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<br><br>The Sketchbook was published in 1819-1820 and shows<br>Irving's attitudes long before writing A TOUR OF THE<br>PRAIRIE.<br><br> * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *<br><br>'TRAITS OF INDIAN CHARACTER' (1819)<br><br>"THERE is something in the character and habits of the<br>North American savage, taken in connection with the<br>scenery over which he is accustomed to range, its vast<br>lakes, boundless forests, majestic rivers, and trackless<br>plains, that is, to my mind, wonderfully striking and<br>sublime. He is formed for the wilderness, as the Arab is<br>for the desert. His nature is stern, simple, and<br>enduring, fitted to grapple with difficulties and to<br>support privations," Irving writes in the Sketchbook.<br><br>The narrator of the Sketchbook is nominally not Irving,<br>although many of his obversations seem to come from Irving's<br>perspective, so one cannot assume that this is<br>absolutely his personal view. The word "savage," though<br>acceptable at the time, has a strident and demeaning<br>ring to our ears, for instance. But this passage links<br>the Native Americans directly to the landscape that<br>produced them. The connection between native peoples<br>and the landscape that formed them is "sublime," and the<br>hardships of life on the North American continent have<br>made its inhabitants "sterm, simple and enduring."<br><br>Irving continues: "It has been the lot of the<br>unfortunate aborigines of America in the early periods<br>of colonization to be doubly wronged by the white men.<br>They have been dispossessed of their hereditary<br>possessions by mercenary and frequently wanton warfare,<br>and their characters have been traduced by bigoted and<br>interested writers." Not only have they been<br>dispossessed, Irving tells us, but "interested" writers<br>have mischaracterized the Indians -- writers interested<br>in proving a case or shaping the way that their readers<br>interpret the native peoples. A variety of interests<br>comes to mind: to prove the superiority of European<br>culture, to prove the superiority of European religion,<br>to justify the appropriation of land and wealth, to<br>justify a racist campaign of removing traces of Indian<br>life from the land itself.<br><br>Irving grapples with the term "savage" and concludes<br>that it is a dehumanizing term:<br><br>"The appellations of savage and pagan were deemed<br>sufficient to sanction the hostilities of both; and thus<br>the poor wanderers of the forest were persecuted and<br>defamed, not because they were guilty, but because they<br>were ignorant."<br><br>Because they have not been raised as Christians, they<br>will be called "pagan" and "heathen" (Mary Rowlandson<br>was quite free with this disparagement of the native<br>people she saw), and because they have not been raised<br>within European culture, they will be termed "savage."<br><br>"Society has advanced upon them like one of those<br>withering airs that will sometimes breed desolation over<br>a whole region of fertility. It has enervated their<br>strength, multiplied their diseases, and superinduced<br>upon their original barbarity the low vices of<br>artificial life. It has given them a thousand<br>superfluous wants, whilst it has diminished their means<br>of mere existence. It has driven before it the animals<br>of the chase, who fly from the sound of the axe and the<br>smoke of the settlement and seek refuge in the depths of<br>remoter forests and yet untrodden wilds. Thus do we too<br>often find the Indians on our frontiers to be the mere<br>wrecks and remnants of once powerful tribes, who have<br>lingered in the vicinity of the settlements and sunk<br>into precarious and vagabond existence. Poverty,<br>repining and hopeless poverty, a canker of the mind<br>unknown in savage life, corrodes their spirits and<br>blights every free and noble quality of their natures.<br>They become drunken, indolent, feeble, thievish, and<br>pusillanimous. They loiter like vagrants about the<br>settlements, among spacious dwellings replete with<br>elaborate comforts, which only render them sensible of<br>the comparative wretchedness of their own condition.<br>Luxury spreads its ample board before their eyes, but<br>they are excluded from the banquet. Plenty revels over<br>the fields, but they are starving in the midst of its<br>abundance; the whole wilderness has blossomed into a<br>garden, but they feel as reptiles that infest it."<br><br>He contrasts this horrifying state of affairs with the<br>situation before the Europeans came:<br><br>"How different was their state while yet the undisputed<br>lords of the soil! Their wants were few and the means of<br>gratification within their reach. They saw every one<br>round them sharing the same lot, enduring the same<br>hardships, feeding on the same aliments, arrayed in the<br>same rude garments. No roof then rose but was open to<br>the homeless stranger; no smoke curled among the trees<br>but he was welcome to sit down by its fire and join the<br>hunter in his repast."<br><br>Irving's narrator attacks the way that bigoted writers<br>have overlooked history and social conditions:<br><br>"In discussing the savage character writers have been<br>too prone to indulge in vulgar prejudice and passionate<br>exaggeration, instead of the candid temper of true<br>philosophy. They have not sufficiently considered the<br>peculiar circumstances in which the Indians have been<br>placed, and the peculiar principles under which they<br>have been educated."<br><br>Irving then explains how the Pilgrims desecrated an<br>ancient burial ground soon after their arrival, and the<br>retaliation of the Indians was generally not explained<br>in the European writing as a response to an affront. <br>Rather, the Indian attack was described as an unprovoked<br>example of the viciousness or savagery of native people.<br> These kinds of misunderstandings were perpetuated by<br>writers who consciously wanted to color the way that<br>people looked at Native Americans -- for the motives I<br>have listed above, as well as for others.<br><br>"We stigmatize the Indians, also, as cowardly and<br>treacherous, because they use stratagem in warfare in<br>preference to open force; but in this they are fully<br>justified by their rude code of honor," Irving writes,<br>but as time has passed and American and European ways of<br>warfare have changed, we too use stealth and stalking,<br>snipers and other methods of warfare that we once<br>complained about in Indian fighting. "The natural<br>principle of war is to do the most harm to our enemy<br>with the least harm to ourselves," Irving adds, "and<br>this of course is to be effected by stratagem."<br><br>Irving's sketch concludes with a dark prophecy:<br><br>"We are driven back," said an old warrior, "until we can<br>retreat no farther--our hatchets are broken, our bows<br>are snapped, our fires are nearly extinguished; a little<br>longer and the white man will cease to persecute us, for<br>we shall cease to exist!"<br><br>In his own way, Irving has gone a little ways toward<br>trying to humanize the figure of the Indian, to argue<br>for their rights and to plead that the white Americans<br>will look again into this difficult relationship and<br>change their views. <br>
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