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Narrative of My Captivity Among the Sioux Indians (7/7) by Fanny Kelly 

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Level: C2 Advanced
Title: Narrative of My Captivity Among the Sioux Indians
Script: On request only
Author: Fanny Kelly
Reader: LibriVox - Tricia G
Accent: American English
Part 1 • Narrative of My Captiv...
Part 2 • Narrative of My Captiv...
Part 3 • Narrative of My Captiv...
Part 4 • Narrative of My Captiv...
Part 5 • Narrative of My Captiv...
Part 6 • Narrative of My Captiv...
Part 7 • Narrative of My Captiv...
00:05 Chapter 26
17:06 Chapter 27
23:46 Chapter 28
Synopsis:
In 1864 the Kelly wagon train, a party of six persons, departed Geneva, Kansas bound for Idaho, " with high wrought hopes and pleasant anticipations of a romantic and delightful journey across the plains " Unaware of the rising hostilities between Indians and settlers, the party chose to turn down the offer to join a larger train and instead continued on their way West content in their own company. It was a decision they would regret.
At the end of a "hot and oppressive day" they were confronted by a band of two hundred and fifty Indians, who after making more demands upon the company turned and began the massacre that would end the carrying away of Fanny Kelly and her daughter, Mary. Fanny Kelly's Captivity coincided with General Sully's campaign against the Santee Sioux, and although she did not realize it, she was witness to the last days of the free roaming way of life with the Sioux is both fascinating and harrowing. She describes, in detail, daily life in an Indian camp and notes customs that differed greatly from her own status among the tribe was constantly being reversed from captive drudge to honored guest.
First published in the nineteenth century, the modern reader will find much that is interesting in Narrative of My Captivity Among the Sioux , not least because Fanny Kelly tells her story with the accepted hostility toward the Indian that was common in her day, hostility that has led to stereotyping and misunderstandings that still exist today.
Level:
A1 Starter
• Easy English A1 Starter
A2 Elementary
• A2 Elementary
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Опубликовано:

 

6 июн 2022

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Комментарии : 6   
@HogMan2022
@HogMan2022 Год назад
I really enjoyed listening to this. Thank you very much!🙋
@mochiebellina8190
@mochiebellina8190 Год назад
Good story and narrative.
@raimundosilva1626
@raimundosilva1626 2 года назад
Good story
@learnenglishthroughstories5820
@learnenglishthroughstories5820 2 года назад
Thanks for watching
@jjdjj5392
@jjdjj5392 Год назад
Its pronounced KI O WA...with the i as it sounds like i went to the market
@kellyowens1868
@kellyowens1868 Год назад
But "RIO" as in Rio Grande, would be pronounced as the narrator did. I've probably heard KIOWA spoken correctly over 100, 150, or it could be as many as 200 different times in different movies, documentaries, lectures, & in connection to the famously strong, heavy lift, & transport helicopters the US Army uses, & it's often used in search, & rescue in mountainous terrain, I think. Whenever the words of any language, is expressed using letters, the closest aproximate spelling, & the spelling rules of a different language, there will always have some confusion, conflicts, & sounds that can't easily be formed with the basic long, & short vowel sounds, & the various consonant expressions, or consonant combinations like CH. English is actually a Germanic language, which replaced the indigenous celtic language used originally in the
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