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Show LIVING SEPULCHERS. 89 another part of the volume that, arriving at a spring one evening, thejr were obliged to dig out the skeleton of an Indian from the mud at the bottom before using the water. This peculiar mode of burial is entirely unique, so far as known, and but from the well- known probity of the relator might well be questioned, especially when it is remembered that in the country spoken of water is quite scarce and Indians are careful not to pollute the streams or springs near which they live. Conjecture seems useless to establish a reason for this disposition of the dead. The second example is by Catlin* and relates to the Chinook: u* * * Tkjg ijttje cra( jle has a strap which passes over the woman's forehead whilst the cradle rides on her back, and if the child dies during its subjection to this rigid mode its cradle becomes its coffin, forming a little canoe, in which it lies floating on the water in some sacred pool, where they are often in the habit of fastening their canoes containing the dead bodies of the old and young, or, which is often the case, elevated into the branches of trees, where their bodies are left to decay and their bones to dry whilst they are bandaged in many skins and curiously packed in their canoes, with paddles to propel and ladles to bail them out, and provisions to last and pipes to smoke as they are performing their ' long journey after death to their contemplated hunting grounds,' which these people think is to be performed in their canoes." LIVING SEPULOHERS. This is a term quaintly used by the learned M. Pierre Muret to express the devouring of the dead by birds and animals or the surviving friends and relatives. Exposure of the dead to animals and birds has already been mentioned, but in the absence of any positive proof it is not believed that the North American Indians followed the custom, although cannibalism may have prevailed to a limited extent. It is true that a few accounts are given by authors, but these are considered to be so apochryphal in character that for the present it is deemed prudential to omit them. That such a means of disposing of the dead was not in practice is somewhat remarkable when we * Hiet. North American Indians, 1844, ii, p. 141. |