these shrieking savages, and heard the pants and snorts of the
departing steamer, which carried away all my companions, were somewhat of
the dismal sort; though it was pleasant, too, in the way that everything
strange is; everything that breaks in upon the routine that so easily
incrusts us.
I had reason to expect a room to myself at the hotel, but found none,
and was obliged to take up my rest in the common parlor and eating-room, a
circumstance which ensured my being an early riser.
With the first rosy streak, I was out among my Indian neighbors, whose
lodges honey-combed the beautiful beach, that curved away in long, fair
outline on either side the house. They were already on the alert, the
children creeping out from beneath the blanket door of the lodge; the
women pounding corn in their rude mortars, the young men playing on their
pipes. I had been much amused, when the strain proper to the Winnebago
courting flute was played to me on another instrument, at any one cying it
a melody; but now, when I heard the notes in their true tone and time, I
thought it not unworthy comparison, in its graceful sequence, and the
light flourish, at the close, with the sweetest bird-songs; and this, like
the bird-song, is only practised to allure a mate. The Indian, become a
citizen and a husband, no more thinks of playing the flute than one of the
"settled down" members of our society would of choosing the "purple light
of love" as dye-stuff for a surtout.
Mackinaw has been fully described by able pens, and I can only add my
tribute to the exceeding
ARCHED ROCK FROM THE WATER
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beauty of the spot and its position. It is charming to be on an island
so small that you can sail round it in an afternoon, yet large enough to
admit of long secluded walks through its gentle groves. You can go round
it in your boat; or, on foot, you can tread its narrow beach, resting, at
times, beneath the lofty walls of stone, richly wooded, which rise from it
in various architectural forms. In this stone, caves are continually
forming, from the action of the atmosphere; one of these is quite deep,
and with a fragment left at its mouth, wreathed with little creeping
plants, that looks, as you sit within, like a ruined pillar.
The arched rock surprised me, much as I had heard of it, from the
perfection of the arch. It is perfect whether you look up through it from
the lake, or down through it to the transparent waters. We both ascended
and descended, no very easy matter, the steep and crumbling path, and
rested at the summit, beneath the trees, and at the foot upon the cool
mossy stones beside the lapsing wave. Nature has carefully decorated all
this architecture with shrubs that take root within the crevices, and
small creeping vines. These natural ruins may vie for beautiful effect
with the remains of European grandeur, and have, beside, a charm as of a
playful mood in nature.
The sugar-loaf rock is a fragment in the same kind as the pine rock we
saw ill Illinois. It has the same air of a helmet, as seen from an
eminence at the side, which you descend by a long and steep path, The rock
itself may be ascended by the bold and
172
agile. Half way up is a niche, to which those, who are neither, can
climb by a ladder. A very handsome young officer and lady who were with us
did so, and then, facing round, stood there side by side, looking in the
niche, if not like saints or angels wrought by pious hands in stone, as
romantically, if not as holily, worthy the gazer's eye.
The woods which adorn the central ridge of the island are very full in
foliage, and, in August, showed the tender green and pliant leaf of June
elsewhere. They are rich in beautiful mosses and the wild raspberry.
From Fort Holmes, the old fort, we had the most commanding view of the
lake and straits, opposite shores, and fair islets. Mackinaw, itself, is
best seen from the water. Its peculiar shape is supposed to have been the
origin of its name, Michilimackinac, which means the Great Turtle. One
person whom I saw, wished to establish another etymology, which he fancied
to be more refined; but, I doubt not, this is the true one, both because
the shape might suggest such a name, and that the existence of an island
in this commanding position, which did so, would seem a significant fact
to the Indians. For Henry gives the details of peculiar worship paid to
the Great Turtle, and the oracles received from this extraordinary Apollo
of the Indian Delphos.
