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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of An Address, Delivered Before the Was-ah
+Ho-de-no-son-ne or New Confederacy of the Iroquois, by Henry R. Schoolcraft and W. H. C. Hosmer
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: An Address, Delivered Before the Was-ah Ho-de-no-son-ne or New Confederacy of the Iroquois
+ Also, Genundewah, a Poem
+
+Author: Henry R. Schoolcraft
+ W. H. C. Hosmer
+
+Release Date: June 29, 2010 [EBook #33023]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK AN ADDRESS, DELIVERED BEFORE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Julia Miller, S.D., and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
+produced from images generously made available by The
+Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ AN
+ ADDRESS,
+ DELIVERED BEFORE THE
+ WAS-AH HO-DE-NO-SON-NE
+ OR
+ NEW CONFEDERACY OF THE IROQUOIS,
+
+ BY
+
+ HENRY R. SCHOOLCRAFT,
+
+ A MEMBER:
+ AT ITS THIRD ANNUAL COUNCIL,
+ AUGUST 14, 1845.
+
+
+ ALSO,
+
+ GENUNDEWAH,
+ A POEM,
+
+ BY
+
+ W. H. C. HOSMER,
+
+ A MEMBER:
+
+ PRONOUNCED ON THE SAME OCCASION.
+
+ PUBLISHED BY THE CONFEDERACY.
+
+ ROCHESTER:
+ PRINTED BY JEROME & BROTHER, TALMAN BLOCK,
+ Sign of the American Eagle, Buffalo-Street.
+
+ 1846.
+
+
+
+
+ADDRESS.
+
+
+GENTLEMEN:
+
+In a country like ours, whose institutions rest on the popular will, we
+must rely for our social and literary means and honors, exclusively on
+personal exertions, springing from the bosom of society. We have no
+external helps and reliances, sealed in expectations of public
+patronage, held by the hands of executive, or ministerial power. Our
+ancestors, it is true, were accustomed to such stimulants to literary
+exertions. Titles and honors were the prerogatives of Kings, who
+sometimes stooped from their political eminences, to bestow the reward
+upon the brows of men, who had rendered their names conspicuous in the
+fields of science and letters. Such is still the hope of men of letters
+in England, Germany and France. But if a bold and hardy ancestry, who
+had learned the art of thought in the bitter school of experience, were
+accustomed to such dispensations of royal favors, while they remained in
+Europe, they feel but little benefit from them here; and made no
+provision for their exercise, as one of the immunities of powers, when
+they came to set up the frame of a government for themselves.
+
+No ruler, under our system, is invested with authority to tap, his
+kneeling fellow subject on the crown of his head, and exclaim, "Arise,
+Sir, Knight!" The cast of our institutions is all the other way, and the
+tendency of things, as the public mind becomes settled and compacted,
+is, to take away from men the prestige of names and titles; to award but
+little, on the score of antiquarian merit, and to weigh every man's
+powers and abilities, political and literary, in the scale of absolute
+individual capacity, to be judged of, by the community at large. If
+there are to be any "orders," in America, let us hope they will be like
+that, whose institution we are met to celebrate, which is founded on the
+principle of intellectual emulation, in the fields of history, science
+and letters.
+
+Such are, indeed, the objects which bring us together on the present
+occasion, favored as we are in assembling around the light of this
+emblematic COUNCIL FIRE. Honored by your notice, as an honorary member,
+in your young institution, I may speak of it, as if I were myself a
+fellow laborer, in your circle: and, at least, as one, understanding
+somewhat of its plan, who feels a deep interest in its success.
+
+Adopting one of the seats of the aboriginal powers, which once cast the
+spell of its simple, yet complicated, government, over the territory, a
+central point has been established HERE. To this central point,
+symbolizing the whole scheme of the Iroquois system, other points of
+subcentralization tend, as so many converging lines. You come from the
+east and the west, the north and the south. You have obeyed ONE
+impulse--followed ONE principle--come to unite your energies in ONE
+object. That object is the cultivation of letters. To give it force and
+distinctness, by which it may be known and distinguished among the
+efforts made to improve and employ the leisure hours of the young men of
+Western New York, you have adopted a name derived from the ancient
+confederacy of the Iroquois, who once occupied this soil. With the name,
+you have taken the general system of organization of society, within a
+society, held together by one bond. That bond, as existing in the
+TOTEMIC tie, reaches, with a peculiar force, each individual, in such
+society. It is an idea noble in itself, and worthy of the thought and
+care, by which it has been nurtured and moulded into its present
+auspicious form.--The union you thus form, is a union of minds. It is a
+band of brotherhood, but a brotherhood of letters. It is a confederacy
+of tribes, but a literary confederacy. It is an assemblage of warriors,
+but the labor to be pursued is exclusively of an intellectual character.
+The plumes with which you aim to pledge your literary arrows, are to be
+plucked from the wings of science. It is a council of clans, not to
+consult on the best means of advancing historical research; of promoting
+antiquarian knowledge; and of cultivating polite literature. The field
+of inquiry is broad, and it is to be trodden in various ways. You seek
+to advance in the paths of useful knowledge, but neglect not the flowers
+that bedeck the way. You aim at general objects and results, but pursue
+them, through the theme and story of that proud and noble race of the
+sons of the Forest, whose name, whose costume and whose principles of
+association you assume. Symbolically, you re-create the race. Thus
+aiming, and thus symbolizing your labors, your objects to resuscitate
+and exhume from the dust of by-gone years, some of those deeds of valor
+and renown which marked this hardy and vigorous race. There is in the
+idea of your association, one of the elements of a peculiar and national
+literature. And whatever may be the degree of success, which
+characterizes your labors, it is hoped they will bear the impress of
+American heads and American hearts. We have drawn our intellectual
+sustenance, it is true, from noble fountains and crystal streams. We
+have all England, and all Europe for our fountain head. But when this
+has been said, we must add, that they have been off-sets from foreign
+fountains and foreign streams. And nurtured as we have been, from such
+ample sources, it is time, in the course of our national developments,
+that we begin to produce something characteristic of the land that gave
+us birth. No people can bear a true nationality, which does not
+exfoliate, as it were, from its bosom, something that expresses the
+peculiarities of its own soil and climate. In building its intellectual
+edifice, we must have not only suitable decorations, but there must come
+from the broad and deep quarries of its own mountains, foundation
+stones, and columns and capitals, which bear the impress of an
+indigenous mental geognosy.
+
+And where! when we survey the length and breadth of the land, can a more
+suitable element, for the work be found, than is furnished by the
+history and antiquities and institutions and love, of the free, bold,
+wild, independent, native hunter race? They are, relatively to us, what
+the ancient Pict and Celt were to Britain, or the Teuton, Goth and
+Magyar to Continental Europe. Looking around, over the wide forests, and
+transcendent lakes of New York, the founders of this association, have
+beheld the footprints of the ancient race. They saw here, as it were, in
+vision, the lordly Iroquois, crowned by the feathers of the eagle,
+bearing in his hand the bow and arrows, and scorning, as it were, by the
+keen glances of his black eye, and the loftiness of his tread, the very
+earth that bore him up. History and tradition speak of the story of this
+ancient race.--They paint him as a man of war--of endurance--of
+indomitable courage--of capacity to endure tortures without
+complaint--of a heroic and noble independence. They tell us that these
+precincts, now waving with yellow corn, and smiling with villages, and
+glittering with spires, were once vocal with their war songs, and
+resounded with the chorusses of their corn feasts. We descry, as we
+plough the plain, the well chipped darts which pointed their arrows, and
+the elongated pestles, that crushed their maize. We exhume from their
+obliterated and simple graves, the pipe of steatite, in which they
+smoked, and offered incense to these deities, and the fragments of the
+culinary vases, around which, the lodge circle gathered to their forest
+meal. Mounds and trenches and ditches, speak of the movement of tribe
+against tribe, and dimly shadow forth the overthrow of nations. There
+are no plated columns of marble; no tablets of inscribed stone--no gates
+of rust-coated brass. But the MAN himself survives, in his generation.
+He is a WALKING STATUE before us. His looks and his gestures and his
+language remain. And he is himself, an attractive _monument_ to be
+studied. Shall we neglect him, and his antiquarian vestiges, to run
+after foreign sources of intellectual study? Shall we toil amid the
+ruins of Thebes and Palmyra, while we have before us the monumental
+enigma of an unknown race? Shall philosophical ardor expend itself, in
+searching after the buried sites of Nineveh, and Babylon and Troy, while
+we have not attempted, with decent research, to collect, arrange and
+determine, the leading data of our aboriginal history and
+antiquities?--These are inquiries, which you, at least, may aim to
+answer.
+
+No branch of the human family is an object unworthy of high philosophic
+inquiry. Their food, their language, their arts, their physical
+peculiarities, and their mental traits, are each topics of deep
+interest, and susceptible of being converted into evidences of high
+importance. Mistaken our Red Men clearly were, in their theories and
+opinions on many points. They were wretched theologists, and poor
+casuists. But not more so, in three-fourths of their dogmas, than the
+disciples of Zoroaster, or Confucius. They were polytheists from their
+very position. And yet, there is a general idea, that under every form,
+they acknowledged but one DIVINE INTELLIGENCE under the name of the
+GREAT SPIRIT.
+
+They paid their sacrifices, or at least, respects, to the imaginary and
+phantastic gods of the air, the woods and water, as Greece and Rome had
+done, and done as blindly before them. But they were a vigorous, hardy
+and brave off-shoot of the original race of man. They were full of
+humanities. They had many qualities to command admiration. They were
+wise in council, they were eloquent in the defence of their rights. They
+were kind and humane to the weak, bewildered and friendless. Their
+lodge-board was ever ready for the way farer. They were constant to a
+proverb, in their _professed_ friendships. They never forgot a kind act.
+Nor can it be recorded, to their dispraise, that they were a terror to
+their enemies. Their character was formed on the military principle, and
+to acquire distinction in this line, they roved over half the continent.
+They literally carried their conquests from the gulf of St. Lawrence to
+the gulf of Mexico. Few nations have ever existed, who have evinced more
+indomitable courage or hardihood, or shown more devotion to the spirit
+of independence than the Iroquois.
+
+But all their efforts would have ended in disappointment, had it not
+been for that principle of confederation, which, at an early day,
+pervaded their councils, and converted them into a phalanx, which no
+other tribe could successfully penetrate, or resist. It is this trait,
+by which they are most distinguished from the other hunter nations of
+North America; and it is to their rigid adherence to the verbal compact,
+which bound them together, as tribes and clans, that they owe their
+present celebrity, and owed their former power.
+
+It is proposed to inquire into the principles of this confederacy, and
+to make a few brief suggestions on its origin and history. In the time
+that has been given me, I have had but little opportunity for research,
+and even this little, other engagements, have not permitted me, fully to
+employ. The little that I have to offer, would indeed have been confined
+to the reminiscence of former reading, had I not been called, the
+present season, to make a personal visit to the reservation still
+occupied by the principal tribes.
+
+1. Prominent in its effects on the rise and progress of nations, in the
+geographical diameter of the country they occupy. And in this respect,
+the Iroquois were singularly favored. They lived under an atmosphere the
+most genial of any in the temperate latitude. Equally free from the
+extremes of heat, and humidity, it has been found eminently favorable to
+human life. Inquiries into the statistics of vitality will abundantly
+denote this. Many of the civil sachems lived to a great age. And the
+same may be said of those warriors who escaped the dart and club, until
+they came to the period, not a very advanced one, when they ceased to
+follow the war path.
+
+They possessed a country, unsurpassed for its various advantages, not
+only on this continent, but on the globe.--It afforded a soil of the
+most fruitful kind, where they could, with ease and certainty, always
+cultivate their maize. Its forests abounded in the deer, elk, bear and
+other animals, whose flesh supplied their lodges. It was irrigated by
+some of the sublimest rivers of the continent, whose waters ran south
+and north, east, and by the Alleghanies, west, till they all found their
+level, at distant points, either in the Gulfs of St. Lawrence and
+Mexico, or in the intermediate shores of the Atlantic. Lakes of an
+amazing size, compared to those of Europe, bounded this territory on the
+north and north east. Its own bosom, was spotted, with secondary sheets
+of water, like that of the Cayuga, upon whose banks we are assembled.
+These added freshness and beauty to the thick, and almost unbroken
+continuity of these forests.
+
+Nations doubtless owe some of their characteristics to the natural
+scenes of their country, and if we grant the same influence to the red
+sons of the forest, they had sources of animating and elevating thoughts
+around them.--Men who habitually cast their views to the Genesee and the
+Niagara--who crossed in their light canoe, the Ontario and Erie, wending
+their way into the sublime vista of the upper lakes: men, who threaded
+these broad forests in search of the deer, or who descended the powerful
+and rapid channels of the Alleghany, the Susquehanna, the Delaware and
+the St. Lawrence, in quest of their foes, must have felt the influence
+of magnitude and creative grandeur, and could not but originate ideas
+favorable to liberty and personal independence. Their very position,
+became thus the initiatory step in their assent to power.
+
+2. Such was the country occupied, at the era of the discovery, by the
+Iroquois. They lived, to employ their own symbolic language, in a long
+lodge extending east and west, from the waters of the Ca-ho-ha-ta-tea[A]
+to those of Erie. Their most easterly tribe, the Mohawks, extended their
+occupancy to a point which they still call, with dialectic variations,
+Skan-ek-ta-tea, being the present site of Albany. To this place, or, as
+is more generally thought, to this geographical vicinity, the commercial
+enterprize of Holland, sent an exploring ship in 1609. Here begins the
+certain and recorded history of the Iroquois. We have only known them
+200 years. All beyond this, is a field of antiquarian inquiry.
+
+[A] Hudson.
+
+From the historical documents recently obtained by the State from
+France, and deposited in the public offices at the capitol, it is seen
+that this people are sometimes called the NINE nations of the Iroquois.
+Algonquin tradition, which I have recently published, denotes that they
+originally consisted of EIGHT tribes. (ONEOTA.) Whatever of truth or
+error, there may be in these terms, it is certain that, at the period of
+the Dutch discovery and settlement referred to, they uniformly described
+themselves as the FIVE NATIONS, or United People, under the title of
+AKONOSHIONI.[B] The term Ongwe Honwee, which Colden mentions as
+peculiarly applied to themselves, as proudly contradistinguished from
+others, is a mere equivalent, in the several dialects, at this day, for
+the term Indian, and applies equally to other tribes, throughout the
+continent, as well as to themselves. By the admission of the Tuscaroras
+into the confederacy, they became known as the Six Nations. The
+principles of their compact, were such as to admit of any extension.
+They might as well, for aught that is known, have consisted of Sixteen
+as Six Tribes, and like our own Union, they would have been stronger and
+firmer in their power, with each admission.
+
+[B] Or Ho-de-no-son-ne.
+
+I have directed some few inquiries to their plan of union. It appears to
+have originated in a proposal to act in concert, by means of a central
+council, in questions of peace and war. In other respects, each tribe
+was an independency. It had no right to receive ambassadors from other
+tribes.--Messages delivered to a frontier tribe, were immediately
+transmitted to the next tribe in position, and by them passed on, to the
+central councils. They affirm that these messages were forwarded, with
+extraordinary celerity, by runners who rested not, night or day. The
+power to convene the general council, for despatch of public business,
+was in the presiding or executive chief of the Central Tribe.
+
+This power to make war or peace, or cession of sovereignty, was given
+up, on the principle of an equal union in all respects, without regard
+to numbers. It was strictly federative, or a union of tribes. The assent
+to a measure, was given by tribes. Whether all were required to assent,
+or a majority was sufficient, is not known. It is believed they
+_required_ entire unanimity.
+
+3. But another principle, of the deepest importance, ran throughout the
+organization of all the tribes, more remote in its origin, and still
+more influential, it may be thought, in forming a more perfect union,
+and giving strength and compactness to the government. It was the plan
+of the TOTEMIC BOND. This bond was a fraternity of separate clans in
+each tribe. It was based on original consanguinity, and marked by a
+heraldic device, as the figure of a quadruped, or bird. This appears to
+be an ancient feature in their organization, and is also found among
+other North American tribes. The Algonquin tribes, who possess the same
+organization, and from whose vocabulary we take the name, call it the
+Totem. The institution of the totem, or inter-fraternity of clans,
+existed, and is also found, with well marked features, among the
+Iroquois. It had, however, one characteristic, which was peculiar, to
+these nations.--It was employed to mark the descent of the chiefs, which
+ran exclusively by the female. The law of marriage, interdicting
+connexions within the clan, and limiting them to another, was probably
+established in ancient times, among the other nations who adhere to this
+institution, but, if so, it has dropped, or dwindled into mere
+tradition.
+
+Totem, is a term denoting the device, or pictorial sign, which is used
+by each individual, to determine his family identity. As many as have
+the same totem are admitted to be of the same family or clan. In this
+respect, it is analogous to coats of arms. It differs from them in this,
+that no person can marry another of the same arms and totem. They are
+related. The reason for keeping up this interdict, in cases where the
+degree of relationship must often be very small, or is entirely lost,
+appears to be one of policy, and will be, as far as possible, explained.
+
+Originally, there appears to have been three leading families or clans,
+among all the North American Indians, whose devices were, respectively,
+the TURTLE, the WOLF, and the BEAR. This triad of honored clans, existed
+and still exists among nations diverse in their languages, and remote in
+position, and may be considered as a proof of their common origin. These
+totems were regarded as of the highest authority--a fact which may
+denote either original paternity in these clans, or some distinguished
+action or services, analogous, perhaps, to the well known events of the
+Curatii and Horatii.
+
+It is certain, at least, that amongst each of the Iroquois tribes, as
+well as the great Algonquin family, there existed the totem or clan of
+the turtle, the wolf, and the bear. I will take, however, as an
+illustration of the Totemic organization of the tribes, the instance of
+the NUN-DO-WA-GA, or Senecas. The facts here employed have recently been
+communicated to me by their distinguished chief DE-O-NE-HO-GA-WA. The
+tribe consists of eight clans. They are, in the order communicated, the
+wolf, the turtle, the bear, the beaver, the snipe or plover, the falcon
+or hawk, the deer and the cranes. The present reigning clan is the wolf,
+the clan to which the noted orator, Red Jacket, and my informant, both
+belonged. We may assume, that what appear to have been fundamental
+principles, were actually so, and are to be regarded as the
+constitutional basis.
+
+Each clan is entitled to a chief. Each chief has a seat in council. The
+chiefs are hereditary, counting by the female line. By this law of
+descent, no chief could beget an immediate successor. And herein
+consisted one of the marked points of political wisdom in their system.
+It is this law of descent which best distinguishes it from the system of
+government of other nations on this continent, and in Asia. No such rule
+is known to exist, but may exist, among the Mongol race, or other
+Asiatic stocks, to whom these people have usually been traced. If so,
+the law of descent, in this regard, is indigenous and original. What
+disquisitions have we not seen, that a certain Iroquois chief was in the
+regular line of the chieftainship, by the father? whereas, it is clear,
+that the son of a chief could never, in any case, succeed his father.
+The descent ran, so to say, in the line of the queen-mother. If a chief
+die, his brother, next in age, would succeed him. These failing, his
+daughter's male children, if connected with the reigning totem, would
+succeed. Her children constituted the chain of transmission; but the
+heir to the chieftainship, whether by acknowledged succession, or by
+choice in case of dispute or uncertainty, had his claims uniformly
+submitted to a called council, and if approved, the sachem was regularly
+installed to the office. Councils had this right from an early day, and
+are known to have ever been very scrupulous and jealous in its
+exercise, and continue to be so, at this time.
+
+By the establishment of this law of descent, the evils of a hereditary
+chieftainship were obviated. And the succession was kept in healthy
+channels, by the right of the council to decide, in all cases, and to
+set aside incompetent claimants. This right was so exercised, as to give
+the nation the advantages of the elective power, and to avail itself of
+all its talent.
+
+We perceive in this system, an effective provision for breaking
+dynasties, and securing at each mutation of the chieftainship, a fresh
+line of chiefs, who were subject to a life limit. Each clan having the
+same right to one chief, a perpetual, yet constantly changing body of
+sachems, was kept up, which must necessarily change the body entirely in
+one generation. Yet, like the classes in our senatorial organization,
+the change was effected so slowly and gradually, that the body of chiefs
+constituted a political perpetuity.
+
+In contemplating this system, there is more than one point to admire.
+History gives us no example of a confederacy in which the principle of
+political and domestic union, were so intimately bound together. By the
+establishment of the Totemic Bond, the clans were separated on the
+principle of near kindred, between which all marriage was inhibited.
+Every marriage between these separated clans, therefore, bound them
+closer together, and the consequence soon must have been, their entire
+amalgamation, had it not been provided, that each clan, through the
+female line, should preserve inviolate forever, its own Totemic
+independency. In other words, the female was never so incorporated into
+a new relation by the matrimonial tie, as to lose her family name, and
+her mother's ancestral rights. If, for example, a deer totem female,
+married a wolf or hawk male, she was still counted in the clan of the
+deer, and never gave up her political rights, to the wolf or hawk
+clans, which had provided for her a husband. Her position may, perhaps,
+be better understood, by observing that the married woman, still
+retained her maiden name--the sir name of her family. By this means she
+preserved the identity of her clan, and with it, its heraldic and
+political rights. Not only so, the property of a female, never vested
+in, or belonged to the husband. This trait is still in full vogue, among
+each of the tribes. Its operation has been witnessed the present year.
+
+Matrons had also the right to attend and sit in council, and there were
+occasions, in which they were permitted to speak. For this purpose, a
+speaker was assigned to them, and this person became a standing officer
+in the council.--It might pertain to the nations to bring in
+propositions of peace. Such propositions might prejudice the character
+of a warrior, but they were appropriate to the female, and the wise men
+knew how to avail themselves of this stroke of policy. We speak of the
+general and burdensome subjection of the female, among our Red Men--a
+condition, indeed, inseparable from the hunter state, but here is a
+trait of power and consideration, which has not yet been reached by
+refined nations.
+
+With respect to the cause of descent through the female line, it is
+believed there are sound and politic reasons for such a custom, in the
+nomadic state; but we have not time to examine them. The whole subject
+of the separation of the tribes into a fixed member of original clans;
+the connexion of these clans, preserved by the totems, and the selection
+of the female as the preserver of these totemic ties, is one of deep
+interest, and worthy of your inquiries. So far as the investigation has
+been carried, it appears, that the primary object of this organization
+was to preserve the NAMES of the original founders of the nation.--These
+founders are said to have been the children of two brothers, and were
+cousin-germans. But why preserve their names? What object was to result
+from it? Were the persons who bore the names of the wolf, and the
+turtle and the falcon and other species, famed as hunters or warriors?
+Had they delivered their people, from imminent peril, or performed any
+noble act? Had they conducted their people across the sea, from other
+countries? Did they expect to return, and was _this_ the object of
+preserving their names, in the line of their descendants? Or was the
+institution, as it does not appear to have been, mere caprice? Nothing
+could give more interest to your enquiries than a search into these
+obscure matters. They are, in fact, at the foundation of their system of
+government, and will enable you, with more clearness, to ascertain and
+fix its principles.
+
+4. Of this government itself, we know very little, beyond the fact, that
+it had attained great celebrity among the other tribes. It was evidently
+founded on the overthrow of that of the ancient Alleghans. It appears to
+have been full of intricacies, yet simple. A republic, yet embracing
+aristocratic features. A mere government of opinion; yet fixed,
+effective, and powerful. It would be well to sift it, by the best lights
+yet within reach. These are verbal and traditionary. There is little to
+be had from books.
+
+If we look at the political theory of this government it had traits both
+peculiar and prescient. Their councils were not constituted, primarily,
+by elective representation. Yet they secured the chief benefits of it.
+The chiefs, had a life office, and were incapable of transmitting it to
+their descendants. The organic council was a representation of tribes,
+not of members. This aristocratic feature, was balanced and its tendency
+to absorb authority prevented, by permitting the warriors to sit in
+these primary councils. In these councils, there was free discussion and
+full deliberation. But there was no formal vote taken, nor any measure
+carried by counting persons, or ascertaining a majority or plurality.
+Tradition declares against any such test. The popular sense appears to
+have been secured alone by the scope and tenor of the debates. I cannot
+learn that there ever was any formal expression, equivalent to the
+modern practice of taking of the sense of the council on a measure.
+Perhaps something of this kind is to be found in the approbatory
+response, from which the French are said to have made up the word
+IROQUOIS.
+
+If the aristocratic feature of life-sachemship, was counteracted by the
+influence of the warriors in council, at the Council Fire of the Tribes;
+this feature was shorn still more of its objectionable tendencies in the
+General or Central Council of the Confederacy. Chiefs attended this
+national assemblage, as delegates or representatives, although not
+elected representatives, of their tribes. The number depended on
+circumstances; and varied with the occasion. They were sent, or went, to
+deliberate on a specific question, or questions, for which, the tribe
+was summoned, by the Executive Sachem of the Nation holding the high
+office of Attotarho,[C] or Convener of the Council. This central
+council, headed by this kind of a Presidency, was in fact, more purely
+democratic in its structure, than the home councils. It consisted
+essentially of a Congress of Chiefs, having a right as chiefs to attend,
+or delegated for the purpose, and aided also, by the warriors. It had
+the character of being a representative national body, delegated for a
+single session; and of a local body of life chiefs constituting the home
+sachemry, or a limited senate.
+
+[C] The corresponding word in the Seneca dialect is Tod-o-dah-hoh.
+
+Such I apprehend to have been the structure of the Iroquois government.
+It was strong, efficient and popular.--It had its fixity in the life
+tenure of the chiefs and the customs of proceeding. The voice of the
+warriors constituted a counterbalance, or species of second estate. But
+practically, whatever the theory, the chief and warriors, acted as one
+body. They came, generally, to advocate, or announce what had already
+been decided on, in the body of the tribe.
+
+It is evident, in viewing this scheme of a native federative
+government, that its tendencies were always in favor of the power of the
+separate tribes. No people ever existed, who watched more narrowly the
+existence of power, and its innate tendency to centralize, and usurp.
+Suspicious to a fault, their eyes and ears were ever open to the least
+tone or gesture of alarm. They had only confided, to the Central
+Council, the power to make war or peace, and to regulate public policy.
+This Central Council, received embassies, not only from the numerous
+nations with whom they warred; but the delegates of the crowns of France
+and England, often stood in their presence.
+
+The assent of each tribe is believed to have been requisite to an
+alliance, or rupture. When this had been given at the central council,
+it was explained before the local council, and the concurrence of the
+body of the tribe, was essential to make it binding and effective. In
+case of war, there was no fixed scale by which men were to be raised. It
+was deemed obligatory for each tribe to raise men according to its
+strength. But each was left free to its own action, being responsible
+for such action, to PUBLIC OPINION. All warriors were volunteers, and
+were raised for specific expeditions, and were bound no longer. To take
+up the war club, and join in the war dance, was to enlist. There was no
+other enlistment--no bounties--no pay--no standing force--no public
+provisions--no public arms--no clothing--no public hospital. The martial
+impulse of the people was sufficient. All was left to personal effort
+and provision. Self dependence was never carried to such height. The
+thirst for glory--the honor of the confederacy--the strife for personal
+distinction, filled their ranks; and led them, through desert paths, to
+the St. Lawrence, the Illinois, the Atlantic seaboard and the southern
+Alleghanies. Nor did they need the roll of the river to animate their
+courage, or regulate their steps. Theirs was a high energetic devotion,
+equal or superior to even that of ancient Sparta and Lacedæmon. They
+conquered wherever they went. They subdued nations in their immediate
+vicinity. They exterminated others. They adopted the fragments of
+subjugated tribes into their confederacy, sunk their national homes into
+oblivion, and thus repaired the irresistable losses of war. They had
+eloquence, as well as courage. Their speakers maintained a high rank
+along side of the best generals and negotiators of France, England and
+America. We owe this tribute to their valor and talents. One thousand
+such men, equipped for war as _they_ were, and led by _their_ spirit,
+would have effected more in battle, than the tens of thousands of
+effeminate Aztecks and Peruvians who shouted, but often did no more than
+_shout_, around the piratical bands of Cortez and Pizarro.
+
+5. I have left myself but little time to speak of the origin and early
+history of this people--topics which are of deep interest in themselves,
+but which are involved in great obscurity. They are subjects which
+commend themselves to your attention, and offer a wide field for your
+future research. There are three periods in our Indian history:
+
+1. THE ALLEGORIC AND FABULOUS AGE. This includes the creation, the
+deluge, the creation of Holiness and Evil, and some analogous points, in
+the general and shadowy traditions of men, which our hunter race, have
+almost universally concealed under the allegoric figures, of a creative
+bird or beast, or the exploits of some potent personage, endowed with
+supernatural courage or power. In this era, the earth was also covered
+with monsters and giants, who waged war, and drove men into caves and
+recesses; until the interposition of the original creative power, for
+their relief.
+
+2. THE ANTE-HISTORICAL PERIOD, in which tradition begins to assume the
+character of truth, but is still obscured by fable. This period includes
+the early discoveries by the Northmen, the reputed voyage of Prince
+Madoc, &c.
+
+3. THE PERIOD OF ACTUAL HISTORY, dating from the earliest voyage of
+Columbus and his companions.
+
+I have alluded, in a preceding part of this address, to the mode of
+studying their early history. Where little or nothing is to be obtained
+from books, it requires a cautious investigation of these traditions and
+antiquities. Ethnology, in all its branches, has a direct and practical
+bearing on this subject. The physical type of man, the means of his
+subsistence, the state of his arts, the language he speaks, the
+hieroglyphics he carves, the mounds he builds--the fortifications he
+erects,--his religion, his superstitions, his legendary lore--the very
+geography of the country he inhabits, are so many direct and palpable
+means of acquiring historical evidence. It is from the investigation of
+these, that tribes and nations are grouped and classified, and the
+original stocks of mankind denoted, and the track of their dispersion
+over the globe traced. And they constitute so many topics of study and
+investigation.
