The Journey to the Polar Sea, by John Franklin















































































































 -  These hose or, as they
are termed, Indian stockings, are commonly ornamented with beads or
ribands, and from their convenience - Page 115
The Journey to the Polar Sea, by John Franklin - Page 115 of 649 - First - Home

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These Hose Or, As They Are Termed, Indian Stockings, Are Commonly Ornamented With Beads Or Ribands, And From Their Convenience Have Been Universally Adopted By The White Residents As An Essential Part Of Their Winter Clothing.

Their shoes, or rather short boots for they tie round the ankle, are made of soft dressed moose-skins, and during the winter they wrap several pieces of blanket round their feet.

They are fond of European articles of dress, considering it as mean to be dressed entirely in leather, and the hunters are generally furnished annually with a capot or great coat, and the women with shawls, printed calicoes, and other things very unsuitable to their mode of life but which they wear in imitation of the wives of the traders; all these articles, however showy they may be at first, are soon reduced to a very filthy condition by the Indian custom of greasing the face and hair with soft fat or marrow instead of washing them with water. This practice they say preserves the skin soft and protects it from cold in the winter and the mosquitoes in summer, but it renders their presence disagreeable to the olfactory organs of an European, particularly when they are seated in a close tent and near a hot fire.

The only peculiarity which we observed in their mode of rearing children consists in the use of a sort of cradle extremely well adapted to their mode of life. The infant is placed in the bag having its lower extremities wrapped up in soft sphagnum or bog-moss, and may be hung up in the tent or to the branch of a tree without the least danger of tumbling out; or in a journey suspended on the mother's back by a band which crosses the forehead so as to leave her hands perfectly free.

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