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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #51881 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/51881)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Lost Atlantis and Other Ethnographic
-Studies, by Daniel Wilson
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The Lost Atlantis and Other Ethnographic Studies
-
-Author: Daniel Wilson
-
-Release Date: April 28, 2016 [EBook #51881]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LOST ATLANTIS, OTHER ETHNOGRAPHIC STUDIES ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Larry Harrison, Cindy Beyer and the online
-Distributed Proofreaders Canada team at
-http://www.pgdpcanada.net with images provided by The
-Internet Archives-US
-
-
-
-
-
- E T H N O G R A P H I C S T U D I E S
-
-
-
-
- _Printed by R. & R. Clark_
- FOR
- DAVID DOUGLAS, EDINBURGH
-
-
-
-
- T H E L O S T A T L A N T I S
-
- AND OTHER
-
- ETHNOGRAPHIC STUDIES
-
- BY
- SIR DANIEL WILSON, LL.D., F.R.S.E.
- PRESIDENT OF THE UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO
- AUTHOR OF ‘THE PREHISTORIC ANNALS OF SCOTLAND’
- ‘PREHISTORIC MAN: THE ORIGIN OF CIVILISATION,’ ETC. ETC.
-
- NEW YORK
- MACMILLAN AND CO.
- 1892
-
- _All rights reserved_
-
-
-
-
- P R E F A C E
-
-“THE Preface is the most troublesome part of a book,” I have often heard
-my dear Father say; and now it falls to my unaccustomed pen to write a
-preface for him.
-
-I cannot undertake to define the aim of this book; I can only tell how
-the last work on it was done. In my Father’s note-book I find it
-described as “A few carefully studied monographs, linked together by a
-slender thread of ethnographic relationship.”
-
-Returning in June last from a brief visit to Montreal, with the first
-signs of illness beginning to show, he found a bundle of proofs waiting
-for him, and with the characteristic promptness which never let any duty
-wait, he set to work at once to correct them. “It is my last book,” he
-said, conscious that his busy brain had nearly fulfilled all its tasks;
-and so through days of rapidly increasing weakness and pain he lay on
-the sofa correcting proofs till the pen dropped from the hand no longer
-able to hold it. His mind turned to the book in his _wandering_ thoughts
-from illness, and on one of these occasions he murmured: “Sybil will
-write the Preface”; and so I try to fulfil his wish. “Ask Mr. Douglas to
-correct the proofs himself, and to be sure to make an index,” was one of
-his last requests, thus providing for the finishing of the work which he
-could not himself finish. He has passed now from this world whose
-prehistoric story he so lovingly tried to decipher, and where he was
-ever finding traces of the hand of God, into that other world, “where
-toil shall cease and rest begin”; but where I doubt not he still goes on
-learning more and more, no longer seeing through a glass darkly but in
-perfect light.
-
-The silent lips seem to speak once more in this volume—his last words
-to the public; and I commit it very tenderly to those who are interested
-in his favourite study of Ethnology.
-
- SYBIL WILSON.
- BENCOSIE, TORONTO,
- _August 1892_.
-
-
-
-
- C O N T E N T S
-
- PAGE
- 1. THE LOST ATLANTIS 1
-
- 2. THE VINLAND OF THE NORTHMEN 37
-
- 3. TRADE AND COMMERCE IN THE STONE AGE 81
-
- 4. PRE-ARYAN AMERICAN MAN 130
-
- 5. THE ÆSTHETIC FACULTY IN ABORIGINAL RACES 185
-
- 6. THE HURON-IROQUOIS; A TYPICAL RACE 246
-
- 7. HYBRIDITY AND HEREDITY 307
-
- 8. RELATIVE RACIAL BRAIN-WEIGHT AND SIZE 339
-
-
- INDEX 403
-
-
-
-
- THE LOST ATLANTIS
- I
- EARLY IDEAS
-
-
-THE legend of Atlantis, an island-continent lying in the Atlantic Ocean
-over against the Pillars of Hercules, which, after being long the seat
-of a powerful empire, was engulfed in the sea, has been made the basis
-of many extravagant speculations; and anew awakens keenest interest with
-the revolving centuries. The 12th of October 1892 has been proclaimed a
-World’s holiday, to celebrate its accomplished cycle of four centuries
-since Columbus set foot on the shores of the West. The voyage has been
-characterised as the most memorable in the annals of our race; and the
-century thus completed is richer than all before it in the
-transformations that the birth of time has disclosed since the wedding
-of the New World to the Old. The story of the Lost Atlantis is recorded
-in the _Timæus_ and, with many fanciful amplifications, in the _Critias_
-of Plato. According to the dialogues, as reproduced there, Critias
-repeats to Socrates a story told him by his grandfather, then an old man
-of ninety, when he himself was not more than ten years of age. According
-to this narrative, Solon visited the city of Sais, at the head of the
-Egyptian delta, and there learned from the priests of the ancient empire
-of Atlantis, and of its overthrow by a convulsion of nature. “No one,”
-says Professor Jowett, in his critical edition of _The Dialogues of
-Plato_, “knew better than Plato how to invent ‘a noble lie’”; and he,
-unhesitatingly, pronounces the whole narrative a fabrication. “The
-world, like a child, has readily, and for the most part, unhesitatingly
-accepted the tale of the Island of Atlantis.” To the critical editor,
-this reception furnishes only an illustration of popular credulity,
-showing how the chance word of a poet or philosopher may give rise to
-endless historical or religious speculation. In the _Critias_, the
-legendary tale is unquestionably expanded into details of no possible
-historical significance or genuine antiquity. But it is not without
-reason, that men like Humboldt have recognised in the original legend
-the possible vestige of a widely-spread tradition of earliest times. In
-this respect, at any rate, I purpose here to review it.
-
-It is to be noted that even in the time of Socrates, and indeed of the
-elder Critias, this Atlantis was referred to as the vague and
-inconsistent tradition of a remote past; though not more inconsistent
-than much else which the cultured Greeks were accustomed to receive. Mr.
-Hyde Clarke, in an “Examination of the Legend,” printed in the
-_Transactions of the Royal Historical Society_, arrives at the
-conclusion that Atlantis was the name of the king rather than of the
-dominion. But king and kingdom have ever been liable to be referred to
-under a common designation. According to the account in the _Timæus_,
-Atlantis was a continent lying over against the Pillars of Hercules,
-greater in extent than Libya and Asia combined; the highway to other
-islands and to a great ocean, of which the Mediterranean Sea was a mere
-harbour. But in the vagueness of all geographical knowledge in the days
-of Socrates and of Plato, this Atlantic domain is confused with some
-Iberian or western African power, which is stated to have been arrayed
-against Egypt, Hellas, and all the countries bordering on the
-Mediterranean Sea. The knowledge even of the western Mediterranean was
-then very imperfect; and, to the ancient Greek, the West was a region of
-vague mystery which sufficed for the localisation of all his fondest
-imaginings. There, on the far horizon, Homer pictured the Elysian plain,
-where, under a serene sky, the favourites of Zeus enjoyed eternal
-felicity; Hesiod assigned the abode of departed heroes to the Happy
-Isles beyond the western waters that engirdled Europe; and Seneca
-foretold that that mysterious ocean would yet disclose an unknown world
-which it then kept concealed. To the ancients, Elysium ever lay beyond
-the setting sun; and the Hesperia of the Greeks, as their geographical
-knowledge increased, continued to recede before them into the unexplored
-west.
-
-In the youth of all nations, the poet and historian are one; and,
-according to the tale of the elder Critias, the legend of Atlantis was
-derived from a poetic chronicle of Solon, whom he pronounced to have
-been one of the best of poets, as well as the wisest of men. The
-elements of oral tradition are aptly set forth in the dialogue which
-Plato puts into the mouth of Timæus of Locris, a Pythagorean
-philosopher. Solon is affirmed to have told the tale to his personal
-friend, Dropidas, the great-grandfather of Critias, who repeated it to
-his son; and he, eighty years thereafter, in extreme old age, told it to
-his grandson, a boy of ten, whose narrative, reproduced in mature years,
-we are supposed to read in the dialogue of the _Timæus_. Even those are
-but the later links in the traditionary catena. Solon himself visited
-Sais, a city of the Egyptian delta, under the protection of the goddess,
-Neith or Athene. There, when in converse with the Egyptian priests, he
-learned, for the first time, rightly to appreciate how ignorant of
-antiquity he and his countrymen were. “O Solon, Solon,” said an aged
-priest to him, “you Hellenes are ever young, and there is no old man who
-is a Hellene; there is no opinion or tradition of knowledge among you
-which is white with age.” Solon had told them the mythical tales of
-Phoroneus and Niobe, and of Deucalion and Pyrrha, and had attempted to
-reckon the interval by generations since the great deluge. But the
-priest of Sais replied to this that such Hellenic annals were children’s
-stories. Their memory went back but a little way, and recalled only the
-latest of the great convulsions of nature, by which revolutions in past
-ages had been wrought: “The memory of them is lost, because there was no
-written voice among you.” And so the venerable priest undertook to tell
-him of the social life and condition of the primitive Athenians 9000
-years before. It is among the events of this older era that the
-overthrow of Atlantis is told: a story already “white with age” in the
-time of Socrates, 3400 years ago. The warriors of Athens, in that elder
-time, were a distinct caste; and when the vast power of Atlantis was
-marshalled against the Mediterranean nations, Athens bravely repelled
-the invader, and gave liberty to the nations whose safety had been
-imperilled; but in the convulsion that followed, in which the
-island-continent was engulfed in the ocean, the warrior race of Athens
-also perished.
-
-The story, as it thus reaches us, is one of the vaguest of popular
-legends, and has been transmitted to modern times in the most obscure of
-all the writings of Plato. Nevertheless, there is nothing improbable in
-the idea that it rests on some historic basis, in which the tradition of
-the fall of an Iberian, or other aggressive power in the western
-Mediterranean, is mingled with other and equally vague traditions of
-intercourse with a vast continent lying beyond the Pillars of Hercules.
-Mr. Hyde Clarke, in his _Khita and Khita-Peruvian Epoch_, draws
-attention to the ancient system of geography, alluded to by various
-early writers, and notably mentioned by Crates of Pergamos, B.C. 160,
-which treated of the Four Worlds. This he connects with the statement by
-Mr. George Smith, derived from the cuneiform interpretations, that Agu,
-an ancient king of Babylonia, called himself “King of the Four Races.”
-He also assigns to it a relation with others, including its Inca
-equivalent of _Tavintinsuzu_, the Empire of the Four Quarters of the
-World. But the extravagance of regal titles has been the same in widely
-diverse ages; so that much caution is necessary before they can be made
-a safe basis for comprehensive generalisations. Four kings made war
-against five in the vale of Siddim; and when Lot was despoiled and taken
-captive by Chederlaomer, King of Elam, Tidal, King of Nations, and other
-regal allies, Abraham, with no further aid than that of his trained
-servants, born in his house, three hundred and eighteen in all, smote
-their combined hosts, and recovered the captives and the spoil. Here, at
-least, it is obvious that “the King of Nations” was somewhat on a par
-with one of the six vassal kings who rowed King Edgar on the River Dee.
-Certainly, within any early period of authentic history, the conceptions
-of the known world were reduced within narrow bounds; and it would be a
-very comprehensive deduction from such slight premises as the legend
-supplies, to refer it to an age of accurate geographical knowledge in
-which the western hemisphere was known as one of four worlds, or
-continents. When the Scottish poet, Dunbar, wrote of America, twenty
-years after the voyage of Columbus, he only knew of it as “the new-found
-isle.”
-
-The opinion, universally favoured in the infancy of physical science, of
-the recurrence of convulsions of nature, whereby nations were
-revolutionised, and vast empires destroyed by fire, or engulfed in the
-ocean, revived with the theories of cataclysmic phenomena in the earlier
-speculations of modern geology; and has even now its advocates among
-writers who have given little heed to the concurrent opinion of later
-scientific authorities. Among the most zealous advocates of the idea of
-a submerged Atlantic continent, the seat of a civilisation older than
-that of Europe, or of the old East, was the late Abbé Brasseur de
-Bourbourg. As an indefatigable and enthusiastic investigator, he
-occupies a place in the history of American archæology somewhat akin to
-that of his fellow-countryman, M. Boucher de Perthes, in relation to the
-palæontological disclosures of Europe. He had the undoubted merit of
-first drawing the attention of the learned world to the native
-transcripts of Maya records, the full value of which is only now being
-adequately recognised. His _Histoire des Nations Civilisées_ aims at
-demonstrating from their religious myths and historical traditions the
-existence of a self-originated civilisation. In his subsequent _Quatre
-Lettres sur le Mexique_, the Abbé adopted, in the most literal form, the
-venerable legend of Atlantis, giving free rein to his imagination in
-some very fanciful speculations. He calls into being, “from the vasty
-deep,” a submerged continent, or, rather, extension of the present
-America, stretching eastward, and including, as he deems probable, the
-Canary Islands, and other insular survivals of the imaginary Atlantis.
-Such speculations of unregulated zeal are unworthy of serious
-consideration. But it is not to be wondered at that the vague legend, so
-temptingly set forth in the _Timæus_, should have kindled the
-imaginations of a class of theorists, who, like the enthusiastic Abbé,
-are restrained by no doubts suggested by scientific indications. So far
-from geology lending the slightest confirmation to the idea of an
-engulfed Atlantis, Professor Wyville Thomson has shown, in his _Depths
-of the Sea_, that while oscillations of the land have considerably
-modified the boundaries of the Atlantic Ocean, the geological age of its
-basin dates as far back, at least, as the later Secondary period. The
-study of its animal life, as revealed in dredging, strongly confirms
-this, disclosing an unbroken continuity of life on the Atlantic sea-bed
-from the Cretaceous period to the present time; and, as Sir Charles
-Lyell has pointed out, in his _Principles of Geology_, the entire
-evidence is adverse to the idea that the Canaries, the Madeiras, and the
-Azores, are surviving fragments of a vast submerged island, or
-continuous area of the adjacent continent. There are, indeed, undoubted
-indications of volcanic action; but they furnish evidence of local
-upheaval, not of the submergence of extensive continental areas.
-
-But it is an easy, as well as a pleasant pastime, to evolve either a
-camel or a continent out of the depths of one’s own inner consciousness.
-To such fanciful speculators, the lost Atlantis will ever offer a
-tempting basis on which to found their unsubstantial creations. Mr. H.
-H. Bancroft, when alluding to the subject in his _Native Races of the
-Pacific States_, refers to forty-two different works for notices and
-speculations concerning Atlantis. The latest advocacy of the idea of an
-actual island-continent of the mid-Atlantic, literally engulfed in the
-ocean, within a period authentically embraced by historical tradition,
-is to be found in its most popular form in Mr. Ignatius Donnelly’s
-_Atlantis, the Antediluvian World_. By him, as by Abbé Brasseur, the
-concurrent opinions of the highest authorities in science, that the main
-features of the Atlantic basin have undergone no change within any
-recent geological period, are wholly ignored. To those, therefore, who
-attach any value to scientific evidence, such speculations present no
-serious claims on their study. There is, indeed, an idea favoured by
-certain students of science, who carry the spirit of nationality into
-regions ordinarily regarded as lying outside of any sectional pride,
-that, geologically speaking, America is the older continent. It may at
-least be accepted as beyond dispute, that that continent and the great
-Atlantic basin intervening between it and Europe are alike of a
-geological antiquity which places the age of either entirely apart from
-all speculations affecting human history. But such fancies are wholly
-superfluous. The idea of intercourse between the Old and the New World
-prior to the fifteenth century, passed from the region of speculation to
-the domain of historical fact, when the publication of the _Antiquitates
-Americanæ_ and the _Grönland’s Historiske Mindesmærker_, by the
-antiquaries of Copenhagen, adduced contemporary authorities, and
-indisputably genuine runic inscriptions, in proof of the visits of the
-Northmen to Greenland and the mainland of North America, before the
-close of the tenth century.
-
-The idea of pre-Columbian intercourse between Europe and America, is
-thus no novelty. What we have anew to consider is: whether, in its wider
-aspect, it is more consistent with probability than the revived notion
-of a continent engulfed in the Atlantic Ocean? The earliest students of
-American antiquities turned to Phœnicia, Egypt, or other old-world
-centres of early civilisation, for the source of Mexican, Peruvian, and
-Central American art or letters; and, indeed, so long as the unity of
-the human race remained unquestioned, some theory of a common source for
-the races of the Old and the New World was inevitable. The idea,
-therefore, that the new world which Columbus revealed, was none other
-than the long-lost Atlantis, is one that has probably suggested itself
-independently to many minds. References to America have, in like manner,
-been sought for in obscure allusions of Herodotus, Seneca, Pliny, and
-other classical writers, to islands or continents in the ocean which
-extended beyond the western verge of the world as known to them. That
-such allusions should be vague, was inevitable. If they had any
-foundation in a knowledge by elder generations of this western
-hemisphere, the tradition had come down to them by the oral
-transmissions of centuries; while their knowledge of their own eastern
-hemisphere was limited and very imperfect. “The Cassiterides, from which
-tin is brought”—assumed to be the British Isles,—were known to
-Herodotus only as uncertainly located islands of the Atlantic of which
-he had no direct information. When Assuryuchurabal, the founder of the
-palace at Nimrud, conquered the people who lived on the banks of the
-Orontes from the confines of Hamath to the sea, the spoils obtained from
-them included one hundred talents of _anna_, or tin; and the same prized
-metal is repeatedly named in cuneiform inscriptions. The people trading
-in tin, supposed to be identical with the Shirutana, were the merchants
-of the world before Tyre assumed her place as chief among the merchant
-princes of the sea. Yet already, in the time of Joshua, she was known as
-“the strong city, Tyre.” “Great Zidon” also is so named, along with her,
-when Joshua defines the bounds of the tribe of Asher, extending to the
-sea coast; and is celebrated by Homer for its works of art. The
-Seleucia, or Cilicia, of the Greeks was an attempted restoration of the
-ancient seaport of the Shirutana, which may have been an emporium of
-Khita merchandise; as it was, undoubtedly, an important place of
-shipment for the Phœnicians in their overland trade from the valley of
-the Euphrates. One favoured etymology of Britain, as the name of the
-islands whence tin was brought, is _barat-anna_, assumed to have been
-applied to them by that ancient race of merchant princes: the
-Cassiterides being the later Aryan equivalent, Gr. κασσίτεροϛ, Sansk.
-_kastira_.
-
-In primitive centuries, when ancient maritime races thus held supremacy
-in the Mediterranean Sea, voyages were undoubtedly made far into the
-Atlantic Ocean. The Phœnicians, who of all the nations settled on its
-shores lay among the remotest from the outlying ocean, habitually traded
-with settlements on the Atlantic. They colonised the western shores of
-the Mediterranean at a remote period; occupied numerous favourable
-trading-posts on the bays and headlands of the Euxine, as well as of
-Sicily and others of the larger islands; and passing beyond the straits,
-effected settlements along the coasts of Europe and Africa. According to
-Strabo (i. 48), they had factories beyond the Pillars of Hercules in the
-period immediately succeeding the Trojan war: an era which yearly
-becomes for us less mythical, and to which may be assigned the great
-development of the commercial prosperity of Tyre. The Phœnicians were
-then expanding their trading enterprise, and extending explorations so
-as to command the remotest available sources of wealth. The trade of
-Tarshish was for Phœnicia what that of the East has been to England in
-modern centuries. The Tartessus, on which the Arabs of Spain
-subsequently conferred the name of the Guadalquivir, afforded ready
-access to a rich mining district; and also formed the centre of valuable
-fisheries of tunny and muræna. By means of its navigable waters, along
-with those of the Guadina, Phœnician traders were able to penetrate far
-inland; and the colonies established at their mouths furnished fresh
-starting points for adventurous exploration along the Atlantic seaboard.
-They derived much at least of the tin, which was an important object of
-traffic, from the mines of north-west Spain, and from Cornwall; though,
-doubtless, both the tin of the Cassiterides and amber from the Baltic
-were also transported by overland routes to the Adriatic and the mouth
-of the Rhone. It was a Phœnician expedition which, in the reign of
-Pharaoh Necho, B.C. 611-605, after the decline of that great maritime
-power, accomplished the feat of circumnavigating Africa by way of the
-Red Sea. Hanno, a Carthaginian, not only guided the Punic fleet round
-the parts of Libya which border on the Atlantic, but has been credited
-with reaching the Indian Ocean by the same route as that which Vasco de
-Gama successfully followed in 1497. The object of Hanno’s expedition, as
-stated in the _Periplus_, was to found Liby-Phœnician cities beyond the
-Pillars of Hercules. How far south his voyage actually extended along
-the African coast is matter of conjecture, or of disputed
-interpretation; for the original work is lost. It is sufficient for our
-purpose to know that he did pursue the same route which led in a later
-century to the discovery of Brazil. Aristotle applies the name of
-“Antilla” to a Carthaginian discovery; and Diodorus Siculus assigns to
-the Carthaginians the knowledge of an island in the ocean, the secret of
-which they reserved to themselves, as a refuge to which they could
-withdraw, should fate ever compel them to desert their African homes. It
-is far from improbable that we may identify this obscure island with one
-of the Azores, which lie 800 miles from the coast of Portugal. Neither
-Greek nor Roman writers make other reference to them; but the discovery
-of numerous Carthaginian coins at Corvo, the extreme north-westerly
-island of the group, leaves little room to doubt that they were visited
-by Punic voyagers. There is therefore nothing extravagant in the
-assumption that we have here the “Antilla” mentioned by Aristotle. While
-the Carthaginian oligarchy ruled, naval adventure was still encouraged;
-but the maritime era of the Mediterranean belongs to more ancient
-centuries. The Greeks were inferior in enterprise to the Phœnicians;
-while the Romans were essentially unmaritime; and the revival of the old
-adventurous spirit with the rise of the Venetian and Genoese republics
-was due to the infusion of fresh blood from the great northern home of
-the sea-kings of the Baltic.
-
-The history of the ancient world is, for us, to a large extent, the
-history of civilisation among the nations around the Mediterranean Sea.
-Its name perpetuates the recognition of it from remote times as the
-great inland sea which kept apart and yet united, in intercourse and
-exchange of experience and culture, the diverse branches of the human
-family settled on its shores. Of the history of those nations, we only
-know some later chapters. Disclosures of recent years have startled us
-with recovered glimpses of the Khita, or Hittites, as a great power
-centred between the Euphrates and the Orontes, but extending into Asia
-Minor, and about B.C. 1200 reaching westward to the Ægean Sea. All but
-their name seemed to have perished; and they were known only as one
-among diverse Canaanitish tribes, believed to have been displaced by the
-Hebrew inheritors of Palestine. Yet now, as Professor Curtius has
-pointed out, we begin to recognise that “one of the paths by which the
-art and civilisation of Babylonia and Assyria made their way to Greece,
-was along the great high-road which runs across Asia Minor”; and which
-the projected railway route through the valley of the Euphrates seeks to
-revive. For, as compared with Egypt, and the earliest nations of Eastern
-Asia, the Greeks were, indeed, children. It was to the Phœnicians that
-the ancients assigned the origin of navigation. Their skill as seamen
-was the subject of admiration even by the later Greeks, who owned
-themselves to be their pupils in seamanship, and called the pole-star,
-the Phœnician star. Their naval commerce is set forth in glowing
-rhetoric by the prophet Ezekiel. “O Tyrus, thou that art situate at the
-entry of the sea, a merchant of the people of many isles. Thy borders
-are in the midst of the seas. The inhabitants of Zidon and Arvad were
-thy mariners. Thy wise men, O Tyrus, were thy pilots. All the ships of
-the sea, with their mariners, were in thee to occupy thy merchandise.”
-But this was spoken at the close of Phœnician history, in the last days
-of Tyre’s supremacy.
-
-Looking back then into the dim dawn of actual history, with whatever
-fresh light recent discoveries have thrown upon it: this, at least,
-seems to claim recognition from us, that in that remote era the eastern
-Mediterranean was a centre of maritime enterprise, such as had no equal
-among the nations of antiquity. Even in the decadence of Phœnicia, her
-maritime skill remained unmatched. Egypt and Palestine, under their
-greatest rulers, recognised her as mistress of the sea; and, as has been
-already noted, the circumnavigation of Africa—which, when it was
-repeated in the fifteenth century, was considered an achievement fully
-equalling that of Columbus,—had long before been accomplished by
-Phœnician mariners. Carthage inherited the enterprise of the mother
-country, but never equalled her achievements. With the fall of Carthage,
-the Mediterranean became a mere Roman lake, over which the galleys of
-Rome sailed reluctantly with her armed hosts; or coasting along shore,
-they “committed themselves to the sea, and loosed the rudder bands, and
-hoisted up the mainsail to the winds”; or again, “strake sail, and so
-were driven,” after the blundering fashion described in the voyage of
-St. Paul. To such a people, the memories of Punic exploration or
-Phœnician enterprise, or the vague legends of an Atlantis beyond the
-engirdling ocean, were equally unavailing. The narrow sea between Gaul
-and Britain was barrier enough to daunt the boldest of them from
-willingly encountering the dangers of an expedition to what seemed to
-them literally another world.
-
-Seeing then that the first steps in navigation were taken in an age
-lying beyond all memory, and that the oldest traditions assign its
-origin to the remarkable people who figure alike in early sacred and
-profane history—in Joshua and Ezekiel, in Dius and Menander of Ephesus,
-in the Homeric poems and in later Greek writings,—as unequalled in
-their enterprise on the sea: what impediments existed in B.C. 1400 or
-any earlier century that did not still exist in A.D. 1400, to render
-intercourse between the eastern and the western hemisphere impossible?
-America was no further off from Tarshish in the golden age of Tyre than
-in that of Henry the Navigator. With the aid of literary memorials of
-the race of sea-rovers who carved out for themselves the Duchy of
-Normandy from the domain of Charlemagne’s heir, and spoiled the Angles
-and Saxons in their island home, we glean sufficient evidence to place
-the fact beyond all doubt that, after discovering and colonising Iceland
-and Greenland, they made their way southward to Labrador, and so, some
-way along the American coast. How far south their explorations actually
-extended, after being long assigned to the locality of Rhode Island, has
-anew excited interest, and is still a matter of controversy. The
-question is reviewed on a subsequent page; but its final settlement does
-not, in any degree, affect the present question. Certain it is that,
-about A.D. 1000, when St. Olaf was introducing Christianity by a
-sufficiently high-handed process into the Norse fatherland, Leif, the
-son of Eric, the founder of the first Greenland colony, sailed from
-Ericsfiord, or other Greenland port, in quest of southern lands already
-reported to have been seen, and did land on more than one point of the
-North American coast. We know what the ships of those Norse rovers were:
-mere galleys, not larger than a good fishing smack, and far inferior to
-it in deck and rigging. For compass they had only the same old
-“Phœnician star,” which, from the birth of navigation, had guided the
-mariners of the ancient world over the pathless deep. The track pursued
-by the Northmen, from Norway to Iceland, and so to Greenland and the
-Labrador coast, was, doubtless, then as now, beset by fogs, so that
-“neither sun nor stars in many days appeared”; and they stood much more
-in need of compass than the sailors of the “Santa Maria,” the “Pinta,”
-and the “Nina,” the little fleet with which Columbus sailed from the
-Andalusian port of Palos, to his first discovered land of “Guanahani,”
-variously identified among the islands of the American Archipelago. Yet,
-notwithstanding all the advantages of a southern latitude, with its
-clearer skies, we have to remember that the “Santa Maria,” the only
-decked vessel of the expedition, was stranded; and the “Pinta” and
-“Nina,” on which Columbus and his party had to depend for their homeward
-voyage, were mere coasting craft, the one with a crew of thirty, and the
-other with twenty-four men, with only _latine_ sails. As to the compass,
-we perceive how little that availed, on recalling the fact that the
-Portuguese admiral, Pedro Alvares de Cabral, only eight years later,
-when following on the route of Vasco de Gama, was carried by the
-equatorial current so far out of his intended course that he found
-himself in sight of a strange land, in 10° S. lat., and so accidentally
-discovered Brazil and the new world of the west, not by means of the
-mariner’s compass, but in spite of its guidance. It is thus obvious that
-the discovery of America would have followed as a result of the voyage
-of Vasco de Gama round the Cape, wholly independent of that of Columbus.
-What befell the Portuguese admiral of King Manoel, in A.D. 1500, was an
-experience that might just as readily have fallen to the lot of the
-Phœnician admiral of Pharaoh Necho in B.C. 600, to the Punic Hanno, or
-other early navigators; and may have repeatedly occurred to
-Mediterranean adventurers on the Atlantic in older centuries. On the
-news of de Cabral’s discovery reaching Portugal, the King despatched the
-Florentine, Amerigo Vespucci, who explored the coast of South America,
-prepared a map of the new-found world, and thereby wrested from Columbus
-the honour of giving his name to the continent which he discovered.
-
-When we turn from the myths and traditions of the Old World to those of
-the New, we find there traces that seem not unfairly interpretable into
-the American counterpart of the legend of Atlantis. The chief seat of
-the highest native American civilisation, is neither Mexico nor Peru,
-but Central America. The nations of the Maya stock, who inhabit Yucatan,
-Guatemala, and the neighbouring region, were peculiarly favourably
-situated; and they appear to have achieved the greatest progress among
-the communities of Central America. They may not unfitly compare with
-the ancient dwellers in the valley of the Euphrates, from the grave
-mounds of whose buried cities we are now recovering the history of ages
-that had passed into oblivion before the Father of History assumed the
-pen. Tested indeed by intervening centuries their monuments are not so
-venerable; but, for America’s chroniclings, they are more prehistoric
-than the disclosures of Assyrian mounds. The cities of Central America
-were large and populous, and adorned with edifices, even now magnificent
-in their ruins. Still more, the Mayas were a lettered people, who, like
-the Egyptians, recorded in elaborate sculptured hieroglyphics the
-formulæ of history and creed. Like them, too, they wrote and ciphered;
-and appear, indeed, to have employed a comprehensive system of computing
-time and recording dates, which, it cannot be doubted, will be
-sufficiently mastered to admit of the decipherment of their ancient
-records. The Mayas appear, soon after the Spanish Conquest, to have
-adopted the Roman alphabet, and employed it in recording their own
-historical traditions and religious myths, as well as in rendering into
-such written characters some of the ancient national documents. Those
-versions of native myth and history survive, and attention is now being
-directed to them. The most recent contribution from this source is _The
-Annals of the Cakchiquels_, by Dr. D. G. Brinton, a carefully edited and
-annotated translation of a native legal document or _titulo_, in which,
-soon after the Conquest, the heir of an ancient Maya family set forth
-the evidence of his claim to the inheritance. Along with this may be
-noted another work of the same class: _Titre Généalogique des Seigneurs
-de Totonicapan. Traduit de l’Espagnol par M. de Charencey._ These two
-works independently illustrate the same great national event. In one, a
-prince of the Cakchiquel nation, tells of the overthrow of the Quiché
-power by his people; and in the other a Quiché seignior, one of the
-“Lords of Totonicapan,” describes it from his own point of view. Both
-were of the same Maya stock, in what is now the State of Guatemala. Each
-nation had a capital adorned with temples and palaces, the splendour of
-which excited the wonder of the Spaniards; and both preserved traditions
-of the migration of their ancestors from Tula, a mythical land from
-which they came across the water.
-
-Such traditions of migration meet us on many sides. Captain Cook found
-among the mythological traditions of Tahiti, a vague legend of a ship
-that came out of the ocean, and seemed to be the dim record of ancestral
-intercourse with the outer world. So also, the Aztecs had the tradition
-of the golden age of Anahuac; and of Quetzalcoatl, their instructor in
-agriculture, metallurgy and the arts of government. He was of fair
-complexion, with long dark hair, and flowing beard: all, characteristics
-foreign to their race. When his mission was completed, he set sail for
-the mysterious shores of Tlapallan; and on the appearance of the ships
-of Cortes, the Spaniards were believed to have returned with the divine
-instructor of their forefathers, from the source of the rising sun.
-
-What tradition hints at, physiology confirms. The races of America
-differ less in physical character from those of Asia, than do the races
-either of Africa or Europe. The American Indian is a Mongol; and though
-marked diversities are traceable throughout the American continent, the
-range of variation is much less than in the eastern hemisphere. The
-western continent appears to have been peopled by repeated migrations
-and by diverse routes; but when we attempt to estimate any probable date
-for its primeval settlement, evidence wholly fails. Language proves
-elsewhere a safe guide. It has established beyond question some
-long-forgotten relationship between the Aryans of India and Persia and
-those of Europe; it connects the Finn and Lapp with their Asiatic
-forefathers; it marks the independent origin of the Basques and their
-priority to the oldest Aryan intruders; it links together widely diverse
-branches of the great Semitic family. Can language tell us of any such
-American affinities, or of traces of Old World congeners, in relation to
-either civilised Mayas and Peruvians, or to the forest and prairie races
-of the northern continent?
-
-With the millions of America’s coloured population, of African blood and
-yet speaking Aryan languages, the American comparative philologist can
-scarcely miss the significance of the warning that linguistic and
-ethnical classifications by no means necessarily imply the same thing.
-Nevertheless, without overlooking this distinction, the ethnical
-significance of the evidence which comparative philology supplies cannot
-be slighted in any question relative to prehistoric relations between
-the Old World and the New. What then can philology tell us? There is one
-answer, at the least, which the languages of America give, that fully
-accords with the legend, “white with age,” that told of an
-island-continent in the Atlantic Ocean with which the nations around the
-Mediterranean once held intercourse. None of them indicates any trace of
-immigration within the period of earliest authentic history. Those who
-attach significance to the references in the _Timæus_ to political
-relations common to Atlantis and parts of Libya and Europe; or who, on
-other grounds, look with favour on the idea of early intercourse between
-the Mediterranean and the western continent, have naturally turned to
-the Eskuara of the Basques. It is invariably recognised as the surviving
-representative of languages spoken by the Allophyliæ of Europe before
-the intrusion of Aryans. The forms of its grammar differ widely from
-those of any Semitic, or Indo-European tongue, placing it in the same
-class with Mongol, East African, and American languages. Here,
-therefore, is a tempting glimpse of possible affinities; and Professor
-Whitney, accordingly, remarks in his _Life and Growth of Languages_,
-that the Basque “forms a suitable stepping-stone from which to enter the
-peculiar linguistic domain of the New World, since there is no other
-dialect of the Old World which so much resembles in structure the
-American languages.” But this glimpse of possible relationship has
-proved, thus far, illusory. In their morphological character, certain
-American and Asiatic languages have a common agglutinative structure,
-which in the former is developed into their characteristic polysynthetic
-attribute. With this, the Eskuarian system of affixes corresponds. But
-beyond the general structure, there is no such evidence of affinity,
-either in the vocabularies or grammar, as direct affiliation might be
-expected to show. Elements common to the Anglo-American of the
-nineteenth century and the Sanskrit-speaking race beyond the Indus, in
-the era of Alexander of Macedon, are suggested at once by the
-grammatical structure of their languages; whereas there is nothing in
-the resemblance between the Basque and any of the North American
-languages that is not compatible with a “stepping-stone” from Asia to
-America by the islands of the Pacific. The most important of all the
-native American languages in their bearing on this interesting
-inquiry—those of Central America,—are only now receiving adequate
-attention. Startling evidence may yet reward the diligence of students;
-but, so far as language furnishes any clue to affinity of race, no
-American language thus far discloses such a relationship, as, for
-example, enabled Dr. Pritchard to suggest that the western people of
-Europe, to whom the Greeks gave the collective name of Kέλται, and whose
-languages had been assumed by all previous ethnologists as furnishing
-evidence that they were precursors of the Aryan immigrants, in reality
-justified their classification in the same stock.
-
-But while thus far, the evidence of language is, at best, vague and
-indefinite in its response to the inquiry for proofs of relationship of
-the races of America to those of the Old World; physiological
-comparisons lend no confirmation to the idea of an indigenous native
-race, with special affinities and adaptation to its peculiar
-environment, and with languages all of one class, the ramifications from
-a single native stem. So far as physical affinities can be relied upon,
-the man of America, in all his most characteristic racial diversities,
-is of Asiatic origin. His near approximation to the Asiatic Mongol is so
-manifest as to have led observers of widely different opinions in all
-other respects, to concur in classing both under the same great
-division: the Mongolian of Pickering, the American Mongolidæ of Latham,
-the Mongoloid of Huxley. Professor Flower, in an able discussion of the
-varieties of the human species, addressed to the Anthropological
-Institute of Great Britain in 1885, unhesitatingly classes the Eskimo as
-the typical North Asiatic Mongol. In other American races he notes as
-distinctive features the characteristic form of the nasal bones, the
-well-developed superciliary ridge, and retreating forehead; but the
-resemblance is so obvious in many other respects, that he finally
-includes them all among the members of the Mongolian type. If, then, the
-American Mongol came originally from Asia, or sprung from the common
-stock of which the Asiatic Mongol is the typical representative, within
-any such period as even earliest Phœnician history would embrace, much
-more definite traces of affinity are to be looked for in his language
-than mere correspondence in the agglutination characteristic of a very
-widely diffused class of speech. But we, thus far, look in vain for
-traces of a common genealogy such as those which, on the one hand,
-correlate the Semitic and Aryan families of Asia and Europe with parent
-stocks of times anterior to history, and on the other, with
-ramifications of modern centuries. We have, moreover, to deal mainly
-with the languages of uncivilised races. To the continent north of the
-Gulf of Mexico, the grand civilising art of the metallurgist remained to
-the last unknown; and in Mexico, it appears as a gift of recent origin,
-derived from Central America. The Asiatic origin of the art of
-Tubal-cain has, indeed, been pretty generally assumed, both for Central
-and Southern America; but by mere inference. In doing so, we are carried
-back to some mythic Quetzalcoatl: for neither the metallurgist nor his
-art was introduced in recent centuries. Assuming, for the sake of
-argument, the dispersion of a common population of Asia and America,
-already familiar with the working of metals, and with architecture,
-sculpture and other kindred arts, at a date coeval with the founding of
-Tyre, “the daughter of Sidon,” what help does language give us in favour
-of such a postulate? We have great language groups, such as the
-Huron-Iroquois, extending of old from the St. Lawrence to North
-Carolina; the Algonkin, from Hudson Bay to South Carolina; the Dakotan,
-from the Mississippi to the Rocky Mountains; the Athabascan, from the
-Eskimo frontier, within the Arctic circle, to New Mexico; and the Tinné
-family of languages west of the Rocky Mountains, from the Youkon and
-Mackenzie rivers, far south on the Pacific slope. With those, as with
-the more cultured languages, or rather languages of the more cultured
-races, of Central and Southern America, elaborate comparisons have been
-made with vocabularies of Asiatic languages; but the results are, at
-best, vague. Curious points of agreement have, indeed, been
-demonstrated, inviting to further research; but as yet the evidence of
-relationship mainly rests on correspondence in structure. The
-agglutinative suffixes are common to the Eskimo and many American Indian
-tongues. Dr. H. Rink describes the polysynthetic process in the Eskimo
-language as founded on radical words, to which additional or imperfect
-words, or affixes, are attached; and on the inflexion, which, for
-transitive verbs, indicates subject as well as object, likewise by
-addition. But, while Professor Flower unhesitatingly characterises the
-Eskimo as belonging to the typical North Asiatic Mongols; he, at the
-same time, speaks of them as almost as perfectly isolated in their
-Arctic home “as an island population.” Nevertheless, the same structure
-is common to their language and to those of the great North American
-families already named. All alike present, in an exaggerated form, the
-characteristic structure of the Ural-Altaic or Turanian group of Asiatic
-languages.
-
-Race-type corresponds in the Old and New World. A comparison of
-languages by means of the vocabularies of the two continents, yields no
-such correspondence. All the more, therefore, is the American student of
-comparative philology stimulated to investigate the significance of the
-polysynthetic characteristic found to pertain to so many—though by no
-means to all—of the languages of this continent. The relationship which
-it suggests to the agglutinative languages of Asia, furnishes a subject
-of investigation not less interesting to American students, alike of the
-science of language, and of the whole comprehensive questions which
-anthropology embraces, than the relations of the Romance languages of
-Europe to the parent Latin; or of Latin itself, and all the Aryan
-languages, ancient and modern, not only to Sanskrit and Zend, but to the
-indeterminate stock which furnished the parent roots, the grammatical
-forms, and that whole class of words still recognisable as the common
-property of the whole Aryan family. Sanskrit was a dead language three
-thousand years ago; the English language, as such, cannot claim to have
-endured much more than fourteen centuries, yet both partake of the same
-common property of numerals and familiar terms existing under certain
-modifications in Sanskrit, Greek, Latin, Slavonic, Celtic, German,
-Anglo-Saxon, and in all the Romance languages. Thus far the American
-philologist has been unable to show any such genealogical relationship
-pervading the native languages; or to recover specific evidence of
-affinities to languages, and so to races of other continents. There are,
-indeed, linguistic families, such as some already referred to,
-indicating a common descent among widely dispersed tribes; but this has
-its chief interest in relation to another aspect of the question.
-
-Professor Max Müller has drawn attention to the tendency of the
-languages of America towards an endless multiplication of distinct
-dialects. Those again have been grouped by the synthetic process of
-Hervas into eleven families: seven for the northern continent, and four
-for South America. But we are as yet only on the threshold of this
-important branch of research. In two papers contributed by M. Lucien
-Adam to the _Congrès International des Americanistes_, he gives the
-results of a careful examination of sixteen languages of North and South
-America; and arrives at the conclusion that they belong to a number of
-independent families as essentially distinct as they would have been
-“had there been primitively several human pairs.” Dr. Brinton, one of
-the highest authorities on any question connected with native American
-languages, contributed a paper to the _American Antiquarian_ (Jan.
-1886), “On the Study of the Nahuatl Language.” This language, which is
-popularly known as Aztec, he strongly commends to the study of American
-philologists. It is one of the most completely organised of Indian
-languages, has a literature of considerable extent and variety, and is
-still in use by upwards of half a million of people. It is from this
-area, southward through Central America, and in the great seat of native
-South American civilisation, that we can alone hope to recover direct
-evidence of ancient intercourse between the Old and the New World. But,
-here again, the complexities of language seem to grow apace. In Dr.
-Brinton’s _Notes on the Mangue, an extinct Language formerly spoken in
-Nicaragua_, he states, as a result of his later studies, that the belief
-which he once entertained of some possible connection between this
-dialect and the Aymara of Peru, has not been confirmed on further
-examination. This, therefore, tends to sustain the prevailing opinion of
-scholars that there is no direct affiliation between the languages of
-North and South America. All this is suggestive either of an idea, such
-as that which Agassiz favoured in his system of natural provinces of the
-animal world, in relation to different types of man, on which he based
-the conclusion that the diverse varieties of American man originated in
-various centres, and had been distributed from them over the entire
-continent; or we must assume immigration from different foreign centres.
-Accepting the latter as the more tenable proposition, I long ago
-sketched a scheme of immigration such as seemed to harmonise with the
-suggestive, though imperfect evidence. This assumed the earliest current
-of population, in its progress from a supposed Asiatic cradleland, to
-have spread through the islands of the Pacific, and reached the South
-American continent before any excess of population had diffused itself
-into the inhospitable northern steppes of Asia. By an Atlantic oceanic
-migration, another wave of population occupied the Canaries, Madeiras,
-and the Azores, and so passed to the Antilles, Central America, and
-probably by the Cape Verdes, or, guided by the more southern equatorial
-current, to Brazil. Latest of all, Behring Strait and the North Pacific
-Islands may have become the highway for a migration by which certain
-striking diversities among nations of the northern continent, including
-the conquerors of the Mexican plateau, are most easily accounted for.
-
-It is not necessary to include in the question here discussed, the more
-comprehensive one of the existence of man in America contemporary with
-the great extinct animals of the Quaternary Period; though the
-acknowledged affinities of Asiatic and American anthropology, taken in
-connection with the remoteness of any assignable period for migration
-from Asia to the American continent, renders it far from improbable that
-the latest oscillations of land may here also have exercised an
-influence. The present soundings of Behring Strait, and the bed of the
-sea extending southward to the Aleutian Islands, entirely accord with
-the assumption of a former continuity of land between Asia and America.
-The idea to which the speculations of Darwin, founded on his
-observations during the voyage of the ‘Beagle’ gave rise, of a
-continuous subsidence of the Pacific Ocean, also favoured the
-probability of greater insular facilities for trans-oceanic migration at
-the supposed period of the peopling of America from Asia. But more
-recent explorations, and especially those connected with the
-‘Challenger’ expedition, fail to confirm the old theory of the origin of
-the coral islands of the Pacific; and in any view of the case, we must
-be content to study the history of existing races, alike of Europe and
-America, apart from questions relating to palæocosmic man. If the vague
-legend of the lost Atlantis embodies any trace of remotest historical
-tradition, it belongs to a modern era compared with the men either of
-the European drift, or of the post-glacial deposits of the Delaware and
-the auriferous gravels of California. When resort is had to comparative
-philology, it is manifest that we must be content to deal with a more
-recent era than contemporaries of the Mastodon, and their congeners of
-Europe’s Mammoth and Reindeer periods, notwithstanding the fact that the
-modern representatives of the latter have been sought within the
-American Arctic circle.
-
-Such evidence as a comparison of languages thus far supplies, lends more
-countenance to the idea of migration through the islands of the Pacific,
-than to such a route from the Mediterranean as is implied in any
-significance attached to the legend of Atlantis. As to the Behring
-Strait route, present ethnology and philology point rather to an
-overflow of Arctic American population into Asia. Gallatin was the first
-to draw attention to certain analogies in the structure of Polynesian
-and American languages, as deserving of investigation; and pointed out
-the peculiar mode of expressing the tense, mood, and voice of the verb,
-by affixed particles, and the value given to place over time, as
-indicated in the predominant locative verbal form. Such are to be looked
-for with greater probability among the languages of South America; but
-the substitution of affixed particles for inflections, especially in
-expressing the direction of action in relation to the speaker, is common
-to the Polynesian and the Oregon languages, and has analogies in the
-Cherokee. The distinction between the inclusive and exclusive pronoun
-_we_, according as it means “you and I,” or “they and I,” etc., is as
-characteristic of the Maori as of the Ojibway. Other observations of
-more recent date have still further tended to countenance the
-recognition of elements common to the languages of Polynesia and
-America; and so to point to migration by the Pacific to the western
-continent.
-
-But this idea of a migration through the islands of the Pacific receives
-curious confirmation from another source. In an ingenious paper on “The
-Origin of Primitive Money,”[1] originally read at the meeting of the
-British Association at Montreal in 1884, Mr. Horatio Hale shows that
-there is good reason for believing that the most ancient currency in
-China consisted of disks and slips of tortoise shell. The fact is stated
-in the great Chinese encyclopædia of the Emperor Kang-he, who reigned in
-the early years of the eighteenth century; and the Chinese annalists
-assert that metal coins have been in use from the time of Fuh-he, about
-B.C. 2950. Without attempting to determine the specific accuracy of
-Chinese chronology, it is sufficient to note here that the most ancient
-form of Chinese copper cash is the disk, perforated with a square hole,
-so as to admit of the coins being strung together. This, which
-corresponds in form to the large perforated shell-disks, or native
-currency of the Indians of California, and with specimens recovered from
-ancient mounds, Mr. Hale regards as the later imitation in metal of the
-original Chinese shell money. A similar shell-currency, as he shows, is
-in use among many islanders of the Pacific; and he traces it from the
-Loo-Choo Islands, across the vast archipelago, through many island
-groups, to California; and then overland, with the aid of numerous
-disclosures from ancient mounds, to the Atlantic coast, where the
-Indians of Long Island were long noted for its manufacture in the later
-form of wampum. “The natives of Micronesia,” says Mr. Hale, who, it will
-be remembered, records the results of personal observation, “in
-character, usages, and language, resemble to a certain extent the
-nations of the southern and eastern Pacific groups, which are included
-in the designation of Polynesia, but with some striking differences,
-which careful observers have ascribed, with great probability, to
-influences from north-eastern Asia. They are noted for their skill in
-navigation. They have well-rigged vessels, exceeding sixty feet in
-length. They sail by the stars, and are accustomed to take long
-voyages.” To such voyagers, the Pacific presents no more formidable
-impediments to oceanic enterprise than did the Atlantic to the Northmen
-of the tenth century.
-
-Throughout the same archipelago, modern exploration is rendering us
-familiar with examples of remarkable stone structures and colossal
-sculptured figures, such as those from Easter Island now in the British
-Museum. Rude as they undoubtedly are, they are highly suggestive of an
-affinity to the megalithic sculptures and cyclopean masonry of Peru.
-Monuments of this class were noted long ago by Captain Beechy on some of
-the islands nearest the coasts of Chili and Peru. Since then the
-megalithic area has been extended by their discovery in other island
-groups lying towards the continent of Asia.
-
-Another subsidiary class of evidence of a different kind, long since
-noted by me, gives additional confirmation to this recovered trail of
-ancient migration through the islands of the Pacific to the American
-continent. The practice to which the Flathead Indians of Oregon and
-British Columbia owe their name, the compressed skulls from Peruvian
-cemeteries, and the widely diffused evidence of the prevalence of such
-artificial malformation among many American tribes, combine to indicate
-it as one of the most characteristic American customs. Yet the evidence
-is abundant which shows it not only as a practice among rude Asiatic
-Mongol tribes of primitive centuries; but proves that it was still in
-use among the Huns and Avars who contended with the Barbarians from the
-Baltic for the spoils of the decaying Roman empire. Nor was it merely
-common to tribes of both continents. It furnishes another link in the
-chain of evidence of ancient migration from Asia to America; as is
-proved by its practice in some of the islands of the Pacific, as
-described by Dr. Pickering,[2] and since abundantly confirmed by the
-forms of Kanaka skulls. By following up the traces of this strange
-custom, perpetuated among the tribes on the Pacific coasts both of
-Northern and Southern America to our own day, we thus once more retrace
-the steps of ancient wanderers, and are carried back to centuries when
-the Macrocephali of the Euxine attracted the observant eye of
-Hippocrates, and became familiar to Strabo, Pliny, and Pomponius Mela.
-
-But the wanderings among the insular races of the Pacific are not
-limited to such remote eras. Later changes are also recorded by other
-evidence. The direct relationship of existing Polynesian languages is
-not Mongol but Malay; but this is the intrusive element of a time long
-subsequent to the growth of characteristic features which still
-perpetuate traces of Polynesian and American affinities. The number and
-diversity of the languages of the continent of America, and their
-essentially native vocabularies, prove that the latter have been in
-prolonged process of development, free from contact with languages which
-appear to have been still modelling themselves according to the same
-plan of thought in many scattered islands of the Pacific.
-
-The remarkable amount of culture in the languages of some of the
-barbarous nations of North America, traceable, apparently, to the
-important part which the orator played in their deliberative assemblies,
-has not unnaturally excited surprise: but in any attempt to recover the
-history of the New World by the aid of philology we must deal with the
-languages of its civilised races. Among those the Nahuatl or Aztec has
-been appealed to; and the Mayas have been noted as a lettered people
-whose hieroglyphic records, and later transcripts of written documents,
-are now the object of intelligent investigation both by European and
-American philologists. The Maya language strikingly contrasts, in its
-soft, vocalic forms, with the languages of nations immediately to the
-north of its native area. It is that which, according to Stephens, was
-affirmed to be still spoken by a living race in a region beyond the
-Great Sierra, extending to Yucatan and the Mexican Gulf. Others among
-the cultured native languages which seem to invite special study are the
-Aymara and the Quichua. Of these, the latter was the classical language
-of South America, wherein, according to its native historians, the
-Peruvian chroniclers and poets incorporated the national legends. It may
-be described as having occupied a place under Inca rule analogous to
-that of the Norman French in England from the eleventh to the thirteenth
-century. To those ancient, cultured languages of the seats of an
-indigenous civilisation, and with a literature of their own, attention
-is now happily directed. The students of American ethnology begin to
-realise that the buried mounds of Assyria are not richer in discoveries
-relative to the ancient history of Asia than are the monuments, the
-hieroglyphic records, and the languages of Central America and Peru, in
-relation to a native social life which long flourished as a product of
-their own West. To this occidental Assyria we have to look for an answer
-to many inquiries, especially interesting to the intrusive occupants of
-the western continent. If its architecture and sculpture, and the
-hieroglyphic records with which they are enriched, are modifications of
-a prehistoric Asiatic civilisation, it is here that the evidence is to
-be looked for; and if the arts of the sculptor and architect were
-brought to the continent of America by wanderers from an Asiatic
-fatherland, then those of the potter and of the metallurgist will also
-prove to be an inheritance from the old Asiatic hive of the nations.
-
-From the evidence thus far adduced it appears that ethnically the
-American is Mongol, and by the agglutinative element in many of the
-native languages may be classed as Turanian. The Finnic hypothesis of
-Rask, however much modified by later reconsideration of the question of
-the origin of the Aryans, as well as the European melanochroic Metis of
-Huxley, pertains to a prehistoric era of which the Finns and the Basques
-are assumed to be survivals; and to that elder era, rather than to any
-date within the remotest limits of authentic history, the languages of
-America seem to refer us in the search for any common origin with those
-of the eastern hemisphere. But a zealous comparative philologist,
-already referred to, has sought for linguistic traces of relationship
-between the Old and the New World which, if confirmed, would better
-harmonise with the traditions of intercourse between the maritime
-nations of the eastern Mediterranean and a continent lying outside of
-the Pillars of Hercules. In his investigations he aims at determining
-the relations of the Aztec or Nahuatl culture and language to those of
-Asia. Humboldt long ago claimed for much of the former an Old World
-derivation. It seems premature to attempt to deduce any comprehensive
-results from the meagre data thus far gathered. But the author of _The
-Khita and Khita-Peruvian Epoch_, in tracing the progress of his Sumerian
-race, assigns an interval of 4000 years since their settlement in
-Babylonia and India. In like manner, on the assumption of their
-migration from a common Asiatic centre, which the division of Western
-and Eastern Sumerian in pronouns and other details is thought to
-indicate, Peru, it is conceived, may have been reached by a migratory
-wave of earlier movement, from 4000 to 5000 years ago. Mr. Hyde Clarke
-indeed conceives that it is quite within compass that the same great
-wave of migration which passed over India and Babylonia, continued to
-propagate its centrifugal force, and that by its means Peru was reached
-within the last 3000 years. But, whatever intercourse may possibly have
-then been carried on between the Old and the New World, it must be
-obvious, on mature reflection, that so recent a date for the peopling of
-South America from Asia is as little reconcilable with the very remote
-traces of linguistic affinity thus far adduced, as it is with any
-fancied relationship with a lost Atlantis of the elder world. The
-enduring affinities of long-parted languages of the Old World tell a
-very different tale. With the comparative philologist, as with the
-archæologist, time is more and more coming to be recognised as an
-all-important factor.
-
-But, leaving the estimate of centuries out of consideration, in the
-researches into the origin of the peculiar native civilisation of
-America here referred to, the recently deciphered Akkad is accepted as
-the typical language of the Sumerian class. This is assumed to have
-started from High Asia, and to have passed on to Babylonia; while
-another branch diffused itself by India and Indo-China, and thence, by
-way of the islands of the Pacific, reached America. Hence, in an
-illustrative table of Sumerian words arranged under four heads, as
-Western, Indo-Chinese, Peruvian, and Mexican, etc., it is noted that
-“while in some cases a root may be traced throughout, it will be seen
-that more commonly the western and American roots or types, cross in the
-Indo-Chinese region.” But another and older influence, related to the
-Agaw of the Nile region, is also traced in the Guarani, Omagua, and
-other languages of South America, indicating evidences of more remote
-relations with the Old World, and with the African continent. This is
-supposed to have been displaced by a Sumerian migration by which the
-Aymara domination was established in Peru, and the Maya element
-introduced into Yucatan. Those movements are assumed to belong to an era
-of civilisation, during which the maritime enterprise of the Pacific may
-have been carried on upon a scale unknown to the most adventurous of
-modern Malay navigators, notwithstanding the essentially maritime
-character by which the race is still distinguished. All this implies
-that the highway to the Pacific was familiar to both continents; and
-hence a second migration is recognised, in certain linguistic relations,
-between the Siamese and other languages of Indo-China, and the Quichua
-and Aztec of Peru and Mexico. But the problem of the origin of the races
-of the western continent, and of the sources of its native civilisation,
-is still in that preliminary stage in which the accumulation of
-materials on which future induction may be based is of more value than
-the most comprehensive generalisations.
-
-The vastness of the American twin continents, with their Atlantic and
-Pacific seaboard reaching from the Arctic well-nigh to the Antarctic
-circle, furnishes a tempting stimulus to theories of migration on the
-grandest scale, and to the assumption of comprehensive schemes of
-international relation in prehistoric centuries. But they are not more
-substantial than the old legend of Atlantis. The best that can be said
-of them is that here, at any rate, are lines of research in the
-prosecution of which American ethnologists may employ their learning and
-acumen encouraged by the hope of yet revealing a past not less
-marvellous, and possessing a more personal interest, than all which
-geology has recovered from the testimony of the rocks. But before such
-can be more than dimly guessed at, the patient diligence of many
-students will be needed to accumulate the needful materials. Nor can we
-afford to delay the task. The Narraganset Bible, the work of Eliot, the
-apostle of the Indians, is the memorial of a race that has perished;
-while other nations and languages have disappeared since his day, with
-no such invaluable record of their character. Mr. Horatio Hale published
-in the _Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society_, in 1883, a
-paper on the “Tutelo Tribe and Language,” derived from Nikonha, the last
-survivor of a once powerful tribe of North Carolina. To Dr. Brinton, we
-owe the recent valuable notes on the Mangue, another extinct language.
-On the North-western Canadian prairies the buffalo has disappeared, and
-the Indian must follow. On all hands, we are called upon to work
-diligently while it is yet time, in order to accumulate the materials
-out of which the history of the western hemisphere is to be evolved.
-
-It accords with the idea of Polynesian genealogy, that indications
-suggestive of grammatical affinity have been noted in languages of South
-America, in their mode of expressing the tense of the verb; in the
-formation of causative, reciprocal, potential, and locative verbs by
-affixes; and in the general system of compound word structure. The
-incorporation of the particle with the verbal root, appears to embody
-the germ of the more comprehensive American holophrasms. Such affinities
-point to others more markedly Asiatic; for analogies recognised between
-the languages of the Deccan and those of the Polynesian group in
-relation to the determinative significance of the formative particles on
-the verbal root, reappear in some of the characteristic peculiarities of
-American languages. On this subject, the Rev. Richard Garnett remarked,
-in a communication to the Philological Society, that most of the native
-American languages of which we have definite information, bear a general
-analogy alike to the Polynesian family and to the languages of the
-Deccan, in their methods of distinguishing the various modifications of
-time; and he adds: “We may venture to affirm, in general terms, that a
-South American verb is constructed precisely as those in the Tamil and
-other languages of Southern India; consisting, like them, of a verbal
-root, a second element defining the time of the action, and a third
-denoting the subject or person.”
-
-So far it becomes apparent that the evidence, derived alike from
-language and from other sources, points to the isolation of the American
-continent through unnumbered ages. The legend of the lost Atlantis is
-true in this, if in nothing else, that it relegates the knowledge of the
-world beyond the Atlantic, by the maritime races of the Mediterranean,
-to a time already of hoar antiquity in the age of Socrates, or even of
-Solon. But at a greatly later date the Caribbean Sea was scarcely more a
-mystery to the dwellers on the shores of the Ægean, than was the Baltic
-or the North Sea. Herodotus, indeed, expressly affirms his disbelief in
-“a river, called by the barbarians, Eridanus, which flows into a
-northern sea, and from which there is a report that amber is wont to
-come.” Nevertheless, we learn from him of Greek traders exchanging
-personal ornaments and woven stuffs for the furs and amber of the North.
-They ascended the Dneiper as far as Gerrhos, a trading-post, forty days’
-journey inland; and the tokens of their presence there have been
-recovered in modern times. Not only hoards of Greek coins, minted in the
-fifth century B.C., but older golden gryphons of Assyrian workmanship
-have been recovered during the present century, near Bromberg in Posen,
-and at Kiev on the Dneiper. As also, afar on the most northern island of
-the Azores, hoards of Carthaginian coins have revealed traces of the old
-Punic voyager there; if still more ancient voyagers from Sidon, Tyre, or
-Seleucia, did find their way in some forgotten century to lands that lay
-beyond the waste of waters which seemed to engirdle their world: similar
-evidence may yet be forthcoming among the traces of ancient native
-civilisation in Central or Southern America.
-
-But also the carving of names and dates, and other graphic memorials of
-the passing wayfarer, is no mere modern custom. When the sites of
-Greenland settlements of the Northmen of the tenth century were
-discovered in our own day, the runic inscriptions left no room for doubt
-as to their former presence there. By like evidence we learn of them in
-southern lands, from their runes still legible on the marble lion of the
-Piræus, since transported to its later site in the arsenal of Venice. At
-Maeshowe in Orkney, in St. Molio’s Cave on the Clyde, at Kirk Michael in
-the Isle of Man, and on many a rock and stone by the Baltic, the
-sea-rovers from the north have left enduring evidence of their
-wanderings. So was it with the Roman. From the Moray Firth to the Libyan
-desert, and from the Iberian shore to the Syrian valleys, sepulchral,
-legionary, and mythological inscriptions, as well as coins, medals,
-pottery, and works of art, mark the footprints of the masters of the
-world. In Italy itself Perusinian, Eugubine, Etruscan, and Greek
-inscriptions tell the story of a succession of races in that beautiful
-peninsula. It was the same, through all the centuries of Hellenic
-intellectual rule, back to the unrivalled inscription at Abbu Simbel.
-This was cut, says Dr. Isaac Taylor,[3] “when what we call Greek history
-can hardly be said to have commenced: two hundred years before
-Herodotus, the Father of History, had composed his work; a century
-before Athens began to rise to power. More ancient even than the epoch
-assigned to Solon, Thales, and the seven wise men of Greece: it must be
-placed in the half-legendary period at which the laws of Dracon are said
-to have been enacted”;—the period, in fact, from which the legend of
-Atlantis was professedly derived. Yet there the graven characters
-perpetuate their authentic bit of history, legible to this day, of the
-son of Theokles, sailing with his company up the Nile, when King
-Psamatichos came to Elephantina. So it is with Egyptians, Assyrians,
-Phœnicians, and with the strange forgotten Hittites, whose vast empire
-has vanished out of the world’s memory. The lion of the Piræus, with its
-graven runes, is a thing of yesterday, compared with the inscribed lion
-from Marash, with its Hittite hieroglyphs, now in the museum at
-Constantinople; for the Hittite capital, Ketesh, was captured by the
-Egyptian Sethos, B.C. 1340. All but the name of this once powerful
-people seemed to have perished. Yet the inscribed stones, by which they
-were to be restored to their place in history, remained, awaiting the
-interpretation of an enlightened age.
-
-If then, traces of the lost Atlantis are ever to be recovered in the New
-World, it must be by some indubitable memorial of a like kind. Old as
-the legend may be, it is seen that literal graphic memorials—Assyrian,
-Phœnician, Khita, Egyptian, and Greek,—still remain to tell of times
-even beyond the epoch assigned to Solon. The antiquaries of New England
-have sought in vain for runic memorials of the Northmen of the tenth
-century; and the diligence of less trustworthy explorers for traces of
-ancient records has been stimulated to excess, throughout the North
-American continent, with results little more creditable to their honesty
-than their judgment. What some chance disclosure may yet reveal, who can
-presume to guess? But thus far it appears to be improbable that within
-the area north of the Gulf of Mexico, evidences of the presence of
-Phœnician, Greek, or other ancient historic race will now be found.
-Certain it is that, whatever transient visits may have been paid to
-North America by representatives of Old World progress, no long-matured
-civilisation, whether of native or foreign origin, has existed there.
-Through all the centuries of which definite history has anything to
-tell, it has remained a world apart, secure in its isolation, with
-languages, arts, and customs essentially native in character. The
-nations of the Maya stock appear to have made the greatest progress in
-civilisation of all the communities of Central America. They dwelt in
-cities adorned with costly structures dedicated to the purposes of
-religion and the state; and had political government, and forms of
-social organisation, to all appearance, the slow growth of many
-generations. They had, also, a well-matured system of chronology; and
-have left behind them graven and written records, analogous to those of
-ancient Egypt, which still await decipherment. Whether this culture was
-purely of native growth, or had its origin from the germs of an Old
-World civilisation, can only be determined when its secrets have been
-fully mastered. The region is even now very partially explored. The
-students of American ethnology and archæology are only awakening to some
-adequate sense of its importance. But there appears to have been the
-centre of a native American civilisation whence light was slowly
-radiating on either hand, before the vandals of the Spanish Conquest
-quenched it in blood. The civilisation of Mexico was but a borrowed
-reflex of that of Central America; and its picture-writing is a very
-inferior imitation of the ideography of the Maya hieroglyphics.
-
-A tendency manifests itself anew to trace the metallurgy, the letters,
-the astronomical science, and whatever else marks the quickening into
-intellectual life of this American leading race, to an Asiatic or other
-Old World origin. The point, however, is by no means established; nor
-can any reason be shown why the human intellect might not be started on
-the same course in Central America, as in Mesopotamia or the valley of
-the Nile. If we assume the primary settlement of Central America by
-expeditions systematically carried on under the auspices of some ancient
-maritime power of the Mediterranean, or of an early seat of Iberian or
-Libyan civilisation, then they would, undoubtedly, transplant the arts
-of their old home to the New World. But, on the more probable
-supposition of wanderers, either by the Atlantic or the Pacific, being
-landed on its shores, and becoming the undesigned settlers of the
-continent, it is otherwise; and the probabilities are still further
-diminished if we conceive of ocean wanderers from island to island of
-the Pacific, at length reaching the shores of the remote continent after
-the traditions of their Asiatic fatherland had faded from the memory of
-later generations. The condition of metallurgy as practised by the
-Mexicans and Peruvians exhibited none of the matured phases of an
-inheritance from remote generations, but partook rather of the tentative
-characteristics of immature native art.
-
-We are prone to overestimate the facilities by which the arts of
-civilisation may be transplanted to remote regions. It is not greatly
-more difficult to conceive of the rediscovery of some of the essential
-elements of human progress than to believe in the transference of them
-from the eastern to the western hemisphere by wanderers from either
-Europe or Asia. Take the average type of emigrants, such as are annually
-landed by thousands at New York. They come from the most civilised
-countries of Europe. Yet, how few among them all could be relied upon
-for any such intelligent comprehension of metallurgy, if left entirely
-to their own resources, as to be found able to turn the mineral wealth
-of their new home to practical account; or for astronomical science,
-such as would enable them to construct a calendar, and start afresh a
-systematic chronology. As to letters, the picture-writing of the Aztecs
-was the same in principle as the rude art of the northern Indians; and I
-cannot conceive of any reason for rejecting the assumption of its native
-origin as an intellectual triumph achieved by the labours of many
-generations. Every step is still traceable, from the rude picturings on
-the Indian’s grave-post or rock inscription, to the systematic
-ideographs of Palenque or Copan. Hieroglyphics, as the natural outgrowth
-of pictorial representation, must always have a general family likeness;
-but all attempts to connect the civilisation of Central and Southern
-America with that of Egypt fail, so soon as a comparison is instituted
-between the Egyptian calendar and any of the native American systems of
-recording dates and computing time. The vague year of 365 days, and the
-corrected solar year, with the great Sothic Cycle of 1460 years, so
-intimately interwoven with the religious system and historical
-chronology of the Egyptians, abundantly prove the correction of the
-Egyptian calendar by accumulated experience, at a date long anterior to
-the resort of the Greek astronomer, Thales, to Egypt. At the close of
-the fifteenth century, the Aztecs had learned to correct their calendar
-to solar time; but their cycle was one of only fifty-two years. The
-Peruvians also had their recurrent religious festivals, connected with
-the adjustment of their sacred calendar to solar time; but the
-geographical position of Peru, with Quito, its holy city, lying
-immediately under the equator, greatly simplified the process by which
-they regulated their religious festivals by the solstices and equinoxes.
-The facilities which their equatorial position afforded for determining
-the few indispensable periods in their calendar were, indeed, a doubtful
-advantage, for they removed all stimulus to progress. The Mexican
-calendar is the most remarkable evidence of the civilisation attained by
-that people. Humboldt unhesitatingly connected it with the ancient
-science of south-eastern Asia. But instead of its exhibiting any such
-inevitable accumulation of error as that which gave so peculiar a
-character to the historical chronology of the Egyptians, its computation
-differed less from true solar time than the unreformed Julian calendar
-which the Spaniards had inherited from pagan Rome. But though this
-suffices to show that the civilisation of Mexico was of no great
-antiquity, it only accords with other evidence of its borrowed
-character. The Mexicans stood in the same relation to Central America as
-the Northern Barbarians of the third and fourth century did to Italy;
-and the intruding Spaniard nipped their germ of borrowed civilisation in
-the bud. So long as the search for evidences either of a native or
-intruded civilisation is limited to the northern continent of America,
-it is equivalent to an attempt to recover the traces of Greek and Roman
-civilisation in transalpine Europe. The Mexican calendar stone is no
-more than the counterpart of some stray Greek or Roman tablet beyond the
-Alps; or rather, perhaps, of some Mæsogothic product of borrowed art.
-
-We must await, then, the intelligent exploration of Central America,
-before any certain conclusion can be arrived at relative to the story of
-the New World’s unknown past. On the sculptured tablets of Palenque,
-Quiriqua, Chichenitza, and Uxmal, and on the colossal statues at Copan
-and other ancient sites, are numerous inscriptions awaiting the
-decipherment of the future Young or Champolion of American palæography.
-The whole region was once in occupation by a lettered race, having the
-same written characters and a common civilisation. If they owed to some
-apostle from the Mediterranean the grand invention of letters, which, as
-Bacon says, “as ships, pass through the vast seas of time, and make ages
-so distant to participate of the wisdom, illuminations and inventions,
-the one of the other:” then, we may confidently anticipate the recovery
-of some graphic memorial of the messenger, confirming the oft-recurring
-traditions of bearded white men who came from beyond the sea, introduced
-the arts of civilisation, and were reverenced as divine benefactors. It
-cannot be that Egyptian, Assyrian, Hittite, Phœnician, and other most
-ancient races, are still perpetuated by so many traces of their
-wanderings in the Old World; that the Northmen’s graphic runes have
-placed beyond all question their pre-Columbian explorations; and yet
-that not a single trace of Mediterranean wanderers to the lost Atlantis
-survives. In Humboldt’s _Researches_, a fragment of a reputed Phœnician
-inscription is engraved. It was copied by Ranson Bueno, a Franciscan
-monk, from a block of granite which he discovered in a cavern in the
-mountain chain, between the Orinoco and the Amazon. Humboldt recognised
-in it some resemblance to the Phœnician alphabet. We must remember,
-however, what rudely traced Phœnician characters are; and as to their
-transcriber, it may be presumed that he had no knowledge of Phœnician.
-Humboldt says of him: “The good monk seemed to be but little interested
-about this pretended inscription,” though, he adds, he had copied it
-very carefully.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The lost Atlantis, then, lies still in the future. The earlier studies
-of the monuments and prehistoric remains of the American continent
-seemed to point conclusively to a native source for its civilisation.
-From quipu and wampum, pictured grave-post and buffalo robe, to the most
-finished hieroglyphs of Copan or Palenque, continuous steps appear to be
-traceable whereby American man developed for himself the same wondrous
-invention of letters which ancient legend ascribed to Thoth or Mercury;
-or, in less mythic form, to the Phœnician Cadmus. Nor has the generally
-accepted assumption of a foreign origin for American metallurgy been
-placed as yet on any substantial basis. Gold, as I believe, was
-everywhere the first metal wrought. The bright nugget tempted the
-savage, with whom personal ornaments precede dress. It was readily
-fashioned into any desired shape. The same is true, though in a less
-degree, of copper; and wherever, as on the American continent, native
-copper abounds, the next step in metallurgy is to be anticipated. With
-the discovery of the economic use of the metals, an all-important step
-had been achieved, leading to the fashioning of useful tools, to
-architecture, sculpture, pictorial ornamentation, and so to ideography.
-The facilities for all this were, at least, as abundant in Central and
-Southern America as in Egypt. The progress was, doubtless, slow; but
-when the Neolithic age began to yield to that of the metallurgist, the
-all-important step had been taken. The history of this first step is
-embodied in myths of the New World, no less than of the Old. Tubal-cain,
-Dædalus, Hephæstus, Vulcan, Vœlund, Galant, and Wayland the Saxon
-smith-god, are all legendary variations of the first mastery of the use
-of the metals; and so, too, the New World has Quetzalcoatl, its divine
-instructor in the same priceless art.
-
-It forms one of the indisputable facts of ancient history that, long
-before Greece became the world’s intellectual leader, the eastern
-Mediterranean was settled by maritime races whose adventurous enterprise
-led them to navigate the Atlantic. There was no greater impediment to
-such adventurous mariners crossing that ocean in earliest centuries
-before Christ, than at any subsequent date prior to the revival of
-navigation in the fifteenth century. It would not, therefore, in any
-degree, surprise me to learn of the discovery of a genuine Phœnician, or
-other inscription; or, of some hoard of Assyrian gryphons, or shekels of
-the merchant princes of Tyre “that had knowledge of the sea,” being
-recovered among the still unexplored treasures of the buried empire of
-Montezuma, or the long-deserted ruins of Central America. Such a
-discovery would scarcely be more surprising than that of the Punic
-hoards found at Corvo, the most westerly island of the Azores. Yet it
-would furnish a substantial basis for the legend of Atlantis, akin to
-that which the runic monuments of Kingiktorsoak and Igalikko supplied in
-confirmation of the fabled charms of a Hesperian region lying within the
-Arctic circle; and of the first actual glimpses of the American mainland
-by Norse voyagers of the tenth century, as told in more than one of
-their old Sagas. But until such evidence is forthcoming, the legendary
-Atlantis must remain a myth, and pre-Columbian America be still credited
-with a self-achieved progress.
-
------
-
-[1] _Popular Science Monthly_, xxviii. 296.
-
-[2] _Races of Man_ (Bohn), p. 445.
-
-[3] _The Alphabet_, ii. 10.
-
-
-
-
- II
- THE VINLAND OF THE NORTHMEN
-
-
-THE idea that the western hemisphere was known to the Old World, prior
-to the ever-memorable voyage of Columbus four centuries ago, has
-reproduced itself in varying phases, not only in the venerable Greek
-legend of the lost Atlantis; and the still vaguer myth of the Garden of
-the Hesperides on the far ocean horizon, the region of the setting sun;
-but in mediæval fancies and mythical epics. The Breton, in _The Earthly
-Paradise_ of William Morris—
-
- Spoke of gardens ever blossoming
- Across the western sea, where none grew old,
- E’en as the books at Micklegarth had told;
- And said moreover that an English knight
- Had had the Earthly Paradise in sight;
- And heard the songs of those that dwelt therein;
- But entered not; being hindered by his sin.
-
-A legend of mediæval hagiology tells of the Island of St. Brandon, the
-retreat of an Irish hermit of the sixth century. Another tale comes down
-to us from the time of the Caliph Walid, and the invincible Musa, of the
-“Seven Islands” whither the Christians of Gothic Spain fled under the
-guidance of their seven bishops, when, in the eighth century, the
-peninsula passed under the yoke of the victorious Saracens. The
-Eyrbyggja Saga has a romantic story of Biorn Ashbrandsson, who narrowly
-escapes in a tempest raised by his enemy, with the aid of one skilled in
-the black art. After undergoing many surprising adventures, he is
-finally discovered by voyagers, “in the latter days of Olaf the Saint,”
-in a strange land beyond the ocean, the chief of a warlike race speaking
-a language that seemed to be Irish. Biorn warned the voyagers to depart,
-for the people had evil designs against them. But before they sailed, he
-took a gold ring from his hand, and gave it to Gudleif, their leader,
-along with a goodly sword; and commissioned him to give the sword to
-Kiartan, the son of Thurid, wife of an Iceland thane at Froda, of whom
-he had been enamoured; and the gold ring to his mother. This done, he
-warned them that no man venture to renew the search for what later
-commentators refer to as White Man’s Land. In equally vague form the
-fancy of lands beyond the ocean perpetuated itself in an imaginary
-island of Brazil that flitted about the charts of the fourteenth and
-fifteenth centuries with ever-varying site and proportions, till it
-vanished in the light of modern exploration.
-
-A more definite character has been given to the tale of Madoc, a Welsh
-prince of the twelfth century. Southey wove into an elaborate epic this
-legend of the son of Owen Gwyneth, king of North Wales, who, _circa_
-A.D. 1170, sailed into the unknown west in search of a resting-place
-beyond reach of his brother Yorwerth, then ridding himself of all rivals
-to the throne. He found a home in the New World, returned to Wales for
-additional colonists to join the pioneer band; and setting sail with
-them, vanished beyond the western horizon, and was heard of no more. The
-poet, while adapting it to the purpose of his art, was not without faith
-in the genuineness of the legend which he amplified into his epic; and
-notes in the preface appended to it: “Strong evidence has been adduced
-that he (Prince Madoc) reached America; and that his posterity exist
-there to this day on the southern branch of the Missouri, retaining
-their complexion, their language, and in some degree, their arts.” But
-later explorations have failed to discover any “Welsh Indians” on the
-Missouri or its tributaries.
-
-A small grain of fact will suffice at times for the crystallisation of
-vague and visionary fancies into a well-credited tradition. Before the
-printing-press came into play, with its perpetuation of definite
-records, and prosaic sifting of evidence, this was no uncommon
-occurrence; but even in recent times fancy may be seen transmuted into
-accepted fact.
-
-When exploring the great earthworks of the Ohio valley, in 1874, I found
-myself on one occasion in a large Welsh settlement, a few miles from
-Newark, where a generation of native-born Americans still perpetuate the
-language of their Cymric forefathers, and conduct their religious
-services in the Welsh tongue. My attention was first called to this by
-the farmer, who had invited me to an early dinner after a morning’s
-digging in a mound on “The Evan’s Farm,” preceding our repast with a
-long Welsh grace. From him I learned that the district had been settled
-in 1802 by a Welsh colony; and that in two churches in neighbouring
-valleys—one Calvinistic Congregational and another Methodist,—the
-entire services are still conducted in their mother tongue. Such a
-perpetuation of the language and traditions of the race, in a quiet
-rural district, only required time and the confusion of dates and
-genealogies by younger generations, to have engrafted the story of
-Prince Madoc on the substantial basis of a genuine Welsh settlement.
-Southey’s epic was published in 1805, within three years after this
-Welsh immigration to the Ohio valley. The subject of the poem naturally
-gave it a special attraction for American readers; and it was speedily
-reprinted in the United States, doubtless with the same indifference to
-the author’s claim of copyright as long continued to characterise the
-ideas of literary ethics beyond the Atlantic. But the idea of a Welsh
-Columbus of the twelfth century was by no means received with universal
-favour there. Southey quoted at a long-subsequent date a critical
-pamphleteer who denounced the author of _Madoc_ as having “meditated a
-most serious injury against the reputation of the New World by
-attributing its discovery and colonisation to a vagabond Welsh prince;
-this being a most insidious attempt against the honour of America, and
-the reputation of Columbus!”
-
-It is inevitable that America should look back to the Old World when in
-search of some elements of civilisation, and for the diversities of race
-and language traceable throughout the western hemisphere. The early
-students of the sculptured monuments and hieroglyphic records of Mexico,
-Central America, and Peru, naturally turned to Egypt as their probable
-source; though mature reflection has dissipated much of the reasoning
-based on superficial analogies. The gradations from the most primitive
-picture-writing of the Indian savage to ideography and abbreviated
-symbolism, are so clearly traceable in the various stages of progress,
-from the rude forest tribes to the native centres of civilisation in
-Central and Southern America, that no necessity remains for assuming any
-foreign source for their origin.
-
-That the world beyond the Atlantic had remained through unnumbered
-centuries apart from Europe and the old East, until that memorable year
-1492, is indisputable; and there was at one time a disposition to resent
-any rivalry with the grand triumph of Columbus; as though patriotic
-spirit and national pride demanded an unquestioning faith in that as the
-sole link that bound America to the Old World. But the same spirit
-stimulated other nations to claim precedence of Spain and the great
-Genoese; and for this the Scandinavian colonists of Iceland had every
-probability in their favour. They had navigated the Arctic Ocean with no
-other compass than the stars; and the publication in 1845, by the Danish
-antiquaries, of the _Grenlands Historiske Mindesmærker_ recalled minute
-details of their settlements in the inhospitable region of the western
-hemisphere to which they gave the strange misnomer of Greenland. But the
-year 1837 may be regarded as marking an epoch in the history of
-ante-Columbian research. The issue in that earlier year of the
-_Antiquitates Americanæ, sive scriptores septentrionales rerum
-ante-Columbiarum in America_, by the Royal Society of Northern
-Antiquaries, under the editorship of Professor Charles Christian Rafn,
-produced a revolution, alike in the form and the reception of
-illustrations of ante-Columbian American history. The publication of
-that work gave a fresh interest to the vaguest intimations of a dubious
-past; while it superseded them by tangible disclosures, which, though
-modern in comparison with such mythic antiquities as the Atlantis of
-Plato’s _Dialogues_, nevertheless added some five centuries to the
-history of the New World. From its appearance, accordingly, may be dated
-the systematic aim of American antiquaries and historians to find
-evidence of intercourse with the ancient world prior to the fifteenth
-century.
-
-This influence became manifest in all ways; and abundant traces of the
-novel idea are to be found in the popular literature of the time. It
-seemed as though the adventurous spirit of the early Greenland explorers
-had revived, as in the days of the first Vinlanders, as told in the Saga
-of Eric the Red: “About this time there began to be much talk at
-Brattahlid, to the effect that Vinland the Good should be explored; for
-it was said that country must be possessed of many good qualities. And
-so it came to pass that Karlsefne and Snorri fitted out their ship for
-the purpose of going in search of that country.” Only the modern
-Vinlanders who follow in their wake have had for their problem to—
-
- Sail up the current of departed time
- And seek along its banks that vanished clime
- By ancient Scalds in Runic verse renowned,
- Now like old Babylon no longer found.[4]
-
-The indomitable race that emerged from the Scandinavian peninsula, and
-the islands and shores of the Baltic, and overran and conquered the
-deserted Roman world, supplied the maritime energy of Europe from the
-fifth to the tenth century; and colonised northern Italy with the
-element to which we must assign the rise of its great maritime
-republics, including the one that was to furnish the discoverer of
-America in the fifteenth century. Genoese and Spaniards could not have
-made for themselves a home either in Greenland or Iceland. Had the
-Northmen of the tenth century been less hardy, they would probably have
-prosecuted their discoveries, and found more genial settlements, such as
-have since then proved the centres of colonisation for the
-Anglo-American race. But of their actual discovery of some portion of
-the mainland of North America, prior to the eleventh century, there can
-be no reasonable doubt. The wonder rather is that after establishing
-permanent settlements both in Iceland and Greenland, their southern
-explorations were prosecuted with such partial and transient results.
-The indomitable Vikings were conquering fresh territories on the coasts
-and islands of the North Sea, and giving a new name to the fairest
-region of northern Gaul wrested by the Northmen from its Frank
-conquerors. The same hardy supplanters were following up such
-acquisitions by expeditions to the Mediterranean that resulted in the
-establishment of their supremacy over ancient historic races there, and
-training leaders for later crusading adventure.
-
-The voyage from Greenland, or even from Iceland, to the New England
-shores was not more difficult than from the native fiords of the
-Northmen to the Atlantic seaboard, or to the coasts and islands of the
-Mediterranean. Everywhere they left their record in graven runes. At
-Maeshowe in the Orkneys, on Holy Island in the Firth of Clyde, and at
-Kirk Michael, Kirk Andreas, and Kirk Braddon, on the Isle of Man; or as
-the relic of a more ancient past, on the marble lion of the Piræus, now
-at the arsenal of Venice: their runic records are to be seen graven in
-the same characters as those which have been recovered during the
-present century from their early settlements beyond the Atlantic.
-Numerous similar inscriptions from the homes of the Northmen are
-furnished in Professor George Stephens’ _Old Northern Runic Monuments_,
-which perpetuate memorials of the love of adventure of those daring
-rovers, and the pride they took in their expeditions to remote and
-strange lands. Intensified at a later stage by religious fervour, the
-same spirit emboldened them as leaders in the Crusades; and some of
-their runic inscriptions tell of adventurous pilgrimages to the Holy
-Land. An Icelandic rover is designated on his rune-stone _Rafn
-Hlmrckfari_ as a successful voyager to Ireland. Norwegian and Danish
-bautastein frequently preserve the epithet of _Englandsfari_ for the
-leaders of expeditions to the British Isles, or more vaguely refer to
-their adventures in “the western parts.” King Sigurd of Norway proudly
-blazoned the title of _Jórsolafari_ as one who had achieved the
-pilgrimage to Jerusalem; and the literate memorials of the Northmen of
-Orkney, recovered in 1861, on the opening of the famous Maeshowe
-Tumulus, include those of a band of Crusaders, or Jerusalem-farers, who,
-in 1153, followed Earl Ragnvald to the Holy Land.
-
-The inscribed rune-stones brought from the sites of the ancient Norse
-colonies in Greenland, and now deposited in the Royal Museum of Northern
-Antiquities, at Copenhagen, are simple personal or sepulchral
-inscriptions. But they are graven in the northern runes, and as such
-constitute monuments of great historical value: furnishing indisputable
-evidence of the presence of European colonists beyond the Atlantic
-centuries before that memorable 12th of October 1492, on which the eyes
-of the wistful gazers from the deck of the “Santa Maria” were gladdened
-with their first glimpse of what they believed to be the India of the
-far east: the Cipango in search of which they had entered on their
-adventurous voyage.
-
-The colonies of Greenland, after being occupied, according to Norwegian
-and Danish tradition, from the tenth to the fifteenth century, were
-entirely forgotten. The colonists are believed to have been exterminated
-by the native Eskimo. The very locality chosen for their settlements was
-so completely lost sight of that, when an interest in their history
-revived, and expeditions were sent out to revisit the scene of early
-Norse colonisation beyond the Atlantic, much time was lost in a
-fruitless search on the coast lying directly west from Iceland. Towards
-the middle of the seventeenth century, an oar drifted to the Iceland
-coast, a relic, as was believed, of the long-lost colony of Greenland,
-bearing this inscription in runic characters: OFT VAR EK DASA DUR EK DRO
-THICK—_Oft was I weary when I drew thee_; but it was not till the close
-of the century that the traditions of the old Greenlanders began to
-excite attention. Many a Norse legend pictured the enviable delights of
-the fabled Hesperian region discovered within the Arctic circle, yet
-meriting by the luxuriance of its fertile valleys its name of Greenland;
-and the fancies and legendary traditions that gradually displaced the
-history of the old colony, had been interwoven by the poet Montgomery
-with the tale of self-sacrificing labours of Moravian Missionaries, in
-the cantos of his _Greenland_ epic, long before the _Antiquitates
-Americanæ_ issued from the Copenhagen press.
-
-The narrations of ancient voyagers, and their explorations in the New
-World, as brought to light in 1835 by the Copenhagen volume on
-pre-Columbian America, were too truthful in their aspect to be slighted;
-and too fascinating in their revelations of a long-forgotten intercourse
-between the Old World and the New, to be willingly subjected to
-incredulous analysis. From the genuine literary memorials of older
-centuries, sufficient evidence could be gleaned to place beyond
-question, not only the discovery and colonisation of Greenland by Eric
-the Red,—apparently in the year 985,—but also the exploration of
-southern lands, some of which must have formed part of the American
-continent. The manuscripts whence those narratives are derived are of
-various dates, and differ widely in value; but of the genuineness and
-historical significance of the oldest of them, no doubt can be
-entertained. The accounts which some of them furnish are so simple, and
-devoid of anything extravagant or improbable, that the internal evidence
-of truthfulness is worthy of great consideration. The exuberant fancy of
-the Northmen, which revels in their mythology and songs, would have
-constructed a very different tale had it been employed in the invention
-of a southern continent, or earthly Paradise fashioned from the dreams
-of Icelandic and Greenland rovers.
-
-The narrative attaches itself to genuine Icelandic history; and
-furnishes a coherent, and seemingly unexaggerated account of a voyage
-characterised by nothing that is supernatural; and little that is even
-romantic. Eric Thorvaldsson, more commonly referred to as Erikr Rauthi,
-or Eric the Red, a banished Icelandic jarl, made his way to the
-Greenland coast and effected a settlement at Igalikko, or Brattalid, as
-it was at first called, from whence one of the runic inscriptions now in
-the Copenhagen museum was taken. Before the close of the century, if not
-in the very year A.D. 1000, in which St. Olaf was introducing
-Christianity into Norway, Leif, or Leiv Ericson, a son of the first
-coloniser of Greenland, appears to have accidentally discovered the
-American mainland. The story, current in Norwegian and Icelandic
-tradition, and repeated with additions and variations in successive
-Sagas, most frequently ascribes to Leif an actual exploratory voyage in
-quest of southern lands already reported to have been seen by Bjarni
-Herjulfson. But the Sagas from whence the revived story of Vinland is
-derived are of different dates, and very varying degrees of credibility.
-Of those, the narrative in which the name of Bjarni Herjulfson first
-appears occurs in a manuscript of the latter part of the fourteenth
-century; and exhibits both amplifications and inconsistencies abundantly
-justifying its rejection as an authority for depriving Leif Ericson of
-the honour of the discovery of the North American continent. He was on
-his way from Norway to Greenland when he was driven out of his course,
-and so reached the mainland of the New World in that early century; even
-as, five centuries later, the Portuguese admiral, Pedro Alvarez Cabral,
-when on his way to the Cape, was driven westward to the coast of Brazil,
-and so to the discovery of the southern continent. For later generations
-the tale of the old Vinland explorers—whose goodly land of the vine,
-and of fertile meads of grain, had faded away as a dream,—naturally
-gathered around it exaggerations and legendary fable; but such terms are
-wholly inapplicable to the original Saga. The story of Thorfinn’s
-expedition to effect a settlement on the new-found land, within three or
-four years after Leif Ericson’s reported discovery, is a simple,
-consistent narrative, rendered attractive by natural and highly
-suggestive incidents, but entirely free from mythical or legendary
-features. This is obviously the basis of the varying and inconsistent
-tales of later Sagas. The year 1003 is the date assigned to the
-expedition in which Thorfinn set out, with three ships and a
-considerable company of adventurers, and effected a temporary settlement
-of Vinland. Voyaging southward, he first landed on a barren coast where
-a great plain covered with flat stones stretched from the sea to a lofty
-range of ice-clad mountains. To this he gave the name of Helluland, from
-_hella_, a flat stone. The earlier editor, having the requirements of
-his main theory in view, found in its characteristics evidence
-sufficient to identify it with Newfoundland; but Professor Gustav Storm
-assigns reasons for preferring Labrador as more probable.[5] The next
-point touched presented a low shore of white sand, and beyond it a level
-country covered with forest, to which the name of Markland, or woodland,
-was given. This, which, so far as the description can guide us, might be
-anywhere on the American coast, was assumed by the editor of the
-_Antiquitates Americanæ_ to be Nova Scotia; but, according to Professor
-Storm, can have been no other country than Newfoundland. The voyagers,
-after two more days at sea, again saw land; and of this the
-characteristic that the dew upon the grass tasted sweet, was accepted as
-sufficient evidence that Nantucket, where honey-dew abounds, is the
-place referred to. Their further course shoreward, and up a river into
-the lake from which it flowed, has been assumed to have been up the
-Pacasset River to Mount Hope Bay. There the voyagers passed the winter.
-After erecting temporary booths, their leader divided them into two
-parties, which alternately proceeded on exploring excursions. One of his
-followers, a southerner,—_sudrmadr_, or German, as he is assumed to
-have been,—having wandered, he reported on his return the discovery of
-wine-trees and grapes; and hence the name of Vineland, given to the
-locality.
-
-This land of the vine, discovered by ancient voyagers on the shores of
-the New World, naturally awakened the liveliest interest in the minds of
-American antiquaries and historical students; nor is that interest even
-now wholly a thing of the past. Is this “Vinland the Good” a reality?
-Can it be located on any definite site? Montgomery’s _Greenland_ epic
-was published in 1819; and the poet, with no American or Canadian pride
-of locality to beguile him in his interpretation of the evidence,
-observes in one of the notes to his poem: “Leif and his party wintered
-there, and observed that on the shortest day the sun rose about eight
-o’clock, which may correspond with the forty-ninth degree of latitude,
-and denotes the situation of Newfoundland, or the River St. Lawrence.”
-The reference here is to the sole data on which all subsequent attempts
-to determine the geographical location of Vinland have been based; and
-after upwards of sixty years of speculation and conjecture, Professor
-Gustav Storm in his _Studier over Vinlandsreiserne_, arrives at a nearly
-similar conclusion. Vinland cannot have lain farther north than 49°. How
-far southward of this its site may be sought for is matter of
-conjecture; but all probabilities are opposed to its discovery so far
-south as Rhode Island.
-
-Professor Rafn, however, arrived at very different results; and found
-abundant confirmation in the sympathetic responses of the Rhode Island
-antiquaries. The famous Dighton Rock was produced, with its assumed
-runic inscription. The Newport Round Tower was a still more satisfactory
-indication of permanent settlement by its supposed Norse builders; and
-“The Skeleton in Armour,” on which Longfellow founded his ballad
-romance, was accepted without hesitation as a glimpse of one of the
-actual colonists of Vinland in the eleventh century. Professor Rafn
-accordingly summed up the inquiry, and set forth the conclusions arrived
-at, in this definite fashion. “It is the total result of the nautical,
-geographical, and astronomical evidence in the original documents, which
-places the situations of the countries discovered beyond all doubt. The
-number of days’ sail between the several newly-found lands, the striking
-description of the coasts, especially the sand-banks of Nova Scotia; and
-the long beaches and downs of a peculiar appearance on Cape Cod (the
-_Kialarnes_ and _Furdustrandir_ of the Northmen,) are not to be
-mistaken. In addition hereto we have the astronomical remark that the
-shortest day in Vinland was nine hours long, which fixes the latitude of
-41° 24′ 10″, or just that of the promontories which limit the entrance
-to Mount Hope Bay, where Leif’s booths were built, and in the district
-around which the old Northmen had their head establishment, which was
-named by them _Hóp_, or the Creek.”
-
-The Dighton Rock runes erelong fell into woeful discredit; and as for
-the Newport Round Tower, it has been identified as “The Old Stone Mill”
-built there by Governor Benedict Arnold, who removed from Providence to
-Newport in 1653. Though therefore no longer to be accredited to the
-Northmen, it is of very respectable architectural antiquity, according
-to New World reckoning. Nevertheless, in spite of such failure of all
-confirmatory evidence, the general summary of results was presented by
-Professor Rafn in such absolute terms, and the geographical details of
-the assumed localities were so confidently accredited by the members of
-the Rhode Island Historical Society, that his conclusions were accepted
-as a whole without cavil. In reality, however, when we revert to the
-evidence from which such definite results were derived, it proves vague,
-if not illusory. The voyagers crossed over from Greenland to Helluland,
-which we may assume without hesitation to have been the inhospitable
-coast of Labrador. They then pursued a south-western course, in a voyage
-in all of four days, subdivided into two nearly equal parts, until they
-landed on a coast where wild grapes grew, and which accordingly they
-named the Land of the Vine. To Icelandic or Greenland voyagers, the
-vine, with its clusters of grapes, however unpalatable, could not fail
-to prove an object of special note. But there is no need to prolong the
-four days’ run, and land the explorers beyond Cape Cod, in order to find
-the wild grape. It grows in sheltered localities in Nova Scotia; and so
-in no degree conflicts with the later deductions based on the same
-astronomical evidence of the length of the shortest day, which have
-induced subsequent investigators to adopt conclusions much more nearly
-approximating to those suggested by the poet Montgomery fully sixteen
-years before the issue of Professor Rafn’s learned quarto from the
-Copenhagen press.
-
-The topographical details which have to be relied upon in any attempt to
-identify the precise locality are little less vague than those of the
-astronomical data from which the editor of the _Antiquitates Americanæ_
-assumed to compute his assigned latitude. The voyagers, after their
-first wintering, pursued their course southward; and again approaching
-the shore, made their way up a river, to a lake from whence it flowed.
-The land was wooded, with wild “wheat” in the low meadows, and on the
-high banks grape-bearing vines. The aspect of this strange land was
-tempting to voyagers from the north, so they erected booths, and
-wintered there. From the mouth of the St. Lawrence southward to Rhode
-Island, the coast is indented with many an estuary, up any of which the
-old voyagers may have found their way into lake or expanded basin, with
-overhanging forest trees, meadow flats, and other features sufficiently
-corresponding to all that we learn from the old Saga of the temporary
-settlement of Thorfinn and his fellow-voyagers. Fresh claimants
-accordingly enter the lists to contend for the honours that pertain to
-the landing-place of those first Pilgrim Fathers. New Englanders above
-all not unnaturally cherish the pleasant fancy that they had for their
-precursors the hardy Vikings, who, resenting the oppression of King
-Harold the fair-haired, sailed into the unknown west to find a free home
-for themselves. The fancy had a double claim on the gifted musician Ole
-Bull. Himself a wanderer from the Scandinavian fatherland, he started
-the proposition which was to give an air of indisputable reality to the
-old legend; and which culminated in the erection, on Boston Common, in
-1888, of a fine statue of Leif Ericson.
-
-“South of Greenland is Helluland; next is Markland; from thence is not
-far to Vinland the Good.” So reads the old Saga; and with the rearing of
-the statue of its finder, it seemed incumbent on some loyal son of the
-Commonwealth to demonstrate the site of the good land within the area of
-Massachusetts. In the following year, accordingly, Professor Eben Norton
-Horsford, of Cambridge, undertook the search, and was able to identify
-to his entire satisfaction the site of Leif’s, or Karlsefne’s booths, in
-his own neighbourhood on the Charles river. First appeared in 1889 _The
-Problem of the Northmen_; and in the following year, in choicest
-typography, and amplitude of attractive illustrations, _The Discovery of
-the Ancient City of Norumbega, at Watertown on the River Charles_. There
-the ephemeral booths of the old winterers in Vinland had left enduring
-traces after a lapse of more than eight centuries. The discoverer,
-resolved to arrest “Time’s decaying fingers,” which had thus far been
-laid with such unwonted gentleness on the pioneer relics, has marked the
-spot with a memorial tower, and an elaborately inscribed tablet, one
-clause of which runs thus: “=River, The Charles, discovered by Leif
-Erikson 1000 a.d. Explored by Thorwald, Leif’s Brother, 1003 a.d.
-Colonised by Thorfinn Karlsefni 1007 a.d. First Bishop Erik Gnupson 1121
-a.d.=”
-
-The entire evidence has been readduced with minutest critical accuracy
-in _The Finding of Wineland the Good: the History of the Icelandic
-Discovery of America_, by the late gifted Arthur Middleton Reeves. His
-verdict is thus briefly stated: “There is no suggestion in Icelandic
-records of a permanent occupation of the county; and after the
-exploration at the beginning of the eleventh century, it is not known
-that Wineland was ever again visited by Icelanders, although it would
-appear that a voyage thither was attempted in the year 1121, but with
-what result is not known.”[6] In the Codex Frisianus is an apt heading
-which might, better than a more lengthy inscription, have given
-expression to the pleasant fancy that the footprints of Leif Ericson’s
-followers had been recovered on the banks of the Charles river, “FUNDIT
-VINLAND GOTHA”—Vineland the Good found! Maps old and new illustrate the
-topography of the newly-assigned site; and among the rest, one which
-specially aims at reproducing the most definite feature of the old
-narrative is thus titled:—“River flowing through a lake into the sea;
-Vinland of the Northmen; site of Leif’s houses.” To his own
-satisfaction, at least, it is manifest that the author has identified
-the site.
-
-But a great deal more than Leif’s booths is involved. It is the
-discovery of the ancient city of Norumbega, of which also the inscribed
-tablet makes due record; including the statement, set forth more fully
-in the printed text, that the name is only an Indian transmutation of
-“Norbega, the ancient form of Norvega, Norway, to which Vinland was
-subject!” The name, though probably unfamiliar to most modern readers,
-was once as well known as that of Utopia, or El Dorado. One of Sir John
-Hawkins’ fellow-voyagers claimed to have seen the city of Norumbega
-still standing in 1568: a gorgeous Indian town outvying the capital of
-Montezuma, and resplendent in pearls and gold. Hakluyt proposed its
-recolonisation; Sir Humphrey Gilbert went in search of it; and it
-figures both as a city and a country on maps familiar to older
-generations than the founders of New England. Above all, Milton has
-given it a place in the Tenth Book of his _Paradise Lost_. When the
-Divine Creator is represented as readapting this world to a fallen
-race—
-
- Some say he bid his Angels turn askance
- The poles of Earth twice ten degrees and more
- From the sun’s axle. . . . . . . . .
- . . . . . Now from the north
- Of Norumbega, and the Samoed shore,
- Bursting their brazen dungeon, arm’d with ice,
- And snow, and hail, and stormy gust and flaw,
- Boreas . . .
-
-which seems to imply very Icelandic and Arctic associations of the
-Miltonic muse. But the gentle New England poet, Whittier, who had sung
-of his Christian knight in vain quest of the marvellous city, thus
-writes in sober prose to its modern discoverer: “I had supposed that the
-famed city of Norumbega was on the Penobscot when I wrote my poem some
-years ago; but I am glad to think of it as on the Charles, in our own
-Massachusetts.” This work of rearing anew on the banks of the river
-Charles the metropolis of Vinland the Good may be best entrusted to the
-poets of New England.
-
-All praise is due to the enthusiastic editors of the _Antiquitates
-Americanæ_ for their reproduction of the original records on which the
-history and the legends of Vinland rest. They found only too willing
-recipients of the theories and assumptions with which they supplemented
-the genuine narrative; nor has the uncritical spirit of credulous
-deduction wholly ceased. In the untimely death of Professor Munch, the
-historian of Norway, the University of Christiana lost a ripe and
-acutely critical scholar in the very flower of his years. But in Dr.
-Gustav Storm a successor has been found not unworthy to fill his place,
-and represent the younger generation of Northern antiquaries, who have
-now taken in hand, in a more critical spirit, yet with no less
-enthusiasm, the work so well begun by Rafn, Finn Magnusen, and
-Sveinbiorn Egilsson. In the same year in which Leif Ericson’s statue was
-set up in Boston, and all the old enthusiasm for the identification of
-the lost Vinland was revived, there appeared in the _Mémoires de la
-Société Royale des Antiquaires du Nord_ a series of _Studies on the
-Vineland Voyages_, from the pen of Professor Storm, embodying a critical
-analysis of the evidence relating to the Vinland voyages, which is
-treated still more fully in his _Studier over Vinlandsreiserne, Vinlands
-Geografi og Ethnographi_. The whole is now available, along with
-valuable additions, including photographic facsimiles illustrative of
-the original MSS., in Reeves’ _Finding of Wineland the Good_.[7] The
-evidence has to be gleaned from two independent series of narratives:
-the one the Icelandic Sagas and other embodiments of the Vinland
-tradition; the other the more amplified, but less reliable narratives of
-Norwegian chroniclers. The earliest Icelandic accounts are derived
-directly or indirectly from Ari froði, more particularly referred to on
-a later page, whose date as an author is given as about 1120; thereby
-marking the transmission of the narrative to a younger generation before
-it was committed to writing. Ari froði, _i.e._ the learned, derived the
-story from his paternal uncle Thorkell Gellisson of Helgufell, who lived
-in the latter half of the eleventh century; and so was a contemporary of
-Adam of Bremen, who, when resident at the Danish Court, about the year
-1070, obtained the information relating to the Northern regions which he
-embodied in his _Descriptio insularum aquilonis_. Ari’s uncle, Thorkell,
-is said to have spoken, when in Greenland, with a man who, in the year
-985, had accompanied Erik the Red on his expedition from Iceland; so
-that the authority is good, if the narrative were sufficiently ample;
-but unfortunately, though Ari’s notes of what he learned from his uncle
-are still extant in the _Libellus Islandorum_, they are exceedingly
-meagre. The Vinland explorations had no such importance for the men of
-that age as they possess for us, and are accordingly dealt with as a
-very secondary matter. Professor Gustav Storm, in his _Studies on the
-Vineland Voyages_, notes that Thorkell seems to have told his nephew
-most about the colonisation of Greenland. In Professor Storm’s
-_Studies_, and in the exhaustive _Finding of Wineland the Good_, by
-Arthur Middleton Reeves, the entire bearings of the evidence, and the
-relative value of the various ancient authorities, are discussed with
-minute care; and lead alike to the inevitable conclusion that any
-assignment of a site for the lost Vinland, either on Rhode Island, or on
-any part of the New England coast, is untenable. The deductions of
-Professor Rafn from the same evidence were accepted as a final verdict,
-until the too eager confirmation of his Rhode Island correspondents
-brought them into discredit. Now when we undertake an unbiassed review
-of them, it is manifest that too much weight has been attached to his
-estimate of distances measured by the vague standard of a day’s sail of
-a rude galley dependent on wind and tide. This Professor Rafn assumed as
-equivalent to twenty-four geographical miles. But very slight
-consideration suffices to show that, with an indefinite starting-point,
-and only a vague indication of the direction of sailing, with the
-unknown influences of wind and tide, any such arbitrary deduction of a
-definite measurement from the log of the old Northmen is not only
-valueless, but misleading.
-
-A reconsideration of the evidence furnished by the references to the
-fauna and flora of the different points touched at, shows that others of
-Professor Rafn’s deductions are equally open to correction. Helluland, a
-barren region, of large stone slabs, with no other trace of life than
-the Arctic fox, presented the same aspect as Labrador still offers to
-the eye of the voyager. But there is no need to traverse the entire
-Canadian and New England coasts before a region can be found answering
-to the descriptions of a forest-clad country, of numerous deer, or even
-of the vine, as noted by the old explorers from Greenland. To the eye of
-the Greenlander, the Markland, or forest-clad land, lay within sight no
-farther south than Newfoundland or Cape Breton. To those who are
-accustomed to associate the vine with the Rhine land, or the plains of
-Champagne, it sounds equally extravagant to speak of the Maritime
-Provinces, or of the New England States, as “Vinland the Good.” But
-numerous allusions of voyagers and travellers of the sixteenth and
-seventeenth centuries refer with commendation to the wild grapes of
-North America. Jacques Cartier on making his way up the St. Lawrence, in
-his second voyage, gave to the Isle of Orleans the name of the Isle de
-Bacchus, because of the many wild vines found there; though he notes
-that, “not being cultivated nor pruned, the grapes are neither so large
-nor so sweet as ours”—that is, those of France. Lescarbot, in like
-manner, in 1606, records the grape vine as growing at Chuakouet, or
-Saco, in Maine, and in the following year they are noted as abundant
-along the banks of the river St. John in New Brunswick.
-
-To voyagers from Iceland or Greenland many portions of the coast of Nova
-Scotia would present the aspect of a region clothed with forest, and, as
-such, “extremely beautiful.” Deer are still abundant both there and in
-Newfoundland; and as for the grapes gathered by Leif Ericson, or those
-brought back to Thorvald by Hake and Hekia, the swift runners, at their
-more northern place of landing, the wild vine is well known at the
-present time in sheltered localities of Nova Scotia. Having therefore
-carefully studied the earliest maps and charts, of which reduced copies
-are furnished in the _Mémoires_, and reviewed the whole evidence with
-minute care, Professor Storm thus unhesitatingly states the results:
-“Kjalarnes, the northern extremity of Vinland, becomes Cape Breton
-Island, specially described as low-lying and sandy. The fiord into which
-the Northmen steered, on the country becoming _fjorthskorit_, _i.e._
-‘fiord-indented,’ may have been one of the bays of Guysborough, the
-county of Nova Scotia lying farthest to the north-east; possibly indeed
-Canso Bay, or some one of the bays south of it. Therefore much further
-to the south in Nova Scotia must we seek the mouth of the river where
-Karlsefn made his abortive attempt at colonisation. . . . The west coast
-of northern Vinland is characterised as a region of uninhabited forest
-tracks, with few open spots, a statement admirably agreeing with the
-topographical conditions distinguishing the west coast of Cape Breton
-Island, which in a modern book of travels is spoken of as ‘an unexplored
-and trackless land of forests and mountains.’ Hence to the south of this
-region search has to be made for the mouth of the streamlet where
-Thorvald Eriksson was killed.” Various points, accordingly, such as
-Salmon river, or one of the rivers flowing into Pictou harbour, are
-suggested as furnishing features of resemblance and inviting to further
-research.
-
-Here, then, is the same problem submitted to the historical antiquaries
-of Nova Scotia which those of Rhode Island took up upwards of half a
-century ago, with unbounded zeal, and very surprising results. Nor is
-there a “Dighton Rock” wanting; for Nova Scotia has its inscribed stone,
-already interpreted as graphic runes, replete with equally suggestive
-traces of the Northmen of the tenth century. The inscribed rock at
-Yarmouth has long been an object of curious interest. So far back as
-1857 I received from Dr. J. G. Farish a full-sized copy of the
-inscription, with the following account of it: “The inscription, of
-which the accompanying sketch is an exact copy,
-
-[Illustration: Inscription, Yarmouth Rock, Nova Scotia.]
-
-was discovered forty-five years ago, at Yarmouth, Nova Scotia. The rock
-on which the characters are engraved is about two feet in diameter, of
-an irregular hemispherical shape, with one naturally smooth surface. It
-lies on the shore of a small inlet, at high-water mark, and close to the
-bank, on which it may formerly have rested. The stone has been split
-where a very thin vein of quartz once traversed it, but the
-corresponding half could never be found. The tracing has been done with
-a sharp-pointed instrument carried onward, by successive blows of a
-hammer or mallet, the effect of which is plainly visible. The point of
-the instrument barely penetrated the layer of quartz, which is almost as
-thin as the black marks of the sketch. The inscription has been shown to
-several learned gentlemen,—one intimately acquainted with the
-characters of the Micmac and Millicet Indians who once inhabited this
-country; another, familiar with the Icelandic and other Scandinavian
-languages; but no person has yet been able to decipher it.” Again, in
-1880, I received from Mr. J. Y. Bulmer, Secretary of the Nova Scotia
-Historical Society, a photograph of the Yarmouth rock, with an
-accompanying letter, in which he remarks: “I am directed by the council
-of the Nova Scotia Historical Society to forward to you a photographic
-view of a stone found near the ocean, in Yarmouth county, N.S., and
-having an inscription which, if not runic or Phœnician, is supposed by
-many to be the work of man. As ancient remains are most likely to be
-preserved by calling attention to all such works and inscriptions, we
-thought it best to forward it to you, where it could be examined by
-yourself and others likely to detect a fraud, or translate an
-inscription. The stone is now—or was one hundred years ago,—near, or
-in fact on, the edge of the sea. It has since been removed to Yarmouth
-for preservation. It was found near Cape Sable, a cape that must have
-been visited by nearly every navigator, whether ancient or modern.”
-
-The earlier description of Dr. Farish is valuable, as it preserves an
-account of the rock while it still occupied its original site. He
-speaks, moreover, definitely as to the period when it first attracted
-attention; and which, though more recent than the “one hundred years” of
-my later correspondent, or a nearly equivalent statement in the
-_Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society_, that “it has been
-known for nearly an hundred years,” is sufficiently remote to remove all
-idea of fraud, at least by any person of the present generation. The
-description given by Dr. Farish of the apparent execution of the
-inscription by means of a sharp-pointed instrument—meaning thereby no
-doubt a metallic tool,—and a hammer or mallet, clearly points to other
-than native Indian workmanship, whatever may have been the date of its
-execution. As will be seen from the accompanying copy, it is in
-arbitrary linear characters bearing no resemblance to the abbreviated
-symbols familiar to us in Indian epigraphy; and at the same time it may
-be described as unique in character. Having been known to people
-resident in its vicinity for many years before the attention of students
-of the early monuments of the continent was invited to it, it appears to
-be beyond suspicion of purposed fraud. I did not attempt any solution of
-the enigma thus repeatedly submitted to my consideration; but it was
-this graven stone that was referred to when, in the inaugural address to
-the section of History and Archæology of the Royal Society of Canada, in
-1882, the remark was made: “I know of but one inscription in Canada
-which seems to suggest the possibility of a genuine native record.”
-
-On nearly every recurrence of an inscription in any linear form of
-alphabetic character brought to light in the western hemisphere, the
-first idea has been to suggest a Phœnician origin; and this is, no
-doubt, implied in the statement of its runic decipherer, in the
-_Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society_, that “the glyphs
-have been at various times copied and sent abroad to men of learning who
-have made more or less attempts at deciphering them, more than one
-savant seeing traces of Semitic origin.” But latterly with the reported
-discovery of any linear inscription on the eastern seaboard, the
-temptation has been to refer it to the Northmen of the eleventh century.
-To this accordingly the allusions of both of my Nova-Scotian
-correspondents pointed. But the characters of the Scandinavian futhork
-are sufficiently definite to satisfy any one familiar with Scottish and
-Manx runic inscriptions, or with Professor George Stephens’ ample
-illustrations of them as they are found in the native home of the
-Northmen, that it is vain to look to either for a key to the graven
-legend on the Yarmouth rock. The presence of the Northmen, not only in
-Iceland and Greenland, but as transient visitors on some portion of the
-North American mainland, now rests on satisfactory historical evidence.
-In Greenland they left indisputable literate records of their
-colonisation of the region to which they gave the inapt name it still
-retains. The runic inscriptions brought to Copenhagen in 1831 not only
-determine the sites of settlements effected by the companions and
-successors of Eric, but they serve to show the kind of evidence to be
-looked for, alike to the north and the south of the St. Lawrence, if any
-traces yet survive of their having attempted to colonise the old
-Markland and Vinland, whether the latter is recovered in Nova Scotia or
-New England. Their genuine memorials are not less definite than those
-left by the Romans in Gaul or Britain; and corresponding traces of them
-in the assumed Vinland, and elsewhere in the United States, have been
-perseveringly, but vainly, sought for. One unmistakably definite
-Scandinavian inscription, that of the “Huidœrk,” professedly found on
-the river Potomac, does not lay claim to serious criticism. It was
-affirmed to have been discovered in 1867 graven on a rock on the banks
-of the Potomac; but to any student familiar with the genuine examples
-figured in the _Antiquitates Americanæ_, it will be readily recognised
-as a clever hoax, fabricated by the correspondent of the _Washington
-Union_ out of genuine Greenland inscriptions. It reads thus: =hir
-huilir syasy fagrharrdr avstfirthingr iki a kildi systr thorg samfethra
-halfthritgr gleda gvd sal henar=. To this are added certain
-symbols, suggested it may be presumed by the Kingiktorsoak inscription,
-from which the translator professes to derive the date A.D. 1051.
-
-In the interval between the dates of the two communications previously
-referred to, a rubbing of the inscription on the Yarmouth rock was
-forwarded to Mr. Henry Phillips jr., of Philadelphia. It appears to have
-been under consideration by him at intervals for nine years, when at
-length it was made the subject of a paper read before the American
-Philosophical Society, and printed in its _Proceedings_ in 1884. After a
-description of the locality, and the discovery of the inscribed stone on
-its original site, “about the end of the last century, by a man named
-Fletcher,” Mr. Phillips states the reasons which sufficed to satisfy him
-that the inscription is a genuine one. He then proceeds thus: “Having
-become imbued with a belief that no deception was intended, or
-practised, I entered upon the study of the markings with a mind totally
-and entirely free from prejudice. So far from believing that the
-inscription was a relic of the pre-Columbian discovery of America, I had
-never given any credence to that theory.” Thus, not only entirely
-unbiassed, but, as he says, “somewhat prejudiced against the
-authenticity of any inscription on this continent purporting to emanate
-from the hardy and intrepid Norsemen,” he proceeded to grapple with the
-strange characters. “As in a kaleidoscope, word after word appeared in
-disjointed form, and each was in turn rejected, until at last an
-intelligible word came forth, followed by another and another, until a
-real sentence with a meaning stood forth to my astonished gaze:
-_Harkussen men varu_—Hako’s son addressed the men.” On reverting to the
-old Vinland narrative this seemed all unexpectedly to tally with it, for
-Mr. Phillips found that in the expedition of Thorfinn Karlsefne, in
-1007, one named Haki occurs among those who accompanied him. Still more
-noteworthy, as it appears, though overlooked by him, this oldest record
-of a European visitor to the Nova-Scotian shores, if actually referable
-to Hake, the fellow-voyager of Thorfinn, was no Northman, but a Scot!
-For Thorfinn himself, the old Saga, as reproduced in the _Antiquitates
-Americanæ_, claims a comprehensive genealogy in which his own Scottish
-ancestry is not overlooked. In the summer of 1006, according to the
-narrative of the “settlement effected in Vinland by Thorfinn,” “there
-arrived in Greenland two ships from Iceland; the one was commanded by
-Thorfinn, having the very significant surname of Karlsefn (_i.e._ who
-promises, or is destined to be an able or great man), a wealthy and
-powerful man, of illustrious lineage, and sprung from Danish, Norwegian,
-Swedish, Irish and Scottish ancestors, some of whom were kings of royal
-descent. He was accompanied by Snorre Thorbrandson, who was also a man
-of distinguished lineage. The other ship was commanded by Bjarne
-Grimolfson, of Breidefiord, and Thorhall Gamlison, of Austfiord. They
-kept the festival of Yule at Brattalid. Thorfinn became enamoured of
-Gudrida, and obtained the consent of her brother-in-law, Leif, and their
-marriage was celebrated during the winter. On this, as on former
-occasions, the voyage to Vinland formed a favourite theme of
-conversation, and Thorfinn was urged both by his wife and others to
-undertake such a voyage. It was accordingly resolved on in the spring of
-1007.” This later narrative distinctly sets forth an organised scheme of
-permanent settlement in the tempting land of the vine. Thorvald, who was
-in command of one of the three ships fitted out for the expedition, was
-married to Freydisa, a natural daughter of Eric the Red. “On board this
-ship was also a man of the name of Thorhall, who had long served Eric as
-a huntsman in summer, and as house-steward in winter, and who had much
-acquaintance with the uncolonised parts of Greenland. They had in all
-160 men. They took with them all kinds of live stock, it being their
-intention to establish a colony, if possible.” Then follows the notice
-of their observations of the characteristic features, and of the fauna
-and flora of Helluland, Markland, and subsequent points; to the last of
-which, characterised by “trackless deserts and long beaches with sands,”
-they gave the name of Furdustrandir. After passing this, the
-characteristic feature is noted that the land began to be indented by
-inlets, or bays. Then follows the notice of Hake, the Scot, to whom Mr.
-Phillips conceives the Yarmouth inscription may be due. The reference,
-accordingly, with its accompanying description of the country, has a
-special claim to notice here. “They had,” says the Saga, “two Scots with
-them, Haki and Hekia, whom Leif had formerly received from the Norwegian
-King, Olaf Tryggvason,” it may be assumed as slaves carried off in some
-marauding expedition to the British Islands. The two Scots, man and
-woman, it is added, “were very swift of foot. They put them on shore
-recommending them to proceed in a south-west direction, and explore the
-country. After the lapse of three days they returned, bringing with them
-some grapes and ears of wheat, which grew wild in that region. They
-continued their course until they came to a place where the firth
-penetrated far into the country. Off the mouth of it was an island past
-which there ran strong currents, which was also the case further up the
-firth. On the island there was an immense number of eider ducks, so that
-it was scarcely possible to walk without treading on their eggs. They
-called the island Straumey (Stream Isle), and the firth Straumfiordr
-(Stream Firth). They landed on the shore of this firth, and made
-preparations for their winter residence. The country was extremely
-beautiful,” as we may readily imagine a sheltered nook of Nova Scotia to
-have appeared to voyagers fresh from Iceland and the Greenland shores.
-It may be well to note here that the incident of the discovery of the
-vine and the gathering of grapes reappears in different narratives under
-varying forms. It was a feature to be specially looked for by all later
-voyagers in search of the Vinland of the first expedition, that set out
-in search for the southern lands of which Bjarni Herjulfson is reported
-to have brought back an account to Greenland. Nor is the discovery of
-the vine by successive explorers along the American seaboard in any
-degree improbable, though it can scarcely be doubted that some of the
-later accounts are mere amplifications of the original narrative. It is,
-at any rate, to be noted that the scene of Haki the Scot’s discovery,
-was not the Hóp, identified by the Rhode Island Historical Society with
-their own Mount Hope Bay. As for Thorhall and his shipmates, they turned
-back, northward, in search of Vinland, and so deserted their
-fellow-voyagers before the scene of attempted colonisation was reached,
-and were ultimately reported to have been wrecked on the Irish coast.
-
-Such is the episode in the narrative of ancient explorations of the
-North American shores by voyagers from Greenland, in which Mr. Phillips
-was gratified by the startling conformity, as it seemed to him, of the
-name of Haki, with the Harkussen of his runes; though, it must be
-admitted, the identity is far from complete. If, however, there were no
-doubt as to the inscription being a genuine example of Northern runes,
-the failure to refer them to Hake, or any other specific member of an
-exploring party, would be of little moment. Here, at any rate, was
-evidence which, if rightly interpreted, was calculated to suggest a
-reconsideration of the old localisation of Vinland in the state of Rhode
-Island; and to this other evidence pointed even more clearly. Reassured,
-accordingly, by a study of the map, which shows the comparatively
-trifling distance traversed by the assumed voyagers from Greenland, when
-compared with that from their remote European fatherland, Mr. Phillips
-submitted his interpretation to the American Philosophical Society “as
-worthy of consideration, if not absolutely convincing.” To the
-topographer of the maritime coasts of Canada, a genuine runic
-inscription which proved that Norse voyagers from Greenland did actually
-land on the shores of Nova Scotia, in A.D. 1007, and leave there a
-literate record of their visit, would be peculiarly acceptable. But
-whatever be the significance of the Yarmouth inscription, it fails to
-satisfy such requirements. It neither accords with the style, or usual
-formula of runic inscriptions; nor, as will be seen from the
-accompanying facsimile, is it graven in any variation of the familiar
-characters of the Scandinavian futhork. The fascinating temptation has
-to be set aside; and the Hake or Harkussen of its modern interpreter
-must take rank with the illusory Thorfinn discovered by the Rhode Island
-antiquaries on their famed Dighton Rock, which still stands by the banks
-of the Taunton river.
-
-It is indeed vain for us to hope for evidence of the same definite kind
-as that which establishes beyond question the presence of the Northmen
-on the sites of their long-settled colonies in Greenland. Their visits
-to the Canadian seaboard were transitory; and any attempt at settlement
-there failed. Yet without the definite memorials of the old Norse
-colonists recovered in the present century on the sites of their
-Greenland settlements, it would probably have proved vain to identify
-them now. The coast of Nova Scotia is indented with inlets, and
-estuaries of creeks and rivers, suggesting some vague resemblance to the
-Hóp, or creek of the old Sagas. Whether any one of them presents
-adequate features for identification with the descriptions furnished in
-their accounts has yet to be ascertained. But there is every motive to
-stimulate us to a careful survey of the coast in search of any probable
-site of the Vinland of the old Northmen. Slight as are the details
-available for such a purpose, they are not without some specific
-definiteness, which the Rhode Island antiquaries turned to account, not
-without a warning to us in their too confident assumption of results.
-Dr. E. B. Tylor, in his address to the section of anthropology at the
-Montreal meeting of the British Association, after referring to the
-Icelandic records of the explorations of the hardy sea-rovers from
-Greenland, as too consistent to be refused belief as to the main facts,
-thus proceeded: “They sailed some way down the American coast. But where
-are we to look for the most southerly points which the Sagas mention as
-reached in Vineland? Where was Keel-ness where Thorvald’s ship ran
-aground, and Cross-ness where he was buried when he died by the
-Skræling’s arrow? Rafn, in the _Antiquitates Americanæ_, confidently
-maps out these places about the promontory of Cape Cod, in
-Massachusetts, and this has been repeated since from book to book. I
-must plead guilty to having cited Rafn’s map before now, but when with
-reference to the present meeting I consulted our learned editor of
-Scandinavian records at Oxford, Mr. Gudbrand Vigfusson, and afterwards
-went through the original passages in the Sagas with Mr. York Powell, I
-am bound to say that the voyages of the Northmen ought to be reduced to
-more moderate limits. It appears that they crossed from Greenland to
-Labrador (Helluland), and thence sailing more or less south and west, in
-two stretches of two days each, they came to a place near where wild
-grapes grew, whence they called the country Vineland. This would,
-therefore, seem to have been somewhere about the Gulf of St. Lawrence,
-and it would be an interesting object for a yachting cruise to try down
-from the east coast of Labrador a fair four days’ sail of a Viking ship,
-and identify, if possible, the sound between the island and the ness,
-the river running out of the lake into the sea, the long stretches of
-sand, and the other local features mentioned in the Sagas.” A fresh
-stimulus is thus furnished to Canadian yachtsmen to combine historical
-exploration with a summer’s coasting trip, and go in search of the lost
-Vinland. The description of the locality that furnished the data from
-which the members of the Rhode Island Historical Society satisfied
-themselves as to the identity of their more southern site on the
-Pacasset river, has to be kept in view in any renewed inquiry. At the
-same time it must not be overlooked that the oldest and most trustworthy
-narrative, in the Saga of Eric the Red, with the credited, and probably
-genuine story of the voyage of Karlsefne, are expanded, in the
-Grænlendingathàttr, into five voyages, with their incidents recast with
-modifications and additions. The expedition of Leif Ericson, and his
-accidental discovery of Vinland, and the subsequent attempt at
-colonisation of Karlsefne, in company with Thorvald and Freydisa, are
-the only adventures accredited by the oldest tradition. In the latter
-narrative it is stated that “they sailed for a long time, until they
-came at last to a river which flowed down from the land into a lake, and
-so into the sea. There were great bars at the mouth of the river, so
-that it could only be entered at the height of the flood tide. Karlsefn
-and his men sailed into the mouth of the river, and called it Hóp,”
-_i.e._ a land-locked bay. “They found self-sown wheat fields wherever
-there were hollows, and where there was hilly ground there were vines.”
-Subsequent descriptions are obviously based on this account. But to
-whatever extent the description of the locality where Thorvald, the
-brother of Leif Ericson, was killed by a Skræling may have been
-suggested by that narrative, the localities are different. It was
-apparently in the spring of A.D. 1004 that Karlsefne set out on his
-colonising expedition. The voyagers sailed along Furdustrandir, a long,
-low sandy coast, till they came to where the land was indented with
-creeks and inlets. There they steered into the Straumsfjord, to a spot
-where Karlsefne and his companions spent the winter of A.D. 1005; and
-where, therefore, we may assume the observations to have been made that
-determined the length of the day in Vinland at the winter solstice. The
-narrative of noteworthy incidents is accompanied with topographical
-details that have to be kept in view in any attempt at recovering traces
-of the locality. There, if it could be identified, we have to look for a
-promontory answering to the Krossanes, or promontory of the crosses: the
-spot where Thorvald was buried; and as would seem to be implied, where a
-cross was set up at the grave mound. The style of such a sepulchral
-memorial of the Northmen at a little later date is very familiar to us.
-The discovery on some hitherto unheeded spot of the Nova-Scotian coast
-of a bautastein, graven like those recovered on the sites of the old
-Greenland colony, would be an invaluable historical record. It might be
-expected to read somewhat in this fashion: _Leif sunr Erikr rautha
-raisti krus thana eftir Thorvald brothur sina_. But there is slight
-ground for imagining that the transient visitors from Greenland to the
-Canadian shores left any more lasting memorial of the tragic event that
-reappears in successive versions of the narrative of their presence
-there, than a wooden grave-post, or uninscribed headstone.
-
-One other element in the characteristic features of the strange land
-visited by the Greenland explorers is the native population, and this
-has a specific interest in other respects, in addition to its bearing on
-the determination of a Nova-Scotian site for “Vineland the Good.” They
-are designated Skrælings (Skrælingjar), and as in this the Greenland
-voyagers applied the same name to the natives of Vinland as to the
-Greenland Eskimo, it has been assumed that both were of the same race.
-But the term “skræling” is still used in Norway to express the idea of
-decrepitude, or physical inferiority; and probably was used with no more
-definite significance than our own word “savage.” The account given in
-the Saga of the approach of the Skrælings would sufficiently accord with
-that of a Micmac flotilla of canoes. Their first appearance is thus
-described: “While looking about one morning, they observed a great
-number of canoes. On exhibiting friendly signals the canoes approached
-nearer to them, and the natives in them looked with astonishment at
-those they met there. These people were sallow-coloured and ill-looking,
-had ugly heads of hair, large eyes and broad cheeks.” The term
-_skræling_ has usually been interpreted “dwarf,” and so seemed to
-confirm the idea of the natives having been Eskimo; but, as already
-stated, the word, as still used in Norway, might mean no more than the
-inferiority of any savage race. As to the description of their features
-and complexion, that would apply equally well to the red Indian or the
-Eskimo, and so far as the eyes are spoken of, rather to the former than
-the latter. More importance may be attached to the term _hudhkeipr_
-applied to their canoes, which is more applicable to the kayak, or
-skin-boat, than to the birch-bark canoe of the Indian; but the word was
-probably loosely used as applicable to any savage substitute for a keel,
-or built boat.
-
-This question of the identification of the Skrælings, or natives,
-whether of Nova Scotia or New England, is one of considerable
-ethnographic significance. The speculations relative to the possible
-relationship of the Eskimo to the post-glacial cave-dwellers of the
-Dordogne valley, and their consequent direct descent from palæolithic
-European man, confer a value on any definite evidence bearing on their
-movements in intermediate centuries. On the other hand, the approximate
-correspondence of the Huron-Iroquois of Canada and the state of New York
-to the Eskimo in the dolichocephalic type of skull common to both, gives
-an interest to any evidence of the early presence of the latter to the
-south of the St. Lawrence. In their western migrations the Eskimo
-attract the attention of the ethnographer as the one definite ethnic
-link between America and Asia. They are met with, as detached and
-wandering tribes, across the whole continent, from Greenland to Behring
-Strait. Nevertheless, they appear to be the occupants of a diminishing
-rather than an expanding area. This would accord with the idea of their
-area extending over the Canadian maritime provinces, and along the New
-England coast, in the eleventh century; and possibly as indicating the
-early home, from which they were being driven northward by the
-Huron-Iroquois or other assailants, rather than implying an overflow
-from their Arctic habitat. Seal hunting on the coast of Newfoundland,
-and fishing on its banks and along the shores of Nova Scotia, would even
-now involve no radical change in the habits of the Eskimo. It was with
-this hyperborean race that the Scandinavian colonists of Greenland came
-in contact 800 years ago, and by them that they were exterminated at a
-later date. If it could be proved that the Skrælings of the eleventh
-century, found by the Northmen on the American mainland, were Eskimo, it
-would furnish the most conclusive evidence that the red Indians—whether
-Micmac, Millicet, or Hurons,—are recent intruders there.
-
-In any process of aggression of the native American race on the older
-area of the Eskimo, some intermixture of blood would naturally follow.
-The slaughter of the males in battle, and the capture of women and
-children, everywhere leads to a like result; and this seems the simplest
-solution of the problem of the southern brachycephalic, and the northern
-dolichocephalic type of head among native American races. When the sites
-of the ancient colonies of Greenland were rediscovered and visited by
-the Danes, they imagined they could recognise in the physiognomy of some
-of the Eskimo who still people the shores of Davis Straits, traces of
-admixture between the old native and the Scandinavian or Icelandic
-blood. Of the Greenland colonies the Eskimo had perpetuated many
-traditions, referring to the colonists under the native name of
-_Kablunet_. But of the language that had been spoken among them for
-centuries, the fact is highly significant that the word _Kona_, used by
-them as a synonym for woman, is the only clearly recognised trace. This
-is worthy of note, in considering the distinctive character of the
-Eskimo language, and its comparison with the Indian languages of the
-North American continent. It has the feature common to nearly all the
-native languages of the continent north of the Mexican Gulf in the
-composite character of its words; so that an Eskimo verb may furnish the
-equivalent to a whole sentence in other tongues. But what is specially
-noteworthy is that, while the Huron-Iroquois, the Algonkin, and other
-Indian families of languages have multiplied widely dissimilar dialects,
-Dr. Henry Rink has shown that the Eskimo dialects of Greenland or
-Labrador differ slightly from those of Behring Strait; and the congeners
-of the American Eskimo, who have overflowed into the Aleutian Islands,
-and taken possession of the north-eastern region of Asia, perpetuate
-there nearly allied dialects of the parent tongue.[8] The Alaskan and
-the Tshugazzi peninsulas are in part peopled by Eskimo; the Konegan of
-Kudjak Island belong to the same stock; and all the dialects spoken in
-the Aleutian Islands, the supposed highway from Asia to America, betray
-in like manner the closest affinities to the Arctic Mongolidæ of the New
-World. They thus appear not only to be contributions from the New World
-to the Old, but to be of recent introduction there. If the cave-dwellers
-of Europe’s palæolithic era found their way as has been suggested, in
-some vastly remote age, either by an eastern or a western route to the
-later home of the Arctic Eskimo, it is in comparatively modern centuries
-that the tide of migration has set westward across the Behring Strait,
-and by the Aleutian Islands, into Asia.
-
-The reference to the Skrælings in the first friendly intercourse of
-Thorfinn Karlsefne and his companions with the natives, and their
-subsequent hostile attitude, ending in the death of Thorvald Ericson,
-has given occasion to this digression. But the question thus suggested
-is one of no secondary interest. If we could certainly determine their
-ethnical character the fact would be of great significance; and coupled
-with any well-grounded determination of the locality where the fatal
-incident occurred, would have important bearings on American ethnology.
-The description of the sallow, or more correctly, swarthy coloured,
-natives with large eyes, broad cheek-bones, shaggy hair, and forbidding
-countenances is furnished in the Saga, and then the narrative thus
-proceeds: “After the Skrælings had gazed at them for a while, they rowed
-away again to the south-west past the cape. Karlsefne and his company
-had erected their dwelling-houses a little above the bay, and there they
-spent the winter. No snow fell, and the cattle found their food in the
-open field. One morning early, in the beginning of 1008, they descried a
-number of canoes coming from the south-west past the cape. Karlsefne
-having held up the white shield as a friendly signal, they drew nigh and
-immediately commenced bartering. These people chose in preference red
-cloth, and gave furs and squirrel skins in exchange. They would fain
-also have bought swords and spears, but these Karlsefne and Snorre
-prohibited their people from selling to them. In exchange for a skin
-entirely gray the Skrælings took a piece of cloth of a span in breadth,
-and bound it round their heads. Their barter was carried on in this way
-for some time. The Northmen then found that their cloth was beginning to
-grow scarce, whereupon they cut it up in smaller pieces, not broader
-than a finger’s breadth, yet the Skrælings gave as much for these
-smaller pieces as they had formerly given for the larger ones, or even
-more. Karlsefne also caused the women to bear out milk soup, and the
-Skrælings relishing the taste of it, they desired to buy it in
-preference to everything else, so they wound up their traffic by
-carrying away their bargains in their bellies. Whilst this traffic was
-going on it happened that a bull, which Karlsefne had brought along with
-him, came out of the wood and bellowed loudly. At this the Skrælings got
-terrified and rushed to their canoes, and rowed away southwards. About
-this time Gudrida, Karlsefne’s wife, gave birth to a son, who received
-the name of Snorre. In the beginning of the following winter the
-Skrælings came again in much greater numbers; they showed symptoms of
-hostility, setting up loud yells. Karlsefne caused the red shield to be
-borne against them, whereupon they advanced against each other, and a
-battle commenced. There was a galling discharge of missiles. The
-Skrælings had a sort of war sling. They elevated on a pole a
-tremendously large ball, almost the size of a sheep’s stomach, and of a
-bluish colour; this they swung from the pole over Karlsefne’s people,
-and it descended with a fearful crash. This struck terror into the
-Northmen, and they fled along the river.”
-
-It was thus apparent that in spite of the attractions of the forest-clad
-land, with its tempting vines, there was little prospect of peaceful
-possession. The experience of these first colonisers differed in no
-degree from that of the later pioneers of Nova Scotia or New England.
-Freydisa, the natural daughter of Eric, whom Thorvald had wedded, is
-described as taunting the men for their cowardice in giving way before
-such miserable caitiffs as the Skrælings or savage natives, and vowing,
-if she had only a weapon, she would show better fight. “She accordingly
-followed them into the wood. There she encountered a dead body. It was
-Thorbrand Snorrason. A flat stone was sticking fast in his head. His
-naked sword lay by his side. This she took up, and prepared to defend
-herself. She uncovered her breasts and dashed them against the naked
-sword. At this sight the Skrælings became terrified, and ran off to
-their canoes. Karlsefne and the rest now came up to her and praised her
-courage. But Karlsefne and his people became aware that, although the
-country held out many advantages, still the life that they would have to
-lead here would be one of constant alarm from the hostile attacks of the
-natives. They therefore made preparations for departure with the
-resolution of returning to their own country.” To us the attractions of
-a Nova-Scotian settlement might seem worth encountering a good many such
-assaults rather than retreat to the ice-bound shores of Greenland. But
-it was “their own country”; their relatives were there. Nor to the hardy
-Northmen did its climate, or that of Iceland, present the forbidding
-aspect which it would to us. So they returned to Brattalid, carrying
-back with them an evil report of the land; and, as it seems, also
-bringing with them specimens of its natives. For, on their homeward
-voyage, they proceeded round Kialarnes, and then were driven to the
-nort-west. “The land lay to larboard of them. There were thick forests
-in all directions as far as they could see, with scarcely any open
-space. They considered the hills at Hope and those which they now saw as
-forming part of one continuous range. They spent the third winter at
-Streamfirth. Karlsefne’s son Snorre was now three years of age. When
-they sailed from Vinland they had southerly wind, and came to Markland,
-where they met with five Skrælings. They caught two of them (two boys),
-whom they carried away along with them, and taught them the Norse
-language, and baptized them; these children said that their mother was
-called Vethilldi and their father Uvaege. They said that the Skrælings
-were ruled by chieftains (kings), one of whom was called Avalldamon, and
-the other Valdidida; that there were no houses in the country, but that
-the people dwelled in holes and caverns.”
-
-Thus ended the abortive enterprise of Thorfinn and his company to found,
-in the eleventh century, a colony of Northmen on the American mainland.
-The account the survivors brought back told indeed of umbrageous
-woodland and the tempting vine. But the forest was haunted by the fierce
-Skrælings, and its coasts open to assault from their canoes. To the race
-that wrested Normandy from the Carlovingian Frank, and established its
-jarldoms in Orkney, Caithness, and Northumbria, such a foe might well be
-deemed contemptible. But the degenerate Franks, and the Angles of
-Northumbria, tempted the Norse marauder with costly spoils; and only
-after repeated successful expeditions awakened the desire to settle in
-the land and make there new homes. Alike to explorers seeking for
-themselves a home, and to adventurers coveting the victors’ spoils, the
-Vinland of the Northmen offered no adequate temptation, and so its
-traditions faded out of memory, or were recalled only as the legend of a
-fabulous age. At the meeting of the British Association at Montreal in
-1884 Mr. R. G. Halliburton read a paper entitled “A Search in British
-North America for lost Colonies of Northmen and Portuguese.” Documents
-were quoted by him showing that from A.D. 1500 to 1570 commissions were
-regularly issued to the Corte Reals and their successors. Cape Breton
-was colonised by them in 1521; and when Portugal became annexed to Spain
-in 1680, and Terra Nova passed with it to her rule, she sent colonists
-to settle there. The site which they occupied, Mr. Halliburton traced to
-Spanish Harbour (Sydney), Cape Breton, and this he claimed to be the
-earliest European settlement in North America. For, as for the
-Northmen’s reputed explorations and attempt at settlement, his verdict
-is thus briefly summed up: “When we can discover Greenland’s verdant
-mountains we can also hope to find the vine-clad hills of Vineland the
-Good.” That, however, is too summary a dismissal of evidence which, if
-vague, is to every appearance based on authorities as seemingly
-authentic and trustworthy as those on which many details of the history
-of early centuries rest. It would manifestly be unwise to discountenance
-further inquiry by any such sweeping scepticism, or to discourage the
-hope that local research may yet be rewarded by evidence confirmatory of
-the reputed visit of Thorfinn and his fellow-explorers to some
-recognisable point on the Nova-Scotian coast.
-
-The diligent research of scholars familiar with the Old Norse, in which
-the Sagas are written, is now clearing this inquiry into reputed
-pre-Columbian discovery and colonisation of much misapprehension. The
-extravagant assumptions alike of earlier Danish and New England
-antiquaries in dealing with the question were provocative of an undue
-bias of critical scepticism. The American historian Bancroft gave form
-to this tendency when he affirmed that “the story of the colonisation of
-America by Northmen rests on narratives mythological in form and obscure
-in meaning; ancient, yet not contemporary.” If the historian had adduced
-in evidence of this the story of the Eyrbyggja Saga, and the later
-amplifications of reputed voyages to “White Man’s Land,” and to
-“Newland,” his language would have been pardonable. Of the later
-fictitious Sagas are the Landvætta-sögur; Stories of the
-guardian-spirits of the land; and the Saga of Halfdan Eysteinsson, from
-which we learn that “Raknar brought the deserts of Heluland under his
-rule, and destroyed all the giants there”; or again we have the Saga of
-“Barthar Snæfellsass,” or the Snow-fell God, and the King Dumbr of
-Dumbshaf. But all such mythical Sagas belong to later Icelandic and
-Norwegian literature, and have no claim to historical value.
-
-The genuine documentary evidence of Vinland is recoverable from
-manuscripts of earlier date, and a widely different character. Had
-Bancroft been familiar with the early Icelandic Sagas he could never
-have spoken of them as mythological. They are, on the contrary,
-distinguished by their presentation of events in an extremely simple and
-literal manner; equally free from rhetorical embellishment and the
-extravagances of the romancer. But the occupation of the new-found land
-was brief; and as the tale of its explorers faded from the memory of
-younger generations, fancy toyed with the legend of a sunny land of the
-Vine, with its self-sown fields of ripened grain. At a later date
-Greenland itself vanished from the ken of living men; and romance
-sported with the fancies suggested by its name as a fertile oasis of
-green pastures walled in by the ice and snows of its Arctic zone.
-
-The first authentic reference, now recoverable, to Vinland the Good has
-already been referred to. It occurs in a passage in the _Iselandinga
-Vók_, by Ari Thorgilsson, the oldest Icelandic historiographer. Ari,
-surnamed froði, or the learned, was born A.D. 1067, and survived till
-1148. The earliest manuscript of the Saga of Eric the Red dates as late
-as A.D. 1330. It is contained in the Arna Magnæan Codex, commonly known
-as _Hauks Vók_. Hauk Erlendsson, to whom the preservation of this copy
-of the original Saga is due, and by whom part of it appears to have been
-written, has appended to the manuscript a genealogy, in which he traces
-his descent from the son of Karlsefne, born in Vinland. Two versions of
-the narrative have been preserved, differing only in slight details; and
-of those Reeves says: “They afford the most graphic and succinct
-exposition of the discovery; and, supported as they are throughout by
-contemporary history, appear in every respect most worthy of
-credence.”[9] The simple, unadorned narrative bears out the idea that it
-is a manuscript of information derived from the statements of the actual
-explorers. The later story of Barni Herjulfson,—an obvious
-amplification of the original narrative, with a change of names, and
-many spurious additions,—occurs in the Flatey Book, a manuscript
-written before the close of the fourteenth century, when the Northmen of
-the Scandinavian fatherland were reawakening to an interest in the
-memories or traditions of early voyages to strange lands beyond the
-Atlantic Ocean, and fashioning them into legend and romance.
-
-The poet, William Morris, represents the Vikings of the fourteenth
-century following the old leadings of Leif Ericson in search of the
-earthly paradise:—
-
- That desired gate
- To immortality and blessed rest
- Within the landless waters of the West.
-
-The time chosen is that of England’s Edward III., and, still more, of
-England’s Chaucer. But in reality all memory of the land which lay
-beyond the waters of the Atlantic had faded as utterly from the minds of
-Europe’s mariners, in that fourteenth century, as in the older days when
-Plato restored a lost Atlantis to give local habitation to his ideal
-Republic. When the idea revived in the closing years of the fifteenth
-century, not as a philosophic dream, but as a legitimate induction of
-science, the reception which it met with from the embodied wisdom of
-that age, curiously illustrates the common experience of the pioneers in
-every path of novel discovery.
-
-To Columbus, with his well-defined faith in the form of the earth which
-gave him confidence to steer boldly westward in search of the Asiatic
-Cipango: the existence of a continent beyond the Atlantic was no mere
-possibility. So early, at least, as 1474 he had conceived the design of
-reaching Asia by sailing to the West; and in that year he is known to
-have expounded his plans to Paolo Toscanelli, the learned Florentine
-physician and cosmographer, and to have received from him hearty
-encouragement. Assuming the world to be a sphere, he fortunately erred
-alike in under-estimating its size, and in over-estimating the extent to
-which the continent of Asia stretched eastward. In this way he
-diminished the distance between the coasts of Europe and Asia; and so,
-when at length he sighted the new-found land of the West, so far from
-dreaming of another ocean wider than the Atlantic between him and the
-object of his quest, he unhesitatingly designated the natives of
-Guanahani, or San Salvador, “Indians,” in the confident belief that this
-was an outlying coast of Asiatic India. Nor was his reasoning unsound.
-He sought, and would have found, a western route to that old east by the
-very track he followed, had no American continent intervened. It was not
-till his third voyage that the great Admiral for the first time beheld
-the new continent,—not indeed the Asiatic mainland, nor even the
-northern continent,—but the embouchures of the Orinoco river, with its
-mighty volume of fresh water, proving beyond dispute that it drained an
-area of vast extent, and opened up access far into the interior of a new
-world.
-
-Columbus had realised his utmost anticipations, and died in the belief
-that he had reached the eastern shores of Asia. Nor is the triumph in
-any degree lessened by this assumption. The dauntless navigator, pushing
-on ever westward into the mysterious waters of the unexplored Atlantic
-in search of the old East, presents one of the most marvellous examples
-of intelligent faith that science can adduce. To estimate all that it
-implied, we have to turn back to a period when his unaccomplished
-purpose rested solely on that sure and well-grounded faith in the
-demonstrations of science.
-
-In the city of Salamanca there assembled in the Dominican convent of San
-Esteban, in the year 1487, a learned and orthodox conclave, summoned by
-Prior Fernando de Talavera, to pronounce judgment on the theory
-propounded by Columbus; and to decide whether in that most catholic of
-Christian kingdoms, on the very eve of its final triumph over the
-infidel, it was a permissible belief that the Western World had even a
-possible existence. Columbus set before them the scientific
-demonstration which constituted for himself indisputable evidence of an
-ocean highway across the Atlantic to the continent beyond. The clerical
-council included professors of mathematics, astronomy, and geography, as
-well as other learned friars and dignitaries of the Church: probably as
-respectable an assemblage of cloister-bred pedantry and orthodox
-conservatism as that fifteenth century could produce. Philosophical
-deductions were parried by a quotation from St. Jerome or St. Augustine;
-and mathematical demonstrations by a figurative text of Scripture; and
-in spite alike of the science and the devout religious spirit of
-Columbus, the divines of Salamanca pronounced the idea of the earth’s
-spherical form to be heterodox; and declared a belief in antipodes
-incompatible with the historical traditions of the Christian faith:
-since to assert that there were inhabited lands on the opposite side of
-the globe would be to maintain that there were nations not descended
-from Adam, it being impossible for them to have passed the intervening
-ocean.
-
-It may naturally excite a smile to thus find the very ethnological
-problem of this nineteenth century thus dogmatically produced four
-centuries earlier to prove that America was an impossibility. But in
-reality this ethnological problem long continued in all ways to affect
-the question. Among the various evidences which Columbus adduced in
-confirmation of his belief in the existence of a continent beyond the
-Atlantic, was the report brought to him by his own brother-in-law, Pedro
-Correa, that the bodies of two dead men had been cast ashore on the
-island of Flores, differing essentially from any known race, “very
-broad-faced, and diverse in aspect from Christians”; and, in truth, the
-more widely they differed from all familiar Christian humanity, the more
-probable did their existence appear to the men of that fifteenth
-century. Hence Shakespeare’s marvellous creation of his Caliban. Upwards
-of a century and half had then elapsed since Columbus returned with the
-news of a world beyond the Western Ocean; yet still to the men of
-Shakespeare’s day, the strange regions of which Columbus, Amerigo
-Vespucci, Gomara, Lane, Harriot, and Raleigh wrote, seemed more fitly
-occupied by Calibans, and the like rude approximations to humanity, than
-by men and women in any degree akin to ourselves. Othello indeed only
-literally reproduces Raleigh’s account of a strange people on the Caoro,
-in Guiana. He had not, indeed, himself got sight of those marvellous
-Ewaipanoma, though anxious enough to do so. Their eyes, as reported,
-were in their shoulders, and their mouths in the middle of their
-breasts. But the truth could not be doubted, since every child in the
-provinces of Arromaia and Canuri affirmed the same. The founder of
-Virginia, assuredly one of the most sagacious men of that wise
-Elizabethan era, and with all the experience which travel supplies,
-reverts again and again to this strange new-world race, as to a thing of
-which he entertained no doubt. The designation of Shakespeare’s Caliban,
-is but an anagram of the epithet which Raleigh couples with the specific
-designation of those monstrous dwellers on the Caoro. “To the west of
-Caroli,” he says, “are divers nations of Cannibals, and of those
-Ewaipanoma without heads.” Of “such men, whose head stood in their
-breasts,” Gonsalo, in _The Tempest_, reminds his companions, as a tale
-which every voyager brings back “good warrant of”; and so it was in all
-honesty that Othello entertained Desdemona with the story of his
-adventures:—
-
- Of moving accidents by flood and field . . .
- And of the Cannibals that each other eat,
- The Anthropophagi and men whose heads
- Do grow beneath their shoulders.
-
-The idea of an island-world lying in some unexplored ocean, apart from
-the influences which affect humanity at large, with beings,
-institutions, and a civilisation of its own, had been the dream of very
-diverse minds. When indeed we recall what the rude Norse galley of Eric
-the Red must have been; and what the little “Pinta” and the “Nina” of
-Columbus—the latter with a crew of only twenty-four men,—actually
-were; and remember, moreover, that the pole-star was the sole compass of
-the earlier explorer; there seems nothing improbable in the assumption
-that the more ancient voyagers from the Mediterranean, who claimed to
-have circumnavigated Africa, and were familiar with the islands of the
-Atlantic, may have found their way to the great continent which lay
-beyond. Vague intimations, derived seemingly from Egypt, encouraged the
-belief in a submerged island or continent, once the seat of arts and
-learning, afar on the Atlantic main. The most definite narrative of this
-vanished continent is that already referred to as recorded in the
-_Timæus_ of Plato, on the authority of an account which Solon had
-received from an Egyptian priest. According to the latter the
-temple-records of the Nile preserved the traditions of times reaching
-back far beyond the infantile fables of the Greeks. Yet, even these
-preserved some memory of deluges and convulsions by which the earth had
-been revolutionised. In one of them the vast Island of Atlantis—a
-continent larger than Libya and Asia conjoined,—had been engulfed in
-the ocean which bears its name. This ocean-world of fancy or tradition,
-Plato revived as the seat of his imaginary commonwealth; and it had not
-long become a world of fact when Sir Thomas More made it anew the seat
-of his famous Utopia, the exemplar of “the best state and form of a
-public weale.” “Unfortunately,” as the author quaintly puts it, “neither
-we remembered to inquire of Raphael, the companion of Amerike Vespuce on
-his third voyage, nor he to tell us in what part of the new world Utopia
-is situate”: and so there is no reason why we should not locate the seat
-of this perfect commonwealth within the young Canadian Dominion, so soon
-as it shall have merited this by the attainment of such Utopian
-perfectibility in its polity.
-
-But it is not less curious to note the tardiness with which, after the
-discovery of the New World had been placed beyond question, its true
-significance was comprehended even by men of culture, and abreast of the
-general knowledge of their time. Peter Giles, indeed, citizen of
-Antwerp, and assumed confidant of “Master More,” writes with
-well-simulated grief to the Right Hon. Counsellor Hierome Buslyde, “as
-touching the situation of the island, that is to say, in what part of
-the world Utopia standeth, the ignorance and lack whereof not a little
-troubleth and grieveth Master More”; but as he had allowed the
-opportunity of ascertaining this important fact to slip by, so the like
-uncertainty long after mystified current ideas regarding the new-found
-world. Ere the “Flowers of the Forest” had been weeded away on Flodden
-Hill, the philosophers and poets of the liberal court of James IV. of
-Scotland had learned in some vague way of the recent discovery; and so
-the Scottish poet, Dunbar, reflecting on the King’s promise of a
-benefice still unfulfilled, hints in his poem “Of the world’s
-instabilitie,” that even had it come “fra Calicut and the new-found
-Isle” that lies beyond “the great sea-ocean, it might have comen in
-shorter while.” Upwards of twenty years had passed since the return of
-the great discoverer from his adventurous voyage; but the _Novus Orbis_
-was then, and long afterwards continued to be, an insubstantial fancy;
-for after nearly another twenty years had elapsed, Sir David Lindsay, in
-his _Dreme_, represents Dame Remembrance as his guide and instructor in
-all heavenly and earthly knowledge; and among the rest, he says:—
-
- She gart me clearly understand
- How that the Earth tripartite was in three;
- In Afric, Europe, and Asie;
-
-the latter being in the Orient, while Africa and Europe still
-constituted the Occident, or western world. Many famous isles situated
-in “the ocean-sea” also attract his notice; but “the new-found isle” of
-the elder poet had obviously faded from the memory of that younger
-generation.
-
-Another century had nearly run its course since the eye of Columbus
-beheld the long-expected land, when, in 1590, Edmund Spenser crossed the
-Irish Channel, bringing with him the first three books of his _Faerie
-Queen_; in the introduction to the second of which he thus defends the
-verisimilitude of that land of fancy in which the scenes of his “famous
-antique history” are laid:—
-
- Who ever heard of th’ Indian Peru?
- Or who in venturous vessel measured
- The Amazon, huge river, now found true?
- Or fruitfullest Virginia who did ever view?
-
- Yet all these were, when no man did them know,
- Yet have from wisest ages hidden been;
- And later times things more unknowne shall show.
- Why then should witless man so much misween
- That nothing is but that which he hath seen?
- What if within the moon’s fair shining sphere;
- What if in every other star unseen,
- Of other worlds he happily should hear?
- He wonder would much more; yet such to some appear.
-
-Raleigh, the discoverer of Virginia, was Spenser’s special friend, his
-“Shepherd of the Ocean,” the patron under whose advice the poet visited
-England with the first instalment of the Epic, which he dedicated to
-Queen Elizabeth, “to live with the eternity of her Fame.” Yet it is
-obvious that to Spenser’s fancy this western continent was then scarcely
-more substantial than his own Faerie land. In truth it was still almost
-as much a world apart as if Raleigh and his adventurous crew had sailed
-up the blue vault of heaven, and brought back the story of another
-planet on which it had been their fortune to alight.
-
-Nor had such fancies wholly vanished long after the voyage across the
-Atlantic had become a familiar thing. It was in 1723 that the
-philosophical idealist, Berkeley,—afterwards Bishop of
-Cloyne,—formulated a more definite and yet not less visionary Utopia
-than that of Sir Thomas More. He was about to organise “among the
-English in our Western plantations” a seminary which was designed to
-train the young American savages, make them Masters of Arts, and fit
-instruments for the regeneration of their own people; while the new
-Academy was to accomplish no less for the reformation of manners and
-morals among his own race. In his fancy’s choice he gave a preference,
-at first for Bermuda, or the Summer Islands, as the site of his college;
-and “presents the bright vision of an academic home in those fair lands
-of the West, whose idyllic bliss poets had sung, from which Christian
-civilisation might be made to radiate over this vast continent with its
-magnificent possibilities in the future history of the race of man.” It
-was while his mind was preoccupied with this fine ideal “of planting
-Arts and Learning in America” that he wrote the well-known lines:—
-
- There shall be sung another golden age,
- The rise of empire and of arts;
- The good and great inspiring epic rage,
- The wisest heads and noblest hearts.
-
- Not such as Europe breeds in her decay:
- Such as she bred when fresh and young,
- When heavenly flame did animate her clay,
- By future poets shall be sung.
-
- Westward the course of empire takes its way;
- The four first acts already past,
- A fifth shall close the drama with the day;
- Time’s noblest offspring is the last.
-
-The visionary philosopher followed up his project so far as to transport
-himself—not to the Summer Islands of which Waller had sung,—but to
-that same Rhode Island which Danish and New England antiquaries were at
-a later date to identify, whether rightly or not, as the Vinland of the
-Icelandic Sagas. One of these ancient chroniclers had chanced to note
-that, on the shortest day of the year in Vinland, they had the sun above
-the horizon at _eykt_ and _dagmat_; that is at their regular evening and
-morning meal. Like our own term breakfast, the names were significant
-and allusive. The old Icelandic poet, Snorro Sturluson, author of the
-Edda and the Sagas of the Norwegian Kings, has left on record that at
-his Icelandic home eykt occurred at sunset on the first day of winter.
-Professor Rafn hailed this old record as the key to the latitude of
-Vinland. The Danish King, Frederick VI., sympathising in researches that
-reflected back honour on their Norse ancestry, called in the aid of the
-Astronomer Royal; and Professor Rafn felt authorised forthwith to
-instruct the Rhode Island antiquaries that the latitude of the long-lost
-Vinland was near Newport, in Narragansett Bay. Their response, with the
-authenticating engravings of the world-famous Newport stone mill, and
-the runes of Thorfinn on Dighton Rock, in Rafn’s learned quarto volume,
-have been the source of many a later comment, both in prose and rhyme.
-
-But all this lay in a still remote future when, in 1728, Berkeley landed
-at Rhode Island with projects not unsuited to the dream of a Vinland the
-Good, where a university was to be reared as a centre of culture and
-regeneration for the aborigines of the New World. The indispensable
-prerequisite of needful funds had been promised him by the English
-Government; but the promised grant was never realised. Meanwhile he
-bought a farm, the purposed site perhaps of his beneficent centre of
-intellectual life for the Island state, and sojourned there for three
-years in pleasant seclusion, leaving behind him kindly memories that
-endeared him to many friends. He planned, if he did not realise many
-goodly Utopias; speculated on space and time, and objective idealism;
-and then bade farewell to Rhode Island, and to his romantic dream of
-regenerated savages and a renovated world. Soon after his return home
-the practical fruits of his quiet sojourn beyond the Atlantic appeared
-in the form of his _Alciphron: or the Minute Philosopher_; in which, in
-the form of a dialogue, he discusses the varied forms of speculative
-scepticism, at the very period when Pope was embodying in his _Essay on
-Man_ the brilliant, but superficial philosophy which constituted the
-essence of thought for men of the world in his age. It is in antithesis
-to such speculations that Berkeley there advances his own theory,
-designed to show that all nature is the language of God, everywhere
-giving expressive utterance to the Divine thought.
