The Southern Quarterly Review, Volume 5Daniel Kimball Whitaker, Milton Clapp, William Gilmore Simms, James Henley Thornwell E. H. Britton, 1965 - American periodicals |
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Page 141
... tribes as any thing more than a melancholy and desperate problem . Between the advances of the Choctaws and the degrada- tion of the Sioux there is a wide intervening space . They form the two extremes of the present condition of the ...
... tribes as any thing more than a melancholy and desperate problem . Between the advances of the Choctaws and the degrada- tion of the Sioux there is a wide intervening space . They form the two extremes of the present condition of the ...
Page 142
... tribes ; hence the scanty population , which seems almost lost in the vast expanse of prairie by which they are surrounded , & c . " Gov. Chambers speaks of the decline of the Sacs and Foxes and the Winnebagoes in equally strong terms ...
... tribes ; hence the scanty population , which seems almost lost in the vast expanse of prairie by which they are surrounded , & c . " Gov. Chambers speaks of the decline of the Sacs and Foxes and the Winnebagoes in equally strong terms ...
Page 182
... tribes , or the patres in the ple- beian tribes . The former could not be done , for the patri- cian tribes were tribes of houses , founded on descent , and it would moreover have violated the idea of preserving the populus as a ...
... tribes , or the patres in the ple- beian tribes . The former could not be done , for the patri- cian tribes were tribes of houses , founded on descent , and it would moreover have violated the idea of preserving the populus as a ...
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