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ver all she bound a wildcat skin, drawing the upper edge over the baby’s head, like a hood.

Papoose.jpg With horn spoon she filled her mouth with waterThumbnailsThe Voyage HomeWith horn spoon she filled her mouth with waterThumbnailsThe Voyage HomeWith horn spoon she filled her mouth with waterThumbnailsThe Voyage HomeWith horn spoon she filled her mouth with waterThumbnailsThe Voyage Home
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Having bathed my baby, Red Blossom bound him in his wrapping skins. She had a square piece of tent cover, folded and sewed along the edges of one end into a kind of sack. Into this she slipped my baby, with his feet against the sewed end. About his little body she packed cattail down.

On a piece of rawhide, she put some clean sand, which she heated by rolling over it a red-hot stone. She packed this sand under my baby’s feet; and, lest it prove too hot, she slipped a piece of soft buckskin under them.

Over all she bound a wildcat skin, drawing the upper edge over the baby’s head, like a hood.

The hot sand was to keep my baby warm. This and the cattail down we placed in a baby’s wrappings only in winter, when on a journey.

Author
Waheenee--An Indian Girl's Story
By Waheenee
as told to Gilbert Livingstone Wilson
Illustrator: Frederick N. Wilson
Published in 1921
Available from gutenberg.org
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