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The beds of the rest of the family stood in the back of the lodge, against the wall

The beds of the rest of the family stood in the back of the lodge, against the wall.jpg She dropped her pack and came running back, her hands at each side of her head with two fingers crooked, like horns, the sign for buffaloesThumbnailsInside the lodgeShe dropped her pack and came running back, her hands at each side of her head with two fingers crooked, like horns, the sign for buffaloesThumbnailsInside the lodgeShe dropped her pack and came running back, her hands at each side of her head with two fingers crooked, like horns, the sign for buffaloesThumbnailsInside the lodgeShe dropped her pack and came running back, her hands at each side of her head with two fingers crooked, like horns, the sign for buffaloesThumbnailsInside the lodgeShe dropped her pack and came running back, her hands at each side of her head with two fingers crooked, like horns, the sign for buffaloesThumbnailsInside the lodge
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The beds of the rest of the family stood in the back of the lodge, against the wall. They46 were less simply made than my father’s, being each covered with an old tent skin drawn over a frame of posts and poles. The bedding was of buffalo skins. As these could not be washed, my mothers used to take them out and hang them on the poles of the corn stage on sunny days, to air.


Most of the earth lodges—at least most of the larger ones—had each a bed like my father’s before the fireplace; for this was the warmest place in the lodge. Usually the eldest in the family, as the father or grandfather, slept in this bed.

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
Dimensions
650*629
Visits
1879
Downloads
73