-
-So long as the American continent lay half revealed in its vague
-obscurity, as a new world lying beyond the Atlantic, and wholly apart
-from the old, it seemed the fitting site for imaginary Vinlands,
-Utopias, Summer Islands, and earthly paradises of all sorts: the scenes
-of a realised perfectibility beyond the reach of Europe “in her decay.”
-Nor was the refined metaphysical idealist the latest dreamer of such
-dreams. In our own century, Southey, Coleridge, and the little band of
-Bristol enthusiasts who planned their grand pantisocratic scheme of
-intellectual communism, created for themselves, with like fertile fancy,
-a Utopia of their own, “where Susquehana pours his untamed stream”; and
-many a later dreamer has striven after like ideal perfectibility in
-“peaceful Freedom’s undivided dale.”
-
------
-
-[4] Montgomery, James, _Greenland_, Canto IV.
-
-[5] _Mem. des Antiq. du Nord_, N.S., 1888, p. 341.
-
-[6] _The Finding of Wineland the Good_, p. 6.
-
-[7] _The Finding of Wineland the Good: the History of the Icelandic
-Discovery of America_, edited and translated from the earliest records,
-by Arthur Middleton Reeves.
-
-[8] _Vide_ Dr. Brinton, _Races and Peoples_, p. 215 note.
-
-[9] Arthur Middleton Reeves, _Finding of Wineland the Good_, p. 28.
-
-
-
-
- III
- TRADE AND COMMERCE IN THE STONE AGE
-
-
-THE term “Stone Period” or “Stone Age” was suggested in the early years
-of the present century by the antiquaries of Denmark as the fitting
-designation of that primitive era in western Europe—with its
-corresponding stage among diverse peoples in widely severed regions and
-ages,—when the use of metals was unknown. That there was a period in
-the history of the human race, before its Tubal-cains, Vulcans, Vœlands,
-or other Smith-gods appeared, when man depended on stone, bone, ivory,
-shells, and wood, for the raw material out of which to manufacture his
-implements and weapons, is now universally admitted; and is confirmed by
-the abundant disclosures of the drift and the caves. The simple, yet
-highly suggestive classification, due to Thomsen of Copenhagen, was the
-first scientific recognition of the fact, now established by evidence
-derived from periods of vastly greater antiquity than the Neolithic age
-of Denmark. The accumulated experience of many generations was required
-before men mastered the useful service of fire in the smelting of ores
-and the casting of metals. Nevertheless it seems probable that the
-knowledge of fire, and its useful service on the domestic hearth, are
-coeval with the existence of man as a rational being. The evidence of
-its practical application to the requirements for warmth and cooking
-carry us back to the age of cave implements, including some among the
-earliest known examples of man’s tool-making industry. In connection
-with this subject, Sir John Evans draws attention to some curious
-indications of the antiquity of the use of flint by the
-fire-producer.[10] He refers to the ingenious derivation of the word
-_silex_ as given by Vincent of Beauvais, in the _Speculum Naturæ_,
-“Silex est lapis durus, sic dictus eo quod ex eo ignis exsiliat,” and he
-recalls a more remarkable reminiscence of the evoking of fire in the
-Neolithic if not in the Palæolithic period. Pliny informs us (lib. vii.
-cap. 56), that it was Pyrodes, the son of Cilix, who first devised the
-way to strike fire out of flint; “A myth,” says Sir John Evans, “which
-seems to point to the use of silex and pyrites (from πῦρ) rather than of
-steel.” In reality the flint and pyrites lie together in the same lower
-strata of the chalk. As the ancient flint-miners sunk their pits in
-search of the levels where the flint abounds they would meet with
-frequent nodules of pyrites. The first grand discovery of the
-fire-producer may have resulted from the use of the pyrites as a mere
-hammer-stone to break up the larger flints.
-
-But whatever was the source of this all-important discovery, it dates
-among the earliest manifestations of human intelligence. Nodules of iron
-pyrites have been found in the caves of France and Belgium, among
-remains pertaining to the Palæolithic age, and are among the most
-interesting disclosures of the greatly more modern, though still
-prehistoric age of the barrows and cairns of the Allophylian period of
-Britain, and of Western Europe generally. Sir R. C. Hoare records the
-finding, among the contents of a cinerary urn, in a Wiltshire barrow,
-“chipped flints prepared for arrow heads, a long piece of flint, and a
-_pyrites_, both evidently smoothed by usage.”[11] More recent explorers,
-apprised of the significance of such discoveries, have noted the
-presence of nodules of pyrites, accompanying the personal ornaments and
-weapons occurring in graves of the same age: deposited there either as
-tokens of regard, or more probably with a vague idea of their utility to
-the dead in the life beyond the grave. In a communication to the Society
-of Antiquaries of Scotland on a group of stone cists disclosed, in 1879,
-on the farm of Teinside, Teviotdale, Lord Rosehill thus describes part
-of the contents of one of them. “It was filled with dark-coloured earth,
-mixed with charcoal; and closely intermingled in every part with
-fragments of bones which had been exposed to the action of fire.” A
-broken urn lay about ten inches from the top. “Close to the urn was a
-rounded piece of metallic-looking substance, which appears to be
-‘radiated iron pyrites,’ and which,” adds Lord Rosehill, “I have myself
-discovered in several interments.”[12] More recently, in 1883, Major
-Colin Mackenzie reported to the same Society the discovery of a cist and
-urn in the Black Isle, Ross-shire.[13] He thus proceeds: “Whilst
-gathering together the broken pieces of the urn, a round-nosed
-flint-flake or scraper, chipped at the edges, was found amongst the
-debris, and proved to have a bluish tinge, as if it had been subjected
-to the action of fire. Close beside it there was found a round piece of
-iron pyrites, flat on one side, in shape somewhat like the half of an
-egg, divided lengthways, only smaller. Dr. Joseph Anderson at once
-recognised this as forming, along with the solitary flint, nothing less
-than a prehistoric ‘strike-light’ apparatus.”[14] No flint is procurable
-in the locality; and after the closest search, no other flint implement
-or flake was found on the site. In communicating this interesting
-discovery to the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, Major Mackenzie
-reviewed the disclosures of this class in Great Britain, so far as they
-had been noted by Hoare, Borlase, Bateman, Greenwell and Evans,
-furnishing a tabulated statement of eleven examples, chiefly found in
-barrows, and ranging over an area extending from Cornwall to Ross-shire;
-and to those additions have since been made. He draws attention to their
-occurrence in localities which produce neither pyrites nor flint. But
-with the former, at least, this need not surprise us. The prized and
-easily transported pyrites may be looked for in any ancient barrow or
-sepulchral deposit, and has probably in many cases passed unnoted before
-its significance was understood. Now that this is fully appreciated, it
-is seen to have been in use from the early stages of primitive art: the
-very dawn of science; and doubtless the pyrites and flint found in
-localities remote from those where they occur as natural products are in
-most cases due to primitive barter.
-
-The old Promethean myth represents the fire-bringer interposing on
-behalf of a degraded race of beings whose helpless lot had been preceded
-by the Hesiodic Golden, Silver, and Bronze ages, as well as by an Heroic
-age of such demigods as the Titan son of Iapetus. By a reverse process
-of evolution from the lower to higher stages, the anthropoid, or Caliban
-of archæological science, becomes the tool-maker, the tool-user, and in
-the same primitive stage, the fire-maker. But the service of fire is
-required by man under the most varied conditions of life. The stone lamp
-with its moss wick, and the stone kettle, are important implements in
-the snow-hut of the Eskimo. On those he depends, not only for cooking,
-but for his supply of water from melted snow; and without the lighted
-taper of his stone lamp the indoor life of the long, unbroken Arctic
-night would be passed in a rayless dungeon. He has inherited the
-knowledge of the palæolithic fire-maker, from whom, indeed, some have
-claimed for him direct genealogical descent; and he generally treasures
-among his most useful appliances a piece of quartz, and a nodule of
-pyrites, which constitute his flint and steel. At the remote extreme of
-the southern continent the same precious bequest is in use by the
-Fuegians and Patagonians of Tierra del Fuego, the name of which is a
-memorial of its fire-using savages. The Fuegian makes a hearth of clay
-in the bottom of his rudely constructed bark canoe, on which he
-habitually keeps a fire burning. He prepares a tinder of dried moss or
-fungus, which is readily ignited by the spark struck from a flinty stone
-by means of a pyrites. The invaluable discovery is shared by the lowest
-races. The Australian, the Andaman Islander, and other rudest tribes of
-the Old and the New World, have mastered the same great secret, and turn
-it to useful account.
-
-The tradition may have been perpetuated from generation to generation
-from the remotest dawn of human reason, or it may have been rediscovered
-independently among diverse races. But wherever the value of the pyrites
-in evoking the latent spark of the flint was known, it would be a
-coveted prize and a valuable object of barter. The story of the old
-fire-makers is recorded still in the charcoal ashes of many an ancient
-hearth; for charcoal is one of the most indestructible of substances
-when buried. In the famous Kent’s Hole limestone cavern at Torbay,
-Devonshire, explorers have systematically pursued research backward from
-the specifically dated stalagmitic record of “Robert Hodges, of Ireland,
-Feb. 20, 1688,” through Saxon, Roman, British, and Neolithic strata, to
-the deposit where human remains lay embedded alongside of those of the
-woolly rhinoceros, the mammoth, the fossil horse, the hyæna and
-cave-bear. There also lay, not only the finished implements, but the
-flakes and flint cores that revealed the workshop of the primitive
-tool-maker, and the charcoal that preserved the traces of his ancient
-fire. So, too, in the Cromagnon rock-shelter of the Perigord, in an
-upper valley of the Garonne, repeated layers of charcoal, interspersed
-with broken bones and other culinary remains of the ancient
-cave-dwellers, tell of the knowledge and use of fire in western Europe’s
-Reindeer and Mammoth ages by palæolithic man. Compared with such
-disclosures of primeval arts, the discoveries on which the Danish
-archæologists based their systematising of prehistoric remains belong,
-geologically speaking, to modern eras. Denmark is underlaid essentially
-by Upper Cretaceous rocks, the _Etage Danien_ of most French writers,
-and the _Faxoe Kelke_ of German geologists. Drift clays and gravels
-overlie the cretaceous rocks in many places, with more recent deposits
-of sands, gravels, etc. These latter are of Neolithic age, containing
-bones only of existing mammals. Palæolithic deposits, with bones of
-extinct species, do not appear to have been recognised in Denmark; nor
-is there any trace of the presence of palæolithic man. Hence the field
-alike of Danish antiquarian research and of archæological speculation
-was greatly circumscribed. But thus precluded from the study of
-primitive arts in that vague palæolithic dawn which lies outside of the
-speculations of the historian, and beyond resort to classical
-authorities for evidence in the interpretation of local disclosures, the
-Danish antiquary escaped the temptation to many misleading assumptions
-which long perplexed the archæologists of France and England; and so his
-limited range has tended to facilitate the investigations into
-subsequent disclosures relative to an ampler antiquity of man and his
-arts.
-
-Within the old Roman provinces of Western Europe, the Latin conquerors
-were not only accredited with whatever showed any trace of Hellenic or
-Roman art, but with the sole skill in working in iron. The Dane and
-Northman were assumed to have followed in their wake with bronze, as
-with runes and other essentially non-classical products; though still
-the beautiful leaf-shaped sword and other choicest relics of the Bronze
-age were not infrequently ascribed to the Romans. But philologists had
-not yet assigned a place to the Celtic in the Aryan family of languages.
-The Celt was not only assumed to be the barbarous precursor, alike of
-Roman and Dane, but to be the primeval man of Western Europe. Hence when
-the first hoards of palæolithic flint implements were accidentally
-discovered in Sussex and Kent, their Celtic or British origin was
-assumed without question. But the known historic position of the
-Northman on Scandinavian soil prevented the crude application of the
-term “Danish” to every bronze relic found there; and as no Roman
-conqueror had trodden the soil of Denmark, the ethnology as well as the
-archæology of the region was left unaffected by misleading complexities
-that resulted from the presence of the Romans in Gaul and Britain. The
-absence of remains of palæolithic man still further simplified the
-problem; while the geology of the Danish peninsula favoured the
-neolithic tool-maker. Flint abounds there in amorphous nodules or
-blocks, and the nuclei, or cores, from which a succession of flakes have
-been struck, are of frequent occurrence among the relics of the Danish
-Stone age. Flint is no less abundant throughout the regions of France
-and England on either side of the English Channel; and there,
-accordingly, alike in the caves and the river-drift, the rude, massive
-flint implements of the Palæolithic era abound.
-
-The natural cleavage of flint, as also of the obsidian found in volcanic
-localities in the Old and New World, so readily adapts both materials to
-the manufacture of knives, lances, and arrow heads, that they appear to
-have been turned to account by the tool-maker from the dawn of rudest
-art. But it must not be overlooked that obsidian is limited to volcanic
-regions, and flint is no more universally available than bronze or iron.
-In some countries it is rare; in still more it is entirely wanting; and
-yet its peculiar aptitude for tool-making appears to have been
-recognised at the earliest period; so that implements and weapons of
-flint, alike of the Palæolithic and the Neolithic age, abound in many
-localities where the raw material of the tool-maker is unknown.
-
-It was only natural that the systematic study and classification of the
-manufactures of the ancient workers in flint should be first carried out
-in regions such as the Danish peninsula, geologically related to the
-Cretaceous period, and abounding in the material which most readily
-adapts itself to the requirements of an implement-maker ignorant of the
-arts of metallurgy. But the same inexhaustible store of raw material was
-available to the “Flint-folk,” whose implements have become so familiar
-by reason of more recent disclosures, of France and England, belonging
-to a period when the climate, the physical geography, and the whole
-animal life of Western Europe, contrasted in every respect with anything
-we have knowledge of in remotest historic times. Those rude examples of
-primitive art lie alongside of the unwrought flint in such profusion
-that the examples of them already accumulated in the museums of Europe
-and America amount to many thousands. But now that attention has been
-thus widely drawn to their character and significance, it is found that
-implements of the same class not only abound in regions geologically
-favourable to their production, but they occur in nearly every country
-in Europe, and on widely scattered localities in Asia and Africa, where
-no such natural resources were available for their manufacture.
-
-The earliest known type of primitive flint implements, illustrative of a
-class now very familiar to archæologists, was accidentally recovered
-from the quaternary gravel beds of the Thames valley, in the heart of
-Old London, before the close of the seventeenth century. It is a
-well-made spear-pointed implement, with an unusually tapering point,
-while the butt-end is broad and roughly fashioned, so that it could be
-used in the hand without any haft as a spade or hoe. The deposit in
-which it lay would now be accepted as unquestionable evidence of its
-Palæocosmic age; but at the date of its discovery, the Celtic era was
-regarded as that to which all oldest traces of European man pertained.
-This interesting relic is accordingly described in the Sloane Catalogue
-of the British Museum as “a British weapon, found with elephant’s tooth,
-opposite to Black Mary’s, near Gray’s Inn Lane.” In 1797, another and
-highly interesting discovery of the same class was communicated to the
-Society of Antiquaries of London by one of its members, Mr. John
-Frere.[15] In this case a large number of palæoliths were found lying at
-a depth of twelve feet from the surface, in a gravelly soil containing
-fresh-water shells and bones of great size. Subsequent excavations in
-the same locality, at Hoxne, Suffolk, confirm the presence there of the
-bones of the mammoth, as well as of the fossil horse and the deer. Mr.
-Frere was so strongly impressed with the evidence of antiquity that he
-inclined to assign the implements to a remote age, “even beyond that of
-the present world.” By this, however, he probably meant no more than M.
-Boucher de Perthes, when, so recently as 1847, he entitled his volume
-devoted to the corresponding discoveries in the valley of the Somme,
-_Antiquités Celtiques et Antédiluviennes_. The antiquity of man, as now
-understood, was then unthought of; and the word “antediluvian” sufficed
-as a vague expression of remote indefinite antiquity for which
-pre-Celtic would then have been accepted as an equivalent. Mr. Frere
-speaks of the flint implements as “evidently weapons of war fabricated
-and used by a people who had not the use of metals.” He further adds:
-“The manner in which they lie would lead to the persuasion that it was a
-place of their manufacture, and not of their accidental deposit; and the
-numbers of them were so great that the man who carried on the brick-work
-told me that before he was aware of their being objects of curiosity he
-had emptied baskets full of them into the ruts of the adjoining
-road.”[16]
-
-When, in December 1886, Mr. J. Allan Brown communicated to the same
-Society an analogous discovery near Ealing, Middlesex, English
-archæologists had become so familiar with the idea of the antiquity of
-palæolithic man, and the arts of his epoch, that the existence of
-pre-Celtic races in Britain was accepted as a mere truism. It was not,
-therefore, any matter of surprise to be told of the discovery of a
-palæolithic workshop floor of the Drift period, near Ealing. It lay
-about a hundred feet above the present bed of the Thames; and here, six
-feet below the surface, on an ancient sloping bank of the river, an area
-of about forty feet square disclosed nearly six hundred unabraded worked
-flints, including neatly finished spear heads from five to six inches in
-length. Alongside of these lay roughly wrought axes, chipped on one or
-both sides to a cutting edge, and some of them unfinished. There were
-also flint flakes, some with serrated edges, and well-finished knives,
-borers, drills, chisels, etc. Waste flakes and chippings, as well as
-cores, or partially worked blocks of flint, were also observed in
-sufficient numbers to leave no doubt that here, in the place of their
-manufacture, lay buried beneath the accumulations of unnumbered
-centuries industrial products of the skilled artizans of the British
-Islands contemporary with the long-extinct quaternary fauna.[17]
-
-The types of flint implements, found at Hoxne in 1797, correspond to
-other palæoliths recovered from rolled gravel and clay of the glacial
-drift in the valleys of the Thames, the Somme, and the Seine. In their
-massive and artless rudeness they seem to realise for us some fit ideal
-of the primitive fabricator in his first efforts at tool-making. But the
-Ealing find accords with the more extended discoveries of this class. In
-reality, the manufactures of palæolithic man, as a whole, are less
-artless than many examples of modern Indian flint-work. Not a few of the
-stone axes have had their shape determined by that of the water-worn
-stones out of which they were fashioned, and so required much less skill
-than was necessarily expended in chipping the flint nodule into the
-rudest of pointed implements. Any close-grained rock, admitting of
-grinding and polish, was available for fashioning the larger weapons and
-domestic implements, alike among the men of the Neolithic age and the
-native races of the American continent in modern centuries. For many of
-the simpler requirements of the tool-user, any apt stone chip or
-water-worn pebble sufficed; and scarcely anything can be conceived of
-more rude or artless than some of the stone weapons and implements in
-use among savage tribes at the present day. Professor Joseph Leidy
-describes a scraper employed by the Shoshone Indians in dressing
-buffalo-skins, consisting of a thin segment of quartzite, so devoid of
-manipulative skill that, he says, had he noticed it among the strata of
-indurated clays and sandstone, instead of seeing it in actual use, he
-would have regarded it as an accidental spawl.[18] Dr. Charles C.
-Abbott, in his _Primitive Industry of the Native Races_, furnishes
-illustrations of pointed flakes, or arrow tips, triangular arrow heads,
-spear heads, and other stone implements, only a little less rude and
-shapeless.[19] Of a similar character is the blade of a war-club in use
-among the Indians of the Rio Frio, in Texas.[20] Nothing so rude has
-been ascribed to artificial origin among the disclosures of the drift,
-though corresponding implements may have escaped notice; for were it not
-that the chipped piece of trachyte of the Texas war-club is inserted in
-a wooden haft of unmistakable human workmanship, the blade would
-scarcely suggest the idea of artificial origin. Mere rudeness,
-therefore, is no certain evidence of the first artless efforts of man to
-furnish himself with tools.
-
-Until we arrive at the period of neolithic art, with its perforated
-hammers, grooved axes, net-sinkers, gouges, adzes, and numerous other
-ground and polished implements, fashioned of granite, diorite, trap, and
-other igneous rocks, the forms of implements are few and simple,
-dependent to a large extent on the natural cleavage of the flint. The
-commoner examples of neolithic art, recovered in thousands from ancient
-Scandinavian, Gaulish, and British graves, from the lake-dwellings of
-Switzerland, the Danish and British shell mounds, the peat mosses of
-Denmark and Ireland, and from numerous other depositories of prehistoric
-industrial art, are scarcely distinguishable from the flint knives,
-scrapers, spears, and arrow heads, or the chisels and axes, manufactured
-by the American Indians at the present day. The material available in
-certain localities, such as the claystone of the Haida and Babeen
-Indians, and the argillite of the old implement-makers of New Jersey,
-the obsidian of Mexico, or the quartz, jasper, and greenstone of many
-Canadian centres, give a specific character to the implements of the
-various regions; but, on the whole, the arts of the Stone period of the
-most diverse races and eras present striking analogies, scarcely less
-suggestive of the operation of a tool-making instinct than the work of
-the nest-builders, or the ingenious art of the beaver. But the massive
-and extremely rude implements of the river-drift and caves present
-essentially different types, controlled indeed, like the productions of
-later artificers, by the natural cleavage and other essential properties
-of the material in which the flint-worker wrought, but with some
-characteristic differences, suggestive of habits and conditions of life
-in which the artificer of the Mammoth or Reindeer period differed from
-the tool-maker of Europe’s Neolithic age, or the Indian savage of modern
-centuries.
-
-The tool-bearing drift-gravel of France and England presents its relics
-of primitive art intermingled with countless amorphous unwrought flints.
-Both have been subjected to the violent action of floods, to which the
-present condition of such geological deposits is due; and many contents
-of the caves, though subjected to less violence, are the results of
-similar causes. But, along with numerous implements of the rude drift
-type, the sheltered recesses of the caves have preserved, not only the
-smaller and more delicate flint implements, but carefully wrought tools
-and weapons of bone, horn, and ivory. Some, at least, of those
-undoubtedly belong to the Palæolithic age, and therefore tend to verify
-conclusions, not only as to the mechanical ingenuity, but also as to the
-intellectual capacity of the earliest tool-makers. The large almond and
-tongue-shaped flint implements are so massive as to have effectually
-resisted the violence to which they, along with other contents of the
-rolled gravels in which they occur, were subjected; whereas it is only
-in the favouring shelter of the caves, or in rare primitive sepulchral
-deposits, that delicate trimmed flakes and the more perishable
-implements of bone and ivory, or horn, have escaped destruction.
-
-The palæolithic implements to which Boucher de Perthes directed
-attention so early as 1840, were recovered from drift-gravel beds, where
-amorphous flint nodules, both whole and fractured, abound in countless
-numbers; and this tended to suggest very reasonable doubts as to the
-artificial origin of the rude implements lying in close proximity to
-them. Nor was this incredulity lessened by the significance assigned by
-him to other contents of the same drift-gravel. For so far was Boucher
-de Perthes from overlooking the endless variety of fractured pieces of
-flint recoverable from the drift beds, that his narrative is
-supplemented by a series of plates of _L’Industrie Primitive_, the
-larger number of which present chipped flints so obviously the mere
-products of accidental fracture or of weathering, that they contributed
-in no slight degree to discredit the book on its first appearance.
-Others of them, however, show true flakes, scrapers, and fragments
-probably referable to smaller implements of the same class, such as
-would be recognised without hesitation as of artificial origin if found
-alongside of undoubted flint implements in a cave deposit, or in any
-barrow, cist, or sepulchral urn. In so far as they belong to the true
-Drift, and not to the Neolithic or the Gallo-Roman period, they tend to
-confirm the idea that the large almond and tongue-shaped implements are
-not the sole relics of palæolithic art.
-
-But now that adequate attention has been given to the stone implements
-of the Drift-folk, or the men of the Mammoth and Reindeer ages, it
-becomes apparent that they are by no means limited to such localities.
-On the contrary, sites of native manufactories of flint implements, with
-abundant remains of the fractured debris of the ancient tool-makers’
-workshop, some of which are described on a later page, have been
-discovered remote from any locality where the raw material could be
-procured. Until the gun flint was superseded by the percussion cap, the
-material for its manufacture was procured by sinking shafts through the
-chalk until the beds of flint suited for the purpose were reached. In
-this the modern flint-worker only repeated the practice of the primitive
-tool-maker. A group of ancient flint pits at Cissbury, near Worthing,
-has been brought into prominent notice by the systematic explorations of
-Colonel A. Lane Fox. They occur in and around one of the aboriginal
-hill-forts of Sussex, the name of which has been connected with Cissa,
-the son of Ella, who is referred to by Camden as “Saxon king of those
-parts.” But any occupation of the old hill-fort as a Saxon stronghold
-belongs to very recent times when compared with that of the
-flint-workers, whose pits have attracted the notice of modern explorers.
-Colonel Lane Fox describes Cissbury Hill Fort as a great flint arsenal.
-Here within its earthen ramparts the workmen who fashioned the arms of
-the Stone age excavated for the beds of native flint in the underlying
-chalk, and industriously worked it into every variety of weapon. “In one
-place a collection of large flakes might be seen, where evidently the
-first rough outline of a flint implement had been formed. In another
-place a quantity of small flakes showed where a celt had been brought to
-perfection by minute and careful chipping.”[21] In other excavations the
-pounders, or stone hammers, were found, with a smooth rounded end by
-which they were held in the hand, and the other bruised and fractured in
-the manufacture of the flint implements that abound on the same
-site.[22] Twenty-five pits were explored; and from these hundreds of
-worked flints were recovered in every stage of workmanship: chips,
-flakes, cores, balls, and finished knives; drills, scrapers, spear
-heads, and axes or celts. In fact, Colonel Lane Fox sums up his general
-statement of details with the remark that “Cissbury has produced
-specimens of nearly every type known to have been found among flint
-implements, from the Drift and Cave up to the Surface period.”[23] But
-this “Woolwich” of the flint age occupied an altogether exceptional
-position, with the raw material immediately underlying the military
-enclosure, not improbably constructed on purpose to defend the primitive
-arsenal and workshop, and so render its garrison independent of all
-foreign supplies.
-
-Other flint pits point to the labours of the industrious miner, and the
-probable transport of the raw material to distant localities where the
-prized flint could only be procured from traders, who bartered it for
-other needful supplies. An interesting group of flint pits of this
-latter class has been subjected to careful exploration by the Rev. Canon
-Greenwell, with the ingenious inference already noted, of the traces of
-a left-handed workman among the flint-miners of the Neolithic age. This
-was based on the relative position and markings of two picks fashioned
-from the antlers of the red deer, corresponding to others of the ancient
-miners’ tools found scattered through the long-deserted shafts and
-galleries of the flint pits.
-
-The shallow depressions on the surface, which guide the explorer to
-those shafts of the ancient workmen, are analogous to others that reveal
-the funnel-shaped excavations hereafter described, on Flint Ridge, the
-sites of ancient flint pits of the American arrow-makers. In France,
-Germany, and Switzerland, as well as in Great Britain, many localities
-are no less familiar, on which the refuse flakes, and chippings of flint
-and other available material, show where they have been systematically
-fashioned into implements. The Museum of the Society of Antiquaries of
-Scotland has acquired numerous interesting additions to its collections
-of objects of this class by encouraging systematic research. From the
-sands at Colvin and Findhorn, Morayshire; Little Ferry, Sutherlandshire;
-and from Burghhead, Drainie, and Culbin sands, Elginshire, nearly seven
-thousand specimens have been recovered, consisting chiefly of flint
-flakes and chippings; but also including several hundred arrow heads,
-knives, and scrapers, many of them unfinished or broken.
-
-Thus, in various localities, remote from native sources of flint, a
-systematic manufacture of implements appears to have been carried on.
-There can, therefore, be scarcely any hesitation in inferring, from the
-evidence adduced, first a trade in the raw material brought from the
-distant localities of the flint mines; and then a local traffic in the
-manufactured implements, as was undoubtedly the case among the American
-aborigines at no remote date. This aspect of primitive interchange, both
-of the raw material and the products of industrial skill, in so far as
-it is illustrated in the practice of the American Indian tribes, merits
-the most careful study, as a help to the interpretation of the
-archæological evidence pertaining to prehistoric times. To the
-superficial observer, stone is of universal occurrence; and it seems,
-therefore, needless to inquire where the implement-maker of any Stone
-age procured the rough block out of which he fashioned his weapon or
-tool. Only when copper, bronze, and iron superseded the crude material
-of the Stone age has it been supposed to be needful to determine the
-sources of supply. But that is a hasty and wholly incorrect surmise. The
-untutored savage is indeed greatly limited in his choice of materials.
-We are familiar with the shell-workers of the Caribbees and the Pacific
-Islands, and the horn and ivory workers of Arctic regions; but where the
-resources of an ample range could be turned to account, the primitive
-workman learned at a very early date to select by preference such stones
-as break with a conchoidal fracture. Only where such could not be had,
-the most available chance-fractured chip or the apt water-worn stone was
-turned to account. Rude implements are accordingly met with fashioned of
-trap, sienite, diorite, granite, and other igneous rocks, as well as
-from quartzite, agate, jasper, serpentine, and slate. Some of those
-materials were specially favoured by the neolithic workmen for certain
-classes of their carefully finished weapons and implements, such as
-perforated hammers, large axes, gouges, and chisels. But the natural
-cleavage of the flint, and the sharp edge exposed by every fracture,
-adapt it for fashioning the smaller knives, lance and arrow heads, in a
-way no other material except obsidian equals. Hence flint appears to
-have been no less in request among ancient tool-makers than copper, tin,
-and iron in the later periods of metallurgic art.
-
-The fact that tin is a metal of rare occurrence, though found in nearly
-inexhaustible quantities in some regions, has given a peculiar
-significance to certain historical researches, apart from the special
-interest involved in the processes of the primitive metallurgist, and
-the widely diffused traces of workers in bronze. The comparative rarity
-of flint, and its total absence in many localities, suggest a like
-inquiry into the probable sources of its supply in regions remote from
-its native deposits. The flint lance or arrow head, thrown by an enemy,
-or wrested from the grasp of a vanquished foe, would, as in the case of
-improved weapons of war in many a later age, first introduce the prized
-material to the notice of less favoured tribes. As the primitive
-tool-maker learned by experience the greater adaptability of flint than
-of most other stones for the manufacture of his weapons and implements,
-it may be assumed that it became an object of barter in localities
-remote from those where it abounds; and thus, by its diffusion, it may
-have constituted a recognised form of _pecunia_ ages before the barter
-of pastoral tribes gave rise to the peculiar significance attached to
-that term.
-
-One piece of confirmatory evidence of trade in unwrought flint is the
-frequent occurrence of numerous flint flakes among the prized gifts
-deposited with the dead. Canon Greenwell describes, among the contents
-of a Yorkshire barrow in the parish of Ganton, a deposit of flint flakes
-and chippings numbering one hundred and eighteen, along with a few
-finished scrapers and arrow heads;[24] and smaller deposits of like kind
-are repeatedly noted by him. Still more, he describes their occurrence
-under circumstances which suggest the probability of the scattering of
-flint flakes, like an offering of current coin, by the mourners, as the
-primitive grave was covered in and the memorial mound piled over the
-sacred spot. Flints and potsherds, he says, occur more constantly, and
-even more abundantly than bones; and this presents to his mind a
-difficult problem, in considering which he refers to an analogous
-practice of a very diverse age. The maimed rites at poor Ophelia’s grave
-are familiar to the reader of _Hamlet_. The priest replies to the demand
-of Laertes for more ample ceremony at his sister’s burial:—
-
- But that great command o’ersways the order,
- She should in ground unsanctified have lodged
- Till the last trumpet; for charitable prayers,
- Shards, flints, and pebbles should be thrown on her.
-
-The flints and potsherds, Canon Green well remarks, “occur at times in
-very large quantities, the flints generally in the shape of mere
-chippings and waste pieces, but often as manufactured articles, such as
-arrow points, knives, saws, drills and scrapers, etc.” He further notes
-that they are found distributed throughout the sepulchral mound, “in
-some instances in such quantities as to suggest the idea that the
-persons who were engaged in throwing up the barrow, scattered them from
-time to time during the process.” Assuredly whatever motive actuated
-those who contributed such objects while the sepulchral mound was in
-progress of erection, they were not designed as any slight to the manes
-of the dead. In districts remote from those where the flint abounds,
-flakes and chips of the prized material must have been in constant
-demand to replenish the sheaf of arrows, and replace the lost or broken
-lance, knife, and scraper. The trader would barter the raw material for
-furs and other equivalents, or the industrious miner would carry off an
-adequate supply for his own future use. Such small objects, possessing a
-universally appreciable value, would be as available for current change
-as the African cowrie, the Ioqua shells of the Pacific coast, or the
-wampum-beads of the tribes to the east of the Rocky Mountains. If this
-assumption be correct, the scattering of flint flakes, while the mound
-was being piled over the grave, was a form of largess not less
-significant than any later tribute of reverence to the dead.
-
-The sources whence such supplies of raw material of the old flint-worker
-were derived, have been sufficiently explored to furnish confirmatory
-evidence of some, at least, of the deductions suggested by other
-indications thus far noted. The archæologists of Europe are now familiar
-with many localities which have been the quarries and workshops, as well
-as the settled abodes, of palæolithic and neolithic man; nor are such
-unknown in America, though research has to be greatly extended before
-definite conclusions can be accepted relative to the earliest presence
-of man on the western continent. Flint and stone implements of every
-variety of form, and nearly every degree of rudeness, abound in the soil
-of the New World. But in estimating the true significance of such
-evidence, it has to be borne in remembrance that its indigenous
-population has not even now abandoned the arts of their Stone period.
-Implements have already been referred to still in use among the
-Shoshone, Texas, and other living tribes, ruder than any yet recovered
-from the river-drift of France or England; whilst others, more nearly
-resembling the palæolithic types of Europe, have been met with, some of
-them imbedded in the rolled gravels, or glacial drift, and associated
-with bones of the mastodon and other fossil mammals. But the evidence as
-to palæolithic origin has been, at best, doubtful. An imperfect flint
-knife, now in the Museum of the University of Toronto, was recovered
-from a depth of upwards of fourteen feet, among rolled gravel and
-gold-bearing quartz of the Grinnel Leads in Kansas Territory. Flint
-implements from the auriferous gravel of California were produced at the
-Paris Exposition of 1855. According to the Geological Survey of Illinois
-for 1866, stone axes and flint spear heads were obtained from a bed of
-local drift near Alton, underlying the loess, and at the same depth as
-bones of the mastodon. Similar discoveries have been repeatedly noted in
-Southern States. The river Chattahoochee, in Georgia, in its course down
-the Nacoochee valley, flows through a rich auriferous region. Explorers
-in search for gold have made extensive cuttings through the underlying
-drift-gravel, down to the slate rock upon which it rests; and during one
-of these excavations, at a depth of nine feet, intermingled with the
-gravel and boulders of the drift, three large implements were found,
-nearly resembling the rude flint hatchets of the drift type. Examples of
-this class, however, though repeatedly noted, have been too isolated to
-admit of their use for any such comprehensive inductions as the
-disclosures of the glacial drift of north-western Europe have justified.
-The evidence hitherto adduced, when implements of this class have been
-of flint, has failed to establish their palæolithic age, notwithstanding
-their recovery from ancient gravels. Implements of flint occur in great
-abundance throughout vast areas of the American continent. With the fact
-before us that even now the Stone period of its aborigines has not
-wholly passed away, careful observation is required in determining the
-probable age of stray specimens buried even at considerable depths.
-
-But disclosures of an actual American implement-bearing drift appear at
-length to have been met with in the valley of the Delaware. These show
-the primitive tool-maker resorting to a granular argillite, the cleavage
-of which adapted itself to the requirements of his rude art. Professor
-Shaler, in a report on the age of the Delaware gravel beds, describes
-this formation as occurring from Virginia northward to Labrador, though
-it is only in New Jersey and Delaware that the accompanying evidences of
-human art have been thus far recovered. The New Jersey drift is made up
-of transported material, including boulders and smaller fragments of
-granitic, hypogene, sandstone, and limestone rocks, along with
-water-worn pebbles of the same granular argillite as the characteristic
-stone implements recovered from it, to which, from their peculiar shape,
-the name of “turtle-back celts” has been given. There is little true
-clay in the deposit to give coherence to the mass. The type of pebble is
-subovate, or discoidal, suggesting its form to be due to the action of
-running water; and it seems probable that the stone was not quarried out
-of the living rock, but that the pebbles thus reduced to a convenient
-form were turned to account by the tool-maker. The researches of Dr.
-Abbott have been rewarded by the discovery in the drift-gravel of
-numerous examples of this peculiar type of implement, for which the one
-material appears to have been used, notwithstanding the varied contents
-of the drift-gravel in which they occur. As in the case of the French
-and English river-drift, the fractured material is found in every stage
-of disintegration. Professor Shaler says: “Along with the
-perfect-looking implements figured by Dr. Abbott, which are apparently
-as clearly artificial as the well-known remains of the valley of the
-Somme, there are all grades of imperfect fragments, down to the pebbles
-that are without a trace of chipping.” But more recent discoveries in
-the Delaware valley point to remains of a still earlier age than those
-described by Dr. Abbott. These naturally attracted attention to the
-region; for there, for the first time, the American archæologist saw a
-promise of disclosures corresponding in character to those of the
-European drift-gravels. A systematic and prolonged series of
-investigations accordingly carried out by Mr. Hilborne T. Cresson, under
-the direction of the Peabody Museum, have resulted in fresh disclosures
-of early American man. The Naaman’s Creek rock-shelter, carefully
-explored by him, is situated in the State of Delaware, immediately to
-the south of Mason and Dixon’s line. There in underlying deposits,
-claimed to be of Post-Glacial age, rudely chipped points and other
-implements, all of argillite, were found; and at a higher level, others
-of argillite, but intermingled with bone implements, and fragments of
-rude pottery, and alongside of these, implements fashioned of quartzite
-and jasper. The antiquity assigned to the Delaware implements, as
-determined by the age of the tool-bearing gravel, is much greater than
-that of the Trenton gravels previously referred to; but though remains
-of fifteen different species of animals, including fragments of a human
-skull, were recovered from the cave or rock-shelter, they include none
-but existing fauna. But the evidence of antiquity is based most
-confidently on the discovery of palæoliths _in situ_ in the true
-Philadelphia red gravel. Professor G. F. Wright remarks, in discussing
-the relative ages of the Trenton and Philadelphia red gravel, that both
-he and Professor Lewis came to the same conclusion: assigning the
-deposition of the red gravel to a period when the ice had its greatest
-extension, and when there was considerable local depression of the land.
-“During this period of greatest ice-extension and depression, the
-Philadelphia Red Gravel and Brick Clay were deposited by the ice-laden
-floods which annually poured down the valley in the summer season. As
-the ice retreated towards the headwaters of the valley, the period was
-marked also by a re-elevation of the land to about its present height,
-when the later deposits of gravel at Trenton took place. Dr. Abbott’s
-discoveries at Trenton prove the presence of man on the continent at
-that stage of the Glacial epoch. Mr. Cresson’s discoveries prove the
-presence of man at a far earlier stage. How much earlier will depend
-upon our interpretation of the general facts bearing on the question of
-the duality of the Glacial epoch,”[25]—a branch of the inquiry which it
-is not necessary to discuss here. It is sufficient to note that this
-argillite—an altogether inferior material to the flint, or hornstone of
-later tool-makers,—appears, thus far, to be a characteristic feature of
-American palæolithic art. The locality of the native rock is still
-undetermined; but implements fashioned of it have been found in great
-numbers along the escarpments facing the river Delaware. Professor
-Shaler describes the material as a curious granular argillite, the like
-of which, he says, “I do not know in place.” Should the native rock be
-hereafter identified, with traces of the manufactured celts in its
-vicinity, it may help to throw light on the age and history of the
-primitive American implement-makers.
-
-The flint of the cretaceous deposits does not occur in America. True
-chalk is all but unknown among the cretaceous strata of the continent,
-although it has been found in the form of a somewhat extensive bed in
-Western Kansas. In Texas, the cretaceous limestones contain in places
-hornstone nodules distributed through them, like the flint nodules in
-the upper chalk beds of Europe. But though, so far, differing in origin,
-the hornstone and flint are practically identical; and the chert, or
-hornstone, which abounds in the chert-layers of the corniferous
-formation, of common occurrence in Canada, is simply a variety of flint,
-consisting essentially, like the substance to which that name is
-specifically applied, of amorphous silica, and with a similar cleavage.
-This Devonian formation is made up chiefly of limestone strata, parted
-in many places by layers of chert which vary in thickness from half an
-inch to three or four inches. The limestones are more or less
-bituminous, and frequently contain chert nodules. Most of their fossils
-are silicified. The formation underlies a considerable portion of
-South-western Ontario. Out-crops occur at Port Dover, Port Colborne,
-Kincardine, Woodstock, St. Mary’s, and other localities. At a point
-which I have explored more than once near Port Dover, implements occur
-in considerable numbers, along with fractured or imperfect specimens,
-mingled with flakes and chippings, evidently indicative of a spot where
-their manufacture was carried on. At this, and some others of the
-localities here named, Canadian flint pits may be looked for. Among
-other objects illustrative of primitive native arts in the Museum of the
-University of Toronto, is a block of flint or brown chert, from which
-flakes have been struck off for the use of the native arrow-maker. This
-flint core was found in a field on Paisley Block, in Guelph Township,
-along with a large flake, a scraper, and fourteen arrow heads of various
-sizes, all made from the same material. Alongside of them lay a flint
-hammer-stone bearing marks of long use. All of those objects are now in
-the University Museum, and appear to indicate the site of an aboriginal
-workshop, with one of the tools of the ancient arrow-maker, who there
-fashioned his implements and weapons, and traded with them to supply the
-need of the old Huron or Petun Indians of Western Canada. The Spider
-Islands in Lake Winnipeg, near its outlet, have been noted by Dr. Robert
-Bell, as a favourite resort of the old workers in flint, where they
-could trade the products of their industry with parties of Indians
-passing in their canoes. “I have found,” he says, “a considerable number
-of new flint implements, all of one pattern, in a grave near one of
-those sites of an old factory”; the body of a man—presumably the old
-arrow-maker,—had been buried there in a sitting posture, surrounded
-with the latest products of his industrious skill.
-
-In 1875 I devoted several weeks to a careful study of some of the
-principal groups of ancient earthworks in the Ohio valley, and visited
-Flint Ridge to examine a group of native flint pits in the old Shawnee
-territory. The Shawnees were formerly a numerous and powerful tribe of
-Indians; but they took part, in 1763, in the conspiracy of Pontiac, and
-were nearly exterminated in a battle fought in the vicinity of their old
-quarries. From these it is probable that the older race of
-Mound-Builders of the Ohio valley procured the material from which they
-manufactured many of their implements, including some of those used in
-the construction of their great earthworks.
-
-Flint Ridge, as the locality is called, a siliceous deposit of the
-Carboniferous age, extends through the State of Ohio, from Newark to New
-Lexington. It has been worked at various points in search of the prized
-material; and the ancient pits can still be recognised over an extensive
-area by the funnel-shaped hollows, or slighter depressions where the
-accumulated vegetable mould of many winters has nearly effaced the
-traces of the old miners. The chert, or hornstone, of this locality
-accords with that from which the implements recovered from the mounds
-appear to have been chiefly made. One fact which such disclosures place
-beyond doubt, namely, that the so-called Mound-Builders had not advanced
-beyond the stage of flint or stone implements, is of great significance.
-Their numbers are proved by the extent of their earthworks in many
-localities in the Ohio valley; and the consequent supply of implements
-needed by them as builders must have involved a constant demand for the
-flint-miners and tool-makers. The great earthworks at Newark are among
-the most extensive structures of this class, covering an area of several
-miles, and characterised by the perplexing element of elaborate
-geometrical figures, executed on a gigantic scale by a people still in
-the primitive stage of stone implements, and yet giving proof of skill
-fully equalling, in the execution of their geometrical designs, that of
-the scientific land-surveyor. On this special aspect of the question, it
-may be well to revert to notes written immediately after a careful
-survey of the Newark earthworks, so as to suggest more clearly their
-extent and the consequent number of workmen and of tools in demand for
-their execution. The sacred enclosures have to be classed apart from the
-military works of the Mound-Builders. Their elaborate fortifications
-occupy isolated heights specially adapted for defence, whereas the broad
-river-terraces have been selected for their religious works. There, on
-the great unbroken levels, they form groups of symmetrical enclosures,
-square, circular, elliptical, and octagonal, connected by long parallel
-avenues, suggesting analogies with the British Avebury, the Breton
-Carnac, or even with the temples and sphinx-avenues of the Egyptian
-Karnak and Luxor; but all wrought of earth, with the simple tools made
-from quartzite, chert, or hornstone, derived from quarries and flint
-pits, such as those of Flint Ridge, the localities of which have been
-identified.
-
-For a time the tendency among American archæologists was to exaggerate
-the antiquity of those works, and to overestimate the artistic skill of
-their builders. But it now appears that some vague memories of the race
-have been perpetuated. The traditions of the Delawares preserved the
-remembrance of the Talligew or Tallegewi, a powerful nation whose
-western borders extended to the Mississippi, over whom they, in
-conjunction with the fierce warrior race of Wyandots or Iroquois,
-triumphed. The old name of the Mound-Builders is believed to survive, in
-modified form, in that of the Alleghany Mountains and River; and the
-Chatta-Muskogee tribes, including the Choctaws, Chickasaws, Creeks, and
-other southern Indians of the same stock, are supposed to represent the
-ancient race. The broad fertile region stretching southward from the
-Appalachian Mountains to the Gulf of Mexico must have attracted settlers
-from earliest times. It was latterly occupied by various tribes of this
-Chatta-Muskogee stock; but intermingled with others speaking essentially
-different languages, and supposed to be the descendants of the older
-occupants of the region on whom the Tallegewi intruded when driven out
-of the Ohio valley. The Cherokees preserved a tradition of having come
-from the upper Ohio. They have been classed by the Washington
-ethnologists as a distant branch of the Iroquois stock; but Mr. Hale,
-finding their grammar mainly Huron-Iroquois, while their vocabulary is
-largely derived from another source, ingeniously infers that one portion
-of the despairing Talligewi may have cast in their lot with the
-conquering race, as the Tlascalans did with the Spaniards in their war
-against the Aztecs. Driven down the Mississippi till they reached the
-country of the Choctaws, they, mingling with friendly tribes, became the
-founders of the Cherokee nation. Among the older native tribes were the
-Catawbas and the Natchez. They were sun-worshippers, maintained a
-perpetual fire, and regarded the great luminary as a goddess, and the
-mother of their race. It is probable that in their religious rites some
-memory survived of the more elaborate worship of the old occupants of
-the Ohio valley; for the Natchez claimed that in their prosperity they
-numbered five hundred towns, and their northern borders extended to the
-Ohio.
-
-De Soto traversed the Chatta-Muskogee region, when, in 1540, he
-discovered the Mississippi. He found there a numerous population lodged
-in well-constructed dwellings, and with their council-houses surmounting
-lofty mounds. De Soto and later travellers noted their extensive fields
-of maize, beans, squashes, and tobacco, and their well-finished flint
-implements. They were Mound-Builders; and though no longer manifesting
-in extended geometrical earthworks the special characteristic of the old
-race, it is assumed that in them we recover traces of the vanished
-people of the Ohio valley.
-
-With this assignment of the Mound-Builders to an affinity with Indian
-nations still represented by existing tribes, the vague idea of some
-strange prehistoric American race of remote antiquity vanishes; and the
-latter tendency has been rather to underestimate their distinctive
-peculiarities. Some of these seem to separate them from any Indian tribe
-of which definite accounts have been preserved; and foremost among them
-is the evidence of comprehensive design, and of scientific skill in the
-construction of their sacred enclosures. The predominant impression
-suggested by the great military earthworks of the Mound-Builders is that
-of a people co-operating under the guidance of approved leaders, with a
-view to the defence of large communities. Elaborate fortifications are
-erected on well-chosen hills or bluffs, and strengthened by ditches,
-mounds, and complicated approaches; but the lines of earthwork are
-everywhere adapted to the natural features of the site. The sacred
-enclosures are, on the contrary, constructed on the level river-terraces
-with elaborate artificiality of design, but on a scale of magnitude not
-less imposing than that of the largest hill-forts. On first entering the
-great circle at Newark, and looking across its broad trench at the lofty
-embankment overshadowed with tall forest trees, my thoughts reverted to
-the Antonine vallum, which by like evidence still records the presence
-of the Roman masters of the world in North Britain 1700 years ago. But
-after driving over a circuit of several miles, embracing the remarkable
-earthworks of which that is only a single feature, and satisfying myself
-by personal observation of the existence of parallel avenues which have
-been traced for nearly two miles and of the grand oval, circles, and
-octagon, the smallest of which measures upwards of half a mile in
-circumference, all idea of mere combined labour is lost in the higher
-conviction of manifest skill, and even science. The octagon indeed is
-not a perfect figure. Its angles are not coincident, but the sides are
-very nearly equal; and the enclosure approaches so closely to an
-accurate figure that its error is only demonstrated by actual survey.
-Connected with it by parallel embankments 350 feet long, is a true
-circle, measuring 2880 feet in circumference; and distant nearly a mile
-from this, but connected with it by an elaborate series of earthworks,
-is the great circular structure previously referred to. Its actual form
-is an ellipse; the different diameters of which are 1250 feet and 1150
-feet respectively; and it encloses an area of upwards of 30 acres. At
-the entrance the enclosing embankment curves outward on either side for
-a distance of 100 feet, leaving a level way between the ditches, 80 feet
-wide, and at this point it measures about 30 feet from the bottom of the
-ditch to the summit. The area of the enclosure is almost perfectly
-level, so that during rain-floods the water stands at a uniform height
-nearly to the edge of the ditch.
-
-The skulls of the Mound-Builders have been appealed to for indications
-of the intellectual capacity of the ancient race; but mounds and
-earthworks were habitually resorted to at long subsequent dates as
-favourite places of interment; so that skulls derived from modern graves
-are ascribed to the ancient race; and much difficulty has been found in
-agreeing on a typical mound skull. Even after making allowance for
-modifications due to artificial malformation, and eliminating those
-derived from superficial interments, a very noticeable diversity is
-found in the comparatively few undoubtedly genuine mound skulls, which
-may lend some countenance to the idea of the presence of two essentially
-distinct races among the ancient settlers in the Ohio valley.[26] It
-seems to accord with the unmistakable traces of intellectual progress of
-a kind foreign to the attainments of any known race of the North
-American continent, thus found in association with arts and methods of
-work not greatly in advance of those of the Indian savage. The only
-satisfactory solution of the problem seems to present itself in the
-assumption of the existence among them of a theocratic order, like the
-priests of ancient Egypt, the Brahmins of India, or the Incas of Peru,
-under whom the vanished race of the Ohio valley—Tallegewi, Muskogees,
-Natchez, Alleghans, or other American aborigines,—executed their vast
-geometrical earthworks with such mathematical accuracy.
-
-The contents of the earthworks of the Ohio and Mississippi valleys show
-that the copper, found in a pure metallic condition at various points
-around Lake Superior, was not unknown to their constructors. But in this
-they had little advantage over the Iroquois and Algonkin tribes, in
-whose grave mounds copper axes and spear heads occasionally occur. It is
-even possible that working parties were despatched from time to time to
-the ancient copper mines on the Kewenaw peninsula, on Lake Superior, to
-bring back supplies of the prized malleable rock, which could be bent
-and hammered into shape in a way that no other stone was susceptible of.
-But the labours of the native miners were inadequate to provide supplies
-that could in any degree suffice to displace the flint or quartzite of
-the implement-maker. One use, however, has been suggested for the
-copper, in relation to the labours of the flint-workers. Mr. George
-Ercol Sellers, whose researches among the workshops of the ancient
-tool-makers have thrown much light on their processes, was led, from
-careful observation of some of their unfinished work, to the opinion
-that copper was in special request in the operations of the
-flint-flaker. After referring to the well-known use of horn or
-bone-flakers, he thus proceeds: “From the narrowness of the cuts in some
-of the specimens, and the thickness of the stone where they terminate, I
-have inclined to the belief that, at the period they were made, the
-aborigines had something stronger than bone to operate with, as I have
-never been able to imitate some of their deep heavy cuts with it; but I
-have succeeded by using a copper point, which possesses all the
-properties of the bone, in holding to its work without slipping, and has
-the strength for direct thrust required.”[27] No copper tool, however,
-was recovered by Mr. Sellers among the vast accumulations of implements
-and waste chips, hereafter described, on the sites of the ancient
-workers’ industrious operations, though some of those found elsewhere
-may have been used for such a purpose.
-
-The evidence that the ancient dwellers in the Ohio valley were still in
-their Stone age is indisputable. But to a people apparently under the
-guidance of an order or cast far in advance of themselves in some
-important branches of knowledge, and by whom the utility of the metals
-was beginning to be discerned—though they had not yet mastered the
-first step in metallurgy by the use of fire,—their speedy advance
-beyond the neolithic stage was inevitable. But an open valley,
-accessible on all sides, was peculiarly unfavourable for the first
-transitional stage of a people just emerging from barbarism. Their
-numbers, it is obvious, were considerable; and agriculture must have
-been carried out on a large scale to furnish the means of subsistence
-for a settled community. They had entered on a course which, if
-unimpeded, must have inevitably tended to develop the higher elements of
-social life and political organisation. But their duration as a settled
-community appears to have been brief. Some faint tradition of the
-irruption of the northern barbarians of the New World survives. The
-Iroquois, that indomitable race of savage warriors, swept through the
-valley with desolating fury; the dawn of civilisation on the northern
-continent of America was abruptly arrested; and the present name of the
-great river along the banks and on the tributaries of which the
-memorials of the Tallegewi abound, is one conferred on it by their
-supplanters, who were equally successful in thwarting the aims of France
-to introduce the higher forms of European civilisation there.
-
-Some singularly interesting information relative to the traces of the
-ancient flint-workers in the Ohio valley, is furnished by Mr. Sellers.
-His observations were made when that region still remained, to a large
-extent, undisturbed by civilised intruders on the deserted Indian
-settlements. He notes many places along the banks of the Ohio and its
-tributaries, at an elevation above the spring floods except at rare
-intervals of violent freshets, where the flaking process of the old
-flint-workers had been extensively carried on, and where cores and waste
-chips abound. “At one of those places, on the Kentucky side of the
-river,” he says, “I found a number of chert blocks, as when first
-brought from the quarry, from which no regular flakes had been split;
-some had a single corner broken off as a starting-point. On the sharp
-right-angled edge of several I found the indentations left by small
-flakes having been knocked off, evidently by blows, as a preparation for
-seating the flaking tool. Most of the localities referred to are now
-under cultivation. Before being cleared of the timber and subjected to
-the plough, no surface relics were found, but on the caving and wearing
-away of the river banks, many spear and arrow heads and other stone
-relics were left on the shore. After the land had been cleared, and the
-plough had loosened the soil, one of the great floods that occur at
-intervals of some fifteen or twenty years, would wash away the loose
-soil, leaving the great flint workshops exposed.” There, accordingly, he
-notes among the materials thus brought to light, the cores or nuclei
-thrown aside, caches stored with finished and unfinished implements and
-flakes, the tools and wastage, vast accumulations of splinters, etc.,
-all serving to illustrate the processes of the ancient flint-workers.
-
-The depth at which some accumulations occur, overlaid by the growth of
-the so-called primeval forest, points to them as contemporary with, if
-not in some cases older than, the earthworks of the Mound-Builders. The
-extent, indeed, to which some are overlaid by subsequent accumulations
-suggests a remote era. In 1853 Mr. Sellers first visited the site of one
-of those ancient work-yards, on the northern bank of the Saline river,
-about three miles above its junction with the Ohio. The region was then
-covered with dense forest, with the exception of a narrow strip along
-the bank of the river, which had been cleared in connection with
-recently opened coal works. But at a later date, in sinking a cistern,
-about 200 yards from the river bank, the excavation was made through a
-mass of flint chips. Subsequently heavy rains, after ploughing, exposed
-some spears and arrow points. “But it was not until the great flood of
-the winter of 1862 and 1863 that overflowed this ridge three or four
-feet with a rapid current, that the portion under cultivation on the
-river bank was denuded, exposing over six acres of what at first
-appeared to be a mass of chips or stone rubbish, but amongst it were
-found many hammer-stones, celts, grooved axes, cores, flakes, almost
-innumerable scrapers and other implements, and many tynes from the buck
-or stag, all of which bore evidence of having been scraped to a point.
-On exposure to the air they fell to pieces.” The actual site of the
-quarry appears to have been subsequently identified. “The greater number
-of cores, scattered flakes, finished and unfinished implements, are of
-the chert from a depression in a ridge three miles to the south-east,
-where there are abundant indications of large quantities having been
-quarried.” But the same great work-yard of the ancient Mound-Builders
-furnished evidence of other sources of supply. Mr. Sellers noted the
-finding “a few cores of the white chert from Missouri, and the red and
-yellow jasper of Kentucky and Tennessee,” but he adds, “the flakes of
-these have mostly been found in nests or small caches, many of which
-have been exposed; and in every case the flakes they contained were more
-or less worked on their edges; whereas the flakes from the neighbouring
-chert preserved their sharp edges as when split from the mass. These
-cache specimens with their worked serrated edges would, if found singly,
-be classed as saws or cutting implements. But here where found in mass,
-evidently brought from a distance, to a place where harder chert of a
-much better character for cutting implements abounds, they tell a
-different story.” The material was better adapted for the manufacture of
-certain classes of small implements much in demand, and the serrated
-edge is simply the natural result of the mode of working of this species
-of chert and of the jasper.
-
-The fine-grained quartzite was also in request, especially for the
-manufacture of the largest class of implements, including hoes and
-spades, equally needed by the primitive agriculturist, and by the
-navvies to whose industrious toil the vast earthworks of the Ohio valley
-are due. The site of the old quartzite quarry appears to be about eight
-miles from the banks of Saline river; but there are many other
-localities scattered over the region extending from southern Illinois to
-the Mississippi, where the same substitute for chert or hornstone
-occurs. Some of the quartzite hoes or spades measure sixteen inches in
-length, with a breadth of from six to seven inches, and evince
-remarkable dexterity and skill in their manufacture. Here, accordingly,
-it becomes apparent that there was a time in the history of this
-continent, before its existence was revealed to the race that now
-peoples the Ohio valley, when that region was the scene of busy native
-industry; and its manufacturers quarried and wrought the chert, jasper,
-and quartzite, and traded the products of their skill over an extensive
-region. But the germs of an incipient native civilisation were trodden
-out by the inroads of savage warriors from the north; and the towns and
-villages of the industrious community were replaced by what appeared to
-La Salle, the discoverer and first explorer of Ohio river, as the
-primeval forest.
-
-It throws an interesting light on the industrial processes of the
-ancient flint-workers to learn that, even in a region where the useful
-chert abounded, they went far afield in search of other materials
-specially adapted for some classes of implements. They were
-unquestionably a settled community, in a higher stage than any of the
-tribes found in occupation of that or any neighbouring region when first
-visited by Europeans. But many tribes, both of the Northern and Southern
-States, habitually travelled far distances to the sea coast, where still
-the ancient shell mounds attest their presence. The routes thus annually
-pursued by the Indians of the interior of Pennsylvania, for example,
-were familiar to the early surveyors, and some of their trails
-undoubtedly marked the footprints of many generations. In traversing
-those routes, as well as in their autumnal encampments on the coast,
-opportunities were afforded of selecting suitable materials for their
-implements from localities remote from their homes. The lines of those
-old trails have accordingly yielded numerous examples of the wayfarers’
-weapons and tools, as well as of unfinished implements. We are apt to
-think of a people in their Stone period as merely turning to account
-materials lying as accessible to all as the loose stones employed as
-missiles by the vagrant schoolboy. But such an idea is manifestly
-inapplicable, not only to the arts of communities like those by whom the
-earthworks of the Ohio valley were constructed, but to many far older
-workers in flint or stone. The Indian arrow-maker and the pipe-maker, it
-is manifest, often travelled great distances for the material best
-suited to their manufactures; and the use of flint or hornstone for
-slingstones, lance and arrow heads, as well as for knives, scrapers,
-axes, and other domestic and agricultural tools, must have involved a
-constant demand for fresh supplies. It might be assumed, therefore,
-apart from all direct evidence, that a regular system of quarrying for
-the raw material both of the pipe and the implement-maker was pursued;
-and that by trade or barter the pipestone of divers qualities, and the
-chert or hornstone, the quartzite, jasper, and other useful minerals,
-were thus furnished to tribes whose homesteads and hunting-grounds
-yielded no such needful supplies. But the same region which abounds in
-such remarkable evidences of the ingenious arts of a vanished race, also
-furnishes traces of the old miners, by whose industry the flint was
-quarried and roughly chipped into available forms for transport to
-distant localities, or for barter among the Mound-Builders in the region
-traversed by the great river. At various points on Flint Ridge, Ohio,
-and localities far beyond the limits of that state, as at Leavenworth,
-300 miles south of Cincinnati, where the gray flint abounds, evidences
-of systematic quarrying illustrate the character and extent of this
-primitive commerce. Funnel-shaped pits occur, in many cases filled up
-with the accumulated vegetable mould of centuries, or only traceable by
-a slight depression in the surface of the ground. When cleared out, they
-extend to a depth of from four or five, to nearly twenty feet. On
-removing the mould, the sloping sides of the pit are found to be covered
-with pieces of fractured flint, intermingled with unfinished or broken
-implements, and with others partially reduced to shape. The largest hoes
-and spades hitherto noted appear to have been fashioned of quartzite,
-but those of most common occurrence in Ohio and Kentucky are made of the
-gray flint or chert, which abounds in the Flint Ridge pits in blocks
-amply sufficing for the manufacture of tools upwards of a foot in
-length, such as may be assumed to have been employed in the construction
-of the great earthworks. But the transportation of the unwrought blocks
-of hornstone to the work-yards in the valley would have involved great
-labour in the construction of roads, as well as of sledges or waggons
-suited to such traffic. In lieu of this, the accumulated waste chips in
-the quarries show the amount of labour that was expended there in order
-to facilitate the transport of the useful material. Suitable flakes and
-chips were no doubt also carried off to be turned to account for
-scrapers, knives, and other small implements. Partially shaped disks and
-other pieces of all sizes abound in the pits, but the finer
-manipulation, by means of which small arrow heads, lances, drills,
-scrapers, etc., were fashioned, was reserved for leisure hours at home,
-and for the patient labour of the skilled tool-maker, for whose use the
-raw material was chiefly quarried.
-
-In the tool-bearing drift of France and England the large characteristic
-flint implements occur in beds of gravel and clay abounding in flakes
-and chips in every stage of accidental fracture, to some of which M.
-Boucher de Perthes assigned an artificial origin and very fanciful
-significance. But if the palæolithic flint-worker in any case quarried
-for his material before the latest geological reconstruction of the beds
-of rolled gravel, the fractured flints may include traces of primeval
-quarrying as well as of the tool-maker’s labours; for the rolled gravel
-beds occur in river-valleys best adapted to the habitat of post-glacial
-man.
-
-In a report furnished to the Peabody Museum of Archæology, by Mr. Paul
-Schumacher, he contributes some interesting evidence relative to the
-stone-workers of Southern California. The Indians of the Pacific coast,
-south of San Francisco, not only furnished themselves with chisels,
-axes, and the like class of implements, but with pots for culinary
-purposes, made of steatite, usually of a greenish-gray colour. In 1876,
-Mr. Schumacher discovered various quarries of the old pot-manufacturers,
-with their tools and unfinished articles lying there. The softer stone
-had been used for pots, while the close-grained darker serpentine was
-chiefly employed in making the weights for digging sticks, cups, pipes,
-and ornaments. “I was struck,” he says, “on examining the locality
-through a field-glass, by the discovery of so many silver-hued mounds,
-the debris of pits, the rock quarries and open-air workshops, so that I
-believed I had found the main factory of the ollas of the California
-aborigines.”[28] He also discovered the slate quarry, where the rock had
-been broken off in irregular blocks, from which pieces best adapted for
-chisels were selected and fashioned into the forms specially useful in
-making the steatite pots. A venerable Spanish lady told Mr. Schumacher
-that she recollected her mother telling her how the Indians had brought
-_ollas_ in canoe-loads from the islands in Santa Barbara Channel to the
-mainland, and there exchanged them for such necessities as the islanders
-were in need of. This tradition was subsequently confirmed by an old
-Mexican guide. Similar evidence of systematic industry with the
-accompanying trade, or barter, meets the explorer at many points from
-the Gulf of Mexico northward to beyond the Canadian lakes. The pyrulæ
-from the Mexican Gulf are of frequent occurrence in northern ossuaries
-and grave mounds, while corresponding southern sepulchral deposits
-disclose the catlinite of the Couteau des Prairies and the native copper
-of the Lake Superior mines. Obsidian is another prized material only to
-be found _in situ_ in volcanic regions, but met with in manufactured
-forms in many diverse regions, remote from the obsidian quarries.
-
-The routes of ancient traffic, determined in part by the geographical
-contour of the regions through which they pass, are familiar to the
-historical students in the Old World. The ancient lines traversed by the
-traders between the Persian Gulf and the Levant; the routes of caravans
-by way of the oases, across the centre of the Arabian peninsula to the
-Red Sea; the lines of access by road and river from the Baltic to the
-Danube; and from the British Isles and the North Sea, by the valley of
-the Rhone, to the Mediterranean: are all indicated by a variety of
-evidence. The geography of Central Africa appears to have been familiar
-to the Arabian traders from remote ages. Similar well-trodden routes,
-and traverses by lake and river, are well known to the investigators of
-American antiquity. The great trail across Pennsylvania to the
-Mississippi; the route by the great lakes and by portage to the Hudson
-valley, and so to the Atlantic; from Lake Ontario, by the Humber and
-Lake Simcoe, to the Georgian Bay; from Lake Superior, by the
-Mitchipicotten river, to the Hudson Bay; and by the Mississippi and its
-tributaries to the Gulf of Mexico: are all demonstrated by abundant
-traces of the interchange of the products of widely severed regions, as
-disclosed in ancient burial mounds, and deposits assignable to remote
-periods and to long-extinct races. West of the Rocky Mountains the
-trails from the Pacific coast to the interior, and through the passes of
-that lofty range, have been recovered. Owing to the bold contours of the
-region, in the abrupt descent from the western slope of the Rocky
-Mountains to the Pacific, the routes of travel are more strictly defined
-by the physical geography of the country than in the long stretches of
-the continent to the east of that mountain range. An interchange of
-commodities between the tribes of the coast and the interior appears to
-have been carried on from remote times. Dr. Dawson’s own personal
-observations in British Columbia have satisfied him that trading
-intercourse was prosecuted by the coast tribes with those of the
-interior, along the Fraser River Valley; Bella Coola Valley, from head
-of Benetinck Arm; Skeena River; Stiking River; and Chilkoot Pass, from
-the head of Lynn Canal. By the second of the above routes oolacten oil
-was carried far into the interior; and the old trail leading from Bella
-Coola and Fraser river is chiefly associated by the inland Indians with
-this traffic. The habitual traffic engendered by the local advantages of
-some of the tribes on the northern Pacific coast has manifestly
-developed some peculiarities which distinguish them from other Indians
-of the northern continent. The Bilqula, a people inhabiting a limited
-tract in the vicinity of Dean Inlet and Benetinck Arms, by reason of
-their geographical position have held command of the most important
-natural pass and trade route from the ocean to the interior between the
-Skeena and the Fraser rivers, a distance of upwards of 400 miles. From
-remotest times embraced in the native traditions a route has been
-traversed by way of the Bella Coola river, thence northward to the
-Salmon river, and then along the north side of the Blackwater river to
-the Upper Fraser. Dentalium shells and other prized objects of barter
-were carried over this route; but the article of chief value brought
-from the coast was the oil of the Oolacten or Candle Fish; and hence
-this thoroughfare is commonly known among the Tinné of the interior as
-the “Grease Trail.”
-
-Along this and other long-frequented trails the broken implements, flint
-and obsidian chips, and other traces of the natives by whom they have
-been traversed, not only afford proof of their presence there, but at
-times disclose indications of the regions they have visited in going to
-or returning from the interior. Dr. G. M. Dawson informs me that, while
-travelling along various Indian trails and routes in British Columbia,
-west of Fraser river, and between lats. 52° and 54°, chips and flakes of
-obsidian were not unfrequently observed. The Tinné Indians stated that
-the material was obtained from a mountain near the headwaters of the
-Salmon river (about long. 125° 40′, lat. 52° 40′), which was formerly
-resorted to for the purpose of procuring this prized material. The
-Indian name of this mountain is _Bece_, and Dr. Dawson further notes the
-suggestive fact that this word is the same with the Mexican (Aztec?)
-name for “knife.” Mr. T. C. Weston, of the Geological Survey, also
-noted, in 1883, the finding of a flake of obsidian in connection with a
-layer of buffalo-bones, occurring in alluvium, and evidently of
-considerable antiquity, near Fort M’Leod, Alberta. The nearest source of
-such a material is the Yellowstone Park region. Those regions, it is
-obvious, were visited by native explorers, not merely to supply their
-own wants, but for the purpose of securing coveted objects available for
-trade or barter. Dr. Dawson reports to me as the result of observations
-founded on repeated visits to the region, in the work of the Geological
-Survey: That all the coast tribes of British Columbia are born traders,
-and possess in a high degree the mental characteristics generally
-attributed to the Jews. Those holding possession of the above routes
-regarded trade with the neighbouring inland tribes as a valuable
-monopoly, and were ready to fight for it. They also traded among
-themselves, and certain localities were well known as the source of
-commodities. Thus the Haida Indians regularly purchased oolacten oil
-from the Tshimsians, who caught the oolacten at the mouth of the Nass
-and Stiking rivers, giving in exchange cedar canoes, for the manufacture
-of which they were celebrated. Through the agency of the Tshimsians they
-also procured from the inland Indians the large mountain sheep horns,
-from which they executed elaborately carved spoons and other implements.
-Cumshewa, in Queen Charlotte Islands, was, again, noted for Indian
-tobacco, an undetermined native plant, which was an article of trade all
-along the coast.
-
-Copper was not unknown to the native tribes on the Pacific coast, and
-rich supplies of the native metal appear to have been partially worked,
-by the tribes along the shores of Lake Superior from a remote date. The
-ancient mines have been disclosed, in the process of turning their
-resources to account by the enterprise of civilised settlers; and
-abundant evidence has been recovered to show that the native copper of
-the Keweenaw peninsula, Ontonagon, Isle Royale, and other points on Lake
-Superior, was worked extensively by its ancient miners, and undoubtedly
-formed a valuable object of traffic throughout the region watered by the
-Mississippi and its tributaries, and along the whole eastern routes to
-the seaboard. But, with the imperfect resources of the native miners, it
-was a costly rarity, procurable only in small quantities by barter with
-the tribes settled on the shores of Lake Superior. Axe blades, spear
-heads, knives, gorgets, armlets, tubes and beads, all fashioned out of
-the native copper solely with the hammer, have been recovered from
-ancient grave mounds and ossuaries in the valleys of the St Lawrence,
-the Hudson, the Ohio, the Mississippi, and their tributaries; and to the
-west of the Rocky Mountains, copper implements again occur manufactured
-from metal derived from some native source on the Pacific slope. The
-copper was, no doubt, recognised as a malleable rock, differing from all
-others in its ductility, so that it could be fashioned, with the aid of
-a hammer-stone, to any desired form. By this means the ancient miners of
-Lake Superior provided themselves with the most suitable tools for their
-mining operations, and were probably the manufacturers of most of the
-widely diffused copper implements. But for general purposes, both of
-industry and war, American man had to be content with the more abundant
-chert, hornstone, and quartzite.
-
-The source from whence the tribes on the Pacific obtained the coveted
-metal has not yet been ascertained; but it was obviously procured only
-in small quantities, insufficient to be turned to account for economic
-uses. Among a curious collection of objects illustrative of the arts of
-the Haida Indians, now in the Museum of the Geological Survey at Ottawa,
-is a large copper ring, or torque, which appears to have been handed
-down for successive generations, from chief to chief, as a prized
-heirloom; and, it may be assumed, as a symbol of official rank. The
-ring, or necklet, is composed of three twisted bars, or strands of
-hammered copper, each tapering at both ends, and is fashioned with
-remarkable skill, if due allowance be made for the imperfect tools of
-the native artificer. This unique relic seems to show the accumulated
-metallic wealth of the tribe fashioned into a symbol of official rank;
-not improbably with mysterious virtues ascribed to it, which passed with
-it to its official custodian. A block of native copper now in the
-National Museum at Washington is described by the Père Charlevoix as a
-sacred object of veneration by the Indians of Lake Superior, on which a
-young maiden had been offered in sacrifice.[29] But it is beyond
-question that throughout the region north of the Mexican Gulf the native
-manufacturer resorted mainly to the abundant hornstone, chert,
-quartzite, and the like materials of the Stone period. These were in
-universal demand, and must have been industriously collected in the
-localities where they abound, and disposed of by a regular system of
-exchange for furs, wampum, or other objects of barter. Mr W. H. Dall, in
-his report on _The Tribes of the Extreme North-West_, notes the absence
-in the Aleutian Islands of any stone, such as serpentine, fit for making
-the celts or adzes, recovered by him from the shell mounds. “They were,”
-he says, “probably imported from the continental Innuit at great cost,
-and very highly valued”; and on a subsequent page he adds: “The
-intertribal traffic I have referred to is universal among the
-Innuit.”[30]
-
-The occurrence of well-stored caches in some of the ancient mounds of
-the Ohio valley, as well as their repeated discovery in other
-localities, accords with the idea of systematised industrial labour, and
-the storing away of the needful supplies for agricultural and domestic
-operations, and for war. Messrs. Squier and Davis, in their _Ancient
-Monuments of the Mississippi Valley_, describe one of the mounds opened
-by them within the great earthwork on the North Fork of Point Creek, in
-which, according to their estimate, about four thousand hornstone disks
-were disposed in regular order, in successive rows overlapping each
-other. In 1864, I had an opportunity of examining some specimens
-retained in the possession of Dr. Davis. They were mostly disks
-measuring about six inches long and four wide, more or less oval, or
-broad spear-shaped, and fashioned out of a fine gray flint with
-considerable uniformity of character. Mr. Squier assumed that the
-deposit was a religious offering; but subsequent disclosures of a like
-character confirm the probability that it was a hoard of material stored
-for the tool-maker.[31]
-
-In other, though rarer cases, the cache has been found containing
-finished implements. In digging a cellar at Trenton, New Jersey, a
-deposit of one hundred and twenty finished stone axes was brought to
-light, at a depth of about three feet below the surface. Another
-discovery of a like character was made when digging for the construction
-of a receiving vault of the Riverview Cemetery, near Taunton; and
-similar deposits are recorded as repeatedly occurring in the same
-state.[32] In two instances all the specimens were grooved axes. In
-another, fifty porphyry celts were found deposited in systematic order.
-Mr. Charles Rau has given the subject special attention, and in a paper
-entitled “Ancient Aboriginal Trade in North America,” he furnishes
-evidence of addiction to certain manufactures, such as arrow heads, hoes
-and other digging tools, spear heads, chisels, etc., by skilled native
-craftsmen.[33] Deposits closely corresponding to the one reported by Mr.
-Squier as the sole contents of one of the mounds, in “Clark’s Work,”
-Ohio, have been subsequently discovered in Illinois, Wisconsin, and
-Kentucky. One of the Illinois deposits contained about fifteen hundred
-leaf-shaped or rounded disks of flint arranged in five horizontal
-layers. Another, said to have contained three thousand five hundred
-specimens, was discovered at Fredericksburg, in the same state. A
-smaller, but more interesting hoard was accidentally brought to light in
-1868, when some labourers in opening up a new street, at East St. Louis,
-in the same State of Illinois, came upon a collection of large flint
-tools all of the hoe and shovel type. There were about fifty of the
-former and twenty of the latter, made of a yellowish-brown flint, and
-betraying no traces of their having been used. Near by them lay several
-large unworked blocks of flint and greenstone, and many chippings and
-fragments of flint.[34] Deposits of a like character, but varying both
-in the number and diversity of their contents, and, in general, showing
-no traces of use, have been discovered in other states to the east of
-the Mississippi. In the _Smithsonian Report_ for 1877, Mr Rau prints a
-curious account of “The Stock in Trade of an Aboriginal Lapidary.” In
-the spring of the previous year Mr. Keenan presented to the National
-Museum at Washington a collection of jasper ornaments, mostly
-unfinished, which had been found in Lawrence County, Mississippi. They
-were brought to light in ploughing a cotton field, where a deposit was
-exposed, lying about two and a half feet below the natural surface. It
-included four hundred and sixty-nine objects, of which twenty-two were
-unwrought jasper pebbles; one hundred and one were beads of an elongated
-cylindrical shape, and a few of them partially perforated. Others were
-ornaments of various forms, including two animal-shaped objects. The
-whole were made of jasper of a red or reddish colour, occasionally
-variegated with spots or streaks of pale yellow, but nearly all were in
-an unfinished state, and so fully bore out the idea of their being the
-stock in trade of some old native workman, who finished them in
-sufficient numbers to meet the demands of his customers.[35]
-
-From time to time fresh disclosures prove the extent to which such
-systematic industry was carried on. The various collections thus brought
-to light were unquestionably the result of prolonged labour, and were,
-for the most part, undoubtedly stored for purposes of trade. In some
-cases they may have been accumulated in the arsenal of the tribe in
-readiness for war. But whether we recognise in such discoveries the
-store of the trader, or the military arsenal, they indicate ideas of
-provident foresight altogether distinct from the desultory labours of
-the Indian savage in the preparation of his own indispensable supply of
-implements for the chase or for war.
-
-But there were also, no doubt, home-made weapons and implements,
-fashioned with patient industry out of the large rolled serpentine,
-chalcedony, jasper, and agate pebbles, gathered from the sea coast and
-river beds, or picked up wherever they chanced to occur. When camping
-out on the Neepigon river, with Indian guides from the Saskatchewan, I
-observed them carefully collecting pieces of a metamorphic rock,
-underlying the syenite cliffs, which, I learned from one of them, was
-specially adapted for pipes. This they would carry a distance of fully
-800 miles before reaching their lodges on the prairie. Dr. Robert Bell
-described to me a pipe made of fine green serpentine, of a favourite
-Chipewyan pattern, which he saw in the possession of an Indian on Nelson
-river. Its owner resisted all attempts to induce him to part with it,
-assigning as a reason of its special value that it had been brought from
-Reindeer Lake distant several hundred miles north of Frog Portage, on
-Churchill river. The diverse forms in which various tribes shape the
-tobacco pipe are highly characteristic. In some cases this is partly due
-to the texture and degrees of hardness of the material employed; but the
-recovery of pipes of nearly all the very diverse tribal patterns, made
-from the beautiful catlinite, or red pipestone of the Couteau des
-Prairies, leaves little room for doubt that the stone was transported in
-rough blocks and bartered by its quarriers to distant tribes. This
-flesh-coloured rock has suggested the Sioux legend of its origin in the
-flesh of the antediluvian red men, who perished there in the great
-deluge. It is soft, of fine texture, and easily wrought into minutely
-varied forms of Indian art, and so was coveted by the pipe-makers of
-widely severed tribes. Hence red pipestone pipes of many ingenious forms
-of sculpture have been recovered from grave mounds down the Mississippi,
-eastward to the Atlantic seaboard, and westward beyond the Rocky
-Mountains. This prized material appears to have circulated among all the
-Plain tribes. Pipes made of it were to be found in recent years
-preserved as cherished possessions among both the Sioux and the
-Blackfoot tribes. Dr. George M. Dawson found in 1874 part of an ancient
-catlinite pipe on Pyramid Creek, about lat. 49°, long. 105°.
-
-A very different material was in use among the Assiniboin Indians,
-limiting the art of the pipe sculptor to the simplest forms. It is a
-fine marble, much too hard to admit of minute carving, but susceptible
-of a high polish. This is cut into pipes of graceful form, and made so
-extremely thin as to be nearly transparent, so that when lighted the
-glowing tobacco presents a singular appearance in a dark lodge. Another
-favourite stone is a coarse species of jasper, also too hard for any
-elaborate ornamentation. But the choice of materials is by no means
-limited to those of the locality of the tribe. I have already referred
-to my Indian guides carrying away with them pieces of the pipestone rock
-on Neepigon river; and Paul Kane, the artist, during his travels, when
-on Athabaska river, near its source in the Rocky Mountains, observed his
-Assiniboin guides select a favourite bluish jasper from among the
-water-worn stones in the bed of the river, to carry home for the purpose
-of pipe manufacture, although they were then fully 500 miles from their
-lodges.
-
-The favourite material of the Chippewas was a dark, close-grained schist
-obtained at some points on Lake Huron. It is easily carved, and many of
-their pipes are decorated with groups of human figures and animals,
-executed with much spirit. Pabahmesad, an old Chippewa pipe-maker of
-unusual skill, pursued his craft on Great Manitoulin Island, on Lake
-Huron, in comparatively recent years. The peculiar style of his
-ingenious carvings may be detected on pipes recovered from widely
-scattered localities, for his fame as a pipe sculptor was great. He was
-generally known among his people as _Pwahguneka_, the pipe-maker. He
-obtained his materials from the favourite resorts of different tribes,
-using the black pipestone of Lake Huron, the white pipestone procured on
-St. Joseph’s Island, and the catlinite or red pipestone of the Couteau
-des Prairies. But the most varied and elaborate in device of all the
-peculiar native types of pipe sculpture are those executed by the
-Chimpseyan or Babeen and the Clalam Indians, of Vancouver Island and the
-neighbouring shores along Charlotte Sound. They are carved out of a soft
-blue claystone or slate, from which also bowls, platters, and other
-utensils are made, decorated with native legendary symbols and other
-devices. But the most elaborate carving is reserved for their pipes,
-which are not less varied and fanciful in design than the details of
-Norman ecclesiastical sculpture. The same easily carved claystone was in
-great request among the Haida Indians of the Queen Charlotte Islands for
-their idols, and for ornamental gorgets and utensils of various kinds.
-Thus the available materials of different localities are seen to modify
-the forms alike of implements, weapons, and articles designed for
-personal ornament or domestic use, and were sought for and transported
-to many distant points, with the same object as the tin and copper which
-played so important a part in the commercial exchanges of nations at the
-dawn of history.
-
-In regions where flint or hornstone is not available, the quartzite
-appears to have been most commonly resorted to. I have in my possession
-some spear heads measuring from seven to nine inches long, which were
-dug up on an old Indian trail at Point Oken, lying to the north of Lake
-St. John, Quebec; and implements of the like material are common
-throughout eastern Canada. The same widely diffused material was no less
-freely resorted to by the tribes on the Pacific coast. The arrow heads
-found throughout the Salish country of southern British Columbia are
-chiefly formed of quartzite, though chert is also used. The quartzite
-occurs in so many localities that it is difficult to trace its special
-source. But near the east end of Marble Cañon, and at the Big Bock
-Slide, about six miles above Spence’s Bridge, on Thompson river, chips
-occur in considerable quantities, suggestive of one of the chosen
-localities resorted to for quarrying and manufacture.
-
-The old arrow-makers evidently derived pleasure from the selection of
-attractive materials for some of their choicest specimens of handiwork.
-The true crystalline quartz was prized for small arrow heads, some of
-which are equally pleasing in material, form, and delicacy of finish.
-But the material most usually employed in eastern Canada, as well as
-that previously referred to as in request by the old workers of the Ohio
-valley for their largest implements, is a gneissoid rock of
-comparatively common occurrence, which chips off with a broad facet when
-sharply struck, and leaves an acute edge and point. Mr. Seller’s
-valuable paper on the ancient workshops of Ohio and Pennsylvania also
-contains an account of his own experience relative to the flaking and
-chipping of flint implements.[36] In this communication he remarks:
-“Most of the arrow points found within my reach in Philadelphia,
-Delaware, and Chester Counties, Pennsylvania, were chipped from massive
-quartz, from the opaque white to semi-transparent, and occasionally
-transparent.” He further describes his first chance discovery of one of
-the native work-places. He was in company with two scientific
-mineralogists, when, as he writes, “we came to a place where (judging
-from the quantities of flakes and chips) arrow points had been made.
-After much diligent search, only one perfect point was found. There were
-many broken ones, showing the difficulty in working the material. Mr.
-Lukins, a scientific mineralogist, collected a quantity of the best
-flakes to experiment with, and, by the strokes of a light hammer,
-roughed out one or two very rude imitations.” Major J. H. Long traversed
-the continent westward to the Rocky Mountains, as head of the United
-States Military Topographical Department; and from him Mr. Sellers
-derived information of the habits of the rude western tribes long before
-they had been brought into direct contact with any civilised settlers.
-“He said that flakes prepared for points and other implements seemed to
-be an object of trade or commerce among the Indian tribes that he came
-in contact with; that there were but few places where chert or quartzite
-was found of sufficient hardness, and close and even grain, to flake
-well, and at those places there were men very expert at flaking.”[37]
-
-Mr. Sellers had known Catlin, the artist and traveller, in his youth,
-while he was still an expert worker in wood and ivory in the service of
-the elder Catlin, a musical instrument maker in Philadelphia; and from
-him he learned much relative to the modes of operation and the sources
-of material of the Indian workers in stone. “He considered making flakes
-much more of an art than the shaping them into arrow or spear points,
-for a thorough knowledge of the nature of the stone to be flaked was
-essential, as a slight difference in its quality necessitated a totally
-different mode of treatment. The principal source of supply for what he
-termed home-made flakes was the coarse gravel bars of the rivers, where
-large pebbles are found. Those most easily worked into flakes for small
-arrow points were chalcedony, jasper, and agate. Most of the tribes had
-men who were expert at flaking, and who could decide at sight the best
-mode of working. Some of these pebbles would split into tolerably good
-flakes by quick and sharp blows, striking on the same point. Others
-would break by a cross fracture into two or more pieces. These were
-preferred, as good flakes could be split from their clean fractured
-surface, by what Mr. Catlin called ‘impulsive pressure,’ the tool used
-being a shaft or stick of between two and three inches in diameter,
-varying in length from thirty inches to four feet, according to the
-manner of using them. These were pointed with bone or buckhorn.” It is
-thus apparent that among rude tribes of modern centuries, as in the
-prehistoric dawn, exceptional aptitude and skill found recognition as
-readily as in any civilised community. There were the quarriers and the
-skilled workmen, on whose joint labours the whole community largely
-depended for the indispensable supply of all needful tools.
-
-In the summer of 1854, when civilisation had made very slight inroads on
-the western wilderness, I visited a group of Chippewa lodges on the
-south-west shore of Lake Superior, where they still maintained many of
-their genuine habits. Their aged chief, Buffalo, was a fine specimen of
-the uncorrupted savage, dressed in native attire, and wearing the collar
-of grizzly bear’s claws as proof of his triumph over the fiercest object
-of the chase. Their weapons were partly of iron, derived from the
-traders. But they had also their stone-tipped arrows; and one Indian was
-an object of interest to a group of Indian boys as he busied himself in
-fashioning a water-worn pebble into an edged tool. He held an oval
-pebble between the finger and thumb, and used it with quick strokes as a
-hammer. But he was only engaged on the first rough process, and I did
-not see the completion of his work. No doubt, the leisure of all was
-turned more or less to account in supplying themselves with their
-ordinary weapons and missiles. But Catlin’s free intercourse with the
-wild western tribes familiarised him with the regular sources of general
-supply. “The best flakes,” he said, “outside of the homemade, were a
-subject of commerce, and came from certain localities where the chert of
-the best quality was quarried in sheets or blocks, as it occurs in
-almost continuous seams in the intercalated limestones of the coal
-measures. These seams are mostly cracked or broken into blocks that show
-the nature of the cross fracture, which is taken advantage of by the
-operators, who seemed to have reduced the art of flaking to almost an
-absolute science, with division of labour; one set of men being expert
-in quarrying and selecting the stone, others in preparing the blocks for
-the flakers.”[38] But suitable and specially prized material were
-sometimes sought on different sites, and disseminated from them by the
-primitive trader. Along eastern Labrador and in Newfoundland arrow heads
-are mostly fashioned out of a peculiar light-gray translucent quartzite.
-Dr. Bell informs me that near Chimo, south of Ungava Bay, is a spot
-resorted to by the Indians from time immemorial for this favourite
-material; and arrows made of it are not uncommon even in Nova Scotia.
-Among the tribes remote from the sea coast, where no exposed rock
-furnished available material for the manufacture of their stone
-implements, the chief source of supply was the larger pebbles of the
-river beds. From these the most suitable stones were carefully selected,
-and often carried great distances. Those most easily worked into flakes
-for small arrow heads are chalcedony, jasper, agate, and quartz; and the
-finer specimens of such weapons are now greatly prized by collectors.
-The coast tribes both of the Atlantic and the Pacific found similar
-sources of supply of the stones best suited for their implements in the
-rolled gravel of the beach, and this appears to have been the most
-frequent resort of the Micmacs and other tribes of the Canadian Maritime
-Provinces.
-
-I have already referred to information derived from Dr. G. M. Dawson and
-Dr. Robert Bell, to both of whom I have been indebted for interesting
-results of their own personal observations as members of the Canadian
-Geological Survey. Collectors are familiar with the elongated flat
-stones, with two or more holes bored through them, variously styled
-gorgets, implements for fashioning sinew into cord, etc. They are made
-of a grayish-green clay slate, with dark streaks; and the same material
-is used in the manufacture of personal ornaments, ceremonial objects,
-and occasionally for smooth spear heads and knives. Relics fashioned of
-this peculiar clay slate are found throughout Ontario, from Lakes Huron
-and Erie to the Ottawa valley. A somewhat similar stone occurs in situ
-at various points, but Dr. Bell believes he has satisfactorily
-identified the ancient quarry at the outlet of Lake Temagamic, nearly
-100 miles north of Lake Nipissing. No clay slate procured from any other
-locality corresponds so exactly to the favourite material. The site is
-accessible by more than one canoe route; and quantities of the rock from
-different beds lie broken up in blocks of a size ready for
-transportation. Dr. Bell found on the shore of Lake Temissaming a large
-unfinished spear head, chipped out of this clay slate, and ready for
-grinding. When the region is settled and the land cleared, sites will
-probably be discovered where the aboriginal exporters reduced the rough
-blocks to forms convenient for transport.
-
-Dr. Bell has described to me specimens of narrow and somewhat long spear
-points, of local manufacture, made from smoky chert found on or near the
-Athabaska, in Mackenzie river basin; and an arrow head of brown flint
-from the mouth of Churchill river, Hudson Bay. The flint implements of
-Rainy river and Lake of the Woods are of brownish flint and chert, such
-as are found in the drift all over the region to the south-westward of
-Hudson Bay; and are mostly derived from the Devonian rocks. Worn pebbles
-of this kind occur in the drift as far south as Lake Superior. A branch
-of Kinogami river is called by the Indians Flint river (_Pewona sipi_)
-from the abundance of the favourite material they find in the river
-gravel and shingle. The finest flint implements of Canada are those of
-the north shore of Lake Huron, made from material corresponding to a
-very fine-grained quartzite, approximating to chalcedony, found among
-the Huronian rocks of that region.
-
-Along the western coast of the Province of Nova Scotia a high ridge of
-trap rock extends, with slight interruption, from Briar Island to Cape
-Blomidon. Here the strong tidal rush of the sea undermines the cliff,
-and the winter frosts split it up, so that every year the shore is
-strewn with broken fragments from the cliff, exposing a variety of
-crystalline minerals, such as jasper, agate, etc. The beach gravel is
-also interspersed with numerous rounded pebbles derived originally from
-the same source. I am indebted to Mr. George Patterson, of New Glasgow,
-N.S., for some interesting notes on this subject. The pebbles of this
-beach seem to have been one of the chief sources of supply for the
-Indian implement-makers of Nova Scotia. Few localities have hitherto
-been noticed in the Maritime Provinces marked by any such large
-accumulation of chips as would suggest the probability of manufacture
-for the purpose of trade; though chips and finished implements
-occasionally occur together on the sites of Indian villages or
-encampments, suggestive of individual industry and home manufacture. But
-Mr. Patterson informs me that one place at Bauchman’s Beach, in the
-county of Lunenburg, furnishes abundant traces of an old native
-workshop. There, until recently, could be gathered agate, jasper, and
-other varieties of the fine-grained crystalline minerals from the trap,
-sometimes in nodules, rounded and worn, as they occur at the base of the
-ocean-washed cliffs. At times they showed partial traces of working; but
-more frequently they were split and broken, bearing the unmistakable
-marks of the hammer. Along with those were cores and large quantities of
-flakes, or chips, with arrow heads, more or less perfectly formed. At
-one time they might have been gathered in large quantities; but recent
-inroads of the sea have swept away much of the old beach, and strewed
-the products of the Indian stone-workers where they may be stored for
-the wonder of men of other centuries. It is curious, indeed, to reflect
-on the memorials of ages so diverse from those with which the
-palæontologist deals, that are now accumulating in the submarine strata
-in process of formation, for the instruction of coming generations,
-should our earth last so long. The world will, doubtless, have grown
-wiser before that epoch is reached. But it will require some
-discrimination, even in so enlightened an age, to read aright the
-significance of this mingling of relics of rudest barbarism with all the
-products of modern civilisation that are being strewn along the great
-ocean highways between the Old and the New World.
-
-A curious illustration of the possible confusion of evidence is shown by
-the discovery in 1884 of a large stone lance head of the Eskimo type,
-deeply imbedded in the tissues of a whale taken at the whaling station
-on Ballast Point, near the harbour of San Diego, California.[39] In the
-Museum of the University of Edinburgh is the skeleton of a whale,
-stranded in the ancient estuary of the Forth in a prehistoric age, when
-the ocean tides reached the site which had been elevated into dry land
-long ages before the Roman invaders of Caledonia made their way over it.
-Alongside of the buried whale lay a rude deerhorn implement of the old
-Caledonian whaler; and had the San Diego whale sunk in deep waters off
-the Pacific coast, it would have perpetuated a similar memorial of
-rudest savage life, in close proximity, doubtless, to evidences of
-modern civilisation. Such, though in less striking form, is the process
-of intermingling the arts of the American Stone age with products of
-modern skill and refinement, that is now in progress off the Lunenburg
-coast of Nova Scotia. The inroads of the sea have not, however, even now
-effaced all traces of the old arrow-makers of Bauchman’s Beach.
-Specimens of their handiwork may still be gathered along the shore. To
-this locality it is obvious that the inland tribes resorted from remote
-Indian villages for some of their most indispensable supplies.
-Implements of the same materials also occur at sites on the northern
-coast; but the larger number found there are made of quartzite, felsite,
-or of hard, slaty stone, such as occurs in the metamorphic rocks of the
-mountain ranges in the interior of the Province.
-
-From what has thus been set forth, some general inferences of a
-comprehensive character are suggested. It is scarcely open to doubt that
-at a very early stage in the development of primitive mechanical art,
-the exceptional aptitude of skilled workmen was recognised and brought
-into use for the general benefit. Co-operation and some division of
-labour in the industrial arts, necessary to meet the universal demand
-for tools and weapons, appear also to have been recognised from a very
-remote period in the social life of the race. There were the quarriers
-for the flint, the obsidian, the shale, the pipestones, the favourite
-minerals, and the close-grained igneous rocks, adapted for the variety
-of implements in general use. There were also the traders by whom the
-raw material was transported to regions where it could only be procured
-by barter; as appears to be demonstrated by the repeated discovery, not
-only of flint and stone implements, alike in stray examples, and in
-well-furnished caches; but also of work-places, remote from any
-flint-producing formation, strewn with the chips, flakes, and imperfect
-or unfinished implements of the tool-makers. It thus becomes obvious
-that the men of the earliest Stone age transported suitable material for
-their simple arts from many remote localities, and purchased the
-services of the skilled workman with the produce of the chase, or
-whatever other equivalent they could offer in exchange. The further
-archæological search is extended, the evidence of social co-operation
-and systematised industry among the men of the Palæolithic era, as well
-as among those of later periods prior to the dawn of metallurgic skill,
-becomes more apparent. Nor is it less interesting to note that there was
-no more equality among the men of those primitive ages, than in later
-civilised stages of social progress. Diversities in capacity and
-consequent moral force asserted themselves in the skilled handicraftsmen
-of the Palæolithic dawn, much as they do in the most artificial states
-of modern society. As a natural concomitant to this, and an invaluable
-element of co-operation, the prized flint flakes appear to have
-furnished a primitive medium of exchange, more generally available as a
-currency of recognised value than any other substitute for coined money.
-The principles on which the wealth of nations and the whole social
-fabric of human society depend, were thus already in operation ages
-before the merchants of Tyre, or the traders of Massala, had learned to
-turn to account the mineral resources of the Cassiterides; or that
-vaguer and still more remote era before the ancient Atlantis had
-vanished from the ken of the civilised dwellers around the Mediterranean
-Sea.
-
------
-
-[10] _Ancient Stone Implements_, p. 14.
-
-[11] Hoare’s _South Wilts_, p. 195.
-
-[12] _Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland_, viii. 137.
-
-[13] _Ibid._ N.S. vii. 356.
-
-[14] _Ibid._ N.S. xii. 436.
-
-[15] _Archæologia_, xiii. 204.
-
-[16] _Archæologia_, xiii. 224, 225; pl. xiv. xv.
-
-[17] _Athenæum_, Dec. 18, 1886.
-
-[18] _U.S. Geological Survey_, 1872, p. 652.
-
-[19] _Primitive Industry_, Figs. 241, 254, 292, 295, etc.
-
-[20] Evans’ _Stone Implements_, Fig. 94.
-
-[21] _Archæologia_, xlii. 72.
-
-[22] _Ibid._ p. 68.
-
-[23] _Ibid._ p. 68.
-
-[24] _British Barrows_, p. 166.
-
-[25] _Palæolithic Man in Eastern and Central North America_, pp. 152,
-153.
-
-[26] Vide _Prehistoric Man_, 3rd ed. ii. 132.
-
-[27] _Smithsonian Reports_, Part I. 1885, p. 880.
-
-[28] _Report of the Peabody Museum_, ii. 262.
-
-[29] _Prehistoric Man_, 3d ed. vol. ii. p. 223.
-
-[30] _Tribes of the Extreme North-West_, pp. 81, 82.
-
-[31] _Smithsonian Contributions to Knowledge_, 158.
-
-[32] Abbott’s _Primitive Industry_, p. 33.
-
-[33] _Smithsonian Report_, 1872.
-
-[34] _Ibid._ 1868, p. 402.
-
-[35] _Smithsonian Report_, 1877, p. 293.
-
-[36] _Smithsonian Report_, 1885, Part I. p. 873.
-
-[37] _Smithsonian Report_, 1885, Part I. p. 873.
-
-[38] _Smithsonian Report_, Part I. 1885, p. 874.
-
-[39] _Science_, iii. 342.
-
-
-
-
- IV
- PRE-ARYAN AMERICAN MAN
-
-
-THE department of American ethnology, notwithstanding its many
-indefatigable workers, is still to a large extent a virgin soil. The
-western hemisphere is rich in materials for ethnical study, but there is
-urgent demand for diligent labourers to rescue them for future use. On
-all hands we see ancient nations passing away. The prairie tribes are
-vanishing with the buffalo; the Flathead Indians of diverse types and
-stranger tongues; and, more interesting than either, the ingenious
-Haidahs of the Queen Charlotte Islands: are all diminishing in numbers,
-giving up their distinctive customs, and confusing their mythic and
-legendary traditions with foreign admixtures; while some are destined to
-speedy extinction.
-
-When, in 1846, the artist, Paul Kane, entered on his exploratory travels
-among the tribes of the North-West, the Flathead Indians of Oregon and
-British Columbia embraced populous settlements of Cowlitz, Chinook,
-Newatee, and other nations. Now the researches of the American Bureau of
-Ethnology are stimulated by the disclosure that of the Clatsop and
-Chinook tribes there are only three survivors who speak the former
-language, and only one with a knowledge of the latter. Of the Klaskanes,
-in like manner, only one is known to survive; and from a like solitary
-representative of the Tuteloes the language of a vanished race has
-recently been rescued. With all the native tribes who have been brought
-into near relations with the intruding white race their languages and
-customs are undergoing important modifications. Other elements of
-confusion and erasure are also at work. A large influx of Chinese
-complicates the ethnological problem; and it cannot be wisely left to
-the efforts of individuals, carried on without concert, and on no
-comprehensive or systematic plan, to rescue for future study the
-invaluable materials of American ethnology. To the native languages
-especially the inquirer into some of the curious problems involved in
-the peopling of this continent must look for a key to the mystery.
-
-The intelligent inquirer cannot fail to be rewarded for any time he may
-devote to a consideration of the condition and relative status of the
-aborigines, north of the Gulf of Mexico, not only as studied from
-existing native tribes, or from those known since the discovery of
-America in 1492, but in so far as we can determine their earlier
-condition with the aid of archæological evidence. The student of the
-history of the North American nations cannot indeed altogether overlook
-the undoubted fact that Columbus was not the first of European voyagers
-within the Christian era to enter on the colonisation of the western
-hemisphere; whatever value he may attach to the legends and traditions
-of more ancient explorers.
-
-The part played by the Scandinavian stock in European history proves
-their abundant aptitude to have been the organisers of a Northland of
-their own in the New World. The Northmen lingered behind, in their first
-home in the Scandinavian peninsula, while Goth, Longobard, Vandal,
-Suevi, Frank, Burgundian, and other tribes from the Baltic first wasted
-and then revolutionised the Roman world. But they were nursing a
-vigorous youth, which ere long, as pagan Dane, and then as Norman,
-stamped a new character on mediæval Europe. Their presence in the New
-World rests on indubitable evidence; but the very definiteness of its
-character in their inhospitable northern retreat helps to destroy all
-faith in any mere conjectural fancies relative to their settlement on
-points along the Atlantic seaboard which they are supposed to have
-visited.
-
-Runic inscriptions on the Canadian and New England seaboard would, if
-genuine, give an entirely novel aspect to our study of Pre-Columbian
-American history, with all its possibilities of older intercourse with
-the eastern hemisphere. But it is the same whether we seek for traces of
-colonisation in the tenth or the fifteenth century, in so far as all
-native history is concerned. They equally little suffice to furnish
-evidence of relationship, in blood, language, arts or customs, between
-any people of the eastern hemisphere and the native American races. We
-are indeed invited from time to time to review indications suggestive of
-an Asiatic or other old-world source for the American aborigines; and in
-nearly every system of ethnical classification they are, with good
-reason, ranked as Mongolidæ; but if their pedigree is derived from an
-Asiatic stock, the evidence has yet to be marshalled which shall place
-on any well-established basis the proofs of direct ethnical affinity
-between them and races of the eastern hemisphere. The ethnological
-problem is, here as elsewhere, beset by many obscuring elements.
-Language, at best, yields only remote analogies, and thus far American
-archæology, though studied with unflagging zeal, has been able to render
-very partial aid.
-
-It cannot admit of question that the compass of American
-archæology,—including that of the semi-civilised and lettered races of
-Central and Southern America,—is greatly circumscribed in comparison
-with that of Europe. But the simplicity which results from this has some
-compensating elements in its direct adaptation to the study of man, as
-he appears on the continent unaffected by the artificialities of a
-forced civilisation, and with so little that can lend countenance to any
-theory of degeneracy from a higher condition of life. In the modern
-alliance between archæology and geology, and the novel views which have
-resulted as to the antiquity of man, the characteristic disclosures of
-primitive art, alike among ancient and modern races, have given a
-significance to familiar phases of savage life undreamt of till very
-recently. The student who has by such means formed a definite conception
-of primeval art, and realised some idea of the condition and
-acquirements of the savage of Europe’s Post-Pliocene era, turns with
-renewed interest to living races seemingly perpetuating in arts and
-habits of our own day what gave character to the social life of the
-prehistoric dawn. This phase of primitive art can still be studied on
-more than one continent, and in many an island of the Pacific and the
-Indian ocean; but nowhere is the apparent reproduction of such initial
-phases of the history of our race presented in so comprehensive an
-aspect as on the American continent. There man is to be found in no
-degree superior in arts or habits to the Australian savage; while
-evidence of ingenious skill and of considerable artistic taste occur
-among nomads exposed to the extremest privations of an Arctic climate;
-and with no more knowledge of metallurgy than is implied in occasionally
-turning to account the malleable native copper, by hammering it into the
-desired shape; or, in their intercourse with Arctic voyagers and
-Hudson’s Bay trappers, acquiring by barter some few implements and
-weapons of European manufacture. The arts of the patient Eskimo,
-exercised under the stimulus of their constant struggle for existence
-amid all the hardships of a polar climate, have, indeed, not only
-suggested comparisons between them and the artistic cave-dwellers of
-Central Europe in its prehistoric dawn; but have been assumed to prove
-an ethnical affinity, and direct descent, altogether startling when we
-fully realise the remote antiquity thereby assigned to those Arctic
-nomads, and the unchanging condition ascribed to them through all the
-intervening ages of geographical and social revolution.
-
-But whatever may be the value ultimately assigned to the Eskimo
-pedigree, a like phenomenon of unprogressive humanity, perpetuating
-through countless generations the same rudimentary arts, everywhere
-presents itself, and seems to me to constitute the really remarkable
-feature in North American ethnology and archæology. We find, not only in
-Canada but throughout the whole region northward from the Gulf of
-Mexico, diversified illustrations of savage life; but nearly all of them
-unaffected by traces of contact with earlier civilisation. From the
-northern frontiers of Canada the explorer may travel through widely
-diversified regions till he reach the cañons of Mexico and the ruined
-cities of Central America; and all that he finds of race and art, of
-language or native tradition, is in contrast to the diversities of the
-European record of manifold successions of races and of arts. There
-within the Arctic circle the Eskimo constructs his lodge of snow, and
-successfully maintains the battle for life under conditions which
-determine to a large extent the character of his ingenious arts and
-manufacture. Immediately to the south are found the nomad tribes of
-forest and prairie, with their téepees of buffalo-skin, or their
-birch-bark wigwams and canoes: wandering hunter tribes of the great
-North-West; type of the red Indian of the whole northern continent. The
-Ohio and Mississippi valleys abound with earthworks and other remains of
-the vanished race of the Mound-Builders: of old the dwellers there in
-fortified towns, agriculturalists, ingenious potters, devoted to the use
-of tobacco, expending laborious art on their sculptured pipes, and with
-some exceptionally curious skill in practical geometry; yet, they too,
-ignorant of almost the very rudiments of metallurgy, and only in the
-first stage of the organised life of a settled community. The modifying
-influences of circumstances must be recognised in the migratory or
-settled habits of different tribes. The Eskimo are of necessity hunters
-and fishers, yet they are not, strictly speaking, nomads. In summer they
-live in tents, constantly moving from place to place, as the exigencies
-of the reindeer-hunting, seal-hunting, or fishing impel them. But they
-generally winter in the same place for successive generations, and
-manifest as strong an attachment to their native home as the dwellers in
-more favoured lands. Their dwelling-houses accommodate from three or
-four to ten families; and the same tendency to gather in communities
-under one roof is worthy of notice wherever other wandering tribes
-settle even temporarily. A drawing, made by me in 1866, of a birch-bark
-dwelling which stood among a group of ordinary wigwams on the banks of
-the Kaministiquia, shows a lodge of sufficiently large dimensions to
-accommodate several families of a band of Chippewas, who had come from
-the far West to trade their furs with the Hudson’s Bay factor there. The
-Haidahs, the Chinooks, the Nootkas, the Columbian and other Indian
-tribes to the west of the Rocky Mountains, all use temporary tents or
-huts in their frequent summer wanderings; but their permanent dwellings
-are huge structures sufficient to accommodate many families, and
-sometimes the whole tribe. They are constructed of logs or split planks,
-and in some cases, as among the Haidahs of Queen Charlotte Islands, they
-are elaborately decorated with carving and painting.
-
-The gregarious habits thus manifested by many wandering tribes, whenever
-circumstances admit of their settling down in a permanent home, may be
-due mainly to the economy of labour which experience has taught them in
-the construction of one common dwelling, instead of the multiplication
-of single huts or lodges. But far to the southward are the ancient
-pueblos, the casas grandes, the cliff dwellings, of a race not yet
-extinct: timid, unaggressive, living wholly on the defensive, gathered
-in large communities like ants or bees; industrious, frugal, and
-manifesting ingenious skill in their pottery and other useful arts; but,
-they too, in no greatly advanced stage. Still farther to the south we
-come at length to the seats of an undoubted native American
-civilisation. The comparative isolation of Central America, and the
-character of its climate and productions, all favoured a more settled
-life; with, as genuine results, its architecture, sculpture, metallurgy,
-hieroglyphics, writing, and all else that gives so novel a character to
-the memorials of the Central American nations. But great as is their
-contrast with the wild tribes of the continent, the highest phases of
-native civilisation will not compare with the arts of Egypt, in
-centuries before Cadmus taught letters to the rude shepherds of Attica,
-or the wolf still suckled her cubs on the Palatine hill.
-
-If this is a correct reading of American archæology, its bearings are
-significant in reference to the whole history of American man. In Europe
-the student of primitive antiquity is habitually required to
-discriminate between products of ingenious skill belonging to periods
-and races widely separated alike by time and by essentially diverse
-stages of progress in art. For not only do its Palæolithic and Neolithic
-periods long precede the oldest written chronicles; but even its Aryan
-colonisation lies beyond any record of historic beginnings. The
-civilisation which had already grown up around the Mediterranean Sea
-while the classic nations were in their infancy, extended its influences
-not only to what was strictly regarded as transalpine Europe, but beyond
-the English Channel and the Baltic, centuries before the Rhine and
-Danube formed the boundary of the Roman world. Voltaire, when treating
-of the morals and spirit of nations, says: “It is not in the nature of
-man to desire that which he does not know.” But it is certainly in his
-nature, at any rate, to desire much that he does not possess; and the
-cravings of the rudest outlying tribes of ancient Europe must have been
-stimulated by many desires of which those of the New World were
-unconscious till the advent of Europeans in the fifteenth century
-brought them into contact with a long-matured civilisation.
-
-The archæology of the American continent is, in this respect, at least,
-simple. Its student is nowhere exposed to misleading or obscuring
-elements such as baffle the European explorer from the intermingling of
-relics of widely diverse eras, or even such a succession of arts of the
-most dissimilar character as Dr. Schliemann found on the site of the
-classic Ilium. The history of America cannot repeat that of Europe. Its
-great river-valleys and vast prairies present a totally different
-condition of things from that in which the distinctive arts, languages,
-and nationalities of Europe have been matured. The physical geography of
-the latter with its great central Alpine chain, its highlands, its
-dividing seas, its peninsulas, and islands, has necessarily fostered
-isolation; and so has tended to develop the peculiarities of national
-character, as well as to protect incipient civilisation and immature
-arts from the constant erasures of barbarism. The steppes of Asia in
-older centuries proved the nurseries of hordes of rude warriors,
-powerful only for spoliation. The evidence of the isolation of the
-nations of Europe in early centuries is unmistakable. Scarcely any
-feature in the history of the ancient world is more strange to us now
-than the absence of all direct intercourse between countries separated
-only by the Alps, or even by the Danube or the Rhine. “The geography of
-Greek experience, as exhibited by Homer, is limited, speaking generally,
-to the Ægean and its coasts, with the Propontis as its limit in the
-north-east; with Crete for a southern boundary; and with the addition of
-the western coast of the peninsula and its islands as far northwards as
-the Leucadian rock. The key to the great contrast between the outer
-geography and the facts of nature lies in the belief of Homer that a
-great sea occupied the space where we know the heart of the European
-continent to lie.”[40] To the early Romans the Celtic nations were known
-only as warlike nomads whose incursions from beyond the Alpine frontier
-of their little world were perpetuated in the half-legendary tales of
-their own national childhood. To the Greek even of the days of Herodotus
-no more was known of the Gauls or Germans than the rumours brought by
-seamen and traders whose farthest voyage was to the mouth of the Rhone.
-
-It is, indeed, difficult for us now, amid the intimate relations of the
-modern world, and the interchange of products of the remotest east and
-west, to realise a condition of things when the region beyond the Alps
-was a mystery to the Greek historian, and the very existence of the
-river Rhine was questioned; or when, four centuries later, the nations
-around the Baltic, which were before long to supplant the masters of the
-Roman world, were so entirely unknown to them that, as Dr. Arnold
-remarks, in one of his letters: “The Roman colonies along the Rhine and
-the Danube looked out on the country beyond those rivers as we look up
-at the stars, and actually see with our own eyes a world of which we
-know nothing.” Yet such ignorance was not incompatible with indirect
-intercourse; and was so far from excluding the barbarians beyond the
-Alps or the Baltic from all the fruits of the civilisation which grew up
-around the Mediterranean Sea, that the elements of the oldest runic
-epigraphy of the Goths and Scandinavians are traced to that source; and
-the stamp of Hellenic influence is apparent in the later runic writing.
-Moreover the elucidation of European archæology has owed its chief
-impediment to the difficulty of discriminating between arts of diverse
-eras and races of northern Europe, intermingled with those of its
-Neolithic and Bronze periods; or of separating them from the true
-products of Celtic and classic workmanship.
-
-It is altogether different with American archæology. Were there any
-traces there of Celtic, Roman, or mediæval European art, the whole
-tendency of the American mind would be to give even an exaggerated value
-to their influence. Superficial students of the ruins of Mexico and
-Central America have misinterpreted characteristics pertaining to what
-may not inaptly be designated instincts common to the human mind in its
-first efforts at visible expression of its ideas; and have recognised in
-them fancied analogies with ancient Egyptian art, or with the mythology
-and astronomical science of the East. Had, indeed, the more advanced
-nations of the New World borrowed the arts of Egypt, India, or Greece,
-the great river highways and the vast unbroken levels of the northern
-continent presented abundant facilities for their diffusion, with no
-greater aid than the birch-bark canoe of the northern savage. The copper
-of Lake Superior was familiar to nations on the banks of the
-Mississippi, the St. Lawrence, the Hudson, and the Delaware. Nor was the
-influence of southern civilisation wholly inoperative. Reflex traces of
-the prolific fancy of the Peruvian potter may be detected in the rude
-ware of the mounds of Georgia and Tennessee; and the conventional art of
-Yucatan reappears in the ornamentation of the lodges of the Haidahs of
-Queen Charlotte’s Islands, and in the wood and ivory carvings of the
-Tawatin and other tribes of British Columbia. Already, moreover, the
-elaborate native devices which give such distinctive character to the
-ivory and claystone carvings of the Chimpseyan and Clalam Indians, have
-been largely superseded by reproductions of European ornamentation, or
-literal representations of houses, shipping, horses, fire-arms, and
-other objects brought under the notice of the native artist in his
-intercourse with white men. We are justified, therefore, in assuming
-that no long-matured civilisation could have existed in any part of the
-American continent without leaving, not only abundant evidence of its
-presence within its own area, but also many traces of its influence far
-beyond. Yet it cannot be said of the vanished races of the North
-American continent that they died and made no sign. Their memorials are
-abundant, and some of their earthworks and burial mounds are on a
-gigantic scale. But they perpetuate no evidence of a native civilisation
-of elder times bearing the slightest analogy to that of Europe through
-all its historic centuries. The western hemisphere stands a world apart,
-with languages and customs essentially its own; and with man and his
-arts embraced within greatly narrower limits of development than in any
-other quarter of the globe, if we except Australia. The evolutionist
-may, indeed, be tempted by the absence not only of the anthropoid apes,
-but by all but the lowest families of the _Primates_, to regard man as a
-recent intruder on the American continent. But in this, as in the
-archæologist’s deductions, the term “recent” is a relative one. To
-whatever source American man may be referred, his relations to the
-old-world races are sufficiently remote to preclude any theory of
-geographical distribution within the historic period.
-
-It is not, therefore, adequate time that is wanting for the growth of a
-native American civilisation. The only satisfactory indication of the
-affiliation of the American races to those of Asia or Europe, or of
-Africa, must be sought for in their languages. But any trace of this
-kind, thus far observed, is at best obscure and remote. The resemblance
-in physical traits points to affinity with the Asiatic Mongol, and the
-agglutinate characteristics common to many languages of the continent,
-otherwise essentially dissimilar, is in harmony with this. But Asiatic
-affinities are only traceable remotely, not demonstrable on any definite
-line of descent; and all the evidence that language supplies points to a
-greatly prolonged period of isolation. The number of languages spoken
-throughout the whole of North and South America has been estimated to
-considerably exceed twelve hundred; and on the northern continent alone,
-more than five hundred distinct languages are spoken, which admit of
-classification among seventy-five ethnical groups, each with essential
-linguistic distinctions, pointing to its own parent stock. Some of those
-languages are merely well-marked dialects, with fully developed
-vocabularies. Others have more recently acquired a dialectic character
-in the breaking up and scattering of dismembered tribes, and present a
-very limited range of vocabulary, suited to the intellectual
-requirements of a small tribe, or band of nomads. The prevailing
-condition of life throughout the whole North American continent was
-peculiarly favourable to the multiplication of such dialects, and their
-growth into new languages, owing to the constant dismemberment of
-tribes, and the frequent adoption into their numbers of the refugees
-from other fugitive broken tribes, leading to an intermingling of
-vocabularies and fresh modifications of speech.
-
-But, by whatever means we seek to account for the great diversity of
-speech among the communities of the New World, it is manifest that
-language furnishes no evidence of recent intrusion, or of contact for
-many generations with Asiatic or other races. On any theory of origin
-either of race or language, a greatly prolonged period is indispensable
-to account for the actual condition of things which presents such a
-tempting field for the study of the ethnologist. Among the various races
-brought under notice, the Huron-Iroquois of Canada and the neighbouring
-states most fitly represent the North American race east of the Rocky
-Mountains. Their language, subdivided into many dialects, furnishes
-indications of migrations throughout the greater portion of that area
-eastward between the Mississippi and the Atlantic seaboard, and its
-affinities have been sought for beyond the American continent. Mr.
-Horatio Hale, an experienced philologist familiar with the races and
-languages most nearly akin to those of the New World, in his _Indian
-Migrations, as evidenced by Language_, after remarking that there is
-nothing in the languages of the American Indians to favour the
-conjecture of an origin from Eastern Asia, thus proceeds: “But in
-Western Europe one community is known to exist, speaking a language
-which in its general structure manifests a near likeness to the Indian
-tongues. Alone of all the races of the old continent the Basques or
-Euskarians, of northern Spain and south-western France, have a speech of
-that highly complex and polysynthetic character which distinguishes the
-American languages.” But to this he has to add the statement that “there
-is not, indeed, any such positive similarity in words or grammar as
-would prove a direct affiliation. The likeness is merely in the general
-cast and mould of speech, but this likeness is so marked as to have
-awakened much attention.”[41]
-
-Assuming the affinity thus based on a general likeness in cast and mould
-of speech to be well founded, there need be no surprise at the lack of
-any positive similarity in words or grammar; for, used only as a test of
-the intervening time since Basque and Red Indian parted, it points to
-representatives of a prehistoric race that occupied Europe before the
-advent of Celtic or other Aryan pioneer, long prior to the historic
-dawn. And if the intervening centuries between that undetermined date
-and the close of the fifteenth century, when intercourse was once more
-renewed between the Iberian peninsula and the transatlantic continent,
-sufficed for the evolution of all the classic, mediæval, and renaissance
-phases of civilisation in Europe, what was man doing through all those
-centuries in this New World? A period of time would appear to have
-transpired ample enough for the development of a native civilisation;
-but neither the languages nor the arts of the Indian nations found in
-occupation of the northern continent reveal traces of it; nor does
-archæology disclose to us evidence of civilised precursors. Whatever
-their origin may have been, the Red Indian appears to have remained for
-unnumbered centuries excluded by ocean barriers from all influence of
-the historic races. But on this very account an inquiry into the history
-of the nations of the American continent, in so far as this may be
-recoverable from archæological or other evidence, may simplify important
-ethnical problems, and contribute results of some value in reference to
-the condition and progress of primeval man elsewhere.
-
-In Europe man can be studied only as he has been moulded by a thousand
-external influences, and by the intermixture of many dissimilar races.
-The most recent terms of ethnological classification, the Xanthocroi and
-Melanochroi, are based on the assumed interblending of widely dissimilar
-races in times long anterior to any definite chronology. There was a
-time, as is assumed, when the sparsely peopled areas of Europe were
-occupied by a population still imperfectly represented by the Finns, the
-Lapps, and the Basques. Those are supposed to be surviving fragments of
-a once homogeneous population in prehistoric centuries. On this the
-great Aryan migration intruded in successive waves of Celtic, Slavic,
-Hellenic and Teutonic invaders, not without considerable intermixture of
-blood. Such is the great ethnical revolution by which it is assumed that
-Europe was recolonised from the same source from whence India and Persia
-derived their ancient civilised and lettered races. The Finnic
-hypothesis, and the once favoured idea of an Asiatic cradleland for the
-whole so-called Aryan races, have been greatly modified by later
-research. Community of language is no longer accepted as necessarily
-involving a common ethnic origin. But the results in no way affect the
-general conclusion as to the displacement of a succession of barbarous
-races by the historic races of Europe long before the Christian era.
-
-The year 1492 marks the beginning of an analogous ethnical revolution by
-which the Aryan, or Indo-European stock intruded, in ever-increasing
-numbers, on the aboriginal populations of the New World. The disparity
-between the first Celtic or other Aryan immigrants into Europe and the
-aborigines whom they encountered there was probably less than that which
-separated the first American colonists from the Red Indian savages whom
-they displaced. In both cases it was the meeting of cultured races with
-rude nomads whom they were prone to regard with an aversion or contempt
-very different from the repellent elements between conquering and
-subject nations in near equality to each other. The disparity, for
-example, between the native Briton and the intruding Saxon, or between
-the later Anglo-Saxon and the intruding Dane or Northman, was
-sufficiently slight to admit of ready intermixture, ultimately, in spite
-of their bitter antagonism. Nor was even the civilised Roman separated
-by any such gulf from the Gaul or German who bowed to the Imperial yoke,
-and exchanged their independence for Roman citizenship. But other
-elements have also to be kept in view. The pioneers of emigration are
-not, as a rule, the most cultured members of the intruding race; while
-the disparity in the relative numbers of the sexes inevitably resulting
-from the conditions under which any extensive migration takes place
-forms an effective counterpoise to very wide ethnical differences. In
-every case of extensive immigration, with the excess of males and
-chiefly of hardy young adventurers, the same result is inevitable. On
-the American continent it has already produced a numerous race of
-half-breeds, descendants of white and Indian parentage, apart from that
-other and not less interesting “coloured race,” now numbering upwards of
-six millions in the United States alone, the descendants of European and
-African parentage. In the older provinces of Canada, the remnants of the
-aboriginal Indian tribes have been gathered on suitable reserves; and on
-many of these, so far are they from hastening to extinction, that during
-the last quarter of a century the returns of the Indian Department show
-a steady numerical increase. In the United States, under less favourable
-circumstances, similar results are beginning to be recognised. In a
-report on “Indian Civilisation and Education,” dated Washington,
-November 24, 1877, it is set forth as more and more tending to assume
-the aspect of an established fact, “that the Indians, instead of being
-doomed to extinction within a limited period, are, as a rule, not
-decreasing in numbers; and are, in all probability, destined to form a
-permanent factor; an enduring element of our population.” Wherever the
-aborigines have been gathered together upon suitable reserves, and
-trained to industrious habits, as among the Six Nation Indians, settled
-on the Grand river, in the Province of Ontario; or where they have
-mingled on terms of equality with the white settlers, as within the old
-Hudson’s Bay territory on the Red river, they have after a time showed
-indications of endurance. It is not a mere intermingling of white and
-Indian settlers, but the increase of the community by the growth of a
-half-breed population; and when this takes place under favourable
-circumstances, as was notably the case so long as the hunter tribes of
-the prairies and the trappers of the Hudson’s Bay Company shared the
-great North-West as a common hunting-ground, the results are altogether
-favourable to the endurance of the mixed race. On a nearly similar
-footing we may conceive of the admixture of the earliest Aryans with the
-Allophylians of Europe, resulting in some of the most noticeable types
-of modern European nationalities. The growth in the territory of the
-Hudson’s Bay Company of a numerous half-breed population, assuming the
-status of farming hunters, distinct alike from the Indians and the
-Whites, is a fact of singular interest to the ethnologist. It has been
-the result of alliances, chiefly with Indian Cree women, by the fur
-trappers of the region. But these included two distinct elements: the
-one a Scottish immigration, chiefly from the Orkney Islands; the other
-that of the French Canadians, who long preceded the English as hunters
-and trappers in the North-West. The contrasting Scottish and French
-paternity reveals itself in the hybrid offspring; but in both cases the
-half-breeds are a large and robust race, with greater powers of
-endurance than the pure-blood Indian. They have been described to me by
-more than one trustworthy observer as “superior in every respect, both
-mentally and physically,” and this is confirmed by my own experience.
-The same opinion has been expressed by nearly all who have paid special
-attention to the hybrid races of the New World. D’Orbigny, when
-referring to the general result of this intermingling of races says:
-“Among the nations in America the product is always superior to the two
-types that are mixed.” Henry, a traveller of the last century, who spent
-six years among the North American Indians, notes the confirmatory
-assurance given to him by a Cristineaux chief, that “the children borne
-by their women to Europeans were bolder warriors and better hunters than
-themselves.” Finally, of the hardy race of the Arctic circle Dr. Kane
-says: “The half-breeds of the coast rival the Esquimaux in their powers
-of endurance.” There is also a fine race in Greenland, half Danes; and
-Dr. Rae informs me that numerous half-breed Eskimo are to be met with on
-the Labrador coast. They are taller and more hardy than the pure-blooded
-Eskimo; so that he always gave the preference to them as his guides. The
-Danish half-breeds are described by Dr. Henry Rink, in his _Tales and
-Traditions of the Eskimo_, as dating back to the earliest times of the
-colonisation of Greenland. The mixed marriages, he says, “have generally
-been rich in offspring. The children for the most part grow up as
-complete Greenlanders”; but the distinction between them and the native
-Eskimo is unmistakable, although individuals of the hybrid offspring
-represent the mixture of European and native blood in almost every
-possible proportion.
-
-From the conquest of Mexico in 1520, and of Peru in 1534, this admixture
-of races of the Old and the New World has been going on in varying ratio
-according to the relative circumstances under which they meet. In Mexico
-and in the more civilised portions of South America the half-breeds are
-estimated to constitute fully one-fifth of the whole population, while
-the so-called “coloured people,” the descendants of European and African
-parentage, now number not less than fifteen millions throughout the
-mainland and the Islands of North and South America.
-
-Throughout the northern, southern, and western states of America, on the
-Pacific slope, and in Canada, the growth of a mixed race of White and
-Indian blood has everywhere taken place in the first period of
-settlement, when the frontier backwoodsman and the hunter were brought
-into contact with the native tribes. Along the borders of every frontier
-state a nearly exclusive male population is compelled to accept the
-services of the Indian women in any attempt at domestic life. The
-children grow up to share in perfect equality the rude life of their
-fathers. The new generation presents a mixed race of hardy trappers,
-mingling the aptitudes of both races in the wild life of the frontier.
-With the increase of population, and the more settled life of the
-clearing, the traces of mixed blood are lost sight of; but it is to a
-large extent only a repetition of what appears to have marked the advent
-of the Aryan immigrants into Europe. The new, but more civilised race
-predominated. Literal extermination, no doubt, did its work, and the
-aborigines to a large extent perished. But no inconsiderable remnant
-finally disappeared by absorption into the general stock; not without
-leaving enduring evidence of the process in the Melanochroi, or dark
-whites—the Iberians, or Black Celts, as they are sometimes styled,—of
-Western Europe; as well as in the allied type, not only of the
-Mediterranean shores, but of Western Asia and Persia. A process has thus
-been going on on the American continent for four centuries, which cannot
-fail to beget new types in the future; even as a like process is seen to
-have produced them under analogous conditions in ancient Europe.
-
-Viewed in this aspect, the archæology and ethnology of the New World
-presents in some important respects a startling analogy to pre-Aryan
-Europe. Assuredly the status of the Allophylian races of Europe can
-scarcely have been inferior to that of some, at least, of the aborigines
-of America in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Probably the
-Aryan pioneers were fully equal to its first European immigrants. But if
-the ethnical characteristics of American man are simple, and the aspect
-of his social life appears to realise for us a living analogy to that of
-Europe’s Neolithic, if not in some respects to that of its Palæolithic
-era, the question of his antiquity acquires a new interest; for it thus
-becomes apparent that man may remain through countless ages in the wild
-hunter stage, as unprogressive as any other denizen of the wilderness
-propagating its species and hunting for its prey. But the whole question
-of the antiquity of man has undergone a marvellous revolution. The
-literature of modern geology curiously illustrates its progress, from
-the date of the publication of Dean Buckland’s _Reliquiæ Diluvianæ_, in
-1823, to the final edition of Sir Charles Lyell’s _Principles of
-Geology_, in 1872, and the latest embodiment of his conclusions on the
-special question involved in his _Antiquity of Man_.
-
-The determination of a Palæolithic period for Europe, with its rude
-implements of flint or stone, chipped into shape without the aid of any
-grinding or polishing process, and belonging to an era when man was
-associated with animals either extinct or known only throughout the
-historic period in extreme northern latitudes, has naturally stimulated
-the research of American archæologists for corresponding traces on this
-continent. Nor is the anticipation of the possible recovery of the
-traces of man’s presence in post-glacial, or still earlier epochs in
-unhistoric areas, limited to either continent. If it be accepted as an
-established fact that man has existed in Europe for unnumbered ages,
-during which enormous physical changes have been wrought; upheaval and
-denudation have revolutionised the face of the continent; the deposition
-of the whole drift formation has been effected; the river-valleys of
-Southern England and the north of France have been excavated, and the
-British Islands detached from the neighbouring continent: it cannot be
-regarded as improbable that evidence may yet be found of the early
-presence of man in any region of the globe. Nevertheless some of the
-elements already referred to tend to mark with a character of their own
-the investigations alike of the archæologist and the geologist into the
-earliest traces of human art in what we have learned habitually to speak
-of as a New World. In Europe the antiquary, familiar already with
-ancient historic remains, had passed by a natural transition to the
-study of ruder examples of primitive art in stone and bronze, as well as
-to the physical characteristics of races which appeared to have
-preceeded the earliest historic nations. The occupation of the British
-Islands, for example, successively by Celts, Romans, Anglo-Saxons,
-Danes, and Normans, was so familiar to the popular mind that the problem
-of a sequence of neolithic, bronze, and the ruder iron implements with
-their correlated personal ornaments, pottery, etc., was universally
-solved by referring them to Celtic, Roman, and Scandinavian art.
-Erroneous as this interpretation of the evidence proves to have been, it
-had, nevertheless, sufficient accordance with truth to prepare the way
-for the ultimate reception of more accurate inductions. The fact of the
-occurrence of successive phases of art, and their indication of a
-succession of races, were undoubted; and researches directed to the
-solution of the problem of European archæology were unhesitatingly
-followed up through mediæval, classical, Assyrian and Egyptian remains,
-to the very threshold of that prehistoric dawn which forms the
-transitional stage between geological and historical epochs. A
-significant fact, in its bearing on the recent disclosures of the
-river-drift in France and England, is that some of the most
-characteristic flint implements, such as a large spear head found along
-with the remains of a fossil elephant in Gray’s Inn Lane, London, and
-implements of the same type obtained from the drift of the Waveney
-Valley, in Surrey, underlying similar fossil remains, had been brought
-under the notice of archæologists upwards of a century before the idea
-of the contemporaneous existence of man and the mammals of the Drift
-found any favour; and they were unhesitatingly assigned to a Celtic
-origin. The first known discovery of any flint implement in the
-quaternary gravels of Europe is the one already noted which stands
-recorded in the Sloane catalogue as “A British weapon found, with
-elephant’s tooth, opposite to black Mary’s, near Grayes Inn Lane.”
-
-A just conception of the comprehensiveness even of historical antiquity
-was long retarded in Europe by an exclusive devotion to classical
-studies; but the relations of America to the Old World are so recent,
-and all else is so nearly a blank, that for it the fifteenth century is
-the historic dawn, and everything dating before the landing of Columbus
-has been habitually assigned to the same vague antiquity. Hence
-historical research has been occupied for the most part on very modern
-remains, and the supreme triumph long aimed at has been to associate the
-hieroglyphics of Central America, and the architectural monuments of
-Peru, with those of Egypt. But we have entered on a new era of
-archæological and historical inquiry. The palæolithic implements of the
-French Drift have only been brought to light in our own day; and, though
-upwards of half a century has elapsed since the researches of Mr. J.
-MacEnery were rewarded by the discovery of flint implements of the
-earliest type in the same red loam of the Devonshire limestone caves
-which embedded bones of the mammoth, tichorhine rhinoceros, cave-bear
-and other extinct mammals, it is only recently that the full
-significance of such disclosures has been recognised.
-
-America was indeed little behind Europe in the earlier stages of cavern
-research. A cabinet of the British Museum is filled with fossil bones
-obtained by Dr. Lund and M. Claussen from limestone caverns in Brazil,
-embedded in a reddish-coloured loam, under a thick stalagmitic flooring,
-and including, along with remains of genera still inhabiting the
-American continent, those of extinct monkeys. Human bones were also
-found in the same caves, but superficially, and seemingly of the present
-Indian race. But a fresh interest and significance have been given to
-such researches by the novel aspect of prehistoric archæology in Europe.
-The relations now established between the earliest traces of European
-man and the geological aspects of the great Drift formation, have
-naturally led to the diligent examination of corresponding deposits of
-the continent of America, in the hope of recovering similar traces
-there. Until recently, however, any supposed examples of American
-palæolithic art have been isolated and unsatisfactory. Colonel Charles
-C. Jones, in his _Antiquities of the Southern Indians_, notes the
-discovery in the Nacoochee valley, in the State of Georgia, of flint
-implements from the gravel and boulders of the drift, and in material,
-manner of construction, and appearance closely resembling the rough
-hatchets belonging to the Drift type. Other more or less trustworthy
-examples of a like kind have been reported; among which may be noted a
-large specimen, now in the collection of the Society of Antiquaries of
-Scotland, found at Lewiston, in the State of New York, at a great depth,
-when sinking a well. Implements of neolithic character, and even of
-modern type, have been produced, not only from Kansas and California
-gold-diggings, but from the volcanic tufa of the Pacific coast, overlaid
-by repeated volcanic deposits. In a terrace of modified drift, near
-Little Falls, Minnesota, an accumulation of quartz chips have been
-found; the supposed refuse of an ancient workshop. More definitely,
-Professor Aughey reports the discovery of rudely chipped flint arrow
-heads in the loess of the Missouri valley, beneath the bones of the
-mastodon; and the loess gravels of Ohio and Indiana, belonging
-unquestionably to the last glacial age, have disclosed what seem to be
-genuine palæoliths, pointing to the presence of the rational tool-maker
-during the close of the quaternary epoch of the North American
-continent.
-
-Some of those assumed illustrations of American palæolithic art cannot
-be accepted. One implement, for example, from the Californian
-gravel-drift, is a polished stone plummet perforated at one end, and not
-only modern in character, but as a genuine discovery in the gold-bearing
-gravels, tending to discredit the palæolithic origin assigned to ruder
-implements found under similar circumstances. But the most startling
-examples of this class are of minor importance when compared with
-reported discoveries of human remains in the Californian drift. In 1857,
-Dr. C. F. Winslow produced a fragment of a human skull found eighteen
-feet below the surface in the “pay drift” at Table Mountain, associated
-with remains of the mastodon and fossil elephant. From beds underlying
-the lava and volcanic tufa of California, from time to time other
-evidences of the assumed ancient presence of man and traces of his art
-are produced. But the manifestly recent character of some of the latter
-prove the disturbance of these deposits by subsequent influences. In
-1869 Professor J. D. Whitney exhibited, at the Chicago meeting of the
-American Association for the Advancement of Science, a complete human
-skull, recovered at a depth of 130 feet in the auriferous gravel of
-Calaveras County, California, underlying five successive beds of lava
-and volcanic tufa, and vouched for its geological antiquity. The gravel
-which adhered to the relic found imbedded in it is referred by him to
-the Pliocene age; and Dr. J. W. Foster remarks of it, in his
-_Prehistoric Races of the United States_: “This skull, admitting its
-authenticity, carries back the advent of man to the Pliocene epoch, and
-is therefore older than the stone implements of the drift-gravel of
-Abbeville and Amiens, or the relics furnished by the cave-dirt of
-Belgium and France.” In reality, however, the authenticity of the skull
-as a pliocene relic cannot be admitted. Like that of Guadaloupe, those
-found by Dr. Lund in the Brazil caves, and other fossil skulls of the
-American continent, it proved, according to the trustworthy report of
-Dr. Wyman, to be of the ordinary Indian type; though to some minds that
-only confirms the genuineness of the discovery. A human skull recovered
-from the delta of the Mississippi at New Orleans, and estimated by Dr.
-Dowler—on what, “to avoid all cavil,” he claimed to be extremely
-moderate assumptions,—as not less than 57,000 years old, is grouped
-with others found by Dr. Lund in one of the Brazil caves, at Logoa
-Santa, and thus commented on: “Numerous species of animals have been
-blotted from creation since American humanity’s first appearance. The
-form of these crania, moreover, proves that the general type of races
-inhabiting America at that inconceivably remote era was the same which
-prevailed at the Columbian discovery”;[42] and so the authors of _Types
-of Mankind_ arrived at the conclusion that with such evidence of the
-native American type having occupied the continent in geological times,
-before the formation of the Mississippi alluvia, science may spare
-itself the trouble of looking elsewhere for the origin of the American
-race! The high authority of Professor Agassiz was adduced at the time in
-support of this and other equally crude assumptions; but they have
-ceased to receive the countenance of men of science.
-
-Meanwhile the progress of European discovery has familiarised us with
-the idea of the rude primeval race of its Palæolithic era, so designated
-in reference to their characteristic implements recovered from the
-river-drift of France and England, and from the sedimentary
-accumulations of their rock shelters and limestone caves. That flint and
-stone implements of every variety of form abound in the soil of the New
-World, has been established by ample proof; and if mere rudeness could
-be accepted as evidence of antiquity, many of them rival in this respect
-the rudest implements of the European drift. But it has to be kept in
-view that the indigenous tribes of America have scarcely even now
-abandoned the manufacture of implements of obsidian, flint, and stone,
-or of bone and ivory. So striking, indeed, is the analogy between the
-simple arts of the palæolithic cave-men of Southern France, and those
-still practised by the Eskimo, that Professor Boyd Dawkins inferred from
-this conclusive evidence of a pedigree for the Arctic aborigines little
-less ancient than that which Dr. Dowler long ago deduced from his
-discovery in the delta of the Mississippi. The implements and
-accumulated debris of the ancient hunters of the Garonne, the
-contemporaries of the mammoth and other extinct mammals, and of the
-reindeer, musk-sheep, cave-bear, and other species known only within the
-historic period in extreme northern latitudes, undoubtedly suggest
-interesting analogies with the modern Eskimo. Only under similar
-climatic conditions to those in which they now live, could such
-accumulations of animal remains as have been found in the caves of the
-valley of the Vésère be possible in places habitually resorted to by
-man. But such analogies form a very slender basis on which to found the
-hypothesis that the race of the Mammoth and Reindeer period in the
-remote Post-Pliocene era of Southern France has its living
-representatives within the Arctic circle of the American continent.
-
-The students of modern archæology have become familiar with startling
-disclosures; and the supposed identification of living representatives
-of the race of the pleistocene river beds or cave deposits is too
-fascinating a one to be readily abandoned by its originator. The men of
-the River-Drift era are assumed to have been a race of still older and
-ruder savages than the palæolithic cave-men, who were more restricted in
-their range, and considerably in advance of them in the variety and
-workmanship of their weapons and implements. The elder ruder race has
-vanished; but the cave-race of that indefinite but vastly remote era of
-pliocene, or post-pliocene Europe, is imagined to still survive within
-the Arctic frontiers of Canada.
-
-In discussing the plausible hypothesis which thus aims at recovering in
-the hyperboreans of America the race that before the close of Europe’s
-Pleistocene age, hunted the mammoth, the musk-sheep, and the reindeer in
-the valleys of the Garonne, Professor Dawkins reviewed the manners and
-habits of the Eskimo as a race of hunters, fishers, and fowlers,
-accumulating round their dwellings vast refuse heaps similar to those of
-the ancient cave-men. Both were ignorant of the metallurgic arts, were
-excluded to a large extent by a like rigorous climate from access to
-stone or flint; while they habitually turned to account the available
-material, resulting from the spoils of the chase: bone, ivory, and
-deer’s horn, in the manufacture of all needful tools. The implements and
-weapons thus common to both do unquestionably prove that their manner of
-life was in many respects similar. Professor Dawkins also notes, what
-can scarcely seem surprising in any people familiar with the working in
-bone, namely, the use at times by the Eskimo of fossil mammoth ivory for
-the handles of their stone scrapers, and adds: “It is very possible that
-this habit of the Eskimos may have been handed down from the late
-pleistocene times.” But what strikes him as “the most astonishing bond
-of union between the cave-men and the Eskimo is the art of representing
-animals”; and, after noting those familiar to both, along with the
-correspondence in their weapons, and habits as hunters, he says: “All
-these points of connection between the cave-men and the Eskimos can, in
-my opinion, be explained only on the hypothesis that they belong to the
-same race.”[43]
-
-As to the ingenious imitative art of the Cro-Magnon cave-dwellers, it is
-by no means peculiar to them and the modern Eskimo; but, on the
-contrary, is common to many savage races; though by no modern savage
-people has a like degree of artistic ability been shown. Professor
-Dawkins says truly of the cave-man: “He possessed a singular talent for
-representing the animals he hunted; and his sketches reveal to us that
-he had a capacity for seeing the beauty and grace of natural form not
-much inferior to that which is the result of long-continued civilisation
-in ourselves, and very much higher than that of his successors in Europe
-in the Neolithic age. The hunter who was both artist and sculptor, who
-reproduced, with his imperfect means, at one time foliage, at another
-the quiet repose of a reindeer feeding, has left behind him the proof of
-a decided advance in culture, such as might be expected to result from
-the long continuance of man on the earth in the hunter state of
-civilisation.”[44] All this is correct in reference to the art of the
-Vézère carvers and draughtsmen; but it would be gross exaggeration if
-applied to such conventional art as the Eskimo arrow-straightener which
-Professor Dawkins figures, with its formal row of reindeer and their
-grotesque accessories. The same criticism is equally applicable to
-numerous other specimens of Eskimo art, and to similar Innuit, or
-western Eskimo representations of hunting scenes, such as those figured
-by Mr. William H. Dall, in his _Alaska_, which he describes as “drawings
-analogous to those discovered in France in the caves of Dordogne.”[45]
-
-The identity, or near resemblance between harpoons, fowling spears,
-marrow spoons, and scrapers, of the ancient cave-race of pleistocene
-France, and implements of the modern Eskimo, is full of interest; as is
-much also of a like kind between savage races of our own day in the most
-widely severed regions of the globe; but it is a slender basis on which
-to found such far-reaching deductions. The old race that lived on the
-verge of the great glaciers in Southern France gave the preference to
-bone and ivory over flint or stone, because the climatic conditions
-under which they lived rendered those most accessible to them; and we
-see in the familiar types of flint arrow heads, stone hammers, and the
-like primitive tools of savage man, both in ancient and modern times,
-how naturally the workman, with the same materials and similar
-necessities, shapes his few and simple weapons and implements into like
-form. As to the absence of pottery, alike among the ancient
-cave-dwellers and the modern Eskimo, in which another element of
-resemblance is traced, it proves no more than that both had to work
-under climatic conditions which rendered clay, adequate fuel, and nearly
-all other appliances of the potter, even less available than flint and
-stone.
-
-But the caves of the Vézère have furnished examples not only of skulls,
-but of complete skeletons of an ancient race of cave-dwellers, whether
-that of the ingenious draughtsmen and reindeer hunters or not; and had
-those, or the underlying debris, yielded traces of the Eskimo type of
-head, there would then be good reason for attaching an exceptional value
-to any evidence of correspondence in arts and habits. But the cerebral
-capacity of this Cro-Magnon race amply accords with the artistic skill,
-and the sense of beauty and grace of natural form, ascribed to the
-ancient draughtsmen; and their well-developed skulls and large bones
-present the most striking contrast to the stunted Eskimo. The strongly
-marked physiognomy of the former bears no resemblance to the debased
-Mongolian type of the latter. No doubt it may be argued with sufficient
-plausibility that in the slow retreat of the palæolithic race, whether
-eastward by the river-valleys of Europe, and across the steppes of Asia,
-to Behring Strait; or over submerging continents, since engulfed in the
-ocean; and in the vast æons of their retreat to their latest home in
-another hemisphere, on the verge of the pole, any amount of change may
-have modified the physical characteristics of the race. But if so, the
-evidence of their pedigree is no longer producible. The Eskimo may be
-related by descent to the men of the French Reindeer period, as we
-ourselves may be descendants of palæolithic man; but, as Professor
-Geikie has justly remarked: “When anthropologists produce from some of
-the caves occupied by the reindeer hunters a cranium resembling that of
-the living Eskimo, it will be time enough to admit that the latter has
-descended from the former. But, unfortunately for the view here referred
-to, none of the skulls hitherto found affords it any support.”[46] In
-truth, the plausible fancy that the discoveries of the last twenty-five
-years have tended to confirm the identification of the cave-men with the
-Eskimo, only requires the full appreciation of all that it involves, in
-order that it shall take its place with that other identification with
-the red man of the present day of “Dr. Dowler’s sub-cypress Indian who
-dwelt on the site of New Orleans 57,000 years ago.”
-
-The received interpretation of the imperfect record which remains to us
-of the successive eras of geological change with the accompanying
-modifications of animal life, down to the appearance of man, and the
-deciphering of geological chroniclings as a coherent disclosure of the
-past history of the earth, are largely due to Sir Charles Lyell. In 1841
-he visited America, and then estimated with cautious conservatism some
-of the evidences adduced for the assumed antiquity of American man. But
-subsequent observations led him to modify his views; and at length, in
-1863, he “read his recantation” of earlier opinions; and—so far at
-least as Europe is concerned,—gave the full weight of his authority to
-the conclusions relative to the antiquity of man based on the discovery
-of flint implements associated with bones of extinct mammalia at
-Abbeville and in the valley of the Thames. The peculiar geological
-conditions accompanying the earliest evidence of the presence of
-palæolithic man in Europe proved, when rightly interpreted, to be no
-less convincing than the long-familiar sequence of more recent
-archæological indices by which antiquarian speculation has proceeded
-step by step back towards that prehistoric dawn in which geology and
-archæology meet on common ground. The chalk and the overlying
-river-drift, abounding with flint nodules, left no room for question as
-to the source of the raw material from which the primitive implements
-were manufactured. The flint is still abundant as ever, in nodules of a
-size amply sufficient for furnishing the largest palæoliths, in the
-localities both of France and England where such specimens of primitive
-art have been recovered by thousands. But there also other disclosures
-tell no less conclusively of many subsequent stages of progress, alike
-in prehistoric and historic times.
-
-Sir John Evans, in his _Ancient Stone Implements of Great Britain_,
-purposely begins with the more recent implements, including those of the
-Australian and other modern savage races, and traces his way backward,
-“ascending the stream of time,” and noting the diverse examples of
-ingeniously fashioned and polished tools of the Neolithic age which
-preceded that palæolithic class, of vast antiquity and rudest
-workmanship, which now constitute the earliest known works of man; if
-they are not, indeed, examples of the first infantile efforts of human
-skill. But alike in Britain, and on the neighbouring continent, a
-chronological sequence of implements in stone and metal, with pottery,
-personal ornaments, and other illustrations of progressive art, supplies
-the evidence by means of which we are led backward—not without some
-prolonged interruptions, as we approach the Palæolithic age,—from
-historic to the remotest prehistoric times.
-
-The relative chronology of the European drift may be thus stated: first,
-and most modern, the superficial deposits of recent centuries with their
-mediæval traces of Frank and Gaul; and along with those, the tombs, the
-pottery, and other remains of the Roman period, scarcely perceptibly
-affected in their geological relations by nearly the whole interval of
-the Christian era; next, in the alluvium, seemingly embedded by natural
-accumulation at an average depth of fifteen feet, occur remains of a
-European Stone period, corresponding in many respects to those of the
-pfahlbauten, or pile villages of the Swiss Lakes; and, underlying such
-accumulations exceeding in their duration the whole historical period,
-we come at length to the tool-bearing drift, imbedding, along with the
-fossil remains of many extinct mammals, the implements of palæolithic
-man, fashioned seemingly when the rivers were only beginning the work of
-excavating the valleys which give their present contour to the
-landscapes of France and England.
-
-There, as elsewhere, we recognise progression from the most artless
-rudeness of tool manufacture, belonging to an epoch when the process of
-grinding flint or stone to an edge appears to have been unknown; through
-various stages of the primitive worker in stone, bone, ivory, and the
-like natural products; and then the discovery and gradual development of
-the metallurgic arts. Yet at the same time it must not be lost sight of
-that mere rudeness of workmanship is no evidence of antiquity. Nothing
-can well be conceived of more artless than some of the stone implements
-still in use among savage tribes of America. Moreover, it is to be noted
-that it is not amid the privations of an Arctic winter, with its
-analogies so suggestive of a condition of life corresponding to that of
-the men of Europe’s Palæolithic age, but in southern latitudes, with a
-climate which furnishes abundant resources for savage man, that the
-crudest efforts at tool-making now occur. In a report of the _United
-States Geological Survey_ for 1872, Professor Joseph Leidy furnishes an
-interesting account of numerous implements, rude as any in the Drift,
-observed by him while engaged on a survey at the base of the Unitah
-Mountains in Southern Wyoming. “In some places,” he remarks, “the stone
-implements are so numerous, and at the same time are so rudely
-constructed, that one is constantly in doubt when to consider them as
-natural or accidental, and when to view them as artificial.”[47] But
-with these, others are mingled of fine finish. The Shoshones who haunt
-the region seem to be incapable of such skill as the latter imply; and
-express the belief that they were a gift of the Great Spirit to their
-ancestors. Yet many are fresh in appearance; though others are worn and
-decomposed on the surface, and may, as Professor Leidy assumes, have
-lain there for centuries. The tendency is now, even among experienced
-archæologists, to assume that they are actually palæolithic. Mr. Thomas
-Wilson remarks, in his _Report_ of 1887: “Dr. Leidy did not know these
-implements to be what they really were, that is implements of the
-Palæolithic period.”[48] But in view of Dr. Leidy’s whole narrative, his
-assumption seems to be more consistent with the observed data. In the
-same narrative he describes a stone scraper, or _teshoa_, as the
-Shoshones call it, employed by them in the dressing of buffalo-skins,
-but of so simple a character that he says, “had I not observed it in
-actual use, and had noticed it among the materials of the buttes, or
-horizontal strata of indurated clays and sandstone, I would have viewed
-it as an accidental spawl.” When illustrating the characteristics of a
-like class of stone implements and weapons of Great Britain, Sir John
-Evans figures and describes an axe, or war-club, procured from the
-Indians of Rio Frio in Texas. Its blade is a piece of trachyte, so
-rudely chipped that it would scarcely attract attention as of artificial
-working, but for the club-like haft, evidently chopped into shape with
-stone tools, into which it is inserted. Nothing ruder has been brought
-to light in any drift or cave deposit.[49] Another modern Texas
-implement, in the Smithonnia collections at Washington,[50] is a
-rudely-fashioned flint blade, presenting considerable resemblance to a
-familiar class of oval implements of the river-drift.
-
-So far, therefore, as unskilled art and the mere rudeness of workmanship
-are concerned, it might be assumed that the aborigines of America are
-thus presented to our study in their most primitive stage. They had
-advanced in no degree beyond the condition of the European savage of the
-River-Drift period, when, at the close of the fifteenth century, they
-were brought into contact with modern European culture; and nothing in
-their rude arts seemed to offer a clue to their origin, or any evidence
-of progression. So far as anything could be learned from their work,
-they might have entered on the occupation of the northern continent,
-subsequent to the visits of the Northmen in the tenth century; and,
-indeed, American archæologists generally favour the opinion that the
-_Skrælings_, as the Northmen designated the New England natives whom
-they encountered, were not Red Indians but Eskimo. But whatever may have
-been the local distribution of races at that date, geological evidence,
-which has proved so conclusive in relation to European ethnology, has at
-length been appealed to by American investigators, with results which
-seem to establish for their continent also its primeval Stone period,
-and remote prehistoric dawn.
-
-The _Report of the Peabody Museum of American Archæology and Ethnology_
-for 1877, gave the first publicity to a communication from Dr. Charles
-C. Abbott, setting forth the data from which he was led to assume that
-man existed on the American continent during the formation of the great
-glacial deposit which extends from Labrador as far south as Virginia.
-The scene of his successful research is in the valley of the Delaware,
-near Trenton, New Jersey. Though the relative antiquity of the Trenton
-gravel beds is modern compared with some subsequent disclosures, his
-discoveries have a special interest as foremost among those of
-implement-bearing gravels in the New World. In the gravel, deposited by
-the Delaware river in the process of excavating the valley through which
-its course now lies, Dr. Abbott’s diligent search has been rewarded by
-finding numerous specimens of rudely chipped implements of a peculiar
-type, to which he has given the name of “turtle-back celts.” They are
-fashioned of a highly indurated argillite, with a conchoidal fracture,
-and have been recovered at depths varying from five to upwards of twenty
-feet below the overlying soil, in the undisturbed gravel of the bluff
-facing the Delaware river, as well as in railway cuttings and other
-excavations.
-
-Here, to all appearance, intelligent research had at length been
-rewarded by the discovery of undoubted traces of the American
-palæolithic man; and Dr. Abbott, not unnaturally, gave free scope to his
-fancy, as he realised to himself the preoccupation of the river valley
-with “the village sites of pre-glacial man.” There is a fascination in
-such disclosures which, especially in the case of the original
-discoverer, tempts to extreme views; and both in France and England, at
-the present time, the more eager among the geologists and archæologists
-devoted to this inquiry are reluctantly restrained from assuming as a
-scientific fact the existence of man in Southern England and in France
-under more genial climatic influences, prior to the great Ice age which
-wrought such enormous changes there. The theory which Dr. Abbott formed
-on the basis of the evidence first presented to him by the disclosures
-of the Trenton gravel may be thus stated. Towards the close of the great
-Ice age, the locality which has rewarded his search for specimens of
-palæolithic art marked the termination of the glacier on the Atlantic
-coast. Here, at the foot of the glacier, a primitive people, in a
-condition closely analogous to that of the Eskimo of the present day,
-made their home, and wandered over the open sea in the vicinity, during
-the accumulation of the deposit from the melting glacier. But this
-drift-gravel was modified by subsequent action. According to Dr.
-Abbott’s conclusions, it was deposited in open water, on the bed of a
-shallow sea. But the position of the large boulders, and the absence of
-true clay in the mass, suggest that it has undergone great changes since
-its original deposition as glacial debris; and if this is to be
-accounted for by subsequent action of water, the unpolished surfaces of
-the chipped implements are inconsistent with such a theory of their
-origin. Huge boulders, of the same character as those which abound in
-the underlying gravel, occur on the surface; and their presence there
-was referred to by Dr. Abbott as throwing light upon “the occurrence of
-rude implements identical with those found in the underlying gravels,
-inasmuch as the same ice-raft that bore the one, with its accompanying
-sand and gravel, might well gather up also stray relics of this
-primitive people, and re-deposit them where they are now found.”
-Accordingly, seeking in fancy to recall this ancient past, he says in
-his first report: “In times preceding the formation of this gravel bed,
-now in part facing the Delaware river, there were doubtless localities,
-once the village sites of pre-glacial man, where these rude stone
-implements would necessarily be abundant,” and he accordingly asks “May
-not the ice in its onward march, gathering in bulk every loose fragment
-of rock and particle of soil, have held them loosely together, and,
-hundreds of miles from their original site, left them in some one
-locality such as this, where the river has again brought to light rude
-implements that characterise an almost primitive people? But, assuming
-that the various implements fashioned by a strictly pre-glacial people
-have been totally destroyed by the crushing forces of the glacier, and
-that the specimens now produced were not brought from a distance, may
-they not be referred to an early race that, driven southward by the
-encroaching ice, dwelt at the foot of the glacier, and during their
-sojourn here these implements were lost?”[51]
-
-The opinions thus set forth in the first published account of Dr.
-Abbott’s discoveries, have since been considerably modified, in so far
-as the geological age of the tool-bearing gravel of the Delaware valley
-is concerned. In his earlier publications he assumed, as no longer
-questionable, the existence of inter-glacial, if not pre-glacial, man on
-the continent. In his more matured views, as set forth in his _Primitive
-Industry_, he speaks of “having been seriously misled by the various
-geological reports that purport to give, in proper sequence, the
-respective ages of the several strata of clay, gravel, boulders, and
-sand, through which the river has finally worn its channel to the ocean
-level”;[52] so that he has probably ascribed too great an antiquity to
-the peculiar class of stone implements brought to light in the
-river-gravels of New Jersey. Dr. Abbott, accordingly, states as his more
-matured conclusion, confirmed by the reports of some of the most
-experienced geological observers, on whose judgment he relies, that the
-Trenton gravel, in which alone the turtle-back celts have thus far been
-found, is a post-glacial river deposit, made at a time when the river
-was larger than at present; and is the most recent of all the formations
-of the Delaware.[53] Here, however, the term “recent” is employed
-altogether relatively; and although Dr. Abbott no longer claims in the
-discovery of the stone implements of the gravel beds near Trenton, New
-Jersey, evidence of the existence of man on the American continent
-before the close of the Glacial period, he still refers the Trenton
-gravel tool-makers to an era which, at the lowest computation, precedes
-by thousands of years the earliest historical glimpses of Assyria,
-Egypt, or wherever among the most ancient nations of the Old World the
-beginnings of history can be traced.
