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Page 11

EXPLANATION
OF THE
INDIAN GAZETTE,

GIVING AN ACCOUNT OF ONE OF THEIR EXPEDITIONS.

The following divisions explain those on the plate referred to by the numbers.

         
1. Each of these figures represents
the number ten. They all signify,
that 18 times 10, or 180 American
Indians
took up the hatchet, or declared
war, in favor of the French;
which is represented by the hatchet
placed over the arms of France. 
2. They departed from Montreal
—represented by the bird, just
taking wing from the top of a
mountain. The moon, and the
buck, show the time to have been
in the first quarter of the buckmoon,
answering to July. 
3. They went by water—signified
by the canoe. The number of huts,
such as they raise to pass the night
in, shows they were 21 days on their
passage. 
4. Then they came on shore, and
traveled seven days by land—represented
by the foot, and the seven
huts. 
5. When they arrived near the
habitations of their enemies, at sunrise
—shewn by the sun being to the
eastward of them, beginning, as
they think, its daily course; there
they lay in wait three days—represented
by the hand pointing and the
three huts. 
6. After which, they surprised
their enemies, in number 12 times
10, or 120. The man asleep shows
how they surprised them, and the
hole in the top of the building is
supposed to signify that they broke
into some of their habitations in
that manner. 
7. They killed with the club
eleven of their enemies, and took
five prisoners—the former represented
by the club, and the eleven
heads; the latter by the figures on
the little pedestals. 
8. They lost nine of their own
men in the action—represented by
the nine heads within the bow,
which is the emblem of honor
among the Americans; but had
none taken prisoners—a circumstance
they lay great weight on,
shown by all the pedestals being
empty. 
9. The heads of the arrows, pointing
opposite ways, represent the
battle. 
10. The heads of the arrows, all
pointing the same way, signify the
flight of the enemy.