of a blanket, a dressed deer skin for moccasins,
a few articles of kitchen furniture, as a kettle,
bowl, or dish, with spoons, and some bread, corn,
salt, etc., for their nourishment. I
have never known an Indian woman complain of the
hardship of carrying this burden, which serves
for their own comfort and support as well as of their
husbands. The tilling of the ground at home, getting
of firewood, and pounding of corn in mortars,
is frequently done by female parties, much in
the manner of those husking, quilting, and other
frolics (as they are called) in some parts
of the United States.... [When accompanying her husband
on the hunt the woman] takes pains to dry as much
meat as she can, that none may be lost; she carefully
puts the tallow up, assists in drying the skins,
gathers as much wild hemp as possible for the
purpose of making strings, carrying bands, bags,
and other necessary articles; collects roots for dyeing;
in short, does everything in her power to leave
no care to her husband but the important one of
providing meat for the family. After all,
the fatigue of the women is by no means to be
compared to that of the men. Their hard and difficult
employments are periodical and of short duration,
while their husbands’ labors are constant
and severe in the extreme. Were a man to
take upon himself a part of his wife’s duty,
in addition to his own, he must necessarily sink
under the load, and of course his family must
suffer with him. On his exertions as a hunter
their existence depends; in order to be able to
follow that rough employment with success, he must
keep his limbs as supple as he can, he must avoid
hard labor as much as possible, that his joints
may not become stiffened, and that he may preserve
the necessary strength and agility of body to
enable him to pursue the chase, and bear the unavoidable
hardships attendant on it; for the fatigues of hunting
wear out the body and constitution far more than manual
labor. Neither creeks nor rivers, whether shallow
or deep, frozen or free from ice, must be an obstacle
to the hunter when in pursuit of a wounded deer,
bear, or other animal, as is often the case.
Nor has he then leisure to think on the state
of his body, and to consider whether his blood is
not too much heated to plunge without danger into the
cold stream, since the game he is in pursuit of
is running off from him with full speed.
Many dangerous accidents often befall him both
as a hunter and a warrior (for he is both), and are
seldom unattended with painful consequences, such
as rheumatism or consumption of the lungs, for
which the sweat-house, on which they so much depend,
and to which they often resort for relief, especially
after a fatiguing hunt or warlike excursion, is
not always a sure preservative or effectual remedy.[173]
The male and female come together by sexual attraction, and the chances of life are increased through association which permits each to do that class of things which