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Filled the heart of Hiawatha?

All he told to old Nokomis;

When he reached the lodge at sunset;

Was the meeting with his father;

Was his fight with Mudjekeewis;

Not a word he said of arrows;

Not a word of Laughing Water。







V



HIAWATHA'S FASTING



You shall hear how Hiawatha

Prayed and fasted in the forest;

Not for greater skill in hunting;

Not for greater craft in fishing;

Not for triumphs in the battle;

And renown among the warriors;

But for profit of the people;

For advantage of the nations。

  First he built a lodge for fasting;

Built a wigwam in the forest;

By the shining Big…Sea…Water;

In the blithe and pleasant Spring…time;

In the Moon of Leaves he built it;

And; with dreams and visions many;

Seven whole days and nights he fasted。

  On the first day of his fasting

Through the leafy woods he wandered;

Saw the deer start from the thicket;

Saw the rabbit in his burrow;

Heard the pheasant; Bena; drumming;

Heard the squirrel; Adjidaumo;

Rattling in his hoard of acorns;

Saw the pigeon; the Omeme;

Building nests among the pine…trees;

And in flocks the wild…goose; Wawa;

Flying to the fen…lands northward;

Whirring; wailing far above him。

〃Master of Life!〃 he cried; desponding;

〃Must our lives depend on these things?〃

  On the next day of his fasting

By the river's brink he wandered;

Through the Muskoday; the meadow;

Saw the wild rice; Mahnomonee;

Saw the blueberry; Meenahga;

And the strawberry; Odahmin;

And the gooseberry; Shahbomin;

And the grape…vine; the Bemahgut;

Trailing o'er the alder…branches;

Filling all the air with fragrance!

〃Master of Life!〃 he cried; desponding;

〃Must our lives depend on these things?〃

  On the third day of his fasting

By the lake he sat and pondered;

By the still; transparent water;

Saw the sturgeon; Nahma; leaping;

Scattering drops like beads of wampum;

Saw the yellow perch; the Sahwa;

Like a sunbeam in the water;

Saw the pike; the Maskenozha;

And the herring; Okahahwis;

And the Shawgashee; the crawfish!

〃Master of Life!〃 he cried; desponding;

〃Must our lives depend on these things?〃

  On the fourth day of his fasting

In his lodge he lay exhausted;

From his couch of leaves and branches

Gazing with half…open eyelids;

Full of shadowy dreams and visions;

On the dizzy; swimming landscape;

On the gleaming of the water;

On the splendor of the sunset。

  And he saw a youth approaching;

Dressed in garments green and yellow;

Coming through the purple twilight;

Through the splendor of the sunset;

Plumes of green bent o'er his forehead;

And his hair was soft and golden。

  Standing at the open doorway;

Long he looked at Hiawatha;

Looked with pity and compassion

On his wasted form and features;

And; in accents like the sighing

Of the South…Wind in the tree…tops;

Said he; 〃O my Hiawatha!

All your prayers are heard in heaven;

For you pray not like the others;

Not for greater skill in hunting;

Not for greater craft in fishing;

Not for triumph in the battle;

Nor renown among the warriors;

But for profit of the people;

For advantage of the nations。

  〃From the Master of Life descending;

I; the friend of man; Mondamin;

Come to warn you and instruct you;

How by struggle and by labor

You shall gain what you have prayed for。

Rise up from your bed of branches;

Rise; O youth; and wrestle with me!〃

  Faint with famine; Hiawatha

Started from his bed of branches;

From the twilight of his wigwam

Forth into the flush of sunset

Came; and wrestled with Mondamin;

At his touch he felt new courage

Throbbing in his brain and bosom;

Felt new life and hope and vigor

Run through every nerve and fibre。

  So they wrestled there together

In the glory of the sunset;

And the more they strove and struggled;

Stronger still grew Hiawatha;

Till the darkness fell around them;

And the heron; the Shuh…shuh…gah;

From her nest among the pine…trees;

Gave a cry of lamentation;

Gave a scream of pain and famine。

  〃'T is enough!〃 then said Mondamin;

Smiling upon Hiawatha;

〃But tomorrow; when the sun sets;

I will come again to try you。〃

And he vanished; and was seen not;

Whether sinking as the rain sinks;

Whether rising as the mists rise;

Hiawatha saw not; knew not;

Only saw that he had vanished;

Leaving him alone and fainting;

With the misty lake below him;