It is crowned most picturesquely, by the white fort, with its gay
flag. From this, on one side, stretches the town. How pleasing a sight,
after the raw, crude, staring assemblage of houses, everywhere else to be
met in this country, an old French town, mellow
173
in its coloring, and with the harmonious effect of a slow growth,
which assimilates, naturally, with objects round it. The people in its
streets, Indian, French, half-breeds, and others, walked with a leisure
step, as of those who live a life of taste and inclination, rather than of
the hard press of business, as in American towns elsewhere.
On the other side, along the fair, curving beach, below the white
houses scattered on the declivity, clustered the Indian lodges, with their
amber brown matting, so soft, and bright of hue, in the late afternoon
sun. The first afternoon I was there, looking down form a near height, I
felt that I never wished to see a more fascinating picture. It was an hour
of the deepest serenity; bright blue and gold, rich shadows. Every moment
the sunlight fell more mellow. The Indians were grouped and scattered
among the lodges; the women preparing food, in the kettle or frying-pan,
over the many small fires; the children, half-naked, wild as little
goblins, were playing both in and out of the water. Here and there lounged
a young girl, with a baby at her back, whose bright eyes glanced, as if
born into a world of courage and of joy, instead of ignominious servitude
and slow decay. Some girls were cutting wood, a little way from me,
talking and laughing, in the low musical tone, so charming in the Indian
women. Many bark canoes were upturned upon the beach, and, by that light,
of almost the same amber as the lodges. Others, coming in, their square
sails set, and with almost arrowy speed, though heavily laden with dusky
forms, and all the apparatus of their
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hold. Here and there a sail-boat glided by, with a different, but
scarce less pleasing motion.
It was a scene of ideal loveliness, and these wild forms adorned it,
as looking so at home in it. All seemed happy, and they were happy that
day, for they had no firewater to madden them, as it was sunday, and the
shops were shut.
From my window, at the boarding house, my eye was constantly attracted
by these picturesque groups. I was never tired of seeing the canoes come
in, and the new arrivals set up their temporary dwellings. The women ran
to set up the tent-poles, and spread the mats on the ground. The men
brought the chests, kettles, &c.; the mats were then laid on the outside,
the cedar boughs strewed on the ground, the blanket hung up for a door,
and all was completed in less than twenty minutes. Then they began to
prepare the night meal, and to learn of their neighbors the news of the
day.
The habit of preparing food out of doors, gave all the gipsy charm and
variety to their conduct. Continually I wanted Sir Walter Scott to have
been there. If such romantic sketches were suggested to him, by the sight
of a few gipsies, not a group near one of these fires but would have
furnished him material for a separate canvass. I was so taken up with the
spirit of the scene, that I could not follow out the stories suggested by
these weather-beaten, sullen, but eloquent figures.
They talked a great deal, and with much variety of gesture, so that I
often had a good guess at the meaning of their discourse. I saw that,
whatever the
175
Indian may be among the whites, he is anything but taciturn with his
own people. And he often would declaim, or narrate at length, as indeed it
is obvious, that these tribes possess great power that way, if only from
the fables taken from their stores, by Mr. Schoolcraft.
I liked very much to walk or sit among them. With the women I held
much communication by signs. They are almost invariably coarse and ugly,
with the exception of their eyes, with a peculiarly awkward gait, and
forms bent by burthens. This gait, so different from the steady and noble
step of the men, marks the inferior position they occupy. I had heard much
eloquent contradiction of this. Mrs. Schoolcraft had maintained to a
friend, that they were in fact as nearly on a par with their husbands as
the White woman with hers. "Although," said she, "on account of inevitable
causes, the Indian woman is subjected to many hardships of a peculiar
nature, yet her position, compared with that of the man, is higher and
freer than that of the white woman. Why will people look only on one side?
They either exalt the Red than into a Demigod or degrade him into a beast.
