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Then he arose and took my baby tenderly in his arms

Then he arose and took my baby tenderly in his arms.jpg The day was windy and cold, and the bull skin kept the chill air from me and my babeThumbnailsHe was crying lustily when my husband drew him outThe day was windy and cold, and the bull skin kept the chill air from me and my babeThumbnailsHe was crying lustily when my husband drew him outThe day was windy and cold, and the bull skin kept the chill air from me and my babeThumbnailsHe was crying lustily when my husband drew him outThe day was windy and cold, and the bull skin kept the chill air from me and my babeThumbnailsHe was crying lustily when my husband drew him outThe day was windy and cold, and the bull skin kept the chill air from me and my babeThumbnailsHe was crying lustily when my husband drew him outThe day was windy and cold, and the bull skin kept the chill air from me and my babeThumbnailsHe was crying lustily when my husband drew him out
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My little son was ten days old the second day we were in winter camp; and, though we were hardly well settled, I found time to make ready his naming feast. Having filled a wooden bowl with venison and boiled dried green 170corn—foods I knew well were to his liking—I set it before Small Ankle.

“I want you to name your grandson,” I said to him.


Small Ankle ate, thinking the while what name he should give my son. Then he arose and took my baby tenderly in his arms, saying, “I name him Tsakahka Sukkee, Good Bird.” Small Ankle’s gods were birds, and the name was a kind of prayer that they remember and help my little son.

Author
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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