The Children's Six Minutes
THE CHILDREN'S SIX MINUTES BRUCE S. WRIGHT THE CHILDREN'S SIX MINUTES BY BRUCE S. WRIGHT NEW YORK GEORGE H. DORAN COMPANY COPYRIGHT, 1922,
bodies, and it is a very easy matter to pick up skulls and
bones around old camping grounds, or where the dead are
laid. In case it is not desirable to abandon a place, the
sick person is left out in some lone spot protected by
brush, where they are either abandoned to their fate or food
brought to them until they die. This is done only when all
hope is gone. I have found bodies thus left so well inclosed
with brush that wild animals were unable to get at them; and
one so left to die was revived by a cup of coffee from our
house and is still living and well.
Lieut. George E. Ford, Third United States Cavalry, in a personal
communication to the writer, corroborates the account given by Dr.
Menard, as follows:
This tribe, numbering about 8,000 souls, occupy a
reservation in the extreme northwestern corner of New Mexico
and Northeastern Arizona. The funeral ceremonies of the
Navajos are of the most simple character. They ascribe the
death of an individual to the direct action of _Chinde_, or
the devil, and believe that he remains in the vicinity of
the dead. For this reason, as soon as a member of the tribe
dies a shallow grave is dug within the hogan or dwelling by
one of the near male relatives, and into this the corpse is
unceremoniously tumbled by the relatives, who have
previously protected themselves from the evil influence by
THE CHILDREN'S SIX MINUTES BRUCE S. WRIGHT THE CHILDREN'S SIX MINUTES BY BRUCE S. WRIGHT NEW YORK GEORGE H. DORAN COMPANY COPYRIGHT, 1922,