They say that he compels his wife to do all the drudgery, while hedoes
nothing but hunt and amuse himself; forgetting that, upon his activity and
power of endurance as a hunter, depends the support of his family; that
this is labor of the most fatiguing kind, and that it is absolutely
necessary that he should keep his frame unbent by burdens and unworn by
toil, that he may be able to obtain the means of subsistence. I have
witnessed scenes of conjugal and
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parental love in the Indian's wigwam from which I have often, often
thought the educated white man, proud of his superior civilization, might
learn an useful lesson. When he returns from hunting, worn out with
fatigue, having tasted nothing since dawn, his wife, if she is a good
wife, will take off his moccasons and replace them with dry ones, and will
prepare his game for their repast, while his children will climb upon him,
and he will caress them with all the tenderness of a woman; and in the
evening the Indian wigwam is the scene of the purest domestic pleasures.
The father will relate for the amusement of the wife, and for the
instruction of the children, all the events of the day's hunt, while they
will treasure up every word that falls, and thus learn the theory of the
art, whose practice is to be the occupation of their lives.
Mrs. Grant speaks thus of the position of woman amid the Mohawk
Indians:
"Lady Mary Montague says, that the court of Vienna was the paradise of
old women, and that there is no other place in the world where a woman
past fifty excites the least interest. Had her travels extended to the
interior of North America, she would have seen another instance of this
inversion of the common mode of thinking. Here a woman never was of
consequence, till she had a son old enough to fight the battles of his
country. From that date she held a superior rank in society; was allowed
to live at ease, and even called to consultations on national affairs. In
savage and warlike countries, the reign of beauty is very short, and its
influence comparatively limited. The girls in childhood had a very
pleasing
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appearance; but excepting their fine hair, eyes, and teeth, every
external grace was soon banished by perpetual drudgery, carrying burdens
too heavy to be borne, and other slavish employments considered beneath
the dignity of the men. These walked before erect and graceful, decked
with ornaments which set off to advantage the symmetry of their
well-formed persons, while the poor women followed, meanly attired, bent
under the weight of the children and utensils, which they carried
everywhere with them, and disfigured and degraded by ceaseless toils. They
were very early married, for a Mohawk had no other servant but his wife,
and, whenever he commenced hunter, it was requisite he should have some
one to carry his lead, cook his kettle, make his moccasons, and, above
all, produce the young warriors who were to succeed him in the honors of
the chase and of the tomahawk. Wherever man is a mere hunter, woman is a
mere slave. It is domestic intercourse that softens man, and elevates
woman; and of that there can be but little, where the employments and
amusements are not in common; the ancient Caledonians honored the fair;
but then it is to be observed, they were fair huntresses, and moved in the
light of their beauty to the hill of roes; and the culinary toils were
entirely left to the rougher sex. When the young warrior made his
appearance, it softened the cares of his mother, who well knew that, when
he grew up, every deficiency in tenderness to his wife would be made up in
superabundant duty and affection to her. If it were possible to carry
filial veneration to excess, it was done here; for all other charities
were absorbed
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in it. I wonder this system of depressing the sex in their early
years, to exalt them when all their juvenile attractions were flown, and
when mind alone can distinguish them, has not occurred to our modern
reformers. The Mohawks took good care not to admit their women to share
their prerogatives, till they approved themselves good wives and mothers."
The observations of women upon the position of woman are always more
valuable than those of men; but, of these two, Mrs. Grant's seems much
nearer the truth than Mrs. Schoolcraft's, because, though her
opportunities for observation did not bring her so close, she looked more
at both sides to find the truth.
Carver, in his travels among the Winnebagoes, describes two queens,
one nominally so, like Queen Victoria; the other invested with a genuine
royalty, springing from her own conduct.
In the great town of the Winnebagoes, he found a queen presiding over
the tribe, instead of a sachem. He adds, that, in some tribes, the descent
is given to the female line in preference to the male, that is, a sister's
son will succeed to the authority, rather than a brother's son.
The position of this Winnebago queen, reminded me forcibly of Queen
Victoria's.
