The Myth of Hiawatha: and Other Oral Legends, Mythologic and Allegoric, of the North American Indians
Henry R. Schoolcraft
Paperback
(CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, June 12, 2015)
TO PROF. HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW. SIR:— Permit me to dedicate to you, this volume of Indian myths and legends, derived from the story-telling circle of the native wigwams. That they indicate the possession, by the Vesperic tribes, of mental resources of a very characteristic kind—furnishing, in fact, a new point from which to judge the race, and to excite intellectual sympathies, you have most felicitously shown in your poem of Hiawatha. Not only so, but you have demonstrated, by this pleasing series of pictures of Indian life, sentiment, and invention, that the theme of the native lore reveals one of the true sources of our literary independence. Greece and Rome, England and Italy, have so long furnished, if they have not exhausted, the field of poetic culture, that it is, at least, refreshing to find both in theme and metre, something new. Very truly yours, HENRY R. SCHOOLCRAFT CONTENTS Hiawatha; or, Manabozho Paup-puk-keewiss Osseo; or, the Son of the Evening Star Kwasind; or, the fearfully Strong Man The Jeebi; or, Two Ghosts Iagoo Shawondasee Puck Wudj Ininees; or, the Vanishing Little Men Pezhiu and Wabose; or, the Lynx and Hare Peboan and Seegwun. An Allegory of Winter and Spring Mon-daw-min; or, the Origin of Indian Corn Nezhik-e-wa-wa-sun; or, the Lone Lightning The Ak Uk O Jeesh; or, the Groundhog Family Opeechee; or, the Origin of the Robin Shingebiss. An Allegory of Self-reliance The Star Family; or, the Celestial Sisters Ojeeg Annung; or, the Summer-Maker Chileeli; or, the Red Lover Sheem, the forsaken Boy, or Wolf Brother Mishemokwa; or, the War with the Gigantic Bear wearing the precious prize of the Necklace of Wampum, or the Origin of the Small Black Bear The Red Swan Tau-wau-chee-hezkaw; or, the White Feather Pauguk, and the mythological interpretation of Hiawatha Iëna, the Wanderer; or, Magic Bundle Mishosha; or, the Magician of Lake Superior Peeta Kway, the Foam-Woman Pah-hah-undootah, the Red Head The White Stone Canoe Onaiazo, the Sky-Walker. A Legend of a Visit to the Sun Bosh-kwa-dosh; or, the Mastodon The Sun-Catcher; or, the Boy who set a Snare for the Sun. A Myth of the Origin of the Dormouse Wa-wa-be-zo-win; or, the Swing on the Pictured Rocks of Lake Superior Mukakee Mindemoea; or, the Toad-Woman Eroneniera; or, an Indian Visit to the Great Spirit The Six Hawks; or, Broken Wing Weeng, the Spirit of Sleep Addik Kum Maig; or, the Origin of the White Fish Bokwewa; or, the Humpback Magician Aggodagauda and his Daughter; or, the Man with his Leg tied up Iosco; or, the Prairie Boys' Visit to the Sun and Moon The Enchanted Moccasins Leelinau. A Chippewa Tale Wild Notes of the Pibbigwun