Alphabet Imagination Story



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Why the North Star Stands Still Story





Long, long ago, when the world was young, the People of the Sky were so restless and traveled so much that they made trails in the heavens. Now, if we watch the sky all through the night, we can see which way they go.

But one star does not travel. That is the North Star. He cannot travel. He cannot move. When he was on the earth long, long ago, he was known as Na-gah, the mountain sheep, the son of Shinoh. He was brave, daring, sure-footed, and courageous. His father was so proud of him and loved him so much that he put large earrings on the sides of his head and made him look dignified, important, and commanding.

Every day, Na-gah was climbing, climbing, climbing. He hunted for the roughest and the highest mountains, climbed them, lived among them, and was happy. Once in the very long ago, he found a very high peak. Its sides were steep and smooth, and its sharp peak reached up into the clouds. Na-gah looked up and said, 'I wonder what is up there. I will climb to the very highest point.'

Around and around the mountain he traveled, looking for a trail. But he could find no trail. There was nothing but sheer cliffs all the way around. This was the first mountain Na-gah had ever seen that he could not climb.

He wondered and wondered what he should do. He felt sure that his father would feel ashamed of him if he knew that there was a mountain that his son could not climb. Na-gah determined that he would find a way up to its top. His father would be proud to see him standing on the top of such a peak.

Again and again he walked around the mountain, stopping now and then to peer up the steep cliff, hoping to see a crevice on which he could find footing. Again and again, he went up as far as he could, but always had to turn around and come down. At last he found a big crack in a rock that went down, not up. Down he went into it and soon found a hole that turned upward. His heart was made glad. Up and up he climbed.

Soon it became so dark that he could not see, and the cave was full of loose rocks that slipped under his feet and rolled down. Soon he heard a big, fearsome noise coming up through the shaft at the same time the rolling rocks were dashed to pieces at the bottom. In the darkness he slipped often and skinned his knees. His courage and determination began to fail. He had never before seen a place so dark and dangerous. He was afraid, and he was also very tired.

'I will go back and look again for a better place to climb,' he said to himself. 'I am not afraid out on the open cliffs, but this dark hole fills me with fear. I'm scared! I want to get out of here!'

But when Na-gah turned to go down, he found that the rolling rocks had closed the cave below him. He could not get down. He saw only one thing now that he could do: He must go on climbing until he came out somewhere.

After a long climb, he saw a little light, and he knew that he was coming out of the hole. 'Now I am happy,' he said aloud. 'I am glad that I really came up through that dark hole.'

Looking around him, he became almost breathless, for he found that he was on the top of a very high peak! There was scarcely room for him to turn around, and looking down from this height made him dizzy. He saw great cliffs below him, in every direction, and saw only a small place in which he could move. Nowhere on the outside could he get down, and the cave was closed on the inside..,

'Here I must stay until I die,' he said. 'But I have climbed my mountain! I have climbed my mountain at last!'

He ate a little grass and drank a little water that he found in the holes in the rocks. Then he felt better. He was higher than any mountain he could see and he could look down on the earth, far below him.

About this time, his father was out walking over the sky. He looked everywhere for his son, but could not find him. He called loudly, 'Na-gah! Na-gah!' And his son answered him from the top of the highest cliffs. When Shinoh saw him there, he felt sorrowful, to himself, 'My brave son can never come down. Always he must stay on the top of the highest mountain. He can travel and climb no more.'

'I will not let my brave son die. I will turn him into a star, and he can stand there and shine where everyone can see him. He shall be a guide mark for all the living things on the earth or in the sky.'

And so Na-gah became a star that every living thing can see. It is the only star that will always be found at the same place. Always he stands still. Directions are set by him. Travelers, looking up at him, can always find their way. He does not move around as the other stars do, and so he is called 'the Fixed Star.' And because he is in the true north all the time, our people call him Qui-am-i Wintook Poot-see. These words mean 'the North Star.'

