake shores,
prancing as a pair
in flowered meadows,
fishing streams
by herding the shallows,
 
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Page 3
 
test-chasing the caribou
ever seeking a weak one,
the varied litters
and joint duties of parenthood,
that sudden, harsh blizzard
when they curled against each other
under the snow.
 
Rare among mammals,
he was always with her
at birthings,
and, most soul-stirring,
their shared prayer
of pre-historic duets
to the shimmering heavens.
 
Everywhere,
every day,
they were together.
 
They were seen
as inseparable,
and the red people came to speak
of two devoted lovers by saying,
"as close as the two wolves."
 
While he slept,
she brought him meat, freshly hunted,
first, a grouse,
then, a rabbit,
and even,
morsels of moose,
but he could eat nothing.
 
He dreamed
of leading the troop again,
remembering the fight
to become pack-leader.
 
NO wolf
ever shared leadership,
but they did.
 
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Page 4
 
Perhaps,
because she had always
been near him,
she remained there.
 
Only she,
was faster than he,
and during the chase,
she raced in front,
leading them all.
 
All this, was much talked about
around the fires at night
and the words, "a good mating"
always spoke of a superior couple,
be they animal, or people.
 
He quivered,
his strength seeping away
through his injury.
 
He floated back
through the many years
of good hunts.
 
With her,
ever near him,
they ran as one.
 
Invincible, were they.
 
No animal could out-plan them.
 
Trailing the caribou,
for weeks at a time
they preyed on a series
of weaker animals.
 
Much meat,
many times,
for many hungers.
 
They were good leaders,
guiding their brethren
to hunt well
and thus survive.
 
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Page 5
 
Their most peaceful times,
in any season,
came,
when they were resting.
 
Perhaps, with his muzzle
touching her,
or her head,
resting on him.
 
He dreamed on,
the memories coming faster now:
their first singing, together,
to the spectacular streakings
of Northern Lights,
their young
coming into sunlight
for the first time,
blinded,
blinking,
how they haunched
and wondered at the world!
 
After birth-times,
he hunted for all.
 
Later,
they alternated food-gathering,
one of them always remaining
with the young.
 
And later still,
the last step,
when they became teachers
leading the young to hunt.
 
How quickly the whelps grew!
 
How soon they became young adults.
 
How quiet the cave once more!
 
How swiftly came
yet another winter.
 
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Page 6
 
His pain was greatest
with any movement,
however slight.
 
Then,
each breath brought discomfort,
and increasingly,
greater pain.
 
When she noticed
a tear of blood
seeping from his mouth,
she whimpered in uneasiness
at the nearness of death.
 
Her ears raised
as the wind groaned softly
echoing her grief.
 
She heard an owl call
and saw the snowy sweep of wind
dusting their door.
 
He, alone,
saw the distant spirit-pack
rushing to greet him.
 
Only he,
heard their yelpings grow louder
as they drew ever closer.
 
Frantically,
desperately,
the she-wolf tried to rouse him,
with barks and tugs,
then pleadings and whinings.
 
But, he was already running
at the front of the ghost-pack,
whose sharp yelps of excitement
followed him across the heavens
as he rapidly neared
the spirit-elk
that sought, futilely,
to escape him
among the stars
 
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Page 7
 
The cave became colder,
the blood stopped seeping,
the dark form
set and stiffened.
 
She,
ever faithful,
continued the solitary vigil.
 
Puzzled,
at the newness
of his not breathing,
she became more restless,
nuzzling and whimpering
against the shadowy stillness,
but he answered not.
 
A long, heart-stricken cry
announced to the world
that her mate was gone.
 
It proclaimed, again and again,
that where two had been one,
and that one,
incomplete.
 
Many days passed
and still she mourned
in and near the cave.
 
She alternated between
a stricken sentinel
at his side,
and the mourner,
sharing her sorrow
by way of the wind
with all the world.
 
Such a long time she spent there
that all the village came to know
that the black leader
lay quiet in the cave
and, she, as yet,
could not,
would not,
leave him.
 
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Page 8
 
They saw that she hunted not
and grew gaunt.
 
The grey-heads nodded
at her will to not live.
 
Sometimes the survivor
chose to feed
only on sorrow.
 
