I shall here give you a few stories of the kind.
[Story of a Wetiko Woman]
That same year (I do not know precisely when, but only a few years back) a woman alone arrived at the house. Her appearance was haggard, wild, and distressed. However, she was taken into the house. Questions [were] put as usual, but the answers [were] vague, indefinite and contradictory. They handed her something to eat. She acted as if eating it indeed, but let the whole fall in the inside of her gown. This [roused] suspicion. But what added to this was the extraordinary stench she emitted from the heat of the chimney. And shortly after her entrance, a part of a human shoulder [was found]. The dogs brought [it] in from upon her road. She went off, being directed upon a road leading to a camp not far off.
As soon as she made her appearance, the Indians immediately conceived what was the matter. But through charity, as well as for safety and to find the truth, they gave her to eat, principally marrow-fat. Now these people pretend that cannibals cannot bear this fat or grease. Of course it was a kind of ordeal.
Everything she did and said, notwithstanding her great caution, betrayed her. She took up [one] of the children of her acquaintances to kiss, as is customary, but would have given it a bite had they not taken it from her. They watched her narrowly. All the men slept in one tent with her. She pretended to be asleep 'till she imagined the others were, then rose very cautiously, and was beginning to prepare herself for action. One of the men perceived this, rose upon her with an axe. Though the blow was violent, and upon the head, she would have killed him had not the others interfered. Her wretched fate was soon decided.
There is such a singular, strange, incomprehensible contradictoriness in almost all these cases. And many I have heard, that I do most verily believe they are denunciations, witch, or wizardisms. In any other manner they are not rationally to be accounted for, unless we suppose all those who feed on human flesh to be thus possessed. Then it is natural to man in these cases. But why then not the same with us as with these people?
[Those who Dream of Ice and the North]
The third kind—or delegated which by what follows, I believe may be allowed to be the term—[is made up of] those who dream of the North or the Ice or both. Everyone knows where the North resides, but only few know the abode of Ice or the Ice. This they pretend is the parent of Ice. [It] is in the bowels of the earth, at a great depth and never thaws. All ice originates from this. These two they are much afraid of because they are both highly malignant spirits. There is no joking or jesting with them. Those who at any future period are to become cannibals thus dream of them.
[Dream Feasts Of Human Flesh]
After the certain things usual in all dreams: