The Native Races (Complete 5 Part Edition). Hubert Howe Bancroft
Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу The Native Races (Complete 5 Part Edition) - Hubert Howe Bancroft страница 197

Название: The Native Races (Complete 5 Part Edition)

Автор: Hubert Howe Bancroft

Издательство: Bookwire

Жанр: Документальная литература

Серия:

isbn: 4064066379742

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ become soft from keeping, when they are mashed with water.' In the Willamette Valley they raised corn, beans, and squashes. Hunter's Cap., pp. 70–2. A 'sturgeon, though weighing upwards of three hundred pounds, is, by the single effort of one Indian, jerked into the boat'! Dunn's Oregon, pp. 135, 114–15, 134, 137–9. The Umpquas, to cook salmon, 'all provided themselves with sticks about three feet long, pointed at one end and split at the other. They then apportioned the salmon, each one taking a large piece, and filling it with splinters to prevent its falling to pieces when cooking, which they fastened with great care, into the forked end of the stick; … then placing themselves around the fire so as to describe a circle, they stuck the pointed end of the stick into the ground, a short distance from the fire, inclining the top towards the flames, so as to bring the salmon in contact with the heat, thus forming a kind of pyramid of salmon over the whole fire.' Hines' Voy., p. 102; Id. Ogn., p. 305. 'There are some articles of food which are mashed by the teeth before being boiled or roasted; this mastication is performed by the women.' Domenech's Deserts, vol. ii., pp. 314, 316, 240–2. 'The salmon in this country are never caught with a (baited) hook.' Wilkes' Hist. Ogn., p. 107. 'Turbot and flounders are caught (at Shoalwater Bay) while wading in the water, by means of the feet.' Swan's N. W. Coast, pp. 38, 83, 103–8, 140, 163–6, with cuts. On food, see Ross' Adven., vol. i., pp. 94–5, 97, 112–3; Lord's Nat., vol. i., pp. 68–9, 181–3; Lewis and Clarke's Trav., pp. 409–15, 422, 425, 430–1, 445, 506; Wells, in Harper's Mag., vol. xiii., pp. 605–7, with cuts; Nicolay's Ogn., pp. 144, 147–8; Palmer's Jour., pp. 84, 105; Parker's Explor. Tour, p. 244; Irving's Astoria, pp. 86, 335; Cox's Adven., vol. i., p. 329–32; vol. ii., pp. 128–31; Catlin's N. Am. Ind., vol. ii., p. 113; Abbott, in Pac. R. R. Rept., vol. vi., p. 89; Ind. Life, p. 165; Pickering's Races, in U. S. Ex. Ex., vol. ix., p. 26; Kane's Wand., pp. 185–9; Franchère's Nar., pp. 235–7; Gass' Jour., pp. 224, 230–1, 282–3; Fédix, L'Orégon, pp. 44–5; Stanley's Portraits, pp. 59–62.

СКАЧАТЬ