The Feast of the Virgins and Other Poems by Hanford Lennox Gordon
page 30 of 448 (06%)
page 30 of 448 (06%)
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"Mah-pí-ya Dúta, O listen to me! Revenge is swift and revenge is strong, And sweet as the hive in the hollow tree; The proud Red Cloud will avenge his wrong. Let the brave be patient, it is not long Till the leaves be green on the maple tree, And the Feast of the Virgins is then to be-- The Feast of the Virgins is then to be!" Proudly she turned from the silent brave, And went her way; but the warrior's eyes-- They flashed with the flame of a sudden fire, Like the lights that gleam in the Sacred Cave[38], When the black night covers the autumn skies, And the stars from their welkin watch retire. Three nights he tarried--the brave Chaskè; Winged were the hours and they flitted away; On the wings of _Wakândee_[39] they silently flew, For Wiwâstè had found her a way to woo. Ah little he cared for the bison-chase, For the red lilies bloomed on the fair maid's face; Ah little he cared for the winds that blew, For Wiwâstè had found her a way to woo. Brown-bosomed she sat on her fox-robe dark, Her ear to the tales of the brave inclined, Or tripped from the _tee_ like the song of a lark, And gathered her hair from the wanton wind. Ah little he thought of the leagues of snow |
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