English:
Identifier: geronimosstoryof00gero (find matches)
Title: Geronimo's story of his life
Year: 1906 (1900s)
Authors: Geronimo, 1829-1909 Barrett, S. M. (Stephen Melvil), b. 1865
Subjects: Geronimo, 1829-1909 Apache Indians -- Kings and rulers
Publisher: New York, Duffield & company
Contributing Library: The Library of Congress
Digitizing Sponsor: Sloan Foundation
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Text Appearing Before Image:
GERONIMO who was speaking to the audience took along sword and ran it through the basket,each way, and then down through the clothcover. I heard the sword cut through thewomans body, and the manager himselfsaid she was dead; but when the cloth waslifted from the basket she stepped out,smiled, and walked off the stage. I wouldlike to know how she was so quickly healed,and why the wounds did not kill her. I have never considered bears very intelli-gent, except in their wild habits, but I hadnever before seen a white bear. In one ofthe shows a man had a white bear thatwas as intelligent as a man. He would dowhatever he was told—carry a log on hisshoulder, just as a man would; then, whenhe was told, would put it down again. Hedid many other things, and seemed to knowexactly what his keeper said to him. I amsure that no grizzly bear could be trained todo these things. One time the guards took me into a little 200
Text Appearing After Image:
Mrs. Asa DeklugieNiece of Geronimo and daughterof Chihuahua, a famous Apachechieftain Eva GeronimoGeronimos youngest daughter,16 years old AT THE WORLDS FAIR house ^ that had four windows. When wewere seated the Httle house started to movealong the ground. Then the guards calledmy attention to some curious things theyhad in their pockets. Finally they told meto look out, and when I did so I was scared,for our little house had gone high up inthe air, and the people down in the FairGrounds looked no larger than ants. Themen laughed at me for being scared; thenthey gave me a glass to look through (Ioften had such glasses which I took fromdead officers after battles in Mexico andelsewhere), and I could see rivers, lakesand mountains. But I had never been sohigh in the air, and I tried to look into thesky. There were no stars, and I could notlook at the sun through this glass becausethe brightness hurt my eyes. Finally I putthe glass down, and as they were all laugh-ing at me, I too, began
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