406 lines
24 KiB
Plaintext
406 lines
24 KiB
Plaintext
1819-20
|
|
|
|
THE SKETCH BOOK
|
|
|
|
TRAITS OF INDIAN CHARACTER
|
|
|
|
by Washington Irving
|
|
|
|
"I appeal to any white man if ever he entered Logan's cabin
|
|
hungry, and he gave him not to eat; if ever he came cold and naked,
|
|
and he clothed him not."
|
|
|
|
SPEECH OF AN INDIAN CHIEF.
|
|
|
|
THERE is something in the character and habits of the North American
|
|
savage, taken in connection with the scenery over which he is
|
|
accustomed to range, its vast lakes, boundless forests, majestic
|
|
rivers, and trackless plains, that is, to my mind, wonderfully
|
|
striking and sublime. He is formed for the wilderness, as the Arab
|
|
is for the desert. His nature is stern, simple and enduring; fitted to
|
|
grapple with difficulties, and to support privations. There seems
|
|
but little soil in his heart for the support of the kindly virtues;
|
|
and yet, if we would but take the trouble to penetrate through that
|
|
proud stoicism and habitual taciturnity, which lock up his character
|
|
from casual observation, we should find him linked to his fellow-man
|
|
of civilized life by more of those sympathies and affections than
|
|
are usually ascribed to him.
|
|
|
|
It has been the lot of the unfortunate aborigines of America, in the
|
|
early periods of colonization, to be doubly wronged by the white
|
|
men. They have been dispossessed of their hereditary possessions by
|
|
mercenary and frequently wanton warfare: and their characters have
|
|
been traduced by bigoted and interested writers. The colonist often
|
|
treated them like beasts of the forest; and the author has
|
|
endeavored to justify him in his outrages. The former found it
|
|
easier to exterminate than to civilize; the latter to vilify than to
|
|
discriminate. The appellations of savage and pagan were deemed
|
|
sufficient to sanction the hostilities of both; and thus the poor
|
|
wanderers of the forest were persecuted and defamed, not because
|
|
they were guilty, but because they were ignorant.
|
|
|
|
The rights of the savage have seldom been properly appreciated or
|
|
respected by the white man. In peace he has too often been the dupe of
|
|
artful traffic; in war he has been regarded as a ferocious animal,
|
|
whose life or death was a question of mere precaution and convenience.
|
|
Man is cruelly wasteful of life when his own safety is endangered, and
|
|
he is sheltered by impunity; and little mercy is to be expected from
|
|
him, when he feels the sting of the reptile and is conscious of the
|
|
power to destroy.
|
|
|
|
The same prejudices, which were indulged thus early, exist in common
|
|
circulation at the present day. Certain learned societies have, it
|
|
is true, with laudable diligence, endeavored to investigate and record
|
|
the real characters and manners of the Indian tribes; the American
|
|
government, too, has wisely and humanely exerted itself to inculcate a
|
|
friendly and forbearing spirit towards them, and to protect them
|
|
from fraud and injustice.* The current opinion of the Indian
|
|
character, however, is too apt to be formed from the miserable
|
|
hordes which infest the frontiers, and hang on the skirts of the
|
|
settlements. These are too commonly composed of degenerate beings,
|
|
corrupted and enfeebled by the vices of society, without being
|
|
benefited by its civilization. That proud independence, which formed
|
|
the main pillar of savage virtue, has been shaken down, and the
|
|
whole moral fabric lies in ruins. Their spirits are humiliated and
|
|
debased by a sense of inferiority, and their native courage cowed
|
|
and daunted by the superior knowledge and power of their enlightened
|
|
neighbors. Society has advanced upon them like one of those
|
|
withering airs that will sometimes breed desolation over a whole
|
|
region of fertility. It has enervated their strength, multiplied their
|
|
diseases, and superinduced upon their original barbarity the low vices
|
|
of artificial life. It has given them a thousand superfluous wants,
|
|
whilst it has diminished their means of mere existence. It has
|
|
driven before it the animals of the chase, who fly from the sound of
|
|
the axe and the smoke of the settlement, and seek refuge in the depths
|
|
of remoter forests and yet untrodden wilds. Thus do we too often
|
|
find the Indians on our frontiers to be the mere wrecks and remnants
|
|
of once powerful tribes, who have lingered in the vicinity of the
|
|
settlements, and sunk into precarious and vagabond existence. Poverty,
|
|
repining and hopeless poverty, a canker of the mind unknown in
|
|
savage life, corrodes their spirits, and blights every free and
|
|
noble quality of their natures. They become drunken, indolent, feeble,
|
|
thievish, and pusillanimous. They loiter like vagrants about the
|
|
settlements, among spacious dwellings replete with elaborate comforts,
|
|
which only render them sensible of the comparative wretchedness of
|
|
their own condition. Luxury spreads its ample board before their eyes;
|
|
but they are excluded from the banquet. Plenty revels over the fields;
|
|
but they are starving in the midst of its abundance: the whole
|
|
wilderness has blossomed into a garden; but they feel as reptiles that
|
|
infest it.
|
|
|
|
* The American government has been indefatigable in its exertions to
|
|
ameliorate the situation of the Indians, and to introduce among them
|
|
the arts of civilization, and civil and religious knowledge. To
|
|
protect them from the frauds of the white traders, no purchase of land
|
|
from them by individuals is permitted; nor is any person allowed to
|
|
receive lands from them as a present, without the express sanction
|
|
of government. These precautions are strictly enforced.
|
|
|
|
How different was their state while yet the undisputed lords of
|
|
the soil! Their wants were few, and the means of gratification
|
|
within their reach. They saw every one around them sharing the same
|
|
lot, enduring the same hardships, feeding on the same aliments,
|
|
arrayed in the same rude garments. No roof then rose, but was open
|
|
to the homeless stranger; no smoke curled among the trees, but he
|
|
was welcome to sit down by its fire, and join the hunter in his
|
|
repast. "For," says an old historian of New England, "their life is so
|
|
void of care, and they are so loving also, that they make use of those
|
|
things they enjoy as common goods, and are therein so compassionate,
|
|
that rather than one should starve through want, they would starve
|
|
all; thus they pass their time merrily, not regarding our pomp, but
|
|
are better content with their own, which some men esteem so meanly
|
|
of." Such were the Indians, whilst in the pride and energy of their
|
|
primitive natures: they resembled those wild plants, which thrive best
|
|
in the shades of the forest, but shrink from the hand of
|
|
cultivation, and perish beneath the influence of the sun.
|
|
|
|
In discussing the savage character, writers have been too prone to
|
|
indulge in vulgar prejudice and passionate exaggeration, instead of
|
|
the candid temper of true philosophy. They have not sufficiently
|
|
considered the peculiar circumstances in which the Indians have been
|
|
placed, and the peculiar principles under which they have been
|
|
educated. No being acts more rigidly from rule than the Indian. His
|
|
whole conduct is regulated according to some general maxims early
|
|
implanted in his mind. The moral laws that govern him are, to be sure,
|
|
but few; but then he conforms to them all;- the white man abounds in
|
|
laws of religion, morals, and manners, but how many does he violate?
|
|
|
|
A frequent ground of accusation against the Indians is their
|
|
disregard of treaties, and the treachery and wantonness with which, in
|
|
time of apparent peace, they will suddenly fly to hostilities. The
|
|
intercourse of the white men with the Indians, however, is too apt
|
|
to be cold, distrustful, oppressive, and insulting. They seldom
|
|
treat them with that confidence and frankness which are
|
|
indispensable to real friendship; nor is sufficient caution observed
|
|
not to offend against those feelings of pride or superstition, which
|
|
often prompts the Indian to hostility quicker than mere considerations
|
|
of interest. The solitary savage feels silently, but acutely. His
|
|
sensibilities are not diffused over so wide a surface as those of
|
|
the white man; but they run in steadier and deeper channels. His
|
|
pride, his affections, his superstitions, are all directed towards
|
|
fewer objects; but the wounds inflicted on them are proportionably
|
|
severe, and furnish motives of hostility, which we cannot sufficiently
|
|
appreciate. Where a community is also limited in number, and forms one
|
|
great patriarchal family, as in an Indian tribe, the injury of an
|
|
individual is the injury of the whole; and the sentiment of
|
|
vengeance is almost instantaneously diffused. One council fire is
|
|
sufficient for the discussion and arrangement of a plan of
|
|
hostilities. Here all the fighting men and sages assemble. Eloquence
|
|
and superstition combine to inflame the minds of the warriors. The
|
|
orator awakens their martial ardor, and they are wrought up to a
|
|
kind of religious desperation, by the visions of the prophet and the
|
|
dreamer.