Besides Na-gah, other mountain sheep are in the sky. They are called 'Big Dipper' and 'Little Dipper.' They too have found the great mountain and have been challenged by it. They have seen Na- gah standing on its top, and they want to go on up to him.

Shinoh, the father of North Star, turned them into stars, and you may see them in the sky at the foot of the big mountain. Always they are traveling. They go around and around the mountain, seeking the trail that leads upward to Na-gah, who stands on the top. He is still the North Star.




Wisest Indian Story





There were once four wise Indian medicine men who were considered to be the most clever and knowledgeable across all the prairies and forests. They learned nearly everything about nearly anything and were often asked for advice and to find solutions for the most difficult problems.  
 
One day, a young Indian boy asked which of the four was the wisest because of course there must be one more wise than the others. This caused much arguing and debating among the people. To find out once and for all, one of the elders of the nation was given the task of devising a test to settle the matter. 
 
After much consideration, the perfect test was put before them. The four medicine men were told to walk into the woods. Their test would be found at the base of a single cedar tree in a broad clearing. They started out early the next morning and, after walking many miles, came to the tree in the clearing. At the base of the tree was a large pile of bleached bones. They appeared to be those of some sort of animal. 
 
The four puzzled over the bones for some time before the first man spoke. 'I will use my knowledge to put these bones back together. That will prove my wisdom.' After some time, the bones stood erect and interlocking. 
 
The men examined the project and the second man said, 'Ah! I know where these bones came from. I can put flesh and fur back on them and restore the animal's beauty.' The second man began his work, and in a while a fierce-looking grizzly bear stood before them. 
 
The four men marveled at the animal's beauty, but the two began to bicker about which one's work was best. Just then, the third man spoke up. 'I believe I can bring the bear back the life. Then I will be the greatest of all.' 
 
The fourth man had been quiet until now. 'Wait! I don't think our test was to see if we could bring the animal back to life.' He pleaded, but the others would not listen. When he realized he was being ignored, he quietly climbed to the top of the cedar tree and watched.  
 
The third man got busy and soon had breathed life into the grizzly bear using his great talents. The bear stretched and roared. Then he chased the men growling and clawing at them. He chased them all the way back to their village where they were finally rescued by the village's mighty hunters.  
 
Later, the fourth wise man walked back to the village. Everyone had taken him for dead, the others were so busy arguing they did not see him climb the tree. It was then that everyone realized that he was indeed the wisest of all.  
 
He possessed common sense - something that is often not so common. 


Witch in the Tower Story





Once upon a time, people in the Japanese city of Kyoto were terribly afraid; they shook with fear. A fierce witch had taken possession of the tower over the city gate which she opened and closed whenever she felt like it. She was capable of locking the gate in the face of travellers bringing food and merchandise, or throwing it wide open to savage tribes from the north.  
 
Many brave Samurai, the strongest and best fighters, had faced up to the witch, but the minute she set eyes on them, she hurled herself out of the tower, hair flying in the wind, screeching furiously and brandishing a fiery sword. Attacking them one by one, she left them lying dead in the dust. No, there was no hope for the city of Kyoto, and many people began to think of leaving it. The folk were murmuring, 'All our Samurai are dead. If only Watanabi were still here, the bravest of them all! But all that remains is his sword, and there's no one able to use it.'  
 
However, the sword was not all that remained of valiant Watanabi, there was also his son, a young boy. On hearing what the citizens were saying, he wondered, 'My father has gone, he died fighting, but we still have his sword. I shall take it and face the witch. Win or die, I shall be a credit to my father's memory.' So the boy bravely armed himself and went off to the tower.  
 
The witch saw him arrive and she grinned, but did not make a move. She wouldn't even bother using her fiery sword on that snivelling youngster, she would wither him with a glance. So she paid little heed to Watanabi's son as he quietly crept into the tower, climbed the stairs without making the slightest sound and entered the witch's room.  
 
When, however, the witch heard the door close, she turned round and laid her wild burning gaze on the boy but the splendour of Watanabi's sword blinded her. 'This is Watanabi's sword!' shouted the young boy, and before the witch could defend herself, he struck a blow and ended her life. In his father's memory and in honour of his sword, the boy had freed the city of Kyoto.


