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  • May 1, 1796
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    Article SKETCHES OF THE MANNERS AND CUSTOMS OF THE NORTH-AMERICAN INDIANS. ← Page 2 of 6 →
Page 20

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Sketches Of The Manners And Customs Of The North-American Indians.

ancl starve to death ; well knowing that they cannot be of any service to the afflicted . On those occasions , therefore , the friends or relations of the sick generally leave them some victuals and water ; ancl , if the situation of the place will afford it , a little , firing . When those articles are provided , the person to be left is acquainted with the road which the others intend to go ; ancl then , after covering " them well up with deer skins , & c . they take their leave , ancl walk

away crying . " Sometimes , persons , thus left , recover ; ancl come up with their friends , or wander about till they meet with other Indians , whom they accompany till they again join their relations . Instances of this kind are seldom known . The poor woman above mentioned , however , came up with us three several times , after having been left in the manner described . At length , poor creature ! she dropt behind ; and no one attempted to go back in search of her . "

FEMALE BEAUTY . " Take them in a bod }* , the women are as destitute of real beauty ; as any nation I ever saw , though there are some few of them , when young , who are tolerable ; but the care of a family , added to their constant hard labour , soon make the most beautiful among thern look old and wrinkled , even before they are thirty ; and several of the

more ordinary ones , at that age , are perfect antidotes to love ancl gallantry . This , however , does not render them less dear ancl valuable to their owners , which is a lucky circumstance for those women , and a certain proof that there is no such thing as any rule or standard for beauty . Ask a Northern Indian , what is beauty ? he will answer , a broad flat face , small eyes , high cheek-bones , three or four broad

black lines a-cross each cheek , a low forehead , a large broad chin , a clumsy hook-nose , a tawney-hide , and breasts hanging down to the belt . Those beauties are greatly heightened , or at least rendered more valuable , when the possessor is capable of dressing all kinds of skins ; converting them into the different parts of their clothing ; and able to cany eiht or ten stone in Slimmeror haul a much greater

g , weight in Winter . These , and other similar accomplishments , are ail that are sought after , or expected , of a Northern Indian woman . " METHOD OF WAR , AMBUSH , & C . On the banks of the Copper River , Mr . -Hearne was witness to a scene of warfareso fraught with cruelty and horrorthat the

po-, , lished European will perhaps hardly credit the relation of it . We extract it , however , as containing a more exact picture of the warlike manners of theJSForthern Indians , than has been given by any former traveller .

" At this time ( it being about noon ) the three men who had been sent as spies met us on their return , and informed my companions that five tents of Esquimaux were on the west side of the river . The situation , they said , was very convenient for surprising them ; and , according to their account , I judged it to be about twelve miles from

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1796-05-01, Page 20” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01051796/page/20/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
Untitled Article 3
LONDON: Article 3
TO READERS, CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 4
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. FOR MAY 1796. PRESENT STATE OF FREEMASONRY IN SCOTLAND. Article 5
Untitled Article 10
COPY OF A LETTER. FROM THE REV. DR. STURGES, Article 13
THE FOLLY OF NOBLEMEN AND GENTLEMEN PAYING THEIR DEBTS, Article 16
SKETCHES OF THE MANNERS AND CUSTOMS OF THE NORTH-AMERICAN INDIANS. Article 19
DISCIPLINE. Article 24
EXTRACTS FROM THE MEMOIRS OF THE LIFE AND WRITINGS OF EDWARD GIBBON, ESQ. Article 25
ON THE MASONIC JEWELS. Article 31
ON PRESENCE OF MIND. Article 33
THE DOG-TAX; A FRAGMENT. Article 35
CIVIC ANECDOTE. Article 36
EXCERPTA ET COLLECTANEA. Article 37
CLOWNISH SIMPLICITY. Article 38
BON MOT OF THE DEVIL. Article 38
ORIGINALITY IN DR. ROBERTSON AND MR. GIBBON. Article 39
SOME ANECDOTES OF HENRY PRINCE OF WALES, Article 40
SOME PARTICULARS NOT GENERALLY KNOWN RESPECTING MONSIEUR BAILLY. Article 41
REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. Article 43
LIST OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. Article 48
BRITISH PARLIAMENT. Article 49
HOUSE OF COMMONS. Article 50
THE FINE ARTS. Article 57
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 59
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 61
ANNIVERSARY OF THE GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND. Article 63
POETRY. Article 66
ELEGY, TO THE MEMORY OF STEPHEN STORACE , THE COMPOSER. Article 67
A NEW OCCASIONAL LYRIC, MASONIC EULOGIVM, Article 68
LINES TO DAPHNE, Article 68
Untitled Article 69
TO DELIA. Article 70
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 71
HOME NEWS. Article 73
PROMOTIONS. Article 77
Untitled Article 77
OBITUARY. Article 78
LIST OF BANKRUPTS. Article 80
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Page 20

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Sketches Of The Manners And Customs Of The North-American Indians.

ancl starve to death ; well knowing that they cannot be of any service to the afflicted . On those occasions , therefore , the friends or relations of the sick generally leave them some victuals and water ; ancl , if the situation of the place will afford it , a little , firing . When those articles are provided , the person to be left is acquainted with the road which the others intend to go ; ancl then , after covering " them well up with deer skins , & c . they take their leave , ancl walk

away crying . " Sometimes , persons , thus left , recover ; ancl come up with their friends , or wander about till they meet with other Indians , whom they accompany till they again join their relations . Instances of this kind are seldom known . The poor woman above mentioned , however , came up with us three several times , after having been left in the manner described . At length , poor creature ! she dropt behind ; and no one attempted to go back in search of her . "

FEMALE BEAUTY . " Take them in a bod }* , the women are as destitute of real beauty ; as any nation I ever saw , though there are some few of them , when young , who are tolerable ; but the care of a family , added to their constant hard labour , soon make the most beautiful among thern look old and wrinkled , even before they are thirty ; and several of the

more ordinary ones , at that age , are perfect antidotes to love ancl gallantry . This , however , does not render them less dear ancl valuable to their owners , which is a lucky circumstance for those women , and a certain proof that there is no such thing as any rule or standard for beauty . Ask a Northern Indian , what is beauty ? he will answer , a broad flat face , small eyes , high cheek-bones , three or four broad

black lines a-cross each cheek , a low forehead , a large broad chin , a clumsy hook-nose , a tawney-hide , and breasts hanging down to the belt . Those beauties are greatly heightened , or at least rendered more valuable , when the possessor is capable of dressing all kinds of skins ; converting them into the different parts of their clothing ; and able to cany eiht or ten stone in Slimmeror haul a much greater

g , weight in Winter . These , and other similar accomplishments , are ail that are sought after , or expected , of a Northern Indian woman . " METHOD OF WAR , AMBUSH , & C . On the banks of the Copper River , Mr . -Hearne was witness to a scene of warfareso fraught with cruelty and horrorthat the

po-, , lished European will perhaps hardly credit the relation of it . We extract it , however , as containing a more exact picture of the warlike manners of theJSForthern Indians , than has been given by any former traveller .

" At this time ( it being about noon ) the three men who had been sent as spies met us on their return , and informed my companions that five tents of Esquimaux were on the west side of the river . The situation , they said , was very convenient for surprising them ; and , according to their account , I judged it to be about twelve miles from

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