|
|
|
|
An instance of one of those sudden exasperations, arising from a
|
|
motive peculiar to the Indian character, is extant in an old record of
|
|
the early settlement of Massachusetts. The planters of Plymouth had
|
|
defaced the monuments of the dead at Passonagessit, and had
|
|
plundered the grave of the Sachem's mother of some skins with which it
|
|
had been decorated. The Indians are remarkable for the reverence which
|
|
they entertain for the sepulchres of their kindred. Tribes that have
|
|
passed generations exiled from the abodes of their ancestors, when
|
|
by chance they have been travelling in the vicinity, have been known
|
|
to turn aside from the highway, and guided by wonderfully accurate
|
|
tradition, have crossed the country for miles to some tumulus,
|
|
buried perhaps in woods, where the bones of their tribe were anciently
|
|
deposited; and there have passed hours in silent meditation.
|
|
Influenced by this sublime and holy feeling, the Sachem, whose
|
|
mother's tomb had been violated, gathered his men together, and
|
|
addressed them in the following beautifully simple and pathetic
|
|
harangue; a curious specimen of Indian eloquence, and an affecting
|
|
instance of filial piety in a savage.
|
|
|
|
"When last the glorious light of all the sky was underneath this
|
|
globe, and birds grew silent, I began to settle, as my custom is, to
|
|
take repose. Before mine eyes were fast closed, methought I saw a
|
|
vision, at which my spirit was much troubled; and trembling at that
|
|
doleful sight, a spirit cried aloud, 'Behold, my son, whom I have
|
|
cherished, see the breasts that gave thee suck, the hands that
|
|
lapped thee warm, and fed thee oft. Canst thou forget to take
|
|
revenge of those wild people who have defaced my monument in a
|
|
despiteful manner, disdaining our antiquities and honorable customs?
|
|
See, now, the Sachem's grave lies like the common people, defaced by
|
|
an ignoble race. Thy mother doth complain, and implores thy aid
|
|
against this thievish people, who have newly intruded on our land.
|
|
If this be suffered, I shall not rest quiet in my everlasting
|
|
habitation.' This said, the spirit vanished, and I, all in a sweat,
|
|
not able scarce to speak, began to get some strength, and recollect my
|
|
spirits that were fled, and determined to demand your counsel and
|
|
assistance."
|
|
|
|
I have adduced this anecdote at some length, as it tends to show how
|
|
these sudden acts of hostility, which have been attributed to
|
|
caprice and perfidy, may often arise from deep and generous motives,
|
|
which our inattention to Indian character and customs prevents our
|
|
properly appreciating.
|
|
|
|
Another ground of violent outcry against the Indians is their
|
|
barbarity to the vanquished. This had its origin partly in policy
|
|
and partly in superstition. The tribes, though sometimes called
|
|
nations, were never so formidable in their numbers, but that the
|
|
loss of several warriors was sensibly felt; this was particularly
|
|
the case when they had been frequently engaged in warfare; and many an
|
|
instance occurs in Indian history, where a tribe, that had long been
|
|
formidable to its neighbors, has been broken up and driven away, by
|
|
the capture and massacre of its principal fighting men. There was a
|
|
strong temptation, therefore, to the victor to be merciless; not so
|
|
much to gratify any cruel revenge, as to provide for future
|
|
security. The Indians had also the superstitious belief, frequent
|
|
among barbarous nations, and prevalent also among the ancients, that
|
|
the manes of their friends who had fallen in battle were soothed by
|
|
the blood of the captives. The prisoners, however, who are not thus
|
|
sacrificed, are adopted into their families in the place of the slain,
|
|
and are treated with the confidence and affection of relatives and
|
|
friends; nay, so hospitable and tender is their entertainment, that
|
|
when the alternative is offered them, they will often prefer to remain
|
|
with their adopted brethren, rather than return to the home and the
|
|
friends of their youth.