+
+In relating their traditions, our Red Men are prone, to connect, (as if
+these were portions of a continuous and consistent narrative) the most
+_recent_ and most _remote_ events, which dwell in their memory. And from
+their present residence and recent history, to run back, by a few
+sentences, into purely fabulous and allegoric periods. Fiction and fact,
+are mingled in the same strain. In listening to those relations, it is
+important to establish in the mind, historical periods, and to separate
+that which is grotesque or imaginative from the narration of real
+events. The latter, may be sometimes distorted by this juxtaposition,
+but it is, in general, easy to separate the two, and to re-adopt them,
+on their own principles. The early nations of Europe and Asia, pursued
+the same system. Their men were soon traced into gods, and their gods,
+soon ended in sensualists, or demons. Greek and Roman history, before
+the period of Herodotus, must have been little better than a jargon of
+such incongruities, and nearly all the earlier part of it, is no better
+now. To teach our children these nonsensical fables, is to vitiate their
+imagination, and the thing would never have been dreamt of, in a moral
+age, were not the ancient mythology, inseparably mixed up with the
+present state of ancient history, poetry and letters. We must teach it
+as a fable, and rely on truth to counteract its effects.
+
+The Iroquois have their full share in the fabulous and allegoric
+periods, and an examination of their tales and traditions will be found,
+I apprehend, to give ample scope to poetry and imagination. In their
+fabulous age, as recorded by Cusick, they have their war, with flying
+Heads, the Stone Giants, the Great Serpent, the Gigantic Musquito, the
+Spirit of Witchcraft, and several other eras, which afford curious
+evidences of the way-farings and wanderings of the human intellect,
+unaided by letters, or the spirit of truth.
+
+Actual history plants its standard close on the confines of these
+benighted regions of fable and allegory. It is not proposed to enter
+into much detail on this topic. The modern facts are pretty well known,
+but have never been thoroughly investigated or arranged. Of the earlier
+facts in their origin and history, we know very little. The first
+writers on the subject of the Indians generally, after the settlement of
+America, dealt in wild speculations, and were carried away with
+preconceived theories, which destroy their value. Colden, who directed
+his attention to the Iroquois, scarcely attempted any thing beyond a
+specific relation of transactions, which are intended for the
+information of the Board of Trade and Plantations, and these do not come
+down beyond the peace of Ryswick. There is a large amount of printed
+information, adequate for the completion of their history in the 18th
+and 19th centuries, but most of the works are of rare occurrence, and
+are only to be found in large libraries at home and abroad. Other facts
+exist in manuscript official documents, numbers of which, have recently
+been obtained by the State, from foreign offices, and are now deposited
+in the Secretary's office at Albany. The lost correspondence on Indian
+affairs, of Sir William Johnson, may yet come to light, and would
+necessarily be important. Private manuscripts and the traditions of aged
+Indians, still living, would further contribute to their history. They
+are a people worthy the separate pen of a historian, and it may be hoped
+that an elaborate and full work, may be produced.
+
+Where the Iroquois originated? is a question, which involves the prior
+and general one, of the origin of the Red Race. So far as relates to
+their proximate origin, on this continent, I am inclined to think, that
+it was in the tropical latitudes extending west from the Gulf of
+Mexico.--Facts indicate the great tide of our migration, to have been
+from that general race. The zea maize which is a southern plant, came
+from that quarter, and was spread, as the tribes moved from the south to
+the north, the east, and northeast, and north west. Which of the
+ancient Indian stocks came first we know not. The Iroquois, if we follow
+one of their own authors, have strong claims to antiquity, but we cannot
+accept this in full. That they migrated up the valley of the
+Mississippi, and the Ohio to its extreme head (they call the Alleghany
+Oheo) is probable. Our actual knowledge on this subject, historically
+speaking, is very small, and we must grope our way through dark and
+shadowy traditions. These, however, sustain the general fact stated,
+which is helped out by other accessions. That they had crossed the great
+artery of the continent, (the Mississippi river) prior to the Algonquin
+race, but after the Alleghans, is shown by the traditions of the latter.
+[P.W.][D] With this race, tradition asserts, that they formed an
+alliance, at a remote era, and maintained a bloody war, for many years,
+against the ancient Alleghans, who are supposed, in these wars, to have
+erected the fortifications and mounds, of the Mississippi valley. That
+this ancient Alleghanic empire of the West, so to call it, fell before
+the combined courage and energy of the Iroquois and Algonquins, and that
+the defeated tribes either retired down the waters of the Mississippi,
+or were in part incorporated with themselves, or yet exist in the Far
+West, under other names, we have various traditions for asserting or
+believing.
+
+[D] Indian Picture Writing.
+
+Thus far we are speaking of the ante-historical period. When the
+colonies came to be planted, and our ancestors spread themselves along
+the Atlantic coast, from the initial points of settlement in Virginia,
+Nova Belgica, and New England, the Iroquois were already well seated,
+and spoke and acted, whenever they desired to make allusion to the
+matter, as if they had been _forever_ seated on the soil they then
+occupied. To conceal the fact of their title being held by right of
+conquest, or to supply the actual want of history, one tribe, the
+Oneidas, asserted that they had sprung from a rock. Another, the
+Wyandots, alleged that they came out of the ground by the fiat of the
+great spirit. [Oneota.] None of them acknowledged a _foreign origin_
+beyond seas. None of them acknowledged, at first, that they knew aught
+of the ancient mound-builders and people who built the old
+fortifications in the West, or in their own country; but they
+subsequently connected, or accommodated these mounds, to their war with
+the Alleghans. This is in accordance with Indian policy, and suspicious
+foresight. When closely questioned, they told Gov. Clinton that these
+old works were by an _earlier_ people, and that their oldest traditions
+related to their wars with the Cherokees, and the people of the extreme
+south. That they originally dwelt in those latitudes--that they migrated
+north through the Ohio valley, around the Alleghanies, and came into
+Western New-York from the borders of the Lakes and the St. Lawrence, are
+points very well denoted by their languages, vestiges of arts,
+geographical nomenclature and history, so far as we have had the means
+of recording it.
+
+Cartier, in 1535, found them seated at Hochelaga, the present site of
+Montreal. They had an ancient station, as low down the Connecticut at
+least, as Northfield. Towards the north of lakes Ontario and Erie, they
+extended to the chain of lakes which stretches through from the northern
+shores of the former to lake Huron. It is seen from Le Jeune, that they
+ordered the Wyandots of the ancient Hochelaga Canton, who had formed an
+alliance with the French and with the Algonquins, to quit that spot, and
+remove into the territory south of the lakes. And in default of this,
+they warred against them, and drove them west, through the great chain
+of lakes to Michilimackinac, and even to the western extremity of lake
+Superior.
+
+The period of the settlement of Canada, ripened causes of hostility to
+the entire Algonquin, or as they called them, Adirondak race, into
+maturity. The Wyandot alliance with the French gave an edge to this
+contest, and having soon been supplied with guns and ammunition by the
+Dutch, they defeated this race in several sanguinary battles between
+Montreal and Quebec, and drove them out of this valley, by the way of
+the Ontario river, and pursued them to their villages and hunting
+grounds in area of lakes Huron, Michigan and Algoma. They defeated the
+Kah Kwahes or Eries. They pushed their war parties, from the lakes,
+through to the MIAMI, the WABASH, and the ILLINOIS, on the latter of
+which they were encountered by La Salle and his people, in his early
+expedition, in the seventeenth century. Their great avenue to the west,
+the avenue by which, in part at least, they appear to have migrated at
+an early day, was the Alleghany river, through which, they continued to
+exercise their ancient or acquired authority in the Ohio valley, and the
+Alleghanian range.
+
+Back on this route, they continued their war expeditions against the
+tribes of the southern Alleghanies _at_ and, for some time, _after_ the
+era of the first settlement of the country. The point of their
+hostility, was directed against the Catawbas, the Cherokees, and their
+allies, the Abiecas, Hutchees and others. Smith encountered them on
+these wars, in the interior of Virginia, in 1608. And it is well known,
+that they brought off their brothers, the Tuscaroras, after the
+settlement of North Carolina, and gave them a location among themselves,
+and a seat at their council fire, in Western New-York.
+
+Launching their war canoes on the Delaware and the Susquehanna, they
+extended their sway over the present area of New-Jersey, Pennsylvania,
+Delaware and Maryland, bringing under their sovereign power, that member
+of the great Algonic family of America, who call themselves Lenni
+Lenapees, but who are better known in our history as Delawares. Go which
+way the traveler will, even at this day, for a thousand miles west,
+southwest and northwest of their great council fire at Onondaga, and the
+inquirer will find that the name of a NADOWA, which is the Algonquin
+term for Iroquois, was a word of terror to the remotest tribes. Writers
+tell us it was the same throughout New England. By the peaceful and wise
+policy of the Dutch prior to 1664, and of the English subsequent to that
+date, this confederacy was kept in our interest; and he must be a
+careless reader of our history, who does not know, that they formed a
+perfect wall of defence against the encroachments of the French Crown
+upon our territories. It was to curb this power, and gain some permanent
+foot-hold on the soil, that La Salle built fort Niagara in 1678.
+Vaudruiel, the Governor General of New France, could give no stronger
+reason to his King, for taking post on the straits of Detroit, and
+fortifying that point, in 1701, than that it would enable him to "curb
+the Iroquois." [Oneota.]
+
+But, I do not stand before you to enter into a critical history of the
+Iroquois' powers. Who has not heard of their fame and prowess--of their
+indomitable courage in war,--of their admirable policy in peace: of
+their eloquence in council: of the noble fire of patriotic
+independence, which led them to defend the integrity of their soil
+against all invaders; and of the triumphs they achieved, throughout
+ABORIGINAL AMERICA, by the wisdom of their principles of confederation.
+The history of their rise and early progress, we shall probably never
+satisfactorily know. It is said by early writers, that the origin of
+their confederation was not very remote. But so much as we know of
+them--so much of their career as has passed while we have been their
+neighbors, proves that they had well established claims to
+antiquity--that they were a free, bold and valorous stock of the human
+race--that they had thought to plan, language to express, and energy to
+execute.--Compared to other races north of the tropics, there were two
+principles, apparent in their history, which give them the palm, as
+statesmen and warriors, although in some other departments of
+intellectual attainment, they were probably excelled by certain of the
+Algonquins. I allude to the principles of political union; and the wise
+and humane policy, which led them to adopt, into their body, the
+remnants of the nations whom they conquered. Here were two elements of
+political power, in which they were not only a century in advance of
+_all_ the other stocks of the north; but they were in advance of the
+most prominent examples of the semi-civilized Indian tribes of _this_
+day.--Neither the Choctaws, the Cherokees, or other expatriated tribes
+now assembled on the Neosho territory, west of the Mississippi, although
+they adopted governments for themselves, have had the wisdom to adopt a
+general union.--The worst and most discouraging fact to the friends of
+the aboriginal race, in these Tribes, is, that they will not
+confederate. Discord, internal and external, has assailed them with
+great power, in late years, and threaten even to defeat the humane
+policy of the government, in their colonization.
+
+So superior were the Iroquois, in this particular, so deeply imbued were
+their minds with the wisdom of union; that had the discovery of the
+continent, been postponed half a century longer, they would have
+presented a compact representative empire in North America, far more
+stable, energetic and sound, if not so brilliant as that of Mexico. They
+were a people of physically better nerve and mould. Of ample stature and
+great personal activity and courage, they were capable of offering a
+more efficient resistance to their invaders. The climate itself was more
+favorable to energetic action; and it can scarcely be deemed fanciful to
+assert, that had Hernando Cortez, in 1519, entered the Mohawk Valley,
+instead of that of Mexico, with the force he actually had, his ranks
+would have gone down under the skillfulness of the Iroquois' ambuscades,
+and himself perished ingloriously at the stake.
+
+The number of warriors they could bring into the field, was large,
+although it has probably been over-rated. Let it not be overlooked, in
+estimating the ancient vigor and military power of this race, that in
+1677, one year after the _final_ transfer of political power, in
+New-York, from the Stadtholder of Holland to the British crown, the
+Iroquois wielded more than 2000 hatches. [Clint's Dis. N. Y. Col. Vol.
+2, p. 80.] Sixteen hundred of these warriors, are estimated to have
+ranged themselves on the side of Great Britain, in the memorable contest
+of the Revolution.
+
+Misled in this contest, they certainly were--doubting long which of two
+branches of the same white race, they should side with, but overpowered
+by external pomp, by specious promises, and by false appearances, they
+committed a fatal mistake. They fought, in fact, against the very
+principles of republican confederation, which they had so long upheld in
+their own body, and which, I may add, had so long upheld them. They
+perilled all upon the issue; and the issue went against them. Their
+great and eloquent leader Thayendanegea, better known as Joseph Brant,
+had been educated in British schools, he could speak two tongues, and
+his counsels prevailed. He was not in the old line of the
+chieftainship, but had placed himself at the head of the confederacy by
+his brilliant talents, and by favorable circumstances. That line fell
+with the great Mohawk sachem Hendrick, at the battle of lake George, in
+1755, and with the wise civilian Little Abraham, who in right of his
+mother, succeeded him, and died at his Castle at Dionderoga. Brant was,
+however, a man of great energy of character, of shrewd principles of
+policy, and of great personal, as well as moral courage. As a war
+captain and a civil leader, the Red Race of America has produced no
+superior. He led 1580 tomahawks against the armies of the Revolution--at
+his war cry 15,000 arrows were launched from their fatal bows. The voice
+of Kirkland--the voice of Schuyler--the voice of Washington were exerted
+in vain. Had he hearkened to these friendly voices, the Iroquois
+confederacy would now have stood in the plenitude of power, and we
+should not have assembled to-day to light the fires of this Young
+Institution from its dying embers.
+
+These things are past. The contest of the revolution was one, which our
+fathers waged. Many of you may have heard the graphic recitals of those
+days of peril, as I have, from the lips of actors, who now rest from
+their toils.--They were days of high and sanguinary import. The deeds of
+daring which they brought forth, came like a mighty tempest over the
+face of this fair land. It prostrated many a noble trunk. It swept for
+seven long years, over the beauteous lakes and forests, which now
+constitute our homes. It left them almost denuded and desolate. But the
+mild airs and gentle summer winds of peace succeeded. The hoarse voice
+of the Iroquois, O-WAY-NE-O, has been transformed into the soft and
+silver tones of GOD. Flowers and fruits, and fields of waving grain,
+soon rose up in every valley, and shed their fragrance along every
+sylvan shore. Joy and prosperity succeeded the arrowy storm of war. And
+it has been given to us, to carry out scenes of improvement, and of
+moral and intellectual progress, which providence, in its profound
+workings, has deemed it best for the prosperity of man, that _we_, and
+not _they_, should be entrusted with. We have succeeded to their
+inheritance: but we regard them as brothers. We cherish their memory: we
+admire their virtues; and we aim to rescue from oblivion their noble
+deeds.
+
+I have merely alluded to the importance of the Iroquois decision at the
+critical period, 1776. The erroneous policy they adopted, with some
+exceptions, is among the events of past times, which wiser and more
+learned and resplendent nations, than they professed to be, have
+committed. We regret the error of the decision, but we hold fellowship
+with the man. He is our brother; and we meet this day to consecrate a
+literary institution in the land, more enduring, we trust, than deeds of
+strife and battle, and better suited to elicit studies to exalt the
+heart and dignify the understanding. Your weapons are not spears and
+clubs, but letters. Your means are the quiet and peaceful paths of
+inquiry. If these paths are often obscured by the foot of time and
+tangled by the interlacings of history and antiquity, be it yours to put
+the branches aside, and lead the right way. Truth is your aim, and
+justice and benevolence your guides. They hold before you the lamp of
+science so clearly, that you cannot mistake your way. While you essay,
+with modesty and diligence to tread in this path, and render justice to
+a proud and noble branch of the aboriginal race, your ultimate ends are
+moral improvement, the accumulation of useful facts, and the general
+advancement of historical letters.
+
+You have selected, out of a wide field of aboriginal nations, the
+history and ethnography of the Iroquois, as the theme of your particular
+inquiries. To us, at least, these Tribes, stand in the most interesting
+relations. They occupied our soil; they gave names to our rivers and
+mountains. They figure in the foreground of our history. The very names
+of the minor streams and lakes we dwell beside, bring up, by
+association, the free and bold race, who once claimed them as their
+patrimony. Before Columbus set out, on his solitary mule, to solicit the
+patronage of Ferdinand and Isabella, they were here. Before Hudson
+dropped anchor north of the, to him, wonderful peaks of the Ontiora, or
+Highlands, they were here. Other Indian races have left their names on
+other portions of the continent. The names of the Missouri and
+Mississippi, the Alleghany and the Oregon, we trace to other stocks of
+red men. But the Akonoshioni, or Iroquois, has consecrated the early
+history of Western New-York. Their history is, to some extent, our
+history; and we turn, with intellectual refreshment from the thread-bare
+themes of Europe and the Europeans, to trace the humble sepulchres where
+the Iroquois buried his dead--the mounds, which entombed his rulers or
+his battle slain,--or lifted on high, his sacrificial lights--the long
+and half obliterated trenches of embankments which encompassed his
+ancient towns--the heaps of stone that lie at the angles and sally ports
+of his simple fortresses, on the circular trenches, which enclosed his
+beacon fires on the mountain tops. It is in localities of this kind,
+that the ploughman turns up fragments of the Red Man's time wasted and
+broken pottery--his stone pestles, his carved pipes, and his skilfully
+chipped arrow heads, and spear heads, and tomahawks of stone. These, and
+analogous remains, are the objects of our antiquarian researches.
+Prouder monuments he had none. There was neither column, nor arch,
+statue nor inscription. But we may trace, by a careful inspection of the
+objects, the state and progress of his ancient and rude arts. We may
+denote, by their occurrence, in the same localities, the era of the
+arrival of the white man. We may establish other eras, from geological
+changes,--the growth of forest trees, and other inductive means.
+
+There are three eras in American antiquity.
+
+1. Vestiges of their primary migration and origin.
+
+2. Vestiges of their international changes and intestine wars, prior to
+the discovery of the continent by Columbus.
+
+3. Evidences of wars, migrations and remains of occupancy, subsequent to
+the arrival of Europeans.
+
+These are to be studied in the inverse order of their being stated. We
+must proceed from the known to the unknown--from the recent, to the
+remote.
+
+Ethnography offers a species of proof, to determine the migrations and
+divisions in the original family of man, which is to be drawn from
+geographical considerations--the relative position of islands, seas and
+continents--the means of subsistence as governed and limited by climate,
+and soil; the state of ancient arts, agriculture, languages, &c.
+
+Philology denotes the affinities of nations, by the analogies of words,
+and forms of syntax, and the place of expressing ideas.
+
+The remains of arts, monuments, inscriptions, hieroglyphics, picture
+writing, and architecture, constitute so many means of comparing one
+nation with another, and thus determining their affinities; and although
+most of our aboriginal nations had made but little progress in these
+departments, the state of ruins in Mexico, Central Mexico and Yucatan;
+the mounds and fortifications of the West; and even the remains of forts
+and barrows in Western New-York, entitle them to consideration.
+
+There is another department of observation on our aborigines, which,
+from the light it has shed on the mental characteristics of the Algic,
+and some other stocks, offers a new field for investigation. I allude to
+the subject of the imaginative legends and tales of the Red Race. Such
+tales have been found abundantly in the lodge circles of the tribes
+about the Upper Lakes and the source of the Mississippi. They reveal the
+sources of many of their peculiar opinions on life, death, and
+immortality, and open, if I may so say, a vista to the philosophy of
+the Indian mind, and the theory of his religion.
+
+An ample field for investigation is thus before you. And it is one full
+of attractions alike for the man of science, research, learned leisure
+and philosophy. But it is not alone to these, that the Red man and his
+associations, present a field for study and contemplation. His history
+and existence on this continent, is blended with the richest sources of
+poetry and imagination. His beautiful and sonorous geographical
+nomenclature alone, has clothed our hills and lakes and streams, with
+the charms of poetic numbers.--The Red man himself, who once roved these
+attractive scenes, with his bow and arrows, and his brow crowned with
+the highest honors of the war path and the chase, was a being of NOBLE
+MOULD. He felt the true sentiment of independence. He was capable of
+high deeds of courage, disinterestedness and virtue. His generosity and
+hospitality were unbounded. His constancy in professed friendship was
+universal, and his memory of a good deed, done to him, or his kindred,
+never faded. His breast was animated with a noble thirst of fame. To
+acquire this, he trod the war path, he submitted to long and severe
+privations. Neither fatigue, hunger or thirst were permitted to gain the
+mastery over him. A stoic in endurance he was above complaint, and when
+a prisoner at the stake, he triumphed over his enemy in his death song.
+The history of such a people must be full of deep tragic and poetic
+incidents; and their antiquities, cannot fail to illustrate it.--The
+tomb that holds a man, derives all its moral interest _from_ the man,
+and would be destitute of it, without him. America is the tomb of the
+Red man.
+
+A single objection, to the plan of the institution, remains to be
+answered. It may be deemed too intricate and complex to secure unity in
+action. The inquiries are admitted to be interesting and capable of
+furnishing intellectual aliment for a literary society; but why not
+establish it on plain principles, in the ordinary mode? All that is
+sought, it may be said, could be accomplished without such a weight of
+associated machinery. By organizing it on the basis of the several
+tribes, and the several clans of each tribe; spreading over so wide an
+area of territory, and adopting so many of the aboriginal peculiarities,
+in terms, form of admission, and you have exposed the institution to
+serious objections, and to the danger of an early decline. But, are not
+these traits, rather the guarantees of its success and perpetuity? It
+addresses itself, particularly to the YOUNG. To them, it brings the
+attractions of novelty. Much of the ardor of association and desire of
+action, peculiar to this age, may find its gratification in these
+co-fraternal, and ceremonial observances; and be supposed to act as
+stimulants to the higher, and ulterior objects of the association. These
+objects are, both in their nature, and associations, of an inspiring
+cast. They bring before you, a new world, with its ancient inhabitants,
+as themes of contemplation. And these themes spring up, with a freshness
+and vigor, well suited to attract the pen and pencil.--Tired with poring
+over the dusty volumes, which detail the ruins of the temples and cities
+of the eastern hemisphere, the spirit of research asks, whether, in the
+very magnificence of the continent, there be not now a temple, whose
+history is worth study? Cloyed with the accounts handed down of the
+renowned places and renowned men of antiquity, it is inquired, whether
+these broad forests and far-spread vistas of woods and waters, do not
+conceal something of the foot-prints of past time, which is worth labor
+and learning to investigate, and reveal?
+
+Nature is found here, in some of her sublimest moods. She is still in
+her questive youth, but it is a youth of gigantic proportions. Her
+largest rivers occupy thousands of miles in displaying their winding
+channels, between these sources and their outlets, in the sea. Her broad
+forests still wave with their leafy honors unshorn. Her lakes occupy a
+length and breadth and depth, which give them far more the aspect of
+seas. Ships, bear a heavy commerce on their bosoms, and navies have
+battled for supremacy upon their ample breasts. It is a region destined
+for the human race to develope itself and expand in. It is a seat
+prepared for the re-union of the different stocks of mankind. It is an
+area of magnificent extent. Higher mountains fill other parts of the
+world, and other parts of _this_ continent. The Alps, the Atlas, the
+Andes and the Cordilleras reach into the skies, but they encumber the
+earth with their vast proportions, and render the surface sterile. They
+take away from the area of tillable soil, and add it to waste and
+unprofitable districts. If our greatest elevations, are humble compared
+to these, they are clothed with verdure, and break into countless
+valleys, which afford a habitation to man. No country on the globe
+abounds with so many beautiful lakes of every size, and our rivers
+display a succession of cataracts and falls, alike attractive to the eye
+of taste and art.
+
+Is all this profusion designed to employ the pens of naturalists and
+statesmen only? Is there no field in the mighty past, for the
+philosopher and the historian? for the ethnologist and the antiquarian?
+Is civilized man alone the only object, wanting in the consideration of
+its former history? We answer, no. Centuries on centuries have passed
+away, since first the Red man planted his foot on this continent. The
+very paucity of his knowledge and simplicity of his arts, tell a story
+of great antiquity. The diversities of language answer to the same end.
+And, for aught that is known, long before the eras of Socrates and
+Pythagoras, Plato and Confucius, the Mongol and the Persian. The Tartar
+and the Mesopotamean, the Chinese and Japanese, and we know not how many
+other shades of the Red man of Asia, were in AWONEO[E] or America. Of
+their wonderful histories and wars and overturnings, by land and sea,
+of their mixtures and intermixtures of blood and language and lineage
+and nationality, we know little, or nothing. But, after all the
+centuries of separation, we find in his physiological characteristics
+and conformation of visage and expression, the same Asiatic type of
+man--whom the first adventurers to these shores, did not hesitate to
+pronounce the man of India. Use, has perpetuated the term, and if the
+discoveries of geography, have, ages since, shown the appellation of
+Indians, in the sense then employed, to be incorrect, physiologists and
+ethnographers, have but found stronger and stronger proofs, that Asia,
+in preference to every other quarter of the globe, was the true land of
+his origin.
+
+[E] Onondaga.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+In Indian mythology may be found the richest poetic materials. An
+American Author is unworthy of the land that gave him birth if he passes
+by with indifference this well-spring of inspiration, sending liberally
+forth a thousand enchanted streams. It has given spiritual inhabitants
+to our valleys, rivers, hills and inland seas; it has peopled the dim
+and awful depths of our forests with spectres, and, by the power of
+association, given our scenery a charm that will make it attractive
+forever. The material eye is gratified by a passing glimpse of nature's
+external features, but a beauty, unseen, unknown before, invests them if
+linked to stories of the past, in the creation of which fabling fancy
+has been a diligent co-worker with memory.
+
+The red man was a being who delighted in the mystical and the wild--it
+was a part of his woodland inheritance. Good and evil genii performed
+for him their allotted tasks. Joyous tidings, freedom from disease and
+disaster--success in the chase, and on the war path were traceable to
+the Master of Life and his subordinate ministers:--blight that fell upon
+the corn was attributed, on the contrary, to demoniac agency, and the
+shaft that missed its mark was turned aside by the invisible hand of
+some mischievous sprite. Deities presided over the elements. The
+Chippewas have their little wild men of the woods, that remind us of
+Puck and his frolicsome brotherhood, and the dark son of the wilderness,
+like our first parents
+
+ --"from the steep
+ Of echoing hill or thicket often heard
+ Celestial voices."
+
+My tent is pitched on the hunting grounds of the Senecas, (or
+So-non-ton-ons) and I deem it not inappropriate to select for my theme
+the Legend of their origin.
+
+Different versions of the story are in circulation, but I have been
+guided mainly, in the narrative part of my poem, by notes taken down
+after an interview with the late Captain Horatio Jones, the Indian
+Interpreter of the Six Nations.
+
+The great hill at the head of Canandaigua Lake, from whence the Senecas
+sprung, is called Genundewah. Tradition says that it was crowned by a
+fort to which the braves of the tribe resorted at night-fall, after
+waging war with a race of giants. These giants were worshippers of
+Ut-co, or the Evil Spirit, who sent, after their extermination, a great
+serpent to destroy the conquerors. Quitting its watery lair in
+Canandaigua Lake, the monster encircled their fortification. The head
+and tail completed a horrid _ring_ at the gateway, and, when half
+famished, the wretched inmates vainly attempted to escape. All were
+destroyed with the exception of a pair, whose miraculous preservation is
+related in the poem that follows. Ever after Genundewah was a chosen
+seat of Iroquois Council, and wrinkled seers were in the habit of
+climbing its sides for the purpose of offering up prayers to the Great
+Spirit.
+
+
+
+
+GENUNDEWAH,
+
+[A LEGEND OF CANANDAIGUA LAKE.]
+
+BY WILLIAM H. C. HOSMER.
+
+WRITTEN AT THE REQUEST OF THE "NEW CONFEDERATION OF THE IROQUOIS," AND
+PRONOUNCED BEFORE THEM IN GENERAL COUNCIL, AT AURORA, AUGUST 15th, 1845.
+
+
+I.
+
+ Why, Chieftain, linger on this barren hill
+ That overbrows yon azure sheet below?
+ Red sunset glimmers on the leaping rill,
+ Dark night is near, and we have far to go.
+ This scene--replied he leaning on big bow--
+ Is hallowed by tradition--wondrous birth
+ Here to my Tribe was given long ago;
+ We stand where rose they from disparting earth
+ To light a deathless blaze on Fame's unmouldering hearth.
+
+
+II.
+
+ A fort they reared upon this summit bleak
+ Guided by counsel from the Spirit Land,
+ And clad in dart-proof panoply would seek
+ The plains beneath each morn, a valiant band,
+ And warfare wage with giants hand to hand:
+ They conquered in the struggle, and the bones
+ Of their dead foemen on the echoing strand
+ Of the clear lake lay blent with wave-washed stones,
+ And pale, unbodied ghosts filled air with hollow moans.
+
+
+III.
+
+ Ut-co, the scowling King of Evil, heard
+ The voice of lamentation, and wild ire
+ The depths of his remorseless bosom stirr'd;
+ Of that gigantic brood he was the sire,
+ And flying from his cavern, arched with fire,
+ He hovered o'er these, waters--at his call
+ Up rushed a hideous monster, spire on spire;--
+ _Call_ so astounding that the rocky wall
+ Of this blue chain of hills seemed tott'ring to its fall!
+
+
+IV.
+
+ With his infernal parent for a guide,
+ The hungry serpent left his watery lair,
+ Dragging his scaly terrors up the side
+ Of this tall hill, now desolate and bare:
+ Filled with alarm the Senecas espied
+ His dread approach, and launched a whizzing shower
+ Of arrows on the foe, whose iron hide
+ Repelled their flinty points--and in that hour
+ The boldest warrior fled from strife with fiendish power.
+
+
+V.
+
+ The loathsome messenger of wo and death
+ True to his dark and awful mission wound,
+ Polluting air with his envenom'd breath,
+ Huge folds the palisadoed camp around:
+ Crouched at his master's feet the faithful hound,
+ And raised a piteous and despairing cry;
+ No outlet of escape the mother found
+ For her imploring infants, and on high
+ Lifted her trembling hands in voiceless agony.
+
+
+VI.
+
+ Forming a hideous circle at the gate
+ The reptile's head and tail together lay;
+ Distended were the fang-set jaws in wait
+ For victims, thus beleaguered, night and day;
+ And not unlike the red and angry ray
+ Shot by the bearded comet was the light
+ Of his unslumbering eye that watched for prey;
+ His burnished mail flashed back the sunshine bright,
+ And round him pale the woods grew with untimely blight.
+
+
+VII.
