vi PREFACE the memories of childhood, and consider how I could make use of these hut little known legends. I was surprised to find how eagerly the children listened to the tales, and how in¬ sistently they clamoured for more. Since that summer I have told them to many others of all ages, in many places, and finding that they have always aroused deep interest, I decided to re¬ tell them for a wider public than they have hith¬ erto reached. And so I am sending them out for the use of children, parents, and teachers— the story lovers and the story tellers. The main source from which I have drawn is Rand's Legends of the Micmacs, published by Wellesley College from the manuscripts of Dr. Rand purchased for that institution by Profes¬ sor E. N. Horsford . I have also made some use of Leland's The Algonquin Legends of Neio England , and of Kuloskap the Master by Le- land and Prince . And I have had access to the Rand manuscripts in the possession of the de¬ partment of comparative philology of Wellesley College. Acknowledgments are gratefully made, fore¬ most of all, to my husband, who has helped me, step by step, from the beginning to the end of the book: To Wellesley College and to the family of