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 〃Far away; away; I answered;

Very far away; I answered;

Ah me! is my native country;

O my sweetheart; my Algonquin!

  〃When I looked back to behold him;

Where we parted; to behold him;

After me he still was gazing;

O my sweetheart; my Algonquin!

  〃By the tree he still was standing;

By the fallen tree was standing;

That had dropped into the water;

O my sweetheart; my Algonquin!

  〃When I think of my beloved;

Ah me! think of my beloved;

When my heart is thinking of him;

O my sweetheart; my Algonquin!〃

  Such was Hiawatha's Wedding;

Such the dance of Pau…Puk…Keewis;

Such the story of Iagoo;

Such the songs of Chibiabos;

Thus the wedding banquet ended;

And the wedding guests departed;

Leaving Hiawatha happy

With the night and Minnehaha。







XIII



BLESSING THE CORNFIELDS



Sing; O Song of Hiawatha;

Of the happy days that followed;

In the land of the Ojibways;

In the pleasant land and peaceful!

Sing the mysteries of Mondamin;

Sing the Blessing of the Cornfields!

  Buried was the bloody hatchet;

Buried was the dreadful war…club;

Buried were all warlike weapons;

And the war…cry was forgotten。

There was peace among the nations;

Unmolested roved the hunters;

Built the birch canoe for sailing;

Caught the fish in lake and river;

Shot the deer and trapped the beaver;

Unmolested worked the women;

Made their sugar from the maple;

Gathered wild rice in the meadows;

Dressed the skins of deer and beaver。

  All around the happy village

Stood the maize…fields; green and shining;

Waved the green plumes of Mondamin;

Waved his soft and sunny tresses;

Filling all the land with plenty。

'T was the women who in Spring…time

Planted the broad fields and fruitful;

Buried in the earth Mondamin;

'T was the women who in Autumn

Stripped the yellow husks of harvest;

Stripped the garments from Mondamin;

Even as Hiawatha taught them。

  Once; when all the maize was planted;

Hiawatha; wise and thoughtful;

Spake and said to Minnehaha;

To his wife; the Laughing Water:

〃You shall bless to…night the cornfields;

Draw a magic circle round them;

To protect them from destruction;

Blast of mildew; blight of insect;

Wagemin; the thief of cornfields;

Paimosaid; who steals the maize…ear!

  〃In the night; when all is silence;

In the night; when all is darkness;

When the Spirit of Sleep; Nepahwin;

Shuts the doors of all the wigwams;

So that not an ear can hear you;

So that not an eye can see you;

Rise up from your bed in silence;

Lay aside your garments wholly;

Walk around the fields you planted;

Round the borders of the cornfields;

Covered by your tresses only;

Robed with darkness as a garment。

  〃Thus the fields shall be more fruitful;

And the passing of your footsteps

Draw a magic circle round them;

So that neither blight nor mildew;

Neither burrowing worm nor insect;

Shall pass o'er the magic circle;

Not the dragon…fly; Kwo…ne…she;

Nor the spider; Subbekashe;

Nor the grasshopper; Pah…puk…keena;

Nor the mighty caterpillar;

Way…muk…kwana; with the bear…skin;

King of all the caterpillars!〃

  On the tree…tops near the cornfields

Sat the hungry crows and ravens;

Kahgahgee; the King of Ravens;

With his band of black marauders。

And they laughed at Hiawatha;

Till the tree…tops shook with laughter;

With their melancholy laughter;

At the words of Hiawatha。

〃Hear him!〃 said they; 〃hear the Wise Man;

Hear the plots of Hiawatha!〃

  When the noiseless night descended

Broad and dark o'er field and forest;

When the mournful Wawonaissa

Sorrowing sang among the hemlocks;

And the Spirit of Sleep; Nepahwin;

Shut the doors of all the wigwams;

From her bed rose Laughing Water;

Laid aside her garments wholly;

And with darkness clothed and guarded;

Unashamed and unaffrighted;

Walked securely round the cornfields;

Drew the sacred; magic circle

Of her footprints round the cornfields。

  No one but the Midnight only

Saw her beauty in the darkness;

No one but the Wawonaissa

Heard the panting of her bosom;

Guskewau; the darkness; wrapped her

Closely in his sacred mantle;

So that none might see her beauty;

So that none might boast; 〃I saw her!〃

  On the morrow; as the day dawned;

Kahgahgee; the King of Ravens;

Gathered all his black marauders;

Crows and blackbirds; jays and ravens;

Clamorous on the dusky tree…tops;

And descended; fast and fearless;

On the fields of Hiawatha;

On the grave of the Mondamin。

  〃We will drag Mondamin;〃 said they;

〃From the grave where he is buried;

Spite of all the magic circles

Laughing Water draws around it;

Spite of all the sacred footprints

Minnehaha stamps upon it!〃

  But the wary Hiawatha;

Ever thoughtful; careful; watchful;

Had o'erheard the scornful laughter

When they mocked him from the tree…tops。

〃Kaw!〃 he said; 〃my friends the ravens!