-
-The disclosures of Dr. Abbott claim a special importance among the
-fruits of archæological investigation on the American continent, not
-only from the fact that they furnish the first well-authenticated
-results of systematic research based on the scientific analogies of
-European archæology, but these later results have included the remains
-of man himself. When Dr. Usher of Mobile contributed to _The Types of
-Mankind_ an account of the discovery of a human skeleton at New Orleans,
-found under circumstances from which the existence of man in the delta
-of the Mississippi was deduced well nigh sixty thousand years ago, it
-was scarcely calculated to win the reader’s acceptance of that
-assumption when it was added that “the type of the cranium was, as might
-have been expected, that of the aboriginal American race.” Nor is this
-the only example of skull of a strictly modern Indian type from which
-the inference has been drawn that the same unchanging form has prevailed
-from the era of pre-glacial American man till now. Three human crania
-found in the Trenton gravel are now in the Peabody Museum at Cambridge
-(Harvard). All are of the same type, but it differs essentially from
-that of the Red Indian skull. They are of small size, oval, and present
-a striking contrast to all other skulls in the Peabody collection. Their
-value is due to the fact of their discovery in the implement-bearing
-gravel, in proximity to the characteristic examples of what are assumed
-to be palæolithic celts. For it is well for us to bear in remembrance
-that the evidences of the antiquity of man in Europe do not rest on any
-number of chance disclosures. It is a simple procedure to dig into a
-Celtic or Saxon barrow, and find there the implements and pottery of its
-builders lying alongside of their buried remains. But archæologists have
-learned to recognise the palæolithic implements as not less
-characteristic of certain post-pliocene deposits than the palæontology
-of the same geological formation. The river-drift and cave deposits are
-characterised by traces of contemporaneous life, as shown in the
-examples of primitive art from which they receive the name of the
-tool-bearing drift or gravel; just as older geological formations have
-their characteristic animal and vegetable fossils. The specific
-character of the tool-bearing gravel of the French Drift having been
-determined, geologists and archæologists have sought for flint
-implements in corresponding English strata, as they would seek for the
-fossils of the same period, and with like success. Palæolithic
-implements have been recovered in this manner in Suffolk, Bedford,
-Hartford, Kent, Middlesex, Surrey, and other districts in the south of
-England. So entirely indeed has the man of the Drift passed beyond the
-province of the archæologist, that in 1861 Professor Prestwich followed
-up his _Notes on Further Discoveries of Flint Implements in Beds of
-Post-Pleiocene Gravel and Clay_, with a list of forty-one localities
-where gravel and clay pits or gravel beds occur, as some of the places
-in the south of England where he thought flint implements might also by
-diligent search possibly be found; and subsequent discoveries confirmed
-his anticipations. It has been by the application of the same principle
-to the drift and river-valley gravels of the New World that a like
-success has been achieved. The result of a careful study of the
-tool-bearing gravel of the Delaware may be thus summarised from recent
-reports of trustworthy scientific observers. The Trenton gravel is a
-post-glacial river deposit, made at a time when the river was larger
-than its present volume. It represents apparently the latest of the
-surface deposits of the upper Delaware valley;[54] and Dr. Abbott
-remarks of it: “The melting of a local glacier in the Cattskill
-Mountains would probably result, at the headwaters of the Delaware, in a
-continued flood of sufficient volume, if supplemented by the action of
-floating ice, to form the Trenton gravels.”[55] But these gravels are
-now recognised as the youngest of the series of ancient
-implement-bearing deposits. Underneath lies the older Columbia gravel,
-which has also yielded—though in much fewer numbers,—palæoliths of
-primitive types. The researches of Mr. Hilborne T. Cresson in the State
-of Delaware have already been referred to; and from those results, as
-well as from similar disclosures in Ohio and Indiana, it is no longer
-doubted that reliable traces have been recovered of American man
-contemporary with the mammoth and the mastodon; and—like the old
-cave-dwellers of Cro-Magnon,—a hunter of the reindeer in the valley of
-the Delaware.
-
-American archæologists have undoubtedly been repeatedly deceived by the
-misleading traces of comparatively modern remains in deposits of some
-geological antiquity; as in instances already referred to in the
-California gravel beds. In these, indeed, ground and polished
-instruments of stone, including a “plummet” of highly polished syenite,
-“an exhibition of the lapidary’s skill superior to anything yet
-furnished by the Stone age of either continent,”[56] are produced from
-time to time from the same post-pliocene formation where the remains of
-the elephant and mastodon abound. Dr. Abbott did not overlook the danger
-to which the archæologist is thus exposed on a continent which, so far
-as its aborigines are concerned, has scarcely yet emerged from its Stone
-age. He accordingly remarked in his original report: “The chance
-occurrence of single specimens of the ordinary forms of Indian relics,
-at depths somewhat greater than they have usually reached, even in
-constantly cultivated soils, induced me, several years since, to
-carefully examine the underlying gravels, to determine if the common
-surface-found stone implements of Indian origin were ever found therein,
-except in such manner as might easily be explained, as in the case of
-deep burials by the uprooting of large trees, whereby an implement lying
-on the surface, or immediately below it, might fall into the gravel
-beneath, and subsequently become buried several feet in depth; and
-lastly, by the action of the water, as where a spring, swollen by spring
-freshets, cuts for itself a new channel, and carrying away a large body
-of earth, leaves its larger pebbles, and possibly stone implements of
-late origin, upon the gravel of the new bed of the stream.” But there is
-little difficulty in separating chance-buried neolithic or modern
-implements from the genuine palæolithic celts or hatchets abundantly
-present in the undisturbed gravel beds, from which they have been taken
-on their first exposure.
-
-Professor Henry C. Lewis, of the Pennsylvania Geological Survey, states
-that “at the localities on the Pennsylvania Railroad, where extensive
-exposures of these gravels have been made, the deposit is undoubtedly
-undisturbed. No implement could have come into this gravel except at a
-time when the river flowed upon it, and when they might have sunk
-through the loose and shifting material. All the evidence points to the
-conclusion that at the time of the Trenton gravel flood, Man, in a rude
-state, with habits similar to those of the river-drift hunter of Europe,
-and probably under a climate similar to that of more northern regions,
-lived upon the banks of the ancient Delaware, and lost his stone
-implements in the shifting sands and gravel of the bed of that
-stream.”[57] To this Dr. Abbott adds: “At just such a locality as
-Trenton, where the river widens out, traces of man, had he existed
-during the accumulation of the gravel, would be most likely to occur.
-This is true not only because there is here the greatest mass of the
-gravel, and the best opportunities for examining it in section, but the
-locality would be one most favourable for the existence of man at the
-time. The higher ground in the immediate vicinity was sufficiently
-elevated to be free from the encroachments of the ice and water, and the
-climate, soil, and fauna are all such as to make it possible for man to
-exist at this time in this locality.”[58] In 1878 the tusk of a mastodon
-was found under partially stratified gravel at a depth of fourteen feet;
-and Dr. Abbott states that, within a few yards of this, palæolithic
-implements have been gathered, one at the same and three at greater
-depths. Now that an intelligent interest has been awakened in the
-subject, numerous labourers are enlisted in its elucidation. To this a
-coherent unity has been given by the archæologists of the Peabody Museum
-at Harvard, and the curators of the National Museum at Washington. The
-results of a systematic inquiry by the latter into the localities and
-numbers of examples of supposed palæolithic works of art already
-recovered, have disclosed abundant confirmatory evidence. Special
-attention was invited to the occurrence of surface-finds, as well as to
-the depth and the geological indications of age in those recovered from
-excavations or chance exposures under the surface. Of the superficial
-examples the proof of the occurrence of stone implements of palæolithic
-types over widely diffused areas, from New England to Texas, is
-abundant. Much caution is required in the conclusions derived from such
-implements found exposed, or in superficial deposits, on a continent
-where weapons and implements of stone are still in frequent use. But
-after the elimination of all doubtful examples, abundant evidence
-remains of the presence of man on the American continent in a
-Palæolithic as well as an early Neolithic age. An interesting _résumé_
-of recent evidence is embodied in the “Results of an Inquiry as to the
-Existence of Man in North America during the Palæolithic Period of the
-Stone Age,” by Mr. Thomas Wilson of the National Museum at
-Washington.[59]
-
-It may still be a question whether the Palæolithic age of the New World
-is equally remote with that of the eastern hemisphere. The date
-approximately assigned thus far to the American Palæolithic era is,
-geologically speaking, recent; and on that very account adapts itself to
-other favoured assumptions, such as the supposed Eskimo pedigree derived
-from the race of Europe’s Reindeer period. This chimes in with the old
-idea of the American antiquary that the _Skrælings_ referred to in the
-Eric Saga were Eskimo, as is far from improbable, though the assumption
-rests on no definite evidence. Dr. Abbott accordingly reproduces the
-statement of Professor Dawkins, in confirmation of the revived belief.
-“We are without a clue to the ethnology of the river-drift man, who most
-probably is as completely extinct at the present time as the woolly
-rhinoceros or the cave-bear; but the discoveries of the last twenty
-years have tended to confirm the identification of the cave-man with the
-Eskimo.” Such a fanciful hypothesis once accepted as fact, its
-application to American ethnology is easy; and so Dr. Abbott proceeds to
-appeal unhesitatingly to evidence sufficient “to warrant the assertion
-that the palæolithic man on the one hand, and the makers of the
-argillite spear points on the other, stand in the relationship of
-ancestor and descendant; and if the latter, as is probable, is in turn
-the ancestor of the modern Eskimo: then does it not follow that the
-River-drift and Cave-man of Europe, supposing the relationship of the
-latter to the Eskimo to be correct, bear the same close relationship to
-each other as do the American representatives of these earliest of
-people?”[60]
-
-Such an appeal to European archæology can scarcely fail to suggest some
-very striking contrasts thereby involved. As the thoughtful student
-dwells on all the phenomena of change and geological revolution which he
-has to encounter in seeking to assign to the man of the European Drift
-his place in vanished centuries, his mind is lost in amazement at the
-vista of that long-forgotten past. Yet inadequate as the intermediate
-steps may appear, there are progressive stages. Amid all the
-overwhelming sense of the vastness of the period embraced in the changes
-which he reviews, the mind rests from time to time at well-defined
-stations, in tracking the way backward, through ages of historical
-antiquity, into the night of time, and so to that dim dawn of mechanical
-skill and rational industry in which the first tool-makers plied their
-ingenious arts. But, so far as yet appears, it is wholly otherwise
-throughout the whole western continent, from the Gulf of Mexico
-northward to the pole. North America has indeed a Copper age of its own
-very markedly defined; for the shores and islands of Lake Superior are
-rich in pure native copper, available for industrial resources without
-even the most rudimentary knowledge of metallurgic arts. But the tools
-and personal ornaments fashioned out of this more workable material are
-little, if at all, in advance of the implements of stone; and, with this
-exception, the primitive industry of North America manifests wondrously
-slight traces of progression through all the ages now assigned to man’s
-presence on the continent.
-
-The means available for forming some just estimate of the character of
-native American art are now abundant. In the National Museum at
-Washington; the Peabody Museum at Cambridge, Mass.; the Peabody Academy
-at Salem; the Academy of Natural Sciences at Philadelphia; the American
-Antiquarian Society at Worcester, Mass.; and in various Historical
-Societies and University Museums throughout the States; the student of
-American archæology has the means of obtaining a comprehensive view of
-the native arts. At the Centennial Exposition of Philadelphia in 1876,
-the various States vied with one another in producing an adequate
-representation of the antiquities specially characteristic of their own
-localities; and numerous valuable reports, of the Smithsonian
-Institution, the United States Geographical Surveys, the Geological
-Survey of Canada, and the Geological Surveys of various States, have
-furnished data for determining the prehistoric chroniclings of the
-northern continent.
-
-One of the latest publications of this class is Dr. Abbott’s own volume,
-entitled _Primitive Industry: or Illustrations of the Handiwork in
-Stone, Bone, and Clay of the native Races of the Northern Atlantic
-Seaboard of America_. It is a most instructive epitome of North American
-archæology. Notwithstanding the limits set in the title, works in metal
-as well as in stone are included; and what are the results? Twenty-one
-out of its twenty-three chapters are devoted to the detailed
-illustrations of stone and flint axes, celts, hammers, chisels,
-scrapers, drills, knives, etc. Fish-hooks, fish-spears, awls or bodkins,
-and other implements of bone, pottery, pipes both in stone and clay, and
-personal ornaments, receive the like detailed illustration; but nearly
-all are in the rudest stage of rudimentary art. An advance upon this is
-seen in the pottery of some southern states. That of the Mound-Builders
-appears to have shown both more artistic design and better finish. The
-carving in bone, ivory, and slate-stone of various western tribes, as
-well as of the extinct Mound-Builders, was also of a higher character.
-But taking them at their highest, they cannot compare in practical skill
-or variety of application with the industrial arts of Europe’s Neolithic
-age; and we look in vain for any traces of higher progress. For well
-nigh four centuries, this continent has been familiar to European
-explorers and settlers. During some considerable portion of that time,
-by means of agricultural operations, and all the incidents consequent on
-urban settlement, its virgin soil has been turned up over
-ever-increasing areas. For nearly forty years I have myself watched,
-with the curious interest of one previously familiar with the minute
-incidents of archæological research in Britain, the urban excavations,
-railway cuttings, and other undesigned explorations of Canadian soil.
-Within the same period, both in Canada and the United States, extensive
-canal, railway, and road-works have afforded abundant opportunities for
-research; and a widespread interest in American antiquities has tended
-to confer an even exaggerated importance on every novel discovery. And
-with what result? Dr. Abbott, in crowning such explorations with his
-interesting and valuable discovery of the turtle-back celts and other
-implements of the Delaware gravel, has epitomised the prehistoric record
-of the northern continent. The further back we date the presence of man
-in America, the more marvellous must his unprogressive condition appear.
-Whatever may be the ampler disclosures relative to the palæolithic or
-primeval race, it does not seem probable that this northern continent
-will now yield any antiquities suggestive of an extinct era of native
-art and civilisation. Here we cannot hope to find a buried Ilium, or
-Tadmor in the Wilderness. Everywhere the explorer wanders, and the
-agriculturist follows, turning up the soil, or digging deeper as he
-drains and builds; but only to disturb the grave of the savage hunter.
-The Mound-Builders of its great river-valleys have indeed left there
-their enduring earthworks, wrought at times in regular geometrical
-configuration on a gigantic scale, strangely suggestive of some
-overruling and informing mind guiding the hand of the earthworker. But
-their mounds and earthworks disclose only implements of bone and flint
-or stone, with here and there an equally rude tool of hammered native
-copper. The crudest metallurgy of Europe’s Copper age was unknown to
-their builders. The art of Tubal-cain, the primitive worker in brass and
-iron, had not dawned on the mind of any native artificer. Only the
-ingeniously carved tobacco pipe, or the better-fashioned pottery, gives
-the slightest hint of even such progress beyond the first infantile
-stage of the tool-maker as is shown in the artistic carvings of the
-cave-men contemporary with the mammoth and the reindeer of post-glacial
-France.
-
-The civilisation of Central and Southern America is a wholly distinct
-thing; and, as I think, not without some suggestive traces of Asiatic
-origin; but the attempts to connect it with that of ancient Egypt,
-suggested mainly by the hieroglyphic sculpturing on their columns and
-temples, find their confutation the moment we attempt to compare the
-Egyptian calendar with that either of Mexico or Peru. Traces of worship
-of the sun, the earliest of all forms of natural religion, have
-undoubtedly been recovered among widely scattered tribes of North
-America; but there is no evidence that it was accompanied with any
-definite mensuration of the solar year, or the construction of a
-calendar. The changes of the seasons sufficed for the division of the
-year, not only into summer and winter, but into the diverse aspects of
-the seasons from month to month; as is shown in the names given to the
-“moons” in various native vocabularies. It was otherwise on the southern
-continent, and among the civilised nations of Central America. But the
-interblending of the science of astronomy with the religious rites of
-the State produced the wonted results; and this was peculiarly the case
-in Peru, with its equatorial site for the temple of the Sun-God; and his
-seeming literal presence on his altar at recurrent festivals. There
-accordingly, even as in ancient Egypt, the divine honours paid to the
-heavenly bodies was an impediment to the progress of astronomical
-observation. Eclipses were regarded with the same superstitious dread as
-among the rudest savage nations; and the conservatism of an established
-national creed must have proved peculiarly unfavourable to astronomical
-science. The impediments to Galileo’s observations were trifling
-compared with those which must have beset the Inca priest who ventured
-to question the diurnal revolution of the sun round the earth, or to
-solve the awful mystery of an eclipse by so simple an explanation as the
-interposition of the moon between the sun and the earth. The Mexican
-Calendar Stone, which embodies evidence of greater knowledge, was
-believed by Humboldt to indicate unmistakable relations to the ancient
-science of South-Eastern Asia. It is of more importance here to note the
-shortness of the Mexican cycle, and the small amount of error in their
-deviation from true solar time, as compared with the European calendar
-at the time when the Spaniards first intruded on Montezuma’s rule. That
-the Spaniards were ten days in error, as compared with the Aztec
-reckoning, only demonstrates the length of time during which error had
-been accumulating in the reformed Julian calendar of Europe; and so
-tends to confirm the idea that the civilisation of the Mexicans was of
-no very great antiquity.
-
-The whole evidence supplied by Northern archæology proves that in so far
-as it had any civilisation of foreign origin, it must have been derived
-from the South, where alike in Central and in Southern America, diverse
-races, and a native civilisation replete with elements of progress, have
-left behind them many enduring memorials of skill and ingenuity. But the
-extremely slight and very partial traces of its influence on any people
-of the northern continent would of itself suffice to awaken doubts as to
-its long duration. The civilisation of Greece and Rome did indeed
-exercise no direct influence on transalpine Europe; but long centuries
-before the Romans crossed the Alps, as the disclosures of the lake
-villages, the crannoges, the kitchen middens, and the sepulchral mounds
-of Central and Northern Europe prove, the nations beyond their ken were
-familiar with weaving, and with the ceramic and metallurgic arts; were
-far advanced as agriculturists, had domesticated animals, acquired
-systems of phonetic writing, and learned the value of a currency of the
-precious metals.
-
-Midway between North America with its unredeemed barbarism, and the
-southern seats of a native American civilisation, Mexico represents, as
-I believe, the first contact of the latter with the former. A gleam of
-light was just beginning to dawn on the horizon of the northern
-continent. The long night of its Dark Ages was coming to a close, when
-the intrusion of the Spaniards abruptly arrested the incipient
-civilisation, and began the displacement of its aborigines and the
-repetition of the Aryan ethnical revolution, which had already
-supplanted the autochthones of prehistoric Europe.
-
-The publication in 1848 of the first volume of the _Smithsonian
-Contributions to Knowledge_, devoted to the history and explorations of
-the ancient monuments of the Mississippi valley, gave a wonderful
-stimulus to archæological research in the United States. For a time,
-indeed, much credulous zeal was devoted to the search for buried cities,
-inscribed records, and the fancied recovery, in more or less modified
-form, in northern areas, of the civilisation of the Aztecs; not
-unmingled with dreams of Phœnician, Hebrew, Scandinavian, and Welsh
-remains. The history of some of its spurious productions is not without
-interest; but its true fruits are seen in numerous works which have
-since issued from the American press, devoted to an accurate record of
-local antiquities. So thoroughly has this already been carried out, that
-it may now be affirmed that, to all appearance, the condition of the
-Indian tribes to the north of Mexico, as shown in the rude arts of a
-Stone age, scarcely at all affected in its character by their use of the
-native copper of Lake Superior, represents what prevailed throughout the
-whole northern continent in all the centuries—however prolonged,—since
-the hunters in the Delaware valley fashioned and employed their
-turtle-back celts.
-
-The condition of the nations of North America at the period of its
-discovery, at the close of the fifteenth century, may be described as
-one of unstable equilibrium; and nothing in its archæological records
-points to an older period of any prolonged duration of settled progress.
-The physical geography of the continent presents in many respects such a
-contrast to that of Europe, as is seen in the steppes of Northern Asia,
-though with great navigable rivers, which only needed the appliances of
-modern civilisation to make them for the New World what the Euphrates
-and the Tigris were to Southern Asia, and the Nile to Africa, in ancient
-centuries. Those vast tablelands, the great steppes of Mongolia and
-Independent Tartary, have ever been the haunts of predatory tribes by
-whom the civilisation of Southern Asia has been repeatedly overthrown;
-and from the same barbarian hive came the Huns who ravaged the Roman
-world in its decline. Europe, on the contrary, nursed its youthful
-civilisation among detached communities of its southern peninsulas on
-the Mediterranean Sea; and in later ages has repeatedly experienced the
-advantages of geographical isolation in the valleys of the Alps, in
-Norway and Denmark, in Portugal, the Netherlands, and the British
-Islands: where nations protected in their youth from predatory hordes,
-and sheltered during critical periods of change, have safely passed
-through their earlier stages of progress.
-
-All that we know or can surmise of the nations of North America,
-presents a total contrast to this. In so far as the mystery of its
-prehistoric Mound-Builders has been solved, we see there a people who
-had attained to a grade of civilisation not greatly dissimilar to that
-of the village communities of New Mexico and Arizona; and who had
-settled down in the Ohio valley, perhaps while feudal Europe was still
-only emerging from mediæval rudeness, if not at an earlier date. The
-great river-valley was occupied by populous urban centres of an
-industrious community. Agriculture, though prosecuted only with the
-simplest implements, chiefly of wood and stone, must have been practised
-on an extensive scale. The primitive arts of the potter were improved;
-the copper abounding in the remote region on the shores of Lake Superior
-was prized as a rarity; though metallurgy in its practical applications
-had scarcely entered on its first stage. The nation was in its infancy;
-but it had passed beyond the rude hunter state, and was entering on a
-settled life, with all possibilities of progress in the future, when the
-fierce nomads of the north swept down on the populous valley, and left
-it a desolate waste. If so, it was but a type of the whole native
-history of the continent.
-
-From all that can be gleaned, alike from archæological chroniclings,
-Indian tradition, and the actual facts of history in the seventeenth and
-eighteenth centuries, the condition of the whole population of the
-northern continent has ever been the same. It might not inaptly be
-compared to an ever-recurring springtide, followed by frosts that nipped
-the young germ, and rendered the promised fruitage abortive. Throughout
-the whole period of French and English colonial history, the influence
-of one or two savage but warlike tribes is traceable from the St.
-Lawrence to the Gulf of Mexico; and the rival nations were exposed to
-such constant warfare that it is more than doubtful if the natural
-increase of population was latterly equal to the waste of war. Almost
-the sole memorials of vanished nations are the names of some of their
-mountain ranges and rivers. It is surmised, as already noted, that the
-Allighewi, or Tallegwi, to whom the name common to the Alleghany
-Mountains and river is traced, were the actual Mound-Builders.[61] If
-so, the history of their overthrow is not wholly a matter of surmise.
-The traditions of the Delawares told that the Alleghans were a powerful
-nation reaching to the eastern shores of the Mississippi, where their
-palisaded towns occupied all the choicest sites in the Ohio valley; but
-the Wyandots, or Iroquois, including perhaps the Eries, who had
-established themselves on the headwaters of the chief rivers that rise
-immediately to the south of the great lakes, combined with the
-Delawares, or Lenape nation, to crush that ancient people; and the
-decimated Alleghans were driven down the Mississippi, and dispersed.
-Some surviving remnant, such as even a war of extermination spares, may
-have been absorbed into the conquering nation, after the fashion
-systematically pursued by the Huron-Iroquois in the seventeenth and
-eighteenth centuries. Nor is this a mere conjecture. Mr. Horatio Hale,
-recognising the evident traces in the Cherokee language of a grammar
-mainly Huron-Iroquois, while the vocabulary is largely recruited from
-some foreign source, thinks it not improbable that the origin of the
-Cherokee nation may have been due to a union of the survivors of the old
-Mound-Builder stock with some branch of the conquering race; just as in
-1649 a fugitive remnant of the Hurons from the Georgian Bay were adopted
-into the Seneca nation;[62] and a few years later such of the captive
-Eries as escaped torture and the stake were admitted into affiliation
-with their conquerors.[63]
-
-The whole region to the east of the Mississippi, from the fifty-second
-to the thirty-sixth degree of north latitude, appears to have been
-occupied by the two great Indian stocks, the Algonquin-Lenape and the
-Iroquois. But Gallatin, who directed special attention to the
-determination of the elements of philological affinity between them,
-recognised to the south of their region the existence of at least three
-essentially distinct languages of extensive use: the Catawba, the
-Cherokee, and that which he assumed to include in a common origin, both
-the Muskhogee and the Choctaw.[64] But besides those, six
-well-ascertained languages of smaller tribes, including those of the
-Uchees and the Natchez, appear to demand separate recognition. Their
-region differs essentially from those over which the Algonquin and
-Iroquois war-parties ranged at will. It is broken up by broad river
-channels, and intersected by impenetrable swamps; and has thus afforded
-refuge for the remnants of conquered tribes, and for the preservation of
-distinct languages among small bands of refugees. The Timucuas were the
-ancient occupants of Florida; but they appear to have been displaced by
-the Chatta-Muskogee nations; driven forth, as is surmised, from their
-homes in the Ohio valley; and the older race is only known now by the
-preservation of its language in works of the Spanish missionaries.[65]
-
-When the Ohio valley was first explored it was uninhabited; and in the
-latter part of the seventeenth century the whole region extending from
-Lake Erie to the Tennessee river was an unpeopled desert. But the
-Cherokees were in the occupation of their territory when first visited
-by De Soto in 1540; and they are described by Bertram in 1773, with
-their great council-house, capable of accommodating several hundreds,
-erected on the summit of one of the large mounds, in their town of Cowe,
-on the Tanase river, in Florida. But Bertram adds: “This mound on which
-the rotunda stands, is of a much ancienter date than the building, and
-perhaps was raised for another purpose. The Cherokees themselves are as
-ignorant as we are by what people, or for what purpose, these artificial
-hills were raised.”[66] It would, indeed, no more occur to those
-wanderers into the deserted regions of the Mound-Builders to inquire
-into the origin of their mounds, than into that of the Alleghany
-Mountains.
-
-If then it is probable that we thus recover some clue to the identity of
-the vanished race of the Ohio valley, the very designation of the river
-is a memorial of their supplanters. The Ohio is an Iroquois name given
-to the river of the Alleghans by that indomitable race of savage
-warriors who effectually counteracted the plans of France, under her
-greatest monarchs, for the settlement of the New World. Their historian,
-the late Hon. L. H. Morgan, remarks of the Iroquois: “They achieved for
-themselves a more remarkable civil organisation, and acquired a higher
-degree of influence, than any other race of Indian lineage except those
-of Mexico and Peru. In the drama of European colonisation, they stood,
-for nearly two centuries, with an unshaken front, against the
-devastations of war, the blighting influence of foreign intercourse, and
-the still more fatal encroachments of a restless and advancing border
-population. Under their federal system, the Iroquois flourished in
-independence, and capable of self-protection, long after the New England
-and Virginia races had surrendered their jurisdictions, and fallen into
-the condition of dependent nations; and they now stand forth upon the
-canvas of Indian history, prominent alike for the wisdom of their civil
-institutions, their sagacity in the administration of the league, and
-their courage in its defence.”[67] But to characterise the elements of
-combined action among the Six Nation Indians as wise civil institutions;
-or to use such terms as league and federal system in the sense in which
-they are employed by the historian of the Iroquois; is to suggest
-associations that are illusory. With all the romance attached to the
-League of the Hodenosauneega, they were to the last mere savages. When
-the treaty which initiated the great league was entered into by its two
-oldest members, the Mohawks and the Oneidas, the former claimed the name
-of Kanienga, or “People of the Flint.” Whatever may have been the
-precise idea they attached to the designation, they were, as they
-remained to the last, but in their Stone period. Their arts were of the
-rudest character, and their wars had no higher aim than the
-gratification of an inextinguishable hatred. All that we know of them
-only serves to illustrate a condition of life such as may have sufficed
-through countless generations to perpetuate the barbarism which
-everywhere reveals itself in the traces of man throughout the northern
-continent of America. One nation after another perished by the fury of
-this race, powerful only to destroy. The Susquehannocks, whose name
-still clings to the beautiful river on the banks of which they once
-dwelt, are believed to have been of the same lineage as the Alleghans;
-but they incurred the wrath of the Iroquois, and perished. At a later
-date the Delawares provoked a like vengeance; and the remnant of that
-nation quitted for ever the shores of the river which perpetuates their
-name. Such in like manner was the fate of the Shawnees, Nanticokes,
-Unamis, Minsi, and Illinois. All alike were vanquished, reduced to the
-condition of serfs, or driven out and exterminated.
-
-The tribes that lived to the west of the Mississippi appear to have been
-for the most part more strictly nomad. The open character of the
-country, with its vast tracts of prairie, and its herds of buffalo and
-other game, no doubt helped to encourage a wandering life. The Crees,
-the Blackfeet, the Sioux, Cheyennes, Comanches, and Apaches were all of
-this class, and with their interminable feuds and perpetual migrations
-rendered all settled life impossible. The Mandans, the most civilised
-among the tribes of the North-West, abandoned village after village
-under the continual attacks of the Sioux, until they disappeared as a
-nation; and the little handful of survivors found shelter with another
-tribe.
-
-All this was the work of Indians. The Spaniards, indeed, wasted and
-destroyed with no less merciless indiscrimination. Not only nations
-perished, but a singularly interesting phase of native civilisation was
-abruptly arrested in Mexico, Central America, and Peru. The intrusion of
-French, Dutch, and English colonists was, no doubt, fatal to the
-aborigines whom they supplanted. Nevertheless their record is not one of
-indiscriminate massacre. The relations of the French, especially with
-the tribes with whom they were brought into immediate contact, were on
-the whole kindly and protective. But as we recover the history of the
-native tribes whose lands are now occupied by the representatives of
-those old colonists, we find the Indians everywhere engaged in the same
-exterminating warfare; and whether we look at the earlier maps, or
-attempt to reconstruct the traditionary history of older tribes, we
-learn only the same tale of aimless strife and extinction. When Cartier
-first explored the St. Lawrence in 1535 he found large Indian
-settlements at Quebec and on the island of Montreal; but on the return
-of the French under Champlain, little more than half a century later,
-there were none left to dispute their settlement. At the later date, and
-throughout the entire period of French occupation, the country to the
-south of the St. Lawrence and Lake Ontario was occupied by the Iroquois,
-or Six Nation Indians, as they were latterly called. Westward of the
-river Ottawa the whole region was deserted until near the shores of the
-Georgian Bay; though its early explorers found everywhere the traces of
-recent occupation by the Wyandot or other tribes, who had withdrawn to
-the shores of Lake Huron to escape the fury of their implacable foes.
-
-At the period when the Hurons were first brought under the notice of the
-French Jesuit missionaries in the seventeenth century they were
-established along the Georgian Bay and around Lake Simcoe; and in so far
-as the wild virtues of the savage warrior are concerned, they fully
-equalled the Iroquois by whom they were at length driven out and nearly
-exterminated. When Locke visited Paris in 1679 the narratives of the
-Jesuit fathers had rendered familiar the unflinching endurance of this
-race under the frightful tortures to which they were subjected by their
-Iroquois captors; and which they, in turn, not only inflicted on their
-captive foes, but on one after another of the missionaries whose devoted
-zeal exposed them to their fury. We now read with interest this
-reflection noted in Locke’s Journal, in which he recognises in these
-savages the common motives of humanity; the same desire to win credit
-and reputation, and to avoid shame and disgrace, which animates all men:
-“This makes the Hurons and other people of Canada with such constancy
-endure inexpressible torments; this makes merchants in one country and
-soldiers in another; this puts men upon school divinity in one country
-and physics and mathematics in another; this cuts out the dresses for
-the women, and makes the fashions for the men, and makes them endure the
-inconveniences of all.” The great English philosopher manifestly
-entertained no doubt that the latent elements on which all civilisation
-depends were equally shared by Indian and European. But the Hurons
-perished—all but a little remnant of Christianised half-breeds now
-settled on the St. Charles river below Quebec—in their very hour of
-contact with European civilisation.
-
-Father Sagard estimated the Huron tribes at the close of their national
-history, when they had been greatly reduced in numbers, as still between
-thirty and forty thousand. But besides these there lay between them and
-the shores of Lake Erie and the Niagara river the Tiontonones and the
-Attiwendaronks, and to the south of the Great Lake the Eries, all of the
-same stock, and all sharers in the same fate. Tradition points to the
-kindling of the council-fire of peace among the Attiwendaronks before
-the organisation of the Iroquois confederacy. Father Joseph de la Roche
-d’Allyon, who passed through their country when seeking to discover the
-source of the Niagara river, speaks of twenty-eight towns and villages
-under the rule of its chief Sachem, and of their extensive cultivation
-of maize, beans, and tobacco. They had won, moreover, the strange
-character of being lovers of peace, and were styled by the French the
-Neuters, from the desire they manifested to maintain a friendly
-neutrality alike with the Hurons and the Iroquois. Of the Eries we know
-less. In the French maps of the seventeenth century the very existence
-of the great lake which perpetuates their name was unknown; but the
-French fur-traders were aware of a tribe existing to the west of the
-Iroquois, whose country abounded with the lynx or wild cat, the fur of
-which was specially prized, and they designated it “La Nation du Chat.”
-To their artistic skill are ascribed several remains of aboriginal art,
-among which a pictorial inscription on Cunningham’s Island is described
-as by far the most elaborate work of its class hitherto found on the
-continent.[68] From the partial glimpses thus recovered of both nations
-we are tempted to ascribe to them an aptitude for civilisation fully
-equal to that of which the boasted federal league of the Iroquois gave
-evidence. But they perished by the violence of kindred nations before
-either the French or English could establish intercourse with them; and
-their fate doubtless reveals to us glimpses of history such as must have
-found frequent repetition in older centuries throughout the whole North
-American continent.
-
-The legend of the peace-pipe, Longfellow’s poetic version of the Red
-Indian Edda, founded on traditions of the Iroquois narrated by an
-Onondaga chief, represents Gitche Manito, the Master of Life, descending
-on the crag of the red pipestone quarry at the Côteau des Prairies, and
-calling all the tribes together:—
-
- And they stood there on the meadow
- With their weapons and their war gear,
- Wildly glaring at each other.
- In their faces stern defiance,
- In their hearts the feuds of ages,
- The hereditary hatred,
- The ancestral thirst of vengeance.
-
-So far the picture is true to nature; but no dream of a millennial era
-for the Red Man, in which all were thenceforth to live together as
-brothers, can have fashioned itself in the mind of Indian seer. The
-Sioux, the Crees, and the Blackfeet, still continued to nurse the same
-feud of ages, and thirsted for each other’s blood, while European
-emigrants crowd in to take possession of their vast prairies, destined
-to become the granaries of the world. The buffalo, on which they mainly
-depended for their food, and their téepees or tents, have vanished from
-their prairies, and will ere long be as extinct as the fossil urus or
-mastodon. The Red Man of the North-West exhibits no change from his
-precursors of the fifteenth century; and for aught that appears in him
-of a capacity for self-development, the forests and prairies of the
-American continent may have sheltered hunting and warring tribes of
-Indians, just as they have sheltered and pastured its wild herds of
-buffaloes, for countless centuries since the continent rose from its
-ocean bed.
-
-Only by prolonged hereditary feuds, more insatiable, and therefore more
-destructive in their results than the ravages of tigers or wolves, is it
-possible to account for such an unprogressive condition of humanity as
-the archæological disclosures of the northern continent seem to reveal?
-Its numerous rivers and lakes, and its boundless forests and prairies,
-afforded inexhaustible resources for the hunter, and both soil and
-climate have proved admirably adapted for agriculture. Still more, the
-great copper region of Lake Superior provided advantages such as have
-existed in few other countries of the known world for developing the
-first stages of metallurgic art on which civilisation so largely
-depends. Whether brought with them from Asia, or discovered for
-themselves, the grand secret of the mastery of the ores by fire was
-already familiar to Peruvian metallurgists, and not unknown to those of
-Mexico. Unalloyed copper, such as that which abounds in the igneous
-rocks of the Keweenaw peninsula on Lake Superior, is extremely difficult
-to cast; and the addition of a small percentage of tin not only produces
-the useful bronze alloy, but renders the copper more readily fusible.
-This all-important secret of science the metallurgists of Peru had
-discovered for themselves, and turned largely to practical account. The
-pictured chronicles of the Mexicans throw an interesting light on the
-value they attached to the products of this novel art. It appears from
-some of their paintings that the tribute due by certain provinces was
-paid in wedges of copper. The forms of these, as well as of chisels and
-other tools of bronze, are simple, and indicate no great ingenuity in
-adapting the moulded metal to the artificer’s or the combatant’s
-requirements. The methods of hafting the axe-blade appear to have been
-of nearly the same rude description as are in use by modern savages in
-fitting the handle to a hatchet of flint or stone; and the whole
-characteristics of their implements suggest the probability that their
-metallurgy was a recently acquired art, derived from the civilised races
-on whom they had intruded as conquerors.
-
-Such knowledge, partial as it was, must have been derived from the
-south. Everywhere to the north of the Mexican Gulf we look in vain for
-anything more than the mere hammered native copper, untouched by fire.
-Dr. J. W. Foster does indeed quote Mr. Perkins, who himself possesses
-sixty copper implements, including knives, spear heads, chisels, and
-objects of anomalous form, as having arrived at the conclusion “that, by
-reason of certain markings, it was evident that the Mound-Builders
-possessed the art of smelting copper,”[69] but the illustrations
-produced in proof of it scarcely bear out the opinion. The same idea has
-been repeatedly advanced; but the contents of the Mounds amply prove
-that if such a knowledge had dawned on their builders it was turned to
-no practical account. Mr. Charles Rau, in his _Ancient Aboriginal Trade
-in North America_, says: “Although the fire on the hearths or altars now
-enclosed by the sacrificial mounds was sometimes sufficiently strong to
-melt the deposited copper articles, it does not seem that this
-proceeding induced the ancient inhabitants to avail themselves of fire
-in working copper; they persisted in the tedious practice of hammering.
-Yet one copper axe, evidently cast, and resembling those taken from the
-mounds of Ohio, has been ploughed up near Auburn, in Cayuga, in the
-State of New York. This specimen, which bears no trace of use, may date
-from the earlier times of European colonisation. It certainly would be
-wrong to place much stress on such an isolated case.”[70] The well-known
-volume of Messrs. Squier and Davis furnishes illustrations of copper and
-other metallic relics from the mounds of Ohio.[71] Mr. J. T. Short
-engraves a variety of similar relics from Wisconsin, where they appear
-to have been found in unusual abundance.[72] In the Annual Report of the
-Historical Society of Wisconsin for 1878 the copper implements in their
-collection are stated to number one hundred and ninety implements,
-classified as spear or dirk heads, knives, chisels, axes, augurs, gads,
-and drills, in addition to beads, tubes, and other personal ornaments
-made out of thin sheets of hammered copper. Dr. J. W. Foster has
-furnished illustrations of the various types from the valuable
-collection of Mr. Perkins.[73] Colonel Charles C. Jones engraves a
-specimen of the rarely known copper implements of Georgia;[74] and Dr.
-Abbott shows the prevailing forms of the same class of relics found
-along the whole northern Atlantic seaboard.[75] All tell the same tale
-of rudest manipulation by a people ignorant of the working of metals
-with the use of fire.
-
-And yet the native copper was ready to hand in a form and in quantity
-unknown elsewhere. No such supplies of the pure metal invited the
-industry of the first Asiatic or European metallurgists. The
-Cassiterides yielded in abundance the ores of copper and tin, but these
-had to be smelted and worked with all the accumulated results of
-tentative skill before they yielded the copper or more useful bronze. By
-whom or where this first knowledge was mastered is unknown: the tendency
-is still to look to Asia, perhaps to Phœnicia, or to the still
-undetermined cradle of the Aryans, wherever that may prove to have been,
-for the birth of this phase of metallurgic art which constituted so
-important a stage in early civilisation. Yet if the ancient American
-missed it, it was not for want of opportunity. Examples of the
-accidental fusion of copper by the sacrificial fires of the
-Mound-Builders repeatedly occur in the mounds of the Ohio valley. But no
-gifted native alchymist was prompt to read the lesson and turn it to
-practical account.
-
-Asia and Europe appear to have passed by a natural transition, step by
-step, from their rudest stages of lithic art to polished stone, and then
-to implements of metal. Some of the steps were doubtless very slow.
-Worsaae believed that the use of bronze prevailed in Denmark “five or
-six hundred years before the birth of Christ.”[76] In Egypt it
-undoubtedly was known at a greatly earlier date. I still incline to my
-early formed opinion, that gold was the first metal worked. Found in
-nuggets, it could scarcely fail to attract attention. It was easy to
-fashion into shape; and some of the small, highly polished stone hammers
-seem fitter for this than any other work.[77] The abundant gold
-ornaments of the New World at the time of the discovery of Mexico and
-Peru accord with this idea. The like attraction of the bright native
-copper, is proved by its employment among the southern Indians for
-personal ornaments; and in this way the economic use of the metals may
-have been first suggested.
-
-From the working of gold nuggets, or of virgin copper, with the hammer,
-to the smelting of the ores, was no trifling step; but that knowledge
-once gained, the threshold of civilisation and true progress had been
-reached. The history of the grand achievement is embodied in the
-earliest myths both of the Old and the New World. Tubal-cain, Dædalus,
-Hephæstus, Vulcan, Vœlund, Galant, the Luno or the Celtic Fingal, and
-Wayland, the Saxon smith-god, are but legendary variations of the first
-worker by whom the gift of metallurgy was communicated to man; and so
-too the New World has its Quetzalcoatl, or Vœlund of the Aztecs, the
-divine instructor of their ancestors in the use of the metals. But
-whatever be the date of this wise instructor, no share of the knowledge
-communicated by him to that favoured race appears to have ever
-penetrated northward of the Mexican Gulf.
-
-It is vain to urge such dubious evidence as the fancied traces of a
-mould-ridge, or the solitary example of a casting of uncertain age, in
-proof of a knowledge of the furnace and the crucible among any North
-American tribe. Everywhere in Europe the soil yields not only its buried
-relics of gold, copper, and bronze, but also stone and bronze moulds in
-which implements and personal ornaments were cast. When the ingenious
-systematising of Danish archæologists had familiarised the students of
-antiquity with the idea of a succession of Stone, Bronze, and Iron
-periods in the history of Europe, the question naturally followed,
-whether metallurgy did not begin, there, as elsewhere, in the easy
-working of virgin copper. Dr. Latham accordingly remarked, in his
-_Ethnology of the British Islands_, on the supposition that no unalloyed
-copper relics had been found in Britain: “Stone and bone first; then
-bronze, or copper and tin combined; but no copper alone. I cannot get
-over this hiatus; cannot imagine a metallurgic industry beginning with
-the use of alloys.” It was a mistake, however, to assume that no copper
-relics had ever been found. At first it had been taken for granted that
-all such implements were of the familiar alloy. But so soon as the
-importance of the distinction was recognised, examples of pure copper
-were forthcoming. So early as 1822, Sir David Brewster described a large
-axe of peculiar shape, and formed of copper, which was found in the hard
-black till-clay at a depth of twenty feet under Ratho Bog, near
-Edinburgh. This is no solitary example. The Scottish Museum of
-Antiquities has other implements of pure copper; and Sir William Wilde
-states in reference to the collections of the Royal Irish Academy: “upon
-careful examination, it has been found that thirty of the rudest, and
-apparently the very oldest celts, are of red, almost unalloyed copper”;
-as is also the case with some other rudely formed tools in the same
-collection.
-
-It was a temporary advantage, doubtless, but a real loss, to the Indian
-miners of Lake Superior that they found the native copper there ready to
-hand, a pure ductile metal, probably regarded by them as only a variety
-of stone which—unlike its rocky matrix,—they could bend, or hammer
-into shape, without fracture. Its value as such was widely appreciated.
-Copper tools, everywhere retaining the specs, or larger crystals of
-silver, characteristic of the Lake Superior veins, tell of the diffusion
-of the metal from that single source throughout all the vast regions
-watered by the Mississippi and its tributaries, and eastward by lake and
-river to the gulf of the St. Lawrence and the mouth of the Hudson.
-
-There was a time when this traffic must have been systematically carried
-on; when the ancient miners of Lake Superior worked its rich copper
-veins with industrious zeal; and when, probably as part of the same
-aggressive energy, the valley of the Ohio was filling with a settled
-population; its great earthworks were in process of construction, and a
-native race entered on a course that gave promise of social progress.
-But, from whatever cause, the work of the old miners was abruptly
-terminated;[78] the race of the Mounds vanished from the scenes of their
-ingenious toil; and rudest barbarism resumed its sway over the whole
-northern continent. The same Aryan race that, before the dawn of
-history, before the Sanskrit-speaking people of India, or the Zends of
-Persia, entered on their southern homes, spoke in its own cradleland the
-mother tongue of Sanskrit, Greek, Celtic, and German, at length broke up
-and went forth on its long wanderings. Whatever peoples it found there;
-they were replaced by Celts, Romans, Greeks, Slavs, and Teutons, who
-broke in upon the barbarism of prehistoric Europe; displaced the older
-races, Allophylian, Neolithic, Iberian, Finnic, or by whatever other
-name we may find it convenient to designate them; but not without a
-considerable intermingling of the old blood with that of the intruders.
-The sparsely settled continent gradually filled up. Forests were
-cleared, swamps drained, rivers confined by artificial banks and levées
-to their channels; and there grew up in their new homes the Celtic,
-Classic, Slavic, and Teutonic tongues, with all the varied culture and
-civilisation which they represent. Agriculture, the special
-characteristic of the whole Aryan race, flourished. They brought with
-them the cereals; and, with plenty, the favoured race multiplied, till
-at length it has grown straitened within the bounds of the old continent
-which it had made its own.
-
-With the close of the fifteenth century one great cycle, that of
-Europe’s mediæval era, came to an end; and then we trace the first
-beginnings of that fresh scattering of the Aryan clan, and its new
-western movement across the Ocean. It seems in a very striking manner
-once more to repeat itself under our own eyes, as we look abroad on the
-millions crowding from Europe and filling up the western wilderness;
-hewing down the forests, cultivating the waste prairies, and everywhere
-displacing the rude aborigines: yet here also not without some
-interblending of the races; though the two types, Aryan and pre-Aryan,
-meet under all the repellent influences of high civilisation and the
-lowest barbarism. In the Canadian North-West alone, the young province
-of Manitoba began its political existence with a population of between
-10,000 and 12,000 half-breeds; in part at least, a hardy race of hunters
-and farmers; the representatives of what is as certainly destined to
-constitute an element in the new phases which the Aryan race already
-begins to assume, under the diverse conditions of a new continent, as
-that curious trace of Europe’s pre-Aryan people which attracted the
-observant attention of Tacitus among the ancient Britons; and which we
-are learning to recognise, with a new significance, as the Melanochroi:
-the representatives of the old half-breed of Europe’s prehistoric dawn.
-
------
-
-[40] Gladstone, _Juventus Mundi_, pp. 474, 479.
-
-[41] _Indian Migrations_, p. 24.
-
-[42] _Types of Mankind_, p. 351.
-
-[43] _Early Man in Britain_, p. 241.
-
-[44] _Ibid._ p. 244.
-
-[45] _Alaska and its Resources_, p. 237.
-
-[46] _Prehistoric Europe_, p. 550.
-
-[47] _U.S. Geological Survey_, 1872, p. 652. _Report of National
-Museum_, 1887, p. 683, Fig. 11535.
-
-[48] _Report of National Museum_, 1887, p. 678.
-
-[49] _Ancient Stone Implements of Great Britain_, p. 140.
-
-[50] Vide _Prehistoric Man_, 3d ed. vol. i. p. 180, Fig. 54.
-
-[51] _Report of the Peabody Museum_, vol. ii., p. 38.
-
-[52] _Primitive Industry_, p. 471.
-
-[53] _Ibid._, p. 542.
-
-[54] _Primitive Industry_, p. 547.
-
-[55] _Ibid._, p. 545.
-
-[56] Foster’s _Prehistoric Races_, p. 55.
-
-[57] _The Antiquity and Origin of the Trenton Gravel_, p. 547.
-
-[58] _Primitive Industry_, p. 481.
-
-[59] _Report of Washington National Museum_, 1887-88, pp. 677-702.
-
-[60] _Primitive Industry_, p. 517.
-
-[61] _Indian Migrations as Evidence of Language_ (Horatio Hale), p. 21.
-
-[62] _Indian Migrations_, p. 22.
-
-[63] _Relations des Jésuites_, 1660, p. 7. Quebec ed.
-
-[64] _Archæologia Americana_, vol. ii.
-
-[65] Brinton, _Races and Peoples_, p. 254.
-
-[66] _Bertram’s Travels through North and South Carolina, Georgia,
-etc._, 1791, p. 367.
-
-[67] _The League of the Iroquois_, p. 2.
-
-[68] Schoolcraft, _History of the Indian Tribes_, vol. ii., p. 78.
-
-[69] _Prehistoric Races of the United States_, p. 259.
-
-[70] _Smithsonian Report_, 1572, p. 353. The important word _not_
-supplied here, it is obvious from the context is absent by a mere
-typographical error.
-
-[71] _Ancient Monuments of the Mississippi Valley_, vol. i., pp.
-196-207.
-
-[72] _The North Americans of Antiquity_, p. 95.
-
-[73] _Prehistoric Races of the United States_, pp. 251-259.
-
-[74] _Antiquities of the Southern Indians_, p. 225.
-
-[75] _Primitive Industry_, pp. 411-422.
-
-[76] _Primæval Antiquities_, p. 135.
-
-[77] _Prehistoric Annals of Scotland_, 1st ed. 1851, p. 214; 2d ed. vol.
-i.
-
-[78] _Prehistoric Man_, 3rd ed. vol. i., pp. 203-228.
-
-
-
-
- V
- THE ÆSTHETIC FACULTY IN ABORIGINAL RACES
-
-
-THE ingenious arts of the palæolithic cave-dwellers of the Vézère
-abundantly prove that it needed no wanderers from the cradlelands of Old
-World civilisation to that strange Atlantis lying in the engirdling
-ocean beyond the Pillars of Hercules, to engraft their artistic
-capacities on the “Achoriens” by whom it was peopled. The innate faculty
-for art has manifested itself in individuals and in nations, among
-widely diverse Assyrian, Egyptian, Hellenic, Arabian, and mediæval
-races, as in later Frank, Fleming, and Dane, with unaccountable
-partiality. For its absence, or very subordinate manifestation, is seen
-to be compatible with the highest intellectual triumphs in other
-directions. The arts of Britain’s Allophyliæ manifest no instinctive aim
-at a reproduction of familiar natural objects, such as is characteristic
-of some races at a very primitive stage. Nor was it till a recent
-generation that the stock from which Shakespeare and Newton sprung put
-forth its first efforts at rivalling the great masters of the
-Renaissance, or entering into competition with the skilled painters of
-the Low Countries. It is otherwise with the nations of the New World.
-The highest stage of civilisation attained there is a very partial one.
-But among the various characteristics of the American aborigines which
-invite attention, the very wide diffusion of an aptitude for imitative
-art is one that merits careful study as typical of American man. It is
-not, indeed, to be overlooked that if due allowance be made for the
-narrow range in degrees of civilisation among the races of the New
-World, the same diversity of racial characteristics is observable there
-as elsewhere. The tendency, moreover, of civilisation is to efface, or
-greatly to modify, such distinctions. Civilised nations habitually
-borrow the arts and imitate the social habits of neighbouring races, or
-accept some common standard of intellectual and moral pre-eminence.
-Nevertheless, while the capacity for imitative art is neither peculiar
-to the New World, nor characteristic of all its diverse nationalities,
-it appears to be more generally diffused among the races of America than
-elsewhere. It is prevalent among tribes in nearly every condition, from
-the rude Indian nomad, or the Eskimo, to the semi-civilised Zuñi, and
-the skilled metallurgists and architects of Central America and Peru.
-
-This development of a feeling for art in savage races is at all times
-interesting as indicative of intellectual capacity and powers of
-observation, even when manifested, as it frequently is, within a very
-narrow range. It is by no means a general characteristic either of
-savage or civilised man. Yet recent archæological discoveries prove it
-to have been one of the earliest forms of intellectual activity among
-the cave-dwellers of Europe’s palæolithic dawn. The most civilised
-nations have differed widely in the manifestations of this æsthetic
-faculty. The city of Dante was the Athens of the Middle Ages in art as
-well as letters; while the land which gave birth to Shakespeare can
-scarcely be said to have had a native school of painting or sculpture
-till late in the eighteenth century. The like differences are observable
-among barbarous nations. Races are met with, to whom the drawing of a
-familiar object suggests no idea of the original; while others, in
-nearly the same stage of savage life, habitually practise the
-representation of natural objects in the decorative details of their
-implements and articles of dress, and in the carvings which furnish
-occupation for many leisure hours.
-
-A special interest attaches to the disclosures of archæology relative to
-the prehistoric races of Europe, owing to the evidence thereby furnished
-of striking resemblances in their arts and conditions of life to those
-of uncultured races of our own day. In many respects it seems as though
-the present condition of some existing races of America only repeats
-that of Europe’s infancy. But so far as imitative art is concerned, the
-analogy fails when the more recent contents of the barrows, cairns, and
-grave mounds of prehistoric Europe are brought into comparison with
-those of the New World. If, indeed, we leave behind us the age of
-cromlechs, kistvaens, cairns, and barrows, and seek to estimate aright
-the disclosures of artistic ability pertaining to the far more ancient
-men of Europe’s Mammoth and Reindeer periods, it is otherwise. But,
-before reviewing the wonderfully definite glimpses thereby furnished of
-tribes of rude yet skilful hunters of that post-glacial world, it may be
-of some help, in the comparisons which they suggest, to recall
-impressions derived from a study of that Stone period in which the
-natives of the British Islands appear to have approximated, in many
-respects, to the Red Indian nomad of the American forest.
-
-One little-heeded point of evidence of this correspondence, to which I
-long since drew attention, is to be found in the traces of artificial
-modification of the head-form in ancient British crania; a comparison of
-which with skulls recovered from Indian grave mounds helps to throw
-light on the habits and social life of the British Islands in
-prehistoric times. In illustration of this I may refer to an
-exploration, now of old date. In the early summer of 1851, I learned of
-the accidental exposure of a stone cist, in trenching a garden at
-Juniper Green, a few miles distant from Edinburgh, and immediately
-proceeded to the spot. There, under a slightly elevated knoll—the
-remains, in all probability, of the ancient barrow,—lay a rude
-sarcophagus of unhewn sandstone, within which was a male skeleton, still
-in good preservation. The body had been laid on its left side, with the
-arms folded over the breast, and the knees drawn up so as to touch the
-elbows. A flat water-worn stone formed the pillow, from which the skull
-had rolled to the bottom of the cist. Above the right shoulder stood a
-gracefully formed clay vase, containing only a little sand and black
-dust, the remains, it may be presumed, of food which it originally
-contained when deposited there by affectionate hands, in some
-long-forgotten century. It was recovered uninjured, and is now
-deposited, along with the skull, in the Archæological Museum of
-Edinburgh.
-
-The primitive grave, thus discovered within sight of the Scottish
-capital, has a curious interest as a link connecting the present with a
-remote past. But the special point which throws light on the habits of
-the ancient race, is a parieto-occipital flattening, such as is of
-common occurrence in skulls recovered from American ossuaries and grave
-mounds. This feature is clearly traceable to the use of the cradle-board
-in infancy. The mode of nursing the Indian papoose, by bandaging it on a
-cradle-board, is specially adapted to the vicissitudes of a nomad forest
-life. The infant is carried safely, slung on the mother’s back, leaving
-her hands free; and in the pauses of her journey, or when engaged in
-field work, it can be laid aside, or suspended from the branch of a
-tree, without risk of injury. But one result of this custom is that the
-soft bones of the skull are subjected to a continuous pressure in one
-direction during the whole term of suckling, which is necessarily
-protracted, among a nomad people, much longer than is usual in settled
-communities; and to this cause is undoubtedly traceable the occipital
-flattening of many skulls recovered from European cists and barrows. Dr.
-L. A. Gosse, after discussing in his _Essai sur les déformations
-artificielles du Crâne_ certain artificial modifications of the skull,
-of common occurrence among the aborigines of the New World, thus
-proceeds: “Passant dans l’ancient continent, ne tardons-nous pas à
-reconnaître que ce berceau plat et solide y a produit des effets
-analogues. Les anciens habitants de la Scandinavie et de la Calédonie
-devaient s’en servir, si l’on en juge par la forme de leurs crânes.”[79]
-
-Full-sized representations of the Juniper Green skull, and others of the
-same type, are given in _Crania Britannica_.[80] Bateman also, in his
-_Ten Years’ Diggings in Celtic and Saxon Gravehills_, concurs with
-earlier writers in ascribing to the use of the cradle-board the
-flattened occiput observed in skulls recovered from British barrows. The
-employment, indeed, of the cradle-board among prehistoric races of
-Northern Europe, and their nomad life of which it is so characteristic a
-feature, may now be considered as generally recognised. The implements
-and pottery recovered from graves of the period show their constructors
-to have been, for the most part, devoid of any knowledge of metals; or,
-at best, in the mere rudimentary stage of metallurgic arts. But the
-Juniper Green cist, that of the large Staffordshire barrow of Wotton
-Hill, that of Roundway Hill, North Wilts, another of Green Lowe,
-Derbyshire, and others described in the works above referred to, while
-all disclosing evidence of correspondence in habits and social condition
-between ancient races of the British Isles and the Indians of the New
-World, also furnished characteristic examples of their fictile ware; and
-here the analogy fails. There are, indeed, abundant specimens of broken
-Indian pottery on many of their deserted village sites, which might be
-mingled with the fragments of a like kind from early European grave
-mounds without attracting special attention. Simple chevron and saltier
-or herring-bone patterns, scratched with a pointed bone on the soft
-clay, are common to both; and many of the more elaborate linear and bead
-patterns of the primitive British potters reappear with slight variation
-on the Indian ware. But besides those, few ancient Indian village sites
-fail to yield fragments of pottery, including clay tobacco pipes,
-ornamented with more or less rude imitations of the human face and of
-familiar animals, such as the beaver, the bear, the lynx, and the deer.
-Before my first visit to the American continent, while still preoccupied
-with the arts of the ancient British savage, and the more graceful
-devices of the metallurgists of Europe’s Bronze period, I noted the
-prevalence of a conventional ornamentation, consisting mainly of
-improvements on what may be called the accidents of manufacture, or
-possibly of linear decorations borrowed from patterns of the plaiter or
-knitter.[81] No attempt appears to have been made by the old European
-decorator at such imitations of familiar natural objects as are now
-known to have been practised among the far more ancient cave-dwellers of
-Europe, the contemporaries of the mammoth and the woolly rhinoceros, and
-which are familiar to us in the primitive arts of the New World. Objects
-recovered from the mounds of the Ohio and the Mississippi valleys, as
-well as the diversified products of the native artificers of Mexico and
-Peru, attract special attention by their endless variety of imitative
-design; and similar skill and ingenuity are apparent in the pottery, the
-plaited manufactures, the stone and bone carvings, and even in many of
-the great animal mounds and other earthworks of the North American
-continent. An observant recognition of analogies, traceable in the
-rhetorical construction of many American Indian holophrasms, appears to
-be only another phase of this widely prevalent imitative faculty. At the
-same time, whether we study the physical form or the intellectual
-characteristics of native American races, it becomes more and more
-apparent that the New World has been peopled from different centres, and
-still presents essentially distinct types of race. It had its ferocious
-Caribs, its Mexicans, with their revolting human sacrifices and other
-bloody rites, and its stealthy, treacherous nomads, less courageous but
-not less cruel. But it has also gentler races, in whom, as in the
-Peruvians, the Zuñis, and others of the Pueblo Indians, the æsthetic
-faculty predominates, and overlays with many a graceful concomitant the
-utilitarian products of their industrial arts.
-
-Whether barbarous or civilised nations are classified in accordance with
-their linguistic affinities, both are found to manifest other
-specialties according with the diverse families of speech. The
-differences which separate the Aryan from the Semitic races are not more
-marked than the intellectual and moral divergencies among barbarous
-tribes. But while this is apparent on the American continent, its
-diverse races appear to be characterised by a more general aptitude for
-artistic imitation than is observable elsewhere, except among the
-long-civilised nations of the Old World, whose composite vocabularies
-reveal the sources of many borrowed arts. The Peruvian potter sketched
-and modelled endless quaint devices in clay; the Zuñian decorated his
-gracefully fashioned ware with highly effective parti-coloured designs;
-and the old Mound-Builder wrought in intaglio on his domestic and
-sepulchral vessels conventional flower patterns; and in his miniature
-sculptures reproduced the fauna of an area extending from the Ohio to
-the Gulf of Mexico. Native artificers of widely different American races
-manifest this imitative faculty. Not only is the Indian pipe sculptor
-found copying animate and inanimate objects with an observant eye and a
-ready hand, but even the linear patterns on pottery and straw
-basket-work are frequently made to assume combinations obviously
-suggested by flowers and other familiar objects of nature. The
-perception of such analogies, and even the capacity for appreciating the
-linear or pictorial representation of objects on a flat surface, varies
-greatly in different races. Travellers have repeatedly described the
-manifestation by savage races of an utter incapacity to comprehend
-pictured representations. Mr. Oldfield, for example, tells how a large
-coloured engraving of a native of New Holland was shown to some
-Australians. “One declared it to be a ship, another a kangaroo, and so
-on, not one of a dozen identifying the portrait as having any connection
-with himself.”[82] The artistic faculty is unquestionably hereditary.
-There are artistic families and artistic races. But if so, the pictorial
-skill of the palæolithic cave-dwellers of Western Europe was not
-transmitted to their successors. Guided not only by a comparison of
-their tools and weapons with those of the Neolithic period, but also by
-cranial and other physical evidence, we are led to assume the absence of
-affinity between the men of the Perigord caves and the greatly more
-modern races of Europe’s later Stone period; and their lack of the
-imitative faculty, so characteristic of the elder race, adds
-confirmation to this opinion.
-
-Artistic sympathies, and a capacity for high achievements in painting
-and sculpture, are neither the direct results of civilisation, nor in
-many cases the product of culture and training. From the days of Giotto,
-the shepherd boy, to those of Thorwaldsen, Wilkie, and Turner, art-power
-is not only seen to be a direct and exceptional gift of nature, but it
-is frequently the product of a singularly partial intellectual
-development. Leonardo da Vinci and Michael Angelo are examples of men of
-rare and comprehensive genius, who sought in art the form in which to
-give expression to their many-sided powers. But, on the other hand,
-instances are not rare of artists like Thorwaldsen or Turner, who,
-except within the range of their own special art, seemed exceptionally
-defective in the exercise of ordinary mental powers. The same is true of
-races as of individuals. Some show an aptitude for art wholly wanting in
-others, who nevertheless equal or surpass them in more important
-qualities. The æsthetic faculty may, indeed, be described as curiously
-capricious in its manifestations. The Papuans of New Guinea and of New
-Caledonia, a race of Negrillos, in some points presenting analogies to
-the Australian, are nevertheless remarkable for a seemingly instinctive
-ingenuity and aptitude for art. Mr. Wallace describes them as
-contrasting with the Malay race in the habitual decoration of their
-canoes, houses, and almost every domestic utensil, with elaborate
-carving. The Fijians, who are allied to this Negrillo race, present in
-many respects an unfavourable contrast to the true Polynesian. In their
-physiognomy and whole physical aspect they are inferior to other island
-races of the Pacific; and are further notable for repulsive habits and a
-general condition of social and moral degradation. But their ferocity
-and the cruel customs in which they so strikingly differ from the Malays
-are vices of a vigorous race. They have frequently been observed to
-indicate energy capable of being directed to useful ends, as has been
-the case with the Maori cannibals of New Zealand, and was seen of old in
-the Huns and the Northmen, whose descendants are now among the most
-civilised races of the world. It is obvious, at any rate, that the
-savage vices of the Fijians are compatible with considerable skill in
-such arts as pertain to their primitive condition. Their musical
-instruments are superior to those of the Polynesians, and include the
-pan-pipe and others unknown in the islands beyond their range. Their
-pottery exhibits great variety of form; and some of the vessels combined
-in groups present a curious correspondence to familiar examples of
-Peruvian art. Their fishing-nets and lines are remarkable for neat and
-skilful workmanship, and they carry on agriculture to a considerable
-extent. “Indeed,” remarked the ethnologist of the United States
-Expedition, in summing up the characteristics of the Fijians, “we soon
-began to perceive that the people were in possession of almost every art
-known to the Polynesians, and of many others besides. The
-highly-finished workmanship was unexpected, everything being executed
-until recently, and even now for the most part, without the use of iron.
-In the collection of implements and manufactures brought home by the
-Expedition, the observer will distinguish in the Fijian division
-something like a school of arts for the other Pacific islands.”
-
-All this has to be kept in view, in any attempt to gauge the
-intellectual development, or determine the degree of civilisation, of
-the palæolithic draughtsmen and carvers of the Garonne. One of the
-scenes introduced by M. Figuier, in the fanciful illustrations of his
-_L’Homme primitif_, represents a group of artists, such as, except for
-their costume, might have been sketched from the students of the École
-des Beaux Arts. Their mode of work was probably much more akin to the
-intermittent labours of the Indian, whose elaborately sculptured pipe is
-laid aside, and resumed again—often after prolonged intervals,—before
-it receives the finishing touch. But though the drawings and the
-carvings of those primitive artists alike manifest remarkable skill and
-observant imitation, the former are the objects of special interest.
-Their carvings appear to have been executed, with rare exceptions, for
-the decoration of favourite implements and weapons, in accordance with a
-practice common to many diverse races and conditions of society. But the
-drawings have no such motive. They more nearly correspond to the sketch
-or drawing from nature of the modern artist; and furnish evidence of
-peculiar attributes, strikingly distinguishing the race of that remote
-age from most others that have succeeded them.
-
-Certain it is that, so far as present evidence goes, the greatly
-prolonged Neolithic period was characterised by no such artistic feeling
-or imitative skill. Specimens of the ingenious handiwork of the
-artificers of Europe’s later Stone age abound. We have numerous relics
-from the kitchen middens of Denmark, the pile villages of Switzerland,
-the crannoges of Scotland and Ireland, as well as the varied contents of
-cromlechs, cists, cairns, and barrows, diligently explored throughout
-Europe. But no such examples of carvings, or graven representations of
-animals or other natural objects, have been found. The “clay in the
-hands of the potter” is a familiar symbol of plastic response to the
-will of the designer. It is, indeed, easier for the practised modeller
-to fashion the clay into any desired form, than to draw it, subject to
-rules of perspective, on a flat surface. Linear devices and the
-representation of objects in intaglio, or in low relief, are also
-accomplished with great facility on the soft clay. Hence the art of
-diverse races, periods, and stages of progress, finds its aptest
-illustration in fictile ware; and the imitative faculty of widely
-different American races may be studied in their pottery. In Mexico,
-apparently, we have to look for the northern school of ceramic art.
-There, the aggressive races of the North first came in contact with the
-civilisation of Central America; and the native aptitude for imitative
-representation received a fresh impulse. The Indian modeller learned to
-work skilfully in clay; and the variety of design, combined with the
-quaint humour of the caricaturist, displayed in many of the Mexican
-terra-cottas, serves to indicate this class of work as specially
-significant in relation to the present inquiry. The inventive fancy and
-skill of the Peruvian potter illustrates in ampler variety the progress
-achieved by the races of the southern continent. But this will more
-fitly come under review along with other examples of modern native art.
-For no analogous traces of contemporary modelling in clay furnish
-material for comparison with the art of the Palæolithic era; though the
-skill of its bone and ivory carvers was in no degree inferior to that of
-the Mexican or Peruvian modeller. But the æsthetic aptitude of that old
-race of Europe’s intellectual dawn is in some respects unique. In so far
-as their ingenious arts furnish any evidence of true racial
-characteristics, the men of the Neolithic era inherited none of their
-æsthetic feelings; nor did the imitative faculty manifest itself with
-exceptional power until the advent of the Aryan races brought with it
-the potentialities of Hellenic inspiration.
-
-The absence of nearly every trace of imitative art in the prehistoric
-remains of Britain has already been noted. It made a strong impression
-on my mind at an early stage of my archæological researches; for this
-characteristic of European art extends over a period of greatly
-prolonged duration, marked by the advent and disappearance of races,
-dissimilar alike in physical and mental characteristics. We have the
-laboriously finished implements of neolithic art, the pottery of at
-least two distinct races seemingly prior to the Celts, and then the
-graceful artistic productions of the Bronze period, but still only the
-rarest traces of any effort at imitation. Long before the imitative arts
-of the American continent were known to me otherwise than from
-description, I remarked, of the archaic art of the first British
-metallurgists: “The ornamentation consists, almost without exception,
-only of improvements on the accidents of manufacture. The incised
-decorations of the pottery appear, in many cases, to have been produced
-simply by passing twisted cords round the soft clay. More complicated
-designs, most frequently consisting of chevron, saltire, or herring-bone
-patterns, where they are not merely the results of a combination of such
-lines, have been suggested, as I conceive, by the few and
-half-accidental patterns of the industrious female knitter. In no single
-case is any attempt made at the imitation of a leaf or flower, of
-animals, or any other simple objects.”[83] At the date of those remarks
-the art of Europe’s Palæolithic era was unknown; but with the arts of
-other primitive races, and especially those of the American continent,
-in view, I then added: “It is curious, indeed, and noteworthy, to find
-how entirely every trace of imitative art is absent in British archaic
-relics; for it is by no means an invariable characteristic of primitive
-arts.” Dr. Hoffman, when commenting on aboriginal American art among the
-Indians of California, adds: “I have not met with any attempts at
-objective drawings or etchings which may be attributed to the Tshuma
-Indians, who were the former occupants of the island;[84] but
-ornamentations upon shells and bone beads, soap-stone pipes, shell
-pendants, and other ornaments, seem to consist entirely of straight or
-zigzag lines, cross-lines, circles,” etc. The earliest examples of
-native metallurgy in Britain are to be found in the works of the
-primitive goldsmith; but the same conventional ornamentation which
-occurs on early pottery, is characteristic of the beautiful personal
-ornaments of gold belonging, for the most part, to the first period of
-working in metals. It is not till a late stage of the European Bronze
-period that imitative art reappears, and zoomorphic decorations become
-common.
-
-The discovery in 1868, and subsequent years, of numerous specimens of
-the artistic ability of the cave-men of palæolithic Europe, revealed a
-singularly interesting phase of primitive history. Remains of the
-so-called “Reindeer period” are now familiar to us from many localities;
-for the range of this animal in palæolithic times appears to have
-extended from the Baltic to the Pyrenees. But a special interest was
-conferred on the first disclosures by the locality itself, where the
-Vézère, an affluent of the river Dordogne, winds its way through the
-cretaceous limestone, in which occur numerous caves and rock-shelters,
-rich in remains of primitive art. In this region of South-western
-France, where many historical and legendary associations carry the fancy
-back to elder centuries, the Dordogne unites with the Garonne at its
-estuary below Bordeaux. The upper waters of the Dordogne form the
-boundary between Limousin and Auvergne, and the Vézère is one of its
-highest tributaries in Limousin. There, nearly in the latitude of
-Montreal, but with the genial climate which, throughout the whole
-historic period, has characterised Southern France, lie the caves of
-Cro-Magnon, La Moustier, Gorge d’Enfer, Laugerie Haute and Basse, and La
-Madelaine: the long-sealed art galleries of prehistoric Gaul. The
-reindeer and the aurochs haunted its forests; the woolly rhinoceros and
-the mammoth still frequented its glades; and the long-extinct fossil
-horse was not only an object of the chase, but was possibly already
-subdued to the companionship and service of man. Such, at least, is the
-idea suggested by a scene graven on the portion of a baton or staff,
-found by M. Lartet and Mr. Christy in La Madelaine cave, which
-represents a man between two horses’ heads, apparently walking past,
-with a staff or spear over his shoulder. Nor were those man’s sole
-contemporaries.
-
-The drawings of the ancient cave-men are of varying degrees of merit,
-showing the efforts of the unskilled tyro as well as of the practised
-artist. Some of the examples found at Laugerie Basse—as, for instance,
-the assumed representation of an ibex, with its legs folded as if
-sitting,—are the crude efforts of unpractised draughtsmen, and would
-compare unfavourably with many examples of graphic art, the work of
-modern Eskimo and Indian gravers and draughtsmen. But other
-specimens—such as the mammoth from La Madelaine cave, and the Alpine
-ibex and reindeers from Laugerie Basse, in Southern France, and, still
-more, the remarkably spirited drawing of the reindeer grazing, from the
-Kesserloch, near Thayingen, sketched on a piece of reindeer
-horn,—evince powers of observation, and a freedom of hand in sketching
-from nature, such as would be found exceptional among pupils of our best
-training schools of art. On this point my friend, Sir Noel Paton, writes
-me: “I entirely concur in your view as to the immense superiority as
-works of art of the engravings on horn and ivory found in the
-prehistoric caves, over any modern work of the same kind which I have
-seen, executed by the Eskimos or other savage, tribes of our own day. As
-compared with the latter, the prehistoric productions are like the swift
-and direct studies from nature of Landseer, compared with the laboured
-scrawlings from memory of a rather dull schoolboy.”
-
-I have elsewhere drawn attention to the fact that some of the drawings
-of the Perigord cave-men and their palæolithic contemporaries,
-especially, among the latter, the Kesserloch sketch of a reindeer
-grazing, are left-hand drawings.[85] So far as this class of evidence is
-of value, the examples from the caves in the valley of the Vézère are
-exceptionally numerous. There, it may be, a family, or possibly a tribe,
-dwelt, among whom left-handedness prevailed to an unusual extent, along
-with a degree of skill and dexterity, such as is frequently found to
-accompany the instinctive use of the left hand.
-
-In this, as in other respects, the recovery of evidences of a
-well-developed æsthetic faculty among the men of Europe’s Mammoth and
-Reindeer period, furnishes materials for many suggestive inferences; for
-we shall very imperfectly estimate the significance of the primitive
-drawings so unexpectedly discovered, if we regard them as no more than
-the pastimes of those ancient cave-men, whose artistic ability they so
-unmistakably reveal. They are rather to be classed with the
-picture-writing of the American aborigines—including its most advanced
-Mexican stage abundantly illustrated in Lord Kingsborough’s folios,—as
-one of the primitive supplements of language among uncultured races. As
-such it is a form of visible speech, and an important step in advance of
-the stage of gesture-language. The historical value of the palæolithic
-drawings is indisputable. They furnish a record, more trustworthy than
-any written chronicle, of the strange conditions of life in a region
-familiar to us throughout the whole historic period for its genial
-climate and social civilisation. It is in this aspect, as a contemporary
-chronicling of current events, that palæolithic art has its chief value.
-It furnishes a graphic picturing of the habits of life, and of many of
-the attendant circumstances of that remote period, recorded with such
-vivid truthfulness, that we realise very definitely the character of its
-long-extinct fauna, and, to some considerable extent, the occupations
-and modes of life of the cave-men by whom they were hunted, and in
-leisure hours were reproduced graven or carved, on bone, horn, or ivory,
-or traced in free outline on slabs of schist or other soft stone.
-
-Viewed simply as examples of imitative art among a people still in the
-rudest Stone age, the drawings are significant and instructive. They
-furnish evidence of observation and artistic capacity, and consequently
-of intellectual powers capable of very different results from anything
-that could be realised in the absence of all knowledge of metallurgy, or
-of anything beyond the crudest appliances for developing mechanical
-skill. The conditions of climate probably forbade any attempt at
-agriculture. They were hunters, fowlers, fishers, subsisting mainly, if
-not wholly, by the chase. They not only successfully pursued the wild
-horse, the reindeer, and other swift-footed herbivora, but assailed the
-cave-bear, the cave-lion, and other formidable carnivora, as well as the
-huge rhinoceros and the mammoth. They also made excursions to the
-sea-shore, and no doubt left there shell mounds similar to those which
-have been explored with such interesting results on the Danish coast;
-and which have their New World equivalents on the seaboards of
-Massachusetts, Georgia, and Florida, where at certain seasons the
-Indians resorted to feast on the shell-fish. From their drawings and
-carvings we not only learn this, but also that they were not unfamiliar
-with the whale, the seal, and other marine fauna. The presence of the
-whale and seal in the same latitude as the reindeer need not surprise
-us. The occupation of Europe by palæolithic man contemporary with the
-_Elephas primigenius_ and other extinct mammalia, belongs to an era when
-the relative levels of sea and land, and the relations of the Atlantic
-coast-line to the ancient continent, differed widely from their present
-conditions. If the genial current of the Gulf Stream then reached the
-shores of Europe, its influence extended over areas very diverse from
-those now affected by it. But the range of the fauna of that Palæolithic
-era was a wide one. Tusks of the mammoth and antlers of the reindeer
-occur in the Scottish boulder-clay; and the discovery of skeletons of
-the whale far inland in the carse of Stirling, accompanied in more than
-one case by implements made of perforated stag’s horn, tells of the
-presence of the Greenland whale on the ancient Scottish sea coast, while
-the stag haunted its forests, and the Allophylian savage paddled his
-canoe in estuaries marked for us now by old sea-margins that preceded
-the last great rise of the land. Skulls and horns of the elk occur in
-the Scottish peat-bogs, seemingly indistinguishable from those of the
-_Cervus alces_, or North American moose.[86] As to the reindeer, not
-only are its remains found in Scottish mosses and the underlying marl,
-but they have been dug up in the ruined brochs, as at Cill-Trolla,
-Sutherlandshire, and Keiss in Caithness. The favourite haunts of the
-Greenland whale are in seas encumbered with floating ice; and when they
-were stranded in the estuary of the Forth by a tide rising on a
-shore-line now nearly thirty feet above the tide-mark of the present
-day, the highlands of Scotland were capped with perpetual snow, and
-great changes of level had still to occur. But neither the whale nor the
-Eskimo retreated within the Arctic circle because they could only be at
-home among polar ice and snow. Remains of the whale in Scottish kitchen
-middens of greatly more modern date show that it must have haunted the
-Scottish shores when the temperature of the surrounding ocean differed
-little from that of the present day. There is preserved in the Museum of
-the Scottish Antiquaries a drinking-cup fashioned from the vertebra of a
-whale, which was found in a weem, or subterranean dwelling, on the Isle
-of Eday, Orkney, along with implements of stone, horn, bone, bronze, and
-iron; and other evidences of the presence of the whale in the Scottish
-seas are of frequent occurrence.
-
-As to the ivory of the narwhal and the rostungr, or walrus, it was in
-use by Scoto-Scandinavian carvers after the disappearance of the
-reindeer from Scotland. A curious large sword, probably of the
-fourteenth century, at Hawthornden, near Edinburgh, has the hilt made of
-the narwhal’s tusk; and the famous Lewis chessmen, found at Uig in the
-Isle of Lewis, as well as examples of chess and tablemen recovered from
-time to time in other Scottish localities, are all made of the walrus
-ivory, the “huel-bone” of Chaucer. But when the whale haunted the shores
-to which the hunters of the Perigord resorted, it is doubtful if Britain
-was an island. In that age of the mammoth and the reindeer of the
-Pyrenees, when art flourished in the valley of the Vézère, and men,
-scarcely less strange than the long-extinct fauna on which they preyed,
-sheltered in their rock-dwellings from the ice and snow, the relative
-levels of sea and land, and the lines of the Atlantic coast, bore no
-relation to their present aspect; for the old region of ice and snow was
-what is now familiar to us as the vine-clad sunny land of France. All
-this we learn from the archæological remains of those old times, and
-especially from the carvings and gravings which, happily for us, were
-then executed, whether for pastime or as actual records. Like many of
-the native races of the American continent at the present day, the old
-cave-dwellers employed their leisure time in carving in bone, horn, or
-ivory; and like them too, as we believe, they applied their skill in
-graphic art as a means of recording events and communicating facts to
-others. The broad palinated antlers of the reindeer, prepared sections
-of mammoth ivory, and slabs of schist, all furnished tablets on which
-they not only delineated the objects of the chase, but incidents and
-observations of daily experience. And if so, we have in such drawings
-the germ of ideographic symbolism, and of hieroglyphic writing. By just
-such a process of recording facts in a form readily intelligible to
-others, the early dwellers in the Nile valley originated the mode of
-object-drawing and ideographic chronicling, from which hieroglyphic,
-demotic, and ultimately, phonetic writing were evolved.
-
-It is not solely by inference that we are led to surmise that the
-ingenious draughtsmen of Southern France had a higher aim than mere
-pastime in some, at least, of their graphic devices. The relics
-recovered from the ancient caves include what appear to be tallies and
-numerical records, unmistakably indicative, not only of a method of
-numeration, but of the growth of a system of mnemonic symbolism, and
-distinctive graven characters, not greatly inferior to the primitive
-alphabets of Celtic or Scandinavian lithology. It is curious, indeed, to
-find in use in Europe’s early Post-Glacial period symbols which, but for
-their undoubted execution by the ancient cave-men of Aquitania, might be
-assigned with every probability to some Druid scribe, familiar with the
-ogham characters of the Gauls and British Celts. Among the objects
-recovered from the Dordogne caves, including tallies and inscribed
-tablets of horn and ivory, with their enumeration in simple units, M.
-Broca specially noted a deer’s tyne, marked with a series of notches,
-which he assumed to be a hunter’s memoranda of the produce of the chase.
-A more complex record, found in the rock-shelter of Gorge d’Enfer, is
-inscribed on a plate of ivory. Its groups of horizontal and oblique
-lines along the edges, and symmetrical rows of dots on the flat surface,
-combine to furnish a record graven in characters as well-defined as many
-a runic or ogham inscription. If it be no more than the memoranda of a
-successful hunt, with a classification of the different kinds of game
-secured for distribution among the members of the tribe, it is not
-greatly inferior to the early system of numeration among the Egyptians.
-But when such a piece of arithmetic was supplemented by a pictorial
-record of the hunt; or by the incident, so acceptable to a bevy of
-hunters over their camp-fire, of the fight of the male deer in the
-rutting season; or the charge of the enraged elephant with elevated
-trunk, trumpeting wrath and defiance: much had been accomplished that
-admits of comparison with records of the modern penman.[87]
-
-It is difficult for the men of a lettered age, with all the facilities
-of the printing-press in fullest use, to realise the condition of
-intellectual activity, or the natural modes of its expression, among an
-unlettered people. The transmission of Homeric or Ossianic poems, of a
-Niebelungen Lied or an Albanic Duan, from generation to generation, by
-the mere aid of memory, is scarcely conceivable to us now. Yet I recall
-the account given by Ozahwahguaquzuebe, an Ojibway Indian, who told of
-his habitually accumulating his tobacco till he saved enough to bribe an
-aged chief of the tribe to repeat to him, again and again, in all its
-marvellous details, the legend of Nanaboozo and the post-diluvial
-creation, in order that he might be able, in his turn, to recount it in
-full, as it had come down from elder generations of his people.
-
-There are some results of the introduction of the printing-press still
-very partially appreciated. Its direct influence on social and
-intellectual progress receives ample recognition; but not so all
-indirect influences traceable to its operations. In elder centuries,
-before Gutenberg and Faust superseded the labours of the scribe, not a
-few ballad-epics and lyrics were consigned to the wandering minstrels,
-to whose tenacious memories we are so largely indebted. But there were
-other avenues in those old centuries for fancy and passion, not greatly
-dissimilar to those by which the observation and descriptive powers of
-the post-glacial Troglodytes found vent. It is vain for a Pugin or a
-Ruskin to bewail the mechanical character of modern art. It was easier
-for the mediæval satirist to find free scope for his humour in a
-sculptured corbel, or on a boss of the beautiful groined ceiling, or to
-carve his grosser caricature within easy access under the _miserere_ in
-the choir, than to spend long hours at his lectern in the scriptorium,
-committing his fancies with laborious pains to less accessible
-parchments. And so, both satires and sermons were then graven in stone,
-which now find utterance in ways more suited to the age in which we
-live:—
-
- For nature brings not back the Mastodon,
- Nor we those times.
-
-Taste and fancy have now a thousand avenues at their command for the
-humour and satire which mingled, in quaint incongruity with the devout
-aspirations inwrought into mediæval architecture. With the revival of
-learning, and the introduction of the printing-press, came the
-Renaissance. Europe renounced mediæval art as “Gothic.” Classic, or what
-passed for classic art, ruled for the next three centuries. Architecture
-became more and more mechanical; while æsthetic taste sought elsewhere,
-and more especially in the novel arena of the printing-press, for
-avenues where it could sport in unrestrained freedom.
-
-The ingenious skill of the palæolithic artists and tool-makers, who
-wrought in their rock-shelters and limestone caves, in that remote era
-when the climate along the northern slope of the Pyrenees resembled that
-of Labrador at the present day, has naturally awakened a lively
-interest. The rigour of the climate during a greatly prolonged winter
-prevented their obtaining stone or flint for purposes of manufacture.
-They wrought, accordingly, in bone, in mammoth ivory, and in the horn of
-the reindeer, fashioning from such materials their lances, fish-spears,
-knives, daggers, and bodkins; turning to account the deer’s tynes for
-tallies; and carving out of the larger bones what are assumed to have
-been maces or official batons, elaborately ornamented with symbolic
-devices designed for other purposes than mere decoration.
-
-The Eskimo are recognised as presenting the nearest type to the cave-men
-of Europe’s Post-Glacial era. It is even possible that, like the natives
-of Labrador, the latter may have occupied winter snow-huts, and only
-resorted to their cave-shelters during the brief heat of a semi-arctic
-summer. This, however, is rendered doubtful by the occurrence of
-reindeer horns and bones of young fawns, along with others of such
-varying age as to indicate the presence of the hunter during nearly
-every season of the year. Among a people so situated the industrial arts
-are called into constant requisition, alike for clothing and tools; and
-the experience of the hunter directs him to the products of the chase
-for the easiest supply of both. The pointed horn of the deer furnished
-the ready-made dagger, lance head, and harpoon; the incisor tooth of the
-larger rodents supplied a more delicately edged chisel than primitive
-art could devise; and the very process of fracturing the bones of the
-larger mammalia, in order to obtain the prized marrow, produced the
-splinters and pointed fragments which an easy manipulation converted
-into daggers, bodkins, and needles. The ivory of walrus, narwhal, or
-elephant is readily wrought into many desirable forms, and is less
-liable to fracture than flint or stone; and all those materials are
-abundant in the most rigorous winters, when the latter are sealed up
-under the frozen soil. Implements of horn or bone may therefore be
-assumed to have preceded all but the rudest flint celts and
-hammer-stones or unwrought missiles; and although, owing to the nearly
-indestructible nature of their material, it is from the latter that our
-ideas of primeval tool-making are chiefly derived, enough has been
-recovered from contemporary cave deposits to confirm the analogy of
-their arts to those of the hyperborean workmen of the North American
-continent.
-
-The necessity which, to a large extent, determined the material of the
-ancient workers in bone and ivory, was favourable to the development of
-the imitative faculty. The ingenious ivory and bone carvings of the
-Tawatins and other tribes of British Columbia, of the Thlinkets of
-Alaska, and the Eskimo, equally suffice, with the examples of European
-palæolithic art, to show how favourable such material was to the
-development of artistic feeling, which must have lain dormant had the
-artificers been limited to flint and stone. The same influence may be
-seen in operation in many stages of art: as in massive but bald Gothic
-structures, such as St. Machar’s Cathedral on the Dee, where the
-builders were limited to granite, while contemporary architecture in
-localities where good sandstone or limestone abounds is rich in
-elaborate details; and, where the soft and easily wrought Caen stone is
-available, runs to excess in the florid exuberance of its carvings.
-
-The ingenious artist of the Palæolithic era not only ornamented the
-hafts of his tools and weapons with representations of familiar objects
-of the chase, but is also accredited with carving, on his mace or baton,
-symbolic emblems expressing the rank and official duties of the owner.
-The analogous practice of the Haidahs of the Queen Charlotte Islands at
-the present day shows that there is nothing inconsistent with primitive
-thought in the symbolic, significance assigned to some of the carved
-batons; and, if so, we have there examples of imitative art employed in
-a way which involved the germ of ideographic graving or picture-writing.
-The mere fact of pictorial imitation implies the interpretation of its
-representations. Eskimo implements are to be seen in various
-collections, as at Copenhagen and Stockholm, in the British Museum, in
-those of San Francisco and the Smithsonian Institution at Washington,
-ornamented with representations of adventures incident to their habits
-of life. An Arctic collection, presented by Captain Beechy to the
-Ashmolean Museum at Oxford, furnishes interesting illustrations of the
-skill of the Eskimo draughtsman. The carvings and linear drawings
-represent, for the most part, incidents in the life of the polar hunter;
-and this is so effectively done that, as Captain Beechy says: “By
-comparing one with another, a little history was obtained which gave us
-a better insight into their habits than could be elicited from any signs
-or intimations.”[88] Mr. W. H. Dall figures in his _Alaska and its
-Resources_, analogous examples of Innuit or Western Eskimo art; and in
-an interesting communication by Dr J. W. Hoffman to the Anthropological
-Society of Washington, on Eskimo pictographs as compared with those of
-other American aborigines, he figures and interprets similar
-examples.[89] One of these, copied from an ivory bow used in making
-fire, which he examined in the Museum of the Alaska Commercial Company
-of San Francisco, depicts three incidents in the Innuit hunter’s
-experience. In one, the hunter supplicates the _Shaman_, or native
-medicine-man, for success in the chase; another group represents the
-results of the chase; while the third records the incidents of an
-unsuccessful appeal to another shaman. Another graving from the same
-locality embodies the incidents of success and failure in a prolonged
-hunting expedition. In their interpretation, Dr. Hoffman was assisted by
-a Kadiack half-breed who happened to visit San Francisco at the time. A
-design of the same class copied from a piece of walrus ivory, carved by
-a Kiatégamut Indian of Southern Alaska, records a successful feat of the
-shaman in curing two patients. He is represented in the act of
-exorcising the demons, who are seen just cast out from the men restored
-to health by his agency. From the interpretations thus given, it may be
-inferred that such drawings as those described by Captain Beechy
-represent in nearly every case actual incidents. The hunter celebrates
-his return from a successful chase, his experience in the attempt to
-propitiate the supernatural powers on his behalf, or any other notable
-event, by recording the impressive incidents on the handle of his
-hunting knife or his ivory bow, or even in some cases on a tablet of
-walrus ivory; just as the enthusiastic sportsman will at times enter in
-his journal the special occurrences of the fox-hunt, or the more
-adventurous feats of deer-stalking, or commission an artist to
-perpetuate them on canvas. Incidents of exceptional skill or daring are
-no doubt recalled, and listened to with eager interest by the home
-circle in the Arctic snow-hut; and are confirmed in their most thrilling
-details by appeals to such graven records.
-
-The more durable material employed alike by the ancient cave-dwellers of
-Europe and by the modern Innuit and Eskimo, has secured their
-preservation in a form best calculated to command attention. But similar
-graphic representations of incidents and ideas are common to various
-tribes of North American Indians. Throughout the wide region of the old
-Algonkin tribes rock-carvings, such as that of the famous Dighton Bock,
-abound. The same are no less frequent in the South-West from New Mexico
-to California; while similar pictographs are executed by the Ojibways in
-less durable fashion on their grave-posts, or even on strips of
-birch-bark. In like fashion, the Crees and Blackfeet of the Canadian
-North-West adorn their buffalo-skin tents with incidents of war and the
-chase, and blazon on their buffalo robes their personal feats of daring,
-and the discomfiture of their foes. In this way, the aboriginal
-draughtsman is seen in his pictorial devices to aim at the like result
-with that achieved by the old minstrel chronicler or the courtly herald.
-
-Of the ornamented handles of implements recovered from the abodes of the
-ancient cave-dwellers of Europe, the most notable examples are far in
-advance of any Eskimo carvings. One of those, from the cave at Laugerie
-Basse, has been repeatedly engraved. It is fashioned from a piece of
-reindeer’s horn. The carver has so modified his design, and availed
-himself of the natural contour of his material, as to adapt it admirably
-to its purpose as the handle of a poignard. It was apparently intended
-to include both handle and blade; but probably broke in the process of
-manufacture, and was flung aside unfinished. The design is a spirited
-adaptation to the special requirements. The horns are thrown back on the
-neck, the fore legs doubled up, and the hind legs stretched out, as if
-in the act of leaping. Another finely finished example of a
-dagger-handle, from Montastrue, Peccadeau de l’Isle, figured by
-Professor de Quatrefages in his _Hommes fossiles_, also represents the
-deer with its horns thrown back; but from its fractured condition the
-position of the limbs can only be surmised to have corresponded to the
-example from Laugerie Basse. With those may be classed such carvings as
-the pike, so characteristically represented on a tooth of the cave-bear,
-recovered from a refuse heap in the cave of Durntly in the Western
-Pyrenees, and other similar sports of primitive artistic skill.
-
-Such carvings had no other aim, we may presume, than the decoration of a
-favourite weapon, or the beguiling of a leisure hour. But they show the
-fruits of skill, and the observation of a practised eye, by the
-ingenious workmen whose drawings and etchings merit our careful study.
-Considerable taste and still more ingenuity are exhibited by many of the
-American aborigines, in their decorative carvings, and the ornamentation
-both of their weapons and dress. The characteristics of Eskimo art have
-been noted. The Thlinkets of Alaska, lying on their western border,
-manifest a like skill, making ladles and spoons from the horns of the
-deer, the mountain sheep, and goat, and carving them with elaborate
-ingenuity. They also work in walrus ivory, fashioning their bodkins,
-combs, and personal ornaments with varied ornamentation; decorate their
-knife-handles of bone, their paddles, and other implements; and carve
-grotesque masks, with much inventive ingenuity in the variety of the
-design, though scarcely in a style of high art. But it is interesting to
-note the different phases of this imitative faculty. Some tribes, such
-as the Algonkins, confine their art mainly to literal reproductions of
-natural objects; while others, such as the Chimpseyans or Babeens, the
-Tawatins, and the Clalam Indians of Vancouver Island, have developed a
-conventional style of art, often exhibiting much ingenious fancy in its
-grotesque ornamentation. This is specially apparent in the claystone
-pipes of the Chimpseyans, in carving which they rival the ingenious
-Haidahs of the Queen Charlotte Islands in exuberance of detail. But
-while the art has become conventional, where it is not displaced by
-imitations of the novel objects brought under their notice in their
-intercourse with Europeans its combinations are in most cases referable
-to native myths.
-
-In many of the elaborately carved Chimpseyan pipes, their special
-purpose seems to be lost sight of in the whimsical profusion of
-ornament, embracing every native or foreign object that has chanced to
-attract the notice of the sculptor. Nevertheless, it may help us to do
-justice to the true aim of the Indian artist, if we call to remembrance
-how much of Christian symbolism was embodied in many a mediæval
-sculpturing of what, to the unsympathetic observer, seem now only
-conventional vines and lilies, or a mere fanciful grouping of dragons
-and snakes, with apples, figs, grapes, and thorns. This has to be kept
-in view while noting in the pipe sculptures human figures in strangest
-varieties of posture, intertwined with zoomorphic devices, in which the
-bear and the frog have a prominent place; and, as will be seen, a mythic
-significance. It is no less suggestive to note, alike in the Chimpseyan
-and in the Tawatin and Haidah carvings, curious analogies to the
-sculptures of Mexico, Yucatan, and Central America. This resemblance has
-been noticed, independently, by many observers.
-
-Marchand, a French navigator who visited the Queen Charlotte Islands in
-1791, after having recently seen the Mexican sculpture and paintings,
-formed the opinion that the Haidah works of art could be distinctly
-traced to Aztec origin.[90] He remarks of their paintings and carvings:
-“The taste for ornament prevails in all the works of their hands; their
-canoes, their chests, and different little articles of furniture in use
-among them, are covered with figures which might be taken for a species
-of hieroglyphics; fishes and other animals, heads of men, and various
-whimsical designs, are mingled and confounded in order to compose a
-subject. It undoubtedly will not be expected that these figures should
-be perfectly regular and the proportions in them exactly observed, for
-here every man is a painter and sculptor; yet they are not deficient in
-a sort of elegance and perfection.”
-
-The imitative faculty thus manifested so generally among a people still
-in the condition of savage life, shows itself no less strikingly in the
-modern claystone carvings of objects of foreign introduction. The
-collection formed by the United States Exploring Expedition, and largely
-augmented since, includes numerous carvings in which representations of
-log and frame houses, forts, boats, horses, and fire-arms, are
-introduced; and where cords, pulleys, anchors, and other details copied
-from the shipping which frequent the coasts, furnish evidence of a
-practised eye, and considerable powers of imitation. To the unfamiliar
-observer, the result presents, in many cases, a very arbitrary and even
-incongruous jumble of miscellaneous details. But, most probably, the
-native designer had, in every case, a special meaning, and even some
-specific incident in view.
-
-The interest awakened by such manifestations of observant accuracy and
-artistic skill among savage tribes is not diminished by the fact that in
-nearly all other respects they are devoid of culture. Notwithstanding
-the absence in most of them of the very rudiments of civilisation,
-experience proves that among the tribes to the west of the Rocky
-Mountains distinguished by artistic capacity, there is an aptitude for
-industrious and settled habits, the want of which is so noticeable in
-the nomad tribes of the prairies. Their linear patterns are often
-singularly graceful; and they employ colour lavishly, and with some
-degree of taste, in decorating their masks, boats, and dwellings. This
-is specially noticeable among the Haidahs, in the different dialects of
-whose language we find not only names for nearly all the primary
-colours, but also the word _kigunijago_, “a picture.” The symbolical and
-mythological significance of many of their carvings is indisputable;
-while the affinities, traceable at times to the ornamentation most
-characteristic of the architectural remains in the principal seats of
-native American civilisation in Central America, confer on them a
-peculiar interest and value.
-
-The curiously conventional style of ornamentation of the Haidahs of
-Queen Charlotte Islands is lavishly expended on their idols, or
-manitous, carved in black argillaceous stone, and on their
-council-houses and lodges. In front of each Haidah dwelling stands an
-ornamented column, formed of the trunk of a tree, large enough, in many
-cases, to admit of the doorway being cut through it. These columns, or
-“totem-poles” as they have been called, are, in some cases, sixty or
-seventy feet high, elaborately carved with the symbols or totems of
-their owners. The height of the pole indicates the rank of the inmate,
-and any attempt at undue assumption in this respect is jealously
-resented by rival chiefs. The symbols of their four clans—the eagle,
-beaver, dog-fish, and black duck,—are represented in conventional style
-on the carved house-pole, along with their individual or family totems.
-In some cases boxes are attached to the poles containing the remains of
-their dead. Dr. Hoffman, whose previous studies in native symbolism and
-ideography specially prepared him for the intelligent observation of
-such monuments, has furnished an interpretation of their most familiar
-devices. “When the posts are the property of some individual, the
-personal totemic sign is carved at the top. Other animate and grotesque
-figures follow in rapid succession, down to the base, so that unless one
-is familiar with the mythology and folk-lore of the tribe, the subject
-would be utterly unintelligible. A drawing was made of one post with
-only seven pronounced carvings, but which related to three distinct
-myths. The bear, in the act of devouring a hunter, or tearing out his
-heart, is met with on many of the posts, and appears to form an
-interesting theme for the native artists. The story connected with this
-is as follows:—Toivats, an Indian, had occasion to visit the lodge of
-the King of the Bears, but found him out. The latter’s wife, however,
-was at home, and Toivats made love to her. Upon the return of the Bear,
-everything seemed to be in confusion. He charged his wife with
-infidelity, which she denied. The Bear pretended to be satisfied, but
-his suspicions caused him to watch his wife very closely, and he soon
-found that her visits away from the lodge for wood and water occurred
-each day at precisely the same hour. Then the Bear tied a magic thread
-to her dress, and when his wife again left the lodge, he followed the
-magic thread, and soon came upon his wife, finding her in the arms of
-Toivats. The Bear was so enraged at this that he tore out the heart of
-the destroyer of his happiness.”[91] Dr. Hoffman found this myth, with
-the corresponding carvings in walrus ivory, among the Thlinkit Indians,
-who, as he conceives, obtained both the story and the design for their
-ivory carvings from the Haidahs. This appears to receive confirmation
-from the peculiar style of art common to both.
-
-But the decorations of the Haidah lodge-poles admit at times of a much
-more homely interpretation. Mr. James G. Swan, the author of an article
-on “The Haidah Indians,” in Vol. XXI. of the _Smithsonian Contributions
-to Knowledge_, in a communication to the _West Shore_, an Oregon
-journal, thus describes an Indian lodge and house-pole which attracted
-his notice, owing to its carved figures, in round hat and other European
-costume, surmounting the two corner-posts of the lodge. He accordingly
-made a careful drawing of the whole, which, as he says, “is interesting
-as illustrative of the grim humour of an Indian in trying to be avenged
-for what he considered an act of injustice a number of years ago. Bear
-Skin, a somewhat noted Haidah chief, belonging to Skidegate village,
-Queen Charlotte Islands, was in Victoria, when for some offence he was
-fined and imprisoned by Judge Pemberton, the police magistrate. Bear
-Skin felt very much insulted; and in order to get even with the
-magistrate he carved the two figures, which are said to be good
-likenesses of the Judge, who in this dual capacity mounts guard at each
-corner of the front of the chiefs residence. The gigantic face on the
-front of the house, and the two bears on the two mortuary columns, seem
-to be grinning with fiendish delight, while the raven on top of one of
-the columns has cocked his eye so as to have a fair look at the effigies
-beneath him. Bear Skin is dead, but the images still remain. It has been
-suggested that they be removed to Victoria, and be placed over the
-entrance to the police barracks, to keep watch and ward like Gog and
-Magog at the gates of old London city.” But, on the other hand, a
-symbolical meaning appears to be most frequently embodied in the Haidah
-devices; of which Mr. Swan reproduces various illustrations, accompanied
-with native interpretations of them. One drawing, for example,
-represents a grouping of conventional patterns such as are common on the
-Haidah blankets of goats’ hair, and in which the untutored student can
-discern little more than confused scroll-work, with here and there an
-enormous eye, rows of teeth, and a symmetrical repetition of the design
-on either side of the central device. Yet, according to Kitelswa, the
-native Haidah interpreter, “it represents cirrus clouds, or, as sailors
-term them, ‘mares’ tails and ‘mackerel sky,’ the sure precursors of a
-change of weather. The centre figure is T’kul, the wind spirit. On the
-right and left are his feet, which are indicated by long streaming
-clouds; above are his wings, and on each side are the different winds,
-each designated by an eye, and represented by the patches of cirrus
-clouds. When T’kul determines which wind is to blow, he gives the word
-and the other winds retire. The change in the weather is usually
-followed by rain, which is indicated by the tears which stream from the
-eyes of T’kul.” The difficulty with which the inexperienced observer has
-to contend, in any attempt to interpret such native conventional art,
-finds apt illustration in Mr. Swan’s account of an elaborately
-sculptured lodge-pole of which he made a drawing at Kioosta village, on
-Graham Island, one of the Queen Charlotte group. When describing it in
-minute detail, he says: “I could make out all the figures but the
-butterfly, which I thought at first was an elephant with its trunk
-coiled up; but on inquiry of old Edinso, the chief who was conveying me
-in his canoe from Massett to Skidegate, he told me it was a butterfly,
-and pointed out one which had just lit near by on a flower.” The same
-characteristics have already been referred to in describing the
-claystone carvings of the Chimpseyans. They also mark the Haidah
-sculptures executed in the soft argillaceous slate which abounds in
-their vicinity. But the Haidahs work with no less ability in other
-materials; and were familiar of old with the native copper, which is
-brought from some still unascertained locality, it is believed, in
-Alaska. The collections of the Geological Survey at Ottawa include some
-of their beautifully wrought copper daggers and a massive and finely
-finished copper neck-collar. They have now learned to work with equal
-skill in iron. Their bracelets, rings, and ear ornaments of gold and
-silver; their copper shields and richly carved emblematic weapons, bows
-and arrows, iron daggers and war knives; as well as their wooden and
-horn dishes, spoons, masks, and toys, are eagerly sought after. The
-carvings on them, when properly explained, are of great interest; for
-every device has a meaning, and each illustrates a story or a legend,
-readily understood by the Indian, but by no means willingly interpreted
-to strangers.
-
-A knowledge of the myths of the Haidahs and other coast tribes is
-indispensable to any interpretation of their carvings; and to those,
-accordingly, Dr. Hoffman has directed his attention. “A very common
-object,” as he says, “found carved upon various household vessels,
-handles of wooden spoons, etc., is the head of a human being in the act
-of eating a toad; or, as it frequently occurs, the toad placed a short
-distance below the mouth. This refers to the evil spirit, supposed to
-live in the wooded country, who has great power of committing evil by
-means of poison, supposed to be extracted from the toad”; but, as Dr.
-Hoffman adds, it is a difficult matter to get an Indian to acknowledge
-the common belief in the mythic being, even when aware that the inquirer
-is in possession of the main facts.
-
-The interpretations thus furnished by a careful study of the carvings of
-the Haidahs and other artistic native tribes of British Columbia, and
-the evidence of a specific meaning and application discoverable in their
-most conventional designs, have a significant hearing on the study of
-analogous productions of the cave-men of Europe’s palæolithic dawn. The
-manifestations of an active imitative faculty and some degree of
-artistic skill, among different rude native tribes of this continent,
-present some striking parallels to the æsthetic aptitudes of the
-primeval draughtsmen and carvers of Europe. There are, moreover,
-undoubted resemblances in style and mode of representation of the
-objects, as depicted on some of the ancient and the modern bone and
-ivory carvings and drawings of the two continents; but the latter
-exhibit no evidence of progress. The Innuit and Eskimo designs do,
-indeed, more nearly approximate to those of the primitive draughtsmen
-than other aboriginal efforts; but their inferiority in all respects is
-equally striking and indisputable.
-
-The evidence of artistic ability in the native races both of Central and
-Southern America is abundant; nor is the northern continent lacking in
-its specially artistic race. But the achievements of the ancient Mayas,
-Peruvians, or Mound-Builders, are of very recent date, compared with the
-palæolithic, or even the neolithic productions of Europe. It need not,
-therefore, excite our wonder to find American antiquaries welcoming a
-disclosure, only too strikingly analogous to the famous mammoth drawing
-of the La Madeleine cave. There recently issued from the American press
-a tastefully printed volume, in which its author, Mr. H. C. Mercer,
-gives an account of the discovery, near Doylestown, Pennsylvania, of a
-“gorget stone” of soft shale, on which is graven what the author
-describes as “unquestionably a picture of a combat between savages and
-the hairy mammoth. The monster, angry, and with erect tail, approaches
-the forest, in which through the pine-trunks are seen the wigwams of an
-Indian village.” The sun, moon, and the forked lightning overhead,
-complete a design which could scarcely deserve serious notice, so
-palpable is the evidence of the fabrication, were it not for the
-unmistakable sincerity with which the author sets forth the narration,
-and assures us that after the most careful inquiry “nothing has occurred
-to shake his faith in the unimpeachable evidence of an honest
-discovery.”[92] The figure of the mammoth has a suspiciously near
-resemblance, in all but one respect, to the La Madeleine graving on
-mammoth ivory. It charges its assailants with lowered trunk and erect
-tail; but instead of presenting, as in the ancient cave-dweller’s
-drawing, evidence of aptitude in the free use of the pencil or graving
-tool, the scratchings on the Lenape Stone are crude and inartistic, even
-if tried by the rudest standard of Indian art. It may, perhaps, be worth
-noting that—if the design has not been purposely reversed in order to
-evade comparison with the genuine European example,—it is a left-handed
-drawing. The forgery of palæolithic implements has become a systematic
-branch of manufacture in Europe; and the “Grave Creek Stone,” the “Ohio
-Holy Stone,” and other similar productions of perverted American
-ingenuity are familiar to us. It need not, therefore, excite any special
-wonder to find a like activity in the production of fictitious examples
-of pictorial art.
-
-But North America has its own ancient artistic race, which, though
-claiming no such antiquity as that of Aquitaine, is, in the primary
-sense of the term, essentially prehistoric. Among the æsthetic
-productions of older races of the continent, the carvings and sculptures
-of the ancient Mound-Builders of Ohio not only admit of comparison with
-those of Europe’s primitive workers in bone and ivory, but even, in one
-respect, surpass them. For it is curious to observe that the palæolithic
-artists, whose carvings and drawings manifest such a capacity for
-appreciating the grace of animal form, and for reproducing with such
-truthfulness objects and scenes familiar to them in the chase, seem to
-have invariably failed, or at least shown a surprising lack of skill, in
-their attempts to delineate the human face and figure. Professor de
-Quatrefages notes of one such carving: “M. Massénat has brought from
-Laugerie Basse a fragment of reindeer’s horn, on which is graven a male
-aurochs fleeing before a man armed with a lance or javelin. The animal
-is magnificent; the man, on the contrary, is detestable, devoid alike of
-proportion and true portraiture.”[93] Some beautiful Mexican terra-cotta
-human masks have been preserved; and, amid the endless varieties of
-quaint and whimsical device in Peruvian pottery, singularly graceful
-portrait-vases occur. But, as a rule, even among the civilised Mexicans,
-imitations of the human face and figure seldom passed beyond the
-grotesque; and although the sculptors of Central America and Yucatan
-manifested an artistic power which accords with the civilisation of a
-lettered people, yet, in the majority of their statues and reliefs, the
-human form and features are subordinated to the symbolism of their
-mythology, or to mere decorative requirements. In the carvings of the
-old Mound-Builders, as in those of the vastly more ancient artists of
-palæolithic Europe, we have to deal with miniature works of art; but
-both include productions meriting the designation. The variety and
-expressiveness of many of the mound sculptures, their careful execution,
-and the evidence of imitative skill which they furnish, all combine to
-render them objects of interest. But foremost in every trait of value
-are the human heads. In view of the accuracy of many of the miniature
-sculptures of animals, it has been reasonably assumed that they
-perpetuate no less trustworthy representations of the workmen by whom
-they were carved. Equally well-executed examples of contemporary
-portraiture, recovered from palæolithic caves of Europe, would be prized
-above all other relics of its Mammoth or Reindeer period. Nevertheless,
-striking as is the character of the art of the Aligéwi, it differs only
-in degree of merit from that of many modern Indian races; and in some of
-the Algonkin stone-pipes the human figure is carved with
-well-proportioned symmetry. In such carvings, moreover, even when
-expended on the decoration of the pipe,—which was employed among so
-many native tribes in their most important ceremonial and religious
-observances,—there is rarely anything to suggest a higher aim of the
-artist than mere decoration. The same may be assumed of the ancient
-carvers, in such work as they expended on the hafts of the daggers found
-at Montastrue or Laugerie Basse. But when a carefully executed linear
-drawing occurs on a rough slab of schist, with its fractured edges left
-untrimmed, as is the case in examples from the caves of Les Eysies and
-Massat, the artist manifestly had some other purpose in view; and this I
-conceive to have been the earliest stage of ideography or
-picture-writing. He was communicating facts in detail by means of his
-pencil which his best attempts at verbal description would have failed
-to convey.
-
-Language is even now a very inadequate means of communicating to others
-specific ideas of form; and some of the most fluent lecturers in those
-departments of science, such as geology, biology, and anthropology, in
-which there is a frequent demand for the appreciation of details in form
-and structure, habitually resort to the chalk and blackboard. Students
-of my own earlier days will recall, as among their most pleasant
-memories, the facile pencil with which the gifted naturalist, Edward
-Forbes, seemed equally eloquent with hand and tongue; and no one who
-enjoyed the lucid demonstrations of Agassiz in the same fields of
-scientific research can think of him otherwise than with chalk in hand.
-To the uncultured, yet strangely gifted Troglodyte of the primeval dawn,
-language was still more inadequate for his requirements; and hence, as I
-imagine, the facile pencil was in frequent requisition for purposes of
-demonstration, with ever-growing skill to the practised hand. Professor
-de Quatrefages, who has enjoyed unusually favourable opportunities for
-the study of those productions, thus directs attention to their artistic
-merits: “The art of the draughtsman, or rather of the engraver, almost
-constantly applied to the representation of animals, was first tried on
-bone or horn. They have attempted it on stone. The burin must have been
-almost always a mere pointed flint. With this instrument, imperfect
-though it was, the Troglodytes of the Reindeer age succeeded by degrees
-in producing results altogether remarkable. The first lines are simple
-and more or less vague. At a later stage they become more defined, and
-acquire a singular firmness and precision; the principal lines become
-deeper; details, such as the fur and mane, are indicated by lighter
-lines, and even the shading is expressed by delicate hatching. But what
-is nearly always apparent is a sense of truthful realisation, and the
-exact copying of characteristics which enable us often to recognise not
-only the order, but the precise species, which the artist wished to
-represent. The bear, engraved on a piece of schist which was found by M.
-Garrigou in the lower cave at Massat, with the characteristic projecting
-forehead, can be no other than the cave-bear, the bones of which were
-recovered by that observer in the same place. When we compare the
-drawings and anatomical details of the Siberian mammoth with the
-engraving on ivory discovered by M. Lartet at La Madeleine, it is
-impossible to avoid recognising the _Elephas primigenius_ which existed
-throughout the Glacial period, and which has been recovered entire in
-the frozen soil of Northern Asia. Oxen, wild goats, the stag, the
-antelope, the otter, the beaver, the horse, the aurochs, whales, certain
-species of fish, etc., have been found recognisable with the like
-certainty. The reindeer especially is frequently represented with
-remarkable skill. This may be seen by the engraving found near
-Thayingen, in Switzerland.”[94]
-
-M. de Quatrefages is disposed to estimate the artistic merit of the
-carvings in ivory as even greater than that of the drawings or etchings.
-But specific form and contour are more easily realisable than their
-indication on a plane surface. To do full justice to the wonderful skill
-of the Troglodyte draughtsman, we must compare the most highly-finished
-paintings on Egyptian temples and tombs with the works of their
-sculptors; or even the perfect realisations of the Greek sculptors’
-chisel, with drawings on the most beautiful Hellenic vases. The mastery
-of perspective, as shown in some of the works of those palæolithic
-artists is remarkable when compared, for example, with the Assyrian
-bas-reliefs; not to speak of the infantile efforts of the Chinese on
-their otherwise justly prized ceramic ware.
-
-The potter’s art is at all times an interesting study to the
-archæologist. We owe to Etruscan and Hellenic fictile ware our sole
-knowledge of painting, contemporary with the most gifted masters of the
-sculptor’s art. But it is in the form, rather than the decoration, that
-the chief excellency of the art of the potter consists. It is one of the
-plastic arts. The clay in the hands of the skilled modeller is even more
-facile than the pencil of the draughtsman; and the distinction between
-the purely decorative sports of an exuberant fancy, and the purposed
-symbolism of the carver or painter, is nowhere more strikingly manifest
-than in the modellings of the ingenious worker in clay. But fictile art
-belongs, for the most part, to periods greatly more recent than that of
-the ancient Stone age. Not that the work of the primitive potter
-involved such laboriously accumulated skill as lay beyond reach of the
-palæolithic carver and draughtsman; for clay cylinders from the banks of
-the Euphrates, and the terra-cottas from the Nile valley, carry us back
-to times that long antedate definite history. But alike among the
-ancient cave-dwellers of Aquitaine, and the modern Eskimo, the
-prevailing conditions of an Arctic or semi-Arctic climate rendered clay,
-fuel, and other needful appliances so rarely available, that among the
-latter, their pots and lamps are fashioned for the most part of the
-_Lapis ollaris_, or potstone. But traces of the pottery of many periods
-and races abound, and furnish interesting materials for comparison. The
-aptitude of the potter’s clay for a display of skill, alike in modelling
-and in tracing on the surface imitative designs and ornamental patterns,
-renders the fictile ware of widely different eras a ready test of
-æsthetic feeling, as well as a trustworthy guide to the age and race of
-its artificers. To the ancient cave-men, to whose skill such carvings as
-the reindeer from Laugerie Basse, or Montastrue, are due, modelling in
-clay would have been as easy and natural as to the modern sculptor; and
-pottery, if well-burnt, when not exposed to violence, is little less
-durable than flint or stone. The rarity, or total absence, of pottery
-among the contents of the palæolithic caves accords with other
-indications of a rigorous climate. A piece of plain earthenware was,
-indeed, recovered from the Belgian cave of Trou de Frontal; and Sir W.
-Dawson, in his _Fossil Men_, calls attention to the discovery, recorded
-by Fournal and Christie, of fragments of pottery in the mud and breccia
-of caverns in the south of France, along with bones of man and animals,
-including those of the hyæna and rhinoceros. Those, however, whatever be
-their true epoch, are mere potsherds, valuable in so far as they
-indicate the practice of the potter’s art at such a time, but furnishing
-no illustration of skill in modelling.
-
-The pottery found in graves of the Neolithic period is mostly so
-imperfectly burned, that, however abundant it may have been, it could
-scarcely leave a trace in the breccia, or river gravel, from which the
-larger number of relics of palæolithic man have been recovered. But the
-pottery and terra-cottas which abound on the sites of Indian villages in
-North America everywhere exhibit traces of imitative art, in the efforts
-at modelling the human form, and the more or less successful
-reproduction of familiar natural objects. Squier remarks in his
-“Aboriginal Monuments of the State of New York,” that “upon the site of
-every Indian town, as also within all of the ancient enclosures,
-fragments of pottery occur in great abundance. It is rare, however, that
-any entire vessels are recovered. . . . In general there was no attempt
-at ornament; but sometimes the exteriors of the pots and vases were
-elaborately, if not tastefully, ornamented with dots and lines, which
-seem to have been formed in a very rude manner with a pointed stick or
-sharpened bone. Bones which appear to have been adapted for the purpose
-are often found.”[95] Ornamentation of a more artistic kind appears to
-have been most frequently reserved by the native workers in clay for
-their pipes, to which at times a sacred character was attached, and on
-which accordingly they lavished their highest skill as modellers and
-carvers. Some of the smaller articles of burnt clay, however, which
-Squier denominates terra-cottas, were probably fragments of domestic
-pottery similar to those hereafter described among the relics of the
-ancient Indian town of Hochelaga. One example of an ingeniously modelled
-pipe, found within an enclosure in Jefferson County, New York, is
-specially selected as a good illustration of Indian art. It is of fine
-red clay, smoothly moulded, with two serpents coiling round the bowl.
-“Bushels of fragments of pipes,” he adds, “have been found within the
-same enclosure.” A carved stone pipe, from a grave in Cayuga County, is
-described as fashioned in the form of a bird with eyes made of silver
-inserted in the head, and Mr. Squier notes of another specimen: “The
-most beautiful terra-cotta which I found in the State, and which in
-point of accuracy and delicacy of finish is unsurpassed by any similar
-article which I have seen of aboriginal origin, is the head of a fox.
-The engraving fails to convey the spirit of the original, which is
-composed of fine clay slightly burned. It seems to have been once
-attached to a body, or perhaps to a vessel of some kind. It closely
-resembles some of the terra-cottas from the mounds of the west and
-south-west. It was found upon the site of an ancient enclosure in
-Jefferson County, in the town of Ellisburg.” Again, in describing some
-similar relics from the site of an old Seneca village in Munroe County,
-he adds: “The spot is remarkable for the number and variety of its
-ancient relics. Vast quantities of these have been removed from time to
-time. Some of the miniature representations of animals found here are
-remarkable for their accuracy.”[96]
-
-The descriptions thus furnished of the traces of aboriginal art in the
-State of New York closely correspond to the remains recovered on the
-sites of ancient Indian villages in Canada. A finely modelled clay-pipe,
-with a serpent twined round it, and holding a human head in its jaws,
-now in my possession, was dug up, along with numerous other clay-pipes,
-bone pins, and other relics, in Norfolk County, on the north shore of
-Lake Erie. I also possess casts of some ingeniously modelled clay-pipes
-found a few years since in an ossuary at Lake Medad, near Watertown,
-about ten miles west from Hamilton, Ontario. This no doubt marks the
-site of an ancient town of the Attiwendaronks, or Neuter Nation, who
-were finally conquered and driven out by the Iroquois in 1635, when the
-little remnant that survived was adopted into the Seneca nation. Mr. B.
-E. Charlton, who explored the Lake Medad ossuaries, after describing the
-human remains, along with large tropical shells, shell-beads and other
-relics, adds: “With these were found antique pipes of stone and clay,
-many of them bearing extraordinary devices, figures of animals, and of
-human heads wearing the conical cap noticed on similar relics in Mexico
-and Peru.”[97] Similar discoveries rewarded the researches of Dr. Taché
-in the Huron ossuaries on the Georgian Bay, examples of which are now in
-the museum of Laval University.
-
-On the site of the famous Indian town of Hochelaga, the precursor of the
-city of Montreal, detached fragments, in well-burnt clay, including
-modellings of the human head and neck, had been repeatedly found, before
-the recovery of larger portions of the Hochelaga pottery showed that
-projections modelled in this form within the mouths of their earthern
-pots or kettles were designed to admit of their suspension over the
-fire. Any projection within the mouth of the pot would have answered the
-purpose of protecting the cord or withe from the risk of burning; so
-that the moulding of it into the human form furnishes an illustration of
-the play of the imitative faculty under circumstances little calculated
-to call it forth.
-
-The decoration of domestic pottery by the American Indian workers in
-clay is greatly developed among the more southern tribes. The
-ornamentation of a few prominent points, moulded more or less rudely
-into human or animal heads, gives place with them to the modelling of
-the vessel itself into animal forms, or to its decoration, chiefly with
-human or animal figures. Among the examples of native art in the
-National Museum at Washington are two large vases, remarkable for their
-elaborate workmanship, which were brought from Mexico, by General Alfred
-Gibbs. They are figured, along with other specimens of Mexican pottery
-and terra-cottas, in Mr. Charles Rau’s account of the Archæological
-Collection of the United States National Museum. They are there spoken
-of as “two large vases of exquisite workmanship,” and one of them is not
-only described as an admirable specimen of Mexican pottery, but it is
-added: “As far as the general outline is concerned, it might readily be
-taken for a vessel of Etruscan or Greek origin. The peculiar
-ornamentation, however, stamps it at once as a Mexican product of
-art:”[98] and, it may be added, in doing so, places it in very marked
-contrast to any example of Etruscan or Greek workmanship. Its modelling,
-both in general form and in all its curious zoomorphic details, is
-essentially barbarous, yet manifesting ingenious skill in the
-workmanship, and exuberant fancy in design. The influence of Mexican art
-extended northward; and its characteristics may be traced in much of the
-native pottery of the Southern States. But throughout Mexico, Central
-America, and the Isthmus, the modeller in clay appears to have revelled
-in feats of skill. Clay masks and caricatures, and heads of men and
-animals, in endless variety of dress and fashioning, abound. Utility is
-in many cases rendered altogether subsidiary to the sports of fancy.
-Musical instruments are made in the form of animals; and vases and
-earthenware vessels of every kind are modelled in imitation of
-vegetables, fruit, and shells, or decorated with familiar natural
-objects. This is still more apparent in Peruvian pottery, where an
-unrestrained exuberance of fancy sports with the pliant clay. Animal and
-vegetable forms are combined. Men and women are represented in their
-daily avocations, as porters, water-carriers, etc. Portrait-vases
-represent the human head, characterised at times by grace and beauty;
-but more frequently grotesquely caricatured. The human head surmounts
-the lithe body of the monkey, sporting in ape-like antics; melons and
-gourds have animal heads for spouts; while the duck, parrot, toucan,
-pelican, turkey, crane, land-turtle, lynx, otter, deer, llama, cayman,
-shark, toad, etc., are ingeniously reproduced, singly or in groups, as
-models for bottles, jars, or pitchers. The double or triple goblets, and
-two-necked bottles or jugs, acquire a fresh interest from resemblances
-traceable between some of them and others belonging to distant
-localities and remote ages. The Fijians, on the extreme western verge of
-the Polynesian archipelago, have already been referred to for their
-skill in the finished workmanship of their implements, and of their
-pottery, some of which suggest curious analogies to Peruvian types. But
-it is more interesting to note the apparent reproduction of Egyptian,
-Etruscan, and other antique forms in Peruvian fictile ware; and to
-recognise on the latter the Vitruvian scroll, the Grecian fret and other
-ancient classic and Assyrian patterns—not as evidence of common origin,
-but as originating independently from the ornamentation naturally
-produced in the work of the straw-plaiter and weaver. Still more curious
-are their analogies to ancient Asiatic art, as disclosed in a comparison
-with many of the objects recovered by Dr. Schliemann on Homeric sites.
-Among the relics which rewarded his exploration of the site of the
-classic Ilios, are examples of double-necked jugs, terra-cotta groups of
-goblets united as single vessels, along with others terminating with
-mouthpieces in the forms of human or animal heads; or modelled with such
-quaint ingenuity to represent the hippopotamus, horse, pig, hedgehog,
-mole, and other animals, that, were it not for the strange fauna
-selected for imitation, they would seem little out of place in any
-collection of Peruvian pottery.
-
-The same exuberant sportiveness of the imitative faculty, so
-characteristic of the races of the New World, reappears in productions
-of the native metallurgists of Mexico and Central America. Casting,
-engraving, chasing, and carving in metal, were all practised by the
-Mexicans with a lavish expenditure of misspent labour. Ingenious toys,
-birds and beasts with moveable wings and limbs, fish with alternate
-scales of gold and silver, and personal ornaments in many fanciful
-forms, were wrought by the Mexican goldsmiths with such skill that the
-Spaniards acknowledged the superiority of the native workmanship over
-any product of European art. The ancient graves of the Isthmus of Panama
-have yielded immense numbers of gold relics of the same class, though
-inferior to the finest examples described above. They include beasts,
-birds, and fishes, frogs and other natural objects, wrought in gold with
-much skill and ingenuity. The frog is made with sockets for the eyes, an
-oval slit in front, and within each a detached ball of gold, executed
-apparently in a single casting. Balls of clay are also frequently found
-enclosed in detached chambers in the pottery of the Isthmus. Human
-figures wrought in gold, and monstrous or grotesque hybrids, with the
-head of the cayman, eagle, vulture, and other animals, attached to the
-human form, are also of frequent occurrence; though in this class of
-works the modelling of the human form is generally inferior to that of
-other animate designs. All of those curious relics are found in graves,
-which, judging from the condition of the human remains, are of great
-antiquity; if, indeed, they do not point to the central cradle and
-common source of Aztec and Peruvian art.
-
-It is thus apparent that the imitative faculty, which manifests itself
-in very different degrees among diverse races, was widely diffused
-throughout the native tribes of the American continent. But, while a
-certain aptitude for art is seen to be prevalent among some of the
-rudest tribes, there were, no doubt, among all of them exceptional
-examples of artistic ability. There were the Jossakeeds and the Wabenos,
-skilled in picturing on bark and deer-skin; and the official annalists
-or “Wampum-keepers,” who perpetuated the national traditions. Among the
-arrow-makers were some famed for their dexterity in fashioning the
-hornstone or jasper into arrow heads; and, while the art of the potter
-proved no less easy to female hands than that of the baker, there were,
-doubtless, among them some few rarely-gifted modellers, whose skill in
-fashioning clay into favourite forms of imitative art won them a name
-among the ceramic artists of their tribe. Pabahmesad, the old Chippewa,
-of the Great Manitoulin Island, in Lake Huron, famed for his skill in
-pipe carving, has been referred to in illustrating the trade and
-manufacture of the Stone age.
-
-The little remnant of the once-powerful Huron race now settled on the
-river St. Charles, near Quebec, expend their ingenious art on the
-manufacture of bark canoes, snow-shoes, la-crosse clubs, basket-work,
-and moccasins. In this they show much skill and dexterity; but among
-their most adroit workers in recent years was Zacharee Thelariolin, who
-claimed to be the last full-blood Indian belonging to the band. He
-manifested considerable ability as an artist, had an apt faculty for
-sketching from nature, and painted successfully in oil. A portrait of
-himself, in full Indian costume, now in the possession of Mr. Clint of
-Quebec, is a relic of much interest as the work of an untaught native
-Indian, in whom the hereditary imitative faculty thus manifested itself
-under circumstances little calculated to favour its development. He was
-sixty-six years of age when he executed this portrait. Had it been his
-fortune to attract the attention of some appreciative patron in early
-years he might have made a name for himself and his people.
-
-Another curious and exceptional example of native artistic ability may
-be noted here. The studio of Edmonia Lewis, the sculptor, has long been
-known to tourists visiting Rome. Her history is a curious one. Her
-father was a Negro, and her mother a Chippewa Indian. She was born at
-Greenbush, on the Hudson river, and reared among the Indians till the
-age of fourteen, both of her parents having died in her childhood. Her
-Indian name was _Suhkuhegarequa_, or Wildfire; but she changed it to
-that by which she is now known on being admitted to the Moravian school
-at Oberlin, Ohio. After three years schooling she went to Boston, where,
-it is said, the sight of the fine statue of Franklin awoke in her the
-ambition to be a sculptor. She sought out William Lloyd Garrison, and in
-simple directness told him she wanted to do something like the statue of
-the printer-statesman. The great abolitionist befriended her. She
-received needful training in a local studio, started an _atelier_ of her
-own, and when I saw her in Boston, in 1864, she was modelling a
-life-size statue emblematic of the emancipation of the race to which
-she, in part, belonged. Africa was impersonated, raising herself from a
-prostrate attitude, and, with her hand shading her eyes, was looking at
-the dawn. Soon after the sculptor went to Rome, and she has there
-executed works of considerable merit. Her most successful productions
-may be assumed to reflect the artistic aptitudes of her mother’s race.
-Her two best works in marble are “Hiawatha’s Wooing” and “Hiawatha’s
-Wedding.” A Boston critic, in reviewing her works, says: “She has always
-had remarkable power of manipulation, beginning with beads and wampum,
-and rising to clay. She has fine artistic feeling and talent, a sort of
-instinct for form and beauty demanding outward expression.”
-
-The wide diffusion of this imitative faculty and feeling for form was no
-doubt stimulated by its employment for representative and symbolic
-purposes. The relation of imitative drawing to written language is
-equally manifest in the graven records of the Nile valley and the
-analogous inscriptions of Yucatan or Peru. Quipus, wampum, and all other
-mnemonic systems, dependent on the transmission of images and ideas from
-one generation to another, literally, by word of mouth, have within
-themselves no such germ of higher development as the picture-writing or
-sculpturing of the early Egyptians, from which all the alphabets of
-Europe have been evolved. The phonetic signs, inherited by us directly
-from the Romans, seem so simple, and yet are of such priceless value in
-their application, that it seems natural to think of the letters of
-Cadmus as a gift not less wonderful than speech; since, by their
-instrumentality, the wise of all ages speak to us still. Plutarch tells,
-in his _De Iside et Osiride_, that when Thoth, the god of letters, first
-appeared on the earth, the inhabitants of Egypt had no language, but
-only uttered the cries of animals. They had, at least, no language with
-which to speak to other generations; nor any common speech to supersede
-the confusion of tongues which characterised their great river valley,
-bordering on Asia, and forming the highway from Ethiopia to the
-Mediterranean Sea. The light thrown for us on the climate, the fauna,
-the people, and the whole social life of Europe’s Palæolithic era, by a
-few graphic delineations of its primitive artists, suffices to show how
-the northern Thoth may have manifested his advent among them.
-
-The condition of the Indian tribes in the North-West, in British
-Columbia, and in the territories of the United States, abundantly
-illustrates the effect of a multiplicity of languages among nomad
-savages. The Blackfeet are in reality a political and not an ethnical
-confederation, with at least three distinct languages, and numerous
-dialects spoken among their dispersed tribes. The same condition is
-found among the Kiawakaskaia Indians, beyond the Rocky Mountains. In the
-confluence of the nomad hunters to common centres of trade, speech
-accordingly fails them for all purposes of intercommunication; and
-travellers and fur-traders have long been familiar with the growth of a
-common language at more than one of the chief meeting-places of diverse
-tribes and races on the Pacific coast. The Clatsop, in so far as it is
-native, is a dialect of the Cowlitz language; but, as now in use, it is
-one of the jargons or “trade languages” of the Pacific. But Fort
-Vancouver, long one of the largest trading-posts of the Hudson Bay
-Company, has been the special Babel where, out of the strangest
-confusion of tongues, a new language has been evolved.
-
-The organisation of part of the territory west of the Rocky Mountains
-into the province of British Columbia is rapidly modifying the character
-of its native population. But in recent years there were frequently to
-be found at Fort Vancouver upwards of two hundred _voyageurs_ with their
-Indian wives and families, in addition to the factors and clerks.
-Thither also resorted for trading purposes, Chinook, Nootka, Nisqually,
-Walla-walla, Klikatat, Kalapurgas, Klackamuss, Cowlitz, and other
-Indians. A discordant Babel of languages accordingly prevailed; and
-hence the growth of a _patois_ by which all could hold intercourse
-together. The principal native tribe of the locality is the Chinook, a
-branch of the Flathead Indians on the Columbia river. They speak a
-language rivalling that of the Hottentots in its seemingly inarticulate
-character. Some of its sounds, according to Dr. Charles Pickering, could
-scarcely be represented by any combination of known letters; and Paul
-Kane, who travelled as an artist among them, described it to me as
-consisting of harsh spluttering sounds proceeding from the throat,
-apparently unguided either by the tongue or lips. This language
-accordingly repelled every attempt at its mastery by others. The Cree is
-the native language most familiar to the traders, many of their wives
-being Cree women. Both French and English are spoken among themselves;
-while, in addition to the tribes already named, natives of the Sandwich
-Islands, Chinese, and other foreigners, add to the strange character and
-speech of this miscellaneous community. Out of all those elements the
-“Chinook jargon” or trade-language of the locality has fashioned itself.
-
-Vocabularies of the Oregon or Chinook jargon have been repeatedly
-published since 1838, when the Rev. Samuel Parker made the first attempt
-to reduce it to writing. But it is necessarily in an unstable condition,
-with local variations and a changing vocabulary. The latest _Dictionary
-of the Chinook Jargon, or Trade Language of Oregon_, is that of Mr.
-George Gibbs, published by the Smithsonian Institution in 1863, and
-includes nearly five hundred words. When studied in all its bearings, it
-is a singularly interesting example of the effort at the development of
-a means of intercommunication among such a strange gathering of
-heterogeneous races. In an analysis of the various sources of its
-vocabulary, Mr. Gibbs assigns about two-fifths of the words to the
-Chinook and Clatsop languages. But in this he includes one of the most
-characteristic elements of the jargon. The representatives of so many
-widely dissimilar peoples, in their efforts at mutual communication,
-naturally resorted to diverse forms of imitation; foremost among which
-was onomatopœia. There are such mimetic words as _he-he_, “laughter”;
-_hoh-hoh_, “to cough”; _tish-tish_, “to drive”; _lip-lip_, “to boil”;
-_poh_, “to blow out”; _tik-tik_, “a watch”; _tin-lin_ or _ting-ling_, “a
-bell”; _tum-tum_, “the heart,” from its pulsation; and hence a number of
-modifications in which the heart is used as equivalent to mind or will,
-etc. Again, varying intonations are resorted to in order to express
-different shades of meaning, as _sey-yaw_, “far off,” in which the first
-syllable is lengthened out according to the idea of greater or less
-distance indicated. Many of their words, as in all interjectional
-utterances, depend for their specific meaning on the intonations of the
-speaker. Such utterances play so small a part in our own speech, that we
-are apt to overlook the force of the interrogative, affirmative, and
-negative tones, and even the change of meaning that is often produced by
-the transfer of emphasis from one to another word.[99] But with such an
-imperfect means of intercommunication as the trade jargon, there is a
-constant motive not only to help out the meaning by expressive
-intonation, but also by signs or gesture-language. “A horse” for
-example, is _kuatan_; but “riding” or “on horseback” is expressed by
-accompanying the word with the gesture of two fingers placed astride
-over the other hand. _Tenas_ is “little” or “a child,”—in the latter
-case, accompanied by the gesture suggestive of its size,—or it may mean
-“an infant,” by the first syllable being prolonged to indicate that it
-is very small. In addition to all this, words are borrowed from all
-sources; and the miscellaneous vocabulary is completed from English,
-French, Cree, Ojibway, Nootka, Chihalis, Nisqually, Kalapuy, and other
-tongues.
-
-The late Paul Kane is my authority for some of the details of intonation
-and gesture-language. He brought back with him a valuable collection of
-studies of the different races in British North America; and, by means
-of the jargon, he learned in a short time to converse without difficulty
-with the chiefs of most of the tribes around Fort Vancouver. But as an
-artist he was in constant use of his pencil; and, as he told me, he
-frequently appealed to it, sketching himself, or at times putting his
-pencil and note-book into their hands, with considerable success in thus
-supplementing less definite signs. The gesture-language furnishes
-Cheyenne, Dakota, Apache, and other signs for “paint, colour, draw,” and
-“write”; the act of writing or drawing being expressed by holding up the
-palm of one hand and moving the forefinger of the other over it, as if
-drawing. The jargon has also its word _pent_, “paint,” transformed to a
-verb by prefixing the word _mamook_, “to do, to make”; and its _tzum_,
-“painting,” or “mixed colours”; _mamooktzum_, “to paint.” In the
-gesture-language of the Dakotas and Apaches the equivalent sign is
-primarily indicative of daubing the face with colour; but the tribes of
-the Pacific coast paint their masks, boats, and houses in diverse
-coloured devices, with some degree of taste. There is, therefore, reason
-to look for terms expressive of the art in any language in use among
-them; though the habitual employment of signs may in some cases check
-the evolution of phonetic equivalents. But among many tribes
-gesture-language has been systematised into universally recognised
-pictographs, and so developed into a native system of hieroglyphics.
-
-Among the Algonkin, Lenape, Iroquois, and other northern tribes, and in
-the region comprising New Mexico, Arizona, Colorado, and other
-south-western territory, rock-carvings and pictographs abound. Wherever
-large surfaces of rock, or slabs of stone, offer a favourable
-opportunity for such records, they are found, at times executed with
-great elaboration of detail. But less durable records are in use,
-dependent on the materials most available to the scribe. The Algonkins
-and Iroquois ordinarily resort to birch-bark; the Crees, Blackfeet, and
-other prairie Indians, substitute the dressed skins of the buffalo;
-while, as already noted, the tribes on the Pacific coast, as well as the
-Innuit and Eskimo, employ deerhorn and ivory. In the South-West, in the
-Sierra Nevada and Southern California, the sculptured pictograph, after
-being incised on the surface of a rock, or the wall of a cave, is
-frequently finished by colouring in much the same way as was the custom
-with the ancient Egyptian chroniclers.
-
-Among a series of reports to the Topographical Bureau, issued from the
-War Department at Washington, in 1850, is the journal of a military
-reconnaissance from Santa Fé, New Mexico, to the Navajo Country, by
-Lieutenant James K. Simpson of the Corps of Topographical Engineers. His
-narrative is accompanied with a map and illustrations of a remarkable
-series of inscriptions, engraved on the smooth surface of a rock called
-the Moro. They are of two classes, the native pictographs, and also
-numerous Spanish inscriptions and devices; one of which records the
-hasty visit of an old Spanish explorer to the Moro Rock in 1606. The
-route of Lieutenant Simpson lay up the valley of the Rio de Zuñi, where
-he met an old trader among the Navajos, who was waiting to offer his
-services as guide to a rock, upon the face of which were, according to
-his repeated assertions, “half an acre of inscriptions.” After
-travelling about eight miles, through a country diversified by cliffs of
-basalt and red and white sandstone, in every variety of bold and
-fantastic form, they came in sight of a quadrangular mass of white
-sandstone rock, from 200 feet to 250 feet in height. This was the Moro,
-or Inscription Rock, on ascending a low mound at the base of which, the
-journalist states, “sure enough here were inscriptions, and some of them
-very beautiful; and although, with those we afterwards examined on the
-south face of the rock, there could not be said to be half an acre of
-them, yet the hyperbole was not near so extravagant as I was prepared to
-find it.” The inscriptions, some in Spanish, and others in, Latin,
-apparently include examples nearly coeval with the conquest of this
-region, by Juan de Onate, in 1595; and from their historical interest
-they naturally received greater attention from the Topographical Corps
-than the Indian hieroglyphics. But the same locality was visited at a
-later date by surveyors appointed to ascertain the most practicable
-route for a railroad to the Pacific coast; and in a Report of
-explorations and surveys, published by the Senate of the United States
-in 1856, Lieutenant Whipple furnishes an interesting series of Indian
-hieroglyphics or pictographs seen on his route. “The first of the Indian
-hieroglyphics,” he remarks, “were at Rocky Dell Creek, between the edge
-of the Llano Estacado and the Canadian. The stream flows through a
-gorge, upon one side of which a shelving sandstone rock forms a sort of
-cave. The roof is covered with paintings, some evidently ancient; and
-beneath are innumerable carvings of footprints, animals, and symmetrical
-lines.”[100] Examples of these are given; but of one series, the
-sketches of which had been lost, Lieutenant Whipple remarks: “This
-series, more than the others, seems to represent a chain of historical
-events, being embraced by serpentine lines. First is a rude sketch,
-resembling a ship with sails; then comes a horse with gay trappings, a
-man with a long speaking-trumpet being mounted upon him, while a little
-bare-legged Indian stands in wonder behind. Below this group are several
-singular-looking figures: men with the horns of an ox, with arms, hands,
-and fingers extended as if in astonishment, and with clawed feet.
-Following the curved line we come to the circle, enclosing a Spanish
-caballero, who extends his hands in amity to the naked Indian standing
-without. Next appears a group with an officer, and a priest bearing the
-emblem of Christianity.” The Pueblo Indians, who still worship the sun,
-recognised in those picturings records of the thoughts and deeds of
-their ancestors. They pointed to representations of Montezuma, whom they
-still expect to return, and who is regarded as a divine power; and
-recognised in the horned men a representation of the buffalo-dance, from
-time immemorial a national festival, at which they crowned themselves
-with horns and corn-shucks. The drawing is in all probability an
-historical record executed at a date not long subsequent to the first
-intrusion of the Spaniards.
-
-Lieutenant Whipple next describes the carvings found at El Moro
-inscription rock where, he says, “Spanish adventurers and explorers,
-from as early a period as the first settlement of Plymouth, have been in
-the habit of recording their expeditions to and from Zuñi.” He refers
-for those to Captain Simpson’s report upon the Navajo expedition; but
-specimens of the Indian drawings are given, which, he says, “are
-evidently more ancient than the oldest of the Spanish
-inscriptions.”[101] The latter are, for the most part, regular literal
-records in the Spanish or Latin language, with names, and, in a few
-instances, the date of their engraving. But the European epigraphists
-appear at times to have borrowed the ideographic art of their Indian
-guides, from the way several of their inscriptions are accompanied with
-pictorial devices, or rebuses, somewhat after the native fashion of
-writing. One, for example, which reads _Pito Vaca ye Jarde_, has also
-the symbol of the _Vaca_, or “cow.” Another group, consisting of certain
-initials interwoven into a monogram, accompanied by an open hand with a
-double thumb, all enclosed in cartouche-fashion, is supposed by the
-transcriber to be, even more than the previous bit of pictorial
-symbolism, a pictured pun. “The characters,” he remarks, “in the double
-rectangle seem to be literally a sign-_manual_, and may possibly be
-symbolical of Francisco Manuel, though the double thumb would seem to
-indicate something more.” The Provincial Secretary, Donaciano Vigil,
-after noting for Lieutenant Simpson some data relative to the Spanish
-inscriptions, adds: “The other signs or characters are traditional
-remembrances, by means of which the Indians transmit historical accounts
-of all their remarkable successes. To discover (or interpret) these sets
-by themselves, is very difficult. Some of the Indians make trifling
-indications, which divulge, with a great deal of reserve, something of
-the history, to persons in whom they have entire confidence.”
-
-On the summit of the cliff the ruins of a pueblo of bold native masonry
-formed a rectangle of 206 feet by 307 feet, around which lay an immense
-accumulation of broken pottery of novel and curious patterns. At Los
-Ojos Calientes, Lieutenant Simpson visited the _estuffas_, buildings one
-story high, called the churches of Montezuma. “On the walls were
-representations of plants, birds, and animals; the turkey, the deer, the
-wolf, the fox, and the dog, being plainly depicted; none of them,
-however, approaching to exactness except the deer, the outline of which
-showed certainly a good eye for proportion.” These are the work of the
-Jemez Indians, who worshipped the sun, moon, and fire; representations
-of which in circular form, and with zigzag barbed lines for lightning,
-also occur on the walls.[102] Lieutenant Simpson remarks that he asked a
-Jemez Indian “Whether they still worshipped the Sun, as God, with
-contrition of heart.” His reply was: “Why not? He governs the World!”
-
-Dr. Hoffman figures and interprets a curious rock-painting, copied by
-him from a granite boulder at Tulare river, California. It covers an
-area of about twelve feet by eight; and the largest figure is about six
-feet in length, and appears to be the work of an advanced party of
-native explorers, intended for the guidance of those who followed on
-their trail.[103] Dr. Hoffman also furnishes some interesting
-illustrations of the reproduction of gesture-language in native
-pictographs preserved in the Museum of San Francisco. Certain symbols
-are in very general use. But the description of an Innuit drawing on a
-slat of wood, as interpreted by a native, partly in his own dialect, but
-largely supplemented by gestures, will best illustrate this development
-of a system of picture-writing among a savage people. A human figure
-directs his right hand to his own side, while, with his left, he points
-away from him. This is the _Ego_, the personal pronoun _I_. Again, a
-simple tracing of the like figure, successively with a boat-paddle over
-his head; his right hand to the side of his head; one finger elevated;
-his hand stretched out in the direction indicated, with his harpoon, or
-his bow and arrow, expresses his various actions. A spot enclosed in a
-circle, and again a blank circle, mark the islands—inhabited or
-uninhabited,—to which he is bound. A canoe, with two persons in it,
-defines the number going and the mode of transport; a phoca, or other
-animal, indicates the prey; and the record closes with an outline of the
-house, or tent, towards which the canoe is directed. The whole is
-equivalent to a written memorandum left behind, to inform the members of
-his family that he has gone in his boat to a particular island, where he
-will pass the night,—the right hand to the side of the head being a
-symbol of sleep. From thence he will proceed to another island, where he
-purposes to catch a seal or sea-lion, and then he will return home. It
-is in no degree surprising to find that nearly the same symbols are in
-use by widely different tribes; for, alike in their pictographs and
-gestures, they naturally aim at the most familiar and literal
-representations. The Eskimo and Alaskans represent death, in their
-drawings and bone carvings, by the symbol of a headless body, in nearly
-the same way as the Iroquois, the Algonkins, and the Blackfeet. To this
-is added the spear, the bow and arrow, or the gun, to indicate the mode
-of death by violence. The ordinary symbol of sepulchral memorial is the
-reversing of the totem and other objects pictured on the grave-post. A
-succession of lines in rows or columns is the simplest mode of primitive
-numeration, perpetuated among the Egyptians even so late as the
-Ptolemaic dynasty. It appears to have been in use among the cave-men of
-the Vézère in palæolithic times, and is common to all such records. But
-in the Eskimo and Indian pictographs the elevated hand, with one or more
-fingers extended, serves for numeration; and where the extended fingers
-and thumbs of both hands are represented on an exaggerated scale, it
-signifies _multitude_. The native gestures, drawings, and spoken
-languages, have indeed to be studied together to understand fully the
-processes resorted to for the expression and interchange of ideas.
-
-To the philologist, the efforts at supplying equivalent terms for
-objects and ideas common to the many diverse races furnish a study full
-of interest. A Chinook or Clatsop word modified to _saghalie_,
-signifying “above,” or “high,” is compounded with the Nootka _tyee_, as
-the name of the High Chief, or God. _Elip_, a Chihalis word, signifies
-“first,” or “before”; _tilikum_, Chinook, is “people, a tribe,” or
-“band”; but the two words conjoined, _elip-tilikum_, lit. “the first
-people,” is employed in reference to a race of beings who preceded the
-Indians as inhabitants of the world, just as we speak of the
-Antediluvians. _Ipsoot_ is the Chinook word for “to hide,” _ipsoot
-wau-wau_ is “to hide one’s speech,” _i.e._ “to whisper.” Or, again,
-_opitsah_ is a modification of the Chinook for “a knife”;
-_opitsah-yakka-sikha_, literally, “the knife’s friend,” is “a fork.” The
-same word is also applied to a sweetheart. Such economic use of words is
-indeed by no means rare. But this branch of the subject lies apart from
-the aim of the present paper. It may be noted, however, in passing, that
-many of the jargon words, according to Mr. Gibbs, “have been adopted
-into ordinary conversation in Oregon, and threaten to become permanently
-incorporated as a local addition to the English.” Mr. Horatio Hale, long
-ago, stated as a result of his own observations, at an earlier date:
-“There are Canadians and half-breeds married to Chinook women, who can
-only converse with their wives in this speech; and it is the fact,
-strange as it may seem, that many young children are growing up to whom
-this factitious language is really the mother-tongue, and who speak it
-with more readiness and perfection than any other.”[104] As to grammar,
-the jargon has no more than the inevitable rudiments involved in the
-necessity for expressing in some way ideas relating to time and number;
-and in these directions there is frequent resort to signs. But this,
-which accords with the first stage of picture-writing, is true of the
-speech of many Indian tribes. Their gesture-language is being reduced to
-the equivalent of a vocabulary, and is much more copious than that of
-the Oregon jargon. In 1880 the United States Bureau of Ethnology issued
-“A Collection of the gesture-signs and signals of the North American
-Indians”; and although this was only designed as a preliminary step
-towards the complete elucidation of the subject, it suffices to show how
-important a part signs and gestures play in the dialogue of many rude
-tribes. The Arapahoes, for example, according to Burton, “possess a very
-scanty vocabulary, and can hardly converse with one another in the dark.
-To make a stranger understand them they must always repair to the
-camp-fire for pow-wow.”[105] We are not without some due appreciation,
-even now, of the eloquence of action, as well as of speech, in the
-effective orator; and Charles Lamb, in one of the _Essays of Elia_,
-aptly reminds us how much even ordinary dialogue owes to expression for
-its full effect. Candle-light, “our peculiar and household planet,” is
-the theme of the quaint humorist. “Wanting it,” he says, “what savage
-unsocial nights must our ancestors have spent, wintering in caves and
-unillumined fastnesses! . . . What repartees could have passed, when you
-must have felt about for a smile, and handled a neighbour’s cheek to be
-sure that he understood it?” And so the grave humorist goes on to
-picture the privations of a supper party in “those unlanterned nights.”
-
-But the Indian, in many cases, resorts to the pencil, or its equivalent,
-for the elucidation of subjects in which language fails him. He will
-take a burnt stick and draw a map indicating the route that has to be
-taken, the portages on a river, or the trail through the forest, after
-he has failed by signs and gestures to convey his meaning; and he can
-interpret with ease the drawings of Indians of other tribes. When
-camping out on the Nepigon River in 1866, with Indian guides from the
-Saskatchewan, who were strangers to the locality, they interpreted the
-drawings or carvings on a soft metamorphic rock overlaid by the syenite
-of that district; and were able thereby to tell us who had preceded
-them, and to determine the route we should take. Lieutenant Whipple in
-the narration of his route near the thirty-fifth parallel, remarks:
-“Near the Llano Extacado were seen Pueblo Indians from San Domingo.
-After an introductory smoke they became quite communicative, furnishing
-curious information as to their traditions and peculiar faith. When
-questioned regarding the numbers and positions of the Pueblos in New
-Mexico, they rudely traced upon the ground a sketch from which a map of
-the country is reproduced in the Government Reports.”[106] The Rev. Dr.
-O’Meara, for many years a missionary among the Ojibway Indians of Lake
-Superior, thus writes to me: “The Indians were always pictorial, even in
-common conversation, _i.e._ they liked to explain what they meant by
-making figures; and always, if you asked one of them for information as
-to the route to any place, he would make a rough map of it, either on
-the sand or on a piece of birch-bark.” This fully accords with my own
-experience. I have repeatedly seen Indian guides take a piece of
-birch-bark and indicate on it some idea otherwise inexpressible from our
-ignorance of any common language. Their map-making must be familiar to
-all who have travelled much with Indian guides. They delineate with much
-accuracy the leading geographical features of any familiar locality. I
-have in my note-books sketches made by Indians, when I have placed the
-pencil in their hand, and indicated by signs some information I desired
-to obtain, about game, fishing, or other matters familiar to them; or
-about their own tribal relationships, which they generally express in
-totemic fashion by their symbolic bear, deer, beaver, eagle, turtle, or
-other animal. Such signs of the clan, tribe, or nation are familiar to
-every Indian, as well as the ideographs of his own and others’ names;
-and when represented on the roll of birch-bark, painted on the chiefs
-buffalo robe, or inverted on his grave-post, they can be interpreted
-with the same facility with which an heraldic student discerns the
-family history on the painted hatchment or the sculptured shields of
-some noble mausoleum.
-
-By an alphabet, strictly so called, we understand a series of symbols
-which have become the conventional equivalents to the eye of the sounds
-which combine to form the speech of a people. But _alpha_, _beta_, etc.,
-were undoubtedly, in their first stage, pictures, and not arbitrary
-signs; though they passed undesignedly into the demotic characters of
-the Egyptian current hand, and were then transformed, from ideographic
-and syllabic characters, into the true phonetics out of which have come
-the later alphabets of the civilised world. Egypt is justly credited
-with the origination of a system of writing which lies at the foundation
-of all our inherited knowledge, and which, as Bacon says, “makes ages so
-distant to participate of the wisdom, illuminations and inventions, the
-one of the other.” Yet the germ of all this lay in the graphic records
-of the palæolithic cave-men; and the very same process of evolution from
-pure pictorial representation to picture-writing or ideography, and so
-to arbitrary hieroglyphic signs, or word-writing, is seen in the graven
-records of Copan or Palenque, and on the ancient monuments of the Nile.
-
-It is replete with interest thus to turn aside from the Old World, with
-all its wealth of intellectual progress associated with the letters of
-Cadmus, and find that in the western hemisphere the human mind has
-followed the very same path in its struggle towards the light.
-Longfellow, in his “Song of Hiawatha,” has interwoven Algonkin and
-Iroquois legends into a national epic, in which the elements of Indian
-progress are all traced to this mythic benefactor, subsequently
-identified by Mr. Horatio Hale, in his _Book of Iroquois Rites_, with a
-wise Onondaga chief of the fifteenth century. But, tracing in legendary
-fashion the early steps of Indian progress, the poet represents the
-mythic reformer mourning how all things perish and pass into oblivion.
-Even the great achievements and the traditions of their people fade away
-from the memory of the old men. And so he inaugurates the method of
-recording events, which in reality we recognise as the natural product
-of the human mind in the exercise of that imitative faculty which the
-discoveries of comparatively recent years have revealed to us as in full
-activity among the men of Europe’s remote Post-Glacial era. With his
-paints of diverse colours he depicts on the smooth birch-bark simple
-figures and symbols, such as are to be seen graven on hundreds of rocks
-throughout the North American continent, and are in constant use by the
-Indian in chronicling his own deeds on his buffalo robe, or recording
-those of the deceased chief on his grave-post. The result is a simple
-process of picture-writing, readily translatable, with nearly equal
-facility, into the language of every tribe. Deeds of daring against
-Indians or white men are set forth by the native chronicler, and the
-rivals are clearly indicated by means of their characteristic costume
-and weapons. Headless figures are the symbols of the dead; scalps
-represent his own special victims; and in like manner incidents of the
-chase, or feats against the buffalo or grizzly bear, are recorded in
-graphic picturings, which are as intelligible as any monumental
-inscription of ancient or modern times. The description in Longfellow’s
-Indian epic of the celestial and terrestrial symbols, in actual use as
-Algonkin and other aboriginal hieroglyphics, would answer, with slight
-modification, for those still to be seen on the walls of Egyptian
-temples and catacombs:—
-
- For the earth he drew a straight line,
- For the sky a bow above it;
- White the span between for day-time,
- Filled with little stars for night-time;
- On the left a point for sunrise,
- On the right a point for sunset,
- On the top a point for noontide;
- And for rain and cloudy weather
- Waving lines descending from it.
-
-The picture-writing of the Aztecs, though greatly improved in execution,
-and simplified by abbreviations, was the same in principle as that of
-the rude northern tribes. The recognised signs of the months and days of
-their calendar are not greatly in advance of Indian symbolism; while
-some of their pictorial records are as definite pieces of literal
-representation as the battle of the reindeer from the Dordogne cave, or
-the peaceful grazing scene recovered from a Swiss grotto near Thayingen.
-One example of such a pictorial chronicling of an important event has
-been repeatedly described, and aptly illustrates its practical
-application. When Cortez held his first interview with the emissaries of
-Montezuma, one of the attendants of Teuhtlile, the chief Aztec noble,
-was observed sketching the novel visitors, their peculiar costumes and
-arms, their horses and ships; and by such means a report of all that
-pertained to the strange invaders of his dominion was transmitted to the
-Aztec sovereign. The skill with which every object was delineated
-excited the admiration of the Spaniards. But however superior this may
-have been as a piece of art, it was manifestly no advance on the
-principle of Indian picture-writing; nor can we be in much doubt as to
-its style of execution, since Lord Kingsborough’s elaborate work
-furnishes many facsimiles of nearly contemporary Mexican drawings. In
-the majority of these, the totemic symbols, and the representations of
-individuals by means of their animal or other cognomens, are abundantly
-apparent. The specific aim of the artist has to be kept in view. The
-figures are for the most part grotesque, from the necessity of giving
-predominance to the special feature in which the symbol is embodied. To
-the generation for which such were produced, the connection between the
-sign, and the person or thing signified, would be manifest; and as a
-mnemonic aid, supplemented by verbal descriptions of the trained
-official registrars, the record would be ample. But a brief interval
-suffices to render such abbreviated symbols obscure, if not wholly
-unintelligible; and within less than a century after the Conquest, De
-Alva could not find more than two surviving Mexicans, both very aged,
-who were able to interpret the native pictorial records. Nevertheless a
-system of picture-writing, originating among the rude forest tribes with
-the simple employment of the imitative faculty in the representation of
-familiar objects, with their associated ideas, had advanced on this
-continent to the very same stage from which, in ancient Egypt, the next
-step was taken, resulting in the evolution of a phonetic alphabet, and
-so of all that is implied in letters in the largest sense.
