Part 50 (1/2)
A pit she Mon e doag (The high G.o.ds) Ne mud wa wa (My praise) Wa we ne goag. (They sound.)
7. He is content and willing to go.
Ka gait', ne min wain' dum (Full happy--I) Ne bun ai k.u.m ig (To lie on the battle-field) Tshe ba be wish e naun. (Over the enemy's line.)
DEATH-SONG--”A' be tuh ge zhig.”
(From the Algonquin of Schoolcraft.)
BY C.F. HOFFMAN.
I.
Under the hollow sky, Stretched on the Prairie lone, Centre of glory, I Bleeding, disdain to groan, But like a battle cry Peal forth my thunder moan, _Baim-wa wa!_
II.
Star--Morning-Star, whose ray Still with the dawn I see, Quenchless through half the day Gazing thou seest me-- Yon birds of carnage, they Fright not my gaze from thee!
_Baim-wa-wa!_
III.
Bird, in thine airy rings Over the foeman's line, Why do thy flapping wings Nearer me thus incline?
Blood of the Dauntless brings Courage, oh Bird to thine!
_Baim-wa-wa!_
Hark to those Spirit-notes!
Ye high Heroes divine, Hymned from your G.o.d-like throats That Song of Praise is mine!
Mine, whose grave-pennon floats Over the foeman's line!
_Baim-wa-wa!_
WAR SONG.
Where are my foes? say, warriors, where? No forest is so black, That it can hide from my quick eye, the vestige of their track: There is no lake so boundless, no path where man may go, Can s.h.i.+eld them from my sharp pursuit, or save them from my blow.
The winds that whisper in the trees, the clouds that spot the sky, Impart a soft intelligence, to show me where they lie, The very birds that sail the air, and scream as on they go, Give me a clue my course to tread, and lead me to the foe.
The sun, at dawn, lifts up his head, to guide me on my way, The moon, at night, looks softly down, and cheers me with her ray.
The war-crowned stars, those beaming lights, my spirit casts at night Direct me as I thread the maze, and lead me to the fight.
In sacred dreams within my lodge, while resting on the land, Bright omens of success arise, and nerve my warlike hand.
Where'er I turn, where'er I go, there is a whispering sound, That tells me I shall crush the foe, and drive him from my ground.
The beaming WEST invites me on, with smiles of vermil hue, And clouds of promise fill the sky, and deck its heavenly blue, There is no breeze--there is no sign, in ocean, earth or sky, That does not swell my breast with hope, or animate my eye.
If to the stormy beach I go, where heavy tempests play.
They tell me but, how warriors brave, should conquer in the fray.