“What you get home you make dance, and will give you the same. when you dance four days and in night one day, dance day time, five days and then fifth, will wash five for every body. He likes you folk you give him good many things, he heart been satting feel good. After you get home, will give good cloud, and give you chance to make you feel good. and he give you good spirit. and he give you all a good paint.
You folks want you to come in three [months] here, any tribes from there. There will be good bit snow this year. Sometimes rain’s, in fall, this year some rain, never give you anything like that. grandfather said when he die never no cry. no hurt anybody. no fight, good behave always, it will give you satisfaction, this young man, he is a good Father and mother, don't tell no white man. Jesus was on ground, he just like cloud. Every body is alive again, I don't know when they will [be] here, may be this fall or in spring.”
Jack Wilson (Wovoka), “The Messiah Letter,” 1890, in James Mooney, The Ghost-Dance Religion and the Sioux Outbreak of 1890, 1991
Which of the following was the most immediate result of the rhetoric demonstrated in the excerpt?