Blackfoot Lodge Tales: The Story of a Prairie People (A Bison Book, 116)
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Blackfoot Lodge Tales: The Story of a Prairie People (A Bison Book, 116)

Blackfoot Lodge Tales: The Story of a Prairie People (A Bison Book, 116)
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Blackfoot Lodge Tales: The Story of a Prairie People (A Bison Book, 116)

by George B. Grinnell
Product Group: Book
Publisher: University of Nebraska Press (1962-07)
ISBN: 0803250797
EAN: 9780803250796
Dewy Decimal #: 398.210978
Paperback: 311 pages
SKU: BX036-070325008
Condition: Used: Very Good
Comments: Clean and shiny. Very minor wear, near new. Spine uncreased, pgs crisp, clean, tight, unmarked. No remainder mark.


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Book Description
Over 100 years ago author George Bird Grinnell, editor of Forest and Stream, founder of the Audubon Society and an advisor to President Theodore Roosevelt, was a famed explorer, naturalist and pioneer conservationist. Keenly interested in the lifestyles and welfare of Native Americans, particularly the Blackfoot, Cheyenne and Pawnee, he journeyed westward during summers to hunt and explore with the Indians, and to study their rapidly vanishing culture. Blackfoot religion, philosophy, literature and ethics were all combined in the stories they told, and the Blackfoot storytellers relied on memory to convey the tales from one generation to the next. In Blackfoot Lodge Tales, Grinnell documents these stories as told to him by the Blackfoot, illustrating them with authentic Blackfoot drawings.
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As they were following up the river, they saw at a distance three old bulls lying down close to a cut bank. Heavy Collar left his party, and went out to kill one of these bulls, and when he had come close to them, he shot one and killed it right there. He cut it up, and, as he was hungry, he went down into a ravine below him, to roast a piece of meat; for he had left his party a long way behind, and night was now coming on. As he was roasting the meat, he thought,--for he was very tired,--"It is a pity I did not bring one of my young men with me. He could go up on that hill and get some hair from that bull's head, and I could wipe out my gun."
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