The Algonquin Legends of New England, by Charles G. Leland, [1884], at sacred-texts.com
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INTRODUCTION | |
GLOOSKAP, THE DIVINITY. |
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Of Glooskap's Birth, and of his Brother Malsum, the Wolf | |
How Glooskap made the Elves and Fairies, and then Man of an Ash-Tree, and last of all the Beasts, and of his Coming at the Last Day | |
Of the Great Deeds which Glooskap did for Men; how he named the Animals, and who they were that formed his Family | |
How Win-pe, the Sorcerer, having stolen Glooskap's Family, was by him pursued. How Glooskap for a Merry Jest cheated the Whale. Of the Song of the Clams, and how the Whale smoked a Pipe | |
Of the Dreadful Deeds of the Evil Pitcher, who was both Man and Woman; how she fell in Love with Glooskap, and, being scorned, became his Enemy. Of the Toads and Porcupines, and the Awful Battle of the Giants | |
How the Story of Glooskap and Pook-jin-skwess, the Evil Pitcher, is told by the Passamaquoddy Indians | |
How Glooskap became friendly to the Loons, and made them his Messengers | |
How Glooskap made his Uncle Mikchich, the Turtle, into a Great Man, and got him a Wife. Of the Turtles' Eggs, and how Glooskap vanquished a Sorcerer by smoking Tobacco | |
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How Glooskap sailed through the Great Cavern of Darkness | |
Of the Great Works which Glooskap made in the Land | |
The Story of Glooskap as told in a few Words by a Woman of the Penobscots | |
How Glooskap, leaving the World, all the Animals mourned for him, and how, ere he departed, he gave Gifts to Men | |
How Glooskap had a Great Frolic with Kitpooseagunow, a Mighty Giant who caught a Whale | |
How Glooskap made a Magician of a Young Man, who aided another to win a Wife and do Wonderful Deeds | |
How a certain Wicked Witch sought to cajole the Great and Good Glooskap, and of her Punishment | |
Of other Men who went to Glooskap for Gifts | |
Of Glooskap and the three other Seekers | |
Of Glooskap and the Sinful Serpent | |
The Tale of Glooskap as told by another Indian, showing how the Toad and Porcupine lost their Noses | |
How Glooskap changed Certain Saucy Indians into Rattlesnakes | |
How Glooskap bound Wuchowsen, the Great Wind-Bird, and made all the Waters in the World stagnant | |
How Glooskap conquered the Great Bull-Frog, and in what Manner all the Pollywogs, Crabs, Leeches, and other Water Creatures were created | |
How the Lord of Men and Beasts strove with the Mighty Wasis, and was shamefully defeated | |
How the Great Glooskap fought the Giant Sorcerers at Saco, and turned them into Fish | |
How Glooskap went to England and France, and was the first to make America known to the Europeans | |
How Glooskap is making Arrows, and preparing for a Great Battle. The Twilight of the Indian Gods | |
How Glooskap found the Summer | |
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THE MERRY TALES OF LOX, THE MISCHIEF-MAKER. |
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The Surprising and Singular Adventures of two Water Fairies who were also Weasels, and how they each became the Bride of a Star. Including the Mysterious and Wonderful Works of Loa, the Great Indian Devil, who rose from the Dead | |
Of the Wolverine and the Wolves, or how Master Lox froze to Death | |
How Master Lox played a Trick on Mrs. Bear, who lost her Eyesight and had her Eyes opened | |
How Lox came to Grief by trying to catch a Salmon | |
How Master Lox, as a Raccoon, killed the Bear and the Black Cats, and performed other Notable Feats of Skill, all to his Great Discredit | |
How Lox deceived the Ducks, cheated the Chief, and beguiled the Bear | |
The Mischief-Maker. A Tradition of the Origin of the Mythology of the Senecas. A Lox Legend | |
How Lox told a Lie | |
THE AMAZING ADVENTURES OF MASTER RABBIT. |
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How Master Rabbit sought to rival Keeoony, the Otter | |
How Mahtigwess, the Rabbit, dined with the Woodpecker Girls, and was again humbled by trying to rival them | |
Of the Adventure with Mooin, the Bear; it being the Third and Last Time that Master Rabbit made a Fool of himself | |
Relating bow the Rabbit became Wise by being Original, and of the Terrible Tricks which he by Magic played Loup-Cervier, the Wicked Wild-Cat | |
How Master Rabbit went to a Wedding and won the Bride | |
flow Master Rabbit gave himself Airs | |
The Young Man who was saved by a Rabbit and a Fox | |
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THE CHENOO LEGENDS. |
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The Chenoo, or the Story of a Cannibal with an Icy Heart | |
The Story of the Great Chenoo, as told by the Passamaquoddies | |
The Girl-Chenoo | |
THUNDER STORIES. |
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Of the Girl who married Mount Katahdin, and how all the Indians brought about their own Ruin | |
How a Hunter visited the Thunder Spirits who dwell on Mount Katahdin | |
The Thunder and Lightning Men | |
Of the Woman who married the Thunder, and of their Boy | |
AT-O-SIS, THE SERPENT. |
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How Two Girls were changed to Water-Snakes, and of Two others that became Mermaids | |
Ne Hwas, the Mermaid | |
Of the Woman who loved a Serpent that lived in a Lake | |
The Mother of Serpents | |
Origin of the Black Snakes | |
THE PARTRIDGE. |
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The Adventures of the Great Hero Pulowech, or the Partridge | |
The Story of a Partridge and his Wonderful Wigwam | |
How the Partridge built Good Canoes for all the Birds, and a Bad One for Himself | |
The Mournful Mystery of the Partridge-Witch; setting forth how a Young Man died from Love | |
How one of the Partridge's Wives became a Sheldrake Duck, and why her Feet and Feathers are red | |
THE INVISIBLE ONE | |
STORY OF THE THREE STRONG MEN | |
THE WEEWILLMEKQ'. |
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How a Woman lost a Gun for Fear of the Weewillmekq'. | |
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Muggahmaht'adem, the Dance of Old Age, or the Magic of the Weewillmekq' | |
Another Version of the Dance of Old Age | |
TALES OF MAGIC. |
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M'téoulin, or Indian Magic | |
Story of the Beaver Trapper | |
How a Youth became a Magician | |
Of Old Joe, the M'téoulin | |
Of Governor Francis | |
How a Chief's Son taught his Friend Sorcery | |
Tilmilkoontaoo, or the Broken Wing | |
Fish-Hawk and Scapegrace | |
The Giant Magicians |