It had happened before.
 
As she approached death,
the impressed villagers
added this to their tribal lore,
"as faithful, as the grieving she-wolf."  
It was seen, thereafter,
that her hair began turning lighter,
beginning along the muzzle,
then inching back along her face,
until her head was completely white.
 
In bright starlight
her snowy head would glitter
near the mouth of the cave
and the words were passed
from brave to squaw,
that she too, had died,
but her eyes and ears remained,
to watch and listen,
for his return.
 
The people were startled
when her living skeleton
was seen again,
for they had thought her dead.
 
She was much observed
running all their old trails.
 
Always alone,
looking here,
looking there,
ever coming back to the end
and resting again,
beside the quiet shadow,
that was no longer he.
 
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Page 9
 
The familiar paths,
their paths,
these were the ones
she constantly padded,
as if, by trailing their past,
she might find him present.
 
She thought he was teasing her
by playing the hiding game,
as she had teased
by hiding on him.
 
But he had never before
hid so well,
nor for so long.
 
So, she continued,
calling and searching,
and the hunters
who many times saw this,
added these to the village words,
"search as the she-wolf searches....endlessly."
 
After many pleadings to end the game
she always returned,
in desolation,
to the cave.
 
Within a season
she was completely white
and in the moonlight
appeared as a thing
not of this world.
 
The families believed that she had died.  
But,
unable to find her mate
in the star world,
her spirit had returned
to search for him here.
 
Whenever seen
she became much talked about,
because,
to see her,
was considered a sacred thing.
 
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Page 10
 
When the time came
for the pack to gather,
they assembled near the cave,
but she joined them not.
 
They were loyal,
remaining near the cave,
continually pleading,
coaxing her daily,
with delicacies.
 
They were persuasive,
and they persisted.
 
When the gray wolves
again ran as a hunting-pack,
She was seen, as before,
running at the
fore.                                          
When an ancient one
was told of this,
he smiled and said,
"even the spirits must eat."
 
She maintained an aloneness
even while with the hunting group.
 
One thing was forever changed.
 
Each time a pack member
approached her too closely,
she would turn on that unfortunate
with great rage.
 
This was always true,
whether running,
or eating,
or resting.
 
The space around her
became inviolate.
 
When a red-person
lost a mate
but hunted, or cooked for two,
or made the extra sleeping space,
of such a one, it would be said,
"like the she-wolf, place is reserved... ...for the lost one."
 
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Page 11
 
She accepted no other mate.
 
When not leading the grey troop
she continued alone,
always searching.
 
She followed this pattern
in all seasons
for the rest of her life.
 
He had always been the strongest,
and she,
"like the she-wolf,
stay by his side
and grow strong."
 
A few times each year
the entire pack
followed her to the cave
and then waited uneasily.
 
She no longer called for him
but entered and lay awhile
at the place where he,
 began his journey
to hunt the spirit-elk.
 
After that tribute,
she returned to her following
and resumed the permanent homage
of mating again,
never.
 
He was the wisest,
and because she always watched,
she learned much.
 
And so, parents were heard to say,
"watch as the she-wolf watches, and you will learn."  
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Page 12
 
Those that traveled
spoke to other tribes
calling her "the she-ghost,"
and marveled that the gray pack
should follow a spirit.
 
Behind her, they were formidable,
moving with one will,
hunting well,
and surviving.
 
Her ability to find game
became so uncanny
that it was said her mate
spoke to her from the star-clouds
telling her where to hunt.
 
Every council fire
re-told the story
of the silver she-spirit,
all-knowing leader
of the northern wolves,
ever-successful guide
to whom the stars spoke.
 
She,
the eternal seeker
after her mate.
 
Years of searching,
And then the white wolf
was no more seen
by the eyes of this world.
 
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Page 13
 
Generations
repeated their story,
telling of how she trailed him
along the path
as she searched for him
among the stars.
 
They are not forgotten.
Each time a strong wind
howls down a canyon,
the red brethren say,
"listen! the she-wolf still mourns."
 
They are often remembered.
 
Each year when the Northern Lights
gayly splash
across the path
of The Milky Way,
 
it is said,
"the she-wolf has, at last,found him,
and for this reason...
...the heavens...dance."
 
 
 


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