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BRIDAL VEIL FALLS - YOSEMITE (MIWOK) TRIBE
Hundreds of years ago, in the shelter of the Yo
Semite valley, lived Tu-tok-a-nula and his tribe. He was a wise Chief,
trusted and loved by his people, always setting the right example by
preserving crops and game for the winter.
While he was hunting one day, he saw the lovely
guardian spirit of the valley for the first time. His people called her
Ti-sa-yac. Tu-tok-a-nula felt she was the most beautiful creature he
had ever seen. Her skin was like milk, her hair was golden as the
afternoon sun, and her eyes were bluer than the sky. Her voice, as
sweet as the song of the thrush, drew him toward her. But as he reached
out to her she rose up toward the heavens and vanished.
From that moment, the Chief knew no peace and he no longer cared for the well-being of his people.
Without his guidance, Yo Semite became like a
desert. When Ti-sa-yac came again after a long time, she broke into
tears. Bushes were growing where corn had once flourished, and bears
foraged where the huts had been. On a mighty dome of rock, she knelt
and prayed to the Great Spirit above, asking him to restore virtue to
the land.
The Great Spirit granted her pleas. Stooping from
the sky, he spread new life of green on the valley floor. He struck a
thunderous blow against the mountains and broke a pathway for all the
melting snow to flow. The water ran and danced downward, collecting in
a lake below and flowing off to gladden other land.
The birds returned with their songs, the flowering
plants began to blossom once more, and corn soon grew tall. When the Yo
Semite people returned to their valley, they gave the name of Ti-sa-yac
to what is now called South Dome, where the guardian spirit had knelt
and prayed.
Then the Chief came home again. When he heard what
the beautiful spirit maiden had done, his love for her became stronger
than ever. Climbing to the top of a rock that rose thousands of feet
below the valley, he carved his likeness into the stone with his
hunting knife. He wanted his tribe to remember him after he departed
from the earth.
Tired from his work, the Chief sat at the foot of
Bridal Veil Fall. Suddenly he saw a rainbow arching over the figure of
Ti-sa-yac, who was shining from the water. She smiled and beckoned to
him. With a cry of joy, Tu-tok-a-nula leapt into the waterfall and
disappeared with his beloved.
The rainbow quivered on the cascading water, and the sun set. |