THE great Northwest--that wonderful fron-
tier that called to itself a world's hardiest
spirits--is rapidly becoming a settled country;
and before the light of civilizing influences,
the blanket-Indian has trailed the buffalo over
the divide that time has set between the pioneer
and the crowd. With his passing we have lost
much of the aboriginal folk-lore, rich in its
fairy-like characters, and its relation to the
lives of a most warlike people.
There is a wide difference between folk-lore
of the so-called Old World and that of America.
Transmitted orally through countless genera-
tions, the folk-stories of our ancestors show
many evidences of distortion and of change in
material particulars; but the Indian seems to
have been too fond of nature and too proud of
tradition to have forgotten or changed the
teachings of his forefathers.
Dettagli
- Data di pubblicazione
- Mar 26, 2007
- Lingua
- English
- Categoria
- Storia
- Copyright
- Tutti i diritti riservati - Licenza di copyright standard
- Collaboratori
- Di (autore): FRANK B. LINDERMAN
Specifiche
- Pagine
- 114
- Tipo di rilegatura
- Libro a copertina morbida Libro a copertina morbida
- Colore del contenuto
- Bianco e nero
- Dimensioni
- Lettera US (216 x 279 mm)