A General History And Collection Of Voyages And Travels - Volume 3 - By Robert Kerr












































































































 -  Their faces are by no means handsome,
being broad like the Tartars, and they allow no hair to remain on - Page 558
A General History And Collection Of Voyages And Travels - Volume 3 - By Robert Kerr - Page 558 of 789 - First - Home

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Their Faces Are By No Means Handsome, Being Broad Like The Tartars, And They Allow No Hair To Remain On Their Eyebrows Or Eyelids, Nor On Any Other Part Of Their Bodies, As Already Mentioned, It Being Esteemed By Them Quite Beastly To Have Hair Remaining On Their Bodies.

Both men and women are amazingly agile in walking and running, as we frequently experienced, the very women being able to run one or two leagues at a stretch with the utmost ease, and in this exercise they greatly excelled us Christians.

They are likewise wonderfully expert swimmers, in which the women excel the men and we have seen them swim two leagues out to sea without any aid whatever. Their arms are bows and arrows, which are more craftily made than ours; and, being destitute of iron or any other metal, they arm the points of their arrows with the teeth of wild beasts or fishes, often hardening their ends in the fire to make them stronger. They are most expert archers, hitting any thing they aim at with wonderful precision; the women also, in some places, being excellent archers. Their other arms are a kind of very sharp lances or pointed stakes, and clubs, having their heads very nicely carved. They are chiefly accustomed to make war against their neighbours speaking a different language; and as they give no quarter, unless to such as are reserved for the most horrid tortures, they fight with extraordinary fury. When they go to battle they are accompanied by their wives, not to assist them in fighting, but on purpose to carry their provisions and other necessaries; and one of their women will carry a greater weight on her back for a journey of thirty or forty leagues, than a strong man is able to lift from the ground, as we have often seen.

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