Page:Early western travels, 1748-1846 (1907 Volume 2).djvu/96

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90
Early Western Travels
[Vol. 2

tiously avoided, as the violence with which they strike has been known to break an arm or a leg.[1]

Athtergain, or miss none but catch all, is also a favourite amusement with them, in which the women frequently take a part. It is played with a number of hard beans, black and white, one of which has small spots, and is called the king: they are put into a shallow wooden bowl, and shaken alternately by each party, who sit on the ground opposite to one another; whoever is dexterous enough to make the spotted bean jump out of the bowl, receives of the adverse party [53] as many beans as there are spots: the rest of the beans do not count for any thing.[2]

The boys are very expert at trundling a hoop, particularly the Cahnuaga Indians, whom I have frequently seen excel at this amusement. The game is played by any number of boys who may accidentally assemble together, some driving the hoop, while others with bows and arrows shoot at it. At this exercise they are surprisingly expert, and will stop the progress of the hoop when going with great velocity, by driving the pointed arrow into its edge; this they will do at a considerable distance, and on horseback as well as on foot. They will also kill small birds at fifty yards distance, and strike a halfpenny off a stick at fifteen yards. Spears and tomahawks they manage with equal dexterity.


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  1. This is the game of lacrosse, a modification of which has become the Canadian national game. For an historical account of this game, see Jesuit Relations, x, pp. 326-328; Henry's Travels (Bain's ed.), p. 77; Masson, Bourgeois, ii, pp. 337, 338.—Ed.
  2. For a similar game with slight modifications, see Masson, Bourgeois, ii, p. 340.—Ed.