قراءة كتاب Two Indian Children of Long Ago
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with fruit join her, and together they walk the trail that leads back to the camp.
Nokomis is watching for the baby. She lifts the cradle and hangs it to the lodge pole. The little one is restless. She turns her head from side to side, her black eyes shining.
Then the grandmother sings the owl song in which Indian babies delight:
Who is this, who is this,
Giving light, light bringing
To the roof of my lodge?"
The singer changes her voice to imitate a little screech owl and answers:
Coming
Down! down! down!"
As she sings, she springs toward the baby and down goes the little head. How the papoose laughs and crows! Again Nokomis sings:
To the roof of my lodge?
It is I, hither swinging—
Dodge, baby, dodge."
Over and over the lullaby is sung, now softer and now slower. The eyelids droop, and the little one is quiet.
NOKOMIS TELLS A STORY
Good Bird had prepared the evening meal, but no one came to eat it. Her husband, Fleet Deer, was late in returning from the hunt, and her little son was still shouting and running with his boy playmates.
The tired baby slept, and the two women sat outside the wigwam in the warm June evening.
"Now that I have a little daughter, I must learn all your stories, Nokomis," said Good Bird. "Suppose you tell one while we wait."
"I heard a new one last moon," answered Nokomis. "Our village story-teller has traveled far from our camp. He visited another tribe and heard all their stories. I will tell you the tale he told about the first strawberries:
"In the very earliest times a young girl became so angry one day that she ran away from home. Her family followed her, calling and grieving; but she would not answer their calls, nor even turn her head.
"The great sun looked down with pity from the sky and tried to settle the quarrel. First he caused a patch of ripe blueberries to grow in her path.
"The girl pushed her way through the low bushes without stooping to pick a berry.
"Further on the sun made juicy blackberries grow by the trail, but the runaway paid no attention to them.
"Then low trees laden with the purple June berry tempted her, but still she hurried on.
"Every kind of berry that the sun had ever helped to grow, he placed in her path to cause delay, but without success.
"The girl still pressed on until she saw clusters of large ripe strawberries growing in the grass at her feet.
"She stooped to pick and to eat. Then she turned and saw that she was followed.
"Forgetting her anger, she gathered the clusters of ripe, red berries and started back along the path to share them with her family.
"Then she went home as if nothing had ever happened!"
THE FIREFLY DANCE
It is a summer evening. There is no moon, and the stars twinkle brightly in the sky. A half circle of Indian lodges fronts a small lake. Wide meadows slope to its shores.
All the air is alive with lights, twinkling, whirling, sparkling. Thousands of fireflies are swarming above the grass.
The meadow is full of Indian boys and girls, little and big, dancing the firefly dance. Advancing and retreating, turning and twisting, bowing and whirling, they imitate the moving lights about them and above them.
In front of the lodges sit the warriors and the squaws looking on.
Good Bird is watching every move of her son. He is one of the most active dancers on the field.
"Look, Nokomis!" she says, "No boy is straighter than your grandson, and there is no better dancer."
Fleet Deer says nothing, but he is thinking of the time when his son will take part in the war dance of his tribe.
Little White Cloud stands by her mother. She has known three winters and is now a chubby, pretty little Indian girl.
Suddenly she begins to imitate her brother. She throws out her tiny brown arms, turns round and round, jumps and bows, while Nokomis and Good Bird shout with laughter.
Listen! the children are singing. What do they say? It is the song of the fireflies that we hear.
Nokomis has chanted the same words and melody for many a lullaby, and she keeps time, singing the same song:
Flitting white fire insect,
Waving white fire bug,
Give me light before I go to bed,
Give me light before I go to sleep!
Come, little dancing white fire bug,
Come, little flitting white fire beast,
Light me with your bright white flame,
Light me with your little candle."
SWIFT ELK, THE INDIAN BOY
Four years have passed since the summer evening when Good Bird watched her children in the firefly dance. Her son, Swift Elk, is now a tall, straight lad of eleven winters. His sister, four years younger, is a sturdy little girl, already able to help her mother in many ways.
The boy is the pride of the lodge. From his earliest babyhood he has been trained to be strong and fearless.
"Lay him very straight," his father used to say when the baby boy was placed on his cradle board. "Do not make his bed too soft. My son must grow tall and strong, for he will sometime be a great warrior."
Since he could first walk he has gone with his father each day to the lake to take an early morning bath. Like all Indians, he learned to swim when he was very small, and he loves to splash and dive and play in the water.
Do you suppose that Swift Elk dresses himself after his bath? He does not think clothing at all necessary except in winter.
Does he help his mother in her work about the lodge? Never! "A boy does not do squaw's work," he says. "A boy must learn to hunt and shoot."
Is he not made to mind? Is he never punished? Oh, no; he will be a great warrior some day, and his father says he ought not to be afraid of any one. And so he lives the wild, free life of the Indian boy. He spends his day in play, with no school, no lessons, and no work to do.
When the father is at home he teaches the boy to notice very carefully everything he sees. He must learn the names of plants and birds. He must know the habits of animals and how to