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Among the Head-Hunters of Formosa

CHAPTER XII METHODS OF TRANSPORT

Word Count: 878    |    Released on: 17/11/2017

und in Early Cyprian Tombs-Boat-building

ansport less primitive than that of human shoulders developed among the a

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Among the Head-Hunters of Formosa
Among the Head-Hunters of Formosa
“To treat her as a goddess has always been accounted a sure way of winning a lady’s favour. To the cynic, therefore, it might seem that Mrs. McGovern was bound to speak well of her head-hunting friends of the Formosan hills, seeing that they welcomed her with a respect that bordered on veneration. But of other head-hunters, hailing, say, from Borneo or from Assam, anthropologists have reported no less well, and that though the investigators were accorded no divine honours. The key to a just estimate of savage morality is knowledge of all the conditions. A custom that considered in itself is decidedly revolting may, on further acquaintance with the state of culture as a whole, turn out to be, if not praiseworthy, at least a drawback incidental to a normal phase of the ruder life of mankind.”
1 PREFACE2 INTRODUCTION3 PART I DESCRIPTION OF THE ISLAND AND ITS INHABITANTS4 CHAPTER II IMPRESSIONS AT FIRST-HAND5 CHAPTER III PERSONAL CONTACT WITH THE ABORIGINES6 CHAPTER IV THE PRESENT POPULATION OF FORMOSA7 PART II MANNERS AND CUSTOMS OF THE ABORIGINAL TRIBES8 CHAPTER VI SOCIAL ORGANIZATION9 CHAPTER VII RELIGIOUS BELIEFS AND PRACTICES10 CHAPTER VIII MARRIAGE CUSTOMS11 CHAPTER IX CUSTOMS CONNECTED WITH ILLNESS AND DEATH12 CHAPTER X ARTS AND CRAFTS13 CHAPTER XI TATTOOING AND OTHER FORMS OF MUTILATION14 CHAPTER XII METHODS OF TRANSPORT15 CHAPTER XIII POSSIBILITIES OF THE FUTURE16 CHAPTER XIV CIVILIZATION AND ITS BENEFITS