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Then the priests of the people said, "It may well be Paiyatuma, the
liquid voices his flute and the flutes of his players."
Now when the time of ripening corn was near, the fathers ordered
preparation for the dance of the Corn Maidens. They sent the two
Master-Priests of the Bow to the grotto at Thunder Mountains, saying.,
"If you behold Paiyatuma, and his maidens, perhaps they will give us
the help of their customs."
Then up the river trail, the priests heard the sound of a drum and
strains of song. It was Paiyatuma and his seven maidens, the Maidens
of the House of Stars, sisters of the Corn Maidens.
The God of Dawn and Music lifted his flute and took his place in the
line of dancers. The drum sounded until the cavern shook as with
thunder. The flutes sang and sighed as the wind in a wooded canon
while still the storm is distant. White mists floated up from the
wands of the Maidens, above which fluttered the butterflies of
Summer-land about the dress of the Rainbows in the strange blue light
of the night.
Then Paiyatuma, smiling, said, "Go the way before, telling the fathers
of our custom, and straightway we will follow."
Soon the sound of music was heard, coming
from up the river, and soon the Flute People and singers and maidens
of the Flute dance. Up rose the fathers and all the watching people,
greeting the God of Dawn with outstretched hand and offering of prayer
meal. Then the singers took their places and sounded their drum,
flutes, and song of clear waters, while the Maidens of the Dew danced
their Flute dance. Greatly marveled the people, when from the wands
they bore forth came white clouds, and fine cool mists descended.
Now
when the dance was ended and the Dew Maidens had retired, out came the
beautiful Mothers of Corn. And when the players of the flutes saw them,
they were enamored of their beauty and gazed upon them so intently that
the Maidens let fall their hair and cast down their eyes. And jealous and
bolder grew the mortal youths, and in the morning dawn, in rivalry, the
dancers sought all too freely the presence of the Corn Maidens, no longer
holding them so precious as in the olden time. And the matrons, intent on
the new dance, heeded naught else. But behold! The mists increased
greatly, surrounding dancers and watchers alike, until within them, the
Maidens of Corn, all in white garments, became invisible. Then sadly and
noiselessly they stole in amongst the people and laid their corn wands
down amongst the trays, and laid their white broidered garments thereupon,
as mothers lay soft kilting over their babes. Then even as the mists
became they, and with the mists drifting, fled away, to the far south
Summer-land.
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