.MTA1Mg.NzA0Njc

From Newberry Transcribe
Revision as of 03:51, 6 April 2021 by AbateS (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Forward?, the Cherokees observed an annual feast, which they allow unknown unknown wa ta te gi. This has unknown been observed at different seasons of the year, though it was anciently? unknown, it is said at unknown stated? season sometime during the first moon of autumn. unknown this unknown the men and women commit? unknown unknown unknown about? followed by two women, then two men unknown, till all are arranged. The two forward men carry in their right hands something like a unknown, with two sticks unknown through it, crossing each other at right angles in the center. On the unknown of these sticks are unknown white feathers. Two men in the middle, and two in the rear carry the unknown, which all the other men and women hold in their right hands green, white unknown boughs, or branches. On the three first? nights? they dance till about midnight, and at the close of the dance each night they put away their boughs till the next morning, and retire to their homes as they choose. unknown on the fourth night a little after dark