-
-To this grand aim of ideography, or an equivalent of written speech,
-may, as it appears to me, be traced the earliest efforts at drawing and
-painting, reaching back to that strange dawn of intellectual vigour
-revealed to us in the graphic art of the men of Europe’s Palæolithic
-age. The same effort at written speech underlies all the manifestations
-of the artistic faculty, common alike to the semi-civilised and to the
-barbarous native races of this continent; and in the terms by which they
-express the graphic art in their various dialects, the common
-significance of drawing and writing is generally apparent. But the
-æsthetic faculty was thus stimulated into activity with results which
-tended to develop art in all its forms of carving, modelling, sculpture,
-and painting. An appreciation of colour, not merely for personal
-adornment, but in its artistic application—alike as a decorative art,
-and as the means whereby natural objects can be presented with vivid
-truthfulness to the eye,—is widely diffused; though the mastery of form
-by the modeller or sculptor long precedes that of chiaroscuro, or aerial
-perspective. Aboriginal painting is crude, consisting mainly of colour
-without tone or shading, even where the drawing is correct. But paints
-and dyes, both of mineral and vegetable origin, are largely in use by
-many Indian tribes. The Eskimo execute tasteful patterns on their skin
-robes in diverse colours; and the northern tribes both to the east and
-west of the Rocky Mountains dye porcupine quills and grasses, and with
-them work ornamental patterns on their dresses and in basket-work. The
-pottery of the Pueblo Indians is elaborately decorated in colours; and
-in various other ways—as in the colouring of their masks, and the
-painting of their boats and houses, by the Indians of Oregon and British
-Columbia,—the native taste for colour is manifested. Mr. Hugh Martin,
-in a communication of an early date to the American Philosophical
-Society, gives an account of the principal dyes employed by the North
-American Indians.[107] The Shawnees obtained a vegetable red, which they
-called _hau-ta-the-caugh_, from the root of a marsh plant, and largely
-used it in dyeing wool, porcupine quills, and the white hair of deers’
-tails. From another root, the _Radix_ _flava_, a bright yellow was
-obtained, by mixing which with the red an orange tint is made. But they
-also extracted a rich orange colour from the Poccon root. A fine
-vegetable blue is also easily procured, and this was transformed to
-green by means of a yellow liquor of the smooth hickory bark. Black,
-which is much in demand, was obtained both from the sumack and from the
-bark of the white walnut. All the colours thus far named are vegetable
-dyes, but mineral colours are in general use for painting, and
-especially for personal decoration, which is no doubt the primary idea
-associated in the Indian mind with the verb “to paint.” The Lenapes, Dr.
-Brinton remarks, “obtained red, white, and blue clays, which were in
-such extensive demand that the vicinity of those streams in Newcastle
-County, Delaware, which are now called White Clay Creek and Red Clay
-Creek, are widely known to the natives as _Walamink_, ‘the place of
-paint.’”[108] The Shawnees applied the name _Alamonee-sepee_, “Paint
-Creek,” to the stream which falls into the Scioto close to Chilicothe.
-The word _walamen_, signifying “to paint,” is the Shawnee _alamon_, and
-the Abnaki _wramann_, the _r_ being substituted for the _l_. Roger
-Williams, describing the New England Indians, speaks of “_wunnam_, their
-red painting, which they most delight in,—both the bark of the pine, as
-also a red earth.” The word is derived from Narr. _wunne_, Del. _wulit_,
-Chip. _gwanatseh_: “beautiful, handsome, good, pretty,” etc. “The Indian
-who had bedaubed his skin with red ochreous clay, was esteemed in full
-dress, and delightful to look upon. Hence the term _wulit_, ‘fine,
-pretty,’ came to be applied to the paint itself.”[109]
-
-A review of the terms of art in the diverse aboriginal vocabularies
-would furnish an interesting supplement to the general question of the
-manifestation of an artistic faculty, and the evidences of appreciation
-of art among savage races. I note a few illustrations, which the
-languages of some Northern Indian tribes supply, of the ideas associated
-in the native mind with terms of art. The Algonkin languages generally
-have no distinctive words clearly discriminating between painting,
-drawing, and writing in the sense of ideography; though the inevitable
-tendency to invent or appropriate words, as equivalents expressive of
-any novel object or idea, is in operation in those as in other
-languages. The Ojibways have no generic term for painting the body or
-face, but express it by some word connected with the specific colour in
-use. For example, the painting the face black, as is done to a youth on
-attaining puberty, is _muhkuhdaekawin_. This consists of _muh-kuh-da_,
-meaning “black,” _eka_, the form which gives it the verbal significance,
-“he makes himself black,” with the termination _win_, constituting the
-whole a noun. So _misquah_, “red,” is the root of _misquah-ne-ga-zoo_,
-“he is painted red”; _misquah-ne-gah-da_, “it is painted red.”
-_Oozahwah_, “yellow,” gives _oo-zah-we-ne-gah-zoo_, “he is painted
-yellow”; with the corresponding terminal change for the neuter. But the
-word _oozahnamahne_, from _oonah_, “the cheek,” is also used for
-painting the face either red or yellow. _Quahnaiy_, or _gwanai_, the
-word for “beautiful,” is applied to moral as well as physical beauty,
-_e.g._ _gwanaienene_ would be used of a fair, honourable dealing man, as
-well as of one who was handsome or good-looking. But such rhetorical
-tropes are common to many languages.
-
-I was indebted to the late Silas T. Rand, for upwards of thirty years a
-missionary among the Micmac Indians of Nova Scotia, for the following
-illustrative details: “The Micmac is rich in words relating to art, the
-making and ornamenting of garments, moccasins, snow-shoes, etc., of
-weapons and implements for domestic use, making pottery and modelling in
-clay. For building and managing a canoe there are at least seventy-six
-words. They have words for carving on stone, and also on wood, for
-marking dressed skins with flower patterns, for carving flowers in
-stone, for scraping them on birch-bark dishes, for drawing a likeness,
-making models and patterns, and for working after them. When I was
-engaged in translating Exodus, and largely dependent on my Indian
-teacher for the words to express all the parts of the Tabernacle, its
-coverings and furniture, mortices, tenons, hooks, fillets, loops, bars,
-pins, sockets, etc., I fully expected to be baffled. What was my
-surprise to find that there were words in the language by which to
-express all I needed. Boards, bars, bolts, pillars, poles, rings,
-everything was made, put together, and my ‘pundit’ an excellent
-mechanic, when he returned next day to go on with our work, assured me
-that he had been dreaming about that ‘wigwam’ we had been erecting the
-previous day, and he was sure he could make such a one. He had the
-pattern in his head as clearly as Moses had it, after he had seen it up
-the mountain.” In the Micmac, _aweekum_ is “a drawing,” lit. “I write
-it,” “I draw it”; _essum_, “I colour it”; _elapskudaaga_, “I am
-carving,” or “cutting stone”; _elapskudaam_, “I am carving it in stone”;
-_apsk_, which here denotes “stone,” is only used in composition;
-_coondow_ is the word for “stone”; _eloksowa_, “I am carving in wood”;
-_noojeweekuga_, “a painter,” “drawer,” “writer,” lit. “a maker of
-marks”; _aweegasik_, “a picture,” lit. “it is marked down,” etc.
-
-The Algonkin root _walam_, “red,” is the term employed in the _Walum
-Olum_, or “Red Score of the Lenape,” which was brought under the notice
-of the New York Historical Society, in 1848, by Mr. E. G. Squier, as
-_The Bark Record of the Lenni-Lenape_. His narrative has been more than
-once reprinted; but the carefully edited version of this curious Indian
-ideograph given by Dr. Brinton, in his _Lenape and their Legends_, will
-supersede earlier and less accurate versions. The full translation with
-which the pictographic record of the _Walum Olum_ is accompanied,
-abundantly suffices to prove that it may be most correctly described as
-a series of mnemonic signs employed for the purpose of keeping in memory
-a national chant, of a class very familiar to the students of primitive
-history. The ballad-epics of the ancient Germans, and the still earlier
-lays of ancient Rome, the Abanic Duan, and others of the genealogical
-and historical poems of the Celtic nations, were all of this class; and
-analogous traditionary chants have been perpetuated among the Maoris of
-New Zealand. The system of pictography corresponds to that in use among
-the Ojibways and other Algonkin tribes, including the totems, or
-sign-names; but it falls far short of true picture-writing. Section IV.
-records the conquest by the Lenape tribe, of the northern country, which
-they call “The Snake Land.” Bald Eagle, Beautiful Head, White Owl,
-Keeping Guard, Snow Bird, and a succession of other chiefs are named,
-all of whom are more or less graphically indicated by their totems; but
-a paraphrastic interpretation accompanies them setting forth ideas that
-have no pictorial representation. Then comes a horizontal line with ten
-oblique lines rising from it, and three cross-lines below, with the
-interpretation: “After the Seizer there were ten chiefs and there was
-much warfare south and north.” Next follows another succession of
-chiefs, each symbolised with some associated idea. Thus a group of six
-small circles, arranged upright in two columns, is surmounted by a
-larger circle, with three oblique lines rising from the top. This is
-paraphrased: “After him, Corn-Breaker was chief, who brought about the
-planting of corn.” It is not difficult to imagine in the drawing the
-conventional representation of an ear of corn; but the major idea can be
-no more than one suggested to the memory by association. In some
-instances the picture-writing is more manifest. A horizontal line
-surmounted by two _téepees_, or buffalo-skin tents, is “the buffalo
-land.” In one group, a semicircle with radiating lines, placed on a
-straight line, is translated: “Let us go together to the east, to the
-sunrise.” In another case, nearly the same symbol—assumed, no doubt, to
-represent the sun setting in the ocean,—is rendered, “at the great
-sea.” It is, indeed, a system of picture-writing; but instead of being
-abbreviated into word-symbols, it is reduced to mere catch-words or
-mnemonic signs. Their value would be unquestionable as an aid to memory
-in the perpetuation of a mythic or historical poem; but, if the
-tradition were lost, they embody no sufficient record from which to
-recover it.
-
-Neither the Iroquois nor the Algonkin nation can be pointed to as
-specially gifted with imitative powers, or in other ways furnishing
-evidence of any highly developed artistic faculty. They cannot compare
-in this respect with the Zuñi, or others of the Pueblo Indians, among
-whom the arts of long-settled, agricultural communities have been
-developed for purposes of ornament as well as utility; nor is their
-inferiority less questionable when we compare them with some of the
-barbarous tribes of the north-west coast, and the neighbouring islands.
-Their languages confirm this; for while, as Mr. Cushing has shown, the
-Zuñi language possesses many words relating to art-processes, the
-Iroquois and Algonkin dialects supply such terms, for the most part, in
-descriptive holophrasms, and not in primitive roots. Nevertheless, alike
-in their pottery and carvings, and in their picture-writing, they show a
-degree of artistic capacity of which few traces are found in Europe’s
-Neolithic age.
-
-In the Ojibway, _oozhebegawin_ is used indiscriminately for “writing,
-drawing, painting,” _wazhebeegad_, for “a man who writes, draws.” In
-combination with _muh-ze-ne_, “figure, form,” such words are in use as
-_muhzenebeégawin_, “a painting, drawing”; _muhzenebeégawenene_ (M.),
-_muhzenebeégawequa_ (F.), “a painter, an artist”; _muhzenebeégun_, “a
-picture.” “To carve,” or “engrave on a rock,” is _muhzeneko_;
-_muhzenekojegun_, “a sculptor’s chisel”; _muhzenekoda_, “it is carved,”
-etc. Again with _wahbegun_, “clay,” such holophrasms are obtained as
-_wahbegunoonahgunekawenene_, “a man who makes earthen vessels, a
-potter,” _wahbeguhega_, “a worker in clay,” lit. “I work with
-clay.”[110]
-
-In previous remarks on the main subject of this paper, the development
-of the artistic faculty has been noted as, in many cases, an exceptional
-manifestation of intellectual activity, alike in ancient and modern
-barbarous races. The striking contrast between the richly fluent forms
-of the language, and the infantile condition of this people in relation
-to so much else, including metallurgy, and the application of the arts
-generally to the practical requirements of life, furnishes a no less
-interesting illustration of intellectual development fostered by special
-influences in another direction. The habitual practice of oratory made
-the Iroquois acute reasoners; and their language abounds in abstract
-terms to a degree altogether surprising in an uncivilised race. The
-purposes of the rhetorician also encouraged the tropical use of literal
-terms. It is not, therefore, difficult to understand how the primary
-sense of the verb “to track” or “trace out” should ultimately yield the
-meaning of “drawing” or “sketching,” and so finally of “painting.” On
-the other hand, it abundantly coincides with the instinctive use of the
-imitative faculty as a means of conveying definite ideas to others, that
-in the Iroquois, as in other languages, the same terms are used to
-express the idea of making a mark, drawing, or writing. The primitive
-hieroglyphics, from whence our phonetic alphabets have come, were first
-literal drawings, and then their abbreviations employed to express
-associated ideas. An ideographic purpose appears to underlie the
-earliest efforts of imitative art.
-
------
-
-[79] _Essai sur les déformations artificielles du Crâne_, p. 74.
-
-[80] _Crania Britannica_, vi. Pl. 15; xiv. Pl. 12; xxxii. Pl. 42.
-
-[81] Vide _Prehistoric Annals of Scotland_, 2d ed. i. 495.
-
-[82] _Trans. Ethnol. Soc._, N.S. iii. 227.
-
-[83] _Prehistoric Annals of Scotland_, i. 495.
-
-[84] _I.e._ the Island of Santa Barbara. See “Remarks on Aboriginal
-Art,” in _Proc. Davenport Acad. Nat. Science_, iv. 121.
-
-[85] “The Right Hand:” _Left-handedness_, pp. 35, 37.
-
-[86] _Proc. Soc. Antiq. Scot._, ix. 297, 301.
-
-[87] Vide _Prehistoric Man_, 3rd ed. ii. 54.
-
-[88] _Narrative of a Voyage to the Pacific_, i. 241.
-
-[89] _Trans. Anthropol. Soc. Washington_, ii. 140.
-
-[90] _Marchand’s Voyages_, ii. 282.
-
-[91] _Remarks on Aboriginal Art in California and Queen Charlotte
-Islands_, p. 118.
-
-[92] _The Lenape Stone: or the Indian and the Mammoth_, by H. C. Mercer.
-New York, 1885, pp. 5, 17.
-
-[93] _Hommes fossiles et Hommes sauvages_, p. 49.
-
-[94] _Hommes fossiles_, etc., p. 46.
-
-[95] _Smithsonian Contributions to Knowledge_, ii. 75.
-
-[96] “Aboriginal Monuments,” etc., p. 76.
-
-[97] _Proceedings of Hamilton Association_, i. 54.
-
-[98] _Smithsonian Contributions to Knowledge_, xxii. 82.
-
-[99] The Rev. Mark Pattison, according to one biographer, Mr. Althaus,
-had cultivated a habit of reticence, till it became one of his most
-marked characteristics. His usual response to any remark was “Ah”; but
-his biographer adds: “It was interesting to observe of what a variety of
-shades of meaning that characteristic ejaculation ‘Ah’ was capable. Many
-times it was his sole answer. Mostly it signified that something had
-aroused his interest; sometimes it conveyed approval, sometimes
-surprise, sometimes doubt; sometimes it was said in a way that indicated
-he did not wish to express himself on the point in question.”
-
-[100] _Reports of Explorations and Surveys for Route for a Railroad to
-Pacific Ocean_, 1885. Part iii. p. 39.
-
-[101] _Reports of Explorations and Surveys for Route for a Railroad to
-Pacific Ocean_, 1885. Part iii. p. 39.
-
-[102] _Reports of Secretary of War, U.S._, 1850, p. 67.
-
-[103] _Transactions of Anthropol. Soc., Washington_, ii. 130.
-
-[104] _United States Exploring Expedition_, vii. 644.
-
-[105] _Burton’s City of the Saints_, p. 157.
-
-[106] _Explorations and Surveys, Washington_, 1856, iii. 10, 36.
-
-[107] _Trans. Amer. Phil. Soc._ iii. 222.
-
-[108] _The Lenape and their Legends_, p. 53.
-
-[109] _Ibid._, pp. 60, 104.
-
-[110] See pp. 300, 301 for examples in Iroquois.
-
-
-
-
- VI
- THE HURON-IROQUOIS: A TYPICAL RACE
-
-
-IT has already been noted in treating of pre-Aryan American men that
-throughout the northern continent, from the Arctic circle to the Mexican
-Gulf, no trace has been recovered of the previous existence of anything
-that properly admits of the term “native civilisation.” The rude arts of
-Europe’s Stone age belong to a period lying far behind its remotest
-traditions; unless we appeal to the mythic allusions of Hesiod, or to
-such poetic imaginings as the _Prometheus_ of Æschylus. But all
-available evidence serves to show that the condition of the native
-tribes throughout the northern continent has never advanced beyond the
-stage which finds its aptest illustration in the arts of their Stone
-period, including the rudimentary efforts at turning to account their
-ample resources of native copper without the use of fire.
-
-But this uniformity in the condition of the aborigines, and the
-consequent resemblance in their arts, habits, and mode of life, has been
-the fruitful source of misleading assumptions. Everywhere the European
-explorer met only rude hunting and warring tribes, exhibiting such
-slight variations in all that first attracts the eye of the most
-observant traveller, that an exaggerated idea of their ethnical
-uniformity was the natural result. In the systematisings of the
-ethnologist, the American type was classed apart as at once uniform and
-distinctive; and, strange as it may now seem, this idea found nowhere
-such ready favour as among those who had the fullest access to the
-evidence by which its truth could be tested. It was the most
-comprehensive induction of the author of _Crania Americana_, as the
-fruit of his conscientious researches in American craniology. The
-authors of _Indigenous Races of the Earth_ and _Types of Mankind_, no
-less unhesitatingly affirmed that “identical characters pervade all the
-American races, ancient and modern, over the whole continent.”[111] In
-this they were sustained by the high authority of Agassiz, who, after
-discussing in his _Provinces of the Animal World, and their relation to
-Types of Man_, the fauna peculiar to the American continent, and
-pointing out the much greater uniformity of its natural productions,
-when its twin continents are compared with those of the eastern
-hemisphere, thus summed up the result of his investigations: “With these
-facts before us, we may expect that there should be no great diversity
-among the tribes of man inhabiting this continent; and indeed the most
-extensive investigation of their peculiarities has led Dr. Morton to
-consider them as constituting but a single race, from the confines of
-the Esquimaux down to the southernmost extremity of the continent. But,
-at the same time, it should be remembered that, in accordance with the
-zoological character of the whole realm, this race is divided into an
-infinite number of small tribes, presenting more or less difference one
-from another.” It was natural and reasonable that the men of the
-sixteenth century should believe in Calibans, or Ewaipanoma, “the
-Anthropophagi, and men whose heads do grow beneath their shoulders.”
-America was to them, in the most literal sense, another world; and it
-was easier for them to think of it as peopled with such monstrosities
-than with human beings like ourselves. But it is curious to note in this
-nineteenth century the lingering traces of the old sentiment; and to see
-men of science still finding it difficult to emancipate themselves from
-the idea that this continent is so essentially another world, that it is
-inconceivable to them that the races by which it is peopled should bear
-any affinity to themselves or to others of the Old World. American
-ethnologists long clung to the idea of an essentially distinct
-indigenous race; and Dr. Nott, Dr. Meigs, and other investigators
-welcomed every confirmation of the view of Dr. Morton as to the
-occupation of the whole American continent by one peculiar type from
-which alone the Eskimo were to be excepted, as an immigrant element,
-possibly—according to the ingenious speculations of one distinguished
-student of science,—of remotest European antiquity. Professor Huxley in
-an address to the Ethnological Society in 1869, suggests hypothetically,
-that the old Mexican and South American races represent the true
-American stock; and that the Red Indians of North America may be the
-product of an intermixture of the indigenous native race with the
-Eskimo. It is noticeable, at any rate, that nearly all writers, however
-widely differing on other points, follow Humboldt in classing the Eskimo
-apart as a distinct type. He remarks in his preface to his _American
-Researches_, that, “except those which border the polar circle, the
-nations of America form a single race characterised by the formation of
-the skull, the colour of the skin, the extreme thinness of the beard,
-and the straight glossy hair.” Some of the characteristics thus noted
-are undoubtedly widely prevalent; but the head-form, or “formation of
-the skull,” is the most important; and a careful comparison of the
-skulls of different tribes has long since modified the opinion,
-expressed by the great traveller and reasserted by distinguished
-American ethnologists.
-
-In reality, were the typical feature most insisted on as universal as it
-was assumed to be, it would furnish the strongest argument for
-classifying the predominant Asiatic and American types as one. All the
-points appealed to suggest affinity to the Asiatic Mongol. But so far
-from the Eskimo standing apart as a markedly exceptional type, if due
-allowance be made for the prolonged influence of an Arctic climate, the
-Huron-Iroquois approximate to them in some very notable ethnical
-features. The dolichocephalic head-form, especially, is common to them,
-and to the Algonkin and other Northern Indians. Of those Dr. Latham
-remarks: “The Iroquois and Algonkins exhibit in the most typical form
-the characteristics of the North American Indians as exhibited in the
-earliest descriptions, and are the two families upon which the current
-notions respecting the physiognomy, habits, and moral and intellectual
-powers of the so-called Red Race are chiefly founded.” Of the former,
-Mr. Parkman, who has studied their later history with the minutest care,
-says: “In this remarkable family of tribes occur the fullest
-developments of Indian character, and the most conspicuous examples of
-Indian intelligence. If the higher traits popularly ascribed to the race
-are not to be found here, they are to be found nowhere.”[112] To this
-typical American race, accordingly, and to some of its peculiarly
-distinctive usages, special attention is here directed.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Iroquois were an important branch of the great stock which included
-also the Hurons, or Wyandots, the native historical race of Canada. But
-divided as the two were throughout the whole period of French Canadian
-history by the bitterest antagonism, it is convenient to speak of them
-under the term of Huron-Iroquois. In reviewing the history of this
-indigenous stock, with the suggestions prompted by their peculiar
-characteristics, it is desirable not only to note the physical geography
-of the country which they occupied, as a region of forest and lakes,
-but, still more, to keep in view this fact as a predominant
-characteristic of the continent, and as one important factor in the
-evolution of whatever may seem to be peculiar in the forest tribes of
-North America.
-
-The effects resulting from the physical features of a country on the
-development and intermingling of its races can nowhere be wisely
-overlooked. Even within the limits of the British Islands the influences
-of mountain and lowlands: of the fertile stretches of Kent and the
-valley of the Thames, the fens of Lincolnshire, the moorlands of
-Northumbria, and the Welsh and Scottish Highlands, have largely
-contributed to the perpetuation, if not in some degree to the
-development, of ethnical distinctions and the diversities in language.
-
-In this respect Britain is an epitome of Europe, with its great mountain
-ranges and detached peninsulas, by means of which races have been
-isolated within well-defined areas, and their languages and other
-distinctive peculiarities preserved. Russia alone, of all European
-countries, presents analogies to Northern Asia as a region favourable to
-nomadic life; and in so far as its history differs from that of the
-continent at large, it accords with such physical conditions. Throughout
-the whole historic period, as doubtless in prehistoric times, the great
-chain of mountains reaching from the western spur of the Pyrenees to the
-Balkans has influenced European progress; while the chief navigable
-river, the Danube, traversing the continent through one uniform
-temperate zone, has tended still further to the perpetuation of certain
-distinctive ethnical characteristics in Central Europe. In all its most
-important geographical features, the northern continent of America
-presents a striking contrast to this. An isosceles triangle with its
-base within the Arctic circle, it tapers to a narrow isthmus towards the
-equator. Its great mountain chain runs from north to south, and in near
-proximity to the Pacific coast; and its chief navigable river, rising
-within the Canadian Dominion, and receiving as its tributaries rivers
-draining vast regions on either hand, traverses twenty degrees of
-latitude before it reaches the Gulf of Mexico. A lower range of
-highlands towards the Atlantic seaboard forms the eastern boundary of
-the great interior plain. But the Alleghanies or Appalachian system of
-mountains, though they may be said to extend from the St. Lawrence to
-the Mexican Gulf, rise only at a few points, as in the White Mountains
-of New Hampshire, to any great elevation. They form rather a long
-plateau, intersected by wide valleys, diversifying the landscape,
-without constituting strongly defined barriers or lines of demarcation.
-As a whole, the continent of North America, eastward from the Rocky
-Mountains, may be described as a level area, so slightly modified by any
-elevated regions throughout its whole extent, from the Arctic circle to
-the Gulf of Mexico, as to present no other impediment except its forests
-to the wanderings of nomadic tribes. It is interlaced with rivers, and
-diversified everywhere with lakes, alike available for navigation and
-for fishing; and, until the intrusion of European immigrants, its
-forests and prairies abounded with game far in excess of the wants of
-its population. Everything thus tended to perpetuate the condition of
-nomadic hunter tribes. This stage of native American history inevitably
-drew to a close under the influence of European institutions and
-civilisation; but it is interesting to note, that the same absence of
-any well-defined geographical limitations of area, which tended to
-perpetuate the nomadic habits of the savage, has aided in consolidating
-the great confederacy of the United States, and maintaining an ethnical
-and political conformity throughout the northern continent in striking
-contrast to the diversities in race and political institutions in
-Europe.
-
-History and native traditions alike confirm the idea that the valley of
-the St. Lawrence was the habitat of the Huron-Iroquois stock as far back
-as evidence can be appealed to. The Huron traditions tell of a time when
-the Province of Quebec was the home of the race eastward to the sea;
-while those of three at least of the members of the Iroquois confederacy
-in legendary fashion claimed their birth from the soil south of the
-great river. When the French explorers, under the leadership of Jacques
-Cartier, first entered the St. Lawrence, in 1535, they found at
-Stadaconé and Hochelaga—the old native sites now occupied by the cities
-of Quebec and Montreal,—a population apparently of the Huron-Iroquois
-stock; and, in so far as reliance may be placed on their traditions,
-Canada was then populous throughout the whole valley of the St. Lawrence
-with industrious native tribes, the representatives of a race that had
-occupied the same region for unnumbered centuries. “Some fanciful tales
-of a supernatural origin from the heart of a mountain; of a migration to
-the eastern seaboard; and of a subsequent return to the country of the
-lakes and rivers, where they finally settled, comprise,” says
-Brownell,[113] “most that is noticeable in the native traditions of the
-Six Nations prior to the grand confederation.” But the value of such
-traditionary transmission of national history among unlettered tribes
-has received repeated confirmation; and incidents in the history of
-their famous league, perpetuated with circumstantial minuteness in the
-traditions of the Iroquois, are assignable apparently to the fifteenth
-century. The older event of the overthrow of the Alligéwi, in the Ohio
-valley, of which independent traditional records have been handed down
-by the Lenni-Lenape, or Delawares, and by the Iroquois, is now believed
-to be correctly assignable to a date nearly contemporaneous with the
-assumption of the authority of Bretwalda of the Heptarchy by Egbert of
-Wessex,—that memorable step in the fusion of “nations” not greatly more
-important than those of the Iroquois league, until their divisions in
-speech and polity were effaced in the unity of the English people. As to
-“the fanciful tale of a supernatural origin from the heart of a
-mountain,” it is simply a literal rendering of the old Greek metaphor of
-the autochthones, or children of the soil, symbolised by the Athenians
-wearing the grasshopper in their hair; and is by no means peculiar to
-the Iroquois. Mr. Horatio Hale derived from Manderong, an old Wyandot
-chief, the story, as narrated to him by the Hurons of Lorette. They took
-him, he said, to a mountain, and showed him the opening in its side from
-whence the progenitors of the people emerged, when they “first came out
-of the ground.”[114] The late Huron chief, Tahourenché, or
-François-Xavier Picard, communicated to me the same legendary tradition
-of the indigenous origin of his people; telling me, though with a smile,
-that they came out of the side of a mountain between Quebec and the
-great sea. He connected this with other incidents, all pointing to a
-traditional belief that the northern shores of the lower St. Lawrence
-were the original home of the race; and he spoke of certain ancient
-events in the history of his people as having occurred when they lived
-beside the big sea. The earliest authentic reference to this tradition
-occurs in the _Relations_ for 1636, where Brebeuf, after a brief
-allusion to certain of their magical songs and dances, says: “The origin
-of all such mysteries is assigned by them to a being of superhuman
-stature, who was wounded in the forehead by one of their nation, at the
-time when they lived near the sea.” The references to a migration from
-the seaboard obviously point to one of those incidents in the life of
-the nation which marked for them an epoch like the Hegira of the Arabs.
-When Champlain followed Cartier nearly seventy years later he found only
-a few Algonkins in their birch-bark wigwams, where the palisaded towns
-of the Huron-Iroquois had stood. But no Algonkin legend claims this as
-their early home. The invariable tradition of the Ojibways points to the
-Lake Superior region and the country stretching towards Hudson Bay as
-the ancestral home of the Algonkin tribes.
-
-Such information as can thus be gleaned from a variety of independent
-sources, as from the somewhat confused yet trustworthy narrative of
-David Cusick, the Tuscarora historian, and from Peter Dooyentate, the
-Wyandot historian, all leads to the same conclusion. From remote and
-altogether pre-Columbian centuries, the Hurons and other allied
-tribes—the occupants in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries of
-various detached portions of the country north of the St. Lawrence and
-eastward of the Georgian Bay,—appear to have been in possession of the
-whole region to which their oldest traditions pointed as the cradle of
-the race; while nations of the Algonkin stock lay beyond them to the
-north-west. The great river and the lakes from whence it flows into the
-lower valley formed a well-defined southern boundary for affiliated
-tribes; but the first Dutch and English explorers of the Hudson, and of
-the tract of country which now constitutes the western part of the State
-of New York, found the river-valleys and lake shores in occupation of
-the Iroquois confederacy, then consisting of Mohawks, Oneidas,
-Onondagas, Cayugas and Senecas. These constituted the five nations of
-the famous Iroquois league. But the Hurons of Canada, with whom they
-were latterly at deadly feud, appear to have been the oldest
-representatives of the common race, and were still in occupation of
-their ancestral home when Cartier first explored the St. Lawrence. The
-same race had spread far to the south; and its representatives, in
-detached groups, long continued to perpetuate its influence. These
-included the Conestogas or Andastes, the Andastogues, the Carantouans,
-the Cherohakahs or Nottoways, the Tuscaroras, and others, under various
-names. It is not always easy to recognise the same tribe under its
-widely dissimilar designations. The Susquehannocks of the English and
-the Minquas of the Dutch, appear to be the Andastes under other
-designations, and Champlain’s Carantouans may have been the Eries. Under
-those and other names the Huron-Iroquois stock extended to the country
-of the Tuscaroras in North Carolina. Still farther south Gallatin
-surmised, from linguistic evidence, a connection between the Cherokees
-and the Iroquois.[115] This fact Mr. Hale has placed beyond doubt; and
-having detected in the language of the former a grammatical structure
-mainly Huron-Iroquois, while the vocabulary is to a great extent
-foreign, he is inclined to think that we thus recover traces of a
-people, far south in Alabama and Georgia, the descendants of refugees of
-the conquered Alligéwi, adopted into one of the nations of their
-Iroquois conquerors.[116]
-
-From one after another of the outlying southern offshoots of the common
-stock, additions were made from time to time, to restore the numbers of
-the decimated Iroquois. Westward of the confederacy was the country of
-the Eries, an offshoot of the Seneca nation, occupying the southern
-shore of the great lake which perpetuates their name. Immediately to the
-north of the Eries, within the Canadian frontier, the Attiwendaronks, or
-Neuters, occupied the peninsula of Niagara, while the Tiontates or
-Petuns, and other tribes of the same stock, were settled in the fertile
-region between Lakes Erie and Huron. In 1714, the Tuscaroras, when
-driven by the English out of North Carolina, were welcomed by their
-Iroquois kinsmen, and received into the league which thenceforth bore
-the name of the Six Nations. Towards the middle of the same century the
-waste of war made them ready to welcome any additions to their numbers;
-and the Tuteloes and Nanticokes, both apparently Algonkin, furnished
-fresh accessions to the diminished numbers of the confederacy, but
-without taking their place as distinct nations.
-
-But of all the nations of the stock thus widely spread westward and
-southward, the Hurons are the native historical race of Canada,
-intimately identified with incidents of its early settlement and of
-friendly intercourse with _La Nouvelle France_. Their language is now
-recognised as the oldest form of the common speech of the
-Huron-Iroquois, and it is not creditable to Canadian philologists that
-its grammar still remains unrepresented in any accurate printed form.
-The Literary and Historical Society of Quebec did, indeed, publish in
-its _Transactions_, in 1831, the translation of a Latin MS., compiled
-with much industry by a missionary who had laboured among the Hurons of
-Lorette, and whose anonymous work was found amongst the papers of the
-mission. But it is the production of one ignorant of the science of
-language, and gives no adequate idea either of the grammatical structure
-or of the variety and richness of the Huron tongue.
-
-The languages or dialects spoken by many native Indian tribes have
-undoubtedly perished with the races to which they pertained; but the
-numerous Huron-Iroquois dialects still existing, not only in written
-form, but as living tongues, afford valuable materials for ethnical
-study. The history of other Indian tribes abundantly accounts for the
-multiplication of a minute diversity of languages so specially
-characteristic of the American continent, with the endless subdivisions
-of its indigenous population into petty tribes, kept apart by
-internecine feuds. The number of native American languages is estimated
-by Vater, in his _Linguarum Totius Orbis Index_, at about five hundred.
-But the question forthwith arises: What shall be regarded as
-constituting a language? For, in the wanderings of little bands of
-Indian nomads, and the adoption of refugees from disbanded tribes,
-dialects multiply indefinitely. Nearly six hundred of such are
-catalogued by Mr. Bancroft, in his _Native Races of the Pacific States_,
-as spoken between Alaska and the Isthmus of Panama.
-
-Until recently the tendency has been to assume an underlying unity of
-speech for the whole American languages, based on the polysynthetic or
-holophrastic characteristic ascribed to the whole; just as by an
-exaggerated estimate of the prevalence of a predominant head-form, one
-physical type was long assumed to characterise the American race from
-Hudson Bay to Tierra del Fuego. Perhaps, so far as language is
-concerned, the present tendency is towards the opposite extreme. Major
-Powell, the chief of the Ethnographical Bureau at Washington, recognises
-eighty groups of languages in North America, between which no affinity
-is thus far apparent. Fifty-five of those he believes to be
-satisfactorily determined as distinct stocks. On the other hand,
-Professor Whitney, after noticing the complexity of the inquiry when
-directed to the native American languages, thus proceeds: “Yet it is the
-confident opinion of linguistic scholars that a fundamental unity lies
-at the base of all these infinitely varying forms of speech; that they
-may be, and probably are, all descended from a single parent
-language.”[117]
-
-Here then is a field for much useful research, with the promise of
-valuable results. The subject is rendered more important owing to the
-fact that, of nearly all the nations of the North American continent,
-their languages are the only surviving memorials of the race. Already,
-under the efficient supervision of the Ethnographic Bureau of the United
-States, systematic contributions are being secured for this important
-branch of knowledge, so far as their own geographical area is concerned.
-A no less important area is embraced in the Dominion of Canada, and the
-attention of the Government is now directed to the necessity for timely
-action in this matter. In the North-West, and in British Columbia,
-languages are disappearing and races becoming extinct. Mr. Hale has
-contributed to the American Philosophical Society’s _Transactions_ a
-valuable monogram on the Tutelo tribe and language, derived mainly from
-Nikonha, the last full-blood Tutelo, who survived till upwards of a
-hundred years of age. He was married to a Cayuga woman, and lived among
-her people on their Grand river reserve. “My only knowledge of the
-Tuteloes,” says Mr. Hale, “had been derived from the few notices
-comprised in Gallatin’s _Synopsis of the Indian Tribes_, where they are
-classed with the nations of the Huron-Iroquois stock. At the same time
-the distinguished author, with the scientific caution which marked all
-his writings, is careful to mention that no vocabulary of the language
-was known. That which was now obtained showed, beyond question, that the
-language was totally distinct from the Huron-Iroquois tongues, and that
-it was closely allied to the language of the Dakota family.”[118] But
-for the timely exertion of a philological student, this interesting link
-in the history of the Huron-Iroquois relations with affiliated tribes
-would have been lost beyond recall.
-
-The history of the Huron-Iroquois race, and especially of the Six Nation
-Indians, since the settlement of the main body for the past century on
-their reserves on the Grand river, in the Province of Ontario, curiously
-illustrates the pertinacity with which they have cherished the dialectic
-varieties of a common tongue. But while the essential differences of
-language everywhere constitute one of the most obvious distinctions of
-race, it is interesting to note the recognition by the Indians of
-affinities of dialects, and even remote kinship based on such evidence;
-as in the readmission of the Tuscaroras to the Iroquois family of
-nations. According to Brebeuf, the kinship of the Attiwendaronks of the
-Niagara peninsula was recognised by the Hurons in that designation which
-classed them as a “people of a language a little different.”[119] Peter
-Jones Kahkewaquonaby, a civilised Ojibway, adopted into the Mohawk
-nation, in speaking of the traditions of the Indians as to their own
-origin, says: “All the information I have been able to gain in relation
-to the question amounts to the following. Many, many winters ago the
-Great Spirit, Keche-Manedoo, created the Indians. Every nation speaking
-a different language is a second creation, but all were made by the same
-Supreme Being.”[120]
-
-Among the races of the northern continent, none east of the Rocky
-Mountains more fitly represent their special characteristics than the
-great Huron-Iroquois family. Their language is remarkable for its
-compass and elaborate grammatical structure; and the numerous dialects
-of the common mother tongue furnish evidence of migration and conquest
-over a wide region eastward of the Mississippi. To such philological
-evidence many inquirers are now turning for a clue to the origin of the
-races of the New World, and for the recovery of proofs of their affinity
-to one or other of the Old World stocks. Professor Whitney, after
-dwelling on the “exaggeratedly agglutinative type” of the ancient
-Iberian language, and its isolation among the essentially dissimilar
-languages of Aryan Europe, thus proceeds: “The Basque forms a suitable
-stepping-stone from which to enter the peculiar linguistic domain of the
-New World, since there is no other dialect of the Old World which so
-much resembles in structure the American languages”[121]; not indeed, as
-he adds, that they are all of accordant form; for he pronounces the
-grouping of them in a single great family as “a classification of
-ignorance.” The possibilities of ancient communication between the
-opposite shores of the Atlantic, and the migration of colonists of the
-New World from the Mediterranean Sea, have already been discussed in
-dealing with the legend of the Lost Atlantis. Great indeed as is the
-interval of time therein implied, it would not suffice to erase all
-traces of affinity of languages. But it would be vain to hope for any
-historical guidance recoverable from the oldest of Iroquois legends. If,
-moreover, Iberian, Hittite, Egyptian, Phœnician, or other of the world’s
-gray fathers, transplanted to America the germs of its long indigenous
-stock, we look in vain for any traces of their Old World civilisation
-north of the Mexican Gulf. Nor is it by any means an established truth
-that the arts of Central America or Peru are of any very great
-antiquity. Their metallurgy was at a crude, yet suggestive, stage at
-which it was not likely to be long arrested. The same may be said of
-their hieroglyphic records; though they certainly present some highly
-significant analogies to the Chinese phase of word-writing, calculated,
-along with other aspects of resemblance to that stage of partial, yet
-long-enduring, civilisation of which China is the Asiatic exemplar, to
-modify our estimate of the possible duration of Central and Southern
-American civilisation. Nevertheless the assumption of an antiquity in
-any degree approximating to that of Egypt seems wholly irreconcilable
-with the evidence. Their architecture was barbaric, though imposing from
-the scale on which their great temples and palaces were built. In
-Central America especially, the aggregation of numerous ill-lighted
-little chambers, like honey-comb cells excavated out of the huge pile,
-is strongly suggestive of affinity to the Casas Grandes, and the Pueblos
-of the Zuñi; and this is confirmed by the correspondence traceable
-between many of their architectural details and the ornamentation of the
-Pueblo pottery.
-
-The astronomy and the calendars, both of Mexico and Peru, with their
-detailed methods of recording their divisions of time, are all
-suggestive of an immature phase of civilisation in the very stage of its
-emergence from barbarism, modified, in some cases, by the recent
-acquisition of certain arts. As to the peculiar phase of Mexican art,
-and whatever other evidence of progress Mexico supplies, they appear to
-me no more than natural products of the first successful intrusion of
-the barbarians of the northern continent on the seats of tropical
-civilisation. Certain it seems, at least, that if an earlier
-civilisation had ever existed in the north, or if the representatives of
-any Old World type were present there in numbers for any length of time,
-some traces of their lost arts must long since have come to light.
-
-But the conservative power of language is indisputable; and if the
-kinship now claimed for the polysynthetic languages of both hemispheres
-be correct, we are on the threshold of significant disclosures. The
-Huron-Iroquois tongue, in its numerous ramifications, as well as some of
-the native languages that have outlived the last of the races to which
-they belonged, may preserve traces of affinities as yet unrecognised.
-But in no respect are the Huron-Iroquois more correctly adducible as a
-typical race of American aborigines than in the absence of all evidence
-of their ever having acquired any of the arts upon which civilisation
-depends. We look in vain in their vocabularies for terms of science, or
-for names adapted to the arts and manufactures on which social progress
-depends. But they had developed a gift of oratory, for which their
-language amply sufficed, and from which we may infer the presence in
-this race of savages of latent powers, capable of wondrous development.
-“Their languages show, in their elaborate mechanism, as well as in their
-fulness of expression and grasp of thought, the evidence of the mental
-capacity of those who speak them. Scholars who admire the inflections of
-the Greek and Sanscrit verb, with their expressive force and clearness,
-will not be less impressed with the ingenious structure of the verb in
-Iroquois. It comprises nine tenses, three moods, the active and passive
-voices, and at least, twenty of those forms which in the Semitic
-grammars are styled conjugations. The very names of these forms will
-suffice to give evidence of the care and minuteness with which the
-framers of this remarkable language have endeavoured to express every
-shade of meaning. We have the diminutive and augmentative forms, the
-cis-locative and trans-locative, the duplicative, reiterative, motional,
-causative, progressive, attributive, frequentative, and many
-others.”[122] To speak, indeed, of the Iroquois as, in a consciously
-active sense, the framers of all this would be misleading. But it
-unquestionably grew up in the deliberations around the council fire,
-where the conflicting aims of confederate tribes were swayed by the
-eloquence of some commanding orator, until the fiercest warrior of this
-forest race learned to value more the successful wielding of the tongue
-in the _Kanonsionni_, or figurative Long House of the League, even than
-the wielding of the tomahawk in the field. At the organisation of the
-confederacy, the Canyengas or Mohawks were figuratively said to have
-“built a house,” _rodinonsonnih_, or rather to have “built the long
-house” in which the council fire of the Five Nations was kindled. Of
-this the Senecas, lying on the extreme west, were styled the
-“door-keepers,” and the Onondagas, whose territory was central, were the
-custodians. The whole usage is rhetorical and figurative. Under such
-influences the language of the Huron-Iroquois was framed, and it grew
-rich in emotional and persuasive forms. It only needed the evolution of
-a true alphabet out of the pictorial symbolism on their painted robes,
-or the grave-posts of their chiefs, to inaugurate a literature which
-should embody the orations of the Iroquois Demosthenes, and the songs of
-a native Homer, for whom a vehicle of thought was already prepared, rich
-and flexible as poet could desire.
-
-So far as the physical traits of the American aborigines furnish any
-evidence of ethnical affinity they unquestionably suggest some common
-line of descent with the Asiatic Mongol; and this is consistent with the
-agglutinate characteristics common to a large class of languages of both
-continents. But, on the other hand, the characteristic head-form of the
-Huron-Iroquois, as well as that of Algonkin and other northern tribes,
-deviates alike from the brachycephalic type of the southern Indians and
-from that of the Asiatic Mongols. Humboldt, who enjoyed rare
-opportunities for studying the ethnical characteristics of both
-continents, but to whom, nevertheless, the northern races, with their
-dolichocephalic type of head were unknown, dwells, in his _American
-Researches_, on the striking resemblance which the American race bear to
-the Asiatic Mongols. Latham classes both under the common head of
-Mongolidæ; and Dr. Charles Pickering, of the American Exploring
-Expedition, arrived at the same conclusion as the result of his own
-independent study of the races of both continents. Nevertheless, however
-great may be the resemblance in many points between the true Red Indian
-and the Asiatic Mongol, it falls short of even an approximate physical
-identity. The Mongolian of Asia is not indeed to be spoken of as one
-unvarying type any more than the American. But the extent to which the
-Mongolian head-form and peculiar physiognomy characterise one widely
-diffused section of the population of the eastern continent, gives it
-special prominence among the great ethnical divisions of the human race.
-Morton assigns 1421 as the cranial capacity of eighteen Mongol, and only
-1234 as that of 164 American skulls other than Peruvian or Mexican. Dr.
-Paul Topinard, in discussing the American type, adds: “If we are to rely
-on the method of cubic measurement followed by Morton, the American
-skull is one of the least capacious of the whole human race.”[123] But
-Dr. Morton’s results are in some respects misleading. The mean capacity
-yielded by the measurements of 214 American skulls in the Peabody Museum
-of Archæology, including a considerable number of females, is 1331; and
-with a carefully selected series, excluding exceptionally large and
-small crania, the results would be higher. Twenty-six male California
-skulls, for example, yield a mean capacity of 1470. The Huron-Iroquois
-crania would rank among such exceptional examples.[124] The forehead is,
-indeed, low and receding, but the general cerebral capacity is good; and
-Dr. Morton specially notes its approximation to the European mean.[125]
-
-But the assumption of uniformity in the ethnical characteristics of the
-various races of North and South America is untenable. All probabilities
-rather favour the idea of different ethnical centres, a diversity of
-origin, and considerable admixture of races. All evidence, moreover,
-whether physical or philological, whatever else it may prove, leaves no
-room for doubt as to a greatly prolonged period of isolation of the
-native races of the New World. Whether they came from the Mediterranean,
-in that old mythic dawn the memory of which survived in the legend of a
-submerged Atlantis; or the history of their primeval migration still
-lingers among fading traces of philological affinity with the Basques;
-or if, with the still more remote glimpses which affinite Arctic
-ethnology has been assumed to supply, we seek to follow the palæolithic
-race of Central Europe’s Reindeer period in the long pilgrimage to
-Behring Straits, and so to the later home of the American Mongol; this,
-at least, becomes more and more obvious, that they brought with them no
-arts derived from the ancient civilisations of Egypt or of Asia. So far,
-at least, as the northern continent is concerned, no evidence tends to
-suggest that the aborigines greatly differed at any earlier period from
-the condition in which they were found by Cartier when he first entered
-the St. Lawrence. They were absolutely ignorant of metallurgy; and
-notwithstanding the abundance of pure native copper accessible to them,
-they cannot be said even to have attained to that rudimentary stage of
-metallurgic art which for Europe is spoken of as its “Copper Age.”
-Copper was to them no more than a malleable stone, which they fashioned
-into axes and knives with their stone hammers. Their pottery was of the
-most primitive crudeness, hand-fashioned by their women without the aid
-of the potter’s wheel. The grass or straw-plaiting of their basket-work
-might seem to embody the hint of the weaver’s loom; but the products of
-the chase furnished them with skins of the bear and deer, sufficient for
-all purposes of clothing. They had advanced in no degree beyond the
-condition of the neolithic savage of Europe’s Stone age when, at the
-close of the fifteenth century, they were abruptly brought into contact
-with its cultured arts. The gifted historian, Mr. Francis Parkman, who
-has thrown so fascinating an interest over the story of their share in
-the long-protracted struggle of the French and English colonists of
-North America, says of them: “Among all the barbarous nations of the
-continent the Iroquois stand paramount. Elements which among other
-tribes were crude, confused, and embryotic, were among them systematised
-and concreted into an established polity. The Iroquois was the Indian of
-Indians. A thorough savage, yet a finished and developed savage. He is
-perhaps an example of the highest elevation which man can reach without
-emerging from his primitive condition of the hunter.” Yet with this high
-estimate of the race as pre-eminent among Red Indian nations, he adds:
-“That the Iroquois, left under their institutions to work out their
-destiny undisturbed, would ever have developed a civilisation of their
-own, I do not believe.”[126] They had not, in truth, taken the first
-step in such a direction; and, were it not for the evidence which
-language supplies, it would be conceivable that they, and the whole
-barbarian nations of which they are a type, were Mongol intruders of a
-later date than the Northmen of the tenth century; who, it seems far
-from improbable, encountered only the Eskimo of the Labrador coast, or
-their more southern congeners, then extending to the south of the St.
-Lawrence. The prevalence of a brachycephalic type of head among southern
-Indian tribes, while dolichocephalic characteristics are common to the
-Eskimo and to the Huron-Iroquois and other northern nations, lends
-countenance to the idea of an intermixture of Red Indian and Eskimo
-blood. The head-forms, however, though both long, differ in other
-respects; and a divergence is apparent on comparing the bones of the
-face, with a corresponding difference in their physiognomy.
-
-Dr. Latham recognised the Iroquois as one of the most typical families
-of the North American race, and Mr. Parkman styles them “the Indian of
-the Indians.” The whole Huron-Iroquois history illustrates their
-patient, politic diplomacy, their devotion to hunting and to war. But
-their policy gave no comprehensive aim to wars which reduced their
-numbers, and threatened their very existence as a race. Throughout the
-entire period of any direct knowledge of them by Europeans, there is
-constant evidence of feuds between members of the common stock, due in
-part, indeed, to their becoming involved in the rivalries of French and
-English colonists, but also traceable to hereditary animosities
-perpetuated through many generations. The strongly marked diversities in
-the dialects of the Six Nations is itself an evidence of their long
-separation, prior to their confederation, in the earlier half of the
-fifteenth century. By far the most trustworthy narrative of this famous
-league is embodied by Mr. Horatio Hale in _The Iroquois Book of Rites_,
-a contribution to aboriginal American literature of singular interest
-and value. Among the members of this confederacy the Tuscaroras occupy a
-peculiar position. They were reunited to the common stock so recently as
-1714, but their traditions accord with those of the whole Huron-Iroquois
-family in pointing to the Lower St. Lawrence as their original home; and
-the diversity of the Tuscarora dialect from those of the older nations
-of the league furnishes a valuable gauge of the significance of such
-differences as evidence of the length of period during which the various
-members of the common stock had been separated. On the other hand, the
-manner in which, in the absence of any hereditary feud, the Iroquois
-respected the bonds of consanguinity, and welcomed the fugitive
-immigrants from North Carolina, throws an interesting light on the
-history of the race, and the large extent of country occupied by it in
-the time of its greatest prosperity.
-
-The earliest home of the whole Huron-Iroquois stock was within the area
-of Quebec and Eastern Ontario, and they have thus a claim on the
-interest of Canadians as their precursors in the occupation of the soil;
-while, in so far as its actual occupancy by the representatives of the
-common stock is concerned, the Hurons were welcomed to a friendly, if
-fatal, alliance with the early French colonists; and the Iroquois of the
-Six Nations have enjoyed a home, under the protection of England, on the
-western Canadian reserves set apart for their use upwards of a century
-ago.
-
-There is one notable inconsistency in the traditions of the
-Huron-Iroquois which is significant. The fathers of the common stock
-dwelt, according to their most cherished memories, in their northern
-home on the St. Lawrence, and beside the great sea. It ranked also among
-the ancient traditions of the “Wampum-keepers,” or official annalists,
-that there came a time when, from whatever cause, the
-Caniengas—Ka-nyen-ke-ha-ka, or Flint people, _i.e._ the Mohawks,—the
-“eldest brother” of the family, led the way from the northern shore of
-the St. Lawrence to their later home in what is now the State of New
-York. But the prehistoric character of this later tradition is shown by
-the fact that the Oneidas, Onondagas, and Senecas, all claimed for
-themselves the character of autochthones in their later home. The
-precise spot where, according to the cherished legend of the Oneidas,
-they literally sprang from the soil, is still marked by “the Oneida
-Stone,” a large boulder of flesh-coloured syenite, from which the latter
-called themselves Oniota-aug, “the people begot from the stone.” It
-occupies a commanding site overlooking a fine expanse of country
-stretching to the Oneida Lake. But, according to Mr. Hale, the name of
-the Oneida nation, in the council of the league, was _Nihatirontakowa_,
-usually rendered the “great-tree people,” or literally “those of the
-great log.” This designation is connected, most probably as an
-afterthought, with a legendary meeting of their people with
-Hiawatha.[127] The beautiful legend of this benefactor of his people has
-been embalmed in the Indian epic of Longfellow, and dealt with as a
-chapter of genuine history in Mr. Horatio Hale’s _Iroquois Book of
-Rites_. At a period when the tribes were being wasted by constant wars
-within and without, a wise and beneficent chief arose among the
-Onondagas. His name is rendered: “he who seeks the wampum belt.” He had
-long viewed with grief the dissensions and misery of his people, and
-conceived the idea of a federal union which should ensure peace. The
-system which he devised was to be not a loose and transitory league,
-such as the Indian tribes were familiar with; but a permanent
-organisation, foreshadowing as it were the federal union of the
-Anglo-American Colonies. “While each nation was to retain its own
-council and its management of local affairs, the general control was to
-be lodged in a federal senate, composed of representatives elected by
-each nation, holding office during good behaviour, and acknowledged as
-ruling chiefs throughout the confederacy. Still further, and more
-remarkably, the confederation was not to be a limited one. It was to be
-infinitely expansive. The avowed design of its proposer was to abolish
-war altogether. He wished the federation to extend until all the tribes
-of men should be included in it. Such,” says Mr. Hale, “is the positive
-testimony of the Iroquois themselves, and their statement is supported
-by historical evidence.”[128] The league survived far on into the
-eighteenth century; but the dream of universal peace among the nations
-of the New World, if it ever found any realisation, had vanished in the
-reawakening of the demon of strife.
-
-In all the accounts of the Iroquois their league is noted as
-distinguishing them from the Algonkins and other ruder tribes of North
-America. The story of this league has been reproduced by successive
-historians, not without rhetorical exaggerations borrowed from the
-institutions of civilised nations, both of ancient and modern times. The
-late Hon. L. H. Morgan says of this tribal union: “Under their federal
-system the Iroquois flourished in independence, and capable of
-self-protection, long after the New England and Virginia races had
-surrendered their jurisdictions, and fallen into the condition of
-dependent nations; and they now stand forth upon the canvas of Indian
-history, prominent alike for the wisdom of their civil institutions,
-their sagacity in the administration of the league, and their courage in
-its defence. When their power and sovereignty finally passed away, it
-was through the events of peaceful intercourse, gradually progressing to
-this result.”[129] Schoolcraft in like manner refers to “their
-advancement in the economy of living, in arms, in diplomacy, and in
-civil polity,” as evidence of a remote date for their confederacy.[130]
-But while thus contrasting the “power and sovereignty” of the Iroquois
-with the “dependent nations” to the south, Schoolcraft leaves it
-manifest that, whatever may have been the extent of the ancient
-confederacy, in the seventeenth century their whole numbers fell short
-of 12,000; and in 1677 their warriors or fighting men were carefully
-estimated at 2150. The diversity of dialects of the different members of
-the league is a source of curious interest to the philologist; but the
-fact that, among a people numerically so small, local dialects were thus
-perpetuated, is a proof of the very partial influence of the league as a
-bond of union. It serves to illustrate the general defect of native
-American polity. “Nothing,” says Max Müller, “surprised the Jesuit
-missionaries so much as the immense number of languages spoken by the
-natives of America. But this, far from being a proof of a high state of
-civilisation, rather showed that the various races of America had never
-submitted for any length of time to a powerful political
-concentration.[131] The Iroquois were undoubtedly pre-eminent in the
-highest virtues of the savage; and could they have been isolated in the
-critical transitional stage, like the ancient Egyptians in their Nile
-valley, the Greeks in their Hellenic peninsula, or the Anglo-Saxons in
-their insular stronghold—
-
- . . . . set in the silver sea
- Which serves it in the office of a wall
- Or as a moat defensive—
-
-until they learned to unite with their courage and persistency in war
-some of the elements of progress in civilisation ascribed to them, they
-might have proved the regenerators of the continent, and reserved it for
-permanent occupation by races of native origin. “Wherever they went,”
-says Schoolcraft, “they carried proofs of their energy, courage, and
-enterprise. At one period we hear the sound of their war-cry along the
-Straits of the St. Mary’s, and at the foot of Lake Superior; at another,
-under the walls of Quebec, where they finally defeated the Hurons under
-the eyes of the French.”[132] And after glancing at the long history of
-their triumphs, he adds: “Nations trembled when they heard the name of
-the Konoshioni.”
-
-In older centuries, while the Huron-Iroquois still constituted one
-united people in their ancestral home to the north of the St. Lawrence,
-they must have been liable to contact with the Eskimo, both on the north
-and the east; and greatly as the two races differ, the dolichocephalic
-type of head common to both is not only suggestive of possible
-intermixture, but also of encroachments on the Eskimo in early centuries
-by this aggressive race. In the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, as
-probably at a much earlier date, when the Iroquois had parted from the
-Hurons, they became unquestionably _the_ aggressive race of the northern
-continent; and were an object of dread to widely severed nations. Their
-earliest foes were probably the Algonkins, whose original home appears
-to have been between Lake Superior and Hudson Bay. Nevertheless, there
-was a time, according to the traditions of both, apparently in some old
-pre-Columbian century, when Iroquois and Algonkins combined their forces
-against the long-extinct stock whose name survives in that of the
-Alleghany Mountains and river. But if so, their numbers must have then
-vastly exceeded that of their whole combined nations at any period
-subsequent to their first intercourse with Europeans. For if the growing
-opinion is correct that the Alligéwi were the so-called “Mound-Builders”
-of the Mississippi and Ohio valleys, they must have been a numerous
-people, occupying a territory of great extent, and carrying on
-agriculture on a large scale. So far as metallurgy—that crucial test of
-civilisation,—is concerned, they had not advanced beyond the stage of
-Iroquois progress. Their pottery and ingenious carvings in stone have
-already been noted, along with their singular geometrical earthworks
-which still puzzle the American archæologist, from the evidence they
-show of skill in a people still practically in their Stone period. The
-only conceivable solution of the mystery, as already suggested, seems to
-me the assumption of some “Druidic” or Brahminical caste, distinct from
-the native Alligéwi stock, who ruled in those great northern
-river-valleys, as in Peru; and, like the mythic Quetzalcoatl of the
-Aztecs, taught them agriculture, and directed the construction of the
-marvellous works to which they owe their later distinctive name. But for
-some unknown reason they provoked the united fury of Iroquois and
-Algonkins; and after long-protracted strife were driven out, if not
-wholly exterminated. A curious phase of incipient native civilisation
-thus perished; and, notwithstanding all the romance attached to the
-league of the Iroquois, it is impossible to credit them at any stage of
-their own history with the achievement of such a progress in agriculture
-or primitive arts as we must ascribe to this ancient people of the Ohio
-valley. To the triumph of the Iroquois in this long-protracted warfare
-may have been due the haughty spirit which thenceforth demanded a
-recognition of their supremacy from all surrounding nations. Their
-partial historians ascribe to them a spirit of magnanimity in the use of
-their power, and a mediatorial interposition among the weaker nations
-that acknowledged their supremacy. They appear, indeed, to have again
-entered into alliance with an Algonkin nation. Their annalists have
-transmitted the memory of a treaty effected with the Ojibways, when the
-latter dwelt on the shores of Lake Superior; and the meeting-place of
-the two powerful races was at the great fishing-ground of the Sault Ste.
-Marie rapids, within reach of the copper-bearing rocks of the Keweenaw
-peninsula. The league then established is believed to have been
-faithfully maintained on both sides for upwards of two hundred years.
-But if so, it had been displaced by bitter feud in the interval between
-the visits of Cartier and Champlain to the St. Lawrence.
-
-The historical significance given to the legend of Hiawatha by the
-coherent narrative so ingeniously deduced by Mr. Horatio Hales from _The
-Iroquois Book of Rites_, points to a long-past era of beneficent rule
-and social progress among the Huron-Iroquois. But the era is
-pre-Columbian, if not mythic. The pipe of peace had been long
-extinguished, and the buried tomahawk recovered, when the early French
-explorers were brought into contact with the Iroquois and Hurons. The
-history of their deeds, as recorded by the Jesuit Fathers from personal
-observation, is replete with the relentless ferocity of the savage. War
-was their pastime; and they were ever ready to welcome the call to arms.
-La Salle came in contact with them on the discovery of the Illinois; and
-Captain John Smith, the founder of Virginia, encountered their canoes on
-the Chesapeake Bay bearing a band of Iroquois warriors to the
-territories of the Powhattan confederacy. They were then, as ever, the
-same fierce marauders, intolerant of equality with any neighbouring
-tribe. The Susquehannocks experienced at their hands the same fate as
-the Alligéwi. The Lenapes, Shawnees, Nanticokes, Unamis, Delawares,
-Munsees, and Manhattans, were successively reduced to the condition of
-dependent tribes. Even the Canarse Indians of Long Island were not safe
-from their vengeance; and their power seems to have been dreaded
-throughout the whole region from the Atlantic to the Mississippi.
-
-It thus appears probable that in remote centuries, before the discovery
-of America by European voyagers, the region extending westward from the
-Labrador coast to Lake Ontario, if not, indeed, to Lake Huron, had been
-in occupation by those who claimed to be autochthones, and who were
-known and feared far beyond their own frontiers. But though thus
-maintaining a haughty predominancy; so far as their arts afford any
-evidence, they were in their infancy. The country occupied by them,
-except in so far as it was overgrown with the forest, was well adapted
-for agriculture; and the Iroquois and Hurons alike compared favourably
-with the Algonkins in their agricultural industry. A confirmatory
-evidence of exceptional superiority among this remarkable race is that
-their women were held in unwonted respect. They had their own
-representatives in the council of the tribe; and exercised considerable
-influence in the choice of a chief. But on them devolved all domestic
-labour, including the cultivation of their fields. This work was
-entirely carried on by the women, while the share of the men in the
-joint provision of food was the product of the chase. The beautiful
-region was still so largely under forest that it must have afforded
-abundant resources for the hunter; but it furnished no facilities for
-the inauguration of a copper or bronze age, such as the shores of Lake
-Superior in vain offered to its Algonkin nomads. Of metallic ores they
-had no knowledge; and while they doubtless prized the copper brought
-occasionally from Lake Superior, copper implements are rare in the
-region which they occupied. Their old alliance with the Algonkins of the
-great copper region had long come to an end; and when brought under the
-notice of the French and English colonists, the Algonkins had joined
-with the Hurons as the implacable foes of the Iroquois confederacy.
-
-In the ancient warfare in which Algonkins and Huron-Iroquois are found
-united against the nation of the great river valleys, we see evidences
-of a conflict between widely distinct stocks of northern and southern
-origin. It is an antagonism between well-defined dolichocephalic and
-brachycephalic races. In the dolichocephalic Iroquois or Huron, we have
-the highest type of the forest savage; maintaining as his own the
-territory of his fathers, and building palisaded towns for the secure
-shelter of his people. The brachycephalic Mound-Builder, on the other
-hand, may still survive in one or other of the members of the
-semi-civilised village communities of New Mexico or Arizona. But if the
-interpretation of native traditions have any value, they carry us back
-to pre-Columbian centuries, and tell of long-protracted strife, until
-what may at first have been no more than the aggressions of wild
-northern races, tempted by the resources of an industrious agricultural
-community, became a war of extermination. The elaborately constructed
-forts of the Mound-Builders, no less abundant throughout the Ohio valley
-than their curious geometrical earthworks, prove the dangers to which
-they were exposed, no less than the skill and determination with which
-the aggressors were withstood, it may be through successive generations,
-before their final overthrow.
-
-The palisaded Indian town of Hochelaga, one of the chief urban centres
-of the Huron-Iroquois tribes in the older home of the race, and a sample
-of the later Huron defences on the Georgian Bay, stood, in the sixteenth
-century, at the foot of Mount Royal, whence the city of Montreal takes
-its name; and some of the typical skulls of its old occupants, as well
-as flint implements and pottery from its site, are now preserved in the
-Museum of M’Gill University. The latter relics reveal no more than had
-long been familiar in the remains which abound within the area of the
-Iroquois confederacy, and elsewhere throughout the eastern states of
-North America. Their earthenware vessels were decorated with
-herring-bone and other incised patterns; and their tobacco pipes and the
-handles of their clay bowls were, at times, rudely modelled into human
-and animal forms. Their implements of flint and stone were equally rude.
-They had inherited little more than the most infantile savage arts; and
-when those were at length superseded, in some degree, by implements and
-weapons of European manufacture, they prized the more effective weapons,
-but manifested no desire for mastering the arts to which they were due.
-To all appearance, through unnumbered centuries, the tide of human life
-has ebbed and flowed in the valley of the St. Lawrence as
-unprogressively as on the great steppes of Asia. Such footprints as the
-wanderers have left on the sands of time tell only of the unchanging
-recurrence of generations of men as years and centuries came and passed
-away. Illustrations of native art are now very familiar to us. The
-ancient flint pits have been explored; and the flint cores and
-rough-hewn nodules recovered. The implements of war and the chase were
-the work of the Indian brave. His spears and arrow heads, his knives,
-chisels, celts, and hammers, in flint and stone, abound. Fish-hooks,
-lances or spears, awls, bodkins, and other implements of bone and deer’s
-horn, are little less common. The highest efforts of artistic skill were
-expended on the carving of his stone pipe, and fashioning the pipe-stem.
-The pottery, the work of female hands, is usually in the simplest stage
-of coarse, handmade, fictile ware. The patterns, incised on the soft
-clay, are the conventional reproductions of the grass or straw-plaiting;
-or, at times, the actual impressions of the cordage or wicker-work by
-which the larger clay vessels were held in shape, to be dried in the sun
-before they were imperfectly burned in the primitive kiln. But the
-potter also indulged her fancy at times in modelling artistic devices of
-men and animals, as the handles of the smaller ware, or the forms in
-which the clay tobacco pipe was wrought. Nevertheless the northern
-continent lingered to the last in its primitive stage of neolithic art;
-and its most northern were its rudest tribes, until we pass within the
-Arctic circle and come in contact with the ingenious handiwork of the
-Eskimo. Southward beyond the great lakes, and especially within the area
-of the Mound-Builders, a manifest improvement is noticeable. Alike in
-their stone carvings and their modelling in clay, the more artistic
-design and better finish of industrious settled communities are
-apparent. Still further to the south, the diversified ingenuity of
-fancy, especially in the pottery, is suggestive of an influence derived
-from Mexican and Peruvian art. The carved work of some western tribes
-was also of a higher character. But taking such work at its best, it
-cannot compare in skill or practical utility with the industrial arts of
-Europe’s Neolithic age. This region has now been visited and explored by
-Europeans for four centuries, during a large portion of which time they
-have been permanent settlers. Its soil has been turned up over areas of
-such wide extent that the results may be accepted, with little
-hesitation, as illustrations of the arts and social life subsequent to
-the occupation of the continent by its aboriginal races. But we look in
-vain for evidence of an extinct native civilisation. However far back
-the presence of man in the New World may be traced, throughout the
-northern continent, at least, he seems never to have attained to any
-higher stage than what is indicated by such evidences of settled
-occupation as were shown in the palisaded Indian town of Hochelaga; or
-at most, in the ancient settlements of the Ohio valley. Everywhere the
-agriculturist only disturbs the graves of the savage hunter. The
-earthworks of the Mound-Builders, and still more their configuration,
-are indeed suggestive of a people in a condition analogous to that of
-the ancient populace of Egypt or Assyria, toiling under the direction of
-an overruling caste, and working out intellectual conceptions of which
-they themselves were incapable. Yet, even in their case, this inference
-finds no confirmation from the contents of their mounds or earthworks.
-They disclose only implements of bone, flint, and stone, with some rare
-examples of equally rude copper tools, hammered into shape without the
-use of fire. Working in the metals appears to have been confined to the
-southern continent; or, at least, never to have found its way northward
-of the Mexican plateau. Nothing but the ingeniously sculptured tobacco
-pipe, or the better-fashioned pottery, gives the slightest hint of
-progress beyond the first infantile stage of the tool-maker.
-
-Whatever may have been the source of special skill among the old
-agricultural occupants of the Ohio valley, their Iroquois supplanters
-borrowed from them no artistic aptitude. No remains of its primitive
-occupants give the slightest hint that the aborigines of Canada, or of
-the country immediately to the south of the St. Lawrence, derived any
-knowledge from the old race so curiously skilled in the construction of
-geometrical earthworks. Any native burial mounds or embankments are on a
-small scale, betraying no more than the simplest operations of a people
-whose tools were flint hoes, and horn or wooden picks and shovels.
-Wherever evidence is found of true working in metals, as distinct from
-the cold-hammered native copper, as in the iron tomahawk, the copper
-kettles, and silver crosses, recovered from time to time from Indian
-graves, their European origin is indisputable. Small silver buckles, or
-brooches, of native workmanship are indeed common in their graves; for a
-metallic currency was so unintelligible to them that this was the use to
-which they most frequently turned French or English silver coinage.
-
-But notwithstanding the general correspondence in arts, habits, and
-conditions of life, among the forest and prairie tribes of North
-America, their distinctive classification into various dolichocephalic
-and brachycephalic types points to diversity of origin and a mingling of
-several races. So far as the native races of Canada are considered, it
-has been shown that they belong to the dolichocephalic type. The
-Alligéwi, or Mound-Builders, on the contrary, appear to have been a
-strongly marked brachycephalic race; and the bitter antagonism between
-the two, which ended in the utter ruin of the latter, may have been
-originally due to race distinctions such as have frequently been the
-source of implacable strife.
-
-The short globular head-form, which, in the famous Scioto-mound skull,
-is shown in a strongly marked typical example with the longitudinal and
-parietal diameters nearly equal, appears to have been common among the
-southern tribes, such as the Osages, Ottoes, Missouries, Shawnees,
-Cherokees, Seminoles, Uchees, Savannahs, Catawbas, Yamasees, Creeks, and
-many others. This seems to point to such a convergence, of two distinct
-ethnical lines of migration from opposite centres, as is borne out by
-much other evidence. In noting this aspect of the question anew, the
-further significant fact may also be once more repeated, that the Eskimo
-cranium, along with certain specialties of its own, is pre-eminently
-distinctive as the northern type.
-
-Among what may be accepted as typical Canadian skulls, those recovered
-from the old site of Hochelaga, and from the Huron ossuaries around Lake
-Simcoe, have a special value. They represent the native race which,
-under various names, extended from the Lower St. Lawrence westward to
-Lake St. Clair. The people encountered by Cartier and the first French
-explorers of 1535, and those whom Champlain found settled around the
-Georgian Bay sixty-eight years later, appear to have been of the same
-stock. Such primitive local names, as Stadaconé and Hochelaga, are not
-Algonkin, but Huron-Iroquois. Native traditions, as well as the
-allusions of the earliest French writers, confirm this idea of the
-occupation by a Huron-Iroquois or Wyandot population of the “region
-north-eastward from the mouth of the St. Lawrence, at or somewhere along
-the Gulf coast, before they ever met with the French, or any European
-adventurers,” as reaffirmed in the narrative of their own native
-historian, Peter Dooyentate.[133] But whatever confirmation may be found
-for this native tradition, it is certain that the European adventurers
-bore no part in their expulsion from their ancient home. The aborigines,
-whom Jacques Cartier found a prosperous people, safe in the shelter of
-their palisaded towns, had all vanished before the return of the French
-under Champlain; and they were found by him in new settlements, which
-they had formed far to the westward on Lake Simcoe and the Georgian Bay.
-
-Questions of considerable interest are involved in the consideration of
-this migration of the Hurons; and the circumstances under which they
-deserted their earlier home. They were visited by Champlain in 1615, and
-subsequently by the missionary Fathers, who, in 1639, found them
-occupying thirty-two palisaded villages, fortified in the same fashion
-as those described by the first French explorers at Stadaconé and
-Hochelaga. Their numbers are variously estimated. Brebeuf reckoned them
-at 30,000; and described them as living together in towns sometimes of
-fifty, sixty, or a hundred dwellings,—that is, of three or four hundred
-householders,—and diligently cultivating their fields, from which they
-derived food for the whole year. Whatever higher qualities distinguished
-the Iroquois from Algonkin or other native races, were fully shared in
-by the Hurons; and they are even spoken of with a natural partiality by
-their French allies, like Sagard, as a patrician order of savages, in
-comparison with those of the Five Nations. When first visited by French
-explorers, after their protracted journey through the desolate forests
-between the Ottawa and Lake Huron, their palisaded towns and cultivated
-fields must have seemed like an oasis in the desert. “To the eye of
-Champlain,” says Mr. Parkman, “accustomed to the desolation he had left
-behind, it seemed a land of beauty and abundance. There was a broad
-opening in the forest, fields of maize with pumpkins ripening in the
-sun, patches of sun-flowers, from the seeds of which the Indians made
-hair-oil, and in the midst the Huron town of Otouacha. In all essential
-points it resembled that which Cartier, eighty years before, had seen at
-Montreal; the same triple palisade of crossed and intersecting trunks,
-and the same long lodges of bark, each containing many households. Here,
-within an area of sixty or seventy miles, was the seat of one of the
-most remarkable savage communities of the continent.”[134] The Hurons,
-thus settled in their latter home, consisted of several “nations,”
-including their kinsmen to the south, as far as Lake Erie and the
-Niagara river. They had their own tribal divisions, still perpetuated
-among their descendants. The Rev. Prosper Vincent Sa∫∫atannen, a native
-Huron, and the first of his race admitted to the priesthood, informs me
-that the Hurons of Lorette still perpetuate their ancient classification
-into four _grandes compagnies_, each of which has its five tribal
-divisions or clans, by which of old all intermarriage was regulated. The
-members of the same clan regarded themselves as brothers and sisters,
-and so were precluded from marriage with one another. The small number
-of the whole band at La Jeune Lorette renders the literal enforcement of
-this rule impossible; but the children are still regarded as belonging
-to the mother’s clan. The five clans into which each of the four
-companies is divided are:—1. The Deer, _Oskanonton_; 2. The Bear,
-_Anniolen_; 3. The Wolf, _Annenarisk∫∫a_; 4. The Tortoise, _Andia∫∫ik_;
-5. The Beaver, _Tsotai_. There were two, if not more dialects spoken by
-the old Hurons, or Wyandots; and that of Hochelaga probably varied from
-any form of the language now surviving. This has to be kept in view in
-estimating the value of the lists of words furnished by Jacques Cartier
-of “le langage des pays et Royaulmes de Hochelaga et Canada, aultrement
-appellée par nous la nouvelle France.”
-
-Of the condition of the region to the west of the Ottawa prior to the
-seventeenth century nothing is known from direct observation. Before
-Champlain had an opportunity of visiting it, the whole region westward
-to Lake Huron had been depopulated and reduced to a desert. The fact
-that the few natives found by Champlain occupying the once populous
-region of the Hochelaga Indians were Algonkins, has been the chief
-ground for the assumption that the expulsion of that old Wyandot stock
-was due to their hostility. But such an idea is irreconcilable with the
-fact that the latter, instead of retreating southward to their
-Huron-Iroquois kinsmen, took refuge among Algonkin tribes. According to
-the narrative of their own Wyandot historian, Peter Dooyentate,
-gathered, as he tells us, from traditions that lived in the memory of a
-few among the older members of his tribe, the island of Montreal was
-occupied in the sixteenth century by Wyandots or Hurons, and Senecas,
-sojourning peaceably in separate villages. The tradition is vague which
-traces the cause of their hostility to the wrath of a Seneca maiden, who
-had been wronged by the object of her affections, and gave her hand to a
-young Wyandot warrior on the condition of his slaying the Seneca chief,
-to whose influence she ascribed the desertion of her former lover.
-Whatever probability may attach to this romance of the Indian lovers,
-the tradition that the Hurons were driven from their ancient homes on
-the St. Lawrence by their Seneca kinsmen is consistent with ascertained
-facts, as well as with the later history of the Senecas, who are found
-playing the same part to the Eries under a somewhat similar incentive to
-revenge, and appear to have taken the lead in the destruction of the
-Attiwendaronks. The native tradition is of value in so far as it shows
-that the fatal enmity of the Iroquois to the Hurons was not originally
-due to the alliance of the latter with the French; but Senecas and
-Hurons had alike disappeared before Champlain visited the scene of
-Cartier’s earlier exploration. The Attiwendaronks, who dwelt to the
-south of the later home of the Hurons, on the shores of Lakes Ontario
-and Erie, may have formed another of the nations of the Wyandot stock
-expelled from the valley of the St. Lawrence. Situated as they were in
-their later home, midway between the Hurons and Iroquois, they strove in
-vain to maintain a friendly neutrality. Charlevoix assigns the year 1635
-as the date of their destruction by the latter. Certain it is that
-between that date and the middle of the century their towns were utterly
-destroyed; and such of the survivors as lingered in the vicinity were
-incorporated into the nation of the Senecas, who lay nearest to them.
-
-The Eries were another Huron-Iroquois nation who appear to have
-persistently held aloof from the league. They were seemingly a fiercer
-and more warlike people than the Attiwendaronks; they fought with
-poisoned arrows, and were esteemed or dreaded as warriors. Their numbers
-must have been considerable, since they were an object of apprehension
-to the nations of the league whose western frontiers marched with their
-own. They are affirmed by the native historian, Cusick, to have sprung
-from the Senecas; but, if so, their separation was probably of remote
-date, as they were both numerous and powerful. The country which they
-occupied was noted among the French _coureurs des bois_ for its lynx
-furs; and they gave accordingly to its people the name of “La Nation du
-Chat.” Their ancient home is still indicated in the name of the great
-lake beside which they dwelt. But, for some unknown reason, they refused
-all alliance with the Senecas and the league of their Iroquois kin, and
-perished by their violence within seven years after the Huron country
-was laid waste. “To the Eries, and to the Neuter nation,” or
-Attiwendaronks, says Schoolcraft, “according to tradition, the Iroquois
-offered the alternative of admission into the league or extermination;
-and the strangeness of this proposition will disappear, when it is
-remembered that an Indian nation regards itself as at war with all
-others not in actual alliance.”[135] Peace, he adds, was the ultimate
-aim of the founders of the Iroquois oligarchy; and, for lovers of peace
-on such terms of supremacy, the _casus belli_ would not be more
-difficult to find than it has proved to be among the most Christian of
-kings. In the case of the Eries, as of the elder Wyandots of Hochelaga,
-the final rupture is ascribed to a woman’s implacable wrath.
-
-Father Le Moyne, while on a mission to the Onondagas in 1654, learned
-that the Iroquois confederacy were excited to fury against the Eries. A
-captive Onondaga chief is said to have been burnt at the stake after he
-had been offered, according to Indian custom, to one of the Erie women,
-to take the place of her brother who had been murdered while on a visit
-to the Senecas. It is a characteristic illustration of how the feuds of
-ages were perpetuated. The traditions of the Iroquois preserved little
-more than the fact that the Eries had perished by their fury. But a
-story told to Mr. Parkman by a Cayuga Indian, only too aptly illustrates
-the hideous ferocity of their assailants. It represented that the night
-after the great battle in which the Eries suffered their final defeat,
-the forest was lighted up with more than a thousand fires, at each of
-which an Erie was being tortured at the stake.[136] The number is
-probably exaggerated. But it is only thus, as it were in the lurid glare
-of its torturing fires, that we catch a glimpse of this old nation as it
-vanished from the scene. Of the survivors, the greater number were
-adopted, according to Indian fashion, into the Seneca nation.
-
-Some of the earthworks met with to the south of Lake Erie show proofs of
-greater constructive labour than anything found in Canada. Still more
-interesting are the primitive hieroglyphics of an inscription on
-Cunningham’s Island, ascribed to the Eries, and which Schoolcraft
-describes as by far the most elaborate work of its class hitherto found
-on the continent.[137] But the rock inscription, though highly
-interesting as an example of native symbolism and pictographic writing,
-throws no light on the history of its carvers; and of their language no
-memorial is recoverable, for they had ceased to exist before the great
-lake which perpetuates their name was known to the French.
-
-More accurate information has been preserved in reference to the Hurons,
-among whom the Jesuit Fathers laboured with self-denying zeal, from time
-to time reporting the results in their _Relations_ to the Provincial of
-the Order at Paris. One of the most characteristic religious ceremonies
-of the Hurons was the great “Feast of the Dead,” celebrated apparently
-at intervals of twelve years, when the remains of their dead were
-gathered from scaffolded biers, or remote graves, and deposited amid
-general mourning in the great cemetery of the tribe. Valuable robes and
-furs, pottery, copper kettles and others of their choicest possessions,
-including the pyrulæ, or large tropical shells brought from the Gulf of
-Mexico, with wampum, prized implements, and personal ornaments, were all
-thrown into the great trench, which was then solemnly covered over. By
-the exploration of those Huron ossuaries, the sites of the palisaded
-villages of the Hurons of the seventeenth century have been identified
-in recent years; and there are now preserved in the Laval University at
-Quebec upwards of eighty skulls recovered from cemeteries at St. Ignace,
-St. Joachin, Ste. Marie, St. Michael, and other villages, the scenes of
-self-denying labour, and in some cases of the cruel torturings, of the
-French missionaries by whom they were thus designated. Other examples of
-skulls from the same ossuaries, I may add, are now in the Museums of the
-University of Toronto, the London Anthropological Society, and the
-Jardin des Plantes at Paris. The skulls recovered from those ossuaries
-have a special value from the fact that the last survivors were driven
-out of the country by their Iroquois foes in 1649; and hence the crania
-recovered from them may be relied upon as fairly illustrating the
-physical characteristics of the race before they had been affected by
-intercourse with Europeans. The Huron skull is of a well-defined
-dolichocephalic type, with, in many cases, an unusual prominence of the
-occipital region; the parietal bones meet more or less at an angle at
-the sagittal suture; the forehead is flat and receding; the superciliary
-ridges in the male skulls are strongly developed; the malar bones are
-broad and flat, and the profile is orthognathic. Careful measurements of
-thirty-nine male skulls yield a mean longitudinal diameter of 7.39 to a
-parietal diameter of 5.50; and of eighteen female skulls, a longitudinal
-diameter of 7.07 to a parietal diameter of 5.22.[138]
-
-Who were the people found by Cartier in 1535, seemingly long-settled and
-prosperous, occupying the fortified towns of Stadaconé and Hochelaga,
-and lower points on the St. Lawrence? The question is not without a
-special interest to Canadians. According to the native Wyandot
-historian, they were Wyandots or Hurons, and Senecas. That they were
-Huron-Iroquois, at any rate, and not Algonkins, is readily determined.
-We owe to Cartier two brief vocabularies of their language, which,
-though obscured probably in their original transcription, and corrupted
-by false transliterations in their transference to the press, leave no
-doubt that the people spoke a Huron-Iroquois dialect. To which of the
-divisions it belonged is not so obvious. The languages, in the various
-dialects, differ only slightly in most of the words which Cartier gives.
-Sometimes they agree with Huron, and sometimes with Iroquois
-equivalents. The name of Hochelaga, “at the beaver-dam,” is Huron, and
-the agreement as a whole preponderates in favour of a Huron rather than
-an Iroquois dialect. But there was probably less difference between the
-two then, than at the more recent dates of their comparison. In dealing
-with this important branch of philological evidence, I have been
-indebted to the kindness of my friend, Mr. Horatio Hale, for a
-comparative analysis of the vocabulary supplied by Cartier, embodying
-the results of long and careful study. He has familiarised himself with
-the Huron language by personal intercourse with members of a little band
-of civilised Wyandots, settled on their reserve at Anderdon, in Western
-Ontario. The language thus preserved by them, after long separation from
-other members of the widely scattered race, probably presents the
-nearest approximation to the original forms of the native tongue, as
-spoken on the Island of Montreal and the lower St. Lawrence. In
-comparing them allowance has to be made for varieties of dialect among
-the old occupants of the lower valley of the St. Lawrence, and also for
-the changes wrought on the Huron language in the lapse of three and a
-half centuries, not simply by time, but also as the result of
-intercourse and intermixture with other peoples. The habit of recruiting
-their numbers by the adoption of prisoners and broken tribes could not
-fail to exercise some influence on the common tongue. The _k_ or hard
-_g_ of Cartier is, in the Wyandot, frequently softened to a _y_; and on
-the other hand, the _n_ is strengthened by a _d_ sound, as in Cartier’s
-pregnant term _Canada_, the old Hochelaga word for a town, which has
-become in the Wyandot _Yandata_; and so in other instances.
-
-The revolution which, at the critical period of the advent of the Trench
-in the valley of the St. Lawrence, in the interval of sixty-eight years
-between the visits of Cartier and Champlain, displaced the fortified and
-populous Indian capital of Hochelaga and left the surrounding regions a
-desolate wilderness, is a mysterious event. Had Champlain been curious
-to learn the facts of an occurrence then so recent there could have been
-little difficulty in recovering the history of the exodus of the
-Hochelagans. But it had no interest for the French adventurers of that
-day. The well-fortified Wyandot towns had given place to a few ephemeral
-birch-bark wigwams belonging to another race; and the readiest solution
-of the mystery has been to ascribe the expulsion of the Wyandots, or
-Hurons, from their ancient home in Eastern Canada, to the Algonkins.
-This, as already shown, is irreconcilable with the fact that Champlain
-found them in friendly alliance with the latter against their common
-foe, the Iroquois. If, however, the Wyandot tradition of the expulsion
-of the Hurons from the island of Montreal by the Senecas be accepted, it
-is in no degree inconsistent with the circumstances subsequently
-reported by Champlain; but rather serves to account for some of them, if
-it is assumed that the Senecas were, in their turn, driven out by the
-Algonkins, and then finally withdrew beyond the St. Lawrence.
-
-But there is another kind of evidence bearing on the question of the
-affinities of the people first met with by Cartier in 1535, which also
-has its value here. The descriptions of the palisaded towns of the
-Hurons on the Georgian Bay very accurately reproduce that which Cartier
-gives of Hochelaga. Ephemeral as such fortifications necessarily were,
-the construction of a rampart formed of a triple row of trunks of trees,
-surmounted with galleries, from whence to hurl stones and other missiles
-on their assailants, was a formidable undertaking for builders provided
-with no better tools than stone hatchets, and with no other means of
-transport than their united labour supplied. But the design had the
-advantage of furnishing a self-supporting wall, and so of saving the
-greater labour of digging a trench, with such inadequate tools, in soil
-penetrated everywhere with the roots of forest trees. It was the
-Huron-Iroquois system of military engineering, in which they contrasted
-favourably with the Algonkins, among whom the absence of such evidence
-of settled habits as those secure defences supplied, was characteristic
-of these ruder nomads. But such urban fortifications no less strikingly
-contrast with the elaborate and enduring military earthworks to the
-south of the great lakes. The pottery and implements found on the site
-of Hochelaga are of the same character as many examples recovered from
-the Huron ossuaries. On the other hand the peculiar rites, of which
-those ossuaries are the enduring memorials, appear to have distinguished
-the western Hurons from the older settlers on the St. Lawrence. The
-great Feast of the Dead, with its recurrent solemnities, when after the
-lapse of years the remains of their dead were exhumed, or removed from
-their scaffold biers, was the most characteristic religious ceremonial
-of the Hurons; and was practised with still more revolting rites by the
-kindred Attiwendaronks. Festering dead bodies were kept in their
-dwellings, preparatory to scraping the flesh from their bones; and the
-decaying remains of recently buried corpses were exhumed for reinterment
-in the great trench, which was prepared with enormous labour, and
-furnished with the most lavish expenditure of prized furs, wampum, and
-other possessions.
-
-In all ages and states of society unavailing sorrow has tempted the
-survivors to extravagant excesses in the effort to do honour to the
-loved dead; and sumptuary laws have been repeatedly enacted to restrain
-such demonstrations within reasonable bounds. _The Book of Rites_
-suffices to suggest that the ancient funeral rites of the Iroquois were
-of the same revolting and wasteful character, until their mythic
-reformer, Hiawatha, superseded them with a simpler symbolical funeral
-service. “I have spoken of the solemn event which has befallen you,” are
-the introductory words to the thirteenth paragraph of “The Condoling
-Council,” and it thus proceeds: “Every day you are losing your great
-men. They are being borne into the earth; also the warriors, and also
-your women, and also your grandchildren; so that in the midst of blood
-you are sitting.” It is therefore enacted, in the twenty-seventh
-paragraph, evidently in lieu of older practices: “This shall be done. We
-will suspend a pouch upon a pole, and will place in it some mourning
-wampum, some short strings, to be taken to the place where the loss was
-suffered. The bearer will enter, and will stand by the hearth, and will
-speak a few words to comfort those who will be mourning; and then they
-will be comforted, and will conform to the great law.”
-
-A string of black wampum sent round the settlement is still, among the
-Indians of the Six Nations, the notice of the death of a chief, as a
-belt of black wampum was a declaration of war. It seems not improbable
-that the people of Stadaconé and Hochelaga had submitted to the wise
-social and religious reforms by which the ancient rites of their dead
-were superseded by the symbolism of the mourning wampum, and hence the
-absence of ossuaries throughout the island of Montreal and the whole
-region to the east. But when the fugitive Wyandots fled into the
-wilderness, and reared new homes around Lake Simcoe and in the western
-peninsula, they may have revived traditional usages of their fathers,
-and resumed rites which had been reluctantly abandoned. Among the
-civilised Indians of the Six Nations some memorials of their ancestral
-rites of the dead still survive. A visitor to the reserve at the time of
-the death of a late highly esteemed chief told me that on the event
-being known it was immediately responded to by all within hearing by the
-prolonged utterance, in a mournful tone, of the cry _Kwé_, and this,
-passing from station to station, spread the news of their loss
-throughout the reserve. Nearly the same sound, uttered in a quicker
-note, _Quaig!_ is the salutation among the Hurons of Lorette.
-
-The later history of the Hurons and Iroquois is not without its special
-interest. One little band, the Hurons of Lorette, the representatives of
-the refugees from the massacre of 1648, has lingered till our own day in
-too close proximity to the French _habitants_ of Quebec to preserve in
-purity the blood of the old race. But great as are the alterations which
-time and intermixture with the white race have effected, they still
-retain many intellectual as well as physical traits of their original
-stock after an interval of two hundred and thirty-six years, during
-which intimate intercourse, and latterly frequent intermarriage with
-those of European blood, have wrought inevitable change on the
-race.[139] Other more vigorous representatives of the old Huron stock
-occupy a small reservation in the Township of Anderdon, in Western
-Ontario, from whom the vocabulary was derived which furnished a test of
-the language of the Hochelagans in the sixteenth century. But the Hurons
-of Lorette have also preserved their native tongue; and an ample
-vocabulary[140] of the older form of their language survives. A third
-modification of the ancient tongue no doubt exists; for the larger
-remnant of the survivors of the Hurons, after repeated wanderings, is
-now settled, far from the native home of the race, on reserves conceded
-to them by the American Government in Kansas.
-
-The Hurons have thus, for the most part, disappeared from Canada; but it
-is not without interest to note that the revolution which, upwards of a
-century ago, severed the connection of the old colonies to the south of
-the St. Lawrence with the region to the north, restored to Canada its
-ancient Iroquois. This race of savage warriors acquired the mastery of a
-region equal in extent to Central Europe; and by a system of warfare,
-not, after all, more inherently barbarous or recklessly bloody than that
-of Europe’s Grand Monarch, reconstructed the social and political map of
-the continent east of the Mississippi. Their influence acquired a novel
-importance when, in the seemingly insignificant rivalries of French and
-English fur-traders, they practically determined the balance of power
-between the two foremost nations of Europe on this continent. Their
-indomitable pertinacity proved more than a match alike for European
-diplomacy and military skill; and, as they maintained an uncompromising
-hostility to the French at a time when the rival colonists were nearly
-equally balanced, the failure of the magnificent schemes of Louis XIV.
-and his successors to establish in North America such a supremacy as
-Charles V. and Philip II. had held in Mexico and Peru, is largely
-traceable to them. It is natural that the Anglo-American student of
-history should estimate highly the polity of savage warriors who thus
-foiled the schemes of one of the most powerful monarchies of Europe for
-the mastery of this continent. The late Hon. L. H. Morgan thus writes of
-them: “They achieved for themselves a more remarkable civil
-organisation, and acquired a higher degree of influence, than any other
-race of Indian lineage except those of Mexico and Peru. In the drama of
-European colonisation they stood, for nearly two centuries, with an
-unshaken front against the devastations of war, the blighting influence
-of foreign intercourse, and the still more fatal encroachments of a
-restless and advancing border population. Under their federal system the
-Iroquois flourished in independence, and capable of self-protection,
-long after the New England and Virginia races had surrendered their
-jurisdictions, and fallen into the condition of dependent nations; and
-they now stand forth upon the canvas of Indian history, prominent alike
-for the wisdom of their civil institutions, their sagacity in the
-administration of the league, and their courage in its defence.”[141]
-But in this their historian applies to the Iroquois a European standard,
-similar to that by which Prescott unconsciously magnified Mexican
-barbarism into a rivalry with the contemporary civilisation of Spain.
-The romance attached to the Hodenosauneega, or Kononsionni, the famous
-league of the Long House or United Households, more truly derives its
-chief interest and value from the fact that its originators remained to
-the last savages. It is, at any rate, important to keep this fact in
-view, and to interpret the significance of the league in that light.
-When the treaty which initiated it was entered into by the Caniengas and
-the Oneidas, they were both in that primitive stage of unsophisticated
-barbarism to which the term “Stone Period” has been applied. In the
-absence of all knowledge of metallurgy, their implements and weapons
-were alike simple and rude. Agriculture, under such conditions, must
-have been equally primitive; and as for their wars, when they were not
-defensive, they appear to have had no higher aim than revenge. Gallatin,
-no unappreciative witness, says of them: “The history of the Five
-Nations is calculated to give a favourable opinion of the intelligence
-of the Red Man. But they may be ranked among the worst of conquerors.
-They conquered only in order to destroy, and, it would seem, solely for
-the purpose of gratifying their thirst for blood. Towards the south and
-the west they made a perfect desert of the whole country within 500
-miles of their seats. A much greater number of those Indians, who since
-the commencement of the seventeenth century have perished by the sword
-in Canada and the United States, have been destroyed by that single
-nation than in all their wars with the Europeans.”[142]
-
-To characterise the combination effected among such tribes as one
-presenting elements of wise civil institutions; or indeed to introduce
-such terms as league and federal system, in the sense in which they have
-been repeatedly employed, as though they referred to a confederation
-akin to those of the ancient Achæans or Ætolians, is to suggest
-associations altogether misleading. Though an interesting phase of
-American savage life, to which its long duration gives a marked
-significance, the Iroquois league was by no means unique; though it was
-the oldest, and may have been the model on which others were framed. The
-Creek confederacy embraced numerous tribes between the Mobile, Alabama,
-and Savannah rivers, and the Gulf of Mexico. At the head of it were the
-Muskhogees, a numerous and powerful, but wholly savage race of hunters.
-Like the Oneidas, Onandagas, and the still older Wyandots, they and the
-Choctaws claimed to be autochthones. The Muskhogees appealed to a
-tradition of their ancestors that they issued from a cave near the
-Alabama river; while the Choctaws pointed to the frontier region between
-them and the Chickasaws, where, as they affirmed, they suddenly emerged
-from a hole in the earth, a numerous and mighty people. The system of
-government amongst the members of this southern confederacy seems to
-have borne considerable resemblance to that of the Iroquois; if it was
-not borrowed from it. Every village was the centre of an independent
-tribe or nation, with its own chief; and the restraints imposed on the
-individual members, except when co-operating in some special enterprise
-or religious ceremonial, appear to have been slight.
-
-Mr. Hale has shown that the language of the Cherokees has a grammar
-mainly Huron-Iroquois, and a vocabulary largely recruited from some
-foreign source. From this he infers that one portion of the conquered
-Alligéwi, while the conflict still lasted, may have cast in their lot
-with the conquering race, just as the Tlascalans did with the Spaniards
-in their war against the Aztecs, and hence the origin of the great
-Cherokee nation. The fugitive Alligéwi, he surmises, may have fled down
-the Mississippi till they reached the country of the Choctaws,
-themselves a mound-building people; and to the alliance of the two he
-would thus trace the difference in the language of the latter from that
-of their eastern kindred, the Creeks or Muskhogees.[143] On the
-assumption of such a combination of ethnical elements, the origin of the
-Creek confederacy is easily accounted for. It is to this same element of
-language that we have to revert for guidance in the interpretation of
-the history of this remarkable race. It would be an evasion of the most
-essential evidence on which any reliable conclusions must be based, if
-the fact were overlooked that the Iroquois never emerged beyond the
-primitive stage of the Stone period. Nevertheless in one element of
-intellectual development their progress had been great. Each nation of
-the Iroquois league had its chief, to whom pertained the right of
-kindling the symbolic council-fire, and of taking the lead in all public
-assemblies. When the representative chiefs of the nations gathered in
-the Long House around the common council-fire of the league, it was no
-less necessary that they should be able and persuasive speakers than
-brave warriors. Rhetoric was cultivated in the council-house of the
-Iroquois no less earnestly than in the Athenian ekklesia or the Roman
-forum. Acute reasoning and persuasive eloquence demanded all the
-discriminating refinements of grammar, and the choice of terms which an
-ample vocabulary supplies. The holophrastic element has been noted as a
-peculiar characteristic of American languages. The word-sentences thus
-constructed not only admitted of, but encouraged, an elaborate nicety of
-discrimination; while the marked tendency of the process, so far as the
-language itself is concerned, was to absorb all other parts in the verb.
-Time, place, manner, aim, purpose, degree, and all the other
-modifications of language are combined polysynthetically with the root.
-Nouns are to a large extent verbal forms; and not only nouns and
-adjectives, but adverbs and prepositions, are regularly conjugated.
-Elaborated polysyllables, flexibly modified by systematic internal
-changes, give expression, in one compounded word-sentence, to every
-varying phase of intricate reasoning or emotion; and the complex
-structure shows the growth of a language in habitual use for higher
-purposes than the mere daily wants of life. The vocabulary in use in
-some rural districts in England has been found to include less than
-three hundred words; and in provincial dialects, thus restricted, the
-refinements of grammatical expression disappear. Among such rustic
-communities speech plays a very subordinate part in the business of
-life. But upon the deliberations of the Indian council-house depended
-the whole action of the confederacy. Hence, while in all else the
-Iroquois remained an untutored savage, his language is a marvellously
-systematised and beautiful structure, well adapted to the requirements
-of intricate reasoning and persuasive subtlety.
-
-Professor Whitney says, in reference to American languages generally,
-what may more especially be applied to the Huron-Iroquois: “There are
-infinite possibilities of expressiveness in such a structure; and it
-would only need that some native American Greek race should arise, to
-fill it full of thought and fancy, and put it to the uses of a noble
-literature, and it would be rightly admired as rich and flexible,
-perhaps beyond anything else that the world knew.”[144] Yet, on the
-other hand, the Iroquois dispense with the whole labials, never
-articulate with their lips, and throw entirely aside from their
-alphabetical series of phonetics six of those most constantly in use by
-us.
-
-In this direction, then, lies an ethnological problem which cannot fail
-to awaken ever-increasing interest. To the native languages of the New
-World we must look for a true key to the solution of some of the most
-curious and difficult questions involved in the peopling of the
-continent. “There lies before us,” says Professor Whitney, “a vast and
-complicated problem in the American races; and it is their language that
-must do by far the greatest part of the work in solving it.”
-
-Of the languages of the Huron-Iroquois, the Huron appears to be the
-oldest, if not the parent stock. When this aggressive race had spread,
-as conquerors, far to the south of the St. Lawrence, the mother nation
-appears to have held on to the cradleland of the race, where its
-representatives were found still in possession when the first European
-explorers entered the St. Lawrence. Colonists, of French or English
-origin, have been in more or less intimate intercourse with them ever
-since, yet the materials for any satisfactory study of the Huron
-language, or of a comparison between it and the various Iroquois
-dialects, are still scanty and very inadequate. The languages of the
-Five Nations that originally constituted the members of the Iroquois
-league, are, in the strictest sense of the term, dialects. In their
-council-house on the Grand river, the chiefs of the Mohawks, Oneidas,
-Onandagas, Cayugas, and Senecas, speak each in their own language and
-need no interpreter. Nevertheless, the differences are considerable; and
-a Seneca would scarcely find the language of a Mohawk intelligible to
-him in ordinary conversation. But the separation of the Tuscaroras from
-the Iroquois on the Mohawk river had been of long duration, and their
-language differs much more widely from the others.
-
-The Mohawk language was adopted at an early date for communicating with
-the Indians of the Six Nations. The New England Company, established in
-1649, under favour of the Lord Protector, Cromwell, “for the propagation
-of the Gospel in New England,” was revived on the restoration of Charles
-II. under a royal charter; and with the eminent philosopher, Robert
-Boyle, as its first governor, vigorous steps were taken for the
-religious instruction of the Indians. The correspondence of Eliot, “the
-Apostle of the Indians,” with the first governor of the Company, is
-marked by their anxiety for the completion of the Massachusetts Bible,
-which, along with other books, he had translated for the benefit of the
-Indians of New England. The silver Communion Service, still preserved at
-the reserve on the Grand river, presented to the ancestors of the Mohawk
-nation by Queen Anne, is an interesting memorial of the early efforts
-for their Christianisation. It bears the inscription: “A. R., 1711.
-=The Gift of Her Majesty, by the Grace of God, of Great Britain,
-France, and Ireland, and of her Plantations in North America, Queen: to
-her Indian Chappel of the Mohawks.=” The date has a special
-interest in evidence of the transforming influences already at work; for
-it was not till three years later that the Tuscaroras were received into
-the confederation, and the Iroquois became known by their later
-appellation as the Six Nation Indians. In accordance with the efforts
-indicated by the royal gift, repeated steps were taken for translating
-the Scriptures and the Prayer-Book into their language. In a letter of
-the Rev. Dr. Stuart, missionary to the Six Nations, dated 1771, he
-describes his introduction to Captain Brant at the Mohawk village of
-Canajoharie, and the aid received from him in revising the Indian
-Prayer-Book, and in translating the Gospel of St. Mark and the Acts of
-the Apostles into the Mohawk language. The breaking out of the
-revolutionary war arrested the printing of these translations. The
-manuscripts were brought to Canada in 1781, and placed in the hands of
-Colonel Clause, the Deputy Superintendent of Indian Affairs. This
-gentleman subsequently carried them to England, where they were at
-length printed. A more recent edition of the Mohawk Prayer-Book,
-prepared under the direction of the Rev. Abraham Nelles, a missionary of
-the New England Company, with the aid of a native catechist, issued from
-the Canadian press in 1842. The Indian text is accompanied with its
-English equivalent on the opposite page, and this _Kaghyadouhsera ne
-Yoedereanayeadagwha_, or Book of Common Prayer, is still in use in the
-religious services of the Six Nation Indians at their settlement on the
-Grand river.
-
-Some characteristics of the language, such as the absence of labials,
-constitute not only a distinctive difference from the old Huron speech,
-but afford proof of the latter being the older form. “It is a fact,”
-says Professor Max Müller, in referring to his intercourse with an
-intelligent native Mohawk, then a student at Oxford, “that the Mohawks
-never, either as infants or as grown-up people, articulate with their
-lips. They have no _p_, _b_, _m_, _f_, _v_, _w_—no labials of any
-kind.”[145] The statement, so far as the Mohawk infants are concerned,
-is open to further inquiry; but Dr. Oronhyatekha, the Mohawk referred
-to, who pursued his studies for a time in the University of Toronto, and
-to whom I have been largely indebted in this and other researches in
-Indian philology, not only rejects the six letters already named, but
-also _c_, _g_, _l_, _z_. The alphabet is thus reduced to seventeen
-letters. Professor Max Müller notes in passing, that the name “Mohawk”
-would seem to prove the use of the labial. But it is of foreign origin,
-though possibly derived from their own term: _oegwehokough_, “people.”
-The name employed by themselves is “Canienga.” The practice of speaking
-without ever closing the lips is an acquired habit of later origin than
-the forms of the parent tongue. A comparison of any of the Iroquois
-dialects with the Huron as still spoken by the Wyandots of Ontario,
-shows the _m_ in use by the latter in what is no doubt a surviving
-example of the oldest form of the Huron-Iroquois language. This Huron
-_m_ frequently becomes _w_ in the Iroquois dialects, _e.g._
-_skatamendjaweh_, “one hundred,” becomes in Mohawk _unskadewennyaweh_;
-_rume_, “man,” Mohawk, _ronkwe_, etc. These and other examples of this
-interchangeable characteristic of Indian phonology, and the process of
-substitution in the absence of labials, are illustrated in the table of
-Huron-Iroquois numerals on the following page. The habit of invariably
-speaking with the lips open is the source of very curious modifications
-in the Iroquois vocabularies when compared with that of the Wyandots.
-The _m_ gives place to _w_, _nw_, _nh_, or _nhu_; also to _ku_ and
-_nkw_, and so frequently changes the whole character of the word by the
-modifications it gives rise to.
-
-A comparison of the numerals of cognate languages and dialects is always
-instructive; and with the growing disposition of American philologists
-to turn to the Basques, as the only prehistoric race of Europe that has
-perpetuated the language of an Allophylian stock with possible analogies
-to the native languages of America, their numerals may be placed
-alongside of those of the Huron-Iroquois. The permanency of the names
-for numerals, and their freedom from displacement by synonyms,
-
- COMPARATIVE TABLE OF NUMERALS.
-
-────┬──────────┬──────────────────┬─────────────────────┬─────────────────
- │ │ │ │
- │HOCHELAGA.│ HURON. │ │
- │(Cartier.)│ (Lorette.) │ WYANDOT. │ MOHAWK.
- │ │ │ │
-────┼──────────┼──────────────────┼─────────────────────┼─────────────────
- │ │ │ │
- 1│segada} │ │ │
- │secata} │skāt │scat │unska
- 2│tigneny} │ │ │
- │tignem } │tendi │tendee │dekenih
- 3│asche │chin │shaight │ahsunh
- 4│honnacon │ndak │andaght │kayerih
- 5│ouiscon │wisch │weeish │wisk
- 6│indahir │wahia │waushau │yayak
- 7│ayaga │tsotaré │sootaie │jadah
- 8│adigue │ateré │autarai │sadekonh
- 9│madellon │entson │aintru │tyodonh
- 10│assem │asen │aughsagh │oyerih
- 11│ ... │asenskatiskaré │assan escate escarhet│unskayawenreh
- 12│ ... │asentenditiskaré │asanteni escarhet │dekenihyawenreh
- 13│ ... │āsenachinskaré │ ... │ahsunhyawenreh
- 14│ ... │asendakskaré │ ... │kayerihyawenreh
- 15│ ... │asenwischskaré │ ... │wiskyawenreh
- 16│ ... │asenwahiaskaré │ ... │yayakyawenreh
- 17│ ... │asentsotaréskaré │ ... │jadahyawenreh
- 18│ ... │asenateréskaré │ ... │sadekonhyawenreh
- 19│ ... │asenentsonskaré │ ... │tyodonhyawenreh
- 20│ ... │tendi eouasen │tendeitawaughsa │dewasunh
- 30│ ... │achink iouasen │ ... │ahsunhniwasunh
- 100│ ... │enniot iouasen │scutemaingarwe │unskadewennyaweh
-1000│ ... │asenate ouendiaré │assen attenoignauoy │oyerih-
- │ │ │ │ nadewennyaweh
- │ │ │ │
-────┴──────────┴──────────────────┴─────────────────────┴─────────────────
-
-are seen in the universality of one series of names throughout the whole
-ancient and modern Aryan languages of Asia and Europe. But the Basque
-numerals bear little or no resemblance to either, unless such can be
-traced in the _bi_, “two,” and the _sei_, “six,” as in the _assem_,
-“ten” (_decem_), of the old Hochelaga, the _ahsen_ of the later
-Wyandots. The _ehun_ of the Basque has also its remote, and probably
-accidental resemblance; but the _milla_, “one thousand,” is certainly
-borrowed, and serves to show that the higher numerals, with the evidence
-they afford of advancing civilisation, were the result of intrusive
-Aryan influences in the natives of the Iberian peninsula. With the
-growing tendency to turn to the prehistoric Iberians of Europe for one
-possible key to the origin of the races and languages of America, it is
-well to keep this test in view for comparison with the widely varying
-native numerals. But the correspondence is slight, even with probable
-Turanian congeners. One Biscayan form of “three,” _hirun_, is not unlike
-the Magyar _harom_; while the _eyg_, “one,” of the latter, seems to find
-its counterpart in the inseparable particle that transforms the Basque
-radical _ham_, “ten,” into the _hamaika_, “eleven.” But such fragmentary
-traces are in striking contrast to the radical agreement of Sanskrit,
-Zend, Greek, Latin, Celtic, Slavonic, and Teutonic numerals. Mr. Hale
-has drawn my attention to the curious manner in which the names of the
-first five Hochelaga numerals in Cartier’s list are contracted and
-strengthened in the modern Wyandot; and some of the modifications in the
-Iroquois dialects are no less interesting. _Secata_, the Hochelaga
-“one,” survives in the Onondaga _skadah_, while it becomes _skat_ in the
-modern Huron, the Cayuga, and the Seneca. But in the compounded form of
-the Wyandot “one hundred,” _skatamendjawe_, as in the Onondaga
-_skadahdewennyachweh_, the terminal _a_ reappears. _Tigneny_, the old
-form of “two,” is abridged and strengthened to _tendi_; _asche_, “three”
-(originally, in all probability, _aschen_, or, as still in use by the
-Hurons of Lorette, _achin_), survives as _ahsunh_ or _ahsenh_ in nearly
-all the Iroquois dialects, including the Tuscarora. In the Nottoway it
-is still discernible in the modified _arsa_. The exceptions are the
-Seneca, where it becomes _sen_, while one Wyandot form is _shenk_; which
-reappears in the Seneca compounded form of “thirty,” _shenkwashen_.
-_Honnacon_, “four,” loses both its initial and terminal syllables, and
-becomes _dak_ in the Wyandot, and _keih_ or _kei_, an abbreviation of
-the Mohawk _kayerih_, in the Cayuga and the Seneca dialects. The ancient
-form of “five,” _ouiscon_, has partially survived in the Huron _ouisch_.
-It becomes _wisk_, _whisk_, _wish_, or (in the Seneca) _wis_, in all the
-Iroquois dialects,—the Wyandot and Cayuga once more agreeing in form.
-The _ayaga_, “seven,” of the old Hochelaga, nearly resembles the _jadah_
-of several of the Iroquois dialects, as in the Cayuga _jadak_, in the
-Tuscarora _janah_, and in the Nottoway _oyag_; whereas in the Wyandot it
-is _tsotaré_. The _adigue_, “eight,” in its oldest form is _sadekonh_ in
-the Mohawk, and _dekrunh_ in the Cayuga; with the substitution of the
-_l_ for _r_ it becomes _deklonh_ in the Oneida; and after changing to
-_tekion_ in the Seneca, and _nagronh_ in the Tuscarora, it reappears in
-the Nottoway as _dekra_. The ancient _madellon_, “nine,” curiously
-survives in abridged form, with the substitute for the labial, in the
-Oneida _wadlonh_ and the Onondaga _wadonh_, while one Wyandot form is
-_entron_, and that of the Hurons of Lorette _entson_. In the Hochelaga
-_assem_, “ten,” we have the old form which is perpetuated in the Wyandot
-_ahsen_, the Onondaga and Cayuga _wasenh_, the Tuscarora _wasunh_, and
-the Nottoway _washa_; while the Mohawk and the Oneida have the diverse
-_oyerih_, or _oyelih_, with the characteristic change of _r_ into _l_.
-The form of the Mohawk for “one thousand,” _oyerihnadewunnyaweh_, is an
-interesting illustration of the progressive development of numbers. _Na_
-is probably a contraction of _nikonh_, “of them,” or “of it,”—the whole
-reading “of them ten hundred.”
-
-In comparing the languages of the different members of the Iroquois
-confederacy with the Wyandot or Huron, some of the facts already noted
-in the history of the former have to be kept in view. Two and a half
-centuries have transpired since the three western nations of the
-confederacy, the Onondagas, Cayugas, and Senecas received great
-additions to their numbers by the successive adoption of Attiwendaronk,
-Huron, and Erie captives, while the Caniengas, or Mohawks, and the
-Oneidas remained unaffected by such intrusions. There is direct evidence
-that the Onondaga language has undergone great change; as a Jesuit
-dictionary of the seventeenth century exists which shows a much nearer
-resemblance between the Mohawk and Onondaga languages at that date than
-now appears. Allowance must be made for similar changes affecting the
-Hurons in their enforced migration from the St. Lawrence to their later
-homes. Here, as in so many other instances, it becomes interesting to
-note how the language of a people reflects its history.
-
-In tracing out slighter and more remote resemblances, such as may be
-discerned on a close scrutiny, where the variation between the Hochelaga
-and the modern Wyandot numerals is widest, the different sources of
-change have to be kept in view. In all such comparisons, moreover,
-allowance must be made for the phonetic reproduction of unfamiliar words
-learned solely by ear, as well as for the peculiar representation of the
-nasal sounds in their reduction to writing by a French or English
-transcriber.
-
-The tradition, mentioned by Dooyentate, of Senecas and Wyandots living
-in friendly contiguity on the Island of Montreal in the sixteenth
-century, naturally suggests the probability that their dialects did not
-greatly differ. Certain noticeable resemblances between the Seneca and
-the Wyandot numerals have been noted above, but it is only their modern
-forms that are thus open to comparison; and in the process of phonetic
-decay the Seneca has suffered the greatest change. But after making
-every allowance for modifications wrought by time, by adoption of
-strangers into the tribe, and other internal sources of change, as well
-as for the imperfection of Cartier’s renderings of the Hochelaga tongue,
-and for subsequent errors of transcribers and printers, there still
-remains satisfactory evidence of relationship between nearly half of
-Cartier’s vocabulary and the corresponding words of the Wyandot tongue.
-A comparison has been made between the Hochelaga numerals and those of
-the Wyandots of Anderdon. In the comparative table of numerals given on
-page 292, I have placed alongside of the old Hochelaga series derived
-from Cartier’s lists those now in use among the Hurons of Lorette, as
-supplied to me by M. Paul Picard, the son of the late Huron chief. In
-the third column another version of the Wyandot numerals is given, from
-Gallatin’s comparative vocabulary. It is derived from different sources,
-including the United States War Department; and therefore, no doubt,
-illustrates the changes which the language has undergone among the
-Wyandots on their remote Texas reserve. Gallatin also gives another
-version of Huron numerals derived from Sagard. It will be seen that M.
-Picard used the _t_ as in Cartier’s lists, and in that of the southern
-Wyandots, where the _d_ is employed in others, except in the Nottoway
-numerals, where the use of both is, no doubt, due to the English
-transcriber. In comparing the different lists, this variation in
-orthography and also the interchangeable _k_ and _g_ have to be kept in
-view. Thus the Cayuga has _dekrunh_, in the Oneida _dekelonh_, where the
-Tuscarora has _nagronh_. But the Huron _tendi_, in use now both at
-Lorette and Anderdon, shows the result of long intercourse with
-Europeans begetting an appreciation of their discrimination between the
-hard and soft consonants. Had the whole series been derived from one
-source, such orthographic variations would have disappeared. The lists
-have been furnished to me by the Rev. J. G. Vincent and M. Picard,
-educated Hurons; L. A. Dorion, an educated Iroquois; Dr. Oronhyatekha,
-an educated Mohawk; Mr. Horatio Hale; and also from Gallatin’s valuable
-comparative tables of Indian vocabularies in the _Archæologia
-Americana_. In the _Synopsis of the Indian Tribes_, to which these
-vocabularies form an appendix, Gallatin classed both the Tuteloes and
-the Nottoways, along with the Tuscaroras, as southern Iroquois tribes.
-But recent researches of Mr. Hale have established the true place of the
-Tuteloes to be with the Dakotan, and not the Huron-Iroquois family. It
-is otherwise with the Cherohakahs, or Nottoways, whose home was in
-south-eastern Virginia, where their memory is perpetuated in the name of
-the river on which they dwelt. At the close of the seventeenth century
-they still numbered 130 warriors, or about 700 in all; but twenty years
-later, of the whole tribe only twenty souls survived. At that date two
-vocabularies of the language were obtained, which furnish satisfactory
-evidence of the correctness of their classification among southern
-Iroquois tribes. Their numerals, as shown in the tables, approximate, as
-might be anticipated, to those of the Tuscaroras, at least in the
-majority of the primary numbers; whereas those of the Tuteloes are
-totally dissimilar. As to the Basque numerals introduced alongside of
-them in the comparative tables, they only suffice to show that the
-pre-Aryan language still spoken, in varying dialects, on both slopes of
-the Pyrenees, differed equally widely from the Aryan languages of
-Europe, and from the Iroquois or any other known American language,
-except in so far as the latter are agglutinative in structure. Van Eys,
-in his _Basque Grammar_, draws attention to the words _buluzkorri_, and
-_larrugori_, “naked”; the first of which literally signifies “red hair,”
-and the second “red skin.” They are interesting illustrations of the way
-in which important historical facts lie embedded in ancient languages.
-But the colour of the hair forbids the inference that the ruddy Basques
-of primitive centuries were akin to the “Redskins” of the New World.
-
-The phonology of the Iroquois languages is notable in other respects
-besides those already referred to. According to M. Cuoq, an able
-philologist, who has laboured for many years as a missionary among the
-Iroquois of the Province of Quebec, the sounds are so simple that he
-considers an alphabet of twelve letters sufficient for their indication:
-_a_, _e_, _f_, _h_, _i_, _k_, _n_, _o_, _r_, _s_, _t_, _w_. The
-transliterations noticeable in the various Iroquois dialects, follow a
-well-known phonetic law. Thus the _l_ and _r_ are interchangeable, as
-_ronkwe_, “man,” in the Mohawk, becomes in the Oneida _lonhwe_; _raxha_,
-“boy,” becomes _laxha_; _rakeniha_, “my father,” becomes _lakenih_, etc.
-The same is seen throughout the compound numerals from “eleven” onward.
-The Cayuga and Tuscarora most nearly approach to the Mohawk in this use
-of the _r_. A characteristic change of a different kind is seen in the
-grammatical value of the initial _r_ in the Mohawk in relation to
-gender. For example, _onkwe_ is applied to mankind, as distinguished
-from _karyoh_, “the brute.” It becomes _ronkwe_, “man,” _yonkwe_
-“woman.” So also _raxah_, “boy,” changes to _kaxha_, “girl”;
-_rihyeinah_, “my son,” to _kheyenah_, “my daughter,” etc. The change of
-gender is further illustrated in such examples as _raohih_, his apple;
-_raoyen_, his arrow; _ahkohih_, her apple; _ahkoyen_, her arrow;
-_raonahih_ (masc.), _aonahih_ (fem.), their apples; _raodiyenkwireh_
-(masc.), _aodiyenkwireh_ (fem.), their arrows, etc. But this arrangement
-of the formative element as a prefix is characteristic of American
-languages, though not peculiar to them. Thus _Seshatsteaghseragwekough_,
-Almighty God (literally, “Thou who hast all power, or strength”),
-becomes, in the third person, _Rashatsteaghseragwekough_.
-
-The vowel sounds are very limited. No distinction is apparent in any
-Huron-Iroquois language between the _o_ and the _u_. In writing it the
-_e_ and _u_ sounds are also often interchangeable. Where, for example,
-_e_ is used in one set of the Tuscarora numerals supplied to me, another
-substitutes _u_ for it wherever it is followed by an _n_; e.g. _enjih_,
-_unjih_; _ahsenh_, _ahsunh_; _endah_, _undah_, etc. So also the word for
-“man” is written for me in one case _onkwe_, and in another _unkweh_. It
-requires an acute and practised ear to discriminate the niceties of
-Indian pronunciation, and a no less practised tongue to satisfy the
-critical native ear. Dr. Oronhyatekha, when pressed to define the value
-of the _t_ sound in his own name, replied “It is not quite _t_ nor _d_.”
-The name is compounded of _oronya_, “blue,” the word used in the
-Prayer-Book for “heaven,” and _yodakha_, “burning.” In very similar
-terms, Asikinack, an educated Odahwah Indian, when asked by me whether
-we should say Ottawa, or Odawa—the Utawa of Morris’s “Canadian Boat
-Song,”—replied that the sound lay between the two,—a nicety
-discernible only by Indian ears.
-
-The euphonic changes which mark the systematic transitions in the Mohawk
-language, though by no means peculiar to it, cannot fail to awaken an
-interest in the thoughtful student, who reflects on the social condition
-of the people among whom this elaborated vehicle of thought was the
-constraining power by means of which their chiefs and elders swayed the
-nations of the Iroquois confederacy with an eloquence more powerful and
-persuasive than that of many civilised nations. They have been
-illustrated in the verb; but the same systematic application of euphonic
-change through all the transitions of their vocabulary is seen in the
-elaborate word-sentences, so characteristic of the extreme length to
-which the incorporating mode of structure of the Turanian family of
-languages is carried in many of those spoken by the American nations.
-The habitual concentration of complex ideas in a single word has long
-been recognised, not only as giving a peculiar character to many of the
-Indian languages, but as one source of their adaptability to the aims of
-native oratory. From the Massachusetts Bible of Eliot, Professor Whitney
-quotes a word of eleven syllables; and Gallatin produces from the
-Cherokee another of seventeen syllables. This frequently embodies a
-descriptive holophrasm, and so aids the native rendering of novel
-objects and ideas into a language, the vocabulary of which is
-necessarily devoid of the requisite terms. But in such cases the
-agglutinative process is obvious, and the elements of the compounded
-word must be present to the mind of speaker and hearer. The English word
-“almighty” is itself an example of the process. It becomes in the Mohawk
-Prayer-Book _seshatsteaghseragwekonh_, from _seshatsteh_, “you are
-strong,” and _ahkwekonh_, “all,” or “the whole.” When the missionaries
-first undertook to render into the Mohawk language the Gospels and
-Service-Books for Christian worship, it may be doubted if many of their
-converts had ever seen a sheep. But they had to reproduce in Mohawk this
-general confession: “We have erred and strayed from Thy ways like lost
-sheep.” They did it accordingly in this fashion:
-_Teyagwaderyeadawearyesneoni yoegwathaharagwaghtha tsisahate tsiniyouht
-yodiyadaghtoeouh teyodinakaroetoeha_, which may be literally rendered:
-“We make a mistake, and get off the track where your road is, the same
-as strayed animals with small horns.” The extreme literalness of the
-rendering may probably strike the mind of the English reader in a way
-that would not occur to the Indian, familiar with such descriptive
-holophrasms. But it illustrates a difficulty with which Eliot was very
-familiar when engaged on his Massachusetts Indian Bible. In translating,
-for example, the song of Deborah and Barak, where the mother of Sisera
-“cried through the lattice,” the good missionary looked in vain in the
-Indian wigwam for anything that corresponded to the term. At length he
-called an Indian and described to him a lattice as wicker-work, and
-obtained in response a rendering of the text which literally meant: “The
-mother of Sisera looked through an eel-pot.” It was the only kind of
-wicker-work of which the Indian had any knowledge.
-
-Evidences of an exceptional development of the æsthetic faculty among
-the nations of the New World have already been noted; but the Iroquois
-cannot be included among those specially noticeable for their imitative
-powers, or in other ways furnishing evidence of any highly developed
-artistic faculty. They cannot compare in this respect with the Zuñi or
-others of the Pueblo Indians, among whom the arts of long-settled
-agricultural communities have been developed for purposes of ornament as
-well as utility; nor is their inferiority less questionable when we
-compare them with some of the tribes of the north-west coast and the
-neighbouring islands. Their languages confirm this; for while, as Mr.
-Cushing has shown, the Zuñi language possesses many words relating to
-art-processes, the Iroquois and Algonkin dialects supply such terms for
-the most part only in descriptive holophrasms, and not in primitive
-roots.
-
-In Iroquois, the word _kar_ or _kare_ signifies “to paint” or “draw.”
-The initial _k_ in Iroquois words is usually not radical, and so rarely
-enters into composite terms. The root of _kar_, is _ar_ or _are_, which
-added to _kaiata_, or _oiata_, “living thing, person, body,” makes
-_kaiatare_, “image” or “likeness,” _i.e._ “pictured body,” or as a verb
-“to paint” or “depict anything.” To this is added the verbal suffix _ta_
-or _tha_, which occasionally becomes _stha_, and has different meanings,
-causative and instrumental. The Mohawk supplies such words and terms of
-art as _ahyeyatonh_, “to grave”; _rahyatonhs_, “an engraver”;
-_ahyekonteke_, “to paint”; _rakonteks_, “a painter”; _s’hakoyatarha_,
-“an artist”; _rahkaratahkwas_, “a carver”; _rateanakerahtha_, “a
-modeller,” or “one who models figures in clay.” In the Iroquois version
-of the Gospel of St. John, chap. viii. verse 6 reads thus: _Nok tanon ne
-Iesos wathastsake ehtake nok rasnonsake_ (more correctly, _rasnonkenh_)
-_warate wahiaton onwentsiake_, lit. “But instead Jesus bent low and with
-hand used, wrote,” or “engraved, on the earth.” The version of the
-second commandment in the Mohawk Prayer-Book affords another
-illustration, in the holophrasm _asadatyaghdoenihseroenyea_. It is
-compounded of _ahsonniyon_, “make”; _ahsadadonnyen_, “to make for
-yourself”; _kayadonnihsera_, “an image” or “doll.” _Toghsa
-asadatyaghdoenihseroenyea, shekonh othenouh taoesakyatayerea nene enekea
-karouhyakouh, neteas eghtake oughweatsyakonh_, etc., lit. “Do not make
-an image or idol for yourself, even anything like above in the sky, nor
-below in the earth,” etc.
-
-The word _kaiata_, or _oiata_, as already noted, signifies “a living
-thing, person,” or “body”; _kakonsa_ or _okonsa_, is the “face” or
-“visage”; and from those come many derivatives. Bruyas gives _gaiata_,
-“a living thing”; _gaiatare_ (or _kaiatare_) “image,” and as a verb, “to
-paint.” There is also _gaiatonni_, “a doll” or “puppet,” _i.e._ “a made
-person,” from _oiata_ and _konnis_, “to make.” From the same root we may
-probably derive _kiaton_, “to write,” as in the Iroquois Gospels,
-_wahaiaton_, “wrote”; _kahiaton_, “it is written,” etc. The original
-meaning was, no doubt, picture-writing, _i.e._ making images of things.
-In the old Onondaga dictionary of the Jesuit Fathers is the word
-_kiatonnion_, “I keep writing.” The same authority also gives
-_guianatonh_ (_kianatonh_), “I paint,” apparently from another root,
-_oiana_ (_kaiana_) “track, walk, gait,” etc., which has many
-derivatives. The remarkable compass and minute nicety of expression
-which the Iroquois grammar had acquired in the various languages of the
-Six Nations, approximates to the wonderful expansion effected on the
-crude Anglo-Saxon verb by the evolution of the auxiliaries out of vague
-active verbs. This has been effected through the habitual resort to
-oratory as a source of combined action in the councils of the tribes,
-which constituted one of the most remarkable characteristics of this
-representative Indian stock. In this respect the expressive flexibility
-and rhetorical aptitude of the Iroquois languages stand out in striking
-contrast to the limited compass of grammatical discrimination in those
-of Europe’s Scandinavian and Teutonic races by whom the Roman empire was
-overthrown. They had indeed their “tun-moot,” the council meeting of the
-village community for justice and government; but the deliberations on
-the moot-hill, though they embodied the germ of all later parliaments,
-gave birth to no such development of language. It is when entering on
-the history of the grand constitutional struggle for a free parliament
-that Carlyle, in quaint irony, exclaims, or assigns to his apocryphal
-Dryasdust the exclamation: “I have known nations altogether destitute of
-printers’ types and learned appliances, with nothing better than old
-songs, monumental stone heaps and quipo-thrums to keep record by, who
-had truer memory of their memorable things. . . . The English, one can
-discern withal, have been perhaps as brave a people as their neighbours;
-perhaps, for valour of action and true hard labour in this earth, since
-brave peoples were first made in it, there has been none braver any
-where or any when:—but also, it must be owned, in stupidity of speech
-they have no fellow!”[146] It suited the purpose of the satirist to
-ignore for the moment that Shakespeare came of that same speechless
-race. But in its earlier stage when any comparison with Indian nations
-is permissible the irony is not extravagant.
-
-But apart from the great compass of the Iroquois verb as illustrative of
-grammatical development in the languages of unlettered nations, another
-characteristic feature is the distinction between masculine and feminine
-forms both in speaking of and to a man or woman. In the study of the
-minute niceties of the Iroquois verb I have been largely indebted to Dr.
-Oronhyatekha, and to the Rev. Isaac Bearfoot, both educated Mohawks.
-When tracing out the comprehensive power of the Mohawk verb, I had in
-view at the same time the recovery of evidences that the language might
-supply of an inherent recognition of the artistic faculty. This is much
-more strongly manifested in other American races in all stages of
-progress, from the ingenious Haidahs and Tawatins of British Columbia,
-and the Pueblo Indians of Arizona, to the semi-civilised nations of
-Mexico and the lettered races of Central and Southern America.
-Nevertheless the Iroquois recorded in primitive picture-writing the
-deeds of their departed braves, and have left records in the same crude
-hieroglyphics, such as the graven rock on Cunningham Island, Lake Erie.
-Their pipes were carved, and their pottery modelled into representations
-of familiar objects indicative of a habitual, though simple practice of
-imitative art that could not fail to beget some counterpart in their
-languages. Hence the choice of the verb _kyadarahste_, “to draw.”
-_Kayadareh_, or _kyadareh_, signifies “a body or form _in_,” _e.g._ “in
-a frame” or “group”; _kyadarastonh_, on the other hand, implies “a body”
-or “form transferred _on_ to something,” _e.g._ a board or canvas. The
-latter is therefore the more expressive and correct term to use for
-drawing or painting, while it illustrates the process of augmenting the
-vocabulary to meet the requirements of novel acquisitions in art. But
-its chief value consists in its affording illustration not only of the
-inherent capacity of the language to express with minute nicety of
-detail the manifestations of an æsthetic faculty, as yet very partially
-developed, but of the compass of its grammar to indicate every
-distinctive variation of form expressive of time, place, action, object,
-or subject. The latest results of philological research in this
-direction are set forth in the _Lexique_ and the _Études philologique_
-of Abbé Cuoq, and in an admirable _résumé_ in Mr. Horatio Hale’s
-introduction to _The Iroquois Book of Rites_.[147] The systematic
-processes by which the moods and tenses are indicated, either by changes
-of termination or prefixed particles, or by both conjoined, are
-carefully indicated by Mr. Hale; but he adds: “A complete grammar of
-this speech, as full and minute as the best Sanscrit or Greek grammars,
-would probably equal, and perhaps surpass those grammars in extent. The
-unconscious forces of memory and of discrimination required to maintain
-this complicated intellectual machine, and to preserve it constantly
-exact, and in good working order, must be prodigious.” This tendency to
-elaborate niceties of discrimination is in striking contrast to that of
-the modern cultivated languages of Europe; and it is not without reason
-that it is spoken of as a “complicated intellectual machine.” The
-contrast, for example, between the Mohawk or other Iroquois verb, in all
-its complex variations, and the extreme simplicity of the Anglo-Saxon
-verb, with only its Indefinite and Perfect Tenses,—the former
-predicated either of the present, or of a future time, and the latter of
-any past time,—can scarcely fail to impress the thoughtful student who
-keeps in view the relative civilisation of the Iroquois, and of the
-English people at the period when Anglo-Saxon in its purely inflectional
-stage was still the national language. The English verb has since then
-acquired wonderful power and compass by means of the auxiliary verbs;
-but its whole tendency is at variance with the elaborations in number
-and gender of the Iroquois verb. These are only partially illustrated in
-the above example, and might easily have been carried further. For
-example, the rendering of the Active, Indicative, Past Progressive, with
-Feminine Object is really a verb in the passive voice. To realise the
-full inflectional niceties of such minute grammatical distinctions, the
-two genders should be given; and also a mixed gender, _i.e._ the two
-genders together, as the artists may consist of both sexes. This is
-indicated in the two forms of the Future Indefinite, by
-_eas’hakodiyadarahste_, “they (mas.) shall draw her,”
-_eayaktodiyadarahste_, “they (fem.) shall draw her.” But a study of the
-paradigm of the Mohawk verb will be found to illustrate in a variety of
-interesting aspects the process of unpremeditated grammatical evolution
-among an unlettered people, with whom the influence of oratory in the
-councils of the tribe was one of their most powerful resources as a
-preliminary to war.
-
-The grand movement of the barbarian races of Northern Europe in the
-fifth and following centuries is spoken of as the wandering of the
-nations. The natural barriers of the continent seemed for a time to have
-given way, and the unknown tribes from beyond the Baltic and from the
-shores of the North Sea poured into the valley of the Danube, and swept
-beyond the Alps and the Pyrenees to the furthest shores of the
-Mediterranean Sea. The physical geography of the New World presents
-fewer barriers to be surmounted. But if the student of North American
-ethnology spread before him a map of the continent, and trace out the
-wanderings of the Huron-Iroquois, he must revert in fancy to that remote
-era when confederated Iroquois and Algonkins swept in triumphant fury
-through the wasted valley of the Ohio, and repeated there what Goth and
-Hun did for Europe, in Rome’s decline and fall. The long-settled and
-semi-civilised Mound-Builders fled before the furious onset, leaving the
-great river-valley a desolate waste. The barrier of an old-settled and
-well-organised community, which, probably for centuries, had kept
-America’s northern barbarians in check, was removed, and the fierce
-Huron-Iroquois ranged at will over the eastern regions of the continent,
-far southward of the North Carolina river-valleys, where the Nottoways
-and Tuscaroras found a new home. As to the Nottoways, they appear to
-have passed out of all remembrance as an Iroquois tribe; yet it is
-suggestive of a long-forgotten chapter of Indian history, that the name
-is still in use among the northern Algonkins as the designation of the
-whole Iroquois stock. The Nottawa saga is doubtless a memorial of their
-presence on the Georgian Bay, and the Notaway (_Náhdahwe_) river which
-falls into Hudson Bay at James Bay, is so named in memory of
-Huron-Iroquois wanderers into that Algonkin region.
-
-Some portion of the ancient Huron stock tarried on the banks of the St.
-Lawrence, in what is known to us now as the traditional cradleland of
-those Canadian aborigines. Others found their way down the Hudson, or
-selected new homes for themselves on the rivers and lakes that lay to
-the west, till they reached the shores of Lake Erie; and all that is now
-the populous region of Western New York was in occupation of the
-Iroquois race. Feuds broke out between them and the parent stock in the
-valley of the St. Lawrence. They meted out to those of their own race
-the same vengeance as to strangers; and the survivors, abandoning their
-homes, fled westward in search of settlements beyond their reach. The
-Georgian Bay lay remote from the territory of the Iroquois, but the
-nations of the Wyandot stock spread beyond it, until the Niagara
-peninsula and the fertile regions between Lake Huron and Lake Erie were
-occupied by them, and the Niagara river alone kept apart what were now
-hostile tribes. But wherever the test of linguistic evidence can be
-obtained their affinities are placed beyond dispute. On the other hand,
-the multiplication of dialects is no less apparent, and in many ways
-helps to throw light on the history of the race.
-
-The old Huron mother tongue still partially preserves the labials which
-have disappeared from all the Iroquois languages. The Mohawk approaches
-nearest to this, and appears to be the main stem from whence other
-languages of the Six Nations have branched off. But the diversities in
-speech of the various members of the confederacy leave no room to doubt
-the prolonged isolation of the several tribes, or “nations,” before they
-were induced to recognise the claims of consanguinity, and to band
-together for their common interest. Some of the noteworthy diversities
-of tongue may be pointed out, such as the _r_ sound which predominates
-in the Mohawk, while the _l_ takes its place in the Oneida. In the
-Onondaga, Cayuga, and Seneca, they are no longer heard. The last of
-these reduces the primary forms to the narrowest range; but beyond, to
-the westward, the old Eries dwelt, speaking, it may be presumed, a
-modified Seneca dialect, but of which unfortunately no record survives.
-As to the Tuscaroras and the Nottoways, if we knew nothing of their
-history, their languages would suffice to tell that they had been
-longest and most widely separated from the parent stock.
-
-It is not without interest to note in conclusion that the main body of
-the representatives of the nations of the ancient Iroquois league sprung
-from the Huron-Iroquois stock of Eastern Canada,—after sojourning for
-centuries beyond the St. Lawrence, until the traditions of the home of
-the race had faded out of memory, or given place to mythic legends of
-autochthon origin,—has returned to Canadian soil. At Caughnawaga, St.
-Regis, Oka, and on the river St. Charles, in the Province of Quebec; at
-Anderdon, the Bay of Quinté, and above all, on the Grand river, in
-Ontario; the Huron-Iroquois are now settled to the number of upwards of
-8000, without reckoning other tribes. If, indeed, the surviving
-representatives of the aborigines in the old provinces of the Canadian
-Dominion are taken as a whole, they number upwards of 34,000, apart from
-the many thousands in Manitoba, British Columbia, and the North-west
-Territories. But the nomad Indians must be classed wholly apart from the
-settlers on the Grand river reserves. The latter are a highly
-intelligent, civilised people, more and more adapting themselves to the
-habits of the strangers who have supplanted them; and they are destined
-as certainly to merge into the predominant race, as the waters of their
-ancient lakes mingle and are lost in the ocean. Yet the process is no
-longer one of extinction but of absorption; and will assuredly leave
-traces of the American autochthones, similar to those which still in
-Europe perpetuate some ethnical memorial of Allophylian races.
-
------
-
-[111] _Types of Mankind_, p. 291.
-
-[112] _The Jesuits in North America_, p. 43.
-
-[113] _The Indian Races of North and South America_, p. 286.
-
-[114] _Magazine of American History_, vol. x. p. 479.
-
-[115] _Archæologia Americana_, vol. ii. p. 173.
-
-[116] _Indian Migrations_, p. 17.
-
-[117] _Whitney’s Study of Language_, p. 348.
-
-[118] _The Tutelo Tribe and Language_, p. 9.
-
-[119] _Relation_, 1641, p. 72.
-
-[120] _Peter Jones and the Ojibway Indians_, p. 31.
-
-[121] _The Life and Growth of Languages_, p. 259.
-
-[122] Hale’s _Indian Migrations as evidenced by Language_, p. 3.
-
-[123] _Anthropology_, by Dr. Paul Topinard: Eng. Trans., p. 480.
-
-[124] “The Huron Race and Head-form:” N. S. _Canadian Journal_, vol.
-xiii. p. 113.
-
-[125] _Crania Americana_, p. 195.
-
-[126] _The Jesuits in North America_, p. 47.
-
-[127] _The Iroquois Book of Rites_, p. 78.
-
-[128] _Ibid._, pp. 21, 22.
-
-[129] _League of the Iroquois_, p. 4.
-
-[130] _Notes on the Iroquois_, p. 51.
-
-[131] _Lectures on the Science of Language_, 5th ed. p. 58.
-
-[132] _Notes on the Iroquois_, p. 52.
-
-[133] _Origin and Traditional History of the Wyandotts_, p. 4.
-
-[134] _Pioneers of France in the New World_, p. 367.
-
-[135] _League of the Iroquois_, p. 76.
-
-[136] _The Jesuits in North America_, p. 441 note.
-
-[137] _History of the Indian Tribes_, vol. ii. p. 78.
-
-[138] “Huron Race and Head-form,” _Canadian Journal_, N. S., vol. xiii.
-p. 113.
-
-[139] “Some American Illustrations of the Evolution of new Varieties of
-Man,” _Journal of Anthropology_, May 1879.
-
-[140] The Huron vocabulary prepared by the Jesuit Father, Chaumonot, is,
-as I have recently learned, still in existence, and will, I hope, be
-speedily published under trustworthy editorial supervision.
-
-[141] _The League of the Iroquois_, p. 2.
-
-[142] _Archæologia Americana_, vol. ii. p. 79.
-
-[143] _Indian Migrations_, p. 22.
-
-[144] _Life and Growth of Language_, p. 261.
-
-[145] _Lectures on the Science of Language_, 2nd series, p. 162.
-
-[146] Cromwell’s _Letters and Speeches_, Introduction.
-
-[147] See p. 110.
-
-
-
-
- VII
- HYBRIDITY AND HEREDITY
-
-
-FOUR centuries have now completed their course since the discovery of
-America revealed to Europe an indigenous people, distinct in many
-respects from all the races of the Old World. There, as in the older
-historic areas, man is indeed seen in various stages: from the rudest
-condition of savage life, without any knowledge of metallurgy, and
-subsisting solely by the chase, to the comparatively civilised nations
-of Mexico, Central America, and Peru, familiar with some of the most
-important arts, skilled in agriculture, and with a system of writing
-embodying the essential germs of intellectual progress.
-
-The western hemisphere, which was the arena of such ethnical
-development, had lain, for unnumbered centuries, apart from Asia and
-Europe; and so its various nationalities and races were left to work out
-their own destinies, and to develop in their own way whatever inherent
-capacities for progress pertained to them. But this done, it was
-abruptly brought into intimate relations with Europe by the maritime
-discoveries which marked the closing years of the fifteenth century.
-
-From that date a constant transfer of races from the Old to the New
-World has been taking place, alike by voluntary and enforced migration;
-with results involving a series of undesigned yet exhaustive
-ethnological experiments carried out on the grandest scale. There alike
-has been tested to what extent the European and the African are affected
-by migration to new regions, and by admixture with diverse races. There
-can now be witnessed the results of a transference, for upwards of three
-centuries, of indigenous populations of the Old World to a continent
-where they have been subjected to many novel geographical, climatic, and
-social influences. There, too, has taken place, on a scale without any
-parallel elsewhere, an intimate and prolonged intermixture of some of
-the most highly cultured races of Europe with purely savage tribes,
-under circumstances which have tended to place them, for the time being,
-on an equality as hunters, trappers, or explorers of their vast forest
-and prairie wilds.
-
-The whole question of heredity, its phenomena and results, is now in
-process of review under the novel phases that affect anthropology; and
-in this view the illustrations which the New World supplies in reference
-to hybridity and absorption have a distinctive value. The anthropologist
-recognises various elements marking diversity of race in stature,
-colour, proportion of limbs, conformation of skull, colour and other
-characteristics of eye and hair. He also notes no less distinctively the
-diverse intellectual and moral aptitudes. Noticeable as are the
-diversities of national type in Europe, the range of variation is
-trifling when compared with the conditions under which the White, Red,
-and Black races have met and intermingled in the West Indies and in
-North and South America. The cultured and civilised races of Europe have
-there united their blood with the African negro and the native Indian
-savage; and both admixtures have been carried out on so great a scale as
-to furnish indisputable data for determining the question how far the
-half-breed is a mean between the two parents; or if there is any
-inevitable preponderance of one of them, with a tendency to revert to
-one or the other type. The intermarriage of fair and dark races of the
-Old World has gone on throughout the whole historic period, with
-apparently resultant intermediate types. The Iberians and “black Celts”
-of Western Europe, and the dark brunettes of the Mediterranean shores,
-stand out in marked contrast to the blondes of the Baltic shores.
-Whatever may be said of other diversities of race, Professor Huxley is
-led to the opinion that the Melanochroi, or dark whites, are not a
-distinct group, but the metis resultant from just such a mixture of his
-“Australioids” and his “Xanthocroi,” as has been going on for centuries
-on the American continent between the blondes of Europe and the native
-olive-skinned American, and between both of them and the dark African
-race.
-
-Yet, on the other hand, many anthropologists insist on the survival of
-distinct types, even among approximate races, as shown in the remarkable
-persistency of the Jewish type, notwithstanding the modifications that
-have resulted from intermarriage with fair and dark races of many lands.
-Dr. F. von Luschan, in describing the Tachtadschy,[148] calls attention
-to the fact that the Greeks of Lycia represent a mixture of two distinct
-types. From this he draws the following inference: “At first glance it
-appears remarkable and hardly probable that two disparate types should
-remain distinct, although intermarriage has continued without
-interruption through thousands of years. But we must acknowledge that it
-would be just as remarkable if continued intercrossing should result in
-the production of a middle type (_Mischform_). It is true that at the
-present time the greater number of anthropologists appear to be of the
-opinion that middle forms originate wherever two distinct types live in
-close contact for a long time. If this is true at all, it is true only
-in a very limited sense, and still needs to be proven. _A priori_, we
-rather ought to expect that one or the other of these types would soon
-succumb in the struggle for existence. It would become extinct, and give
-way to the other type; or both types might continue to co-exist,
-although intercrossing might go on for centuries. They would undergo no
-other changes than those which each singly, uninfluenced by the other,
-would have undergone by the agency of physical causes.”
-
-The evidence we possess of the physical characteristics of the
-succession of races in Europe from palæolithic times is already
-considerable; and in reference to neolithic and later periods is ample.
-Within the recent historic period of the decline and fall of Rome, and
-the influx of Northern and Asiatic barbarians, the evidence of admixture
-of race is abundant; and the physical, intellectual, and moral changes
-resulting therefrom have stamped their ineffaceable impress on history.
-But the conditions under which the meeting of the Aryans with
-Allophylians, Neolithians, or other prehistoric races took place in
-older centuries, can only be surmised; and the many analogies resulting
-from the intrusion of the European races on the aborigines of the
-western hemisphere are calculated to render useful aid in determining
-some definite results.
-
-History has familiarised us with the idea of sovereign and subject
-races. The monuments of Egypt perpetuate the fact from its remote dawn,
-Punic, Roman, Gothic, Frank, Saracenic, and Scandinavian races, have in
-turn subdued others, and made them subservient to their will. Evidence
-of a different kind, but little less definite, points to the intrusion
-into Europe in prehistoric times of races superior alike in physical
-type, and in the arts upon which progress depends, to the Autochthones,
-or primitive occupants of the soil. Further indications have been
-assumed to point to the contemporaneous presence, in primeval Britain,
-as elsewhere, of races of diverse type, and apparently in the relation
-of lord and serf: a natural if not indeed inevitable consequence of the
-intrusion of a superior race of conquerors.
-
-But in the New World the inaptitude of the native race for useful
-serfdom largely contributed to the introduction there of other and very
-diverse races from Africa and Asia; so that now within a well-defined
-North American area, indigenous populations of the three continents of
-the Old World are displacing its native races. Still more, all three
-meet there under circumstances which inevitably lead to their
-intermixture with one another, and with the native races.
-
-Various terms, such as Iberian, Silurian, Canstadt, Cimbric, Finnish,
-and Turanian, have been applied to primitive types as expressive of the
-hypothesis of their origin. But on turning to the American continent we
-see vast regions occupied exclusively until a comparatively recent
-period by tribes of savage hunters, upon whom some of the most civilised
-races of Europe have intruded, with results in many respects so
-strikingly accordant with the supposed evolution of the Melanochroi of
-the Old World, that we seem to look upon a series of ethnological
-experiments prolonged through centuries, with synthetic results to a
-large extent confirmatory of previous inductions.
-
-The intermingling of very diverse races at present taking place on the
-American continent includes some of widely diverse types. There is seen
-the Portuguese in Brazil; the Spaniard in Peru, Mexico, Central America,
-and in Cuba; the African in the West Indies and the Southern States; the
-Chinese on the Pacific; the Frenchman on the St. Lawrence; the German,
-the Italian, the Norwegian, the Icelander, the Celt, and the
-Anglo-Saxon: all subjected to novel influences, necessarily testing the
-results of a change of climate, of diet, and of social habits, on the
-ethnical character of each. There too, alike in the Red and the Black
-races, we can study the results of hybridity carried out on a scale
-adequate to determine many important points calculated to throw light on
-the origin and perpetuation of diverse races of mankind.
-
-The growth of a race of hybrid African blood has been one of the results
-of the substitution at an early date of imported negro slaves to supply
-the place of the rapidly disappearing Indians who perished under the
-exactions of their taskmasters. According to careful data set forth in
-the United States census for 1850, the whole number of native Africans
-imported cannot have exceeded 400,000. At present the coloured
-race—hybrids chiefly—of African blood numbers nearly 7,000,000. In
-1715 there were 58,000 negroes in British America; in 1775, when the
-revolution broke out, there were 501,102. After the epoch of
-independence the increase became more rapid. In 1790 the numbers were
-757,208; in 1800, 893,041; in 1810, 1,191,364. At the date of
-emancipation in 1865 there were, in round numbers, in slavery,
-4,000,000; and at the census in 1880 the negro population in the United
-States had risen to 6,580,793;[149] and in the returns thus far
-published relative to the later census of 1890, in the Southern States
-alone they are reported to number 6,996,116; so that with the added
-numbers of the Northern States and Canada they can fall little short of
-8,000,000. Of this numerous intrusive race, the larger number are
-hybrids; and, as was inevitable, they include some small proportion of
-mixed negro and Indian blood.[150] But it is the Metis, or White and Red
-half-breed, that constitutes the subject of special interest here.
-
-Various causes have tended to beget more friendly relations between the
-older colonists of New France, and at a later date between those of
-British America and the native Indian race, than have existed either in
-Spanish America or the United States.
-
-The great North-West, with its warlike Chippeways, Crees, Sioux, and
-Blackfeet; and beyond the Rocky Mountains its Tinné, Babeens, Clalams,
-Newatees, Chinooks, Cowlitz, and numerous other native tribes; had till
-recently been under the control of the all-powerful fur-trading company
-of Hudson Bay. The interests of the fur-traders stimulated them to fair
-and honourable dealing with the native tribes; and while they had no
-motive to encourage the Indians to abandon their nomadic life for the
-civilised habits of a settled people, or even to interpose in the wars
-which varied the monotony of the Indians’ wild hunter-life, they had so
-thoroughly won the confidence of the natives, that tribes at open enmity
-with each other were ready to repose equal confidence in the Hudson Bay
-factors.
-
-The late Paul Kane, author of _Wanderings of an Artist among the Indians
-of North America_, informed me that when travelling beyond the Rocky
-Mountains he found no difficulty in transmitting his correspondence
-home, even when among the rudest Flathead savages. His packet, entrusted
-to one of the tribe, was accompanied with a small gift of tobacco, and
-the request to have it forwarded to Fort Garry, or other Hudson Bay
-fort. The messenger—Cowlitz, Chinook, Nasquallie, or other
-Indian,—carried it to the frontier of his own hunting-grounds, and then
-sold it for so much tobacco to some Indian of another tribe; by him it
-was passed on, by like process of barter, till it crossed the Rocky
-Mountains into the territory of the Blackfeet, the Crees, and so onward
-to its destination, in full confidence that the officers of the Hudson
-Bay Fort would sustain the credit of the White Medicine-man (for so the
-painter was regarded), and redeem the packet at its full value in
-tobacco or other equivalent.
-
-The personal interests of the little bands of European fur-traders thus
-settled in the heart of a wilderness, and surrounded by savage hunters,
-no less strongly prompted them to exclude the maddening fire-water from
-the vast regions under their control. Guns and ammunition, kettles,
-axes, knives, beads, and other trinkets, with the no less prized
-tobacco, were abundantly provided for barter. Even nails and the iron
-hoops of their barrels were traded with the Indians, and displaced the
-primitive tomahawk and arrow head of flint or stone. Thus, curiously,
-the Stone period of a people still in the most primitive stage of
-barbarism has been superseded by the use of metals obtained solely by
-barter, and without any advance either in the knowledge of metallurgy,
-or in the mastery of the arts which lie at the foundation of all
-civilisation. Long before the advent of Europeans, the Chippeways along
-the shores of Lake Superior had been familiar with the native copper
-which abounds there in the condition of pure metal. But they knew it
-only as a kind of malleable stone; nor have they even now learned the
-application of fire in their simple metallurgic processes. The root of
-their names for iron and copper is the same abstract term, _wahbik_,
-used only in compound words, and apparently in the sense of rock or
-stone. _Pewahbik_ is iron; _ozahwahbik_, copper, literally the yellow
-stone. It formed no part of the Hudson Bay traders’ aim to advance him
-beyond the stage of a savage hunter. It was incompatible with the
-interests of the fur-trader to teach him any higher use of the rich
-prairie land than that of a wilderness inhabited by fur-bearing animals,
-or a grazing ground for the herds of buffalo which furnished their
-annual supply of pemmican; or to familiarise him with more of the
-borrowed arts of civilisation than helped to facilitate the accumulation
-of peltries in the factory stores. Hence the intrusive Europeans and the
-native tribes met on common ground, engaged in the same pursuits, all
-tending to foster the habits of hunter-life; and so presenting a close
-analogy to the condition of Europe when, in its Neolithic age, its rude
-hunter tribes were invaded by the Aryans. Thus engaged to a large extent
-in the same pursuits, the Whites and Indians of the Canadian North-West
-have dwelt together for successive generations on terms of comparative
-equality, and with results of curious interest, hereafter referred to,
-in relation to the intermingling of the races.
-
-In the long-settled provinces of Canada it has been otherwise. There the
-aborigines had to be gathered together on suitable reserves, and induced
-to accommodate themselves in some degree to the habits of an industrious
-agricultural population; or to be driven out, to wander off into the
-great hunting-grounds of the uncleared West. The exterminating native
-wars, which preceded the settlement of Upper Canada, greatly facilitated
-this; and the tribes with which the English colonists of Ontario have
-had to deal have been for the most part immigrants, not greatly less
-recent than themselves. As to the Six Nation Indians settled on the
-Grand River and at the Bay of Quinté (the most numerous and the farthest
-advanced in civilisation of all the Indians in the British provinces),
-they are a body of loyalist refugees who followed the fortunes of their
-English allies on the declaration of independence by the revolted
-Colonies; and there is now in use, at the little Indian Church at
-Tuscarora, the silver Communion Plate presented to their ancestors while
-still in the valley of the Mohawk, in the State of New York, the gift of
-Her Majesty Queen Anne, “to her Indian Chappel of the Mohawks.”[151]
-
-But the civilisation which has thus resulted from prolonged and intimate
-relations with the Whites, has been accompanied by an inevitable
-admixture of blood, of which the results are abundantly manifest in the
-physical characteristics of the Indian settlers, both on the Grand river
-and at the Bay of Quinté. The system of adopting members of other
-tribes, including even those of their vanquished foes, to recruit their
-own numbers, was practised by many of the North American tribes, and was
-familiar to the Iroquois, or Indians of the Five Nations, as they were
-styled before the admission of the Tuscaroras to their confederacy. In
-1649, for example, the survivors of two of the Huron towns which they
-had ravaged, besought the favour of the victors, and were adopted into
-the Seneca nation. Nor did extreme differences of race interfere with
-affiliation, as in the case of children kidnapped from the White
-colonists in their vicinity. One interesting example of the latter
-suffices to illustrate the extent to which such a process tended to
-affect the ethnical purity of the race.
-
-In the year 1779, while the Mohawks still dwelt in their native valley
-in the State of New York, Ste-nah, a white girl, then about twelve years
-of age, was captured in one of their marauding expeditions, and adopted
-into the tribe. In 1868, while still living, she was described to me by
-an educated Mohawk India, as a full-blood _Sko-ha-ra_, or Dutchwoman.
-She grew up among her captors, accompanied the tribe on their removal
-from the Mohawk valley to the shores of the Bay of Quinté, and married
-one of the Mohawk braves. She had reached mature years, and was the
-mother of Indian children, when an aged stranger visited the reserve in
-search of his long-lost daughter. He had heard of a captive white woman
-who survived among the emigrant Mohawks there, and was able, by certain
-marks, and the scar of a wound received in childhood, to identify his
-long-lost daughter. But the discovery came too late. As my Mohawk
-informant told me, she had got an Indian heart. She had, indeed, lost
-her native tongue; had acquired the habits and sympathies of her adopted
-people; and coldly repelled the advances of her aged father, who in vain
-recalled his long-lost daughter Christina in the Mohawk white-blood,
-_Ste-nah_. If the date of her capture and her estimated age can be
-relied on, she must have been in her hundred and fifth year at the time
-of her death, in December 1871. I have received through one of her
-grandsons—himself a Mohawk chief,—a genealogical table of her
-descendants, from which it appears that there are at the present time
-fifty-seven of them living and twenty-three dead. It is thus apparent,
-that by the adoption of a single White captive into the tribe, there
-are, in the fourth generation, fifty-seven survivors out of eighty
-members of the tribe, all of them of hybrid character.
-
-The influence of a single case of admixture of White blood, thus
-followed out to its results in the fourth generation, suffices to show
-how largely those tribes must be affected who dwell for any length of
-time in close vicinity to White settlers, and in intimate friendly
-relations with them. The earlier French and English colonists, like the
-Hudson Bay traders of later times, were mostly young adventurers,
-without wives, and readily entering into alliance with the native women.
-The children of such unions were admitted to a perfect equality with the
-Whites, when trained up in their settlements; and in the older period of
-French and English rivalry the Indians were dealt with on very different
-terms from those with which they are now regarded, though even yet some
-memory of older relations survives.
-
-During the wars between the French and English colonists to the north
-and south of the St. Lawrence, in the seventeenth and eighteenth
-centuries, the alliance of neighbouring Indian tribes was courted; and
-the traditions of the fidelity of the Hurons to the French, and the
-loyalty of the Iroquois to the English, are cherished as incentives to
-the fulfilment of obligations entered into on behalf of the little
-remnant of the Huron nation remaining on the river St. Charles, below
-Quebec; and to a liberal and generous policy towards the Six Nation
-Indians settled on the Grand river and elsewhere in Western Canada.
-
-But also in the primitive simplicity of border life, the half-civilised
-Indian and the rude settler meet on common ground; and in some cases the
-friendly relations established between them have survived the more
-settled condition of agricultural progress in the clearings. In this
-respect the older colonists of Quebec fraternised far more readily with
-the native population than has been the case with English settlers. The
-relations in which the early French colonists stood to the Indians of
-Lower Canada bore more resemblance to those of the fur-traders of the
-North-West in later times, and were of a kindlier nature than those of
-the intrusive European emigrants of the present century. Prior to the
-accession of Louis XIV. to the throne, the French possessions in the New
-World had been regarded as little more than a hunting-ground to be
-turned to the same account as the Hudson Bay Company’s territory; and
-the peopling of Canada had given little promise of permanent
-colonisation. Priests and nuns alone varied the usual class of trading
-adventurers who resort to a young colony. But soon after the King
-reached his majority, a systematic shipment of emigrants to Canada was
-organised under the direction of Colbert; sundry companies of soldiers
-were disbanded in the colony; and then, at last, the necessity of
-finding wives for the settlers was recognised. Thereupon a system of
-female emigration, with bounties on marriage, was established. Colbert,
-writing to the Canadian Intendant, tells him that the prosperity of the
-people, and all that is most dear to them as colonists, depend upon
-their securing the marriage of youths not later than their eighteenth or
-nineteenth year to girls at fourteen or fifteen; and the next step was
-to impose a fine on the father of a family who neglected to marry his
-children when they reached the respective ages of twenty and sixteen.