+
+ When famine raged within their guarded hold,
+ And wan distemper thinn'd their numbers fast,
+ Crowding the narrow gateway young and old
+ With the fixed look of desperation passed
+ From life to dreadful death--a charnel vast--
+ The reptile's yawning throat entombed the strong,
+ And lovely of the Tribe:--remained at last
+ Two lovers only of that mighty throng
+ To chaunt with feeble voice a nation's funeral song.
+
+
+VIII.
+
+ Comely to look on was the youthful pair:--
+ One, like the mountain pine erect and tall,
+ Was of imposing presence;--his dark hair
+ Had caught its hue from night's descending pall;
+ Light was his tread--his port majestical,
+ And well his kingly brow became a form
+ Of matchless beauty:--like the rise and fall
+ Of a strong billow in the hour of storm
+ Beat his undaunted heart with glory's impulse warm.
+
+
+IX.
+
+ Graced was his belt by beads of dazzling sheen
+ And painted quills--the handiwork of one
+ Dearer than life to him;--though he had seen
+ From the gray hills, beneath a wasting sun,
+ Only the snows of twenty winters run,
+ The warrior's right his scalp lock to adorn
+ With eagle plumes in battle he had won:
+ O'erjoyed were prophets old when he was born,
+ And hailed him with one voice "_First Sunbeam of the Morn_."
+
+
+X.
+
+ The other!--what of her?--bright shapes beyond
+ This darkened earth wear looks like those she wore;
+ Graceful her mien as lilly of the pond
+ That nods to every wind that passes o'er
+ Its fragrant head a welcome:--never more
+ By loveliness so rare will earth be blest;
+ Softer than ripple breaking on the shore
+ By moonlight was her voice, and in her breast
+ Pure thought a dwelling found--the Bird of Love a nest.
+
+
+XI.
+
+ Round her would hop unscared the sinless bird,
+ And court the lustre of her gentle glance,
+ Hushing each wood-note wild whene'er it heard
+ Her song of joy:--her countenance
+ Inspired beholders with a thought that chance
+ Had borne her hither from some better land:--
+ To deck her tresses for the festive dance
+ Girls of the tribe would bring, with liberal hand,
+ Blossoms and rose-lipped shells from bower and reedy strand.
+
+
+XII.
+
+ A thing of beauty is the slender vine
+ That wreaths its verdant arm around the oak
+ As if it there could safely intertwine
+ Shielded from ringing axe--the lightning stroke--
+ And like that vine the girl of whom I spoke
+ Clung to her companion:--scalding tears
+ Rained from her elk-like eyes, and sobs outbroke
+ From her o'er-labored bosom, while her ears
+ Were filled with soothing tones that did not hush her fears.
+
+
+XIII.
+
+ Mourner! the hour of rescue is at hand!
+ This hill will tremble to its rocky base
+ When Ou-wee ne-you utters stern command;
+ Joy ere another fleeting moon the trace
+ Of clouding sorrow from thy brow will chase:--
+ Fear not!--for I am left to guard thee yet
+ Last of the daughters of a luckless race!
+ We must not in the time of grief forget
+ That light breaks forth anew from orbs that darkly set.
+
+
+XIV.
+
+ Thus, day by day, would O-wen-do-skah strive
+ To cheer the drooping spirits of the maid,
+ And keep one glimmering spark of hope alive;
+ In the deep midnight for celestial aid,
+ While cowered the trembler at his knee, he prayed
+ In tones that might have touched a heart of rock:
+ One morn exclaimed he--"be no more afraid
+ Bright, peerless scion of a broken stock,
+ For Heaven the monster's coil is arming to unlock.
+
+
+XV.
+
+ "Reserved for some high destiny despite
+ The downfall of our people we live on--
+ My dreams were of deliverance last night,
+ And peril of impending death withdrawn:
+ A light, my weeping one, begins to dawn
+ On the thick gloom by sorrow round us cast;
+ The lead-like pressure of despair is gone,
+ And rides a viewless courier on the blast
+ Who whispers--Lo! the hour of vengeance comes at last.
+
+
+XVI.
+
+ "Gorged with his meal of gore unstirring sleeps
+ In his tremendous ring our mortal foe:
+ Film-veiled his savage eye no longer keeps
+ Grim watch for victims--warily and slow!
+ Follow thy lover arrived with bended bow
+ Of timber shaped, in many a battle tried--
+ Some guardian spirit will before me throw
+ A shield by human vision undescried
+ Should he awake in wrath, and hence our footsteps guide."
+
+
+XVII.
+
+ It was I ween a sight to freeze each vein
+ That courses through our perishable clay
+ When sallied forth with muffled tread the twain;
+ A look of wild, unutterable dismay
+ Convulsed Te-yos-yu's[F] visage while the way,
+ A spear-length in advance, her lover led:
+ Reaching the portal paused he to survey
+ The dangerous pass through which a grisly head
+ Deprest to earth he saw, its mouth with murder red.
+
+[F] Bright eye.
+
+
+XVIII.
+
+ "On! On!"--he whispered--"and the sightless mole
+ Our footfall must not hear, or we are lost:"
+ Nerved to high purpose was his war-like soul
+ As the dark threshold of the gate he cross'd;
+ But fear that instant chilled his limbs with frost,
+ For high its swollen neck the monster raised
+ Gore dripping from its jaws with foam embossed,
+ And rimmed with fire, and circling eye-ball blazed
+ As light unwounding dart its horrid armor grazed.
+
+
+XIX.
+
+ Sick by a foul and fetid odor made
+ Recoiled the champion from unequal fray;
+ Cut off all hope of rescue, he surveyed
+ Fiercely the danger like a stag at bay:
+ Where was Te-yos-yu?--she had swooned away,
+ And hoof-crushed wild-flower of the forest brown
+ Resembled her as soiled with mould she lay;
+ Long on the _seeming corpse_ the chief looked down,
+ For 'twas a sight the cup of his despair to crown.
+
+
+XX.
+
+ Kneeling at length, upheld he with strong arm
+ Her beauteous head, but in the temples beat
+ No pulse of life:--tears gushing fast and warm
+ Refresh a heart, of transcient ill the seat,
+ As raindrops cool the summer's midday heat;
+ But when descends some desolating blow
+ That makes this world a desert, how unmeet
+ Is outward symbol!--and far, far below
+ The water-mark of grief was Oh-wen-do-skah's wo!
+
+
+XXI.
+
+ In broken tones he murmured--"must the name
+ Of a great people be revived no more,
+ And like an echo pass away their fame,
+ Or moccasin's faint impress on the shore
+ Of the salt lake when billows foam and roar?
+ Black night enwraps my soul, for she is dead
+ Who was its light--desire to live is o'er!"
+ Scarce were these words in mournful accent said,
+ When peals of thunder shook low vale and mountain-head.
+
+
+XXII.
+
+ Up sprang the Chief;--and on a throne of cloud,
+ Robed in a snowy mantle fringed with light,
+ The Lord of life beheld:--the forest bowed
+ Its head in awe before that presence bright,
+ And a wild shudder at the dazzling sight
+ Ran through the mighty monster's knotted ring
+ Shaking the hill from base to rocky height;
+ Rose from her trance the maid with fawn-like spring,
+ And balanced in mid-air the bird on trembling wing.
+
+
+XXIII.
+
+ "Notch on the twisted sinew of thy bow
+ This fatal weapon"--Ou-wee-ne-you[G] cried,
+ Dropping a golden shaft--"and pierce the foe
+ Under the rounded scale that wall his side!"
+ Then vanished, while again the valley wide
+ And mountain quaked with thunder:--from the ground
+ The warrior raised the gift of Heaven, and hied
+ On his heroic mission while around
+ The hill with closer clasp his train the serpent wound.
+
+[G] Great Spirit.
+
+
+XXIV.
+
+ Flame-hued and hissing played its nimble tongue
+ Between thick, ghastly rows of pointed bone
+ Round which commingled gore and venom clung:
+ Raging its flattened head like copper shone,
+ And flinty earth returned a heavy groan
+ Lashed by quick strokes of its resounding tail;
+ Heard is like uproar when the hills bleak cone
+ Is wildly beat by winter's icy flail,
+ But in that moment dire the archer did not quail.
+
+
+XXV.
+
+ Firm in one hand his trusty bow he held,
+ And with the other to its glittering head
+ Drew the long shaft while full each muscle swell'd;
+ A twanging sound!--and on its errand sped
+ The messenger of vengeance:--warm and red
+ Gushed from a gaping wound the vital tide--
+ Wrenched was the granite from its ancient bed,
+ And pines were broken in their leafy pride,
+ When throes of mortal pain the monster's coil untied.
+
+
+XXVI.
+
+ Down the steep hill outstretched and dead he rolled
+ Disgorging human heads in his descent;
+ Oaks that in earth had deeply fixed their hold
+ Like reeds by that revolving mass were bent,
+ Splintered their boughs as if by thunder rent:
+ High flung the troubled lake its glittering spray,
+ And far the beach with flakes of foam besprent,
+ When the huge carcass disappeared for aye
+ In depths from whence it rose to curse the beams of day.
+
+
+XXVII.
+
+ When winds its murmuring bosom cease to wake
+ Through bright transparent waves you may discern
+ On the hard, pebbled bottom of the lake
+ Skulls changed to stone:--when fires no longer burn
+ Kindled by sunset, and the glistening urn
+ Of night o'erflows with dew the phantoms pale
+ Of matron, maid, child, seer and chieftain stern
+ Their ghastly faces to the moon unveil,
+ And raise upon the shore a low heart-broken wail.
+
+
+XXVIII.
+
+ The lovers of Genundewah were blest
+ By the Great Spirit, and their lodge became
+ The nursery of a nation:--when the West
+ Opened its gates of parti-colored flame
+ To give their souls free passage loud acclaim
+ Rang through the Spirit Land, and voices cried
+ "Welcome! ye builders of eternal fame!
+ Ye royal founders of an empire wide
+ The stream of joy flows by, quaff ever from its tide!"
+
+
+XXIX.
+
+ At Onondaga burned the sacred fire
+ A thousand winters with unwasting blaze;
+ In guarding it son emulated sire,
+ And far abroad were flung its dazzling rays:
+ Followed were happy years by evil days--
+ Blue-eyed and pale came Children of the Dawn
+ Tall spires on site of bark-built town to raise;
+ Change groves of beauty to a naked lawn,
+ And whirl their chariot wheels where led the doe her fawn.
+
+
+XXX.
+
+ Where are the mighty?--morning finds them not!
+ I call--and echo gives response alone;
+ The fiery bolt of Ruin hath been shot,
+ The blow is struck--the winds of death have blown!
+ Cold are the hearths--their altars overthrown:
+ For them with smoking venison the board,
+ Reward of toilsome chase, no more will groan;
+ Sharper than hatchet proved the conqueror's sword,
+ And blood, in fruitless strife, like water they outpoured.
+
+
+XXXI.
+
+ The spotted Demon of Contagion came
+ Ere the sacred bird of Peace could find a nest,
+ And vanished Tribes like summer grass when flame
+ Reddens the level prairie of the West,
+ Or wasting dew drops when the rocky crest
+ Of this enchanted hill is tipped with gold;
+ And ere the Genii of the wild-wood drest
+ With flowers and moss the grave mound's hollowed mould,
+ Before the ringing axe went down the forest old.
+
+
+XXXII.
+
+ Oh! where is Gar-an-gu-la--Sachem wise?
+ Who was the father of his people?--where
+ King Hendrick, Cay-en-guac-to?--_who replies?_
+ And Sken-an-do-ah, was thy silver hair
+ Brought to the dust in sorrow and despair
+ By pale oppression, though thy bow was strong
+ To guard their Thirteen Fires?--they did not spare
+ E'en thee, old chieftain, and thy tuneful tongue
+ The death-dirge of thy race in measured cadence sung.
+
+
+XXXIII.
+
+ Thea-an-de-nea-gua[H] of the martial brow,
+ Gy-ant-wa,[I] Hon-ne-ya-was[J] where are they?
+ Sa-go-ye-wat-hah![K] is _he silent_ now?
+ No more will listening throngs his voice obey.
+ Like visions have the mighty passed away!
+ Their tears descend in rain-drops, and their sighs
+ Are heard in wailing winds when evening gray
+ Shadows the landscape, and their mournful eyes
+ Gleam in the misty light of moon-illumin'd skies.
+
+[H] Brunt.
+
+[I] Corn Planter.
+
+[J] Farmer's Brother.
+
+[K] Red Jacket.
+
+
+XXXIV.
+
+ Gone are my tribesmen, and another race,
+ _Born of the foam_, disclose with plough and spade
+ Secrets of battle-field and burial-place;
+ And hunting grounds, once dark with pleasant shade,
+ Bask in the golden light:--but I have made
+ A pilgrimage from far to look once more
+ On scenes through which in childhood's hour I strayed,
+ Though robbed of might my limbs, my locks all hoar,
+ And on this Holy Mount mourn for the days of yore,
+
+
+XXXV.
+
+ Our house is broken open at both ends
+ Though deeply set the posts, its timber strong--
+ From ruthless foes, and traitors masked as friends,
+ Tutored to sing a false but pleasant song
+ The Seneca and Mohawk guarded long
+ Its blood-stained doors:--the _former_ faced the sun
+ In his decline--the _latter_ watched a throng
+ Clouding the eastern hills--their tasks are done;
+ A game for life was played, and prize the white man won.
+
+
+XXXVI.
+
+ Around me soon will bloom unfading flowers
+ Ye glorious Spirit Islands of the just!
+ No fatal axe will hew away your bowers,
+ Or lay the green-robed forest king in dust:
+ Far from the spoiler's fury, and his lust
+ Of boundless power will I my fathers meet
+ Tiaras wearing never dimm'd by rust,
+ And they, while airs waft music passing sweet,
+ To blest abodes will guide my silver-sandal'd feet.
+
+
+NOTES.
+
+ _The warrior's right his scalp lock to adorn
+ With eagle plumes in battle he had won._--STANZA IX.
+
+No one but a brave who has slain an enemy in battle, is allowed the
+distinguished honor of wearing eagle feathers.
+
+ _Rained from her elk-like eyes._--STANZA XII.
+
+Objects clear and bright are often compared by the Indian to the elk's
+eye. The definition of Muskingum is--"clear as an elk's eye."
+
+ _Born of the foam._--STANZA XXXIV.
+
+The red man believes that the whites sprang from the foam of the salt
+water.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Note:
+
+
+Inconsistent capitalization (e.g. Gulf vs. gulf), spacing (e.g. north
+east vs. northeast), and hyphenation (e.g. foot-prints vs. footprints)
+have been left as in the original.
+
+The following changes were made to the text:
+
+p. 5: worty to worthy (worthy of the thought and care)
+
+p. 6: expreses to expresses (expresses the peculiarities of its own
+soil)
+
+p. 6: Tueton to Teuton (the Teuton, Goth and Magyar)
+
+p. 6: maze to maize (crushed their maize)
+
+p. 7: Ninevah to Nineveh (buried sites of Nineveh)
+
+p. 7: deciples to disciples (disciples of Zoroaster)
+
+p. 8: progres to progress (progress of nations)
+
+p. 9: Alleghany's to Alleghanies (by the Alleghanies)
+
+p. 9: distatant to distant (at distant points)
+
+p. 10: Susquehannah to Susquehanna (the Susquehanna, the Delaware and
+the St. Lawrence)
+
+p. 11: acient to ancient (an ancient feature)
+
+p. 13: entititled to entitled (Each clan is entitled to a chief.)
+
+p. 14: heriditary to hereditary (a hereditary chieftainship)
+
+p. 16: eminent to imminent (from imminent peril)
+
+p. 20: Heredotus to Herodotus (the period of Herodotus)
+
+p. 24: amunition to ammunition (guns and ammunition)
+
+p. 25: Ioroquois' to Iroquois' (the Iroquois' powers)
+
+p. 25: Vandruiel to Vaudruiel (Vaudruiel, the Governor General of New
+France)
+
+p. 28: beautious to beauteous (beauteous lakes and forests)
+
+p. 29: resplendant to resplendent (more learned and resplendent nations)
+
+p. 30: oblitered to obliterated (half obliterated trenches)
+
+p. 31: subsistance to subsistence (means of subsistence)
+
+p. 33: alterior to ulterior (ulterior objects)
+
+p. 33: pouring to poring (poring over the dusty volumes)
+
+p. 34: vallies to valleys (countless valleys)
+
+p. 34: centures to centuries (Centuries on centuries)
+
+p. 43: muflled to muffled (with muffled tread)
+
+p. 44: is to in (head in awe)
+
+p. 44: hilll to hill (Shaking the hill)
+
+p. 44: single quotes to double quotes ("Notch on ... fatal weapon")
+
+p. 44: side"! to side!" (that wall his side!")
+
+p. 46: missing close quote added (quaff ever from its tide!")
+
+p. 48: worn to won, and period at end of first line removed to match
+quoted passage in poem (Note for STANZA IX.)
+
+p. 48: missing period added (STANZA XXXIV.)
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of An Address, Delivered Before the
+Was-ah Ho-de-no-son-ne or New Confederacy of the Iroquois, by Henry R. Schoolcraft and W. H. C. Hosmer
+
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+ An Address, Delivered Before the Was-ah Ho-de-no-son-ne or
+ New Confederacy of the Iroquois, by Henry R. Schoolcraft.
+ Also, Genundewah, a Poem, by W. H. C. Hosmer.
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+
+
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of An Address, Delivered Before the Was-ah
+Ho-de-no-son-ne or New Confederacy of the Iroquois, by Henry R. Schoolcraft and W. H. C. Hosmer
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: An Address, Delivered Before the Was-ah Ho-de-no-son-ne or New Confederacy of the Iroquois
+ Also, Genundewah, a Poem
+
+Author: Henry R. Schoolcraft
+ W. H. C. Hosmer
+
+Release Date: June 29, 2010 [EBook #33023]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK AN ADDRESS, DELIVERED BEFORE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Julia Miller, S.D., and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
+produced from images generously made available by The
+Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
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+
+</pre>
+
+
+<div class="tp">
+<h1><span class="xsm">AN</span><br />
+ADDRESS,<br />
+<span class="xxsm">DELIVERED BEFORE THE</span><br />
+WAS-AH HO-DE-NO-SON-NE<br />
+<span class="xxsm">OR</span><br />
+<span class="sm">NEW CONFEDERACY OF THE IROQUOIS,</span></h1>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="sm">BY</span><br />
+HENRY R. SCHOOLCRAFT,<br />
+<span class="sm">A MEMBER:</span><br />
+<span class="med">AT ITS THIRD ANNUAL COUNCIL,</span><br />
+AUGUST 14, 1845.</p>
+<br />
+<p class="center sm">ALSO,</p>
+
+<h1>GENUNDEWAH,<br />
+<span class="xsm">A POEM,</span></h1>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="sm">BY</span><br />
+W. H. C. HOSMER,<br />
+<span class="sm">A MEMBER:</span><br />
+PRONOUNCED ON THE SAME OCCASION.</p>
+
+<p class="center sm">PUBLISHED BY THE CONFEDERACY.</p>
+
+<p class="center pad-t">ROCHESTER:<br />
+<span class="sm">PRINTED BY JEROME &amp; BROTHER, TALMAN BLOCK,<br />
+Sign of the American Eagle, Buffalo-Street.</span></p>
+
+<p class="center med">1846.</p>
+</div>
+
+<h2 id="begin">ADDRESS.</h2>
+
+<p class="smcap">Gentlemen:</p>
+
+<p>In a country like ours, whose institutions rest on the popular
+will, we must rely for our social and literary means
+and honors, exclusively on personal exertions, springing
+from the bosom of society. We have no external helps
+and reliances, sealed in expectations of public patronage,
+held by the hands of executive, or ministerial power. Our
+ancestors, it is true, were accustomed to such stimulants to
+literary exertions. Titles and honors were the prerogatives
+of Kings, who sometimes stooped from their political eminences,
+to bestow the reward upon the brows of men, who
+had rendered their names conspicuous in the fields of
+science and letters. Such is still the hope of men of letters
+in England, Germany and France. But if a bold and hardy
+ancestry, who had learned the art of thought in the bitter
+school of experience, were accustomed to such dispensations
+of royal favors, while they remained in Europe, they
+feel but little benefit from them here; and made no provision
+for their exercise, as one of the immunities of powers,
+when they came to set up the frame of a government for
+themselves.</p>
+
+<p>No ruler, under our system, is invested with authority to
+tap, his kneeling fellow subject on the crown of his head,
+and exclaim, "Arise, Sir, Knight!" The cast of our institutions
+is all the other way, and the tendency of things, as<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span>
+the public mind becomes settled and compacted, is, to take
+away from men the prestige of names and titles; to award
+but little, on the score of antiquarian merit, and to weigh
+every man's powers and abilities, political and literary, in
+the scale of absolute individual capacity, to be judged of,
+by the community at large. If there are to be any "orders,"
+in America, let us hope they will be like that, whose
+institution we are met to celebrate, which is founded on
+the principle of intellectual emulation, in the fields of history,
+science and letters.</p>
+
+<p>Such are, indeed, the objects which bring us together on
+the present occasion, favored as we are in assembling
+around the light of this emblematic <em class="smcap">Council Fire</em>. Honored
+by your notice, as an honorary member, in your young
+institution, I may speak of it, as if I were myself a fellow
+laborer, in your circle: and, at least, as one, understanding
+somewhat of its plan, who feels a deep interest in its
+success.</p>
+
+<p>Adopting one of the seats of the aboriginal powers,
+which once cast the spell of its simple, yet complicated,
+government, over the territory, a central point has been
+established <em class="ucsmcap">HERE</em>. To this central point, symbolizing the
+whole scheme of the Iroquois system, other points of subcentralization
+tend, as so many converging lines. You come
+from the east and the west, the north and the south. You
+have obeyed <em class="ucsmcap">ONE</em> impulse&mdash;followed <em class="ucsmcap">ONE</em> principle&mdash;come
+to unite your energies in <em class="ucsmcap">ONE</em> object. That object is the
+cultivation of letters. To give it force and distinctness, by
+which it may be known and distinguished among the efforts
+made to improve and employ the leisure hours of the young
+men of Western New York, you have adopted a name derived
+from the ancient confederacy of the Iroquois, who
+once occupied this soil. With the name, you have taken
+the general system of organization of society, within a society,
+held together by one bond. That bond, as existing
+in the <em class="caps">TOTEMIC</em> tie, reaches, with a peculiar force, each<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span>
+individual, in such society. It is an idea noble in itself,
+and worthy of the thought and care, by which it has been
+nurtured and moulded into its present auspicious form.&mdash;The
+union you thus form, is a union of minds. It is a band
+of brotherhood, but a brotherhood of letters. It is a confederacy
+of tribes, but a literary confederacy. It is an assemblage
+of warriors, but the labor to be pursued is exclusively
+of an intellectual character. The plumes with which
+you aim to pledge your literary arrows, are to be plucked
+from the wings of science. It is a council of clans, not to
+consult on the best means of advancing historical research;
+of promoting antiquarian knowledge; and of cultivating
+polite literature. The field of inquiry is broad, and it is
+to be trodden in various ways. You seek to advance in
+the paths of useful knowledge, but neglect not the flowers
+that bedeck the way. You aim at general objects and results,
+but pursue them, through the theme and story of that
+proud and noble race of the sons of the Forest, whose name,
+whose costume and whose principles of association you
+assume. Symbolically, you re-create the race. Thus
+aiming, and thus symbolizing your labors, your objects to
+resuscitate and exhume from the dust of by-gone years,
+some of those deeds of valor and renown which marked
+this hardy and vigorous race. There is in the idea of your
+association, one of the elements of a peculiar and national
+literature. And whatever may be the degree of success,
+which characterizes your labors, it is hoped they will bear
+the impress of American heads and American hearts. We
+have drawn our intellectual sustenance, it is true, from
+noble fountains and crystal streams. We have all England,
+and all Europe for our fountain head. But when this
+has been said, we must add, that they have been off-sets
+from foreign fountains and foreign streams. And nurtured
+as we have been, from such ample sources, it is time, in
+the course of our national developments, that we begin to
+produce something characteristic of the land that gave us<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span>
+birth. No people can bear a true nationality, which does
+not exfoliate, as it were, from its bosom, something that
+expresses the peculiarities of its own soil and climate. In
+building its intellectual edifice, we must have not only suitable
+decorations, but there must come from the broad and
+deep quarries of its own mountains, foundation stones, and
+columns and capitals, which bear the impress of an indigenous
+mental geognosy.</p>
+
+<p>And where! when we survey the length and breadth of
+the land, can a more suitable element, for the work be found,
+than is furnished by the history and antiquities and institutions
+and love, of the free, bold, wild, independent, native
+hunter race? They are, relatively to us, what the
+ancient Pict and Celt were to Britain, or the Teuton, Goth
+and Magyar to Continental Europe. Looking around, over
+the wide forests, and transcendent lakes of New York, the
+founders of this association, have beheld the footprints of
+the ancient race. They saw here, as it were, in vision, the
+lordly Iroquois, crowned by the feathers of the eagle, bearing
+in his hand the bow and arrows, and scorning, as it
+were, by the keen glances of his black eye, and the loftiness
+of his tread, the very earth that bore him up. History
+and tradition speak of the story of this ancient race.&mdash;They
+paint him as a man of war&mdash;of endurance&mdash;of indomitable
+courage&mdash;of capacity to endure tortures without
+complaint&mdash;of a heroic and noble independence. They
+tell us that these precincts, now waving with yellow corn,
+and smiling with villages, and glittering with spires, were
+once vocal with their war songs, and resounded with the
+chorusses of their corn feasts. We descry, as we plough
+the plain, the well chipped darts which pointed their arrows,
+and the elongated pestles, that crushed their maize. We
+exhume from their obliterated and simple graves, the pipe
+of steatite, in which they smoked, and offered incense to
+these deities, and the fragments of the culinary vases,
+around which, the lodge circle gathered to their forest meal.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span>
+Mounds and trenches and ditches, speak of the movement
+of tribe against tribe, and dimly shadow forth the overthrow
+of nations. There are no plated columns of marble; no
+tablets of inscribed stone&mdash;no gates of rust-coated brass.
+But the <em class="ucsmcap">MAN</em> himself survives, in his generation. He is a
+<em class="ucsmcap">WALKING STATUE</em> before us. His looks and his gestures
+and his language remain. And he is himself, an attractive
+<em>monument</em> to be studied. Shall we neglect him, and his antiquarian
+vestiges, to run after foreign sources of intellectual
+study? Shall we toil amid the ruins of Thebes and Palmyra,
+while we have before us the monumental enigma of
+an unknown race? Shall philosophical ardor expend itself,
+in searching after the buried sites of Nineveh, and
+Babylon and Troy, while we have not attempted, with
+decent research, to collect, arrange and determine, the
+leading data of our aboriginal history and antiquities?&mdash;These
+are inquiries, which you, at least, may aim to answer.</p>
+
+<p>No branch of the human family is an object unworthy
+of high philosophic inquiry. Their food, their language,
+their arts, their physical peculiarities, and their mental
+traits, are each topics of deep interest, and susceptible of
+being converted into evidences of high importance. Mistaken
+our Red Men clearly were, in their theories and
+opinions on many points. They were wretched theologists,
+and poor casuists. But not more so, in three-fourths of
+their dogmas, than the disciples of Zoroaster, or Confucius.
+They were polytheists from their very position. And yet,
+there is a general idea, that under every form, they acknowledged
+but one <em class="ucsmcap">DIVINE INTELLIGENCE</em> under the name
+of the <em class="smcap">Great Spirit</em>.</p>
+
+<p>They paid their sacrifices, or at least, respects, to the
+imaginary and phantastic gods of the air, the woods and
+water, as Greece and Rome had done, and done as blindly
+before them. But they were a vigorous, hardy and brave
+off-shoot of the original race of man. They were full of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span>
+humanities. They had many qualities to command admiration.
+They were wise in council, they were eloquent
+in the defence of their rights. They were kind and humane
+to the weak, bewildered and friendless. Their lodge-board
+was ever ready for the way farer. They were constant
+to a proverb, in their <em>professed</em> friendships. They
+never forgot a kind act. Nor can it be recorded, to their
+dispraise, that they were a terror to their enemies. Their
+character was formed on the military principle, and to acquire
+distinction in this line, they roved over half the continent.
+They literally carried their conquests from the gulf
+of St. Lawrence to the gulf of Mexico. Few nations have
+ever existed, who have evinced more indomitable courage
+or hardihood, or shown more devotion to the spirit of independence
+than the Iroquois.</p>
+
+<p>But all their efforts would have ended in disappointment,
+had it not been for that principle of confederation, which,
+at an early day, pervaded their councils, and converted
+them into a phalanx, which no other tribe could successfully
+penetrate, or resist. It is this trait, by which they
+are most distinguished from the other hunter nations of
+North America; and it is to their rigid adherence to the
+verbal compact, which bound them together, as tribes and
+clans, that they owe their present celebrity, and owed their
+former power.</p>
+
+<p>It is proposed to inquire into the principles of this confederacy,
+and to make a few brief suggestions on its origin
+and history. In the time that has been given me, I have
+had but little opportunity for research, and even this little,
+other engagements, have not permitted me, fully to employ.
