| Congregational churches - 1832 - 480 pages
...away a woman from some campong. When the children are old enough to shift for themselves, they usually separate, neither one afterwards thinking of the other. At night they sleep under a large tree, the branches of which hang low. On the branches they fasten the children in a kind of... | |
| American literature - 1860 - 620 pages
...away a woman from some campong. When the children are old enough to shift for themselves, they usually separate, neither one afterwards thinking of the other. At night they sleep under some large tree the branches of which hang low. On these they fasten the children in a kind of swing. Around the... | |
| George Windsor Earl - Ethnology - 1853 - 288 pages
...away a woman from some kampong. When the children are old enough to shift for themselves they usually separate, neither one afterwards thinking of the other; at night they sleep under some large tree, the branches of which hang low. On these they fasten the children in a kind of swing ; around... | |
| Charles Pickering - Ethnology - 1854 - 564 pages
...away a woman from some campong. When the children are old enough to shift for themselves, they usually separate, neither one afterwards thinking of the other. At night they sleep under some large tree, the branches of which hang low. On these they fasten the children in -a kind of swing. Around... | |
| John Holmes Agnew, Walter Hilliard Bidwell - American periodicals - 1860 - 624 pages
...away a woman from some campong. When the children are old enough to shift for themselves, they usually separate, neither one afterwards thinking of the other. At night they sleep under some large tree the branches of which hang low. On these they fasten the children in a kind of swing. Around the... | |
| Sir John Lubbock - Anthropology - 1875 - 646 pages
...woman from some campong. ' When the children are old enough to shift for them' selves, they usually separate, neither one afterwards ' thinking of the other. At night they sleep under some ' large tree, the branches of which hang low ; on these ' they fasten the children in a kind of swing ; around... | |
| Joseph Hatton - British North Borneo - 1881 - 326 pages
...away a woman from some kampong. When the children are old enough to shift for themselves they usually separate, neither one afterwards thinking of the other; at night they sleep under some large tree, the branches of which hang low. On these they fasten the children in a kind of swing; around... | |
| GEORGE GUNTON - 1891 - 530 pages
...Progress in general, therefore, may be defined as a tendency to change from a relatively simple Jo A . relatively -complex organization. Although this...595, 596 ; Lyell's " Antiquity of Man,'' pp. 377-80 ; Sproat's " Scenes and Studies of Savage Life," p. 120 ; Dubois' " Description of the People of India,"... | |
| Henry Ling Roth - Dayak (Bornean people) - 1896 - 566 pages
...away a woman from some kampong. When the children are old enough to shift for themselves they usually separate, neither one afterwards thinking of the other ; at night they sleep under some large tree, the branches of which hang low. On these they fasten the children in a kind of swing ; around... | |
| Hudson Tuttle - Ethnology - 1896 - 350 pages
...man carries away the woman. When the children are old enough to shift for themselves, they usually separate, neither one afterwards thinking of the other; at night they sleep under some large tree, the branches of which hang low! On these they fasten the children in a kind of swing; around... | |
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