-
-Up to this period the native women had chiefly supplied wives for the
-colonists; nor was this element now ignored or slighted. In the _Mémoire
-sur l’Etat Présent du Canada_, 1667, it is stated: “At this time it was
-believed that the Indians, mingled with the French, might become a
-valuable part of the population. The reproductive qualities of Indian
-women therefore became an object of attention to Talon, the Royal
-Intendant; and he reports that they impair their fertility by nursing
-their children longer than is needful; but, he adds, ‘this obstacle to
-the speedy building up of the colony can be overcome by regulations of
-police.’” Thus it is apparent that the strongest encouragement was given
-to such alliances.
-
-The religious element, moreover, among a purely Roman Catholic
-population, helped to foster a sense of equality in the case of the
-Christianised Indian; while the gentler and less progressive habits of
-the French habitants have tended to prevent direct collision with the
-Indians settled in their midst. Hence in the province of Quebec,
-half-breeds, and men and women of partial Indian blood, are frequently
-to be met with in all ranks of life; and slighter traces, discernible in
-the hair, the eye, the cheek-bone, and peculiar mouth, as well as
-certain traits of Indian character, suggest to the close observer remote
-indications of the same admixture of blood.
-
-But while favouring influences in national character, political
-institutions, and religion, all united to encourage a more friendly
-intercourse between the native and European population of Lower Canada,
-the circumstances attendant on the settlement of new clearings have
-everywhere led in some degree to similar results; and experience
-abundantly proves the impossibility of preserving distinct two races
-living in close proximity to each other.
-
-Throughout the old provinces of Upper and Lower Canada, and the Maritime
-Provinces, where the aborigines are mostly congregated on reserves,
-under the charge of Government officers of the Indian Department, they
-appear, with few exceptions, to have passed the critical stage of
-transition from a nomadic state to that of assimilation to the habits of
-settled industry of the Whites.
-
-The native tribes of the old provinces of the Dominion, though bearing a
-variety of names, may all be classed under the two essentially distinct
-groups of Algonkins and Iroquois. Under the former head properly rank
-the Micmacs, and other tribes of Prince Edward’s Island, Nova Scotia,
-and New Brunswick; and the Chippeways, including Ottawas, Mississagas,
-Pottawattomies, etc., of Ontario. Under the other head have to be placed
-not only the Six Nations—Mohawks, Oneidas, Onondagas, Cayugas, Senecas,
-and Tuscaroras,—but also the Wyandots, or Hurons, both of Upper and
-Lower Canada; though among the one were found the faithful allies of the
-English, while the other adhered persistently to the French; and to the
-deadly enmity between them was due the expulsion of the Hurons from
-their ancient territory on the Georgian Bay, and the extermination of
-all but an insignificant remnant, including the refugees on the St.
-Charles river, below Quebec.
-
-The Canadian census of 1871 includes the aborigines in the enumeration
-of the population of the Dominion, and states the grand total of the
-Indians of the Provinces of Quebec, Ontario, Nova Scotia, and New
-Brunswick, at 23,035.
-
-That the Indian population, gathered on their own reserved lands under
-the care of Government superintendents, is not diminishing in numbers,
-appears to be universally admitted. But as, at the same time, the pure
-race is being largely replaced by younger generations of mixed blood,
-the results cannot be looked upon as encouraging the hope of
-perpetuating the native Indian race under such exceptional conditions;
-nor can it be overlooked that the increase is partly begot by the
-addition of a foreign element. At best the results point rather to such
-a process of absorption as appears to be the inevitable result wherever
-a race, alike inferior in numbers and in progressive energy, escapes
-extirpation at the hands of the intruders.
-
-In the boyhood of the older generation of Toronto, hundreds of Indians,
-including those of the old Mississaga tribe, were to be seen about the
-streets. Now, at rare intervals, two or three squaws, in round hats,
-blue blankets, and Indian leggings, attract attention less by their
-features than their dress; for in complexion they are nearly as white as
-those of pure European descent. The same is the case on all the oldest
-Indian reserves. The Hurons of Lorette, whose forefathers were brought
-to Lower Canada after the massacre of their nation by the Iroquois in
-1649, are reported to have considerably increased in numbers in the
-interval between 1844 and the last census. But while the Commissioners
-refer to them as a band of Indians “the most advanced in civilisation in
-the whole of Canada,” they add that “they have, by the intermixture of
-White blood, so far lost the original purity of race as scarcely to be
-considered as Indians.” In their case this admixture with the European
-race has been protracted through a period of upwards of two centuries,
-till they have lost their Indian language, and substituted for it a
-French patois. Were it not for their hereditary right to a share in
-certain Indian funds, which furnishes an inducement to perpetuate their
-descent from the Huron nation, they would long since have merged in the
-common stock. Yet the results would not thereby have been eradicated,
-but only lost sight of. Their baptismal registers and genealogical
-traditions supply the record of a practical, though undesigned,
-experiment as to the influence of hybridity on the perpetuation of the
-race, and show the mixed descendants of Huron and French blood still,
-after a lapse of upwards of two centuries, betraying no traces of a
-tendency towards infertility or extinction.
-
-In the Maritime Provinces the Micmacs are the representatives of the
-aboriginal owners of the soil. Small encampments of them may be
-encountered in summer on the Lower St. Lawrence, busily engaged in the
-manufacture of staves, barrel-hoops, axe-handles, and baskets of various
-kinds, which they dispose of, with much shrewdness, to the traders of
-Quebec, and the smaller towns on the Gulf. So far as I have seen, the
-pure-blood Micmac has more of the dark-red, in contrast to the prevalent
-olive hue, than other Indians. But the Micmacs of Nova Scotia and New
-Brunswick reveal the same evidence of inevitable amalgamation with the
-predominant race as elsewhere. The Rev. S. T. Rand—a devoted missionary
-labouring among the Indians of Nova Scotia,—on being asked to obtain a
-photograph of a pure-blood representative of the tribe, had some
-difficulty in finding a single example, and stated that not one is to be
-found among the younger generation.
-
-In the old provinces the Indians are in the minority; but the same
-process is apparent where little bands of pioneers leave the settled
-provinces and states to begin new clearings, or to engage in the
-adventurous life of hunters and trappers in the far West. The hunter
-finds a bride among the native women; and when at length the wild tribe
-recedes before the growing clearing and the diminished supplies of game,
-it not only leaves behind a half-breed population as the nucleus of the
-civilised community, but it also carries away with it a like element,
-increasingly affecting the ethnical character of the whole tribe.
-
-The same circumstances have continued, in every frontier settlement, to
-involve the inevitable production of a race of half-breeds. Even the
-cruellest exterminations of hostile tribes have rarely been carried out
-so effectually as to preclude this. In New England, for example, after
-the desolating war of 1637, which resulted in the extinction of the
-Pequot tribe, Winthrop thus summarily records the policy of the victors:
-“We sent the male children to Bermuda by Mr. William Pierce, and the
-women and maid children are disposed about in the towns.” Such a female
-population could not grow up in a young colony, with the wonted
-preponderance of males, and leave no traces in subsequent generations.
-
-Seeing, then, that the meeting of two types of humanity so essentially
-distinct as the European and the native Indian of America, has, for
-upwards of three centuries, led to the production of a hybrid race, it
-becomes an interesting question, what has been the ultimate result? Has
-the mixed breed proved infertile, and so disappeared; has it perpetuated
-a new and permanent type of intermediate characteristics; or has it been
-absorbed into the predominant European race without leaving traces of
-this foreign element? These questions are not without their significance
-even in reference to the policy in dealing with the Indian settlements
-in old centres of population; for the traces of this intermingling of
-the races of the Old and New World are neither limited to frontier
-settlements nor to Indian reserves.
-
-Among Canadians of mixed blood there are men at the Bar and in the
-Legislature, in the Church, in the medical profession, holding rank in
-the army, in aldermanic and other civic offices, and engaged in active
-trade and commerce. A curious case was recently brought before the law
-courts in Ontario. A son of the chief of the Wyandot Indians settled in
-Western Canada, left the reserves of his tribe, engaged in business, and
-acquired a large amount of real estate and personal property. He won for
-himself, moreover, such general respect that he was elected Reeve of
-Anderdon by a considerable majority over a White candidate. Thereupon
-his rival applied to have him unseated, on the plea that a person of
-Indian blood was not a citizen in the eye of the law. Fortunately the
-judge took a common-sense view of the case, and decided that as he held
-a sufficient property-qualification within the county, the election was
-valid.
-
-That an Indian ceases to be such in the eye of the law, and in all
-practical relations to society, when he becomes an educated industrious
-member of the general community, and competes not only for its
-privileges but for its highest honours, is inevitable. But it is not
-with the Indian as with the Negro mixed race. The privileges and the
-disabilities of the Indian ward may both be cast off; but a certain
-degree of romance attaches to Indian blood, when accompanied with the
-culture and civilisation of the European. The descendants of Brant and
-other distinguished native chiefs are still proud to claim their
-lineage, where the physical traces of such an ancestry would escape the
-eye of a common observer. Traces of Indian descent may be recognised
-among ladies of attractive refinement and intelligence, and with certain
-mental as well as physical traits which add to the charm of their
-society. Similar indications of the blood of the aborigines are familiar
-to Canadians in the gay assemblies of a Governor-General’s receptions,
-in the halls of Legislature, in the diocesan synods and other
-ecclesiastical assemblies, and amongst the undergraduates of Canadian
-universities.
-
-But the condition of men and women of mixed blood, admitted to all the
-privileges of citizenship, and mingling in perfect equality with all
-other members of the community, is in striking contrast to that of the
-occupants of the Indian reserves, where they are settled, for the most
-part in isolated bands, in the midst of a progressive White population.
-Such a condition is manifestly an unfavourable one, and one, moreover,
-which cannot be regarded as other than transitional. They are
-confessedly dealt with as wards, in a state of pupilage.
-
-A growing sense of the necessity for some modification of this system
-has been felt for a considerable time; and in 1867 “An Act to encourage
-the gradual Civilisation of the Indian Tribes,” received the royal
-assent. This Act avowedly aims at the “gradual removal of all legal
-distinctions between them and Her Majesty’s other Canadian subjects; and
-to facilitate the acquisition of property, and of the rights
-accompanying it, by such individual members of the said tribes as shall
-be found to desire such encouragement, and to have deserved it.”
-
-That the ultimate result of this will involve the disappearance of the
-Indian as a distinct race is inevitable. He will be absorbed into the
-dominant race; not to be displaced or driven out of the community; but
-to be perpetuated, as the precursors of the blonde Aryans of Europe
-still survive in the “dark Whites” that now, in undisputed equality,
-enjoy all the rights of citizenship of a common race. They will indeed
-constitute but a small remnant of the nations of Euramerican blood. That
-whole tribes and peoples of the American aborigines have been
-exterminated in the process of colonisation of the New World is no more
-to be questioned, than that a similar result followed from the Roman
-conquest and colonisation of Britain. Nevertheless, long and careful
-study of the subject has satisfied me that a larger amount of absorption
-of the Indian into the Anglo-American race has occurred than is
-generally recognised.
-
-Fully to appreciate this, it is necessary to retrace the course of
-events by which America has been transferred to the descendants of
-European colonists. At every fresh stage of colonisation, or of
-pioneering into the wild West, the work has necessarily been
-accomplished by hardy young adventurers, or the hunters or trappers of
-the clearing. It is rare indeed for such to be accompanied by wives or
-daughters. Where they find a home they take to themselves wives from
-among the native women; and their offspring share in whatever advantages
-the father transplants with him to this home in the wilderness. To such
-mingling of blood, in its least favourable aspects, the prejudices of
-the Indian present little obstacle. Henry, in his narrative of travel
-among the Cristineaux on Lake Winipagoos upwards of a century ago, after
-describing the dress and allurements of the women, adds: “One of the
-chiefs assured me that the children borne by their women to Europeans
-were bolder warriors and better hunters than themselves.” This idea
-recurs in various forms. The half-breed lumberers and trappers are
-valued throughout Canada for their hardihood and patient endurance; the
-half-breed hunters and trappers are equally esteemed in the Hudson Bay
-territory; and beyond their remotest forts Dr. Kane reported, as his
-experience within the Arctic circle, that “the half-breeds of the coast
-rival the Esquimaux in their powers of endurance.”
-
-Mr. Charles Horetskey, in his _Canada on the Pacific_, after remarking
-on the well-known fact that Japanese junks have been known to drift on
-to the Pacific coast of America, and so contribute new elements of
-Mongolian character to the native population, thus proceeds to notice
-another element of hybridity. “There is,” he says, “another mixture in
-the blood on the west coast of Vancouver Island, and a very marked
-one—the Spanish, owing to the Spaniards having long had a settlement at
-Nootka. Strangely enough, the Spanish cast of countenance does not show
-in the women, who have the same flat features as their sisters to the
-eastward. Nor is it so noticeable among the young men, many of whom,
-however, have beards—a most unusual appendage among American Indians,
-and of course traceable to the cause referred to. The features are more
-observable among the older men, many of whom, with their long, narrow,
-pointed faces and beards, would, if washed, present very fair models for
-Don Quixote.” Within the region of Alaska, Russian traders have
-contributed another element to the mingling of races; and Mr. Wm. H.
-Dall, in his _Alaska and its Resources_, states specifically the number
-of the Creoles or half-breeds of that region as 1421. But the present
-condition of society there favours their increase. In 1842, they were,
-for the first time, qualified to enter the Church as priests; and in
-1865, the American Expedition found Ivan Pavloff, the son of a Russian
-father and a native woman of Kenai, filling the office of Bidarshik, or
-commander of the post at Nulato. He was legally married to a
-full-blooded Indian woman, by whom he had a large family.
-
-Another intrusive element, that of the Asiatic Mongol, has awakened
-alarm for the possible future of the white race of settlers, both in
-America and in Australia. In 1875 the number of Chinese in California
-amounted to 130,000; 19,000 arrived in a single year. They speedily made
-their way to the New England States, and to Eastern Canada; till it has
-been deemed politic to forbid further immigration. It is the intrusion
-of a type approximating to the American Mongol, and so has a special
-interest in its bearing on the ethnology of the continent; for here we
-see the approximate types of Asia and America brought into contact, it
-may be as descendants of a common stock, separated through unnumbered
-centuries by untraversed oceans.
-
-The Indians of Vancouver Island and British Columbia were estimated in
-1860 to number 75,000. The observations of Paul Kane in 1846 showed that
-a considerable half-breed population already existed then in the
-vicinity of every Hudson Bay fort. But at the later date the reported
-richness of the gold-diggings was attracting hundreds of settlers; and
-as usual, in such cases, nearly all males. The admixture of blood with
-the native population consequent on such a social condition is
-inevitable; and though such a population is least likely to leave behind
-it any permanent traces among settled civilised colonists, yet the
-condition of things which it presents illustrates the social life of
-every frontier settlement of the New World. Everywhere the colonisation
-of the outlying territory begins with a migration of males, and by and
-by the cry comes from Australia, Canada, and elsewhere, for stimulated
-female emigration. It is a state of things old as the dispersion of the
-human race, and typified in such ancient legends as the Roman Rape of
-the Sabines. The abstract of the United States census of 1860 showed
-that the old settled states of New England are affected even more than
-European countries by this inevitable source of the disparity of the
-sexes. In Massachusetts, at that date, the females outnumbered the males
-by upwards of 37,000; while in Indiana, on the contrary, they fell short
-of the males by 48,000.
-
-In the latter case, on a frontier state, where the services of the
-Indian women must necessarily be courted in any attempt at domestic
-life, intermixture between the native and intruding races is inevitable,
-and the feeling with which it is regarded finds expression constantly
-through the genuine New World lyrics of Joaquin Miller, with his “brown
-bride won from an Indian town”—
-
- Where some were blonde and some were brown,
- And all as brave as Sioux.
-
-Thus the same process still repeats itself along the widening frontier
-of the far West, which has been in operation on the American continent
-from the days of Columbus and Cabot. Hardy bands of pioneer adventurers,
-or the solitary hunter and trapper, wander forth to brave the dangers of
-the prairie or savage-haunted forest, and to such, an Indian bride
-proves the fittest mate. Of the mixed offspring a portion cling to the
-fortunes of the mother’s race, and are involved in its fate; but more
-adhere to those of the white father, share with him the vicissitudes of
-border life, and cast in their lot with the first nucleus of a settled
-community. As the border land slowly recedes into the further West, new
-settlers crowd into the clearing; the little cluster of primitive
-log-huts grows up into the city, perhaps the capital of a state, and
-with a new generation the traces of Indian blood are well nigh
-forgotten. If any portion of the aboriginal owners of the soil linger in
-the neighbourhood, they are no less affected by the predominant
-intruding race.
-
-The transfer of the rich prairie lands of the great North-West from the
-care of Hudson Bay factors and trappers, the organisation of it into the
-Province of Manitoba, and the territories already in preparation for new
-provinces, under the government of their own legislatures, has
-necessarily brought to an end the condition of things so favourable to
-friendly relations between the White and Red races. The region,
-moreover, is now traversed by the Canadian Pacific Railway; and the
-herds of buffalo, on which the Indian mainly depended for his supplies
-of food, fur robes, and teepe skins, have finally disappeared. Railways,
-telegraph lines, and other appliances of civilisation are equally
-incompatible with the existence of the wild buffalo and the wild Indian.
-The former inevitably vanished from the scene. It remains to be seen if
-the latter can adapt himself to the novel conditions of such an
-environment.
-
-As some preparation for the inevitable revolution, the half-breeds,
-already numbering thousands, accustomed to mingle on perfect equality
-with the Whites, and trained in some partial degree to agricultural
-industry, entered on the possession of farms allotted to them by the
-Government. But such a transitional stage, forced into premature
-development, could scarcely be expected to pass through all its
-revolutionary stages without a conflict, and clashing of interests; and
-the efforts of the Dominion Government to deal with this novel condition
-of things were only partially successful. But perhaps the most notable
-feature in the results has been that the chief difficulty was, not with
-the wild tribes transferred from the management of the fur-traders to
-the direct jurisdiction of the Government, but with the half-breeds,
-claiming civil rights, and jealously resenting encroachments on lands
-appropriated for their own settlement.
-
-The reports of the Indian Department supply interesting glimpses of the
-process of adjustment with the various tribes of natives reluctantly
-yielding to the new condition of things. Returns made to an address of
-the House of Commons at Ottawa, dated March 1873, disclose the
-jealousies and suspicions of the native tribes, and the anxiety evinced
-by the Government officials to remove all just grounds of complaint. Mr.
-Beatty, a contractor for certain surveys on the Upper Assiniboine,
-reports that the Portage Indians, under their chief, Yellow Quill, had
-absolutely forbidden any survey of their lands, and driven him and his
-party off the field. The Lieutenant-Governor thereafter held an
-interview with Yellow Quill and a party of his braves, and after a long
-_pow-wow_ succeeded in pacifying him. Again, a party of about two
-thousand Sioux are reported to have left in high dudgeon, with a threat
-to return in force next spring; and the Hon. Alexander Morris—now
-Lieutenant-Governor of Manitoba—writes to the Provincial Secretary at
-Ottawa, that “The Red Lake Indians on the American side have been
-sending tobacco to the Sioux in our territory, as it is believed, with
-the view of common action with regard to the Boundary Survey.” For the
-settlement of provinces, and the surveying of the prairie for disposal
-to its new occupants, had necessitated the determination of a
-well-defined boundary between the Canadian territories and those of the
-United States. Only a few years had elapsed since the State of Minnesota
-was desolated by a cruel war, carried on by the Sioux at the
-instigation, as was then affirmed, of Southern agents, with a view to a
-diversion in favour of the South during the great Civil War. A large
-number of the Sioux have since crossed the boundary, and settled within
-the British lines; and the Hon. Mr. Morris writes from Fort Garry in
-December last: “Some of the Sioux assist the white settlers as labourers
-in the summer. They have asked for land, and were led to believe that
-they would be assigned a reserve, and, if so, they would plant crops,
-and could then be removed from the settlement.” But Mr. Morris specially
-draws the attention of the provincial authorities to the excited state
-apparent among all the Western tribes, and adds: “I believe it to be in
-part created by the Boundary Commission. They do not understand it, and
-think the two nations are uniting against them.” The difficulties,
-however, were overcome; and the reports of the Indian agents contain
-some curious illustrations of the difficulties inevitable in the first
-attempt at transforming wild Indian tribes into prairie farmers. One of
-them thus writes: “The full demands of the Indians cannot be complied
-with; but there is, nevertheless, a certain paradox in asking a wild
-Indian, who has hitherto gained his livelihood by hunting and trapping,
-to settle down on a reservation and cultivate the land, without at the
-same time offering him some means of making his living. As they say
-themselves: ‘We cannot tear down the trees and build huts with our
-teeth, we cannot break the prairie with our hands, nor reap the harvest,
-if we had grown it, with our knives.’” But even among the wild tribes of
-the prairies a great diversity in habits, and in aptitude for the new
-life now forced upon them as their only chance of survival, is apparent.
-The Portage Indians clung to their old status as hunters living in their
-buffalo-skin lodges on the prairies; the St. Peter Indians form
-permanent settlements, not only of birch-bark wigwams, but many of them
-have built log-houses for themselves. Even among the tribes already
-settling down to steady agricultural labour, such as the Saulteux and
-the Swampies of Manitoba, a very great difference both in sentiments and
-customs prevail. Thirty-four Indian families from one tribe in Pembina
-are reported by the agent as demanding their allocation of farms; the
-chiefs and headmen of other tribes are in negotiation for farming
-implements, stock, etc., and some of their demands curiously illustrate
-the form in which the new life thus opening up to them presents its most
-tempting aspects. Hoes, axes, and other indispensable implements have
-been readily granted to them. Ploughs, harrows, and oxen are in request,
-and have been conceded or promised where the Government agent is
-satisfied that they will be turned to good account. But in special
-demand is “a bull and cow for each chief, and a boar for each reserve.”
-The incipient idea of the stock farm is indeed apparent in the universal
-demand of all: “A promise,” says one of the agents, “which the Indians
-never omit to mention, that they shall be supplied with a male and
-female of each animal used by a farmer.” But the transformation of the
-wild hunter into an industrious agriculturist is a difficult process;
-and even in the new generation, born under such changed conditions, the
-Indian boy shows much greater aptitude for mechanical employments; and
-takes more readily to the work of the carpenter than to that of tilling
-the soil, which, so long as the Indian was its lord, was practised
-exclusively by the women of the tribe.
-
-Could the older condition of interblended prairie life have been
-sufficiently long perpetuated, the results would far more fully have
-presented results in close analogy to the intermingling of Europe’s
-aboriginal and Aryan races in prehistoric times. A settlement begun by
-Lord Selkirk in 1811, was formed on the Red River within the area now
-embraced in the Province of Manitoba. It consisted of hardy Orkney men
-and Sutherlandshire Highlanders; and on the amalgamation of the
-North-West and the Hudson Bay Companies, the settlement received
-considerable additions to its numbers. When at length the great fur
-Companies’ supremacy came to an end, the community numbered upwards of
-two thousand whites, chiefly occupied in farming, or in the service of
-the Company. At a later date, another settlement was formed on the
-Assiniboine river, chiefly by French Canadians. In those, as at the
-forts and trading-posts of the Hudson Bay Company, the settlers
-consisted chiefly of young men. They had no choice but to wed or cohabit
-with the Indian women; and the result has been, not only the growth of a
-half-breed population greatly out-numbering the Whites, but the
-formation of a tribe of half-breeds, divided into two distinct bands,
-according to their Scottish or French paternity, who kept themselves
-distinct in manners, habits, and allegiance, alike from the Whites and
-the Indians.
-
-This rise of an independent half-breed tribe is one of the most
-remarkable results of the great, though undesigned, ethnological
-experiment which has been in progress ever since the meeting of the
-diverse races of the Old and New World on the continent of America; and
-when the peculiar circumstances which favoured this result came to an
-end, it became a matter of great interest to note the most striking
-phases presented by it, before they are effaced by the influx of
-European emigration. I accordingly printed and circulated as widely as
-possible a set of queries relative to the Indian and half-breed
-population both of Canada and the Hudson Bay territory; and from the
-returns made to me by Hudson Bay factors, missionaries, and others, most
-of the following results are derived. The number of the settled
-population, either half-breed or more or less of Indian blood, in Red
-River and the surrounding settlements was about 7200. The intermarriage
-there has been chiefly with Indian women of the plain Crees, though
-alliances also occur with the Swampies (another branch of the Crees),
-and with Sioux, Chippeway, and Blackfeet women. But the most noticeable
-differences are traceable to the white paternity. The French half-breeds
-have more demonstrativeness and vivacity, but they are reported to take
-less readily to the steady drudgery of the farm than those of Scotch
-descent. But, at best, the temptations of a border settlement, with its
-buffalo hunts and its chief market for peltries, were little calculated
-to develop the industrious habits of a settled community; and the
-intrusion of farmers from the old provinces, and immigrants from Europe,
-ignorant of their habits and wholly indifferent to their interests,
-necessarily interfered with the healthful process of transformation into
-a settled industrious community of civilised half-breeds.
-
-Some of the results elicited by the inquiries are of value in their
-bearing on the question of mixed races, and the apparent tendency to
-develop permanent varieties; and all the more so as the data thus
-obtained show the condition of the North-West community immediately
-prior to the formation of the Province of Manitoba, and the inauguration
-of the revolution which inevitably followed in its train. The
-half-breeds are a large and robust race, with greater powers of
-endurance than the native Indian. Mr. S. J. Dawson, of the Red River
-Exploring Expedition, speaks of the French half-breeds as a gigantic
-race as compared with the French Canadians of Lower Canada. Professor
-Hind refers in equally strong language to their great physical powers
-and vigorous muscular developments; and the venerable Archdeacon Hunter,
-of Red River, replied in answer to my inquiry: “In what respects do the
-half-breed Indians differ from the pure Indians as to habits of life,
-courage, strength, increase of numbers, etc.?” “They are superior in
-every respect, both mentally and physically.” Much concurrent evidence
-points to the fact that the families descended from mixed parentage are
-larger than those of the whites; and though the results are in some
-degree counteracted by a tendency to consumption, yet it does not amount
-to such a source of diminution on the whole as to interfere with their
-steady numerical increase. One of the questions circulated by me was in
-this form: “State any facts tending to prove or disprove that the
-offspring descended from mixed White and Indian blood fails in a few
-generations.” To this the Rev. J. Gilmour answered: “I know many large
-and healthy families of partial Indian blood, and have formed the
-opinion that they are likely to perpetuate a hardy race.” The venerable
-Archdeacon Hunter, familiar with the facts by long residence as a
-clergyman of the Roman Catholic Church among the mixed population of the
-Red River Settlement, answered still more decidedly: “The offspring
-descended from mixed White and Indian blood does not fail, but,
-generally speaking, by intermarriages it becomes very difficult to
-determine whether they are pure Whites or half-breeds.” Living, however,
-for many years among a people in whom the Indian traits are more or less
-traceable, it is probable that Archdeacon Hunter is less attracted by
-the modified, ample black hair, the large full mouth, and the dark,
-though gentle and softly expressive eye, which strikes a stranger on
-first coming among any frontier population of mixed blood. The
-half-breeds also retain much of the reserved and unimpressible manner of
-the Indian; though a good deal of intercourse with the native race has
-led me to the conclusion that this is more of an acquired habit than a
-strictly hereditary trait: a piece of Indian education akin to certain
-habits of social life universally inculcated among ourselves. When off
-his guard, the wild Indian betrays great inquisitiveness, and when
-relaxing over the camp-fire after a laborious day gives free play to
-mirth and loquacity.
-
-So far, however, much that has been said applies to the mixed population
-of the Red River Settlement, living on a perfect equality with the white
-settlers, and constituting an integral part of the colony. They are
-neither to be confounded with the remarkable tribe of half-breed
-hunters, nor with the Indians of mixed blood already described, on older
-Canadian reserves. Remote as this settlement has hitherto been from
-ordinary centres of colonisation, and inaccessible except through the
-agency of the Hudson Bay Company, every tendency has been to encourage
-the introduction of the young adventurer, trapper, or _voyageur_, rather
-than the married settler. The habits of life incident to the fur trade
-made the distinction less marked between the Indian and the white man;
-and thus a people of peculiar type grew up there as intermediate in
-habits and mode of life as in blood from those of the old settled
-provinces of Upper and Lower Canada. Much property is now possessed by
-men of mixed blood. Their young men have in some cases been sent to the
-colleges of Canada, and, after creditably distinguishing themselves,
-have returned to lend their aid in the progress of the settlement. Thus
-a favourable concurrence of circumstances in all respects tended to give
-ample opportunity for testing the experiment of intermingling the blood
-of Europe and America, and raising up a civilised race peculiar to its
-soil. With the rapid influx of emigrants; the settling of the prairie
-lands with a population of yeomen farmers; and the rise of villages and
-towns along the railways and river highways; the ultimate absorption of
-this half-breed population, and its merging into the homogeneous
-community that will ultimately be fashioned out of a meeting of very
-diverse settlers, is inevitable. Icelanders and Danes, Germans,
-Russians, Italians, French, Highland crofters, and Irish Celts, are all
-being interfused into the new community of which the half-breed element
-will form no unimportant factor.
-
-But a greater interest attaches to that other class of half-breeds
-already alluded to, which the new order of things has inevitably tended
-to efface, though not necessarily to eradicate, as an element in the
-population of the future province. Besides the civilised race of
-half-breeds, mingling on a perfect equality with the Whites; brought up
-in many cases in full enjoyment of such domestic training as the Hudson
-Bay factor and hunter could furnish in the wilderness; there remained
-apart from them a half-breed race, the offspring born to native women as
-the inevitable results of such a social condition as pertains to the
-occupants of the forts and trading-posts of that remote region. These
-half-breed buffalo hunters were wholly distinct from the civilised
-settlers, and yet more nearly related to them than to the wild Indian
-tribes. They belonged to the settlement, possessed land, and cultivated
-farms, though their agricultural labours were very much subordinated to
-the claims of the chase, and they scarcely aimed at more than supplying
-their own wants. The two bands numbered in all between 6000 and 7000.
-Each division had its separate tribal organisation and distinct
-hunting-grounds, extending beyond the British American frontier. In 1849
-the White Horse plain half-breeds on the Strayenne river, Dakota
-territory, rendered the following returns to an officer appointed to
-take the census: “700 half-breeds, 200 Indians, 603 carts, 600 horses,
-200 oxen, 400 dogs, and 1 cat.” This may illustrate the general
-character of a people partaking of the nomad habits of the Indian, and
-yet possessed of a considerable amount of movable property and real
-estate. They are a hardy race, fearless horsemen, and capable of
-enduring the greatest privations. They have adopted the Roman Catholic
-faith, and specially coveted the presence of a priest with them when on
-their hunting expeditions. The mass was celebrated on the open prairie,
-and was prized as a guarantee of success in the hunting-field. On such
-expeditions, it has to be borne in view, they were not tempted by mere
-love of the chase or by the prospect of a supply of game. Winter-hunting
-supplies to the trapper the valued peltries of the fur-bearing animals;
-but they depended on the summer and autumn buffalo hunts for the supply
-of pemmican, which furnished one of the main resources of the whole
-Hudson Bay population. The summer hunt kept them abroad on the prairie
-from about the 15th of June to the end of August, and smaller bands
-resumed the hunt in the autumn. With this as the favourite and
-engrossing work of the tribe, it is inevitable that farming could be
-carried on only in the most desultory fashion. Nevertheless, the
-severity of the winter compelled them to make provision for the numerous
-horses and oxen on which the summer hunt depended; and thus habits of
-industry and forethought were engendered.
-
-The half-breed hunters regarded the Sioux and Blackfeet as their natural
-enemies, and carried on warfare with them much after the fashion of the
-Indian tribes that have acquired fire-arms and horses; but they gave
-proof of their “Christian” civilisation by taking no scalps. In the
-field, whether preparing for hunting or war, the superiority of the
-half-breeds was strikingly apparent. They then evinced a discipline,
-courage, and self-control, of which the wild Sioux, Crees, or Blackfeet
-are wholly incapable; and they accordingly looked with undisguised
-contempt on their Indian foes.
-
-Such are some of the most noticeable characteristics of this interesting
-race, called into being by the contact of the European with the native
-tribes of the forest and prairie. With so many of the elements of
-civilisation which it is found so hard to introduce among the most
-intelligent native tribes, an aptitude for social organisation, and a
-thorough independence of all external superintendence or control, there
-seems no reason to doubt that here is an example of an intermediate
-race, combining characteristics derived from two extremely diverse types
-of man, with all apparent promise of perpetuity and increase, if they
-could have been secured in the exclusive occupation of the region in
-which they have originated. But the railway has traversed the trail of
-the buffalo; and they have been compelled to make their choice between
-conformity to the industrial habits of agricultural settlers, or follow
-the herds of the buffalo in search of some remote wilderness beyond the
-shriek of the locomotive and the hail of the pioneer immigrant.
-
-The inevitable revolution was not permitted to be inaugurated without
-very practical protest. The Red River Expedition of Sir Garnet Wolseley
-in 1870 was directed to put down a revolt of the half-breeds, under
-their leader, Louis Riel, resolute to oppose the intrusion of immigrant
-settlers. The struggle was renewed in 1885 under the same leader, but
-with the more legitimate grievance of neglected land claims, and the
-assertion of their rights to property in the prairie lands and on the
-river fronts. They were encountered by a Canadian volunteer force;
-Batoche, their little urban stronghold, was captured; and the North-West
-rebellion was brought to an end. But it was freely acknowledged that,
-poorly armed and ill-provided with the indispensable requisites for
-meeting a well-organised force of militia, under an experienced British
-soldier, General Middleton, they displayed unflinching courage, and held
-out bravely against overwhelming numbers furnished with the deadly
-appliances of modern warfare.
-
-It could not be supposed that the invasion of the western hemisphere by
-the wanderers from the later homes of the Aryans beyond the Atlantic
-could reproduce in all respects the old phenomena that marked the
-displacement of Europe’s prehistoric races. But making due allowance for
-the changes wrought on the Aryan stock by the civilising influences of
-twenty centuries or more; and the consequent disparity between them and
-the rude hunter tribes of the American forests and prairies; much
-remains to aid us in the interpretation of the past. Ethnological
-investigation and induction enable us to realise the condition of Europe
-when its thinly-dispersed population consisted of a dark-skinned race,
-small in stature, and, as we may conceive, with hair and eyes of
-corresponding hue. Sepulchral deposits and the chance disclosures in
-their old cave-shelters have made us familiar with their physical form.
-Their modern representatives survive on the outskirts of Europe’s
-civilised centres. Still more, their ethnical characteristics have been
-perpetuated by the very same process as may now be seen in progress in
-the frontier states of America and the newest provinces of the Canadian
-Dominion. Not only are the modern representatives of Europe’s Allophyliæ
-to be found among the Lapps, Finns, and the Iberians of Northern and
-Western Europe; but everywhere in the British Isles, and throughout
-Western Europe, the Melanochroic elements stand out distinctly from the
-predominant Xanthocroic stock, among a people unconscious of any
-diversity of race. Here then we see evidences of the intermingling and
-the partial absorption of the Australioid savage of prehistoric Europe
-by the later Xanthocroi, the product of which survives in the brunette
-of Britain, France, Germany, Spain, and Italy. In Britain the
-contrasting characteristics of the diverse ethnical elements attracted
-the attention of Tacitus in the first century of our era. In Spain the
-Iberian still preserves the evidence of an individuality apart from the
-Indo-European races in the vernacular Euskara, while a large Moorish
-element in the southern portion of the peninsula perpetuates the results
-of another foreign intrusion and interblending of races within historic
-times.
-
-The diversity apparent in some of the results of the meeting of
-dissimilar races in the Old World and the New, is due to the
-geographical characteristics of the two hemispheres. Alike by sea and
-land, Europe could be entered by invading colonists, gradually, and at
-many diverse points. Hence, the aggression of the higher races may be
-assumed to have begun while the difference between them and the
-aborigines of Europe was much less than that which distinguishes the
-European from the Bed Indian savage. The conquest would thus be
-protracted over a period probably of many generations, and so would
-involve no such collisions as inevitably result in the destruction of
-savage races when brought into abrupt contact with those far advanced in
-civilisation.
-
-But the peculiar relations of the frontier populations of the New World,
-and especially of the factors, trappers, and _voyageurs_ of the Hudson
-Bay Company, with the native tribes, helped to create a partial equality
-between the civilised European and the savage, and so to beget results
-akin to those which have left such enduring evidences of the mingling of
-diverse races in the population of Europe.
-
-This accordingly suggests a question affecting the whole relations of
-British and European colonists generally to the native population of new
-lands settled and colonised by them. Not only English, Scotch, and
-Irish, but German, Norwegian, Icelandic, French, Polish, Russian, and
-Italian emigrants flock in thousands to the New World, merge in the
-common stock, and in the third generation learn to speak of themselves
-as “Anglo-Saxon!” The investigations of ethnologists have well-nigh put
-an end to the supposed purity of an Anglo-Saxon or Anglo-Scandinavian
-population in all but the assumed purely Celtic areas of the British
-Islands; and the latest system of ethnical classification is based on
-the recognition of the survival in the mixed population of modern
-Britain of a race-element which still perpetuates an enduring influence
-derived from aborigines of Europe anterior to the advent of Celt or
-Teuton. The power of absorption and assimilation of a predominant race
-is great; and ethnological displacement is no more necessarily a process
-of extinction now than in primitive times; though intermixture must ever
-be most easily effected where the ethnical distinctions are least
-strongly marked, and the conditions of civilisation are nearly akin.
-
-The permanent survival of a disparate type in America perpetuating the
-evidences of the interblending of the Red and White races may be
-doubted. That some ineffaceable results will remain I cannot doubt; but
-the enormous disparity in numbers between the millions of European
-nationalities, and the little remnant of the native race brought in
-contact with them, precludes the possibility of results such as have
-perpetuated in the modern races of Europe elements derived from some of
-its earliest savage tribes.
-
-It has indeed been such a favourite idea with some physiologists that in
-the undoubted developments of something like a distinct Anglo-American
-type, there is a certain approximation to the Indian, that Dr.
-Carpenter, in his _Essay on the Varieties of Mankind_, lays claim to
-originality in the idea “that the conformation of the cranium seems to
-have undergone a certain amount of alteration, even in the Anglo-Saxon
-race of the United States, which assimilates it in some degree to that
-of the aboriginal inhabitants.” This he dwells on in some detail, and
-arrives at what he seems to regard as an indisputable conclusion, that
-the peculiar American physiognomy to which he adverts presents a
-transition, however slight, toward that of the North American Indian.
-But the long-cherished opinion, to which Dr. Morton gave currency, of
-the existence of one special type of skull-form common to the whole
-aborigines of America, has been abandoned by all who have given any
-attention to the evidence which Dr. Morton’s own _Crania Americana_
-supplies. I doubt if the idea of such an approximation of the
-Anglo-American to the Red Indian type would ever have occurred to a
-physiologist of Canada or of New England, to whom abundant opportunities
-for comparing the Indian and Anglo-American features, and of noting the
-actual transitional forms between the two, are accessible. But if such
-examples can be clearly recognised, they may be assigned with
-probability to a reverting to the type of some Bed ancestress whose
-blood is transmitted to a late descendant.
-
-But it is otherwise with the millions of the Coloured race who now
-constitute the indigenous population of the Southern States. They are at
-home there in a climate to which the White race adapts itself with very
-partial success. The offspring of white fathers and of mothers of the
-African races, they have multiplied to millions; and now with the
-recently acquired rights of citizenship, and with the advantages of
-education within their reach, the country is their own. The very social
-prejudices against miscegenation protect them from the effacing
-influences to which the Indian half-breed is exposed by ever recurrent
-intermarriage with the dominant race. As yet, there are discernible the
-various degrees of heredity from the Mulatto to the Quinteron. But the
-abolishing of slavery has placed the Coloured race on an entirely new
-footing; and left as it now is, free to enjoy the healthful social
-relations of a civilised community, and protected by the very prejudices
-of race and caste from any large intermixture with the White race, it
-can scarcely admit of doubt that there will survive on the American
-continent a Melanocroi of its own, more distinctly separated from the
-White race, not only by heredity, but also by climatic influences, than
-the “dark Whites” of Europe are from the blonde types of Hellenic,
-Slavic, Teutonic, or Scandinavian stocks.
-
------
-
-[148] _Reisen in Lykien_, etc., Vienna, 1889.
-
-[149] Vide _History of the Negro Race in America_. G. W. Williams.
-
-[150] _Science_, Feb. 13, 1891. A. F. Chamberlain.
-
-[151] See p. 290.
-
-
-
-
- VIII
- RELATIVE RACIAL BRAIN-WEIGHT AND SIZE
-
-
-CONSISTENTLY with the recognition of the brain as the organ of
-intellectual activity, it seems not unnatural to assume for man, as the
-rational animal, a very distinctive cerebral development. One of the
-most distinguished of living naturalists, Professor Owen, has even made
-this organ the basis of a system of classification, by means of which he
-separates man into a sub-class, distinct from all other mammalia. But
-while a comparison between man and the anthropoid apes, as the animals
-most nearly approximating to him in physical structure, lends
-confirmation to the idea not only that a well-developed brain is
-essential to natural activity, but that there is a close relation
-between the development of the brain and the manifestation of
-intellectual power; the distinctive features in the human brain, as
-compared with those of the anthropomorpha, prove to be greatly less than
-had been assumed under imperfect knowledge. The substantial difference
-is in volume. “No one, I presume,” says Darwin, “doubts that the large
-size of the brain in man, relatively to his body, in comparison to that
-of the gorilla or orang, is closely connected with his higher mental
-powers”;[152] and it might not unfairly be reasoned from analogy, that
-the same test distinguishes the intellectual man from the stolid, and
-the civilised man from the savage. A careful study of the subject,
-however, shows some remarkable deviations from such a scale of
-progression. Attention is indeed directed to greatly more ample proofs
-of inequality between the organic source of power and the manifestations
-of mental energy; as, for example, in the ant, with its cerebral ganglia
-not so large as the quarter of a small pin’s head, displaying instincts
-and apparent affections of wonderful intensity and compass. Viewed in
-this aspect, “the brain of an ant is one of the most marvellous atoms of
-matter in the world, perhaps more marvellous than the brain of man.”
-Here, however, we look on elements of contrast rather than analogy; and
-seek in vain in this direction for any appreciable test of the soundness
-of the popular belief in the size of the brain as a measure of
-intellectual power. It is otherwise when we turn to the anthropomorpha.
-There, alike in the scientific and in the popular creed, very special
-and exceptional affinities to man are admitted; and a careful study of
-their anatomical structure tends to increase the recognised points of
-analogy.
-
-Mr. Lockhart Clarke, in a contribution to Dr. Maudsley’s work on the
-Physiology and Pathology of Mind, gives a minute description of the
-concentric layers of nervous substance which combine to form the
-convolutions of the human brain; and of the forms and disposition of the
-various nerve-cells of which its vesicular structure consists. Comparing
-the human brain with those of other animals, he says: “Between the cells
-of the convolutions in man and those of the ape tribe I could not
-perceive any difference whatever; but they certainly differ in some
-respects from those of the larger mammalia: from those, for instance, of
-the ox, sheep, or cat.”[153] Apart from the difference in volume (55 to
-115 cubic inches), the only distinctive features, according to Professor
-Huxley, between the brain of the anthropomorpha and that of man, are
-“the filling up of the occipito-temporal fissure; the greater complexity
-and less symmetry of the other sulci and gyri; the less excavation of
-the orbital face of the frontal lobe; and the larger size of the
-cerebral hemispheres, as compared with the cerebellum and the cerebral
-nerves.”
-
-The brain of the orang is the one which seems most nearly to approximate
-to that of man. In volume it is about 26 or 27 cubic inches; or about
-half the minimum size of a normal human brain. The frontal height is
-greater than in that of other anthropomorpha; the frontal lobe is in all
-respects larger as compared with the occipital lobe; and certain folds
-of brain-substance, styled “bridging convulsions,” which in the human
-brain are interposed between the parietal and occipital lobes, also
-occur, though greatly reduced, in the brain of the orang; while they
-appear to be wholly wanting in the chimpanzee, the gibbon, and other
-apes which superficially present a greater resemblance to man. Referring
-to the convolutions of the central cerebral lobe, Huschke says: “With
-their formation in the ape, the brain enters the last stage of
-development until it arrives at its perfection in man”; and the higher
-class of brains may be arranged between the extremes of poorly and
-richly convoluted examples.
-
-But it must not be overlooked that, apart from structural differences,
-relative, and not absolute mass and weight of brain has to be
-considered, otherwise the elephant and the whale would take the foremost
-place. “The brain of the porpoise,” Professor Huxley remarks,[154] “is
-quite wonderful for its mass, and for the development of the cerebral
-convolutions”; but it is the centre of a nervous system of corresponding
-capacity, while as compared with the size of the animal, the brain is
-not relatively large. Vogt states the weight of the human body to be to
-the brain, on an average, as 36 to 1; whereas in the most intelligent
-animals the difference is rarely less than 100 to 1.
-
-Assuming the existence of some uniform relation between the size of the
-brain and the development of the intellectual faculties, along with
-whatever is recognised as most closely analogous to them in the lower
-animals, it might be anticipated that we should find not only a
-graduated development of brain in the anthropomorpha as they approximate
-in resemblance to man; but, still more, that the progressive stages from
-the lowest savage condition to that of the most civilised nations should
-be traceable in a comparative size and weight of brain. Dr. Carl Vogt,
-after discussing certain minor and doubtful exceptions, thus proceeds:
-“We find that there is an almost regular series in the cranial capacity
-of such nations and races as, since historic times, have taken no part
-in civilisation. Australians, Hottentots, and Polynesians, nations in
-the lowest state of barbarism, commence the series; and no one can deny
-that the place they occupy in relation to cranial capacity and cerebral
-weight corresponds with the degree of their intellectual capacity and
-civilisation.”[155] But the position thus confidently assigned to the
-Polynesians receives no confirmation from the evidence supplied by the
-measurements of Dr. J. B. Davis, in his _Thesaurus Craniorum_; and a
-careful study of the subject reveals other remarkable deviations from
-such a scale of progression, not only in individuals but in races. To
-these exceptional deviations, with their bearing on the comparative
-capacity of races, the following remarks are chiefly directed. The
-largest and heaviest brains do indeed appear, for the most part, to
-pertain to the nations highest in civilisation, and to the most
-intelligent of their number. But this cannot be asserted as a uniform
-law, either in relation to races or individuals. The more carefully the
-requisite evidence is accumulated, the less does it appear that the
-volume of brain, or the cubic contents of the skull, supply a uniform
-gauge of intellectual capacity. In the researches which have thus far
-been instituted into the characteristics of the human brain among the
-lowest races, the development is in many respects remarkable; and, as
-was to be expected, no organic differences between diverse races of men
-have been traced.
-
-Professor C. Luigi Calori has published the results of a careful
-examination of the brain of a negro of Guinea. It presented the marked
-excess of length over breadth so characteristic of the negro cranium;
-but in other respects it corresponded generally to the fully developed
-European brain. The distribution of the white and gray substances was
-the same; the cerebral convolutions were collected into an equal number
-of lobes; and the only special difference was that the convolutions were
-a little less frequently folded, and the separating sulci somewhat less
-marked than in the average European brain. But even in those respects
-the complication was great. The actual weight of the brain, according to
-Professor Calori, was 1260 grammes, equivalent to 44.4 cubic inches. The
-complexity of convolution, and consequent extension of superficies of
-the encephalon, appears to be an essential element in the development of
-the brain as the organ of highest mental capacity; and to the cerebrum,
-apparently, the true functions of intellectual activity pertain.
-Professor Wagner undertook the measurement of the convex surface of the
-frontal lobe in a series of brains. The heaviest, as a rule, had also
-the greatest development of surface. But the two elements were not in
-uniform ratio. Some of the lighter brains presented a much greater
-degree of convolution and consequent extent of convex superficies than
-others which ranked above them in weight. It is thus apparent that in
-estimating the comparative characteristics of brains, various elements
-are necessary for an exhaustive comparison. Besides the functional
-differences of the cerebrum, cerebellum, and pons varolii, they have
-different specific gravities, so that brains of equal weight may differ
-widely in quality. Dr. Peacock, taking distilled water as 1000, gives
-the values of the subdivisions of the brain thus: cerebrum, 1034;
-cerebellum, 1041; pons varolii, 1040. Again, Dr. Sankey states the mean
-specific gravity of the gray matter of the brain in either sex as
-1034.6, and of the white matter as 1041.2. The variations from these
-results, as given by Bastian, Thurnam, and others, are trifling. But it
-is significant to note that recent researches show that where greater
-specific gravity of brain occurs in the insane, it appears to be limited
-to the gray matter.[156] Professor Goodsir maintained that symmetry of
-brain has more to do with the higher faculties than bulk of form. It is,
-at any rate, apparent that two brains of equal weight may differ widely
-in quality.
-
-Nevertheless, the popular estimate embodied in such expressions as “a
-good head,” “a long-headed fellow,” and “a poor head,” like many other
-popular inductions, has truth for its basis. Up to a certain stage the
-growth of the brain determines the capacity of the skull. Then it seems
-as though more complex convolutions accompanied the packing of the
-elaborated cerebral mass within the fixed limits of its osseous chamber.
-
-A comparison of races, based on minute investigation of an adequate
-number of brains of fair typical examples, may be expected to yield
-important results; but in the absence of such direct evidence, the chief
-data available for this purpose are derived from measurements of the
-internal capacity of their skulls. Among English observers who have
-devoted themselves to this class of observations, the foremost place is
-due to Dr. J. Barnard Davis, who, in 1867, summed up the results of his
-extensive researches in a contribution to the Royal Society, entitled
-“Contributions towards determining the Weight of the Brain in different
-Races of Man.”[157] Inferior as such evidence must necessarily be, if
-compared with the examination of the brain itself, nevertheless the
-number of skulls of the different races gauged unquestionably furnishes
-some highly valuable data for ethnical comparison. The evidence,
-moreover, is obtained from a source in some respects less variable than
-the encephalon; and will always constitute a corrective element in
-estimating results based on direct examinations of the brain. Dr. Davis,
-indeed, claims “that the examination of a large series of skulls in
-ascertaining their capacities and deducing from those capacities the
-average volume of the brain, affords in some respects more available
-data for determining this relative volume for any particular race than
-the weighing of the brain itself.” The defect is, that its most
-important results are necessarily based on the assumption of a uniform
-density of brain; whereas some notable ethnical differences, hereafter
-referred to, may prove to be due to the fact that certain races derive
-their special characteristics from a prevailing diversity in this very
-respect.
-
-But the extensive observations of Dr. Davis, as of Dr. Morton, have a
-special value from the fact that each furnishes results based on a
-uniform system of observation; for the diverse methods and materials
-employed by different observers in gauging the human skull have greatly
-detracted from their practical value. In a communication by the late
-Professor Jeffreys Wyman to the Boston Natural History Society,[158] he
-presented the results of a series of measurements of the internal
-capacity of the same skull with pease, beans, rice, flax-seed, shot, and
-coarse and fine sand. From repeated experiments he arrived at the
-conclusion that the apparent capacity varied according to the different
-substances used, so that the same skull measured respectively, with
-pease 1193 centimetres, with shot 1201.8, with rice 1220.2, and with
-fine sand 1313 centimetres. Professor Wyman was led to the conclusion
-that, for exactness, small shot, as employed latterly by Dr. Morton, is
-preferable to sand, were it not for its weight, which, in the case of
-old and fragile skulls, is apt to be destructive to them. With a view to
-avoid the latter evil, Dr. J. B. Davis has used fine Calais sand of
-1.425 specific gravity. The diversity in apparent volume, consequent on
-the employment of different substances in gauging the internal capacity
-of the skull, necessarily detracts from the value of comparative results
-of Morton, Davis, and others. But the elaborate measurements of their
-great collections of human crania furnish reliable series of data, each
-uniform in system, and sufficiently minute to satisfy many requirements
-of comparative craniometry and approximate cerebral development.
-
-Without assuming an invariable correspondence in cubical capacity and
-brain-weight, there is a sufficient approximation in the cubical
-capacity of the skull and the average weight of the encephalon to render
-the deductions derived from gauging the capacities of skulls of
-different races an important addition to this department of comparative
-ethnology. For minute cerebral comparisons, however, it is apparent that
-much more is required; and the special functions assigned to the various
-organs within the cranium have to be kept in view. Of these the medulla
-oblongata, in direct contact with the spinal cord, is now recognised as
-the centre of the vital actions in breathing and swallowing; and is
-believed also to be the direct source of the muscular action employed in
-speech. Next to it are the sensory ganglia, arranged in pairs along the
-base of the brain. To the cerebellum, which the phrenologist sets apart
-as the source of the emotions and passions embraced in his terminology
-of amativeness, philoprogenitiveness, etc., physiologists now assign the
-function of conveying to the mind the conditions of tension and
-relaxation of the muscles, and so controlling their voluntary action.
-But above all those is the cerebrum, or brain-proper, consisting of two
-large lobes of nervous substance, which in man are so large that, when
-viewed vertically, they cover and conceal the cerebellum. To this organ
-is specially assigned emotion, volition, and ratiocination. It is the
-assumed seat of the mind; and, in a truer sense than the skull—
-
- The dome of thought, the palace of the soul;
-
-if indeed it be not, to one class of reasoners, the mind itself. Certain
-it is that no acute disease can affect it without a corresponding
-disorder of the functions of mind; and with this organ much below the
-average size, intellectual weakness may always be predicated. But at the
-same time, it is significant to note that the human brain, stinted in
-its full proportions, and reduced to a seeming equality with the
-anthropomorpha, exhibits no corresponding capacities or instincts in
-lieu of the higher mental qualities. Microcephaly is the invariable
-index, not of mere limited intelligence and mental capacity, but of
-actual mental imbecility. If the augmentation of the brain of the
-anthropomorpha from 55 to 115 cubic inches be all that is requisite for
-the transformation of the irrational ape into the reasoning man, it
-would seem to be in no degree illogical to look for the accompaniment of
-the inversion of the process by an approximation, in some instances, to
-certain capacities and functions of the ape. But there are no
-indications of this. In some examples of microcephaly, the so-called
-animal propensities do indeed manifest themselves to excess; but there
-is no reproduction of the animal nature, instincts, or capacities,
-analogous to the scale of cerebral development of the orang or
-chimpanzee. A microcephalous idiot, who died at the age of twenty-two,
-in St. Bartholomew’s Hospital, London, had a brain weighing only 13.125
-oz., or 372 grammes. In describing this case, Professor Owen remarks:
-“Here nature may be said to have performed for us the experiment of
-arresting the development of the brain almost exactly at the size which
-it attains in the chimpanzee, and where the intellectual faculties were
-scarcely more developed. Yet no anatomist would hesitate in at once
-referring the cranium to the human species.” And so is it with the
-encephalon. The brain of the chimpanzee is a healthy, well-developed
-organ, adequate to the amplest requirements of the animal; whereas the
-microcephalous human brain is inadequate for any efficient, continuous
-cerebral activity: not merely limited in its range of powers. Much,
-however, may yet be learned from a careful attention to the imperfect
-manifestations of activity in certain directions, in cases of
-microcephalic idiocy, and noting the predominant tendency in each case,
-with a view to subsequent examination of the brain. By this means it may
-be found possible to refer certain forms of mental activity to special
-variations in the structure of the organ, or to distinct members of the
-encephalon.
-
-Dr. Laennec exhibited to the Anthropological Society of Paris a
-microcephalous idiot of the male sex, aged fourteen years. “This child
-is entirely unconscious of his own actions, and his intellectual
-operations are very few in number, and very rudimentary. His language
-consists of two syllables, _oui_ and _la_, and he takes an evident
-pleasure in pronouncing them. He takes no heed in what direction he
-walks. He would step off a precipice, or into a fire.” Attention was
-specially directed to the idiot’s hands: “The thumbs are atrophied, and
-cannot be opposed to the other fingers. The palms of the hands have the
-transverse creases, but not the diagonal—the result of the atrophy of
-the thumbs. Hence the hand resembles that of the chimpanzee. The
-dentition too is defective. Though fourteen years of age, the child has
-only twelve teeth.” Here it is curious to note the analogies in physical
-structure to the lower anthropomorpha in other organs besides the brain,
-for it only renders more striking the absence of any corresponding
-aptitudes.
-
-Dr. J. Barnard Davis, in his interesting monograph on _Synostotic Crania
-among Aboriginal Races of Man_, produces some remarkable illustrations
-of the effect of premature ossification of the sutures of the skull in
-arresting the full development of the brain, and so rendering it unequal
-to the due performance of its functions. “I have,” he says, “the cranium
-of a convict who was executed on Norfolk Island, which I owe to the
-kindness of Admiral H. M. Denham. This man was executed there when that
-beautiful isle was appropriated to the reception of the most dangerous
-and irreclaimable convicts from the other penal settlements. It is a
-microcephalic skull, rather dolichocephalic, of a man apparently about
-forty years of age. It exhibits a perfect ossification of the sagittal
-and of the greater portion of the lambdoidal sutures. The coronal suture
-is partially obliterated at the sides in the temporal regions, and can
-only be distinguished by faint traces in all its middle parts. In this
-case there has not been any compensatory development of moment in other
-directions. The calvarium is not abridged in its length, which is 7.1
-inches, equal to 179 millimetres; probably it is a little elongated. It
-is, however, very narrow being only 4.8 inches, or 122 mm. at its widest
-part, between the temporal bones. So that the result is a very small,
-dwarfed, almost cylindrical calvarium. The internal capacity is only 59
-ounces of sand,[159] which is equal to 71.4 cubic inches, or 1169 cubic
-centimetres.” Here is a skull considerably below the lowest mean of the
-crania of any race in Morton’s enlarged tables, or in the more
-comprehensive ones furnished in Dr. Davis’s _Thesaurus Craniorum_.
-Another skull nearly approximating to it is that of a Cole, one of the
-savage tribes of Nagpore, in Central India, who are said to go entirely
-naked. It is described in the supplement to the _Thesaurus Craniorum_ as
-that of “Chara,” a Cole farmer, aged fifty, and its internal capacity is
-stated as 59.5 oz. av., equivalent to 71.7 cubic inches. The Coles
-appear to be small of stature. The heights of three of them, whose
-skulls are in the same collection, were respectively 5 ft. 5 in., 5 ft.
-2 in., and 5 ft., and the average internal capacity of five male skulls
-is only 66.6. The small stature in this and others of the native races
-of Central India, has to be taken into account in estimating the
-relative size of the brain. But, after making all due allowance for
-this, the Cole skulls are remarkable for their small size, being smaller
-even than the ordinary Hindoos of Bengal. Yet one of them, “Cootlo,”
-whose skull is among those included in the above mean, commanded a band
-of insurgents in the Porahant rebellion of 1858, and made himself a
-terror to the district.
-
-The microcephalism of races, as well as of individuals, of small
-stature, must not be confounded with the true microcephaly of a dwarfed
-or imperfectly developed brain, which is invariably accompanied with
-mental imbecility. The Mincopies of the Andaman Islands are spoken of by
-Professor Owen as “perhaps the most primitive, or lowest in the scale of
-civilisation, of the human race.”[160] Mr. G. E. Dobson, in describing
-his first visit to one of their “homes,” says: “Although none of the
-tribe exceeded 64 inches in height, so that on first seeing them we
-thought the shed contained none but boys and girls, I was especially
-struck by the remarkable contrast between the size of the males and
-females.”[161] Dr. J. B. Davis has given, in the supplement to
-_Thesaurus Craniorum_, the dimensions of a male Mincopie skeleton in his
-collection. The age he assumes to have been about thirty-five. The
-internal capacity of the skull is 62 oz. (Calais sand), equivalent to
-75.5 cubic inches, and the entire height of the skeleton is 58.7 inches.
-It belongs, says Dr. Davis, to a pigmy race, is small in all its
-dimensions, and is particularly small in the dimensions of the pelvis.
-Of their skulls, moreover, he adds, “it is somewhat difficult to
-determine the sex with confidence. They are all small (but this is a
-character of the race), they are delicate in development, and they have
-that fulness of the occipital region, and smallness of the mastoid
-processes, which are marks of femininism.”
-
-Mr. Alfred R. Wallace connects the Mincopies with the Negritos and
-Semangs of the Malay peninsula, a dark woolly-haired race, dwarfs in
-stature. Dr. Davis says of the six Mincopie skulls in his collection,
-four male and two female, as well as of others which he has seen: “They
-are all remarkably and strikingly alike, not merely in size but in form
-also. They are all small, round, brachycephalic crania of beautiful
-form.” Moreover, though classed as “lowest in the scale of
-civilisation,” the Mincopies betray no deficiency of intellect. The
-admirable photographs which illustrate Mr. Dobson’s narrative show in
-the majority of them good frontal development. The brain is not, indeed,
-relatively small. Their canoes are made of the trunk of a tree, hollowed
-out; and Mr. Dobson remarks: “The construction of their peculiar arrows
-and fish-spears with movable heads exhibits much ingenuity, and the use
-of no small reasoning power in adapting means to an end.”
-
-We are indeed too apt to apply our own artificial standards as the sole
-test of intellectual vigour; whereas it is probable that in the amount
-of acquired knowledge and acuteness of reasoning many savage races
-surpass the majority of the illiterate peasantry in the most civilised
-countries of Europe. Mr. Wallace, in viewing the subject in one special
-light, remarks: “The brain of the lowest savages, and, as far as we yet
-know, of the prehistoric races, is little inferior in size to that of
-the higher types of man, and is immensely superior to that of the higher
-animals; while it is universally admitted that quantity of brain is one
-of the most important, and probably the most essential of the elements
-which determine mental power. Yet the mental requirements of savages,
-and the faculties actually exercised by them, are very little above
-those of animals. The higher feelings of pure morality and refined
-emotion, and the power of abstract reasoning and ideal conception, are
-useless to them; are rarely, if ever, manifested; and have no important
-relations to their habits, wants, desires, and well-being. They possess
-a mental organ beyond their needs.”[162]
-
-Here, however, it may be well to guard against the confusion of two very
-distinct elements. The higher feelings of pure morality and refined
-emotion are not manifestations of intellectual vigour in the same sense
-as is the power of abstract reasoning and ideal conception. It is not
-rare to find an English or Scottish peasant with little intellectual
-culture or capacity for abstract reasoning, but with an acutely
-instinctive moral sense. On the other hand, among the criminal class, it
-is by no means rare to find examples of wonderfully vigorous
-intellectual power applied to the planning and accomplishing of schemes
-which involve as much foresight and skill as many a triumph of
-diplomacy; but which at the same time seem to be nearly incompatible
-with any moral sense. Moreover, it is needless to say that intellectual
-vigour and high moral principle are by no means invariable concomitants
-in any class of society; nor can they be traced to a common source. Mr.
-Wallace recognises that “a superior intelligence has guided the
-development of man in a definite direction, and for a special purpose”;
-and such guidance involves much more than the mere evolution of a higher
-animal organisation. But, appreciating as he does the difficulties
-involved in any acceptance of a theory of evolution which assumes man to
-be the mere latest outgrowth of a development from lower forms of animal
-life, Mr. Wallace points out that “natural selection could only have
-endowed savage man with a brain a little superior to that of an ape,
-whereas he actually possesses one very little inferior to that of a
-philosopher.”
-
-Yet neither Mr. Wallace, nor Professor Huxley when controverting this
-argument, withholds a due recognition of the activity of the intellect
-of the savage. No one indeed can have much intercourse with savage races
-wholly dependent on their own resources without recognising that, within
-a certain range, their faculties are kept in constant activity. The
-savage hunter has not merely an intimate familiarity with all the
-capabilities and resources of many regions traversed by him in pursuit
-of his game; his geographical information includes much useful knowledge
-of the topography of ranges of country which he has never visited. I
-found, on one occasion, when exploring the Nepigon River, on Lake
-Superior, that my Chippeway guides, though fully 500 miles from their
-own country, and visiting the region for the first time, were
-nevertheless on the lookout for a metamorphic rock underlying the
-syenite which abounds there; and they made their way by well-recognised
-land-marks to this favourite “pipestone rock.” While moreover the
-Indian, like other savages, is devoid of much of what we style “useful
-knowledge,” but which would be very useless to him, he is fully informed
-on many subjects embraced within the range of the natural sciences; and
-has a very practical knowledge of meteorology, zoology, botany, and much
-else which constitutes useful knowledge to him. He is familiar with the
-habits of animals, and the medicinal virtues of many plants; will find
-his way through the forest by noting the special side of the trunks on
-which certain lichens grow; and follow the tracks of his game, or
-discover the nests of birds, by indications which would escape the most
-observant naturalist. The Australian savage, stimulated apparently to an
-unwonted ingenuity by the privations of an arid climate, is the inventor
-of two wonderfully ingenious implements, the _wommera_ or throwing
-stick, and the _bomerang_, which, when employed by the native expert,
-accomplish feats entirely beyond any efforts of European skill.
-Moreover, as Professor Huxley remarks, he “can make excellent baskets
-and nets, and neatly fitted and beautifully balanced spears; he learns
-to use these so as to be able to transfix a quartern loaf at sixty
-yards; and very often, as in the case of the American Indians, the
-language of a savage exhibits complexities which a well-trained European
-finds it difficult to master.” Again he goes on to say: “Consider that
-every time a savage tracks his game he employs a minuteness of
-observation, and an accuracy of inductive and deductive reasoning which,
-applied to other matters, would assure some reputation to a man of
-science, and I think we need ask no further why he possesses such a fair
-supply of brains. In complexity and difficulty, I should say that the
-intellectual labour of a good hunter or warrior considerably exceeds
-that of an ordinary Englishman.” Hence Professor Huxley is not prepared
-to admit that the American or Australian savage possesses in his brain a
-mental organ which he fails to turn to full account. But without
-entering on the questions of evolution and natural selection in all
-their comprehensive bearings, it is still apparent that the brain of the
-savage is an instrument of great capacity, employed within narrow
-limits.
-
-In estimating the comparative size of the brain, it is seen to be
-necessary to discriminate between individuals or races of small stature
-and cases of true microcephaly. On the other hand, it is not to be
-overlooked that examples of idiocy are not rare where the head is of a
-fair average size, and where the mental imbecility is regarded as
-congenital. But in this as in other researches of the physiologist, he
-is limited in his observations mainly to the chance opportunities which
-offer for study; and not unfrequently the prejudices of affection arrest
-the hand of the student, and prevent a _post-mortem_ examination in
-cases where science has much to hope for from freedom of investigation.
-Hence the data thus far accumulated in evidence of the actual structure,
-size, and weight, of the human brain fall far short of what is requisite
-for a solution of many questions in reference to the relations between
-cerebration and mental activity. From time to time men of science have
-sought by example, as well as by precept, to lessen such impediments to
-scientific research. Dr. Dalton left instructions for a _post-mortem_
-examination in order to test the peculiarity of his vision, which he had
-assumed to be due to a colouring of the vitreous humour; Jeremy Bentham
-bequeathed his body to his friend Dr. Southwood Smith, for the purposes
-of anatomical science; and the will of Harriet Martineau contained this
-provision: “It is my desire, from an interest in the progress of
-scientific investigation, that my skull should be given to Henry George
-Atkinson, of Upper Gloucester Place, London, and also my brain, if my
-death should take place within such distance of his then present abode
-as to enable him to have it for purposes of scientific investigation.”
-The will is dated March 10, 1864; but by a codicil, dated October 5,
-1871, this direction is revoked, with the explanation which follows in
-these words: “I wish to leave it on record that this alteration in my
-testamentary directions is not caused by any change of opinion as to the
-importance of scientific observation on such subjects, but is made in
-consequence merely of a change of circumstances in my individual case.”
-The natural repugnance of surviving relatives to any mutilation of the
-body must always tend to throw impediments in the way of such
-researches; though it may be anticipated that, with the increasing
-diffusion of knowledge, such obstacles to its pursuit will be
-diminished. Thus far, however, notwithstanding the persevering labours
-of Welcker, Bergmann, Parchappe, Broca, Boyd, Skae, Owen, Thurnam, and
-other physiologists, their observations have been necessarily limited
-almost exclusively to certain exceptional sources of evidence, embracing
-to a large extent only the pauper and the insane classes; and in the
-case of the latter especially, the functional disorder or chronic
-disease of the organ under consideration renders it peculiarly desirable
-that such results should be brought, as far as possible, into comparison
-with a corresponding number of observations on healthy brains of a class
-fairly representing the social and intellectual status of a civilised
-community.
-
-The average brain-weight of the human adult, as determined by a numerous
-series of observations, ranges for man from 40 oz. to 52½ oz., and for
-woman from 35 oz. to 47½ oz. But some indications among ancient crania
-tend to suggest a doubt as to whether this difference in cerebral
-capacity was a uniformly marked sexual distinction among early races;
-due allowance being made for difference in stature. Dr. Thurnam made the
-race of the British Long Barrows a special subject of study; and Dr.
-Rolleston followed up his researches with valuable results. Amongst
-other points, he noted that the males appear to have averaged 5 ft. 6
-in., and the females 4 ft. 10 in. in height. But while the difference of
-stature between the male and the female exceeds what is observable in
-most modern races, the variation in the size and internal capacity of
-their skulls appears to be less than among civilised races. The like
-characteristics are noticeable in the larger race of Europe’s
-Palæolithic era. Nothing is more striking in the discovery of those
-ancient remains of European man than the remarkable development of the
-skulls and the good brain capacity of the race of the palæotechnic dawn,
-where man is proved, by his works of art and all the traces of his
-hearth and home, to have been still a rude hunter and cave-dweller. The
-Canstadt type of skull is assumed to be that of the earliest European
-race of which traces have thus far been discovered; and it is
-unquestionably markedly inferior in development to that of the artistic
-Troglodytes of the French Reindeer period. Yet remarkable examples of
-atavism, as in the skull of St. Mansuy, the missionary bishop of Toul,
-in Lorraine, in the fourth century, and in that of Robert the Bruce,
-show a reversion to this early type, in accompaniment with exceptional
-intellectual capacity. The Neanderthal skull, an extreme example of the
-primitive type, is pronounced by Professor Schaaffhausen to be the most
-brutal of all human skulls; though this impression is mainly due to the
-abnormal development of the superciliary ridges, in which it undoubtedly
-approximates to the chimpanzee or the gorilla. But it has an estimated
-capacity of 75 cubic inches, and a corresponding cerebral development in
-no degree incompatible with the idea that the remains recovered from the
-Neanderthal cave may be those of a skilled hunter; and one apt in the
-ingenious arts of the primitive tool-maker.
-
-Whatever other changes, therefore, may have affected the brain as the
-organ of human thought and reasoning, it does not thus far appear that
-the average mass of brain has greatly increased since the advent of
-European man. Important exceptions have indeed been noted. Professor
-Broca’s observations on the cerebral capacity of the Parisian population
-at different periods, based on nearly 400 skulls derived from vaults and
-cemeteries of dates from the eleventh or twelfth to the nineteenth
-century, appear to him to show a progressive cerebral development in
-that centre of European civilisation.[163] But though the assumption is
-not inconsistent with other results of civilisation, and is the
-necessary corollary of the postulate that intellectual activity tends to
-development of brain, the fact that the crania presented a still greater
-diversity in type than in size reminds us of the intermixture of races
-on the banks of the Seine, and the consequent necessity for much more
-extended observations before so important a deduction can be received as
-an established truth.
-
-Taking the average brain-weight of the human adult as already stated,
-all male brains falling much below 40 oz. or 1130 grammes, and female
-brains below 35 oz. or 990 grammes, may be classed as _microcephalous_;
-and all above the maxima of the medium male and female brain, viz. 52½
-oz. or 1480 grammes, and 47½ oz. or 1345 grammes, may be ranked as
-_megalocephalous_, or great brains.
-
-Professor Welcker, who devoted special attention to the whole subject
-under review, assumes another and simpler test when he says that skulls
-of more than 540 to 550 millimetres, or 21.26 to 21.65 inches in
-circumference—the weight of brain belonging to which is 1490 to 1560
-grammes (52.5-55 oz. av.)—are to be regarded as exceptionally large.
-But while an excess of horizontal circumference may be accepted as
-indicating good cerebral capacity, it must not be overlooked that the
-adoption of it as the key to any definite or even approximate
-brain-weight ignores the important elements of variation involved in the
-difference between acrocephalic and platycephalic head-forms. The volume
-of brain in Scott, and probably in Shakespeare, appears to have depended
-more on its elevation than its horizontal expansion. The same was also
-the case with Byron. The intermastoid arch, measured across the vertex
-of the skull from the tip of one mastoid process to the other, furnishes
-an accurate gauge of this development. Of thirteen selected male English
-skulls in Dr. Davis’s collection, the mean of this measurement is 15.1;
-and of thirty-nine male and female English skulls, it is only 14.4. Of
-the whole number of eighty-one English skulls described in the
-_Thesaurus Craniorum_, three exceptionally large ones are: No. 123, that
-of an ancient British chief, of fully 6 ft. 2 in. in stature, from the
-Grimsthorpe Barrow, Yorkshire; No. 905, a calvarium of great magnitude,
-very brachycephalic, and with the elevation across the middle of the
-parietals apparently exaggerated by compression in infancy, from Hythe,
-Kent; and No. 1029, another male skull, remarkable alike for its size
-and weight, and with a peculiarity of conformation ascribed by Dr. Davis
-to synostosis of the coronal suture. The intermastoid arch in those
-exceptionally large skulls measures respectively 16.0, 16.2, and 16.9,
-whereas the same measurement derived from the cast of Scott’s head taken
-after death, yields the extraordinary dimensions of 19 inches. This last
-measurement is over the hairy scalp. But after making ample allowance
-for this, the vertical measurement of the skull and consequently of the
-brain is remarkable.
-
-Full value has been assigned at all periods to the well-developed
-forehead. It is characteristic of man. The physiognomist and the
-phrenologist have each given significance to it in their respective
-systems; and it has received no less prominent recognition from the
-poets. A fully developed forehead is assumed as distinctive of the male
-skull. But Juliet, in _The Two Gentlemen of Verona_, when depreciating
-her rival, exclaims, “Ay, but her forehead’s low”; and the jealous Queen
-of Egypt, in _Antony and Cleopatra_, is told of Octavia that “her
-forehead is as low as she would wish it.” “The fair large front” of
-Milton’s perfect man is the external index of an ample cerebrum: the
-organ to which the seat of consciousness, intelligence, and will is
-assigned. It is therefore consistent with this that a low, retreating
-forehead is popularly assumed to be the characteristic index of the
-savage, and of the unintellectual among civilised races. But the
-cerebral characteristics of both ancient and modern civilised races have
-still to be studied in detail; and the influence of race and sex on the
-form of the head and the mass and weight of the brain, involves some
-curious questions in relation to the oldest illustrations of the
-physical characteristics of man, and to the effect of civilisation on
-the relative development of the sexes.
-
-Early observations led Dr. Pruner-Bey and other ethnologists of France
-to recognise in certain ancient Gaulish skulls of a brachycephalic type
-the evidences of a primitive race, assumed to represent the inhabitants
-of France and of Central Europe during its Reindeer period, and which
-appeared to be assigned with reasonable probability to a Mongol origin.
-But in the Cro-Magnon cavern, and in other caves more recently explored,
-the remains of a race of men have been brought to light markedly
-dolichocephalic, and no less striking in cranial capacity. Dr. Broca
-speaks of these ancient cave-dwellers of the valley of the Vézère as
-characterised by “sure signs of a powerful cerebral organisation. The
-skulls are large. Their diameters, their curves, their capacity, attain,
-and even surpass, our medium skulls of the present day. The forehead is
-wide, by no means receding, but describing a fine curve. The amplitude
-of the frontal tuberosities denotes a large development of the anterior
-cerebral lobes, which are the seat of the most noble intellectual
-faculties.”
-
-This primitive race of hunters, marked by such exceptional
-characteristics, belonged to the remote Reindeer period of Western
-Europe, and was contemporary with the mammoth, the tichorine rhinoceros,
-and the fossil horse, as well as with the cave-lion, the cave-bear, and
-other long-extinct carnivora of Europe. The remarkable evidence of their
-intellectual capacity has already been reviewed, in considering the
-manifestations of the artistic faculty among primitive races. Their
-weapons and implements, including carved maces or official batons, as
-they are assumed to be, contribute additional evidence of skill and
-latent capacity among a primitive race of hunters and cave-dwellers. Dr.
-Broca, after a consideration of the merits of their ingenious arts,
-says: “They had advanced to the very threshold of civilisation”; and Dr.
-Pruner-Bey thus comments on their characteristics: “If we consider that
-its three individuals had a cranial capacity much superior to the
-average at the present day; that one of them was a female, and that
-female crania are generally below the average of _male_ crania in size;
-and that nevertheless the cranial capacity of the Cro-Magnon woman
-surpasses the average capacity of male skulls of to-day, we are led to
-regard the great size of the brain as one of the more remarkable
-characters of the Cro-Magnon race. This cerebral volume seems to me even
-to exceed that with which at the present day a stature equal to that of
-our cave-folks would be associated; whilst the skulls from the Belgium
-caves are small, not only absolutely, but even relatively in the rather
-small stature of the inhabitants of those caves.”
-
-The Canstadt head is undoubtedly an unintellectual type suggestive of an
-inferior, though not necessarily an older savage race; for the evidence
-of climate, contemporary fauna, and other indices of the environments of
-the Cro-Magnon cave-dwellers, all point to an early Post-Glacial era.
-Dr. Isaac Taylor, in his _Origin of the Aryans_, assuming the priority
-of the Canstadt man, speaks of him as “this primitive savage, the
-earliest inhabitant of Europe.” The forehead in this type is low and
-receding, and the cerebral capacity generally correspondingly inferior.
-The relative superposition in some discoveries of ancient human remains,
-as in the alluvium and gravels of a former bed of the Seine, at
-Grenelle, lends confirmation to the idea that in this poorly-developed
-cranial type we recover the physical characteristics of the earliest
-type of the European savage thus far brought to light. But no disclosure
-of regular sepulture, or of implements or carvings assignable to him,
-have hitherto furnished the means of determining his condition or mode
-of life.
-
-The disclosures of the rock-shelters in the valley of the Vézère are, on
-the contrary, replete with interest, from the evidence they furnish of a
-race of savage hunters, in whom ingenious skill and great artistic
-aptitude gave evidence of latent intellectual capacity of a high order.
-The remarkable size of crania accompanying those examples of primitive
-art seemingly pertaining to the Troglodytes of the Mammoth and Reindeer
-periods of Central Europe, is the more significant from its bearing on
-the evidence of progressive cerebral development adduced by Dr. Broca
-from skulls recovered from ancient and modern cemeteries of Paris. It
-appears, indeed, to conflict with any theory of a progressive
-development from the Troglodyte of the Post-Glacial age to the civilised
-Frenchman of modern times. Professor Boyd Dawkins has accordingly been
-at some pains in his _Cave Hunting_ to show that the conclusions formed
-by previous observers as to the epoch of their burial are not supported
-by the facts of the case; and he sums up his review of the whole
-evidence by expressing a conviction that he “should feel inclined to
-assign the interments to the Neolithic age, in which cave-burial was so
-common. The facts,” he adds, “do not warrant the human skeletons being
-taken as proving the physique of the palæolithic hunters of the
-Dordogne, or as a basis for an inquiry into the ethnology of the
-palæolithic races. Professor Boyd Dawkins also pronounces the same
-doubts in reference to the equally characteristic male skeleton found in
-a cave at Mentone, and to others obtained in the Lombrive and other
-caves. It is not to be overlooked that the possibility of the intrusion
-of human remains into earlier strata constitutes an important element
-suggesting caution in reasoning from such evidence. For the remains of
-man differ from those of other animals found in such series of deposits
-as mark a succession of periods, in so far as they pertain to the only
-animal habitually given to the practice of interment. Human skeletons
-found under such circumstances may have been artificially intruded long
-subsequent to the accumulation of the breccia in which they lay.
-Happily, however, any doubts as to the contemporaneity of the human
-remains with the other cave relics has been removed by the discovery of
-skeletons, similar in type, in other caverns in the same valley—and
-especially in that of Laugerie Basse,—in positions which seem to leave
-no room for questioning their being of the same age as the works of art
-found along with them.
-
-Other examples of the ancient man of Europe show him in like manner
-endowed with a cerebral development in advance of the rudest races of
-modern times. The skull found by Dr. Schmerling in the Engis cave, near
-Liège, along with remains of six or seven human skeletons, was embedded
-in the same matrix with bones of the fossil elephant, rhinoceros, hyæna,
-and other extinct quadrupeds. It is a fairly proportioned,
-well-developed dolichocephalic skull; and, like others of the ancient
-human skulls of different types thus far found, has signally
-disappointed the expectations of those who count upon invariably finding
-a lower type the older the formation in which it occurs. “Assuredly,”
-says Professor Huxley, “there is no mark of degradation about any part
-of its structure. It is, in fact, a fair average human skull, which
-might have belonged to a philosopher, or might have contained the
-thoughtless brain of a savage.” Even the famous Neanderthal skull, of
-uncertain geological antiquity, but pronounced to be “the most brutal of
-all human skulls,” acquires its exceptional character, as already noted,
-chiefly from the abnormal development of the superciliary region.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It is a universally accepted fact that the size of the male head and the
-weight of the brain are greater than those of the female. The average
-weight of the male brain is found to exceed that of the female by about
-10 per cent; or, as it is stated by Professor Welcker, the brain-weight
-of man is to that of woman as 100 to 90. But the difference of stature
-between the two sexes has to be taken into account. The average, based
-on various series of observations to determine the mean stature for man
-and for woman, shows the latter to be about 8 per cent less than the
-former; or, as Dr. Thurnam has stated it more precisely:
-
- RATIO OF STATURE AND BRAIN-WEIGHT IN THE TWO SEXES
-
- MALE. FEMALE.
- Stature 100 92.0
- Weight of brain 100 90.3
-
-Here again, however, it becomes important to take into consideration
-other elements of difference besides weight; for, as Tennyson insists,
-“Woman is not undevelopt man, but diverse.” The results of Wagner’s
-observations on the superficial measurements of the convolutions of the
-brain point to the conclusion that in the female the lesser brain-weight
-may be compensated by a larger superficies. Ranked in the order of their
-relative weights in grammes, six average brains of men and women were
-found to stand thus:—
-
- 1. Male (_a_) 1340
- 2. Male (_b_) 1330
- 3. Male (_c_) 1273
- 4. Female (_d_) 1254
- 5. Female (_e_) 1223
- 6. Female (_f_) 1185
-
-But the same brains, when tested by the degrees of convolution of the
-frontal lobe, measured in squares of sixteen square millimetres,
-irrespective of the question of relative size, ranked as follows,
-advancing the female (_d_) from the fourth to the first place, and
-reducing the male (_c_) from the third to the sixth place:—
-
- 1. Female (_d_) 2498
- 2. Male (_a_) 2451
- 3. Male (_b_) 2309
- 4. Female (_f_) 2300
- 5. Female (_e_) 2272
- 6. Male (_c_) 2117
-
-But, as already indicated, some modern disclosures tend to raise the
-question whether the difference between the sexes, in so far as relative
-volume of brain is concerned, has not been increased as a result of
-civilisation. The disparity in size between the Cro-Magnon male and
-female skeletons is quite as great as that of modern times, but the
-capacity of the female skull is relatively good.
-
-Other observations, such as those of Professor Rolleston “On the People
-of the Long Barrow Period,” seem to indicate a nearer approximation in
-actual cranial capacity of the two sexes in prehistoric times than among
-modern civilised races. On the assumption that intellectual activity
-tends to permanent development of brain, it is consistent with the
-conditions of savage life that it should bring the mental energies of
-both sexes into nearly equal play. They have equally to encounter the
-struggle for existence, and have their faculties stimulated in a
-corresponding degree. As nations rise above the purely savage condition
-of the hunter stage, this relative co-operation of the sexes is
-subjected to great variations. The laws of Solon with reference to the
-right of sale of a daughter or sister, and the penalties for the
-violation of a free woman, show the position of the weaker sex among the
-Greeks at that early stage to have been a degrading one. But the change
-was great at a later stage; and much of our higher civilisation is
-traceable to the early establishment of the European woman’s rights,
-which Christianity subsequently tended to enlarge. The position of woman
-among the ancient Britons appears to have been one of perfect equality
-with man. Among the Arabians and other Mohammedan nations, including the
-modern Turks, the opposite is the case; and the whole tendency of the
-creed of the Koran, and the social life among Mohammedan nations, must
-be towards the intellectual atrophy of woman. Hence it is consistent
-with the diverse conditions of life that, in so far as cerebral
-development is the result of mental activity, a much closer
-approximation is to be looked for in the mass and weight of brain in the
-two sexes among savage races, than among nations where woman
-systematically occupies a condition of servile degradation, or of
-passive inertness.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Some interesting results of the actual brain-weights of Negroes and
-other typical representatives of inferior savage races have been
-published, including examples of both sexes; and although the
-observations are as yet too few for the deduction of any absolute or
-very comprehensive conclusions, they furnish a valuable contribution
-towards this department of ethnical comparison. In 1865, Dr. Peacock
-published the results of observations on the brains of four Negroes and
-two Negresses; and to those he subsequently added a seventh
-example.[164] Others are included in the following table. But I have
-excluded some extremes of variation, such as the two given by Mascagni,
-one of which weighed 1458 grammes, or 51.5 oz. av., and the other only
-738 grammes, or 26.1 oz. av. In addition to such actual brain-weights,
-Morton, Tiedemann, Davis, Wyman, and others, have gauged the skulls of
-Negroes, American Indians, Mincopies, Tasmanians, Australians, and other
-savage races, as well as those of many civilised and semi-civilised
-nations, and thereby contributed valuable data towards determining their
-relative cranial capacity. In his _Crania Ægyptiaca_, Dr. Morton, when
-discussing the traces of a Negro element in the ancient Egyptian
-population, says: “I have in my possession seventy-nine crania of
-Negroes born in Africa, for which I am indebted to Drs. Goheen and
-M’Dowell, lately attached to the medical department of the colony of
-Liberia, in Western Africa; and especially to Don Jose Rodriguez
-Cisneros, M.D., of Havana, in the island of Cuba. Of the whole number,
-fifty-eight are adult, or sixteen years of age and upwards, and give
-eighty-five cubic inches for the average size of the brain. The largest
-head measures ninety-nine cubic inches; the smallest but sixty-five. The
-latter, which is that of a middle-aged woman, is the smallest adult head
-that has hitherto come under my notice.”[165]
-
- TABLE I
-
- NEGRO BRAIN-WEIGHT
-
- ─────┬────────────────────────────────────┬────────────────────┬────────
- │ │ │
- Sex. │ Race. │ Authority. │Weight.
- │ │ │
- ─────┼────────────────────────────────────┼────────────────────┼────────
- │ │ │
- M. │African, Mozambique │Peacock │ 43.80
- M. │ „ │ „ │ 45.80
- M. │ „ Buenos Ayres │ „ │ 44.00
- M. │ „ Congo │ „ │ 46.25
- M. │ „ │ „ │ 42.80
- M. │ „ │Sœmmering │ 45.40
- M. │ „ │Tiedemann │ 35.20
- M. │ „ Congo │C. Luigi Calori │ 44.40
- M. │ „ │Barkow │ 50.80
- M. │ „ │ „ │ 45.90
- M. │ „ │ „ │ 38.90
- M. │ „ │Sir A. Cooper │ 49.00
- F. │Hottentot Venus │Marshall │ 31.00
- F. │Bushwoman │ „ │ 30.75
- F. │ „ │ „ │ 31.50
- F. │ „ │ „ │ 31.00
- F. │ „ │Flower and Murie │ 38.00
- F. │African │Peacock │ 46.00
- F. │ „ │ „ │ 41.00
- │ │ │
- ─────┴────────────────────────────────────┴────────────────────┴────────
-
-The influence of race on the volume, weight, disposition, and relative
-proportions of the different subdivisions of the human brain, and so of
-brain on the character of races, has thus far been very partially
-tested. But the diversities of race head-forms—brachycephalic,
-dolichocephalic, platycephalic, acrocephalic, etc.—are now
-well-recognised, though their relation to cerebral development still
-requires much research for its elucidation. The ancient Roman forehead,
-as illustrated by classic busts, and confirmed by genuine Roman skulls,
-was low but broad, and the whole head was platycephalic. The Greek had a
-high forehead, and the works of the Greek sculptors show that this was
-regarded as typical. But contemporary with the classic races were the
-Macrocephali of the Euxine and the Caspian Seas, who, like many modern
-tribes of the New World, purposely aimed at depressing a naturally
-receding forehead, and thereby exaggerated the typical forehead
-characteristic of certain ancient barbaric races.
-
-In the case of hybrids the interchange of physical and mental
-characteristics of the parents, including modifications of head-form, is
-a familiar fact. The English head-form appears to be an insular product
-of intermingled Briton, Teuton, and Scandinavian elements, which has no
-continental analogue; and its subdivisions, or sub-types, vary with the
-ethnical intermixture. The Scottish head appears to exceed the English
-in length, while the latter is higher. Where the Celtic element most
-predominates, the longer form of head is found; but even in the most
-Teutonic districts the difference between the prevailing head-form and
-that of the continental German is so marked that the latter finds it
-difficult to obtain an English-made hat which will fit his head.[166]
-Here the diversities of head-form are accompanied with no less marked
-differences of individual and national character.
-
-Professor Welcker determined the average capacity of the German male
-skull as 1450 cubic centimetres, equivalent to 88 cubic inches, and
-representing an average brain-weight of 49 oz. Dr. Davis, by a similar
-process, assigns to the Germans, male and female, the larger mean
-brain-weight of 50.28 oz.; but by combining the means of both sexes, as
-derived from his own tables and those of Huschke and Wagner, we obtain a
-mean weight of German brain of 1314 grms., or 46.37 oz. The results of
-an extensive series of observations by Dr. Broca, on the male French
-skull, yield a mean capacity of 1502 cubic centimetres, or 91 cubic
-inches, representing an average brain-weight of 50.6 oz. Morton, taking
-his average from five English skulls, gives the great internal capacity
-of 96 cubic inches; while Davis arrives at a capacity of only 90.9 cubic
-inches from the examination of thirty-two skulls, male and female; and
-for the Scottish and Irish, each of 91.2 cubic inches, from an
-examination of thirty-five skulls. But unfortunately the Davis
-collection, so rich in other respects, derived its chief English
-specimens from a phrenological collection; and, along with a few large
-skulls, contains “many small and poor English examples.”[167] The
-average weight of the English brain may therefore, as Dr. Davis admits,
-be assumed to be higher than the mean determined by him. “Still a
-comparison with actually tested weights of brains shows that there
-cannot be any material error.” The average brain-weight of twenty-one
-Englishmen, as given by him, is 50.28 oz., that of thirteen women is
-43.13; and of the combined series, 47.50. The results determined by the
-same process in relation to the other nationalities of Europe are
-exhibited in detail in Dr. Davis’s tables, printed in the _Philosophical
-Transactions_.
-
-Such averages are, at best, only approximations to true results; and
-when obtained, as in Morton’s English race, from a very few examples, or
-in Davis’s, from exceptional skulls, collected under peculiar
-circumstances or for a special purpose, they must be tested by other
-observations. According to Dr. Morton, for example, the mean internal
-capacity of the English head is 96 cubic inches, while that of the
-Anglo-American is only 90 cubic inches. Such a conclusion, if
-established as the result of comparison of a sufficiently large number
-of well-authenticated skulls, would be of great importance in its
-bearing on the influence of change of climate, diet, habits, etc., as
-elements affecting varieties of the human race. But determined as it was
-in the Morton collection, from five English and seven Anglo-American
-specimens, it can be regarded as little more than a mere chance result.
-Ranged nearly in the order of mean internal capacity of skull, the
-following are the results arrived at, mainly by gauging the skulls in
-various collections available for such comparisons of different races of
-mankind. In presenting them here, I avail myself of Dr. Thurnam’s
-researches, augmenting them with other data subsequently published,
-including results deduced from Dr. Davis’s minute reports of his own
-extensive collections, and taking Tiedemann’s capacity of 92.3 for the
-European skull as 100.
-
- TABLE II
-
- RATIO OF CUBICAL CAPACITY OF SKULLS OF DIFFERENT RACES
-
- ────────────────────┬────────────────────┬──────────
- │ │
- Race. │ Authority. │Capacity.
- │ │
- ────────────────────┼────────────────────┼──────────
- │ │
- European │Tiedemann │ 100.0
- Asiatic │Davis │ 94.3
- African │ „ │ 93.0
- American │Tiedemann │ 95.0
- „ │Davis │ 94.7
- „ │Morton │ 87.0
- Oceanic │Davis │ 96.9
- Chinese │ „ │ 99.8
- Mongol │Morton │ 94.0
- „ │Tiedemann │ 93.0
- Hindoo │Davis │ 89.4
- Malay │Tiedemann │ 89.0
- American Indian │Morton │ 91.0
- Esquimaux │Davis │ 98.8
- Mexican │Morton │ 88.5
- Peruvian │Wyman │ 81.2
- „ │Morton │ 81.2
- Negro │Tiedemann │ 91.0
- „ │Peacock │ 88.0
- Hottentot │Morton │ 86.0
- Javan │Davis │ 94.8
- Tasmanian │ „ │ 88.0
- Australian │Morton │ 88.0
- „ │Davis │ 87.9
- │ │
- ────────────────────┴────────────────────┴──────────
-
-The tables of Dr. Morton and Dr. Davis furnish materials for drawing
-comparisons between diverse nations of the great European family; but
-though they are of value as contributions to the required means for
-ethnical comparison, they fall far short of determining the average
-cranial capacity of the different nationalities. Whilst, for example,
-the tabular data in the _Thesaurus Craniorum_ show a mean internal
-capacity of 94 cubic inches for the combined Teutonic family, the Finns
-yield the higher mean capacity of 96.3 cubic inches. Again, Dr. Thurnam
-found that the results of the weighing of fifty-nine brains of patients
-at the Friends’ Retreat near York, mostly persons of the middle class of
-society, yielded weights considerably above those which he subsequently
-obtained from testing those of pauper patients in Wilts and Somerset.
-But this has to be estimated along with the undoubted ethnical
-differences which separate the population of Yorkshire from that of
-Somerset and Wiltshire. An interesting paper in the West-Riding Asylum
-Reports gives the results of the determination of 716 brain-weights,
-rather more than half being males. The average is 48.149 oz. for the
-male, and 43.872 for the female brain; whereas the average weights of
-267 male brains of a similar class of patients in the Wilts County
-Asylum, as given by Dr. Thurnam, is 46.2 oz., and of 213 female brains,
-41.0 oz. The results of the observations carried on by Dr. Boyd at St.
-Marylebone yield, from 680 male English brains, a mean weight of 47.1
-oz., and from 744 female brains a mean weight of 42.3 oz.; whereas Dr.
-Peacock determined, from 183 cases in the Edinburgh Infirmary, the
-weight of the male Scottish brain to average 49.7, and that of the
-female brain to average 44.3 oz. Here the results are determined by so
-numerous a series that they might be accepted as altogether reliable,
-were it not that in the former case they are based to a large extent on
-a purely pauper class; whereas the patients of the Royal Infirmary of
-Edinburgh include respectable mechanics and others from many parts of
-Scotland, among whom education is common. It is not to be doubted,
-indeed, that a considerable difference in the form and size of the head,
-and no doubt also in brain-weight, is to be looked for amongst English,
-Scotch, Irish, German and French men and women, according to the county
-or province of which they are natives, and the class of society to which
-they belong.
-
-The comparative ratio of the cubical capacity of the skull, or the
-average brain-weight, in so far as either is indicative of ethnical
-differences among members of the European family of nations, has thus to
-be determined by numerous examples; or dealt with in detail in reference
-to the different nationalities. Even in single provinces or counties,
-social position, and probably education, must be taken into account; so
-that a series of observations on hospital and pauper patients may be
-expected to fall below the general average; and fallacious comparisons
-between European peoples may be based on data, correct enough _per se_,
-but unjust when placed alongside of a different class of results. The
-great mass of evidence in reference to brain-weight has thus far been
-mainly derived, in the case of the sane, from one rank of life. A
-comparison of the results with those derived from the insane of various
-classes of society shows less discrepancy than might have been
-anticipated. But there are certain cases of hydrocephalous and other
-abnormally enlarged brains which have to be rigorously excluded from any
-estimate of the size or weight of the brain, either as a race-test or as
-an index of comparative mental power.
-
-Were it possible to select from among the great intellects of all ages
-an adequate series of representative men, and ascertain their
-brain-weights, or even the cubical capacity of their skulls, one
-important step would be gained towards the determination of the relation
-between size of brain and power of intellect. But we have little other
-data than such hints as the busts of Æschylus, Pericles, Socrates,
-Plato, Aristotle, and other leaders of thought may supply. Malcolm
-Canmore—Malcolm of the great head, as his name implied,—stands forth
-with marked individuality from out the shadowy roll of names which
-figure in early Scottish history. Charlemagne, we should fancy, merited
-a similar designation. But the portraits of his modern imperial
-successor, Charles V., show no such loftiness of forehead. Judging from
-the portraits and busts of Chaucer, Shakespeare, Milton, Cromwell,
-Napoleon, and Scott, their brains must have considerably exceeded the
-ordinary size. In the report of the _post-mortem_ examination of Scott,
-the physicians state that “the brain was not large.” But this, no doubt,
-means relatively to the internal capacity of the skull in its then
-diseased condition. The intermastoid arch, as already noted, shows a
-remarkably exceptional magnitude of 19 inches, whereas the average of
-fifty-eight ancient and modern European skulls, as given in the
-_Thesaurus Craniorum_, is only 14.60. The portraits of Wordsworth and
-Byron show an ample forehead; and the popular recognition of the “fair
-large front” of Milton’s typical man as the index of superior intellect
-is an induction universally accepted. But, on the other hand, examples
-of intellectual greatness undoubtedly occur with the brain little, if at
-all, in excess of the average size. On the discovery of Dante’s remains
-at Ravenna in 1865, the skull was pronounced to be ample, and exquisite
-in form. But its actual cubical capacity and estimated brain-weight fall
-considerably below those of the highest ascertained brain-weights of
-distinguished men. Again, looking at the casts of the skulls of Robert
-the Bruce and the poet Burns, the first impression is the comparatively
-small size of head, and the moderate frontal development in each. Robert
-Liston, the eminent surgeon, remarked of the former: “The division of
-the cranium behind the meatus auditorius is large in proportion to that
-situated before it. The skull is also remarkably wide and capacious in
-that part, whereas the forehead is rather depressed”;[168] and more
-recent observers have not hesitated to recognise in it a reversion to
-the Canstadt type of the primitive European savage. Other
-characteristics so markedly indicate the elements of physical rather
-than intellectual vigour, that Liston expressly pointed out the analogy
-to “the heads of carnivorous animals.” The Bruce was indeed
-pre-eminently distinguished for courage and deeds of personal prowess;
-but it was no less by statesmanlike qualities, calm, resolute
-perseverance, and wise prudence, that he achieved the independence of
-his country.
-
-George Combe, the phrenologist, to whom the original cast of Burns’s
-skull was first submitted, thus states the case in reference to the
-frontal development of the poet: “An unskilful observer looking at the
-forehead might suppose it to be moderate in size; but when the
-dimensions of the anterior lobe, in both length and breadth, are
-attended to, the intellectual organs will be recognised to have been
-large. The anterior lobe projects so much that it gives an appearance of
-narrowness to the forehead which is not real.”[169] The actual
-dimensions of the skull are, longitudinal diameter, 8 inches; parietal
-diameter, 5.95; and horizontal circumference, 22.25.
-
-In the year 1865 the bones of Italy’s greatest poet, Dante, were
-submitted to a minute examination under the direction of commissioners
-appointed by the Italian Government to verify the discovery; and careful
-measurements were taken of the skull. Dr. H. C. Barlow, describing it
-from personal observation, says: “The head was finely formed, and the
-cranium showed, by its ample and exquisite form, that it had held the
-brain of no ordinary man. It was the most intellectually developed head
-that I ever remember to have seen. The occipital region was prominently
-marked, but the frontal was also amply and broadly expanded, and the
-anterior part of the frontal bone had a vertical direction in relation
-to the bones of the face” (_Athenæum_, September 9, 1865). But however
-intellectually developed and exquisite in form the poet’s skull may have
-appeared, the actual measurements fall short of the amplitude here
-assigned to it. The dimensions are as follows: Internal capacity,
-determined by filling the calvarium with grains of rice, 3.1321 lbs.
-av., or a little over 50 oz.; circumference, 52 cent. 5 mill.;
-occipito-frontal diameter, 31 cent. 7 mill.; transverse diameter, taken
-between the ears, 31 cent. 8 mill.; height, 14 cent. If the internal
-capacity is accepted without any correction, it would yield 57 oz., but
-if allowance be made, as in the actual weighing of the brain, for the
-abstraction of the dura mater and fluids, of say 8 per cent, this would
-reduce it to about 52.5, or nearly the same weight as that of the
-mathematician, Gauss. Professor Welcker deducts from 11.6 to 14 per
-cent, according to the size of the skull; Dr. J. B. Davis recommends a
-uniform deduction of 10 per cent. If we apply the latter rule, it will
-reduce the estimated weight of Dante’s brain to 51.3 oz.[170]
-
-Another interesting example of the skull of an Italian poet is that of
-Ugo Foscolo, a cast of which was taken on the transfer of his remains to
-the Church of Santa Croce at Florence. Though only fifty years old at
-the time of his death, the skull was marked by “the entire ossification
-of the coronal, sagittal, and lambdoidal sutures, and that atrophy of
-the outer table, manifested by a depression on each side in the
-posterior half of each parietal, leaving an elevated ridge in the
-middle, in the position of the sagittal, which is but rarely observed
-except in extremely advanced age.”[171] Sir Henry Holland, who knew the
-poet intimately, describes him as resembling in temperament the painter
-Fuseli, “passionately eccentric in social life.” Full of genius and
-original thought, as the writings of Foscolo show him to have been, he
-“was fiery and impulsive, almost to the verge of madness.”[172] He died
-in England in obscurity and neglect; but a regenerated Italy recalled
-the memory of her lost poet, and transferred his remains to Santa
-Croce’s consecrated soil. The estimated size of his brain is given as
-1426 cubic cents., equivalent to 87 cubic inches internal capacity,
-which corresponds to a weight of brain of 48.44 oz. The longitudinal
-diameter is 6.90; the parietal diameter 5.70; the intermastoid arch
-15.0; and the horizontal circumference 520 mm., or 20.5 inches. The
-brain capacity of the poet was thus little more than the European mean
-deduced by Morton from the miscellaneous examples in his collection.
-
-Dr. J. C. Gustav Lucae, in his _Zur Organischen Formenlehre_, furnishes
-views and measurements of two other skulls of men of known intellectual
-capacity. One of these is Johan Jacob Wilhelm Heinse, the author of
-_Ardinghello_, a work of high character in the elements of æsthetic
-criticism, though as a romance fit to rank with _Don Juan_ in subjective
-significance and morality. He wrote another romance entitled
-_Hildegard_; in addition to numerous articles and translations of
-Petronius, Tasso, etc., which won for him the high commendation of
-Goethe, and the more guarded admiration of Wieland. His skull, as
-figured by Dr. Lucae, shows the frontal suture still open at the age of
-fifty-three, at which he died. The internal capacity of the skull is
-stated as 41.4 oz., equivalent to 1173 grms. In this, as in other
-examples hereafter referred to, Dr. Lucae has gauged the capacity of the
-skull with peas, and gives the weight in “unzen.” In the results deduced
-from them here the _unzen_ are assumed to be Prussian ounces, the lb. of
-12 oz. equal to 350.78348 grms. As already noted, the determination of
-the internal capacity of the skull by varying tests, such as pease,
-rice, and sands of diverse degrees of fineness, leads to uncertain
-results. In those here deduced from the data furnished by Dr. Lucae, the
-unzen have been tested by a series of experiments made with a view to
-correct the error necessarily resulting from the fact that peas do not
-entirely fill the cavity. The results show that 82.5 grms. of ordinary
-sized peas occupy the space of 100 grms. of water. Deducting 10 per cent
-for membranes and fluids, the estimated brain-weight of Heinse is 1379
-grms. or 48.7 oz. av. The dimensions of the skull are given thus:—
-
- ───────────────┬──────────┬──────────┬──────────
- │ │ │
- │ Height. │ Length. │ Breadth.
- │ │ │
- ───────────────┼──────────┼──────────┼──────────
- │ │ │
- Fore part │ 4.9 │ 4.00 │ 4.1
- Middle part │ 4.1 │ 3.11 │ 5.3
- Hind part │ 3.9 │ 3.60 │ 4.1
- │ │ │
- ───────────────┴──────────┴──────────┴──────────
-
-The other example produced by Dr. Lucae is that of Dr. Christian
-Heinrich Bünger, Professor of Anatomy in the University of Marburg. In
-this skull the frontal suture is still more strongly defined at the age
-of sixty than in that of Heinse. The internal capacity of the skull is
-stated as 42.8 oz., equivalent to 1213 grms., which, dealt with as above
-stated, yields 1410 grms. or 49.8 oz. av. Other dimensions of the skull
-are given as follows:—
-
- ───────────────┬──────────┬──────────┬──────────
- │ │ │
- │ Height. │ Length. │ Breadth.
- │ │ │
- ───────────────┼──────────┼──────────┼──────────
- │ │ │
- Fore part │ 4.8 │ 4.1 │ 4.2
- Middle part │ 4.9 │ 4.1 │ 5.0
- Hind part │ 3.7 │ 3.1 │ 4.1
- │ │ │
- ───────────────┴──────────┴──────────┴──────────
-
-The premature ossification of the sagittal suture, by arresting the
-expansion of the brain laterally, is a frequent source of abnormal
-elongation of the head. On the other hand the frontal suture, which
-ordinarily closes in the man-child before birth, though persistent in
-the lower animals, is occasionally found to remain open in man till
-maturity, as in the two notable cases here described. Darwin refers to
-it as a case of arrested development. “This suture,” he says,
-“occasionally persists, more or less distinctly, in man after maturity,
-and more frequently in ancient than in recent crania; especially, as
-Canestrini has observed, in those exhumed from the Drift, and belonging
-to the brachycephalic type. In this and other instances the cause of
-ancient races approaching the lower animals in certain characters more
-frequently than do the modern races, appears to be that the latter stand
-at a somewhat greater distance in the long line of descent from their
-early semi-human progenitors.”[173] It may be permissible to express a
-doubt as to this relative frequency of the occurrence of the frontal
-suture in ancient and modern races, since the great naturalist does not
-state it as a result of his own observations. Not only am I led to do so
-from repeatedly noting its occurrence in modern crania; but its effect
-can in no way favour arrested development. It must rather admit of the
-free expansion of the frontal lobes of the brain, the decrease of which
-in a progressive ratio is characteristic of the orang, chimpanzee, and
-baboon.
-
-On the general question of cranial development as an index of cerebral
-capacity, Professor Welcker assigns a standard, which was accepted by
-Dr. Thurnam, thus: “Skulls of more than 540 to 550 millimetres in
-horizontal circumference (the weight of brain belonging to which is 1490
-to 1560 grms., or 52.5-55 oz. av.), are to be regarded as exceptionally
-large. The designation of _kephalones_, proposed by Virchow, might
-commence from this point. Men with great mental endowments fall, for the
-most part, under the definition of kephalony. If we consider the
-relations of capacity, 1800 grms. (63.5 oz.) appears to be the greatest
-attainable weight of brain within a skull not pathologically enlarged.”
-But the brain of Cuvier—the heaviest healthy brain yet
-recorded,—exceeded this. Its weight is stated by Wagner as 1861 grms.,
-or 65.8 oz.; but this M. Broca corrects to 1829.96 grms. Even thus
-reduced it exceeds the limits assigned by Professor Welcker to the
-normal healthy brain. But a curious commentary upon this is furnished by
-the fact that the modern English skull which Dr. Davis selects as
-presenting the most striking analogy to the Neanderthal skull—“the most
-ape-like skull which Professor Huxley had ever beheld,”—though marked
-not only by the prominence of the superciliary ridges, but by great
-depression of the frontal region, appears to have a cubical capacity
-equivalent to that of Dr. Abercrombie, whose brain is only surpassed by
-that of Cuvier among the ascertained brain-weights of distinguished
-men.[174] Its capacity is 94 oz. of sand, or 113 cubic inches,
-equivalent—after making the requisite deduction for membranes and
-fluids,—to a brain-weight of 63 oz.
-
-I have attempted in the following table to reduce to some common
-standard such imperfect glimpses as are recoverable of the cranial
-capacity of some distinguished men, of whose actual brain-weights no
-record exists:—
-
- TABLE III
-
- CRANIAL CAPACITY OF DISTINGUISHED MEN
-
- ────────────────────┬────────┬──────────┬───────────────┬───────────────
- │ │ │ │
- │Length. │ Breadth. │Circumference. │ Estimated
- │ │ │ │ Brain-Weight.
- │ │ │ │
- ────────────────────┼────────┼──────────┼───────────────┼───────────────
- │ │ │ │
- Dante │ — │ — │ — │ 51.3
- Robert the Bruce │ 7.70 │ 6.25 │ 22.25 │ —
- Burns │ 8.00 │ 5.95 │ 22.25 │ —
- Scott (head) │ 9.00 │ 6.40 │ 23.10 │ —
- Heinse │ — │ 5.30 │ — │ 48.0
- Bünger │ — │ 5.00 │ — │ 49.8
- Ugo Foscolo │ 6.90 │ 5.70 │ 20.50 │ 48.4
- │ │ │ │
- ────────────────────┴────────┴──────────┴───────────────┴───────────────
-
-Some of the examples adduced in the above table appear to exhibit
-instances of mental endowment of high character, without the
-corresponding degree of cranial, and consequently cerebral development.
-The following table exhibits recorded examples of a series of actual
-brain-weights of distinguished men. It seems to lend confirmation to the
-idea that great manifestation of mental endowment is correlated, in the
-majority of observed cases, to a brain above the normal average in mass
-or weight. But even here intellect and brain-weight are not strictly in
-uniform ratio. Several of the following brain-weights, including that of
-Tiedemann, are furnished by Wagner, in the _Vorstudien des Menschlichen
-Gehirns_; but in an elaborate table of brain-weights given in the
-_Morphologie und physiologie des Menschlichen gehirns als Seelenorgan_,
-the brain of Byron is classed above all except Cuvier; while Vogt gives
-the same place, by estimate, to Schiller’s, as next in rank to that of
-the great naturalist among highly developed brains. Dr. Thurnam states
-his authorities for others, when producing them in his valuable
-contribution to the _Journal of Mental Science_ “On the Weight of the
-Brain.” For that of Webster he refers to “the unsatisfactory article on
-the brain of Daniel Webster, _Edin. Med. Surg. Journ._, vol. lxxix. p.
-355.” Dr. J. C. Nott, in his “Comparative Anatomy of Races” (_Types of
-Mankind_, p. 453), says: “Dr. Wyman, in his _post-mortem_ examination of
-the famed Daniel Webster, found the internal capacity of the cranium to
-be 122 cubic inches, and in a private letter to me, he says: ‘The
-circumference was measured outside of the integuments before the scalp
-was removed, and may, perhaps, as there was much emaciation, be a little
-less than in health.’ It was 23¾ inches in circumference; and the Doctor
-states that it is well known there are several heads in Boston larger
-than Webster’s. I have myself, in the last few weeks, measured half a
-dozen heads as large and larger.” The circumference, it will be seen,
-exceeds the corresponding measurement of Scott’s head, taken under
-similar circumstances. But the statement of 122 cubic inches as the
-internal capacity of Webster’s skull seems open to question. If correct,
-instead of 53.5 oz. of brain-weight as stated in the following table, it
-is the equivalent of a brain-weight of fully 65 oz., or one in excess
-even of that, of Cuvier. The brain-weights of Goodsir, Simpson, and
-Agassiz, are given in the following table from the reported autopsy in
-each case:—
-
- TABLE IV
-
- BRAIN-WEIGHTS OF DISTINGUISHED MEN
-
-─────┬────────────────────┬─────────────────────────┬──────┬──────┬──────
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ Age. │Oz. │Grms.
- │ │ │ │ │
-─────┼────────────────────┼─────────────────────────┼──────┼──────┼──────
- │ │ │ │ │
- 1│Cuvier │Naturalist │ 63 │64.5 │ 1830
- 2│Byron │Poet │ 36 │63.5? │ 1799
- 3│Abercrombie │Philosopher, Physician │ 64 │63. │ 1785
- 4│Schiller │Poet │ 46 │63.? │ 1785
- 5│Goodsir │Anatomist │ 53 │57.55 │ 1629
- 6│George Brown │Statesman (Canadian) │ 61 │56.3 │ 1595
- 7│Harrison │Chief Justice │ 45 │56. │ 1586
- 8│Spurzheim │Phrenologist, Physician │ 56 │55.06 │ 1575
- 9│Simpson │Physician, Archæologist │ 59 │54. │ 1530
- 10│Dirichlet │Mathematician │ 54 │53.6 │ 1520
- 11│De Morny │Statesman │ 50 │53.6 │ 1520
- 12│Napoleon I. │General, Statesman │ 52 │53.5 │ 1516
- 13│Daniel Webster │Statesman │ 70 │53.5 │ 1516
- 14│Campbell │Lord Chancellor │ 80 │53.5 │ 1516
- 15│Agassiz │Naturalist │ 66 │53.4 │ 1512
- 16│Chalmers │Author, Preacher │ 67 │53. │ 1502
- 17│Fuchs │Pathologist │ 52 │52.9 │ 1499
- 18│De Morgan │Mathematician │ 73 │52.7 │ 1493
- 19│Gauss │Mathematician │ 78 │52.6 │ 1492
- 20│Broca │Anthropologist │ — │52.5 │ 1488
- 21│Dupuytren │Surgeon │ 58 │50.7 │ 1436
- 22│Grote │Historian │ 76 │49.75 │ 1410
- 23│Whewell │Philosopher │ 71 │49. │ 1390
- 24│Hermann │Philologist │ 51 │47.9 │ 1358
- 25│Tiedemann │Physiologist │ 80 │44.2 │ 1254
- 26│Hausmann │Mineralogist │ 77 │43.2 │ 1226
- │ │ │ │ │
-─────┴────────────────────┴─────────────────────────┴──────┴──────┴──────
-
-Dr. Thurnam, in producing fifteen of the above examples, remarks:
-“Altogether, they decidedly confirm the generally received view of the
-connection between size of brain and mental power and intelligence”; and
-he adds his conviction that if the examination of the brain in the upper
-ranks of society, and in men whose mental endowments are well known,
-were more generally available, further confirmation would be given to
-this conclusion. The converse, at least, is certain, that no great
-intelligence or unwonted mental power is possible with a brain much
-below the average in mass and weight But while the above list exhibits a
-series of exceptionally high brain-weights of distinguished men, the
-relative weights in some cases—as in Napoleon—are calculated to excite
-surprise if viewed as an index of comparative intellectual capacity. On
-the other hand, those lowest in the scale, and below the mean weight,
-include men of undoubted eminence in letters and science; while the
-proofs are no less unquestionable that a large healthy brain is not
-invariably the organ of unwonted intelligence or mental activity.
-
-In the _Philosophical Transactions_ of 1861, Dr. Boyd published an
-elaborate series of researches illustrative of the weight of various
-organs of the human body, including the weights of two thousand brains.
-Most of the healthy brains are those of patients in the St. Marylebone
-Infirmary, and have already been referred to as necessarily representing
-the indigent and uneducated classes of London. Here, therefore, if an
-unusually large brain is the index of intellectual power, every
-probability was against the occurrence of brains above the average size
-or weight. But the results by no means confirm this assumption. Among
-the patients in the Edinburgh Royal Infirmary, in like manner, though
-including the better class of artizans and others from country
-districts, we might still look for a confirmation of M. Broca’s
-assumption, based on extensive observations of French crania, “that,
-other things being equal, whether as the result of education, or by
-hereditary transmission, the volume of the skull, and consequently of
-the brain, is greater in the higher than in the lower classes.” But Dr.
-Peacock’s tables include four brain-weights, three of them of a sailor,
-a printer, and a tailor, respectively, ranging from 61 to 62.75 oz.; and
-so surpassing all but two, or at the most three, of the heaviest
-ascertained brain-weights of distinguished men. Tried by the posthumous
-test of internal capacity, three skulls of nameless Frenchmen, derived
-from the common cemeteries of Paris, in like manner showed brains
-equalling in size that of Cuvier. The following are the maximum
-brain-weights among the St. Marylebone patients apparently unaffected by
-cerebral disease:—
-
- TABLE V
-
- MAXIMUM BRAIN-WEIGHTS—ST. MARYLEBONE
-
- ───────────────┰─────────────────────┰─────────────────────
- ┃ ┃
- AGE. ┃ MALE. ┃ FEMALE.
- ┃ Oz. Grms. ┃ Oz. Grms.
- ┃ ┃
- ───────────────╂─────────────────────╂─────────────────────
- ┃ ┃
- 7-14 ┃ 57.25 1622 ┃ 52.00 1473
- 14-20 ┃ 58.50 1658 ┃ 52.00 1473
- 20-30 ┃ 57.00 1615 ┃ 55.25 1565
- 30-40 ┃ 60.75 1721 ┃ 53.00 1502
- 40-50 ┃ 60.00 1700 ┃ 52.50 1488
- 50-60 ┃ 59.00 1672 ┃ 52.50 1488
- 60-70 ┃ 59.50 1686 ┃ 54.00 1530
- 70-80 ┃ 55.25 1565 ┃ 49.50 1403
- 80 ┃ 53.75 1523 ┃ 48.00 1360
- All Ages. ┃ ┃
- 7-80 ┃ 60.75 1721 ┃ 55.25 1565
- ┃ ┃
- ───────────────┸─────────────────────┸─────────────────────
-
-The stature, or relative size of body, has already been referred to as
-an element in testing the comparative male and female weight of brain;
-and it is one which ought not to be overlooked in estimating the
-comparative size and weight of the brains of distinguished men. From my
-own recollections of Dr. Chalmers, who was of moderate stature, his head
-appeared proportionally large. The same was noticeable in the cases of
-Lord Jeffrey, Lord Macaulay, Sir James Y. Simpson, and very markedly so
-in that of De Quincey. The philosopher Kant was also of small stature;
-and Dr. Thurnam refers to the observation of Carus that he had a head
-not absolutely large, though, in proportion to the small and puny body
-of that eminent thinker, it was of remarkable size. Among the
-large-brained artizans of the Marylebone Infirmary, on the contrary, the
-probabilities are in favour of a majority of them being men of full
-muscular development and ample stature. Nevertheless, with every
-allowance for this, it still remains probable, if not demonstrable, that
-from the same humble and unnoted class, examples of megalocephaly could
-be selected little short in cerebral mass, and apparently in
-brain-weight, of the group of men whose large brains are recognised as
-the concomitants of exceptionally great mental capacity and intellectual
-vigour. Unless, therefore, we are contented to accept the poet’s dictum,
-“Their lot forbad,”[175] and assume that “chill penury repressed their
-noble rage, and froze the genial current of the soul,” it is manifest
-that other elements besides those of volume or weight are essential as
-cerebral indices of mental power. Dr. Thurnam, after noting examples
-that had come under his own notice of brain-weights above the
-medium—but which, as those of insane patients, may be assigned to other
-causes than healthy cerebral development,—adds: “The heaviest brain
-weighed by me (62 oz., or 1760 grms.) was that of an uneducated butcher,
-who was just able to read, and who died suddenly of epilepsy, combined
-with mania, after about a year’s illness. The head was large, but
-well-formed; the brain of normal consistence; the _puncta vasculosa_
-numerous.” In cases like this, of weighty brain with no corresponding
-manifestation of intellectual power, something else was wanting besides
-an ampler sphere. The mere position of a humble artizan or labourer will
-not suffice to mar the capacity to “make by force his merit known,”
-which pertains to the “divinely gifted man.”
-
-Arkwright, Franklin, Watt, Stephenson, Farraday, Hugh Miller, and others
-of the like type of self-made men, are not rare. Among the large-brained
-artizans, scarcely one can have had a more limited sphere for the
-exercise of mental vigour than the poet Burns, the child of poverty and
-toil, who refers to his own early years as passed in “the unceasing moil
-of a galley-slave.” In his case the very means essential to a healthy
-physical development were stinted at the most critical period of life.
-His brother Gilbert says: “We lived sparingly. For several years
-butcher’s meat was a stranger to the house; while all exerted themselves
-to the utmost of their strength, and rather beyond it, in the labours of
-the farm. My brother, at the age of thirteen, assisted in thrashing the
-crop of corn, and at fifteen was the principal labourer on the farm.”
-Such premature toil and privations left their permanent stamp on his
-frame. “Externally, the consequences appeared in a stoop of the
-shoulders, which never left him; but internally, in the more serious
-form of mental depression, attended by a nervous disorder which affected
-the movements of the heart.” He had only exchanged the toil on his
-father’s farm for equally unremitting labour on his own, when the finest
-of his poems were written; nor would it be inconsistent with all the
-facts to assume that the privations of his early life diminished his
-capacity for continuous mental activity; as it undoubtedly impaired his
-physical constitution. But, while the possession of a brain much above
-the average in size might have seemed to account for his triumph over
-the depressing influences of his limited sphere, the fact that his brain
-appears to have been below the average size, points to some other
-requisite than mere cerebral mass as essential to intellectual vigour.
-
-The brain is influenced in all its functions by the character and the
-amount of blood circulating through it, and promptly manifests the
-effects of any deleterious substance, such as alcohol or opium,
-introduced into its tissues. It depends, like other portions of the
-nervous system, on an adequate supply of nourishment. In both respects
-the brain of the Ayrshire poet was injuriously affected, in so far as we
-may infer from all the known circumstances of his life.
-
-The human brain is large in proportion to the body in infancy and youth;
-and the opinions of leading anatomists and physiologists early in the
-present century favoured the idea that it attained its full size within
-a few years after birth. Professor Sœmmering assumed this to take place
-so early as the third year. Sir William Hamilton explicitly stated his
-conclusion thus: “In man the encephalon reaches its full size about
-seven years of age”; and Tiedemann assigns the eighth year as that in
-which it attains its greatest development. But the more accurate and
-extended observations since carried on rather tend to the conclusion
-that the brain not only goes on increasing in size and weight to a much
-later period of life; but that it is healthfully stimulated by habitual
-activity, and under exceptionally favouring circumstances it may
-increase in weight long after the body has attained its maximum.
-
-The largest average brain-weights, as determined by observations on the
-brains of upwards of 2000 men and women in different countries of
-Europe, have indeed been found in those not above twenty years of age;
-and from a nearly equal number of English examples, Dr. Boyd determines
-the period of greatest average weight to be the interval between
-fourteen and twenty years of age; but this includes cases in which death
-has ensued from undue or premature brain development.
-
-Other evidence leaves no room for doubt that cases are not rare of the
-growth, or increased density of the brain up to middle age; while the
-observations of Professor Welcker indicate this process extended to a
-later period of life. The average brain-weights, as given by Boyd,
-Peacock, and Broca, from healthy or sane cases, along with those of
-Welcker, include the weights of 47 male brains from ten to twenty years
-of age, giving an average of 49.6 oz., or 1405 grms.; and of 112 male
-brains from twenty to thirty years of age, giving an average of 48.9
-oz., or 1384 grms.; and the results of a nearly equal number of female
-brains closely approximate. They embrace English, Scotch, German, and
-French, men and women. Dr. Welcker’s results indicate the period of
-maximum brain-weight to be between 30-40, as shown in the following
-table:—
-
- TABLE VI
-
- AVERAGE WEIGHT OF THE BRAIN AT DIFFERENT AGES
-
- ───────────────┰─────────────────────┰─────────────────────
- ┃ ┃
- AGE. ┃ MALE. ┃ FEMALE.
- ┃ Oz. Av. Grms. ┃ Oz. Av. Grms.
- ┃ ┃
- ───────────────╂─────────────────────╂─────────────────────
- ┃ ┃
- From 10-20 ┃ 47.5 1346 ┃ 43.1 1221
- 20-30 ┃ 49.5 1404 ┃ 44.1 1251
- 30-40 ┃ 49.5 1404 ┃ 44.8 1272
- 40-50 ┃ 48.6 1379 ┃ 43.5 1234
- 50-60 ┃ 48.1 1365 ┃ 43.5 1234
- 60-70 ┃ 46.1 1306 ┃ 42.8 1213
- ┃ ┃
- ───────────────┸─────────────────────┸─────────────────────
-
-In the female examples, amounting to thirty-one between seventy and
-eighty years of age, and six between eighty and ninety, the continuous
-diminution of brain-weight corresponds with the increasing age; but in
-the male examples, sixty-five cases between sixty and seventy years of
-age yield an average brain-weight of 46.1 oz., while twenty-seven cases
-between seventy and eighty years of age give 47.9 as the average;
-falling in the next decade to 43.8.
-
-It may be inferred from the number of cases pointing to an early
-attainment of the highest average brain-weight, not that the brain
-differs from all other internal organs of the human body in attaining
-its maximum before the period of puberty; but that physical as well as
-mental vigour are dependent on the maintenance of a nice equilibrium
-between the brain and the other organs while in process of development.
-The observations of Dr. Boyd, including the results of 2614
-_post-mortem_ examinations of sane and insane patients of all ages,
-showed that the average weight of the brain of “still-born” children at
-the full period was much greater than that of the new-born living child.
-It is a legitimate inference, therefore, that death in the former cases
-was traceable to an excessive premature development of the brain. Again,
-when it is shown from numerous cases that the highest average weights of
-brain in both sexes occur not later than twenty years of age, it appears
-a more legitimate inference to trace to exceptional cerebral development
-towards the period of adolescence, the mortality which rendered
-available so many examples of unusually large or heavy brains, than to
-assume that the normal healthy brain begins to diminish at that age.
-
-It is a fact familiar to popular observation that a large head in youth
-is apt to be unfavourable to life. A tendency to epilepsy appears to be
-the frequent concomitant of an unusually large brain; and with the
-congestion accompanying its abnormal condition, this may account for the
-weights of such diseased brains as have been repeatedly found in excess
-of nearly all the recorded examples of megalocephaly in the cases of
-distinguished men. But a greater interest attaches to a remarkable
-example of healthy megalocephaly recorded in the _British Medical
-Journal_ for 1872. The case was that of a boy thirteen years of age, who
-died in Middlesex Hospital from injuries caused by a fall from an
-omnibus. His brain was found to weigh 58 oz. He had been a particularly
-healthy lad, without any evidence of rachitis, and very intelligent.
-This is a strikingly exceptional case of a healthy brain, at the age of
-thirteen, exceeding in weight all but two of the greatest ascertained
-brain-weights of distinguished men.
-
-From the evidence already adduced of relative cubical capacity of the
-skulls of different races, it appears, as was to be expected, that there
-is a greater prevalence of the amply-developed brain among the higher
-and more civilised races. But all averages are apt to be deceptive; and
-the progressive scale from the smallest up to the greatest mass of brain
-is by no means in the precise ratio of an intellectual scale of
-progression. The results of Dr. J. B. Davis’s investigations, based on
-the study of a large, and in many cases a seemingly adequate number of
-skulls, bring out this remarkable fact, that, so far from the
-Polynesians occupying a rank in the lowest scale, as affirmed by
-Professor Vogt, the Oceanic races of the Pacific generally rank in
-internal capacity of skull, and consequent size of brain, next to the
-European.
-
-But it is of more importance for our present inquiry to note that, as
-exceptionally large and heavy brains occur among the most civilised
-races, in some cases—and in some only—accompanied with corresponding
-manifestations of unusual intellectual power; so also it becomes
-apparent that skulls much exceeding the average, and some of remarkable
-internal capacity, are met with among barbarian races, and even among
-some of the lowest savages. Taking the crania in the elaborate series of
-tables in Dr. J. B. Davis’s _Thesaurus Craniorum_, with an internal
-capacity above 100 cubic inches, they will rank in order as follows:—
-
- Chinese 111.8
- Maduran 110.6
- Marquesan 110.6
- Kanaka 108.8
- Javan 107.
- Negro 105.8
- Australian 104.5
- Kafir 104.5
- Bakele 103.3
- Tidorese 103.3
- Bhotia 102.7
- Bodo 100.9
- Hindoo 100.9
- Sumatra 100.9
-
-Among the European series the largest is an Irish cranium of 121.6 cubic
-inches, and next to it comes an Italian, 114.3, and an Englishman,
-112.4; an ancient Briton from a Yorkshire Long Barrow, 109.4; an ancient
-Roman, 106.4; a Lapp, 105.8; an ancient Gaul, 103.7; a Briton of Roman
-times, 103.3; a Merovingian Frank, 101.5; and an Anglo-Saxon, 100.9.
-Those and other examples of the like kind are full of interest as
-showing the recurrence of megalocephalic variations from the common
-cranial and cerebral standard among ancient races; and among rudest
-savages as well as among the most cultivated classes of modern civilised
-nations. But the order shown in the above instances is derived from
-purely exceptional examples, and is no key to the relative capacity of
-the races named.
-
-Opportunities for testing the size and weight of the brain among
-barbarous races are only rarely accessible to those who are qualified to
-avail themselves of them for the purposes of science. Some near
-approximation to the relative brain-weight of the English, Scotch,
-German, and French, may now be assumed to have been established. Dr.
-Thurnam instituted a comparison between those and two of the prehistoric
-races of Britain—the Dolichocephali of the Long Barrows, and the
-Brachycephali of the Round Barrows of England.[176] The results are
-curious, as showing not only a greater capacity in the ancient British
-skulls than the average modern German, French, or English head; but an
-actual average higher than that of all but five of the most
-distinguished men of Europe, whose brain-weights have been recorded. On
-comparing the ancient skulls with those of modern Europeans, as
-determined by gauging the capacity of both by the same process, the
-following are the results presented, according to the authorities
-named:—
-
- TABLE VII
-
-───────────────────────┬──────────┬──────────┬────────┬──────────┬────────
- │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │Capacity. │ Brain-
- SKULLS OF MEN. │ No. │ Weight │ Cubic │ Centi- │ weight
- │ │ of Sand. │ In. │ metres. │oz. av.
- │ │ │ │ │
-───────────────────────┼──────────┼──────────┼────────┼──────────┼────────
- │ │ │ │ │
-Anc. British, L. │ 18 │ 82 │ 99 │ 1622 │ 54.0
-Barrows │ │ │ │ │
-Anc. British, R. │ 18 │ 80½ │ 98 │ 1605 │ 53.5
-Barrows │ │ │ │ │
-Mod. English, _Morton_ │ 28 │ 77 │ 94 │ 1540 │ 52.2
-Mod. French, _Broca_ │ 357 │ 74 │ 91 │ 1502 │ 50.6
-Mod. German, _Welcker_ │ 30 │ 72 │ 88 │ 1450 │ 49.0
- │ │ │ │ │
-───────────────────────┴──────────┴──────────┴────────┴──────────┴────────
-
-The highest average of any nationality, as determined by Drs. Reid and
-Peacock from the weighing of 157 brains of male patients, chiefly
-Scottish Lowlanders, in the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh, is little more
-than 50 oz., or 1417 grammes; whereas the estimated average brain-weight
-in the ancient British skulls is 54 oz. for the Dolichocephali of the
-Long Barrows, which equals that of Sir James Simpson, and exceeds all
-but six of the most distinguished men adduced in Table IV. For the
-Brachycephali of the Round Barrows it is 53.5 oz., which is in excess of
-the brain-weights of Agassiz, Chalmers, Whewell, and other distinguished
-men, and exactly accords with that of Daniel Webster and Lord Chancellor
-Campbell. In so far, moreover, as this illustrates the cerebral capacity
-of ancient races, it is in each case an average obtained by gauging
-eighteen skulls, and not the cranial capacity of one or two
-exceptionally large ones. Dr. Thurnam does indeed suggest that the
-Barrows may have been the sepulchres of chiefs; nor is this unlikely;
-but the superior vigour and mental endowment which this implies fails to
-account for a cerebral capacity surpassing all but the most
-distinguished men of science and letters in modern Europe referred to in
-the above table. Rather may we conclude from this, as from other
-evidence, that quality of brain may, within certain limits, be of more
-significance than mere quantity; and that brains of the same volume, and
-agreeing in weight, may greatly differ in minute structure and in powers
-of cerebration.
-
-In the case of the ancient British Barrow-Builders we seem to have large
-heads and remarkable development of brain, without any indications of an
-equivalent in intellectual power; and although the estimated
-brain-weight derived from gauging the capacity of the empty chamber of
-the skull proceeds on the assumption of mass and weight agreeing,
-sufficient data exist to justify the adoption of this for approximate
-results. The average weight of brain of twelve male Negroes of
-undetermined tribes, deduced from gauging their skulls, has been
-ascertained to amount to 1255 grammes, or 44.3 oz. The actual weight of
-brain of the Negro of Guinea, described by Professor Calori, was 1260
-grammes; and other examples vary considerably from the average. Mascagni
-gives 1458 grammes as the weight of one Negro brain weighed by him;
-equivalent to an actual brain-weight of 51.5 oz., which is greater than
-that of Dupuytren, Whewell, Hermann, Tiedemann, or Grote. Nevertheless,
-although the extremes are great, and are confirmed by a like diversity
-in measurements of the horizontal circumference and of internal
-capacity, the average result given above appears to be a fair and
-reliable one.
-
-Thus far the inquiry into data illustrative of comparative size and
-weight of brain has dealt chiefly with the races of the eastern
-hemisphere. The compass is great in point of time in so far as it
-embraces savage and civilised peoples, including the barbarians of
-Europe’s Palæolithic era, along with modern tribes of Asia, Africa, and
-Australia, and some of the most notable among the prehistoric races of
-the British Isles. The compass is equally great in the range of
-intellectual development, when to those are added data illustrative of
-the average brain-weight of some of the leading nations of modern
-Europe, and a series of examples derived from noted instances of the
-highest exceptional types of intellectual power and activity in recent
-times. Some general conclusions of a comprehensive kind seem to follow
-legitimately from this evidence. Notwithstanding the prominence given to
-the assumed evidence of a low type of skull, depressed forehead, and
-poor frontal development, in the assumed primitive European Canstadt
-race, when we keep in view the enormous interval of time assumed to
-separate “those savages who peopled Europe in the Palæolithic age” from
-our own era, the amount of difference in size and apparent brain-weight
-is not remarkable. Compared with those of contemporary savage races it
-suggests no more than the accompanying development of the brain in a
-ratio with the intellectual activities of progressive civilisation, and
-even then the relative brain-mass of the lowest type is suggestive of
-latent powers only needing development. But the old and later races of
-the New World stand in a different relation to each other; and the
-process thus far employed when applied to determine the comparative
-cranial capacities of the native American races, discloses results of a
-different character, and widely at variance with those above described
-relating to the ancient races of Britain. On the continent of America
-the native ethnical scale embraces a comparatively narrow range, and any
-intrusive elements are sufficiently recent to be easily eliminated. The
-Patagonian and the Fuegian rank alongside of the Bushman, the Andaman
-Islander, or the Australian, as among the lowest types of humanity;
-while the Aztecs, Mayas, Quichuas, and Aymaras, attained to the highest
-scale which has been reached independently by any native American race.
-We owe to the zealous and indefatigable labours of Dr. Morton, alike in
-the formation of his great collection of human crania, and in the
-published results embodied in the _Crania Americana_, a large amount of
-knowledge derived from this class of evidence in reference to the races
-of the New World. In one respect, at least, those results stand out in
-striking contrast to the large-headed barbarian Barrow-Builders of
-ancient Britain. Dr. Morton subdivides the American races into the
-Toltecan race, embracing the semi-civilised communities of Mexico,
-Bogota, and Peru, and the barbarous tribes scattered over the continent
-from the Arctic circle to Tierra del Fuego. His latest views are
-embodied in a contribution to Schoolcraft’s _History of the Indian
-Tribes of the United States_, entitled “The Physical Type of the
-American Indians.” In treating of the volume of brain, he draws special
-attention to the Peruvian skulls, 201 in number, obtained for him from
-the cemeteries of Pisco, Pachacamac, and Arica. “Herera informs us that
-Pachacamac was sacred to priests, nobles, and other persons of
-distinction; and there is ample evidence that Arica and Pisco, though
-free to all classes, were among the most favoured cemeteries of Peru.”
-Dr. Morton accordingly adds: “It is of some importance to the present
-inquiry, that nearly one-half of this series of Peruvian crania was
-obtained at Pachacamac; whence the inference that they belonged to the
-most intellectual and cultivated portion of the Peruvian nation; for in
-Peru learning of every kind was an exclusive privilege of the ruling
-caste.” In reality, however, later additions to our knowledge of the
-physical characteristics of the ancient Peruvians tend to confirm the
-idea of the existence of two distinct races: a patrician order occupying
-a position analogous to the Franks of Gaul or the Normans of England,
-though more aptly to be compared to the Brahmins of India; and a more
-numerous class, constituting the labouring and industrial orders of the
-community, abundantly represented in the Pacific coast tribes of Peru,
-the cemeteries of which have furnished the larger number of crania to
-European and American collections.
-
-To such a patrician order or caste the intellectual superiority and
-privileges of the governing race pertained. But whatever may have been
-the exclusive prerogatives of the patrician and sacerdotal orders, there
-is no doubt that the Peruvians as a people had carried metallurgy to as
-high a development as has been attained by any race ignorant of working
-in iron. They had acquired great skill in the arts of the goldsmith, the
-engraver, chaser, and modeller. Pottery was fashioned into many artistic
-and fanciful forms, showing ingenuity and great versatility of fancy.
-They excelled as engineers, architects, sculptors, weavers, and
-agriculturists. Their public works display great skill, combined with
-comprehensive aims of practical utility; and alone, among all the
-nations of the New World, they had domesticated animals, and trained
-them as beasts of burden. It is not, therefore, without reason that Dr.
-Morton adds: “When we consider the institutions of the old Peruvians,
-their comparatively advanced civilisation, their tombs and temples,
-mountain roads and monolithic gateways, together with their knowledge of
-certain ornamental arts, it is surprising to find that they possessed a
-brain no larger than the Hottentot and New Hollander, and far below that
-of the barbarous hordes of their own race. For, on measuring 155 crania,
-nearly all derived from the sepulchres just mentioned, they give but 75
-cubic inches (equivalent, after due deduction for membranes and fluids,
-to a brain of 40.1 oz. av. in weight,) for the average bulk of the
-brain. Of the whole number, only one attains the capacity of 101 cubic
-inches, and the minimum sinks to 58, the smallest in the whole series of
-641 measured crania. It is important further to remark that the sexes
-are nearly equally represented, namely, eighty men and seventy-five
-women.”
-
-Other collections subsequently formed have largely added to our means of
-testing the curious question thus raised of the apparent inverse ratio
-of volume of brain to intellectual power and progressive civilisation
-among the native races of the American continent. In 1866, Mr. E. G.
-Squier presented to the Peabody Museum of American Archæology and
-Ethnology at Harvard, a collection of seventy-five Peruvian skulls,
-obtained by himself from various localities both on the coast and in the
-interior. “The skulls from the interior represent the Aymara on Lake
-Titicaca, as well as the Quichua, Cuzco, or Inca families; and the
-skulls of every coast family from Tumbes to Atacama, or from Ecuador to
-Chili.”[177] Subsequently the curator, the late Professor Jeffreys
-Wyman, made this collection, along with two others, of skulls from the
-mounds of Kentucky and Florida, the subject of careful comparative
-measurements. The following are the results: The crania from Florida
-were chiefly obtained from a burial place near an ancient Indian shell
-mound of gigantic proportions, a few miles distant from Cedar Keys. They
-are eighteen in number, and have a mean capacity of 1375.7 cubic
-centimetres, or nearly 84 cubic inches. The skulls from the Kentucky
-mounds, twenty-four in number, show a mean capacity of 1313 cubic
-centimetres, 80.21 cubic inches, with a difference of 125 cubic
-centimetres, or 7.61 cubic inches in favour of the males. Yet, small as
-the Kentucky skulls are, they exceed the Peruvian ones. Keeping in view
-the varied sources of the latter, Professor Wyman remarks: “Although the
-crania from the several localities show some differences as regards
-capacity, yet in most other respects they are alike.” And the numbers,
-when viewed separately, are too few to attach much importance to
-variations within so narrow a range. Nevertheless it is noteworthy that
-the highest mean is that of the Aymaras of Lake Titicaca; and this
-difference is considerably increased by measurements derived from
-subsequent additions to the Harvard collection, received since the death
-of Professor Wyman from the high valley of Lake Titicaca. In other
-respects besides their marked superiority in size, the latter crania
-differ from those of the Coast tribes, and confirm the earlier deduction
-of an ethnical distinction between the more numerous race so abundantly
-represented in the Coast cemeteries, and that which is chiefly
-represented by crania brought from the interior. The numbers from the
-several localities selected by Professor Wyman as fair average specimens
-of the whole stand thus: six from burial towers, or chulpas, near Lake
-Titicaca, 1292; five from Cajamaquilla, 1268.75; fourteen from Casma,
-1254; four from Truxillo, 1236; four from Pachicamac, 1195; sixteen from
-Amacavilca, 1176.2; and seven from Grand Chimu, 1094.28.
-
-In 1872, the collection of Peruvian crania in the Peabody Museum was
-augmented by a large addition from 330 skulls obtained by Professor
-Agassiz, through the intervention of Mr. T. J. Hutchinson, British
-Consul at Callao, in Peru. From those contributed to the Harvard Museum,
-Dr. Wyman selected eleven as apparently the only ones unaffected by any
-artificial compression or distortion, and therefore valuable as
-illustrations of the normal shape of the Peruvian head. They are quite
-symmetrical. The occiput, instead of being flattened or vertical, as in
-the distorted crania, has the ordinary curves, and in some of them is
-prominent. Two of them are marked by a low, retreating forehead; but in
-all the others the forehead is moderately developed. As, moreover, the
-larger half appear to be the skulls of females, this accounts for the
-mean capacity falling below the Peruvian average. But they are all
-small. The largest of them is only 1260 cubic centimetres, or less than
-74 cubic inches; and the average capacity of ten of them is 1129 cubic
-centimetres, or 69 cubic inches.
-
-The collection, as a whole, differs from that of Mr. Squier, in having
-been derived from the huacas, or ancient graves of one locality, that of
-Ancon, near Callao. Professor Wyman stated as the result of his careful
-study of them: “The average capacity obtained from the whole collection,
-including those having the distorted as well as the natural shape,
-varies but little from that of previous measurements,” including those
-of Morton and Meigs, and his own results from the Squier collection.
-
-Another collection of 150 ancient skulls, obtained by Mr. Hutchinson
-during his residence in Peru, and presented to the Anthropological
-Institute of London, has the additional value, like that of Squier, of
-having been carefully selected from different localities, including
-Santos, Ica, Ancon, Passamayo, and Cerro del Oro; and the same may be
-said of those enumerated in the _Thesaurus Craniorum_ of Dr. Davis. We
-have thus unusually ample materials for determining the cranial
-characteristics of this remarkable people, and the results in every case
-are the same. After a careful examination of the Peruvian skulls, in the
-London anthropological collection, Professor Busk states his conclusions
-thus: “The mean capacity of the larger skulls, which may be regarded as
-males, appears, as far as I have gone, to be about 80 cubic inches,
-equivalent to a brain of about 45 ounces, roughly estimated. This
-capacity, and the measurements above cited, show that the crania
-generally are of small size”; and he adds: “this is in accord with the
-statements of all observers.”[178]
-
-Dr. Davis has added to the valuable data included in his _Thesaurus
-Craniorum_, a series of measurements of skeletons. Unfortunately that of
-a male Quichua, procured by him in the form of a “Peruvian mummy,”
-proved to be affected with carious disease about the last dorsal and
-upper lumbar vertebræ; and consequently the length of the vertebral
-column essential for comparison with the skeletons of other races, is
-wanting; but the other measurements indicate in this example a stature
-below the average, while the skull exceeds it. The average internal
-capacity of eighteen Quichua male skulls, as given by Dr. Davis, is
-seventy-three, whereas this is 78.5. That the ancient Peruvian skulls
-are, with rare exceptions, of small size, is undoubted; and in view of
-this it becomes a matter of some importance to determine whether this
-was in any degree due to a correspondingly small stature. Obscure
-references are found in the legendary history of Peru to a pigmy race.
-Pedro de Cieza de Leon, whose travels have been translated by Mr.
-Markham, refers to the first emigration of the Indians of Chincha to
-that valley, “where they found many inhabitants, but all of such small
-stature, that the tallest was barely two cubits high” (p. 260).
-Garcilasso de la Vega repeats another tradition heard by himself in
-Peru, of a race of giants who came by sea to the country, and were so
-tall that the natives reached no higher than their knees. They lived by
-rapine, and wasted the whole country till they were destroyed by fire
-from heaven. Traditions of this class may possibly point to the
-existence of an aboriginal race of small stature. The aborigines of
-Guatemala, Salvador, and Nicaragua, are described as below the middle
-size (Bancroft, vol. i. p. 688); and Von Tchudi divides the wild Indians
-of Peru into the Iscuchanos, the natives of the highlands, a tall, slim,
-vigorous race, with the head proportionally large and the forehead low;
-and those of the hot lowlands, a smaller race, lank, but broad
-shouldered, with a broad face and small round chin. There appear,
-therefore, to be traces of one or more aboriginal races of small
-stature. But Dr. Morton says expressly of the Peruvians: “Our knowledge
-of their physical appearance is derived solely from their tombs. In
-stature they appear not to have been in any respect remarkable, nor to
-have differed from the cognate nations except in the conformation of the
-head, which is small, greatly elongated, narrow its whole length, with a
-very retreating forehead, and possessing more symmetry than is usual in
-skulls of the American race.” Some of the characteristics here referred
-to are, in part at least, the result of artificial modifications; but
-the small head appears to be an indisputable characteristic of the most
-numerous ancient people of Peru.
-
-It may not unreasonably excite surprise that Dr. Morton should have
-adduced results apparently pointing to the conclusion that civilisation
-had progressed among the native races of the American continent in an
-inverse ratio to the volume of brain; and yet passed it over with such
-slight comment. The only hint at a recognition of the difficulty is
-where, as he draws his work to a close, he indicates his observation of
-a greater anterior and coronal development in the smaller Peruvian
-brain. “It is curious,” he says, “to observe that the barbarous nations
-possess a larger brain by 5½ cubic inches than the Toltecans; while, on
-the other hand, the Toltecans possess a greater relative capacity of the
-anterior chamber of the skull in the proportion of 42.3 to 41.8. Again,
-the coronal region, though absolutely greater in the barbarous tribes,
-is rather larger in proportion in the demi-civilised tribes.”[179] But
-Dr. Morton also noted that the heads of nine Peruvian children in his
-possession “appear to be nearly if not quite as large as those of
-children of other nations at the same age”;[180] so that he seemed to
-recognise something equivalent to an arrested cerebral development
-accompanying the intellectual activity of this remarkable people at some
-later stage, yet without apparently affecting their mental power. But it
-was characteristic of this minute and painstaking observer to accumulate
-and set forth his results, unaffected by any apparent difficulties or
-inconsistencies which they might seem to involve.
-
-Important advances have been made in craniometry, as in other branches
-of anthropology, since Dr. Morton formed the collection which now, with
-many later additions, constitutes an important department in the
-collections of the Academy of Science of Philadelphia. Zealous and
-well-trained labourers are following in his steps; but the value of his
-services to science are more fully appreciated with every addition to
-the work he inaugurated. Researches have been prosecuted for some years
-by a committee of the British Association with a view to securing
-reliable data relative to the tribes of the Canadian North-West and
-British Columbia. In following out their instructions, Dr. Franz Boas
-has prepared valuable tables of measurements, both of living examples of
-the Haidah, Tsimshian, Kwakintl, and Nootka tribes, and of crania of
-those and other natives of the Pacific coast; but unfortunately he has
-omitted the cerebral capacity. But a large collection of crania of
-tribes lying to the south of British Columbia, now in the Peabody Museum
-of Harvard University, has furnished to Mr. Lucien Carr opportunities
-for a series of careful measurements showing some very distinctive
-diversities among tribes of the coast and the islands of Southern
-California. From those the following table is derived. The capacity is
-given in cubic centimetres; and shows not only a marked diversity in
-cerebral capacity distinguishing different island tribes, but also notes
-the relative difference of the male and female head. Among the Indians
-of the Pacific coast are the Haidahs and others noted for exceptional
-ingenuity and skill in their carvings, pottery, and other handiwork. But
-besides the fair-skinned Haidahs and Tsimshians of the north, there are
-essentially diverse tribes of Southern California, noticeable for
-swarthy and almost black colour; and not only inferior, but essentially
-differing in the style of their arts.
-
- TABLE VIII
-
- CRANIA OF PACIFIC COAST TRIBES
- _Santa Catalina Island, California._
-
-───────────────┬──────────┬───────────────┬───────────────┬───────────────
- │ │ │ │
-No. of Crania. │ Sex. │ Capacity │ Capacity │ Capacity
- │ │ Average. │ Maximum. │ Minimum.
- │ │ │ │
-───────────────┼──────────┼───────────────┼───────────────┼───────────────
- │ │ │ │
- 26 │ Male │ 1470 │ 1719 │ 1282
- 12 │ Female │ 1279 │ 1451 │ 1098
- │ │ │ │
-───────────────┴──────────┴───────────────┴───────────────┴───────────────
-
- _San Clementé Island, California._
-
-───────────────┬──────────┬───────────────┬───────────────┬───────────────
- │ │ │ │
-No. of Crania. │ Sex. │ Capacity │ Capacity │ Capacity
- │ │ Average. │ Maximum. │ Minimum.
- │ │ │ │
-───────────────┼──────────┼───────────────┼───────────────┼───────────────
- │ │ │ │
- 9 │ Male │ 1452 │ 1747 │ 1300
- 6 │ Female │ 1315 │ 1352 │ 1268
- │ │ │ │
-───────────────┴──────────┴───────────────┴───────────────┴───────────────
-
- _Santa Cruz Island, California._
-
-───────────────┬──────────┬───────────────┬───────────────┬───────────────
- │ │ │ │
-No. of Crania. │ Sex. │ Capacity │ Capacity │ Capacity
- │ │ Average. │ Maximum. │ Minimum.
- │ │ │ │
-───────────────┼──────────┼───────────────┼───────────────┼───────────────
- │ │ │ │
- 45 │ Male │ 1365 │ 1625 │ 1144
- 35 │ Female │ 1219 │ 1528 │ 1040
- │ │ │ │
-───────────────┴──────────┴───────────────┴───────────────┴───────────────
-
- _Santa Barbara Islands and Mainland._
-
-───────────────┬──────────┬───────────────┬───────────────┬───────────────
- │ │ │ │
-No. of Crania. │ Sex. │ Capacity │ Capacity │ Capacity
- │ │ Average. │ Maximum. │ Minimum.
- │ │ │ │
-───────────────┼──────────┼───────────────┼───────────────┼───────────────
- │ │ │ │
- 9 │ Male │ 1324 │ 1441 │ 1167
- 5 │ Female │ 1247 │ 1316 │ 1175
- │ │ │ │
-───────────────┴──────────┴───────────────┴───────────────┴───────────────
-
-Among exceptional features claimed as more or less a racial
-characteristic of American crania, the _os Incæ_, or epactal bone in the
-occiput, has been noted as present in various stages of manifestation in
-3.81 per cent; and among ancient Peruvian crania in 6.08 per cent; while
-it does not apparently exceed 2.65 per cent in the Negro; and only
-reaches 1.19 per cent in Europeans.[181] In so far as this may be
-regarded as a sign of arrested development, it is noteworthy as thus
-occurring in excess in the small-headed, yet highly ingenious and
-civilised Peruvian race. Dr. Morton noted as a remarkable fact that the
-skull of the Peruvian child appeared to equal in size that of other
-races; so that in a much ampler sense than in the perpetuation of a
-suture of the occiput beyond the stage of fœtal development, the
-small-sized skull and brain of the adult Peruvian is abnormal. But he
-followed out his observation of the phenomena no farther than to state,
-in summing up his investigations “On the internal capacity of the
-cranium in the different races of men:”[182] “Respecting the American
-race, I have nothing to add, excepting the striking fact that of all the
-American nations, the Peruvians had the smallest heads, while those of
-the Mexicans were something larger, and those of the barbarous tribes
-the largest of all,” namely:—
-
- { Peruvians, collectively 75 cubic inches.
- Toltecan Nations {
- { Mexicans, „ 79 „ „
- Barbarous Tribes 82 „ „
-
-The enlarged tables given in the catalogue of Dr J. Aitken Meigs,
-increase this inverse ratio of cerebral capacity, thus:—
-
- Peruvians 75.3
- Mexicans 81.7
- Barbarous Tribes 84.0
-
-“The great American group,” he says, “is, in several respects, well
-represented in the collection. It includes 490 crania and 13 casts,
-making a total of 503 from nearly 70 different nations and tribes. Of
-this large number 256 belong to the Toltecan race (embracing the
-semi-civilised communities of Mexico, Bogota, and Peru), and 247 to the
-barbarous tribes scattered over the continent. Of 164 measurements of
-crania of the barbarous tribes, the largest is 104 cubic inches; the
-smallest 69; and the mean of all 84. One hundred and fifty-two Peruvian
-skulls give 101 cubic inches for the largest internal capacity, 58 for
-the smallest, and 75.3 for the average of all.”[183]
-
-The results which Professor Jeffreys Wyman arrived at from a careful
-comparative measurement of the Squier collection, were confirmed by his
-subsequent study of that of Professor Agassiz, and may be quoted as
-applying to both; for he sums up his later investigations with the
-remark: “These results agree with all previous conclusions with regard
-to the diminutive size of the ancient Peruvian brain.”[184] Of the
-Squier collection he says: “The average capacity of the fifty-six crania
-measured agrees very closely with that indicated by Morton and Meigs,
-namely, 1230 centimetres, or 75 cubic inches, which is considerably less
-than that of the barbarous tribes of America, and almost exactly that of
-the Australians and Hottentots as given by Morton and Meigs, and smaller
-than that derived from a larger number of measurements by Davis. Thus we
-have, in this particular, a race which has established a complex civil
-and religious polity, and made great progress in the useful and fine
-arts,—as its pottery, textile fabrics, wrought metals, highways and
-aqueducts, colossal architectural structures and court of almost
-imperial splendour prove,—on the same level, as regards the quantity of
-brain, with a race whose social and religious conditions are among the
-most degraded exhibited by the human race. All this goes to show, and
-cannot be too much insisted upon, that the relative capacity of the
-skull is to be considered merely as an anatomical and not as a
-physiological characteristic; and unless the quality of the brain can be
-represented at the same time as the quantity, brain measurement cannot
-be assumed as an indication of the intellectual position of races any
-more than of individuals.”[185]
-
-The only definite attempt of Dr. Morton to solve the difficulty thus
-presented to us, curiously evades its true point. “Something,” he says,
-“may be attributed to a primitive difference of stock; but more,
-perhaps, to the contrasted activity of the two races.” Here, however, it
-is not a case of intellectual activity accompanied by, and seemingly
-begetting an increased volume of brain; but only the assumption of
-greater activity in the small-brained race to account for its triumph
-over larger-brained barbarous tribes in the attainment of numerous
-elements of a native-born civilisation. The question is, how to account
-for this intellectual activity, with all its marvellous results,
-attained by a race with an average brain of no greater volume than that
-of the Bushman, the Australian, or other lowest types of humanity.
-
-The Nilotic Egyptian race, of composite ethnical character, presents
-striking elements of comparison, in the ingenious arts and constructive
-skill of the ancient dwellers in the Nile valley; but whether we take
-the Egyptian of the Catacombs, the Copt, or the Fellah, we seek in vain
-for like microcephalous characteristics. Among modern races the Chinese
-exhibit many analogies in arts and social life to the ancient Peruvians;
-but their cerebral capacity presents no correspondence to that of the
-American race. Dr. Morton gives a mean capacity for the Chinese skull of
-85, as compared with the Peruvian 75.3, while Dr. Davis derives from
-nineteen skulls a mean internal capacity of 76.7 oz. av., or 93 cubic
-inches.
-
-But another Asiatic race, that of the Hindoos—also associated with a
-remarkable ancient civilisation, and a social and religious organisation
-not without suggestive analogies both to ancient Egypt and Peru,—is
-noticeable for like microcephalous characteristics. In completing the
-anatomical measurements with which Dr. Morton closes his great work, he
-places the Ethiopian lowest in the scale of internal capacity of
-cranium; but, while including the Hindoo in his Caucasian group, he
-adds: “It is proper to mention that but three Hindoos are admitted in
-the whole number, because the skulls of these people are probably
-smaller than those of any other existing nation. For example, seventeen
-Hindoo heads give a mean of but 75 cubic inches.”[186] The Vedahs of
-Ceylon, the Mincopies, the Negritos, and the Bushmen, appear to vie with
-the Hindoos in smallness of skull; but all of them are races of
-diminutive stature. This element, therefore, which has been referred to
-as important in individual comparisons, is no less necessary to be borne
-in view in determining such comparative results as those which
-distinguish the Peruvians from other American races. Certain races are
-unquestionably distinguished from others by difference of stature.
-Barrow determined the mean height of the Bushman, from measurements of a
-whole tribe, to be 4 ft. 3½ in. D’Orbigny, from nearly similar evidence,
-states that of the Patagonians to be 5 ft. 8 in. The internal capacity
-of the Peruvian skull, as derived from eighteen male and six female
-Quichua skulls in Dr. Davis’s collection, is 70, while he states that of
-the Patagonian skull as 67 and of the Bushman as 65; but it is manifest
-that the latter figures, if taken without reference to relative stature,
-furnish a very partial index of the comparative volume of brain.
-
-Professor Goodsir, as already noted, held that symmetry of brain has
-more to do with the higher faculties than mere bulk. In the case of the
-Peruvians the systematic distortion of the skull precludes the
-application of this test. But in the small Hindoo skull the fine
-proportions have been repeatedly noted. Dr. Davis, in describing one of
-a Hindoo of unmixed blood, born in Sumatra, says: “His pretty,
-diminutive skull is singularly contrasted with those of the races by
-whom, alive, he was surrounded”;[187] and he adds: “The great agreement
-of the elegant skulls of Hindoos in their types and proportions,
-although not in dimensions, with those of European races, has afforded
-some support to that widespread and learned illusion, ‘the Indo-European
-hypothesis.’ The Hindoo skulls are generally beautiful models of form in
-miniature.”
