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could only be the wife of one, they agreed that he should have her who was most successful in the next day's hunt. Accordingly, the next day, they each took different ways, and hunted till the sun went down, when they met at the lodge. Nine of the hunters had found nothing, but the youngest brought home a deer, so the woman was given to him for his wife. The hunter had not been married more than a year when he was seized with sickness and died. Then the next brother took the girl for his wife. Shortly after he died also, and the woman married the next brother. In a short time all the brothers died save the eldest, and he married the girl. She did not, however, love him, for he was of a churlish disposition, and one day it came into the woman's head that she would leave him and see what fortune she would meet with in the world. So she went, taking only a dog with her, and travelled all day. She went on and on, but towards evening she heard some one coming after her who, she imagined, must be her husband. In great fear she knew not which way to turn, when she perceived a hole in the ground before her. There she thought she might hide herself, and entering it with her dog she suddenly found herself going lower and lower, until she passed through the earth and came up on the other side. Near to her there was a lake, and a man fishing in it. "My grandfather," cried the woman, "I am pursued by a spirit." "Leave me," cried Manabozho, for it was he, "leave me. Let me be quiet." The woman still begged him to protect her, and Manabozho at length said-- "Go that way, and you shall be safe." Hardly had she disappeared when the husband, who had discovered the hole by which his wife had descended, came on the scene. "Tell me," said he to Manabozho, "where has the woman gone?" "Leave me," cried Manabozho, "don't trouble me." "Tell me," said the man, "where is the woman?" Manabozho was silent, and the husband, at last getting angry, abused him with all his might. "The woman went that way," said Manabozho at last. "Run after her, but you shall never catch her, and you shall be called Gizhigooke (day sun), and the woman shall be called Tibikgizis (night sun)." So the man went on running after his wife to the west, but he has never caught her, and he pursues her to this day. THE SNAIL AND THE BEAVER. The father of the Osage nation was a snail. It was when the earth was young and little. It was before
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