|
|
|
|
The cruelty of the Indians towards their prisoners has been
|
|
heightened since the colonization of the whites. What was formerly a
|
|
compliance with policy and superstition, has been exasperated into a
|
|
gratification of vengeance. They cannot but be sensible that the white
|
|
men are the usurpers of their ancient dominion, the cause of their
|
|
degradation, and the gradual destroyers of their race. They go forth
|
|
to battle, smarting with injuries and indignities which they have
|
|
individually suffered, and they are driven to madness and despair by
|
|
the wide-spreading desolation, and the overwhelming ruin of European
|
|
warfare. The whites have too frequently set them an example of
|
|
violence, by burning their villages, and laying waste their slender
|
|
means of subsistence: and yet they wonder that savages do not show
|
|
moderation and magnanimity towards those who have left them nothing
|
|
but mere existence and wretchedness.
|
|
|
|
We stigmatize the Indians, also, as cowardly and treacherous,
|
|
because they use stratagem in warfare, in preference to open force;
|
|
but in this they are fully justified by their rude code of honor. They
|
|
are early taught that stratagem is praiseworthy; the bravest warrior
|
|
thinks it no disgrace to lurk in silence, and take every advantage
|
|
of his foe: he triumphs in the superior craft and sagacity by which he
|
|
has been enabled to surprise and destroy an enemy. Indeed, man is
|
|
naturally more prone to subtility than open valor, owing to his
|
|
physical weakness in comparison with other animals. They are endowed
|
|
with natural weapons of defence: with horns, with tusks, with hoofs,
|
|
and talons; but man has to depend on his superior sagacity. In all his
|
|
encounters with these, his proper enemies, he resorts to stratagem;
|
|
and when he perversely turns his hostility against his fellow-man,
|
|
he at first continues the same subtle mode of warfare.
|
|
|
|
The natural principle of war is to do the most harm to our enemy
|
|
with the least harm to ourselves; and this of course is to be effected
|
|
by stratagem. That chivalrous courage which induces us to despise
|
|
the suggestions of prudence, and to rush in the face of certain
|
|
danger, is the offspring of society, and produced by education. It
|
|
is honorable, because it is in fact the triumph of lofty sentiment
|
|
over an instinctive repugnance to pain, and over those yearnings after
|
|
personal ease and security, which society has condemned as ignoble. It
|
|
is kept alive by pride and the fear of shame; and thus the dread of
|
|
real evil is overcome by the superior dread of an evil which exists
|
|
but in the imagination. It has been cherished and stimulated also by
|
|
various means. It has been the theme of spirit-stirring song and
|
|
chivalrous story. The poet and minstrel have delighted to shed round
|
|
it the splendors of fiction; and even the historian has forgotten
|
|
the sober gravity of narration, and broken forth into enthusiasm and
|
|
rhapsody in its praise. Triumphs and gorgeous pageants have been its
|
|
reward: monuments, on which art has exhausted its skill, and
|
|
opulence its treasures, have been erected to perpetuate a nation's
|
|
gratitude and admiration. Thus artificially excited, courage has risen
|
|
to an extraordinary and factitious degree of heroism: and arrayed in
|
|
all the glorious "pomp and circumstance of war," this turbulent
|
|
quality has even been able to eclipse many of those quiet, but
|
|
invaluable virtues, which silently ennoble the human character, and
|
|
swell the tide of human happiness.
