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The Song of Hiawatha

Illustrator: Margaret Early
By: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Retail Price: $22.95
Booktopia Price $9.95
ISBN: 9781865039046
Format: Paperback
Published: June 2002
Age Range:  5 +   Years Old

All prices in Australian Dollars
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*** This book is now out of print and these are the last of the brand new copies available. Once stocks run out it may be difficult to pick up a new copy.

Booktopia Comments: Quite a large format paperback book. Apologies we don't have a big enough scanner to scan the whole front cover! The pictures are absolutely exquisite in this book. Each one is a painting in its own right. So you can use the book as art appreciation but it also blends in the story of the famous Indian, Hiawatha. You can read the Longfellow poems and prose or just simply do your own story-telling based on the pictures and picking parts of the story from the words supplied by Longfellow and the illustrator, Margaret Early. A gorgeous gift.

Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's classic American Indian legend, The Song of Hiawatha, is beautifully illustrated by Margaret Early. Notes from the illustrator in the back of the book:

"The Song of Hiawatha" was written by American poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (1807 - 1882) and published in 1855. I have chosen a small segment of the poem, hoping it will encourage children to read more of the original. My grandfather read 'Hiawatha' to my father in the 1920s, and I in turn read 'Hiawatha's Childhood' when I was young. It has been a popular poem for generations in the Anglo-Saxon world.

Longfellow found many sources of influence for his poem. The eight-syllable trochaic verse form came from the Finnish national epic, the 'Kalevala'. He was also influenced by the tales and legends of the ethnologist Henry R. Schoolcraft (1793 - 1864), who married a woman of the Ojibway tribe.

'Hiawatha' is based on the legends about a chief, Manabozho who is a trickster and fool, as well as a redeemer. Longfellow selected material from Manabozho's adventures but chose to call his hero Hiawatha. Assuming that both names referred to the same person, Longfellow felt that Hiawatha sounded more poetic. However, Manabozho was an Algonkian spirit whereas the man Hiawatha (originally known as Aiontwahta) is part of Iroquois legend and a tribal god. According to his legend, the Creator sent a Peacemaker, a numinous figure who travelled amongst the Five Nations (the tribes south to south-east of Lake Ontario) in times of war and blood feuds. Together, the Peacemaker and Hiawatha persuaded the warring tribes to join in a 'Great Peace', based on a binding law.

The greatest enemy to peace was Atotarhoh. His mind was so evil that snakes grew from his hair, and his body was bent in seven places. Because of his magic, no one could approach him until the Hymn of Peace was composed. He was then hypnotised by the song, allowing Hiawatha to comb the snakes from his hair. (Aiontwatha means 'he who combs'.) Atotarhoh's body was then straightened and he became one of the Peace Chiefs. His power was transformed from evil to good and he became the head of the League of Five Nations. Then the fifty chiefs of the Five Nations met on the shore of Lake Onondaga and a white pine was planted as the weapons of war were buried.

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