+The little that I have to offer, would indeed have been
+confined to the reminiscence of former reading, had I not
+been called, the present season, to make a personal visit to
+the reservation still occupied by the principal tribes.</p>
+
+<p>1. Prominent in its effects on the rise and progress of nations,
+in the geographical diameter of the country they<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span>
+occupy. And in this respect, the Iroquois were singularly
+favored. They lived under an atmosphere the most genial
+of any in the temperate latitude. Equally free from the
+extremes of heat, and humidity, it has been found eminently
+favorable to human life. Inquiries into the statistics of
+vitality will abundantly denote this. Many of the civil
+sachems lived to a great age. And the same may be said
+of those warriors who escaped the dart and club, until they
+came to the period, not a very advanced one, when they
+ceased to follow the war path.</p>
+
+<p>They possessed a country, unsurpassed for its various
+advantages, not only on this continent, but on the globe.&mdash;It
+afforded a soil of the most fruitful kind, where they could,
+with ease and certainty, always cultivate their maize. Its
+forests abounded in the deer, elk, bear and other animals,
+whose flesh supplied their lodges. It was irrigated by
+some of the sublimest rivers of the continent, whose waters
+ran south and north, east, and by the Alleghanies, west,
+till they all found their level, at distant points, either in
+the Gulfs of St. Lawrence and Mexico, or in the intermediate
+shores of the Atlantic. Lakes of an amazing size,
+compared to those of Europe, bounded this territory on the
+north and north east. Its own bosom, was spotted, with
+secondary sheets of water, like that of the Cayuga, upon
+whose banks we are assembled. These added freshness
+and beauty to the thick, and almost unbroken continuity
+of these forests.</p>
+
+<p>Nations doubtless owe some of their characteristics to
+the natural scenes of their country, and if we grant the
+same influence to the red sons of the forest, they had sources
+of animating and elevating thoughts around them.&mdash;Men
+who habitually cast their views to the Genesee and
+the Niagara&mdash;who crossed in their light canoe, the Ontario
+and Erie, wending their way into the sublime vista of the
+upper lakes: men, who threaded these broad forests in
+search of the deer, or who descended the powerful and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span>
+rapid channels of the Alleghany, the Susquehanna, the
+Delaware and the St. Lawrence, in quest of their foes, must
+have felt the influence of magnitude and creative grandeur,
+and could not but originate ideas favorable to liberty
+and personal independence. Their very position, became
+thus the initiatory step in their assent to power.</p>
+
+<p>2. Such was the country occupied, at the era of the discovery,
+by the Iroquois. They lived, to employ their own
+symbolic language, in a long lodge extending east and
+west, from the waters of the Ca-ho-ha-ta-tea<a name="FNanchor_A_1" id="FNanchor_A_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_1" class="fnanchor">[A]</a> to those of
+Erie. Their most easterly tribe, the Mohawks, extended
+their occupancy to a point which they still call, with dialectic
+variations, Skan-ek-ta-tea, being the present site of
+Albany. To this place, or, as is more generally thought,
+to this geographical vicinity, the commercial enterprize of
+Holland, sent an exploring ship in 1609. Here begins the
+certain and recorded history of the Iroquois. We have
+only known them 200 years. All beyond this, is a field of
+antiquarian inquiry.</p>
+
+<p>From the historical documents recently obtained by the
+State from France, and deposited in the public offices at
+the capitol, it is seen that this people are sometimes called
+the <em class="smcap">Nine</em> nations of the Iroquois. Algonquin tradition,
+which I have recently published, denotes that they originally
+consisted of <em class="smcap">Eight</em> tribes. (<span class="smcap">Oneota.</span>) Whatever of
+truth or error, there may be in these terms, it is certain that,
+at the period of the Dutch discovery and settlement referred
+to, they uniformly described themselves as the <em class="smcap">Five
+Nations</em>, or United People, under the title of <em class="smcap">Akonoshioni</em>.<a name="FNanchor_B_2" id="FNanchor_B_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_B_2" class="fnanchor">[B]</a>
+The term Ongwe Honwee, which Colden mentions as
+peculiarly applied to themselves, as proudly contradistinguished
+from others, is a mere equivalent, in the several
+dialects, at this day, for the term Indian, and applies
+equally to other tribes, throughout the continent, as well as
+to themselves. By the admission of the Tuscaroras into<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span>
+the confederacy, they became known as the Six Nations.
+The principles of their compact, were such as to admit of
+any extension. They might as well, for aught that is
+known, have consisted of Sixteen as Six Tribes, and like
+our own Union, they would have been stronger and firmer
+in their power, with each admission.</p>
+
+<p>I have directed some few inquiries to their plan of union.
+It appears to have originated in a proposal to act in concert,
+by means of a central council, in questions of peace and
+war. In other respects, each tribe was an independency.
+It had no right to receive ambassadors from other tribes.&mdash;Messages
+delivered to a frontier tribe, were immediately
+transmitted to the next tribe in position, and by them passed
+on, to the central councils. They affirm that these messages
+were forwarded, with extraordinary celerity, by runners
+who rested not, night or day. The power to convene
+the general council, for despatch of public business, was
+in the presiding or executive chief of the Central Tribe.</p>
+
+<p>This power to make war or peace, or cession of sovereignty,
+was given up, on the principle of an equal union in
+all respects, without regard to numbers. It was strictly
+federative, or a union of tribes. The assent to a measure,
+was given by tribes. Whether all were required to assent,
+or a majority was sufficient, is not known. It is believed
+they <em>required</em> entire unanimity.</p>
+
+<p>3. But another principle, of the deepest importance, ran
+throughout the organization of all the tribes, more remote
+in its origin, and still more influential, it may be thought,
+in forming a more perfect union, and giving strength and
+compactness to the government. It was the plan of the
+<em class="smcap">Totemic Bond</em>. This bond was a fraternity of separate
+clans in each tribe. It was based on original consanguinity,
+and marked by a heraldic device, as the figure of a quadruped,
+or bird. This appears to be an ancient feature in their
+organization, and is also found among other North American
+tribes. The Algonquin tribes, who possess the same<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>
+organization, and from whose vocabulary we take the name,
+call it the Totem. The institution of the totem, or inter-fraternity
+of clans, existed, and is also found, with well
+marked features, among the Iroquois. It had, however,
+one characteristic, which was peculiar, to these nations.&mdash;It
+was employed to mark the descent of the chiefs, which
+ran exclusively by the female. The law of marriage, interdicting
+connexions within the clan, and limiting them to
+another, was probably established in ancient times, among
+the other nations who adhere to this institution, but, if so,
+it has dropped, or dwindled into mere tradition.</p>
+
+<p>Totem, is a term denoting the device, or pictorial sign,
+which is used by each individual, to determine his family
+identity. As many as have the same totem are admitted
+to be of the same family or clan. In this respect, it is
+analogous to coats of arms. It differs from them in this,
+that no person can marry another of the same arms and
+totem. They are related. The reason for keeping up this
+interdict, in cases where the degree of relationship must
+often be very small, or is entirely lost, appears to be one
+of policy, and will be, as far as possible, explained.</p>
+
+<p>Originally, there appears to have been three leading
+families or clans, among all the North American Indians,
+whose devices were, respectively, the <em class="ucsmcap">TURTLE</em>, the <em class="ucsmcap">WOLF</em>,
+and the <em class="ucsmcap">BEAR</em>. This triad of honored clans, existed and
+still exists among nations diverse in their languages, and remote
+in position, and may be considered as a proof of their
+common origin. These totems were regarded as of the
+highest authority&mdash;a fact which may denote either original
+paternity in these clans, or some distinguished action or
+services, analogous, perhaps, to the well known events of
+the Curatii and Horatii.</p>
+
+<p>It is certain, at least, that amongst each of the Iroquois
+tribes, as well as the great Algonquin family, there existed
+the totem or clan of the turtle, the wolf, and the bear. I
+will take, however, as an illustration of the Totemic organi<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span>zation
+of the tribes, the instance of the <em class="smcap">Nun-do-wa-ga</em>, or
+Senecas. The facts here employed have recently been
+communicated to me by their distinguished chief <em class="smcap">De-o-ne-ho-ga-wa</em>.
+The tribe consists of eight clans. They are,
+in the order communicated, the wolf, the turtle, the bear,
+the beaver, the snipe or plover, the falcon or hawk, the deer
+and the cranes. The present reigning clan is the wolf, the
+clan to which the noted orator, Red Jacket, and my informant,
+both belonged. We may assume, that what appear
+to have been fundamental principles, were actually so, and
+are to be regarded as the constitutional basis.</p>
+
+<p>Each clan is entitled to a chief. Each chief has a seat
+in council. The chiefs are hereditary, counting by the
+female line. By this law of descent, no chief could beget
+an immediate successor. And herein consisted one of the
+marked points of political wisdom in their system. It is
+this law of descent which best distinguishes it from the
+system of government of other nations on this continent,
+and in Asia. No such rule is known to exist, but may
+exist, among the Mongol race, or other Asiatic stocks, to
+whom these people have usually been traced. If so, the
+law of descent, in this regard, is indigenous and original.
+What disquisitions have we not seen, that a certain Iroquois
+chief was in the regular line of the chieftainship, by the
+father? whereas, it is clear, that the son of a chief could
+never, in any case, succeed his father. The descent ran,
+so to say, in the line of the queen-mother. If a chief die,
+his brother, next in age, would succeed him. These failing,
+his daughter's male children, if connected with the reigning
+totem, would succeed. Her children constituted the
+chain of transmission; but the heir to the chieftainship,
+whether by acknowledged succession, or by choice in case
+of dispute or uncertainty, had his claims uniformly submitted
+to a called council, and if approved, the sachem was
+regularly installed to the office. Councils had this right
+from an early day, and are known to have ever been very<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span>
+scrupulous and jealous in its exercise, and continue to be
+so, at this time.</p>
+
+<p>By the establishment of this law of descent, the evils of
+a hereditary chieftainship were obviated. And the succession
+was kept in healthy channels, by the right of the council
+to decide, in all cases, and to set aside incompetent
+claimants. This right was so exercised, as to give the nation
+the advantages of the elective power, and to avail itself
+of all its talent.</p>
+
+<p>We perceive in this system, an effective provision for
+breaking dynasties, and securing at each mutation of the
+chieftainship, a fresh line of chiefs, who were subject to a
+life limit. Each clan having the same right to one chief,
+a perpetual, yet constantly changing body of sachems,
+was kept up, which must necessarily change the body
+entirely in one generation. Yet, like the classes in our
+senatorial organization, the change was effected so slowly
+and gradually, that the body of chiefs constituted a political
+perpetuity.</p>
+
+<p>In contemplating this system, there is more than one
+point to admire. History gives us no example of a confederacy
+in which the principle of political and domestic
+union, were so intimately bound together. By the establishment
+of the Totemic Bond, the clans were separated on
+the principle of near kindred, between which all marriage
+was inhibited. Every marriage between these separated
+clans, therefore, bound them closer together, and the consequence
+soon must have been, their entire amalgamation,
+had it not been provided, that each clan, through
+the female line, should preserve inviolate forever, its own
+Totemic independency. In other words, the female was
+never so incorporated into a new relation by the matrimonial
+tie, as to lose her family name, and her mother's ancestral
+rights. If, for example, a deer totem female, married
+a wolf or hawk male, she was still counted in the clan
+of the deer, and never gave up her political rights, to the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span>
+wolf or hawk clans, which had provided for her a husband.
+Her position may, perhaps, be better understood, by observing
+that the married woman, still retained her maiden
+name&mdash;the sir name of her family. By this means she
+preserved the identity of her clan, and with it, its heraldic
+and political rights. Not only so, the property of a female,
+never vested in, or belonged to the husband. This trait is
+still in full vogue, among each of the tribes. Its operation
+has been witnessed the present year.</p>
+
+<p>Matrons had also the right to attend and sit in council,
+and there were occasions, in which they were permitted to
+speak. For this purpose, a speaker was assigned to them,
+and this person became a standing officer in the council.&mdash;It
+might pertain to the nations to bring in propositions of
+peace. Such propositions might prejudice the character of
+a warrior, but they were appropriate to the female, and the
+wise men knew how to avail themselves of this stroke
+of policy. We speak of the general and burdensome subjection
+of the female, among our Red Men&mdash;a condition,
+indeed, inseparable from the hunter state, but here is a
+trait of power and consideration, which has not yet been
+reached by refined nations.</p>
+
+<p>With respect to the cause of descent through the female
+line, it is believed there are sound and politic reasons for
+such a custom, in the nomadic state; but we have not time
+to examine them. The whole subject of the separation of
+the tribes into a fixed member of original clans; the connexion
+of these clans, preserved by the totems, and the
+selection of the female as the preserver of these totemic
+ties, is one of deep interest, and worthy of your inquiries.
+So far as the investigation has been carried, it appears,
+that the primary object of this organization was to preserve
+the <em class="ucsmcap">NAMES</em> of the original founders of the nation.&mdash;These
+founders are said to have been the children of two
+brothers, and were cousin-germans. But why preserve
+their names? What object was to result from it? Were<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span>
+the persons who bore the names of the wolf, and the turtle
+and the falcon and other species, famed as hunters or warriors?
+Had they delivered their people, from imminent
+peril, or performed any noble act? Had they conducted
+their people across the sea, from other countries? Did
+they expect to return, and was <em>this</em> the object of preserving
+their names, in the line of their descendants? Or was the
+institution, as it does not appear to have been, mere caprice?
+Nothing could give more interest to your enquiries
+than a search into these obscure matters. They are, in
+fact, at the foundation of their system of government, and
+will enable you, with more clearness, to ascertain and fix
+its principles.</p>
+
+<p>4. Of this government itself, we know very little, beyond
+the fact, that it had attained great celebrity among the
+other tribes. It was evidently founded on the overthrow
+of that of the ancient Alleghans. It appears to have
+been full of intricacies, yet simple. A republic, yet embracing
+aristocratic features. A mere government of opinion;
+yet fixed, effective, and powerful. It would be well to sift
+it, by the best lights yet within reach. These are verbal
+and traditionary. There is little to be had from books.</p>
+
+<p>If we look at the political theory of this government it
+had traits both peculiar and prescient. Their councils
+were not constituted, primarily, by elective representation.
+Yet they secured the chief benefits of it. The chiefs,
+had a life office, and were incapable of transmitting it
+to their descendants. The organic council was a representation
+of tribes, not of members. This aristocratic feature,
+was balanced and its tendency to absorb authority
+prevented, by permitting the warriors to sit in these primary
+councils. In these councils, there was free discussion
+and full deliberation. But there was no formal vote taken,
+nor any measure carried by counting persons, or ascertaining
+a majority or plurality. Tradition declares against any
+such test. The popular sense appears to have been secured<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span>
+alone by the scope and tenor of the debates. I cannot
+learn that there ever was any formal expression, equivalent
+to the modern practice of taking of the sense of the council
+on a measure. Perhaps something of this kind is to be
+found in the approbatory response, from which the French
+are said to have made up the word <em class="smcap">Iroquois</em>.</p>
+
+<p>If the aristocratic feature of life-sachemship, was counteracted
+by the influence of the warriors in council, at the
+Council Fire of the Tribes; this feature was shorn still
+more of its objectionable tendencies in the General or Central
+Council of the Confederacy. Chiefs attended this national
+assemblage, as delegates or representatives, although
+not elected representatives, of their tribes. The number
+depended on circumstances; and varied with the occasion.
+They were sent, or went, to deliberate on a specific question,
+or questions, for which, the tribe was summoned, by
+the Executive Sachem of the Nation holding the high office
+of Attotarho,<a name="FNanchor_C_3" id="FNanchor_C_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_C_3" class="fnanchor">[C]</a> or Convener of the Council. This central
+council, headed by this kind of a Presidency, was in fact,
+more purely democratic in its structure, than the home
+councils. It consisted essentially of a Congress of Chiefs,
+having a right as chiefs to attend, or delegated for the purpose,
+and aided also, by the warriors. It had the character
+of being a representative national body, delegated for
+a single session; and of a local body of life chiefs constituting
+the home sachemry, or a limited senate.</p>
+
+<p>Such I apprehend to have been the structure of the Iroquois
+government. It was strong, efficient and popular.&mdash;It
+had its fixity in the life tenure of the chiefs and the customs
+of proceeding. The voice of the warriors constituted
+a counterbalance, or species of second estate. But
+practically, whatever the theory, the chief and warriors,
+acted as one body. They came, generally, to advocate,
+or announce what had already been decided on, in the
+body of the tribe.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span></p><p>It is evident, in viewing this scheme of a native federative
+government, that its tendencies were always in favor
+of the power of the separate tribes. No people ever existed,
+who watched more narrowly the existence of power,
+and its innate tendency to centralize, and usurp. Suspicious
+to a fault, their eyes and ears were ever open to the
+least tone or gesture of alarm. They had only confided,
+to the Central Council, the power to make war or peace,
+and to regulate public policy. This Central Council, received
+embassies, not only from the numerous nations with
+whom they warred; but the delegates of the crowns of
+France and England, often stood in their presence.</p>
+
+<p>The assent of each tribe is believed to have been requisite
+to an alliance, or rupture. When this had been given
+at the central council, it was explained before the local
+council, and the concurrence of the body of the tribe, was
+essential to make it binding and effective. In case of war,
+there was no fixed scale by which men were to be raised. It
+was deemed obligatory for each tribe to raise men according
+to its strength. But each was left free to its own action,
+being responsible for such action, to <em class="ucsmcap">PUBLIC OPINION</em>.
+All warriors were volunteers, and were raised for specific
+expeditions, and were bound no longer. To take up the
+war club, and join in the war dance, was to enlist. There
+was no other enlistment&mdash;no bounties&mdash;no pay&mdash;no standing
+force&mdash;no public provisions&mdash;no public arms&mdash;no clothing&mdash;no
+public hospital. The martial impulse of the people
+was sufficient. All was left to personal effort and provision.
+Self dependence was never carried to such height.
+The thirst for glory&mdash;the honor of the confederacy&mdash;the
+strife for personal distinction, filled their ranks; and led
+them, through desert paths, to the St. Lawrence, the Illinois,
+the Atlantic seaboard and the southern Alleghanies.
+Nor did they need the roll of the river to animate their
+courage, or regulate their steps. Theirs was a high energetic
+devotion, equal or superior to even that of ancient<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>
+Sparta and Lacedæmon. They conquered wherever they
+went. They subdued nations in their immediate vicinity.
+They exterminated others. They adopted the fragments
+of subjugated tribes into their confederacy, sunk their national
+homes into oblivion, and thus repaired the irresistable
+losses of war. They had eloquence, as well as courage.
+Their speakers maintained a high rank along side
+of the best generals and negotiators of France, England
+and America. We owe this tribute to their valor and
+talents. One thousand such men, equipped for war as <em>they</em>
+were, and led by <em>their</em> spirit, would have effected more in
+battle, than the tens of thousands of effeminate Aztecks
+and Peruvians who shouted, but often did no more than
+<em>shout</em>, around the piratical bands of Cortez and Pizarro.</p>
+
+<p>5. I have left myself but little time to speak of the
+origin and early history of this people&mdash;topics which are
+of deep interest in themselves, but which are involved in
+great obscurity. They are subjects which commend themselves
+to your attention, and offer a wide field for your
+future research. There are three periods in our Indian
+history:</p>
+
+<p>1. <span class="smcap">The Allegoric and Fabulous Age.</span> This includes
+the creation, the deluge, the creation of Holiness and Evil,
+and some analogous points, in the general and shadowy
+traditions of men, which our hunter race, have almost universally
+concealed under the allegoric figures, of a creative
+bird or beast, or the exploits of some potent personage,
+endowed with supernatural courage or power. In this
+era, the earth was also covered with monsters and giants,
+who waged war, and drove men into caves and recesses;
+until the interposition of the original creative power, for
+their relief.</p>
+
+<p>2. <span class="smcap">The Ante-Historical period</span>, in which tradition
+begins to assume the character of truth, but is still obscured
+by fable. This period includes the early discoveries by
+the Northmen, the reputed voyage of Prince Madoc, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span></p>
+<p>3. <span class="smcap">The period of actual history</span>, dating from the earliest
+voyage of Columbus and his companions.</p>
+
+<p>I have alluded, in a preceding part of this address, to
+the mode of studying their early history. Where little or
+nothing is to be obtained from books, it requires a cautious
+investigation of these traditions and antiquities. Ethnology,
+in all its branches, has a direct and practical bearing
+on this subject. The physical type of man, the means of
+his subsistence, the state of his arts, the language he speaks,
+the hieroglyphics he carves, the mounds he builds&mdash;the
+fortifications he erects,&mdash;his religion, his superstitions, his
+legendary lore&mdash;the very geography of the country he
+inhabits, are so many direct and palpable means of acquiring
+historical evidence. It is from the investigation of
+these, that tribes and nations are grouped and classified,
+and the original stocks of mankind denoted, and the track
+of their dispersion over the globe traced. And they constitute
+so many topics of study and investigation.</p>
+
+<p>In relating their traditions, our Red Men are prone, to
+connect, (as if these were portions of a continuous and
+consistent narrative) the most <em>recent</em> and most <em>remote</em> events,
+which dwell in their memory. And from their present residence
+and recent history, to run back, by a few sentences,
+into purely fabulous and allegoric periods. Fiction
+and fact, are mingled in the same strain. In listening to
+those relations, it is important to establish in the mind, historical
+periods, and to separate that which is grotesque or
+imaginative from the narration of real events. The latter,
+may be sometimes distorted by this juxtaposition, but
+it is, in general, easy to separate the two, and to re-adopt
+them, on their own principles. The early nations of
+Europe and Asia, pursued the same system. Their men
+were soon traced into gods, and their gods, soon ended in
+sensualists, or demons. Greek and Roman history, before
+the period of Herodotus, must have been little better than
+a jargon of such incongruities, and nearly all the earlier<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span>
+part of it, is no better now. To teach our children these
+nonsensical fables, is to vitiate their imagination, and the
+thing would never have been dreamt of, in a moral age,
+were not the ancient mythology, inseparably mixed up
+with the present state of ancient history, poetry and letters.
+We must teach it as a fable, and rely on truth to counteract
+its effects.</p>
+
+<p>The Iroquois have their full share in the fabulous and allegoric
+periods, and an examination of their tales and traditions
+will be found, I apprehend, to give ample scope to
+poetry and imagination. In their fabulous age, as recorded
+by Cusick, they have their war, with flying Heads, the
+Stone Giants, the Great Serpent, the Gigantic Musquito,
+the Spirit of Witchcraft, and several other eras, which afford
+curious evidences of the way-farings and wanderings
+of the human intellect, unaided by letters, or the spirit of
+truth.</p>
+
+<p>Actual history plants its standard close on the confines
+of these benighted regions of fable and allegory. It is not
+proposed to enter into much detail on this topic. The
+modern facts are pretty well known, but have never been
+thoroughly investigated or arranged. Of the earlier facts
+in their origin and history, we know very little. The first
+writers on the subject of the Indians generally, after the
+settlement of America, dealt in wild speculations, and were
+carried away with preconceived theories, which destroy
+their value. Colden, who directed his attention to the Iroquois,
+scarcely attempted any thing beyond a specific relation
+of transactions, which are intended for the information
+of the Board of Trade and Plantations, and these do
+not come down beyond the peace of Ryswick. There is
+a large amount of printed information, adequate for the
+completion of their history in the 18th and 19th centuries,
+but most of the works are of rare occurrence, and are only
+to be found in large libraries at home and abroad. Other
+facts exist in manuscript official documents, numbers of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>
+which, have recently been obtained by the State, from
+foreign offices, and are now deposited in the Secretary's
+office at Albany. The lost correspondence on Indian affairs,
+of Sir William Johnson, may yet come to light, and
+would necessarily be important. Private manuscripts and
+the traditions of aged Indians, still living, would further
+contribute to their history. They are a people worthy the
+separate pen of a historian, and it may be hoped that an
+elaborate and full work, may be produced.</p>
+
+<p>Where the Iroquois originated? is a question, which involves
+the prior and general one, of the origin of the Red
+Race. So far as relates to their proximate origin, on this
+continent, I am inclined to think, that it was in the tropical
+latitudes extending west from the Gulf of Mexico.&mdash;Facts
+indicate the great tide of our migration, to have been
+from that general race. The zea maize which is a southern
+plant, came from that quarter, and was spread, as the
+tribes moved from the south to the north, the east, and northeast,
+and north west. Which of the ancient Indian stocks
+came first we know not. The Iroquois, if we follow one
+of their own authors, have strong claims to antiquity, but
+we cannot accept this in full. That they migrated up the
+valley of the Mississippi, and the Ohio to its extreme head
+(they call the Alleghany Oheo) is probable. Our actual
+knowledge on this subject, historically speaking, is very
+small, and we must grope our way through dark and
+shadowy traditions. These, however, sustain the general
+fact stated, which is helped out by other accessions. That
+they had crossed the great artery of the continent, (the
+Mississippi river) prior to the Algonquin race, but after the
+Alleghans, is shown by the traditions of the latter. [P.W.]<a name="FNanchor_D_4" id="FNanchor_D_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_D_4" class="fnanchor">[D]</a>
+With this race, tradition asserts, that they formed an alliance,
+at a remote era, and maintained a bloody war, for
+many years, against the ancient Alleghans, who are supposed,
+in these wars, to have erected the fortifications and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span>
+mounds, of the Mississippi valley. That this ancient Alleghanic
+empire of the West, so to call it, fell before the
+combined courage and energy of the Iroquois and Algonquins,
+and that the defeated tribes either retired down the
+waters of the Mississippi, or were in part incorporated with
+themselves, or yet exist in the Far West, under other names,
+we have various traditions for asserting or believing.</p>
+
+<p>Thus far we are speaking of the ante-historical period.
+When the colonies came to be planted, and our ancestors
+spread themselves along the Atlantic coast, from the initial
+points of settlement in Virginia, Nova Belgica, and New
+England, the Iroquois were already well seated, and spoke
+and acted, whenever they desired to make allusion to the
+matter, as if they had been <em>forever</em> seated on the soil they
+then occupied. To conceal the fact of their title being
+held by right of conquest, or to supply the actual want of
+history, one tribe, the Oneidas, asserted that they had
+sprung from a rock. Another, the Wyandots, alleged that
+they came out of the ground by the fiat of the great spirit.
+[Oneota.] None of them acknowledged a <em>foreign origin</em>
+beyond seas. None of them acknowledged, at first, that
+they knew aught of the ancient mound-builders and people
+who built the old fortifications in the West, or in their own
+country; but they subsequently connected, or accommodated
+these mounds, to their war with the Alleghans. This
+is in accordance with Indian policy, and suspicious foresight.
+When closely questioned, they told Gov. Clinton
+that these old works were by an <em>earlier</em> people, and that
+their oldest traditions related to their wars with the Cherokees,
+and the people of the extreme south. That they originally
+dwelt in those latitudes&mdash;that they migrated north
+through the Ohio valley, around the Alleghanies, and came
+into Western New-York from the borders of the Lakes and
+the St. Lawrence, are points very well denoted by their
+languages, vestiges of arts, geographical nomenclature and
+history, so far as we have had the means of recording it.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span></p><p>Cartier, in 1535, found them seated at Hochelaga, the
+present site of Montreal. They had an ancient station, as
+low down the Connecticut at least, as Northfield. Towards
+the north of lakes Ontario and Erie, they extended to the
+chain of lakes which stretches through from the northern
+shores of the former to lake Huron. It is seen from Le
+Jeune, that they ordered the Wyandots of the ancient
+Hochelaga Canton, who had formed an alliance with the
+French and with the Algonquins, to quit that spot, and remove
+into the territory south of the lakes. And in default
+of this, they warred against them, and drove them west,
+through the great chain of lakes to Michilimackinac, and
+even to the western extremity of lake Superior.</p>
+
+<p>The period of the settlement of Canada, ripened causes
+of hostility to the entire Algonquin, or as they called them,
+Adirondak race, into maturity. The Wyandot alliance
+with the French gave an edge to this contest, and having
+soon been supplied with guns and ammunition by the Dutch,
+they defeated this race in several sanguinary battles between
+Montreal and Quebec, and drove them out of this
+valley, by the way of the Ontario river, and pursued them
+to their villages and hunting grounds in area of lakes Huron,
+Michigan and Algoma. They defeated the Kah
+Kwahes or Eries. They pushed their war parties, from
+the lakes, through to the <em class="smcap">Miami</em>, the <em class="smcap">Wabash</em>, and the <em class="smcap">Illinois</em>,
+on the latter of which they were encountered by
+La Salle and his people, in his early expedition, in the
+seventeenth century. Their great avenue to the west, the
+avenue by which, in part at least, they appear to have migrated
+at an early day, was the Alleghany river, through
+which, they continued to exercise their ancient or acquired
+authority in the Ohio valley, and the Alleghanian range.</p>
+
+<p>Back on this route, they continued their war expeditions
+against the tribes of the southern Alleghanies <em>at</em> and, for
+some time, <em>after</em> the era of the first settlement of the country.
+The point of their hostility, was directed against the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>
+Catawbas, the Cherokees, and their allies, the Abiecas,
+Hutchees and others. Smith encountered them on these
+wars, in the interior of Virginia, in 1608. And it is well
+known, that they brought off their brothers, the Tuscaroras,
+after the settlement of North Carolina, and gave them
+a location among themselves, and a seat at their council
+fire, in Western New-York.</p>
+
+<p>Launching their war canoes on the Delaware and the
+Susquehanna, they extended their sway over the present
+area of New-Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware and Maryland,
+bringing under their sovereign power, that member
+of the great Algonic family of America, who call themselves
+Lenni Lenapees, but who are better known in our
+history as Delawares. Go which way the traveler will,
+even at this day, for a thousand miles west, southwest and
+northwest of their great council fire at Onondaga, and the
+inquirer will find that the name of a <em class="smcap">Nadowa</em>, which is the
+Algonquin term for Iroquois, was a word of terror to the
+remotest tribes. Writers tell us it was the same throughout
+New England. By the peaceful and wise policy of the
+Dutch prior to 1664, and of the English subsequent to that
+date, this confederacy was kept in our interest; and he
+must be a careless reader of our history, who does not
+know, that they formed a perfect wall of defence against
+the encroachments of the French Crown upon our territories.
+It was to curb this power, and gain some permanent
+foot-hold on the soil, that La Salle built fort Niagara in 1678.
+Vaudruiel, the Governor General of New France, could
+give no stronger reason to his King, for taking post on the
+straits of Detroit, and fortifying that point, in 1701, than
+that it would enable him to "curb the Iroquois." [Oneota.]</p>
+
+<p>But, I do not stand before you to enter into a critical
+history of the Iroquois' powers. Who has not heard of
+their fame and prowess&mdash;of their indomitable courage in
+war,&mdash;of their admirable policy in peace: of their eloquence
+in council: of the noble fire of patriotic indepen<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span>dence,
+which led them to defend the integrity of their soil
+against all invaders; and of the triumphs they achieved,
+throughout <em class="smcap">Aboriginal America</em>, by the wisdom of their
+principles of confederation. The history of their rise and
+early progress, we shall probably never satisfactorily know.
