The Head Hunters of Northern Luzon by Cornélis de Witt Willcox
page 99 of 183 (54%)
page 99 of 183 (54%)
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of Northern Luzon. This _baile_ was like all native balls, _rigodón_,
waltzes, and two-steps; remarkably well done too, these, considering that the _señoritas_ wear the native slipper, the _chinela_, which is nothing more or less than a heelless bed-room slipper. But one _señorita_ danced the _jota_ for us, a graceful and charming dance, with one cavalier as her partner, friend or enemy according to the phase intended to be depicted. CHAPTER XIX The native village.--Houses.--Pitapit.--Native institutions.--Lumawig. The next day, the 9th, Father Clapp very kindly offered to show Strong and me the native village, an invitation we made haste to accept. This village, if village it be, marches with the Christian town, so that we at once got into it, to find it a collection of huts put down higgledy-piggledy, with almost no reference to convenience of access. Streets, of course, there were none, nor even regular paths from house to house; you just picked your way from one habitation to the next as best you could, carefully avoiding the pig-sty which each considerable hut seemed to have. I wish I could say that the Igorot out of rude materials had built a simple but clean and commodious house! He has done nothing of the sort: his materials are rude enough, but his hut is small, low, black, and dirty, so far as one could tell in walking through. The poorer houses have two rooms, an inner and an outer, both very small (say 6 × 6 feet and 4 × 6 feet respectively, |
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