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5 revisions | Anh Quoc Nguyen at May 01, 2020 12:29 AM | |
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33he infinitely prefers to suffer at the stake, with all the tortures that ingenuity can devise, than die by hanging. The other eternal disaster is by scalping the head of the dead body. This annihilation; the soul ceases to exist. This accounts for eagerness of Indians to scalp all their enemies and the care they take to avoid being scalped themselves. Not unfrequently Indians do not scalp slain enemies, believing that each person killed by them, not scalped will be their servant in the next world. It will be found invariably that the slain foe were either very cowardly or very brave. The first he reserves to be his servant because he will have no trouble in managing him, and the last to gratidy his vanity in the future state by having a servant well known as a renowned warrior in this world. This superstition is the occasion for the display of the most heroic traits of Indian character. Reckless charges are made and desperate chances taken to carry off unscalped the body of a loved chief, a relative, or friend. Numerous instances have occurred where many were killed in vain efforts to recover and carry off worthy of burial. A Homer might find many an Indian hero as worthy of immortal fame as Achilles for this efforts to save the body of his friend, and no Christian missionary ever evinced a more noble indifference to danger, than the savage Indian displays in his efforts to save his friend's soul and ensure a transit to the "Happy Hunting Grounds". -- Vol. Dodge in Our Wild Indians. (IMAGE) WIth all the attraction in the line of amusements, there seems to be no abatement in the interest manifested by the public in the peculiarities to be found in the daily presentation of the realistic scenes of the "Wild West". Each participant has passed through, in the Far West, all the various acts which they are called upon to represent, and the public are assured that every thing and person is as stated in the programme. "UATH FRANK" Anticipating the result, the ranch building was connected by an underground passage with a bush-covered ravine about sixty feet behind it, with a carefully concealed entrance, the ravine running down the hill to the bottom. One morning in January, 1808, a band of sixty savages were descried, who surrounded the place and (32) | 33he infinitely prefers to suffer at the stake, with all the tortures that ingenuity can devise, than die by hanging. The other eternal disaster is by scalping the head of the dead body. This annihilation; the soul ceases to exist. This accounts for eagerness of Indians to scalp all their enemies and the care they take to avoid being scalped themselves. Not unfrequently Indians do not scalp slain enemies, believing that each person killed by them, not scalped will be their servant in the next world. It will be found invariably that the slain foe were either very cowardly or very brave. The first he reserves to be his servant because he will have no trouble in managing him, and the last to gratidy his vanity in the future state by having a servant well known as a renowned warrior in this world. This superstition is the occasion for the display of the most heroic traits of Indian character. Reckless charges are made and desperate chances taken to carry off unscalped the body of a loved chief, a relative, or friend. Numerous instances have occurred where many were killed in vain efforts to recover and carry off worthy of burial. A Homer might find many an Indian hero as worthy of immortal fame as Achilles for this efforts to save the body of his friend, and no Christian missionary ever evinced a more noble indifference to danger, than the savage Indian displays in his efforts to save his friend's soul and ensure a transit to the "Happy Hunting Grounds". -- Vol. Dodge in Our Wild Indians. (IMAGE) WIth all the attraction in the line of amusements, there seems to be no abatement in the interest manifested by the public in the peculiarities to be found in the daily presentation of the realistic scenes of the "Wild West". Each participant has passed through, in the Far West, all the various acts which they are called upon to represent, and the public are assured that every thing and person is as stated in the programme. "UATH FRANK" Anticipating the result, the ranch building was connected by an underground passage with a bush-covered ravine about sixty feet behind it, with a carefully concealed entrance, the ravine running down the hill to the bottom. One morning in January, 1808, a band of sixty savages were descried, who surrounded the place and (32) |
