239 lines
12 KiB
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239 lines
12 KiB
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ARRoGANT CoURiERS WiTH ESSaYS
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Grade Level: Type of Work Subject/Topic is on:
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[ ]6-8 [ ]Class Notes [Creative Story ]
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[ ]9-10 [ ]Cliff Notes [Unchained Heritage ]
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[x]11-12 [x]Essay/Report [ ]
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[ ]College [ ]Misc [ ]
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Dizzed: o4/95 # of Words:1708 School: ? State: ?
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<EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>><3E><><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>><3E><><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>>Chop Here><3E><><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>><3E><><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>><3E><><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>><3E><><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>
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Unchained Heritage
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by: <--INSERT NAME HERE-->
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The Elder sat alone on a slab of granite outside a carelessly-
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erected tent on a Native reserve near Beardmore in northern Ontario, just
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east of Lake Nipigon. The previous night's rain was already drying off the
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ground, leaving only scattered mud patches in it's wake. Soon the early
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summer sun would turn these into crusty bits of dirt, only to be muddied
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the next rainfall.
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The roar of a twin-engine charter from Dryden filled the air. A
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squirrel, apparently frightened by the noise, scampered hurriedly past the
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Elder, pausing only momentarily to sniff the air before taking refuge up a
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nearby tree. About a minute later, the plane was completely out of sight,
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but the squirrel had not yet come back down from his tree.
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The Elder eased himself off the rock and stood up, looking about
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him critically. This was not the land he used to know. Although he was
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nearing his sixty-third birthday, he clearly remembered coming to this same
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location with his father as a boy. There were more birds then, he thought,
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and more trees. The Elder walked a few steps to a creek to wash his hands.
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A very faint metallic odour met him as he bent down, but he did not notice
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it as his nose had long become insensitive.
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The Elder shook his hands dry and glanced up at the position of
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the sun. It was high overhead, indicating noontime. He sighed, knowing that
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in a couple of hours his son would bring his family from Toronto to visit
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him. He did not like his son very much, but he put up with the annual
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visits for the sake of the grandchildren: he was their only link to their
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heritage. For one month a year he would show them how their ancestors
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lived. How he lives.
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He thought back to his last visit to the Hogtown, more then
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twenty years previously. An early morning walk along the lakeshore was
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ruined by the constant reek of rotting fish and the deafening roar of cars
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rushing past on the Gardiner. He had followed the shoreline until Don
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River, where the expressway simply turned into a parkway: woes by another
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name. He has wondered why expressways were always built along lakeshores
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and rivers, the most ecologically-sensitive areas of the land, and decided
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that he would never return to Toronto.
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"Now Toronto comes to me," he murmured softly.
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The Elder walked back to his tent and rummaged about inside,
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producing a peace pipe that was more then two hundred years old. He had
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long quit smoking, on the advice of a physician in Beardmore, but at least
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it would break the ice with his grandchildren. He carefully unrolled a
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pouch of aromatic tobacco, whcih he had imported from Virginia and saved
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for special occasions, and removed some leaves, which he placed in the
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pipe. He then set about busily creating a campfire.
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"Everything must be just right," he said to himself. From his
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jacket, he removed some grains and nuts, which he scattered on the ground
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nearby. He hoped it would attract a few birds and small animals. He wanted
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to be sure that his grandchildren would enjoy their culture and be proud of
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who they are.
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Before he could light the fire, the Elder heard the distant grind
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of a car. He hurriedly made a few last-minute preparations, then set to
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light the fire. The breeze from nearby Lake Nipigon made it difficult, and
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as he fumbled with twigs and safety matches he caught sight of a giant
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beast through the gap between the trees. He dropped the matches and stood
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up, expressionless. The beast, a blue Lumina passenger van, came to a stop
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just meters away, and five figures poured out of its belly.
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Two children ran up to the Elder and hugged him. "Gramps!" one of
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them exclaimed. "We've missed you so much!"
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The Elder forced himself to smile. He hated being called Gramps,
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but that was what he was to the kids. "Let me look at you," he said pulling
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away. "You've grown!" Beaming faces looked up at him happily in response.
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A third child walked up and laid both hands on the Elder's
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shoulders."Hello, Grandfather," he said."How's life up here?"
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"Peaceful," he replied. "Have you finished school yet?"
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"No," laughed the oldest child. "You always ask me that same
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question; you know I still have a year to go."
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"Here come your parents," replied the Elder. "Hello, Ted. How are
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you, Wendy?"
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"Just fine,Potewan," replied the Elder's daughter-in-law. "We're
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a but tired, though, after the long drive up. Ted's been behind the wheel
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since midnight last night."
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"Its a new Lumina, Dad," added Ted. "What do you think?"
