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Titre : Annual report of the Bureau of American ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian institution

Auteur : Bureau of American ethnology (Washington, D.C.). Auteur du texte

Éditeur : Government printing office (Washington)

Date d'édition : 1929

Contributeur : Powell, John Wesley (1834-1902). Directeur de publication

Notice du catalogue : http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb37575968z

Notice du catalogue : https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb37575968z/date

Type : texte

Type : publication en série imprimée

Langue : anglais

Format : Nombre total de vues : 40082

Description : 1929

Description : 1929 (N47)-1930.

Description : Note : Index.

Droits : Consultable en ligne

Droits : Public domain

Identifiant : ark:/12148/bpt6k27660k

Source : Bibliothèque nationale de France

Conservation numérique : Bibliothèque nationale de France

Date de mise en ligne : 15/10/2007

Le texte affiché peut comporter un certain nombre d'erreurs. En effet, le mode texte de ce document a été généré de façon automatique par un programme de reconnaissance optique de caractères (OCR). Le taux de reconnaissance estimé pour ce document est de 89%.


"l'm afraid of her." Masewi told him, "Don't be afraid. We'U get her before sundown."

Ckoyo said, "Here, my dear grandcbildren, come here." Masewi and Oyoyewi didn't want to liston, but kept playing. Ckoyo said, "Now l'm getting tired waiting. Let's go to a nice place to play. Corne get in my basket. I take you to a nice place." Masewi said, "Let her alone till we find out a way to get her." Then he said "Ail right. Let's go get in her basket and let her carry us away." Then they went to thé basket. "All right, get in." Masewi got in and jumped out and in and out. "You got fine basket here to carry us." "Yes; I got fine basket to carry you." They both jumped in. "Now are you ready? Sit down so when I get up you won't fall off." "All right, grandmother." Then Masewi say, "See what fine basket our grandmother got to carry us?" Oyoyewi said, "Yes; that's pretty nice basket."

Ckoyo stooped down and put basket on her back and she walk off. Some one saw them. "Oh, some one is caught by the ckoyo. Oh! it's Masewi and his brother. Let's go back and tell their mother." They went back and told their mother. The mother was afraid. "I tell them not to go, but now they will see how they will do them, those ckoyos." She was crying, "l'Il never get to see them no more."

Ckoyo got up on top of mesa in the pines and pinons. Masewi and Oyoyewi would hang out thé basket. Ckoyo would look back. "Don't fall out!" "No; wejust. playing. We like to play." The boys would pull her hair and say to each other, "I wonder what this is?" Ckoyo would say, "Don't do that; that's my hair." They would pull the buckskin on her shoulders. "Take us under that tall pinon tree. We want to get brushes to play with." When she took them under the tree they broke off some branches and got some pitch. "Let's get some pitch and bum her hair off. Then she will throw us down." And they asked again, "Take us under that pine tree. We want to get brushes to play with." Then she did. Then they asked to go under a dry pine tree. "We want to get pitch to make chewing gum out of." They got the pitch to make gum out of. Now they get to her home, the ckoyo. "Now, grandchildren, get down. Here's the place where you can play all the time and be happy." "Ail right." They jumping around and hollering 'round. "Better go over there on west side. There is an arroyo there. There is a nice place to slide down. But don't go far away. There's lots bear and lion there."

They stay there and play around till aftemoon sometime. Then they thinking there. Masewi said, "Let's build fire down here so she won't see us. Or maybe we can get some rabbits or a deer and we will take to her." They walk off little ways and get some and take