Traits of Indian Character: As Generally Applicable to the Aborigines of North America ...Key & Biddle, 1836 |
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Страница 29
... believe any thing but what is pro- bable or visible to the senses , -- this is the principle of their abstract religion ' There is one passage of the Scriptures which shocks them , ' Multi vocati pauci vero electi ; ' - many are called ...
... believe any thing but what is pro- bable or visible to the senses , -- this is the principle of their abstract religion ' There is one passage of the Scriptures which shocks them , ' Multi vocati pauci vero electi ; ' - many are called ...
Страница 43
... believe , of all people that have been known on the earth , their thoughts , hopes , and fears , dwell the least on any thing beyond this life . It appears inexplicable to them , that any part of their moral conduct here can have any ...
... believe , of all people that have been known on the earth , their thoughts , hopes , and fears , dwell the least on any thing beyond this life . It appears inexplicable to them , that any part of their moral conduct here can have any ...
Страница 50
... believe , and the most universally understood by Savages- ' heap ! ' We have read that , in some of their languages , there are subtleties of structure , and nice shades of divisions of time , in the tenses of their verbs , that ...
... believe , and the most universally understood by Savages- ' heap ! ' We have read that , in some of their languages , there are subtleties of structure , and nice shades of divisions of time , in the tenses of their verbs , that ...
Страница 65
... believe , that the Evil Spirit ' is the maker of spiritous liquors , from which , notwithstand- ing , hardly one of them can refrain . An Indian near the Delaware Water Gap , told Mr. Heckewelder , a mission- ary , that he had once ...
... believe , that the Evil Spirit ' is the maker of spiritous liquors , from which , notwithstand- ing , hardly one of them can refrain . An Indian near the Delaware Water Gap , told Mr. Heckewelder , a mission- ary , that he had once ...
Страница 67
... believe , too , in a guardian spirit belonging to every individual , and is called his TOTEM . They suppose this spirit to assume the shape of some beast or other ; and , therefore , will never hunt , kill , nor eat the animal supposed ...
... believe , too , in a guardian spirit belonging to every individual , and is called his TOTEM . They suppose this spirit to assume the shape of some beast or other ; and , therefore , will never hunt , kill , nor eat the animal supposed ...
Често срещани думи и фрази
animal appear armadillo arms arrows beautiful beaver body cabin called canoe ceremony Chief child Choctaw Colter Conrad Weiser Cornplanter council dance death deer dian earth enemy English language eyes Father feel feet female fire forest Fort Stanwix friends gave give ground hand head heard Higgins honour horse hundred hunter hunting Indian character Ioways killed Lake Lake Pepin land language live lodge looked M'Dougal Mad Buffalo Major Davenport medicine Medicine Lodge miles nation nature never night Osages painted party passed Pawnee Pequot person prairie preter retreat returned rifle river Savages scene Schoonhoven seat seen Seneca Seneca Nation skin soon speech Spirit spot squaw struck supposed thing tion told tomahawk took treaty trees tribe turned venison village warrior White White nations white wolf whole wife wigwam wild woman women woods words yell young
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Страница 122 - Conrad answered all his questions; and when the discourse began to flag, the Indian, to continue it, said, "Conrad, you have lived long among the white people, and know something of their customs; I have been sometimes at Albany, and have observed that once in seven days they shut up their shops and assemble all in the great house; tell me what it is for? What do they do there?" "They meet there," says Conrad, "to hear and learn good things.
Страница 129 - You always told us you would never draw your foot off British ground. But now, father, we see you are drawing back, and we are sorry to see our father doing so without seeing the enemy. We must compare our father's conduct to a fat dog that carries its tail upon its back, but when affrighted, it drops it between its legs and runs off.
Страница 122 - I may as well go to the meeting too, and I went with him. There stood up a man in black, and began to talk to the people very angrily; I did not understand what he said, but perceiving that he looked much at me, and at...
Страница 123 - ... spread soft furs for him to rest and sleep on. We demand nothing in return. But if I go into a white man's house at Albany, and ask for victuals and drink, they say, where is your money ? and if I have none they say, get out you Indian dog.
Страница 123 - I imagined that he was angry at seeing me there ; so I went out, sat down near the house, struck fire, and lit my pipe, waiting till the meeting should break up. I thought too that the man had mentioned something of beaver, and I suspected it might be the subject of their meeting. So when they came out, I accosted my merchant. —
Страница 122 - Canassetego, an old acquaintance, who embraced him, spread furs for him to sit on, and placed before him some boiled beans and venison, and mixed some rum and water for his drink. When he was well refreshed, and had lit his pipe...
Страница 137 - He had now arrived within a mile of the river, when he distinctly heard the appalling sound of footsteps behind him, and every instant expected to feel the spear of his pursuer. Again he turned his head, and saw the savage not twenty yards from him. Determined, if possible, to avoid the expected blow, he suddenly...
Страница 135 - Indians — one of whom had been killed by Lewis — they set their traps at night, and took them up early in the morning, remaining concealed during the day. They were examining their traps early one morning, in a creek about six miles from that branch of the Missouri...
Страница 137 - ... had lodged. He dived under the raft, and after several efforts, got his head above water amongst the trunks of trees, covered over with smaller wood to the depth of several feet. Scarcely had he secured himself when the Indians arrived on the river, screeching and yelling, as Colter expressed it,
Страница 128 - In that war our father was thrown upon his back by the Americans ; and our father took them by the hand without our knowledge ; and we are afraid that our father will do so again at this time. " Summer before last, when I came forward with my red brethren and was ready to take up...