+It is said by early writers, that the origin of their confederation
+was not very remote. But so much as we know of
+them&mdash;so much of their career as has passed while we
+have been their neighbors, proves that they had well established
+claims to antiquity&mdash;that they were a free, bold and
+valorous stock of the human race&mdash;that they had thought
+to plan, language to express, and energy to execute.&mdash;Compared
+to other races north of the tropics, there were
+two principles, apparent in their history, which give them
+the palm, as statesmen and warriors, although in some other
+departments of intellectual attainment, they were probably
+excelled by certain of the Algonquins. I allude to
+the principles of political union; and the wise and humane
+policy, which led them to adopt, into their body, the remnants
+of the nations whom they conquered. Here were
+two elements of political power, in which they were not
+only a century in advance of <em>all</em> the other stocks of the
+north; but they were in advance of the most prominent
+examples of the semi-civilized Indian tribes of <em>this</em> day.&mdash;Neither
+the Choctaws, the Cherokees, or other expatriated
+tribes now assembled on the Neosho territory, west of the
+Mississippi, although they adopted governments for themselves,
+have had the wisdom to adopt a general union.&mdash;The
+worst and most discouraging fact to the friends of the
+aboriginal race, in these Tribes, is, that they will not confederate.
+Discord, internal and external, has assailed them
+with great power, in late years, and threaten even to defeat
+the humane policy of the government, in their colonization.</p>
+
+<p>So superior were the Iroquois, in this particular, so deeply
+imbued were their minds with the wisdom of union;<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span>
+that had the discovery of the continent, been postponed
+half a century longer, they would have presented a compact
+representative empire in North America, far more
+stable, energetic and sound, if not so brilliant as that of
+Mexico. They were a people of physically better nerve
+and mould. Of ample stature and great personal activity
+and courage, they were capable of offering a more efficient
+resistance to their invaders. The climate itself was more
+favorable to energetic action; and it can scarcely be deemed
+fanciful to assert, that had Hernando Cortez, in 1519,
+entered the Mohawk Valley, instead of that of Mexico,
+with the force he actually had, his ranks would have gone
+down under the skillfulness of the Iroquois' ambuscades,
+and himself perished ingloriously at the stake.</p>
+
+<p>The number of warriors they could bring into the field,
+was large, although it has probably been over-rated. Let it
+not be overlooked, in estimating the ancient vigor and military
+power of this race, that in 1677, one year after the
+<em>final</em> transfer of political power, in New-York, from the
+Stadtholder of Holland to the British crown, the Iroquois
+wielded more than 2000 hatches. [Clint's Dis. N. Y. Col.
+Vol. 2, p. 80.] Sixteen hundred of these warriors, are estimated
+to have ranged themselves on the side of Great
+Britain, in the memorable contest of the Revolution.</p>
+
+<p>Misled in this contest, they certainly were&mdash;doubting
+long which of two branches of the same white race, they
+should side with, but overpowered by external pomp, by
+specious promises, and by false appearances, they committed
+a fatal mistake. They fought, in fact, against the very
+principles of republican confederation, which they had so
+long upheld in their own body, and which, I may add, had
+so long upheld them. They perilled all upon the issue;
+and the issue went against them. Their great and eloquent
+leader Thayendanegea, better known as Joseph
+Brant, had been educated in British schools, he could
+speak two tongues, and his counsels prevailed. He was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span>
+not in the old line of the chieftainship, but had placed himself
+at the head of the confederacy by his brilliant talents,
+and by favorable circumstances. That line fell with the
+great Mohawk sachem Hendrick, at the battle of lake
+George, in 1755, and with the wise civilian Little Abraham,
+who in right of his mother, succeeded him, and
+died at his Castle at Dionderoga. Brant was, however,
+a man of great energy of character, of shrewd principles
+of policy, and of great personal, as well as moral courage.
+As a war captain and a civil leader, the Red Race of
+America has produced no superior. He led 1580 tomahawks
+against the armies of the Revolution&mdash;at his war
+cry 15,000 arrows were launched from their fatal bows.
+The voice of Kirkland&mdash;the voice of Schuyler&mdash;the voice
+of Washington were exerted in vain. Had he hearkened
+to these friendly voices, the Iroquois confederacy would
+now have stood in the plenitude of power, and we should
+not have assembled to-day to light the fires of this Young
+Institution from its dying embers.</p>
+
+<p>These things are past. The contest of the revolution
+was one, which our fathers waged. Many of you may have
+heard the graphic recitals of those days of peril, as I have,
+from the lips of actors, who now rest from their toils.&mdash;They
+were days of high and sanguinary import. The
+deeds of daring which they brought forth, came like a
+mighty tempest over the face of this fair land. It prostrated
+many a noble trunk. It swept for seven long years,
+over the beauteous lakes and forests, which now constitute
+our homes. It left them almost denuded and desolate.
+But the mild airs and gentle summer winds of peace succeeded.
+The hoarse voice of the Iroquois, <em class="smcap">O-way-ne-o</em>,
+has been transformed into the soft and silver tones of <em class="smcap">God</em>.
+Flowers and fruits, and fields of waving grain, soon rose
+up in every valley, and shed their fragrance along every
+sylvan shore. Joy and prosperity succeeded the arrowy
+storm of war. And it has been given to us, to carry out<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span>
+scenes of improvement, and of moral and intellectual progress,
+which providence, in its profound workings, has deemed
+it best for the prosperity of man, that <em>we</em>, and not <em>they</em>,
+should be entrusted with. We have succeeded to their
+inheritance: but we regard them as brothers. We cherish
+their memory: we admire their virtues; and we aim to rescue
+from oblivion their noble deeds.</p>
+
+<p>I have merely alluded to the importance of the Iroquois
+decision at the critical period, 1776. The erroneous policy
+they adopted, with some exceptions, is among the events
+of past times, which wiser and more learned and resplendent
+nations, than they professed to be, have committed.
+We regret the error of the decision, but we hold fellowship
+with the man. He is our brother; and we meet this
+day to consecrate a literary institution in the land, more enduring,
+we trust, than deeds of strife and battle, and better
+suited to elicit studies to exalt the heart and dignify the understanding.
+Your weapons are not spears and clubs, but
+letters. Your means are the quiet and peaceful paths of
+inquiry. If these paths are often obscured by the foot of
+time and tangled by the interlacings of history and antiquity,
+be it yours to put the branches aside, and lead the right
+way. Truth is your aim, and justice and benevolence
+your guides. They hold before you the lamp of science
+so clearly, that you cannot mistake your way. While you
+essay, with modesty and diligence to tread in this path,
+and render justice to a proud and noble branch of the aboriginal
+race, your ultimate ends are moral improvement,
+the accumulation of useful facts, and the general advancement
+of historical letters.</p>
+
+<p>You have selected, out of a wide field of aboriginal nations,
+the history and ethnography of the Iroquois, as the
+theme of your particular inquiries. To us, at least, these
+Tribes, stand in the most interesting relations. They occupied
+our soil; they gave names to our rivers and mountains.
+They figure in the foreground of our history. The<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span>
+very names of the minor streams and lakes we dwell beside,
+bring up, by association, the free and bold race, who
+once claimed them as their patrimony. Before Columbus
+set out, on his solitary mule, to solicit the patronage of Ferdinand
+and Isabella, they were here. Before Hudson
+dropped anchor north of the, to him, wonderful peaks of
+the Ontiora, or Highlands, they were here. Other Indian
+races have left their names on other portions of the continent.
+The names of the Missouri and Mississippi, the Alleghany
+and the Oregon, we trace to other stocks of red
+men. But the Akonoshioni, or Iroquois, has consecrated
+the early history of Western New-York. Their history is,
+to some extent, our history; and we turn, with intellectual
+refreshment from the thread-bare themes of Europe and
+the Europeans, to trace the humble sepulchres where the
+Iroquois buried his dead&mdash;the mounds, which entombed
+his rulers or his battle slain,&mdash;or lifted on high, his sacrificial
+lights&mdash;the long and half obliterated trenches of embankments
+which encompassed his ancient towns&mdash;the heaps of
+stone that lie at the angles and sally ports of his simple
+fortresses, on the circular trenches, which enclosed his
+beacon fires on the mountain tops. It is in localities of this
+kind, that the ploughman turns up fragments of the Red
+Man's time wasted and broken pottery&mdash;his stone pestles,
+his carved pipes, and his skilfully chipped arrow heads,
+and spear heads, and tomahawks of stone. These, and
+analogous remains, are the objects of our antiquarian researches.
+Prouder monuments he had none. There was
+neither column, nor arch, statue nor inscription. But we
+may trace, by a careful inspection of the objects, the state
+and progress of his ancient and rude arts. We may denote,
+by their occurrence, in the same localities, the era of
+the arrival of the white man. We may establish other
+eras, from geological changes,&mdash;the growth of forest trees,
+and other inductive means.</p>
+
+<p>There are three eras in American antiquity.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span></p><p>1. Vestiges of their primary migration and origin.</p>
+
+<p>2. Vestiges of their international changes and intestine
+wars, prior to the discovery of the continent by Columbus.</p>
+
+<p>3. Evidences of wars, migrations and remains of occupancy,
+subsequent to the arrival of Europeans.</p>
+
+<p>These are to be studied in the inverse order of their being
+stated. We must proceed from the known to the unknown&mdash;from
+the recent, to the remote.</p>
+
+<p>Ethnography offers a species of proof, to determine the
+migrations and divisions in the original family of man,
+which is to be drawn from geographical considerations&mdash;the
+relative position of islands, seas and continents&mdash;the
+means of subsistence as governed and limited by climate,
+and soil; the state of ancient arts, agriculture, languages,
+&amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>Philology denotes the affinities of nations, by the analogies
+of words, and forms of syntax, and the place of expressing
+ideas.</p>
+
+<p>The remains of arts, monuments, inscriptions, hieroglyphics,
+picture writing, and architecture, constitute so many
+means of comparing one nation with another, and thus
+determining their affinities; and although most of our aboriginal
+nations had made but little progress in these departments,
+the state of ruins in Mexico, Central Mexico and
+Yucatan; the mounds and fortifications of the West; and
+even the remains of forts and barrows in Western New-York,
+entitle them to consideration.</p>
+
+<p>There is another department of observation on our aborigines,
+which, from the light it has shed on the mental
+characteristics of the Algic, and some other stocks, offers a
+new field for investigation. I allude to the subject of the
+imaginative legends and tales of the Red Race. Such
+tales have been found abundantly in the lodge circles of
+the tribes about the Upper Lakes and the source of the
+Mississippi. They reveal the sources of many of their
+peculiar opinions on life, death, and immortality, and open,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span>
+if I may so say, a vista to the philosophy of the Indian
+mind, and the theory of his religion.</p>
+
+<p>An ample field for investigation is thus before you. And
+it is one full of attractions alike for the man of science, research,
+learned leisure and philosophy. But it is not alone
+to these, that the Red man and his associations, present a
+field for study and contemplation. His history and existence
+on this continent, is blended with the richest sources
+of poetry and imagination. His beautiful and sonorous geographical
+nomenclature alone, has clothed our hills and
+lakes and streams, with the charms of poetic numbers.&mdash;The
+Red man himself, who once roved these attractive
+scenes, with his bow and arrows, and his brow crowned
+with the highest honors of the war path and the chase, was
+a being of <em class="ucsmcap">NOBLE MOULD</em>. He felt the true sentiment of
+independence. He was capable of high deeds of courage,
+disinterestedness and virtue. His generosity and hospitality
+were unbounded. His constancy in professed friendship
+was universal, and his memory of a good deed, done
+to him, or his kindred, never faded. His breast was animated
+with a noble thirst of fame. To acquire this, he
+trod the war path, he submitted to long and severe privations.
+Neither fatigue, hunger or thirst were permitted to
+gain the mastery over him. A stoic in endurance he was
+above complaint, and when a prisoner at the stake, he triumphed
+over his enemy in his death song. The history of
+such a people must be full of deep tragic and poetic incidents;
+and their antiquities, cannot fail to illustrate it.&mdash;The
+tomb that holds a man, derives all its moral interest
+<em>from</em> the man, and would be destitute of it, without him.
+America is the tomb of the Red man.</p>
+
+<p>A single objection, to the plan of the institution, remains
+to be answered. It may be deemed too intricate and complex
+to secure unity in action. The inquiries are admitted
+to be interesting and capable of furnishing intellectual aliment
+for a literary society; but why not establish it on<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span>
+plain principles, in the ordinary mode? All that is sought,
+it may be said, could be accomplished without such a
+weight of associated machinery. By organizing it on the
+basis of the several tribes, and the several clans of each
+tribe; spreading over so wide an area of territory, and
+adopting so many of the aboriginal peculiarities, in terms,
+form of admission, and you have exposed the institution to
+serious objections, and to the danger of an early decline.
+But, are not these traits, rather the guarantees of its success
+and perpetuity? It addresses itself, particularly to
+the <em class="smcap">Young</em>. To them, it brings the attractions of novelty.
+Much of the ardor of association and desire of action, peculiar
+to this age, may find its gratification in these co-fraternal,
+and ceremonial observances; and be supposed to
+act as stimulants to the higher, and ulterior objects of the
+association. These objects are, both in their nature, and
+associations, of an inspiring cast. They bring before you,
+a new world, with its ancient inhabitants, as themes of
+contemplation. And these themes spring up, with a freshness
+and vigor, well suited to attract the pen and pencil.&mdash;Tired
+with poring over the dusty volumes, which detail
+the ruins of the temples and cities of the eastern hemisphere,
+the spirit of research asks, whether, in the very
+magnificence of the continent, there be not now a temple,
+whose history is worth study? Cloyed with the accounts
+handed down of the renowned places and renowned men
+of antiquity, it is inquired, whether these broad forests and
+far-spread vistas of woods and waters, do not conceal
+something of the foot-prints of past time, which is worth
+labor and learning to investigate, and reveal?</p>
+
+<p>Nature is found here, in some of her sublimest moods.
+She is still in her questive youth, but it is a youth of gigantic
+proportions. Her largest rivers occupy thousands of
+miles in displaying their winding channels, between these
+sources and their outlets, in the sea. Her broad forests
+still wave with their leafy honors unshorn. Her lakes oc<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span>cupy
+a length and breadth and depth, which give them far
+more the aspect of seas. Ships, bear a heavy commerce
+on their bosoms, and navies have battled for supremacy
+upon their ample breasts. It is a region destined for the
+human race to develope itself and expand in. It is a seat
+prepared for the re-union of the different stocks of mankind.
+It is an area of magnificent extent. Higher mountains fill
+other parts of the world, and other parts of <em>this</em> continent.
+The Alps, the Atlas, the Andes and the Cordilleras reach
+into the skies, but they encumber the earth with their vast
+proportions, and render the surface sterile. They take
+away from the area of tillable soil, and add it to waste and
+unprofitable districts. If our greatest elevations, are humble
+compared to these, they are clothed with verdure, and
+break into countless valleys, which afford a habitation to
+man. No country on the globe abounds with so many beautiful
+lakes of every size, and our rivers display a succession
+of cataracts and falls, alike attractive to the eye of
+taste and art.</p>
+
+<p>Is all this profusion designed to employ the pens of
+naturalists and statesmen only? Is there no field in the
+mighty past, for the philosopher and the historian? for the
+ethnologist and the antiquarian? Is civilized man alone the
+only object, wanting in the consideration of its former history?
+We answer, no. Centuries on centuries have passed
+away, since first the Red man planted his foot on this
+continent. The very paucity of his knowledge and simplicity
+of his arts, tell a story of great antiquity. The
+diversities of language answer to the same end. And, for
+aught that is known, long before the eras of Socrates and
+Pythagoras, Plato and Confucius, the Mongol and the Persian.
+The Tartar and the Mesopotamean, the Chinese
+and Japanese, and we know not how many other shades
+of the Red man of Asia, were in <em class="caps">AWONEO</em><a name="FNanchor_E_5" id="FNanchor_E_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_E_5" class="fnanchor">[E]</a> or America.
+Of their wonderful histories and wars and overturnings,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span>
+by land and sea, of their mixtures and intermixtures of
+blood and language and lineage and nationality, we know
+little, or nothing. But, after all the centuries of separation,
+we find in his physiological characteristics and conformation
+of visage and expression, the same Asiatic type of
+man&mdash;whom the first adventurers to these shores, did not
+hesitate to pronounce the man of India. Use, has perpetuated
+the term, and if the discoveries of geography, have,
+ages since, shown the appellation of Indians, in the sense
+then employed, to be incorrect, physiologists and ethnographers,
+have but found stronger and stronger proofs, that
+Asia, in preference to every other quarter of the globe, was
+the true land of his origin.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span></p><div class="footnotes">
+
+<h3 class="norm">FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_A_1" id="Footnote_A_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_A_1"><span class="label">[A]</span></a> Hudson.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_B_2" id="Footnote_B_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_B_2"><span class="label">[B]</span></a> Or Ho-de-no-son-ne.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_C_3" id="Footnote_C_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_C_3"><span class="label">[C]</span></a> The corresponding word in the Seneca dialect is Tod-o-dah-hoh.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_D_4" id="Footnote_D_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_D_4"><span class="label">[D]</span></a> Indian Picture Writing.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_E_5" id="Footnote_E_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_E_5"><span class="label">[E]</span></a> Onondaga.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2 id="preface">PREFACE.</h2>
+
+<p>In Indian mythology may be found the richest poetic materials. An
+American Author is unworthy of the land that gave him birth if he passes
+by with indifference this well-spring of inspiration, sending liberally forth
+a thousand enchanted streams. It has given spiritual inhabitants to our
+valleys, rivers, hills and inland seas; it has peopled the dim and awful
+depths of our forests with spectres, and, by the power of association, given
+our scenery a charm that will make it attractive forever. The material
+eye is gratified by a passing glimpse of nature's external features, but a
+beauty, unseen, unknown before, invests them if linked to stories of the
+past, in the creation of which fabling fancy has been a diligent co-worker
+with memory.</p>
+
+<p>The red man was a being who delighted in the mystical and the wild&mdash;it
+was a part of his woodland inheritance. Good and evil genii performed
+for him their allotted tasks. Joyous tidings, freedom from disease and disaster&mdash;success
+in the chase, and on the war path were traceable to the
+Master of Life and his subordinate ministers:&mdash;blight that fell upon the
+corn was attributed, on the contrary, to demoniac agency, and the shaft that
+missed its mark was turned aside by the invisible hand of some mischievous
+sprite. Deities presided over the elements. The Chippewas have their
+little wild men of the woods, that remind us of Puck and his frolicsome
+brotherhood, and the dark son of the wilderness, like our first parents</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i7">&mdash;"from the steep<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of echoing hill or thicket often heard<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Celestial voices."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>My tent is pitched on the hunting grounds of the Senecas, (or So-non-ton-ons)
+and I deem it not inappropriate to select for my theme the Legend
+of their origin.</p>
+
+<p>Different versions of the story are in circulation, but I have been guided
+mainly, in the narrative part of my poem, by notes taken down after an
+interview with the late Captain Horatio Jones, the Indian Interpreter of
+the Six Nations.</p>
+
+<p>The great hill at the head of Canandaigua Lake, from whence the Senecas
+sprung, is called Genundewah. Tradition says that it was crowned
+by a fort to which the braves of the tribe resorted at night-fall, after<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>
+waging war with a race of giants. These giants were worshippers of
+Ut-co, or the Evil Spirit, who sent, after their extermination, a great serpent
+to destroy the conquerors. Quitting its watery lair in Canandaigua
+Lake, the monster encircled their fortification. The head and tail completed
+a horrid <em>ring</em> at the gateway, and, when half famished, the wretched
+inmates vainly attempted to escape. All were destroyed with the exception
+of a pair, whose miraculous preservation is related in the poem that
+follows. Ever after Genundewah was a chosen seat of Iroquois Council,
+and wrinkled seers were in the habit of climbing its sides for the purpose
+of offering up prayers to the Great Spirit.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span></p>
+<h2>GENUNDEWAH,<br />
+<span class="sm">[A LEGEND OF CANANDAIGUA LAKE.]</span></h2>
+
+<p class="center">BY WILLIAM H. C. HOSMER.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="ucsmcap">WRITTEN AT THE REQUEST OF THE "NEW CONFEDERATION OF THE IROQUOIS," AND PRONOUNCED
+BEFORE THEM IN GENERAL COUNCIL, AT AURORA, AUGUST</span> 15th, 1845.</p>
+
+<div class="poem" id="main-poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+
+<h3>I.</h3>
+
+<span class="i1">Why, Chieftain, linger on this barren hill<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">That overbrows yon azure sheet below?<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Red sunset glimmers on the leaping rill,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Dark night is near, and we have far to go.<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">This scene&mdash;replied he leaning on big bow&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Is hallowed by tradition&mdash;wondrous birth<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Here to my Tribe was given long ago;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">We stand where rose they from disparting earth<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To light a deathless blaze on Fame's unmouldering hearth.<br /></span>
+</div>
+
+<h3>II.</h3>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i1">A fort they reared upon this summit bleak<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Guided by counsel from the Spirit Land,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And clad in dart-proof panoply would seek<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">The plains beneath each morn, a valiant band,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And warfare wage with giants hand to hand:<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">They conquered in the struggle, and the bones<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Of their dead foemen on the echoing strand<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Of the clear lake lay blent with wave-washed stones,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And pale, unbodied ghosts filled air with hollow moans.<br /></span>
+</div>
+
+<h3>III.</h3>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i1">Ut-co, the scowling King of Evil, heard<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">The voice of lamentation, and wild ire<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">The depths of his remorseless bosom stirr'd;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Of that gigantic brood he was the sire,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And flying from his cavern, arched with fire,<br /></span>
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span>
+<span class="i1">He hovered o'er these, waters&mdash;at his call<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Up rushed a hideous monster, spire on spire;&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1"><em>Call</em> so astounding that the rocky wall<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of this blue chain of hills seemed tott'ring to its fall!<br /></span>
+</div>
+
+<h3>IV.</h3>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i1">With his infernal parent for a guide,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">The hungry serpent left his watery lair,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Dragging his scaly terrors up the side<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Of this tall hill, now desolate and bare:<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Filled with alarm the Senecas espied<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">His dread approach, and launched a whizzing shower<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Of arrows on the foe, whose iron hide<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Repelled their flinty points&mdash;and in that hour<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The boldest warrior fled from strife with fiendish power.<br /></span>
+</div>
+
+<h3>V.</h3>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i1">The loathsome messenger of wo and death<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">True to his dark and awful mission wound,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Polluting air with his envenom'd breath,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Huge folds the palisadoed camp around:<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Crouched at his master's feet the faithful hound,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And raised a piteous and despairing cry;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">No outlet of escape the mother found<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">For her imploring infants, and on high<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Lifted her trembling hands in voiceless agony.<br /></span>
+</div>
+
+<h3>VI.</h3>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i1">Forming a hideous circle at the gate<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">The reptile's head and tail together lay;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Distended were the fang-set jaws in wait<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">For victims, thus beleaguered, night and day;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And not unlike the red and angry ray<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Shot by the bearded comet was the light<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Of his unslumbering eye that watched for prey;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">His burnished mail flashed back the sunshine bright,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And round him pale the woods grew with untimely blight.<br /></span>
+</div>
+
+<h3>VII.</h3>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i1">When famine raged within their guarded hold,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And wan distemper thinn'd their numbers fast,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Crowding the narrow gateway young and old<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">With the fixed look of desperation passed<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">From life to dreadful death&mdash;a charnel vast&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span>
+<span class="i1">The reptile's yawning throat entombed the strong,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And lovely of the Tribe:&mdash;remained at last<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Two lovers only of that mighty throng<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To chaunt with feeble voice a nation's funeral song.<br /></span>
+</div>
+
+<h3>VIII.</h3>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i1">Comely to look on was the youthful pair:&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">One, like the mountain pine erect and tall,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Was of imposing presence;&mdash;his dark hair<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Had caught its hue from night's descending pall;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Light was his tread&mdash;his port majestical,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And well his kingly brow became a form<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Of matchless beauty:&mdash;like the rise and fall<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Of a strong billow in the hour of storm<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Beat his undaunted heart with glory's impulse warm.<br /></span>
+</div>
+
+<h3><a name="IX" id="IX"></a>IX.</h3>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i1">Graced was his belt by beads of dazzling sheen<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And painted quills&mdash;the handiwork of one<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Dearer than life to him;&mdash;though he had seen<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">From the gray hills, beneath a wasting sun,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Only the snows of twenty winters run,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">The warrior's right his scalp lock to adorn<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">With eagle plumes in battle he had won:<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">O'erjoyed were prophets old when he was born,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And hailed him with one voice "<em>First Sunbeam of the Morn</em>."<br /></span>
+</div>
+
+<h3>X.</h3>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i1">The other!&mdash;what of her?&mdash;bright shapes beyond<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">This darkened earth wear looks like those she wore;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Graceful her mien as lilly of the pond<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">That nods to every wind that passes o'er<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Its fragrant head a welcome:&mdash;never more<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">By loveliness so rare will earth be blest;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Softer than ripple breaking on the shore<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">By moonlight was her voice, and in her breast<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Pure thought a dwelling found&mdash;the Bird of Love a nest.<br /></span>
+</div>
+
+<h3>XI.</h3>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i1">Round her would hop unscared the sinless bird,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And court the lustre of her gentle glance,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Hushing each wood-note wild whene'er it heard<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Her song of joy:&mdash;her countenance<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Inspired beholders with a thought that chance<br /></span>
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span>
+<span class="i1">Had borne her hither from some better land:&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">To deck her tresses for the festive dance<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Girls of the tribe would bring, with liberal hand,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Blossoms and rose-lipped shells from bower and reedy strand.<br /></span>
+</div>
+
+<h3><a name="XII" id="XII"></a>XII.</h3>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i1">A thing of beauty is the slender vine<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">That wreaths its verdant arm around the oak<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">As if it there could safely intertwine<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Shielded from ringing axe&mdash;the lightning stroke&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And like that vine the girl of whom I spoke<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Clung to her companion:&mdash;scalding tears<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Rained from her elk-like eyes, and sobs outbroke<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">From her o'er-labored bosom, while her ears<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Were filled with soothing tones that did not hush her fears.<br /></span>
+</div>
+
+<h3>XIII.</h3>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i1">Mourner! the hour of rescue is at hand!<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">This hill will tremble to its rocky base<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">When Ou-wee ne-you utters stern command;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Joy ere another fleeting moon the trace<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Of clouding sorrow from thy brow will chase:&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Fear not!&mdash;for I am left to guard thee yet<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Last of the daughters of a luckless race!<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">We must not in the time of grief forget<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That light breaks forth anew from orbs that darkly set.<br /></span>
+</div>
+
+<h3>XIV.</h3>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i1">Thus, day by day, would O-wen-do-skah strive<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">To cheer the drooping spirits of the maid,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And keep one glimmering spark of hope alive;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">In the deep midnight for celestial aid,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">While cowered the trembler at his knee, he prayed<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">In tones that might have touched a heart of rock:<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">One morn exclaimed he&mdash;"be no more afraid<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Bright, peerless scion of a broken stock,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">For Heaven the monster's coil is arming to unlock.<br /></span>
+</div>
+
+<h3>XV.</h3>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i1">"Reserved for some high destiny despite<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">The downfall of our people we live on&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">My dreams were of deliverance last night,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And peril of impending death withdrawn:<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">A light, my weeping one, begins to dawn<br /></span>
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span>
+<span class="i1">On the thick gloom by sorrow round us cast;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">The lead-like pressure of despair is gone,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And rides a viewless courier on the blast<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Who whispers&mdash;Lo! the hour of vengeance comes at last.<br /></span>
+</div>
+
+<h3>XVI.</h3>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i1">"Gorged with his meal of gore unstirring sleeps<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">In his tremendous ring our mortal foe:<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Film-veiled his savage eye no longer keeps<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Grim watch for victims&mdash;warily and slow!<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Follow thy lover arrived with bended bow<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Of timber shaped, in many a battle tried&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Some guardian spirit will before me throw<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">A shield by human vision undescried<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Should he awake in wrath, and hence our footsteps guide."<br /></span>
+</div>
+
+<h3>XVII.</h3>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i1">It was I ween a sight to freeze each vein<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">That courses through our perishable clay<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">When sallied forth with muffled tread the twain;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">A look of wild, unutterable dismay<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Convulsed Te-yos-yu's<a name="FNanchor_F_6" id="FNanchor_F_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_F_6" class="fnanchor">[F]</a> visage while the way,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">A spear-length in advance, her lover led:<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Reaching the portal paused he to survey<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">The dangerous pass through which a grisly head<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Deprest to earth he saw, its mouth with murder red.<br /></span>
+</div>
+
+<h3>XVIII.</h3>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i1">"On! On!"&mdash;he whispered&mdash;"and the sightless mole<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Our footfall must not hear, or we are lost:"<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Nerved to high purpose was his war-like soul<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">As the dark threshold of the gate he cross'd;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">But fear that instant chilled his limbs with frost,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">For high its swollen neck the monster raised<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Gore dripping from its jaws with foam embossed,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And rimmed with fire, and circling eye-ball blazed<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">As light unwounding dart its horrid armor grazed.<br /></span>
+</div>
+
+<h3>XIX.</h3>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i1">Sick by a foul and fetid odor made<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Recoiled the champion from unequal fray;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Cut off all hope of rescue, he surveyed<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Fiercely the danger like a stag at bay:<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Where was Te-yos-yu?&mdash;she had swooned away,<br /></span>
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span>
+<span class="i1">And hoof-crushed wild-flower of the forest brown<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Resembled her as soiled with mould she lay;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Long on the <em>seeming corpse</em> the chief looked down,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">For 'twas a sight the cup of his despair to crown.<br /></span>
+</div>
+
