Title: A Native American Folk Tale
1The Scent of the Skunk
A Native American Folk Tale Retold by Bernice
Insley
Jill Johnson
Sarah Brown
Scott Steinhoff
2The skunk was once a larger animal than he is
now- he was as large as a hill. But he became
smaller and smaller and this caused him to worry.
"If I grow smaller and smaller," he said, "I
will lose my strength. Then how can I hunt, and
kill my game, and make my living?" And so
he thought and thought. "I know," he said. "I
will make a strong hunting medicine which will
give me skill even when I am not so large as
now."
3He hunted and hunted to find all the plants as he
could grasp in his hand, he took them home. He
ground them up very, very fine, like a powder.
Then, when this medicine was all prepared, he
placed it in a little pouch that he carried with
him wherever he went. Then he said, "I will test
my medicine against the biggest, strongest thing
I can find."
4He looked around, and there he saw a large oak
tree nothing could be bigger or stronger than
this tree, and decided to test his medicine
against it. He took some powder out of his pouch
- only a pinch of the powder was needed - and put
it in some water, and drank it. Then, to make
still more powerful medicine, he sang, "Who is
going out hunting, for I go out to hunt?"
5Then the skunk shot at the oak tree - not with an
arrow, but with this medicine, a foul-smelling
liquid - and the tree shrank away and died, and
looked as if it were burned. Nothing was left but
a pile of ashes. The hunting medicine made by
that skunk was the same as that the skunk carries
today.
6The End
7Story
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