[364.] The Great Heads were the Dagwanoenyent.
[365.] The Arrow.
[366.] This term signifies “People of the Land of Reeds.” It Is not at all certain that the name applied to any place in the southland, for the modern Iroquois apply it to certain people coming from Ononʻhoʻgwaʹʼgeʻ near Binghamton, N. Y.
[367.] The Roué.
[368.] These two words signify “ ‘Cherokee’; there they dwell.” That is, it was the country of the Cherokee.
[369.] The words “Ne Hononhsot” signify “the lodge tenant,” but “Endekha Gaahgwa” signify “the sun,” i.e., “Diurnal It-Orb-of-Light.”
[370.] This is an official title; it denotes “the chiefess”; that is, the woman chief, who is such by election, and not by being a wife of a chief.
[371.] This conception of a river of land is picturesque, to say the least.
[372.] This is a protest against prevalent cannibalism.
[373.] Hăʼdegaunʹdăgeʻ, i.e., “All kinds of trees,” and the Dwarf Man, respectively.