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ORIGIN OF THE CROW.
  
  
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228

ORIGIN OF THE CROW.

Weary and worn old Tar-yon-ee
Was slumbering, in the days of yore,
Under a leafy white-wood tree
That grew beside his cabin-door.
Giving the wood a deeper brown,
A raven, huge and black, came down,
And, hungering for human prey,
In his talons bore the chief away.
While sailed to a distant mountain-peak
With bleeding prize that cruel bird,
A rush of wings—a dismal shriek
His tribe, with horror voiceless, heard:
Soon finished was its dread repast,
And up the monster hurried fast,
Leaving, to whiten in the wind,
A pile of naked bones behind.
Heh-nù—dark Thunder-God—espied
The creature flying to its nest
Far in those regions, blue and wide,
That over stormy Cloud-land rest:—
On his resounding bow he laid
A shaft of ragged lightning made
While the gorged monster, at the sight,
Clapped pinions for a swifter flight.
Outstretched was its long neck in vain,
Soaring through air with frightful cries
To reach its azure perch again
On wall that fenced remoter skies;

229

O'ertaken by a missile dire
Scorched was each plume by hissing fire,
And redly the dismembered form
Was showered to earth in atoms warm.
A hunter on the hills, in fear,
Watched the torn fragments as they fell,
Forgetful of a wounded deer
That limped for shelter to the dell;
But wilder terror thrilled his heart
When shape took each disrupted part,
And darkly, from the ground, uprose,
Croaking their joy, a flock of crows.
Beneath a cedar, tall and green,
The bones of Tar-yon-ee were laid;
His mountain-tomb may yet be seen
Within its ever-during shade:
Ill-omened ravens blacken oft
Its branches towering aloft,
And load, with clamors loud, the air
As if they held a council there.