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As retold by Marie L. McLaughlin in "Myths and
Legends of the Sioux" in 1913
The Artichoke
and the Muskrat
On the shore of a lake
stood an artichoke with its green leaves waving in the
sun. Very proud of itself it was, and well satisfiedpar
with the world.
In the lake below
lived a muskrat in his tepee, and in the evening as the
sun set he would come out upon the shore and wander over
the bank.
One evening he came
near the place where the artichoke stood.
"Ho,
friend," he said, "you seem rather proud of
yourself. Who are you_"
"I am the
artichoke," answered the other, "and I have
many handsome cousins. But who are you_"
"I am the
muskrat, and I, too, belong to a large family. I live in
the water. I don't stand all day in one place like a
stone."
"If I stand in
one place all day," retorted the artichoke, "at
least I don't swim around in stagnant water, and build my
lodge in the mud."
"You are jealous
of my fine fur," sneered the muskrat. "I may
build my lodge in the mud, but I always have a clean
coat. But you are half buried in the ground, and when men
dig you up, you are never clean."
"And your fine
coat always smells of musk," jeered the artichoke.
"That is
true," said the muskrat. "But men think well of
me, nevertheless. They trap me for the fine sinew in my
tail; and handsome young women bite off my tail with
their white teeth and make it into thread."
"That's
nothing," laughed the artichoke. "Handsome
young warriors, painted and splendid with feathers, dig
me up, brush me off with their shapely hands and eat me
without even taking the trouble to wash me off."
Click here to continue with
"The Rabbit and the Bear With the Flint Body"
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