The Iroquois Trail: Or Foot-prints of the Six Nations, in Customs, Traditions, and HistoryH. C. Beauchamp, 1892 - 154 pages |
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The Iroquois trail, or Foot-prints of the Six nations, in customs ... W.M. Beauchamp Limited preview - 1892 |
Common terms and phrases
Albert Cusick Algonquins ambassy animals appear arrows Atotarho attacked bank bark bear beaver became belt body bones brother cabin called Canada canoe Cayugas Champlain Charlevoix clans condolence corn council fire council house custom daga dance dead deer destroyed dream early earth east enemy Erie war False Faces feast Five Nations French Genesee river head Heavens Hiawatha Holder Horatio Hale hunt hunter Hurons Indians Iroquois killed Lake Erie Lake Ontario lived Long House Loskiel says Mohawks monster mountain night Okwencha ondaga Oneida creek Oneida lake Oneidas Onon Onondaga Onondaga lake pipes principal chiefs sachems seems Senecas sent serpent side Sir William Sir William Johnson Six Nations soon Spirit stone Stonish Giants story Susquehanna thought tobacco told took town treaty tree tribe Turtle Tuscaroras village visited wampum warriors witch woman women York
Popular passages
Page 47 - Their chief speaker immediately put himself into an attitude of oratory, and with a pomp suited to what he conceived the elevation of his subject, informed him that it was a tradition handed down from their fathers, "That in ancient times a herd of these tremendous animals came to the...
Page 48 - ... of his feet are still to be seen, and hurled his bolts among them till the whole were slaughtered, except the big bull, who presenting his forehead to the shafts, shook them off as they fell; but missing one at length, it wounded him in the side; whereon, springing round, he bounded over the Ohio, over the Wabash, the Illinois, and finally over the great lakes, where he is living at this day.
Page 47 - A delegation of warriors from the Delaware tribe having visited the governor of Virginia during the revolution, on matters of business, the governor asked them some questions relative to their country, and, among others, what they knew or had heard of the animal whose bones were found at the Saltlicks on the Ohio. Their chief speaker immediately put himself into an attitude of oratory, and with...
Page 126 - In fact, the men never tell the women any thing they would have to be kept secret; and rarely any affair of consequence is communicated to them, though all is done in their name, and the chiefs are no more than their lieutenants.
Page 48 - ... the print of his feet are still to be seen, and hurled his bolts among them till the whole were slaughtered, except the big bull, who presenting his forehead to the shafts, shook them off as they fell ; but missing one at length, it wounded him in the side ; whereon...
Page 88 - Generally all the Men throughout the Countrey have a Tobacco-bag with a pipe in it, hanging at their back; sometimes they make such great pipes, both of wood and stone, that they are two...
Page 5 - ... which he succeeded in deceiving his brother, and he crushed him in the earth; and the last words uttered from the bad mind were, that he would have equal power over the souls of mankind after death; and he sinks down to eternal doom, and became the Evil Spirit.
Page 17 - Senators are invited to set and deliberate, and smoke the pipe of peace as ratification of their proceedings ; a great council fire was kindled under the majestic tree, having four branches, one pointed to the south, west, east, north ; the neighboring nations were amazed...
Page 149 - Their corne being ripe, they gather it, and drying it hard in the sunne, conveigh it to their barnes, which be great holes digged in the ground in forme of a brasse pot, seeled with rinds of trees, wherein they put their corne...
Page 17 - ... he became a law giver, and renewed the chain of alliance of the Five Nations and framed their internal government, which took five years in accomplishing it. At Onondaga a tree of peace...