How the Chestnut Burrs Became
In
the woods of Poconic there once roamed a very
discontented Porcupine. He was forever fretting, He
complained that everything was wrong, till it was
perfectly scandalous and the Great Spirit, getting
tired of his grumbling, said:
"You and the world I have made don't seem to fit. One
or the other must be wrong. It is easier to change you.
You don't like the trees, you are unhappy on the
ground, and think everything is upside down, so I'll
turn you inside out and put you in the water.
This was the origin of the Shad.
After Manitou had turned the old Porcupine into a Shad
the young ones missed their mother and crawled up into
a high tree to look for her coming. Manitou happened to
pass that way and they all chattered their teeth at
him, thinking themselves safe. They were not wicked,
only ill-trained, some of them, indeed, were at heart
quite good, but, oh, so ill-trained, and they chattered
and groaned as Alanitou came nearer. Remembering then
that he had taken their mother from them, he said, "You
look very well up there, you little Porkys, so you had
better stay there for always, and be part of the tree."
This was the origin of the chestnut burrs. They hang
like a lot of little porcupines on the tree-crotches.
They are spiny, and dangerous, utterly without manners
and yet most of them have a good little heart inside.
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