Folk-Lore and Legends: North 
American Indian, by 
 
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Title: Folk-Lore and Legends: North American Indian 
Author: Anonymous 
Release Date: July 14, 2007 [EBook #22072] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
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FOLK-LORE AND LEGENDS *** 
 
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FOLK-LORE 
AND 
LEGENDS
NORTH AMERICAN INDIAN 
W. W. GIBBINGS 18 BURY ST., LONDON, W.C. 1890 
 
FOLK-LORE AND LEGENDS 
NORTH AMERICAN INDIAN 
UNIFORM WITH THIS VOLUME. 
"These dainty little books."--STANDARD. 
FOLK-LORE AND LEGENDS. 
FIRST SERIES. 
1. GERMAN. 2. ORIENTAL. 3. SCOTLAND. 4. IRELAND. 
SECOND SERIES. 
1. ENGLAND. 2. SCANDINAVIAN. 3. RUSSIAN. 4. NORTH 
AMERICAN INDIAN. 
"They transport us into a romantic world."--TIMES. 
 
PREFATORY NOTE. 
It might have been expected that the Indians of North America would 
have many Folklore tales to tell, and in this volume I have endeavoured 
to present such of them as seemed to me to best illustrate the primitive 
character and beliefs of the people. The belief, and the language in 
which it is clothed, are often very beautiful. Fantastic imagination, 
magnanimity, moral sentiment, tender feeling, and humour are 
discovered in a degree which may astonish many who have been apt to 
imagine that advanced civilisation has much to do with the possession 
of such qualities. I know of nothing that throws so much light upon
Indian character as their Folk-tales. 
 
CONTENTS 
PAGE 
Moowis, 1 
The Girl who Married the Pine-tree, 9 
A Legend of Manabozho, 11 
Pauppukkeewis, 15 
The Discovery of the Upper World, 33 
The Boy who Snared the Sun, 37 
The Maid in the Box, 41 
The Spirits and the Lovers, 45 
The Wonderful Rod, 54 
The Funeral Fire, 56 
The Legend of O-na-wut-a-qut-o, 63 
Manabozho in the Fish's Stomach, 69 
The Sun and the Moon, 72 
The Snail and the Beaver, 75 
The Strange Guests, 79 
Manabozho and his Toe, 88
The Girl who Became a Bird, 90 
The Undying Head, 92 
The Old Chippeway, 113 
Mukumik! Mukumik! Mukumik!, 116 
The Swing by the Lake, 119 
The Fire Plume, 123 
The Journey to the Island of Souls, 129 
Machinitou, the Evil Spirit, 134 
The Woman of Stone, 144 
The Maiden who Loved a Fish, 147 
The Lone Lightning, 151 
Aggo-dah-gauda, 154 
Piqua, 158 
The Evil Maker, 177 
Manabozho the Wolf, 179 
The Man-fish, 186 
 
MOOWIS. 
In a large village there lived a noted belle, or Ma-mon-dá-go-Kwa, who 
was the admiration of all the young hunters and warriors. She was 
particularly admired by a young man who, from his good figure and the 
care he took in his dress, was called the Beau-Man, or
Ma-mon-dá-gin-in-e. This young man had a friend and companion 
whom he made his confidant. 
"Come," said he one day, in a sportive mood, "let us go a-courting to 
her who is so handsome, perhaps she may fancy one of us." 
She would, however, listen to neither of them; and when the handsome 
young man rallied her on the coldness of her air, and made an effort to 
overcome her indifference, she repulsed him with the greatest contempt, 
and the young man retired confused and abashed. His sense of pride 
was deeply wounded, and he was the more piqued because he had been 
thus treated in the presence of others, and this affair had been noised 
about in the village, and became the talk of every lodge circle. He was, 
besides, a very sensitive man, and the incident so preyed upon him that 
he became moody and at last took to his bed. For days he would lie 
without uttering a word, with his eyes fixed on vacancy, and taking 
little or no food. From this state no efforts could rouse him. He felt 
abashed and dishonoured even in the presence of his own relatives, and 
no persuasions could induce him to rise, so that when the family 
prepared to take down the lodge to remove he still kept his bed, and 
they were compelled to lift it from above his head and leave him upon 
his skin couch. It was a time of general removal and breaking up of the 
camp, for it was only a winter hunting-camp, and as the season of the 
hunt was now over, and spring began to appear, his friends all moved 
off as by one impulse to the place of their summer village, and in a 
short time all were gone, and he was left alone. The last person to leave 
him was his boon companion and cousin, who had been, like    
    
		
	
	
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