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  Ended were his wild adventures;

Ended were his tricks and gambols;

Ended all his craft and cunning;

Ended all his mischief…making;

All his gambling and his dancing;

All his wooing of the maidens。

  Then the noble Hiawatha

Took his soul; his ghost; his shadow;

Spake and said: 〃O Pau…Puk…Keewis;

Never more in human figure

Shall you search for new adventures;

Never more with jest and laughter

Dance the dust and leaves in whirlwinds;

But above there in the heavens

You shall soar and sail in circles;

I will change you to an eagle;

To Keneu; the great war…eagle;

Chief of all the fowls with feathers;

Chief of Hiawatha's chickens。〃

  And the name of Pau…Puk…Keewis

Lingers still among the people;

Lingers still among the singers;

And among the story…tellers;

And in Winter; when the snow…flakes

Whirl in eddies round the lodges;

When the wind in gusty tumult

O'er the smoke…flue pipes and whistles;

〃There;〃 they cry; 〃comes Pau…Puk…Keewis;

He is dancing through the village;

He is gathering in his harvest!〃







XVIII



THE DEATH OF KWASIND



Far and wide among the nations

Spread the name and fame of Kwasind;

No man dared to strive with Kwasind;

No man could compete with Kwasind。

But the mischievous Puk…Wudjies;

They the envious Little People;

They the fairies and the pygmies;

Plotted and conspired against him。

  〃If this hateful Kwasind;〃 said they;

〃If this great; outrageous fellow

Goes on thus a little longer;

Tearing everything he touches;

Rending everything to pieces;

Filling all the world with wonder;

What becomes of the Puk…Wudjies?

Who will care for the Puk…Wudjies?

He will tread us down like mushrooms;

Drive us all into the water;

Give our bodies to be eaten

By the wicked Nee…ba…naw…baigs;

By the Spirits of the water!

  So the angry Little People

All conspired against the Strong Man;

All conspired to murder Kwasind;

Yes; to rid the world of Kwasind;

The audacious; overbearing;

Heartless; haughty; dangerous Kwasind!

  Now this wondrous strength of Kwasind

In his crown alone was seated;

In his crown too was his weakness;

There alone could he be wounded;

Nowhere else could weapon pierce him;

Nowhere else could weapon harm him。

  Even there the only weapon

That could wound him; that could slay him;

Was the seed…cone of the pine…tree;

Was the blue cone of the fir…tree。

This was Kwasind's fatal secret;

Known to no man among mortals;

But the cunning Little People;

The Puk…Wudjies; knew the secret;

Knew the only way to kill him。

  So they gathered cones together;

Gathered seed…cones of the pine…tree;

Gathered blue cones of the fir…tree;

In the woods by Taquamenaw;

Brought them to the river's margin;

Heaped them in great piles together;

Where the red rocks from the margin

Jutting overhang the river。

There they lay in wait for Kwasind;

The malicious Little People。

  'T was an afternoon in Summer;

Very hot and still the air was;

Very smooth the gliding river;

Motionless the sleeping shadows:

Insects glistened in the sunshine;

Insects skated on the water;

Filled the drowsy air with buzzing;

With a far resounding war…cry。

  Down the river came the Strong Man;

In his birch canoe came Kwasind;

Floating slowly down the current

Of the sluggish Taquamenaw;

Very languid with the weather;

Very sleepy with the silence。

  From the overhanging branches;

From the tassels of the birch…trees;

Soft the Spirit of Sleep descended;

By his airy hosts surrounded;

His invisible attendants;

Came the Spirit of Sleep; Nepahwin;

Like a burnished Dush…kwo…ne…she;

Like a dragon…fly; he hovered

O'er the drowsy head of Kwasind。

  To his ear there came a murmur

As of waves upon a sea…shore;

As of far…off tumbling waters;

As of winds among the pine…trees;

And he felt upon his forehead

Blows of little airy war…clubs;

Wielded by the slumbrous legions

Of the Spirit of Sleep; Nepahwin;

As of some one breathing on him。

  At the first blow of their war…clubs;

Fell a drowsiness on Kwasind;

At the second blow they smote him;

Motionless his paddle rested;

At the third; before his vision

Reeled the landscape into darkness;

Very sound asleep was Kwasind。


  So he floated down the river;

Like a blind man seated upright;

