Part, chapter

 1    1,    2|                special grudge.~In fact Indians especially make more fuss
 2    1,    3|              of the century the Iquito Indians, who then formed the entire
 3    1,    3|         entered into with the riverine Indians, Ticunas, or Omaguas, mixed
 4    1,    3|               the time we speak of the Indians of Iquitos went about in
 5    1,    3|                he owned, and the dozen Indians whom he hired, he showed
 6    1,    3|            blacks, and the huts of the Indians. From the bank of the river,
 7    1,    3|        servants they were of two kindsIndians, of whom there were about
 8    1,    5|              few families of wandering Indians at the mouth of the Jurua.
 9    1,    5|                There are but few Muras Indians on the banks of the Purus.
10    1,    5|               the law of progress. The Indians will disappear. Before the
11    1,    5|                West the North American Indians have been wiped out. One
12    1,    6|               by six long sweeps which Indians worked from a forecastle.~
13    1,    6|             There were about a hundred Indians and blacks, and during the
14    1,    6|           close grained that of it the Indians make their battle-axes; “
15    1,    7|         service of negroes, negresses, Indians and Indian women, who appreciate
16    1,    8|           direction of Joam Garral the Indians displayed their incomparable
17    1,    8|                 there were to go forty Indians, forty blacks, Fragoso,
18    1,    8|                 continued Benito.~“Its Indians, its nomadic tribes,” added
19    1,    9|             fellows and of some of the Indians were reckoned on for additional
20    1,    9|                center the huts for the Indians and the blacks had been
21    1,    9|              the Upper Amazon.~For the Indians Joam Garral had designed
22    1,    9|            access to the interior. The Indians, accustomed to live in the
23    1,    9|          astonished that the number of Indians and negroes embarked were
24    1,    9|                attack by the riverside Indians.~Such would have been useless.
25    1,    9|         against their aggressions. The Indians along the river belong to
26    1,    9|               and fifty to two hundred Indians, without counting the population
27    1,   10|             the superintendent and the Indians and negroes who were to
28    1,   10|           whose population consists of Indians belonging to the Mayoruna
29    1,   10|                of the Coto and Orejone Indians.~It was on the morning of
30    1,   10|            waters of the Amazon.~A few Indians had wandered to the mouth
31    1,   11|             the country of the Marahua Indians, whose long floating hair,
32    1,   11|               missionaries. The Ticuma Indians, who inhabit the territories
33    1,   11|          received by some kind-hearted Indians, who took her to the missions,
34    1,   12|            hinder the kidnaping of the Indians from the Amazon, a practice
35    1,   12|               four hundred, nearly all Indians, comprising, no doubt, many
36    1,   12|              nine soldiers, nearly all Indians, and a sergeant, who is
37    1,   13|               accompanied by a crew of Indians and negroes, who form part
38    1,   14|              after all, why not? These Indians are no longer the Indians
39    1,   14|              Indians are no longer the Indians of days gone by. Instead
40    1,   14|              territories of the Culino Indians.~A number of islands were
41    1,   15|                affair for the riverine Indians of the Amazon and its tributaries.
42    1,   15|               watchers, another to the Indians, a third to the state, represented
43    1,   15|                it is a holiday for the Indians, who give themselves up
44    1,   15|             Benito, Fragoso, and a few Indians took a pirogue and landed
45    1,   15|               which a legend says that Indians with tails once existed.~
46    1,   15| Representatives of different tribes of Indians are found in the neighborhood,
47    1,   15|              territories of the Cacena Indians. At this spot the Amazon
48    1,   15|            inhabitants, drawn from the Indians on both banks, who rear
49    1,   16|                which, according to the Indians, is navigable toward the
50    1,   16|              appeared a party of Muras Indians, the remains of that ancient
51    1,   16|           Teffe and the Madeira.~These Indians went and came, watching
52    1,   16|               and not to provoke these Indians.~In truth the sides were
53    1,   16|            kills in a whisper,” as the Indians say, is prepared from the
54    1,   17|            There were here some twenty Indians collecting and working the
55    1,   17|         condition for the harvest, the Indians are set to work.~Incisions
56    1,   17|                sap being obtained, the Indians, to prevent the separation
57    1,   17|           opportunity, bought from the Indians all the caoutchouc stored
58    1,   17|            gone back to his cabin.~The Indians and the negroes were at
59    1,   17|            Benito, making signs to the Indians and the blacks to get behind.~“
60    1,   17|             young men joined them. The Indians and the negroes ran into
61    2,    1|               of the latest style; and Indians, also on the road to Europeanization
62    2,    2|          called “froxas,” of which the Indians make some of their weapons.~
63    2,    6|            seen nothing!~Once or twice Indians working in the fields were
64    2,    7|               became excited. A mob of Indians and negroes hurried, in
65    2,    7|               two ubas, a dozen of our Indians, and make a start.”~Padre
66    2,    8|           approached the bank, and the Indians, furnished with long poles,
67    2,    8|             scrutiny of Araujo and his Indians.~But all this labor produced
68    2,    8|                s rest was given to the Indians. During this time they partook
69    2,    8|                not even to stir up the Indians or to encourage them. The
70    2,    9|            with the four boats and the Indians to the basin of Frias, and
71    2,    9|               the air-pump, while four Indians from the jangada, under
72    2,   10|            which the long poles of the Indians kept just over his head.~
73    2,   11|             been taken on board by the Indians. His sojourn in the water
74    2,   11|          pirogue stopped.~In fact, the Indians had already thrown back
75    2,   20|             five thousand inhabitants, Indians for the most part, whose
76    2,   20|           Xingu, frequented by Yurumas Indians, whose principal industry
77    2,   20|             frequented by Tapuyas, the Indians of the Lower Amazon become
78    2,   20|          artery. There the huts of the Indians, the cottage of the negroes,
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