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THE BOY WHO MIGHT NOT GO WEST.

In the woods of North America there lived an Indian boy and his grandmother. Whenever he went out to play she said to "him: "Be sure to go to the east; never go west." The boy grew up, and learned to use his bow and arrows. Every time he went hunting she said the same thing to him, "Never go west." "Why may I not go west?" he asked. "Other bovs go east and west, as their heart or the chase leads them." Still she would give him no reason, and only cried, "Never go west." At last he plagued her into telling him the truth. In the West there lived a mysterious being who had hated the boy'a father and grandfather before him. If the boy fell into his power there would be no mercy. "And without you," said the old woman, "I should die of grief." Next morning he got up while hie grandmother elept and went westward. When he had been walking for some hours he came to a lake fringed with gloomy trees. He lay down to drink, and suddenly a great voice cried: "How daTe you come west, you pnnny, you red doll!"

The boy could see no one anywhere. "Go home and see what I shall do with your grandmother," called the voice from nowhere. "I will tear down her hut with a hurricane.!" "That will be a blessing," said the boy. "It -will gave me the trouble of going to fetch firewood." "We shall see!" roared the voice. The boy returned. Ab so on as he was out of eight of the lake he ran like a deer. As he drew near his grand-mother's hut the leaves began to whistle with the hurricane's approach. He dragged the old woman out, and they crouched for shelter in a cave near by, while the tempest burst upon the forest, tearing up trees, and crushing their hut as if it were a handful of twigs. "This is not fair fighting," said the boy. Next morning he built his grandmother a new hut, and then he went east, to a man who practised magic in the hills. There, for a bearskin, an embroidered belt, and a handsome pipe, the boy bought a little pebble. Once more he went west. Am he approached the lake a voice screamed: "What, have you dared to come back? I shall " Before it could finish its threats the boy called: "Come out and show yourself, and fight me." "Do you think I will obey a snippet like you?" howled the voice. "I will send a forest fire to burn your grandmother to a cinder!" Then the boy threw his pebble into the lake. Instantly the waters began to boil like a kettle. The boy snatched up his bow and kept a eharp watch. He saw a great frog crawl out on ,the opposite bank. The next moment an arrow pierced che creature's body; it gave a shrill human cry, and then the voice in the lake was never heard again.

Thenceforward the youth and his grandmother lived in peace and prosperity, wa-king to all points of the compass at their own free will.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AS19281103.2.167.9

Bibliographic details

Auckland Star, Volume LIX, Issue 261, 3 November 1928, Page 23 (Supplement)

Word Count
538

THE BOY WHO MIGHT NOT GO WEST. Auckland Star, Volume LIX, Issue 261, 3 November 1928, Page 23 (Supplement)

THE BOY WHO MIGHT NOT GO WEST. Auckland Star, Volume LIX, Issue 261, 3 November 1928, Page 23 (Supplement)