Wolf and Dog Story





A dog slipped off his leash one day and went for a walk in the woods. After a time, he met a wolf. 
 
The dog said to the wolf, 'Brother wolf, you look so thin! How can you be happy when you are so thin? You should come live with me and my master. I eat everyday and I never want for food.' 
 
The wolf thought for a moment and replied, 'Yes, you are right. Why should I be out here in the wild hunting for small bites of food when someone else will give it to me? And you are so well fed. Very well, I will come to live with you.' 
 
'Good,' said the dog, 'then follow me.' 
 
As they trotted off to the dog's home, the wolf noticed a patch around the dog's neck where the fur had been worn off. 
 
'Brother Dog, ' asked the wolf, 'why do you have that patch around your neck where there is no fur?' 
 
The dog slowed down, stopped and turned to the wolf with sadness in his eyes. 
 
'That is where they place the leather leash around my neck. They do this so they can control me and keep me in my place.' replied the dog, sadly.  
 
'Never!' said the wolf as he began to trot back into the forest. 'I would rather be starving and free than to be fat and a slave.' 




Alphabet Imagination Story 1

Anishinabe and the Ravens Story 2

Ballad of Johnny O'Dell Story 4

Barnabas and Sebastian Story 5

Bat Story 6

Battle of the Snakes Story 7

Bear Bells Story 8

Birch Tree's Bark Story 9

Bloody Finger Story 10

Bloody Finger Story 11

Boy and the RattleSnake Story 12

Bricklayers Accident Report Story 13

Bronze Rat Story 14

Car Wreck Story 15

Cremation of Sam McGee Story 16

Cricket and Cougar Story 19

Dark Suckers Story 20

Falcon and the Duck Story 21

Field Mouse and Buffalo Story 22

Finger Rock Trail Ghost Story 24

First Flute Story 25

First Mocassins Story 26

Four Magic Arrowheads Story 29

Girl Who Climbed to the Sky Story 31

Gloop Maker Story 33

Glooskap Finds Summer Story 34

Grandmother Spider Steals Light Story 35

Hitch Hiking Ghost Story 36

How 10,000 Lakes Were Made Story 37

How Bear Lost His Tail Story 38

How Bluebird and Coyote Got Their Colors Story 39

How Chipmunk Got His Stripes Story 40

How Coyote Got His Cunning Story 41

How Coyote Stole Fire Story 42

How Devil's Tower Was Made Story 44

How Mosquitoes Came To Be Story 45

How Rabbit Lost His Tail Story 46

How Redbird Got His Color Story 49

How the People Got Arrowheads Story 50

How Turtle's Shell Got Cracked Story 51

I Like Monkeys Story 53

Invisible One Story 54

Lost Scout Story 56

Nail in the Attic Story 57

Old Growler - The Secret of the Bear Story 58

Origin of Cedar Tree Story 59

Origin of Corn Story 60

Origin of Medicine Story 61

Origin of Summer and Winter Story 62

Origin of the Pleiades Story 64

Phone Call From the Grave Story 65

Pink Jellybean Story 66

Rabbit Shoots the Sun Story 67

Red Sloppity Lips Story 68

Scouts on an Indian Grave Story 70

Shaggy Dog Story 71

Skeleton Lady Story 72

Skunk Outwits Coyote Story 74

Some Special Pig Story 76

The Christmas Scout Story 77

The Coffin Story 79

The Crane and the Frogs Story 80

The Med and Sin Story 81

The Medic Men Story 82

The Most Popular Man Story 83

Two Traveling Angels Story 84

White Deer Named Virginia Dare Story 85

Why Cats Land on Their Feet Story 87

Why Crow Is Black Story 88

Why Opposum's Tail is Bare Story 89

Why the North Star Stands Still Story 91

Wisest Indian Story 93

Witch in the Tower Story 94

Wolf and Dog Story 95







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