NO. 7 WHITE INFLUENCE ON INDIAN PAINTING—EWERS II 
black-hearted dogs who had repaid his long and faithful friendship 
with a pestilence which was causing him to “die with my face rotten, 
that even the wolves will shrink with horror at seeing me.” Chardon 
wrote Four Bears’ brief obituary in his journal under the date 
Sunday, July 30, 1837: “One of our best friends of the Village 
(Four Bears), died today, regretted by all who knew him.” 
(Chardon, 1932, pp. 44-45, 50, 123-125.) 
BIBLIOGRAPHY 
ARNHEIM, RUDOLF. 
1954. Art as perception. Berkeley, Calif. 
CATLIN, GEORGE. 
1841. Letters and notes on the manners, customs, and condition of the 
North American Indians. 2 vols. London. 
1848. A descriptive catalogue of Catlin’s Indian collection. London. 
CHARDON, FrANGoIS A. 
1932. Chardon’s journal of Fort Clark, 1834-39. Ed. by Annie Heloise Abel. 
Pierre, S. Dak. 
Ewers, JoHN C. 
1939. Plains Indian painting. Palo Alto, Calif. 
1956. George Catlin, painter of Indians and the west. Ann. Rep. Smith- 
sonian Inst. for 1955. 
La VERENDRYE, PrerreE G. V. 
1890. Journal of La Verendrye, 1738-39. Rep. Canadian Archives for 1880. 
Ottawa. 
Lewis, MERIWETHER, and CLARK, WILLIAM. 
1906. Original journals of the Lewis and Clark Expedition. Ed. by Reuben 
Gold Thwaites. 8 vols. New York. 
MAXIMILIAN, ALEXANDER PHILIP, Prinz zU WIED-NEUWIED. 
1906. Travels in the interior of North America. Jn Early Western Travels, 
ed. by Reuben Gold Thwaites, vols. 22-24. Cleveland. 
WHISTLER, JAMES A. McNEILL. 
1916. Ten o’clock. Portland, Maine. 
