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One time there were living together a man and his wife.
They had a young child. The woman died. The man was very sad,
and mourned for his wife.
One night he took the child in his arms, and went out from
the village to the place where his wife was buried, stood over
the grave, and mourned for his wife. The little child was very
helpless and cried all the time. The man's heart was sick with
grief and loneliness. Late in the night he fell asleep, fainting
and worn out with sorrow. After a while he awoke, and when he
looked up, there was a form standing by him.
The form standing there was the one who had died. She spoke
to her husband, and said, "You are very unhappy here. There
is a place to go where we would not be unhappy. Where I have
been, nothing bad happens to one. Here, you never know what evil
will come to you. You and the child had better come to me."
The man did not want to die. He said to her, "No, it
will be better if you can come back to us. We love you. If you
were with us we would be unhappy no longer."
For a long time they discussed this, to decide which one should
go to the other. At length the man by his persuasions overcame
her, and the woman agreed to come back. She said to the man,
"If l am to come back you must do exactly as I tell you
for four nights. For four days the curtain must remain let down
before my sleeping place. It must not be raised. No one must
look behind it."
The man did as he had been told, and after four days had passed
the curtain was lifted, and the woman came out from behind it.
Then they all saw her, first her relations, and afterward the
whole tribe. Her husband and her child were very glad, and they
lived happily together.
A long time after this, the man took another wife. The first
wife was always pleasant and good-natured, but the new one was
bad-tempered, and after some time she grew jealous of the first
woman, and quarreled with her. At length, one day the last married
became angry with the other, and called her bad names, and finally
said to her, "You ought not to be here. You are nothing
but a ghost anyway."
That night when the man went to bed, he lay down, as was his
custom, by the side of his first wife. During the night he awoke
and found that his wife had disappeared. She was seen no more.
The next night after this happened, the man and the child both
died in sleep. The wife had called them to her. They had gone
to that place where there is a living.
This convinced everybody that there is a hereafter.
Related products:
Pawnee Hero Stories and Folktales by George
Bird Grinnell. Buy it new at Amazon.com or search for used copies at Abebooks.
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