-
-Mr. Alfred R. Wallace, in his _Malay Archipelago_, discusses the value
-of cranial measurements for ethnological purposes; and, employing those
-furnished by Dr. J. B. Davis in his _Thesaurus Craniorum_ as a “means of
-determining whether the forms and dimensions of the crania of the
-eastern races would in any way support or refute his classification of
-them,” he finally selected as the best tests for his purpose—1. The
-capacity of the cranium; 2. The proportion of the width to the length
-taken as 100; 3. The proportion of the height to the length taken as
-100. But here again, unfortunately, the systematic distortion of the
-Peruvian skull limits us to the first of those tests. There are, indeed,
-the eleven normal Peruvian crania selected as such from the numerous
-Ancon skulls brought by Professor Agassiz from Peru. But those are
-stated by Professor Wyman to be on an average less by six inches than
-the ordinary skull. Some partial results embodied in the following table
-admit of comparison with those based on the more ample data of Table X.
-Dr. Lucae, in his _Zur Organischen Formenlehre_, gives the cranial
-capacity of single skulls of different races, selected as examples of
-each. In these, as in others already referred to, the capacity was
-determined with peas; and the results—assumed to be given in Prussian
-ounces,—are dealt with here, as in the skulls of Heinse and Bünger. The
-experiments carried on for the purpose of testing the process fully
-confirmed the results stated by Professor Wyman as to the differences in
-apparent cubical capacity according to the material employed. Taking a
-sound Huron Indian skull, a mean internal capacity of 1490 grms. was
-obtained by repeatedly gauging it with peas, and of 1439.5 with rice.
-The position of the Negro, heading the list, serves to show the
-exceptional nature of the evidence; though this is rather due to the
-inferiority of other examples, such as the Chinese and Greenlander, than
-to its capacity greatly exceeding the Negro mean. In the first column
-the unzen, as Prussian ounces, are rendered in grammes. The second
-column gives the nearer approximation to the true specific gravity,
-according to the standard referred to, based on a series of experiments
-carried out under my direction in the laboratory of the University of
-Toronto, and assuming 82.5 grms. of peas to occupy the space of 100
-grms. of water. The third and fourth columns represent the estimated
-brain-weight, after the requisite deductions, on the basis of s.g. of
-brain as 1.0408.
-
- TABLE IX
-
- LUCAE
-
-───────────────┬───────────────┬───────────────┬───────────────┬──────────
- │ │ │ │
- │ Internal │ Internal Cap. │ Brain-Weight. │ Brain-
- │ Capacity. │ Corrected. │ Grms. │ weight.
- │ Grms. │ Grms. │ │ Oz. Av.
- │ │ │ │
-───────────────┼───────────────┼───────────────┼───────────────┼──────────
- │ │ │ │
-Negro │ 1169.28 │ 1424.12 │ 1281.71 │ 45.2
-Chinese │ 1081.58 │ 1364.48 │ 1228.04 │ 43.4
-Nubian │ 1041.24 │ 1313.54 │ 1182.19 │ 41.7
-Floris │ 1033.93 │ 1304.38 │ 1173.94 │ 41.4
-Papuan │ 1030.42 │ 1299.95 │ 1169.96 │ 41.3
-Greenlander │ 1023.12 │ 1290.74 │ 1161.67 │ 41.0
-Javanese │ 995.06 │ 1254.54 │ 1129.91 │ 39.8
- │ │ │ │
-───────────────┴───────────────┴───────────────┴───────────────┴──────────
-
-In the following table the examples are derived from Dr. J. B. Davis’s
-tables, with the exception of the Peruvians. For these I have availed
-myself of Dr. Jeffreys Wyman’s careful observations on the large
-collection in the Peabody Museum, the results of which confirm Dr.
-Morton’s earlier data. One further fact, however, may be noted as a
-result of my own study of Peruvian crania, amply confirmed by the
-published observations of others, namely, that while the Peruvian head
-unquestionably ranks among those of the microcephalous races, the range
-of variation among the Peruvian coast tribes appears to be less than
-that even of the Australian. Of this there is good evidence, based on
-the comparison of several hundred crania. But exceptional examples of
-unusually large skulls may be looked for in all races; and a few of such
-abnormal Peruvian or other skulls would modify the mean capacities and
-weights in the following table. Nevertheless the average results, as a
-whole, are probably a close approximation to the truth:—
-
- TABLE X
-
- COMPARATIVE CEREBRAL CAPACITY OF RACES
-
- ────────────────────┬───────────────┬───────────────┬───────────────
- │ │ │
- │ │ Capacity. │ Brain-Weight.
- Race. │ Number. │ Cubic Inches. │ Oz. Av.
- │ │ │
- ────────────────────┼───────────────┼───────────────┼───────────────
- │ │ │
- European │ 299 │ 92.3 │ 47.12
- English │ 21 │ 93.1 │ 47.50
- Asiatic │ 124 │ 87.1 │ 44.44
- Chinese │ 25 │ 92.1 │ 47.00
- Hindoos │ 35 │ 82.5 │ 42.11
- Negroes │ 16 │ 86.4 │ 44.08
- Negro Tribes │ 69 │ 85.2 │ 43.47
- American Indians │ 52 │ 87.5 │ 44.64
- Mexicans │ 25 │ 81.7 │ 41.74
- Peruvians │ 56 │ 75.0 │ 38.25
- Eskimos │ 13 │ 91.2 │ 46.56
- Oceanic │ 210 │ 89.4 │ 45.63
- Javans │ 30 │ 87.5 │ 44.64
- Australians │ 24 │ 81.1 │ 41.38
- │ │ │
- ────────────────────┴───────────────┴───────────────┴───────────────
-
-Looking for some definite results from the various data here produced,
-the deductions which they seem to suggest may be thus stated. While
-Professor Wyman justly remarks that the relative capacity of the skull,
-and consequently of the encephalon, is to be considered as an anatomical
-and not as a physiological characteristic, relative largeness of the
-brain is nevertheless one of the most distinguishing attributes of man.
-Ample cerebral development is the general accompaniment of intellectual
-capacity, alike in individuals and races; and microcephaly, when it
-passes below well-defined limits, is no longer compatible with rational
-intelligence; though it amply suffices for the requirements of the
-highest anthropomorpha. Wagner thus definitely refers the special
-characteristics which separate man from the irrational creation to one
-member of the encephalon: “The relation of the lobes of the cerebrum to
-intelligence may, perhaps, be expressed thus: there is a certain
-development of the mass of the cerebrum, especially of the convolutions,
-requisite in order to such a development of intelligence as divides man
-from other animals.”
-
-The important data accumulated by Morton, Meigs, Davis, Tiedemann,
-Pruner-Bey, Broca, and others, by the process of gauging the skulls of
-different races, proceeds on the assumption of brain of a uniform
-density. But it seems by no means improbable that certain marked
-distinctions in races may be traceable to the very fact of a prevailing
-difference in the specific gravity of the brain, or of certain of its
-constituent portions; to the greater or less complexity of its
-convolutions; and to the relative characteristics of the two
-hemispheres. Moreover, it may be that some of those sources of
-difference in races may not lie wholly out of our reach, or even beyond
-our control. The diversity of food, for example, of the Peruvians and of
-the American Indian hunter tribes was little less than that which
-distinguishes the Eskimo from the Hindoo, or the nomad Tartar from the
-Chinese. The remarkable cerebral capacity characteristic of the Oceanic
-races is the accompaniment of well-defined peculiarities in food,
-climate, and other physical conditions; and Australia is even more
-distinct in its physical specialties than in its variety of race.
-
-Looking then to the unwonted persistency of the Peruvian cranium within
-such narrow limits, so far at least as the physical characteristics of
-the predominant population of Peru are illustrated by means of the great
-Coast cemeteries; and to the striking discrepancy between the volume of
-brain and the intellectual activity of the race; I am led to the
-conclusion that, in the remarkable exceptional characteristics thus
-established by the study of this class of Peruvian crania, we have as
-marked an indication of a distinctive race-character as anything
-hitherto noted in anthropology.
-
------
-
-[152] _The Descent of Man_, Part I. chap. iv.
-
-[153] _Insanity and its Treatment_, by G. F. Blandford, M.D., p. 10.
-
-[154] _Mr. Darwin’s Critics: Critiques and Addresses._
-
-[155] Vogt, _Lectures on Man_, Lecture III.
-
-[156] _Journal of Mental Science_, vol. xii. p. 23.
-
-[157] _Philosophical Transactions_, vol. clviii. p. 505.
-
-[158] _Proceedings of the Boston Natural History Society_, vol. xl.
-
-[159] The internal capacity of 59 oz. is given here from the _Thesaurus
-Craniorum_, p. 40, in correction of that of 50 oz. stated in the memoir
-in _Transactions of the Dutch Society of Sciences_, Haarlem, p. 21,
-which may be presumed to be a misprint. Dr. Davis adds, in the
-_Thesaurus Craniorum_: “An early closure of the sutures has occasioned a
-stunted growth of the brain, especially of its convolutions, and thus
-prevented the development of those structures and faculties which might
-have given a different direction to his lower propensities”; and he
-justly adds his conviction that this was a case rather for timely
-treatment as a dangerous idiot, than for punishment as a criminal.
-
-[160] _Report of British Association_, 1861.
-
-[161] _Journal Anthrop. Inst._, vol. iv. p. 464.
-
-[162] _Limits of Natural Selection, as applied to Man._
-
-[163] _Bull. de la Soc. d’Anthropologie de Paris_, 1861, ii. p. 501;
-1862, iii. p. 192.
-
-[164] _Mem. Anthropol. Soc. London_, vol. i. p. 65.
-
-[165] _Crania Ægyptiaca_, p. 21.
-
-[166] _Vide_ “Physical Characteristics of the Ancient and Modern Celt”:
-_Canadian Journal_, vol. vii. p. 369.
-
-[167] _Thesaurus Craniorum_ (Appendix), p. 347.
-
-[168] _Archæologia Scotica_, vol. ii. p. 450.
-
-[169] _Phrenological Development of Robert Burns_, by George Combe, p.
-7.
-
-[170] The use of different standards of weights and measures, and of
-diverse materials for determining the capacity of the skull in different
-countries, greatly complicates the researches of the craniologist. Some
-pains have been taken here to bring the various weights and measurements
-to a common standard. In attempting to do so in reference to the weight
-of brain of Italy’s great poet, the following process was adopted: It
-was ascertained by experiment that 912.5 grms. of rice, well shaken
-down, occupied the space of 1000 grms. of water. Hence 3.1321 lbs.
-rice = 3.4324 water. Multiplying this by 1.04, the s.g. of brain, the
-result is the capacity of the skull, viz. 3.5697 lbs., or 57 oz., as
-given above. In this and other investigations embodied in the present
-paper, I was indebted to the valuable co-operation of my late friend and
-colleague, Professor H. H. Croft.
-
-[171] Dr. J. B. Davis, Supp. _Thesaurus Craniorum_, p. 7.
-
-[172] Sir H. Holland’s _Recollections of Past Life_, p. 254.
-
-[173] _The Descent of Man_, vol. i. p. 120. Appleton ed.
-
-[174] _Memoirs of Anthrop. Soc. London_, vol. i. p. 289. _Thesaurus
-Craniorum_, p. 49.
-
-[175] Grey’s _Elegy_.
-
-[176] _Mem. Anthropol. Soc. London_, vol. i. p. 465.
-
-[177] _Peabody Museum Annual Report_, 1868, p. 7.
-
-[178] _Journal of Anthropol. Inst._, vol. iii. p. 92.
-
-[179] _Crania Americana_, p. 260.
-
-[180] _Ibid._, p. 132.
-
-[181] _Crania Americana_, p. 261.
-
-[182] Same as Footnote 181.
-
-[183] _Introductory Note, Catalogue_, p. 10.
-
-[184] _Peabody Museum Report_, 1874, p. 10.
-
-[185] _Ibid_. 1871, p. 11.
-
-[186] _Crania Americana_, p. 261.
-
-[187] _Thesaurus Craniorum_, p. 148.
-
-
-
-
- INDEX
-
-
-Abbeville, bones of extinct mammalia at, 154
-Abbot, Dr. Charles C., _Primitive Industry of the Native Races_, quoted,
- 89, 98;
- discoveries at Trenton, 100, 158, 160, 162, 163, 164, 165, 167, 180
-Abercrombie, Dr., 374, 376
-Adam, M. Lucien, papers by, 19
-Africa, circumnavigation of, in 611 B.C., 9
-African hybrid, the, 311
-Agassiz, Professor, 20, 150, 216, 375, 376, 385, 390, 396, 399
-Akkad, language of the Sumerian class, 27
-Alaska, peopled by Eskimo, 66, 234
-Aleutian Island, 66, 117
-Algonkins, 18, 66, 106, 173, 206, 207, 216, 229, 234, 237, 241, 243, 244,
- 248, 252, 254, 265, 268, 270, 274, 275, 276, 280, 281, 282, 300, 304,
- 318
-Alleghans, 106, 172, 174, 175
-Alligéwi, 103, 172, 215, 251, 253, 267, 269, 273, 287
-Alphabet, Indian, 237
-Alton, find of flint implements, 97
-Andaman Islander, 348, 387
-Andastes, 253
-Andastogues, 253
-Anderdon, Indian reserve, 280, 284, 295, 306
-Anne, Queen, gift to the Mohawks, 314
-_Antiquitates Americanæ_, 51, 57, 58, 61
-Apaches, 175, 229
-Arapahoes, 235
-Arifrode’s Icelandic Saga, 51
-Arnold, Dr., 137
-Arrowhead-makers, 224
-Artist, the Indian, 193
-Ashbrandsson, Biorn, 37
-Assiniboins, 120, 121
-Athabaska river, 121, 126
-Athabascan, language of, 18
-Atkinson, Henry George, 353
-Atlantis, legend of, 1;
- supposed geographical position, 2
-Attiwendaronks, 177, 220, 254, 256, 277, 278, 282, 294
-Aughey, Professor, 148
-Avalldamon, Skræling chief, 69
-Aymaras, 387, 389
-Aztecs, 20, 103, 238, 268, 287, 387
-
-Babeens, 90, 121, 207, 312
-Bacon, quoted, 34
-Bancroft’s _Native Races of the Pacific States_, quoted, 6, 70
-Barlow, Dr. H. C., 369
-Basket-work, 224
-Bastian, 343
-Bateman, 83, 188
-Batoche, 334
-Bauchman’s Beach, arrow-makers of, 128
-Bay of Quinté, 314
-Bearfoot, Rev. Isaac, 302
-Bear Skin, a Haidah chief, and Judge Pemberton, 211
-Beatty, Mr., 326
-Beechy, Captain, 204
-Belgium caves, 357
-Bell, Dr. Robert, 101, 120, 125, 126
-Bentham, Jeremy, 352
-Berkeley landed at Rhode Island in 1728, 79
-Bertram, the Cherokees described by, 173
-Bible, Indian, translation of, 298, 299
-Blackfeet, 120, 175, 178, 206, 226, 229, 234, 312, 329, 333
-Blankets, drawings on Haidah, 211
-Boas, Dr. Franz, 393
-Bone implements, 167
-Borlase, 83
-Boucher de Perthes, M., 5, 88, 91, 112
-Boyd, Dr., 367, 377, 380, 381, 382
-Boyle, Robert, 289
-Brain, the weight in proportion to the body, 341
-Brain, the average weight of, 353, 360
-Brant, a native chief, 321
-Brasseur de Bourbourg, Abbé, 5
-Brazil, discovery of, 13, 38;
- caves, 148, 149
-Brewster, Sir David, 182
-Brinton, Dr., 14, 20, 28, 241, 243
-British Association at Montreal, 61, 69
-British Columbia, tribes of, 115, 324
-Brown, George, 376
-—— J. Allan, 88
-Brownell’s _Indian Races_, 251
-Broca, Professor, 354, 357, 358, 373, 376, 377, 381, 402
-Bronze, sword, leaf-shaped, 85;
- workers in, 95
-Bruce, King Robert the, 354, 369, 374
-Buckland’s, Dean, _Reliquiæ Diluvianæ_, 145
-Buffalo, 178, 325
-Buffalo robe, pictured, 35, 89
-Bulmer, J. Y., 55
-Bünger, Professor, 372, 374
-Burns’s head, 369, 374, 379
-Busk, Professor, 390
-Buslyde, Hierome, 76
-Byron, 355, 375, 376
-
-Cabral, Pedro Alvares de, 12, 45
-Caliban, references to, 74, 84, 247
-Calori, Professor C. L., 342
-Campbell, Lord Chancellor, 376, 385
-Canarses of Long Island, 269
-Caniengas, or Flint People, 264, 285, 294
-Cape Breton Island, 53, 54, 69
-Cape Cod, 62
-Carantouans, 253
-Caribbees, shell-workers of the, 94
-Caribs, 190
-Carpenter, Dr., 336
-Carr, Lucien, 393
-Cartier, Jacques, 53, 176, 253, 262, 268, 274, 275, 277, 280, 281, 282,
- 295
-Carved lodge-poles, 210, 212
-Cassiterides, 181
-Catawbas, 103, 173, 274
-Catlin, Mr., artist, 123
-Caughnawaga, 306
-Cave-men, 152, 153, 165, 195, 196
-Cayugas, 253, 278, 289, 294, 297, 305, 318
-Centennial Exposition of Philadelphia in 1876, 166
-Chalmers, Dr., 376, 378, 385
-Champlain, 252, 268, 274, 275, 276, 277, 281
-Charlevoix, Père, 117, 277
-Charles River, 49
-Charlton, B. E., 220
-Chattahoochee River, 97
-Chatta-Muskogees, 103, 173
-Cherohakahs, 253, 296
-Cherokees, 103, 172, 173, 174, 253, 274, 287, 298
-Chesapeake Bay, 269
-Cheyennes, 175, 229
-Chickasaws, 103, 286
-Chichenitza sculptured tablets, 34
-Chimpseyans, 121, 138, 207, 208
-China, money of, 22
-Chincha, Indians of, 391
-Chinooks, 130, 134, 227, 234, 312
-Chippeways, 121, 124, 134, 225, 312, 318, 329, 351
-Choctaws, 103, 173, 286, 287
-Chuakouet, grape vine at, in 1606, 53
-Cisneros, Dr., 362
-Cissbury, flint pits at, 92
-Clalam Indians, 121, 138, 312
-Clarke, Hyde, _Examination of the Legend_, quoted, 2;
- _Khita and Khita-Peruvian Epoch_, quoted, 4, 26
-Clarke, Lockhart, 340
-Clatsops, 130, 226, 234
-Claussen, M., 148
-Cliff dwellings, 135
-Cloyne, Bishop of, 77
-Colbert, shipment of emigrants under direction of, 316
-Coles, the, 348
-Columbus, 1, 7, 11, 13, 37, 40, 72, 73, 74, 77, 131, 325
-Columns, ornamental, 209
-Comanches, 175
-Combe, George, 369
-Comparative cerebral capacity of races, 400, 401
-Compass, the, of the Norse rovers, 12
-Conestogas, 253
-Cook, Captain, 14
-Copan, statue at, 34, 35
-Copenhagen, rune-stones at, 42, 56
-Copper of Lake Superior, 35, 115, 170, 179, 262, 313;
- of Mexico, 179, 181
-—— implements, 106, 116, 179, 182, 212, 262
-—— ornaments, 116, 212
-—— smelting, 180
-Coral islands of the Pacific, 21
-Correa, Pedro, 74
-Corvo, coins found at, 9, 36
-Cowlitz, 130, 226, 227, 312
-Crania of Pacific coast tribes, 394
-Creeks, 103, 274
-Crees, 175, 178, 206, 227, 229, 312, 329, 333
-Cresson, H. T., 99, 100, 162
-Cristineaux, 143, 323
-Cromagnon cavern, 85, 357, 358, 361
-Cross-ness, 61
-Cumshewa, 115
-Cunningham’s Island, 177, 278
-Curtius, Professor, 10
-Cushing, Mr., 244, 300
-Cusick, David, 252, 277
-Cuvier, 373, 374, 375, 376, 377
-Cuoq, M., 297
-Cuzco, 389
-
-Dakota, 229, 256
-Dakotan, language of, 18, 296
-Dall, W. H., 117, 152, 205, 323
-D’Allyon, Father, 177
-Dalton, Dr., 352
-Dante, 368, 369, 374
-Darwin, 339, 372
-Davis, Dr. J. Barnard, 117, 342, 344, 345, 347, 348, 349, 355, 362, 365,
- 366, 370, 373, 383, 390, 391, 397, 398, 400, 402
-—— Straits, 65
-Dawkins, Professor Boyd, 150, 151, 152, 165, 358, 359
-Dawson, Dr. G. M., 114, 120, 125
-—— S. J., 330
-Dawson’s, Sir W., _Fossil Men_, 219
-Delaware gravel beds, 98, 158
-Delawares, 103, 175, 251, 269
-De Leon, Pedro de Cieza, 391
-Denham, Admiral H. M., 347
-Designs on pottery, Indian, 121, 189, 190, 195, 220;
- by cave-men, 196
-De Quatrefages, Professor, 206, 215, 216
-De Quincey, 378
-_Descriptio insularum aquilonis_, 52
-De Soto, 173
-Dighton Rock, 46, 47, 54, 61, 79, 206
-Dirichlet, the mathematician, 376
-Dobson, G. E., 348, 349
-Donnelly’s _Atlantis_, 6
-Dooyentate, Peter, 252, 274, 276, 295
-D’Orbigny, 143, 398
-Dordogne cave, 239;
- valley, 64
-Dorion, L, A., 296
-Dowler, Dr., 149, 150, 154
-Drawings of Animals, Indian, 217
-Dupuytren, Surgeon, 376, 386
-Dyes employed by Indians, 240-243
-
-Ealing, palæolithic workshop at, 88
-Earthworks, 105, 117
-Edda, Red Indian, 178
-Egilsson, Sveinbiorn, 51
-Eider ducks, 59
-Eliot, Indian Bible of, 298
-El Moro rock, 231
-Emigrants to New York, 32;
- to Canada, 316
-Engis cave, 359
-Eric Saga, 165
-Eric the Red, 41, 44, 52, 59, 62
-Eries, 172, 177, 254, 277, 278, 294
-Eriksson, Leif, 44, 49, 51, 53, 58, 59, 62, 71
-Eriksson, Thorwald, 49, 54, 66
-Erlendsson Hauk, 71
-Eskimo: a typical Mongol, 17, 18;
- in Greenland, 43, 64;
- migrations of, 65;
- in Alaska, 66;
- implements of, 84;
- pedigree, 133;
- half-breed in Labrador, 144, 151;
- implements of, 152, 153, 159, 165, 204;
- and cave-men, 203;
- designs by, 213, 234, 240, 247, 248, 267, 272;
- cranium of, 274;
- powers of endurance, 323
-Evans, Sir John, 81, 155
-Ewaipanoma, 247
-Eyrbyggja Saga, 70
-
-Farish, Dr. J. G., 54, 55
-Farms, allocation of, 328
-Fijians, 192
-Figuier, M., 193
-Five Nations, the, 260, 275, 286, 289
-Flathead Indians, 130, 312
-Flint as a fire-producer, 81
-Flint Ridge, 101, 102, 111
-Flint River, 126
-Flint-workers, 92
-Flores, island, 74
-Flower, Professor, 17, 18
-Forbes, Edward, 216
-Fort M’Leod, Alberta, 115
-Foscolo, Ugo, 370, 374
-Foster, Dr. J. W., 149, 179, 180
-Fox, Colonel A. Lane, 92
-Franklin, 379
-Fredericksburg, 118
-French half-breeds, 330
-Frere John, 87, 88
-Freydisa, 62, 68
-Fuchs, pathologist, 376
-Fuegians of Tierra del Fuego, 84
-Furdustrandir, 59, 63
-
-Gallatin, 173, 253, 256, 286, 295, 296, 298
-Gama, Vasco da, voyage of, 9, 12
-Gamlison Thorhall, 58
-Ganton, flint flakes at, 95
-Garcilasso de la Vega, 391
-Garnett, Rev. Richard, 28
-Garonne, valleys of, 150, 151
-Garrison, W. Lloyd, 225
-Gauss, the mathematician, 370, 376
-Geikie, Professor, 154
-Gellisson Thorkell, 51
-Gesture-language, 229, 233, 235
-Gibbs, General Alfred, 221
-Gibbs, George, 227
-Gilbert, Sir Humphrey, 50
-Giles, Peter, 76
-Gilmour, Rev. J., 330
-Gold, first metal wrought, 35
-Goheen, Dr., 362
-Gold ornaments, 181, 212, 223, 388
-Gomara, 74
-Goodsir, Professor, 343, 375, 398
-Gosse, Dr. L. A., 188
-Grænlendingathàttr, 62
-Grand river reserves, 306, 314, 316
-Grapes, wild, of North America, 48, 53, 60, 62
-Grave Creek Stone, 214
-Grave mounds, 116
-Grave-posts, pictured, 35
-Graves, flint implements in, 95, 96
-Greenland, 41, 43, 53, 60, 63, 65
-Greenwell, Rev. Canon, 83, 93, 95, 96
-_Grenlands Historiske Mindesmærker_, 40
-Grimolfson Bjarne, 58
-Grinnel Leads, 97
-Grote, 376, 386
-Grupson, Erik, 49
-Gudleif, a Norse leader, 38
-Gudrida, Karlsefne’s wife, 67
-Guysborough, 53
-Gwyneth, Owen, 38
-
-Haidahs, of Queen Charlotte Islands, 90, 115, 116, 121, 130, 134, 138,
- 204, 207, 208, 209, 211, 393
-Hake, the Scot, 58, 59, 60, 61
-Haki, a Scot, 59, 60
-Hakluyt, 50
-Hale, Horatio, on currency in China, 22;
- grammar of the Hurons, 103;
- _Indian Migrations_, 140, 172, 235;
- _Iroquois Rites_, 237, 252, 253, 256, 263, 264, 268, 280, 287, 293, 296,
- 303
-Half-breeds, 143, 144;
- powers of endurance, 323
-Halliburton, R. G., 69
-Hamilton, Sir. W., 380
-Hamlet, quoted, 96
-Hanno, voyage of, 9
-Harkussen, 58, 60, 61
-Harriot, 74
-Harrison, Chief Justice, 376
-_Hauks Vók_, 71
-Hausmann, 376
-Hawkins, Sir John, 50
-Heinse, J. J. W., 371, 374
-Helluland, 45, 52, 59, 62, 70
-Henry the Navigator, 11
-—— a traveller of last century, 143, 323
-Herjulfson, Bjarni, 44, 60, 71
-Hermann, 376, 386
-Hiawatha, quoted, 265, 268
-Hieroglyphics, Indian, 230, 231
-Hind, Professor, 330
-Hindoos, 397
-Hittite capital, Ketesh, 30
-Hoare, Sir R. C., 82, 83
-Hochelaga, 221, 270, 272, 274, 275, 276, 278, 280, 281, 282, 283, 284,
- 293, 295
-Hodges, Robert, 84
-Hoffman, Dr. J. W., 195, 205, 210, 233
-Holland, Sir Henry, 371
-Holy Island, 42
-Hóp, Mount Hope Bay, 60, 61, 63
-Horetskey, Charles, 323
-Horn, engraving on, 94, 197
-Horsford, Professor E. N., 49
-Hoxme, flint implements found at, 89
-Huidœrk inscription, 57
-Humboldt, 35, 169, 248, 260
-Hunter, Archdeacon, 330, 331
-Hurons, 65, 101, 176, 177, 224, 280, 318, 319
-Huron-Iroquois, language of, 18, 64, 65, 66, 139, 172, 246 _et seq._
-Huschke, 341, 364
-Hutchinson, T. J., 390
-Huxley, Professor, quoted, 248, 308, 340, 351, 352, 359, 374
-
-Iceland, 41, 43, 44
-Icelandic Sagas, 51, 70
-Idols of the Haidah, 209
-Igalikko runic monuments, 36
-Ilium, 168
-Illinois, 175
-Incas, 389
-Indians of California, money of, 23
-Indian lodge, 211
-Innuit designs, 213
-Iroquois, 103, 106, 107, 172, 173, 175, 176, 177, 229, 234, 237, 244, 245,
- 316, 318
-Isle de Bacchus, 53
-—— of Orleans, 53
-—— Royale, 116
-Ivory, 94, 138, 151, 153, 197, 217
-
-Jeffrey, Lord, 378
-Jemez Indians, 232
-Jones, Colonel C. C., 148, 180
-Jossakeeds, 224
-Jowett’s, Professor, _Dialogues of Plato_, quoted, 1
-Jugs, double-necked, 223
-Julian calendar, 34
-
-Kablunet, 65
-Kalapurgas, 227
-Kane, Paul, 121, 130, 227, 228, 312, 324
-—— Dr., 144, 323
-Kanienga, 174
-Karlsefne, Thorfinn, 41, 49, 58, 62, 63, 66, 67, 68, 71
-Karlseven, 54
-Keel-ness, 61
-Keenan, Mr., 119
-Kent’s Hole, 84
-Kentucky skulls, 389
-Kettle, stone, 84
-Kewenaw peninsula, 106, 116
-Khita or Hittites, 10
-Kialarnes, 68
-Kiatégamut Indians, 205
-Kiawakaskaia, 226
-Kingiktorsoak runic monuments, 36, 57
-Kingsborough, Lord, 239
-Kioosta village on Graham Island, 212
-Kjalarnes, 53
-Klaskane Indians, 130
-Klikatat, 227
-Kona, 65
-Konegan, 66
-Krossanes, 63
-
-Labrador (Helluland), 62
-La-crosse clubs, 224
-Laennec, Dr., 347
-La Jeune Lorette, 276
-Lake-dwellings of Switzerland, 90
-Lake Simcoe, 283
-La Madeleine cave, 213
-Lamb, Charles, quoted, 235
-Lane, 74
-Languages—Huron-Iroquois, 257, 281;
- Indian, 66, 255;
- Mohawk, 291;
- significance of, 15;
- of uncivilised races, 17
-La Salle, 110, 269
-Latham, Dr., 182, 248, 260, 263
-Laugerie Basse, cave at, 206, 359
-League of the Hodenosauneega, 174
-Leavenworth, 111
-Left-hand drawings, 197
-Leidy, Professor Joseph, 89, 156
-Le Moyne, Father, 278
-Lenape, 172, 214, 229, 241, 269
-Lenni-Lenape, 251
-Les Eysies, cave of, 216
-Lewis, Professor H. C., 99, 163
-Lewis, Edmonia, 225
-Lindsay, Sir David, 76
-Lion from Marash, 30
-Lion of Piræus, 30
-Liston, Robert, 369
-Little Falls, Minnesota, 148
-Locke’s _Journal_, 176
-Lombrive cave, 359
-Longfellow, quoted, 178
-Long, Major J. H., 123
-Lorette, 275, 283, 295, 319
-Los Ojos Calientes, 232
-Lucae, Dr. J. C. Gustav, 371, 399
-Lukins, Mr., 123
-Lund, Dr., 148, 149
-Luschan, Dr. F. von, 309
-Lyell’s, Sir Charles, _Principles of Geology_, quoted, 6, 145, 154
-Lynx or wild cat, 177
-
-Macaulay, Lord, 378
-M’Dowell, Dr., 362
-MacEnery, J., 147
-Mackenzie, Major Colin, 83
-Macrocephali, 363
-Madoc, a Welsh prince, 38
-Maeshowe, Orkney, 30, 42
-Magnusen, Finn, 51
-Malay race, 192
-Malformation, artificial, 24
-Mammoth, bones of, 88;
- carvings of, 213, 217
-Mandans, 175
-Mangue language, 28
-Manhattans, 269
-Manitoba, 184
-Maps, earliest, 53
-—— by Rafn, 62
-—— of Vinland, 49
-Marchand’s voyage, 208
-Markham, Mr., 391
-Markland, 57, 59, 69
-Martin, Hugh, 240
-Martineau, Harriet, 352
-Mascagni, 362, 385
-Massat, cave of, 216
-Massénat, M., 215
-Mayas, 13, 25, 31, 387
-Meigs, Dr. J. Aitken, 247, 395, 396, 402
-Melanochroi or dark whites, 308
-_Mémoires de la Société Royale des Antiquaires du Nord_, 51
-Mentone, skeleton found at, 359
-Mercer, H. C., 214
-Metallurgy, American, 35
-Metis, the, 311
-Mexican calendar, 33, 169
-—— sculptured monuments, 39
-—— terra-cotta human masks, 215
-Mexicans, 190
-Mexico, ruins of, 137
-Micmacs, 55, 64, 65, 125, 242, 318, 319
-Middleton, General, 334
-Miller, Joaquin, 325
-Millicet Indians, 55, 65
-Milton’s _Paradise Lost_, 50
-Minsi, 175
-Mississagas, 318
-Missouries, 274
-Moccasins, 224
-Mohawks, 174, 253, 264, 289, 290, 294, 297, 299, 302, 305, 314, 318
-Money, Origin of Primitive, 22
-Montgomery’s _Greenland_ epic, 46
-More, Sir Thomas, 75, 76, 77
-Morgan, Hon. L. H., 174, 265, 285
-Moro rock, 230
-Morris, Hon. Alexander, 326, 327
-—— William, quoted, 37, 71
-Morton, Dr., 247, 261, 337, 344, 345, 348, 362, 365, 366, 371, 387, 392,
- 395, 396, 397, 400, 402
-Mound builders, 102, 103, 104, 108, 167, 214, 215, 267, 270, 273
-Mount Hope Bay, 46
-Müller, Professor Max, 19, 266, 290, 291
-Munch, Professor, 51
-Musical instruments in the form of animals, 222
-Muskogees, 106, 173, 286
-
-Naaman’s Creek, rock shelter, 99
-Nanticokes, 254, 269
-Nantucket, 45
-Napoleon, 376, 377
-Narraganset Bible, 28
-Nasquallie, 312
-Natchez, 103, 106, 173
-Naticokes, 175
-Navajo Expedition, 230, 231
-Neanderthal skull, 354, 359, 373
-Neepigon River, 119, 121, 236, 351
-Negroes, brain-weights of, 362, 363, 385, 395
-Neolithians, 309
-Newark earthworks, 102
-Newatees, 130, 312
-New England, 64
-Newfoundland, 53
-New Jersey, old implement-maker at, 90, 98
-New Orleans, skeleton of, 161
-Newport in Narragansett Bay, 79
-“Nina,” the, 75
-Nipissing, Lake, 125
-Nisqually, 227
-Nootkas, 134, 227
-North Fork, 117
-Norumbega, ancient city of, 50
-Nott, Dr. J. C., 247, 375
-Nottawa saga, 304
-Nottoways, 253, 296, 305
-Nova Scotia, 45, 47, 53, 54, 59, 61, 64
-
-Oar, with runic inscription, 43
-Ohio Holy Stone, 214
-Ohio Valley, earthworks of, 38, 101
-Ojibways, 206, 242, 243, 245, 252, 257, 268
-Oka, 306
-Olaf, the Saint, 37
-O’Meara, Rev. Dr., 236
-Oneidas, 174, 253, 264, 285, 286, 289, 294, 297, 305, 318
-Onondagas, chief, 178, 237, 253, 260, 264, 278, 286, 289, 294, 305, 318
-Ontonagon, 116
-Orang, brain of, 340
-Orinoco River, 72
-Oronhyatekha, Dr., 296, 298, 302
-Osages, 274
-Otouacha, 275
-Ottawas, 318
-Ottoes, 274
-Owen, Professor, 339, 346, 348
-
-Pabahmesad, the old Chippewa, 224
-Pacasset River, 46, 62
-Paisley Block, 101
-Palenque, sculptured tablets, 34, 35
-Parker, Rev. Samuel, 227
-Parkman, Francis, 248, 262, 275, 278
-Patagonians of Tierra del Fuego, 84
-Paton, Sir Noel, 197
-Patterson, George, 126
-Pattison, Rev. Mark, _note_ 228
-Pavloff, Ivan, 324
-Peacock, Dr., 343, 362, 367, 377, 381
-Peat mosses of Denmark and Ireland, 90
-Pequot, 320
-Perkins, Mr., 179, 180
-Peruvian, natives, 190;
- pottery, 215;
- skulls, 387, 388;
- crania, 395
-Petun Indians, 101
-Philadelphia gravel beds, 99
-Phillips, H., jun., 57, 59, 60
-Phœnician, Cadmus, 35
-Picard, Paul, 295, 296
-Pickering, Dr. Charles, 24, 227, 260
-Pictou harbour, 54
-Picture-writing, 33, 40, 233, 238, 239, 244
-Pierce, William, 320
-“Pinta,” the, 75
-Piræus, lion of, 42
-Plato’s _Critias_, quoted, 1, 2, 75
-Point Oken, 122
-Population, and number of villages, 275;
- coloured, 311, 318, 324, 329
-Porpoise, brain of, 341
-Port Dover, implements at, 101
-Potomac, rock at the, 57
-Pottawattomies, 318
-Pottery, 153, 167, 168, 171, 189, 192, 194, 218, 219, 220, 240, 262, 267,
- 271, 273, 282, 388
-Powell, York, 62
-Powhattan, 269
-Pre-Aryan Man, 130 _et seq._
-Pre-Columbian America, Copenhagen volume on, 43, 131;
- intercourse between Europe and America, 7
-Prescott, 285
-Prestwich, Professor, 162
-Pritchard, Dr., 16
-_Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society_, 57
-Pruner-Bey, Dr., 356, 402
-Pueblo Indians, 190, 231, 236, 240, 244, 299
-
-Quebec and the Huron Indians, 251
-Quichuas, 387, 389;
- skulls, 398
-Quiriqua sculptured tablets, 34
-
-Race-types, 18
-Rae, Dr., 144
-Rafn, Professor Christian, 40, 46, 47, 51, 52, 61, 78
-Ragnvald, Earl, 42
-Rainy River, 126
-Raleigh, 74, 77
-Rand, Rev. Silas T., 242, 319
-Rau, Charles, 118, 119, 180
-Red Lake Indians, 327
-Red River, 328, 330, 334
-Reeve of Anderdon, 321
-Reeves’ _The Finding of Wineland the Good_, 49, 51, 52, 71
-Reid, Dr., 385
-Reindeer’s horn, engraving on, 215
-Rhode Island, 52, 54, 60, 61, 62, 78
-Riel, Louis, 334
-Rink, Dr. Henry, 18, 66, 144
-Rites, revolting, 282
-Riverview Cemetery, 118
-Rocky Dell Creek, 231
-Rolleston, Dr., 353, 361
-Rosehill, Lord, 82
-Royal Society of Canada, 60
-Rune-stones, 42
-Runic inscriptions, 42, 131
-Russians in Alaska, 323
-
-Sa∫∫atannen, Rev. P. W., 275
-Sachem, chief, 177
-Saco, 53
-Saga of Barthar Snæfellsass, 70
-Saga of Eric the Red, 71
-Saga of Halfdan Eysteinsson, 70
-Sagard, 296
-St. Brandon, Island of, 37
-St. Charles river reserves, 306, 316, 318
-St. John, New Brunswick, 53
-St. Mansuy, 354
-St. Molio’s Cave on the Clyde, 30
-St. Olaf, 44
-St. Peter Indians, 328
-St. Regis, 306
-Saline River, 108
-Salmon River, 54, 115
-San Esteban, convent of, 73
-Sankey, Dr., 343
-Saulteux, 328
-Savannahs, 274
-Schaaffhausen, Professor, 354
-Schiller, 375, 376
-Schliemann, Dr., 136
-Schmerling, Dr., 359
-Schumacher, Paul, 112
-Scioto-mound skull, 273
-Scott, Sir Walter, brain of, 355, 368, 374
-Sculptured figures, 23;
- monuments of Mexico, Central America, and Peru, 39
-Seal hunting, 65
-Sea-rovers, literary memorials of, 11
-Selkirk, Lord, 328
-Sellers, G. E., 106, 107, 109, 122, 123
-Seminoles, 274
-Senecas, 253, 264, 276, 277, 278, 280, 281, 289, 294, 295, 305, 318
-Seven Islands, the, 37
-Shakespeare, brain of, 355
-Shaler, Professor, 98, 99
-Shawnees, 101, 175, 240, 241, 269, 274
-Sheep, mountain, 115
-Shell, mounds, British and Danish, 90;
- workers of the Caribbees, 94;
- ornaments on, 195
-Ships of the Norse rovers, 12
-Short, J. T., 180
-Shoshones, 89, 97, 156
-Sigurd, King of Norway, 42
-Simpson, Lieut. James K., 230, 231, 232
-Simpson, Sir James Y., 375, 376, 378, 385
-Sioux, 120, 175, 178, 312, 325, 326, 327, 329, 333
-Six Nation Indians, 143, 174, 176, 254, 256, 263, 264, 283, 289, 290, 301,
- 305, 314, 316, 318
-Skrælings, 63, 64, 65, 66, 67, 69, 157, 165
-Skulls, Mound-Builders, 105;
- cave-men, 153;
- Red Indian, 161;
- comparison of, 187;
- capacity, 261;
- Canadian, 274;
- Huron, 279;
- table of cubical capacity, 366
-Smith, Captain John, 269
-Smith, Dr. Southwood, 352
-Snorrason, Thorbrand, 68
-Snorre, 67
-Snovri, 41
-Snow Bird, 243
-Snow-shoes, 224
-Sœmmering, Professor, 380
-Solon, 3, 75, 361
-Soto, Dr., 103, 104
-Southey, quoted, 38
-Spenser, Edmund, quoted, 77
-Spider Islands in Lake Winnipeg, 101
-Spurzheim, Dr., 376
-Squier, E. G., 118, 243, 388, 390, 396
-Squier and Davis’ _Ancient Monuments_, 117, 180
-Stadaconé, 274, 275, 280, 283
-Ste-nah, capture of, 315
-Stephens’ _Old Northern Runic Monuments_, 42, 56
-Stirling, whale at, 199
-Stone implements, 82, 86, 87, 88, 89, 90, 95, 97, 110, 111, 112, 116, 118,
- 122, 126, 147, 152, 153, 157, 167, 224, 262, 271;
- manufacture of, 88-92, 122, 124
-Stone ornaments, 125, 214
-Storm, Professor Gustav, 45, 46, 51, 52, 53
-Straumey (Stream Isle), 59
-Straumfiordr (Stream Firth), 59, 63, 68
-Stuart, Rev. Dr., 290
-Sturluson, Snorro, 78
-Sun-worshippers, 103
-Survey, Government, 326, 327
-Susquehannocks, 175, 269
-Swampies, 328, 329
-Swan, James G., 211, 212
-Symbols of the clans, 210
-
-Tadmor, 168
-Tahiti, traditions of, 14
-Talavera, Prior Fernando de, 73
-Talligew, or Tallegewi, 103, 106, 107, 172
-Taunton River, 61
-Tawatins, 138, 204, 207, 208
-Taylor, Dr. Isaac, 30, 358
-Tchudi, Von, 391
-Thelariolin Zacharee, 224
-Temagamic, Lake, 125
-Temissaming, Lake, 126
-Texas reserve, 296
-Thales, a Greek astronomer, 33
-The Snake Land, 243
-Thlinkets, 204, 207, 210
-Thomsen of Copenhagen, 81
-Thomson’s, Professor Wyville, _Depths of the Sea_, quoted, 5
-Thorbrandson, Snorre, 58
-Thorfinn, 58, 61
-Thorgilsson’s _Iselandinga Vók_, 71
-Thorhall, 59, 60
-Thorvald, 58, 61, 62, 63
-Thurnam, Dr., 343, 353, 360, 365, 366, 367, 373, 375, 376, 378, 384, 385
-Tiedemann, 362, 375, 376, 380, 386, 402
-_Timæus_ of Plato, 1, 15, 75
-Timucuas, 173
-Tin-mines of Spain and Cornwall, 9, 95
-Tinné Indians, 18, 115, 312
-Tiontates, 254
-Tiontonones, 177
-T’kul, the wind spirit, 212
-Tlascalans, 103
-Toad, emblematic of an evil spirit, 213
-Tobacco in Queen Charlotte Islands, 115
-Tobacco-pipes, 120, 167, 168, 178, 190, 195, 207, 219, 271, 272, 273
-Toivats and the “King of the Bears,” 210
-Topinard, Dr. Paul, 261
-Toscanelli, Paolo, 72
-Toys, ingenious, 223
-Traffic, ancient routes of, 113
-Trenton, gravel beds, 99, 158, 161
-Tryggvason, King Olaf, 59
-Tshugazzi, 66
-Tshimsians, 115
-Tshuma Indians, 195
-Tubal-cain, art of, 17, 168
-Tulare River, rock at, 233
-Tuscaroras, 253, 254, 289, 296, 297, 305, 314, 318
-Tuteloes, 28, 130, 254, 256, 296
-Tylor, Dr. E. B., 61
-
-Uchees, 173, 274
-Unamis, 175, 269
-Unitah Mountains, 156
-Usher, Dr., 161
-Uvaege, 69
-Uxmal sculptured tablets, 34
-
-Valdidida, 69
-Vancouver Island, Indians of, 324
-Vases, native art, 221
-Vespucci, Amerigo, 13, 74
-Vespuce, Amerike, 75
-Vethilldi, 69
-Vézère, valley of, 357, 358
-Vigfusson, Gudbrand, 62
-Vincent, Rev. J. G., 296
-Vinland, or Vineland, 41;
- origin of name, 46;
- booths in, 49;
- coast of, 54, 57, 60, 69
-Virchow, Professor, 373
-Virginia, 74
-Vogt, Dr. Carl, 341, 375, 383
-
-Wabenos, 224
-Wagner, Professor, 343, 364, 373, 375
-Wallace, A. R., 192, 349, 350, 351, 398
-Walla-walla, 227
-War-sling of the Skrælings, 67
-Webster, Daniel, 375, 376, 385
-Welcker, Professor, 355, 360, 364, 370, 373, 381
-Welsh Indians, 38
-Weston, T. C., 115
-Whale at San Diego, 127
-Whewell, 376, 385, 386
-Whipple, Lieutenant, 231, 236
-White Man’s Land, 38
-White Owl, 243
-Whitney, Professor, 16, 149, 255, 257, 288, 289, 298
-Wilde, Sir William, 183
-Wild goat, carvings of, 217
-Wilson, Thomas, 156, 165
-Wilts County Asylum, 367
-Winslow, Dr. C. F., 149
-Winthrop, Mr., 320
-Wolseley, Sir Garnet, 334
-Wright, Professor G. F., 99
-Wyandots, 103, 172, 176, 249, 276, 277, 278, 280, 283, 286, 293, 295, 305,
- 318, 321
-Wyman, Professor Jeffreys, 149, 344, 362, 375, 389, 390, 396, 399, 400,
- 401
-
-Yamasees, 274
-Yarmouth, inscribed rock at, 54, 59, 60
-Yellowstone Park, 115
-
-Zuñi Indians, 190, 244, 299, 300
-
- THE END
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Lost Atlantis and Other Ethnographic
-Studies, by Daniel Wilson
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The Lost Atlantis and Other Ethnographic Studies
-
-Author: Daniel Wilson
-
-Release Date: April 28, 2016 [EBook #51881]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LOST ATLANTIS, OTHER ETHNOGRAPHIC STUDIES ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Larry Harrison, Cindy Beyer and the online
-Project Gutenberg team at
-http://www.pgdpcanada.net with images provided by The
-Internet Archives-US
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/cover.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0000' style='width:335px;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:center;margin-top:10em;margin-bottom:15em;font-size:1.2em;'><span class='gesp'>ETHNOGRAPHIC STUDIES</span></p>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:center;margin-top:15em;font-size:.8em;'><span class='it'>Printed by R. &amp; R. Clark</span></p>
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:center;margin-top:1em;margin-bottom:1em;font-size:.6em;'>FOR</p>
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:center;margin-bottom:15em;font-size:.8em;'>DAVID DOUGLAS, EDINBURGH</p>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='lgc' style=''> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<p class='line0' style='margin-top:1em;font-size:1.8em;'><span class='gesp'>THE LOST ATLANTIS</span></p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0' style='font-size:.7em;'>AND&nbsp;&nbsp;OTHER</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0' style='margin-bottom:4em;font-size:1.3em;'>ETHNOGRAPHIC&nbsp;&nbsp;STUDIES</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0' style='font-size:.6em;'>BY</p>
-<p class='line0' style='margin-top:.5em;margin-bottom:.5em;font-size:.8em;'><span class='sc'>Sir&nbsp;&nbsp;DANIEL&nbsp;&nbsp;WILSON,&nbsp;&nbsp;LL.D.,&nbsp;&nbsp;F.R.S.E.</span></p>
-<p class='line0' style='font-size:.6em;'>PRESIDENT OF THE UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO</p>
-<p class='line0' style='font-size:.6em;'>AUTHOR OF ‘THE PREHISTORIC ANNALS OF SCOTLAND’</p>
-<p class='line0' style='font-size:.6em;'>‘PREHISTORIC MAN: THE ORIGIN OF CIVILISATION,’ ETC. ETC.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0' style='margin-top:8em;font-size:.8em;'>NEW&nbsp;&nbsp;YORK</p>
-<p class='line0' style='margin-top:.5em;margin-bottom:.5em;font-size:.8em;'>MACMILLAN&nbsp;&nbsp;AND&nbsp;&nbsp;CO.</p>
-<p class='line0' style='font-size:.8em;'>1892</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0' style='margin-bottom:2em;font-size:.6em;'><span class='it'>All rights reserved</span></p>
-</div> <!-- end rend -->
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:center;margin-top:4em;margin-bottom:2em;font-size:1.2em;'><span class='gesp'>PREFACE</span></p>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='sc'>“The</span> Preface is the most troublesome part of a book,” I have
-often heard my dear Father say; and now it falls to my
-unaccustomed pen to write a preface for him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I cannot undertake to define the aim of this book; I can
-only tell how the last work on it was done. In my Father’s
-note-book I find it described as “A few carefully studied monographs,
-linked together by a slender thread of ethnographic
-relationship.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Returning in June last from a brief visit to Montreal, with
-the first signs of illness beginning to show, he found a bundle of
-proofs waiting for him, and with the characteristic promptness
-which never let any duty wait, he set to work at once to
-correct them. “It is my last book,” he said, conscious that
-his busy brain had nearly fulfilled all its tasks; and so
-through days of rapidly increasing weakness and pain he lay
-on the sofa correcting proofs till the pen dropped from the
-hand no longer able to hold it. His mind turned to the
-book in his <span class='it'>wandering</span> thoughts from illness, and on one of
-these occasions he murmured: “Sybil will write the Preface”;
-and so I try to fulfil his wish. “Ask Mr. Douglas to correct
-the proofs himself, and to be sure to make an index,” was one
-of his last requests, thus providing for the finishing of the
-work which he could not himself finish. He has passed
-now from this world whose prehistoric story he so lovingly
-tried to decipher, and where he was ever finding traces of the
-hand of God, into that other world, “where toil shall cease
-and rest begin”; but where I doubt not he still goes on
-learning more and more, no longer seeing through a glass darkly
-but in perfect light.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The silent lips seem to speak once more in this volume—his
-last words to the public; and I commit it very
-tenderly to those who are interested in his favourite study
-of Ethnology.</p>
-
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:right;margin-right:1em;'><span class='sc'>Sybil Wilson.</span></p>
-
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:left;margin-left:1em;'><span class='sc'>Bencosie, Toronto</span>,</p>
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:left;margin-left:3em;'><span class='it'>August 1892</span>.</p>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:center;margin-top:4em;margin-bottom:1em;font-size:1.5em;'><span class='gesp'>CONTENTS</span></p>
-
-<table id='tab1' summary='' class='center'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 2em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 25em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 2em;'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle2'><span style='font-size:x-small'>PAGE</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'>1.</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle1'><span class='sc'>The Lost Atlantis</span></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle2'><a href='#Page_1'>1</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle1'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'>2.</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle1'><span class='sc'>The Vinland of the Northmen</span></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle2'><a href='#Page_37'>37</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle1'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'>3.</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle1'><span class='sc'>Trade and Commerce in the Stone Age</span></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle2'><a href='#Page_81'>81</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle1'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'>4.</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle1'><span class='sc'>Pre-Aryan American Man</span></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle2'><a href='#Page_130'>130</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle1'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'>5.</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle1'><span class='sc'>The Æsthetic Faculty in Aboriginal Races</span></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle2'><a href='#Page_185'>185</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle1'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'>6.</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle1'><span class='sc'>The Huron-Iroquois; a Typical Race</span></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle2'><a href='#Page_246'>246</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle1'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'>7.</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle1'><span class='sc'>Hybridity and Heredity</span></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle2'><a href='#Page_307'>307</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle1'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'>8.</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle1'><span class='sc'>Relative Racial Brain-Weight and Size</span></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle2'><a href='#Page_339'>339</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle1'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle1'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col2 tdStyle0' colspan='2'>INDEX</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle2'><a href='#Page_403'>403</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' title='1' id='Page_1'></span><h1><span style='font-size:larger'>THE LOST ATLANTIS</span><br/> I<br/> EARLY IDEAS</h1></div>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='sc'>The</span> legend of Atlantis, an island-continent lying in the
-Atlantic Ocean over against the Pillars of Hercules, which,
-after being long the seat of a powerful empire, was engulfed
-in the sea, has been made the basis of many extravagant
-speculations; and anew awakens keenest interest with the
-revolving centuries. The 12th of October 1892 has been
-proclaimed a World’s holiday, to celebrate its accomplished
-cycle of four centuries since Columbus set foot on the shores
-of the West. The voyage has been characterised as the most
-memorable in the annals of our race; and the century thus
-completed is richer than all before it in the transformations
-that the birth of time has disclosed since the wedding of the
-New World to the Old. The story of the Lost Atlantis is
-recorded in the <span class='it'>Timæus</span> and, with many fanciful amplifications,
-in the <span class='it'>Critias</span> of Plato. According to the dialogues, as reproduced
-there, Critias repeats to Socrates a story told him by
-his grandfather, then an old man of ninety, when he himself
-was not more than ten years of age. According to this narrative,
-Solon visited the city of Sais, at the head of the
-Egyptian delta, and there learned from the priests of the
-ancient empire of Atlantis, and of its overthrow by a convulsion
-of nature. “No one,” says Professor Jowett, in his
-critical edition of <span class='it'>The Dialogues of Plato</span>, “knew better than
-<span class='pageno' title='2' id='Page_2'></span>
-Plato how to invent ‘a noble lie’ ”; and he, unhesitatingly,
-pronounces the whole narrative a fabrication. “The world, like
-a child, has readily, and for the most part, unhesitatingly
-accepted the tale of the Island of Atlantis.” To the critical
-editor, this reception furnishes only an illustration of popular
-credulity, showing how the chance word of a poet or philosopher
-may give rise to endless historical or religious speculation.
-In the <span class='it'>Critias</span>, the legendary tale is unquestionably
-expanded into details of no possible historical significance or
-genuine antiquity. But it is not without reason, that men
-like Humboldt have recognised in the original legend the
-possible vestige of a widely-spread tradition of earliest times.
-In this respect, at any rate, I purpose here to review it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is to be noted that even in the time of Socrates, and
-indeed of the elder Critias, this Atlantis was referred to as
-the vague and inconsistent tradition of a remote past; though
-not more inconsistent than much else which the cultured
-Greeks were accustomed to receive. Mr. Hyde Clarke, in an
-“Examination of the Legend,” printed in the <span class='it'>Transactions of
-the Royal Historical Society</span>, arrives at the conclusion that
-Atlantis was the name of the king rather than of the dominion.
-But king and kingdom have ever been liable to be referred to
-under a common designation. According to the account in
-the <span class='it'>Timæus</span>, Atlantis was a continent lying over against the
-Pillars of Hercules, greater in extent than Libya and Asia
-combined; the highway to other islands and to a great ocean,
-of which the Mediterranean Sea was a mere harbour. But in
-the vagueness of all geographical knowledge in the days of
-Socrates and of Plato, this Atlantic domain is confused with
-some Iberian or western African power, which is stated to
-have been arrayed against Egypt, Hellas, and all the countries
-bordering on the Mediterranean Sea. The knowledge even of
-the western Mediterranean was then very imperfect; and, to
-the ancient Greek, the West was a region of vague mystery
-which sufficed for the localisation of all his fondest imaginings.
-There, on the far horizon, Homer pictured the Elysian plain,
-where, under a serene sky, the favourites of Zeus enjoyed
-eternal felicity; Hesiod assigned the abode of departed heroes
-to the Happy Isles beyond the western waters that engirdled
-Europe; and Seneca foretold that that mysterious ocean would
-<span class='pageno' title='3' id='Page_3'></span>
-yet disclose an unknown world which it then kept concealed.
-To the ancients, Elysium ever lay beyond the setting sun; and
-the Hesperia of the Greeks, as their geographical knowledge
-increased, continued to recede before them into the unexplored
-west.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the youth of all nations, the poet and historian are one;
-and, according to the tale of the elder Critias, the legend of
-Atlantis was derived from a poetic chronicle of Solon, whom
-he pronounced to have been one of the best of poets, as well
-as the wisest of men. The elements of oral tradition are aptly
-set forth in the dialogue which Plato puts into the mouth of
-Timæus of Locris, a Pythagorean philosopher. Solon is
-affirmed to have told the tale to his personal friend, Dropidas,
-the great-grandfather of Critias, who repeated it to his son;
-and he, eighty years thereafter, in extreme old age, told it to
-his grandson, a boy of ten, whose narrative, reproduced in
-mature years, we are supposed to read in the dialogue of the
-<span class='it'>Timæus</span>. Even those are but the later links in the traditionary
-catena. Solon himself visited Sais, a city of the
-Egyptian delta, under the protection of the goddess, Neith or
-Athene. There, when in converse with the Egyptian priests,
-he learned, for the first time, rightly to appreciate how ignorant
-of antiquity he and his countrymen were. “O Solon, Solon,”
-said an aged priest to him, “you Hellenes are ever young, and
-there is no old man who is a Hellene; there is no opinion or
-tradition of knowledge among you which is white with age.”
-Solon had told them the mythical tales of Phoroneus and
-Niobe, and of Deucalion and Pyrrha, and had attempted to
-reckon the interval by generations since the great deluge.
-But the priest of Sais replied to this that such Hellenic annals
-were children’s stories. Their memory went back but a little
-way, and recalled only the latest of the great convulsions of
-nature, by which revolutions in past ages had been wrought:
-“The memory of them is lost, because there was no written
-voice among you.” And so the venerable priest undertook to
-tell him of the social life and condition of the primitive
-Athenians 9000 years before. It is among the events of this
-older era that the overthrow of Atlantis is told: a story
-already “white with age” in the time of Socrates, 3400
-years ago. The warriors of Athens, in that elder time, were
-<span class='pageno' title='4' id='Page_4'></span>
-a distinct caste; and when the vast power of Atlantis was
-marshalled against the Mediterranean nations, Athens bravely
-repelled the invader, and gave liberty to the nations whose
-safety had been imperilled; but in the convulsion that followed,
-in which the island-continent was engulfed in the
-ocean, the warrior race of Athens also perished.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The story, as it thus reaches us, is one of the vaguest of
-popular legends, and has been transmitted to modern times in
-the most obscure of all the writings of Plato. Nevertheless,
-there is nothing improbable in the idea that it rests on some
-historic basis, in which the tradition of the fall of an Iberian,
-or other aggressive power in the western Mediterranean, is
-mingled with other and equally vague traditions of intercourse
-with a vast continent lying beyond the Pillars of Hercules.
-Mr. Hyde Clarke, in his <span class='it'>Khita and Khita-Peruvian Epoch</span>,
-draws attention to the ancient system of geography, alluded
-to by various early writers, and notably mentioned by Crates
-of Pergamos, <span class='sc'>b.c.</span> 160, which treated of the Four Worlds.
-This he connects with the statement by Mr. George Smith,
-derived from the cuneiform interpretations, that Agu, an
-ancient king of Babylonia, called himself “King of the Four
-Races.” He also assigns to it a relation with others, including
-its Inca equivalent of <span class='it'>Tavintinsuzu</span>, the Empire of the Four
-Quarters of the World. But the extravagance of regal titles
-has been the same in widely diverse ages; so that much
-caution is necessary before they can be made a safe basis for
-comprehensive generalisations. Four kings made war against
-five in the vale of Siddim; and when Lot was despoiled and
-taken captive by Chederlaomer, King of Elam, Tidal, King of
-Nations, and other regal allies, Abraham, with no further aid
-than that of his trained servants, born in his house, three
-hundred and eighteen in all, smote their combined hosts, and
-recovered the captives and the spoil. Here, at least, it is
-obvious that “the King of Nations” was somewhat on a par
-with one of the six vassal kings who rowed King Edgar on
-the River Dee. Certainly, within any early period of authentic
-history, the conceptions of the known world were reduced
-within narrow bounds; and it would be a very comprehensive
-deduction from such slight premises as the legend supplies, to
-refer it to an age of accurate geographical knowledge in which
-<span class='pageno' title='5' id='Page_5'></span>
-the western hemisphere was known as one of four worlds,
-or continents. When the Scottish poet, Dunbar, wrote of
-America, twenty years after the voyage of Columbus, he only
-knew of it as “the new-found isle.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The opinion, universally favoured in the infancy of physical
-science, of the recurrence of convulsions of nature, whereby
-nations were revolutionised, and vast empires destroyed by fire,
-or engulfed in the ocean, revived with the theories of cataclysmic
-phenomena in the earlier speculations of modern
-geology; and has even now its advocates among writers who
-have given little heed to the concurrent opinion of later scientific
-authorities. Among the most zealous advocates of the idea of
-a submerged Atlantic continent, the seat of a civilisation older
-than that of Europe, or of the old East, was the late Abbé
-Brasseur de Bourbourg. As an indefatigable and enthusiastic
-investigator, he occupies a place in the history of American
-archæology somewhat akin to that of his fellow-countryman,
-M. Boucher de Perthes, in relation to the palæontological disclosures
-of Europe. He had the undoubted merit of first
-drawing the attention of the learned world to the native transcripts
-of Maya records, the full value of which is only now
-being adequately recognised. His <span class='it'>Histoire des Nations Civilisées</span>
-aims at demonstrating from their religious myths and historical
-traditions the existence of a self-originated civilisation. In
-his subsequent <span class='it'>Quatre Lettres sur le Mexique</span>, the Abbé adopted,
-in the most literal form, the venerable legend of Atlantis,
-giving free rein to his imagination in some very fanciful
-speculations. He calls into being, “from the vasty deep,” a
-submerged continent, or, rather, extension of the present
-America, stretching eastward, and including, as he deems
-probable, the Canary Islands, and other insular survivals of
-the imaginary Atlantis. Such speculations of unregulated zeal
-are unworthy of serious consideration. But it is not to be
-wondered at that the vague legend, so temptingly set forth in
-the <span class='it'>Timæus</span>, should have kindled the imaginations of a class
-of theorists, who, like the enthusiastic Abbé, are restrained by
-no doubts suggested by scientific indications. So far from
-geology lending the slightest confirmation to the idea of an
-engulfed Atlantis, Professor Wyville Thomson has shown, in
-his <span class='it'>Depths of the Sea</span>, that while oscillations of the land have
-<span class='pageno' title='6' id='Page_6'></span>
-considerably modified the boundaries of the Atlantic Ocean,
-the geological age of its basin dates as far back, at least, as the
-later Secondary period. The study of its animal life, as revealed
-in dredging, strongly confirms this, disclosing an unbroken
-continuity of life on the Atlantic sea-bed from the
-Cretaceous period to the present time; and, as Sir Charles
-Lyell has pointed out, in his <span class='it'>Principles of Geology</span>, the entire
-evidence is adverse to the idea that the Canaries, the Madeiras,
-and the Azores, are surviving fragments of a vast submerged
-island, or continuous area of the adjacent continent. There
-are, indeed, undoubted indications of volcanic action; but
-they furnish evidence of local upheaval, not of the submergence
-of extensive continental areas.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But it is an easy, as well as a pleasant pastime, to evolve
-either a camel or a continent out of the depths of one’s own
-inner consciousness. To such fanciful speculators, the lost
-Atlantis will ever offer a tempting basis on which to found
-their unsubstantial creations. Mr. H. H. Bancroft, when
-alluding to the subject in his <span class='it'>Native Races of the Pacific States</span>,
-refers to forty-two different works for notices and speculations
-concerning Atlantis. The latest advocacy of the idea of an
-actual island-continent of the mid-Atlantic, literally engulfed
-in the ocean, within a period authentically embraced
-by historical tradition, is to be found in its most popular form
-in Mr. Ignatius Donnelly’s <span class='it'>Atlantis, the Antediluvian World</span>.
-By him, as by Abbé Brasseur, the concurrent opinions of the
-highest authorities in science, that the main features of the
-Atlantic basin have undergone no change within any recent
-geological period, are wholly ignored. To those, therefore, who
-attach any value to scientific evidence, such speculations present
-no serious claims on their study. There is, indeed, an
-idea favoured by certain students of science, who carry the
-spirit of nationality into regions ordinarily regarded as lying
-outside of any sectional pride, that, geologically speaking,
-America is the older continent. It may at least be accepted
-as beyond dispute, that that continent and the great Atlantic
-basin intervening between it and Europe are alike of a geological
-antiquity which places the age of either entirely apart
-from all speculations affecting human history. But such fancies
-are wholly superfluous. The idea of intercourse between
-<span class='pageno' title='7' id='Page_7'></span>
-the Old and the New World prior to the fifteenth century,
-passed from the region of speculation to the domain of historical
-fact, when the publication of the <span class='it'>Antiquitates Americanæ</span> and
-the <span class='it'>Grönland’s Historiske Mindesmærker</span>, by the antiquaries of
-Copenhagen, adduced contemporary authorities, and indisputably
-genuine runic inscriptions, in proof of the visits of the
-Northmen to Greenland and the mainland of North America,
-before the close of the tenth century.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The idea of pre-Columbian intercourse between Europe and
-America, is thus no novelty. What we have anew to consider
-is: whether, in its wider aspect, it is more consistent with probability
-than the revived notion of a continent engulfed in
-the Atlantic Ocean? The earliest students of American antiquities
-turned to Phœnicia, Egypt, or other old-world centres
-of early civilisation, for the source of Mexican, Peruvian, and
-Central American art or letters; and, indeed, so long as the
-unity of the human race remained unquestioned, some theory
-of a common source for the races of the Old and the New World
-was inevitable. The idea, therefore, that the new world which
-Columbus revealed, was none other than the long-lost Atlantis,
-is one that has probably suggested itself independently to many
-minds. References to America have, in like manner, been
-sought for in obscure allusions of Herodotus, Seneca, Pliny,
-and other classical writers, to islands or continents in the ocean
-which extended beyond the western verge of the world as known
-to them. That such allusions should be vague, was inevitable.
-If they had any foundation in a knowledge by elder generations
-of this western hemisphere, the tradition had come down
-to them by the oral transmissions of centuries; while their
-knowledge of their own eastern hemisphere was limited and
-very imperfect. “The Cassiterides, from which tin is brought”—assumed
-to be the British Isles,—were known to Herodotus
-only as uncertainly located islands of the Atlantic of which he
-had no direct information. When Assuryuchurabal, the founder
-of the palace at Nimrud, conquered the people who lived on
-the banks of the Orontes from the confines of Hamath to the
-sea, the spoils obtained from them included one hundred talents
-of <span class='it'>anna</span>, or tin; and the same prized metal is repeatedly
-named in cuneiform inscriptions. The people trading in tin, supposed
-to be identical with the Shirutana, were the merchants
-<span class='pageno' title='8' id='Page_8'></span>
-of the world before Tyre assumed her place as chief
-among the merchant princes of the sea. Yet already, in the
-time of Joshua, she was known as “the strong city, Tyre.”
-“Great Zidon” also is so named, along with her, when Joshua
-defines the bounds of the tribe of Asher, extending to the sea
-coast; and is celebrated by Homer for its works of art. The
-Seleucia, or Cilicia, of the Greeks was an attempted restoration
-of the ancient seaport of the Shirutana, which may have
-been an emporium of Khita merchandise; as it was, undoubtedly,
-an important place of shipment for the Phœnicians
-in their overland trade from the valley of the Euphrates. One
-favoured etymology of Britain, as the name of the islands whence
-tin was brought, is <span class='it'>barat-anna</span>, assumed to have been applied to
-them by that ancient race of merchant princes: the Cassiterides
-being the later Aryan equivalent, Gr. κασσίτεροϛ, Sansk. <span class='it'>kastira</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In primitive centuries, when ancient maritime races thus
-held supremacy in the Mediterranean Sea, voyages were undoubtedly
-made far into the Atlantic Ocean. The Phœnicians,
-who of all the nations settled on its shores lay among the
-remotest from the outlying ocean, habitually traded with
-settlements on the Atlantic. They colonised the western
-shores of the Mediterranean at a remote period; occupied
-numerous favourable trading-posts on the bays and headlands
-of the Euxine, as well as of Sicily and others of the larger
-islands; and passing beyond the straits, effected settlements
-along the coasts of Europe and Africa. According to Strabo
-(i. 48), they had factories beyond the Pillars of Hercules in
-the period immediately succeeding the Trojan war: an era
-which yearly becomes for us less mythical, and to which may
-be assigned the great development of the commercial prosperity
-of Tyre. The Phœnicians were then expanding their trading
-enterprise, and extending explorations so as to command the
-remotest available sources of wealth. The trade of Tarshish
-was for Phœnicia what that of the East has been to England
-in modern centuries. The Tartessus, on which the Arabs of
-Spain subsequently conferred the name of the Guadalquivir,
-afforded ready access to a rich mining district; and also
-formed the centre of valuable fisheries of tunny and muræna.
-By means of its navigable waters, along with those of the
-Guadina, Phœnician traders were able to penetrate far inland;
-<span class='pageno' title='9' id='Page_9'></span>
-and the colonies established at their mouths furnished fresh
-starting points for adventurous exploration along the Atlantic
-seaboard. They derived much at least of the tin, which was
-an important object of traffic, from the mines of north-west
-Spain, and from Cornwall; though, doubtless, both the tin of
-the Cassiterides and amber from the Baltic were also transported
-by overland routes to the Adriatic and the mouth of
-the Rhone. It was a Phœnician expedition which, in the
-reign of Pharaoh Necho, <span class='sc'>b.c.</span> 611-605, after the decline of
-that great maritime power, accomplished the feat of circumnavigating
-Africa by way of the Red Sea. Hanno, a
-Carthaginian, not only guided the Punic fleet round the
-parts of Libya which border on the Atlantic, but has been
-credited with reaching the Indian Ocean by the same route
-as that which Vasco de Gama successfully followed in 1497.
-The object of Hanno’s expedition, as stated in the <span class='it'>Periplus</span>,
-was to found Liby-Phœnician cities beyond the Pillars of
-Hercules. How far south his voyage actually extended along
-the African coast is matter of conjecture, or of disputed interpretation;
-for the original work is lost. It is sufficient for our
-purpose to know that he did pursue the same route which led
-in a later century to the discovery of Brazil. Aristotle applies
-the name of “Antilla” to a Carthaginian discovery; and
-Diodorus Siculus assigns to the Carthaginians the knowledge
-of an island in the ocean, the secret of which they reserved to
-themselves, as a refuge to which they could withdraw, should
-fate ever compel them to desert their African homes. It is
-far from improbable that we may identify this obscure island
-with one of the Azores, which lie 800 miles from the coast
-of Portugal. Neither Greek nor Roman writers make other
-reference to them; but the discovery of numerous Carthaginian
-coins at Corvo, the extreme north-westerly island of the group,
-leaves little room to doubt that they were visited by Punic
-voyagers. There is therefore nothing extravagant in the
-assumption that we have here the “Antilla” mentioned by
-Aristotle. While the Carthaginian oligarchy ruled, naval
-adventure was still encouraged; but the maritime era of the
-Mediterranean belongs to more ancient centuries. The Greeks
-were inferior in enterprise to the Phœnicians; while the
-Romans were essentially unmaritime; and the revival of the
-<span class='pageno' title='10' id='Page_10'></span>
-old adventurous spirit with the rise of the Venetian and
-Genoese republics was due to the infusion of fresh blood from
-the great northern home of the sea-kings of the Baltic.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The history of the ancient world is, for us, to a large
-extent, the history of civilisation among the nations around
-the Mediterranean Sea. Its name perpetuates the recognition
-of it from remote times as the great inland sea which kept
-apart and yet united, in intercourse and exchange of experience
-and culture, the diverse branches of the human family settled
-on its shores. Of the history of those nations, we only know
-some later chapters. Disclosures of recent years have startled
-us with recovered glimpses of the Khita, or Hittites, as a great
-power centred between the Euphrates and the Orontes, but
-extending into Asia Minor, and about <span class='sc'>b.c.</span> 1200 reaching
-westward to the Ægean Sea. All but their name seemed to
-have perished; and they were known only as one among
-diverse Canaanitish tribes, believed to have been displaced by
-the Hebrew inheritors of Palestine. Yet now, as Professor
-Curtius has pointed out, we begin to recognise that “one of
-the paths by which the art and civilisation of Babylonia and
-Assyria made their way to Greece, was along the great high-road
-which runs across Asia Minor”; and which the projected
-railway route through the valley of the Euphrates seeks to
-revive. For, as compared with Egypt, and the earliest nations
-of Eastern Asia, the Greeks were, indeed, children. It was to
-the Phœnicians that the ancients assigned the origin of navigation.
-Their skill as seamen was the subject of admiration
-even by the later Greeks, who owned themselves to be their
-pupils in seamanship, and called the pole-star, the Phœnician
-star. Their naval commerce is set forth in glowing rhetoric
-by the prophet Ezekiel. “O Tyrus, thou that art situate at
-the entry of the sea, a merchant of the people of many isles.
-Thy borders are in the midst of the seas. The inhabitants
-of Zidon and Arvad were thy mariners. Thy wise men, O
-Tyrus, were thy pilots. All the ships of the sea, with their
-mariners, were in thee to occupy thy merchandise.” But this
-was spoken at the close of Phœnician history, in the last days
-of Tyre’s supremacy.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Looking back then into the dim dawn of actual history,
-with whatever fresh light recent discoveries have thrown upon
-<span class='pageno' title='11' id='Page_11'></span>
-it: this, at least, seems to claim recognition from us, that in
-that remote era the eastern Mediterranean was a centre of
-maritime enterprise, such as had no equal among the nations
-of antiquity. Even in the decadence of Phœnicia, her maritime
-skill remained unmatched. Egypt and Palestine, under their
-greatest rulers, recognised her as mistress of the sea; and, as
-has been already noted, the circumnavigation of Africa—which,
-when it was repeated in the fifteenth century, was
-considered an achievement fully equalling that of Columbus,—had
-long before been accomplished by Phœnician mariners.
-Carthage inherited the enterprise of the mother country, but
-never equalled her achievements. With the fall of Carthage,
-the Mediterranean became a mere Roman lake, over which the
-galleys of Rome sailed reluctantly with her armed hosts; or
-coasting along shore, they “committed themselves to the sea,
-and loosed the rudder bands, and hoisted up the mainsail to
-the winds”; or again, “strake sail, and so were driven,” after
-the blundering fashion described in the voyage of St. Paul.
-To such a people, the memories of Punic exploration or
-Phœnician enterprise, or the vague legends of an Atlantis
-beyond the engirdling ocean, were equally unavailing. The
-narrow sea between Gaul and Britain was barrier enough to
-daunt the boldest of them from willingly encountering the
-dangers of an expedition to what seemed to them literally
-another world.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Seeing then that the first steps in navigation were taken in
-an age lying beyond all memory, and that the oldest traditions
-assign its origin to the remarkable people who figure alike in
-early sacred and profane history—in Joshua and Ezekiel, in
-Dius and Menander of Ephesus, in the Homeric poems and in
-later Greek writings,—as unequalled in their enterprise on the
-sea: what impediments existed in <span class='sc'>b.c.</span> 1400 or any earlier
-century that did not still exist in <span class='sc'>a.d.</span> 1400, to render intercourse
-between the eastern and the western hemisphere
-impossible? America was no further off from Tarshish in
-the golden age of Tyre than in that of Henry the Navigator.
-With the aid of literary memorials of the race of sea-rovers
-who carved out for themselves the Duchy of Normandy from
-the domain of Charlemagne’s heir, and spoiled the Angles and
-Saxons in their island home, we glean sufficient evidence to
-<span class='pageno' title='12' id='Page_12'></span>
-place the fact beyond all doubt that, after discovering and
-colonising Iceland and Greenland, they made their way southward
-to Labrador, and so, some way along the American coast.
-How far south their explorations actually extended, after being
-long assigned to the locality of Rhode Island, has anew excited
-interest, and is still a matter of controversy. The question is
-reviewed on a subsequent page; but its final settlement does
-not, in any degree, affect the present question. Certain it is
-that, about <span class='sc'>a.d.</span> 1000, when St. Olaf was introducing Christianity
-by a sufficiently high-handed process into the Norse
-fatherland, Leif, the son of Eric, the founder of the first
-Greenland colony, sailed from Ericsfiord, or other Greenland
-port, in quest of southern lands already reported to have been
-seen, and did land on more than one point of the North
-American coast. We know what the ships of those Norse
-rovers were: mere galleys, not larger than a good fishing
-smack, and far inferior to it in deck and rigging. For compass
-they had only the same old “Phœnician star,” which, from the
-birth of navigation, had guided the mariners of the ancient
-world over the pathless deep. The track pursued by the
-Northmen, from Norway to Iceland, and so to Greenland and
-the Labrador coast, was, doubtless, then as now, beset by fogs,
-so that “neither sun nor stars in many days appeared”;
-and they stood much more in need of compass than the
-sailors of the “Santa Maria,” the “Pinta,” and the “Nina,”
-the little fleet with which Columbus sailed from the Andalusian
-port of Palos, to his first discovered land of “Guanahani,”
-variously identified among the islands of the American Archipelago.
-Yet, notwithstanding all the advantages of a southern
-latitude, with its clearer skies, we have to remember that the
-“Santa Maria,” the only decked vessel of the expedition, was
-stranded; and the “Pinta” and “Nina,” on which Columbus
-and his party had to depend for their homeward voyage, were
-mere coasting craft, the one with a crew of thirty, and the
-other with twenty-four men, with only <span class='it'>latine</span> sails. As to the
-compass, we perceive how little that availed, on recalling the
-fact that the Portuguese admiral, Pedro Alvares de Cabral,
-only eight years later, when following on the route of Vasco de
-Gama, was carried by the equatorial current so far out of his
-intended course that he found himself in sight of a strange
-<span class='pageno' title='13' id='Page_13'></span>
-land, in 10° S. lat., and so accidentally discovered Brazil and the
-new world of the west, not by means of the mariner’s compass,
-but in spite of its guidance. It is thus obvious that the
-discovery of America would have followed as a result of the
-voyage of Vasco de Gama round the Cape, wholly independent
-of that of Columbus. What befell the Portuguese admiral of
-King Manoel, in <span class='sc'>a.d.</span> 1500, was an experience that might just
-as readily have fallen to the lot of the Phœnician admiral of
-Pharaoh Necho in <span class='sc'>b.c.</span> 600, to the Punic Hanno, or other early
-navigators; and may have repeatedly occurred to Mediterranean
-adventurers on the Atlantic in older centuries. On the news
-of de Cabral’s discovery reaching Portugal, the King despatched
-the Florentine, Amerigo Vespucci, who explored the coast of
-South America, prepared a map of the new-found world, and
-thereby wrested from Columbus the honour of giving his name
-to the continent which he discovered.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When we turn from the myths and traditions of the Old
-World to those of the New, we find there traces that seem not
-unfairly interpretable into the American counterpart of the
-legend of Atlantis. The chief seat of the highest native
-American civilisation, is neither Mexico nor Peru, but Central
-America. The nations of the Maya stock, who inhabit
-Yucatan, Guatemala, and the neighbouring region, were
-peculiarly favourably situated; and they appear to have
-achieved the greatest progress among the communities of
-Central America. They may not unfitly compare with the
-ancient dwellers in the valley of the Euphrates, from the grave
-mounds of whose buried cities we are now recovering the
-history of ages that had passed into oblivion before the Father
-of History assumed the pen. Tested indeed by intervening
-centuries their monuments are not so venerable; but, for
-America’s chroniclings, they are more prehistoric than the
-disclosures of Assyrian mounds. The cities of Central
-America were large and populous, and adorned with edifices,
-even now magnificent in their ruins. Still more, the Mayas
-were a lettered people, who, like the Egyptians, recorded in
-elaborate sculptured hieroglyphics the formulæ of history and
-creed. Like them, too, they wrote and ciphered; and appear,
-indeed, to have employed a comprehensive system of computing
-time and recording dates, which, it cannot be doubted, will be
-<span class='pageno' title='14' id='Page_14'></span>
-sufficiently mastered to admit of the decipherment of their
-ancient records. The Mayas appear, soon after the Spanish
-Conquest, to have adopted the Roman alphabet, and employed
-it in recording their own historical traditions and religious
-myths, as well as in rendering into such written characters
-some of the ancient national documents. Those versions of
-native myth and history survive, and attention is now being
-directed to them. The most recent contribution from this
-source is <span class='it'>The Annals of the Cakchiquels</span>, by Dr. D. G. Brinton,
-a carefully edited and annotated translation of a native legal
-document or <span class='it'>titulo</span>, in which, soon after the Conquest, the heir
-of an ancient Maya family set forth the evidence of his claim
-to the inheritance. Along with this may be noted another
-work of the same class: <span class='it'>Titre Généalogique des Seigneurs de
-Totonicapan. Traduit de l’Espagnol par M. de Charencey.</span>
-These two works independently illustrate the same great
-national event. In one, a prince of the Cakchiquel nation, tells
-of the overthrow of the Quiché power by his people; and in
-the other a Quiché seignior, one of the “Lords of Totonicapan,”
-describes it from his own point of view. Both were of the
-same Maya stock, in what is now the State of Guatemala.
-Each nation had a capital adorned with temples and palaces,
-the splendour of which excited the wonder of the Spaniards;
-and both preserved traditions of the migration of their ancestors
-from Tula, a mythical land from which they came across the
-water.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Such traditions of migration meet us on many sides.
-Captain Cook found among the mythological traditions of
-Tahiti, a vague legend of a ship that came out of the ocean,
-and seemed to be the dim record of ancestral intercourse with
-the outer world. So also, the Aztecs had the tradition of the
-golden age of Anahuac; and of Quetzalcoatl, their instructor
-in agriculture, metallurgy and the arts of government. He
-was of fair complexion, with long dark hair, and flowing beard:
-all, characteristics foreign to their race. When his mission
-was completed, he set sail for the mysterious shores of
-Tlapallan; and on the appearance of the ships of Cortes, the
-Spaniards were believed to have returned with the divine
-instructor of their forefathers, from the source of the rising
-sun.
-<span class='pageno' title='15' id='Page_15'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>What tradition hints at, physiology confirms. The races
-of America differ less in physical character from those of Asia,
-than do the races either of Africa or Europe. The American
-Indian is a Mongol; and though marked diversities are traceable
-throughout the American continent, the range of variation
-is much less than in the eastern hemisphere. The western
-continent appears to have been peopled by repeated migrations
-and by diverse routes; but when we attempt to estimate any
-probable date for its primeval settlement, evidence wholly
-fails. Language proves elsewhere a safe guide. It has
-established beyond question some long-forgotten relationship
-between the Aryans of India and Persia and those of Europe; it
-connects the Finn and Lapp with their Asiatic forefathers; it
-marks the independent origin of the Basques and their priority
-to the oldest Aryan intruders; it links together widely diverse
-branches of the great Semitic family. Can language tell us of
-any such American affinities, or of traces of Old World congeners,
-in relation to either civilised Mayas and Peruvians, or
-to the forest and prairie races of the northern continent?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>With the millions of America’s coloured population, of
-African blood and yet speaking Aryan languages, the American
-comparative philologist can scarcely miss the significance
-of the warning that linguistic and ethnical classifications by no
-means necessarily imply the same thing. Nevertheless, without
-overlooking this distinction, the ethnical significance of the
-evidence which comparative philology supplies cannot be
-slighted in any question relative to prehistoric relations
-between the Old World and the New. What then can philology
-tell us? There is one answer, at the least, which the
-languages of America give, that fully accords with the legend,
-“white with age,” that told of an island-continent in the
-Atlantic Ocean with which the nations around the Mediterranean
-once held intercourse. None of them indicates any
-trace of immigration within the period of earliest authentic
-history. Those who attach significance to the references in
-the <span class='it'>Timæus</span> to political relations common to Atlantis and
-parts of Libya and Europe; or who, on other grounds, look
-with favour on the idea of early intercourse between the
-Mediterranean and the western continent, have naturally
-turned to the Eskuara of the Basques. It is invariably
-<span class='pageno' title='16' id='Page_16'></span>
-recognised as the surviving representative of languages spoken
-by the Allophyliæ of Europe before the intrusion of Aryans.
-The forms of its grammar differ widely from those of any
-Semitic, or Indo-European tongue, placing it in the same class
-with Mongol, East African, and American languages. Here,
-therefore, is a tempting glimpse of possible affinities; and
-Professor Whitney, accordingly, remarks in his <span class='it'>Life and Growth
-of Languages</span>, that the Basque “forms a suitable stepping-stone
-from which to enter the peculiar linguistic domain of the New
-World, since there is no other dialect of the Old World which
-so much resembles in structure the American languages.” But
-this glimpse of possible relationship has proved, thus far,
-illusory. In their morphological character, certain American
-and Asiatic languages have a common agglutinative structure,
-which in the former is developed into their characteristic
-polysynthetic attribute. With this, the Eskuarian system of
-affixes corresponds. But beyond the general structure, there
-is no such evidence of affinity, either in the vocabularies or
-grammar, as direct affiliation might be expected to show.
-Elements common to the Anglo-American of the nineteenth
-century and the Sanskrit-speaking race beyond the Indus, in
-the era of Alexander of Macedon, are suggested at once by the
-grammatical structure of their languages; whereas there is
-nothing in the resemblance between the Basque and any of
-the North American languages that is not compatible with a
-“stepping-stone” from Asia to America by the islands of the
-Pacific. The most important of all the native American
-languages in their bearing on this interesting inquiry—those
-of Central America,—are only now receiving adequate attention.
-Startling evidence may yet reward the diligence of students;
-but, so far as language furnishes any clue to affinity of race,
-no American language thus far discloses such a relationship,
-as, for example, enabled Dr. Pritchard to suggest that the
-western people of Europe, to whom the Greeks gave the
-collective name of Kέλται, and whose languages had been
-assumed by all previous ethnologists as furnishing evidence
-that they were precursors of the Aryan immigrants, in reality
-justified their classification in the same stock.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But while thus far, the evidence of language is, at best,
-vague and indefinite in its response to the inquiry for proofs
-<span class='pageno' title='17' id='Page_17'></span>
-of relationship of the races of America to those of the Old
-World; physiological comparisons lend no confirmation to the
-idea of an indigenous native race, with special affinities and
-adaptation to its peculiar environment, and with languages all
-of one class, the ramifications from a single native stem. So
-far as physical affinities can be relied upon, the man of
-America, in all his most characteristic racial diversities, is of
-Asiatic origin. His near approximation to the Asiatic Mongol
-is so manifest as to have led observers of widely different
-opinions in all other respects, to concur in classing both under
-the same great division: the Mongolian of Pickering, the
-American Mongolidæ of Latham, the Mongoloid of Huxley.
-Professor Flower, in an able discussion of the varieties of the
-human species, addressed to the Anthropological Institute of
-Great Britain in 1885, unhesitatingly classes the Eskimo as
-the typical North Asiatic Mongol. In other American races
-he notes as distinctive features the characteristic form of the
-nasal bones, the well-developed superciliary ridge, and retreating
-forehead; but the resemblance is so obvious in
-many other respects, that he finally includes them all
-among the members of the Mongolian type. If, then,
-the American Mongol came originally from Asia, or
-sprung from the common stock of which the Asiatic
-Mongol is the typical representative, within any such
-period as even earliest Phœnician history would embrace,
-much more definite traces of affinity are to be looked
-for in his language than mere correspondence in the
-agglutination characteristic of a very widely diffused
-class of speech. But we, thus far, look in vain
-for traces of a common genealogy such as those which, on
-the one hand, correlate the Semitic and Aryan families of
-Asia and Europe with parent stocks of times anterior to
-history, and on the other, with ramifications of modern
-centuries. We have, moreover, to deal mainly with the
-languages of uncivilised races. To the continent north of the
-Gulf of Mexico, the grand civilising art of the metallurgist
-remained to the last unknown; and in Mexico, it appears as a
-gift of recent origin, derived from Central America. The
-Asiatic origin of the art of Tubal-cain has, indeed, been pretty
-generally assumed, both for Central and Southern America;
-<span class='pageno' title='18' id='Page_18'></span>
-but by mere inference. In doing so, we are carried back to
-some mythic Quetzalcoatl: for neither the metallurgist nor
-his art was introduced in recent centuries. Assuming, for the
-sake of argument, the dispersion of a common population of
-Asia and America, already familiar with the working of metals,
-and with architecture, sculpture and other kindred arts, at a
-date coeval with the founding of Tyre, “the daughter of Sidon,”
-what help does language give us in favour of such a postulate?
-We have great language groups, such as the Huron-Iroquois,
-extending of old from the St. Lawrence to North Carolina;
-the Algonkin, from Hudson Bay to South Carolina; the
-Dakotan, from the Mississippi to the Rocky Mountains; the
-Athabascan, from the Eskimo frontier, within the Arctic circle,
-to New Mexico; and the Tinné family of languages west of the
-Rocky Mountains, from the Youkon and Mackenzie rivers, far
-south on the Pacific slope. With those, as with the more cultured
-languages, or rather languages of the more cultured races, of
-Central and Southern America, elaborate comparisons have
-been made with vocabularies of Asiatic languages; but the
-results are, at best, vague. Curious points of agreement have,
-indeed, been demonstrated, inviting to further research; but
-as yet the evidence of relationship mainly rests on correspondence
-in structure. The agglutinative suffixes are common
-to the Eskimo and many American Indian tongues. Dr. H.
-Rink describes the polysynthetic process in the Eskimo language
-as founded on radical words, to which additional or imperfect
-words, or affixes, are attached; and on the inflexion, which, for
-transitive verbs, indicates subject as well as object, likewise by
-addition. But, while Professor Flower unhesitatingly characterises
-the Eskimo as belonging to the typical North Asiatic
-Mongols; he, at the same time, speaks of them as almost as
-perfectly isolated in their Arctic home “as an island population.”
-Nevertheless, the same structure is common to their
-language and to those of the great North American families
-already named. All alike present, in an exaggerated form, the
-characteristic structure of the Ural-Altaic or Turanian group of
-Asiatic languages.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Race-type corresponds in the Old and New World. A
-comparison of languages by means of the vocabularies of the
-two continents, yields no such correspondence. All the more,
-<span class='pageno' title='19' id='Page_19'></span>
-therefore, is the American student of comparative philology
-stimulated to investigate the significance of the polysynthetic
-characteristic found to pertain to so many—though by no
-means to all—of the languages of this continent. The
-relationship which it suggests to the agglutinative languages
-of Asia, furnishes a subject of investigation not less interesting
-to American students, alike of the science of language, and
-of the whole comprehensive questions which anthropology
-embraces, than the relations of the Romance languages of
-Europe to the parent Latin; or of Latin itself, and all the
-Aryan languages, ancient and modern, not only to Sanskrit
-and Zend, but to the indeterminate stock which furnished the
-parent roots, the grammatical forms, and that whole class of
-words still recognisable as the common property of the whole
-Aryan family. Sanskrit was a dead language three thousand
-years ago; the English language, as such, cannot claim to
-have endured much more than fourteen centuries, yet both
-partake of the same common property of numerals and familiar
-terms existing under certain modifications in Sanskrit, Greek,
-Latin, Slavonic, Celtic, German, Anglo-Saxon, and in all the
-Romance languages. Thus far the American philologist has
-been unable to show any such genealogical relationship pervading
-the native languages; or to recover specific evidence
-of affinities to languages, and so to races of other continents.
-There are, indeed, linguistic families, such as some already
-referred to, indicating a common descent among widely dispersed
-tribes; but this has its chief interest in relation to
-another aspect of the question.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Professor Max Müller has drawn attention to the tendency
-of the languages of America towards an endless multiplication
-of distinct dialects. Those again have been grouped by the
-synthetic process of Hervas into eleven families: seven for the
-northern continent, and four for South America. But we are
-as yet only on the threshold of this important branch of
-research. In two papers contributed by M. Lucien Adam to
-the <span class='it'>Congrès International des Americanistes</span>, he gives the
-results of a careful examination of sixteen languages of North
-and South America; and arrives at the conclusion that they
-belong to a number of independent families as essentially
-distinct as they would have been “had there been primitively
-<span class='pageno' title='20' id='Page_20'></span>
-several human pairs.” Dr. Brinton, one of the highest
-authorities on any question connected with native American
-languages, contributed a paper to the <span class='it'>American Antiquarian</span>
-(Jan. 1886), “On the Study of the Nahuatl Language.” This
-language, which is popularly known as Aztec, he strongly
-commends to the study of American philologists. It is one
-of the most completely organised of Indian languages, has
-a literature of considerable extent and variety, and is still in
-use by upwards of half a million of people. It is from this
-area, southward through Central America, and in the great
-seat of native South American civilisation, that we can alone
-hope to recover direct evidence of ancient intercourse between
-the Old and the New World. But, here again, the complexities
-of language seem to grow apace. In Dr. Brinton’s <span class='it'>Notes on
-the Mangue, an extinct Language formerly spoken in Nicaragua</span>,
-he states, as a result of his later studies, that the belief
-which he once entertained of some possible connection between
-this dialect and the Aymara of Peru, has not been confirmed
-on further examination. This, therefore, tends to sustain the
-prevailing opinion of scholars that there is no direct affiliation
-between the languages of North and South America. All this
-is suggestive either of an idea, such as that which Agassiz
-favoured in his system of natural provinces of the animal
-world, in relation to different types of man, on which he
-based the conclusion that the diverse varieties of American
-man originated in various centres, and had been distributed
-from them over the entire continent; or we must assume
-immigration from different foreign centres. Accepting the
-latter as the more tenable proposition, I long ago sketched
-a scheme of immigration such as seemed to harmonise with
-the suggestive, though imperfect evidence. This assumed the
-earliest current of population, in its progress from a supposed
-Asiatic cradleland, to have spread through the islands of the
-Pacific, and reached the South American continent before any
-excess of population had diffused itself into the inhospitable
-northern steppes of Asia. By an Atlantic oceanic migration,
-another wave of population occupied the Canaries, Madeiras,
-and the Azores, and so passed to the Antilles, Central America,
-and probably by the Cape Verdes, or, guided by the more
-southern equatorial current, to Brazil. Latest of all, Behring
-<span class='pageno' title='21' id='Page_21'></span>
-Strait and the North Pacific Islands may have become the
-highway for a migration by which certain striking diversities
-among nations of the northern continent, including the conquerors
-of the Mexican plateau, are most easily accounted
-for.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is not necessary to include in the question here discussed,
-the more comprehensive one of the existence of man
-in America contemporary with the great extinct animals of the
-Quaternary Period; though the acknowledged affinities of
-Asiatic and American anthropology, taken in connection with
-the remoteness of any assignable period for migration from Asia
-to the American continent, renders it far from improbable that
-the latest oscillations of land may here also have exercised an
-influence. The present soundings of Behring Strait, and the
-bed of the sea extending southward to the Aleutian Islands,
-entirely accord with the assumption of a former continuity of
-land between Asia and America. The idea to which the
-speculations of Darwin, founded on his observations during the
-voyage of the ‘Beagle’ gave rise, of a continuous subsidence
-of the Pacific Ocean, also favoured the probability of greater
-insular facilities for trans-oceanic migration at the supposed
-period of the peopling of America from Asia. But more
-recent explorations, and especially those connected with the
-‘Challenger’ expedition, fail to confirm the old theory of the
-origin of the coral islands of the Pacific; and in any view of
-the case, we must be content to study the history of existing
-races, alike of Europe and America, apart from questions
-relating to palæocosmic man. If the vague legend of the
-lost Atlantis embodies any trace of remotest historical tradition,
-it belongs to a modern era compared with the men either
-of the European drift, or of the post-glacial deposits of the
-Delaware and the auriferous gravels of California. When resort
-is had to comparative philology, it is manifest that we must be
-content to deal with a more recent era than contemporaries of
-the Mastodon, and their congeners of Europe’s Mammoth and
-Reindeer periods, notwithstanding the fact that the modern
-representatives of the latter have been sought within the
-American Arctic circle.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Such evidence as a comparison of languages thus far
-supplies, lends more countenance to the idea of migration
-<span class='pageno' title='22' id='Page_22'></span>
-through the islands of the Pacific, than to such a route from
-the Mediterranean as is implied in any significance attached
-to the legend of Atlantis. As to the Behring Strait route,
-present ethnology and philology point rather to an overflow
-of Arctic American population into Asia. Gallatin was the
-first to draw attention to certain analogies in the structure of
-Polynesian and American languages, as deserving of investigation;
-and pointed out the peculiar mode of expressing the
-tense, mood, and voice of the verb, by affixed particles, and
-the value given to place over time, as indicated in the predominant
-locative verbal form. Such are to be looked for
-with greater probability among the languages of South America;
-but the substitution of affixed particles for inflections, especially
-in expressing the direction of action in relation to the speaker,
-is common to the Polynesian and the Oregon languages, and
-has analogies in the Cherokee. The distinction between the
-inclusive and exclusive pronoun <span class='it'>we</span>, according as it means
-“you and I,” or “they and I,” etc., is as characteristic of the
-Maori as of the Ojibway. Other observations of more recent
-date have still further tended to countenance the recognition of
-elements common to the languages of Polynesia and America;
-and so to point to migration by the Pacific to the western
-continent.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But this idea of a migration through the islands of the
-Pacific receives curious confirmation from another source. In
-an ingenious paper on “The Origin of Primitive Money,”<a id='r1'/><a href='#f1' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[1]</span></sup></a>
-originally read at the meeting of the British Association at
-Montreal in 1884, Mr. Horatio Hale shows that there is good
-reason for believing that the most ancient currency in China
-consisted of disks and slips of tortoise shell. The fact is stated
-in the great Chinese encyclopædia of the Emperor Kang-he,
-who reigned in the early years of the eighteenth century; and
-the Chinese annalists assert that metal coins have been in use
-from the time of Fuh-he, about <span class='sc'>b.c.</span> 2950. Without attempting
-to determine the specific accuracy of Chinese chronology,
-it is sufficient to note here that the most ancient form of
-Chinese copper cash is the disk, perforated with a square hole,
-so as to admit of the coins being strung together. This, which
-corresponds in form to the large perforated shell-disks, or native
-<span class='pageno' title='23' id='Page_23'></span>
-currency of the Indians of California, and with specimens
-recovered from ancient mounds, Mr. Hale regards as the later
-imitation in metal of the original Chinese shell money. A
-similar shell-currency, as he shows, is in use among many
-islanders of the Pacific; and he traces it from the Loo-Choo
-Islands, across the vast archipelago, through many island
-groups, to California; and then overland, with the aid of
-numerous disclosures from ancient mounds, to the Atlantic
-coast, where the Indians of Long Island were long noted for
-its manufacture in the later form of wampum. “The natives
-of Micronesia,” says Mr. Hale, who, it will be remembered,
-records the results of personal observation, “in character,
-usages, and language, resemble to a certain extent the nations
-of the southern and eastern Pacific groups, which are included
-in the designation of Polynesia, but with some striking differences,
-which careful observers have ascribed, with great probability,
-to influences from north-eastern Asia. They are noted
-for their skill in navigation. They have well-rigged vessels,
-exceeding sixty feet in length. They sail by the stars, and
-are accustomed to take long voyages.” To such voyagers, the
-Pacific presents no more formidable impediments to oceanic
-enterprise than did the Atlantic to the Northmen of the tenth
-century.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Throughout the same archipelago, modern exploration is
-rendering us familiar with examples of remarkable stone
-structures and colossal sculptured figures, such as those from
-Easter Island now in the British Museum. Rude as they
-undoubtedly are, they are highly suggestive of an affinity to
-the megalithic sculptures and cyclopean masonry of Peru.
-Monuments of this class were noted long ago by Captain
-Beechy on some of the islands nearest the coasts of Chili and
-Peru. Since then the megalithic area has been extended by
-their discovery in other island groups lying towards the continent
-of Asia.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Another subsidiary class of evidence of a different kind,
-long since noted by me, gives additional confirmation to this
-recovered trail of ancient migration through the islands of the
-Pacific to the American continent. The practice to which the
-Flathead Indians of Oregon and British Columbia owe their
-name, the compressed skulls from Peruvian cemeteries, and the
-<span class='pageno' title='24' id='Page_24'></span>
-widely diffused evidence of the prevalence of such artificial
-malformation among many American tribes, combine to indicate
-it as one of the most characteristic American customs.
-Yet the evidence is abundant which shows it not only as a
-practice among rude Asiatic Mongol tribes of primitive centuries;
-but proves that it was still in use among the Huns and
-Avars who contended with the Barbarians from the Baltic for
-the spoils of the decaying Roman empire. Nor was it merely
-common to tribes of both continents. It furnishes another
-link in the chain of evidence of ancient migration from Asia
-to America; as is proved by its practice in some of the islands
-of the Pacific, as described by Dr. Pickering,<a id='r2'/><a href='#f2' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[2]</span></sup></a> and since
-abundantly confirmed by the forms of Kanaka skulls. By
-following up the traces of this strange custom, perpetuated
-among the tribes on the Pacific coasts both of Northern and
-Southern America to our own day, we thus once more retrace
-the steps of ancient wanderers, and are carried back to centuries
-when the Macrocephali of the Euxine attracted the observant
-eye of Hippocrates, and became familiar to Strabo, Pliny, and
-Pomponius Mela.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But the wanderings among the insular races of the Pacific
-are not limited to such remote eras. Later changes are also
-recorded by other evidence. The direct relationship of existing
-Polynesian languages is not Mongol but Malay; but this is
-the intrusive element of a time long subsequent to the growth
-of characteristic features which still perpetuate traces of Polynesian
-and American affinities. The number and diversity of
-the languages of the continent of America, and their essentially
-native vocabularies, prove that the latter have been in prolonged
-process of development, free from contact with languages
-which appear to have been still modelling themselves according
-to the same plan of thought in many scattered islands of the
-Pacific.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The remarkable amount of culture in the languages of some
-of the barbarous nations of North America, traceable, apparently,
-to the important part which the orator played in their
-deliberative assemblies, has not unnaturally excited surprise:
-but in any attempt to recover the history of the New World by
-the aid of philology we must deal with the languages of its
-<span class='pageno' title='25' id='Page_25'></span>
-civilised races. Among those the Nahuatl or Aztec has been
-appealed to; and the Mayas have been noted as a lettered
-people whose hieroglyphic records, and later transcripts of
-written documents, are now the object of intelligent investigation
-both by European and American philologists. The Maya
-language strikingly contrasts, in its soft, vocalic forms, with
-the languages of nations immediately to the north of its native
-area. It is that which, according to Stephens, was affirmed to
-be still spoken by a living race in a region beyond the Great
-Sierra, extending to Yucatan and the Mexican Gulf. Others
-among the cultured native languages which seem to invite
-special study are the Aymara and the Quichua. Of these, the
-latter was the classical language of South America, wherein,
-according to its native historians, the Peruvian chroniclers and
-poets incorporated the national legends. It may be described
-as having occupied a place under Inca rule analogous to that
-of the Norman French in England from the eleventh to the
-thirteenth century. To those ancient, cultured languages of
-the seats of an indigenous civilisation, and with a literature
-of their own, attention is now happily directed. The students
-of American ethnology begin to realise that the buried mounds
-of Assyria are not richer in discoveries relative to the ancient
-history of Asia than are the monuments, the hieroglyphic
-records, and the languages of Central America and Peru, in
-relation to a native social life which long flourished as a product
-of their own West. To this occidental Assyria we have
-to look for an answer to many inquiries, especially interesting
-to the intrusive occupants of the western continent. If its
-architecture and sculpture, and the hieroglyphic records with
-which they are enriched, are modifications of a prehistoric
-Asiatic civilisation, it is here that the evidence is to be looked
-for; and if the arts of the sculptor and architect were brought
-to the continent of America by wanderers from an Asiatic
-fatherland, then those of the potter and of the metallurgist will
-also prove to be an inheritance from the old Asiatic hive of
-the nations.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>From the evidence thus far adduced it appears that ethnically
-the American is Mongol, and by the agglutinative
-element in many of the native languages may be classed as
-Turanian. The Finnic hypothesis of Rask, however much
-<span class='pageno' title='26' id='Page_26'></span>
-modified by later reconsideration of the question of the origin of
-the Aryans, as well as the European melanochroic Metis of
-Huxley, pertains to a prehistoric era of which the Finns and
-the Basques are assumed to be survivals; and to that elder
-era, rather than to any date within the remotest limits of
-authentic history, the languages of America seem to refer us
-in the search for any common origin with those of the eastern
-hemisphere. But a zealous comparative philologist, already
-referred to, has sought for linguistic traces of relationship
-between the Old and the New World which, if confirmed,
-would better harmonise with the traditions of intercourse
-between the maritime nations of the eastern Mediterranean
-and a continent lying outside of the Pillars of Hercules. In
-his investigations he aims at determining the relations of the
-Aztec or Nahuatl culture and language to those of Asia.
-Humboldt long ago claimed for much of the former an Old
-World derivation. It seems premature to attempt to deduce
-any comprehensive results from the meagre data thus far
-gathered. But the author of <span class='it'>The Khita and Khita-Peruvian
-Epoch</span>, in tracing the progress of his Sumerian race, assigns
-an interval of 4000 years since their settlement in
-Babylonia and India. In like manner, on the assumption of
-their migration from a common Asiatic centre, which the
-division of Western and Eastern Sumerian in pronouns and
-other details is thought to indicate, Peru, it is conceived, may
-have been reached by a migratory wave of earlier movement,
-from 4000 to 5000 years ago. Mr. Hyde Clarke indeed
-conceives that it is quite within compass that the same great
-wave of migration which passed over India and Babylonia,
-continued to propagate its centrifugal force, and that by its
-means Peru was reached within the last 3000 years.
-But, whatever intercourse may possibly have then been carried
-on between the Old and the New World, it must be obvious,
-on mature reflection, that so recent a date for the peopling of
-South America from Asia is as little reconcilable with the very
-remote traces of linguistic affinity thus far adduced, as it is
-with any fancied relationship with a lost Atlantis of the elder
-world. The enduring affinities of long-parted languages
-of the Old World tell a very different tale. With the
-comparative philologist, as with the archæologist, time is
-<span class='pageno' title='27' id='Page_27'></span>
-more and more coming to be recognised as an all-important
-factor.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But, leaving the estimate of centuries out of consideration,
-in the researches into the origin of the peculiar native civilisation
-of America here referred to, the recently deciphered
-Akkad is accepted as the typical language of the Sumerian
-class. This is assumed to have started from High Asia, and
-to have passed on to Babylonia; while another branch diffused
-itself by India and Indo-China, and thence, by way of the
-islands of the Pacific, reached America. Hence, in an illustrative
-table of Sumerian words arranged under four heads, as
-Western, Indo-Chinese, Peruvian, and Mexican, etc., it is noted
-that “while in some cases a root may be traced throughout, it
-will be seen that more commonly the western and American
-roots or types, cross in the Indo-Chinese region.” But another
-and older influence, related to the Agaw of the Nile region, is
-also traced in the Guarani, Omagua, and other languages of
-South America, indicating evidences of more remote relations
-with the Old World, and with the African continent. This is
-supposed to have been displaced by a Sumerian migration by
-which the Aymara domination was established in Peru, and
-the Maya element introduced into Yucatan. Those movements
-are assumed to belong to an era of civilisation, during which
-the maritime enterprise of the Pacific may have been carried
-on upon a scale unknown to the most adventurous of modern
-Malay navigators, notwithstanding the essentially maritime
-character by which the race is still distinguished. All this
-implies that the highway to the Pacific was familiar to both
-continents; and hence a second migration is recognised, in
-certain linguistic relations, between the Siamese and other
-languages of Indo-China, and the Quichua and Aztec of Peru
-and Mexico. But the problem of the origin of the races of
-the western continent, and of the sources of its native civilisation,
-is still in that preliminary stage in which the accumulation
-of materials on which future induction may be based is of
-more value than the most comprehensive generalisations.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The vastness of the American twin continents, with their
-Atlantic and Pacific seaboard reaching from the Arctic well-nigh
-to the Antarctic circle, furnishes a tempting stimulus to
-theories of migration on the grandest scale, and to the assumption
-<span class='pageno' title='28' id='Page_28'></span>
-of comprehensive schemes of international relation in
-prehistoric centuries. But they are not more substantial than
-the old legend of Atlantis. The best that can be said of them
-is that here, at any rate, are lines of research in the prosecution
-of which American ethnologists may employ their learning
-and acumen encouraged by the hope of yet revealing a past
-not less marvellous, and possessing a more personal interest,
-than all which geology has recovered from the testimony of
-the rocks. But before such can be more than dimly guessed
-at, the patient diligence of many students will be needed to
-accumulate the needful materials. Nor can we afford to delay
-the task. The Narraganset Bible, the work of Eliot, the
-apostle of the Indians, is the memorial of a race that has
-perished; while other nations and languages have disappeared
-since his day, with no such invaluable record of their character.
-Mr. Horatio Hale published in the <span class='it'>Proceedings of the American
-Philosophical Society</span>, in 1883, a paper on the “Tutelo Tribe
-and Language,” derived from Nikonha, the last survivor of a
-once powerful tribe of North Carolina. To Dr. Brinton, we
-owe the recent valuable notes on the Mangue, another extinct
-language. On the North-western Canadian prairies the buffalo
-has disappeared, and the Indian must follow. On all hands,
-we are called upon to work diligently while it is yet time, in
-order to accumulate the materials out of which the history of
-the western hemisphere is to be evolved.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It accords with the idea of Polynesian genealogy, that
-indications suggestive of grammatical affinity have been noted
-in languages of South America, in their mode of expressing the
-tense of the verb; in the formation of causative, reciprocal,
-potential, and locative verbs by affixes; and in the general
-system of compound word structure. The incorporation of the
-particle with the verbal root, appears to embody the germ of
-the more comprehensive American holophrasms. Such affinities
-point to others more markedly Asiatic; for analogies recognised
-between the languages of the Deccan and those of the Polynesian
-group in relation to the determinative significance of
-the formative particles on the verbal root, reappear in some of
-the characteristic peculiarities of American languages. On this
-subject, the Rev. Richard Garnett remarked, in a communication
-to the Philological Society, that most of the native American
-<span class='pageno' title='29' id='Page_29'></span>
-languages of which we have definite information, bear a general
-analogy alike to the Polynesian family and to the languages of the
-Deccan, in their methods of distinguishing the various modifications
-of time; and he adds: “We may venture to affirm, in
-general terms, that a South American verb is constructed
-precisely as those in the Tamil and other languages of
-Southern India; consisting, like them, of a verbal root, a
-second element defining the time of the action, and a third
-denoting the subject or person.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So far it becomes apparent that the evidence, derived alike
-from language and from other sources, points to the isolation
-of the American continent through unnumbered ages. The
-legend of the lost Atlantis is true in this, if in nothing else,
-that it relegates the knowledge of the world beyond the
-Atlantic, by the maritime races of the Mediterranean, to a time
-already of hoar antiquity in the age of Socrates, or even of
-Solon. But at a greatly later date the Caribbean Sea was
-scarcely more a mystery to the dwellers on the shores of the
-Ægean, than was the Baltic or the North Sea. Herodotus,
-indeed, expressly affirms his disbelief in “a river, called by
-the barbarians, Eridanus, which flows into a northern sea, and
-from which there is a report that amber is wont to come.”
-Nevertheless, we learn from him of Greek traders exchanging
-personal ornaments and woven stuffs for the furs and amber of
-the North. They ascended the Dneiper as far as Gerrhos,
-a trading-post, forty days’ journey inland; and the tokens of
-their presence there have been recovered in modern times.
-Not only hoards of Greek coins, minted in the fifth century
-<span class='sc'>b.c.</span>, but older golden gryphons of Assyrian workmanship have
-been recovered during the present century, near Bromberg in
-Posen, and at Kiev on the Dneiper. As also, afar on the most
-northern island of the Azores, hoards of Carthaginian coins
-have revealed traces of the old Punic voyager there; if still
-more ancient voyagers from Sidon, Tyre, or Seleucia, did find
-their way in some forgotten century to lands that lay beyond
-the waste of waters which seemed to engirdle their world:
-similar evidence may yet be forthcoming among the traces of
-ancient native civilisation in Central or Southern America.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But also the carving of names and dates, and other graphic
-memorials of the passing wayfarer, is no mere modern custom.
-<span class='pageno' title='30' id='Page_30'></span>
-When the sites of Greenland settlements of the Northmen of
-the tenth century were discovered in our own day, the runic
-inscriptions left no room for doubt as to their former presence
-there. By like evidence we learn of them in southern lands,
-from their runes still legible on the marble lion of the Piræus,
-since transported to its later site in the arsenal of Venice. At
-Maeshowe in Orkney, in St. Molio’s Cave on the Clyde, at
-Kirk Michael in the Isle of Man, and on many a rock and
-stone by the Baltic, the sea-rovers from the north have left
-enduring evidence of their wanderings. So was it with the
-Roman. From the Moray Firth to the Libyan desert, and
-from the Iberian shore to the Syrian valleys, sepulchral,
-legionary, and mythological inscriptions, as well as coins,
-medals, pottery, and works of art, mark the footprints of the
-masters of the world. In Italy itself Perusinian, Eugubine,
-Etruscan, and Greek inscriptions tell the story of a succession
-of races in that beautiful peninsula. It was the same, through
-all the centuries of Hellenic intellectual rule, back to the
-unrivalled inscription at Abbu Simbel. This was cut, says
-Dr. Isaac Taylor,<a id='r3'/><a href='#f3' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[3]</span></sup></a> “when what we call Greek history can
-hardly be said to have commenced: two hundred years before
-Herodotus, the Father of History, had composed his work; a
-century before Athens began to rise to power. More ancient
-even than the epoch assigned to Solon, Thales, and the seven
-wise men of Greece: it must be placed in the half-legendary
-period at which the laws of Dracon are said to have been
-enacted”;—the period, in fact, from which the legend of
-Atlantis was professedly derived. Yet there the graven
-characters perpetuate their authentic bit of history, legible
-to this day, of the son of Theokles, sailing with his company
-up the Nile, when King Psamatichos came to Elephantina.
-So it is with Egyptians, Assyrians, Phœnicians, and with the
-strange forgotten Hittites, whose vast empire has vanished out
-of the world’s memory. The lion of the Piræus, with its
-graven runes, is a thing of yesterday, compared with the
-inscribed lion from Marash, with its Hittite hieroglyphs, now
-in the museum at Constantinople; for the Hittite capital,
-Ketesh, was captured by the Egyptian Sethos, <span class='sc'>b.c.</span> 1340.
-All but the name of this once powerful people seemed to have
-<span class='pageno' title='31' id='Page_31'></span>
-perished. Yet the inscribed stones, by which they were to be
-restored to their place in history, remained, awaiting the interpretation
-of an enlightened age.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If then, traces of the lost Atlantis are ever to be recovered
-in the New World, it must be by some indubitable memorial
-of a like kind. Old as the legend may be, it is seen that
-literal graphic memorials—Assyrian, Phœnician, Khita,
-Egyptian, and Greek,—still remain to tell of times even beyond
-the epoch assigned to Solon. The antiquaries of New England
-have sought in vain for runic memorials of the Northmen of the
-tenth century; and the diligence of less trustworthy explorers
-for traces of ancient records has been stimulated to excess,
-throughout the North American continent, with results little
-more creditable to their honesty than their judgment. What
-some chance disclosure may yet reveal, who can presume to
-guess? But thus far it appears to be improbable that within
-the area north of the Gulf of Mexico, evidences of the presence
-of Phœnician, Greek, or other ancient historic race will now be
-found. Certain it is that, whatever transient visits may have
-been paid to North America by representatives of Old World
-progress, no long-matured civilisation, whether of native or
-foreign origin, has existed there. Through all the centuries of
-which definite history has anything to tell, it has remained a
-world apart, secure in its isolation, with languages, arts, and
-customs essentially native in character. The nations of the
-Maya stock appear to have made the greatest progress in
-civilisation of all the communities of Central America. They
-dwelt in cities adorned with costly structures dedicated to the
-purposes of religion and the state; and had political government,
-and forms of social organisation, to all appearance, the
-slow growth of many generations. They had, also, a well-matured
-system of chronology; and have left behind them
-graven and written records, analogous to those of ancient Egypt,
-which still await decipherment. Whether this culture was
-purely of native growth, or had its origin from the germs of an
-Old World civilisation, can only be determined when its secrets
-have been fully mastered. The region is even now very
-partially explored. The students of American ethnology and
-archæology are only awakening to some adequate sense of its
-importance. But there appears to have been the centre of a
-<span class='pageno' title='32' id='Page_32'></span>
-native American civilisation whence light was slowly radiating
-on either hand, before the vandals of the Spanish Conquest
-quenched it in blood. The civilisation of Mexico was but a
-borrowed reflex of that of Central America; and its picture-writing
-is a very inferior imitation of the ideography of the
-Maya hieroglyphics.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A tendency manifests itself anew to trace the metallurgy,
-the letters, the astronomical science, and whatever else marks
-the quickening into intellectual life of this American leading
-race, to an Asiatic or other Old World origin. The point,
-however, is by no means established; nor can any reason be
-shown why the human intellect might not be started on the
-same course in Central America, as in Mesopotamia or the
-valley of the Nile. If we assume the primary settlement of
-Central America by expeditions systematically carried on under
-the auspices of some ancient maritime power of the Mediterranean,
-or of an early seat of Iberian or Libyan civilisation,
-then they would, undoubtedly, transplant the arts of their old
-home to the New World. But, on the more probable supposition
-of wanderers, either by the Atlantic or the Pacific,
-being landed on its shores, and becoming the undesigned
-settlers of the continent, it is otherwise; and the probabilities
-are still further diminished if we conceive of ocean wanderers
-from island to island of the Pacific, at length reaching the
-shores of the remote continent after the traditions of their
-Asiatic fatherland had faded from the memory of later generations.
-The condition of metallurgy as practised by the
-Mexicans and Peruvians exhibited none of the matured phases
-of an inheritance from remote generations, but partook rather
-of the tentative characteristics of immature native art.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We are prone to overestimate the facilities by which the
-arts of civilisation may be transplanted to remote regions. It
-is not greatly more difficult to conceive of the rediscovery of
-some of the essential elements of human progress than to
-believe in the transference of them from the eastern to the
-western hemisphere by wanderers from either Europe or Asia.
-Take the average type of emigrants, such as are annually landed
-by thousands at New York. They come from the most civilised
-countries of Europe. Yet, how few among them all could
-be relied upon for any such intelligent comprehension of metallurgy,
-<span class='pageno' title='33' id='Page_33'></span>
-if left entirely to their own resources, as to be found
-able to turn the mineral wealth of their new home to practical
-account; or for astronomical science, such as would enable
-them to construct a calendar, and start afresh a systematic
-chronology. As to letters, the picture-writing of the Aztecs
-was the same in principle as the rude art of the northern
-Indians; and I cannot conceive of any reason for rejecting
-the assumption of its native origin as an intellectual triumph
-achieved by the labours of many generations. Every step is
-still traceable, from the rude picturings on the Indian’s grave-post
-or rock inscription, to the systematic ideographs of Palenque
-or Copan. Hieroglyphics, as the natural outgrowth of
-pictorial representation, must always have a general family
-likeness; but all attempts to connect the civilisation of
-Central and Southern America with that of Egypt fail, so soon
-as a comparison is instituted between the Egyptian calendar
-and any of the native American systems of recording dates and
-computing time. The vague year of 365 days, and the corrected
-solar year, with the great Sothic Cycle of 1460 years,
-so intimately interwoven with the religious system and historical
-chronology of the Egyptians, abundantly prove the correction
-of the Egyptian calendar by accumulated experience, at a
-date long anterior to the resort of the Greek astronomer, Thales,
-to Egypt. At the close of the fifteenth century, the Aztecs had
-learned to correct their calendar to solar time; but their cycle
-was one of only fifty-two years. The Peruvians also had their
-recurrent religious festivals, connected with the adjustment of
-their sacred calendar to solar time; but the geographical position
-of Peru, with Quito, its holy city, lying immediately under
-the equator, greatly simplified the process by which they regulated
-their religious festivals by the solstices and equinoxes.
-The facilities which their equatorial position afforded for determining
-the few indispensable periods in their calendar were,
-indeed, a doubtful advantage, for they removed all stimulus to
-progress. The Mexican calendar is the most remarkable
-evidence of the civilisation attained by that people. Humboldt
-unhesitatingly connected it with the ancient science of south-eastern
-Asia. But instead of its exhibiting any such inevitable
-accumulation of error as that which gave so peculiar a character
-to the historical chronology of the Egyptians, its computation
-<span class='pageno' title='34' id='Page_34'></span>
-differed less from true solar time than the unreformed
-Julian calendar which the Spaniards had inherited from pagan
-Rome. But though this suffices to show that the civilisation
-of Mexico was of no great antiquity, it only accords with other
-evidence of its borrowed character. The Mexicans stood in
-the same relation to Central America as the Northern Barbarians
-of the third and fourth century did to Italy; and the
-intruding Spaniard nipped their germ of borrowed civilisation
-in the bud. So long as the search for evidences either of a
-native or intruded civilisation is limited to the northern continent
-of America, it is equivalent to an attempt to recover the
-traces of Greek and Roman civilisation in transalpine Europe.
-The Mexican calendar stone is no more than the counterpart
-of some stray Greek or Roman tablet beyond the Alps; or
-rather, perhaps, of some Mæsogothic product of borrowed
-art.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We must await, then, the intelligent exploration of Central
-America, before any certain conclusion can be arrived at relative
-to the story of the New World’s unknown past. On the
-sculptured tablets of Palenque, Quiriqua, Chichenitza, and
-Uxmal, and on the colossal statues at Copan and other
-ancient sites, are numerous inscriptions awaiting the decipherment
-of the future Young or Champolion of American palæography.
-The whole region was once in occupation by a
-lettered race, having the same written characters and a
-common civilisation. If they owed to some apostle from the
-Mediterranean the grand invention of letters, which, as Bacon
-says, “as ships, pass through the vast seas of time, and make
-ages so distant to participate of the wisdom, illuminations and
-inventions, the one of the other:” then, we may confidently
-anticipate the recovery of some graphic memorial of the
-messenger, confirming the oft-recurring traditions of bearded
-white men who came from beyond the sea, introduced the
-arts of civilisation, and were reverenced as divine benefactors.
-It cannot be that Egyptian, Assyrian, Hittite, Phœnician, and
-other most ancient races, are still perpetuated by so many
-traces of their wanderings in the Old World; that the Northmen’s
-graphic runes have placed beyond all question their
-pre-Columbian explorations; and yet that not a single trace
-of Mediterranean wanderers to the lost Atlantis survives. In
-<span class='pageno' title='35' id='Page_35'></span>
-Humboldt’s <span class='it'>Researches</span>, a fragment of a reputed Phœnician
-inscription is engraved. It was copied by Ranson Bueno, a
-Franciscan monk, from a block of granite which he discovered
-in a cavern in the mountain chain, between the Orinoco and
-the Amazon. Humboldt recognised in it some resemblance to
-the Phœnician alphabet. We must remember, however, what
-rudely traced Phœnician characters are; and as to their
-transcriber, it may be presumed that he had no knowledge of
-Phœnician. Humboldt says of him: “The good monk seemed
-to be but little interested about this pretended inscription,”
-though, he adds, he had copied it very carefully.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The lost Atlantis, then, lies still in the future. The earlier
-studies of the monuments and prehistoric remains of the
-American continent seemed to point conclusively to a native
-source for its civilisation. From quipu and wampum, pictured
-grave-post and buffalo robe, to the most finished hieroglyphs of
-Copan or Palenque, continuous steps appear to be traceable
-whereby American man developed for himself the same
-wondrous invention of letters which ancient legend ascribed to
-Thoth or Mercury; or, in less mythic form, to the Phœnician
-Cadmus. Nor has the generally accepted assumption of a
-foreign origin for American metallurgy been placed as yet on
-any substantial basis. Gold, as I believe, was everywhere the
-first metal wrought. The bright nugget tempted the savage,
-with whom personal ornaments precede dress. It was readily
-fashioned into any desired shape. The same is true, though
-in a less degree, of copper; and wherever, as on the American
-continent, native copper abounds, the next step in metallurgy
-is to be anticipated. With the discovery of the economic use
-of the metals, an all-important step had been achieved, leading
-to the fashioning of useful tools, to architecture, sculpture,
-pictorial ornamentation, and so to ideography. The facilities
-for all this were, at least, as abundant in Central and Southern
-America as in Egypt. The progress was, doubtless, slow; but
-when the Neolithic age began to yield to that of the metallurgist,
-the all-important step had been taken. The history of
-this first step is embodied in myths of the New World, no less
-than of the Old. Tubal-cain, Dædalus, Hephæstus, Vulcan,
-Vœlund, Galant, and Wayland the Saxon smith-god, are all
-<span class='pageno' title='36' id='Page_36'></span>
-legendary variations of the first mastery of the use of the
-metals; and so, too, the New World has Quetzalcoatl, its divine
-instructor in the same priceless art.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It forms one of the indisputable facts of ancient history
-that, long before Greece became the world’s intellectual leader,
-the eastern Mediterranean was settled by maritime races
-whose adventurous enterprise led them to navigate the Atlantic.
-There was no greater impediment to such adventurous
-mariners crossing that ocean in earliest centuries before Christ,
-than at any subsequent date prior to the revival of navigation
-in the fifteenth century. It would not, therefore, in any
-degree, surprise me to learn of the discovery of a genuine
-Phœnician, or other inscription; or, of some hoard of Assyrian
-gryphons, or shekels of the merchant princes of Tyre “that
-had knowledge of the sea,” being recovered among the still
-unexplored treasures of the buried empire of Montezuma, or
-the long-deserted ruins of Central America. Such a discovery
-would scarcely be more surprising than that of the Punic
-hoards found at Corvo, the most westerly island of the Azores.
-Yet it would furnish a substantial basis for the legend of
-Atlantis, akin to that which the runic monuments of Kingiktorsoak
-and Igalikko supplied in confirmation of the fabled
-charms of a Hesperian region lying within the Arctic circle;
-and of the first actual glimpses of the American mainland by
-Norse voyagers of the tenth century, as told in more than one
-of their old Sagas. But until such evidence is forthcoming,
-the legendary Atlantis must remain a myth, and pre-Columbian
-America be still credited with a self-achieved progress.</p>
-
-<hr class='footnotemark'/>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_1'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f1'><a href='#r1'>[1]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Popular Science Monthly</span>, xxviii. 296.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_2'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f2'><a href='#r2'>[2]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Races of Man</span> (Bohn), p. 445.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_3'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f3'><a href='#r3'>[3]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>The Alphabet</span>, ii. 10.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' title='37' id='Page_37'></span><h1>II<br/> THE VINLAND OF THE NORTHMEN</h1></div>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='sc'>The</span> idea that the western hemisphere was known to the Old
-World, prior to the ever-memorable voyage of Columbus four
-centuries ago, has reproduced itself in varying phases, not only
-in the venerable Greek legend of the lost Atlantis; and the
-still vaguer myth of the Garden of the Hesperides on the far
-ocean horizon, the region of the setting sun; but in mediæval
-fancies and mythical epics. The Breton, in <span class='it'>The Earthly
-Paradise</span> of William Morris—</p>
-
-<div class='poetry-container' style=''><div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;Spoke of gardens ever blossoming</p>
-<p class='line0'>Across the western sea, where none grew old,</p>
-<p class='line0'>E’en as the books at Micklegarth had told;</p>
-<p class='line0'>And said moreover that an English knight</p>
-<p class='line0'>Had had the Earthly Paradise in sight;</p>
-<p class='line0'>And heard the songs of those that dwelt therein;</p>
-<p class='line0'>But entered not; being hindered by his sin.</p>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='noindent'>A legend of mediæval hagiology tells of the Island of St.
-Brandon, the retreat of an Irish hermit of the sixth century.
-Another tale comes down to us from the time of the Caliph
-Walid, and the invincible Musa, of the “Seven Islands”
-whither the Christians of Gothic Spain fled under the
-guidance of their seven bishops, when, in the eighth century,
-the peninsula passed under the yoke of the victorious Saracens.
-The Eyrbyggja Saga has a romantic story of Biorn Ashbrandsson,
-who narrowly escapes in a tempest raised by his enemy,
-with the aid of one skilled in the black art. After undergoing
-many surprising adventures, he is finally discovered by
-voyagers, “in the latter days of Olaf the Saint,” in a strange
-land beyond the ocean, the chief of a warlike race speaking a
-<span class='pageno' title='38' id='Page_38'></span>
-language that seemed to be Irish. Biorn warned the voyagers
-to depart, for the people had evil designs against them. But
-before they sailed, he took a gold ring from his hand, and gave
-it to Gudleif, their leader, along with a goodly sword; and
-commissioned him to give the sword to Kiartan, the son of
-Thurid, wife of an Iceland thane at Froda, of whom he had
-been enamoured; and the gold ring to his mother. This done,
-he warned them that no man venture to renew the search for
-what later commentators refer to as White Man’s Land. In
-equally vague form the fancy of lands beyond the ocean perpetuated
-itself in an imaginary island of Brazil that flitted
-about the charts of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries with
-ever-varying site and proportions, till it vanished in the light
-of modern exploration.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A more definite character has been given to the tale of
-Madoc, a Welsh prince of the twelfth century. Southey wove
-into an elaborate epic this legend of the son of Owen Gwyneth,
-king of North Wales, who, <span class='it'>circa</span> <span class='sc'>a.d.</span> 1170, sailed into the
-unknown west in search of a resting-place beyond reach of his
-brother Yorwerth, then ridding himself of all rivals to the
-throne. He found a home in the New World, returned to
-Wales for additional colonists to join the pioneer band; and
-setting sail with them, vanished beyond the western horizon,
-and was heard of no more. The poet, while adapting it to the
-purpose of his art, was not without faith in the genuineness of
-the legend which he amplified into his epic; and notes in the
-preface appended to it: “Strong evidence has been adduced
-that he (Prince Madoc) reached America; and that his
-posterity exist there to this day on the southern branch of the
-Missouri, retaining their complexion, their language, and in
-some degree, their arts.” But later explorations have failed to
-discover any “Welsh Indians” on the Missouri or its tributaries.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A small grain of fact will suffice at times for the crystallisation
-of vague and visionary fancies into a well-credited
-tradition. Before the printing-press came into play, with its
-perpetuation of definite records, and prosaic sifting of evidence,
-this was no uncommon occurrence; but even in recent times
-fancy may be seen transmuted into accepted fact.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When exploring the great earthworks of the Ohio valley,
-<span class='pageno' title='39' id='Page_39'></span>
-in 1874, I found myself on one occasion in a large Welsh
-settlement, a few miles from Newark, where a generation of
-native-born Americans still perpetuate the language of their
-Cymric forefathers, and conduct their religious services in
-the Welsh tongue. My attention was first called to this by
-the farmer, who had invited me to an early dinner after a
-morning’s digging in a mound on “The Evan’s Farm,” preceding
-our repast with a long Welsh grace. From him I learned
-that the district had been settled in 1802 by a Welsh
-colony; and that in two churches in neighbouring valleys—one
-Calvinistic Congregational and another Methodist,—the
-entire services are still conducted in their mother tongue.
-Such a perpetuation of the language and traditions of the
-race, in a quiet rural district, only required time and the
-confusion of dates and genealogies by younger generations,
-to have engrafted the story of Prince Madoc on the substantial
-basis of a genuine Welsh settlement. Southey’s epic
-was published in 1805, within three years after this Welsh
-immigration to the Ohio valley. The subject of the poem
-naturally gave it a special attraction for American readers;
-and it was speedily reprinted in the United States, doubtless
-with the same indifference to the author’s claim of copyright as
-long continued to characterise the ideas of literary ethics beyond
-the Atlantic. But the idea of a Welsh Columbus of the
-twelfth century was by no means received with universal favour
-there. Southey quoted at a long-subsequent date a critical
-pamphleteer who denounced the author of <span class='it'>Madoc</span> as having
-“meditated a most serious injury against the reputation of
-the New World by attributing its discovery and colonisation
-to a vagabond Welsh prince; this being a most insidious
-attempt against the honour of America, and the reputation of
-Columbus!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is inevitable that America should look back to the Old
-World when in search of some elements of civilisation, and
-for the diversities of race and language traceable throughout
-the western hemisphere. The early students of the sculptured
-monuments and hieroglyphic records of Mexico, Central
-America, and Peru, naturally turned to Egypt as their
-probable source; though mature reflection has dissipated much
-of the reasoning based on superficial analogies. The gradations
-<span class='pageno' title='40' id='Page_40'></span>
-from the most primitive picture-writing of the Indian
-savage to ideography and abbreviated symbolism, are so
-clearly traceable in the various stages of progress, from the
-rude forest tribes to the native centres of civilisation in
-Central and Southern America, that no necessity remains for
-assuming any foreign source for their origin.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That the world beyond the Atlantic had remained through
-unnumbered centuries apart from Europe and the old East,
-until that memorable year 1492, is indisputable; and there
-was at one time a disposition to resent any rivalry with the
-grand triumph of Columbus; as though patriotic spirit and
-national pride demanded an unquestioning faith in that as the
-sole link that bound America to the Old World. But the
-same spirit stimulated other nations to claim precedence of
-Spain and the great Genoese; and for this the Scandinavian
-colonists of Iceland had every probability in their favour.
-They had navigated the Arctic Ocean with no other compass
-than the stars; and the publication in 1845, by the Danish
-antiquaries, of the <span class='it'>Grenlands Historiske Mindesmærker</span> recalled
-minute details of their settlements in the inhospitable
-region of the western hemisphere to which they gave the
-strange misnomer of Greenland. But the year 1837 may
-be regarded as marking an epoch in the history of ante-Columbian
-research. The issue in that earlier year of the
-<span class='it'>Antiquitates Americanæ, sive scriptores septentrionales rerum
-ante-Columbiarum in America</span>, by the Royal Society of Northern
-Antiquaries, under the editorship of Professor Charles
-Christian Rafn, produced a revolution, alike in the form and
-the reception of illustrations of ante-Columbian American
-history. The publication of that work gave a fresh interest
-to the vaguest intimations of a dubious past; while it superseded
-them by tangible disclosures, which, though modern in
-comparison with such mythic antiquities as the Atlantis of
-Plato’s <span class='it'>Dialogues</span>, nevertheless added some five centuries to
-the history of the New World. From its appearance, accordingly,
-may be dated the systematic aim of American antiquaries
-and historians to find evidence of intercourse with the
-ancient world prior to the fifteenth century.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This influence became manifest in all ways; and abundant
-traces of the novel idea are to be found in the popular literature
-<span class='pageno' title='41' id='Page_41'></span>
-of the time. It seemed as though the adventurous spirit
-of the early Greenland explorers had revived, as in the days
-of the first Vinlanders, as told in the Saga of Eric the Red:
-“About this time there began to be much talk at Brattahlid,
-to the effect that Vinland the Good should be explored; for it
-was said that country must be possessed of many good
-qualities. And so it came to pass that Karlsefne and Snorri
-fitted out their ship for the purpose of going in search of that
-country.” Only the modern Vinlanders who follow in their
-wake have had for their problem to—</p>
-
-<div class='poetry-container' style=''><div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<p class='line0'>Sail up the current of departed time</p>
-<p class='line0'>And seek along its banks that vanished clime</p>
-<p class='line0'>By ancient Scalds in Runic verse renowned,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Now like old Babylon no longer found.<a id='r4'/><a href='#f4' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[4]</span></sup></a></p>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>The indomitable race that emerged from the Scandinavian
-peninsula, and the islands and shores of the Baltic, and overran
-and conquered the deserted Roman world, supplied the
-maritime energy of Europe from the fifth to the tenth
-century; and colonised northern Italy with the element to
-which we must assign the rise of its great maritime republics,
-including the one that was to furnish the discoverer of
-America in the fifteenth century. Genoese and Spaniards
-could not have made for themselves a home either in Greenland
-or Iceland. Had the Northmen of the tenth century
-been less hardy, they would probably have prosecuted their
-discoveries, and found more genial settlements, such as have
-since then proved the centres of colonisation for the Anglo-American
-race. But of their actual discovery of some portion
-of the mainland of North America, prior to the eleventh
-century, there can be no reasonable doubt. The wonder
-rather is that after establishing permanent settlements both in
-Iceland and Greenland, their southern explorations were prosecuted
-with such partial and transient results. The indomitable
-Vikings were conquering fresh territories on the coasts
-and islands of the North Sea, and giving a new name to the
-fairest region of northern Gaul wrested by the Northmen from
-its Frank conquerors. The same hardy supplanters were
-following up such acquisitions by expeditions to the Mediterranean
-that resulted in the establishment of their supremacy
-<span class='pageno' title='42' id='Page_42'></span>
-over ancient historic races there, and training leaders for later
-crusading adventure.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The voyage from Greenland, or even from Iceland, to the
-New England shores was not more difficult than from the
-native fiords of the Northmen to the Atlantic seaboard, or to
-the coasts and islands of the Mediterranean. Everywhere
-they left their record in graven runes. At Maeshowe in the
-Orkneys, on Holy Island in the Firth of Clyde, and at Kirk
-Michael, Kirk Andreas, and Kirk Braddon, on the Isle of
-Man; or as the relic of a more ancient past, on the marble
-lion of the Piræus, now at the arsenal of Venice: their runic
-records are to be seen graven in the same characters as those
-which have been recovered during the present century from
-their early settlements beyond the Atlantic. Numerous
-similar inscriptions from the homes of the Northmen are furnished
-in Professor George Stephens’ <span class='it'>Old Northern Runic
-Monuments</span>, which perpetuate memorials of the love of
-adventure of those daring rovers, and the pride they took in
-their expeditions to remote and strange lands. Intensified at
-a later stage by religious fervour, the same spirit emboldened
-them as leaders in the Crusades; and some of their runic
-inscriptions tell of adventurous pilgrimages to the Holy Land.
-An Icelandic rover is designated on his rune-stone <span class='it'>Rafn
-Hlmrckfari</span> as a successful voyager to Ireland. Norwegian
-and Danish bautastein frequently preserve the epithet of
-<span class='it'>Englandsfari</span> for the leaders of expeditions to the British
-Isles, or more vaguely refer to their adventures in “the
-western parts.” King Sigurd of Norway proudly blazoned the
-title of <span class='it'>Jórsolafari</span> as one who had achieved the pilgrimage to
-Jerusalem; and the literate memorials of the Northmen of
-Orkney, recovered in 1861, on the opening of the famous
-Maeshowe Tumulus, include those of a band of Crusaders, or
-Jerusalem-farers, who, in 1153, followed Earl Ragnvald to the
-Holy Land.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The inscribed rune-stones brought from the sites of the
-ancient Norse colonies in Greenland, and now deposited in
-the Royal Museum of Northern Antiquities, at Copenhagen,
-are simple personal or sepulchral inscriptions. But they are
-graven in the northern runes, and as such constitute
-monuments of great historical value: furnishing indisputable
-<span class='pageno' title='43' id='Page_43'></span>
-evidence of the presence of European colonists beyond the
-Atlantic centuries before that memorable 12th of October
-1492, on which the eyes of the wistful gazers from the deck
-of the “Santa Maria” were gladdened with their first glimpse
-of what they believed to be the India of the far east: the
-Cipango in search of which they had entered on their adventurous
-voyage.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The colonies of Greenland, after being occupied, according
-to Norwegian and Danish tradition, from the tenth to the
-fifteenth century, were entirely forgotten. The colonists are
-believed to have been exterminated by the native Eskimo.
-The very locality chosen for their settlements was so completely
-lost sight of that, when an interest in their history
-revived, and expeditions were sent out to revisit the scene of
-early Norse colonisation beyond the Atlantic, much time was
-lost in a fruitless search on the coast lying directly west from
-Iceland. Towards the middle of the seventeenth century, an
-oar drifted to the Iceland coast, a relic, as was believed, of
-the long-lost colony of Greenland, bearing this inscription in
-runic characters: <span class='sc'>oft var ek dasa dur ek dro thick</span>—<span class='it'>Oft
-was I weary when I drew thee</span>; but it was not till the close
-of the century that the traditions of the old Greenlanders
-began to excite attention. Many a Norse legend pictured the
-enviable delights of the fabled Hesperian region discovered
-within the Arctic circle, yet meriting by the luxuriance of its
-fertile valleys its name of Greenland; and the fancies and
-legendary traditions that gradually displaced the history of
-the old colony, had been interwoven by the poet Montgomery
-with the tale of self-sacrificing labours of Moravian Missionaries,
-in the cantos of his <span class='it'>Greenland</span> epic, long before the
-<span class='it'>Antiquitates Americanæ</span> issued from the Copenhagen press.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The narrations of ancient voyagers, and their explorations
-in the New World, as brought to light in 1835 by the
-Copenhagen volume on pre-Columbian America, were too
-truthful in their aspect to be slighted; and too fascinating in
-their revelations of a long-forgotten intercourse between the
-Old World and the New, to be willingly subjected to incredulous
-analysis. From the genuine literary memorials of older
-centuries, sufficient evidence could be gleaned to place beyond
-question, not only the discovery and colonisation of Greenland
-<span class='pageno' title='44' id='Page_44'></span>
-by Eric the Red,—apparently in the year 985,—but also the
-exploration of southern lands, some of which must have
-formed part of the American continent. The manuscripts
-whence those narratives are derived are of various dates, and
-differ widely in value; but of the genuineness and historical
-significance of the oldest of them, no doubt can be entertained.
-The accounts which some of them furnish are so simple, and
-devoid of anything extravagant or improbable, that the
-internal evidence of truthfulness is worthy of great consideration.
-The exuberant fancy of the Northmen, which revels in
-their mythology and songs, would have constructed a very
-different tale had it been employed in the invention of a
-southern continent, or earthly Paradise fashioned from the
-dreams of Icelandic and Greenland rovers.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The narrative attaches itself to genuine Icelandic history;
-and furnishes a coherent, and seemingly unexaggerated account
-of a voyage characterised by nothing that is supernatural;
-and little that is even romantic. Eric Thorvaldsson, more
-commonly referred to as Erikr Rauthi, or Eric the Red, a
-banished Icelandic jarl, made his way to the Greenland coast
-and effected a settlement at Igalikko, or Brattalid, as it was
-at first called, from whence one of the runic inscriptions now
-in the Copenhagen museum was taken. Before the close of
-the century, if not in the very year <span class='sc'>a.d.</span> 1000, in which St.
-Olaf was introducing Christianity into Norway, Leif, or Leiv
-Ericson, a son of the first coloniser of Greenland, appears to
-have accidentally discovered the American mainland. The
-story, current in Norwegian and Icelandic tradition, and
-repeated with additions and variations in successive Sagas,
-most frequently ascribes to Leif an actual exploratory voyage
-in quest of southern lands already reported to have been seen
-by Bjarni Herjulfson. But the Sagas from whence the
-revived story of Vinland is derived are of different dates, and
-very varying degrees of credibility. Of those, the narrative in
-which the name of Bjarni Herjulfson first appears occurs in a
-manuscript of the latter part of the fourteenth century; and
-exhibits both amplifications and inconsistencies abundantly
-justifying its rejection as an authority for depriving Leif Ericson
-of the honour of the discovery of the North American
-continent. He was on his way from Norway to Greenland
-<span class='pageno' title='45' id='Page_45'></span>
-when he was driven out of his course, and so reached the
-mainland of the New World in that early century; even as,
-five centuries later, the Portuguese admiral, Pedro Alvarez
-Cabral, when on his way to the Cape, was driven westward to
-the coast of Brazil, and so to the discovery of the southern
-continent. For later generations the tale of the old Vinland
-explorers—whose goodly land of the vine, and of fertile meads
-of grain, had faded away as a dream,—naturally gathered around
-it exaggerations and legendary fable; but such terms are
-wholly inapplicable to the original Saga. The story of Thorfinn’s
-expedition to effect a settlement on the new-found land,
-within three or four years after Leif Ericson’s reported discovery,
-is a simple, consistent narrative, rendered attractive by
-natural and highly suggestive incidents, but entirely free from
-mythical or legendary features. This is obviously the basis
-of the varying and inconsistent tales of later Sagas. The year
-1003 is the date assigned to the expedition in which Thorfinn
-set out, with three ships and a considerable company of
-adventurers, and effected a temporary settlement of Vinland.
-Voyaging southward, he first landed on a barren coast where
-a great plain covered with flat stones stretched from the sea
-to a lofty range of ice-clad mountains. To this he gave the
-name of Helluland, from <span class='it'>hella</span>, a flat stone. The earlier
-editor, having the requirements of his main theory in view,
-found in its characteristics evidence sufficient to identify it
-with Newfoundland; but Professor Gustav Storm assigns
-reasons for preferring Labrador as more probable.<a id='r5'/><a href='#f5' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[5]</span></sup></a> The next
-point touched presented a low shore of white sand, and
-beyond it a level country covered with forest, to which the
-name of Markland, or woodland, was given. This, which, so
-far as the description can guide us, might be anywhere on the
-American coast, was assumed by the editor of the <span class='it'>Antiquitates
-Americanæ</span> to be Nova Scotia; but, according to
-Professor Storm, can have been no other country than Newfoundland.
-The voyagers, after two more days at sea, again
-saw land; and of this the characteristic that the dew upon
-the grass tasted sweet, was accepted as sufficient evidence that
-Nantucket, where honey-dew abounds, is the place referred to.
-Their further course shoreward, and up a river into the lake
-<span class='pageno' title='46' id='Page_46'></span>
-from which it flowed, has been assumed to have been up the
-Pacasset River to Mount Hope Bay. There the voyagers
-passed the winter. After erecting temporary booths, their
-leader divided them into two parties, which alternately proceeded
-on exploring excursions. One of his followers, a
-southerner,—<span class='it'>sudrmadr</span>, or German, as he is assumed to have
-been,—having wandered, he reported on his return the
-discovery of wine-trees and grapes; and hence the name of
-Vineland, given to the locality.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This land of the vine, discovered by ancient voyagers on
-the shores of the New World, naturally awakened the liveliest
-interest in the minds of American antiquaries and historical
-students; nor is that interest even now wholly a thing of the
-past. Is this “Vinland the Good” a reality? Can it be
-located on any definite site? Montgomery’s <span class='it'>Greenland</span>
-epic was published in 1819; and the poet, with no American
-or Canadian pride of locality to beguile him in his interpretation
-of the evidence, observes in one of the notes to his poem:
-“Leif and his party wintered there, and observed that on the
-shortest day the sun rose about eight o’clock, which may correspond
-with the forty-ninth degree of latitude, and denotes the
-situation of Newfoundland, or the River St. Lawrence.” The
-reference here is to the sole data on which all subsequent
-attempts to determine the geographical location of Vinland
-have been based; and after upwards of sixty years of speculation
-and conjecture, Professor Gustav Storm in his <span class='it'>Studier over
-Vinlandsreiserne</span>, arrives at a nearly similar conclusion. Vinland
-cannot have lain farther north than 49°. How far
-southward of this its site may be sought for is matter of
-conjecture; but all probabilities are opposed to its discovery so
-far south as Rhode Island.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Professor Rafn, however, arrived at very different results;
-and found abundant confirmation in the sympathetic responses
-of the Rhode Island antiquaries. The famous Dighton Rock
-was produced, with its assumed runic inscription. The
-Newport Round Tower was a still more satisfactory indication
-of permanent settlement by its supposed Norse builders; and
-“The Skeleton in Armour,” on which Longfellow founded his
-ballad romance, was accepted without hesitation as a glimpse
-of one of the actual colonists of Vinland in the eleventh
-<span class='pageno' title='47' id='Page_47'></span>
-century. Professor Rafn accordingly summed up the inquiry,
-and set forth the conclusions arrived at, in this definite
-fashion. “It is the total result of the nautical, geographical,
-and astronomical evidence in the original documents, which
-places the situations of the countries discovered beyond all
-doubt. The number of days’ sail between the several newly-found
-lands, the striking description of the coasts, especially
-the sand-banks of Nova Scotia; and the long beaches and
-downs of a peculiar appearance on Cape Cod (the <span class='it'>Kialarnes</span>
-and <span class='it'>Furdustrandir</span> of the Northmen,) are not to be mistaken.
-In addition hereto we have the astronomical remark that the
-shortest day in Vinland was nine hours long, which fixes the
-latitude of 41° 24′ 10″, or just that of the promontories which
-limit the entrance to Mount Hope Bay, where Leif’s booths
-were built, and in the district around which the old Northmen
-had their head establishment, which was named by them <span class='it'>Hóp</span>,
-or the Creek.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Dighton Rock runes erelong fell into woeful discredit;
-and as for the Newport Round Tower, it has been identified as
-“The Old Stone Mill” built there by Governor Benedict
-Arnold, who removed from Providence to Newport in 1653.
-Though therefore no longer to be accredited to the Northmen,
-it is of very respectable architectural antiquity, according to
-New World reckoning. Nevertheless, in spite of such failure
-of all confirmatory evidence, the general summary of results
-was presented by Professor Rafn in such absolute terms, and
-the geographical details of the assumed localities were so
-confidently accredited by the members of the Rhode Island
-Historical Society, that his conclusions were accepted as a
-whole without cavil. In reality, however, when we revert to
-the evidence from which such definite results were derived, it
-proves vague, if not illusory. The voyagers crossed over from
-Greenland to Helluland, which we may assume without hesitation
-to have been the inhospitable coast of Labrador. They
-then pursued a south-western course, in a voyage in all of four
-days, subdivided into two nearly equal parts, until they
-landed on a coast where wild grapes grew, and which
-accordingly they named the Land of the Vine. To Icelandic
-or Greenland voyagers, the vine, with its clusters of grapes,
-however unpalatable, could not fail to prove an object of
-<span class='pageno' title='48' id='Page_48'></span>
-special note. But there is no need to prolong the four days’
-run, and land the explorers beyond Cape Cod, in order to find
-the wild grape. It grows in sheltered localities in Nova
-Scotia; and so in no degree conflicts with the later deductions
-based on the same astronomical evidence of the length of the
-shortest day, which have induced subsequent investigators to
-adopt conclusions much more nearly approximating to those
-suggested by the poet Montgomery fully sixteen years before
-the issue of Professor Rafn’s learned quarto from the Copenhagen
-press.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The topographical details which have to be relied upon in
-any attempt to identify the precise locality are little less vague
-than those of the astronomical data from which the editor of
-the <span class='it'>Antiquitates Americanæ</span> assumed to compute his assigned
-latitude. The voyagers, after their first wintering, pursued
-their course southward; and again approaching the shore, made
-their way up a river, to a lake from whence it flowed. The
-land was wooded, with wild “wheat” in the low meadows,
-and on the high banks grape-bearing vines. The aspect of this
-strange land was tempting to voyagers from the north, so they
-erected booths, and wintered there. From the mouth of the
-St. Lawrence southward to Rhode Island, the coast is indented
-with many an estuary, up any of which the old voyagers may
-have found their way into lake or expanded basin, with overhanging
-forest trees, meadow flats, and other features
-sufficiently corresponding to all that we learn from the old
-Saga of the temporary settlement of Thorfinn and his fellow-voyagers.
-Fresh claimants accordingly enter the lists to
-contend for the honours that pertain to the landing-place of
-those first Pilgrim Fathers. New Englanders above all not
-unnaturally cherish the pleasant fancy that they had for their
-precursors the hardy Vikings, who, resenting the oppression of
-King Harold the fair-haired, sailed into the unknown west to
-find a free home for themselves. The fancy had a double
-claim on the gifted musician Ole Bull. Himself a wanderer
-from the Scandinavian fatherland, he started the proposition
-which was to give an air of indisputable reality to the old
-legend; and which culminated in the erection, on Boston
-Common, in 1888, of a fine statue of Leif Ericson.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“South of Greenland is Helluland; next is Markland;
-<span class='pageno' title='49' id='Page_49'></span>
-from thence is not far to Vinland the Good.” So reads the
-old Saga; and with the rearing of the statue of its finder, it
-seemed incumbent on some loyal son of the Commonwealth to
-demonstrate the site of the good land within the area of
-Massachusetts. In the following year, accordingly, Professor
-Eben Norton Horsford, of Cambridge, undertook the search,
-and was able to identify to his entire satisfaction the site of
-Leif’s, or Karlsefne’s booths, in his own neighbourhood on the
-Charles river. First appeared in 1889 <span class='it'>The Problem of the
-Northmen</span>; and in the following year, in choicest typography,
-and amplitude of attractive illustrations, <span class='it'>The Discovery of
-the Ancient City of Norumbega, at Watertown on the River
-Charles</span>. There the ephemeral booths of the old winterers in
-Vinland had left enduring traces after a lapse of more than
-eight centuries. The discoverer, resolved to arrest “Time’s
-decaying fingers,” which had thus far been laid with such
-unwonted gentleness on the pioneer relics, has marked the
-spot with a memorial tower, and an elaborately inscribed
-tablet, one clause of which runs thus: “<span class='sc'>River, The Charles,
-discovered by Leif Erikson 1000 a.d. Explored by Thorwald,
-Leif’s Brother, 1003 a.d. Colonised by Thorfinn
-Karlsefni 1007 a.d. First Bishop Erik Gnupson 1121
-a.d.</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The entire evidence has been readduced with minutest
-critical accuracy in <span class='it'>The Finding of Wineland the Good: the
-History of the Icelandic Discovery of America</span>, by the late gifted
-Arthur Middleton Reeves. His verdict is thus briefly stated:
-“There is no suggestion in Icelandic records of a permanent
-occupation of the county; and after the exploration at the
-beginning of the eleventh century, it is not known that Wineland
-was ever again visited by Icelanders, although it would
-appear that a voyage thither was attempted in the year 1121,
-but with what result is not known.”<a id='r6'/><a href='#f6' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[6]</span></sup></a> In the Codex Frisianus
-is an apt heading which might, better than a more lengthy
-inscription, have given expression to the pleasant fancy that
-the footprints of Leif Ericson’s followers had been recovered
-on the banks of the Charles river, “<span class='sc'>Fundit Vinland Gotha</span>”—Vineland
-the Good found! Maps old and new illustrate the
-topography of the newly-assigned site; and among the rest,
-<span class='pageno' title='50' id='Page_50'></span>
-one which specially aims at reproducing the most definite
-feature of the old narrative is thus titled:—“River flowing
-through a lake into the sea; Vinland of the Northmen; site
-of Leif’s houses.” To his own satisfaction, at least, it is
-manifest that the author has identified the site.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But a great deal more than Leif’s booths is involved. It is
-the discovery of the ancient city of Norumbega, of which also
-the inscribed tablet makes due record; including the statement,
-set forth more fully in the printed text, that the name is only
-an Indian transmutation of “Norbega, the ancient form of
-Norvega, Norway, to which Vinland was subject!” The name,
-though probably unfamiliar to most modern readers, was once
-as well known as that of Utopia, or El Dorado. One of Sir
-John Hawkins’ fellow-voyagers claimed to have seen the city
-of Norumbega still standing in 1568: a gorgeous Indian
-town outvying the capital of Montezuma, and resplendent in
-pearls and gold. Hakluyt proposed its recolonisation; Sir
-Humphrey Gilbert went in search of it; and it figures both
-as a city and a country on maps familiar to older generations
-than the founders of New England. Above all, Milton has
-given it a place in the Tenth Book of his <span class='it'>Paradise Lost</span>.
-When the Divine Creator is represented as readapting this
-world to a fallen race—</p>
-
-<div class='poetry-container' style=''><div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<p class='line0'>Some say he bid his Angels turn askance</p>
-<p class='line0'>The poles of Earth twice ten degrees and more</p>
-<p class='line0'>From the sun’s axle.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-<p class='line0'>.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Now from the north</p>
-<p class='line0'>Of Norumbega, and the Samoed shore,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Bursting their brazen dungeon, arm’d with ice,</p>
-<p class='line0'>And snow, and hail, and stormy gust and flaw,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Boreas .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='noindent'>which seems to imply very Icelandic and Arctic associations
-of the Miltonic muse. But the gentle New England poet,
-Whittier, who had sung of his Christian knight in vain quest of
-the marvellous city, thus writes in sober prose to its modern
-discoverer: “I had supposed that the famed city of Norumbega
-was on the Penobscot when I wrote my poem some
-years ago; but I am glad to think of it as on the Charles,
-in our own Massachusetts.” This work of rearing anew
-on the banks of the river Charles the metropolis of Vinland
-<span class='pageno' title='51' id='Page_51'></span>
-the Good may be best entrusted to the poets of New
-England.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>All praise is due to the enthusiastic editors of the <span class='it'>Antiquitates
-Americanæ</span> for their reproduction of the original records
-on which the history and the legends of Vinland rest. They
-found only too willing recipients of the theories and assumptions
-with which they supplemented the genuine narrative;
-nor has the uncritical spirit of credulous deduction wholly
-ceased. In the untimely death of Professor Munch, the historian
-of Norway, the University of Christiana lost a ripe and
-acutely critical scholar in the very flower of his years. But in
-Dr. Gustav Storm a successor has been found not unworthy to
-fill his place, and represent the younger generation of Northern
-antiquaries, who have now taken in hand, in a more critical
-spirit, yet with no less enthusiasm, the work so well begun by
-Rafn, Finn Magnusen, and Sveinbiorn Egilsson. In the same
-year in which Leif Ericson’s statue was set up in Boston, and
-all the old enthusiasm for the identification of the lost Vinland
-was revived, there appeared in the <span class='it'>Mémoires de la Société Royale
-des Antiquaires du Nord</span> a series of <span class='it'>Studies on the Vineland
-Voyages</span>, from the pen of Professor Storm, embodying a critical
-analysis of the evidence relating to the Vinland voyages, which
-is treated still more fully in his <span class='it'>Studier over Vinlandsreiserne,
-Vinlands Geografi og Ethnographi</span>. The whole is now available,
-along with valuable additions, including photographic facsimiles
-illustrative of the original MSS., in Reeves’ <span class='it'>Finding of
-Wineland the Good</span>.<a id='r7'/><a href='#f7' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[7]</span></sup></a> The evidence has to be gleaned from
-two independent series of narratives: the one the Icelandic
-Sagas and other embodiments of the Vinland tradition; the
-other the more amplified, but less reliable narratives of Norwegian
-chroniclers. The earliest Icelandic accounts are derived
-directly or indirectly from Ari froði, more particularly referred
-to on a later page, whose date as an author is given as about
-1120; thereby marking the transmission of the narrative to a
-younger generation before it was committed to writing. Ari
-froði, <span class='it'>i.e.</span> the learned, derived the story from his paternal uncle
-Thorkell Gellisson of Helgufell, who lived in the latter half of
-<span class='pageno' title='52' id='Page_52'></span>
-the eleventh century; and so was a contemporary of Adam of
-Bremen, who, when resident at the Danish Court, about the
-year 1070, obtained the information relating to the Northern
-regions which he embodied in his <span class='it'>Descriptio insularum aquilonis</span>.