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Averting his son's gaze, Potewan thought a moment, then replied,
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"It's a van, all right." He disliked motorized vehicles of any kind, but
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did not want to start the visit on such a sour note. "Why don't you set
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yourselves up?" he suggested, picking up the twigs and matches from the
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ground.
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"Here, Dad; let me help you with that," offered Ted, producing a
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Zippo lighter. Soon he had a fire roaring despite the wind.
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"Thanks," said Potewan without enthusiasm. He looked over at his
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oldest grandchild and thought about how things had changed. On Alan's feet
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were Reebok running shoes with air soles; on his own were hand-tooled
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leather moccasins. Potewan had long ago decided not to wear modern apparel;
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he did not wish to contribute to the western capitalism that had destroyed
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his life. The Elder trudged over to his tent, where the two youngest were
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squabbling over who sleeps closer to Gramps.
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"I'm the youngest, so I get to sleep next to him!" said the girl.
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"Are not!" replied the boy, nearly shouting.
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"Am too!" asserted his sister. "I'm four minutes younger than
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you! Mommy said so!"
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"Well, I saw it first! So I'm sleeping there!"
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Potewan took in the sight and then put in a few words of his own.
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"Couldn't you both sleep next to me?" hu suggested. "After all, I've got
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two sides -a left and a right."
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His grandchildren thought over this latest proposal, and finally
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one of them said slowly, "You mean share?"
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Potewan nodded.
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"I guess so. Come on, let's go for a swim in the river!" The two
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kids ran off.
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Potewan shook his head sadly. If only it were this easy to deal
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with Indian Affairs, he thought. The bureaucrats at the Ministry must have
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skipped kindergarten.
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Wendy walked up, a puzzled expression on her face. "Where do you
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keep the pots and pans?" she asked. "Ted wants to warm up some lunch, and
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he can't find any cookware."
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"I don't use pots or pans, Wendy," replied Potewan, kindly.
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"Don't you know the best way to cook fish is to spear it with a stick?"
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"Oh, right," said Wendy, still a little puzzled.
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Like last year, and the year before, and the one before that,
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thought Potewan to himself. Aloud, he said "I'll go catch us a mess of
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fish." He picked up a spear that was leaning against the tent and headed
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down to the river. Potewan had never used a fishing rod and reel in his
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life.
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Soon he emerged from the thickets waving three plump trout in the
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air. "Lunch!" he called out. Gutting each fish first, he speared them with
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metal rods he kep for that purpose, and skillfully cooked them over the
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campfire. It was nearly two o'clock when the whole family gathered around
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to eat. The wild berries and fish earned the praise of all.
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"Do you always eat fish, Gramps?" asked the youngest.
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"Sometimes I catch small game, if there are any around," replied
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Potewan. "Have you ever tasted rabbit?"
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"Ewww! Gross!"exclaimed the twins together. "Rabbit!"
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"It's actually quite good," put in Ted. "Isn't that right,
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Wendy?"
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"Yes, rabbit is....quite good," agreed Wendy hesitantly. She had
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never ventured to taste the meat before, but did not want to cause tension.
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"It's settled then," said The Elder with a clap of his hands.
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"Tonight we feast on the hare. Francis, Frances - come with me!" he
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ordered. Potewan and his two youngest grandchildren left in the woods in
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search of small game, armed only with a crudely-crafted bow and some
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flintstone arrows, over which the twins had raved.
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"Hey, Mom, check this out," said Alan, walking over with the
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Elder's peace pipe.
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"What is it?"
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"Ask your father, dear," replied Wendy absently. She was never
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into this heritage stuff, her family having lived in Toronto for five
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generations.
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Before Alan could reply, however, his sister Frances came running
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out of the woods. "Mom! DAD! Come quick! Something terrible happened!" She
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began to sob.
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Oh no, thought Ted, getting up. He wondered what got Frances so
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excited.
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Francis and Potewan walked out of the woods each smiling from ear
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to ear. The Elder was carrying a motionless rabbit by the feet, and Francis
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the bow and three arrows.
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"Look Dad!" exclaimed the latter. "We caught a rabbit!"
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Potewan noticed his granddaughter, sobbing over the loss of
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"Bugs", the result of cartoons depicting certain animals as cute. Potewan
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viewed hunting as necessary for survival. This view was clearly
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incompatible with the modern world. He struggled with himself and finally
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came to a decision.
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"I give up," he said simply. He laid down the rabbit on the
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ground and walked away without another word. He headed off into the woods
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in search of a new home. He would find a clearing somewhere near a river
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and he would erect a teepee made from deerskin. His food, his clothing, his
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shelter would come from nature. He would live like a hermit if that's what
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it took. He did not care if it meant being alone, even though he enjoyed
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being with others who shared his views.
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Potewan did not know where he was headed, but he was certain that
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he would recognise it when he got there. And there he would make his new
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home, free from the modern world and independant. At last he could do what
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he wanted to do, what his ancestors did. He would be unchained for good.
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