The Four Winds Poem Rhyme Scheme and Analysis
Rhyme Scheme: ABCDEAFDGAAAAHAIJIAA DKKAALAMNGOICAPQCAAI QACRJQSJTTASCJLUQMGO QJGAAASAEJQQAEQQEQEA SLQLAVRQWJQIXIALIQXL JALXAXXYIAQLVQAQJLAA DQJDALLLLAAAXDXXLXAX XLALAAXJJXAAJIAAXALV AXXLXZXLLXXVGXXXJIYL LXXJAILLXJXXAVAALA2A XJLGAAJJJIXAJXALJJXQ AXJJLXAXQJAB2AXX| Honor be to Mudjekeewis | A |
| Cried the warriors cried the old men | B |
| When he came in triumph homeward | C |
| With the sacred Belt of Wampum | D |
| From the regions of the North Wind | E |
| From the kingdom of Wabasso | A |
| From the land of the White Rabbit | F |
| He had stolen the Belt of Wampum | D |
| From the neck of Mishe Mokwa | G |
| From the Great Bear of the mountains | A |
| From the terror of the nations | A |
| As he lay asleep and cumbrous | A |
| On the summit of the mountains | A |
| Like a rock with mosses on it | H |
| Spotted brown and gray with mosses | A |
| Silently he stole upon him | I |
| Till the red nails of the monster | J |
| Almost touched him almost scared him | I |
| Till the hot breath of his nostrils | A |
| Warmed the hands of Mudjekeewis | A |
| As he drew the Belt of Wampum | D |
| Over the round ears that heard not | K |
| Over the small eyes that saw not | K |
| Over the long nose and nostrils | A |
| The black muffle of the nostrils | A |
| Out of which the heavy breathing | L |
| Warmed the hands of Mudjekeewis | A |
| Then he swung aloft his war club | M |
| Shouted loud and long his war cry | N |
| Smote the mighty Mishe Mokwa | G |
| In the middle of the forehead | O |
| Right between the eyes he smote him | I |
| With the heavy blow bewildered | C |
| Rose the Great Bear of the mountains | A |
| But his knees beneath him trembled | P |
| And he whimpered like a woman | Q |
| As he reeled and staggered forward | C |
| As he sat upon his haunches | A |
| And the mighty Mudjekeewis | A |
| Standing fearlessly before him | I |
| Taunted him in loud derision | Q |
| Spake disdainfully in this wise | A |
| Hark you Bear you are a coward | C |
| And no Brave as you pretended | R |
| Else you would not cry and whimper | J |
| Like a miserable woman | Q |
| Bear you know our tribes are hostile | S |
| Long have been at war together | J |
| Now you find that we are strongest | T |
| You go sneaking in the forest | T |
| You go hiding in the mountains | A |
| Had you conquered me in battle | S |
| Not a groan would I have uttered | C |
| But you Bear sit here and whimper | J |
| And disgrace your tribe by crying | L |
| Like a wretched Shaugodaya | U |
| Like a cowardly old woman | Q |
| Then again he raised his war club | M |
| Smote again the Mishe Mokwa | G |
| In the middle of his forehead | O |
| Broke his skull as ice is broken | Q |
| When one goes to fish in Winter | J |
| Thus was slain the Mishe Mokwa | G |
| He the Great Bear of the mountains | A |
| He the terror of the nations | A |
| Honor be to Mudjekeewis | A |
| With a shout exclaimed the people | S |
| Honor be to Mudjekeewis | A |
| Henceforth he shall be the West Wind | E |
| And hereafter and forever | J |
| Shall he hold supreme dominion | Q |
| Over all the winds of heaven | Q |
| Call him no more Mudjekeewis | A |
| Call him Kabeyun the West Wind | E |
| Thus was Mudjekeewis chosen | Q |
| Father of the Winds of Heaven | Q |
| For himself he kept the West Wind | E |
| Gave the others to his children | Q |
| Unto Wabun gave the East Wind | E |
| Gave the South to Shawondasee | A |
| And the North Wind wild and cruel | S |
| To the fierce Kabibonokka | L |
| Young and beautiful was Wabun | Q |
| He it was who brought the morning | L |
| He it was whose silver arrows | A |
| Chased the dark o'er hill and valley | V |
| He it was whose cheeks were painted | R |
| With the brightest streaks of crimson | Q |
| And whose voice awoke the village | W |
| Called the deer and called the hunter | J |
| Lonely in the sky was Wabun | Q |
| Though the birds sang gayly to him | I |
| Though the wild flowers of the meadow | X |
| Filled the air with odors for him | I |
| Though the forests and the rivers | A |
| Sang and shouted at his coming | L |
| Still his heart was sad within him | I |
| For he was alone in heaven | Q |
| But one morning gazing earthward | X |
| While the village still was sleeping | L |
| And the fog lay on the river | J |
| Like a ghost that goes at sunrise | A |
| He beheld a maiden walking | L |
| All alone upon a meadow | X |
| Gathering water flags and rushes | A |
| By a river in the meadow | X |
| Every morning gazing earthward | X |
| Still the first thing he beheld there | Y |
| Was her blue eyes looking at him | I |
| Two blue lakes among the rushes | A |
| And he loved the lonely maiden | Q |
| Who thus waited for his coming | L |
| For they both were solitary | V |
| She on earth and he in heaven | Q |
| And he wooed her with caresses | A |
| Wooed her with his smile of sunshine | Q |
| With his flattering words he wooed her | J |
| With his sighing and his singing | L |
