Home / O'Callaghan, E.B., ed. The Documentary History of the State of New York, Vol. II. Albany: Weed, Parsons and Co., 1849. / Passage

Documentary History of the State of New York, Vol. II

O'Callaghan, E.B., ed. The Documentary History of the State of New York, Vol. II. Albany: Weed, Parsons and Co., 1849. 266 words

You may be assured we shall take to Heart all your words, & deliberate upon everry Article, and as it requires some time, you must not think it long, if we do not come down to the Lake where you lay, as you expect to morrow, it may be the next day, tho we consider it cannot be agreeable to you to live in the WooJs, we shall make' what dispatch we can --

Parted for that Day -- Att a General Meeting of the Six Nations Held at Onondaga September the lO-h. 1753_

The Answer of the Six Nations to the foregoing Speech, By the Red Head their Speaker -- Brother Warraghiiyagee --

We are obliged to you for your Speech and Act of Condolence, for the loss of jur Three Great Brothers, Caghniagarota, Onughsa. lego, and Gahuscaro^na and we are the more affected, as it was done conformable to .^ur Manner. We are too sensible of what Consequence they wore of in this Assembly, To say more would be to Exaggerate our Conscern, which we wish was intirely suppressed. A Belt.

Brother Warraghiiyagee -- ■

We are sorry to hear our Brother the Governour is sick, and we thank you for giveing us Notice of y®. sudden arrival of a new One, we shall suspend some Matters of Consequence 'till then, some ^f which we shall mention in order, as we proceed to Answer that part of your Speech relative thereto, All of us will chearfully attend when he pleases to call, and are unalterable in our Antient Freindship with our Bretheren the English.