+<h3>XX.</h3>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i1">Kneeling at length, upheld he with strong arm<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Her beauteous head, but in the temples beat<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">No pulse of life:&mdash;tears gushing fast and warm<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Refresh a heart, of transcient ill the seat,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">As raindrops cool the summer's midday heat;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">But when descends some desolating blow<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">That makes this world a desert, how unmeet<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Is outward symbol!&mdash;and far, far below<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The water-mark of grief was Oh-wen-do-skah's wo!<br /></span>
+</div>
+
+<h3>XXI.</h3>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i1">In broken tones he murmured&mdash;"must the name<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Of a great people be revived no more,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And like an echo pass away their fame,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Or moccasin's faint impress on the shore<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Of the salt lake when billows foam and roar?<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Black night enwraps my soul, for she is dead<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Who was its light&mdash;desire to live is o'er!"<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Scarce were these words in mournful accent said,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">When peals of thunder shook low vale and mountain-head.<br /></span>
+</div>
+
+<h3>XXII.</h3>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i1">Up sprang the Chief;&mdash;and on a throne of cloud,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Robed in a snowy mantle fringed with light,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">The Lord of life beheld:&mdash;the forest bowed<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Its head in awe before that presence bright,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And a wild shudder at the dazzling sight<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Ran through the mighty monster's knotted ring<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Shaking the hill from base to rocky height;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Rose from her trance the maid with fawn-like spring,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And balanced in mid-air the bird on trembling wing.<br /></span>
+</div>
+
+<h3>XXIII.</h3>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i1">"Notch on the twisted sinew of thy bow<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">This fatal weapon"&mdash;Ou-wee-ne-you<a name="FNanchor_G_7" id="FNanchor_G_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_G_7" class="fnanchor">[G]</a> cried,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Dropping a golden shaft&mdash;"and pierce the foe<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Under the rounded scale that wall his side!"<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Then vanished, while again the valley wide<br /></span>
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>
+<span class="i1">And mountain quaked with thunder:&mdash;from the ground<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">The warrior raised the gift of Heaven, and hied<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">On his heroic mission while around<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The hill with closer clasp his train the serpent wound.<br /></span>
+</div>
+
+<h3>XXIV.</h3>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i1">Flame-hued and hissing played its nimble tongue<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Between thick, ghastly rows of pointed bone<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Round which commingled gore and venom clung:<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Raging its flattened head like copper shone,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And flinty earth returned a heavy groan<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Lashed by quick strokes of its resounding tail;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Heard is like uproar when the hills bleak cone<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Is wildly beat by winter's icy flail,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But in that moment dire the archer did not quail.<br /></span>
+</div>
+
+<h3>XXV.</h3>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i1">Firm in one hand his trusty bow he held,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And with the other to its glittering head<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Drew the long shaft while full each muscle swell'd;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">A twanging sound!&mdash;and on its errand sped<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">The messenger of vengeance:&mdash;warm and red<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Gushed from a gaping wound the vital tide&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Wrenched was the granite from its ancient bed,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And pines were broken in their leafy pride,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">When throes of mortal pain the monster's coil untied.<br /></span>
+</div>
+
+<h3>XXVI.</h3>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i1">Down the steep hill outstretched and dead he rolled<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Disgorging human heads in his descent;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Oaks that in earth had deeply fixed their hold<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Like reeds by that revolving mass were bent,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Splintered their boughs as if by thunder rent:<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">High flung the troubled lake its glittering spray,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And far the beach with flakes of foam besprent,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">When the huge carcass disappeared for aye<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In depths from whence it rose to curse the beams of day.<br /></span>
+</div>
+
+<h3>XXVII.</h3>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i1">When winds its murmuring bosom cease to wake<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Through bright transparent waves you may discern<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">On the hard, pebbled bottom of the lake<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Skulls changed to stone:&mdash;when fires no longer burn<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Kindled by sunset, and the glistening urn<br /></span>
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span>
+<span class="i1">Of night o'erflows with dew the phantoms pale<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Of matron, maid, child, seer and chieftain stern<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Their ghastly faces to the moon unveil,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And raise upon the shore a low heart-broken wail.<br /></span>
+</div>
+
+<h3>XXVIII.</h3>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i1">The lovers of Genundewah were blest<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">By the Great Spirit, and their lodge became<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">The nursery of a nation:&mdash;when the West<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Opened its gates of parti-colored flame<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">To give their souls free passage loud acclaim<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Rang through the Spirit Land, and voices cried<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">"Welcome! ye builders of eternal fame!<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Ye royal founders of an empire wide<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The stream of joy flows by, quaff ever from its tide!"<br /></span>
+</div>
+
+<h3>XXIX.</h3>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i1">At Onondaga burned the sacred fire<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">A thousand winters with unwasting blaze;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">In guarding it son emulated sire,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And far abroad were flung its dazzling rays:<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Followed were happy years by evil days&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Blue-eyed and pale came Children of the Dawn<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Tall spires on site of bark-built town to raise;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Change groves of beauty to a naked lawn,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And whirl their chariot wheels where led the doe her fawn.<br /></span>
+</div>
+
+<h3>XXX.</h3>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i1">Where are the mighty?&mdash;morning finds them not!<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">I call&mdash;and echo gives response alone;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">The fiery bolt of Ruin hath been shot,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">The blow is struck&mdash;the winds of death have blown!<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Cold are the hearths&mdash;their altars overthrown:<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">For them with smoking venison the board,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Reward of toilsome chase, no more will groan;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Sharper than hatchet proved the conqueror's sword,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And blood, in fruitless strife, like water they outpoured.<br /></span>
+</div>
+
+<h3>XXXI.</h3>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i1">The spotted Demon of Contagion came<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Ere the sacred bird of Peace could find a nest,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And vanished Tribes like summer grass when flame<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Reddens the level prairie of the West,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Or wasting dew drops when the rocky crest<br /></span>
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span>
+<span class="i1">Of this enchanted hill is tipped with gold;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And ere the Genii of the wild-wood drest<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">With flowers and moss the grave mound's hollowed mould,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Before the ringing axe went down the forest old.<br /></span>
+</div>
+
+<h3>XXXII.</h3>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i1">Oh! where is Gar-an-gu-la&mdash;Sachem wise?<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Who was the father of his people?&mdash;where<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">King Hendrick, Cay-en-guac-to?&mdash;<em>who replies?</em><br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And Sken-an-do-ah, was thy silver hair<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Brought to the dust in sorrow and despair<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">By pale oppression, though thy bow was strong<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">To guard their Thirteen Fires?&mdash;they did not spare<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">E'en thee, old chieftain, and thy tuneful tongue<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The death-dirge of thy race in measured cadence sung.<br /></span>
+</div>
+
+<h3>XXXIII.</h3>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i1">Thea-an-de-nea-gua<a name="FNanchor_H_8" id="FNanchor_H_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_H_8" class="fnanchor">[H]</a> of the martial brow,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Gy-ant-wa,<a name="FNanchor_I_9" id="FNanchor_I_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_I_9" class="fnanchor">[I]</a> Hon-ne-ya-was<a name="FNanchor_J_10" id="FNanchor_J_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_J_10" class="fnanchor">[J]</a> where are they?<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Sa-go-ye-wat-hah!<a name="FNanchor_K_11" id="FNanchor_K_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_K_11" class="fnanchor">[K]</a> is <em>he silent</em> now?<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">No more will listening throngs his voice obey.<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Like visions have the mighty passed away!<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Their tears descend in rain-drops, and their sighs<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Are heard in wailing winds when evening gray<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Shadows the landscape, and their mournful eyes<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Gleam in the misty light of moon-illumin'd skies.<br /></span>
+</div>
+
+<h3><a name="XXXIV" id="XXXIV"></a>XXXIV.</h3>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i1">Gone are my tribesmen, and another race,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1"><em>Born of the foam</em>, disclose with plough and spade<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Secrets of battle-field and burial-place;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And hunting grounds, once dark with pleasant shade,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Bask in the golden light:&mdash;but I have made<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">A pilgrimage from far to look once more<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">On scenes through which in childhood's hour I strayed,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Though robbed of might my limbs, my locks all hoar,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And on this Holy Mount mourn for the days of yore,<br /></span>
+</div>
+
+<h3>XXXV.</h3>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i1">Our house is broken open at both ends<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Though deeply set the posts, its timber strong&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">From ruthless foes, and traitors masked as friends,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Tutored to sing a false but pleasant song<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">The Seneca and Mohawk guarded long<br /></span>
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span>
+<span class="i1">Its blood-stained doors:&mdash;the <em>former</em> faced the sun<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">In his decline&mdash;the <em>latter</em> watched a throng<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Clouding the eastern hills&mdash;their tasks are done;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">A game for life was played, and prize the white man won.<br /></span>
+</div>
+
+<h3>XXXVI.</h3>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i1">Around me soon will bloom unfading flowers<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Ye glorious Spirit Islands of the just!<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">No fatal axe will hew away your bowers,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Or lay the green-robed forest king in dust:<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Far from the spoiler's fury, and his lust<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Of boundless power will I my fathers meet<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Tiaras wearing never dimm'd by rust,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And they, while airs waft music passing sweet,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To blest abodes will guide my silver-sandal'd feet.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<h3 class="norm">NOTES.</h3>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><i>The warrior's right his scalp lock to adorn</i><br /></span>
+<span class="i0"><i>With eagle plumes in battle he had won.</i>&mdash;<span class="smcap"><a href="#IX">Stanza ix.</a></span><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>No one but a brave who has slain an enemy in battle, is allowed the distinguished honor
+of wearing eagle feathers.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><i>Rained from her elk-like eyes.</i>&mdash;<span class="smcap"><a href="#XII">Stanza xii.</a></span><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Objects clear and bright are often compared by the Indian to the elk's eye. The definition
+of Muskingum is&mdash;"clear as an elk's eye."</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><i>Born of the foam.</i>&mdash;<span class="smcap"><a href="#XXXIV">Stanza xxxiv.</a></span><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The red man believes that the whites sprang from the foam of the salt water.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+
+<h3 class="norm">FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_F_6" id="Footnote_F_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_F_6"><span class="label">[F]</span></a> Bright eye.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_G_7" id="Footnote_G_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_G_7"><span class="label">[G]</span></a> Great Spirit.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_H_8" id="Footnote_H_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_H_8"><span class="label">[H]</span></a> Brunt.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_I_9" id="Footnote_I_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_I_9"><span class="label">[I]</span></a> Corn Planter.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_J_10" id="Footnote_J_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_J_10"><span class="label">[J]</span></a> Farmer's Brother.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_K_11" id="Footnote_K_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_K_11"><span class="label">[K]</span></a> Red Jacket.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="tn">
+<h2 id="note">Transcriber's Note:</h2>
+
+<p>Inconsistent capitalization (e.g. Gulf vs. gulf), spacing
+(e.g. north east vs. northeast), and hyphenation (e.g.
+foot-prints vs. footprints) have been left as in the original.</p>
+
+<p>The following changes were made to the text:</p>
+
+<ul>
+<li><a href="#Page_5">p. 5</a>: worty to worthy (worthy of the thought and care)</li>
+<li><a href="#Page_6">p. 6</a>: expreses to expresses (expresses the peculiarities of its own soil)</li>
+<li><a href="#Page_6">p. 6</a>: Tueton to Teuton (the Teuton, Goth and Magyar)</li>
+<li><a href="#Page_6">p. 6</a>: maze to maize (crushed their maize)</li>
+<li><a href="#Page_7">p. 7</a>: Ninevah to Nineveh (buried sites of Nineveh)</li>
+<li><a href="#Page_7">p. 7</a>: deciples to disciples (disciples of Zoroaster)</li>
+<li><a href="#Page_8">p. 8</a>: progres to progress (progress of nations)</li>
+<li><a href="#Page_9">p. 9</a>: Alleghany's to Alleghanies (by the Alleghanies)</li>
+<li><a href="#Page_9">p. 9</a>: distatant to distant (at distant points)</li>
+<li><a href="#Page_10">p. 10</a>: Susquehannah to Susquehanna (the Susquehanna, the
+Delaware and the St. Lawrence)</li>
+<li><a href="#Page_11">p. 11</a>: acient to ancient (an ancient feature)</li>
+<li><a href="#Page_13">p. 13</a>: entititled to entitled (Each clan is entitled to a chief.)</li>
+<li><a href="#Page_14">p. 14</a>: heriditary to hereditary (a hereditary chieftainship)</li>
+<li><a href="#Page_16">p. 16</a>: eminent to imminent (from imminent peril)</li>
+<li><a href="#Page_20">p. 20</a>: Heredotus to Herodotus (the period of Herodotus)</li>
+<li><a href="#Page_24">p. 24</a>: amunition to ammunition (guns and ammunition)</li>
+<li><a href="#Page_25">p. 25</a>: Ioroquois' to Iroquois' (the Iroquois' powers)</li>
+<li><a href="#Page_25">p. 25</a>: Vandruiel to Vaudruiel (Vaudruiel, the Governor General of New France)</li>
+<li><a href="#Page_28">p. 28</a>: beautious to beauteous (beauteous lakes and forests)</li>
+<li><a href="#Page_29">p. 29</a>: resplendant to resplendent (more learned and resplendent
+nations)</li>
+<li><a href="#Page_30">p. 30</a>: oblitered to obliterated (half obliterated trenches)</li>
+<li><a href="#Page_31">p. 31</a>: subsistance to subsistence (means of subsistence)</li>
+<li><a href="#Page_33">p. 33</a>: alterior to ulterior (ulterior objects)</li>
+<li><a href="#Page_33">p. 33</a>: pouring to poring (poring over the dusty volumes)</li>
+<li><a href="#Page_34">p. 34</a>: vallies to valleys (countless valleys)</li>
+<li><a href="#Page_34">p. 34</a>: centures to centuries (Centuries on centuries)</li>
+<li><a href="#Page_43">p. 43</a>: muflled to muffled (with muffled tread)</li>
+<li><a href="#Page_44">p. 44</a>: is to in (head in awe)</li>
+<li><a href="#Page_44">p. 44</a>: hilll to hill (Shaking the hill)</li>
+<li><a href="#Page_44">p. 44</a>: single quotes to double quotes ("Notch on ... fatal weapon")</li>
+<li><a href="#Page_44">p. 44</a>: side"! to side!" (that wall his side!")</li>
+<li><a href="#Page_46">p. 46</a>: missing close quote added (quaff ever from its tide!")</li>
+<li><a href="#Page_48">p. 48</a>: worn to won, and period at end of first line removed to
+match quoted passage in poem (Note for <span class="smcap">Stanza ix.</span>)</li>
+<li><a href="#Page_48">p. 48</a>: missing period added (<span class="smcap">Stanza xxxiv.</span>)</li>
+</ul>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
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+</body>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of An Address, Delivered Before the Was-ah
+Ho-de-no-son-ne or New Confederacy of the Iroquois, by Henry R. Schoolcraft and W. H. C. Hosmer
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: An Address, Delivered Before the Was-ah Ho-de-no-son-ne or New Confederacy of the Iroquois
+ Also, Genundewah, a Poem
+
+Author: Henry R. Schoolcraft
+ W. H. C. Hosmer
+
+Release Date: June 29, 2010 [EBook #33023]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK AN ADDRESS, DELIVERED BEFORE ***
+
+
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+
+Produced by Julia Miller, S.D., and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
+produced from images generously made available by The
+Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ AN
+ ADDRESS,
+ DELIVERED BEFORE THE
+ WAS-AH HO-DE-NO-SON-NE
+ OR
+ NEW CONFEDERACY OF THE IROQUOIS,
+
+ BY
+
+ HENRY R. SCHOOLCRAFT,
+
+ A MEMBER:
+ AT ITS THIRD ANNUAL COUNCIL,
+ AUGUST 14, 1845.
+
+
+ ALSO,
+
+ GENUNDEWAH,
+ A POEM,
+
+ BY
+
+ W. H. C. HOSMER,
+
+ A MEMBER:
+
+ PRONOUNCED ON THE SAME OCCASION.
+
+ PUBLISHED BY THE CONFEDERACY.
+
+ ROCHESTER:
+ PRINTED BY JEROME & BROTHER, TALMAN BLOCK,
+ Sign of the American Eagle, Buffalo-Street.
+
+ 1846.
+
+
+
+
+ADDRESS.
+
+
+GENTLEMEN:
+
+In a country like ours, whose institutions rest on the popular will, we
+must rely for our social and literary means and honors, exclusively on
+personal exertions, springing from the bosom of society. We have no
+external helps and reliances, sealed in expectations of public
+patronage, held by the hands of executive, or ministerial power. Our
+ancestors, it is true, were accustomed to such stimulants to literary
+exertions. Titles and honors were the prerogatives of Kings, who
+sometimes stooped from their political eminences, to bestow the reward
+upon the brows of men, who had rendered their names conspicuous in the
+fields of science and letters. Such is still the hope of men of letters
+in England, Germany and France. But if a bold and hardy ancestry, who
+had learned the art of thought in the bitter school of experience, were
+accustomed to such dispensations of royal favors, while they remained in
+Europe, they feel but little benefit from them here; and made no
+provision for their exercise, as one of the immunities of powers, when
+they came to set up the frame of a government for themselves.
+
+No ruler, under our system, is invested with authority to tap, his
+kneeling fellow subject on the crown of his head, and exclaim, "Arise,
+Sir, Knight!" The cast of our institutions is all the other way, and the
+tendency of things, as the public mind becomes settled and compacted,
+is, to take away from men the prestige of names and titles; to award but
+little, on the score of antiquarian merit, and to weigh every man's
+powers and abilities, political and literary, in the scale of absolute
+individual capacity, to be judged of, by the community at large. If
+there are to be any "orders," in America, let us hope they will be like
+that, whose institution we are met to celebrate, which is founded on the
+principle of intellectual emulation, in the fields of history, science
+and letters.
+
+Such are, indeed, the objects which bring us together on the present
+occasion, favored as we are in assembling around the light of this
+emblematic COUNCIL FIRE. Honored by your notice, as an honorary member,
+in your young institution, I may speak of it, as if I were myself a
+fellow laborer, in your circle: and, at least, as one, understanding
+somewhat of its plan, who feels a deep interest in its success.
+
+Adopting one of the seats of the aboriginal powers, which once cast the
+spell of its simple, yet complicated, government, over the territory, a
+central point has been established HERE. To this central point,
+symbolizing the whole scheme of the Iroquois system, other points of
+subcentralization tend, as so many converging lines. You come from the
+east and the west, the north and the south. You have obeyed ONE
+impulse--followed ONE principle--come to unite your energies in ONE
+object. That object is the cultivation of letters. To give it force and
+distinctness, by which it may be known and distinguished among the
+efforts made to improve and employ the leisure hours of the young men of
+Western New York, you have adopted a name derived from the ancient
+confederacy of the Iroquois, who once occupied this soil. With the name,
+you have taken the general system of organization of society, within a
+society, held together by one bond. That bond, as existing in the
+TOTEMIC tie, reaches, with a peculiar force, each individual, in such
+society. It is an idea noble in itself, and worthy of the thought and
+care, by which it has been nurtured and moulded into its present
+auspicious form.--The union you thus form, is a union of minds. It is a
+band of brotherhood, but a brotherhood of letters. It is a confederacy
+of tribes, but a literary confederacy. It is an assemblage of warriors,
+but the labor to be pursued is exclusively of an intellectual character.
+The plumes with which you aim to pledge your literary arrows, are to be
+plucked from the wings of science. It is a council of clans, not to
+consult on the best means of advancing historical research; of promoting
+antiquarian knowledge; and of cultivating polite literature. The field
+of inquiry is broad, and it is to be trodden in various ways. You seek
+to advance in the paths of useful knowledge, but neglect not the flowers
+that bedeck the way. You aim at general objects and results, but pursue
+them, through the theme and story of that proud and noble race of the
+sons of the Forest, whose name, whose costume and whose principles of
+association you assume. Symbolically, you re-create the race. Thus
+aiming, and thus symbolizing your labors, your objects to resuscitate
+and exhume from the dust of by-gone years, some of those deeds of valor
+and renown which marked this hardy and vigorous race. There is in the
+idea of your association, one of the elements of a peculiar and national
+literature. And whatever may be the degree of success, which
+characterizes your labors, it is hoped they will bear the impress of
+American heads and American hearts. We have drawn our intellectual
+sustenance, it is true, from noble fountains and crystal streams. We
+have all England, and all Europe for our fountain head. But when this
+has been said, we must add, that they have been off-sets from foreign
+fountains and foreign streams. And nurtured as we have been, from such
+ample sources, it is time, in the course of our national developments,
+that we begin to produce something characteristic of the land that gave
+us birth. No people can bear a true nationality, which does not
+exfoliate, as it were, from its bosom, something that expresses the
+peculiarities of its own soil and climate. In building its intellectual
+edifice, we must have not only suitable decorations, but there must come
+from the broad and deep quarries of its own mountains, foundation
+stones, and columns and capitals, which bear the impress of an
+indigenous mental geognosy.
+
+And where! when we survey the length and breadth of the land, can a more
+suitable element, for the work be found, than is furnished by the
+history and antiquities and institutions and love, of the free, bold,
+wild, independent, native hunter race? They are, relatively to us, what
+the ancient Pict and Celt were to Britain, or the Teuton, Goth and
+Magyar to Continental Europe. Looking around, over the wide forests, and
+transcendent lakes of New York, the founders of this association, have
+beheld the footprints of the ancient race. They saw here, as it were, in
+vision, the lordly Iroquois, crowned by the feathers of the eagle,
+bearing in his hand the bow and arrows, and scorning, as it were, by the
+keen glances of his black eye, and the loftiness of his tread, the very
+earth that bore him up. History and tradition speak of the story of this
+ancient race.--They paint him as a man of war--of endurance--of
+indomitable courage--of capacity to endure tortures without
+complaint--of a heroic and noble independence. They tell us that these
+precincts, now waving with yellow corn, and smiling with villages, and
+glittering with spires, were once vocal with their war songs, and
+resounded with the chorusses of their corn feasts. We descry, as we
+plough the plain, the well chipped darts which pointed their arrows, and
+the elongated pestles, that crushed their maize. We exhume from their
+obliterated and simple graves, the pipe of steatite, in which they
+smoked, and offered incense to these deities, and the fragments of the
+culinary vases, around which, the lodge circle gathered to their forest
+meal. Mounds and trenches and ditches, speak of the movement of tribe
+against tribe, and dimly shadow forth the overthrow of nations. There
+are no plated columns of marble; no tablets of inscribed stone--no gates
+of rust-coated brass. But the MAN himself survives, in his generation.
+He is a WALKING STATUE before us. His looks and his gestures and his
+language remain. And he is himself, an attractive _monument_ to be
+studied. Shall we neglect him, and his antiquarian vestiges, to run
+after foreign sources of intellectual study? Shall we toil amid the
+ruins of Thebes and Palmyra, while we have before us the monumental
+enigma of an unknown race? Shall philosophical ardor expend itself, in
+searching after the buried sites of Nineveh, and Babylon and Troy, while
+we have not attempted, with decent research, to collect, arrange and
+determine, the leading data of our aboriginal history and
+antiquities?--These are inquiries, which you, at least, may aim to
+answer.
+
+No branch of the human family is an object unworthy of high philosophic
+inquiry. Their food, their language, their arts, their physical
+peculiarities, and their mental traits, are each topics of deep
+interest, and susceptible of being converted into evidences of high
+importance. Mistaken our Red Men clearly were, in their theories and
+opinions on many points. They were wretched theologists, and poor
+casuists. But not more so, in three-fourths of their dogmas, than the
+disciples of Zoroaster, or Confucius. They were polytheists from their
+very position. And yet, there is a general idea, that under every form,
+they acknowledged but one DIVINE INTELLIGENCE under the name of the
+GREAT SPIRIT.
+
+They paid their sacrifices, or at least, respects, to the imaginary and
+phantastic gods of the air, the woods and water, as Greece and Rome had
+done, and done as blindly before them. But they were a vigorous, hardy
+and brave off-shoot of the original race of man. They were full of
+humanities. They had many qualities to command admiration. They were
+wise in council, they were eloquent in the defence of their rights. They
+were kind and humane to the weak, bewildered and friendless. Their
+lodge-board was ever ready for the way farer. They were constant to a
+proverb, in their _professed_ friendships. They never forgot a kind act.
+Nor can it be recorded, to their dispraise, that they were a terror to
+their enemies. Their character was formed on the military principle, and
+to acquire distinction in this line, they roved over half the continent.
+They literally carried their conquests from the gulf of St. Lawrence to
+the gulf of Mexico. Few nations have ever existed, who have evinced more
+indomitable courage or hardihood, or shown more devotion to the spirit
+of independence than the Iroquois.
+
+But all their efforts would have ended in disappointment, had it not
+been for that principle of confederation, which, at an early day,
+pervaded their councils, and converted them into a phalanx, which no
+other tribe could successfully penetrate, or resist. It is this trait,
+by which they are most distinguished from the other hunter nations of
+North America; and it is to their rigid adherence to the verbal compact,
+which bound them together, as tribes and clans, that they owe their
+present celebrity, and owed their former power.
+
+It is proposed to inquire into the principles of this confederacy, and
+to make a few brief suggestions on its origin and history. In the time
+that has been given me, I have had but little opportunity for research,
+and even this little, other engagements, have not permitted me, fully to
+employ. The little that I have to offer, would indeed have been confined
+to the reminiscence of former reading, had I not been called, the
+present season, to make a personal visit to the reservation still
+occupied by the principal tribes.
+
+1. Prominent in its effects on the rise and progress of nations, in the
+geographical diameter of the country they occupy. And in this respect,
+the Iroquois were singularly favored. They lived under an atmosphere the
+most genial of any in the temperate latitude. Equally free from the
+extremes of heat, and humidity, it has been found eminently favorable to
+human life. Inquiries into the statistics of vitality will abundantly
+denote this. Many of the civil sachems lived to a great age. And the
+same may be said of those warriors who escaped the dart and club, until
+they came to the period, not a very advanced one, when they ceased to
+follow the war path.
+
+They possessed a country, unsurpassed for its various advantages, not
+only on this continent, but on the globe.--It afforded a soil of the
+most fruitful kind, where they could, with ease and certainty, always
+cultivate their maize. Its forests abounded in the deer, elk, bear and
+other animals, whose flesh supplied their lodges. It was irrigated by
+some of the sublimest rivers of the continent, whose waters ran south
+and north, east, and by the Alleghanies, west, till they all found their
+level, at distant points, either in the Gulfs of St. Lawrence and
+Mexico, or in the intermediate shores of the Atlantic. Lakes of an
+amazing size, compared to those of Europe, bounded this territory on the
+north and north east. Its own bosom, was spotted, with secondary sheets
+of water, like that of the Cayuga, upon whose banks we are assembled.
+These added freshness and beauty to the thick, and almost unbroken
+continuity of these forests.
+
+Nations doubtless owe some of their characteristics to the natural
+scenes of their country, and if we grant the same influence to the red
+sons of the forest, they had sources of animating and elevating thoughts
+around them.--Men who habitually cast their views to the Genesee and the
+Niagara--who crossed in their light canoe, the Ontario and Erie, wending
+their way into the sublime vista of the upper lakes: men, who threaded
+these broad forests in search of the deer, or who descended the powerful
+and rapid channels of the Alleghany, the Susquehanna, the Delaware and
+the St. Lawrence, in quest of their foes, must have felt the influence
+of magnitude and creative grandeur, and could not but originate ideas
+favorable to liberty and personal independence. Their very position,
+became thus the initiatory step in their assent to power.
+
+2. Such was the country occupied, at the era of the discovery, by the
+Iroquois. They lived, to employ their own symbolic language, in a long
+lodge extending east and west, from the waters of the Ca-ho-ha-ta-tea[A]
+to those of Erie. Their most easterly tribe, the Mohawks, extended their
+occupancy to a point which they still call, with dialectic variations,
+Skan-ek-ta-tea, being the present site of Albany. To this place, or, as
+is more generally thought, to this geographical vicinity, the commercial
+enterprize of Holland, sent an exploring ship in 1609. Here begins the
+certain and recorded history of the Iroquois. We have only known them
+200 years. All beyond this, is a field of antiquarian inquiry.
+
+[A] Hudson.
+
+From the historical documents recently obtained by the State from
+France, and deposited in the public offices at the capitol, it is seen
+that this people are sometimes called the NINE nations of the Iroquois.
+Algonquin tradition, which I have recently published, denotes that they
+originally consisted of EIGHT tribes. (ONEOTA.) Whatever of truth or
+error, there may be in these terms, it is certain that, at the period of
+the Dutch discovery and settlement referred to, they uniformly described
+themselves as the FIVE NATIONS, or United People, under the title of
+AKONOSHIONI.[B] The term Ongwe Honwee, which Colden mentions as
+peculiarly applied to themselves, as proudly contradistinguished from
+others, is a mere equivalent, in the several dialects, at this day, for
+the term Indian, and applies equally to other tribes, throughout the
+continent, as well as to themselves. By the admission of the Tuscaroras
+into the confederacy, they became known as the Six Nations. The
+principles of their compact, were such as to admit of any extension.
+They might as well, for aught that is known, have consisted of Sixteen
+as Six Tribes, and like our own Union, they would have been stronger and
+firmer in their power, with each admission.
+
+[B] Or Ho-de-no-son-ne.
+
+I have directed some few inquiries to their plan of union. It appears to
+have originated in a proposal to act in concert, by means of a central
+council, in questions of peace and war. In other respects, each tribe
+was an independency. It had no right to receive ambassadors from other
+tribes.--Messages delivered to a frontier tribe, were immediately
+transmitted to the next tribe in position, and by them passed on, to the
+central councils. They affirm that these messages were forwarded, with
+extraordinary celerity, by runners who rested not, night or day. The
+power to convene the general council, for despatch of public business,
+was in the presiding or executive chief of the Central Tribe.
+
+This power to make war or peace, or cession of sovereignty, was given
+up, on the principle of an equal union in all respects, without regard
+to numbers. It was strictly federative, or a union of tribes. The assent
+to a measure, was given by tribes. Whether all were required to assent,
+or a majority was sufficient, is not known. It is believed they
+_required_ entire unanimity.
+
+3. But another principle, of the deepest importance, ran throughout the
+organization of all the tribes, more remote in its origin, and still
+more influential, it may be thought, in forming a more perfect union,
+and giving strength and compactness to the government. It was the plan
+of the TOTEMIC BOND. This bond was a fraternity of separate clans in
+each tribe. It was based on original consanguinity, and marked by a
+heraldic device, as the figure of a quadruped, or bird. This appears to
+be an ancient feature in their organization, and is also found among
+other North American tribes. The Algonquin tribes, who possess the same
+organization, and from whose vocabulary we take the name, call it the
+Totem. The institution of the totem, or inter-fraternity of clans,
+existed, and is also found, with well marked features, among the
+Iroquois. It had, however, one characteristic, which was peculiar, to
+these nations.--It was employed to mark the descent of the chiefs, which
+ran exclusively by the female. The law of marriage, interdicting
+connexions within the clan, and limiting them to another, was probably
+established in ancient times, among the other nations who adhere to this
+institution, but, if so, it has dropped, or dwindled into mere
+tradition.
+
+Totem, is a term denoting the device, or pictorial sign, which is used
+by each individual, to determine his family identity. As many as have
+the same totem are admitted to be of the same family or clan. In this
+respect, it is analogous to coats of arms. It differs from them in this,
+that no person can marry another of the same arms and totem. They are
+related. The reason for keeping up this interdict, in cases where the
+degree of relationship must often be very small, or is entirely lost,
+appears to be one of policy, and will be, as far as possible, explained.
