The Legend of the Cherokee Sweet Shrub ...
... as told by Tsisghwanai - Traveller Bird

Long ago, the Old Ones say, in the year of the Great Harvest, the land of the Cherokees was becoming too thickly populated. The people realized that they needed more lands in order to grow and prosper. So the Peace Chief sent out a delegation of the leading men of the nation to talk with the neighboring Anitsigsu (Chickasaws), who claimed large areas of suitable lands toward the southwest. Now the Chickasaws were not as strong as the Cherokees, for they had been at war for a long time with their enemies.
The Cherokees sat in council with the Chickasaws to arrange the terms of the exchange of territory. This council lasted for many days. There were many courtesies to be observed before business could be started. At the beginning, it was polite to sit in complete silence. The didahnvwisgi (physician-priest, commonly referred to as "medicine men") enacted the lengthy invocation. After the invocation, the ancient and sacred Tsola (tobacco) Pipe Ceremony must be performed. The pipe was passed leisurely around to each council member, who took his turn on the sacred medicine. Some elaborate speeches of greeting and the presentation of gifts expressed the good will of the visitors. These were answered by the hosts. These amenities must not be hurried, lest it appear that the Cherokees were eager to have their business done with and go on home.
At the end of each day, the Chicksaws prepared an elaborate feast, which was served by the young maidens. The most beautiful maiden of them all was the daughter of the Chickasaw War Chief. Among the Cherokee group was Sanuwa (the hawk), nephew and heir of one of the powerful Cherokee War Chiefs.
The first night he sat for a long time around the campfire composing a love song. The next afternoon he did not appear at the council meeting. He was playing the new song and she secretly went to meet him by the bend in the river. They enjoyed the thrill of a forbidden adventure. They gathered wild flowers and waded barefoot across the stream, following after the shrill cry of a blue dove. Sanuwa told her of the land of his people, where the mountains touch the sky and the sun always stands still. He knew that he was expected to choose a wife from the proper clan of an important Cherokee village in order to increase the power and solidarity of the nation. And she, too knew that a brave warrior had spoken to her parents for her. But the Redbird Spirit of love pays no heed to the notions of nations, and fluttered at the breast of the young lovers.
So the young lovers agreed that when the council was ended and his people went on their way homeward, Sanuwa would come for her. They planned that if he should be detained she would hide in a thicket at the bend of the river and he would come for her there. Finally the council ended between the Chickasaws and the Cherokees. The Chickasaws agreed to move back a day's walk to allow for the expansion of the Cherokee Nation, and to share their hunting lands with the Cherokees. Many of the Chickasaw warriors objected to the trading away of their lands and wanted to fight for them, but the civil Chief could see that there was no chance of keeping the land for themselves. He argued that it was better to trade away than to lose it, along with the lives of many warriors. But when the Cherokees left, the daughter of the Chickasaw War Chief could not be found. The Chickasaw warriors began a search for her. They were the first to find her, hiding in the thicket at the bend of the river. When Sanuwa arrived, he found her dead. He buried her there at the bend of the river. Then he rejoined his own group and began the long journey homeward.
The next spring, Sanuwa returned and found among the deep green leaves growing over the mound, the soft brown petals of a sweet-smelling bush. He knelt beside it and called it his Sweet One, for he had claimed the Chickasaw maiden for his own. He carried the bush back to his homeland and planted it. But long before the long winter was over, he grew eager to see and to be with his Sweet One. So he went back to her grave and waited until his own death came.
But the bush with deep brown flowers spread throughout the lands of the Cherokees. And to this day, the Cherokee Sweet Shrub opens her eager face and sweet smell in early spring to welcome the return of her loved one.

Calycanthus floridus - Sweet Shrub, Carolina allspice

Nice native shrub grows to about 6 feet tall and spreads considerably wider. Maroon flowers are extremely fragrant,smelling alot like bubble gum. Watch though as seedlings will not be fragrant.

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