Copyright 1903 by the S.S. McClure Company.
Copyright 1904 by McClure, Phillips & Company.
[4] From "At the Sign of the Dollar," by Wallace Irwin. Copyright, 1905, by Fox, Duffield & Co.
[5] Lippincott's Magazine.
A Book about Indians, Animals, and the Woods
Kuloskap, the Master
And Other Algonkin Legends and Poems
By Charles Godfrey Leland, F.R.S.L., and John Dyneley Prince, Ph.D.
In the first four cantos are told the legends of the Indian god, Kuloskap, narrating how he created the Indians' world, cared for the interests of his children, dealt with the animal kingdom, and punished the sorcerers. Following these cantos will be found the witchcraft lore, lyrics, and miscellany. The stories take the reader into the heart of nature. In the innermost recesses of the forest he follows the strange doings of wizards, goblins, and witches, and revels in such exquisite lyrics as those that tell of "The Scarlet Tanager and the Leaf," "The Story of Nipon the Summer," "Lox, the Indian Devil," "The Song of the Stars," and others.