+
+Originally, there appears to have been three leading families or clans,
+among all the North American Indians, whose devices were, respectively,
+the TURTLE, the WOLF, and the BEAR. This triad of honored clans, existed
+and still exists among nations diverse in their languages, and remote in
+position, and may be considered as a proof of their common origin. These
+totems were regarded as of the highest authority--a fact which may
+denote either original paternity in these clans, or some distinguished
+action or services, analogous, perhaps, to the well known events of the
+Curatii and Horatii.
+
+It is certain, at least, that amongst each of the Iroquois tribes, as
+well as the great Algonquin family, there existed the totem or clan of
+the turtle, the wolf, and the bear. I will take, however, as an
+illustration of the Totemic organization of the tribes, the instance of
+the NUN-DO-WA-GA, or Senecas. The facts here employed have recently been
+communicated to me by their distinguished chief DE-O-NE-HO-GA-WA. The
+tribe consists of eight clans. They are, in the order communicated, the
+wolf, the turtle, the bear, the beaver, the snipe or plover, the falcon
+or hawk, the deer and the cranes. The present reigning clan is the wolf,
+the clan to which the noted orator, Red Jacket, and my informant, both
+belonged. We may assume, that what appear to have been fundamental
+principles, were actually so, and are to be regarded as the
+constitutional basis.
+
+Each clan is entitled to a chief. Each chief has a seat in council. The
+chiefs are hereditary, counting by the female line. By this law of
+descent, no chief could beget an immediate successor. And herein
+consisted one of the marked points of political wisdom in their system.
+It is this law of descent which best distinguishes it from the system of
+government of other nations on this continent, and in Asia. No such rule
+is known to exist, but may exist, among the Mongol race, or other
+Asiatic stocks, to whom these people have usually been traced. If so,
+the law of descent, in this regard, is indigenous and original. What
+disquisitions have we not seen, that a certain Iroquois chief was in the
+regular line of the chieftainship, by the father? whereas, it is clear,
+that the son of a chief could never, in any case, succeed his father.
+The descent ran, so to say, in the line of the queen-mother. If a chief
+die, his brother, next in age, would succeed him. These failing, his
+daughter's male children, if connected with the reigning totem, would
+succeed. Her children constituted the chain of transmission; but the
+heir to the chieftainship, whether by acknowledged succession, or by
+choice in case of dispute or uncertainty, had his claims uniformly
+submitted to a called council, and if approved, the sachem was regularly
+installed to the office. Councils had this right from an early day, and
+are known to have ever been very scrupulous and jealous in its
+exercise, and continue to be so, at this time.
+
+By the establishment of this law of descent, the evils of a hereditary
+chieftainship were obviated. And the succession was kept in healthy
+channels, by the right of the council to decide, in all cases, and to
+set aside incompetent claimants. This right was so exercised, as to give
+the nation the advantages of the elective power, and to avail itself of
+all its talent.
+
+We perceive in this system, an effective provision for breaking
+dynasties, and securing at each mutation of the chieftainship, a fresh
+line of chiefs, who were subject to a life limit. Each clan having the
+same right to one chief, a perpetual, yet constantly changing body of
+sachems, was kept up, which must necessarily change the body entirely in
+one generation. Yet, like the classes in our senatorial organization,
+the change was effected so slowly and gradually, that the body of chiefs
+constituted a political perpetuity.
+
+In contemplating this system, there is more than one point to admire.
+History gives us no example of a confederacy in which the principle of
+political and domestic union, were so intimately bound together. By the
+establishment of the Totemic Bond, the clans were separated on the
+principle of near kindred, between which all marriage was inhibited.
+Every marriage between these separated clans, therefore, bound them
+closer together, and the consequence soon must have been, their entire
+amalgamation, had it not been provided, that each clan, through the
+female line, should preserve inviolate forever, its own Totemic
+independency. In other words, the female was never so incorporated into
+a new relation by the matrimonial tie, as to lose her family name, and
+her mother's ancestral rights. If, for example, a deer totem female,
+married a wolf or hawk male, she was still counted in the clan of the
+deer, and never gave up her political rights, to the wolf or hawk
+clans, which had provided for her a husband. Her position may, perhaps,
+be better understood, by observing that the married woman, still
+retained her maiden name--the sir name of her family. By this means she
+preserved the identity of her clan, and with it, its heraldic and
+political rights. Not only so, the property of a female, never vested
+in, or belonged to the husband. This trait is still in full vogue, among
+each of the tribes. Its operation has been witnessed the present year.
+
+Matrons had also the right to attend and sit in council, and there were
+occasions, in which they were permitted to speak. For this purpose, a
+speaker was assigned to them, and this person became a standing officer
+in the council.--It might pertain to the nations to bring in
+propositions of peace. Such propositions might prejudice the character
+of a warrior, but they were appropriate to the female, and the wise men
+knew how to avail themselves of this stroke of policy. We speak of the
+general and burdensome subjection of the female, among our Red Men--a
+condition, indeed, inseparable from the hunter state, but here is a
+trait of power and consideration, which has not yet been reached by
+refined nations.
+
+With respect to the cause of descent through the female line, it is
+believed there are sound and politic reasons for such a custom, in the
+nomadic state; but we have not time to examine them. The whole subject
+of the separation of the tribes into a fixed member of original clans;
+the connexion of these clans, preserved by the totems, and the selection
+of the female as the preserver of these totemic ties, is one of deep
+interest, and worthy of your inquiries. So far as the investigation has
+been carried, it appears, that the primary object of this organization
+was to preserve the NAMES of the original founders of the nation.--These
+founders are said to have been the children of two brothers, and were
+cousin-germans. But why preserve their names? What object was to result
+from it? Were the persons who bore the names of the wolf, and the
+turtle and the falcon and other species, famed as hunters or warriors?
+Had they delivered their people, from imminent peril, or performed any
+noble act? Had they conducted their people across the sea, from other
+countries? Did they expect to return, and was _this_ the object of
+preserving their names, in the line of their descendants? Or was the
+institution, as it does not appear to have been, mere caprice? Nothing
+could give more interest to your enquiries than a search into these
+obscure matters. They are, in fact, at the foundation of their system of
+government, and will enable you, with more clearness, to ascertain and
+fix its principles.
+
+4. Of this government itself, we know very little, beyond the fact, that
+it had attained great celebrity among the other tribes. It was evidently
+founded on the overthrow of that of the ancient Alleghans. It appears to
+have been full of intricacies, yet simple. A republic, yet embracing
+aristocratic features. A mere government of opinion; yet fixed,
+effective, and powerful. It would be well to sift it, by the best lights
+yet within reach. These are verbal and traditionary. There is little to
+be had from books.
+
+If we look at the political theory of this government it had traits both
+peculiar and prescient. Their councils were not constituted, primarily,
+by elective representation. Yet they secured the chief benefits of it.
+The chiefs, had a life office, and were incapable of transmitting it to
+their descendants. The organic council was a representation of tribes,
+not of members. This aristocratic feature, was balanced and its tendency
+to absorb authority prevented, by permitting the warriors to sit in
+these primary councils. In these councils, there was free discussion and
+full deliberation. But there was no formal vote taken, nor any measure
+carried by counting persons, or ascertaining a majority or plurality.
+Tradition declares against any such test. The popular sense appears to
+have been secured alone by the scope and tenor of the debates. I cannot
+learn that there ever was any formal expression, equivalent to the
+modern practice of taking of the sense of the council on a measure.
+Perhaps something of this kind is to be found in the approbatory
+response, from which the French are said to have made up the word
+IROQUOIS.
+
+If the aristocratic feature of life-sachemship, was counteracted by the
+influence of the warriors in council, at the Council Fire of the Tribes;
+this feature was shorn still more of its objectionable tendencies in the
+General or Central Council of the Confederacy. Chiefs attended this
+national assemblage, as delegates or representatives, although not
+elected representatives, of their tribes. The number depended on
+circumstances; and varied with the occasion. They were sent, or went, to
+deliberate on a specific question, or questions, for which, the tribe
+was summoned, by the Executive Sachem of the Nation holding the high
+office of Attotarho,[C] or Convener of the Council. This central
+council, headed by this kind of a Presidency, was in fact, more purely
+democratic in its structure, than the home councils. It consisted
+essentially of a Congress of Chiefs, having a right as chiefs to attend,
+or delegated for the purpose, and aided also, by the warriors. It had
+the character of being a representative national body, delegated for a
+single session; and of a local body of life chiefs constituting the home
+sachemry, or a limited senate.
+
+[C] The corresponding word in the Seneca dialect is Tod-o-dah-hoh.
+
+Such I apprehend to have been the structure of the Iroquois government.
+It was strong, efficient and popular.--It had its fixity in the life
+tenure of the chiefs and the customs of proceeding. The voice of the
+warriors constituted a counterbalance, or species of second estate. But
+practically, whatever the theory, the chief and warriors, acted as one
+body. They came, generally, to advocate, or announce what had already
+been decided on, in the body of the tribe.
+
+It is evident, in viewing this scheme of a native federative
+government, that its tendencies were always in favor of the power of the
+separate tribes. No people ever existed, who watched more narrowly the
+existence of power, and its innate tendency to centralize, and usurp.
+Suspicious to a fault, their eyes and ears were ever open to the least
+tone or gesture of alarm. They had only confided, to the Central
+Council, the power to make war or peace, and to regulate public policy.
+This Central Council, received embassies, not only from the numerous
+nations with whom they warred; but the delegates of the crowns of France
+and England, often stood in their presence.
+
+The assent of each tribe is believed to have been requisite to an
+alliance, or rupture. When this had been given at the central council,
+it was explained before the local council, and the concurrence of the
+body of the tribe, was essential to make it binding and effective. In
+case of war, there was no fixed scale by which men were to be raised. It
+was deemed obligatory for each tribe to raise men according to its
+strength. But each was left free to its own action, being responsible
+for such action, to PUBLIC OPINION. All warriors were volunteers, and
+were raised for specific expeditions, and were bound no longer. To take
+up the war club, and join in the war dance, was to enlist. There was no
+other enlistment--no bounties--no pay--no standing force--no public
+provisions--no public arms--no clothing--no public hospital. The martial
+impulse of the people was sufficient. All was left to personal effort
+and provision. Self dependence was never carried to such height. The
+thirst for glory--the honor of the confederacy--the strife for personal
+distinction, filled their ranks; and led them, through desert paths, to
+the St. Lawrence, the Illinois, the Atlantic seaboard and the southern
+Alleghanies. Nor did they need the roll of the river to animate their
+courage, or regulate their steps. Theirs was a high energetic devotion,
+equal or superior to even that of ancient Sparta and Lacedaemon. They
+conquered wherever they went. They subdued nations in their immediate
+vicinity. They exterminated others. They adopted the fragments of
+subjugated tribes into their confederacy, sunk their national homes into
+oblivion, and thus repaired the irresistable losses of war. They had
+eloquence, as well as courage. Their speakers maintained a high rank
+along side of the best generals and negotiators of France, England and
+America. We owe this tribute to their valor and talents. One thousand
+such men, equipped for war as _they_ were, and led by _their_ spirit,
+would have effected more in battle, than the tens of thousands of
+effeminate Aztecks and Peruvians who shouted, but often did no more than
+_shout_, around the piratical bands of Cortez and Pizarro.
+
+5. I have left myself but little time to speak of the origin and early
+history of this people--topics which are of deep interest in themselves,
+but which are involved in great obscurity. They are subjects which
+commend themselves to your attention, and offer a wide field for your
+future research. There are three periods in our Indian history:
+
+1. THE ALLEGORIC AND FABULOUS AGE. This includes the creation, the
+deluge, the creation of Holiness and Evil, and some analogous points, in
+the general and shadowy traditions of men, which our hunter race, have
+almost universally concealed under the allegoric figures, of a creative
+bird or beast, or the exploits of some potent personage, endowed with
+supernatural courage or power. In this era, the earth was also covered
+with monsters and giants, who waged war, and drove men into caves and
+recesses; until the interposition of the original creative power, for
+their relief.
+
+2. THE ANTE-HISTORICAL PERIOD, in which tradition begins to assume the
+character of truth, but is still obscured by fable. This period includes
+the early discoveries by the Northmen, the reputed voyage of Prince
+Madoc, &c.
+
+3. THE PERIOD OF ACTUAL HISTORY, dating from the earliest voyage of
+Columbus and his companions.
+
+I have alluded, in a preceding part of this address, to the mode of
+studying their early history. Where little or nothing is to be obtained
+from books, it requires a cautious investigation of these traditions and
+antiquities. Ethnology, in all its branches, has a direct and practical
+bearing on this subject. The physical type of man, the means of his
+subsistence, the state of his arts, the language he speaks, the
+hieroglyphics he carves, the mounds he builds--the fortifications he
+erects,--his religion, his superstitions, his legendary lore--the very
+geography of the country he inhabits, are so many direct and palpable
+means of acquiring historical evidence. It is from the investigation of
+these, that tribes and nations are grouped and classified, and the
+original stocks of mankind denoted, and the track of their dispersion
+over the globe traced. And they constitute so many topics of study and
+investigation.
+
+In relating their traditions, our Red Men are prone, to connect, (as if
+these were portions of a continuous and consistent narrative) the most
+_recent_ and most _remote_ events, which dwell in their memory. And from
+their present residence and recent history, to run back, by a few
+sentences, into purely fabulous and allegoric periods. Fiction and fact,
+are mingled in the same strain. In listening to those relations, it is
+important to establish in the mind, historical periods, and to separate
+that which is grotesque or imaginative from the narration of real
+events. The latter, may be sometimes distorted by this juxtaposition,
+but it is, in general, easy to separate the two, and to re-adopt them,
+on their own principles. The early nations of Europe and Asia, pursued
+the same system. Their men were soon traced into gods, and their gods,
+soon ended in sensualists, or demons. Greek and Roman history, before
+the period of Herodotus, must have been little better than a jargon of
+such incongruities, and nearly all the earlier part of it, is no better
+now. To teach our children these nonsensical fables, is to vitiate their
+imagination, and the thing would never have been dreamt of, in a moral
+age, were not the ancient mythology, inseparably mixed up with the
+present state of ancient history, poetry and letters. We must teach it
+as a fable, and rely on truth to counteract its effects.
+
+The Iroquois have their full share in the fabulous and allegoric
+periods, and an examination of their tales and traditions will be found,
+I apprehend, to give ample scope to poetry and imagination. In their
+fabulous age, as recorded by Cusick, they have their war, with flying
+Heads, the Stone Giants, the Great Serpent, the Gigantic Musquito, the
+Spirit of Witchcraft, and several other eras, which afford curious
+evidences of the way-farings and wanderings of the human intellect,
+unaided by letters, or the spirit of truth.
+
+Actual history plants its standard close on the confines of these
+benighted regions of fable and allegory. It is not proposed to enter
+into much detail on this topic. The modern facts are pretty well known,
+but have never been thoroughly investigated or arranged. Of the earlier
+facts in their origin and history, we know very little. The first
+writers on the subject of the Indians generally, after the settlement of
+America, dealt in wild speculations, and were carried away with
+preconceived theories, which destroy their value. Colden, who directed
+his attention to the Iroquois, scarcely attempted any thing beyond a
+specific relation of transactions, which are intended for the
+information of the Board of Trade and Plantations, and these do not come
+down beyond the peace of Ryswick. There is a large amount of printed
+information, adequate for the completion of their history in the 18th
+and 19th centuries, but most of the works are of rare occurrence, and
+are only to be found in large libraries at home and abroad. Other facts
+exist in manuscript official documents, numbers of which, have recently
+been obtained by the State, from foreign offices, and are now deposited
+in the Secretary's office at Albany. The lost correspondence on Indian
+affairs, of Sir William Johnson, may yet come to light, and would
+necessarily be important. Private manuscripts and the traditions of aged
+Indians, still living, would further contribute to their history. They
+are a people worthy the separate pen of a historian, and it may be hoped
+that an elaborate and full work, may be produced.
+
+Where the Iroquois originated? is a question, which involves the prior
+and general one, of the origin of the Red Race. So far as relates to
+their proximate origin, on this continent, I am inclined to think, that
+it was in the tropical latitudes extending west from the Gulf of
+Mexico.--Facts indicate the great tide of our migration, to have been
+from that general race. The zea maize which is a southern plant, came
+from that quarter, and was spread, as the tribes moved from the south to
+the north, the east, and northeast, and north west. Which of the
+ancient Indian stocks came first we know not. The Iroquois, if we follow
+one of their own authors, have strong claims to antiquity, but we cannot
+accept this in full. That they migrated up the valley of the
+Mississippi, and the Ohio to its extreme head (they call the Alleghany
+Oheo) is probable. Our actual knowledge on this subject, historically
+speaking, is very small, and we must grope our way through dark and
+shadowy traditions. These, however, sustain the general fact stated,
+which is helped out by other accessions. That they had crossed the great
+artery of the continent, (the Mississippi river) prior to the Algonquin
+race, but after the Alleghans, is shown by the traditions of the latter.
+[P.W.][D] With this race, tradition asserts, that they formed an
+alliance, at a remote era, and maintained a bloody war, for many years,
+against the ancient Alleghans, who are supposed, in these wars, to have
+erected the fortifications and mounds, of the Mississippi valley. That
+this ancient Alleghanic empire of the West, so to call it, fell before
+the combined courage and energy of the Iroquois and Algonquins, and that
+the defeated tribes either retired down the waters of the Mississippi,
+or were in part incorporated with themselves, or yet exist in the Far
+West, under other names, we have various traditions for asserting or
+believing.
+
+[D] Indian Picture Writing.
+
+Thus far we are speaking of the ante-historical period. When the
+colonies came to be planted, and our ancestors spread themselves along
+the Atlantic coast, from the initial points of settlement in Virginia,
+Nova Belgica, and New England, the Iroquois were already well seated,
+and spoke and acted, whenever they desired to make allusion to the
+matter, as if they had been _forever_ seated on the soil they then
+occupied. To conceal the fact of their title being held by right of
+conquest, or to supply the actual want of history, one tribe, the
+Oneidas, asserted that they had sprung from a rock. Another, the
+Wyandots, alleged that they came out of the ground by the fiat of the
+great spirit. [Oneota.] None of them acknowledged a _foreign origin_
+beyond seas. None of them acknowledged, at first, that they knew aught
+of the ancient mound-builders and people who built the old
+fortifications in the West, or in their own country; but they
+subsequently connected, or accommodated these mounds, to their war with
+the Alleghans. This is in accordance with Indian policy, and suspicious
+foresight. When closely questioned, they told Gov. Clinton that these
+old works were by an _earlier_ people, and that their oldest traditions
+related to their wars with the Cherokees, and the people of the extreme
+south. That they originally dwelt in those latitudes--that they migrated
+north through the Ohio valley, around the Alleghanies, and came into
+Western New-York from the borders of the Lakes and the St. Lawrence, are
+points very well denoted by their languages, vestiges of arts,
+geographical nomenclature and history, so far as we have had the means
+of recording it.
+
+Cartier, in 1535, found them seated at Hochelaga, the present site of
+Montreal. They had an ancient station, as low down the Connecticut at
+least, as Northfield. Towards the north of lakes Ontario and Erie, they
+extended to the chain of lakes which stretches through from the northern
+shores of the former to lake Huron. It is seen from Le Jeune, that they
+ordered the Wyandots of the ancient Hochelaga Canton, who had formed an
+alliance with the French and with the Algonquins, to quit that spot, and
+remove into the territory south of the lakes. And in default of this,
+they warred against them, and drove them west, through the great chain
+of lakes to Michilimackinac, and even to the western extremity of lake
+Superior.
+
+The period of the settlement of Canada, ripened causes of hostility to
+the entire Algonquin, or as they called them, Adirondak race, into
+maturity. The Wyandot alliance with the French gave an edge to this
+contest, and having soon been supplied with guns and ammunition by the
+Dutch, they defeated this race in several sanguinary battles between
+Montreal and Quebec, and drove them out of this valley, by the way of
+the Ontario river, and pursued them to their villages and hunting
+grounds in area of lakes Huron, Michigan and Algoma. They defeated the
+Kah Kwahes or Eries. They pushed their war parties, from the lakes,
+through to the MIAMI, the WABASH, and the ILLINOIS, on the latter of
+which they were encountered by La Salle and his people, in his early
+expedition, in the seventeenth century. Their great avenue to the west,
+the avenue by which, in part at least, they appear to have migrated at
+an early day, was the Alleghany river, through which, they continued to
+exercise their ancient or acquired authority in the Ohio valley, and the
+Alleghanian range.
+
+Back on this route, they continued their war expeditions against the
+tribes of the southern Alleghanies _at_ and, for some time, _after_ the
+era of the first settlement of the country. The point of their
+hostility, was directed against the Catawbas, the Cherokees, and their
+allies, the Abiecas, Hutchees and others. Smith encountered them on
+these wars, in the interior of Virginia, in 1608. And it is well known,
+that they brought off their brothers, the Tuscaroras, after the
+settlement of North Carolina, and gave them a location among themselves,
+and a seat at their council fire, in Western New-York.
+
+Launching their war canoes on the Delaware and the Susquehanna, they
+extended their sway over the present area of New-Jersey, Pennsylvania,
+Delaware and Maryland, bringing under their sovereign power, that member
+of the great Algonic family of America, who call themselves Lenni
+Lenapees, but who are better known in our history as Delawares. Go which
+way the traveler will, even at this day, for a thousand miles west,
+southwest and northwest of their great council fire at Onondaga, and the
+inquirer will find that the name of a NADOWA, which is the Algonquin
+term for Iroquois, was a word of terror to the remotest tribes. Writers
+tell us it was the same throughout New England. By the peaceful and wise
+policy of the Dutch prior to 1664, and of the English subsequent to that
+date, this confederacy was kept in our interest; and he must be a
+careless reader of our history, who does not know, that they formed a
+perfect wall of defence against the encroachments of the French Crown
+upon our territories. It was to curb this power, and gain some permanent
+foot-hold on the soil, that La Salle built fort Niagara in 1678.
+Vaudruiel, the Governor General of New France, could give no stronger
+reason to his King, for taking post on the straits of Detroit, and
+fortifying that point, in 1701, than that it would enable him to "curb
+the Iroquois." [Oneota.]
+
+But, I do not stand before you to enter into a critical history of the
+Iroquois' powers. Who has not heard of their fame and prowess--of their
+indomitable courage in war,--of their admirable policy in peace: of
+their eloquence in council: of the noble fire of patriotic
+independence, which led them to defend the integrity of their soil
+against all invaders; and of the triumphs they achieved, throughout
+ABORIGINAL AMERICA, by the wisdom of their principles of confederation.
+The history of their rise and early progress, we shall probably never
+satisfactorily know. It is said by early writers, that the origin of
+their confederation was not very remote. But so much as we know of
+them--so much of their career as has passed while we have been their
+neighbors, proves that they had well established claims to
+antiquity--that they were a free, bold and valorous stock of the human
+race--that they had thought to plan, language to express, and energy to
+execute.--Compared to other races north of the tropics, there were two
+principles, apparent in their history, which give them the palm, as
+statesmen and warriors, although in some other departments of
+intellectual attainment, they were probably excelled by certain of the
+Algonquins. I allude to the principles of political union; and the wise
+and humane policy, which led them to adopt, into their body, the
+remnants of the nations whom they conquered. Here were two elements of
+political power, in which they were not only a century in advance of
+_all_ the other stocks of the north; but they were in advance of the
+most prominent examples of the semi-civilized Indian tribes of _this_
+day.--Neither the Choctaws, the Cherokees, or other expatriated tribes
+now assembled on the Neosho territory, west of the Mississippi, although
+they adopted governments for themselves, have had the wisdom to adopt a
+general union.--The worst and most discouraging fact to the friends of
+the aboriginal race, in these Tribes, is, that they will not
+confederate. Discord, internal and external, has assailed them with
+great power, in late years, and threaten even to defeat the humane
+policy of the government, in their colonization.
+
+So superior were the Iroquois, in this particular, so deeply imbued were
+their minds with the wisdom of union; that had the discovery of the
+continent, been postponed half a century longer, they would have
+presented a compact representative empire in North America, far more
+stable, energetic and sound, if not so brilliant as that of Mexico. They
+were a people of physically better nerve and mould. Of ample stature and
+great personal activity and courage, they were capable of offering a
+more efficient resistance to their invaders. The climate itself was more
+favorable to energetic action; and it can scarcely be deemed fanciful to
+assert, that had Hernando Cortez, in 1519, entered the Mohawk Valley,
+instead of that of Mexico, with the force he actually had, his ranks
+would have gone down under the skillfulness of the Iroquois' ambuscades,
+and himself perished ingloriously at the stake.
+
+The number of warriors they could bring into the field, was large,
+although it has probably been over-rated. Let it not be overlooked, in
+estimating the ancient vigor and military power of this race, that in
+1677, one year after the _final_ transfer of political power, in
+New-York, from the Stadtholder of Holland to the British crown, the
+Iroquois wielded more than 2000 hatches. [Clint's Dis. N. Y. Col. Vol.
+2, p. 80.] Sixteen hundred of these warriors, are estimated to have
+ranged themselves on the side of Great Britain, in the memorable contest
+of the Revolution.
+
+Misled in this contest, they certainly were--doubting long which of two
+branches of the same white race, they should side with, but overpowered
+by external pomp, by specious promises, and by false appearances, they
+committed a fatal mistake. They fought, in fact, against the very
+principles of republican confederation, which they had so long upheld in
+their own body, and which, I may add, had so long upheld them. They
+perilled all upon the issue; and the issue went against them. Their
+great and eloquent leader Thayendanegea, better known as Joseph Brant,
+had been educated in British schools, he could speak two tongues, and
+his counsels prevailed. He was not in the old line of the
+chieftainship, but had placed himself at the head of the confederacy by
+his brilliant talents, and by favorable circumstances. That line fell
+with the great Mohawk sachem Hendrick, at the battle of lake George, in
+1755, and with the wise civilian Little Abraham, who in right of his
+mother, succeeded him, and died at his Castle at Dionderoga. Brant was,
+however, a man of great energy of character, of shrewd principles of
+policy, and of great personal, as well as moral courage. As a war
+captain and a civil leader, the Red Race of America has produced no
+superior. He led 1580 tomahawks against the armies of the Revolution--at
+his war cry 15,000 arrows were launched from their fatal bows. The voice
+of Kirkland--the voice of Schuyler--the voice of Washington were exerted
+in vain. Had he hearkened to these friendly voices, the Iroquois
+confederacy would now have stood in the plenitude of power, and we
+should not have assembled to-day to light the fires of this Young
+Institution from its dying embers.
+
+These things are past. The contest of the revolution was one, which our
+fathers waged. Many of you may have heard the graphic recitals of those
+days of peril, as I have, from the lips of actors, who now rest from
+their toils.--They were days of high and sanguinary import. The deeds of
+daring which they brought forth, came like a mighty tempest over the
+face of this fair land. It prostrated many a noble trunk. It swept for
+seven long years, over the beauteous lakes and forests, which now
+constitute our homes. It left them almost denuded and desolate. But the
+mild airs and gentle summer winds of peace succeeded. The hoarse voice
+of the Iroquois, O-WAY-NE-O, has been transformed into the soft and
+silver tones of GOD. Flowers and fruits, and fields of waving grain,
+soon rose up in every valley, and shed their fragrance along every
+sylvan shore. Joy and prosperity succeeded the arrowy storm of war. And
+it has been given to us, to carry out scenes of improvement, and of
+moral and intellectual progress, which providence, in its profound
+workings, has deemed it best for the prosperity of man, that _we_, and
+not _they_, should be entrusted with. We have succeeded to their
+inheritance: but we regard them as brothers. We cherish their memory: we
+admire their virtues; and we aim to rescue from oblivion their noble
+deeds.
+
+I have merely alluded to the importance of the Iroquois decision at the
+critical period, 1776. The erroneous policy they adopted, with some
+exceptions, is among the events of past times, which wiser and more
+learned and resplendent nations, than they professed to be, have
+committed. We regret the error of the decision, but we hold fellowship
+with the man. He is our brother; and we meet this day to consecrate a
+literary institution in the land, more enduring, we trust, than deeds of
+strife and battle, and better suited to elicit studies to exalt the
+heart and dignify the understanding. Your weapons are not spears and
+clubs, but letters. Your means are the quiet and peaceful paths of
+inquiry. If these paths are often obscured by the foot of time and
+tangled by the interlacings of history and antiquity, be it yours to put
+the branches aside, and lead the right way. Truth is your aim, and
+justice and benevolence your guides. They hold before you the lamp of
+science so clearly, that you cannot mistake your way. While you essay,
+with modesty and diligence to tread in this path, and render justice to
+a proud and noble branch of the aboriginal race, your ultimate ends are
+moral improvement, the accumulation of useful facts, and the general
+advancement of historical letters.
+
+You have selected, out of a wide field of aboriginal nations, the
+history and ethnography of the Iroquois, as the theme of your particular
+inquiries. To us, at least, these Tribes, stand in the most interesting
+relations. They occupied our soil; they gave names to our rivers and
+mountains. They figure in the foreground of our history. The very names
+of the minor streams and lakes we dwell beside, bring up, by
+association, the free and bold race, who once claimed them as their
+patrimony. Before Columbus set out, on his solitary mule, to solicit the
+patronage of Ferdinand and Isabella, they were here. Before Hudson
+dropped anchor north of the, to him, wonderful peaks of the Ontiora, or
+Highlands, they were here. Other Indian races have left their names on
+other portions of the continent. The names of the Missouri and
+Mississippi, the Alleghany and the Oregon, we trace to other stocks of
+red men. But the Akonoshioni, or Iroquois, has consecrated the early
+history of Western New-York. Their history is, to some extent, our
+history; and we turn, with intellectual refreshment from the thread-bare
+themes of Europe and the Europeans, to trace the humble sepulchres where
+the Iroquois buried his dead--the mounds, which entombed his rulers or
+his battle slain,--or lifted on high, his sacrificial lights--the long
+and half obliterated trenches of embankments which encompassed his
+ancient towns--the heaps of stone that lie at the angles and sally ports
+of his simple fortresses, on the circular trenches, which enclosed his
+beacon fires on the mountain tops. It is in localities of this kind,
+that the ploughman turns up fragments of the Red Man's time wasted and
+broken pottery--his stone pestles, his carved pipes, and his skilfully
+chipped arrow heads, and spear heads, and tomahawks of stone. These, and
+analogous remains, are the objects of our antiquarian researches.
