So now, verily, her body continued to fall. Her body was falling some time before it emerged. Now she was surprised, seemingly, that there was light below, of a blue color. She looked and there seemed to be a lake at the spot toward which she was falling.... Hopi Katcinas Drawn by Native Artists - Página 161por Jesse Walter Fewkes - 1903 - 124 páginasVista completa - Acerca de este libro
| Louis Herbert Gray, George Foot Moore, John Arnott MacCulloch - 1916 - 476 páginas
...Breath-of-Life. The second act of the drama is set in the World Below. The Onondaga myth continues: "So now, verily, her body continued to fall. Her body...nowhere any earth. There she saw many ducks on the lake where they, being waterfowl of all their kinds, floated severally about. Without interruption the body... | |
| Hartley Burr Alexander - 1916 - 496 páginas
...Breath-of-Life. The second act of the drama is set in the World Below. The Onondaga myth continues: " So now, verily, her body continued to fall. Her body...nowhere any earth. There she saw many ducks on the lake where they, being waterfowl of all their kinds, floated severally about. Without interruption the body... | |
| James Hastings, John Alexander Selbie, Louis Herbert Gray - 1916 - 940 páginas
...the fall of Ataenteic, the demiurgic TiUness, from the Sky-world to the chaos of nether waters : * So now, verily, her body continued to fall. Her body...falling. There was nowhere any earth. There she saw many ducka on the lake, whereon they, being waterfowl of all their kinds, floated severally about. Without... | |
| Smithsonian Institution. Bureau of American Ethnology - 1903 - 544 páginas
...o'dia'k honwana'don"khwa'. 14 the he chief (iB). He-it-earth-holds some they him designate HEWITTl ONONDAGA VERSION So now, verily, her body continued...they, being waterfowl of all their kinds, floated severally about. Without interruption the body of the woman-being continued to fall. Now, at that time... | |
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