Show SOME 2 LATE 1 THE lire so lonely and cheerless 1 neva deotte covek of the maquis J land is not a lender solitude but a foi bidding desolation of f carped aliffi overlooking wastes ot sands the winds wage ir on the small shrubs and ventu iome glasses leav ing to the dinuth such as they cannot uproot trees spotting the edo of the plain as if they looked across the st and crouched in fear famished fumi shed a little for the files of tho maquis abo aie battle for ex istance that i the truie ahe flinty hilla are terraced td ind br careful irrigation canape to raise corn enough to keep body and soul together tho seven villages within a circuit of ten miles have leen related from the lost of the world through centimes cen times ot they 1 so little antei courso with each other tint the r hn gudges swift mutation aie entirely set men wrapped in blankets on the bare seared loc tsin the sun are tho ghastly proprietors of reservation activities chev number only 1600 souls of triba exhausted sun bounded by dilapidated cities unquestionably of areat anquita uhe sad of filen in tio emptiness ot then barren estates fia rients of pottery are profusely scattered about and deeply worn foot paths leading from to villace down the river bank and winding up to tho plain marl the ancient thoroughfares are new slightly trodden or ut tei ly how the indians were enslaved and dm en to the mines and how they pei by thousand is familiar history aney were an abject and brobyn people after the conquest and their decline roca steadily on whole tribe are eichnor aavo united with each othe for lafelt and tl e of citizens of sanu tle tube at pecos coined thit at which speaks the same language |