FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39   40   41   42   43   44   45   46   47   48  
49   50   51   52   53   >>  
hrow money, clothing, or other contributions, into the blanket, to pay him and his assistants for their services. At other times this man acts as a messenger or news carrier--first spreading his blanket to collect his fees, and then starting off on his mission. MARRIAGE. Many of the Indians in Mariposa and adjoining counties were polygamists, having two or three, and sometimes more, wives. Some of the chiefs and head men would have wives from several of the adjacent tribes, which had a tendency to establish permanent friendly relations among them. Every man who took a young woman for his wife had to buy her. Young women were considered by their parents as personal chattels, subject to sale to the highest suitable bidder, and the payment of the price constituted the main part of the marriage ceremony. The wife was then the personal property of the husband, which he might sell or gamble away if he wished; but such instances were said to be very rare. In case negotiations for a marriage fell through, the preliminary payments were scrupulously returned to the rejected suitor by the parents. Even a widow, independent of control in the matter of marriage, if she consented to become a man's wife, received some compensation herself from her intended husband. [Illustration: _Photograph by Dore_. A YOUNG YOSEMITE. The babies are tied to their baskets to make them straight, and keep them out of mischief.] It is said that in their marital relations they were as a rule strictly faithful to each other. If the woman was found to be guilty of unfaithfulness to her husband, the penalty was death. Such a thing as a man whipping or beating his wife was never known. Whipping under any circumstances was considered a more humiliating and disgraceful punishment than death. Even in the management of children, whipping was never resorted to as punishment for disobedience. In fact, children were always treated in such a kind, patient, loving manner, that disobedience was a fault rarely known. The pre-natal maternal influence, and subsequent treatment after birth, were such that they were naturally patient and readily submissive to kind parental control. In recent years, under the influence and examples often seen in what is called civilized life, Indian husbands have been known to beat their wives, and mothers to whip their children. [Illustration: _Photograph by Boysen_. LENA AND VIRGIL. The canopy of the baby basket
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39   40   41   42   43   44   45   46   47   48  
49   50   51   52   53   >>  



Top keywords:

husband

 
marriage
 

children

 

disobedience

 

patient

 

relations

 
personal
 

whipping

 

parents

 
considered

punishment

 
blanket
 

Illustration

 

Photograph

 
control
 
influence
 
VIRGIL
 

guilty

 

compensation

 
penalty

intended

 

unfaithfulness

 

YOSEMITE

 

canopy

 

marital

 

mischief

 

basket

 
straight
 

strictly

 

babies


faithful
 
baskets
 
Whipping
 

Indian

 

treatment

 
subsequent
 
maternal
 

husbands

 

naturally

 

readily


called

 
examples
 

submissive

 

parental

 

recent

 

rarely

 

mothers

 
circumstances
 

humiliating

 
disgraceful