The chief pulled up his horse, while his companion shivered from

head to foot. Then raising his voice, he cried: "Jubal, relight your lamp; I have come far to see you. You know me,

Jubal. Monsieur le chef?"

"Pardonnez moi," croaked the hag, as she struck the light. Then came

in quavering tones: "Entrez."

What a brushing of soft wings and gleaming of eyes! The hut was

literally filled with living creatures.

"These are my children," the old woman said, with a horrible quaking

laugh, as she pointed to the perches. Rows of pert ravens stood upon

tip-toe along the bars looking with bright eyes upon the strangers;

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while here and there an owl opened his crooked beak and said Too

whit, Too whoo. A strange creature, with wolfish head and limbs,

crouched by the hearth; but after three or four furtive glances at

the intruders, he skulked back into a dark corner of the cabin. From

this retreat he continued to glare with shy, treacherous eyes.

The old woman was short, and stooped; but her eyes were wonderfully

bright. Nay, when she looked from the dark corner, phosphorescent

jets seemed to break from them.

"Come, mother, toss the cup and tell me what Fortune has in store

for me this time," said the chief, who had seated himself upon a low,

creaking stool in the corner.

"I will," she replied; "why should I not when I am honoured so much

as to receive a visit from le grand chef de Metis." And hobbling

away, she took from a nook a large cup without a handle, black on the

outside and white within. Tea was brewed which the Rebel chief drank,

leaving naught but the dregs. Then Jubal muttered some words, which

her visitors could not understand, and threw up the cup. She had no

sooner done this than the crows began to chatter and caw, and the

owls to cry; and each time that the cup ascended, they all raised

themselves upon their feet and elevated their wings. When the cup

came into her hand from the ceiling the third time, she looked toward

the perches and said: "Peace children." Then turning to the dark, oily chief, she said,

"Listen, O Monsieur, while I read. Here are bands of men hurrying

across the prairie into the gorges, and concealing themselves in the

wood. There is the flash of sabres, and the smoke of cannon.

Everywhere a bloody war is raging; and Indians are tearing away men,

and women, and children from their homes to captivity.

"Ah! what is this I see here? A girl. Monsieur woos her, but she is

turned away. The maiden flies; Monsieur follows, and he overtakes the

maiden. Then he bears her away with guards around her, through a deep

valley, till he reaches a hut. Now he hands her over to an ugly hag--

and the name of that hag is Jubal. Is it not so, Monsieur?" and the

crone, turning from the cup, looked with a hideous grin in the face

of the Rebel chief.