. On the old porch outside her room she sits a'spinning on her loom, weaving memories of times long gone, gently singing a Native song. Of rivers running on the plains swollen from the mountain rains, of the deserts endless sands, and of toil with calloused hands. She sang of buffalo and of bear, of a paradise for all to share, she also sang of the forests deep and of where wolves go to sleep. Her song dies away like a friend when her spinning is at its end. The Great Mother retires in silent gloom and snuffs out the candles in her room. Thus stilling the night of a Woman's Moon.