The faithful lovers
The
following story will be special for each of you who want to know the real
meaning of love.
Hmm,
there once lived a chief’s daughter who had many admirers. All the young men in
the village wanted to have her for a wife and were all eager to fill her skin
bucket when she went to the brook for water.
There
was a young man in the village. He was a good hunter but he was poor and had a
mean family. He loved the maiden and wished he could marry her. So, one day
when she went for water, he threw his robe over her head while he whispered in
her ear :”will you marry me?”
For a long time the maiden acted as
if she hadn’t heard anything, but one day she whispered back telling that she
would be willing to marry him if he took a scalp.
So he
made a war party of seven, himself and six other young men. Before they
started, they sat down to smoke and rest beside a beautiful lake at the foot of
a green knoll that rose from its shore. The knoll was covered with green grass
and somehow as they looked at it they had a feeling that there was something
about it that was mysterious and uncanny.
One of
the lover’s friends was so curious about it that he ventured into the knoll.
Four of the young men followed. Having reached to the top of the knoll, all
five began to jump and stamp about in sport.
But, suddenly they stopped. The
knoll had begun to move toward the water. It was a gigantic turtle! The five
men cried our in alarm and tried to run, but it was too late! They cried; but
the others could be do nothing. In just a few moments, the wave had closed over
them.
The
other two men: the lover and his friend, went on, but with heavy heart. After
some days, they came to a river. Worn out with fatigue, the lover threw himself
down on the bank. Fortunately, the lover’s friend came to help him.
The
following day, his friend told him that he found a fish which he had cleaned
and asked him to eat the fish together. The lover said that if he ate the fish,
his friend had to promise to fetch him all the water that he could drink. When
they had eaten, the kettle was rinsed out and the lover’s friend brought it
back with full of water. The lover drank the water at a draught. Again his
friend filled the kettle at the river and again the lover drank it dry but still
asked for more water. The lover’s friend then took the lover to the river. When
the lover saw the river, he walked to the river, sprang in, and lying down in
the water with his head toward land, drank greedily.
Then, he called out his friend,. The friend came and was amazed to see
that the lover was now a fish from his feet to his middle. Sick at heart he ran
off a little away and threw himself upon the ground in grief. After a while, he
returned to find that the lover was now a fish up to his neck.
The friend went home and told his story. There was great mourning over
the death of the five young men and for the lost lover. In the river, the lover
had become a great fish and its fin was just above the surface. Canoes had to
be portaged at great labor around the obstruction.
Meanwhile, the chief’s daughter mourned for her lover as for a husband
and nobody could comfort her. Day by day, she sat inside her mother’s tepee
with her head covered with her robe, silent, working, and working. Whenever her
mother asked, the maiden did not reply.
The days lengthened into moons until a year had passed. And then the
maiden arose. She left her mother’s tepee with holding lots of things in her hands.
There were three pairs of moccasins, three pairs of leggings, three belts,
three shirts, three head dresses with beautiful feath-ers, and sweet smelling
tobacco.
One day she had a new canoe made. Then, the next morning she stepped
into the canoe and floated slowly down the river toward the great fish. Her
canoe came and stopped to the place where the great fin arose. One by one she
laid her present on the fish’s back, scattering the feathers and tobacco over
his broad spine.
“oh, fish,” she cried, “oh,
fish, you who were my lover, i shall not forget you. Because you were lost for
love of me, i shall never marry. All my life i shall remain a widow. Take these
presents. And now leave the river, and let the waters run free, so my people
may once more descend in their canoes.” Slowly the great fish sank, his broad
fin disappeared and the waters of the St. Croix (Stillwater) were free.
(Adapted from: Encarta
Reference Library,2005)
4 komentar:
makasih bos, buat tugas numpang copas ya. makasih
ok. sama-sama bro.
semoga bermanfaat
kesimpulannya tolong, buatkan ringkasan ceritanya dong.. Pentingg
Sorry kak baru baca komentarnya :)
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