The forgotten ear of corn |
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An Arikara woman was once gathering corn from the
field to store away for winter use. She passed from stalk to
stalk,
tearing off the ears and dropping them into her folded robe.
When all
was gathered she started to go, when she heard a faint voice,
like a
child's, weeping and calling:
"Oh, do not leave me! Do not go away without me."
The woman was astonished. "What child can that be?" she asked
herself.
"What babe can be lost in the cornfield?"
She set down her robe in which she had tied up her corn, and
went back
to search; but she found nothing.
As she started away she heard the voice again:
"Oh, do not leave me. Do not go away without me."
She searched for a long time. At last in one corner of the
field,
hidden under the leaves of the stalks, she found one little
ear of
corn. This it was that had been crying, and this is why all
Indian
women have since garnered their corn crop very carefully, so
that the
succulent food product should not even to the last small
nubbin be
neglected or wasted, and thus displease the Great Mystery.
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Myth
of the Sioux - free of traditional myth of the native American
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