Stránka:roll 1917.djvu/116

Z thewoodcraft.org
Verze z 31. 10. 2016, 22:34, kterou vytvořil Keny (diskuse | příspěvky) (→‎Nebylo zkontrolováno: Založena nová stránka s textem „84 Woodcraft Manual for Boys of our fathers you were the one who could follow the wounded deer. You made the hunting a success. So I will daQce and sing…“)
(rozdíl) ← Starší verze | zobrazit aktuální verzi (rozdíl) | Novější verze → (rozdíl)
Tato stránka nebyla zkontrolována

84 Woodcraft Manual for Boys of our fathers you were the one who could follow the wounded deer. You made the hunting a success. So I will daQce and sing in your honor to-night." He adds a feather or a candy, and dances. (Yap, yap, as before.) The next says: "Dog! When I was a little pappoose, I wandered from the village and fell in the river. No one saw me. I should have been drowned, but you jumped in and pulled me out. So I will dance and sing in your honor to- night." He adds his contribution and dances. The next says: "Dog! You were the one who cleaned up the camp, so we were not troubled with flies." Others thank the dog for finding the lost children, for giving alarm when an enemy approached, for killing a rattler, for finding the lost medicine bag, etc. Then the last one, the boy dog, comes up and barks at the head. Finally, the leader resumes, saying: "Yes, Dog! You were the one that dragged the lodge poles. You were the one that found the wounded deer, etc. And best of all, first, last, and all the time, you were our faithful friend, and all you asked in return was a bite to eat and a place to Ue down. And so long as the blue sky is above the green grass you will be the friend of the prairie children. Then, when at last we cross over the great river, and see behind the Divide, we hope we shall find awaiting us our old friend, the Dog, that we may take up our friendship again, and continue on and on in the good country where no white man or smallpox ever comes." Then they pass around the dish and eat the crackers and candies; offering things to the dog, and honoring him as much as possible with a variety of stage "business." Finally, all go off, carrying the various things and barking as they came. Ojibwa Snake Dance Select a good dancer for leader. All form line, holding hands, carefully graded so the smallest is last. Then, dancing in step to the music, they set out in a line, follow-my-leader style, doubling the line on itself, and evoluting around the fire. Sometimes the dancers face alternately — that is, all the even numbers in the line look one way and the odd another. A good finish is to curl in a tight spiral around the head, when the tail boy mounts on the back of the one before him and shakes a rattle, like a rattler rattling on its coil.