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ブックス ... may have been made, they are of considerable notoriety among the Indians: for... の書籍検索結果
" ... may have been made, they are of considerable notoriety among the Indians: for a party passing, about thirty years ago, through the part of the country where this barrow is, went through the woods directly to it, without any instructions or... "
Gallery of Nature and Art, Or a Tour Through Creation and Science ... - 566 ページ
E. Polehamton 著 - 1815
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Myths of the Cherokee

James Mooney - 1995 - 614 ページ
...the woods directly to it without any instructions or enquiry, und having staid about it some time, with expressions which were construed to be those...they returned to the high road, which they had left aliout half a dozen miles to pay this visit, and pursued their journey."' Although the tribe is not...

Facing West: The Metaphysics of Indian-hating and Empire-building

Richard Drinnon - 1997 - 612 ページ
...passing band had gone directly through the woods to the mound and "having staid about it for some time, with expressions which were construed to be those of sorrow, they returned to the high road . . . about a half a dozen miles . . . and pursued their journey." The absence of imposing remains...

Political Writings

Thomas Jefferson - 1999 - 676 ページ
...woods directly to it, without any instructions or inquiry, and having staid about it for some time, with expressions which were construed to be those...much resembling this, in the low grounds of the South branch of Shenandoah, where it is crossed by the road leading from the Rock-fish gap to Staunton. Both...

Jefferson and the Indians: The Tragic Fate of the First Americans

Anthony F. C. Wallace, University Professor of Anthropology Emeritus Anthony F C Wallace - 2009 - 410 ページ
...the woods directly to it, without any instructions or inquiry, and having staid about it some time, with expressions which were construed to be those of sorrow, they returned to the high road [probably the road from Richmond to Staunton in the Shenandoah Valley], from which they had detoured...

Repatriation Reader: Who Owns American Indian Remains?

Devon Abbott Mihesuah - 2000 - 356 ページ
...woods directly to it, without any instructions or inquiry, and having staid about it for some time, with expressions which were construed to be those...miles to pay this visit, and pursued their journey" (Foner 1944: 1 18). Jefferson cited no source for this (in all likelihood) apocryphal account. Nor...

A Forest of Time: American Indian Ways of History

Peter Nabokov - 2002 - 258 ページ
...the woods directly to it, without any instructions or enquiry, and having staid about it some time, with expressions which were construed to be those...miles to pay this visit, and pursued their journey." 5 ' Over the following centuries, former village locations and their cemeteries exerted a sentimental...

Facing the Other: Ethical Disruption and the American Mind

Linda Bolton - 2004 - 232 ページ
...Metaphysics of Indian-Hating and Empire-Building (Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1997), 93. sions which were construed to be those of sorrow, they returned...a dozen miles to pay this visit, and pursued their journey."32 Jefferson's decision to explore the burial ground is not only a physical violation; it...

Historical Sketch of the Cherokee

James Mooney - 290 ページ
...the woods directly to it without any instructions or enquiry, and having staid about it some time, with expressions which were construed to be those...a dozen miles to pay this visit, and pursued their journey."1 Although the tribe is not named, the Indians were probably Cherokee, as no other southern...

Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary ..., 第 19 巻

Smithsonian Institution. Bureau of American Ethnology - 1900 - 728 ページ
...the woods directly to it without any instructions or enquiry, and having staid about it some time, with expressions which were construed to be those...a dozen miles to pay this visit, and pursued their journey.''1 Although the tribe is not named, the Indians were probably Cherokee, as no other southern...

The North American Review, 第 44 巻

Jared Sparks, Henry Cabot Lodge, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell - 1837 - 602 ページ
...the woods directly to it, without any instructions or inquiry, and, having stayed about it some time, with expressions which were construed to be those...returned to the high road, which they had left, about a half a dozen miles, to pay this visit, and pursued their journey." In these tumuli are usually found,...




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