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In his shadow he saw what he had been. It was a thorn bush

In his shadow he saw what he had been. It was a thorn bush.jpg The Hunting CampThumbnailsSuddenly the knoll began to shakeThe Hunting CampThumbnailsSuddenly the knoll began to shakeThe Hunting CampThumbnailsSuddenly the knoll began to shakeThe Hunting CampThumbnailsSuddenly the knoll began to shakeThe Hunting CampThumbnailsSuddenly the knoll began to shake

“A Dakota Indian had married a Hidatsa woman, and dwelt with our tribe. He was a good man, but he had a sharp tongue. He often got angry and said bitter words to his wife. When his anger had gone, he felt sorry for his words. ‘I do not know why I have such a sharp tongue,’ he would say.


“One day, when hunting with some Hidatsas, he came near the magic lake. ‘I am going to see what I was before I became a babe,’ he told the others. In the morning he went to the lake, leaned over and looked. In his shadow he saw what he had been. It was a thorn bush.

“With heavy heart, he came back to camp. ‘Now I know why I have a sharp tongue,’ he cried. ‘It is because I was a thorn bush. All my life I shall speak sharp words, like thorns.’”