[374.] “She, the Proud One.”
[375.] This story is identical with one published by Lafitau in his “Moeurs, etc.”
[376.] Thunder or the Thunder Man-Being.
[377.] This is the statement of an early form of anthropic parthenogenesis; its enduring implication is that air (wind)—that is, breath—is the source of life. In later development it becomes an immaculate conception.
[378.] The Wind Man-Being and Winter Man-Being.
[379.] The use of the epithet “cannibal” is justified only by the thought that persons are killed to be eaten; a natural inference to cannibalistic peoples.
[380.] The name is not easily translatable; it was probably partly misunderstood.
[381.] A Fishhawk.
[382.] Flint-worker or Flint-maker, i.e., Arrow-head-maker.
[383.] Net-Maker.