-Ari’s uncle, Thorkell, is said to have spoken, when
-in Greenland, with a man who, in the year 985, had accompanied
-Erik the Red on his expedition from Iceland; so that
-the authority is good, if the narrative were sufficiently ample;
-but unfortunately, though Ari’s notes of what he learned from
-his uncle are still extant in the <span class='it'>Libellus Islandorum</span>, they are
-exceedingly meagre. The Vinland explorations had no such
-importance for the men of that age as they possess for us,
-and are accordingly dealt with as a very secondary matter.
-Professor Gustav Storm, in his <span class='it'>Studies on the Vineland Voyages</span>,
-notes that Thorkell seems to have told his nephew most about
-the colonisation of Greenland. In Professor Storm’s <span class='it'>Studies</span>,
-and in the exhaustive <span class='it'>Finding of Wineland the Good</span>, by Arthur
-Middleton Reeves, the entire bearings of the evidence, and the
-relative value of the various ancient authorities, are discussed
-with minute care; and lead alike to the inevitable conclusion
-that any assignment of a site for the lost Vinland, either on
-Rhode Island, or on any part of the New England coast, is untenable.
-The deductions of Professor Rafn from the same evidence
-were accepted as a final verdict, until the too eager confirmation
-of his Rhode Island correspondents brought them into discredit.
-Now when we undertake an unbiassed review of them, it is
-manifest that too much weight has been attached to his estimate
-of distances measured by the vague standard of a day’s
-sail of a rude galley dependent on wind and tide. This Professor
-Rafn assumed as equivalent to twenty-four geographical
-miles. But very slight consideration suffices to show that, with
-an indefinite starting-point, and only a vague indication of the
-direction of sailing, with the unknown influences of wind and
-tide, any such arbitrary deduction of a definite measurement
-from the log of the old Northmen is not only valueless, but
-misleading.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A reconsideration of the evidence furnished by the references
-to the fauna and flora of the different points touched at, shows
-that others of Professor Rafn’s deductions are equally open to
-correction. Helluland, a barren region, of large stone slabs,
-<span class='pageno' title='53' id='Page_53'></span>
-with no other trace of life than the Arctic fox, presented the
-same aspect as Labrador still offers to the eye of the voyager.
-But there is no need to traverse the entire Canadian and New
-England coasts before a region can be found answering to the
-descriptions of a forest-clad country, of numerous deer, or even
-of the vine, as noted by the old explorers from Greenland.
-To the eye of the Greenlander, the Markland, or forest-clad
-land, lay within sight no farther south than Newfoundland or
-Cape Breton. To those who are accustomed to associate the
-vine with the Rhine land, or the plains of Champagne, it
-sounds equally extravagant to speak of the Maritime Provinces,
-or of the New England States, as “Vinland the Good.” But
-numerous allusions of voyagers and travellers of the sixteenth
-and seventeenth centuries refer with commendation to the wild
-grapes of North America. Jacques Cartier on making his way
-up the St. Lawrence, in his second voyage, gave to the Isle of
-Orleans the name of the Isle de Bacchus, because of the many
-wild vines found there; though he notes that, “not being cultivated
-nor pruned, the grapes are neither so large nor so sweet
-as ours”—that is, those of France. Lescarbot, in like manner,
-in 1606, records the grape vine as growing at Chuakouet, or
-Saco, in Maine, and in the following year they are noted as
-abundant along the banks of the river St. John in New
-Brunswick.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>To voyagers from Iceland or Greenland many portions of
-the coast of Nova Scotia would present the aspect of a region
-clothed with forest, and, as such, “extremely beautiful.” Deer
-are still abundant both there and in Newfoundland; and as
-for the grapes gathered by Leif Ericson, or those brought back
-to Thorvald by Hake and Hekia, the swift runners, at their
-more northern place of landing, the wild vine is well known
-at the present time in sheltered localities of Nova Scotia.
-Having therefore carefully studied the earliest maps and charts,
-of which reduced copies are furnished in the <span class='it'>Mémoires</span>, and
-reviewed the whole evidence with minute care, Professor Storm
-thus unhesitatingly states the results: “Kjalarnes, the northern
-extremity of Vinland, becomes Cape Breton Island, specially
-described as low-lying and sandy. The fiord into which the
-Northmen steered, on the country becoming <span class='it'>fjorthskorit</span>, <span class='it'>i.e.</span>
-‘fiord-indented,’ may have been one of the bays of Guysborough,
-<span class='pageno' title='54' id='Page_54'></span>
-the county of Nova Scotia lying farthest to the north-east;
-possibly indeed Canso Bay, or some one of the bays south
-of it. Therefore much further to the south in Nova Scotia
-must we seek the mouth of the river where Karlsefn made
-his abortive attempt at colonisation.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. The west coast of
-northern Vinland is characterised as a region of uninhabited
-forest tracks, with few open spots, a statement admirably
-agreeing with the topographical conditions distinguishing the
-west coast of Cape Breton Island, which in a modern book of
-travels is spoken of as ‘an unexplored and trackless land of
-forests and mountains.’ Hence to the south of this region
-search has to be made for the mouth of the streamlet where
-Thorvald Eriksson was killed.” Various points, accordingly,
-such as Salmon river, or one of the rivers flowing into Pictou
-harbour, are suggested as furnishing features of resemblance
-and inviting to further research.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Here, then, is the same problem submitted to the historical
-antiquaries of Nova Scotia which those of Rhode Island took
-up upwards of half a century ago, with unbounded zeal, and
-very surprising results. Nor is there a “Dighton Rock”
-wanting; for Nova Scotia has its inscribed stone, already
-interpreted as graphic runes, replete with equally suggestive
-traces of the Northmen of the tenth century. The inscribed
-rock at Yarmouth has long been an object of curious interest.
-So far back as 1857 I received from Dr. J. G. Farish a full-sized
-copy of the inscription, with the following account of it: “The
-inscription, of which the accompanying sketch is an exact copy,</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/illo-54.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0001' style='width:400px;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span style='font-size:smaller'>Inscription, Yarmouth Rock, Nova Scotia.</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>was discovered forty-five years ago, at Yarmouth, Nova Scotia.
-The rock on which the characters are engraved is about two
-feet in diameter, of an irregular hemispherical shape, with one
-naturally smooth surface. It lies on the shore of a small inlet,
-at high-water mark, and close to the bank, on which it may
-formerly have rested. The stone has been split where a very
-thin vein of quartz once traversed it, but the corresponding
-half could never be found. The tracing has been done with a
-<span class='pageno' title='55' id='Page_55'></span>
-sharp-pointed instrument carried onward, by successive blows
-of a hammer or mallet, the effect of which is plainly visible.
-The point of the instrument barely penetrated the layer of
-quartz, which is almost as thin as the black marks of the
-sketch. The inscription has been shown to several learned
-gentlemen,—one intimately acquainted with the characters of
-the Micmac and Millicet Indians who once inhabited this
-country; another, familiar with the Icelandic and other Scandinavian
-languages; but no person has yet been able to decipher
-it.” Again, in 1880, I received from Mr. J. Y. Bulmer, Secretary
-of the Nova Scotia Historical Society, a photograph of the
-Yarmouth rock, with an accompanying letter, in which he
-remarks: “I am directed by the council of the Nova Scotia
-Historical Society to forward to you a photographic view of
-a stone found near the ocean, in Yarmouth county, N.S., and
-having an inscription which, if not runic or Phœnician, is
-supposed by many to be the work of man. As ancient remains
-are most likely to be preserved by calling attention to all such
-works and inscriptions, we thought it best to forward it to you,
-where it could be examined by yourself and others likely to
-detect a fraud, or translate an inscription. The stone is now—or
-was one hundred years ago,—near, or in fact on, the edge
-of the sea. It has since been removed to Yarmouth for preservation.
-It was found near Cape Sable, a cape that must
-have been visited by nearly every navigator, whether ancient
-or modern.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The earlier description of Dr. Farish is valuable, as it
-preserves an account of the rock while it still occupied its
-original site. He speaks, moreover, definitely as to the period
-when it first attracted attention; and which, though more
-recent than the “one hundred years” of my later correspondent,
-or a nearly equivalent statement in the <span class='it'>Proceedings of the
-American Philosophical Society</span>, that “it has been known
-for nearly an hundred years,” is sufficiently remote to remove
-all idea of fraud, at least by any person of the present generation.
-The description given by Dr. Farish of the apparent
-execution of the inscription by means of a sharp-pointed instrument—meaning
-thereby no doubt a metallic tool,—and a
-hammer or mallet, clearly points to other than native Indian
-workmanship, whatever may have been the date of its execution.
-<span class='pageno' title='56' id='Page_56'></span>
-As will be seen from the accompanying copy, it is in arbitrary
-linear characters bearing no resemblance to the abbreviated
-symbols familiar to us in Indian epigraphy; and at the same
-time it may be described as unique in character. Having
-been known to people resident in its vicinity for many years
-before the attention of students of the early monuments of the
-continent was invited to it, it appears to be beyond suspicion
-of purposed fraud. I did not attempt any solution of the
-enigma thus repeatedly submitted to my consideration; but it
-was this graven stone that was referred to when, in the
-inaugural address to the section of History and Archæology of
-the Royal Society of Canada, in 1882, the remark was made:
-“I know of but one inscription in Canada which seems to
-suggest the possibility of a genuine native record.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On nearly every recurrence of an inscription in any linear
-form of alphabetic character brought to light in the western
-hemisphere, the first idea has been to suggest a Phœnician
-origin; and this is, no doubt, implied in the statement of its
-runic decipherer, in the <span class='it'>Proceedings of the American Philosophical
-Society</span>, that “the glyphs have been at various times
-copied and sent abroad to men of learning who have made
-more or less attempts at deciphering them, more than one
-savant seeing traces of Semitic origin.” But latterly with the
-reported discovery of any linear inscription on the eastern seaboard,
-the temptation has been to refer it to the Northmen of
-the eleventh century. To this accordingly the allusions of
-both of my Nova-Scotian correspondents pointed. But the
-characters of the Scandinavian futhork are sufficiently definite
-to satisfy any one familiar with Scottish and Manx runic inscriptions,
-or with Professor George Stephens’ ample illustrations
-of them as they are found in the native home of the
-Northmen, that it is vain to look to either for a key to the
-graven legend on the Yarmouth rock. The presence of the
-Northmen, not only in Iceland and Greenland, but as transient
-visitors on some portion of the North American mainland, now
-rests on satisfactory historical evidence. In Greenland they
-left indisputable literate records of their colonisation of the
-region to which they gave the inapt name it still retains.
-The runic inscriptions brought to Copenhagen in 1831 not
-only determine the sites of settlements effected by the companions
-<span class='pageno' title='57' id='Page_57'></span>
-and successors of Eric, but they serve to show the
-kind of evidence to be looked for, alike to the north and the
-south of the St. Lawrence, if any traces yet survive of their
-having attempted to colonise the old Markland and Vinland,
-whether the latter is recovered in Nova Scotia or New
-England. Their genuine memorials are not less definite than
-those left by the Romans in Gaul or Britain; and corresponding
-traces of them in the assumed Vinland, and elsewhere in the
-United States, have been perseveringly, but vainly, sought for.
-One unmistakably definite Scandinavian inscription, that of the
-“Huidœrk,” professedly found on the river Potomac, does not
-lay claim to serious criticism. It was affirmed to have been
-discovered in 1867 graven on a rock on the banks of the
-Potomac; but to any student familiar with the genuine
-examples figured in the <span class='it'>Antiquitates Americanæ</span>, it will be
-readily recognised as a clever hoax, fabricated by the correspondent
-of the <span class='it'>Washington Union</span> out of genuine Greenland
-inscriptions. It reads thus: <span class='sc'>hir huilir syasy fagrharrdr
-avstfirthingr iki a kildi systr thorg samfethra halfthritgr
-gleda gvd sal henar</span>. To this are added certain
-symbols, suggested it may be presumed by the Kingiktorsoak
-inscription, from which the translator professes to derive the
-date <span class='sc'>a.d.</span> 1051.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the interval between the dates of the two communications
-previously referred to, a rubbing of the inscription on the
-Yarmouth rock was forwarded to Mr. Henry Phillips jr., of
-Philadelphia. It appears to have been under consideration by
-him at intervals for nine years, when at length it was made
-the subject of a paper read before the American Philosophical
-Society, and printed in its <span class='it'>Proceedings</span> in 1884. After a
-description of the locality, and the discovery of the inscribed
-stone on its original site, “about the end of the last century,
-by a man named Fletcher,” Mr. Phillips states the reasons
-which sufficed to satisfy him that the inscription is a genuine
-one. He then proceeds thus: “Having become imbued with
-a belief that no deception was intended, or practised, I entered
-upon the study of the markings with a mind totally and
-entirely free from prejudice. So far from believing that the
-inscription was a relic of the pre-Columbian discovery of
-America, I had never given any credence to that theory.”
-<span class='pageno' title='58' id='Page_58'></span>
-Thus, not only entirely unbiassed, but, as he says, “somewhat
-prejudiced against the authenticity of any inscription on this
-continent purporting to emanate from the hardy and intrepid
-Norsemen,” he proceeded to grapple with the strange characters.
-“As in a kaleidoscope, word after word appeared in disjointed
-form, and each was in turn rejected, until at last an intelligible
-word came forth, followed by another and another,
-until a real sentence with a meaning stood forth to my
-astonished gaze: <span class='it'>Harkussen men varu</span>—Hako’s son addressed
-the men.” On reverting to the old Vinland narrative this
-seemed all unexpectedly to tally with it, for Mr. Phillips found
-that in the expedition of Thorfinn Karlsefne, in 1007, one
-named Haki occurs among those who accompanied him. Still
-more noteworthy, as it appears, though overlooked by him,
-this oldest record of a European visitor to the Nova-Scotian
-shores, if actually referable to Hake, the fellow-voyager of
-Thorfinn, was no Northman, but a Scot! For Thorfinn himself,
-the old Saga, as reproduced in the <span class='it'>Antiquitates Americanæ</span>,
-claims a comprehensive genealogy in which his own Scottish
-ancestry is not overlooked. In the summer of 1006, according
-to the narrative of the “settlement effected in Vinland by
-Thorfinn,” “there arrived in Greenland two ships from Iceland;
-the one was commanded by Thorfinn, having the very significant
-surname of Karlsefn (<span class='it'>i.e.</span> who promises, or is destined to be an
-able or great man), a wealthy and powerful man, of illustrious
-lineage, and sprung from Danish, Norwegian, Swedish, Irish and
-Scottish ancestors, some of whom were kings of royal descent.
-He was accompanied by Snorre Thorbrandson, who was also a
-man of distinguished lineage. The other ship was commanded
-by Bjarne Grimolfson, of Breidefiord, and Thorhall Gamlison, of
-Austfiord. They kept the festival of Yule at Brattalid.
-Thorfinn became enamoured of Gudrida, and obtained the consent
-of her brother-in-law, Leif, and their marriage was
-celebrated during the winter. On this, as on former occasions,
-the voyage to Vinland formed a favourite theme of conversation,
-and Thorfinn was urged both by his wife and others to
-undertake such a voyage. It was accordingly resolved on in
-the spring of 1007.” This later narrative distinctly sets forth
-an organised scheme of permanent settlement in the tempting
-land of the vine. Thorvald, who was in command of one of
-<span class='pageno' title='59' id='Page_59'></span>
-the three ships fitted out for the expedition, was married to
-Freydisa, a natural daughter of Eric the Red. “On board this
-ship was also a man of the name of Thorhall, who had long
-served Eric as a huntsman in summer, and as house-steward
-in winter, and who had much acquaintance with the uncolonised
-parts of Greenland. They had in all 160 men. They took
-with them all kinds of live stock, it being their intention to
-establish a colony, if possible.” Then follows the notice of
-their observations of the characteristic features, and of the
-fauna and flora of Helluland, Markland, and subsequent points;
-to the last of which, characterised by “trackless deserts and
-long beaches with sands,” they gave the name of Furdustrandir.
-After passing this, the characteristic feature is noted that the
-land began to be indented by inlets, or bays. Then follows
-the notice of Hake, the Scot, to whom Mr. Phillips conceives
-the Yarmouth inscription may be due. The reference,
-accordingly, with its accompanying description of the country,
-has a special claim to notice here. “They had,” says the Saga,
-“two Scots with them, Haki and Hekia, whom Leif had
-formerly received from the Norwegian King, Olaf Tryggvason,”
-it may be assumed as slaves carried off in some marauding
-expedition to the British Islands. The two Scots, man and
-woman, it is added, “were very swift of foot. They put them
-on shore recommending them to proceed in a south-west
-direction, and explore the country. After the lapse of three
-days they returned, bringing with them some grapes and ears
-of wheat, which grew wild in that region. They continued
-their course until they came to a place where the firth penetrated
-far into the country. Off the mouth of it was an island
-past which there ran strong currents, which was also the case
-further up the firth. On the island there was an immense
-number of eider ducks, so that it was scarcely possible to walk
-without treading on their eggs. They called the island
-Straumey (Stream Isle), and the firth Straumfiordr (Stream
-Firth). They landed on the shore of this firth, and made
-preparations for their winter residence. The country was
-extremely beautiful,” as we may readily imagine a sheltered
-nook of Nova Scotia to have appeared to voyagers fresh from
-Iceland and the Greenland shores. It may be well to note here
-that the incident of the discovery of the vine and the gathering
-<span class='pageno' title='60' id='Page_60'></span>
-of grapes reappears in different narratives under varying forms.
-It was a feature to be specially looked for by all later voyagers
-in search of the Vinland of the first expedition, that set out in
-search for the southern lands of which Bjarni Herjulfson is
-reported to have brought back an account to Greenland. Nor
-is the discovery of the vine by successive explorers along the
-American seaboard in any degree improbable, though it can
-scarcely be doubted that some of the later accounts are mere
-amplifications of the original narrative. It is, at any rate, to
-be noted that the scene of Haki the Scot’s discovery, was not
-the Hóp, identified by the Rhode Island Historical Society with
-their own Mount Hope Bay. As for Thorhall and his shipmates,
-they turned back, northward, in search of Vinland, and
-so deserted their fellow-voyagers before the scene of attempted
-colonisation was reached, and were ultimately reported to have
-been wrecked on the Irish coast.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Such is the episode in the narrative of ancient explorations
-of the North American shores by voyagers from Greenland, in
-which Mr. Phillips was gratified by the startling conformity, as
-it seemed to him, of the name of Haki, with the Harkussen of
-his runes; though, it must be admitted, the identity is far from
-complete. If, however, there were no doubt as to the inscription
-being a genuine example of Northern runes, the failure to
-refer them to Hake, or any other specific member of an exploring
-party, would be of little moment. Here, at any rate,
-was evidence which, if rightly interpreted, was calculated to
-suggest a reconsideration of the old localisation of Vinland in
-the state of Rhode Island; and to this other evidence pointed
-even more clearly. Reassured, accordingly, by a study of the
-map, which shows the comparatively trifling distance traversed
-by the assumed voyagers from Greenland, when compared with
-that from their remote European fatherland, Mr. Phillips submitted
-his interpretation to the American Philosophical Society
-“as worthy of consideration, if not absolutely convincing.”
-To the topographer of the maritime coasts of Canada, a genuine
-runic inscription which proved that Norse voyagers from
-Greenland did actually land on the shores of Nova Scotia,
-in <span class='sc'>a.d.</span> 1007, and leave there a literate record of their visit,
-would be peculiarly acceptable. But whatever be the significance
-of the Yarmouth inscription, it fails to satisfy such
-<span class='pageno' title='61' id='Page_61'></span>
-requirements. It neither accords with the style, or usual
-formula of runic inscriptions; nor, as will be seen from the
-accompanying facsimile, is it graven in any variation of the
-familiar characters of the Scandinavian futhork. The fascinating
-temptation has to be set aside; and the Hake or
-Harkussen of its modern interpreter must take rank with the
-illusory Thorfinn discovered by the Rhode Island antiquaries
-on their famed Dighton Rock, which still stands by the banks
-of the Taunton river.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is indeed vain for us to hope for evidence of the same
-definite kind as that which establishes beyond question the
-presence of the Northmen on the sites of their long-settled
-colonies in Greenland. Their visits to the Canadian seaboard
-were transitory; and any attempt at settlement there failed.
-Yet without the definite memorials of the old Norse colonists
-recovered in the present century on the sites of their Greenland
-settlements, it would probably have proved vain to
-identify them now. The coast of Nova Scotia is indented
-with inlets, and estuaries of creeks and rivers, suggesting
-some vague resemblance to the Hóp, or creek of the old
-Sagas. Whether any one of them presents adequate features
-for identification with the descriptions furnished in their
-accounts has yet to be ascertained. But there is every
-motive to stimulate us to a careful survey of the coast in
-search of any probable site of the Vinland of the old Northmen.
-Slight as are the details available for such a purpose,
-they are not without some specific definiteness, which the
-Rhode Island antiquaries turned to account, not without a
-warning to us in their too confident assumption of results.
-Dr. E. B. Tylor, in his address to the section of anthropology
-at the Montreal meeting of the British Association, after
-referring to the Icelandic records of the explorations of the
-hardy sea-rovers from Greenland, as too consistent to be
-refused belief as to the main facts, thus proceeded: “They
-sailed some way down the American coast. But where are
-we to look for the most southerly points which the Sagas
-mention as reached in Vineland? Where was Keel-ness
-where Thorvald’s ship ran aground, and Cross-ness where he
-was buried when he died by the Skræling’s arrow? Rafn, in
-the <span class='it'>Antiquitates Americanæ</span>, confidently maps out these places
-<span class='pageno' title='62' id='Page_62'></span>
-about the promontory of Cape Cod, in Massachusetts, and this
-has been repeated since from book to book. I must plead
-guilty to having cited Rafn’s map before now, but when with
-reference to the present meeting I consulted our learned
-editor of Scandinavian records at Oxford, Mr. Gudbrand
-Vigfusson, and afterwards went through the original passages
-in the Sagas with Mr. York Powell, I am bound to say that
-the voyages of the Northmen ought to be reduced to more
-moderate limits. It appears that they crossed from Greenland
-to Labrador (Helluland), and thence sailing more or
-less south and west, in two stretches of two days each, they
-came to a place near where wild grapes grew, whence they
-called the country Vineland. This would, therefore, seem to
-have been somewhere about the Gulf of St. Lawrence, and it
-would be an interesting object for a yachting cruise to try
-down from the east coast of Labrador a fair four days’ sail of
-a Viking ship, and identify, if possible, the sound between the
-island and the ness, the river running out of the lake into the
-sea, the long stretches of sand, and the other local features
-mentioned in the Sagas.” A fresh stimulus is thus furnished
-to Canadian yachtsmen to combine historical exploration with
-a summer’s coasting trip, and go in search of the lost Vinland.
-The description of the locality that furnished the data from
-which the members of the Rhode Island Historical Society
-satisfied themselves as to the identity of their more southern
-site on the Pacasset river, has to be kept in view in any
-renewed inquiry. At the same time it must not be overlooked
-that the oldest and most trustworthy narrative, in the
-Saga of Eric the Red, with the credited, and probably genuine
-story of the voyage of Karlsefne, are expanded, in the Grænlendingathàttr,
-into five voyages, with their incidents recast
-with modifications and additions. The expedition of Leif
-Ericson, and his accidental discovery of Vinland, and the
-subsequent attempt at colonisation of Karlsefne, in company
-with Thorvald and Freydisa, are the only adventures accredited
-by the oldest tradition. In the latter narrative it is stated
-that “they sailed for a long time, until they came at last to a
-river which flowed down from the land into a lake, and so
-into the sea. There were great bars at the mouth of the river,
-so that it could only be entered at the height of the flood tide.
-<span class='pageno' title='63' id='Page_63'></span>
-Karlsefn and his men sailed into the mouth of the river,
-and called it Hóp,” <span class='it'>i.e.</span> a land-locked bay. “They found self-sown
-wheat fields wherever there were hollows, and where
-there was hilly ground there were vines.” Subsequent descriptions
-are obviously based on this account. But to whatever
-extent the description of the locality where Thorvald,
-the brother of Leif Ericson, was killed by a Skræling may
-have been suggested by that narrative, the localities are
-different. It was apparently in the spring of <span class='sc'>a.d.</span> 1004 that
-Karlsefne set out on his colonising expedition. The voyagers
-sailed along Furdustrandir, a long, low sandy coast, till they
-came to where the land was indented with creeks and inlets.
-There they steered into the Straumsfjord, to a spot where
-Karlsefne and his companions spent the winter of <span class='sc'>a.d.</span> 1005;
-and where, therefore, we may assume the observations to have
-been made that determined the length of the day in Vinland
-at the winter solstice. The narrative of noteworthy incidents
-is accompanied with topographical details that have to be kept
-in view in any attempt at recovering traces of the locality.
-There, if it could be identified, we have to look for a promontory
-answering to the Krossanes, or promontory of the crosses:
-the spot where Thorvald was buried; and as would seem to be
-implied, where a cross was set up at the grave mound. The
-style of such a sepulchral memorial of the Northmen at a
-little later date is very familiar to us. The discovery on some
-hitherto unheeded spot of the Nova-Scotian coast of a bautastein,
-graven like those recovered on the sites of the old
-Greenland colony, would be an invaluable historical record.
-It might be expected to read somewhat in this fashion: <span class='it'>Leif
-sunr Erikr rautha raisti krus thana eftir Thorvald brothur
-sina</span>. But there is slight ground for imagining that the
-transient visitors from Greenland to the Canadian shores left
-any more lasting memorial of the tragic event that reappears
-in successive versions of the narrative of their presence there,
-than a wooden grave-post, or uninscribed headstone.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>One other element in the characteristic features of the
-strange land visited by the Greenland explorers is the native
-population, and this has a specific interest in other respects, in
-addition to its bearing on the determination of a Nova-Scotian
-site for “Vineland the Good.” They are designated Skrælings
-<span class='pageno' title='64' id='Page_64'></span>
-(Skrælingjar), and as in this the Greenland voyagers applied
-the same name to the natives of Vinland as to the Greenland
-Eskimo, it has been assumed that both were of the same race.
-But the term “skræling” is still used in Norway to express the
-idea of decrepitude, or physical inferiority; and probably was
-used with no more definite significance than our own word
-“savage.” The account given in the Saga of the approach of
-the Skrælings would sufficiently accord with that of a Micmac
-flotilla of canoes. Their first appearance is thus described:
-“While looking about one morning, they observed a great
-number of canoes. On exhibiting friendly signals the canoes
-approached nearer to them, and the natives in them looked
-with astonishment at those they met there. These people
-were sallow-coloured and ill-looking, had ugly heads of hair,
-large eyes and broad cheeks.” The term <span class='it'>skræling</span> has usually
-been interpreted “dwarf,” and so seemed to confirm the idea
-of the natives having been Eskimo; but, as already stated, the
-word, as still used in Norway, might mean no more than the
-inferiority of any savage race. As to the description of their
-features and complexion, that would apply equally well to the
-red Indian or the Eskimo, and so far as the eyes are spoken
-of, rather to the former than the latter. More importance
-may be attached to the term <span class='it'>hudhkeipr</span> applied to their canoes,
-which is more applicable to the kayak, or skin-boat, than to
-the birch-bark canoe of the Indian; but the word was probably
-loosely used as applicable to any savage substitute for a keel,
-or built boat.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This question of the identification of the Skrælings, or
-natives, whether of Nova Scotia or New England, is one of
-considerable ethnographic significance. The speculations
-relative to the possible relationship of the Eskimo to the
-post-glacial cave-dwellers of the Dordogne valley, and their
-consequent direct descent from palæolithic European man,
-confer a value on any definite evidence bearing on their
-movements in intermediate centuries. On the other hand,
-the approximate correspondence of the Huron-Iroquois of
-Canada and the state of New York to the Eskimo in the
-dolichocephalic type of skull common to both, gives an
-interest to any evidence of the early presence of the latter
-to the south of the St. Lawrence. In their western migrations
-<span class='pageno' title='65' id='Page_65'></span>
-the Eskimo attract the attention of the ethnographer as the
-one definite ethnic link between America and Asia. They
-are met with, as detached and wandering tribes, across the
-whole continent, from Greenland to Behring Strait. Nevertheless,
-they appear to be the occupants of a diminishing
-rather than an expanding area. This would accord with the
-idea of their area extending over the Canadian maritime provinces,
-and along the New England coast, in the eleventh century;
-and possibly as indicating the early home, from which
-they were being driven northward by the Huron-Iroquois or
-other assailants, rather than implying an overflow from their
-Arctic habitat. Seal hunting on the coast of Newfoundland,
-and fishing on its banks and along the shores of Nova Scotia,
-would even now involve no radical change in the habits of the
-Eskimo. It was with this hyperborean race that the Scandinavian
-colonists of Greenland came in contact 800 years ago,
-and by them that they were exterminated at a later
-date. If it could be proved that the Skrælings of the eleventh
-century, found by the Northmen on the American mainland,
-were Eskimo, it would furnish the most conclusive evidence
-that the red Indians—whether Micmac, Millicet, or Hurons,—are
-recent intruders there.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In any process of aggression of the native American race
-on the older area of the Eskimo, some intermixture of blood
-would naturally follow. The slaughter of the males in battle,
-and the capture of women and children, everywhere leads to
-a like result; and this seems the simplest solution of the
-problem of the southern brachycephalic, and the northern
-dolichocephalic type of head among native American races.
-When the sites of the ancient colonies of Greenland were
-rediscovered and visited by the Danes, they imagined they
-could recognise in the physiognomy of some of the Eskimo
-who still people the shores of Davis Straits, traces of admixture
-between the old native and the Scandinavian or
-Icelandic blood. Of the Greenland colonies the Eskimo had
-perpetuated many traditions, referring to the colonists under
-the native name of <span class='it'>Kablunet</span>. But of the language that had
-been spoken among them for centuries, the fact is highly
-significant that the word <span class='it'>Kona</span>, used by them as a synonym
-for woman, is the only clearly recognised trace. This is
-<span class='pageno' title='66' id='Page_66'></span>
-worthy of note, in considering the distinctive character of the
-Eskimo language, and its comparison with the Indian languages
-of the North American continent. It has the feature common
-to nearly all the native languages of the continent north of
-the Mexican Gulf in the composite character of its words; so
-that an Eskimo verb may furnish the equivalent to a whole
-sentence in other tongues. But what is specially noteworthy
-is that, while the Huron-Iroquois, the Algonkin, and other
-Indian families of languages have multiplied widely dissimilar
-dialects, Dr. Henry Rink has shown that the Eskimo dialects
-of Greenland or Labrador differ slightly from those of Behring
-Strait; and the congeners of the American Eskimo, who have
-overflowed into the Aleutian Islands, and taken possession of
-the north-eastern region of Asia, perpetuate there nearly allied
-dialects of the parent tongue.<a id='r8'/><a href='#f8' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[8]</span></sup></a> The Alaskan and the Tshugazzi
-peninsulas are in part peopled by Eskimo; the Konegan of
-Kudjak Island belong to the same stock; and all the dialects
-spoken in the Aleutian Islands, the supposed highway from
-Asia to America, betray in like manner the closest affinities
-to the Arctic Mongolidæ of the New World. They thus
-appear not only to be contributions from the New World to
-the Old, but to be of recent introduction there. If the cave-dwellers
-of Europe’s palæolithic era found their way as has
-been suggested, in some vastly remote age, either by an
-eastern or a western route to the later home of the Arctic
-Eskimo, it is in comparatively modern centuries that the tide
-of migration has set westward across the Behring Strait, and
-by the Aleutian Islands, into Asia.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The reference to the Skrælings in the first friendly intercourse
-of Thorfinn Karlsefne and his companions with the
-natives, and their subsequent hostile attitude, ending in the
-death of Thorvald Ericson, has given occasion to this digression.
-But the question thus suggested is one of no secondary
-interest. If we could certainly determine their ethnical
-character the fact would be of great significance; and coupled
-with any well-grounded determination of the locality where the
-fatal incident occurred, would have important bearings on
-American ethnology. The description of the sallow, or more
-correctly, swarthy coloured, natives with large eyes, broad cheek-bones,
-<span class='pageno' title='67' id='Page_67'></span>
-shaggy hair, and forbidding countenances is furnished
-in the Saga, and then the narrative thus proceeds: “After the
-Skrælings had gazed at them for a while, they rowed away
-again to the south-west past the cape. Karlsefne and his
-company had erected their dwelling-houses a little above the
-bay, and there they spent the winter. No snow fell, and the
-cattle found their food in the open field. One morning early,
-in the beginning of 1008, they descried a number of canoes
-coming from the south-west past the cape. Karlsefne having
-held up the white shield as a friendly signal, they drew nigh
-and immediately commenced bartering. These people chose
-in preference red cloth, and gave furs and squirrel skins in
-exchange. They would fain also have bought swords and
-spears, but these Karlsefne and Snorre prohibited their people
-from selling to them. In exchange for a skin entirely gray
-the Skrælings took a piece of cloth of a span in breadth, and
-bound it round their heads. Their barter was carried on in
-this way for some time. The Northmen then found that their
-cloth was beginning to grow scarce, whereupon they cut it up
-in smaller pieces, not broader than a finger’s breadth, yet the
-Skrælings gave as much for these smaller pieces as they had
-formerly given for the larger ones, or even more. Karlsefne
-also caused the women to bear out milk soup, and the Skrælings
-relishing the taste of it, they desired to buy it in preference to
-everything else, so they wound up their traffic by carrying
-away their bargains in their bellies. Whilst this traffic was
-going on it happened that a bull, which Karlsefne had brought
-along with him, came out of the wood and bellowed loudly.
-At this the Skrælings got terrified and rushed to their canoes,
-and rowed away southwards. About this time Gudrida,
-Karlsefne’s wife, gave birth to a son, who received the name
-of Snorre. In the beginning of the following winter the
-Skrælings came again in much greater numbers; they showed
-symptoms of hostility, setting up loud yells. Karlsefne caused
-the red shield to be borne against them, whereupon they
-advanced against each other, and a battle commenced. There
-was a galling discharge of missiles. The Skrælings had a sort
-of war sling. They elevated on a pole a tremendously large
-ball, almost the size of a sheep’s stomach, and of a bluish
-colour; this they swung from the pole over Karlsefne’s people,
-<span class='pageno' title='68' id='Page_68'></span>
-and it descended with a fearful crash. This struck terror into
-the Northmen, and they fled along the river.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was thus apparent that in spite of the attractions of the
-forest-clad land, with its tempting vines, there was little
-prospect of peaceful possession. The experience of these
-first colonisers differed in no degree from that of the later
-pioneers of Nova Scotia or New England. Freydisa, the
-natural daughter of Eric, whom Thorvald had wedded, is
-described as taunting the men for their cowardice in giving
-way before such miserable caitiffs as the Skrælings or savage
-natives, and vowing, if she had only a weapon, she would show
-better fight. “She accordingly followed them into the wood.
-There she encountered a dead body. It was Thorbrand
-Snorrason. A flat stone was sticking fast in his head. His
-naked sword lay by his side. This she took up, and prepared
-to defend herself. She uncovered her breasts and dashed them
-against the naked sword. At this sight the Skrælings became
-terrified, and ran off to their canoes. Karlsefne and the rest
-now came up to her and praised her courage. But Karlsefne
-and his people became aware that, although the country held
-out many advantages, still the life that they would have to
-lead here would be one of constant alarm from the hostile
-attacks of the natives. They therefore made preparations for
-departure with the resolution of returning to their own
-country.” To us the attractions of a Nova-Scotian settlement
-might seem worth encountering a good many such assaults
-rather than retreat to the ice-bound shores of Greenland. But
-it was “their own country”; their relatives were there. Nor
-to the hardy Northmen did its climate, or that of Iceland,
-present the forbidding aspect which it would to us. So they
-returned to Brattalid, carrying back with them an evil report
-of the land; and, as it seems, also bringing with them specimens
-of its natives. For, on their homeward voyage, they
-proceeded round Kialarnes, and then were driven to the nort-west.
-“The land lay to larboard of them. There were thick
-forests in all directions as far as they could see, with scarcely
-any open space. They considered the hills at Hope and those
-which they now saw as forming part of one continuous range.
-They spent the third winter at Streamfirth. Karlsefne’s son
-Snorre was now three years of age. When they sailed from
-<span class='pageno' title='69' id='Page_69'></span>
-Vinland they had southerly wind, and came to Markland,
-where they met with five Skrælings. They caught two of
-them (two boys), whom they carried away along with them,
-and taught them the Norse language, and baptized them;
-these children said that their mother was called Vethilldi and
-their father Uvaege. They said that the Skrælings were ruled
-by chieftains (kings), one of whom was called Avalldamon,
-and the other Valdidida; that there were no houses in the
-country, but that the people dwelled in holes and caverns.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Thus ended the abortive enterprise of Thorfinn and his
-company to found, in the eleventh century, a colony of Northmen
-on the American mainland. The account the survivors
-brought back told indeed of umbrageous woodland and the
-tempting vine. But the forest was haunted by the fierce
-Skrælings, and its coasts open to assault from their canoes.
-To the race that wrested Normandy from the Carlovingian
-Frank, and established its jarldoms in Orkney, Caithness, and
-Northumbria, such a foe might well be deemed contemptible.
-But the degenerate Franks, and the Angles of Northumbria,
-tempted the Norse marauder with costly spoils; and only
-after repeated successful expeditions awakened the desire to
-settle in the land and make there new homes. Alike to
-explorers seeking for themselves a home, and to adventurers
-coveting the victors’ spoils, the Vinland of the Northmen
-offered no adequate temptation, and so its traditions faded out
-of memory, or were recalled only as the legend of a fabulous
-age. At the meeting of the British Association at Montreal
-in 1884 Mr. R. G. Halliburton read a paper entitled “A
-Search in British North America for lost Colonies of Northmen
-and Portuguese.” Documents were quoted by him showing
-that from <span class='sc'>a.d.</span> 1500 to 1570 commissions were regularly
-issued to the Corte Reals and their successors. Cape Breton
-was colonised by them in 1521; and when Portugal became
-annexed to Spain in 1680, and Terra Nova passed with it
-to her rule, she sent colonists to settle there. The site which
-they occupied, Mr. Halliburton traced to Spanish Harbour
-(Sydney), Cape Breton, and this he claimed to be the earliest
-European settlement in North America. For, as for the
-Northmen’s reputed explorations and attempt at settlement, his
-verdict is thus briefly summed up: “When we can discover
-<span class='pageno' title='70' id='Page_70'></span>
-Greenland’s verdant mountains we can also hope to find the
-vine-clad hills of Vineland the Good.” That, however, is too
-summary a dismissal of evidence which, if vague, is to every
-appearance based on authorities as seemingly authentic and
-trustworthy as those on which many details of the history of
-early centuries rest. It would manifestly be unwise to discountenance
-further inquiry by any such sweeping scepticism,
-or to discourage the hope that local research may yet be rewarded
-by evidence confirmatory of the reputed visit of Thorfinn
-and his fellow-explorers to some recognisable point on the
-Nova-Scotian coast.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The diligent research of scholars familiar with the Old
-Norse, in which the Sagas are written, is now clearing this
-inquiry into reputed pre-Columbian discovery and colonisation
-of much misapprehension. The extravagant assumptions alike
-of earlier Danish and New England antiquaries in dealing with
-the question were provocative of an undue bias of critical
-scepticism. The American historian Bancroft gave form to
-this tendency when he affirmed that “the story of the colonisation
-of America by Northmen rests on narratives mythological
-in form and obscure in meaning; ancient, yet not contemporary.”
-If the historian had adduced in evidence of this the
-story of the Eyrbyggja Saga, and the later amplifications of
-reputed voyages to “White Man’s Land,” and to “Newland,”
-his language would have been pardonable. Of the later fictitious
-Sagas are the Landvætta-sögur; Stories of the guardian-spirits
-of the land; and the Saga of Halfdan Eysteinsson, from
-which we learn that “Raknar brought the deserts of Heluland
-under his rule, and destroyed all the giants there”; or again
-we have the Saga of “Barthar Snæfellsass,” or the Snow-fell
-God, and the King Dumbr of Dumbshaf. But all such
-mythical Sagas belong to later Icelandic and Norwegian literature,
-and have no claim to historical value.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The genuine documentary evidence of Vinland is recoverable
-from manuscripts of earlier date, and a widely different
-character. Had Bancroft been familiar with the early Icelandic
-Sagas he could never have spoken of them as mythological.
-They are, on the contrary, distinguished by their presentation
-of events in an extremely simple and literal manner; equally
-free from rhetorical embellishment and the extravagances of
-<span class='pageno' title='71' id='Page_71'></span>
-the romancer. But the occupation of the new-found land
-was brief; and as the tale of its explorers faded from the
-memory of younger generations, fancy toyed with the legend
-of a sunny land of the Vine, with its self-sown fields of
-ripened grain. At a later date Greenland itself vanished from
-the ken of living men; and romance sported with the fancies
-suggested by its name as a fertile oasis of green pastures
-walled in by the ice and snows of its Arctic zone.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The first authentic reference, now recoverable, to Vinland
-the Good has already been referred to. It occurs in a passage
-in the <span class='it'>Iselandinga Vók</span>, by Ari Thorgilsson, the oldest Icelandic
-historiographer. Ari, surnamed froði, or the learned, was born
-<span class='sc'>a.d.</span> 1067, and survived till 1148. The earliest manuscript
-of the Saga of Eric the Red dates as late as <span class='sc'>a.d.</span> 1330. It
-is contained in the Arna Magnæan Codex, commonly known as
-<span class='it'>Hauks Vók</span>. Hauk Erlendsson, to whom the preservation
-of this copy of the original Saga is due, and by whom part
-of it appears to have been written, has appended to the manuscript
-a genealogy, in which he traces his descent from the
-son of Karlsefne, born in Vinland. Two versions of the
-narrative have been preserved, differing only in slight details;
-and of those Reeves says: “They afford the most graphic and
-succinct exposition of the discovery; and, supported as they
-are throughout by contemporary history, appear in every
-respect most worthy of credence.”<a id='r9'/><a href='#f9' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[9]</span></sup></a> The simple, unadorned
-narrative bears out the idea that it is a manuscript of information
-derived from the statements of the actual explorers.
-The later story of Barni Herjulfson,—an obvious amplification
-of the original narrative, with a change of names, and many
-spurious additions,—occurs in the Flatey Book, a manuscript
-written before the close of the fourteenth century, when the
-Northmen of the Scandinavian fatherland were reawakening
-to an interest in the memories or traditions of early voyages
-to strange lands beyond the Atlantic Ocean, and fashioning
-them into legend and romance.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The poet, William Morris, represents the Vikings of the
-fourteenth century following the old leadings of Leif Ericson
-in search of the earthly paradise:—
-<span class='pageno' title='72' id='Page_72'></span></p>
-
-<div class='poetry-container' style=''><div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;That desired gate</p>
-<p class='line0'>To immortality and blessed rest</p>
-<p class='line0'>Within the landless waters of the West.</p>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>The time chosen is that of England’s Edward III., and, still
-more, of England’s Chaucer. But in reality all memory of the
-land which lay beyond the waters of the Atlantic had faded
-as utterly from the minds of Europe’s mariners, in that fourteenth
-century, as in the older days when Plato restored a
-lost Atlantis to give local habitation to his ideal Republic.
-When the idea revived in the closing years of the fifteenth
-century, not as a philosophic dream, but as a legitimate induction
-of science, the reception which it met with from the
-embodied wisdom of that age, curiously illustrates the common
-experience of the pioneers in every path of novel discovery.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>To Columbus, with his well-defined faith in the form of
-the earth which gave him confidence to steer boldly westward
-in search of the Asiatic Cipango: the existence of a continent
-beyond the Atlantic was no mere possibility. So early, at
-least, as 1474 he had conceived the design of reaching Asia
-by sailing to the West; and in that year he is known to
-have expounded his plans to Paolo Toscanelli, the learned
-Florentine physician and cosmographer, and to have received
-from him hearty encouragement. Assuming the world to
-be a sphere, he fortunately erred alike in under-estimating
-its size, and in over-estimating the extent to which the
-continent of Asia stretched eastward. In this way he
-diminished the distance between the coasts of Europe and
-Asia; and so, when at length he sighted the new-found land
-of the West, so far from dreaming of another ocean wider than
-the Atlantic between him and the object of his quest, he
-unhesitatingly designated the natives of Guanahani, or San
-Salvador, “Indians,” in the confident belief that this was an
-outlying coast of Asiatic India. Nor was his reasoning
-unsound. He sought, and would have found, a western route
-to that old east by the very track he followed, had no
-American continent intervened. It was not till his third
-voyage that the great Admiral for the first time beheld the
-new continent,—not indeed the Asiatic mainland, nor even
-the northern continent,—but the embouchures of the Orinoco
-river, with its mighty volume of fresh water, proving beyond
-<span class='pageno' title='73' id='Page_73'></span>
-dispute that it drained an area of vast extent, and opened up
-access far into the interior of a new world.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Columbus had realised his utmost anticipations, and died
-in the belief that he had reached the eastern shores of Asia.
-Nor is the triumph in any degree lessened by this assumption.
-The dauntless navigator, pushing on ever westward into the
-mysterious waters of the unexplored Atlantic in search of the
-old East, presents one of the most marvellous examples of intelligent
-faith that science can adduce. To estimate all that
-it implied, we have to turn back to a period when his
-unaccomplished purpose rested solely on that sure and well-grounded
-faith in the demonstrations of science.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the city of Salamanca there assembled in the Dominican
-convent of San Esteban, in the year 1487, a learned and
-orthodox conclave, summoned by Prior Fernando de Talavera,
-to pronounce judgment on the theory propounded by
-Columbus; and to decide whether in that most catholic of
-Christian kingdoms, on the very eve of its final triumph
-over the infidel, it was a permissible belief that the Western
-World had even a possible existence. Columbus set before
-them the scientific demonstration which constituted for himself
-indisputable evidence of an ocean highway across the Atlantic
-to the continent beyond. The clerical council included professors
-of mathematics, astronomy, and geography, as well
-as other learned friars and dignitaries of the Church: probably
-as respectable an assemblage of cloister-bred pedantry
-and orthodox conservatism as that fifteenth century could
-produce. Philosophical deductions were parried by a quotation
-from St. Jerome or St. Augustine; and mathematical
-demonstrations by a figurative text of Scripture; and in spite
-alike of the science and the devout religious spirit of Columbus,
-the divines of Salamanca pronounced the idea of the earth’s
-spherical form to be heterodox; and declared a belief in
-antipodes incompatible with the historical traditions of the
-Christian faith: since to assert that there were inhabited
-lands on the opposite side of the globe would be to maintain
-that there were nations not descended from Adam, it being
-impossible for them to have passed the intervening ocean.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It may naturally excite a smile to thus find the very
-ethnological problem of this nineteenth century thus dogmatically
-<span class='pageno' title='74' id='Page_74'></span>
-produced four centuries earlier to prove that America
-was an impossibility. But in reality this ethnological problem
-long continued in all ways to affect the question.
-Among the various evidences which Columbus adduced in
-confirmation of his belief in the existence of a continent
-beyond the Atlantic, was the report brought to him by his
-own brother-in-law, Pedro Correa, that the bodies of two
-dead men had been cast ashore on the island of Flores,
-differing essentially from any known race, “very broad-faced,
-and diverse in aspect from Christians”; and, in truth, the
-more widely they differed from all familiar Christian
-humanity, the more probable did their existence appear to
-the men of that fifteenth century. Hence Shakespeare’s
-marvellous creation of his Caliban. Upwards of a century
-and half had then elapsed since Columbus returned with the
-news of a world beyond the Western Ocean; yet still to the
-men of Shakespeare’s day, the strange regions of which
-Columbus, Amerigo Vespucci, Gomara, Lane, Harriot, and
-Raleigh wrote, seemed more fitly occupied by Calibans, and
-the like rude approximations to humanity, than by men and
-women in any degree akin to ourselves. Othello indeed only
-literally reproduces Raleigh’s account of a strange people
-on the Caoro, in Guiana. He had not, indeed, himself got
-sight of those marvellous Ewaipanoma, though anxious enough
-to do so. Their eyes, as reported, were in their shoulders,
-and their mouths in the middle of their breasts. But the
-truth could not be doubted, since every child in the provinces
-of Arromaia and Canuri affirmed the same. The founder of
-Virginia, assuredly one of the most sagacious men of that
-wise Elizabethan era, and with all the experience which travel
-supplies, reverts again and again to this strange new-world
-race, as to a thing of which he entertained no doubt. The
-designation of Shakespeare’s Caliban, is but an anagram of
-the epithet which Raleigh couples with the specific designation
-of those monstrous dwellers on the Caoro. “To the west of
-Caroli,” he says, “are divers nations of Cannibals, and of those
-Ewaipanoma without heads.” Of “such men, whose head
-stood in their breasts,” Gonsalo, in <span class='it'>The Tempest</span>, reminds
-his companions, as a tale which every voyager brings back
-“good warrant of”; and so it was in all honesty that
-<span class='pageno' title='75' id='Page_75'></span>
-Othello entertained Desdemona with the story of his adventures:—</p>
-
-<div class='poetry-container' style=''><div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<p class='line0'>Of moving accidents by flood and field .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-<p class='line0'>And of the Cannibals that each other eat,</p>
-<p class='line0'>The Anthropophagi and men whose heads</p>
-<p class='line0'>Do grow beneath their shoulders.</p>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>The idea of an island-world lying in some unexplored
-ocean, apart from the influences which affect humanity at
-large, with beings, institutions, and a civilisation of its own,
-had been the dream of very diverse minds. When indeed we
-recall what the rude Norse galley of Eric the Red must have
-been; and what the little “Pinta” and the “Nina” of
-Columbus—the latter with a crew of only twenty-four men,—actually
-were; and remember, moreover, that the pole-star
-was the sole compass of the earlier explorer; there seems
-nothing improbable in the assumption that the more ancient
-voyagers from the Mediterranean, who claimed to have
-circumnavigated Africa, and were familiar with the islands of
-the Atlantic, may have found their way to the great continent
-which lay beyond. Vague intimations, derived seemingly
-from Egypt, encouraged the belief in a submerged island or
-continent, once the seat of arts and learning, afar on the
-Atlantic main. The most definite narrative of this vanished
-continent is that already referred to as recorded in the
-<span class='it'>Timæus</span> of Plato, on the authority of an account which
-Solon had received from an Egyptian priest. According to
-the latter the temple-records of the Nile preserved the traditions
-of times reaching back far beyond the infantile fables of
-the Greeks. Yet, even these preserved some memory of
-deluges and convulsions by which the earth had been
-revolutionised. In one of them the vast Island of Atlantis—a
-continent larger than Libya and Asia conjoined,—had been
-engulfed in the ocean which bears its name. This ocean-world
-of fancy or tradition, Plato revived as the seat of his
-imaginary commonwealth; and it had not long become a
-world of fact when Sir Thomas More made it anew the seat of
-his famous Utopia, the exemplar of “the best state and form
-of a public weale.” “Unfortunately,” as the author quaintly
-puts it, “neither we remembered to inquire of Raphael, the
-companion of Amerike Vespuce on his third voyage, nor he to
-<span class='pageno' title='76' id='Page_76'></span>
-tell us in what part of the new world Utopia is situate”: and
-so there is no reason why we should not locate the seat of
-this perfect commonwealth within the young Canadian
-Dominion, so soon as it shall have merited this by the attainment
-of such Utopian perfectibility in its polity.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But it is not less curious to note the tardiness with which,
-after the discovery of the New World had been placed beyond
-question, its true significance was comprehended even by men
-of culture, and abreast of the general knowledge of their time.
-Peter Giles, indeed, citizen of Antwerp, and assumed confidant
-of “Master More,” writes with well-simulated grief to the
-Right Hon. Counsellor Hierome Buslyde, “as touching the
-situation of the island, that is to say, in what part of the
-world Utopia standeth, the ignorance and lack whereof not a
-little troubleth and grieveth Master More”; but as he had
-allowed the opportunity of ascertaining this important fact to
-slip by, so the like uncertainty long after mystified current
-ideas regarding the new-found world. Ere the “Flowers of
-the Forest” had been weeded away on Flodden Hill, the
-philosophers and poets of the liberal court of James IV.
-of Scotland had learned in some vague way of the recent
-discovery; and so the Scottish poet, Dunbar, reflecting on the
-King’s promise of a benefice still unfulfilled, hints in his poem
-“Of the world’s instabilitie,” that even had it come “fra
-Calicut and the new-found Isle” that lies beyond “the great
-sea-ocean, it might have comen in shorter while.” Upwards
-of twenty years had passed since the return of the great
-discoverer from his adventurous voyage; but the <span class='it'>Novus Orbis</span>
-was then, and long afterwards continued to be, an insubstantial
-fancy; for after nearly another twenty years had
-elapsed, Sir David Lindsay, in his <span class='it'>Dreme</span>, represents Dame
-Remembrance as his guide and instructor in all heavenly and
-earthly knowledge; and among the rest, he says:—</p>
-
-<div class='poetry-container' style=''><div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<p class='line0'>She gart me clearly understand</p>
-<p class='line0'>How that the Earth tripartite was in three;</p>
-<p class='line0'>In Afric, Europe, and Asie;</p>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='noindent'>the latter being in the Orient, while Africa and Europe still
-constituted the Occident, or western world. Many famous
-isles situated in “the ocean-sea” also attract his notice; but
-<span class='pageno' title='77' id='Page_77'></span>
-“the new-found isle” of the elder poet had obviously faded
-from the memory of that younger generation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Another century had nearly run its course since the eye of
-Columbus beheld the long-expected land, when, in 1590,
-Edmund Spenser crossed the Irish Channel, bringing with him
-the first three books of his <span class='it'>Faerie Queen</span>; in the introduction
-to the second of which he thus defends the verisimilitude of
-that land of fancy in which the scenes of his “famous antique
-history” are laid:—</p>
-
-<div class='poetry-container' style=''><div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;Who ever heard of th’ Indian Peru?</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Or who in venturous vessel measured</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;The Amazon, huge river, now found true?</p>
-<p class='line0'>Or fruitfullest Virginia who did ever view?</p>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<div class='poetry-container' style=''><div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Yet all these were, when no man did them know,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;Yet have from wisest ages hidden been;</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;And later times things more unknowne shall show.</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;Why then should witless man so much misween</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;That nothing is but that which he hath seen?</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;What if within the moon’s fair shining sphere;</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;What if in every other star unseen,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;Of other worlds he happily should hear?</p>
-<p class='line0'>He wonder would much more; yet such to some appear.</p>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>Raleigh, the discoverer of Virginia, was Spenser’s special
-friend, his “Shepherd of the Ocean,” the patron under
-whose advice the poet visited England with the first instalment
-of the Epic, which he dedicated to Queen Elizabeth,
-“to live with the eternity of her Fame.” Yet it is obvious
-that to Spenser’s fancy this western continent was then
-scarcely more substantial than his own Faerie land. In truth
-it was still almost as much a world apart as if Raleigh and his
-adventurous crew had sailed up the blue vault of heaven, and
-brought back the story of another planet on which it had
-been their fortune to alight.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Nor had such fancies wholly vanished long after the
-voyage across the Atlantic had become a familiar thing. It
-was in 1723 that the philosophical idealist, Berkeley,—afterwards
-Bishop of Cloyne,—formulated a more definite and yet
-not less visionary Utopia than that of Sir Thomas More. He
-was about to organise “among the English in our Western
-plantations” a seminary which was designed to train the
-young American savages, make them Masters of Arts, and fit
-<span class='pageno' title='78' id='Page_78'></span>
-instruments for the regeneration of their own people; while
-the new Academy was to accomplish no less for the reformation
-of manners and morals among his own race. In his
-fancy’s choice he gave a preference, at first for Bermuda, or
-the Summer Islands, as the site of his college; and “presents
-the bright vision of an academic home in those fair lands of
-the West, whose idyllic bliss poets had sung, from which
-Christian civilisation might be made to radiate over this
-vast continent with its magnificent possibilities in the future
-history of the race of man.” It was while his mind was
-preoccupied with this fine ideal “of planting Arts and
-Learning in America” that he wrote the well-known lines:—</p>
-
-<div class='poetry-container' style=''><div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<p class='line0'>There shall be sung another golden age,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;The rise of empire and of arts;</p>
-<p class='line0'>The good and great inspiring epic rage,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;The wisest heads and noblest hearts.</p>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<div class='poetry-container' style=''><div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<p class='line0'>Not such as Europe breeds in her decay:</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Such as she bred when fresh and young,</p>
-<p class='line0'>When heavenly flame did animate her clay,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;By future poets shall be sung.</p>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<div class='poetry-container' style=''><div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<p class='line0'>Westward the course of empire takes its way;</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;The four first acts already past,</p>
-<p class='line0'>A fifth shall close the drama with the day;</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Time’s noblest offspring is the last.</p>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>The visionary philosopher followed up his project so far as
-to transport himself—not to the Summer Islands of which
-Waller had sung,—but to that same Rhode Island which
-Danish and New England antiquaries were at a later date to
-identify, whether rightly or not, as the Vinland of the Icelandic
-Sagas. One of these ancient chroniclers had chanced to note
-that, on the shortest day of the year in Vinland, they had the
-sun above the horizon at <span class='it'>eykt</span> and <span class='it'>dagmat</span>; that is at their
-regular evening and morning meal. Like our own term
-breakfast, the names were significant and allusive. The old
-Icelandic poet, Snorro Sturluson, author of the Edda and the
-Sagas of the Norwegian Kings, has left on record that at his
-Icelandic home eykt occurred at sunset on the first day of
-winter. Professor Rafn hailed this old record as the key to
-the latitude of Vinland. The Danish King, Frederick VI.,
-<span class='pageno' title='79' id='Page_79'></span>
-sympathising in researches that reflected back honour on their
-Norse ancestry, called in the aid of the Astronomer Royal;
-and Professor Rafn felt authorised forthwith to instruct the
-Rhode Island antiquaries that the latitude of the long-lost
-Vinland was near Newport, in Narragansett Bay. Their
-response, with the authenticating engravings of the world-famous
-Newport stone mill, and the runes of Thorfinn on
-Dighton Rock, in Rafn’s learned quarto volume, have been
-the source of many a later comment, both in prose and
-rhyme.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But all this lay in a still remote future when, in 1728,
-Berkeley landed at Rhode Island with projects not unsuited to
-the dream of a Vinland the Good, where a university was to
-be reared as a centre of culture and regeneration for the
-aborigines of the New World. The indispensable prerequisite
-of needful funds had been promised him by the
-English Government; but the promised grant was never
-realised. Meanwhile he bought a farm, the purposed
-site perhaps of his beneficent centre of intellectual life for
-the Island state, and sojourned there for three years in
-pleasant seclusion, leaving behind him kindly memories that
-endeared him to many friends. He planned, if he did
-not realise many goodly Utopias; speculated on space and
-time, and objective idealism; and then bade farewell to Rhode
-Island, and to his romantic dream of regenerated savages and
-a renovated world. Soon after his return home the practical
-fruits of his quiet sojourn beyond the Atlantic appeared in
-the form of his <span class='it'>Alciphron: or the Minute Philosopher</span>; in which,
-in the form of a dialogue, he discusses the varied forms of
-speculative scepticism, at the very period when Pope was
-embodying in his <span class='it'>Essay on Man</span> the brilliant, but superficial
-philosophy which constituted the essence of thought for men
-of the world in his age. It is in antithesis to such speculations
-that Berkeley there advances his own theory, designed to
-show that all nature is the language of God, everywhere
-giving expressive utterance to the Divine thought.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So long as the American continent lay half revealed in its
-vague obscurity, as a new world lying beyond the Atlantic,
-and wholly apart from the old, it seemed the fitting site for
-imaginary Vinlands, Utopias, Summer Islands, and earthly
-<span class='pageno' title='80' id='Page_80'></span>
-paradises of all sorts: the scenes of a realised perfectibility
-beyond the reach of Europe “in her decay.” Nor was the
-refined metaphysical idealist the latest dreamer of such
-dreams. In our own century, Southey, Coleridge, and the
-little band of Bristol enthusiasts who planned their grand
-pantisocratic scheme of intellectual communism, created for
-themselves, with like fertile fancy, a Utopia of their own,
-“where Susquehana pours his untamed stream”; and many a
-later dreamer has striven after like ideal perfectibility in
-“peaceful Freedom’s undivided dale.”</p>
-
-<hr class='footnotemark'/>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_4'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f4'><a href='#r4'>[4]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Montgomery, James, <span class='it'>Greenland</span>, Canto IV.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_5'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f5'><a href='#r5'>[5]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Mem. des Antiq. du Nord</span>, N.S., 1888, p. 341.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_6'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f6'><a href='#r6'>[6]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>The Finding of Wineland the Good</span>, p. 6.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_7'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f7'><a href='#r7'>[7]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>The Finding of Wineland the Good: the History of the Icelandic Discovery of
-America</span>, edited and translated from the earliest records, by Arthur Middleton
-Reeves.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_8'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f8'><a href='#r8'>[8]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Vide</span> Dr. Brinton, <span class='it'>Races and Peoples</span>, p. 215 note.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_9'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f9'><a href='#r9'>[9]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Arthur Middleton Reeves, <span class='it'>Finding of Wineland the Good</span>, p. 28.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' title='81' id='Page_81'></span><h1>III<br/> TRADE AND COMMERCE IN THE STONE AGE</h1></div>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='sc'>The</span> term “Stone Period” or “Stone Age” was suggested in
-the early years of the present century by the antiquaries of
-Denmark as the fitting designation of that primitive era in
-western Europe—with its corresponding stage among diverse
-peoples in widely severed regions and ages,—when the use of
-metals was unknown. That there was a period in the history
-of the human race, before its Tubal-cains, Vulcans, Vœlands, or
-other Smith-gods appeared, when man depended on stone, bone,
-ivory, shells, and wood, for the raw material out of which to
-manufacture his implements and weapons, is now universally
-admitted; and is confirmed by the abundant disclosures of the
-drift and the caves. The simple, yet highly suggestive classification,
-due to Thomsen of Copenhagen, was the first scientific
-recognition of the fact, now established by evidence derived
-from periods of vastly greater antiquity than the Neolithic age
-of Denmark. The accumulated experience of many generations
-was required before men mastered the useful service of fire in
-the smelting of ores and the casting of metals. Nevertheless
-it seems probable that the knowledge of fire, and its useful
-service on the domestic hearth, are coeval with the existence
-of man as a rational being. The evidence of its practical application
-to the requirements for warmth and cooking carry us
-back to the age of cave implements, including some among the
-earliest known examples of man’s tool-making industry. In
-connection with this subject, Sir John Evans draws attention
-to some curious indications of the antiquity of the use of flint
-by the fire-producer.<a id='r10'/><a href='#f10' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[10]</span></sup></a> He refers to the ingenious derivation of
-<span class='pageno' title='82' id='Page_82'></span>
-the word <span class='it'>silex</span> as given by Vincent of Beauvais, in the <span class='it'>Speculum
-Naturæ</span>, “Silex est lapis durus, sic dictus eo quod ex eo
-ignis exsiliat,” and he recalls a more remarkable reminiscence
-of the evoking of fire in the Neolithic if not in the Palæolithic
-period. Pliny informs us (lib. vii. cap. 56), that it was Pyrodes,
-the son of Cilix, who first devised the way to strike fire out of
-flint; “A myth,” says Sir John Evans, “which seems to point to
-the use of silex and pyrites (from πῦρ) rather than of steel.” In
-reality the flint and pyrites lie together in the same lower
-strata of the chalk. As the ancient flint-miners sunk their
-pits in search of the levels where the flint abounds they would
-meet with frequent nodules of pyrites. The first grand discovery
-of the fire-producer may have resulted from the use of
-the pyrites as a mere hammer-stone to break up the larger
-flints.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But whatever was the source of this all-important discovery,
-it dates among the earliest manifestations of human intelligence.
-Nodules of iron pyrites have been found in the caves of France
-and Belgium, among remains pertaining to the Palæolithic age,
-and are among the most interesting disclosures of the greatly
-more modern, though still prehistoric age of the barrows and
-cairns of the Allophylian period of Britain, and of Western
-Europe generally. Sir R. C. Hoare records the finding, among
-the contents of a cinerary urn, in a Wiltshire barrow, “chipped
-flints prepared for arrow heads, a long piece of flint, and a
-<span class='it'>pyrites</span>, both evidently smoothed by usage.”<a id='r11'/><a href='#f11' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[11]</span></sup></a> More recent explorers,
-apprised of the significance of such discoveries, have
-noted the presence of nodules of pyrites, accompanying the
-personal ornaments and weapons occurring in graves of the
-same age: deposited there either as tokens of regard, or more
-probably with a vague idea of their utility to the dead in the
-life beyond the grave. In a communication to the Society of
-Antiquaries of Scotland on a group of stone cists disclosed, in
-1879, on the farm of Teinside, Teviotdale, Lord Rosehill thus
-describes part of the contents of one of them. “It was filled
-with dark-coloured earth, mixed with charcoal; and closely
-intermingled in every part with fragments of bones which had
-been exposed to the action of fire.” A broken urn lay about
-ten inches from the top. “Close to the urn was a rounded
-<span class='pageno' title='83' id='Page_83'></span>
-piece of metallic-looking substance, which appears to be
-‘radiated iron pyrites,’ and which,” adds Lord Rosehill, “I
-have myself discovered in several interments.”<a id='r12'/><a href='#f12' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[12]</span></sup></a> More recently,
-in 1883, Major Colin Mackenzie reported to the same
-Society the discovery of a cist and urn in the Black Isle, Ross-shire.<a id='r13'/><a href='#f13' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[13]</span></sup></a>
-He thus proceeds: “Whilst gathering together the
-broken pieces of the urn, a round-nosed flint-flake or scraper,
-chipped at the edges, was found amongst the debris, and proved
-to have a bluish tinge, as if it had been subjected to the action
-of fire. Close beside it there was found a round piece of iron
-pyrites, flat on one side, in shape somewhat like the half of an
-egg, divided lengthways, only smaller. Dr. Joseph Anderson
-at once recognised this as forming, along with the solitary flint,
-nothing less than a prehistoric ‘strike-light’ apparatus.”<a id='r14'/><a href='#f14' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[14]</span></sup></a> No
-flint is procurable in the locality; and after the closest search,
-no other flint implement or flake was found on the site. In
-communicating this interesting discovery to the Society of
-Antiquaries of Scotland, Major Mackenzie reviewed the disclosures
-of this class in Great Britain, so far as they had been
-noted by Hoare, Borlase, Bateman, Greenwell and Evans,
-furnishing a tabulated statement of eleven examples, chiefly
-found in barrows, and ranging over an area extending from
-Cornwall to Ross-shire; and to those additions have since been
-made. He draws attention to their occurrence in localities
-which produce neither pyrites nor flint. But with the former,
-at least, this need not surprise us. The prized and easily
-transported pyrites may be looked for in any ancient barrow
-or sepulchral deposit, and has probably in many cases passed
-unnoted before its significance was understood. Now that this
-is fully appreciated, it is seen to have been in use from the
-early stages of primitive art: the very dawn of science; and
-doubtless the pyrites and flint found in localities remote from
-those where they occur as natural products are in most cases
-due to primitive barter.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The old Promethean myth represents the fire-bringer interposing
-on behalf of a degraded race of beings whose helpless
-lot had been preceded by the Hesiodic Golden, Silver, and
-Bronze ages, as well as by an Heroic age of such demigods as
-<span class='pageno' title='84' id='Page_84'></span>
-the Titan son of Iapetus. By a reverse process of evolution
-from the lower to higher stages, the anthropoid, or Caliban of
-archæological science, becomes the tool-maker, the tool-user,
-and in the same primitive stage, the fire-maker. But the
-service of fire is required by man under the most varied conditions
-of life. The stone lamp with its moss wick, and the
-stone kettle, are important implements in the snow-hut of the
-Eskimo. On those he depends, not only for cooking, but for
-his supply of water from melted snow; and without the
-lighted taper of his stone lamp the indoor life of the long,
-unbroken Arctic night would be passed in a rayless dungeon.
-He has inherited the knowledge of the palæolithic fire-maker,
-from whom, indeed, some have claimed for him direct genealogical
-descent; and he generally treasures among his most
-useful appliances a piece of quartz, and a nodule of pyrites,
-which constitute his flint and steel. At the remote extreme
-of the southern continent the same precious bequest is in use
-by the Fuegians and Patagonians of Tierra del Fuego, the name
-of which is a memorial of its fire-using savages. The Fuegian
-makes a hearth of clay in the bottom of his rudely constructed
-bark canoe, on which he habitually keeps a fire burning. He
-prepares a tinder of dried moss or fungus, which is readily
-ignited by the spark struck from a flinty stone by means of a
-pyrites. The invaluable discovery is shared by the lowest
-races. The Australian, the Andaman Islander, and other
-rudest tribes of the Old and the New World, have mastered
-the same great secret, and turn it to useful account.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The tradition may have been perpetuated from generation
-to generation from the remotest dawn of human reason, or it
-may have been rediscovered independently among diverse
-races. But wherever the value of the pyrites in evoking the
-latent spark of the flint was known, it would be a coveted
-prize and a valuable object of barter. The story of the old
-fire-makers is recorded still in the charcoal ashes of many an
-ancient hearth; for charcoal is one of the most indestructible
-of substances when buried. In the famous Kent’s Hole limestone
-cavern at Torbay, Devonshire, explorers have systematically
-pursued research backward from the specifically dated
-stalagmitic record of “Robert Hodges, of Ireland, Feb. 20,
-1688,” through Saxon, Roman, British, and Neolithic strata, to
-<span class='pageno' title='85' id='Page_85'></span>
-the deposit where human remains lay embedded alongside of
-those of the woolly rhinoceros, the mammoth, the fossil horse,
-the hyæna and cave-bear. There also lay, not only the finished
-implements, but the flakes and flint cores that revealed the
-workshop of the primitive tool-maker, and the charcoal that
-preserved the traces of his ancient fire. So, too, in the
-Cromagnon rock-shelter of the Perigord, in an upper valley of
-the Garonne, repeated layers of charcoal, interspersed with
-broken bones and other culinary remains of the ancient cave-dwellers,
-tell of the knowledge and use of fire in western
-Europe’s Reindeer and Mammoth ages by palæolithic man.
-Compared with such disclosures of primeval arts, the discoveries
-on which the Danish archæologists based their systematising of
-prehistoric remains belong, geologically speaking, to modern
-eras. Denmark is underlaid essentially by Upper Cretaceous
-rocks, the <span class='it'>Etage Danien</span> of most French writers, and the <span class='it'>Faxoe
-Kelke</span> of German geologists. Drift clays and gravels overlie
-the cretaceous rocks in many places, with more recent deposits
-of sands, gravels, etc. These latter are of Neolithic age, containing
-bones only of existing mammals. Palæolithic deposits,
-with bones of extinct species, do not appear to have been
-recognised in Denmark; nor is there any trace of the presence
-of palæolithic man. Hence the field alike of Danish antiquarian
-research and of archæological speculation was greatly circumscribed.
-But thus precluded from the study of primitive arts
-in that vague palæolithic dawn which lies outside of the
-speculations of the historian, and beyond resort to classical
-authorities for evidence in the interpretation of local disclosures,
-the Danish antiquary escaped the temptation to many misleading
-assumptions which long perplexed the archæologists of France
-and England; and so his limited range has tended to facilitate
-the investigations into subsequent disclosures relative to an
-ampler antiquity of man and his arts.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Within the old Roman provinces of Western Europe, the
-Latin conquerors were not only accredited with whatever
-showed any trace of Hellenic or Roman art, but with the sole
-skill in working in iron. The Dane and Northman were
-assumed to have followed in their wake with bronze, as with
-runes and other essentially non-classical products; though still
-the beautiful leaf-shaped sword and other choicest relics of the
-<span class='pageno' title='86' id='Page_86'></span>
-Bronze age were not infrequently ascribed to the Romans.
-But philologists had not yet assigned a place to the Celtic in
-the Aryan family of languages. The Celt was not only assumed
-to be the barbarous precursor, alike of Roman and Dane, but to
-be the primeval man of Western Europe. Hence when the
-first hoards of palæolithic flint implements were accidentally
-discovered in Sussex and Kent, their Celtic or British origin
-was assumed without question. But the known historic
-position of the Northman on Scandinavian soil prevented the
-crude application of the term “Danish” to every bronze relic
-found there; and as no Roman conqueror had trodden the soil
-of Denmark, the ethnology as well as the archæology of the
-region was left unaffected by misleading complexities that
-resulted from the presence of the Romans in Gaul and Britain.
-The absence of remains of palæolithic man still further
-simplified the problem; while the geology of the Danish
-peninsula favoured the neolithic tool-maker. Flint abounds
-there in amorphous nodules or blocks, and the nuclei, or cores,
-from which a succession of flakes have been struck, are of
-frequent occurrence among the relics of the Danish Stone age.
-Flint is no less abundant throughout the regions of France and
-England on either side of the English Channel; and there,
-accordingly, alike in the caves and the river-drift, the rude,
-massive flint implements of the Palæolithic era abound.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The natural cleavage of flint, as also of the obsidian found
-in volcanic localities in the Old and New World, so readily adapts
-both materials to the manufacture of knives, lances, and arrow
-heads, that they appear to have been turned to account by the
-tool-maker from the dawn of rudest art. But it must not be
-overlooked that obsidian is limited to volcanic regions, and
-flint is no more universally available than bronze or iron. In
-some countries it is rare; in still more it is entirely wanting;
-and yet its peculiar aptitude for tool-making appears to have
-been recognised at the earliest period; so that implements and
-weapons of flint, alike of the Palæolithic and the Neolithic age,
-abound in many localities where the raw material of the tool-maker
-is unknown.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was only natural that the systematic study and
-classification of the manufactures of the ancient workers in
-flint should be first carried out in regions such as the Danish
-<span class='pageno' title='87' id='Page_87'></span>
-peninsula, geologically related to the Cretaceous period, and
-abounding in the material which most readily adapts itself to
-the requirements of an implement-maker ignorant of the arts of
-metallurgy. But the same inexhaustible store of raw material
-was available to the “Flint-folk,” whose implements have
-become so familiar by reason of more recent disclosures, of
-France and England, belonging to a period when the climate,
-the physical geography, and the whole animal life of Western
-Europe, contrasted in every respect with anything we have
-knowledge of in remotest historic times. Those rude examples
-of primitive art lie alongside of the unwrought flint in such
-profusion that the examples of them already accumulated in
-the museums of Europe and America amount to many thousands.
-But now that attention has been thus widely drawn to their
-character and significance, it is found that implements of the
-same class not only abound in regions geologically favourable to
-their production, but they occur in nearly every country in
-Europe, and on widely scattered localities in Asia and Africa,
-where no such natural resources were available for their manufacture.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The earliest known type of primitive flint implements,
-illustrative of a class now very familiar to archæologists, was
-accidentally recovered from the quaternary gravel beds of the
-Thames valley, in the heart of Old London, before the close of
-the seventeenth century. It is a well-made spear-pointed
-implement, with an unusually tapering point, while the butt-end
-is broad and roughly fashioned, so that it could be used in
-the hand without any haft as a spade or hoe. The deposit in
-which it lay would now be accepted as unquestionable evidence
-of its Palæocosmic age; but at the date of its discovery,
-the Celtic era was regarded as that to which all oldest traces
-of European man pertained. This interesting relic is accordingly
-described in the Sloane Catalogue of the British Museum
-as “a British weapon, found with elephant’s tooth, opposite to
-Black Mary’s, near Gray’s Inn Lane.” In 1797, another and
-highly interesting discovery of the same class was communicated
-to the Society of Antiquaries of London by one of its
-members, Mr. John Frere.<a id='r15'/><a href='#f15' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[15]</span></sup></a> In this case a large number of
-palæoliths were found lying at a depth of twelve feet from the
-<span class='pageno' title='88' id='Page_88'></span>
-surface, in a gravelly soil containing fresh-water shells and
-bones of great size. Subsequent excavations in the same
-locality, at Hoxne, Suffolk, confirm the presence there of the
-bones of the mammoth, as well as of the fossil horse and the
-deer. Mr. Frere was so strongly impressed with the evidence
-of antiquity that he inclined to assign the implements to a
-remote age, “even beyond that of the present world.” By
-this, however, he probably meant no more than M. Boucher de
-Perthes, when, so recently as 1847, he entitled his volume
-devoted to the corresponding discoveries in the valley of the
-Somme, <span class='it'>Antiquités Celtiques et Antédiluviennes</span>. The antiquity
-of man, as now understood, was then unthought of; and the
-word “antediluvian” sufficed as a vague expression of remote
-indefinite antiquity for which pre-Celtic would then have been
-accepted as an equivalent. Mr. Frere speaks of the flint
-implements as “evidently weapons of war fabricated and used
-by a people who had not the use of metals.” He further
-adds: “The manner in which they lie would lead to the
-persuasion that it was a place of their manufacture, and not of
-their accidental deposit; and the numbers of them were so
-great that the man who carried on the brick-work told me
-that before he was aware of their being objects of curiosity he
-had emptied baskets full of them into the ruts of the adjoining
-road.”<a id='r16'/><a href='#f16' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[16]</span></sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When, in December 1886, Mr. J. Allan Brown communicated
-to the same Society an analogous discovery near Ealing,
-Middlesex, English archæologists had become so familiar with
-the idea of the antiquity of palæolithic man, and the arts of
-his epoch, that the existence of pre-Celtic races in Britain was
-accepted as a mere truism. It was not, therefore, any matter
-of surprise to be told of the discovery of a palæolithic workshop
-floor of the Drift period, near Ealing. It lay about a
-hundred feet above the present bed of the Thames; and here,
-six feet below the surface, on an ancient sloping bank of the
-river, an area of about forty feet square disclosed nearly six
-hundred unabraded worked flints, including neatly finished
-spear heads from five to six inches in length. Alongside of
-these lay roughly wrought axes, chipped on one or both sides
-to a cutting edge, and some of them unfinished. There were
-<span class='pageno' title='89' id='Page_89'></span>
-also flint flakes, some with serrated edges, and well-finished
-knives, borers, drills, chisels, etc. Waste flakes and chippings,
-as well as cores, or partially worked blocks of flint, were also
-observed in sufficient numbers to leave no doubt that here, in
-the place of their manufacture, lay buried beneath the accumulations
-of unnumbered centuries industrial products of the
-skilled artizans of the British Islands contemporary with the
-long-extinct quaternary fauna.<a id='r17'/><a href='#f17' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[17]</span></sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The types of flint implements, found at Hoxne in 1797,
-correspond to other palæoliths recovered from rolled gravel and
-clay of the glacial drift in the valleys of the Thames, the
-Somme, and the Seine. In their massive and artless rudeness
-they seem to realise for us some fit ideal of the primitive
-fabricator in his first efforts at tool-making. But the Ealing
-find accords with the more extended discoveries of this class.
-In reality, the manufactures of palæolithic man, as a whole,
-are less artless than many examples of modern Indian flint-work.
-Not a few of the stone axes have had their shape
-determined by that of the water-worn stones out of which they
-were fashioned, and so required much less skill than was
-necessarily expended in chipping the flint nodule into the
-rudest of pointed implements. Any close-grained rock, admitting
-of grinding and polish, was available for fashioning the
-larger weapons and domestic implements, alike among the
-men of the Neolithic age and the native races of the American
-continent in modern centuries. For many of the simpler
-requirements of the tool-user, any apt stone chip or water-worn
-pebble sufficed; and scarcely anything can be conceived
-of more rude or artless than some of the stone weapons and
-implements in use among savage tribes at the present day.
-Professor Joseph Leidy describes a scraper employed by the
-Shoshone Indians in dressing buffalo-skins, consisting of a thin
-segment of quartzite, so devoid of manipulative skill that, he
-says, had he noticed it among the strata of indurated clays and
-sandstone, instead of seeing it in actual use, he would have
-regarded it as an accidental spawl.<a id='r18'/><a href='#f18' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[18]</span></sup></a> Dr. Charles C. Abbott, in
-his <span class='it'>Primitive Industry of the Native Races</span>, furnishes illustrations
-of pointed flakes, or arrow tips, triangular arrow heads, spear
-<span class='pageno' title='90' id='Page_90'></span>
-heads, and other stone implements, only a little less rude and
-shapeless.<a id='r19'/><a href='#f19' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[19]</span></sup></a> Of a similar character is the blade of a war-club
-in use among the Indians of the Rio Frio, in Texas.<a id='r20'/><a href='#f20' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[20]</span></sup></a> Nothing
-so rude has been ascribed to artificial origin among the disclosures
-of the drift, though corresponding implements may
-have escaped notice; for were it not that the chipped piece of
-trachyte of the Texas war-club is inserted in a wooden haft of
-unmistakable human workmanship, the blade would scarcely
-suggest the idea of artificial origin. Mere rudeness, therefore,
-is no certain evidence of the first artless efforts of man to
-furnish himself with tools.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Until we arrive at the period of neolithic art, with its perforated
-hammers, grooved axes, net-sinkers, gouges, adzes, and
-numerous other ground and polished implements, fashioned of
-granite, diorite, trap, and other igneous rocks, the forms of
-implements are few and simple, dependent to a large extent
-on the natural cleavage of the flint. The commoner examples
-of neolithic art, recovered in thousands from ancient Scandinavian,
-Gaulish, and British graves, from the lake-dwellings of
-Switzerland, the Danish and British shell mounds, the peat
-mosses of Denmark and Ireland, and from numerous other
-depositories of prehistoric industrial art, are scarcely distinguishable
-from the flint knives, scrapers, spears, and arrow
-heads, or the chisels and axes, manufactured by the American
-Indians at the present day. The material available in certain
-localities, such as the claystone of the Haida and Babeen
-Indians, and the argillite of the old implement-makers of New
-Jersey, the obsidian of Mexico, or the quartz, jasper, and
-greenstone of many Canadian centres, give a specific character
-to the implements of the various regions; but, on the whole,
-the arts of the Stone period of the most diverse races and eras
-present striking analogies, scarcely less suggestive of the
-operation of a tool-making instinct than the work of the
-nest-builders, or the ingenious art of the beaver. But the
-massive and extremely rude implements of the river-drift and
-caves present essentially different types, controlled indeed, like
-the productions of later artificers, by the natural cleavage and
-other essential properties of the material in which the flint-worker
-<span class='pageno' title='91' id='Page_91'></span>
-wrought, but with some characteristic differences,
-suggestive of habits and conditions of life in which the
-artificer of the Mammoth or Reindeer period differed from the
-tool-maker of Europe’s Neolithic age, or the Indian savage of
-modern centuries.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The tool-bearing drift-gravel of France and England presents
-its relics of primitive art intermingled with countless
-amorphous unwrought flints. Both have been subjected to
-the violent action of floods, to which the present condition of
-such geological deposits is due; and many contents of the
-caves, though subjected to less violence, are the results of
-similar causes. But, along with numerous implements of the
-rude drift type, the sheltered recesses of the caves have preserved,
-not only the smaller and more delicate flint implements,
-but carefully wrought tools and weapons of bone, horn,
-and ivory. Some, at least, of those undoubtedly belong to the
-Palæolithic age, and therefore tend to verify conclusions, not
-only as to the mechanical ingenuity, but also as to the
-intellectual capacity of the earliest tool-makers. The large
-almond and tongue-shaped flint implements are so massive as
-to have effectually resisted the violence to which they, along
-with other contents of the rolled gravels in which they occur,
-were subjected; whereas it is only in the favouring shelter of
-the caves, or in rare primitive sepulchral deposits, that delicate
-trimmed flakes and the more perishable implements of bone
-and ivory, or horn, have escaped destruction.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The palæolithic implements to which Boucher de Perthes
-directed attention so early as 1840, were recovered from drift-gravel
-beds, where amorphous flint nodules, both whole and
-fractured, abound in countless numbers; and this tended to
-suggest very reasonable doubts as to the artificial origin of the
-rude implements lying in close proximity to them. Nor was
-this incredulity lessened by the significance assigned by him
-to other contents of the same drift-gravel. For so far was
-Boucher de Perthes from overlooking the endless variety of
-fractured pieces of flint recoverable from the drift beds, that
-his narrative is supplemented by a series of plates of
-<span class='it'>L’Industrie Primitive</span>, the larger number of which present
-chipped flints so obviously the mere products of accidental
-fracture or of weathering, that they contributed in no slight
-<span class='pageno' title='92' id='Page_92'></span>
-degree to discredit the book on its first appearance. Others
-of them, however, show true flakes, scrapers, and fragments
-probably referable to smaller implements of the same class,
-such as would be recognised without hesitation as of
-artificial origin if found alongside of undoubted flint implements
-in a cave deposit, or in any barrow, cist, or sepulchral
-urn. In so far as they belong to the true Drift, and not to
-the Neolithic or the Gallo-Roman period, they tend to confirm
-the idea that the large almond and tongue-shaped implements
-are not the sole relics of palæolithic art.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But now that adequate attention has been given to the
-stone implements of the Drift-folk, or the men of the Mammoth
-and Reindeer ages, it becomes apparent that they are by
-no means limited to such localities. On the contrary, sites of
-native manufactories of flint implements, with abundant
-remains of the fractured debris of the ancient tool-makers’
-workshop, some of which are described on a later page, have
-been discovered remote from any locality where the raw
-material could be procured. Until the gun flint was superseded
-by the percussion cap, the material for its manufacture
-was procured by sinking shafts through the chalk until the
-beds of flint suited for the purpose were reached. In this the
-modern flint-worker only repeated the practice of the primitive
-tool-maker. A group of ancient flint pits at Cissbury, near
-Worthing, has been brought into prominent notice by the
-systematic explorations of Colonel A. Lane Fox. They occur
-in and around one of the aboriginal hill-forts of Sussex, the
-name of which has been connected with Cissa, the son of
-Ella, who is referred to by Camden as “Saxon king of those
-parts.” But any occupation of the old hill-fort as a Saxon
-stronghold belongs to very recent times when compared with
-that of the flint-workers, whose pits have attracted the notice
-of modern explorers. Colonel Lane Fox describes Cissbury
-Hill Fort as a great flint arsenal. Here within its earthen
-ramparts the workmen who fashioned the arms of the Stone
-age excavated for the beds of native flint in the underlying
-chalk, and industriously worked it into every variety of
-weapon. “In one place a collection of large flakes might be
-seen, where evidently the first rough outline of a flint implement
-had been formed. In another place a quantity of small
-<span class='pageno' title='93' id='Page_93'></span>
-flakes showed where a celt had been brought to perfection by
-minute and careful chipping.”<a id='r21'/><a href='#f21' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[21]</span></sup></a> In other excavations the
-pounders, or stone hammers, were found, with a smooth
-rounded end by which they were held in the hand, and the
-other bruised and fractured in the manufacture of the flint
-implements that abound on the same site.<a id='r22'/><a href='#f22' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[22]</span></sup></a> Twenty-five pits
-were explored; and from these hundreds of worked flints were
-recovered in every stage of workmanship: chips, flakes, cores,
-balls, and finished knives; drills, scrapers, spear heads, and
-axes or celts. In fact, Colonel Lane Fox sums up his general
-statement of details with the remark that “Cissbury has produced
-specimens of nearly every type known to have been
-found among flint implements, from the Drift and Cave up to
-the Surface period.”<a id='r23'/><a href='#f23' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[23]</span></sup></a> But this “Woolwich” of the flint age
-occupied an altogether exceptional position, with the raw
-material immediately underlying the military enclosure, not
-improbably constructed on purpose to defend the primitive
-arsenal and workshop, and so render its garrison independent
-of all foreign supplies.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Other flint pits point to the labours of the industrious
-miner, and the probable transport of the raw material to
-distant localities where the prized flint could only be procured
-from traders, who bartered it for other needful supplies. An
-interesting group of flint pits of this latter class has been
-subjected to careful exploration by the Rev. Canon Greenwell,
-with the ingenious inference already noted, of the traces of a
-left-handed workman among the flint-miners of the Neolithic
-age. This was based on the relative position and markings of
-two picks fashioned from the antlers of the red deer, corresponding
-to others of the ancient miners’ tools found scattered
-through the long-deserted shafts and galleries of the flint pits.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The shallow depressions on the surface, which guide the
-explorer to those shafts of the ancient workmen, are analogous
-to others that reveal the funnel-shaped excavations hereafter
-described, on Flint Ridge, the sites of ancient flint pits of the
-American arrow-makers. In France, Germany, and Switzerland,
-as well as in Great Britain, many localities are no less familiar,
-on which the refuse flakes, and chippings of flint and other
-available material, show where they have been systematically
-<span class='pageno' title='94' id='Page_94'></span>
-fashioned into implements. The Museum of the Society of
-Antiquaries of Scotland has acquired numerous interesting
-additions to its collections of objects of this class by encouraging
-systematic research. From the sands at Colvin and
-Findhorn, Morayshire; Little Ferry, Sutherlandshire; and
-from Burghhead, Drainie, and Culbin sands, Elginshire, nearly
-seven thousand specimens have been recovered, consisting
-chiefly of flint flakes and chippings; but also including
-several hundred arrow heads, knives, and scrapers, many of
-them unfinished or broken.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Thus, in various localities, remote from native sources of
-flint, a systematic manufacture of implements appears to have
-been carried on. There can, therefore, be scarcely any hesitation
-in inferring, from the evidence adduced, first a trade in
-the raw material brought from the distant localities of the
-flint mines; and then a local traffic in the manufactured
-implements, as was undoubtedly the case among the American
-aborigines at no remote date. This aspect of primitive interchange,
-both of the raw material and the products of industrial
-skill, in so far as it is illustrated in the practice of the
-American Indian tribes, merits the most careful study, as a
-help to the interpretation of the archæological evidence
-pertaining to prehistoric times. To the superficial observer,
-stone is of universal occurrence; and it seems, therefore, needless
-to inquire where the implement-maker of any Stone age
-procured the rough block out of which he fashioned his
-weapon or tool. Only when copper, bronze, and iron superseded
-the crude material of the Stone age has it been supposed
-to be needful to determine the sources of supply. But that is a
-hasty and wholly incorrect surmise. The untutored savage is
-indeed greatly limited in his choice of materials. We are
-familiar with the shell-workers of the Caribbees and the
-Pacific Islands, and the horn and ivory workers of Arctic
-regions; but where the resources of an ample range could be
-turned to account, the primitive workman learned at a very
-early date to select by preference such stones as break with a
-conchoidal fracture. Only where such could not be had, the
-most available chance-fractured chip or the apt water-worn
-stone was turned to account. Rude implements are accordingly
-met with fashioned of trap, sienite, diorite, granite, and other
-<span class='pageno' title='95' id='Page_95'></span>
-igneous rocks, as well as from quartzite, agate, jasper,
-serpentine, and slate. Some of those materials were specially
-favoured by the neolithic workmen for certain classes of their
-carefully finished weapons and implements, such as perforated
-hammers, large axes, gouges, and chisels. But the natural
-cleavage of the flint, and the sharp edge exposed by every
-fracture, adapt it for fashioning the smaller knives, lance and
-arrow heads, in a way no other material except obsidian
-equals. Hence flint appears to have been no less in request
-among ancient tool-makers than copper, tin, and iron in the
-later periods of metallurgic art.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The fact that tin is a metal of rare occurrence, though
-found in nearly inexhaustible quantities in some regions, has
-given a peculiar significance to certain historical researches,
-apart from the special interest involved in the processes of the
-primitive metallurgist, and the widely diffused traces of
-workers in bronze. The comparative rarity of flint, and its
-total absence in many localities, suggest a like inquiry into
-the probable sources of its supply in regions remote from its
-native deposits. The flint lance or arrow head, thrown by an
-enemy, or wrested from the grasp of a vanquished foe, would,
-as in the case of improved weapons of war in many a later
-age, first introduce the prized material to the notice of less
-favoured tribes. As the primitive tool-maker learned by
-experience the greater adaptability of flint than of most other
-stones for the manufacture of his weapons and implements, it
-may be assumed that it became an object of barter in localities
-remote from those where it abounds; and thus, by its diffusion,
-it may have constituted a recognised form of <span class='it'>pecunia</span> ages
-before the barter of pastoral tribes gave rise to the peculiar
-significance attached to that term.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>One piece of confirmatory evidence of trade in unwrought
-flint is the frequent occurrence of numerous flint flakes among
-the prized gifts deposited with the dead. Canon Greenwell
-describes, among the contents of a Yorkshire barrow in the
-parish of Ganton, a deposit of flint flakes and chippings
-numbering one hundred and eighteen, along with a few
-finished scrapers and arrow heads;<a id='r24'/><a href='#f24' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[24]</span></sup></a> and smaller deposits of
-like kind are repeatedly noted by him. Still more, he describes
-<span class='pageno' title='96' id='Page_96'></span>
-their occurrence under circumstances which suggest the
-probability of the scattering of flint flakes, like an offering of
-current coin, by the mourners, as the primitive grave was
-covered in and the memorial mound piled over the sacred
-spot. Flints and potsherds, he says, occur more constantly,
-and even more abundantly than bones; and this presents to
-his mind a difficult problem, in considering which he refers to
-an analogous practice of a very diverse age. The maimed
-rites at poor Ophelia’s grave are familiar to the reader of
-<span class='it'>Hamlet</span>. The priest replies to the demand of Laertes for more
-ample ceremony at his sister’s burial:—</p>
-
-<div class='poetry-container' style=''><div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;But that great command o’ersways the order,</p>
-<p class='line0'>She should in ground unsanctified have lodged</p>
-<p class='line0'>Till the last trumpet; for charitable prayers,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Shards, flints, and pebbles should be thrown on her.</p>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>The flints and potsherds, Canon Green well remarks, “occur
-at times in very large quantities, the flints generally in the
-shape of mere chippings and waste pieces, but often as
-manufactured articles, such as arrow points, knives, saws, drills
-and scrapers, etc.” He further notes that they are found
-distributed throughout the sepulchral mound, “in some
-instances in such quantities as to suggest the idea that the
-persons who were engaged in throwing up the barrow, scattered
-them from time to time during the process.” Assuredly whatever
-motive actuated those who contributed such objects while
-the sepulchral mound was in progress of erection, they were
-not designed as any slight to the manes of the dead. In
-districts remote from those where the flint abounds, flakes and
-chips of the prized material must have been in constant demand
-to replenish the sheaf of arrows, and replace the lost or broken
-lance, knife, and scraper. The trader would barter the raw
-material for furs and other equivalents, or the industrious
-miner would carry off an adequate supply for his own future
-use. Such small objects, possessing a universally appreciable
-value, would be as available for current change as the African
-cowrie, the Ioqua shells of the Pacific coast, or the wampum-beads
-of the tribes to the east of the Rocky Mountains. If
-this assumption be correct, the scattering of flint flakes, while
-the mound was being piled over the grave, was a form of
-<span class='pageno' title='97' id='Page_97'></span>
-largess not less significant than any later tribute of reverence
-to the dead.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The sources whence such supplies of raw material of the old
-flint-worker were derived, have been sufficiently explored to
-furnish confirmatory evidence of some, at least, of the deductions
-suggested by other indications thus far noted. The
-archæologists of Europe are now familiar with many localities
-which have been the quarries and workshops, as well as the
-settled abodes, of palæolithic and neolithic man; nor are such
-unknown in America, though research has to be greatly extended
-before definite conclusions can be accepted relative to
-the earliest presence of man on the western continent. Flint
-and stone implements of every variety of form, and nearly
-every degree of rudeness, abound in the soil of the New World.
-But in estimating the true significance of such evidence, it has
-to be borne in remembrance that its indigenous population
-has not even now abandoned the arts of their Stone period.
-Implements have already been referred to still in use among
-the Shoshone, Texas, and other living tribes, ruder than any
-yet recovered from the river-drift of France or England; whilst
-others, more nearly resembling the palæolithic types of Europe,
-have been met with, some of them imbedded in the rolled gravels,
-or glacial drift, and associated with bones of the mastodon
-and other fossil mammals. But the evidence as to palæolithic
-origin has been, at best, doubtful. An imperfect flint knife,
-now in the Museum of the University of Toronto, was recovered
-from a depth of upwards of fourteen feet, among rolled gravel
-and gold-bearing quartz of the Grinnel Leads in Kansas Territory.
-Flint implements from the auriferous gravel of California
-were produced at the Paris Exposition of 1855. According
-to the Geological Survey of Illinois for 1866, stone axes and
-flint spear heads were obtained from a bed of local drift near
-Alton, underlying the loess, and at the same depth as bones of
-the mastodon. Similar discoveries have been repeatedly noted
-in Southern States. The river Chattahoochee, in Georgia, in
-its course down the Nacoochee valley, flows through a rich
-auriferous region. Explorers in search for gold have made
-extensive cuttings through the underlying drift-gravel, down to
-the slate rock upon which it rests; and during one of these
-excavations, at a depth of nine feet, intermingled with the
-<span class='pageno' title='98' id='Page_98'></span>
-gravel and boulders of the drift, three large implements were
-found, nearly resembling the rude flint hatchets of the drift
-type. Examples of this class, however, though repeatedly noted,
-have been too isolated to admit of their use for any such
-comprehensive inductions as the disclosures of the glacial drift
-of north-western Europe have justified. The evidence hitherto
-adduced, when implements of this class have been of flint, has
-failed to establish their palæolithic age, notwithstanding their
-recovery from ancient gravels. Implements of flint occur in
-great abundance throughout vast areas of the American continent.
-With the fact before us that even now the Stone
-period of its aborigines has not wholly passed away, careful
-observation is required in determining the probable age of
-stray specimens buried even at considerable depths.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But disclosures of an actual American implement-bearing
-drift appear at length to have been met with in the valley of
-the Delaware. These show the primitive tool-maker resorting
-to a granular argillite, the cleavage of which adapted itself to
-the requirements of his rude art. Professor Shaler, in a report on
-the age of the Delaware gravel beds, describes this formation
-as occurring from Virginia northward to Labrador, though it is
-only in New Jersey and Delaware that the accompanying
-evidences of human art have been thus far recovered. The
-New Jersey drift is made up of transported material, including
-boulders and smaller fragments of granitic, hypogene, sandstone,
-and limestone rocks, along with water-worn pebbles of the
-same granular argillite as the characteristic stone implements
-recovered from it, to which, from their peculiar shape, the name
-of “turtle-back celts” has been given. There is little true
-clay in the deposit to give coherence to the mass. The type
-of pebble is subovate, or discoidal, suggesting its form to be
-due to the action of running water; and it seems probable that
-the stone was not quarried out of the living rock, but that the
-pebbles thus reduced to a convenient form were turned to
-account by the tool-maker. The researches of Dr. Abbott
-have been rewarded by the discovery in the drift-gravel of
-numerous examples of this peculiar type of implement, for
-which the one material appears to have been used, notwithstanding
-the varied contents of the drift-gravel in which they
-occur. As in the case of the French and English river-drift,
-<span class='pageno' title='99' id='Page_99'></span>
-the fractured material is found in every stage of disintegration.
-Professor Shaler says: “Along with the perfect-looking implements
-figured by Dr. Abbott, which are apparently as clearly artificial
-as the well-known remains of the valley of the Somme, there
-are all grades of imperfect fragments, down to the pebbles that
-are without a trace of chipping.” But more recent discoveries
-in the Delaware valley point to remains of a still earlier age
-than those described by Dr. Abbott. These naturally attracted
-attention to the region; for there, for the first time, the
-American archæologist saw a promise of disclosures corresponding
-in character to those of the European drift-gravels. A
-systematic and prolonged series of investigations accordingly
-carried out by Mr. Hilborne T. Cresson, under the direction of
-the Peabody Museum, have resulted in fresh disclosures of early
-American man. The Naaman’s Creek rock-shelter, carefully
-explored by him, is situated in the State of Delaware, immediately
-to the south of Mason and Dixon’s line. There in
-underlying deposits, claimed to be of Post-Glacial age, rudely
-chipped points and other implements, all of argillite, were
-found; and at a higher level, others of argillite, but intermingled
-with bone implements, and fragments of rude pottery,
-and alongside of these, implements fashioned of quartzite and
-jasper. The antiquity assigned to the Delaware implements,
-as determined by the age of the tool-bearing gravel, is much
-greater than that of the Trenton gravels previously referred to;
-but though remains of fifteen different species of animals,
-including fragments of a human skull, were recovered from the
-cave or rock-shelter, they include none but existing fauna.
-But the evidence of antiquity is based most confidently on the
-discovery of palæoliths <span class='it'>in situ</span> in the true Philadelphia red
-gravel. Professor G. F. Wright remarks, in discussing the relative
-ages of the Trenton and Philadelphia red gravel, that both
-he and Professor Lewis came to the same conclusion: assigning
-the deposition of the red gravel to a period when the ice
-had its greatest extension, and when there was considerable
-local depression of the land. “During this period of greatest
-ice-extension and depression, the Philadelphia Red Gravel and
-Brick Clay were deposited by the ice-laden floods which
-annually poured down the valley in the summer season. As
-the ice retreated towards the headwaters of the valley, the
-<span class='pageno' title='100' id='Page_100'></span>
-period was marked also by a re-elevation of the land to about
-its present height, when the later deposits of gravel at Trenton
-took place. Dr. Abbott’s discoveries at Trenton prove the
-presence of man on the continent at that stage of the Glacial
-epoch. Mr. Cresson’s discoveries prove the presence of man at
-a far earlier stage. How much earlier will depend upon our
-interpretation of the general facts bearing on the question of
-the duality of the Glacial epoch,”<a id='r25'/><a href='#f25' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[25]</span></sup></a>—a branch of the inquiry
-which it is not necessary to discuss here. It is sufficient to
-note that this argillite—an altogether inferior material to the
-flint, or hornstone of later tool-makers,—appears, thus far, to be
-a characteristic feature of American palæolithic art. The
-locality of the native rock is still undetermined; but implements
-fashioned of it have been found in great numbers along
-the escarpments facing the river Delaware. Professor Shaler
-describes the material as a curious granular argillite, the like
-of which, he says, “I do not know in place.” Should the native
-rock be hereafter identified, with traces of the manufactured
-celts in its vicinity, it may help to throw light on the age and
-history of the primitive American implement-makers.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The flint of the cretaceous deposits does not occur in
-America. True chalk is all but unknown among the cretaceous
-strata of the continent, although it has been found in the form
-of a somewhat extensive bed in Western Kansas. In Texas,
-the cretaceous limestones contain in places hornstone nodules
-distributed through them, like the flint nodules in the upper
-chalk beds of Europe. But though, so far, differing in origin,
-the hornstone and flint are practically identical; and the chert,
-or hornstone, which abounds in the chert-layers of the corniferous
-formation, of common occurrence in Canada, is simply a
-variety of flint, consisting essentially, like the substance to
-which that name is specifically applied, of amorphous silica,
-and with a similar cleavage. This Devonian formation is made
-up chiefly of limestone strata, parted in many places by layers
-of chert which vary in thickness from half an inch to three or
-four inches. The limestones are more or less bituminous, and
-frequently contain chert nodules. Most of their fossils are
-silicified. The formation underlies a considerable portion of
-South-western Ontario. Out-crops occur at Port Dover, Port
-<span class='pageno' title='101' id='Page_101'></span>
-Colborne, Kincardine, Woodstock, St. Mary’s, and other
-localities. At a point which I have explored more than once
-near Port Dover, implements occur in considerable numbers,
-along with fractured or imperfect specimens, mingled with
-flakes and chippings, evidently indicative of a spot where their
-manufacture was carried on. At this, and some others of the
-localities here named, Canadian flint pits may be looked for.
-Among other objects illustrative of primitive native arts in the
-Museum of the University of Toronto, is a block of flint or
-brown chert, from which flakes have been struck off for the
-use of the native arrow-maker. This flint core was found in a
-field on Paisley Block, in Guelph Township, along with a
-large flake, a scraper, and fourteen arrow heads of various
-sizes, all made from the same material. Alongside of them
-lay a flint hammer-stone bearing marks of long use. All of
-those objects are now in the University Museum, and appear to
-indicate the site of an aboriginal workshop, with one of the
-tools of the ancient arrow-maker, who there fashioned his
-implements and weapons, and traded with them to supply the
-need of the old Huron or Petun Indians of Western Canada.
-The Spider Islands in Lake Winnipeg, near its outlet, have
-been noted by Dr. Robert Bell, as a favourite resort of the old
-workers in flint, where they could trade the products of their
-industry with parties of Indians passing in their canoes. “I
-have found,” he says, “a considerable number of new flint
-implements, all of one pattern, in a grave near one of those
-sites of an old factory”; the body of a man—presumably the
-old arrow-maker,—had been buried there in a sitting posture,
-surrounded with the latest products of his industrious skill.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In 1875 I devoted several weeks to a careful study of
-some of the principal groups of ancient earthworks in the
-Ohio valley, and visited Flint Ridge to examine a group of native
-flint pits in the old Shawnee territory. The Shawnees were
-formerly a numerous and powerful tribe of Indians; but they
-took part, in 1763, in the conspiracy of Pontiac, and were nearly
-exterminated in a battle fought in the vicinity of their old
-quarries. From these it is probable that the older race of Mound-Builders
-of the Ohio valley procured the material from which
-they manufactured many of their implements, including some
-of those used in the construction of their great earthworks.
-<span class='pageno' title='102' id='Page_102'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Flint Ridge, as the locality is called, a siliceous deposit of
-the Carboniferous age, extends through the State of Ohio, from
-Newark to New Lexington. It has been worked at various
-points in search of the prized material; and the ancient pits
-can still be recognised over an extensive area by the funnel-shaped
-hollows, or slighter depressions where the accumulated
-vegetable mould of many winters has nearly effaced the traces
-of the old miners. The chert, or hornstone, of this locality
-accords with that from which the implements recovered from
-the mounds appear to have been chiefly made. One fact
-which such disclosures place beyond doubt, namely, that the
-so-called Mound-Builders had not advanced beyond the stage
-of flint or stone implements, is of great significance. Their
-numbers are proved by the extent of their earthworks in many
-localities in the Ohio valley; and the consequent supply of
-implements needed by them as builders must have involved
-a constant demand for the flint-miners and tool-makers. The
-great earthworks at Newark are among the most extensive
-structures of this class, covering an area of several miles, and
-characterised by the perplexing element of elaborate geometrical
-figures, executed on a gigantic scale by a people still in the primitive
-stage of stone implements, and yet giving proof of skill fully
-equalling, in the execution of their geometrical designs, that of
-the scientific land-surveyor. On this special aspect of the
-question, it may be well to revert to notes written immediately
-after a careful survey of the Newark earthworks, so as to suggest
-more clearly their extent and the consequent number of workmen
-and of tools in demand for their execution. The sacred
-enclosures have to be classed apart from the military works of
-the Mound-Builders. Their elaborate fortifications occupy
-isolated heights specially adapted for defence, whereas the broad
-river-terraces have been selected for their religious works.
-There, on the great unbroken levels, they form groups of symmetrical
-enclosures, square, circular, elliptical, and octagonal, connected
-by long parallel avenues, suggesting analogies with the
-British Avebury, the Breton Carnac, or even with the temples
-and sphinx-avenues of the Egyptian Karnak and Luxor; but all
-wrought of earth, with the simple tools made from quartzite,
-chert, or hornstone, derived from quarries and flint pits, such as
-those of Flint Ridge, the localities of which have been identified.
-<span class='pageno' title='103' id='Page_103'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>For a time the tendency among American archæologists
-was to exaggerate the antiquity of those works, and to overestimate
-the artistic skill of their builders. But it now
-appears that some vague memories of the race have been
-perpetuated. The traditions of the Delawares preserved the
-remembrance of the Talligew or Tallegewi, a powerful nation
-whose western borders extended to the Mississippi, over whom
-they, in conjunction with the fierce warrior race of Wyandots
-or Iroquois, triumphed. The old name of the Mound-Builders
-is believed to survive, in modified form, in that of the Alleghany
-Mountains and River; and the Chatta-Muskogee tribes,
-including the Choctaws, Chickasaws, Creeks, and other southern
-Indians of the same stock, are supposed to represent the
-ancient race. The broad fertile region stretching southward
-from the Appalachian Mountains to the Gulf of Mexico must
-have attracted settlers from earliest times. It was latterly
-occupied by various tribes of this Chatta-Muskogee stock; but
-intermingled with others speaking essentially different languages,
-and supposed to be the descendants of the older occupants
-of the region on whom the Tallegewi intruded when
-driven out of the Ohio valley. The Cherokees preserved a
-tradition of having come from the upper Ohio. They have
-been classed by the Washington ethnologists as a distant
-branch of the Iroquois stock; but Mr. Hale, finding their
-grammar mainly Huron-Iroquois, while their vocabulary is
-largely derived from another source, ingeniously infers that one
-portion of the despairing Talligewi may have cast in their lot
-with the conquering race, as the Tlascalans did with the
-Spaniards in their war against the Aztecs. Driven down the
-Mississippi till they reached the country of the Choctaws,
-they, mingling with friendly tribes, became the founders of
-the Cherokee nation. Among the older native tribes were the
-Catawbas and the Natchez. They were sun-worshippers,
-maintained a perpetual fire, and regarded the great luminary
-as a goddess, and the mother of their race. It is probable that
-in their religious rites some memory survived of the more
-elaborate worship of the old occupants of the Ohio valley; for the
-Natchez claimed that in their prosperity they numbered five
-hundred towns, and their northern borders extended to the Ohio.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>De Soto traversed the Chatta-Muskogee region, when, in
-<span class='pageno' title='104' id='Page_104'></span>
-1540, he discovered the Mississippi. He found there a
-numerous population lodged in well-constructed dwellings, and
-with their council-houses surmounting lofty mounds. De
-Soto and later travellers noted their extensive fields of maize,
-beans, squashes, and tobacco, and their well-finished flint
-implements. They were Mound-Builders; and though no
-longer manifesting in extended geometrical earthworks the
-special characteristic of the old race, it is assumed that in
-them we recover traces of the vanished people of the Ohio
-valley.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>With this assignment of the Mound-Builders to an affinity
-with Indian nations still represented by existing tribes, the vague
-idea of some strange prehistoric American race of remote
-antiquity vanishes; and the latter tendency has been rather to
-underestimate their distinctive peculiarities. Some of these
-seem to separate them from any Indian tribe of which definite
-accounts have been preserved; and foremost among them is
-the evidence of comprehensive design, and of scientific skill in
-the construction of their sacred enclosures. The predominant
-impression suggested by the great military earthworks of the
-Mound-Builders is that of a people co-operating under the
-guidance of approved leaders, with a view to the defence of
-large communities. Elaborate fortifications are erected on well-chosen
-hills or bluffs, and strengthened by ditches, mounds, and
-complicated approaches; but the lines of earthwork are everywhere
-adapted to the natural features of the site. The sacred
-enclosures are, on the contrary, constructed on the level river-terraces
-with elaborate artificiality of design, but on a scale of
-magnitude not less imposing than that of the largest hill-forts.
-On first entering the great circle at Newark, and looking across
-its broad trench at the lofty embankment overshadowed with
-tall forest trees, my thoughts reverted to the Antonine vallum,
-which by like evidence still records the presence of the Roman
-masters of the world in North Britain 1700 years ago.
-But after driving over a circuit of several miles, embracing
-the remarkable earthworks of which that is only a single
-feature, and satisfying myself by personal observation of the
-existence of parallel avenues which have been traced for nearly
-two miles and of the grand oval, circles, and octagon, the
-smallest of which measures upwards of half a mile in circumference,
-<span class='pageno' title='105' id='Page_105'></span>
-all idea of mere combined labour is lost in the higher
-conviction of manifest skill, and even science. The octagon
-indeed is not a perfect figure. Its angles are not coincident,
-but the sides are very nearly equal; and the enclosure
-approaches so closely to an accurate figure that its error is only
-demonstrated by actual survey. Connected with it by parallel
-embankments 350 feet long, is a true circle, measuring
-2880 feet in circumference; and distant nearly a mile from
-this, but connected with it by an elaborate series of earthworks,
-is the great circular structure previously referred to. Its actual
-form is an ellipse; the different diameters of which are 1250
-feet and 1150 feet respectively; and it encloses an area
-of upwards of 30 acres. At the entrance the enclosing
-embankment curves outward on either side for a distance of
-100 feet, leaving a level way between the ditches, 80 feet
-wide, and at this point it measures about 30 feet from the
-bottom of the ditch to the summit. The area of the enclosure
-is almost perfectly level, so that during rain-floods the water
-stands at a uniform height nearly to the edge of the ditch.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The skulls of the Mound-Builders have been appealed to for
-indications of the intellectual capacity of the ancient race; but
-mounds and earthworks were habitually resorted to at long
-subsequent dates as favourite places of interment; so that
-skulls derived from modern graves are ascribed to the ancient
-race; and much difficulty has been found in agreeing on a
-typical mound skull. Even after making allowance for modifications
-due to artificial malformation, and eliminating those
-derived from superficial interments, a very noticeable diversity
-is found in the comparatively few undoubtedly genuine mound
-skulls, which may lend some countenance to the idea of the
-presence of two essentially distinct races among the ancient
-settlers in the Ohio valley.<a id='r26'/><a href='#f26' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[26]</span></sup></a> It seems to accord with the unmistakable
-traces of intellectual progress of a kind foreign to the
-attainments of any known race of the North American continent,
-thus found in association with arts and methods of work not
-greatly in advance of those of the Indian savage. The only
-satisfactory solution of the problem seems to present itself in
-the assumption of the existence among them of a theocratic
-order, like the priests of ancient Egypt, the Brahmins of India,
-<span class='pageno' title='106' id='Page_106'></span>
-or the Incas of Peru, under whom the vanished race of the
-Ohio valley—Tallegewi, Muskogees, Natchez, Alleghans, or
-other American aborigines,—executed their vast geometrical
-earthworks with such mathematical accuracy.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The contents of the earthworks of the Ohio and Mississippi
-valleys show that the copper, found in a pure metallic condition
-at various points around Lake Superior, was not unknown
-to their constructors. But in this they had little advantage
-over the Iroquois and Algonkin tribes, in whose grave mounds
-copper axes and spear heads occasionally occur. It is even
-possible that working parties were despatched from time to
-time to the ancient copper mines on the Kewenaw peninsula,
-on Lake Superior, to bring back supplies of the prized malleable
-rock, which could be bent and hammered into shape in a way
-that no other stone was susceptible of. But the labours of
-the native miners were inadequate to provide supplies that
-could in any degree suffice to displace the flint or quartzite of
-the implement-maker. One use, however, has been suggested
-for the copper, in relation to the labours of the flint-workers.
-Mr. George Ercol Sellers, whose researches among the workshops
-of the ancient tool-makers have thrown much light on
-their processes, was led, from careful observation of some of
-their unfinished work, to the opinion that copper was in
-special request in the operations of the flint-flaker. After
-referring to the well-known use of horn or bone-flakers, he
-thus proceeds: “From the narrowness of the cuts in some of
-the specimens, and the thickness of the stone where they
-terminate, I have inclined to the belief that, at the period
-they were made, the aborigines had something stronger than
-bone to operate with, as I have never been able to imitate
-some of their deep heavy cuts with it; but I have succeeded
-by using a copper point, which possesses all the properties of
-the bone, in holding to its work without slipping, and has the
-strength for direct thrust required.”<a id='r27'/><a href='#f27' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[27]</span></sup></a> No copper tool, however,
-was recovered by Mr. Sellers among the vast accumulations
-of implements and waste chips, hereafter described, on the sites
-of the ancient workers’ industrious operations, though some
-of those found elsewhere may have been used for such a
-purpose.
-<span class='pageno' title='107' id='Page_107'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The evidence that the ancient dwellers in the Ohio valley
-were still in their Stone age is indisputable. But to a people
-apparently under the guidance of an order or cast far in
-advance of themselves in some important branches of knowledge,
-and by whom the utility of the metals was beginning
-to be discerned—though they had not yet mastered the first
-step in metallurgy by the use of fire,—their speedy advance
-beyond the neolithic stage was inevitable. But an open
-valley, accessible on all sides, was peculiarly unfavourable for
-the first transitional stage of a people just emerging from
-barbarism. Their numbers, it is obvious, were considerable;
-and agriculture must have been carried out on a large scale to
-furnish the means of subsistence for a settled community.
-They had entered on a course which, if unimpeded, must have
-inevitably tended to develop the higher elements of social life
-and political organisation. But their duration as a settled
-community appears to have been brief. Some faint tradition
-of the irruption of the northern barbarians of the New World
-survives. The Iroquois, that indomitable race of savage
-warriors, swept through the valley with desolating fury; the
-dawn of civilisation on the northern continent of America
-was abruptly arrested; and the present name of the great
-river along the banks and on the tributaries of which the
-memorials of the Tallegewi abound, is one conferred on it by
-their supplanters, who were equally successful in thwarting the
-aims of France to introduce the higher forms of European
-civilisation there.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Some singularly interesting information relative to the
-traces of the ancient flint-workers in the Ohio valley, is
-furnished by Mr. Sellers. His observations were made when
-that region still remained, to a large extent, undisturbed by
-civilised intruders on the deserted Indian settlements. He
-notes many places along the banks of the Ohio and its
-tributaries, at an elevation above the spring floods except at
-rare intervals of violent freshets, where the flaking process of
-the old flint-workers had been extensively carried on, and
-where cores and waste chips abound. “At one of those
-places, on the Kentucky side of the river,” he says, “I found
-a number of chert blocks, as when first brought from the
-quarry, from which no regular flakes had been split; some
-<span class='pageno' title='108' id='Page_108'></span>
-had a single corner broken off as a starting-point. On the
-sharp right-angled edge of several I found the indentations
-left by small flakes having been knocked off, evidently by
-blows, as a preparation for seating the flaking tool. Most of
-the localities referred to are now under cultivation. Before being
-cleared of the timber and subjected to the plough, no surface
-relics were found, but on the caving and wearing away of the
-river banks, many spear and arrow heads and other stone
-relics were left on the shore. After the land had been cleared,
-and the plough had loosened the soil, one of the great floods
-that occur at intervals of some fifteen or twenty years, would
-wash away the loose soil, leaving the great flint workshops
-exposed.” There, accordingly, he notes among the materials
-thus brought to light, the cores or nuclei thrown aside, caches
-stored with finished and unfinished implements and flakes, the
-tools and wastage, vast accumulations of splinters, etc., all
-serving to illustrate the processes of the ancient flint-workers.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The depth at which some accumulations occur, overlaid by
-the growth of the so-called primeval forest, points to them as
-contemporary with, if not in some cases older than, the earthworks
-of the Mound-Builders. The extent, indeed, to which
-some are overlaid by subsequent accumulations suggests a
-remote era. In 1853 Mr. Sellers first visited the site of one
-of those ancient work-yards, on the northern bank of the
-Saline river, about three miles above its junction with the
-Ohio. The region was then covered with dense forest, with
-the exception of a narrow strip along the bank of the river,
-which had been cleared in connection with recently opened
-coal works. But at a later date, in sinking a cistern, about
-200 yards from the river bank, the excavation was made
-through a mass of flint chips. Subsequently heavy rains,
-after ploughing, exposed some spears and arrow points. “But
-it was not until the great flood of the winter of 1862 and
-1863 that overflowed this ridge three or four feet with a rapid
-current, that the portion under cultivation on the river bank
-was denuded, exposing over six acres of what at first appeared
-to be a mass of chips or stone rubbish, but amongst it were
-found many hammer-stones, celts, grooved axes, cores, flakes,
-almost innumerable scrapers and other implements, and many
-tynes from the buck or stag, all of which bore evidence of
-<span class='pageno' title='109' id='Page_109'></span>
-having been scraped to a point. On exposure to the air they
-fell to pieces.” The actual site of the quarry appears to have
-been subsequently identified. “The greater number of cores,
-scattered flakes, finished and unfinished implements, are of the
-chert from a depression in a ridge three miles to the south-east,
-where there are abundant indications of large quantities
-having been quarried.” But the same great work-yard of the
-ancient Mound-Builders furnished evidence of other sources of
-supply. Mr. Sellers noted the finding “a few cores of the
-white chert from Missouri, and the red and yellow jasper of
-Kentucky and Tennessee,” but he adds, “the flakes of these
-have mostly been found in nests or small caches, many of
-which have been exposed; and in every case the flakes they
-contained were more or less worked on their edges; whereas
-the flakes from the neighbouring chert preserved their sharp
-edges as when split from the mass. These cache specimens
-with their worked serrated edges would, if found singly, be
-classed as saws or cutting implements. But here where found
-in mass, evidently brought from a distance, to a place where
-harder chert of a much better character for cutting implements
-abounds, they tell a different story.” The material was better
-adapted for the manufacture of certain classes of small implements
-much in demand, and the serrated edge is simply the
-natural result of the mode of working of this species of chert
-and of the jasper.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The fine-grained quartzite was also in request, especially
-for the manufacture of the largest class of implements, including
-hoes and spades, equally needed by the primitive
-agriculturist, and by the navvies to whose industrious toil
-the vast earthworks of the Ohio valley are due. The site of
-the old quartzite quarry appears to be about eight miles from
-the banks of Saline river; but there are many other localities
-scattered over the region extending from southern Illinois to
-the Mississippi, where the same substitute for chert or hornstone
-occurs. Some of the quartzite hoes or spades measure sixteen
-inches in length, with a breadth of from six to seven inches,
-and evince remarkable dexterity and skill in their manufacture.
-Here, accordingly, it becomes apparent that there was a time
-in the history of this continent, before its existence was
-revealed to the race that now peoples the Ohio valley, when
-<span class='pageno' title='110' id='Page_110'></span>
-that region was the scene of busy native industry; and its
-manufacturers quarried and wrought the chert, jasper, and
-quartzite, and traded the products of their skill over an
-extensive region. But the germs of an incipient native
-civilisation were trodden out by the inroads of savage warriors
-from the north; and the towns and villages of the industrious
-community were replaced by what appeared to La Salle, the
-discoverer and first explorer of Ohio river, as the primeval
-forest.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It throws an interesting light on the industrial processes
-of the ancient flint-workers to learn that, even in a region
-where the useful chert abounded, they went far afield in
-search of other materials specially adapted for some classes of
-implements. They were unquestionably a settled community,
-in a higher stage than any of the tribes found in occupation
-of that or any neighbouring region when first visited by
-Europeans. But many tribes, both of the Northern and
-Southern States, habitually travelled far distances to the sea
-coast, where still the ancient shell mounds attest their presence.
-The routes thus annually pursued by the Indians of
-the interior of Pennsylvania, for example, were familiar to the
-early surveyors, and some of their trails undoubtedly marked
-the footprints of many generations. In traversing those
-routes, as well as in their autumnal encampments on the
-coast, opportunities were afforded of selecting suitable materials
-for their implements from localities remote from their homes.
-The lines of those old trails have accordingly yielded numerous
-examples of the wayfarers’ weapons and tools, as well as
-of unfinished implements. We are apt to think of a people
-in their Stone period as merely turning to account materials
-lying as accessible to all as the loose stones employed as
-missiles by the vagrant schoolboy. But such an idea is
-manifestly inapplicable, not only to the arts of communities
-like those by whom the earthworks of the Ohio valley were
-constructed, but to many far older workers in flint or stone.
-The Indian arrow-maker and the pipe-maker, it is manifest,
-often travelled great distances for the material best suited to
-their manufactures; and the use of flint or hornstone for
-slingstones, lance and arrow heads, as well as for knives,
-scrapers, axes, and other domestic and agricultural tools, must
-<span class='pageno' title='111' id='Page_111'></span>
-have involved a constant demand for fresh supplies. It might
-be assumed, therefore, apart from all direct evidence, that a
-regular system of quarrying for the raw material both of the pipe
-and the implement-maker was pursued; and that by trade or
-barter the pipestone of divers qualities, and the chert or hornstone,
-the quartzite, jasper, and other useful minerals, were thus
-furnished to tribes whose homesteads and hunting-grounds
-yielded no such needful supplies. But the same region which
-abounds in such remarkable evidences of the ingenious arts of
-a vanished race, also furnishes traces of the old miners, by
-whose industry the flint was quarried and roughly chipped
-into available forms for transport to distant localities, or for
-barter among the Mound-Builders in the region traversed by
-the great river. At various points on Flint Ridge, Ohio,
-and localities far beyond the limits of that state, as at
-Leavenworth, 300 miles south of Cincinnati, where the gray
-flint abounds, evidences of systematic quarrying illustrate the
-character and extent of this primitive commerce. Funnel-shaped
-pits occur, in many cases filled up with the accumulated
-vegetable mould of centuries, or only traceable by a
-slight depression in the surface of the ground. When cleared
-out, they extend to a depth of from four or five, to nearly
-twenty feet. On removing the mould, the sloping sides of
-the pit are found to be covered with pieces of fractured flint,
-intermingled with unfinished or broken implements, and with
-others partially reduced to shape. The largest hoes and
-spades hitherto noted appear to have been fashioned of quartzite,
-but those of most common occurrence in Ohio and Kentucky
-are made of the gray flint or chert, which abounds in
-the Flint Ridge pits in blocks amply sufficing for the manufacture
-of tools upwards of a foot in length, such as may be
-assumed to have been employed in the construction of the
-great earthworks. But the transportation of the unwrought
-blocks of hornstone to the work-yards in the valley would have
-involved great labour in the construction of roads, as well as
-of sledges or waggons suited to such traffic. In lieu of this,
-the accumulated waste chips in the quarries show the amount
-of labour that was expended there in order to facilitate the
-transport of the useful material. Suitable flakes and chips were
-no doubt also carried off to be turned to account for scrapers,
-<span class='pageno' title='112' id='Page_112'></span>
-knives, and other small implements. Partially shaped disks
-and other pieces of all sizes abound in the pits, but the finer
-manipulation, by means of which small arrow heads, lances,
-drills, scrapers, etc., were fashioned, was reserved for leisure
-hours at home, and for the patient labour of the skilled tool-maker,
-for whose use the raw material was chiefly quarried.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the tool-bearing drift of France and England the large
-characteristic flint implements occur in beds of gravel and clay
-abounding in flakes and chips in every stage of accidental
-fracture, to some of which M. Boucher de Perthes assigned an
-artificial origin and very fanciful significance. But if the
-palæolithic flint-worker in any case quarried for his material
-before the latest geological reconstruction of the beds of rolled
-gravel, the fractured flints may include traces of primeval
-quarrying as well as of the tool-maker’s labours; for the
-rolled gravel beds occur in river-valleys best adapted to the
-habitat of post-glacial man.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In a report furnished to the Peabody Museum of Archæology,
-by Mr. Paul Schumacher, he contributes some interesting
-evidence relative to the stone-workers of Southern California.
-The Indians of the Pacific coast, south of San Francisco, not
-only furnished themselves with chisels, axes, and the like class
-of implements, but with pots for culinary purposes, made of
-steatite, usually of a greenish-gray colour. In 1876, Mr.
-Schumacher discovered various quarries of the old pot-manufacturers,
-with their tools and unfinished articles lying there.
-The softer stone had been used for pots, while the close-grained
-darker serpentine was chiefly employed in making the weights
-for digging sticks, cups, pipes, and ornaments. “I was
-struck,” he says, “on examining the locality through a field-glass,
-by the discovery of so many silver-hued mounds, the
-debris of pits, the rock quarries and open-air workshops, so
-that I believed I had found the main factory of the ollas
-of the California aborigines.”<a id='r28'/><a href='#f28' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[28]</span></sup></a> He also discovered the slate
-quarry, where the rock had been broken off in irregular
-blocks, from which pieces best adapted for chisels were selected
-and fashioned into the forms specially useful in making the
-steatite pots. A venerable Spanish lady told Mr. Schumacher
-that she recollected her mother telling her how the Indians
-<span class='pageno' title='113' id='Page_113'></span>
-had brought <span class='it'>ollas</span> in canoe-loads from the islands in Santa
-Barbara Channel to the mainland, and there exchanged them
-for such necessities as the islanders were in need of. This
-tradition was subsequently confirmed by an old Mexican
-guide. Similar evidence of systematic industry with the
-accompanying trade, or barter, meets the explorer at many
-points from the Gulf of Mexico northward to beyond the
-Canadian lakes. The pyrulæ from the Mexican Gulf are of
-frequent occurrence in northern ossuaries and grave mounds,
-while corresponding southern sepulchral deposits disclose the
-catlinite of the Couteau des Prairies and the native copper of
-the Lake Superior mines. Obsidian is another prized material
-only to be found <span class='it'>in situ</span> in volcanic regions, but met with in
-manufactured forms in many diverse regions, remote from the
-obsidian quarries.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The routes of ancient traffic, determined in part by the
-geographical contour of the regions through which they pass,
-are familiar to the historical students in the Old World. The
-ancient lines traversed by the traders between the Persian
-Gulf and the Levant; the routes of caravans by way of the
-oases, across the centre of the Arabian peninsula to the Red
-Sea; the lines of access by road and river from the Baltic to
-the Danube; and from the British Isles and the North Sea,
-by the valley of the Rhone, to the Mediterranean: are all indicated
-by a variety of evidence. The geography of Central
-Africa appears to have been familiar to the Arabian traders
-from remote ages. Similar well-trodden routes, and traverses
-by lake and river, are well known to the investigators of
-American antiquity. The great trail across Pennsylvania to
-the Mississippi; the route by the great lakes and by portage
-to the Hudson valley, and so to the Atlantic; from Lake
-Ontario, by the Humber and Lake Simcoe, to the Georgian
-Bay; from Lake Superior, by the Mitchipicotten river, to the
-Hudson Bay; and by the Mississippi and its tributaries to the
-Gulf of Mexico: are all demonstrated by abundant traces of
-the interchange of the products of widely severed regions, as
-disclosed in ancient burial mounds, and deposits assignable to
-remote periods and to long-extinct races. West of the Rocky
-Mountains the trails from the Pacific coast to the interior,
-and through the passes of that lofty range, have been recovered.
-<span class='pageno' title='114' id='Page_114'></span>
-Owing to the bold contours of the region, in the abrupt
-descent from the western slope of the Rocky Mountains to
-the Pacific, the routes of travel are more strictly defined by
-the physical geography of the country than in the long
-stretches of the continent to the east of that mountain range.
-An interchange of commodities between the tribes of the
-coast and the interior appears to have been carried on from
-remote times. Dr. Dawson’s own personal observations in
-British Columbia have satisfied him that trading intercourse
-was prosecuted by the coast tribes with those of the interior,
-along the Fraser River Valley; Bella Coola Valley, from head
-of Benetinck Arm; Skeena River; Stiking River; and Chilkoot
-Pass, from the head of Lynn Canal. By the second of
-the above routes oolacten oil was carried far into the interior;
-and the old trail leading from Bella Coola and Fraser river is
-chiefly associated by the inland Indians with this traffic. The
-habitual traffic engendered by the local advantages of some
-of the tribes on the northern Pacific coast has manifestly
-developed some peculiarities which distinguish them from
-other Indians of the northern continent. The Bilqula, a
-people inhabiting a limited tract in the vicinity of Dean Inlet
-and Benetinck Arms, by reason of their geographical position
-have held command of the most important natural pass and
-trade route from the ocean to the interior between the
-Skeena and the Fraser rivers, a distance of upwards of 400
-miles. From remotest times embraced in the native traditions
-a route has been traversed by way of the Bella Coola river,
-thence northward to the Salmon river, and then along the
-north side of the Blackwater river to the Upper Fraser.
-Dentalium shells and other prized objects of barter were
-carried over this route; but the article of chief value brought
-from the coast was the oil of the Oolacten or Candle Fish;
-and hence this thoroughfare is commonly known among the
-Tinné of the interior as the “Grease Trail.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Along this and other long-frequented trails the broken
-implements, flint and obsidian chips, and other traces of the
-natives by whom they have been traversed, not only afford
-proof of their presence there, but at times disclose indications
-of the regions they have visited in going to or returning from
-the interior. Dr. G. M. Dawson informs me that, while
-<span class='pageno' title='115' id='Page_115'></span>
-travelling along various Indian trails and routes in British
-Columbia, west of Fraser river, and between lats. 52° and
-54°, chips and flakes of obsidian were not unfrequently observed.
-The Tinné Indians stated that the material was
-obtained from a mountain near the headwaters of the Salmon
-river (about long. 125° 40′, lat. 52° 40′), which was formerly
-resorted to for the purpose of procuring this prized material.
-The Indian name of this mountain is <span class='it'>Bece</span>, and Dr. Dawson
-further notes the suggestive fact that this word is the same
-with the Mexican (Aztec?) name for “knife.” Mr. T. C.
-Weston, of the Geological Survey, also noted, in 1883, the
-finding of a flake of obsidian in connection with a layer
-of buffalo-bones, occurring in alluvium, and evidently of considerable
-antiquity, near Fort M’Leod, Alberta. The nearest
-source of such a material is the Yellowstone Park region.
-Those regions, it is obvious, were visited by native explorers,
-not merely to supply their own wants, but for the purpose of
-securing coveted objects available for trade or barter. Dr.
-Dawson reports to me as the result of observations founded
-on repeated visits to the region, in the work of the Geological
-Survey: That all the coast tribes of British Columbia are born
-traders, and possess in a high degree the mental characteristics
-generally attributed to the Jews. Those holding possession of
-the above routes regarded trade with the neighbouring inland
-tribes as a valuable monopoly, and were ready to fight for it.
-They also traded among themselves, and certain localities were
-well known as the source of commodities. Thus the Haida
-Indians regularly purchased oolacten oil from the Tshimsians,
-who caught the oolacten at the mouth of the Nass and Stiking
-rivers, giving in exchange cedar canoes, for the manufacture of
-which they were celebrated. Through the agency of the
-Tshimsians they also procured from the inland Indians the
-large mountain sheep horns, from which they executed elaborately
-carved spoons and other implements. Cumshewa, in
-Queen Charlotte Islands, was, again, noted for Indian tobacco,
-an undetermined native plant, which was an article of trade
-all along the coast.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Copper was not unknown to the native tribes on the
-Pacific coast, and rich supplies of the native metal appear to
-have been partially worked, by the tribes along the shores of
-<span class='pageno' title='116' id='Page_116'></span>
-Lake Superior from a remote date. The ancient mines have
-been disclosed, in the process of turning their resources to
-account by the enterprise of civilised settlers; and abundant
-evidence has been recovered to show that the native copper of
-the Keweenaw peninsula, Ontonagon, Isle Royale, and other
-points on Lake Superior, was worked extensively by its ancient
-miners, and undoubtedly formed a valuable object of traffic
-throughout the region watered by the Mississippi and its
-tributaries, and along the whole eastern routes to the seaboard.
-But, with the imperfect resources of the native miners, it was
-a costly rarity, procurable only in small quantities by barter
-with the tribes settled on the shores of Lake Superior. Axe
-blades, spear heads, knives, gorgets, armlets, tubes and beads,
-all fashioned out of the native copper solely with the hammer,
-have been recovered from ancient grave mounds and ossuaries
-in the valleys of the St Lawrence, the Hudson, the Ohio, the
-Mississippi, and their tributaries; and to the west of the
-Rocky Mountains, copper implements again occur manufactured
-from metal derived from some native source on the
-Pacific slope. The copper was, no doubt, recognised as a
-malleable rock, differing from all others in its ductility, so that
-it could be fashioned, with the aid of a hammer-stone, to any
-desired form. By this means the ancient miners of Lake
-Superior provided themselves with the most suitable tools for
-their mining operations, and were probably the manufacturers
-of most of the widely diffused copper implements. But for
-general purposes, both of industry and war, American man had
-to be content with the more abundant chert, hornstone, and
-quartzite.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The source from whence the tribes on the Pacific obtained
-the coveted metal has not yet been ascertained; but it was
-obviously procured only in small quantities, insufficient to be
-turned to account for economic uses. Among a curious collection
-of objects illustrative of the arts of the Haida Indians,
-now in the Museum of the Geological Survey at Ottawa, is a
-large copper ring, or torque, which appears to have been
-handed down for successive generations, from chief to chief, as
-a prized heirloom; and, it may be assumed, as a symbol of
-official rank. The ring, or necklet, is composed of three
-twisted bars, or strands of hammered copper, each tapering at
-<span class='pageno' title='117' id='Page_117'></span>
-both ends, and is fashioned with remarkable skill, if due
-allowance be made for the imperfect tools of the native artificer.
-This unique relic seems to show the accumulated
-metallic wealth of the tribe fashioned into a symbol of official
-rank; not improbably with mysterious virtues ascribed to it,
-which passed with it to its official custodian. A block of
-native copper now in the National Museum at Washington is
-described by the Père Charlevoix as a sacred object of veneration
-by the Indians of Lake Superior, on which a young
-maiden had been offered in sacrifice.<a id='r29'/><a href='#f29' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[29]</span></sup></a> But it is beyond question
-that throughout the region north of the Mexican Gulf the
-native manufacturer resorted mainly to the abundant hornstone,
-chert, quartzite, and the like materials of the Stone
-period. These were in universal demand, and must have been
-industriously collected in the localities where they abound,
-and disposed of by a regular system of exchange for furs, wampum,
-or other objects of barter. Mr W. H. Dall, in his report
-on <span class='it'>The Tribes of the Extreme North-West</span>, notes the absence
-in the Aleutian Islands of any stone, such as serpentine, fit for
-making the celts or adzes, recovered by him from the shell
-mounds. “They were,” he says, “probably imported from the
-continental Innuit at great cost, and very highly valued”; and
-on a subsequent page he adds: “The intertribal traffic I have
-referred to is universal among the Innuit.”<a id='r30'/><a href='#f30' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[30]</span></sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The occurrence of well-stored caches in some of the ancient
-mounds of the Ohio valley, as well as their repeated discovery
-in other localities, accords with the idea of systematised industrial
-labour, and the storing away of the needful supplies for
-agricultural and domestic operations, and for war. Messrs.
-Squier and Davis, in their <span class='it'>Ancient Monuments of the
-Mississippi Valley</span>, describe one of the mounds opened by
-them within the great earthwork on the North Fork of Point
-Creek, in which, according to their estimate, about four thousand
-hornstone disks were disposed in regular order, in successive
-rows overlapping each other. In 1864, I had an
-opportunity of examining some specimens retained in the
-possession of Dr. Davis. They were mostly disks measuring
-about six inches long and four wide, more or less oval, or
-<span class='pageno' title='118' id='Page_118'></span>
-broad spear-shaped, and fashioned out of a fine gray flint with
-considerable uniformity of character. Mr. Squier assumed that
-the deposit was a religious offering; but subsequent disclosures
-of a like character confirm the probability that it was a hoard
-of material stored for the tool-maker.<a id='r31'/><a href='#f31' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[31]</span></sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In other, though rarer cases, the cache has been found containing
-finished implements. In digging a cellar at Trenton,
-New Jersey, a deposit of one hundred and twenty finished
-stone axes was brought to light, at a depth of about three feet
-below the surface. Another discovery of a like character was
-made when digging for the construction of a receiving vault of
-the Riverview Cemetery, near Taunton; and similar deposits
-are recorded as repeatedly occurring in the same state.<a id='r32'/><a href='#f32' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[32]</span></sup></a> In
-two instances all the specimens were grooved axes. In
-another, fifty porphyry celts were found deposited in systematic
-order. Mr. Charles Rau has given the subject special
-attention, and in a paper entitled “Ancient Aboriginal Trade
-in North America,” he furnishes evidence of addiction to
-certain manufactures, such as arrow heads, hoes and other
-digging tools, spear heads, chisels, etc., by skilled native craftsmen.<a id='r33'/><a href='#f33' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[33]</span></sup></a>
-Deposits closely corresponding to the one reported by
-Mr. Squier as the sole contents of one of the mounds, in
-“Clark’s Work,” Ohio, have been subsequently discovered in
-Illinois, Wisconsin, and Kentucky. One of the Illinois
-deposits contained about fifteen hundred leaf-shaped or
-rounded disks of flint arranged in five horizontal layers.
-Another, said to have contained three thousand five hundred
-specimens, was discovered at Fredericksburg, in the same
-state. A smaller, but more interesting hoard was accidentally
-brought to light in 1868, when some labourers in opening
-up a new street, at East St. Louis, in the same State of
-Illinois, came upon a collection of large flint tools all of the
-hoe and shovel type. There were about fifty of the former
-and twenty of the latter, made of a yellowish-brown flint, and
-betraying no traces of their having been used. Near by them
-lay several large unworked blocks of flint and greenstone, and
-many chippings and fragments of flint.<a id='r34'/><a href='#f34' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[34]</span></sup></a> Deposits of a like
-<span class='pageno' title='119' id='Page_119'></span>
-character, but varying both in the number and diversity of
-their contents, and, in general, showing no traces of use, have
-been discovered in other states to the east of the Mississippi.
-In the <span class='it'>Smithsonian Report</span> for 1877, Mr Rau prints a curious
-account of “The Stock in Trade of an Aboriginal Lapidary.”
-In the spring of the previous year Mr. Keenan presented to
-the National Museum at Washington a collection of jasper
-ornaments, mostly unfinished, which had been found in
-Lawrence County, Mississippi. They were brought to light in
-ploughing a cotton field, where a deposit was exposed, lying
-about two and a half feet below the natural surface. It included
-four hundred and sixty-nine objects, of which twenty-two
-were unwrought jasper pebbles; one hundred and one
-were beads of an elongated cylindrical shape, and a few of
-them partially perforated. Others were ornaments of various
-forms, including two animal-shaped objects. The whole were
-made of jasper of a red or reddish colour, occasionally variegated
-with spots or streaks of pale yellow, but nearly all were in an
-unfinished state, and so fully bore out the idea of their being the
-stock in trade of some old native workman, who finished them
-in sufficient numbers to meet the demands of his customers.<a id='r35'/><a href='#f35' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[35]</span></sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>From time to time fresh disclosures prove the extent to
-which such systematic industry was carried on. The various
-collections thus brought to light were unquestionably the
-result of prolonged labour, and were, for the most part,
-undoubtedly stored for purposes of trade. In some cases they
-may have been accumulated in the arsenal of the tribe in
-readiness for war. But whether we recognise in such discoveries
-the store of the trader, or the military arsenal, they
-indicate ideas of provident foresight altogether distinct from
-the desultory labours of the Indian savage in the preparation
-of his own indispensable supply of implements for the chase or
-for war.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But there were also, no doubt, home-made weapons and
-implements, fashioned with patient industry out of the large
-rolled serpentine, chalcedony, jasper, and agate pebbles, gathered
-from the sea coast and river beds, or picked up wherever they
-chanced to occur. When camping out on the Neepigon river,
-with Indian guides from the Saskatchewan, I observed them
-<span class='pageno' title='120' id='Page_120'></span>
-carefully collecting pieces of a metamorphic rock, underlying
-the syenite cliffs, which, I learned from one of them, was
-specially adapted for pipes. This they would carry a distance
-of fully 800 miles before reaching their lodges on the
-prairie. Dr. Robert Bell described to me a pipe made of fine
-green serpentine, of a favourite Chipewyan pattern, which he
-saw in the possession of an Indian on Nelson river. Its
-owner resisted all attempts to induce him to part with it,
-assigning as a reason of its special value that it had been
-brought from Reindeer Lake distant several hundred miles
-north of Frog Portage, on Churchill river. The diverse forms
-in which various tribes shape the tobacco pipe are highly
-characteristic. In some cases this is partly due to the texture
-and degrees of hardness of the material employed; but the
-recovery of pipes of nearly all the very diverse tribal patterns,
-made from the beautiful catlinite, or red pipestone of the
-Couteau des Prairies, leaves little room for doubt that the
-stone was transported in rough blocks and bartered by its
-quarriers to distant tribes. This flesh-coloured rock has
-suggested the Sioux legend of its origin in the flesh of the
-antediluvian red men, who perished there in the great deluge.
-It is soft, of fine texture, and easily wrought into minutely
-varied forms of Indian art, and so was coveted by the pipe-makers
-of widely severed tribes. Hence red pipestone pipes
-of many ingenious forms of sculpture have been recovered from
-grave mounds down the Mississippi, eastward to the Atlantic
-seaboard, and westward beyond the Rocky Mountains. This
-prized material appears to have circulated among all the Plain
-tribes. Pipes made of it were to be found in recent years
-preserved as cherished possessions among both the Sioux and
-the Blackfoot tribes. Dr. George M. Dawson found in 1874
-part of an ancient catlinite pipe on Pyramid Creek, about lat.
-49°, long. 105°.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A very different material was in use among the Assiniboin
-Indians, limiting the art of the pipe sculptor to the simplest
-forms. It is a fine marble, much too hard to admit of minute
-carving, but susceptible of a high polish. This is cut into
-pipes of graceful form, and made so extremely thin as to be
-nearly transparent, so that when lighted the glowing tobacco
-presents a singular appearance in a dark lodge. Another
-<span class='pageno' title='121' id='Page_121'></span>
-favourite stone is a coarse species of jasper, also too hard for
-any elaborate ornamentation. But the choice of materials is
-by no means limited to those of the locality of the tribe. I
-have already referred to my Indian guides carrying away with
-them pieces of the pipestone rock on Neepigon river; and
-Paul Kane, the artist, during his travels, when on Athabaska
-river, near its source in the Rocky Mountains, observed his
-Assiniboin guides select a favourite bluish jasper from among
-the water-worn stones in the bed of the river, to carry home
-for the purpose of pipe manufacture, although they were then
-fully 500 miles from their lodges.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The favourite material of the Chippewas was a dark, close-grained
-schist obtained at some points on Lake Huron. It is
-easily carved, and many of their pipes are decorated with
-groups of human figures and animals, executed with much
-spirit. Pabahmesad, an old Chippewa pipe-maker of unusual
-skill, pursued his craft on Great Manitoulin Island, on Lake
-Huron, in comparatively recent years. The peculiar style of
-his ingenious carvings may be detected on pipes recovered
-from widely scattered localities, for his fame as a pipe sculptor
-was great. He was generally known among his people as
-<span class='it'>Pwahguneka</span>, the pipe-maker. He obtained his materials from
-the favourite resorts of different tribes, using the black pipestone
-of Lake Huron, the white pipestone procured on St.
-Joseph’s Island, and the catlinite or red pipestone of the
-Couteau des Prairies. But the most varied and elaborate in
-device of all the peculiar native types of pipe sculpture are
-those executed by the Chimpseyan or Babeen and the Clalam
-Indians, of Vancouver Island and the neighbouring shores
-along Charlotte Sound. They are carved out of a soft blue
-claystone or slate, from which also bowls, platters, and other
-utensils are made, decorated with native legendary symbols
-and other devices. But the most elaborate carving is reserved
-for their pipes, which are not less varied and fanciful in design
-than the details of Norman ecclesiastical sculpture. The same
-easily carved claystone was in great request among the Haida
-Indians of the Queen Charlotte Islands for their idols, and for
-ornamental gorgets and utensils of various kinds. Thus the
-available materials of different localities are seen to modify the
-forms alike of implements, weapons, and articles designed for
-<span class='pageno' title='122' id='Page_122'></span>
-personal ornament or domestic use, and were sought for and
-transported to many distant points, with the same object as
-the tin and copper which played so important a part in the
-commercial exchanges of nations at the dawn of history.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In regions where flint or hornstone is not available, the
-quartzite appears to have been most commonly resorted to. I
-have in my possession some spear heads measuring from seven
-to nine inches long, which were dug up on an old Indian trail
-at Point Oken, lying to the north of Lake St. John, Quebec;
-and implements of the like material are common throughout
-eastern Canada. The same widely diffused material was no
-less freely resorted to by the tribes on the Pacific coast. The
-arrow heads found throughout the Salish country of southern
-British Columbia are chiefly formed of quartzite, though chert
-is also used. The quartzite occurs in so many localities that
-it is difficult to trace its special source. But near the east end
-of Marble Cañon, and at the Big Bock Slide, about six miles
-above Spence’s Bridge, on Thompson river, chips occur in
-considerable quantities, suggestive of one of the chosen localities
-resorted to for quarrying and manufacture.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The old arrow-makers evidently derived pleasure from the
-selection of attractive materials for some of their choicest
-specimens of handiwork. The true crystalline quartz was
-prized for small arrow heads, some of which are equally
-pleasing in material, form, and delicacy of finish. But the
-material most usually employed in eastern Canada, as well as
-that previously referred to as in request by the old workers
-of the Ohio valley for their largest implements, is a gneissoid
-rock of comparatively common occurrence, which chips off
-with a broad facet when sharply struck, and leaves an acute
-edge and point. Mr. Seller’s valuable paper on the ancient
-workshops of Ohio and Pennsylvania also contains an account
-of his own experience relative to the flaking and chipping of
-flint implements.<a id='r36'/><a href='#f36' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[36]</span></sup></a> In this communication he remarks: “Most
-of the arrow points found within my reach in Philadelphia,
-Delaware, and Chester Counties, Pennsylvania, were chipped
-from massive quartz, from the opaque white to semi-transparent,
-and occasionally transparent.” He further describes his first
-chance discovery of one of the native work-places. He was in
-<span class='pageno' title='123' id='Page_123'></span>
-company with two scientific mineralogists, when, as he writes,
-“we came to a place where (judging from the quantities of
-flakes and chips) arrow points had been made. After much
-diligent search, only one perfect point was found. There
-were many broken ones, showing the difficulty in working the
-material. Mr. Lukins, a scientific mineralogist, collected a
-quantity of the best flakes to experiment with, and, by the
-strokes of a light hammer, roughed out one or two very rude
-imitations.” Major J. H. Long traversed the continent westward
-to the Rocky Mountains, as head of the United States
-Military Topographical Department; and from him Mr. Sellers
-derived information of the habits of the rude western tribes
-long before they had been brought into direct contact with
-any civilised settlers. “He said that flakes prepared for
-points and other implements seemed to be an object of trade
-or commerce among the Indian tribes that he came in contact
-with; that there were but few places where chert or quartzite
-was found of sufficient hardness, and close and even grain, to
-flake well, and at those places there were men very expert at
-flaking.”<a id='r37'/><a href='#f37' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[37]</span></sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mr. Sellers had known Catlin, the artist and traveller, in
-his youth, while he was still an expert worker in wood and
-ivory in the service of the elder Catlin, a musical instrument
-maker in Philadelphia; and from him he learned much relative
-to the modes of operation and the sources of material of the
-Indian workers in stone. “He considered making flakes much
-more of an art than the shaping them into arrow or spear
-points, for a thorough knowledge of the nature of the stone
-to be flaked was essential, as a slight difference in its quality
-necessitated a totally different mode of treatment. The
-principal source of supply for what he termed home-made
-flakes was the coarse gravel bars of the rivers, where large
-pebbles are found. Those most easily worked into flakes for
-small arrow points were chalcedony, jasper, and agate. Most
-of the tribes had men who were expert at flaking, and who
-could decide at sight the best mode of working. Some of
-these pebbles would split into tolerably good flakes by quick
-and sharp blows, striking on the same point. Others would
-break by a cross fracture into two or more pieces. These
-<span class='pageno' title='124' id='Page_124'></span>
-were preferred, as good flakes could be split from their clean
-fractured surface, by what Mr. Catlin called ‘impulsive
-pressure,’ the tool used being a shaft or stick of between two
-and three inches in diameter, varying in length from thirty
-inches to four feet, according to the manner of using them.
-These were pointed with bone or buckhorn.” It is thus
-apparent that among rude tribes of modern centuries, as in
-the prehistoric dawn, exceptional aptitude and skill found
-recognition as readily as in any civilised community. There
-were the quarriers and the skilled workmen, on whose joint
-labours the whole community largely depended for the indispensable
-supply of all needful tools.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the summer of 1854, when civilisation had made very
-slight inroads on the western wilderness, I visited a group of
-Chippewa lodges on the south-west shore of Lake Superior,
-where they still maintained many of their genuine habits.
-Their aged chief, Buffalo, was a fine specimen of the uncorrupted
-savage, dressed in native attire, and wearing the collar
-of grizzly bear’s claws as proof of his triumph over the
-fiercest object of the chase. Their weapons were partly of
-iron, derived from the traders. But they had also their stone-tipped
-arrows; and one Indian was an object of interest to
-a group of Indian boys as he busied himself in fashioning
-a water-worn pebble into an edged tool. He held an oval
-pebble between the finger and thumb, and used it with quick
-strokes as a hammer. But he was only engaged on the first
-rough process, and I did not see the completion of his work.
-No doubt, the leisure of all was turned more or less to account
-in supplying themselves with their ordinary weapons and
-missiles. But Catlin’s free intercourse with the wild western
-tribes familiarised him with the regular sources of general
-supply. “The best flakes,” he said, “outside of the homemade,
-were a subject of commerce, and came from certain
-localities where the chert of the best quality was quarried in
-sheets or blocks, as it occurs in almost continuous seams in
-the intercalated limestones of the coal measures. These seams
-are mostly cracked or broken into blocks that show the nature
-of the cross fracture, which is taken advantage of by the
-operators, who seemed to have reduced the art of flaking to
-almost an absolute science, with division of labour; one set
-<span class='pageno' title='125' id='Page_125'></span>
-of men being expert in quarrying and selecting the stone,
-others in preparing the blocks for the flakers.”<a id='r38'/><a href='#f38' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[38]</span></sup></a> But suitable
-and specially prized material were sometimes sought on different
-sites, and disseminated from them by the primitive trader.
-Along eastern Labrador and in Newfoundland arrow heads
-are mostly fashioned out of a peculiar light-gray translucent
-quartzite. Dr. Bell informs me that near Chimo, south of
-Ungava Bay, is a spot resorted to by the Indians from time immemorial
-for this favourite material; and arrows made of it are
-not uncommon even in Nova Scotia. Among the tribes remote
-from the sea coast, where no exposed rock furnished available
-material for the manufacture of their stone implements, the
-chief source of supply was the larger pebbles of the river beds.
-From these the most suitable stones were carefully selected,
-and often carried great distances. Those most easily worked
-into flakes for small arrow heads are chalcedony, jasper, agate,
-and quartz; and the finer specimens of such weapons are now
-greatly prized by collectors. The coast tribes both of the
-Atlantic and the Pacific found similar sources of supply of the
-stones best suited for their implements in the rolled gravel of
-the beach, and this appears to have been the most frequent
-resort of the Micmacs and other tribes of the Canadian
-Maritime Provinces.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I have already referred to information derived from Dr. G.
-M. Dawson and Dr. Robert Bell, to both of whom I have been
-indebted for interesting results of their own personal observations
-as members of the Canadian Geological Survey. Collectors
-are familiar with the elongated flat stones, with two or more
-holes bored through them, variously styled gorgets, implements
-for fashioning sinew into cord, etc. They are made of a
-grayish-green clay slate, with dark streaks; and the same
-material is used in the manufacture of personal ornaments,
-ceremonial objects, and occasionally for smooth spear heads
-and knives. Relics fashioned of this peculiar clay slate are
-found throughout Ontario, from Lakes Huron and Erie to the
-Ottawa valley. A somewhat similar stone occurs in situ at
-various points, but Dr. Bell believes he has satisfactorily
-identified the ancient quarry at the outlet of Lake Temagamic,
-nearly 100 miles north of Lake Nipissing. No clay slate
-<span class='pageno' title='126' id='Page_126'></span>
-procured from any other locality corresponds so exactly to
-the favourite material. The site is accessible by more than
-one canoe route; and quantities of the rock from different beds
-lie broken up in blocks of a size ready for transportation.
-Dr. Bell found on the shore of Lake Temissaming a large
-unfinished spear head, chipped out of this clay slate, and ready
-for grinding. When the region is settled and the land cleared,
-sites will probably be discovered where the aboriginal exporters
-reduced the rough blocks to forms convenient for transport.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dr. Bell has described to me specimens of narrow and
-somewhat long spear points, of local manufacture, made from
-smoky chert found on or near the Athabaska, in Mackenzie river
-basin; and an arrow head of brown flint from the mouth of
-Churchill river, Hudson Bay. The flint implements of Rainy
-river and Lake of the Woods are of brownish flint and chert,
-such as are found in the drift all over the region to the south-westward
-of Hudson Bay; and are mostly derived from the
-Devonian rocks. Worn pebbles of this kind occur in the drift
-as far south as Lake Superior. A branch of Kinogami river
-is called by the Indians Flint river (<span class='it'>Pewona sipi</span>) from the
-abundance of the favourite material they find in the river
-gravel and shingle. The finest flint implements of Canada
-are those of the north shore of Lake Huron, made from
-material corresponding to a very fine-grained quartzite,
-approximating to chalcedony, found among the Huronian
-rocks of that region.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Along the western coast of the Province of Nova Scotia a
-high ridge of trap rock extends, with slight interruption, from
-Briar Island to Cape Blomidon. Here the strong tidal rush
-of the sea undermines the cliff, and the winter frosts split it
-up, so that every year the shore is strewn with broken fragments
-from the cliff, exposing a variety of crystalline minerals,
-such as jasper, agate, etc. The beach gravel is also interspersed
-with numerous rounded pebbles derived originally
-from the same source. I am indebted to Mr. George Patterson,
-of New Glasgow, N.S., for some interesting notes on this subject.
-The pebbles of this beach seem to have been one of the chief
-sources of supply for the Indian implement-makers of Nova
-Scotia. Few localities have hitherto been noticed in the
-Maritime Provinces marked by any such large accumulation
-<span class='pageno' title='127' id='Page_127'></span>
-of chips as would suggest the probability of manufacture for
-the purpose of trade; though chips and finished implements
-occasionally occur together on the sites of Indian villages or
-encampments, suggestive of individual industry and home
-manufacture. But Mr. Patterson informs me that one
-place at Bauchman’s Beach, in the county of Lunenburg,
-furnishes abundant traces of an old native workshop. There,
-until recently, could be gathered agate, jasper, and other
-varieties of the fine-grained crystalline minerals from the
-trap, sometimes in nodules, rounded and worn, as they occur
-at the base of the ocean-washed cliffs. At times they showed
-partial traces of working; but more frequently they were split
-and broken, bearing the unmistakable marks of the hammer.
