CONTENTS XIII 



The narrative — Continued rage 

 Chapter XII — The Ghost dance east of the Rockies — Continued 



Statement of General Miles 833 



Report of Captain Hurst 836 



Statement of American Horse 839 



Statement of Bishop Hare 840 



XIII — The Sioux outbreak — Sitting Bull and Wounded Knee 843 



Appendix : The Indian story of Wounded Knee 884 



XIV — Close of the outbreak — The Ghost dance in the south 887 



XV — The ceremony of the Ghost dance 915 



Among the northern Cheyenne 915 



Among the Sioux 915 



Song rehearsals 918 



Preparations for the dance 918 



Giving the feather 919 



The painting of the dancers 919 



The ceremony 920 



The crow dance 921 



The hypnotic process 922 



The area covered by the dance 926 



Present condition of the dance 927 



XVI — Parallels in other systems 928 



The Biblical period 928 



Mohammedanism 930 



Joan of Arc 932 



Dance of Saint John 935 



The Flagellants 935 



Ranters, Quakers, and Fifth-Monarchy men 936 



French prophets 938 



Jumpers 939 



Methodists 939 



Shakers 941 



Kentucky revival 942 



Adventists 944 



Other parallels 945 



Beekmanites 945 



Patterson and Brown's mission 946 



Wilderness worshipers 946 



Heavenly recruits 947 



Appendix: Hypnotism and the dance among the Der- 

 vishes 948 



The songs 953 



Introductory 953 



The Arapaho 953 



Tribal synonymy 953 



Tribal signs 954 



Sketch of the tribe 954 



Songs of the Arapaho 958 



1. Opening song: Eyehe'1 nd'nisa'na — O, my children ! 958 



2. Sc'icha lieitu'wiini'na — The sacred pipe tells me 959 



3. Ate'be tiriuu naiitt' — When at first I liked the whites 961 



4. A'ba'ni'ki' — My partner 961 



5. Anisiina'aliu — My father 962 



6. E'yehe' Wu'naiju' uhu' — E'tjehe'! They are new 963 



7. Bi'iahi'hi — My partner! My partner! 964 



