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Hiawatha; or, Manabozho.

Paup-Puk-Keewiss.

Osseo, or the Son of the Evening Star.

Kwasind, or the Fearfully Strong Man.

The Jeebi, or Two Ghosts.

Iagoo.

Shawondasee.

Puck Wudj Ininees, or the Vanishing Little Men.

Pezhiu and Wabose, or the Lynx and Hare.

Peboan and Seegwun. An Allegory of Winter and Spring.

Mon-daw-min, or the Origin of Indian Corn.

Nezhik-e-wa-wa-sun, or the Lone Lightning.

The Ak Uk O Jeesh, or the Groundhog Family.

Opeechee, or the Origin of the Robin.

Shingebiss. An Allegory of Self-reliance.

The Star Family, or Celestial Sisters.

Ojeeg Annung, or the Summer-maker.

Chileeli, or the Red Lover.

Sheem, the Forsaken Boy or Wolf Brother.

Mishemokwa, or the War with the Gigantic Bear Wearing the Precious Prize of the Necklace of Wampum, or the Origin of the Small Black Bear.

The Red Swan.

Tau-wau-chee-hezkaw, or the White Feather.

Pauguk, and the Mythological Interpretation of Hiawatha.

Iëna, the Wanderer, or Magic Bundle.

Mishosha, or the Magician of Lake Superior.

Peeta Kway, the Foam-woman.

Pah-hah-undootah, the Red Head.

The White Stone Canoe.

Onaiazo, the Sky-walker. A Legend of a Visit to the Sun.

Bosh-kwa-dosh, or the Mastodon.

The Sun-catcher, or Boy Who Set a Snare for the Sun. A Myth of the Origin of the Dormouse.

Wa-wa-be-zo-win, or the Swing on the Pictured Rocks of Lake Superior.

Mukakee Mindemoea, or the Toad-woman.

Eroneniera, or an Indian Visit to the Great Spirit.

The Six Hawks, or Broken Wing.

Weeng, the Spirit of Sleep.

Addik Kum Maig, or the Origin of the White Fish.

Bokwewa, or the Humpback Magician.

Aggodagauda and His Daughter, or the Man with His Leg Tied Up.

Iosco; or, the Prairie Boys' Visit to the Sun and Moon.

The Enchanted Moccasins.

Leelinau. A Chippewa Tale.

Wild Notes of the Pibbigwun.

The Myth of Hiawatha and Other Oral Legends

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