|
|
|
|
But if courage intrinsically consists in the defiance of danger
|
|
and pain, the life of the Indian is a continual exhibition of it. He
|
|
lives in a state of perpetual hostility and risk. Peril and
|
|
adventure are congenial to his nature; or rather seem necessary to
|
|
arouse his faculties and to give an interest to his existence.
|
|
Surrounded by hostile tribes, whose mode of warfare is by ambush and
|
|
surprisal, he is always prepared for fight, and lives with his weapons
|
|
in his hands. As the ship careers in fearful singleness through the
|
|
solitudes of ocean;- as the bird mingles among clouds and storms,
|
|
and wings its way, a mere speck, across the pathless fields of air;-
|
|
so the Indian holds his course, silent, solitary, but undaunted,
|
|
through the boundless bosom of the wilderness. His expeditions may vie
|
|
in distance and danger with the pilgrimage of the devotee, or the
|
|
crusade of the knight-errant. He traverses vast forests, exposed to
|
|
the hazards of lonely sickness, of lurking enemies, and pining famine.
|
|
Stormy lakes, those great inland seas, are no obstacles to his
|
|
wanderings: in his light canoe of bark he sports, like a feather, on
|
|
their waves, and darts, with the swiftness of an arrow, down the
|
|
roaring rapids of the rivers. His very subsistence is snatched from
|
|
the midst of toil and peril. He gains his food by the hardships and
|
|
dangers of the chase: he wraps himself in the spoils of the bear,
|
|
the panther, and the buffalo, and sleeps among the thunders of the
|
|
cataract.
|
|
|
|
No hero of ancient or modern days can surpass the Indian in his
|
|
lofty contempt of death, and the fortitude with which he sustains
|
|
its cruellest infliction. Indeed we here behold him rising superior to
|
|
the white man, in consequence of his peculiar education. The latter
|
|
rushes to glorious death at the cannon's mouth; the former calmly
|
|
contemplates its approach, and triumphantly endures it, amidst the
|
|
varied torments of surrounding foes and the protracted agonies of
|
|
fire. He even takes a pride in taunting his persecutors, and provoking
|
|
their ingenuity of torture; and as the devouring flames prey on his
|
|
very vitals, and the flesh shrinks from the sinews, he raises his last
|
|
song of triumph, breathing the defiance of an unconquered heart, and
|
|
invoking the spirits of his fathers to witness that he dies without
|
|
a groan.
|
|
|
|
Notwithstanding the obloquy with which the early historians have
|
|
overshadowed the characters of the unfortunate natives, some bright
|
|
gleams occasionally break through, which throw a degree of
|
|
melancholy lustre on their memories. Facts are occasionally to be
|
|
met with in the rude annals of the eastern provinces, which, though
|
|
recorded with the coloring of prejudice and bigotry, yet speak for
|
|
themselves; and will be dwelt on with applause and sympathy, when
|
|
prejudice shall have passed away.
|
|
|
|
In one of the homely narratives of the Indian wars in New England,
|
|
there is a touching account of the desolation carried into the tribe
|
|
of the Pequod Indians. Humanity shrinks from the cold-blooded detail
|
|
of indiscriminate butchery. In one place we read of the surprisal of
|
|
an Indian fort in the night, when the wigwams were wrapped in
|
|
flames, and the miserable inhabitants shot down and slain in
|
|
attempting to escape, "all being despatched and ended in the course of
|
|
an hour." After a series of similar transactions, "our soldiers," as
|
|
the historian piously observes, "being resolved by God's assistance to
|
|
make a final destruction of them," the unhappy savages being hunted
|
|
from their homes and fortresses, and pursued with fire and sword, a
|
|
scanty, but gallant band, the sad remnant of the Pequod warriors, with
|
|
their wives and children, took refuge in a swamp.
|
|
|
|
Burning with indignation, and rendered sullen by despair; with
|
|
hearts bursting with grief at the destruction of their tribe, and
|
|
spirits galled and sore at the fancied ignominy of their defeat,
|
|
they refused to ask their lives at the hands of an insulting foe,
|
|
and preferred death to submission.
