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ver all she bound a wildcat skin, drawing the upper edge over the baby’s head, like a hood.
Tailles de photo
✔ XXS - minuscule (231 x 240)✔ XS - très petit (312 x 324)
✔ S - petit (416 x 432)
✔ Original (450 x 467)
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.
- Auteur
- 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 - Ajoutée le
- Lundi 10 Janvier 2022
- Dimensions
- 450*467
- Mots-clés
- Babies, Century:19th, Indigenous, Place:America
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