Floated down the Taquamenaw;

Underneath the trembling birch…trees;

Underneath the wooded headlands;

Underneath the war encampment

Of the pygmies; the Puk…Wudjies。

  There they stood; all armed and waiting;

Hurled the pine…cones down upon him;

Struck him on his brawny shoulders;

On his crown defenceless struck him。

〃Death to Kwasind!〃 was the sudden

War…cry of the Little People。

  And he sideways swayed and tumbled;

Sideways fell into the river;

Plunged beneath the sluggish water

Headlong; as an otter plunges;

And the birch canoe; abandoned;

Drifted empty down the river;

Bottom upward swerved and drifted:

Nothing more was seen of Kwasind。

  But the memory of the Strong Man

Lingered long among the people;

And whenever through the forest

Raged and roared the wintry tempest;

And the branches; tossed and troubled;

Creaked and groaned and split asunder;

〃Kwasind!〃 cried they; 〃that is Kwasind!

He is gathering in his fire…wood!〃







IX



THE GHOSTS



Never stoops the soaring vulture

On his quarry in the desert;

On the sick or wounded bison;

But another vulture; watching

From his high aerial look…out;

Sees the downward plunge; and follows;

And a third pursues the second;

Coming from the invisible ether;

First a speck; and then a vulture;

Till the air is dark with pinions。

  So disasters come not singly;

But as if they watched and waited;

Scanning one another's motions;

When the first descends; the others

Follow; follow; gathering flock…wise

Round their victim; sick and wounded;

First a shadow; then a sorrow;

Till the air is dark with anguish。

  Now; o'er all the dreary North…land;

Mighty Peboan; the Winter;

Breathing on the lakes and rivers;

Into stone had changed their waters。

From his hair he shook the snow…flakes;

Till the plains were strewn with whiteness;

One uninterrupted level;

As if; stooping; the Creator

With his hand had smoothed them over。

Through the forest; wide and wailing;

Roamed the hunter on his snow…shoes;

In the village worked the women;

Pounded maize; or dressed the deer…skin;

And the young men played together

On the ice the noisy ball…play;

On the plain the dance of snow…shoes。

  One dark evening; after sundown;

In her wigwam Laughing Water

Sat with old Nokomis; waiting

For the steps of Hiawatha

Homeward from the hunt returning。

  On their faces gleamed the firelight;

Painting them with streaks of crimson;

In the eyes of old Nokomis

Glimmered like the watery moonlight;

In the eyes of Laughing Water

Glistened like the sun in water;

And behind them crouched their shadows

In the corners of the wigwam;

And the smoke in wreaths above them

Climbed and crowded through the smoke…flue。

  Then the curtain of the doorway

From without was slowly lifted;

Brighter glowed the fire a moment;

And a moment swerved the smoke…wreath;

As two women entered softly;

Passed the doorway uninvited;

Without word of salutation;

Without sign of recognition;

Sat down in the farthest corner;

Crouching low among the shadows。

  From their aspect and their garments;

Strangers seemed they in the village;

Very pale and haggard were they;

As they sat there sad and silent;

Trembling; cowering with the shadows。

  Was it the wind above the smoke…flue;

Muttering down into the wigwam?

Was it the owl; the Koko…koho;

Hooting from the dismal forest?

Sure a voice said in the silence:

〃These are corpses clad in garments;

These are ghosts that come to haunt you;

From the kingdom of Ponemah;

From the land of the Hereafter!〃

  Homeward now came Hiawatha

From his hunting in the forest;

With the snow upon his tresses;

And the red deer on his shoulders。

At the feet of Laughing Water

Down he threw his lifeless burden;

Nobler; handsomer she thought him;

Than when first he came to woo her;

First threw down the deer before her;

As a token of his wishes;

As a promise of the future。

  Then he turned and saw the strangers;

Cowering; crouching with the shadows;

Said within himself; 〃Who are they?

What strange guests has Minnehaha?〃

But he questioned not the strangers;

Only spake to bid them welcome

To his lodge; his food; his fireside。

  When the evening meal was ready;

And the deer had been divided;

Both the pallid guests; the strangers;

Springing from among the shadows;

Seized upon the choicest portions;

Seized the white fat of the roebuck;

Set apart for Laughing Water;

For the wife of Hiawatha;

Without asking; without thanking;

Eagerly devoured the mor

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