The Feast of the Virgins and Other Poems by Hanford Lennox Gordon
page 41 of 448 (09%)
page 41 of 448 (09%)
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Are red with blood and bitter with tears.
Gone--brothers, and daughters, and wife--all gone That are kin to Wakâwa--but one--but one-- Wakínyan Tânka--undutiful son! And he estranged from his father's _tee_, Will never return till the chief shall die. And what cares he for his father's grief? He will smile at my death--it will make him chief. Woe burns in my bosom. Ho, warriors--Ho! Raise the song of red war; for your chief must go To drown his grief in the blood of the foe! I shall fall. Raise my mound on the sacred hill. Let my warriors the wish of their chief fulfill; For my fathers sleep in the sacred ground. The Autumn blasts o'er Wakâwa's mound Will chase the hair of the thistles' head, And the bare-armed oak o'er the silent dead, When the whirling snows from the north descend, Will wail and moan in the midnight wind. In the famine of winter the wolf will prowl, And scratch the snow from the heap of stones, And sit in the gathering storm and howl, On the frozen mound, for Wakâwa's bones. But the years that are gone shall return again, As the robin returns and the whippowil, When my warriors stand on the sacred hill And remember the deeds of their brave chief slain." Beneath the glow of the Virgin Star They raised the song of the red war-dance. |
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