Kahgahgee; my King of Ravens!

I will teach you all a lesson

That shall not be soon forgotten!〃

  He had risen before the daybreak;

He had spread o'er all the cornfields

Snares to catch the black marauders;

And was lying now in ambush

In the neighboring grove of pine…trees;

Waiting for the crows and blackbirds;

Waiting for the jays and ravens。

  Soon they came with caw and clamor;

Rush of wings and cry of voices;

To their work of devastation;

Settling down upon the cornfields;

Delving deep with beak and talon;

For the body of Mondamin。

And with all their craft and cunning;

All their skill in wiles of warfare;

They perceived no danger near them;

Till their claws became entangled;

Till they found themselves imprisoned

In the snares of Hiawatha。

  From his place of ambush came he;

Striding terrible among them;

And so awful was his aspect

That the bravest quailed with terror。

Without mercy he destroyed them

Right and left; by tens and twenties;

And their wretched; lifeless bodies

Hung aloft on poles for scarecrows

Round the consecrated cornfields;

As a signal of his vengeance;

As a warning to marauders。

  Only Kahgahgee; the leader;

Kahgahgee; the King of Ravens;

He alone was spared among them

As a hostage for his people。

With his prisoner…string he bound him;

Led him captive to his wigwam;

Tied him fast with cords of elm…bark

To the ridge…pole of his wigwam。

  〃Kahgahgee; my raven!〃 said he;

〃You the leader of the robbers;

You the plotter of this mischief;

The contriver of this outrage;

I will keep you; I will hold you;

As a hostage for your people;

As a pledge of good behavior!〃

  And he left him; grim and sulky;

Sitting in the morning sunshine

On the summit of the wigwam;

Croaking fiercely his displeasure;

Flapping his great sable pinions;

Vainly struggling for his freedom;

Vainly calling on his people!

  Summer passed; and Shawondasee

Breathed his sighs o'er all the landscape;

From the South…land sent his ardor;

Wafted kisses warm and tender;

And the maize…field grew and ripened;

Till it stood in all the splendor

Of its garments green and yellow;

Of its tassels and its plumage;

And the maize…ears full and shining

Gleamed from bursting sheaths of verdure。

  Then Nokomis; the old woman;

Spake; and said to Minnehaha:

〃'T is the Moon when leaves are falling;

All the wild…rice has been gathered;

And the maize is ripe and ready;

Let us gather in the harvest;

Let us wrestle with Mondamin;

Strip him of his plumes and tassels;

Of his garments green and yellow!〃

  And the merry Laughing Water

Went rejoicing from the wigwam;

With Nokomis; old and wrinkled;

And they called the women round them;

Called the young men and the maidens;

To the harvest of the cornfields;

To the husking of the maize…ear。

  On the border of the forest;

Underneath the fragrant pine…trees;

Sat the old men and the warriors

Smoking in the pleasant shadow。

In uninterrupted silence

Looked they at the gamesome labor

Of the young men and the women;

Listened to their noisy talking;

To their laughter and their singing;

Heard them chattering like the magpies;

Heard them laughing like the blue…jays;

Heard them singing like the robins。

  And whene'er some lucky maiden

Found a red ear in the husking;

Found a maize…ear red as blood is;

〃Nushka!〃 cried they all together;

〃Nushka! you shall have a sweetheart;

You shall have a handsome husband!〃

〃Ugh!〃 the old men all responded

From their seats beneath the pine…trees。

  And whene'er a youth or maiden

Found a crooked ear in husking;

Found a maize…ear in the husking

Blighted; mildewed; or misshapen;

Then they laughed and sang together;

Crept and limped about the cornfields;

Mimicked in their gait and gestures

Some old man; bent almost double;

Singing singly or together:

〃Wagemin; the thief of cornfields!

Paimosaid; who steals the maize…ear!〃

  Till the cornfields rang with laughter;

Till fro

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