716 PICTURE-WRITING OF THE AMERICAN INDIANS. 
might not be recognized as such. The fifth figure is more distinctly 
ideographic, showing the 
foot and leg as in the act 
& 
m= ee. Gn 
Fig. 1181. Fia. 1182. Fig. 1183. 
of making the impress, and the eagle’s feather to 
indicate the kind of track which would have been 
made by arunning eagle. 
Fig. 1181.—Goes- Walking. Red-Cloud’s Census. 
Fig. 1182.—Running-Eagle. Red-Cloud’sCensus. 
Fig. 1183.—Tracks. Red-Cloud’s Census. 
Fig. 1184.—Walking-Bull-Track. Red-Cloud’s 
Census. 
Fig, 1185.—Eagle-Track. Red-Cloud’s Census. 
Fig. 1186, copied from Copway (b), gives three 
characters of which the first represents “ran,” 
the second “walked” or ‘“‘passed,” and the third 
“stand,” characters similar both to the tracks and 
the feet found on many petroglyphs in North 
America. 
en —~ They are also found in the ter- 
N= HY races of temples of Thebes, of Kar- 
Fig. 1184. nak, and especially at Nakhaur in saree. 
South Bihar. 
P. le Page Renouf (a), in An Ele- 
hee J/\ mentary Grammar of the Ancient 
Egyptian Language, gives the 
Fig. 1186.—Feet. right-hand character of the same 
figure as the generic determinative implying motion. 
BROKEN LEG. 
This group gives several modes of expressing, pictorially, broken legs. 
Fig. 1187.—Many were thrown from their 
horses while surrounding buffalo, and some 
had their legs broken. Cloud-Shield’s Win- 
ter Count, 184748. The legs are distorted 
and the line may refer to the slippery ice 
touched by the toes. 
Fia. 1187. Fig. 1188.—Lone-Horn’s father broke his ye. 1198. 
leg. The-Flame’s Winter Count, 1832~33. This is a strongly marked 
representation. 
