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As retold by Marie L. McLaughlin in "Myths and
Legends of the Sioux" in 1913
The Raccoon
and the Crawfish
Sharp and cunning is
the raccoon, say the Indians, by whom he is named Spotted
Face.
A crawfish one evening
wandered along a river bank, looking for something dead
to feast upon. A raccoon was also out looking for
something to eat. He spied the crawfish and formed a plan
to catch him.
He lay down on the
bank and feigned to be dead. By and by the crawfish came
near by.
"Ho," he
thought, "here is a feast indeed; but is he really
dead. I will go near and pinch him with my claws and find
out."
So he went near and
pinched the raccoon on the nose and then on his soft
paws. The raccoon never moved. The crawfish then pinched
him on the ribs and tickled him so that the raccoon could
hardly keep from laughing. The crawfish at last left him.
"The raccoon is
surely dead," he thought. And he hurried back to the
crawfish village and reported his find to the chief.
All the villagers were
called to go down to the feast. The chief bade the
warriors and young men to paint their faces and dress in
their gayest for a dance.
So they marched in a
long line, first the warriors, with their weapons in
hand, then the women with their babies and children, to
the place where the raccoon lay.
They formed a great
circle about him and danced, singing...
"We shall have a
great feast on the spotted-faced beast, with soft smooth
paws!"
"He is dead! He
is dead! We shall dance!"
"We shall have a
good time We shall feast on his flesh."
But as they danced,
the raccoon suddenly sprang to his feet saying, "Who
is that you say you are going to eat_ He has a spotted
face, has he_ He has soft, smooth paws, has he_ I'll
break your ugly backs. I'll break your rough bones. I'll
crunch your ugly, rough paws."
And he rushed among
the crawfish, killing them by scores. The crawfish
warriors fought bravely and the women ran screaming, all
to no purpose.
They did not feast on
the raccoon; the raccoon feasted on them!
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