| Gentlest whispers in the branches | A |
| Softest music sweetest odors | A |
| Till he drew her to his bosom | D |
| Folded in his robes of crimson | Q |
| Till into a star he changed her | J |
| Trembling still upon his bosom | D |
| And forever in the heavens | A |
| They are seen together walking | L |
| Wabun and the Wabun Annung | L |
| Wabun and the Star of Morning | L |
| But the fierce Kabibonokka | L |
| Had his dwelling among icebergs | A |
| In the everlasting snow drifts | A |
| In the kingdom of Wabasso | A |
| In the land of the White Rabbit | X |
| He it was whose hand in Autumn | D |
| Painted all the trees with scarlet | X |
| Stained the leaves with red and yellow | X |
| He it was who sent the snow flake | L |
| Sifting hissing through the forest | X |
| Froze the ponds the lakes the rivers | A |
| Drove the loon and sea gull southward | X |
| Drove the cormorant and curlew | X |
| To their nests of sedge and sea tang | L |
| In the realms of Shawondasee | A |
| Once the fierce Kabibonokka | L |
| Issued from his lodge of snow drifts | A |
| From his home among the icebergs | A |
| And his hair with snow besprinkled | X |
| Streamed behind him like a river | J |
| Like a black and wintry river | J |
| As he howled and hurried southward | X |
| Over frozen lakes and moorlands | A |
| There among the reeds and rushes | A |
| Found he Shingebis the diver | J |
| Trailing strings of fish behind him | I |
| O'er the frozen fens and moorlands | A |
| Lingering still among the moorlands | A |
| Though his tribe had long departed | X |
| To the land of Shawondasee | A |
| Cried the fierce Kabibonokka | L |
| Who is this that dares to brave me | V |
| Dares to stay in my dominions | A |
| When the Wawa has departed | X |
| When the wild goose has gone southward | X |
| And the heron the Shuh shuh gah | L |
| Long ago departed southward | X |
| I will go into his wigwam | Z |
| I will put his smouldering fire out | X |
| And at night Kabibonokka | L |
| To the lodge came wild and wailing | L |
| Heaped the snow in drifts about it | X |
| Shouted down into the smoke flue | X |
| Shook the lodge poles in his fury | V |
| Flapped the curtain of the door way | G |
| Shingebis the diver feared not | X |
| Shingebis the diver cared not | X |
| Four great logs had he for firewood | X |
| One for each moon of the winter | J |
| And for food the fishes served him | I |
| By his blazing fire he sat there | Y |
| Warm and merry eating laughing | L |
| Singing O Kabibonokka | L |
| You are but my fellow mortal | X |
| Then Kabibonokka entered | X |
| And though Shingebis the diver | J |
| Felt his presence by the coldness | A |
| Felt his icy breath upon him | I |
| Still he did not cease his singing | L |
| Still he did not leave his laughing | L |
| Only turned the log a little | X |
| Only made the fire burn brighter | J |
| Made the sparks fly up the smoke flue | X |
| From Kabibonokka's forehead | X |
| From his snow besprinkled tresses | A |
| Drops of sweat fell fast and heavy | V |
| Making dints upon the ashes | A |
| As along the eaves of lodges | A |
| As from drooping boughs of hemlock | L |
| Drips the melting snow in spring time | A2 |
| Making hollows in the snow drifts | A |
| Till at last he rose defeated | X |
| Could not bear the heat and laughter | J |
| Could not bear the merry singing | L |
| But rushed headlong through the door way | G |
| Stamped upon the crusted snow drifts | A |
| Stamped upon the lakes and rivers | A |
| Made the snow upon them harder | J |
| Made the ice upon them thicker | J |
| Challenged Shingebis the diver | J |
| To come forth and wrestle with him | I |
| To come forth and wrestle naked | X |
| On the frozen fens and moorlands | A |
| Forth went Shingebis the diver | J |
| Wrestled all night with the North Wind | X |
| Wrestled naked on the moorlands | A |
| With the fierce Kabibonokka | L |
| Till his panting breath grew fainter | J |
| Till his frozen grasp grew feebler | J |
| Till he reeled and staggered backward | X |
| And retreated baffled beaten | Q |
| To the kingdom of Wabasso | A |
| To the land of the White Rabbit | X |
| Hearing still the gusty laughter | J |
| Hearing Shingebis the diver | J |
| Singing O Kabibonokka | L |
| You are but my fellow mortal | X |
| Shawondasee fat and lazy | A |
| Had his dwelling far to southward | X |
| In the drowsy dreamy sunshine | Q |
| In the never ending Summer | J |
| He it was who sent the wood birds | A |
| Sent the robin the Opechee | B2 |
| Sent the bluebird the Owaissa | A |
| Sent the Shawshaw sent the swallow | X |
| Sent the w | X |
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
(1)
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About The Four Winds
The Four Winds is a poem by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. This page includes the poem text, poet information, related topics, comments, and similar poems.
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