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Flint
and Feather
by
Emily Pauline Johnson
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THE
INDIAN CORN PLANTER
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He needs
must leave the trapping and the chase,
For mating game his arrows
ne’er despoil,
And from the hunter’s heaven turn his face,
To wring some promise from
the dormant soil.
He needs must leave the lodge that wintered him,
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The
enervating fires, the blanket bed—
The women’s dulcet voices, for the grim
Realities of labouring for
bread.
So goes he forth beneath the planter’s moon
With sack of seed that pledges
large increase,
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His
simple pagan faith knows night and noon,
Heat, cold, seedtime and
harvest shall not cease.
And yielding to his needs, this honest sod,
Brown as the hand that tills
it, moist with rain,
Teeming with ripe fulfilment, true as God,
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| With
fostering richness, mothers every grain. [Page
137] |
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