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OF the Printers of this Treaty may be had, [Price 6d] The Charge delivered from the Bench to the Grand Inquest, at a Court of Oyer and Terminer and General Gaol Delivery, held for the City and County of Philadelphia; by the Honble James Logan Esq; Chief Justice of the Province of Pensilvania.


FOOTNOTES

[1] The History of the Five Nations, from the earliest Acquaintance of the Europeans with them, to the Treaty of Reswick, by C. Colden, a Manuscript ready for the Press, in the Hands of a worthy Gentleman in London.

[2] "It is customary among them to make a Complement of Naturalization into the Five Nations; and considering how highly they value themselves above all others, it must be accounted no small one.—I had this Complement from one of their old Sachems, which he did by giving me his own Name: He had been a notable Warriour; and he told me, that now I had a Right to assume to my self all the Acts of Valour he had performed." C. Colden's History of the Five Nations, M.S.

[3] The Indian Idiom; they always stile a whole Nation in the singular Number.

[4] A Tree is their most frequent Emblem of Peace. To plant a Tree whose Top may reach to the Sun, and its Branches may extend over the whole Country, is a Phrase for a lasting Covenant of Peace.

[5] The great Pipe, or Calumet of the Indians, resembles the Olive-Branch of Antiquity, always a Badge of Peace.

[6] "All the Nations round them have for many Years entirely submitted to them, (the Five Nations) and pay a Yearly Tribute in Wampum: They dare neither make War nor Peace without the Consent of the Mohawks. Two old Men commonly go about every Year or two to receive this Tribute; and I have had Opportunity to observe what Anxiety the poor Indians were under, whilst the two old Men remained in that Part of the Country where I was. An old Mohawk Sachem, in a poor Blanket and a dirty Shirt, may be seen issuing his Orders with as absolute Authority as a Roman Dictator, or King of France." C. Colden's History.

[7] Roanu signifies Nation or People, in the Language of the Six Nations.

[8] De la Poterie's History of North America, in Dr. Colden's History, &c.





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