"She sat in the council, but only asked a few questions, or gave some
trifling directions in matters relative to the state, for women are never
allowed to sit in their councils, except they happen to be invested with
the supreme authority, and then it is not customary for them to make any
formal speeches, as the chiefs do. She was a very ancient woman, small in
stature,
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and not much distinguished by her dress from several young women that
attended her. These, her attendants, seemed greatly pleased whenever I
showed any tokens of respect to their queen, especially when I saluted
her, which I frequently did to acquire her favor." The other was a woman,
who being taken captive, found means to kill her captor, and make her
escape, and the tribe were so struck with admiration at the courage and
calmness she displayed on the occasion, as to make her chieftainess in her
own right.
Notwithstanding the homage paid to women, and the consequence allowed
her in some cases, it is impossible to look upon the Indian women, without
feeling that they do occupy a lower place than women among the nations of
European civilization. The habits of drudgery expressed in their form and
gesture, the soft and wild but melancholy expression of their eye,
reminded me of the tribe mentioned by Mackenzie, where the women destroy
their female children, whenever they have a good opportunity; and of the
cloquent reproaches addressed by the Paraguay woman to her mother, that
she had not, in the same way, saved her from the anguish and weariness of
her lot.
More weariness than anguish, no doubt, falls to the lot of most of
these women. They inherit submission, and the minds of the generality
accommodate themselves more or less to any posture. Perhaps they suffer
less than their white sisters, who have more aspiration and refinement,
with little power of self-sustenance. But their place is certainty lower,
and their share of the human inheritance less.
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Their decorum and delicacy are striking, and show that when these are
native to the mind, no habits of life make any difference. Their whole
gesture is timid, yet serf-possessed. They used to crowd round me, to
inspect little things I had to show them, but never press near; on the
contrary, would reprove and keep off the children. Anything they took from
my hand, was held with care, then shut or folded, and returned with an air
of lady-like precision. They would not stare, however curious they might
be, but cast sidelong glances.
A locket that I wore, was an object of untiring interest; they seemed
to regard it as a talisman. My little sun-shade was still more fascinating
to them; apparently they had never before seen one. For an umbrella they
entertain profound regard, probably looking upon it as the most luxurious
superfluity a person can possess, and therefore a badge of great wealth. I
used to see an old squaw, whose sullied skin and coarse, tanned locks,
told that she had braved sun and storm, without a doubt or care, for sixty
years at the least, sitting gravely at the door of her lodge, with an old
green umbrella over her head, happy for hours together in the dignified
shade. For her happiness pomp came not, as it so often does, too late; she
received it with grateful enjoyment.
One day, as I was seated on one of the canoes, a woman came and sat
beside me, with her baby in its cradle set up at her feet. She asked me by
a gesture, to let her take my sun-shade, and then to show her how to open
it. Then she put it into her baby's hand, and held it over its head,
looking at me the
181
while with a sweet, mischievous laugh, as much as to say, "you carry a
thing that is only fit for a baby;" her pantomime was very pretty. She,
like the other women, had a glance, and shy, sweet expression in the eye;
the men have a steady gaze.
That noblest and loveliest of modern Preux, Lord Edward Fitzgerald,
who came through Buffalo to Detroit and Mackinaw, with Brant, and was
adopted into the Bear tribe by the name of Eghnidal, was struck, in the
same way, by the delicacy of manners in the women. He says,
"Notwithstanding the life they lead, which would make most women rough and
masculine, they are as soft, meek and modest, as the best brought up girls
in England. Somewhat coquettish too! Imagine the manners of Mimi in a poor
squaw , that has been carrying packs in the woods all her life."
