so that thewomen cannot be distinguished, except that they use a girdle and are less naked than themen; quite the reverse of what is practiced in many Christian lands, to the shame ofChristianity. One sees here old men, of eighty and a hundred years, who have hardly a grayhair. As to their intelligence, if we may judge from their conduct and from their way ofdealing with the French, they are not at a great disadvantage.
Father Perrault expresses a positive impression of the Mi'kmaq nation here which appears to be typical of the paradoxical attitude which these missionaries have of the Indigenous peoples.
Namely, that they are in some ways more virtuous than the Europeans/Christians yet in others more privy to vice (as with the perception of Pierre Biard that the Mi'kmaq are more prone to alcoholism than the French).