+Prouder monuments he had none. There was neither column, nor arch,
+statue nor inscription. But we may trace, by a careful inspection of the
+objects, the state and progress of his ancient and rude arts. We may
+denote, by their occurrence, in the same localities, the era of the
+arrival of the white man. We may establish other eras, from geological
+changes,--the growth of forest trees, and other inductive means.
+
+There are three eras in American antiquity.
+
+1. Vestiges of their primary migration and origin.
+
+2. Vestiges of their international changes and intestine wars, prior to
+the discovery of the continent by Columbus.
+
+3. Evidences of wars, migrations and remains of occupancy, subsequent to
+the arrival of Europeans.
+
+These are to be studied in the inverse order of their being stated. We
+must proceed from the known to the unknown--from the recent, to the
+remote.
+
+Ethnography offers a species of proof, to determine the migrations and
+divisions in the original family of man, which is to be drawn from
+geographical considerations--the relative position of islands, seas and
+continents--the means of subsistence as governed and limited by climate,
+and soil; the state of ancient arts, agriculture, languages, &c.
+
+Philology denotes the affinities of nations, by the analogies of words,
+and forms of syntax, and the place of expressing ideas.
+
+The remains of arts, monuments, inscriptions, hieroglyphics, picture
+writing, and architecture, constitute so many means of comparing one
+nation with another, and thus determining their affinities; and although
+most of our aboriginal nations had made but little progress in these
+departments, the state of ruins in Mexico, Central Mexico and Yucatan;
+the mounds and fortifications of the West; and even the remains of forts
+and barrows in Western New-York, entitle them to consideration.
+
+There is another department of observation on our aborigines, which,
+from the light it has shed on the mental characteristics of the Algic,
+and some other stocks, offers a new field for investigation. I allude to
+the subject of the imaginative legends and tales of the Red Race. Such
+tales have been found abundantly in the lodge circles of the tribes
+about the Upper Lakes and the source of the Mississippi. They reveal the
+sources of many of their peculiar opinions on life, death, and
+immortality, and open, if I may so say, a vista to the philosophy of
+the Indian mind, and the theory of his religion.
+
+An ample field for investigation is thus before you. And it is one full
+of attractions alike for the man of science, research, learned leisure
+and philosophy. But it is not alone to these, that the Red man and his
+associations, present a field for study and contemplation. His history
+and existence on this continent, is blended with the richest sources of
+poetry and imagination. His beautiful and sonorous geographical
+nomenclature alone, has clothed our hills and lakes and streams, with
+the charms of poetic numbers.--The Red man himself, who once roved these
+attractive scenes, with his bow and arrows, and his brow crowned with
+the highest honors of the war path and the chase, was a being of NOBLE
+MOULD. He felt the true sentiment of independence. He was capable of
+high deeds of courage, disinterestedness and virtue. His generosity and
+hospitality were unbounded. His constancy in professed friendship was
+universal, and his memory of a good deed, done to him, or his kindred,
+never faded. His breast was animated with a noble thirst of fame. To
+acquire this, he trod the war path, he submitted to long and severe
+privations. Neither fatigue, hunger or thirst were permitted to gain the
+mastery over him. A stoic in endurance he was above complaint, and when
+a prisoner at the stake, he triumphed over his enemy in his death song.
+The history of such a people must be full of deep tragic and poetic
+incidents; and their antiquities, cannot fail to illustrate it.--The
+tomb that holds a man, derives all its moral interest _from_ the man,
+and would be destitute of it, without him. America is the tomb of the
+Red man.
+
+A single objection, to the plan of the institution, remains to be
+answered. It may be deemed too intricate and complex to secure unity in
+action. The inquiries are admitted to be interesting and capable of
+furnishing intellectual aliment for a literary society; but why not
+establish it on plain principles, in the ordinary mode? All that is
+sought, it may be said, could be accomplished without such a weight of
+associated machinery. By organizing it on the basis of the several
+tribes, and the several clans of each tribe; spreading over so wide an
+area of territory, and adopting so many of the aboriginal peculiarities,
+in terms, form of admission, and you have exposed the institution to
+serious objections, and to the danger of an early decline. But, are not
+these traits, rather the guarantees of its success and perpetuity? It
+addresses itself, particularly to the YOUNG. To them, it brings the
+attractions of novelty. Much of the ardor of association and desire of
+action, peculiar to this age, may find its gratification in these
+co-fraternal, and ceremonial observances; and be supposed to act as
+stimulants to the higher, and ulterior objects of the association. These
+objects are, both in their nature, and associations, of an inspiring
+cast. They bring before you, a new world, with its ancient inhabitants,
+as themes of contemplation. And these themes spring up, with a freshness
+and vigor, well suited to attract the pen and pencil.--Tired with poring
+over the dusty volumes, which detail the ruins of the temples and cities
+of the eastern hemisphere, the spirit of research asks, whether, in the
+very magnificence of the continent, there be not now a temple, whose
+history is worth study? Cloyed with the accounts handed down of the
+renowned places and renowned men of antiquity, it is inquired, whether
+these broad forests and far-spread vistas of woods and waters, do not
+conceal something of the foot-prints of past time, which is worth labor
+and learning to investigate, and reveal?
+
+Nature is found here, in some of her sublimest moods. She is still in
+her questive youth, but it is a youth of gigantic proportions. Her
+largest rivers occupy thousands of miles in displaying their winding
+channels, between these sources and their outlets, in the sea. Her broad
+forests still wave with their leafy honors unshorn. Her lakes occupy a
+length and breadth and depth, which give them far more the aspect of
+seas. Ships, bear a heavy commerce on their bosoms, and navies have
+battled for supremacy upon their ample breasts. It is a region destined
+for the human race to develope itself and expand in. It is a seat
+prepared for the re-union of the different stocks of mankind. It is an
+area of magnificent extent. Higher mountains fill other parts of the
+world, and other parts of _this_ continent. The Alps, the Atlas, the
+Andes and the Cordilleras reach into the skies, but they encumber the
+earth with their vast proportions, and render the surface sterile. They
+take away from the area of tillable soil, and add it to waste and
+unprofitable districts. If our greatest elevations, are humble compared
+to these, they are clothed with verdure, and break into countless
+valleys, which afford a habitation to man. No country on the globe
+abounds with so many beautiful lakes of every size, and our rivers
+display a succession of cataracts and falls, alike attractive to the eye
+of taste and art.
+
+Is all this profusion designed to employ the pens of naturalists and
+statesmen only? Is there no field in the mighty past, for the
+philosopher and the historian? for the ethnologist and the antiquarian?
+Is civilized man alone the only object, wanting in the consideration of
+its former history? We answer, no. Centuries on centuries have passed
+away, since first the Red man planted his foot on this continent. The
+very paucity of his knowledge and simplicity of his arts, tell a story
+of great antiquity. The diversities of language answer to the same end.
+And, for aught that is known, long before the eras of Socrates and
+Pythagoras, Plato and Confucius, the Mongol and the Persian. The Tartar
+and the Mesopotamean, the Chinese and Japanese, and we know not how many
+other shades of the Red man of Asia, were in AWONEO[E] or America. Of
+their wonderful histories and wars and overturnings, by land and sea,
+of their mixtures and intermixtures of blood and language and lineage
+and nationality, we know little, or nothing. But, after all the
+centuries of separation, we find in his physiological characteristics
+and conformation of visage and expression, the same Asiatic type of
+man--whom the first adventurers to these shores, did not hesitate to
+pronounce the man of India. Use, has perpetuated the term, and if the
+discoveries of geography, have, ages since, shown the appellation of
+Indians, in the sense then employed, to be incorrect, physiologists and
+ethnographers, have but found stronger and stronger proofs, that Asia,
+in preference to every other quarter of the globe, was the true land of
+his origin.
+
+[E] Onondaga.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+In Indian mythology may be found the richest poetic materials. An
+American Author is unworthy of the land that gave him birth if he passes
+by with indifference this well-spring of inspiration, sending liberally
+forth a thousand enchanted streams. It has given spiritual inhabitants
+to our valleys, rivers, hills and inland seas; it has peopled the dim
+and awful depths of our forests with spectres, and, by the power of
+association, given our scenery a charm that will make it attractive
+forever. The material eye is gratified by a passing glimpse of nature's
+external features, but a beauty, unseen, unknown before, invests them if
+linked to stories of the past, in the creation of which fabling fancy
+has been a diligent co-worker with memory.
+
+The red man was a being who delighted in the mystical and the wild--it
+was a part of his woodland inheritance. Good and evil genii performed
+for him their allotted tasks. Joyous tidings, freedom from disease and
+disaster--success in the chase, and on the war path were traceable to
+the Master of Life and his subordinate ministers:--blight that fell upon
+the corn was attributed, on the contrary, to demoniac agency, and the
+shaft that missed its mark was turned aside by the invisible hand of
+some mischievous sprite. Deities presided over the elements. The
+Chippewas have their little wild men of the woods, that remind us of
+Puck and his frolicsome brotherhood, and the dark son of the wilderness,
+like our first parents
+
+ --"from the steep
+ Of echoing hill or thicket often heard
+ Celestial voices."
+
+My tent is pitched on the hunting grounds of the Senecas, (or
+So-non-ton-ons) and I deem it not inappropriate to select for my theme
+the Legend of their origin.
+
+Different versions of the story are in circulation, but I have been
+guided mainly, in the narrative part of my poem, by notes taken down
+after an interview with the late Captain Horatio Jones, the Indian
+Interpreter of the Six Nations.
+
+The great hill at the head of Canandaigua Lake, from whence the Senecas
+sprung, is called Genundewah. Tradition says that it was crowned by a
+fort to which the braves of the tribe resorted at night-fall, after
+waging war with a race of giants. These giants were worshippers of
+Ut-co, or the Evil Spirit, who sent, after their extermination, a great
+serpent to destroy the conquerors. Quitting its watery lair in
+Canandaigua Lake, the monster encircled their fortification. The head
+and tail completed a horrid _ring_ at the gateway, and, when half
+famished, the wretched inmates vainly attempted to escape. All were
+destroyed with the exception of a pair, whose miraculous preservation is
+related in the poem that follows. Ever after Genundewah was a chosen
+seat of Iroquois Council, and wrinkled seers were in the habit of
+climbing its sides for the purpose of offering up prayers to the Great
+Spirit.
+
+
+
+
+GENUNDEWAH,
+
+[A LEGEND OF CANANDAIGUA LAKE.]
+
+BY WILLIAM H. C. HOSMER.
+
+WRITTEN AT THE REQUEST OF THE "NEW CONFEDERATION OF THE IROQUOIS," AND
+PRONOUNCED BEFORE THEM IN GENERAL COUNCIL, AT AURORA, AUGUST 15th, 1845.
+
+
+I.
+
+ Why, Chieftain, linger on this barren hill
+ That overbrows yon azure sheet below?
+ Red sunset glimmers on the leaping rill,
+ Dark night is near, and we have far to go.
+ This scene--replied he leaning on big bow--
+ Is hallowed by tradition--wondrous birth
+ Here to my Tribe was given long ago;
+ We stand where rose they from disparting earth
+ To light a deathless blaze on Fame's unmouldering hearth.
+
+
+II.
+
+ A fort they reared upon this summit bleak
+ Guided by counsel from the Spirit Land,
+ And clad in dart-proof panoply would seek
+ The plains beneath each morn, a valiant band,
+ And warfare wage with giants hand to hand:
+ They conquered in the struggle, and the bones
+ Of their dead foemen on the echoing strand
+ Of the clear lake lay blent with wave-washed stones,
+ And pale, unbodied ghosts filled air with hollow moans.
+
+
+III.
+
+ Ut-co, the scowling King of Evil, heard
+ The voice of lamentation, and wild ire
+ The depths of his remorseless bosom stirr'd;
+ Of that gigantic brood he was the sire,
+ And flying from his cavern, arched with fire,
+ He hovered o'er these, waters--at his call
+ Up rushed a hideous monster, spire on spire;--
+ _Call_ so astounding that the rocky wall
+ Of this blue chain of hills seemed tott'ring to its fall!
+
+
+IV.
+
+ With his infernal parent for a guide,
+ The hungry serpent left his watery lair,
+ Dragging his scaly terrors up the side
+ Of this tall hill, now desolate and bare:
+ Filled with alarm the Senecas espied
+ His dread approach, and launched a whizzing shower
+ Of arrows on the foe, whose iron hide
+ Repelled their flinty points--and in that hour
+ The boldest warrior fled from strife with fiendish power.
+
+
+V.
+
+ The loathsome messenger of wo and death
+ True to his dark and awful mission wound,
+ Polluting air with his envenom'd breath,
+ Huge folds the palisadoed camp around:
+ Crouched at his master's feet the faithful hound,
+ And raised a piteous and despairing cry;
+ No outlet of escape the mother found
+ For her imploring infants, and on high
+ Lifted her trembling hands in voiceless agony.
+
+
+VI.
+
+ Forming a hideous circle at the gate
+ The reptile's head and tail together lay;
+ Distended were the fang-set jaws in wait
+ For victims, thus beleaguered, night and day;
+ And not unlike the red and angry ray
+ Shot by the bearded comet was the light
+ Of his unslumbering eye that watched for prey;
+ His burnished mail flashed back the sunshine bright,
+ And round him pale the woods grew with untimely blight.
+
+
+VII.
+
+ When famine raged within their guarded hold,
+ And wan distemper thinn'd their numbers fast,
+ Crowding the narrow gateway young and old
+ With the fixed look of desperation passed
+ From life to dreadful death--a charnel vast--
+ The reptile's yawning throat entombed the strong,
+ And lovely of the Tribe:--remained at last
+ Two lovers only of that mighty throng
+ To chaunt with feeble voice a nation's funeral song.
+
+
+VIII.
+
+ Comely to look on was the youthful pair:--
+ One, like the mountain pine erect and tall,
+ Was of imposing presence;--his dark hair
+ Had caught its hue from night's descending pall;
+ Light was his tread--his port majestical,
+ And well his kingly brow became a form
+ Of matchless beauty:--like the rise and fall
+ Of a strong billow in the hour of storm
+ Beat his undaunted heart with glory's impulse warm.
+
+
+IX.
+
+ Graced was his belt by beads of dazzling sheen
+ And painted quills--the handiwork of one
+ Dearer than life to him;--though he had seen
+ From the gray hills, beneath a wasting sun,
+ Only the snows of twenty winters run,
+ The warrior's right his scalp lock to adorn
+ With eagle plumes in battle he had won:
+ O'erjoyed were prophets old when he was born,
+ And hailed him with one voice "_First Sunbeam of the Morn_."
+
+
+X.
+
+ The other!--what of her?--bright shapes beyond
+ This darkened earth wear looks like those she wore;
+ Graceful her mien as lilly of the pond
+ That nods to every wind that passes o'er
+ Its fragrant head a welcome:--never more
+ By loveliness so rare will earth be blest;
+ Softer than ripple breaking on the shore
+ By moonlight was her voice, and in her breast
+ Pure thought a dwelling found--the Bird of Love a nest.
+
+
+XI.
+
+ Round her would hop unscared the sinless bird,
+ And court the lustre of her gentle glance,
+ Hushing each wood-note wild whene'er it heard
+ Her song of joy:--her countenance
+ Inspired beholders with a thought that chance
+ Had borne her hither from some better land:--
+ To deck her tresses for the festive dance
+ Girls of the tribe would bring, with liberal hand,
+ Blossoms and rose-lipped shells from bower and reedy strand.
+
+
+XII.
+
+ A thing of beauty is the slender vine
+ That wreaths its verdant arm around the oak
+ As if it there could safely intertwine
+ Shielded from ringing axe--the lightning stroke--
+ And like that vine the girl of whom I spoke
+ Clung to her companion:--scalding tears
+ Rained from her elk-like eyes, and sobs outbroke
+ From her o'er-labored bosom, while her ears
+ Were filled with soothing tones that did not hush her fears.
+
+
+XIII.
+
+ Mourner! the hour of rescue is at hand!
+ This hill will tremble to its rocky base
+ When Ou-wee ne-you utters stern command;
+ Joy ere another fleeting moon the trace
+ Of clouding sorrow from thy brow will chase:--
+ Fear not!--for I am left to guard thee yet
+ Last of the daughters of a luckless race!
+ We must not in the time of grief forget
+ That light breaks forth anew from orbs that darkly set.
+
+
+XIV.
+
+ Thus, day by day, would O-wen-do-skah strive
+ To cheer the drooping spirits of the maid,
+ And keep one glimmering spark of hope alive;
+ In the deep midnight for celestial aid,
+ While cowered the trembler at his knee, he prayed
+ In tones that might have touched a heart of rock:
+ One morn exclaimed he--"be no more afraid
+ Bright, peerless scion of a broken stock,
+ For Heaven the monster's coil is arming to unlock.
+
+
+XV.
+
+ "Reserved for some high destiny despite
+ The downfall of our people we live on--
+ My dreams were of deliverance last night,
+ And peril of impending death withdrawn:
+ A light, my weeping one, begins to dawn
+ On the thick gloom by sorrow round us cast;
+ The lead-like pressure of despair is gone,
+ And rides a viewless courier on the blast
+ Who whispers--Lo! the hour of vengeance comes at last.
+
+
+XVI.
+
+ "Gorged with his meal of gore unstirring sleeps
+ In his tremendous ring our mortal foe:
+ Film-veiled his savage eye no longer keeps
+ Grim watch for victims--warily and slow!
+ Follow thy lover arrived with bended bow
+ Of timber shaped, in many a battle tried--
+ Some guardian spirit will before me throw
+ A shield by human vision undescried
+ Should he awake in wrath, and hence our footsteps guide."
+
+
+XVII.
+
+ It was I ween a sight to freeze each vein
+ That courses through our perishable clay
+ When sallied forth with muffled tread the twain;
+ A look of wild, unutterable dismay
+ Convulsed Te-yos-yu's[F] visage while the way,
+ A spear-length in advance, her lover led:
+ Reaching the portal paused he to survey
+ The dangerous pass through which a grisly head
+ Deprest to earth he saw, its mouth with murder red.
+
+[F] Bright eye.
+
+
+XVIII.
+
+ "On! On!"--he whispered--"and the sightless mole
+ Our footfall must not hear, or we are lost:"
+ Nerved to high purpose was his war-like soul
+ As the dark threshold of the gate he cross'd;
+ But fear that instant chilled his limbs with frost,
+ For high its swollen neck the monster raised
+ Gore dripping from its jaws with foam embossed,
+ And rimmed with fire, and circling eye-ball blazed
+ As light unwounding dart its horrid armor grazed.
+
+
+XIX.
+
+ Sick by a foul and fetid odor made
+ Recoiled the champion from unequal fray;
+ Cut off all hope of rescue, he surveyed
+ Fiercely the danger like a stag at bay:
+ Where was Te-yos-yu?--she had swooned away,
+ And hoof-crushed wild-flower of the forest brown
+ Resembled her as soiled with mould she lay;
+ Long on the _seeming corpse_ the chief looked down,
+ For 'twas a sight the cup of his despair to crown.
+
+
+XX.
+
+ Kneeling at length, upheld he with strong arm
+ Her beauteous head, but in the temples beat
+ No pulse of life:--tears gushing fast and warm
+ Refresh a heart, of transcient ill the seat,
+ As raindrops cool the summer's midday heat;
+ But when descends some desolating blow
+ That makes this world a desert, how unmeet
+ Is outward symbol!--and far, far below
+ The water-mark of grief was Oh-wen-do-skah's wo!
+
+
+XXI.
+
+ In broken tones he murmured--"must the name
+ Of a great people be revived no more,
+ And like an echo pass away their fame,
+ Or moccasin's faint impress on the shore
+ Of the salt lake when billows foam and roar?
+ Black night enwraps my soul, for she is dead
+ Who was its light--desire to live is o'er!"
+ Scarce were these words in mournful accent said,
+ When peals of thunder shook low vale and mountain-head.
+
+
+XXII.
+
+ Up sprang the Chief;--and on a throne of cloud,
+ Robed in a snowy mantle fringed with light,
+ The Lord of life beheld:--the forest bowed
+ Its head in awe before that presence bright,
+ And a wild shudder at the dazzling sight
+ Ran through the mighty monster's knotted ring
+ Shaking the hill from base to rocky height;
+ Rose from her trance the maid with fawn-like spring,
+ And balanced in mid-air the bird on trembling wing.
+
+
+XXIII.
+
+ "Notch on the twisted sinew of thy bow
+ This fatal weapon"--Ou-wee-ne-you[G] cried,
+ Dropping a golden shaft--"and pierce the foe
+ Under the rounded scale that wall his side!"
+ Then vanished, while again the valley wide
+ And mountain quaked with thunder:--from the ground
+ The warrior raised the gift of Heaven, and hied
+ On his heroic mission while around
+ The hill with closer clasp his train the serpent wound.
+
+[G] Great Spirit.
+
+
+XXIV.
+
+ Flame-hued and hissing played its nimble tongue
+ Between thick, ghastly rows of pointed bone
+ Round which commingled gore and venom clung:
+ Raging its flattened head like copper shone,
+ And flinty earth returned a heavy groan
+ Lashed by quick strokes of its resounding tail;
+ Heard is like uproar when the hills bleak cone
+ Is wildly beat by winter's icy flail,
+ But in that moment dire the archer did not quail.
+
+
+XXV.
+
+ Firm in one hand his trusty bow he held,
+ And with the other to its glittering head
+ Drew the long shaft while full each muscle swell'd;
+ A twanging sound!--and on its errand sped
+ The messenger of vengeance:--warm and red
+ Gushed from a gaping wound the vital tide--
+ Wrenched was the granite from its ancient bed,
+ And pines were broken in their leafy pride,
+ When throes of mortal pain the monster's coil untied.
+
+
+XXVI.
+
+ Down the steep hill outstretched and dead he rolled
+ Disgorging human heads in his descent;
+ Oaks that in earth had deeply fixed their hold
+ Like reeds by that revolving mass were bent,
+ Splintered their boughs as if by thunder rent:
+ High flung the troubled lake its glittering spray,
+ And far the beach with flakes of foam besprent,
+ When the huge carcass disappeared for aye
+ In depths from whence it rose to curse the beams of day.
+
+
+XXVII.
+
+ When winds its murmuring bosom cease to wake
+ Through bright transparent waves you may discern
+ On the hard, pebbled bottom of the lake
+ Skulls changed to stone:--when fires no longer burn
+ Kindled by sunset, and the glistening urn
+ Of night o'erflows with dew the phantoms pale
+ Of matron, maid, child, seer and chieftain stern
+ Their ghastly faces to the moon unveil,
+ And raise upon the shore a low heart-broken wail.
+
+
+XXVIII.
+
+ The lovers of Genundewah were blest
+ By the Great Spirit, and their lodge became
+ The nursery of a nation:--when the West
+ Opened its gates of parti-colored flame
+ To give their souls free passage loud acclaim
+ Rang through the Spirit Land, and voices cried
+ "Welcome! ye builders of eternal fame!
+ Ye royal founders of an empire wide
+ The stream of joy flows by, quaff ever from its tide!"
+
+
+XXIX.
+
+ At Onondaga burned the sacred fire
+ A thousand winters with unwasting blaze;
+ In guarding it son emulated sire,
+ And far abroad were flung its dazzling rays:
+ Followed were happy years by evil days--
+ Blue-eyed and pale came Children of the Dawn
+ Tall spires on site of bark-built town to raise;
+ Change groves of beauty to a naked lawn,
+ And whirl their chariot wheels where led the doe her fawn.
+
+
+XXX.
+
+ Where are the mighty?--morning finds them not!
+ I call--and echo gives response alone;
+ The fiery bolt of Ruin hath been shot,
+ The blow is struck--the winds of death have blown!
+ Cold are the hearths--their altars overthrown:
+ For them with smoking venison the board,
+ Reward of toilsome chase, no more will groan;
+ Sharper than hatchet proved the conqueror's sword,
+ And blood, in fruitless strife, like water they outpoured.
+
+
+XXXI.
+
+ The spotted Demon of Contagion came
+ Ere the sacred bird of Peace could find a nest,
+ And vanished Tribes like summer grass when flame
+ Reddens the level prairie of the West,
+ Or wasting dew drops when the rocky crest
+ Of this enchanted hill is tipped with gold;
+ And ere the Genii of the wild-wood drest
+ With flowers and moss the grave mound's hollowed mould,
+ Before the ringing axe went down the forest old.
+
+
+XXXII.
+
+ Oh! where is Gar-an-gu-la--Sachem wise?
+ Who was the father of his people?--where
+ King Hendrick, Cay-en-guac-to?--_who replies?_
+ And Sken-an-do-ah, was thy silver hair
+ Brought to the dust in sorrow and despair
+ By pale oppression, though thy bow was strong
+ To guard their Thirteen Fires?--they did not spare
+ E'en thee, old chieftain, and thy tuneful tongue
+ The death-dirge of thy race in measured cadence sung.
+
+
+XXXIII.
+
+ Thea-an-de-nea-gua[H] of the martial brow,
+ Gy-ant-wa,[I] Hon-ne-ya-was[J] where are they?
+ Sa-go-ye-wat-hah![K] is _he silent_ now?
+ No more will listening throngs his voice obey.
+ Like visions have the mighty passed away!
+ Their tears descend in rain-drops, and their sighs
+ Are heard in wailing winds when evening gray
+ Shadows the landscape, and their mournful eyes
+ Gleam in the misty light of moon-illumin'd skies.
+
+[H] Brunt.
+
+[I] Corn Planter.
+
+[J] Farmer's Brother.
+
+[K] Red Jacket.
+
+
+XXXIV.
+
+ Gone are my tribesmen, and another race,
+ _Born of the foam_, disclose with plough and spade
+ Secrets of battle-field and burial-place;
+ And hunting grounds, once dark with pleasant shade,
+ Bask in the golden light:--but I have made
+ A pilgrimage from far to look once more
+ On scenes through which in childhood's hour I strayed,
+ Though robbed of might my limbs, my locks all hoar,
+ And on this Holy Mount mourn for the days of yore,
+
+
+XXXV.
+
+ Our house is broken open at both ends
+ Though deeply set the posts, its timber strong--
+ From ruthless foes, and traitors masked as friends,
+ Tutored to sing a false but pleasant song
+ The Seneca and Mohawk guarded long
+ Its blood-stained doors:--the _former_ faced the sun
+ In his decline--the _latter_ watched a throng
+ Clouding the eastern hills--their tasks are done;
+ A game for life was played, and prize the white man won.
+
+
+XXXVI.
+
+ Around me soon will bloom unfading flowers
+ Ye glorious Spirit Islands of the just!
+ No fatal axe will hew away your bowers,
+ Or lay the green-robed forest king in dust:
+ Far from the spoiler's fury, and his lust
+ Of boundless power will I my fathers meet
+ Tiaras wearing never dimm'd by rust,
+ And they, while airs waft music passing sweet,
+ To blest abodes will guide my silver-sandal'd feet.
+
+
+NOTES.
+
+ _The warrior's right his scalp lock to adorn
+ With eagle plumes in battle he had won._--STANZA IX.
+
+No one but a brave who has slain an enemy in battle, is allowed the
+distinguished honor of wearing eagle feathers.
+
+ _Rained from her elk-like eyes._--STANZA XII.
+
+Objects clear and bright are often compared by the Indian to the elk's
+eye. The definition of Muskingum is--"clear as an elk's eye."
+
+ _Born of the foam._--STANZA XXXIV.
+
+The red man believes that the whites sprang from the foam of the salt
+water.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Note:
+
+
+Inconsistent capitalization (e.g. Gulf vs. gulf), spacing (e.g. north
+east vs. northeast), and hyphenation (e.g. foot-prints vs. footprints)
+have been left as in the original.
+
+The following changes were made to the text:
+
+p. 5: worty to worthy (worthy of the thought and care)
+
+p. 6: expreses to expresses (expresses the peculiarities of its own
+soil)
+
+p. 6: Tueton to Teuton (the Teuton, Goth and Magyar)
+
+p. 6: maze to maize (crushed their maize)
+
+p. 7: Ninevah to Nineveh (buried sites of Nineveh)
+
+p. 7: deciples to disciples (disciples of Zoroaster)
+
+p. 8: progres to progress (progress of nations)
+
+p. 9: Alleghany's to Alleghanies (by the Alleghanies)
+
+p. 9: distatant to distant (at distant points)
+
+p. 10: Susquehannah to Susquehanna (the Susquehanna, the Delaware and
+the St. Lawrence)
+
+p. 11: acient to ancient (an ancient feature)
+
+p. 13: entititled to entitled (Each clan is entitled to a chief.)
+
+p. 14: heriditary to hereditary (a hereditary chieftainship)
+
+p. 16: eminent to imminent (from imminent peril)
+
+p. 20: Heredotus to Herodotus (the period of Herodotus)
+
+p. 24: amunition to ammunition (guns and ammunition)
+
+p. 25: Ioroquois' to Iroquois' (the Iroquois' powers)
+
+p. 25: Vandruiel to Vaudruiel (Vaudruiel, the Governor General of New
+France)
+
+p. 28: beautious to beauteous (beauteous lakes and forests)
+
+p. 29: resplendant to resplendent (more learned and resplendent nations)
+
+p. 30: oblitered to obliterated (half obliterated trenches)
+
+p. 31: subsistance to subsistence (means of subsistence)
+
+p. 33: alterior to ulterior (ulterior objects)
+
+p. 33: pouring to poring (poring over the dusty volumes)
+
+p. 34: vallies to valleys (countless valleys)
+
+p. 34: centures to centuries (Centuries on centuries)
+
+p. 43: muflled to muffled (with muffled tread)
+
+p. 44: is to in (head in awe)
+
+p. 44: hilll to hill (Shaking the hill)
+
+p. 44: single quotes to double quotes ("Notch on ... fatal weapon")
+
+p. 44: side"! to side!" (that wall his side!")
+
+p. 46: missing close quote added (quaff ever from its tide!")
+
+p. 48: worn to won, and period at end of first line removed to match
+quoted passage in poem (Note for STANZA IX.)
+
+p. 48: missing period added (STANZA XXXIV.)
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of An Address, Delivered Before the
+Was-ah Ho-de-no-son-ne or New Confederacy of the Iroquois, by Henry R. Schoolcraft and W. H. C. Hosmer
+
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