McKenney mentions that the young wife, during the short bloom of her
beauty, is an object of homage and tenderness to her husband. One Indian
woman, the Flying Pigeon, a beautiful, an excellent woman, of whom he
gives some particulars, is an instance of the power uncommon characters
will always exert of breaking down the barriers custom has erected round
them. She captivated by her charms, and inspired with reverence for her
character, her husband and son. The simple praise with which the husband
indicates the religion, the judgment, and the generosity he saw in her,
are as satisfying as Count Zinzendorf's more labored eulogium on his
"noble consort." The conduct of her son, when, many years after her death,
he saw her picture at Washington, is unspeakably
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182
affecting. Catlin gives anecdotes of the grief of a chief for the loss
of a daughter, and the princely gifts he offers in exchange for her
portrait, worthy not merely of European, but of Troubadour Sentiment, It
is also evident that, as Mrs. Schoolcraft says, the women have great power
at home. It can never be otherwise, men being dependent upon them for the
comfort of their lives. Just. so among ourselves, wives who are neither
esteemed nor loved by their husbands, have great power over their Conduct
by the friction of every day, and over the formation of their opinions by
the daily opportunities so close a relation affords, of perverting
testimony and instilling doubts. But these sentiments should not come in
brief flashes, but burn as a steady flame, then there would be more women
worthy to inspire them. This power is good for nothing, unless the woman
be wise to use it aright. Has the Indian, has the white woman, as noble a
feeling of life and its uses, as religious a self-respect, as worthy a
field of thought and action, as man? If not, the white woman, the Indian
woman, occupies an inferior position to that of man. It is not so much a
question of power, as of privilege.
The men of these subjugated tribes, now accustomed to drunkenness and
every way degraded, bear but a faint impress of the lost grandeur of the
race. They are no longer strong, tall, or finely proportioned. Yet as you
see them stealing along a height, or striding boldly forward, they remind
you of what was majestic in the red man.
On the shores of lake Superior, it is said, if you visit them at home,
you may still see a remnant of
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the noble blood. The Pillagers(Pilleurs)a band celebrated
by the old travellers, are still existant there.
"Still some, 'the eagles of their tribe,' may rush."
I have spoken of the hatred felt by the white man for the Indian: with
white women it seems to amount to disgust, to loathing. How I could endure
the dirt, the peculiar smell of the Indians, and their dwellings, was a
great marvel in the eyes of my lady acquaintance; indeed, I wonder why
they did not quite give me up, as they certainly looked on me with great
distaste for it. "Get you gone, you Indian dog," was the felt, if not the
breathed, expression towards the hapless owners of the soil. All their
claims, all their sorrows quite forgot, in abhorrence of their dirt, their
tawny Skins, and the vices the whites have taught them.
A person Who had seen them during great part of a life, expressed his
prejudices to me With such violence, that I was no longer surprised that
the Indian children threw sticks at him, as he passed. A lady said, "do
what you will for them, they will be ungrateful. The savage cannot be
washed out of them. Bring UP an Indian child and see if you can attach it
to you." The next moment, she expressed, in the presence of one of those
children whom she was bringing up, loathing at the odor left by one of her
people, and one of the most respected, as he passed through the room. When
the child is grown she will consider it basely ungrateful not to love her,
as it certainly will not; and this will be cited as an instance of the
impossibility of attaching the Indian.
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Whether the Indian could, by any efforts of love and intelligence from
the white man, have been civilized and made a valuable ingredient in the
new state, I will not say; but this we are sure of; the French Catholics,
at least, did not harm them, nor disturb their minds merely to corrupt
them. The French they loved. But the stern Presbyterian, with his dogmas
and his task-work, the city circle and the college, with their niggard
concessions and unfeeling stare, have never tried the experiment. It has
not been tried. Our people and our government have sinned alike against
the first-born of the soil, and if they are the fated agents of a new era,
they have done nothinghave invoked no god to keep them sinless while
they do the hest of fate.
Worst of all, when they invoke the holy power only to mask their
iniquity; when the felon trader, who, all the week, has been besotting and
degrading the Indian with rum mixed with red pepper, and damaged tobacco,
kneels with him on Sunday before a common altar, to tell the rosary which
recalls the thought of him crucified for love of suffering men, and to
listen to sermons in praise of "purity"!!
