A Study of the Savage Weapons at the Centennial Exhibition, Philadelphia, 1876 (Classic Reprint)
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Excerpt from A Study of the Savage Weapons at the Centennial Exhibition, Philadelphia, 1876
It may be mentioned, however, that the Dutch and Portuguese colo nies had a manifold better exhibit in Paris in 1878, and that the former had the finest ethnological display of the mechanical ingenuity of an unlettered people which it has ever been the good fortune of the author to see.
Types of Savage Weapons. - The simplest form of a weapon is a stick, a heavy stick is a club. The club with a knob becomes a mace, the swell ing end sharpened on one edge is an axe. Point the stick and it is a spear, if light, it is a javelin, shorter still, it is a dagger for close quar ters. Flatten the stick and give it an edge, it becomes a sword, or, if short, it is a knife.
So far the weapon is a single piece of wood, but some ingenious man contrives to mount a stone in a withe, or sling it with a thong or in the skin of an animal's leg, or lash it to a stick, or he learns how to project a light spear from a bow, or a heavier one by means of a stick or a thong. We find all these modifications in the collections from various countries at the Centennial.
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