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"From the First Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology, Smithsonian Institution"

|[T][/u]cpa[c]a[n]+,|
burnt to nothing very I am | -- | said, they | Grandchild!! |
say.
|i[n]'na[c]i[~n]g[)e]'-qti-ma[n]'|eska[n]'+,
| burnt to nothing very I am | I think,
for me
[/a]-biam[/a].|Ceta[n]'.
said, they say.| So far.

NOTES.
581, 1. Mactci[~n]ge, the Rabbit, or Si[c]e-maka[n] (meaning uncertain),
is the hero of numerous myths of several tribes. He is the deliverer of
mankind from different tyrants. One of his opponents is Ictinike, the
maker of this world, according to the Iowas. The Rabbit's grandmother
is Mother Earth, who calls mankind her children.
581, 7. a[c]ai te a[n]. The conclusion of this sentence seems odd to the
collector, but its translation given with this myth is that furnished
by the Indian informant.
581, 12. ha[n]+ega[n]tc[)e]-qtci, "ve--ry early in the morning." The
prolongation of the first syllable adds to the force of the adverb
"qtci," _very_.
582, 3. hebe ihe a[c]e-hna[n]-biama. The Rabbit tried to obey the Sun;
but each time that he attempted it, he was so much afraid of him that
he passed by a little to one side.


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