My savage friends, cries the old fat priest, you must, above all
things, aim at purity .
Oh, my heart swelled when I saw them in a Christian church. Better
their own dog-feasts and bloody rites than such mockery of that other
faith.
"The dog," said an Indian, "was once a spirit; he has fallen for his
sin, and was given by the Great Spirit, in this shape, to man, as his most
intelligent companion. Therefore we sacrifice it in highest
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honor to our friends in this world;to our protecting geniuses in
another." There was religion in that thought. The white man sacrifices
his own brother, and to Mammon, yet he turns in loathing from the
dog-feast.
"You say," said the Indian of the South to the missionary, "that
Christianity is pleasing to God. How can that be? Those men at
Savannah are Christians."
Yes! slave-drivers and Indian traders are called Christians, and the
Indian is to be deemed less like the Son of Mary than they! Wonderful is
the deceit of man's heart!
I have not, on seeing something of them in their own haunts, found
reason to change the sentiments expressed in the following lines, when a
deputation of the Sacs and Foxes visited Boston in 1837, and were, by one
person at least, received in a dignified and courteous manner.
GOVERNOR EVERETT RECEIVING THE INDIAN
CHIEFS, November , 1837.
Who says that Poesy is on the wane,
And that the Muses tune their lyres in vain?
'Mid all the treasures of romantic story,
When thought was fresh and fancy in her glory,
Has ever Art found out a richer theme,
More dark a shadow, or more soft a gleam,
Than fall upon the scene, sketched carelessly;
In the newspaper column of to-day?
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American romance is somewhat stale.
Talk of the hatchet, and the faces pale,
Wampum and calumets and forests dreary,
Once so attractive, now begins to weary.
Uncas and Magawisca please us still,
Unreal, yet idealized with skill;
But every poetaster scribbling witling,
From the majestic oak his stylus whittling,
Has helped to tire us, and to make us fear
The monotone in which so much we hear
Of "stoics of the wood," and "men without a tear."
Yet Nature, ever buoyant, ever young,
If let alone, will sing as erst she sung;
The course of circumstance gives back again
The Picturesque, erewhile pursued in vain;
Shows us the fount of Romance is not wasted
The lights and shades of contrast not exhausted.
Shorn of his strength, the Samson now must sue
For fragments from the feast his fathers gave,
The Indian dare not claim what is his due,
But as a boon his heritage must crave;
His stately form shall soon be seen no more
Through all his father's land, th' Atlantic shore,
Beneath the sun, to us so kind, they melt,
More heavily each day our rule is felt;
The tale is old,We do as mortals must;
Might makes right here, but God and Time are just.
So near the drama hastens to its close,
On this last scene awhile your eyes repose;
The polished Greek and Scythian meet again,
The ancient life is lived by modern men
187
The savage through our busy cities walks,
He in his untouched grandeur silent stalks.
Unmoved by all our gaieties and shows,
Wonder nor shame can touch him as he goes;
He gazes on the marvels we have wrought,
But knows the models from whence all was brought;
In God's first temples he has stood so oft,
And listened to the natural organ loft
Has watched the eagle's flight, the muttering thunder heard,
Art cannot move him to a wondering word;
Perhaps he sees that all this luxury
Brings less food to the mind than to the eye;
Perhaps a simple sentiment has brought
More to him than your arts had ever taught.
What are the petty triumphs Art has given,
To eyes familiar with the naked heaven?
All has been seendock, railroad, and canal,
Fort, market, bridge, college, and arsenal,
Asylum, hospital, and cotton mill,
The theatre, the lighthouse, and the jail.
The Braves each novelty, reflecting, saw,
And now and then growled ont the earnest yaw .
And now the time is come, 't is understood,
When, having seen and thought so much, a talk may do some good.