And the reeling stars above him。

  On the morrow and the next day;

When the sun through heaven descending;

Like a red and burning cinder

From the hearth of the Great Spirit;

Fell into the western waters;

Came Mondamin for the trial;

For the strife with Hiawatha;

Came as silent as the dew comes;

From the empty air appearing;

Into empty air returning;

Taking shape when earth it touches;

But invisible to all men

In its coming and its going。

  Thrice they wrestled there together

In the glory of the sunset;

Till the darkness fell around them;

Till the heron; the Shuh…shuh…gah;

From her nest among the pine…trees;

Uttered her loud cry of famine;

And Mondamin paused to listen。

  Tall and beautiful he stood there;

In his garments green and yellow;

To and fro his plumes above him;

Waved and nodded with his breathing;

And the sweat of the encounter

Stood like drops of dew upon him。

  And he cried; 〃O Hiawatha!

Bravely have you wrestled with me;

Thrice have wrestled stoutly with me;

And the Master of Life; who sees us;

He will give to you the triumph!〃

  Then he smiled; and said: 〃To…morrow

Is the last day of your conflict;

Is the last day of your fasting。

You will conquer and o'ercome me;

Make a bed for me to lie in;

Where the rain may fall upon me;

Where the sun may come and warm me;

Strip these garments; green and yellow;

Strip this nodding plumage from me;

Lay me in the earth; and make it

Soft and loose and light above me。

  〃Let no hand disturb my slumber;

Let no weed nor worm molest me;

Let not Kahgahgee; the raven;

Come to haunt me and molest me;

Only come yourself to watch me;

Till I wake; and start; and quicken;

Till I leap into the sunshine。〃

  And thus saying; he departed;

Peacefully slept Hiawatha;

But he heard the Wawonaissa;

Heard the whippoorwill complaining;

Perched upon his lonely wigwam;

Heard the rushing Sebowisha;

Heard the rivulet rippling near him;

Talking to the darksome forest;

Heard the sighing of the branches;

As they lifted and subsided

At the passing of the night…wind;

Heard them; as one hears in slumber

Far…off murmurs; dreamy whispers:

Peacefully slept Hiawatha。

  On the morrow came Nokomis;

On the seventh day of his fasting;

Came with food for Hiawatha;

Came imploring and bewailing;

Lest his hunger should o'ercome him;

Lest his fasting should be fatal。

  But he tasted not; and touched not;

Only said to her; 〃Nokomis;

Wait until the sun is setting;

Till the darkness falls around us;

Till the heron; the Shuh…shuh…gah;

Crying from the desolate marshes;

Tells us that the day is ended。〃

  Homeward weeping went Nokomis;

Sorrowing for her Hiawatha;

Fearing lest his strength should fail him;

Lest his fasting should be fatal。 

He meanwhile sat weary waiting

For the coming of Mondamin;

Till the shadows; pointing eastward;

Lengthened over field and forest;

Till the sun dropped from the heaven;

Floating on the waters westward;

As a red leaf in the Autumn

Falls and floats upon the water;

Falls and sinks into its bosom。

  And behold! the young Mondamin;

With his soft and shining tresses;

With his garments green and yellow;

With his long and glossy plumage;

Stood and beckoned at the doorway。

And as one in slumber walking;

Pale and haggard; but undaunted;

From the wigwam Hiawatha

Came and wrestled with Mondamin。

  Round about him spun the landscape;

Sky and forest reeled together;

And his strong heart leaped within him;

As the sturgeon leaps and struggles

In a net to break its meshes。

Like a ring of fire around him

Blazed and flared the red horizon;

And a hundred suns seemed looking

At the combat of the wrestlers。

  Suddenly upon the greensward

All alone stood Hiawatha;

Panting with his wild exertion;

Palpitating with the struggle;

And before him breathless; lifeless;

Lay the youth; with hair dishevelled;

Plumage torn; and garments tattered;

Dead he lay there in the sunset。

  And victorious Hiawatha

Made the grave as he commanded;

Stripped the garments from Mondamin;

Stripped his tattered plumage from him;

Laid him in the earth; and made it

Soft and loose and light above him;

And the heron; the Shuh…shuh…gah;

From the melancholy moorlands;

Gave a cry of lamentation;

Gave a cry of pain and anguish!

  Homeward then went Hiawatha

To the lodge of old Nokomis;

And the seven days of his fasting

Were accomplished and completed。

But the place was 

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