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Lelawala

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InNative Americanlegend,Lelawala was a beautifulmaiden of the peacefultribe of theIroquois that was venturing in waterfalls one day, but happened to fall out of her canoe. Thethunder godHé-no then saved her, as Hé-no was the one who lived behind the falls. At the time, her canoe was broken so Hé-no offered to build a new one. On the day he finished building the canoe, a huge snake with venom so powerful it could kill a whole village, was headed towards the village of Lelawala, but Hé-no then threw a lightning bolt at the snake. The snake landed on top of the falls, creating the curved shape ofHorseshoe Falls.

Lelawala is known as the originalMaid of the Mist.

Adaptations

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Henry Hadley composed acantata entitledLelawala: A Legend of Niagara in 1898, in which the maiden Lelawala sacrifices herself to appease the "Thunder Waters" and save her tribe from a famine.[1]Charles Wakefield Cadman's three-act operettaLelawala:The Maid of Niagara (1926) is based on the story of Lelawala. The libretto includes a number of colonialist plot points, including Lelawala learning about Christian forgiveness from a white missionary.[1][2]

References

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  1. ^abLevy, Beth E. (2012-04-18).Frontier Figures: American Music and the Mythology of the American West. University of California Press. pp. 137–138.ISBN 978-0-520-95202-7.
  2. ^Cadman, Charles Wakefield (May 1927).""Lelawala", The Maid of Niagara".Music Supervisors' Journal.13 (5): 73.doi:10.2307/3383281.ISSN 1559-2472.JSTOR 3383281.S2CID 143690230.
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