|
|
|
|
As the night drew on they were surrounded in their dismal retreat,
|
|
so as to render escape impracticable. Thus situated, their enemy
|
|
"plied them with shot all the time, by which means many were killed
|
|
and buried in the mire." In the darkness and fog that preceded the
|
|
dawn of day some few broke through the besiegers and escaped into
|
|
the woods: "the rest were left to the conquerors, of which many were
|
|
killed in the swamp, like sullen dogs who would rather, in their
|
|
self-willedness and madness, sit still and be shot through, or cut
|
|
to pieces," than implore for mercy. When the day broke upon this
|
|
handful of forlorn but dauntless spirits, the soldiers, we are told,
|
|
entering the swamp, "saw several heaps of them sitting close together,
|
|
upon whom they discharged their pieces, laden with ten or twelve
|
|
pistol bullets at a time, putting the muzzles of the pieces under
|
|
the boughs, within a few yards of them; so as, besides those that were
|
|
found dead, many more were killed and sunk into the mire, and never
|
|
were minded more by friend or foe.
|
|
|
|
Can any one read this plain unvarnished tale, without admiring the
|
|
stern resolution, the unbending pride, the loftiness of spirit, that
|
|
seemed to nerve the hearts of these self-taught heroes, and to raise
|
|
them above the instinctive feelings of human nature? When the Gauls
|
|
laid waste the city of Rome, they found the senators clothed in
|
|
their robes, and seated with stern tranquillity in their curule
|
|
chairs; in this manner they suffered death without resistance or
|
|
even supplication. Such conduct was, in them, applauded as noble and
|
|
magnanimous; in the hapless Indian it was reviled as obstinate and
|
|
sullen! How truly are we the dupes of show and circumstance! How
|
|
different is virtue, clothed in purple and enthroned in state, from
|
|
virtue, naked and destitute, and perishing obscurely in a wilderness!
|
|
|
|
But I forbear to dwell on these gloomy pictures. The eastern
|
|
tribes have long since disappeared; the forests that sheltered them
|
|
have been laid low, and scarce any traces remain of them in the
|
|
thickly-settled states of New England, excepting here and there the
|
|
Indian name of a village or a stream. And such must, sooner or
|
|
later, be the fate of those other tribes which skirt the frontiers,
|
|
and have occasionally been inveigled from their forests to mingle in
|
|
the wars of white men. In a little while, and they will go the way
|
|
that their brethren have gone before. The few hordes which still
|
|
linger about the shores of Huron and Superior, and the tributary
|
|
streams of the Mississippi, will share the fate of those tribes that
|
|
once spread over Massachusetts and Connecticut, and lorded it along
|
|
the proud banks of the Hudson; of that gigantic race said to have
|
|
existed on the borders of the Susquehanna; and of those various
|
|
nations that flourished about the Potomac and the Rappahannock, and
|
|
that peopled the forests of the vast valley of Shenandoah. They will
|
|
vanish like a vapor from the face of the earth; their very history
|
|
will be lost in forgetfulness; and "the places that now know them will
|
|
know them no more for ever." Or if, perchance, some dubious memorial
|
|
of them should survive, it may be in the romantic dreams of the
|
|
poet, to people in imagination his glades and groves, like the fauns
|
|
and satyrs and sylvan deities of antiquity. But should he venture upon
|
|
the dark story of their wrongs and wretchedness; should he tell how
|
|
they were invaded, corrupted, despoiled, driven from their native
|
|
abodes and the sepulchres of their fathers, hunted like wild beasts
|
|
about the earth, and sent down with violence and butchery to the
|
|
grave, posterity will either turn with horror and incredulity from the
|
|
tale, or blush with indignation at the inhumanity of their
|
|
forefathers.- "We are driven back," said an old warrior, "until we can
|
|
retreat no farther- our hatchets are broken, our bows are snapped, our
|
|
fires are nearly extinguished:- a little longer, and the white man
|
|
will cease to persecute us- for we shall cease to exist!"
|
|
|
|
THE END
|
|
.
|