A well-dressed mob have thronged the sight to greet,
And motley figures throng the spacious street;
Majestical and calm through all they stride,
Wearing the blanket with a monarch's pride;
The gazers stare and shrug, but can't deny
Their noble forms and blameless symmetry.
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If the Great Spirit their morale has slighted,
And wigwam smoke their mental culture blighted,
Yet the physique, at least, perfection reaches,
In wilds where neither Combe nor Spursheim teaches;
Where whispering trees invite man to the chase,
And bounding deer allure him to the race.
Would thou hadst seen it! That dark, stately band,
Whose ancestors enjoyed all this fair land,
Whence they, by force or fraud, were made to flee,
Are brought, the white man's victory to see.
Can kind emotions in their proud hearts glow,
As through these realms, now decked by Art, they go?
The church, the school, the railroad and the mart
Can these a pleasure to their minds impart?
All once was theirsearth, ocean, forest, sky
How can they joy in what now meets the eye?
Not yet Religion has unlocked the soul,
Nor Each has learned to glory in the Whole!
Must they not think, so strange and sad their lot,
That they by the Great Spirit are forgot?
From the far border to which they are driven,
They might look up in trust to the clear heaven;
But here what tales doth every object tell
Where Massasoit sleeps where Philip fell!
We take our turn, and the Philosopher
Sees through the clouds a hand which cannot err,
An unimproving race, with all their graces
And all their vices, must resign their places;
And Human Culture rolls its onward flood
Over the broad plains steeped in Indian blood.
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Such thoughts steady our faith; yet there will rise
Some natural tears into the calmest eyes
Which gaze where forest princes haughty go,
Made for a gaping crowd a raree show.
But this a scene seems where, in courtesy,
The pale face with the forest prince could vie,
For One presided, who, for tact and grace,
In any age had held an honored place,
In Beauty's own dear day, had shone a polished Phidian vase!
Oft have I listened to his accents bland,
And owned the magic of his silvery voice,
In all the graces which life's arts demand,
Delighted by the justness of his choice.
Not his the stream of lavish, fervid thought,
The rhetoric by passion's magic wrought;
Not his the massive style, the lion port,
Which with the granite class of mind assort;
But, in a range of excellence his own,
With all the charms to soft persuasion known,
Amid our busy people we admire him "elegant and lone"
He scarce needs words, so exquisite the skill
Which modulates the tones to do his will,
That the mere sound enough would charm the ear,
And lap in its Elysium all who hear.
The intellectual paleness of his cheek,
The heavy eyelids and slow, tranquil smile,
The well cut lips from which the graces speak,
Fit him alike to win or to beguile;
Then those words so well chosen, fit, though few,
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Their linked sweetness as our thoughts pursue,
We deem them spoken pearls, or radiant diamond dew.
And never yet did I admire the power
Which makes so lustrous every threadbare theme
Which won for Lafayette one other hour,
And e'en on July Fourth could cast a gleam
As now, when I behold him play the host,
With all the dignity which red men boast
With all the courtesy the whites have lost;
Assume the very hue of savage mind,
Yet in rude accents show the thought refined;
Assume the naivet
of infant age,
And in such prattle seem still more a sage;
The golden mean with tact unerring seized,
A courtly critic shone, a simple savage pleased;
The stoic of the woods his skill confessed,
As all the Father answered in his breast,
To the sure mark the silver arrow sped,
The man without a tear a tear has shed;
And thou hadst wept, hadst thou been there, to see
How true one sentiment must ever be,
In court or camp, the city or the wild,
To rouse the Father's heart, you need but name his Child.
'T was a fair scene and acted well by all;
So here's a health to Indian braves so tall
Our Governor and Boston people all!
I will copy the admirable speech of Governor Everett on that occasion,
as I think it the happiest attempt ever made to meet the Indian in his own
way, and catch the tone of his mind. It was said, in the
191
newspapers, that Keokuck did actually shed tears when addressed as a
father. If he did not with his eyes, he well might in his heart.