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Sing louder cousin, sing louder, that I may hear you

Sing louder cousin, sing louder, that I may hear you.jpg On his back I saw a handsome otter-skin quiver, full of arrowsMiniaturesI saw that the black-bear skin was bound to one of the posts at the entranceOn his back I saw a handsome otter-skin quiver, full of arrowsMiniaturesI saw that the black-bear skin was bound to one of the posts at the entranceOn his back I saw a handsome otter-skin quiver, full of arrowsMiniaturesI saw that the black-bear skin was bound to one of the posts at the entranceOn his back I saw a handsome otter-skin quiver, full of arrowsMiniaturesI saw that the black-bear skin was bound to one of the posts at the entranceOn his back I saw a handsome otter-skin quiver, full of arrowsMiniaturesI saw that the black-bear skin was bound to one of the posts at the entranceOn his back I saw a handsome otter-skin quiver, full of arrowsMiniaturesI saw that the black-bear skin was bound to one of the posts at the entrance
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But it is never good for a man not to know his faults, and so we let one’s clan cousins tease him 68for any fault he had. Especially was this teasing common between young men and young women. Thus a young man might be unlucky in war. As he passed the fields where the village women hoed their corn, he would hear some mischievous girl, his clan cousin, singing a song taunting him for his ill success. Were any one else to do this, the young man would be ready to fight; but, seeing that the singer was his clan cousin, he would laugh and call out, “Sing louder cousin, sing louder, that I may hear you.”

Auteur
Waheenee--An Indian Girl's Story
By Waheenee
as told to Gilbert Livingstone Wilson
Illustrator: Frederick N. Wilson
Published in 1921
Available from gutenberg.org
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