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Longfellow Henry Wadsworth
«The Song of Hiawatha»

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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 visionReeled 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 encampmentOf 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 suddenWar-cry of the Little People.And he sideways swayed and tumbled,Sideways fell into the river,Plunged beneath the sluggish waterHeadlong, 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 ManLingered long among the people,And whenever through the forestRaged 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!"

XIX



The Ghosts




Never stoops the soaring vultureOn his quarry in the desert,On the sick or wounded bison,But another vulture, watchingFrom 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 othersFollow, follow, gathering flock-wiseRound 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 CreatorWith his hand had smoothed them over.Through the forest, wide and wailing,Roamed the hunter on his snow-shoes;In
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