West American History, Volum 1,Del 1Bancroft Company, 1902 |
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Side 252
... Sahaptin family . Jour . , p . 224 . 145 Also called Kalispelms and Ponderas . The Upper Pend d'Oreilles con- sist of a number of wandering families of Spokanes , Kalispelms proper , and Flatheads . Suckley , in Pac . R. R. Rept . , vol ...
... Sahaptin family . Jour . , p . 224 . 145 Also called Kalispelms and Ponderas . The Upper Pend d'Oreilles con- sist of a number of wandering families of Spokanes , Kalispelms proper , and Flatheads . Suckley , in Pac . R. R. Rept . , vol ...
Side 253
... SAHAPTIN FAMILY , the last of the Columbian group , is immediately south of the Salish , between the Cascade and Bitter Root mountains , reaching southward , in general terms , to the forty - fifth par- allel , but very irregularly ...
... SAHAPTIN FAMILY , the last of the Columbian group , is immediately south of the Salish , between the Cascade and Bitter Root mountains , reaching southward , in general terms , to the forty - fifth par- allel , but very irregularly ...
Side 254
... Sahaptin family , I will divide somewhat arbitrarily into the Wascos , extending from the mountains east- ward to John Day River , and the Cayuse , 154 from this river across the Blue Mountains to the Grande Ronde . 152 The name comes ...
... Sahaptin family , I will divide somewhat arbitrarily into the Wascos , extending from the mountains east- ward to John Day River , and the Cayuse , 154 from this river across the Blue Mountains to the Grande Ronde . 152 The name comes ...
Side 256
... Sahaptin family . Among them all , however , with the exception perhaps of the Kliketats , the deformity consists only of a very slight compression of the forehead , which nearly or Com- 156 The interior tribes have long faces , and ...
... Sahaptin family . Among them all , however , with the exception perhaps of the Kliketats , the deformity consists only of a very slight compression of the forehead , which nearly or Com- 156 The interior tribes have long faces , and ...
Side 257
... Sahaptin and Walla Wallas compress the head , but not so much as the tribes near the coast . It merely serves with them to make the forehead more retreating , which , with the aquiline nose common to these natives , gives to them ...
... Sahaptin and Walla Wallas compress the head , but not so much as the tribes near the coast . It merely serves with them to make the forehead more retreating , which , with the aquiline nose common to these natives , gives to them ...
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
Annales des Voy Apaches arrows California canoes chief Chinooks Clarke's Trav coast Cochimís color Columbia Columbia River Comanches Coppermine River dance Domenech's Deserts dress Dunn's Oregon dwell Eskimos Ethn feet fish Geog Geografia Gibbs hair Hale's Ethnog head Hist Honduras Indians inhabit Island Jour Kane's Wand La Pérouse Lacandones Lake leguas Lewis and Clarke's live Lond Lord's Nat Mayne's B. C. Mexican Mexico miles Möllhausen mountains mouth Mühlenpfordt nations natives Navajos Nez Percés Nicaragua Nootka northern Noticias Nouvelles Annales occupy Ópatas ornamented Orozco y Berra Overland Monthly painted Pápagos Parker's Explor Pomo Pueblos R. R. Rept race River round Sahaptins Schoolcraft's Arch série Shoshones Sinaloa skin Smithsonian Rept Sonora stone Sutil y Mexicana tribes Trinidad Bay U. S. Ex Valley Viage village Voyage Walla women Zapotecs
Populære avsnitt
Side 461 - The great Snake nation may be divided into three divisions, namely, the Shirrydikas, or dog-eaters; the Wararereekas, or fish-eaters; and the Banattecs, or robbers. But, as a nation, they all go by the general appellation of Shoshones, or Snakes. . . .The Shirrydikas are the real Shoshones, and live in the plains hunting the buffalo.
Side 369 - Their men for the most part goe naked ; the women take a kinde of bulrushes, and kembing it after the manner of hemp, make themselues thereof a loose garment, which being knitte about their middles, hanges downe about their hippes, and so affordes to them a couering of that which nature teaches should be hidden ; about their shoulders they weare also the skin of a deere, with the haire vpon it.
Side 161 - ... twelve feet from the ground. The figures at the upper part of this square represent two persons, with their hands upon their knees, as if they supported the weight with pain and difficulty : the others opposite to them stand at their ease, with their hands resting on their hips. In the area of the building there were the remains of several fires. The posts, poles, and figures, were painted red and black; but the sculpture of these people is superior to their painting.
Side 121 - They take their names in the first instance from their dogs. A young man is the father of a certain dog but when he is married and has a son he styles himself the father of the boy. The women have a habit of reproving the dogs very tenderly when they observe them fighting: "Are you not ashamed," say they, "are you not ashamed to quarrel with your little brother?
Side 549 - when a young man sees a girl whom he desires for a wife, he first endeavors to gain the good-will of the parents; this accomplished, he proceeds to serenade his lady-love, and will often sit for hours, day after day, near her home, playing on his flute.
Side 117 - The men in general extract their beards, though some of them are seen to prefer a bushy black beard, to a smooth chin.
Side 741 - the manner of obtaining this guardian was to proceed to some secluded spot and offer up a sacrifice : with the beast or bird which thereupon appeared, in dream or in reality, a compact for life was made, by drawing blood from various parts of the body.
Side 227 - A flat, retreating brow seems to white men to spoil what would otherwise be a pretty face ; but " the Chinook ideal of facial beauty is a straight line from the end of the nose to the crown of the head."* A little snub-nose may embitter the life of a European girl ; but the Australian natives " laugh at the sharp noses of Europeans, and call them in their language
Side 54 - The purity of the material of which the house was framed, the elegance of its construction, and the translucency of its walls, which transmitted a very pleasant light, gave it an appearance far superior to a marble building, and one might survey it with feelings somewhat akin to those produced by the contemplation of a Grecian temple, reared by Phidias ; both are triumphs of art, inimitable in their kinds.
Side 550 - Pimas get drunk once a year, the revelry continuing for a week or two at a time; but it is also a universal custom with them to take regular turns, so that only one third of the party is supposed to indulge at one time, the remainder being required to take care of their stimulated comrades, and protect them from injuring each other or being injured by other tribes.