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Childhood games

Childhood games.jpg We also had a big, soft ball, stuffed with antelope hair, which we would bounce in the air with the footMiniaturesA Kitten playingWe also had a big, soft ball, stuffed with antelope hair, which we would bounce in the air with the footMiniaturesA Kitten playingWe also had a big, soft ball, stuffed with antelope hair, which we would bounce in the air with the footMiniaturesA Kitten playingWe also had a big, soft ball, stuffed with antelope hair, which we would bounce in the air with the footMiniaturesA Kitten playingWe also had a big, soft ball, stuffed with antelope hair, which we would bounce in the air with the footMiniaturesA Kitten playingWe also had a big, soft ball, stuffed with antelope hair, which we would bounce in the air with the footMiniaturesA Kitten playing

White people seem to think that Indian children never have any play and never laugh. Such ideas seem very funny to me. How can any child grow up without play? I have seen children at our reservation school playing white men’s games—baseball, prisoners’ base, marbles. We Indian children also had games. I think they were better than white children’s games.

I look back upon my girlhood as the happiest time of my life. How I should like to see all my little girl playmates again! Some still live, and when we meet at feasts or at Fourth-of-July camp, we talk of the good times we had when we were children.