-Along with those were cores and large quantities of flakes, or
-chips, with arrow heads, more or less perfectly formed. At
-one time they might have been gathered in large quantities;
-but recent inroads of the sea have swept away much of the
-old beach, and strewed the products of the Indian stone-workers
-where they may be stored for the wonder of men of other
-centuries. It is curious, indeed, to reflect on the memorials
-of ages so diverse from those with which the palæontologist
-deals, that are now accumulating in the submarine strata in
-process of formation, for the instruction of coming generations,
-should our earth last so long. The world will, doubtless, have
-grown wiser before that epoch is reached. But it will require
-some discrimination, even in so enlightened an age, to read
-aright the significance of this mingling of relics of rudest
-barbarism with all the products of modern civilisation that are
-being strewn along the great ocean highways between the
-Old and the New World.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A curious illustration of the possible confusion of evidence
-is shown by the discovery in 1884 of a large stone lance
-head of the Eskimo type, deeply imbedded in the tissues of a
-whale taken at the whaling station on Ballast Point, near the
-harbour of San Diego, California.<a id='r39'/><a href='#f39' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[39]</span></sup></a> In the Museum of the
-University of Edinburgh is the skeleton of a whale, stranded
-in the ancient estuary of the Forth in a prehistoric age, when
-the ocean tides reached the site which had been elevated into
-dry land long ages before the Roman invaders of Caledonia
-<span class='pageno' title='128' id='Page_128'></span>
-made their way over it. Alongside of the buried whale lay
-a rude deerhorn implement of the old Caledonian whaler; and
-had the San Diego whale sunk in deep waters off the Pacific
-coast, it would have perpetuated a similar memorial of rudest
-savage life, in close proximity, doubtless, to evidences of modern
-civilisation. Such, though in less striking form, is the process
-of intermingling the arts of the American Stone age with
-products of modern skill and refinement, that is now in progress
-off the Lunenburg coast of Nova Scotia. The inroads of the
-sea have not, however, even now effaced all traces of the old
-arrow-makers of Bauchman’s Beach. Specimens of their
-handiwork may still be gathered along the shore. To this
-locality it is obvious that the inland tribes resorted from
-remote Indian villages for some of their most indispensable
-supplies. Implements of the same materials also occur at
-sites on the northern coast; but the larger number found there
-are made of quartzite, felsite, or of hard, slaty stone, such as
-occurs in the metamorphic rocks of the mountain ranges in
-the interior of the Province.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>From what has thus been set forth, some general inferences
-of a comprehensive character are suggested. It is scarcely
-open to doubt that at a very early stage in the development of
-primitive mechanical art, the exceptional aptitude of skilled
-workmen was recognised and brought into use for the general
-benefit. Co-operation and some division of labour in the
-industrial arts, necessary to meet the universal demand for
-tools and weapons, appear also to have been recognised from a
-very remote period in the social life of the race. There were
-the quarriers for the flint, the obsidian, the shale, the pipestones,
-the favourite minerals, and the close-grained igneous
-rocks, adapted for the variety of implements in general use.
-There were also the traders by whom the raw material was
-transported to regions where it could only be procured by
-barter; as appears to be demonstrated by the repeated
-discovery, not only of flint and stone implements, alike in
-stray examples, and in well-furnished caches; but also of work-places,
-remote from any flint-producing formation, strewn with
-the chips, flakes, and imperfect or unfinished implements of
-the tool-makers. It thus becomes obvious that the men of the
-earliest Stone age transported suitable material for their simple
-<span class='pageno' title='129' id='Page_129'></span>
-arts from many remote localities, and purchased the services
-of the skilled workman with the produce of the chase, or
-whatever other equivalent they could offer in exchange. The
-further archæological search is extended, the evidence of social
-co-operation and systematised industry among the men of the
-Palæolithic era, as well as among those of later periods prior to
-the dawn of metallurgic skill, becomes more apparent. Nor is
-it less interesting to note that there was no more equality
-among the men of those primitive ages, than in later civilised
-stages of social progress. Diversities in capacity and consequent
-moral force asserted themselves in the skilled handicraftsmen
-of the Palæolithic dawn, much as they do in the most artificial
-states of modern society. As a natural concomitant to this,
-and an invaluable element of co-operation, the prized flint flakes
-appear to have furnished a primitive medium of exchange, more
-generally available as a currency of recognised value than any
-other substitute for coined money. The principles on which
-the wealth of nations and the whole social fabric of human
-society depend, were thus already in operation ages before the
-merchants of Tyre, or the traders of Massala, had learned to
-turn to account the mineral resources of the Cassiterides; or
-that vaguer and still more remote era before the ancient
-Atlantis had vanished from the ken of the civilised dwellers
-around the Mediterranean Sea.</p>
-
-<hr class='footnotemark'/>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_10'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f10'><a href='#r10'>[10]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Ancient Stone Implements</span>, p. 14.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_11'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f11'><a href='#r11'>[11]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Hoare’s <span class='it'>South Wilts</span>, p. 195.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_12'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f12'><a href='#r12'>[12]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland</span>, viii. 137.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_13'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f13'><a href='#r13'>[13]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Ibid.</span> N.S. vii. 356.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_14'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f14'><a href='#r14'>[14]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Ibid.</span> N.S. xii. 436.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_15'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f15'><a href='#r15'>[15]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Archæologia</span>, xiii. 204.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_16'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f16'><a href='#r16'>[16]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Archæologia</span>, xiii. 224, 225; pl. xiv. xv.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_17'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f17'><a href='#r17'>[17]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Athenæum</span>, Dec. 18, 1886.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_18'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f18'><a href='#r18'>[18]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>U.S. Geological Survey</span>, 1872, p. 652.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_19'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f19'><a href='#r19'>[19]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Primitive Industry</span>, Figs. 241, 254, 292, 295, etc.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_20'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f20'><a href='#r20'>[20]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Evans’ <span class='it'>Stone Implements</span>, Fig. 94.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_21'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f21'><a href='#r21'>[21]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Archæologia</span>, xlii. 72.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_22'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f22'><a href='#r22'>[22]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Ibid.</span> p. 68.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_23'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f23'><a href='#r23'>[23]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Ibid.</span> p. 68.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_24'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f24'><a href='#r24'>[24]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>British Barrows</span>, p. 166.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_25'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f25'><a href='#r25'>[25]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Palæolithic Man in Eastern and Central North America</span>, pp. 152, 153.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_26'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f26'><a href='#r26'>[26]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Vide <span class='it'>Prehistoric Man</span>, 3rd ed. ii. 132.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_27'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f27'><a href='#r27'>[27]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Smithsonian Reports</span>, Part I. 1885, p. 880.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_28'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f28'><a href='#r28'>[28]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Report of the Peabody Museum</span>, ii. 262.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_29'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f29'><a href='#r29'>[29]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Prehistoric Man</span>, 3d ed. vol. ii. p. 223.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_30'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f30'><a href='#r30'>[30]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Tribes of the Extreme North-West</span>, pp. 81, 82.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_31'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f31'><a href='#r31'>[31]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Smithsonian Contributions to Knowledge</span>, 158.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_32'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f32'><a href='#r32'>[32]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Abbott’s <span class='it'>Primitive Industry</span>, p. 33.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_33'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f33'><a href='#r33'>[33]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Smithsonian Report</span>, 1872.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_34'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f34'><a href='#r34'>[34]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Ibid.</span> 1868, p. 402.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_35'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f35'><a href='#r35'>[35]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Smithsonian Report</span>, 1877, p. 293.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_36'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f36'><a href='#r36'>[36]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Smithsonian Report</span>, 1885, Part I. p. 873.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_37'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f37'><a href='#r37'>[37]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Smithsonian Report</span>, 1885, Part I. p. 873.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_38'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f38'><a href='#r38'>[38]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Smithsonian Report</span>, Part I. 1885, p. 874.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_39'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f39'><a href='#r39'>[39]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Science</span>, iii. 342.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' title='130' id='Page_130'></span><h1>IV<br/> PRE-ARYAN AMERICAN MAN</h1></div>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='sc'>The</span> department of American ethnology, notwithstanding its
-many indefatigable workers, is still to a large extent a virgin
-soil. The western hemisphere is rich in materials for ethnical
-study, but there is urgent demand for diligent labourers to
-rescue them for future use. On all hands we see ancient
-nations passing away. The prairie tribes are vanishing with
-the buffalo; the Flathead Indians of diverse types and stranger
-tongues; and, more interesting than either, the ingenious
-Haidahs of the Queen Charlotte Islands: are all diminishing
-in numbers, giving up their distinctive customs, and confusing
-their mythic and legendary traditions with foreign admixtures;
-while some are destined to speedy extinction.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When, in 1846, the artist, Paul Kane, entered on his
-exploratory travels among the tribes of the North-West, the
-Flathead Indians of Oregon and British Columbia embraced
-populous settlements of Cowlitz, Chinook, Newatee, and other
-nations. Now the researches of the American Bureau of
-Ethnology are stimulated by the disclosure that of the Clatsop
-and Chinook tribes there are only three survivors who speak
-the former language, and only one with a knowledge of the
-latter. Of the Klaskanes, in like manner, only one is known
-to survive; and from a like solitary representative of the
-Tuteloes the language of a vanished race has recently been
-rescued. With all the native tribes who have been brought
-into near relations with the intruding white race their
-languages and customs are undergoing important modifications.
-Other elements of confusion and erasure are also at work. A
-<span class='pageno' title='131' id='Page_131'></span>
-large influx of Chinese complicates the ethnological problem;
-and it cannot be wisely left to the efforts of individuals, carried
-on without concert, and on no comprehensive or systematic
-plan, to rescue for future study the invaluable materials of
-American ethnology. To the native languages especially the
-inquirer into some of the curious problems involved in the
-peopling of this continent must look for a key to the mystery.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The intelligent inquirer cannot fail to be rewarded for any
-time he may devote to a consideration of the condition and
-relative status of the aborigines, north of the Gulf of Mexico,
-not only as studied from existing native tribes, or from those
-known since the discovery of America in 1492, but in so far
-as we can determine their earlier condition with the aid of
-archæological evidence. The student of the history of the
-North American nations cannot indeed altogether overlook the
-undoubted fact that Columbus was not the first of European
-voyagers within the Christian era to enter on the colonisation
-of the western hemisphere; whatever value he may attach to
-the legends and traditions of more ancient explorers.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The part played by the Scandinavian stock in European
-history proves their abundant aptitude to have been the
-organisers of a Northland of their own in the New World.
-The Northmen lingered behind, in their first home in the
-Scandinavian peninsula, while Goth, Longobard, Vandal,
-Suevi, Frank, Burgundian, and other tribes from the Baltic first
-wasted and then revolutionised the Roman world. But they
-were nursing a vigorous youth, which ere long, as pagan Dane,
-and then as Norman, stamped a new character on mediæval
-Europe. Their presence in the New World rests on indubitable
-evidence; but the very definiteness of its character in their
-inhospitable northern retreat helps to destroy all faith in any
-mere conjectural fancies relative to their settlement on points
-along the Atlantic seaboard which they are supposed to have
-visited.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Runic inscriptions on the Canadian and New England
-seaboard would, if genuine, give an entirely novel aspect to
-our study of Pre-Columbian American history, with all its
-possibilities of older intercourse with the eastern hemisphere.
-But it is the same whether we seek for traces of colonisation in
-the tenth or the fifteenth century, in so far as all native history
-<span class='pageno' title='132' id='Page_132'></span>
-is concerned. They equally little suffice to furnish evidence
-of relationship, in blood, language, arts or customs, between
-any people of the eastern hemisphere and the native American
-races. We are indeed invited from time to time to review
-indications suggestive of an Asiatic or other old-world source
-for the American aborigines; and in nearly every system of
-ethnical classification they are, with good reason, ranked as
-Mongolidæ; but if their pedigree is derived from an Asiatic
-stock, the evidence has yet to be marshalled which shall place
-on any well-established basis the proofs of direct ethnical affinity
-between them and races of the eastern hemisphere. The
-ethnological problem is, here as elsewhere, beset by many
-obscuring elements. Language, at best, yields only remote
-analogies, and thus far American archæology, though studied
-with unflagging zeal, has been able to render very partial aid.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It cannot admit of question that the compass of American
-archæology,—including that of the semi-civilised and lettered
-races of Central and Southern America,—is greatly circumscribed
-in comparison with that of Europe. But the simplicity which
-results from this has some compensating elements in its direct
-adaptation to the study of man, as he appears on the continent
-unaffected by the artificialities of a forced civilisation, and
-with so little that can lend countenance to any theory of
-degeneracy from a higher condition of life. In the modern
-alliance between archæology and geology, and the novel
-views which have resulted as to the antiquity of man,
-the characteristic disclosures of primitive art, alike among
-ancient and modern races, have given a significance to familiar
-phases of savage life undreamt of till very recently. The
-student who has by such means formed a definite conception
-of primeval art, and realised some idea of the condition and
-acquirements of the savage of Europe’s Post-Pliocene era, turns
-with renewed interest to living races seemingly perpetuating in
-arts and habits of our own day what gave character to the social
-life of the prehistoric dawn. This phase of primitive art can
-still be studied on more than one continent, and in many an
-island of the Pacific and the Indian ocean; but nowhere is
-the apparent reproduction of such initial phases of the history
-of our race presented in so comprehensive an aspect as on the
-American continent. There man is to be found in no degree
-<span class='pageno' title='133' id='Page_133'></span>
-superior in arts or habits to the Australian savage; while
-evidence of ingenious skill and of considerable artistic taste
-occur among nomads exposed to the extremest privations of
-an Arctic climate; and with no more knowledge of metallurgy
-than is implied in occasionally turning to account the malleable
-native copper, by hammering it into the desired shape; or, in
-their intercourse with Arctic voyagers and Hudson’s Bay
-trappers, acquiring by barter some few implements and
-weapons of European manufacture. The arts of the patient
-Eskimo, exercised under the stimulus of their constant struggle
-for existence amid all the hardships of a polar climate, have,
-indeed, not only suggested comparisons between them and the
-artistic cave-dwellers of Central Europe in its prehistoric dawn;
-but have been assumed to prove an ethnical affinity, and direct
-descent, altogether startling when we fully realise the remote
-antiquity thereby assigned to those Arctic nomads, and the
-unchanging condition ascribed to them through all the intervening
-ages of geographical and social revolution.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But whatever may be the value ultimately assigned to the
-Eskimo pedigree, a like phenomenon of unprogressive humanity,
-perpetuating through countless generations the same rudimentary
-arts, everywhere presents itself, and seems to me to constitute
-the really remarkable feature in North American ethnology and
-archæology. We find, not only in Canada but throughout the
-whole region northward from the Gulf of Mexico, diversified
-illustrations of savage life; but nearly all of them unaffected by
-traces of contact with earlier civilisation. From the northern
-frontiers of Canada the explorer may travel through widely
-diversified regions till he reach the cañons of Mexico and the
-ruined cities of Central America; and all that he finds of race
-and art, of language or native tradition, is in contrast to the
-diversities of the European record of manifold successions of
-races and of arts. There within the Arctic circle the Eskimo
-constructs his lodge of snow, and successfully maintains the
-battle for life under conditions which determine to a large
-extent the character of his ingenious arts and manufacture.
-Immediately to the south are found the nomad tribes of forest
-and prairie, with their téepees of buffalo-skin, or their birch-bark
-wigwams and canoes: wandering hunter tribes of the
-great North-West; type of the red Indian of the whole northern
-<span class='pageno' title='134' id='Page_134'></span>
-continent. The Ohio and Mississippi valleys abound with
-earthworks and other remains of the vanished race of the
-Mound-Builders: of old the dwellers there in fortified towns,
-agriculturalists, ingenious potters, devoted to the use of tobacco,
-expending laborious art on their sculptured pipes, and with
-some exceptionally curious skill in practical geometry; yet,
-they too, ignorant of almost the very rudiments of metallurgy,
-and only in the first stage of the organised life of a settled
-community. The modifying influences of circumstances must
-be recognised in the migratory or settled habits of different
-tribes. The Eskimo are of necessity hunters and fishers, yet
-they are not, strictly speaking, nomads. In summer they live
-in tents, constantly moving from place to place, as the exigencies
-of the reindeer-hunting, seal-hunting, or fishing impel them.
-But they generally winter in the same place for successive
-generations, and manifest as strong an attachment to their
-native home as the dwellers in more favoured lands. Their
-dwelling-houses accommodate from three or four to ten families;
-and the same tendency to gather in communities under one
-roof is worthy of notice wherever other wandering tribes settle
-even temporarily. A drawing, made by me in 1866, of a
-birch-bark dwelling which stood among a group of ordinary
-wigwams on the banks of the Kaministiquia, shows a lodge
-of sufficiently large dimensions to accommodate several families
-of a band of Chippewas, who had come from the far West to
-trade their furs with the Hudson’s Bay factor there. The
-Haidahs, the Chinooks, the Nootkas, the Columbian and other
-Indian tribes to the west of the Rocky Mountains, all use
-temporary tents or huts in their frequent summer wanderings;
-but their permanent dwellings are huge structures sufficient to
-accommodate many families, and sometimes the whole tribe.
-They are constructed of logs or split planks, and in some
-cases, as among the Haidahs of Queen Charlotte Islands, they
-are elaborately decorated with carving and painting.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The gregarious habits thus manifested by many wandering
-tribes, whenever circumstances admit of their settling down in a
-permanent home, may be due mainly to the economy of labour
-which experience has taught them in the construction of one
-common dwelling, instead of the multiplication of single huts
-or lodges. But far to the southward are the ancient pueblos,
-<span class='pageno' title='135' id='Page_135'></span>
-the casas grandes, the cliff dwellings, of a race not yet extinct:
-timid, unaggressive, living wholly on the defensive, gathered in
-large communities like ants or bees; industrious, frugal, and
-manifesting ingenious skill in their pottery and other useful
-arts; but, they too, in no greatly advanced stage. Still farther
-to the south we come at length to the seats of an undoubted
-native American civilisation. The comparative isolation of
-Central America, and the character of its climate and productions,
-all favoured a more settled life; with, as genuine
-results, its architecture, sculpture, metallurgy, hieroglyphics,
-writing, and all else that gives so novel a character to the
-memorials of the Central American nations. But great as is
-their contrast with the wild tribes of the continent, the highest
-phases of native civilisation will not compare with the arts of
-Egypt, in centuries before Cadmus taught letters to the rude
-shepherds of Attica, or the wolf still suckled her cubs on the
-Palatine hill.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If this is a correct reading of American archæology, its
-bearings are significant in reference to the whole history of
-American man. In Europe the student of primitive antiquity
-is habitually required to discriminate between products of ingenious
-skill belonging to periods and races widely separated
-alike by time and by essentially diverse stages of progress in
-art. For not only do its Palæolithic and Neolithic periods long
-precede the oldest written chronicles; but even its Aryan
-colonisation lies beyond any record of historic beginnings.
-The civilisation which had already grown up around the
-Mediterranean Sea while the classic nations were in their
-infancy, extended its influences not only to what was strictly
-regarded as transalpine Europe, but beyond the English
-Channel and the Baltic, centuries before the Rhine and Danube
-formed the boundary of the Roman world. Voltaire, when
-treating of the morals and spirit of nations, says: “It is not in
-the nature of man to desire that which he does not know.”
-But it is certainly in his nature, at any rate, to desire much
-that he does not possess; and the cravings of the rudest outlying
-tribes of ancient Europe must have been stimulated by
-many desires of which those of the New World were unconscious
-till the advent of Europeans in the fifteenth century
-brought them into contact with a long-matured civilisation.
-<span class='pageno' title='136' id='Page_136'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The archæology of the American continent is, in this respect,
-at least, simple. Its student is nowhere exposed to misleading
-or obscuring elements such as baffle the European explorer
-from the intermingling of relics of widely diverse eras, or even
-such a succession of arts of the most dissimilar character as
-Dr. Schliemann found on the site of the classic Ilium. The
-history of America cannot repeat that of Europe. Its great river-valleys
-and vast prairies present a totally different condition of
-things from that in which the distinctive arts, languages, and
-nationalities of Europe have been matured. The physical
-geography of the latter with its great central Alpine chain, its
-highlands, its dividing seas, its peninsulas, and islands, has
-necessarily fostered isolation; and so has tended to develop the
-peculiarities of national character, as well as to protect incipient
-civilisation and immature arts from the constant erasures of
-barbarism. The steppes of Asia in older centuries proved
-the nurseries of hordes of rude warriors, powerful only for
-spoliation. The evidence of the isolation of the nations of
-Europe in early centuries is unmistakable. Scarcely any
-feature in the history of the ancient world is more strange to
-us now than the absence of all direct intercourse between
-countries separated only by the Alps, or even by the Danube
-or the Rhine. “The geography of Greek experience, as exhibited
-by Homer, is limited, speaking generally, to the Ægean
-and its coasts, with the Propontis as its limit in the north-east;
-with Crete for a southern boundary; and with the addition of
-the western coast of the peninsula and its islands as far northwards
-as the Leucadian rock. The key to the great contrast
-between the outer geography and the facts of nature lies in the
-belief of Homer that a great sea occupied the space where we
-know the heart of the European continent to lie.”<a id='r40'/><a href='#f40' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[40]</span></sup></a> To the
-early Romans the Celtic nations were known only as warlike
-nomads whose incursions from beyond the Alpine frontier of
-their little world were perpetuated in the half-legendary tales
-of their own national childhood. To the Greek even of the
-days of Herodotus no more was known of the Gauls or
-Germans than the rumours brought by seamen and
-traders whose farthest voyage was to the mouth of the
-Rhone.
-<span class='pageno' title='137' id='Page_137'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is, indeed, difficult for us now, amid the intimate relations
-of the modern world, and the interchange of products of
-the remotest east and west, to realise a condition of things
-when the region beyond the Alps was a mystery to the Greek
-historian, and the very existence of the river Rhine was
-questioned; or when, four centuries later, the nations around
-the Baltic, which were before long to supplant the masters of
-the Roman world, were so entirely unknown to them that, as
-Dr. Arnold remarks, in one of his letters: “The Roman colonies
-along the Rhine and the Danube looked out on the country
-beyond those rivers as we look up at the stars, and actually see
-with our own eyes a world of which we know nothing.” Yet
-such ignorance was not incompatible with indirect intercourse;
-and was so far from excluding the barbarians beyond the Alps
-or the Baltic from all the fruits of the civilisation which grew
-up around the Mediterranean Sea, that the elements of the
-oldest runic epigraphy of the Goths and Scandinavians are
-traced to that source; and the stamp of Hellenic influence is
-apparent in the later runic writing. Moreover the elucidation
-of European archæology has owed its chief impediment to the
-difficulty of discriminating between arts of diverse eras and
-races of northern Europe, intermingled with those of its
-Neolithic and Bronze periods; or of separating them from the
-true products of Celtic and classic workmanship.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is altogether different with American archæology. Were
-there any traces there of Celtic, Roman, or mediæval European
-art, the whole tendency of the American mind would be to
-give even an exaggerated value to their influence. Superficial
-students of the ruins of Mexico and Central America have
-misinterpreted characteristics pertaining to what may not
-inaptly be designated instincts common to the human mind in
-its first efforts at visible expression of its ideas; and have
-recognised in them fancied analogies with ancient Egyptian
-art, or with the mythology and astronomical science of the
-East. Had, indeed, the more advanced nations of the New
-World borrowed the arts of Egypt, India, or Greece, the great
-river highways and the vast unbroken levels of the northern
-continent presented abundant facilities for their diffusion, with
-no greater aid than the birch-bark canoe of the northern
-savage. The copper of Lake Superior was familiar to nations
-<span class='pageno' title='138' id='Page_138'></span>
-on the banks of the Mississippi, the St. Lawrence, the Hudson,
-and the Delaware. Nor was the influence of southern civilisation
-wholly inoperative. Reflex traces of the prolific fancy of
-the Peruvian potter may be detected in the rude ware of the
-mounds of Georgia and Tennessee; and the conventional art
-of Yucatan reappears in the ornamentation of the lodges of the
-Haidahs of Queen Charlotte’s Islands, and in the wood and
-ivory carvings of the Tawatin and other tribes of British
-Columbia. Already, moreover, the elaborate native devices
-which give such distinctive character to the ivory and claystone
-carvings of the Chimpseyan and Clalam Indians, have been
-largely superseded by reproductions of European ornamentation,
-or literal representations of houses, shipping, horses, fire-arms,
-and other objects brought under the notice of the native artist
-in his intercourse with white men. We are justified, therefore,
-in assuming that no long-matured civilisation could have
-existed in any part of the American continent without leaving,
-not only abundant evidence of its presence within its own
-area, but also many traces of its influence far beyond. Yet
-it cannot be said of the vanished races of the North American
-continent that they died and made no sign. Their memorials
-are abundant, and some of their earthworks and burial mounds
-are on a gigantic scale. But they perpetuate no evidence of a
-native civilisation of elder times bearing the slightest analogy
-to that of Europe through all its historic centuries. The
-western hemisphere stands a world apart, with languages and
-customs essentially its own; and with man and his arts embraced
-within greatly narrower limits of development than in
-any other quarter of the globe, if we except Australia. The
-evolutionist may, indeed, be tempted by the absence not only
-of the anthropoid apes, but by all but the lowest families of the
-<span class='it'>Primates</span>, to regard man as a recent intruder on the American
-continent. But in this, as in the archæologist’s deductions, the
-term “recent” is a relative one. To whatever source American
-man may be referred, his relations to the old-world races are
-sufficiently remote to preclude any theory of geographical distribution
-within the historic period.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is not, therefore, adequate time that is wanting for the
-growth of a native American civilisation. The only satisfactory
-indication of the affiliation of the American races to those
-<span class='pageno' title='139' id='Page_139'></span>
-of Asia or Europe, or of Africa, must be sought for in their
-languages. But any trace of this kind, thus far observed, is at
-best obscure and remote. The resemblance in physical traits
-points to affinity with the Asiatic Mongol, and the agglutinate
-characteristics common to many languages of the continent,
-otherwise essentially dissimilar, is in harmony with this. But
-Asiatic affinities are only traceable remotely, not demonstrable
-on any definite line of descent; and all the evidence that
-language supplies points to a greatly prolonged period of
-isolation. The number of languages spoken throughout the
-whole of North and South America has been estimated to
-considerably exceed twelve hundred; and on the northern
-continent alone, more than five hundred distinct languages
-are spoken, which admit of classification among seventy-five
-ethnical groups, each with essential linguistic distinctions,
-pointing to its own parent stock. Some of those languages
-are merely well-marked dialects, with fully developed vocabularies.
-Others have more recently acquired a dialectic character
-in the breaking up and scattering of dismembered tribes, and
-present a very limited range of vocabulary, suited to the intellectual
-requirements of a small tribe, or band of nomads. The
-prevailing condition of life throughout the whole North American
-continent was peculiarly favourable to the multiplication of
-such dialects, and their growth into new languages, owing to
-the constant dismemberment of tribes, and the frequent
-adoption into their numbers of the refugees from other
-fugitive broken tribes, leading to an intermingling of vocabularies
-and fresh modifications of speech.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But, by whatever means we seek to account for the great
-diversity of speech among the communities of the New World,
-it is manifest that language furnishes no evidence of recent
-intrusion, or of contact for many generations with Asiatic or
-other races. On any theory of origin either of race or
-language, a greatly prolonged period is indispensable to account
-for the actual condition of things which presents such a
-tempting field for the study of the ethnologist. Among the
-various races brought under notice, the Huron-Iroquois of
-Canada and the neighbouring states most fitly represent the
-North American race east of the Rocky Mountains. Their
-language, subdivided into many dialects, furnishes indications
-<span class='pageno' title='140' id='Page_140'></span>
-of migrations throughout the greater portion of that area eastward
-between the Mississippi and the Atlantic seaboard, and
-its affinities have been sought for beyond the American continent.
-Mr. Horatio Hale, an experienced philologist familiar
-with the races and languages most nearly akin to those of
-the New World, in his <span class='it'>Indian Migrations, as evidenced by
-Language</span>, after remarking that there is nothing in the languages
-of the American Indians to favour the conjecture of an origin
-from Eastern Asia, thus proceeds: “But in Western Europe
-one community is known to exist, speaking a language which
-in its general structure manifests a near likeness to the Indian
-tongues. Alone of all the races of the old continent the
-Basques or Euskarians, of northern Spain and south-western
-France, have a speech of that highly complex and polysynthetic
-character which distinguishes the American languages.” But
-to this he has to add the statement that “there is not, indeed,
-any such positive similarity in words or grammar as would
-prove a direct affiliation. The likeness is merely in the general
-cast and mould of speech, but this likeness is so marked as to
-have awakened much attention.”<a id='r41'/><a href='#f41' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[41]</span></sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Assuming the affinity thus based on a general likeness in
-cast and mould of speech to be well founded, there need be no
-surprise at the lack of any positive similarity in words or
-grammar; for, used only as a test of the intervening time since
-Basque and Red Indian parted, it points to representatives of a
-prehistoric race that occupied Europe before the advent of
-Celtic or other Aryan pioneer, long prior to the historic dawn.
-And if the intervening centuries between that undetermined
-date and the close of the fifteenth century, when intercourse
-was once more renewed between the Iberian peninsula and the
-transatlantic continent, sufficed for the evolution of all the
-classic, mediæval, and renaissance phases of civilisation in
-Europe, what was man doing through all those centuries in
-this New World? A period of time would appear to have
-transpired ample enough for the development of a native
-civilisation; but neither the languages nor the arts of the
-Indian nations found in occupation of the northern continent
-reveal traces of it; nor does archæology disclose to us evidence
-of civilised precursors. Whatever their origin may have been,
-<span class='pageno' title='141' id='Page_141'></span>
-the Red Indian appears to have remained for unnumbered
-centuries excluded by ocean barriers from all influence of the
-historic races. But on this very account an inquiry into the
-history of the nations of the American continent, in so far as
-this may be recoverable from archæological or other evidence,
-may simplify important ethnical problems, and contribute results
-of some value in reference to the condition and progress
-of primeval man elsewhere.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In Europe man can be studied only as he has been moulded
-by a thousand external influences, and by the intermixture of
-many dissimilar races. The most recent terms of ethnological
-classification, the Xanthocroi and Melanochroi, are based on the
-assumed interblending of widely dissimilar races in times long
-anterior to any definite chronology. There was a time, as is
-assumed, when the sparsely peopled areas of Europe were
-occupied by a population still imperfectly represented by the
-Finns, the Lapps, and the Basques. Those are supposed to be
-surviving fragments of a once homogeneous population in prehistoric
-centuries. On this the great Aryan migration intruded
-in successive waves of Celtic, Slavic, Hellenic and Teutonic
-invaders, not without considerable intermixture of blood.
-Such is the great ethnical revolution by which it is assumed
-that Europe was recolonised from the same source from whence
-India and Persia derived their ancient civilised and lettered
-races. The Finnic hypothesis, and the once favoured idea of
-an Asiatic cradleland for the whole so-called Aryan races,
-have been greatly modified by later research. Community of
-language is no longer accepted as necessarily involving a common
-ethnic origin. But the results in no way affect the general
-conclusion as to the displacement of a succession of barbarous
-races by the historic races of Europe long before the Christian
-era.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The year 1492 marks the beginning of an analogous
-ethnical revolution by which the Aryan, or Indo-European
-stock intruded, in ever-increasing numbers, on the aboriginal
-populations of the New World. The disparity between the
-first Celtic or other Aryan immigrants into Europe and the
-aborigines whom they encountered there was probably less
-than that which separated the first American colonists from
-the Red Indian savages whom they displaced. In both cases
-<span class='pageno' title='142' id='Page_142'></span>
-it was the meeting of cultured races with rude nomads whom
-they were prone to regard with an aversion or contempt very
-different from the repellent elements between conquering and
-subject nations in near equality to each other. The disparity,
-for example, between the native Briton and the intruding
-Saxon, or between the later Anglo-Saxon and the intruding
-Dane or Northman, was sufficiently slight to admit of ready
-intermixture, ultimately, in spite of their bitter antagonism.
-Nor was even the civilised Roman separated by any such gulf
-from the Gaul or German who bowed to the Imperial yoke,
-and exchanged their independence for Roman citizenship.
-But other elements have also to be kept in view. The
-pioneers of emigration are not, as a rule, the most cultured
-members of the intruding race; while the disparity in the
-relative numbers of the sexes inevitably resulting from the
-conditions under which any extensive migration takes place
-forms an effective counterpoise to very wide ethnical differences.
-In every case of extensive immigration, with the
-excess of males and chiefly of hardy young adventurers,
-the same result is inevitable. On the American continent
-it has already produced a numerous race of half-breeds,
-descendants of white and Indian parentage, apart from that
-other and not less interesting “coloured race,” now numbering
-upwards of six millions in the United States alone, the descendants
-of European and African parentage. In the older
-provinces of Canada, the remnants of the aboriginal Indian
-tribes have been gathered on suitable reserves; and on many
-of these, so far are they from hastening to extinction, that
-during the last quarter of a century the returns of the Indian
-Department show a steady numerical increase. In the United
-States, under less favourable circumstances, similar results are
-beginning to be recognised. In a report on “Indian Civilisation
-and Education,” dated Washington, November 24, 1877,
-it is set forth as more and more tending to assume the aspect
-of an established fact, “that the Indians, instead of being
-doomed to extinction within a limited period, are, as a rule,
-not decreasing in numbers; and are, in all probability,
-destined to form a permanent factor; an enduring element
-of our population.” Wherever the aborigines have been
-gathered together upon suitable reserves, and trained to
-<span class='pageno' title='143' id='Page_143'></span>
-industrious habits, as among the Six Nation Indians, settled
-on the Grand river, in the Province of Ontario; or where
-they have mingled on terms of equality with the white
-settlers, as within the old Hudson’s Bay territory on the
-Red river, they have after a time showed indications of
-endurance. It is not a mere intermingling of white and
-Indian settlers, but the increase of the community by the
-growth of a half-breed population; and when this takes
-place under favourable circumstances, as was notably the case
-so long as the hunter tribes of the prairies and the trappers
-of the Hudson’s Bay Company shared the great North-West as
-a common hunting-ground, the results are altogether favourable
-to the endurance of the mixed race. On a nearly similar
-footing we may conceive of the admixture of the earliest
-Aryans with the Allophylians of Europe, resulting in some of
-the most noticeable types of modern European nationalities.
-The growth in the territory of the Hudson’s Bay Company of
-a numerous half-breed population, assuming the status of
-farming hunters, distinct alike from the Indians and the
-Whites, is a fact of singular interest to the ethnologist. It
-has been the result of alliances, chiefly with Indian Cree
-women, by the fur trappers of the region. But these included
-two distinct elements: the one a Scottish immigration, chiefly
-from the Orkney Islands; the other that of the French Canadians,
-who long preceded the English as hunters and trappers
-in the North-West. The contrasting Scottish and French
-paternity reveals itself in the hybrid offspring; but in both
-cases the half-breeds are a large and robust race, with greater
-powers of endurance than the pure-blood Indian. They have
-been described to me by more than one trustworthy observer
-as “superior in every respect, both mentally and physically,”
-and this is confirmed by my own experience. The same
-opinion has been expressed by nearly all who have paid special
-attention to the hybrid races of the New World. D’Orbigny,
-when referring to the general result of this intermingling of
-races says: “Among the nations in America the product is
-always superior to the two types that are mixed.” Henry, a
-traveller of the last century, who spent six years among the
-North American Indians, notes the confirmatory assurance
-given to him by a Cristineaux chief, that “the children borne
-<span class='pageno' title='144' id='Page_144'></span>
-by their women to Europeans were bolder warriors and better
-hunters than themselves.” Finally, of the hardy race of the
-Arctic circle Dr. Kane says: “The half-breeds of the coast
-rival the Esquimaux in their powers of endurance.” There is
-also a fine race in Greenland, half Danes; and Dr. Rae informs
-me that numerous half-breed Eskimo are to be met with on
-the Labrador coast. They are taller and more hardy than the
-pure-blooded Eskimo; so that he always gave the preference
-to them as his guides. The Danish half-breeds are described
-by Dr. Henry Rink, in his <span class='it'>Tales and Traditions of the Eskimo</span>,
-as dating back to the earliest times of the colonisation of
-Greenland. The mixed marriages, he says, “have generally
-been rich in offspring. The children for the most part grow
-up as complete Greenlanders”; but the distinction between
-them and the native Eskimo is unmistakable, although individuals
-of the hybrid offspring represent the mixture of
-European and native blood in almost every possible proportion.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>From the conquest of Mexico in 1520, and of Peru in 1534,
-this admixture of races of the Old and the New World has
-been going on in varying ratio according to the relative circumstances
-under which they meet. In Mexico and in the more
-civilised portions of South America the half-breeds are estimated
-to constitute fully one-fifth of the whole population,
-while the so-called “coloured people,” the descendants of
-European and African parentage, now number not less than
-fifteen millions throughout the mainland and the Islands of
-North and South America.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Throughout the northern, southern, and western states of
-America, on the Pacific slope, and in Canada, the growth of a
-mixed race of White and Indian blood has everywhere taken
-place in the first period of settlement, when the frontier backwoodsman
-and the hunter were brought into contact with the
-native tribes. Along the borders of every frontier state a
-nearly exclusive male population is compelled to accept the
-services of the Indian women in any attempt at domestic life.
-The children grow up to share in perfect equality the rude life
-of their fathers. The new generation presents a mixed race of
-hardy trappers, mingling the aptitudes of both races in the wild
-life of the frontier. With the increase of population, and the
-more settled life of the clearing, the traces of mixed blood are
-<span class='pageno' title='145' id='Page_145'></span>
-lost sight of; but it is to a large extent only a repetition of
-what appears to have marked the advent of the Aryan immigrants
-into Europe. The new, but more civilised race
-predominated. Literal extermination, no doubt, did its work,
-and the aborigines to a large extent perished. But no inconsiderable
-remnant finally disappeared by absorption into the
-general stock; not without leaving enduring evidence of the
-process in the Melanochroi, or dark whites—the Iberians, or
-Black Celts, as they are sometimes styled,—of Western Europe;
-as well as in the allied type, not only of the Mediterranean
-shores, but of Western Asia and Persia. A process has thus
-been going on on the American continent for four centuries,
-which cannot fail to beget new types in the future; even as a
-like process is seen to have produced them under analogous
-conditions in ancient Europe.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Viewed in this aspect, the archæology and ethnology of the
-New World presents in some important respects a startling
-analogy to pre-Aryan Europe. Assuredly the status of the
-Allophylian races of Europe can scarcely have been inferior to
-that of some, at least, of the aborigines of America in the
-sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Probably the Aryan
-pioneers were fully equal to its first European immigrants.
-But if the ethnical characteristics of American man are simple,
-and the aspect of his social life appears to realise for us a
-living analogy to that of Europe’s Neolithic, if not in some
-respects to that of its Palæolithic era, the question of his
-antiquity acquires a new interest; for it thus becomes apparent
-that man may remain through countless ages in the wild
-hunter stage, as unprogressive as any other denizen of the
-wilderness propagating its species and hunting for its prey.
-But the whole question of the antiquity of man has undergone
-a marvellous revolution. The literature of modern geology
-curiously illustrates its progress, from the date of the publication
-of Dean Buckland’s <span class='it'>Reliquiæ Diluvianæ</span>, in 1823, to the
-final edition of Sir Charles Lyell’s <span class='it'>Principles of Geology</span>, in
-1872, and the latest embodiment of his conclusions on the
-special question involved in his <span class='it'>Antiquity of Man</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The determination of a Palæolithic period for Europe, with
-its rude implements of flint or stone, chipped into shape
-without the aid of any grinding or polishing process, and
-<span class='pageno' title='146' id='Page_146'></span>
-belonging to an era when man was associated with animals
-either extinct or known only throughout the historic period in
-extreme northern latitudes, has naturally stimulated the
-research of American archæologists for corresponding traces on
-this continent. Nor is the anticipation of the possible recovery
-of the traces of man’s presence in post-glacial, or still earlier
-epochs in unhistoric areas, limited to either continent. If it
-be accepted as an established fact that man has existed in
-Europe for unnumbered ages, during which enormous physical
-changes have been wrought; upheaval and denudation have
-revolutionised the face of the continent; the deposition of the
-whole drift formation has been effected; the river-valleys of
-Southern England and the north of France have been excavated,
-and the British Islands detached from the neighbouring
-continent: it cannot be regarded as improbable that evidence
-may yet be found of the early presence of man in any region
-of the globe. Nevertheless some of the elements already
-referred to tend to mark with a character of their own the
-investigations alike of the archæologist and the geologist into
-the earliest traces of human art in what we have learned
-habitually to speak of as a New World. In Europe the
-antiquary, familiar already with ancient historic remains, had
-passed by a natural transition to the study of ruder examples
-of primitive art in stone and bronze, as well as to the physical
-characteristics of races which appeared to have preceeded the
-earliest historic nations. The occupation of the British
-Islands, for example, successively by Celts, Romans, Anglo-Saxons,
-Danes, and Normans, was so familiar to the popular
-mind that the problem of a sequence of neolithic, bronze, and
-the ruder iron implements with their correlated personal
-ornaments, pottery, etc., was universally solved by referring
-them to Celtic, Roman, and Scandinavian art. Erroneous as
-this interpretation of the evidence proves to have been, it had,
-nevertheless, sufficient accordance with truth to prepare the
-way for the ultimate reception of more accurate inductions.
-The fact of the occurrence of successive phases of art, and
-their indication of a succession of races, were undoubted; and
-researches directed to the solution of the problem of European
-archæology were unhesitatingly followed up through mediæval,
-classical, Assyrian and Egyptian remains, to the very threshold
-<span class='pageno' title='147' id='Page_147'></span>
-of that prehistoric dawn which forms the transitional stage
-between geological and historical epochs. A significant fact,
-in its bearing on the recent disclosures of the river-drift in
-France and England, is that some of the most characteristic
-flint implements, such as a large spear head found along with
-the remains of a fossil elephant in Gray’s Inn Lane, London,
-and implements of the same type obtained from the drift of
-the Waveney Valley, in Surrey, underlying similar fossil
-remains, had been brought under the notice of archæologists
-upwards of a century before the idea of the contemporaneous
-existence of man and the mammals of the Drift found any
-favour; and they were unhesitatingly assigned to a Celtic
-origin. The first known discovery of any flint implement in
-the quaternary gravels of Europe is the one already noted
-which stands recorded in the Sloane catalogue as “A British
-weapon found, with elephant’s tooth, opposite to black Mary’s,
-near Grayes Inn Lane.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A just conception of the comprehensiveness even of
-historical antiquity was long retarded in Europe by an
-exclusive devotion to classical studies; but the relations of
-America to the Old World are so recent, and all else is so
-nearly a blank, that for it the fifteenth century is the historic
-dawn, and everything dating before the landing of Columbus
-has been habitually assigned to the same vague antiquity.
-Hence historical research has been occupied for the most part
-on very modern remains, and the supreme triumph long aimed
-at has been to associate the hieroglyphics of Central America,
-and the architectural monuments of Peru, with those of Egypt.
-But we have entered on a new era of archæological and
-historical inquiry. The palæolithic implements of the French
-Drift have only been brought to light in our own day; and,
-though upwards of half a century has elapsed since the
-researches of Mr. J. MacEnery were rewarded by the discovery
-of flint implements of the earliest type in the same
-red loam of the Devonshire limestone caves which embedded
-bones of the mammoth, tichorhine rhinoceros, cave-bear and
-other extinct mammals, it is only recently that the full
-significance of such disclosures has been recognised.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>America was indeed little behind Europe in the earlier
-stages of cavern research. A cabinet of the British Museum
-<span class='pageno' title='148' id='Page_148'></span>
-is filled with fossil bones obtained by Dr. Lund and M.
-Claussen from limestone caverns in Brazil, embedded in a
-reddish-coloured loam, under a thick stalagmitic flooring, and
-including, along with remains of genera still inhabiting the
-American continent, those of extinct monkeys. Human bones
-were also found in the same caves, but superficially, and
-seemingly of the present Indian race. But a fresh interest
-and significance have been given to such researches by the
-novel aspect of prehistoric archæology in Europe. The
-relations now established between the earliest traces of
-European man and the geological aspects of the great Drift
-formation, have naturally led to the diligent examination of
-corresponding deposits of the continent of America, in the hope
-of recovering similar traces there. Until recently, however,
-any supposed examples of American palæolithic art have been
-isolated and unsatisfactory. Colonel Charles C. Jones, in his
-<span class='it'>Antiquities of the Southern Indians</span>, notes the discovery in the
-Nacoochee valley, in the State of Georgia, of flint implements
-from the gravel and boulders of the drift, and in material,
-manner of construction, and appearance closely resembling the
-rough hatchets belonging to the Drift type. Other more or
-less trustworthy examples of a like kind have been reported;
-among which may be noted a large specimen, now in the
-collection of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, found at
-Lewiston, in the State of New York, at a great depth, when
-sinking a well. Implements of neolithic character, and even
-of modern type, have been produced, not only from Kansas
-and California gold-diggings, but from the volcanic tufa of the
-Pacific coast, overlaid by repeated volcanic deposits. In a
-terrace of modified drift, near Little Falls, Minnesota, an
-accumulation of quartz chips have been found; the supposed
-refuse of an ancient workshop. More definitely, Professor
-Aughey reports the discovery of rudely chipped flint arrow heads
-in the loess of the Missouri valley, beneath the bones
-of the mastodon; and the loess gravels of Ohio and Indiana,
-belonging unquestionably to the last glacial age, have disclosed
-what seem to be genuine palæoliths, pointing to the
-presence of the rational tool-maker during the close of the
-quaternary epoch of the North American continent.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Some of those assumed illustrations of American palæolithic
-<span class='pageno' title='149' id='Page_149'></span>
-art cannot be accepted. One implement, for example, from
-the Californian gravel-drift, is a polished stone plummet perforated
-at one end, and not only modern in character, but as
-a genuine discovery in the gold-bearing gravels, tending to
-discredit the palæolithic origin assigned to ruder implements
-found under similar circumstances. But the most startling
-examples of this class are of minor importance when compared
-with reported discoveries of human remains in the Californian
-drift. In 1857, Dr. C. F. Winslow produced a fragment of
-a human skull found eighteen feet below the surface in the
-“pay drift” at Table Mountain, associated with remains of
-the mastodon and fossil elephant. From beds underlying
-the lava and volcanic tufa of California, from time to time
-other evidences of the assumed ancient presence of man
-and traces of his art are produced. But the manifestly recent
-character of some of the latter prove the disturbance of these
-deposits by subsequent influences. In 1869 Professor J. D.
-Whitney exhibited, at the Chicago meeting of the American
-Association for the Advancement of Science, a complete human
-skull, recovered at a depth of 130 feet in the auriferous gravel
-of Calaveras County, California, underlying five successive beds
-of lava and volcanic tufa, and vouched for its geological
-antiquity. The gravel which adhered to the relic found
-imbedded in it is referred by him to the Pliocene age; and
-Dr. J. W. Foster remarks of it, in his <span class='it'>Prehistoric Races of the
-United States</span>: “This skull, admitting its authenticity,
-carries back the advent of man to the Pliocene epoch, and is
-therefore older than the stone implements of the drift-gravel of
-Abbeville and Amiens, or the relics furnished by the cave-dirt
-of Belgium and France.” In reality, however, the authenticity
-of the skull as a pliocene relic cannot be admitted. Like
-that of Guadaloupe, those found by Dr. Lund in the Brazil
-caves, and other fossil skulls of the American continent, it
-proved, according to the trustworthy report of Dr. Wyman, to
-be of the ordinary Indian type; though to some minds that
-only confirms the genuineness of the discovery. A human
-skull recovered from the delta of the Mississippi at New
-Orleans, and estimated by Dr. Dowler—on what, “to avoid all
-cavil,” he claimed to be extremely moderate assumptions,—as
-not less than 57,000 years old, is grouped with others found
-<span class='pageno' title='150' id='Page_150'></span>
-by Dr. Lund in one of the Brazil caves, at Logoa Santa, and
-thus commented on: “Numerous species of animals have been
-blotted from creation since American humanity’s first appearance.
-The form of these crania, moreover, proves that the
-general type of races inhabiting America at that inconceivably
-remote era was the same which prevailed at the Columbian
-discovery”;<a id='r42'/><a href='#f42' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[42]</span></sup></a> and so the authors of <span class='it'>Types of Mankind</span> arrived
-at the conclusion that with such evidence of the native
-American type having occupied the continent in geological
-times, before the formation of the Mississippi alluvia, science
-may spare itself the trouble of looking elsewhere for the origin
-of the American race! The high authority of Professor
-Agassiz was adduced at the time in support of this and other
-equally crude assumptions; but they have ceased to receive
-the countenance of men of science.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Meanwhile the progress of European discovery has familiarised
-us with the idea of the rude primeval race of its Palæolithic
-era, so designated in reference to their characteristic implements
-recovered from the river-drift of France and England, and from
-the sedimentary accumulations of their rock shelters and limestone
-caves. That flint and stone implements of every variety
-of form abound in the soil of the New World, has been
-established by ample proof; and if mere rudeness could be
-accepted as evidence of antiquity, many of them rival in this
-respect the rudest implements of the European drift. But it
-has to be kept in view that the indigenous tribes of America
-have scarcely even now abandoned the manufacture of implements
-of obsidian, flint, and stone, or of bone and ivory. So
-striking, indeed, is the analogy between the simple arts of
-the palæolithic cave-men of Southern France, and those still
-practised by the Eskimo, that Professor Boyd Dawkins inferred
-from this conclusive evidence of a pedigree for the Arctic
-aborigines little less ancient than that which Dr. Dowler long
-ago deduced from his discovery in the delta of the Mississippi.
-The implements and accumulated debris of the ancient hunters
-of the Garonne, the contemporaries of the mammoth and other
-extinct mammals, and of the reindeer, musk-sheep, cave-bear,
-and other species known only within the historic period in
-extreme northern latitudes, undoubtedly suggest interesting
-<span class='pageno' title='151' id='Page_151'></span>
-analogies with the modern Eskimo. Only under similar climatic
-conditions to those in which they now live, could such accumulations
-of animal remains as have been found in the caves
-of the valley of the Vésère be possible in places habitually
-resorted to by man. But such analogies form a very slender
-basis on which to found the hypothesis that the race of the
-Mammoth and Reindeer period in the remote Post-Pliocene era
-of Southern France has its living representatives within the
-Arctic circle of the American continent.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The students of modern archæology have become familiar
-with startling disclosures; and the supposed identification of
-living representatives of the race of the pleistocene river beds
-or cave deposits is too fascinating a one to be readily abandoned
-by its originator. The men of the River-Drift era are assumed
-to have been a race of still older and ruder savages than the
-palæolithic cave-men, who were more restricted in their range,
-and considerably in advance of them in the variety and
-workmanship of their weapons and implements. The elder
-ruder race has vanished; but the cave-race of that indefinite
-but vastly remote era of pliocene, or post-pliocene Europe,
-is imagined to still survive within the Arctic frontiers of
-Canada.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In discussing the plausible hypothesis which thus aims
-at recovering in the hyperboreans of America the race that
-before the close of Europe’s Pleistocene age, hunted the
-mammoth, the musk-sheep, and the reindeer in the valleys of
-the Garonne, Professor Dawkins reviewed the manners and
-habits of the Eskimo as a race of hunters, fishers, and fowlers,
-accumulating round their dwellings vast refuse heaps similar
-to those of the ancient cave-men. Both were ignorant of the
-metallurgic arts, were excluded to a large extent by a like
-rigorous climate from access to stone or flint; while they
-habitually turned to account the available material, resulting
-from the spoils of the chase: bone, ivory, and deer’s horn, in
-the manufacture of all needful tools. The implements and
-weapons thus common to both do unquestionably prove that
-their manner of life was in many respects similar. Professor
-Dawkins also notes, what can scarcely seem surprising in any
-people familiar with the working in bone, namely, the use at times
-by the Eskimo of fossil mammoth ivory for the handles of their
-<span class='pageno' title='152' id='Page_152'></span>
-stone scrapers, and adds: “It is very possible that this habit
-of the Eskimos may have been handed down from the late
-pleistocene times.” But what strikes him as “the most
-astonishing bond of union between the cave-men and the
-Eskimo is the art of representing animals”; and, after noting
-those familiar to both, along with the correspondence in their
-weapons, and habits as hunters, he says: “All these points of
-connection between the cave-men and the Eskimos can, in my
-opinion, be explained only on the hypothesis that they belong
-to the same race.”<a id='r43'/><a href='#f43' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[43]</span></sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As to the ingenious imitative art of the Cro-Magnon cave-dwellers,
-it is by no means peculiar to them and the modern
-Eskimo; but, on the contrary, is common to many savage
-races; though by no modern savage people has a like degree of
-artistic ability been shown. Professor Dawkins says truly of
-the cave-man: “He possessed a singular talent for representing
-the animals he hunted; and his sketches reveal to us that he
-had a capacity for seeing the beauty and grace of natural form
-not much inferior to that which is the result of long-continued
-civilisation in ourselves, and very much higher than that of his
-successors in Europe in the Neolithic age. The hunter who
-was both artist and sculptor, who reproduced, with his imperfect
-means, at one time foliage, at another the quiet repose
-of a reindeer feeding, has left behind him the proof of a decided
-advance in culture, such as might be expected to result from
-the long continuance of man on the earth in the hunter state
-of civilisation.”<a id='r44'/><a href='#f44' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[44]</span></sup></a> All this is correct in reference to the art of
-the Vézère carvers and draughtsmen; but it would be gross
-exaggeration if applied to such conventional art as the Eskimo
-arrow-straightener which Professor Dawkins figures, with its
-formal row of reindeer and their grotesque accessories. The
-same criticism is equally applicable to numerous other
-specimens of Eskimo art, and to similar Innuit, or western
-Eskimo representations of hunting scenes, such as those figured
-by Mr. William H. Dall, in his <span class='it'>Alaska</span>, which he describes as
-“drawings analogous to those discovered in France in the caves
-of Dordogne.”<a id='r45'/><a href='#f45' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[45]</span></sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The identity, or near resemblance between harpoons, fowling
-<span class='pageno' title='153' id='Page_153'></span>
-spears, marrow spoons, and scrapers, of the ancient cave-race
-of pleistocene France, and implements of the modern
-Eskimo, is full of interest; as is much also of a like kind
-between savage races of our own day in the most widely
-severed regions of the globe; but it is a slender basis on which
-to found such far-reaching deductions. The old race that lived
-on the verge of the great glaciers in Southern France gave the
-preference to bone and ivory over flint or stone, because the
-climatic conditions under which they lived rendered those
-most accessible to them; and we see in the familiar types of
-flint arrow heads, stone hammers, and the like primitive tools
-of savage man, both in ancient and modern times, how
-naturally the workman, with the same materials and similar
-necessities, shapes his few and simple weapons and implements
-into like form. As to the absence of pottery, alike
-among the ancient cave-dwellers and the modern Eskimo,
-in which another element of resemblance is traced, it proves
-no more than that both had to work under climatic conditions
-which rendered clay, adequate fuel, and nearly all
-other appliances of the potter, even less available than flint
-and stone.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But the caves of the Vézère have furnished examples not only
-of skulls, but of complete skeletons of an ancient race of cave-dwellers,
-whether that of the ingenious draughtsmen and reindeer
-hunters or not; and had those, or the underlying debris,
-yielded traces of the Eskimo type of head, there would then be
-good reason for attaching an exceptional value to any evidence
-of correspondence in arts and habits. But the cerebral
-capacity of this Cro-Magnon race amply accords with the
-artistic skill, and the sense of beauty and grace of natural form,
-ascribed to the ancient draughtsmen; and their well-developed
-skulls and large bones present the most striking contrast
-to the stunted Eskimo. The strongly marked physiognomy of
-the former bears no resemblance to the debased Mongolian type
-of the latter. No doubt it may be argued with sufficient plausibility
-that in the slow retreat of the palæolithic race, whether
-eastward by the river-valleys of Europe, and across the steppes
-of Asia, to Behring Strait; or over submerging continents, since
-engulfed in the ocean; and in the vast æons of their retreat
-to their latest home in another hemisphere, on the verge of the
-<span class='pageno' title='154' id='Page_154'></span>
-pole, any amount of change may have modified the physical
-characteristics of the race. But if so, the evidence of their
-pedigree is no longer producible. The Eskimo may be related
-by descent to the men of the French Reindeer period, as we
-ourselves may be descendants of palæolithic man; but, as Professor
-Geikie has justly remarked: “When anthropologists
-produce from some of the caves occupied by the reindeer
-hunters a cranium resembling that of the living Eskimo, it will
-be time enough to admit that the latter has descended from the
-former. But, unfortunately for the view here referred to, none
-of the skulls hitherto found affords it any support.”<a id='r46'/><a href='#f46' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[46]</span></sup></a> In
-truth, the plausible fancy that the discoveries of the last
-twenty-five years have tended to confirm the identification of
-the cave-men with the Eskimo, only requires the full appreciation
-of all that it involves, in order that it shall take its place
-with that other identification with the red man of the present
-day of “Dr. Dowler’s sub-cypress Indian who dwelt on the
-site of New Orleans 57,000 years ago.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The received interpretation of the imperfect record which
-remains to us of the successive eras of geological change with
-the accompanying modifications of animal life, down to the
-appearance of man, and the deciphering of geological
-chroniclings as a coherent disclosure of the past history of the
-earth, are largely due to Sir Charles Lyell. In 1841 he
-visited America, and then estimated with cautious conservatism
-some of the evidences adduced for the assumed antiquity of
-American man. But subsequent observations led him to
-modify his views; and at length, in 1863, he “read his recantation”
-of earlier opinions; and—so far at least as Europe is
-concerned,—gave the full weight of his authority to the conclusions
-relative to the antiquity of man based on the discovery
-of flint implements associated with bones of extinct mammalia
-at Abbeville and in the valley of the Thames. The peculiar
-geological conditions accompanying the earliest evidence of the
-presence of palæolithic man in Europe proved, when rightly
-interpreted, to be no less convincing than the long-familiar
-sequence of more recent archæological indices by which antiquarian
-speculation has proceeded step by step back towards
-that prehistoric dawn in which geology and archæology meet
-<span class='pageno' title='155' id='Page_155'></span>
-on common ground. The chalk and the overlying river-drift,
-abounding with flint nodules, left no room for question as to
-the source of the raw material from which the primitive implements
-were manufactured. The flint is still abundant as ever,
-in nodules of a size amply sufficient for furnishing the largest
-palæoliths, in the localities both of France and England
-where such specimens of primitive art have been recovered
-by thousands. But there also other disclosures tell no less
-conclusively of many subsequent stages of progress, alike in
-prehistoric and historic times.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Sir John Evans, in his <span class='it'>Ancient Stone Implements of Great
-Britain</span>, purposely begins with the more recent implements,
-including those of the Australian and other modern savage
-races, and traces his way backward, “ascending the stream of
-time,” and noting the diverse examples of ingeniously fashioned
-and polished tools of the Neolithic age which preceded that
-palæolithic class, of vast antiquity and rudest workmanship,
-which now constitute the earliest known works of man; if they
-are not, indeed, examples of the first infantile efforts of human
-skill. But alike in Britain, and on the neighbouring continent,
-a chronological sequence of implements in stone and metal,
-with pottery, personal ornaments, and other illustrations of progressive
-art, supplies the evidence by means of which we are
-led backward—not without some prolonged interruptions, as
-we approach the Palæolithic age,—from historic to the remotest
-prehistoric times.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The relative chronology of the European drift may be thus
-stated: first, and most modern, the superficial deposits of
-recent centuries with their mediæval traces of Frank and Gaul;
-and along with those, the tombs, the pottery, and other remains
-of the Roman period, scarcely perceptibly affected in their
-geological relations by nearly the whole interval of the Christian
-era; next, in the alluvium, seemingly embedded by
-natural accumulation at an average depth of fifteen feet, occur
-remains of a European Stone period, corresponding in many
-respects to those of the pfahlbauten, or pile villages of the
-Swiss Lakes; and, underlying such accumulations exceeding
-in their duration the whole historical period, we come at length
-to the tool-bearing drift, imbedding, along with the fossil
-remains of many extinct mammals, the implements of palæolithic
-<span class='pageno' title='156' id='Page_156'></span>
-man, fashioned seemingly when the rivers were only beginning
-the work of excavating the valleys which give their present
-contour to the landscapes of France and England.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There, as elsewhere, we recognise progression from the most
-artless rudeness of tool manufacture, belonging to an epoch
-when the process of grinding flint or stone to an edge appears
-to have been unknown; through various stages of the primitive
-worker in stone, bone, ivory, and the like natural products;
-and then the discovery and gradual development of the
-metallurgic arts. Yet at the same time it must not be lost
-sight of that mere rudeness of workmanship is no evidence of
-antiquity. Nothing can well be conceived of more artless
-than some of the stone implements still in use among savage
-tribes of America. Moreover, it is to be noted that it is not
-amid the privations of an Arctic winter, with its analogies so
-suggestive of a condition of life corresponding to that of the
-men of Europe’s Palæolithic age, but in southern latitudes,
-with a climate which furnishes abundant resources for savage
-man, that the crudest efforts at tool-making now occur. In a
-report of the <span class='it'>United States Geological Survey</span> for 1872,
-Professor Joseph Leidy furnishes an interesting account of
-numerous implements, rude as any in the Drift, observed by
-him while engaged on a survey at the base of the Unitah
-Mountains in Southern Wyoming. “In some places,” he
-remarks, “the stone implements are so numerous, and at the
-same time are so rudely constructed, that one is constantly in
-doubt when to consider them as natural or accidental, and
-when to view them as artificial.”<a id='r47'/><a href='#f47' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[47]</span></sup></a> But with these, others are
-mingled of fine finish. The Shoshones who haunt the region
-seem to be incapable of such skill as the latter imply; and
-express the belief that they were a gift of the Great Spirit to
-their ancestors. Yet many are fresh in appearance; though
-others are worn and decomposed on the surface, and may, as
-Professor Leidy assumes, have lain there for centuries. The
-tendency is now, even among experienced archæologists, to
-assume that they are actually palæolithic. Mr. Thomas
-Wilson remarks, in his <span class='it'>Report</span> of 1887: “Dr. Leidy did not
-know these implements to be what they really were, that is
-<span class='pageno' title='157' id='Page_157'></span>
-implements of the Palæolithic period.”<a id='r48'/><a href='#f48' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[48]</span></sup></a> But in view of Dr.
-Leidy’s whole narrative, his assumption seems to be more consistent
-with the observed data. In the same narrative he
-describes a stone scraper, or <span class='it'>teshoa</span>, as the Shoshones call it,
-employed by them in the dressing of buffalo-skins, but of so
-simple a character that he says, “had I not observed it in
-actual use, and had noticed it among the materials of the
-buttes, or horizontal strata of indurated clays and sandstone,
-I would have viewed it as an accidental spawl.” When
-illustrating the characteristics of a like class of stone implements
-and weapons of Great Britain, Sir John Evans figures and
-describes an axe, or war-club, procured from the Indians of
-Rio Frio in Texas. Its blade is a piece of trachyte, so rudely
-chipped that it would scarcely attract attention as of artificial
-working, but for the club-like haft, evidently chopped into
-shape with stone tools, into which it is inserted. Nothing
-ruder has been brought to light in any drift or cave deposit.<a id='r49'/><a href='#f49' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[49]</span></sup></a>
-Another modern Texas implement, in the Smithonnia collections
-at Washington,<a id='r50'/><a href='#f50' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[50]</span></sup></a> is a rudely-fashioned flint blade,
-presenting considerable resemblance to a familiar class of oval
-implements of the river-drift.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So far, therefore, as unskilled art and the mere rudeness of
-workmanship are concerned, it might be assumed that the
-aborigines of America are thus presented to our study in their
-most primitive stage. They had advanced in no degree beyond
-the condition of the European savage of the River-Drift period,
-when, at the close of the fifteenth century, they were brought
-into contact with modern European culture; and nothing in
-their rude arts seemed to offer a clue to their origin, or any
-evidence of progression. So far as anything could be learned
-from their work, they might have entered on the occupation
-of the northern continent, subsequent to the visits of the
-Northmen in the tenth century; and, indeed, American
-archæologists generally favour the opinion that the <span class='it'>Skrælings</span>,
-as the Northmen designated the New England natives whom
-they encountered, were not Red Indians but Eskimo. But
-whatever may have been the local distribution of races at that
-<span class='pageno' title='158' id='Page_158'></span>
-date, geological evidence, which has proved so conclusive in
-relation to European ethnology, has at length been appealed to
-by American investigators, with results which seem to establish
-for their continent also its primeval Stone period, and remote
-prehistoric dawn.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The <span class='it'>Report of the Peabody Museum of American Archæology
-and Ethnology</span> for 1877, gave the first publicity to a communication
-from Dr. Charles C. Abbott, setting forth the data from
-which he was led to assume that man existed on the American
-continent during the formation of the great glacial deposit
-which extends from Labrador as far south as Virginia. The
-scene of his successful research is in the valley of the Delaware,
-near Trenton, New Jersey. Though the relative antiquity of
-the Trenton gravel beds is modern compared with some subsequent
-disclosures, his discoveries have a special interest as
-foremost among those of implement-bearing gravels in the
-New World. In the gravel, deposited by the Delaware river
-in the process of excavating the valley through which its
-course now lies, Dr. Abbott’s diligent search has been rewarded
-by finding numerous specimens of rudely chipped implements
-of a peculiar type, to which he has given the name of “turtle-back
-celts.” They are fashioned of a highly indurated argillite,
-with a conchoidal fracture, and have been recovered at depths
-varying from five to upwards of twenty feet below the overlying
-soil, in the undisturbed gravel of the bluff facing the
-Delaware river, as well as in railway cuttings and other
-excavations.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Here, to all appearance, intelligent research had at length
-been rewarded by the discovery of undoubted traces of the
-American palæolithic man; and Dr. Abbott, not unnaturally,
-gave free scope to his fancy, as he realised to himself the preoccupation
-of the river valley with “the village sites of pre-glacial
-man.” There is a fascination in such disclosures which,
-especially in the case of the original discoverer, tempts to
-extreme views; and both in France and England, at the present
-time, the more eager among the geologists and archæologists
-devoted to this inquiry are reluctantly restrained from assuming
-as a scientific fact the existence of man in Southern
-England and in France under more genial climatic influences,
-prior to the great Ice age which wrought such enormous
-<span class='pageno' title='159' id='Page_159'></span>
-changes there. The theory which Dr. Abbott formed on the
-basis of the evidence first presented to him by the disclosures
-of the Trenton gravel may be thus stated. Towards the close
-of the great Ice age, the locality which has rewarded his search
-for specimens of palæolithic art marked the termination of the
-glacier on the Atlantic coast. Here, at the foot of the glacier,
-a primitive people, in a condition closely analogous to that
-of the Eskimo of the present day, made their home, and
-wandered over the open sea in the vicinity, during the
-accumulation of the deposit from the melting glacier. But
-this drift-gravel was modified by subsequent action. According
-to Dr. Abbott’s conclusions, it was deposited in open
-water, on the bed of a shallow sea. But the position of the
-large boulders, and the absence of true clay in the mass, suggest
-that it has undergone great changes since its original
-deposition as glacial debris; and if this is to be accounted for
-by subsequent action of water, the unpolished surfaces of the
-chipped implements are inconsistent with such a theory of
-their origin. Huge boulders, of the same character as those
-which abound in the underlying gravel, occur on the surface;
-and their presence there was referred to by Dr. Abbott as
-throwing light upon “the occurrence of rude implements
-identical with those found in the underlying gravels, inasmuch
-as the same ice-raft that bore the one, with its accompanying
-sand and gravel, might well gather up also stray relics of this
-primitive people, and re-deposit them where they are now
-found.” Accordingly, seeking in fancy to recall this ancient
-past, he says in his first report: “In times preceding the
-formation of this gravel bed, now in part facing the Delaware
-river, there were doubtless localities, once the village sites of pre-glacial
-man, where these rude stone implements would necessarily
-be abundant,” and he accordingly asks “May not the ice
-in its onward march, gathering in bulk every loose fragment
-of rock and particle of soil, have held them loosely together,
-and, hundreds of miles from their original site, left them in
-some one locality such as this, where the river has again
-brought to light rude implements that characterise an almost
-primitive people? But, assuming that the various implements
-fashioned by a strictly pre-glacial people have been totally
-destroyed by the crushing forces of the glacier, and that the
-<span class='pageno' title='160' id='Page_160'></span>
-specimens now produced were not brought from a distance,
-may they not be referred to an early race that, driven southward
-by the encroaching ice, dwelt at the foot of the glacier, and
-during their sojourn here these implements were lost?”<a id='r51'/><a href='#f51' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[51]</span></sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The opinions thus set forth in the first published account
-of Dr. Abbott’s discoveries, have since been considerably
-modified, in so far as the geological age of the tool-bearing
-gravel of the Delaware valley is concerned. In his earlier
-publications he assumed, as no longer questionable, the existence
-of inter-glacial, if not pre-glacial, man on the continent.
-In his more matured views, as set forth in his <span class='it'>Primitive
-Industry</span>, he speaks of “having been seriously misled by the
-various geological reports that purport to give, in proper
-sequence, the respective ages of the several strata of clay,
-gravel, boulders, and sand, through which the river has finally
-worn its channel to the ocean level”;<a id='r52'/><a href='#f52' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[52]</span></sup></a> so that he has probably
-ascribed too great an antiquity to the peculiar class of stone
-implements brought to light in the river-gravels of New Jersey.
-Dr. Abbott, accordingly, states as his more matured conclusion,
-confirmed by the reports of some of the most experienced
-geological observers, on whose judgment he relies, that the
-Trenton gravel, in which alone the turtle-back celts have thus
-far been found, is a post-glacial river deposit, made at a time
-when the river was larger than at present; and is the most
-recent of all the formations of the Delaware.<a id='r53'/><a href='#f53' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[53]</span></sup></a> Here, however,
-the term “recent” is employed altogether relatively; and
-although Dr. Abbott no longer claims in the discovery of the
-stone implements of the gravel beds near Trenton, New Jersey,
-evidence of the existence of man on the American continent
-before the close of the Glacial period, he still refers the Trenton
-gravel tool-makers to an era which, at the lowest computation,
-precedes by thousands of years the earliest historical glimpses
-of Assyria, Egypt, or wherever among the most ancient nations
-of the Old World the beginnings of history can be traced.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The disclosures of Dr. Abbott claim a special importance
-among the fruits of archæological investigation on the American
-continent, not only from the fact that they furnish the first
-well-authenticated results of systematic research based on the
-<span class='pageno' title='161' id='Page_161'></span>
-scientific analogies of European archæology, but these later
-results have included the remains of man himself. When Dr.
-Usher of Mobile contributed to <span class='it'>The Types of Mankind</span> an
-account of the discovery of a human skeleton at New Orleans,
-found under circumstances from which the existence of man in
-the delta of the Mississippi was deduced well nigh sixty
-thousand years ago, it was scarcely calculated to win the
-reader’s acceptance of that assumption when it was added that
-“the type of the cranium was, as might have been expected,
-that of the aboriginal American race.” Nor is this the only
-example of skull of a strictly modern Indian type from which
-the inference has been drawn that the same unchanging
-form has prevailed from the era of pre-glacial American man
-till now. Three human crania found in the Trenton gravel
-are now in the Peabody Museum at Cambridge (Harvard).
-All are of the same type, but it differs essentially from that
-of the Red Indian skull. They are of small size, oval, and
-present a striking contrast to all other skulls in the Peabody
-collection. Their value is due to the fact of their discovery
-in the implement-bearing gravel, in proximity to the characteristic
-examples of what are assumed to be palæolithic celts.
-For it is well for us to bear in remembrance that the evidences
-of the antiquity of man in Europe do not rest on any number
-of chance disclosures. It is a simple procedure to dig into a
-Celtic or Saxon barrow, and find there the implements and
-pottery of its builders lying alongside of their buried remains.
-But archæologists have learned to recognise the palæolithic
-implements as not less characteristic of certain post-pliocene
-deposits than the palæontology of the same geological formation.
-The river-drift and cave deposits are characterised by traces of
-contemporaneous life, as shown in the examples of primitive
-art from which they receive the name of the tool-bearing drift
-or gravel; just as older geological formations have their characteristic
-animal and vegetable fossils. The specific character
-of the tool-bearing gravel of the French Drift having been
-determined, geologists and archæologists have sought for flint
-implements in corresponding English strata, as they would
-seek for the fossils of the same period, and with like success.
-Palæolithic implements have been recovered in this manner in
-Suffolk, Bedford, Hartford, Kent, Middlesex, Surrey, and other
-<span class='pageno' title='162' id='Page_162'></span>
-districts in the south of England. So entirely indeed has the
-man of the Drift passed beyond the province of the archæologist,
-that in 1861 Professor Prestwich followed up his
-<span class='it'>Notes on Further Discoveries of Flint Implements in Beds of
-Post-Pleiocene Gravel and Clay</span>, with a list of forty-one localities
-where gravel and clay pits or gravel beds occur, as some of
-the places in the south of England where he thought flint
-implements might also by diligent search possibly be found;
-and subsequent discoveries confirmed his anticipations. It
-has been by the application of the same principle to the drift
-and river-valley gravels of the New World that a like success
-has been achieved. The result of a careful study of the tool-bearing
-gravel of the Delaware may be thus summarised from
-recent reports of trustworthy scientific observers. The Trenton
-gravel is a post-glacial river deposit, made at a time when the
-river was larger than its present volume. It represents apparently
-the latest of the surface deposits of the upper Delaware
-valley;<a id='r54'/><a href='#f54' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[54]</span></sup></a> and Dr. Abbott remarks of it: “The melting of
-a local glacier in the Cattskill Mountains would probably
-result, at the headwaters of the Delaware, in a continued
-flood of sufficient volume, if supplemented by the action of
-floating ice, to form the Trenton gravels.”<a id='r55'/><a href='#f55' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[55]</span></sup></a> But these gravels
-are now recognised as the youngest of the series of ancient
-implement-bearing deposits. Underneath lies the older Columbia
-gravel, which has also yielded—though in much fewer
-numbers,—palæoliths of primitive types. The researches of
-Mr. Hilborne T. Cresson in the State of Delaware have already
-been referred to; and from those results, as well as from
-similar disclosures in Ohio and Indiana, it is no longer doubted
-that reliable traces have been recovered of American man
-contemporary with the mammoth and the mastodon; and—like
-the old cave-dwellers of Cro-Magnon,—a hunter of the
-reindeer in the valley of the Delaware.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>American archæologists have undoubtedly been repeatedly
-deceived by the misleading traces of comparatively modern
-remains in deposits of some geological antiquity; as in instances
-already referred to in the California gravel beds.
-In these, indeed, ground and polished instruments of stone,
-including a “plummet” of highly polished syenite, “an
-<span class='pageno' title='163' id='Page_163'></span>
-exhibition of the lapidary’s skill superior to anything yet furnished
-by the Stone age of either continent,”<a id='r56'/><a href='#f56' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[56]</span></sup></a> are produced
-from time to time from the same post-pliocene formation
-where the remains of the elephant and mastodon abound. Dr.
-Abbott did not overlook the danger to which the archæologist
-is thus exposed on a continent which, so far as its aborigines
-are concerned, has scarcely yet emerged from its Stone age.
-He accordingly remarked in his original report: “The chance
-occurrence of single specimens of the ordinary forms of Indian
-relics, at depths somewhat greater than they have usually
-reached, even in constantly cultivated soils, induced me,
-several years since, to carefully examine the underlying
-gravels, to determine if the common surface-found stone
-implements of Indian origin were ever found therein, except
-in such manner as might easily be explained, as in the case
-of deep burials by the uprooting of large trees, whereby an
-implement lying on the surface, or immediately below it,
-might fall into the gravel beneath, and subsequently become
-buried several feet in depth; and lastly, by the action of the
-water, as where a spring, swollen by spring freshets, cuts for
-itself a new channel, and carrying away a large body of earth,
-leaves its larger pebbles, and possibly stone implements of late
-origin, upon the gravel of the new bed of the stream.” But
-there is little difficulty in separating chance-buried neolithic
-or modern implements from the genuine palæolithic celts or
-hatchets abundantly present in the undisturbed gravel beds,
-from which they have been taken on their first exposure.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Professor Henry C. Lewis, of the Pennsylvania Geological
-Survey, states that “at the localities on the Pennsylvania
-Railroad, where extensive exposures of these gravels have been
-made, the deposit is undoubtedly undisturbed. No implement
-could have come into this gravel except at a time when the
-river flowed upon it, and when they might have sunk through
-the loose and shifting material. All the evidence points to
-the conclusion that at the time of the Trenton gravel flood,
-Man, in a rude state, with habits similar to those of the river-drift
-hunter of Europe, and probably under a climate similar
-to that of more northern regions, lived upon the banks of the
-ancient Delaware, and lost his stone implements in the shifting
-<span class='pageno' title='164' id='Page_164'></span>
-sands and gravel of the bed of that stream.”<a id='r57'/><a href='#f57' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[57]</span></sup></a> To this
-Dr. Abbott adds: “At just such a locality as Trenton, where
-the river widens out, traces of man, had he existed during the
-accumulation of the gravel, would be most likely to occur.
-This is true not only because there is here the greatest mass
-of the gravel, and the best opportunities for examining it in
-section, but the locality would be one most favourable for the
-existence of man at the time. The higher ground in the
-immediate vicinity was sufficiently elevated to be free from
-the encroachments of the ice and water, and the climate, soil,
-and fauna are all such as to make it possible for man to exist
-at this time in this locality.”<a id='r58'/><a href='#f58' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[58]</span></sup></a> In 1878 the tusk of a
-mastodon was found under partially stratified gravel at a
-depth of fourteen feet; and Dr. Abbott states that, within a
-few yards of this, palæolithic implements have been gathered,
-one at the same and three at greater depths. Now that an
-intelligent interest has been awakened in the subject, numerous
-labourers are enlisted in its elucidation. To this a coherent
-unity has been given by the archæologists of the Peabody
-Museum at Harvard, and the curators of the National Museum
-at Washington. The results of a systematic inquiry by the
-latter into the localities and numbers of examples of supposed
-palæolithic works of art already recovered, have disclosed
-abundant confirmatory evidence. Special attention was invited
-to the occurrence of surface-finds, as well as to the depth and
-the geological indications of age in those recovered from
-excavations or chance exposures under the surface. Of the
-superficial examples the proof of the occurrence of stone
-implements of palæolithic types over widely diffused areas,
-from New England to Texas, is abundant. Much caution is
-required in the conclusions derived from such implements found
-exposed, or in superficial deposits, on a continent where weapons
-and implements of stone are still in frequent use. But
-after the elimination of all doubtful examples, abundant evidence
-remains of the presence of man on the American continent
-in a Palæolithic as well as an early Neolithic age. An
-interesting <span class='it'>résumé</span> of recent evidence is embodied in the
-“Results of an Inquiry as to the Existence of Man in North
-<span class='pageno' title='165' id='Page_165'></span>
-America during the Palæolithic Period of the Stone Age,” by
-Mr. Thomas Wilson of the National Museum at Washington.<a id='r59'/><a href='#f59' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[59]</span></sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It may still be a question whether the Palæolithic age of
-the New World is equally remote with that of the eastern
-hemisphere. The date approximately assigned thus far to the
-American Palæolithic era is, geologically speaking, recent;
-and on that very account adapts itself to other favoured
-assumptions, such as the supposed Eskimo pedigree derived
-from the race of Europe’s Reindeer period. This chimes in
-with the old idea of the American antiquary that the <span class='it'>Skrælings</span>
-referred to in the Eric Saga were Eskimo, as is far from
-improbable, though the assumption rests on no definite evidence.
-Dr. Abbott accordingly reproduces the statement of
-Professor Dawkins, in confirmation of the revived belief.
-“We are without a clue to the ethnology of the river-drift
-man, who most probably is as completely extinct at the
-present time as the woolly rhinoceros or the cave-bear; but
-the discoveries of the last twenty years have tended to confirm
-the identification of the cave-man with the Eskimo.”
-Such a fanciful hypothesis once accepted as fact, its application
-to American ethnology is easy; and so Dr. Abbott proceeds
-to appeal unhesitatingly to evidence sufficient “to warrant the
-assertion that the palæolithic man on the one hand, and the
-makers of the argillite spear points on the other, stand in the
-relationship of ancestor and descendant; and if the latter, as
-is probable, is in turn the ancestor of the modern Eskimo:
-then does it not follow that the River-drift and Cave-man of
-Europe, supposing the relationship of the latter to the Eskimo
-to be correct, bear the same close relationship to each other
-as do the American representatives of these earliest of
-people?”<a id='r60'/><a href='#f60' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[60]</span></sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Such an appeal to European archæology can scarcely fail to
-suggest some very striking contrasts thereby involved. As the
-thoughtful student dwells on all the phenomena of change and
-geological revolution which he has to encounter in seeking to
-assign to the man of the European Drift his place in vanished
-centuries, his mind is lost in amazement at the vista of that
-long-forgotten past. Yet inadequate as the intermediate steps
-<span class='pageno' title='166' id='Page_166'></span>
-may appear, there are progressive stages. Amid all the overwhelming
-sense of the vastness of the period embraced in the
-changes which he reviews, the mind rests from time to time
-at well-defined stations, in tracking the way backward, through
-ages of historical antiquity, into the night of time, and so to
-that dim dawn of mechanical skill and rational industry in
-which the first tool-makers plied their ingenious arts. But, so
-far as yet appears, it is wholly otherwise throughout the whole
-western continent, from the Gulf of Mexico northward to the
-pole. North America has indeed a Copper age of its own very
-markedly defined; for the shores and islands of Lake Superior
-are rich in pure native copper, available for industrial resources
-without even the most rudimentary knowledge of metallurgic
-arts. But the tools and personal ornaments fashioned out of
-this more workable material are little, if at all, in advance of
-the implements of stone; and, with this exception, the primitive
-industry of North America manifests wondrously slight traces
-of progression through all the ages now assigned to man’s
-presence on the continent.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The means available for forming some just estimate of the
-character of native American art are now abundant. In the
-National Museum at Washington; the Peabody Museum at
-Cambridge, Mass.; the Peabody Academy at Salem; the
-Academy of Natural Sciences at Philadelphia; the American
-Antiquarian Society at Worcester, Mass.; and in various
-Historical Societies and University Museums throughout the
-States; the student of American archæology has the means of
-obtaining a comprehensive view of the native arts. At the
-Centennial Exposition of Philadelphia in 1876, the various
-States vied with one another in producing an adequate representation
-of the antiquities specially characteristic of their own
-localities; and numerous valuable reports, of the Smithsonian
-Institution, the United States Geographical Surveys, the
-Geological Survey of Canada, and the Geological Surveys of
-various States, have furnished data for determining the prehistoric
-chroniclings of the northern continent.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>One of the latest publications of this class is Dr. Abbott’s
-own volume, entitled <span class='it'>Primitive Industry: or Illustrations of
-the Handiwork in Stone, Bone, and Clay of the native Races of the
-Northern Atlantic Seaboard of America</span>. It is a most instructive
-<span class='pageno' title='167' id='Page_167'></span>
-epitome of North American archæology. Notwithstanding
-the limits set in the title, works in metal as well as in stone
-are included; and what are the results? Twenty-one out of
-its twenty-three chapters are devoted to the detailed illustrations
-of stone and flint axes, celts, hammers, chisels, scrapers,
-drills, knives, etc. Fish-hooks, fish-spears, awls or bodkins, and
-other implements of bone, pottery, pipes both in stone and clay,
-and personal ornaments, receive the like detailed illustration;
-but nearly all are in the rudest stage of rudimentary art. An
-advance upon this is seen in the pottery of some southern
-states. That of the Mound-Builders appears to have shown
-both more artistic design and better finish. The carving in
-bone, ivory, and slate-stone of various western tribes, as well
-as of the extinct Mound-Builders, was also of a higher character.
-But taking them at their highest, they cannot compare in
-practical skill or variety of application with the industrial arts
-of Europe’s Neolithic age; and we look in vain for any traces
-of higher progress. For well nigh four centuries, this continent
-has been familiar to European explorers and settlers. During
-some considerable portion of that time, by means of agricultural
-operations, and all the incidents consequent on urban settlement,
-its virgin soil has been turned up over ever-increasing
-areas. For nearly forty years I have myself watched, with the
-curious interest of one previously familiar with the minute
-incidents of archæological research in Britain, the urban
-excavations, railway cuttings, and other undesigned explorations
-of Canadian soil. Within the same period, both in
-Canada and the United States, extensive canal, railway, and
-road-works have afforded abundant opportunities for research;
-and a widespread interest in American antiquities has tended
-to confer an even exaggerated importance on every novel discovery.
-And with what result? Dr. Abbott, in crowning
-such explorations with his interesting and valuable discovery
-of the turtle-back celts and other implements of the Delaware
-gravel, has epitomised the prehistoric record of the northern
-continent. The further back we date the presence of man in
-America, the more marvellous must his unprogressive condition
-appear. Whatever may be the ampler disclosures relative
-to the palæolithic or primeval race, it does not seem probable
-that this northern continent will now yield any antiquities
-<span class='pageno' title='168' id='Page_168'></span>
-suggestive of an extinct era of native art and civilisation.
-Here we cannot hope to find a buried Ilium, or Tadmor in the
-Wilderness. Everywhere the explorer wanders, and the agriculturist
-follows, turning up the soil, or digging deeper as he
-drains and builds; but only to disturb the grave of the savage
-hunter. The Mound-Builders of its great river-valleys have
-indeed left there their enduring earthworks, wrought at times
-in regular geometrical configuration on a gigantic scale, strangely
-suggestive of some overruling and informing mind guiding the
-hand of the earthworker. But their mounds and earthworks
-disclose only implements of bone and flint or stone, with here
-and there an equally rude tool of hammered native copper.
-The crudest metallurgy of Europe’s Copper age was unknown
-to their builders. The art of Tubal-cain, the primitive worker
-in brass and iron, had not dawned on the mind of any native
-artificer. Only the ingeniously carved tobacco pipe, or the
-better-fashioned pottery, gives the slightest hint of even such
-progress beyond the first infantile stage of the tool-maker as
-is shown in the artistic carvings of the cave-men contemporary
-with the mammoth and the reindeer of post-glacial France.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The civilisation of Central and Southern America is a
-wholly distinct thing; and, as I think, not without some
-suggestive traces of Asiatic origin; but the attempts to connect
-it with that of ancient Egypt, suggested mainly by the hieroglyphic
-sculpturing on their columns and temples, find their confutation
-the moment we attempt to compare the Egyptian calendar
-with that either of Mexico or Peru. Traces of worship of the
-sun, the earliest of all forms of natural religion, have undoubtedly
-been recovered among widely scattered tribes of North
-America; but there is no evidence that it was accompanied
-with any definite mensuration of the solar year, or the construction
-of a calendar. The changes of the seasons sufficed
-for the division of the year, not only into summer and winter,
-but into the diverse aspects of the seasons from month to
-month; as is shown in the names given to the “moons” in
-various native vocabularies. It was otherwise on the southern
-continent, and among the civilised nations of Central America.
-But the interblending of the science of astronomy with the
-religious rites of the State produced the wonted results; and
-this was peculiarly the case in Peru, with its equatorial site
-<span class='pageno' title='169' id='Page_169'></span>
-for the temple of the Sun-God; and his seeming literal presence
-on his altar at recurrent festivals. There accordingly, even as
-in ancient Egypt, the divine honours paid to the heavenly bodies
-was an impediment to the progress of astronomical observation.
-Eclipses were regarded with the same superstitious dread as among
-the rudest savage nations; and the conservatism of an established
-national creed must have proved peculiarly unfavourable to astronomical
-science. The impediments to Galileo’s observations
-were trifling compared with those which must have beset the
-Inca priest who ventured to question the diurnal revolution of
-the sun round the earth, or to solve the awful mystery of an eclipse
-by so simple an explanation as the interposition of the moon
-between the sun and the earth. The Mexican Calendar Stone,
-which embodies evidence of greater knowledge, was believed by
-Humboldt to indicate unmistakable relations to the ancient
-science of South-Eastern Asia. It is of more importance here to
-note the shortness of the Mexican cycle, and the small amount of
-error in their deviation from true solar time, as compared with the
-European calendar at the time when the Spaniards first intruded
-on Montezuma’s rule. That the Spaniards were ten days in
-error, as compared with the Aztec reckoning, only demonstrates
-the length of time during which error had been accumulating in
-the reformed Julian calendar of Europe; and so tends to confirm
-the idea that the civilisation of the Mexicans was of no
-very great antiquity.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The whole evidence supplied by Northern archæology
-proves that in so far as it had any civilisation of foreign
-origin, it must have been derived from the South, where
-alike in Central and in Southern America, diverse races, and a
-native civilisation replete with elements of progress, have left
-behind them many enduring memorials of skill and ingenuity.
-But the extremely slight and very partial traces of its influence
-on any people of the northern continent would of itself suffice
-to awaken doubts as to its long duration. The civilisation of
-Greece and Rome did indeed exercise no direct influence on
-transalpine Europe; but long centuries before the Romans
-crossed the Alps, as the disclosures of the lake villages, the
-crannoges, the kitchen middens, and the sepulchral mounds of
-Central and Northern Europe prove, the nations beyond their
-ken were familiar with weaving, and with the ceramic and
-<span class='pageno' title='170' id='Page_170'></span>
-metallurgic arts; were far advanced as agriculturists, had
-domesticated animals, acquired systems of phonetic writing, and
-learned the value of a currency of the precious metals.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Midway between North America with its unredeemed
-barbarism, and the southern seats of a native American civilisation,
-Mexico represents, as I believe, the first contact of the
-latter with the former. A gleam of light was just beginning
-to dawn on the horizon of the northern continent. The long
-night of its Dark Ages was coming to a close, when the
-intrusion of the Spaniards abruptly arrested the incipient
-civilisation, and began the displacement of its aborigines and
-the repetition of the Aryan ethnical revolution, which had
-already supplanted the autochthones of prehistoric Europe.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The publication in 1848 of the first volume of the
-<span class='it'>Smithsonian Contributions to Knowledge</span>, devoted to the
-history and explorations of the ancient monuments of the
-Mississippi valley, gave a wonderful stimulus to archæological
-research in the United States. For a time, indeed, much
-credulous zeal was devoted to the search for buried cities,
-inscribed records, and the fancied recovery, in more or less
-modified form, in northern areas, of the civilisation of the
-Aztecs; not unmingled with dreams of Phœnician, Hebrew,
-Scandinavian, and Welsh remains. The history of some of
-its spurious productions is not without interest; but its true
-fruits are seen in numerous works which have since issued
-from the American press, devoted to an accurate record of
-local antiquities. So thoroughly has this already been carried
-out, that it may now be affirmed that, to all appearance, the
-condition of the Indian tribes to the north of Mexico, as
-shown in the rude arts of a Stone age, scarcely at all affected
-in its character by their use of the native copper of Lake
-Superior, represents what prevailed throughout the whole
-northern continent in all the centuries—however prolonged,—since
-the hunters in the Delaware valley fashioned and employed
-their turtle-back celts.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The condition of the nations of North America at the
-period of its discovery, at the close of the fifteenth century,
-may be described as one of unstable equilibrium; and nothing
-in its archæological records points to an older period of any
-prolonged duration of settled progress. The physical geography
-<span class='pageno' title='171' id='Page_171'></span>
-of the continent presents in many respects such a contrast to
-that of Europe, as is seen in the steppes of Northern Asia, though
-with great navigable rivers, which only needed the appliances
-of modern civilisation to make them for the New World what
-the Euphrates and the Tigris were to Southern Asia, and the
-Nile to Africa, in ancient centuries. Those vast tablelands,
-the great steppes of Mongolia and Independent Tartary, have
-ever been the haunts of predatory tribes by whom the civilisation
-of Southern Asia has been repeatedly overthrown; and
-from the same barbarian hive came the Huns who ravaged the
-Roman world in its decline. Europe, on the contrary, nursed
-its youthful civilisation among detached communities of its
-southern peninsulas on the Mediterranean Sea; and in later
-ages has repeatedly experienced the advantages of geographical
-isolation in the valleys of the Alps, in Norway and Denmark,
-in Portugal, the Netherlands, and the British Islands: where
-nations protected in their youth from predatory hordes, and
-sheltered during critical periods of change, have safely passed
-through their earlier stages of progress.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>All that we know or can surmise of the nations of North
-America, presents a total contrast to this. In so far as the
-mystery of its prehistoric Mound-Builders has been solved, we
-see there a people who had attained to a grade of civilisation
-not greatly dissimilar to that of the village communities of
-New Mexico and Arizona; and who had settled down in the
-Ohio valley, perhaps while feudal Europe was still only
-emerging from mediæval rudeness, if not at an earlier date.
-The great river-valley was occupied by populous urban centres
-of an industrious community. Agriculture, though prosecuted
-only with the simplest implements, chiefly of wood and stone,
-must have been practised on an extensive scale. The primitive
-arts of the potter were improved; the copper abounding
-in the remote region on the shores of Lake Superior was prized
-as a rarity; though metallurgy in its practical applications
-had scarcely entered on its first stage. The nation was in its
-infancy; but it had passed beyond the rude hunter state, and
-was entering on a settled life, with all possibilities of progress
-in the future, when the fierce nomads of the north swept
-down on the populous valley, and left it a desolate waste. If so,
-it was but a type of the whole native history of the continent.
-<span class='pageno' title='172' id='Page_172'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>From all that can be gleaned, alike from archæological
-chroniclings, Indian tradition, and the actual facts of history
-in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, the condition of
-the whole population of the northern continent has ever been
-the same. It might not inaptly be compared to an ever-recurring
-springtide, followed by frosts that nipped the young
-germ, and rendered the promised fruitage abortive. Throughout
-the whole period of French and English colonial history,
-the influence of one or two savage but warlike tribes is traceable
-from the St. Lawrence to the Gulf of Mexico; and the
-rival nations were exposed to such constant warfare that it is
-more than doubtful if the natural increase of population was
-latterly equal to the waste of war. Almost the sole memorials
-of vanished nations are the names of some of their mountain
-ranges and rivers. It is surmised, as already noted, that the
-Allighewi, or Tallegwi, to whom the name common to the
-Alleghany Mountains and river is traced, were the actual
-Mound-Builders.<a id='r61'/><a href='#f61' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[61]</span></sup></a> If so, the history of their overthrow is not
-wholly a matter of surmise. The traditions of the Delawares
-told that the Alleghans were a powerful nation reaching to the
-eastern shores of the Mississippi, where their palisaded towns
-occupied all the choicest sites in the Ohio valley; but the
-Wyandots, or Iroquois, including perhaps the Eries, who had
-established themselves on the headwaters of the chief rivers
-that rise immediately to the south of the great lakes, combined
-with the Delawares, or Lenape nation, to crush that ancient
-people; and the decimated Alleghans were driven down the
-Mississippi, and dispersed. Some surviving remnant, such as
-even a war of extermination spares, may have been absorbed
-into the conquering nation, after the fashion systematically
-pursued by the Huron-Iroquois in the seventeenth and
-eighteenth centuries. Nor is this a mere conjecture. Mr.
-Horatio Hale, recognising the evident traces in the Cherokee
-language of a grammar mainly Huron-Iroquois, while the
-vocabulary is largely recruited from some foreign source,
-thinks it not improbable that the origin of the Cherokee
-nation may have been due to a union of the survivors of the
-old Mound-Builder stock with some branch of the conquering
-race; just as in 1649 a fugitive remnant of the Hurons from
-<span class='pageno' title='173' id='Page_173'></span>
-the Georgian Bay were adopted into the Seneca nation;<a id='r62'/><a href='#f62' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[62]</span></sup></a> and a
-few years later such of the captive Eries as escaped torture
-and the stake were admitted into affiliation with their
-conquerors.<a id='r63'/><a href='#f63' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[63]</span></sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The whole region to the east of the Mississippi, from the
-fifty-second to the thirty-sixth degree of north latitude, appears
-to have been occupied by the two great Indian stocks, the
-Algonquin-Lenape and the Iroquois. But Gallatin, who
-directed special attention to the determination of the elements
-of philological affinity between them, recognised to
-the south of their region the existence of at least three
-essentially distinct languages of extensive use: the Catawba,
-the Cherokee, and that which he assumed to include in a
-common origin, both the Muskhogee and the Choctaw.<a id='r64'/><a href='#f64' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[64]</span></sup></a> But
-besides those, six well-ascertained languages of smaller tribes,
-including those of the Uchees and the Natchez, appear to
-demand separate recognition. Their region differs essentially
-from those over which the Algonquin and Iroquois war-parties
-ranged at will. It is broken up by broad river channels, and
-intersected by impenetrable swamps; and has thus afforded
-refuge for the remnants of conquered tribes, and for the preservation
-of distinct languages among small bands of refugees.
-The Timucuas were the ancient occupants of Florida; but they
-appear to have been displaced by the Chatta-Muskogee nations;
-driven forth, as is surmised, from their homes in the Ohio
-valley; and the older race is only known now by the preservation
-of its language in works of the Spanish missionaries.<a id='r65'/><a href='#f65' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[65]</span></sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When the Ohio valley was first explored it was uninhabited;
-and in the latter part of the seventeenth century
-the whole region extending from Lake Erie to the Tennessee
-river was an unpeopled desert. But the Cherokees were in
-the occupation of their territory when first visited by De Soto
-in 1540; and they are described by Bertram in 1773, with
-their great council-house, capable of accommodating several
-hundreds, erected on the summit of one of the large mounds,
-in their town of Cowe, on the Tanase river, in Florida. But
-Bertram adds: “This mound on which the rotunda stands, is
-of a much ancienter date than the building, and perhaps was
-<span class='pageno' title='174' id='Page_174'></span>
-raised for another purpose. The Cherokees themselves are as
-ignorant as we are by what people, or for what purpose, these
-artificial hills were raised.”<a id='r66'/><a href='#f66' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[66]</span></sup></a> It would, indeed, no more occur
-to those wanderers into the deserted regions of the Mound-Builders
-to inquire into the origin of their mounds, than into
-that of the Alleghany Mountains.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If then it is probable that we thus recover some clue to
-the identity of the vanished race of the Ohio valley, the very
-designation of the river is a memorial of their supplanters.
-The Ohio is an Iroquois name given to the river of the Alleghans
-by that indomitable race of savage warriors who effectually
-counteracted the plans of France, under her greatest monarchs,
-for the settlement of the New World. Their historian, the late
-Hon. L. H. Morgan, remarks of the Iroquois: “They achieved
-for themselves a more remarkable civil organisation, and acquired
-a higher degree of influence, than any other race of
-Indian lineage except those of Mexico and Peru. In the
-drama of European colonisation, they stood, for nearly two
-centuries, with an unshaken front, against the devastations of
-war, the blighting influence of foreign intercourse, and the still
-more fatal encroachments of a restless and advancing border
-population. Under their federal system, the Iroquois flourished
-in independence, and capable of self-protection, long after the
-New England and Virginia races had surrendered their jurisdictions,
-and fallen into the condition of dependent nations;
-and they now stand forth upon the canvas of Indian history,
-prominent alike for the wisdom of their civil institutions, their
-sagacity in the administration of the league, and their courage
-in its defence.”<a id='r67'/><a href='#f67' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[67]</span></sup></a> But to characterise the elements of combined
-action among the Six Nation Indians as wise civil
-institutions; or to use such terms as league and federal
-system in the sense in which they are employed by the
-historian of the Iroquois; is to suggest associations that are
-illusory. With all the romance attached to the League of the
-Hodenosauneega, they were to the last mere savages. When
-the treaty which initiated the great league was entered into by
-its two oldest members, the Mohawks and the Oneidas, the
-former claimed the name of Kanienga, or “People of the
-<span class='pageno' title='175' id='Page_175'></span>
-Flint.” Whatever may have been the precise idea they
-attached to the designation, they were, as they remained to
-the last, but in their Stone period. Their arts were of the
-rudest character, and their wars had no higher aim than the
-gratification of an inextinguishable hatred. All that we know
-of them only serves to illustrate a condition of life such as
-may have sufficed through countless generations to perpetuate
-the barbarism which everywhere reveals itself in the traces of
-man throughout the northern continent of America. One
-nation after another perished by the fury of this race, powerful
-only to destroy. The Susquehannocks, whose name still clings
-to the beautiful river on the banks of which they once dwelt,
-are believed to have been of the same lineage as the Alleghans;
-but they incurred the wrath of the Iroquois, and perished. At
-a later date the Delawares provoked a like vengeance; and the
-remnant of that nation quitted for ever the shores of the river
-which perpetuates their name. Such in like manner was the
-fate of the Shawnees, Nanticokes, Unamis, Minsi, and Illinois.
-All alike were vanquished, reduced to the condition of serfs,
-or driven out and exterminated.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The tribes that lived to the west of the Mississippi appear
-to have been for the most part more strictly nomad. The
-open character of the country, with its vast tracts of prairie,
-and its herds of buffalo and other game, no doubt helped to
-encourage a wandering life. The Crees, the Blackfeet, the
-Sioux, Cheyennes, Comanches, and Apaches were all of this
-class, and with their interminable feuds and perpetual migrations
-rendered all settled life impossible. The Mandans, the
-most civilised among the tribes of the North-West, abandoned
-village after village under the continual attacks of the Sioux,
-until they disappeared as a nation; and the little handful of
-survivors found shelter with another tribe.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>All this was the work of Indians. The Spaniards, indeed,
-wasted and destroyed with no less merciless indiscrimination.
-Not only nations perished, but a singularly interesting phase
-of native civilisation was abruptly arrested in Mexico, Central
-America, and Peru. The intrusion of French, Dutch, and
-English colonists was, no doubt, fatal to the aborigines whom
-they supplanted. Nevertheless their record is not one of
-indiscriminate massacre. The relations of the French, especially
-<span class='pageno' title='176' id='Page_176'></span>
-with the tribes with whom they were brought into immediate
-contact, were on the whole kindly and protective. But as
-we recover the history of the native tribes whose lands are now
-occupied by the representatives of those old colonists, we find
-the Indians everywhere engaged in the same exterminating
-warfare; and whether we look at the earlier maps, or attempt
-to reconstruct the traditionary history of older tribes, we learn
-only the same tale of aimless strife and extinction. When
-Cartier first explored the St. Lawrence in 1535 he found large
-Indian settlements at Quebec and on the island of Montreal;
-but on the return of the French under Champlain, little more
-than half a century later, there were none left to dispute their
-settlement. At the later date, and throughout the entire period
-of French occupation, the country to the south of the St.
-Lawrence and Lake Ontario was occupied by the Iroquois, or
-Six Nation Indians, as they were latterly called. Westward
-of the river Ottawa the whole region was deserted until near
-the shores of the Georgian Bay; though its early explorers
-found everywhere the traces of recent occupation by the
-Wyandot or other tribes, who had withdrawn to the shores of
-Lake Huron to escape the fury of their implacable foes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At the period when the Hurons were first brought under
-the notice of the French Jesuit missionaries in the seventeenth
-century they were established along the Georgian Bay and
-around Lake Simcoe; and in so far as the wild virtues of the
-savage warrior are concerned, they fully equalled the Iroquois
-by whom they were at length driven out and nearly exterminated.
-When Locke visited Paris in 1679 the narratives
-of the Jesuit fathers had rendered familiar the unflinching
-endurance of this race under the frightful tortures to which
-they were subjected by their Iroquois captors; and which they,
-in turn, not only inflicted on their captive foes, but on one
-after another of the missionaries whose devoted zeal exposed
-them to their fury. We now read with interest this reflection
-noted in Locke’s Journal, in which he recognises in these savages
-the common motives of humanity; the same desire to win
-credit and reputation, and to avoid shame and disgrace, which
-animates all men: “This makes the Hurons and other people
-of Canada with such constancy endure inexpressible torments;
-this makes merchants in one country and soldiers in another;
-<span class='pageno' title='177' id='Page_177'></span>
-this puts men upon school divinity in one country and physics
-and mathematics in another; this cuts out the dresses for the
-women, and makes the fashions for the men, and makes them
-endure the inconveniences of all.” The great English philosopher
-manifestly entertained no doubt that the latent elements on
-which all civilisation depends were equally shared by Indian
-and European. But the Hurons perished—all but a little
-remnant of Christianised half-breeds now settled on the St.
-Charles river below Quebec—in their very hour of contact
-with European civilisation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Father Sagard estimated the Huron tribes at the close of
-their national history, when they had been greatly reduced in
-numbers, as still between thirty and forty thousand. But
-besides these there lay between them and the shores of Lake
-Erie and the Niagara river the Tiontonones and the Attiwendaronks,
-and to the south of the Great Lake the Eries, all
-of the same stock, and all sharers in the same fate. Tradition
-points to the kindling of the council-fire of peace among the
-Attiwendaronks before the organisation of the Iroquois confederacy.
-Father Joseph de la Roche d’Allyon, who passed
-through their country when seeking to discover the source of
-the Niagara river, speaks of twenty-eight towns and villages
-under the rule of its chief Sachem, and of their extensive cultivation
-of maize, beans, and tobacco. They had won, moreover,
-the strange character of being lovers of peace, and were styled
-by the French the Neuters, from the desire they manifested to
-maintain a friendly neutrality alike with the Hurons and the
-Iroquois. Of the Eries we know less. In the French maps
-of the seventeenth century the very existence of the great lake
-which perpetuates their name was unknown; but the French
-fur-traders were aware of a tribe existing to the west of the
-Iroquois, whose country abounded with the lynx or wild cat,
-the fur of which was specially prized, and they designated it
-“La Nation du Chat.” To their artistic skill are ascribed
-several remains of aboriginal art, among which a pictorial
-inscription on Cunningham’s Island is described as by far the
-most elaborate work of its class hitherto found on the continent.<a id='r68'/><a href='#f68' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[68]</span></sup></a>
-From the partial glimpses thus recovered of both nations we
-are tempted to ascribe to them an aptitude for civilisation fully
-<span class='pageno' title='178' id='Page_178'></span>
-equal to that of which the boasted federal league of the Iroquois
-gave evidence. But they perished by the violence of
-kindred nations before either the French or English could
-establish intercourse with them; and their fate doubtless reveals
-to us glimpses of history such as must have found frequent
-repetition in older centuries throughout the whole North
-American continent.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The legend of the peace-pipe, Longfellow’s poetic version of
-the Red Indian Edda, founded on traditions of the Iroquois
-narrated by an Onondaga chief, represents Gitche Manito, the
-Master of Life, descending on the crag of the red pipestone
-quarry at the Côteau des Prairies, and calling all the tribes
-together:—</p>
-
-<div class='poetry-container' style=''><div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<p class='line0'>And they stood there on the meadow</p>
-<p class='line0'>With their weapons and their war gear,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Wildly glaring at each other.</p>
-<p class='line0'>In their faces stern defiance,</p>
-<p class='line0'>In their hearts the feuds of ages,</p>
-<p class='line0'>The hereditary hatred,</p>
-<p class='line0'>The ancestral thirst of vengeance.</p>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>So far the picture is true to nature; but no dream of a
-millennial era for the Red Man, in which all were thenceforth
-to live together as brothers, can have fashioned itself in the
-mind of Indian seer. The Sioux, the Crees, and the Blackfeet,
-still continued to nurse the same feud of ages, and thirsted
-for each other’s blood, while European emigrants crowd in to
-take possession of their vast prairies, destined to become the
-granaries of the world. The buffalo, on which they mainly
-depended for their food, and their téepees or tents, have vanished
-from their prairies, and will ere long be as extinct as the
-fossil urus or mastodon. The Red Man of the North-West
-exhibits no change from his precursors of the fifteenth century;
-and for aught that appears in him of a capacity for self-development,
-the forests and prairies of the American continent
-may have sheltered hunting and warring tribes of Indians, just
-as they have sheltered and pastured its wild herds of buffaloes,
-for countless centuries since the continent rose from its
-ocean bed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Only by prolonged hereditary feuds, more insatiable, and
-therefore more destructive in their results than the ravages of
-<span class='pageno' title='179' id='Page_179'></span>
-tigers or wolves, is it possible to account for such an unprogressive
-condition of humanity as the archæological disclosures
-of the northern continent seem to reveal? Its numerous
-rivers and lakes, and its boundless forests and prairies, afforded
-inexhaustible resources for the hunter, and both soil and
-climate have proved admirably adapted for agriculture. Still
-more, the great copper region of Lake Superior provided
-advantages such as have existed in few other countries of the
-known world for developing the first stages of metallurgic art
-on which civilisation so largely depends. Whether brought
-with them from Asia, or discovered for themselves, the grand
-secret of the mastery of the ores by fire was already familiar
-to Peruvian metallurgists, and not unknown to those of Mexico.
-Unalloyed copper, such as that which abounds in the igneous
-rocks of the Keweenaw peninsula on Lake Superior, is
-extremely difficult to cast; and the addition of a small percentage
-of tin not only produces the useful bronze alloy, but renders
-the copper more readily fusible. This all-important secret of
-science the metallurgists of Peru had discovered for themselves,
-and turned largely to practical account. The pictured
-chronicles of the Mexicans throw an interesting light on the
-value they attached to the products of this novel art. It
-appears from some of their paintings that the tribute due by
-certain provinces was paid in wedges of copper. The forms of
-these, as well as of chisels and other tools of bronze, are simple,
-and indicate no great ingenuity in adapting the moulded metal
-to the artificer’s or the combatant’s requirements. The methods
-of hafting the axe-blade appear to have been of nearly the
-same rude description as are in use by modern savages in
-fitting the handle to a hatchet of flint or stone; and the whole
-characteristics of their implements suggest the probability that
-their metallurgy was a recently acquired art, derived from the
-civilised races on whom they had intruded as conquerors.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Such knowledge, partial as it was, must have been derived
-from the south. Everywhere to the north of the Mexican
-Gulf we look in vain for anything more than the mere
-hammered native copper, untouched by fire. Dr. J. W. Foster
-does indeed quote Mr. Perkins, who himself possesses sixty
-copper implements, including knives, spear heads, chisels, and
-objects of anomalous form, as having arrived at the conclusion
-<span class='pageno' title='180' id='Page_180'></span>
-“that, by reason of certain markings, it was evident that the
-Mound-Builders possessed the art of smelting copper,”<a id='r69'/><a href='#f69' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[69]</span></sup></a> but the
-illustrations produced in proof of it scarcely bear out the
-opinion. The same idea has been repeatedly advanced; but the
-contents of the Mounds amply prove that if such a knowledge
-had dawned on their builders it was turned to no practical
-account. Mr. Charles Rau, in his <span class='it'>Ancient Aboriginal Trade in
-North America</span>, says: “Although the fire on the hearths or altars
-now enclosed by the sacrificial mounds was sometimes sufficiently
-strong to melt the deposited copper articles, it does not
-seem that this proceeding induced the ancient inhabitants to
-avail themselves of fire in working copper; they persisted in
-the tedious practice of hammering. Yet one copper axe,
-evidently cast, and resembling those taken from the mounds
-of Ohio, has been ploughed up near Auburn, in Cayuga, in the
-State of New York. This specimen, which bears no trace of
-use, may date from the earlier times of European colonisation.
-It certainly would be wrong to place much stress on such an
-isolated case.”<a id='r70'/><a href='#f70' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[70]</span></sup></a> The well-known volume of Messrs. Squier
-and Davis furnishes illustrations of copper and other metallic
-relics from the mounds of Ohio.<a id='r71'/><a href='#f71' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[71]</span></sup></a> Mr. J. T. Short engraves a
-variety of similar relics from Wisconsin, where they appear to
-have been found in unusual abundance.<a id='r72'/><a href='#f72' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[72]</span></sup></a> In the Annual
-Report of the Historical Society of Wisconsin for 1878 the
-copper implements in their collection are stated to number one
-hundred and ninety implements, classified as spear or dirk
-heads, knives, chisels, axes, augurs, gads, and drills, in addition
-to beads, tubes, and other personal ornaments made out of
-thin sheets of hammered copper. Dr. J. W. Foster has
-furnished illustrations of the various types from the valuable
-collection of Mr. Perkins.<a id='r73'/><a href='#f73' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[73]</span></sup></a> Colonel Charles C. Jones engraves
-a specimen of the rarely known copper implements of Georgia;<a id='r74'/><a href='#f74' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[74]</span></sup></a>
-and Dr. Abbott shows the prevailing forms of the same
-class of relics found along the whole northern Atlantic
-<span class='pageno' title='181' id='Page_181'></span>
-seaboard.<a id='r75'/><a href='#f75' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[75]</span></sup></a> All tell the same tale of rudest manipulation by
-a people ignorant of the working of metals with the use of
-fire.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And yet the native copper was ready to hand in a form
-and in quantity unknown elsewhere. No such supplies of the
-pure metal invited the industry of the first Asiatic or European
-metallurgists. The Cassiterides yielded in abundance the ores
-of copper and tin, but these had to be smelted and worked
-with all the accumulated results of tentative skill before they
-yielded the copper or more useful bronze. By whom or where
-this first knowledge was mastered is unknown: the tendency
-is still to look to Asia, perhaps to Phœnicia, or to the still
-undetermined cradle of the Aryans, wherever that may prove
-to have been, for the birth of this phase of metallurgic art
-which constituted so important a stage in early civilisation.
-Yet if the ancient American missed it, it was not for want of
-opportunity. Examples of the accidental fusion of copper by
-the sacrificial fires of the Mound-Builders repeatedly occur in
-the mounds of the Ohio valley. But no gifted native alchymist
-was prompt to read the lesson and turn it to practical account.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Asia and Europe appear to have passed by a natural
-transition, step by step, from their rudest stages of lithic art
-to polished stone, and then to implements of metal. Some of
-the steps were doubtless very slow. Worsaae believed that
-the use of bronze prevailed in Denmark “five or six hundred
-years before the birth of Christ.”<a id='r76'/><a href='#f76' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[76]</span></sup></a> In Egypt it undoubtedly
-was known at a greatly earlier date. I still incline to my
-early formed opinion, that gold was the first metal worked.
-Found in nuggets, it could scarcely fail to attract attention.
-It was easy to fashion into shape; and some of the small,
-highly polished stone hammers seem fitter for this than any
-other work.<a id='r77'/><a href='#f77' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[77]</span></sup></a> The abundant gold ornaments of the New World
-at the time of the discovery of Mexico and Peru accord with
-this idea. The like attraction of the bright native copper, is
-proved by its employment among the southern Indians for personal
-ornaments; and in this way the economic use of the
-metals may have been first suggested.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>From the working of gold nuggets, or of virgin copper, with
-<span class='pageno' title='182' id='Page_182'></span>
-the hammer, to the smelting of the ores, was no trifling step;
-but that knowledge once gained, the threshold of civilisation
-and true progress had been reached. The history of the grand
-achievement is embodied in the earliest myths both of the Old
-and the New World. Tubal-cain, Dædalus, Hephæstus,
-Vulcan, Vœlund, Galant, the Luno or the Celtic Fingal, and
-Wayland, the Saxon smith-god, are but legendary variations
-of the first worker by whom the gift of metallurgy was
-communicated to man; and so too the New World has its
-Quetzalcoatl, or Vœlund of the Aztecs, the divine instructor of
-their ancestors in the use of the metals. But whatever be
-the date of this wise instructor, no share of the knowledge
-communicated by him to that favoured race appears to have
-ever penetrated northward of the Mexican Gulf.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is vain to urge such dubious evidence as the fancied
-traces of a mould-ridge, or the solitary example of a casting of
-uncertain age, in proof of a knowledge of the furnace and the
-crucible among any North American tribe. Everywhere in
-Europe the soil yields not only its buried relics of gold,
-copper, and bronze, but also stone and bronze moulds in which
-implements and personal ornaments were cast. When the
-ingenious systematising of Danish archæologists had familiarised
-the students of antiquity with the idea of a succession of
-Stone, Bronze, and Iron periods in the history of Europe, the
-question naturally followed, whether metallurgy did not begin,
-there, as elsewhere, in the easy working of virgin copper. Dr.
-Latham accordingly remarked, in his <span class='it'>Ethnology of the British
-Islands</span>, on the supposition that no unalloyed copper relics had
-been found in Britain: “Stone and bone first; then bronze, or
-copper and tin combined; but no copper alone. I cannot get
-over this hiatus; cannot imagine a metallurgic industry
-beginning with the use of alloys.” It was a mistake, however,
-to assume that no copper relics had ever been found.
-At first it had been taken for granted that all such implements
-were of the familiar alloy. But so soon as the importance of
-the distinction was recognised, examples of pure copper were
-forthcoming. So early as 1822, Sir David Brewster described
-a large axe of peculiar shape, and formed of copper, which was
-found in the hard black till-clay at a depth of twenty feet
-under Ratho Bog, near Edinburgh. This is no solitary
-<span class='pageno' title='183' id='Page_183'></span>
-example. The Scottish Museum of Antiquities has other
-implements of pure copper; and Sir William Wilde states in
-reference to the collections of the Royal Irish Academy: “upon
-careful examination, it has been found that thirty of the
-rudest, and apparently the very oldest celts, are of red, almost
-unalloyed copper”; as is also the case with some other rudely
-formed tools in the same collection.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was a temporary advantage, doubtless, but a real loss, to
-the Indian miners of Lake Superior that they found the native
-copper there ready to hand, a pure ductile metal, probably
-regarded by them as only a variety of stone which—unlike its
-rocky matrix,—they could bend, or hammer into shape, without
-fracture. Its value as such was widely appreciated.
-Copper tools, everywhere retaining the specs, or larger crystals
-of silver, characteristic of the Lake Superior veins, tell of the
-diffusion of the metal from that single source throughout all
-the vast regions watered by the Mississippi and its tributaries,
-and eastward by lake and river to the gulf of the St. Lawrence
-and the mouth of the Hudson.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There was a time when this traffic must have been
-systematically carried on; when the ancient miners of Lake
-Superior worked its rich copper veins with industrious zeal;
-and when, probably as part of the same aggressive energy, the
-valley of the Ohio was filling with a settled population; its
-great earthworks were in process of construction, and a native
-race entered on a course that gave promise of social progress.
-But, from whatever cause, the work of the old miners was
-abruptly terminated;<a id='r78'/><a href='#f78' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[78]</span></sup></a> the race of the Mounds vanished from
-the scenes of their ingenious toil; and rudest barbarism
-resumed its sway over the whole northern continent. The
-same Aryan race that, before the dawn of history, before the
-Sanskrit-speaking people of India, or the Zends of Persia,
-entered on their southern homes, spoke in its own cradleland
-the mother tongue of Sanskrit, Greek, Celtic, and German,
-at length broke up and went forth on its long wanderings.
-Whatever peoples it found there; they were replaced by Celts,
-Romans, Greeks, Slavs, and Teutons, who broke in upon the barbarism
-of prehistoric Europe; displaced the older races, Allophylian,
-Neolithic, Iberian, Finnic, or by whatever other name we
-<span class='pageno' title='184' id='Page_184'></span>
-may find it convenient to designate them; but not without
-a considerable intermingling of the old blood with that of
-the intruders. The sparsely settled continent gradually filled
-up. Forests were cleared, swamps drained, rivers confined by
-artificial banks and levées to their channels; and there grew
-up in their new homes the Celtic, Classic, Slavic, and Teutonic
-tongues, with all the varied culture and civilisation which they
-represent. Agriculture, the special characteristic of the whole
-Aryan race, flourished. They brought with them the cereals;
-and, with plenty, the favoured race multiplied, till at length it
-has grown straitened within the bounds of the old continent
-which it had made its own.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>With the close of the fifteenth century one great cycle,
-that of Europe’s mediæval era, came to an end; and then we
-trace the first beginnings of that fresh scattering of the Aryan
-clan, and its new western movement across the Ocean. It
-seems in a very striking manner once more to repeat itself
-under our own eyes, as we look abroad on the millions
-crowding from Europe and filling up the western wilderness;
-hewing down the forests, cultivating the waste prairies, and
-everywhere displacing the rude aborigines: yet here also
-not without some interblending of the races; though the two
-types, Aryan and pre-Aryan, meet under all the repellent
-influences of high civilisation and the lowest barbarism. In
-the Canadian North-West alone, the young province of
-Manitoba began its political existence with a population
-of between 10,000 and 12,000 half-breeds; in part at least,
-a hardy race of hunters and farmers; the representatives of
-what is as certainly destined to constitute an element in the
-new phases which the Aryan race already begins to assume,
-under the diverse conditions of a new continent, as that curious
-trace of Europe’s pre-Aryan people which attracted the
-observant attention of Tacitus among the ancient Britons;
-and which we are learning to recognise, with a new significance,
-as the Melanochroi: the representatives of the old half-breed
-of Europe’s prehistoric dawn.</p>
-
-<hr class='footnotemark'/>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_40'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f40'><a href='#r40'>[40]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Gladstone, <span class='it'>Juventus Mundi</span>, pp. 474, 479.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_41'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f41'><a href='#r41'>[41]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Indian Migrations</span>, p. 24.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_42'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f42'><a href='#r42'>[42]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Types of Mankind</span>, p. 351.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_43'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f43'><a href='#r43'>[43]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Early Man in Britain</span>, p. 241.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_44'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f44'><a href='#r44'>[44]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Ibid.</span> p. 244.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_45'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f45'><a href='#r45'>[45]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Alaska and its Resources</span>, p. 237.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_46'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f46'><a href='#r46'>[46]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Prehistoric Europe</span>, p. 550.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_47'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f47'><a href='#r47'>[47]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>U.S. Geological Survey</span>, 1872, p. 652. <span class='it'>Report of National Museum</span>, 1887,
-p. 683, Fig. 11535.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_48'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f48'><a href='#r48'>[48]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Report of National Museum</span>, 1887, p. 678.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_49'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f49'><a href='#r49'>[49]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Ancient Stone Implements of Great Britain</span>, p. 140.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_50'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f50'><a href='#r50'>[50]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Vide <span class='it'>Prehistoric Man</span>, 3d ed. vol. i. p. 180, Fig. 54.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_51'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f51'><a href='#r51'>[51]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Report of the Peabody Museum</span>, vol. ii., p. 38.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_52'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f52'><a href='#r52'>[52]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Primitive Industry</span>, p. 471.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_53'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f53'><a href='#r53'>[53]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Ibid.</span>, p. 542.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_54'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f54'><a href='#r54'>[54]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Primitive Industry</span>, p. 547.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_55'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f55'><a href='#r55'>[55]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Ibid.</span>, p. 545.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_56'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f56'><a href='#r56'>[56]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Foster’s <span class='it'>Prehistoric Races</span>, p. 55.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_57'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f57'><a href='#r57'>[57]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>The Antiquity and Origin of the Trenton Gravel</span>, p. 547.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_58'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f58'><a href='#r58'>[58]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Primitive Industry</span>, p. 481.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_59'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f59'><a href='#r59'>[59]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Report of Washington National Museum</span>, 1887-88, pp. 677-702.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_60'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f60'><a href='#r60'>[60]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Primitive Industry</span>, p. 517.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_61'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f61'><a href='#r61'>[61]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Indian Migrations as Evidence of Language</span> (Horatio Hale), p. 21.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_62'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f62'><a href='#r62'>[62]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Indian Migrations</span>, p. 22.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_63'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f63'><a href='#r63'>[63]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Relations des Jésuites</span>, 1660, p. 7. Quebec ed.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_64'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f64'><a href='#r64'>[64]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Archæologia Americana</span>, vol. ii.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_65'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f65'><a href='#r65'>[65]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Brinton, <span class='it'>Races and Peoples</span>, p. 254.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_66'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f66'><a href='#r66'>[66]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Bertram’s Travels through North and South Carolina, Georgia, etc.</span>, 1791,
-p. 367.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_67'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f67'><a href='#r67'>[67]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>The League of the Iroquois</span>, p. 2.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_68'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f68'><a href='#r68'>[68]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Schoolcraft, <span class='it'>History of the Indian Tribes</span>, vol. ii., p. 78.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_69'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f69'><a href='#r69'>[69]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Prehistoric Races of the United States</span>, p. 259.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_70'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f70'><a href='#r70'>[70]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Smithsonian Report</span>, 1572, p. 353. The important word <span class='it'>not</span> supplied here, it
-is obvious from the context is absent by a mere typographical error.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_71'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f71'><a href='#r71'>[71]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Ancient Monuments of the Mississippi Valley</span>, vol. i., pp. 196-207.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_72'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f72'><a href='#r72'>[72]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>The North Americans of Antiquity</span>, p. 95.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_73'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f73'><a href='#r73'>[73]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Prehistoric Races of the United States</span>, pp. 251-259.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_74'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f74'><a href='#r74'>[74]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Antiquities of the Southern Indians</span>, p. 225.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_75'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f75'><a href='#r75'>[75]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Primitive Industry</span>, pp. 411-422.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_76'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f76'><a href='#r76'>[76]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Primæval Antiquities</span>, p. 135.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_77'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f77'><a href='#r77'>[77]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Prehistoric Annals of Scotland</span>, 1st ed. 1851, p. 214; 2d ed. vol. i.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_78'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f78'><a href='#r78'>[78]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Prehistoric Man</span>, 3rd ed. vol. i., pp. 203-228.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' title='185' id='Page_185'></span><h1>V<br/> THE ÆSTHETIC FACULTY IN ABORIGINAL RACES</h1></div>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='sc'>The</span> ingenious arts of the palæolithic cave-dwellers of the
-Vézère abundantly prove that it needed no wanderers from the
-cradlelands of Old World civilisation to that strange Atlantis
-lying in the engirdling ocean beyond the Pillars of Hercules,
-to engraft their artistic capacities on the “Achoriens” by whom
-it was peopled. The innate faculty for art has manifested
-itself in individuals and in nations, among widely diverse
-Assyrian, Egyptian, Hellenic, Arabian, and mediæval races, as
-in later Frank, Fleming, and Dane, with unaccountable
-partiality. For its absence, or very subordinate manifestation,
-is seen to be compatible with the highest intellectual
-triumphs in other directions. The arts of Britain’s Allophyliæ
-manifest no instinctive aim at a reproduction of familiar
-natural objects, such as is characteristic of some races at a
-very primitive stage. Nor was it till a recent generation that
-the stock from which Shakespeare and Newton sprung put
-forth its first efforts at rivalling the great masters of the
-Renaissance, or entering into competition with the skilled
-painters of the Low Countries. It is otherwise with the
-nations of the New World. The highest stage of civilisation
-attained there is a very partial one. But among the various
-characteristics of the American aborigines which invite
-attention, the very wide diffusion of an aptitude for imitative
-art is one that merits careful study as typical of American
-man. It is not, indeed, to be overlooked that if due allowance
-be made for the narrow range in degrees of civilisation among
-the races of the New World, the same diversity of racial
-<span class='pageno' title='186' id='Page_186'></span>
-characteristics is observable there as elsewhere. The tendency,
-moreover, of civilisation is to efface, or greatly to modify, such
-distinctions. Civilised nations habitually borrow the arts and
-imitate the social habits of neighbouring races, or accept some
-common standard of intellectual and moral pre-eminence.
-Nevertheless, while the capacity for imitative art is neither
-peculiar to the New World, nor characteristic of all its diverse
-nationalities, it appears to be more generally diffused among
-the races of America than elsewhere. It is prevalent among
-tribes in nearly every condition, from the rude Indian nomad,
-or the Eskimo, to the semi-civilised Zuñi, and the skilled
-metallurgists and architects of Central America and Peru.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This development of a feeling for art in savage races is at
-all times interesting as indicative of intellectual capacity and
-powers of observation, even when manifested, as it frequently
-is, within a very narrow range. It is by no means a general
-characteristic either of savage or civilised man. Yet recent
-archæological discoveries prove it to have been one of the
-earliest forms of intellectual activity among the cave-dwellers
-of Europe’s palæolithic dawn. The most civilised nations
-have differed widely in the manifestations of this æsthetic
-faculty. The city of Dante was the Athens of the Middle
-Ages in art as well as letters; while the land which gave birth
-to Shakespeare can scarcely be said to have had a native
-school of painting or sculpture till late in the eighteenth century.
-The like differences are observable among barbarous nations.
-Races are met with, to whom the drawing of a familiar object
-suggests no idea of the original; while others, in nearly the
-same stage of savage life, habitually practise the representation
-of natural objects in the decorative details of their implements
-and articles of dress, and in the carvings which furnish
-occupation for many leisure hours.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A special interest attaches to the disclosures of archæology
-relative to the prehistoric races of Europe, owing to the evidence
-thereby furnished of striking resemblances in their arts and conditions
-of life to those of uncultured races of our own day. In
-many respects it seems as though the present condition of some
-existing races of America only repeats that of Europe’s infancy.
-But so far as imitative art is concerned, the analogy fails
-when the more recent contents of the barrows, cairns, and grave
-<span class='pageno' title='187' id='Page_187'></span>
-mounds of prehistoric Europe are brought into comparison
-with those of the New World. If, indeed, we leave behind us
-the age of cromlechs, kistvaens, cairns, and barrows, and seek
-to estimate aright the disclosures of artistic ability pertaining
-to the far more ancient men of Europe’s Mammoth and Reindeer
-periods, it is otherwise. But, before reviewing the
-wonderfully definite glimpses thereby furnished of tribes of
-rude yet skilful hunters of that post-glacial world, it may be
-of some help, in the comparisons which they suggest, to recall
-impressions derived from a study of that Stone period in
-which the natives of the British Islands appear to have approximated,
-in many respects, to the Red Indian nomad of the
-American forest.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>One little-heeded point of evidence of this correspondence,
-to which I long since drew attention, is to be found in the
-traces of artificial modification of the head-form in ancient
-British crania; a comparison of which with skulls recovered
-from Indian grave mounds helps to throw light on the habits
-and social life of the British Islands in prehistoric times. In
-illustration of this I may refer to an exploration, now of old
-date. In the early summer of 1851, I learned of the accidental
-exposure of a stone cist, in trenching a garden at Juniper
-Green, a few miles distant from Edinburgh, and immediately
-proceeded to the spot. There, under a slightly elevated knoll—the
-remains, in all probability, of the ancient barrow,—lay
-a rude sarcophagus of unhewn sandstone, within which was a
-male skeleton, still in good preservation. The body had been
-laid on its left side, with the arms folded over the breast, and
-the knees drawn up so as to touch the elbows. A flat water-worn
-stone formed the pillow, from which the skull had rolled
-to the bottom of the cist. Above the right shoulder stood a
-gracefully formed clay vase, containing only a little sand and
-black dust, the remains, it may be presumed, of food which it
-originally contained when deposited there by affectionate
-hands, in some long-forgotten century. It was recovered uninjured,
-and is now deposited, along with the skull, in the
-Archæological Museum of Edinburgh.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The primitive grave, thus discovered within sight of the
-Scottish capital, has a curious interest as a link connecting the
-present with a remote past. But the special point which
-<span class='pageno' title='188' id='Page_188'></span>
-throws light on the habits of the ancient race, is a parieto-occipital
-flattening, such as is of common occurrence in skulls
-recovered from American ossuaries and grave mounds. This
-feature is clearly traceable to the use of the cradle-board in
-infancy. The mode of nursing the Indian papoose, by bandaging
-it on a cradle-board, is specially adapted to the vicissitudes
-of a nomad forest life. The infant is carried safely,
-slung on the mother’s back, leaving her hands free; and in
-the pauses of her journey, or when engaged in field work, it
-can be laid aside, or suspended from the branch of a tree,
-without risk of injury. But one result of this custom is that
-the soft bones of the skull are subjected to a continuous
-pressure in one direction during the whole term of suckling,
-which is necessarily protracted, among a nomad people, much
-longer than is usual in settled communities; and to this cause
-is undoubtedly traceable the occipital flattening of many skulls
-recovered from European cists and barrows. Dr. L. A. Gosse,
-after discussing in his <span class='it'>Essai sur les déformations artificielles du
-Crâne</span> certain artificial modifications of the skull, of common
-occurrence among the aborigines of the New World, thus proceeds:
-“Passant dans l’ancient continent, ne tardons-nous
-pas à reconnaître que ce berceau plat et solide y a produit des
-effets analogues. Les anciens habitants de la Scandinavie et de
-la Calédonie devaient s’en servir, si l’on en juge par la forme
-de leurs crânes.”<a id='r79'/><a href='#f79' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[79]</span></sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Full-sized representations of the Juniper Green skull, and
-others of the same type, are given in <span class='it'>Crania Britannica</span>.<a id='r80'/><a href='#f80' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[80]</span></sup></a>
-Bateman also, in his <span class='it'>Ten Years’ Diggings in Celtic and Saxon
-Gravehills</span>, concurs with earlier writers in ascribing to the use
-of the cradle-board the flattened occiput observed in skulls
-recovered from British barrows. The employment, indeed, of
-the cradle-board among prehistoric races of Northern Europe,
-and their nomad life of which it is so characteristic a feature,
-may now be considered as generally recognised. The implements
-and pottery recovered from graves of the period show
-their constructors to have been, for the most part, devoid of
-any knowledge of metals; or, at best, in the mere rudimentary
-stage of metallurgic arts. But the Juniper Green cist, that of
-<span class='pageno' title='189' id='Page_189'></span>
-the large Staffordshire barrow of Wotton Hill, that of Roundway
-Hill, North Wilts, another of Green Lowe, Derbyshire,
-and others described in the works above referred to, while all
-disclosing evidence of correspondence in habits and social
-condition between ancient races of the British Isles and the
-Indians of the New World, also furnished characteristic
-examples of their fictile ware; and here the analogy fails.
-There are, indeed, abundant specimens of broken Indian
-pottery on many of their deserted village sites, which might
-be mingled with the fragments of a like kind from early
-European grave mounds without attracting special attention.
-Simple chevron and saltier or herring-bone patterns, scratched
-with a pointed bone on the soft clay, are common to both;
-and many of the more elaborate linear and bead patterns of
-the primitive British potters reappear with slight variation on
-the Indian ware. But besides those, few ancient Indian
-village sites fail to yield fragments of pottery, including clay
-tobacco pipes, ornamented with more or less rude imitations
-of the human face and of familiar animals, such as the beaver,
-the bear, the lynx, and the deer. Before my first visit to the
-American continent, while still preoccupied with the arts of
-the ancient British savage, and the more graceful devices of
-the metallurgists of Europe’s Bronze period, I noted the prevalence
-of a conventional ornamentation, consisting mainly of
-improvements on what may be called the accidents of manufacture,
-or possibly of linear decorations borrowed from
-patterns of the plaiter or knitter.<a id='r81'/><a href='#f81' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[81]</span></sup></a> No attempt appears to
-have been made by the old European decorator at such imitations
-of familiar natural objects as are now known to have
-been practised among the far more ancient cave-dwellers of
-Europe, the contemporaries of the mammoth and the woolly
-rhinoceros, and which are familiar to us in the primitive arts
-of the New World. Objects recovered from the mounds of
-the Ohio and the Mississippi valleys, as well as the diversified
-products of the native artificers of Mexico and Peru, attract
-special attention by their endless variety of imitative design;
-and similar skill and ingenuity are apparent in the pottery,
-the plaited manufactures, the stone and bone carvings, and
-even in many of the great animal mounds and other earthworks
-<span class='pageno' title='190' id='Page_190'></span>
-of the North American continent. An observant
-recognition of analogies, traceable in the rhetorical construction
-of many American Indian holophrasms, appears to be
-only another phase of this widely prevalent imitative faculty.
-At the same time, whether we study the physical form or the
-intellectual characteristics of native American races, it becomes
-more and more apparent that the New World has been
-peopled from different centres, and still presents essentially
-distinct types of race. It had its ferocious Caribs, its
-Mexicans, with their revolting human sacrifices and other
-bloody rites, and its stealthy, treacherous nomads, less courageous
-but not less cruel. But it has also gentler races, in
-whom, as in the Peruvians, the Zuñis, and others of the
-Pueblo Indians, the æsthetic faculty predominates, and overlays
-with many a graceful concomitant the utilitarian products
-of their industrial arts.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Whether barbarous or civilised nations are classified in
-accordance with their linguistic affinities, both are found to
-manifest other specialties according with the diverse families
-of speech. The differences which separate the Aryan from
-the Semitic races are not more marked than the intellectual
-and moral divergencies among barbarous tribes. But while
-this is apparent on the American continent, its diverse races
-appear to be characterised by a more general aptitude for
-artistic imitation than is observable elsewhere, except among
-the long-civilised nations of the Old World, whose composite
-vocabularies reveal the sources of many borrowed arts. The
-Peruvian potter sketched and modelled endless quaint devices
-in clay; the Zuñian decorated his gracefully fashioned ware
-with highly effective parti-coloured designs; and the old
-Mound-Builder wrought in intaglio on his domestic and
-sepulchral vessels conventional flower patterns; and in his
-miniature sculptures reproduced the fauna of an area extending
-from the Ohio to the Gulf of Mexico. Native artificers
-of widely different American races manifest this imitative
-faculty. Not only is the Indian pipe sculptor found copying
-animate and inanimate objects with an observant eye and a
-ready hand, but even the linear patterns on pottery and straw
-basket-work are frequently made to assume combinations
-obviously suggested by flowers and other familiar objects of
-<span class='pageno' title='191' id='Page_191'></span>
-nature. The perception of such analogies, and even the
-capacity for appreciating the linear or pictorial representation
-of objects on a flat surface, varies greatly in different races.
-Travellers have repeatedly described the manifestation by
-savage races of an utter incapacity to comprehend pictured
-representations. Mr. Oldfield, for example, tells how a large
-coloured engraving of a native of New Holland was shown to
-some Australians. “One declared it to be a ship, another a
-kangaroo, and so on, not one of a dozen identifying the portrait
-as having any connection with himself.”<a id='r82'/><a href='#f82' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[82]</span></sup></a> The artistic
-faculty is unquestionably hereditary. There are artistic
-families and artistic races. But if so, the pictorial skill of
-the palæolithic cave-dwellers of Western Europe was not
-transmitted to their successors. Guided not only by a comparison
-of their tools and weapons with those of the Neolithic
-period, but also by cranial and other physical evidence, we are
-led to assume the absence of affinity between the men of the
-Perigord caves and the greatly more modern races of Europe’s
-later Stone period; and their lack of the imitative faculty, so
-characteristic of the elder race, adds confirmation to this
-opinion.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Artistic sympathies, and a capacity for high achievements
-in painting and sculpture, are neither the direct results of
-civilisation, nor in many cases the product of culture and
-training. From the days of Giotto, the shepherd boy, to
-those of Thorwaldsen, Wilkie, and Turner, art-power is not
-only seen to be a direct and exceptional gift of nature, but it
-is frequently the product of a singularly partial intellectual
-development. Leonardo da Vinci and Michael Angelo are
-examples of men of rare and comprehensive genius, who
-sought in art the form in which to give expression to their
-many-sided powers. But, on the other hand, instances are
-not rare of artists like Thorwaldsen or Turner, who, except
-within the range of their own special art, seemed exceptionally
-defective in the exercise of ordinary mental powers. The
-same is true of races as of individuals. Some show an
-aptitude for art wholly wanting in others, who nevertheless
-equal or surpass them in more important qualities. The
-æsthetic faculty may, indeed, be described as curiously
-<span class='pageno' title='192' id='Page_192'></span>
-capricious in its manifestations. The Papuans of New Guinea
-and of New Caledonia, a race of Negrillos, in some points
-presenting analogies to the Australian, are nevertheless remarkable
-for a seemingly instinctive ingenuity and aptitude
-for art. Mr. Wallace describes them as contrasting with the
-Malay race in the habitual decoration of their canoes, houses,
-and almost every domestic utensil, with elaborate carving.
-The Fijians, who are allied to this Negrillo race, present in
-many respects an unfavourable contrast to the true Polynesian.
-In their physiognomy and whole physical aspect they are
-inferior to other island races of the Pacific; and are further
-notable for repulsive habits and a general condition of social
-and moral degradation. But their ferocity and the cruel
-customs in which they so strikingly differ from the Malays
-are vices of a vigorous race. They have frequently been
-observed to indicate energy capable of being directed to useful
-ends, as has been the case with the Maori cannibals of New
-Zealand, and was seen of old in the Huns and the Northmen,
-whose descendants are now among the most civilised races of
-the world. It is obvious, at any rate, that the savage vices of
-the Fijians are compatible with considerable skill in such arts
-as pertain to their primitive condition. Their musical instruments
-are superior to those of the Polynesians, and include
-the pan-pipe and others unknown in the islands beyond their
-range. Their pottery exhibits great variety of form; and
-some of the vessels combined in groups present a curious
-correspondence to familiar examples of Peruvian art. Their
-fishing-nets and lines are remarkable for neat and skilful
-workmanship, and they carry on agriculture to a considerable
-extent. “Indeed,” remarked the ethnologist of the United
-States Expedition, in summing up the characteristics of the
-Fijians, “we soon began to perceive that the people were in
-possession of almost every art known to the Polynesians, and
-of many others besides. The highly-finished workmanship
-was unexpected, everything being executed until recently, and
-even now for the most part, without the use of iron. In the
-collection of implements and manufactures brought home by
-the Expedition, the observer will distinguish in the Fijian
-division something like a school of arts for the other Pacific
-islands.”
-<span class='pageno' title='193' id='Page_193'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>All this has to be kept in view, in any attempt to gauge
-the intellectual development, or determine the degree of
-civilisation, of the palæolithic draughtsmen and carvers of the
-Garonne. One of the scenes introduced by M. Figuier, in the
-fanciful illustrations of his <span class='it'>L’Homme primitif</span>, represents a
-group of artists, such as, except for their costume, might have
-been sketched from the students of the École des Beaux Arts.
-Their mode of work was probably much more akin to the
-intermittent labours of the Indian, whose elaborately sculptured
-pipe is laid aside, and resumed again—often after prolonged
-intervals,—before it receives the finishing touch. But
-though the drawings and the carvings of those primitive artists
-alike manifest remarkable skill and observant imitation, the
-former are the objects of special interest. Their carvings
-appear to have been executed, with rare exceptions, for the
-decoration of favourite implements and weapons, in accordance
-with a practice common to many diverse races and conditions
-of society. But the drawings have no such motive. They
-more nearly correspond to the sketch or drawing from nature
-of the modern artist; and furnish evidence of peculiar attributes,
-strikingly distinguishing the race of that remote age
-from most others that have succeeded them.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Certain it is that, so far as present evidence goes, the
-greatly prolonged Neolithic period was characterised by no
-such artistic feeling or imitative skill. Specimens of the
-ingenious handiwork of the artificers of Europe’s later Stone
-age abound. We have numerous relics from the kitchen
-middens of Denmark, the pile villages of Switzerland, the crannoges
-of Scotland and Ireland, as well as the varied contents
-of cromlechs, cists, cairns, and barrows, diligently explored
-throughout Europe. But no such examples of carvings, or
-graven representations of animals or other natural objects, have
-been found. The “clay in the hands of the potter” is a
-familiar symbol of plastic response to the will of the designer.
-It is, indeed, easier for the practised modeller to fashion the clay
-into any desired form, than to draw it, subject to rules of perspective,
-on a flat surface. Linear devices and the representation of
-objects in intaglio, or in low relief, are also accomplished with
-great facility on the soft clay. Hence the art of diverse races,
-periods, and stages of progress, finds its aptest illustration in
-<span class='pageno' title='194' id='Page_194'></span>
-fictile ware; and the imitative faculty of widely different
-American races may be studied in their pottery. In Mexico,
-apparently, we have to look for the northern school of ceramic
-art. There, the aggressive races of the North first came in
-contact with the civilisation of Central America; and the
-native aptitude for imitative representation received a fresh
-impulse. The Indian modeller learned to work skilfully in
-clay; and the variety of design, combined with the quaint
-humour of the caricaturist, displayed in many of the Mexican
-terra-cottas, serves to indicate this class of work as specially
-significant in relation to the present inquiry. The inventive
-fancy and skill of the Peruvian potter illustrates in ampler
-variety the progress achieved by the races of the southern
-continent. But this will more fitly come under review along
-with other examples of modern native art. For no analogous
-traces of contemporary modelling in clay furnish material for
-comparison with the art of the Palæolithic era; though the
-skill of its bone and ivory carvers was in no degree inferior to
-that of the Mexican or Peruvian modeller. But the æsthetic
-aptitude of that old race of Europe’s intellectual dawn is in
-some respects unique. In so far as their ingenious arts furnish
-any evidence of true racial characteristics, the men of the
-Neolithic era inherited none of their æsthetic feelings; nor did
-the imitative faculty manifest itself with exceptional power until
-the advent of the Aryan races brought with it the potentialities
-of Hellenic inspiration.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The absence of nearly every trace of imitative art in the
-prehistoric remains of Britain has already been noted. It made
-a strong impression on my mind at an early stage of my
-archæological researches; for this characteristic of European art
-extends over a period of greatly prolonged duration, marked by
-the advent and disappearance of races, dissimilar alike in
-physical and mental characteristics. We have the laboriously
-finished implements of neolithic art, the pottery of at least two
-distinct races seemingly prior to the Celts, and then the graceful
-artistic productions of the Bronze period, but still only the
-rarest traces of any effort at imitation. Long before the
-imitative arts of the American continent were known to me
-otherwise than from description, I remarked, of the archaic art of
-the first British metallurgists: “The ornamentation consists,
-<span class='pageno' title='195' id='Page_195'></span>
-almost without exception, only of improvements on the
-accidents of manufacture. The incised decorations of the
-pottery appear, in many cases, to have been produced simply
-by passing twisted cords round the soft clay. More complicated
-designs, most frequently consisting of chevron, saltire, or
-herring-bone patterns, where they are not merely the results of
-a combination of such lines, have been suggested, as I conceive,
-by the few and half-accidental patterns of the industrious
-female knitter. In no single case is any attempt made at the
-imitation of a leaf or flower, of animals, or any other simple
-objects.”<a id='r83'/><a href='#f83' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[83]</span></sup></a> At the date of those remarks the art of Europe’s
-Palæolithic era was unknown; but with the arts of other
-primitive races, and especially those of the American continent,
-in view, I then added: “It is curious, indeed, and noteworthy, to
-find how entirely every trace of imitative art is absent in
-British archaic relics; for it is by no means an invariable
-characteristic of primitive arts.” Dr. Hoffman, when commenting
-on aboriginal American art among the Indians of California,
-adds: “I have not met with any attempts at objective drawings
-or etchings which may be attributed to the Tshuma Indians, who
-were the former occupants of the island;<a id='r84'/><a href='#f84' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[84]</span></sup></a> but ornamentations
-upon shells and bone beads, soap-stone pipes, shell pendants, and
-other ornaments, seem to consist entirely of straight or zigzag
-lines, cross-lines, circles,” etc. The earliest examples of native
-metallurgy in Britain are to be found in the works of the
-primitive goldsmith; but the same conventional ornamentation
-which occurs on early pottery, is characteristic of the beautiful
-personal ornaments of gold belonging, for the most part, to the
-first period of working in metals. It is not till a late stage of
-the European Bronze period that imitative art reappears, and
-zoomorphic decorations become common.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The discovery in 1868, and subsequent years, of numerous
-specimens of the artistic ability of the cave-men of palæolithic
-Europe, revealed a singularly interesting phase of primitive
-history. Remains of the so-called “Reindeer period” are now
-familiar to us from many localities; for the range of this
-animal in palæolithic times appears to have extended from the
-<span class='pageno' title='196' id='Page_196'></span>
-Baltic to the Pyrenees. But a special interest was conferred on
-the first disclosures by the locality itself, where the Vézère, an
-affluent of the river Dordogne, winds its way through the
-cretaceous limestone, in which occur numerous caves and rock-shelters,
-rich in remains of primitive art. In this region of
-South-western France, where many historical and legendary
-associations carry the fancy back to elder centuries, the
-Dordogne unites with the Garonne at its estuary below Bordeaux.
-The upper waters of the Dordogne form the boundary
-between Limousin and Auvergne, and the Vézère is one of its
-highest tributaries in Limousin. There, nearly in the latitude
-of Montreal, but with the genial climate which, throughout the
-whole historic period, has characterised Southern France, lie the
-caves of Cro-Magnon, La Moustier, Gorge d’Enfer, Laugerie
-Haute and Basse, and La Madelaine: the long-sealed art
-galleries of prehistoric Gaul. The reindeer and the aurochs
-haunted its forests; the woolly rhinoceros and the mammoth
-still frequented its glades; and the long-extinct fossil horse
-was not only an object of the chase, but was possibly already
-subdued to the companionship and service of man. Such, at
-least, is the idea suggested by a scene graven on the portion of
-a baton or staff, found by M. Lartet and Mr. Christy in La
-Madelaine cave, which represents a man between two horses’
-heads, apparently walking past, with a staff or spear over his
-shoulder. Nor were those man’s sole contemporaries.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The drawings of the ancient cave-men are of varying
-degrees of merit, showing the efforts of the unskilled tyro as
-well as of the practised artist. Some of the examples found
-at Laugerie Basse—as, for instance, the assumed representation
-of an ibex, with its legs folded as if sitting,—are the crude
-efforts of unpractised draughtsmen, and would compare unfavourably
-with many examples of graphic art, the work of modern
-Eskimo and Indian gravers and draughtsmen. But other specimens—such
-as the mammoth from La Madelaine cave, and
-the Alpine ibex and reindeers from Laugerie Basse, in Southern
-France, and, still more, the remarkably spirited drawing of the
-reindeer grazing, from the Kesserloch, near Thayingen, sketched
-on a piece of reindeer horn,—evince powers of observation, and
-a freedom of hand in sketching from nature, such as would be
-found exceptional among pupils of our best training schools of art.
-<span class='pageno' title='197' id='Page_197'></span>
-On this point my friend, Sir Noel Paton, writes me: “I entirely
-concur in your view as to the immense superiority as works of art
-of the engravings on horn and ivory found in the prehistoric caves,
-over any modern work of the same kind which I have seen, executed
-by the Eskimos or other savage, tribes of our own day. As
-compared with the latter, the prehistoric productions are like the
-swift and direct studies from nature of Landseer, compared with
-the laboured scrawlings from memory of a rather dull schoolboy.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I have elsewhere drawn attention to the fact that some of
-the drawings of the Perigord cave-men and their palæolithic
-contemporaries, especially, among the latter, the Kesserloch
-sketch of a reindeer grazing, are left-hand drawings.<a id='r85'/><a href='#f85' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[85]</span></sup></a> So far
-as this class of evidence is of value, the examples from the
-caves in the valley of the Vézère are exceptionally numerous.
-There, it may be, a family, or possibly a tribe, dwelt, among
-whom left-handedness prevailed to an unusual extent, along
-with a degree of skill and dexterity, such as is frequently
-found to accompany the instinctive use of the left hand.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In this, as in other respects, the recovery of evidences of a
-well-developed æsthetic faculty among the men of Europe’s
-Mammoth and Reindeer period, furnishes materials for many
-suggestive inferences; for we shall very imperfectly estimate
-the significance of the primitive drawings so unexpectedly discovered,
-if we regard them as no more than the pastimes of
-those ancient cave-men, whose artistic ability they so unmistakably
-reveal. They are rather to be classed with the
-picture-writing of the American aborigines—including its
-most advanced Mexican stage abundantly illustrated in Lord
-Kingsborough’s folios,—as one of the primitive supplements of
-language among uncultured races. As such it is a form of
-visible speech, and an important step in advance of the stage
-of gesture-language. The historical value of the palæolithic
-drawings is indisputable. They furnish a record, more trustworthy
-than any written chronicle, of the strange conditions of
-life in a region familiar to us throughout the whole historic
-period for its genial climate and social civilisation. It is in
-this aspect, as a contemporary chronicling of current events,
-that palæolithic art has its chief value. It furnishes a graphic
-picturing of the habits of life, and of many of the attendant
-<span class='pageno' title='198' id='Page_198'></span>
-circumstances of that remote period, recorded with such vivid
-truthfulness, that we realise very definitely the character of its
-long-extinct fauna, and, to some considerable extent, the occupations
-and modes of life of the cave-men by whom they were
-hunted, and in leisure hours were reproduced graven or carved,
-on bone, horn, or ivory, or traced in free outline on slabs of
-schist or other soft stone.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Viewed simply as examples of imitative art among a people
-still in the rudest Stone age, the drawings are significant and
-instructive. They furnish evidence of observation and artistic
-capacity, and consequently of intellectual powers capable of
-very different results from anything that could be realised in
-the absence of all knowledge of metallurgy, or of anything
-beyond the crudest appliances for developing mechanical skill.
-The conditions of climate probably forbade any attempt at
-agriculture. They were hunters, fowlers, fishers, subsisting
-mainly, if not wholly, by the chase. They not only successfully
-pursued the wild horse, the reindeer, and other swift-footed
-herbivora, but assailed the cave-bear, the cave-lion, and
-other formidable carnivora, as well as the huge rhinoceros and
-the mammoth. They also made excursions to the sea-shore,
-and no doubt left there shell mounds similar to those which
-have been explored with such interesting results on the Danish
-coast; and which have their New World equivalents on the
-seaboards of Massachusetts, Georgia, and Florida, where at
-certain seasons the Indians resorted to feast on the shell-fish.
-From their drawings and carvings we not only learn this, but
-also that they were not unfamiliar with the whale, the seal,
-and other marine fauna. The presence of the whale and seal
-in the same latitude as the reindeer need not surprise us. The
-occupation of Europe by palæolithic man contemporary with
-the <span class='it'>Elephas primigenius</span> and other extinct mammalia, belongs
-to an era when the relative levels of sea and land, and the
-relations of the Atlantic coast-line to the ancient continent,
-differed widely from their present conditions. If the genial
-current of the Gulf Stream then reached the shores of Europe,
-its influence extended over areas very diverse from those now
-affected by it. But the range of the fauna of that Palæolithic
-era was a wide one. Tusks of the mammoth and antlers of
-the reindeer occur in the Scottish boulder-clay; and the discovery
-<span class='pageno' title='199' id='Page_199'></span>
-of skeletons of the whale far inland in the carse of
-Stirling, accompanied in more than one case by implements
-made of perforated stag’s horn, tells of the presence of the
-Greenland whale on the ancient Scottish sea coast, while the
-stag haunted its forests, and the Allophylian savage paddled his
-canoe in estuaries marked for us now by old sea-margins that
-preceded the last great rise of the land. Skulls and horns of
-the elk occur in the Scottish peat-bogs, seemingly indistinguishable
-from those of the <span class='it'>Cervus alces</span>, or North American moose.<a id='r86'/><a href='#f86' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[86]</span></sup></a>
-As to the reindeer, not only are its remains found in Scottish
-mosses and the underlying marl, but they have been dug up in
-the ruined brochs, as at Cill-Trolla, Sutherlandshire, and Keiss
-in Caithness. The favourite haunts of the Greenland whale
-are in seas encumbered with floating ice; and when they were
-stranded in the estuary of the Forth by a tide rising on a
-shore-line now nearly thirty feet above the tide-mark of the
-present day, the highlands of Scotland were capped with perpetual
-snow, and great changes of level had still to occur. But
-neither the whale nor the Eskimo retreated within the Arctic
-circle because they could only be at home among polar ice and
-snow. Remains of the whale in Scottish kitchen middens of
-greatly more modern date show that it must have haunted
-the Scottish shores when the temperature of the surrounding
-ocean differed little from that of the present day. There is
-preserved in the Museum of the Scottish Antiquaries a drinking-cup
-fashioned from the vertebra of a whale, which was
-found in a weem, or subterranean dwelling, on the Isle of
-Eday, Orkney, along with implements of stone, horn, bone,
-bronze, and iron; and other evidences of the presence of the
-whale in the Scottish seas are of frequent occurrence.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As to the ivory of the narwhal and the rostungr, or walrus,
-it was in use by Scoto-Scandinavian carvers after the disappearance
-of the reindeer from Scotland. A curious large sword,
-probably of the fourteenth century, at Hawthornden, near
-Edinburgh, has the hilt made of the narwhal’s tusk; and the
-famous Lewis chessmen, found at Uig in the Isle of Lewis, as
-well as examples of chess and tablemen recovered from time to
-time in other Scottish localities, are all made of the walrus
-ivory, the “huel-bone” of Chaucer. But when the whale
-<span class='pageno' title='200' id='Page_200'></span>
-haunted the shores to which the hunters of the Perigord
-resorted, it is doubtful if Britain was an island. In that age
-of the mammoth and the reindeer of the Pyrenees, when art
-flourished in the valley of the Vézère, and men, scarcely less
-strange than the long-extinct fauna on which they preyed,
-sheltered in their rock-dwellings from the ice and snow, the
-relative levels of sea and land, and the lines of the Atlantic
-coast, bore no relation to their present aspect; for the old region
-of ice and snow was what is now familiar to us as the vine-clad
-sunny land of France. All this we learn from the archæological
-remains of those old times, and especially from the
-carvings and gravings which, happily for us, were then
-executed, whether for pastime or as actual records. Like
-many of the native races of the American continent at the
-present day, the old cave-dwellers employed their leisure time
-in carving in bone, horn, or ivory; and like them too, as we
-believe, they applied their skill in graphic art as a means of
-recording events and communicating facts to others. The
-broad palinated antlers of the reindeer, prepared sections of
-mammoth ivory, and slabs of schist, all furnished tablets on
-which they not only delineated the objects of the chase, but
-incidents and observations of daily experience. And if so, we
-have in such drawings the germ of ideographic symbolism, and
-of hieroglyphic writing. By just such a process of recording
-facts in a form readily intelligible to others, the early dwellers
-in the Nile valley originated the mode of object-drawing and
-ideographic chronicling, from which hieroglyphic, demotic, and
-ultimately, phonetic writing were evolved.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is not solely by inference that we are led to surmise
-that the ingenious draughtsmen of Southern France had a higher
-aim than mere pastime in some, at least, of their graphic
-devices. The relics recovered from the ancient caves include
-what appear to be tallies and numerical records, unmistakably
-indicative, not only of a method of numeration, but of the
-growth of a system of mnemonic symbolism, and distinctive
-graven characters, not greatly inferior to the primitive alphabets
-of Celtic or Scandinavian lithology. It is curious, indeed,
-to find in use in Europe’s early Post-Glacial period symbols
-which, but for their undoubted execution by the ancient
-cave-men of Aquitania, might be assigned with every probability
-<span class='pageno' title='201' id='Page_201'></span>
-to some Druid scribe, familiar with the ogham characters
-of the Gauls and British Celts. Among the objects recovered from
-the Dordogne caves, including tallies and inscribed tablets of
-horn and ivory, with their enumeration in simple units, M.
-Broca specially noted a deer’s tyne, marked with a series of
-notches, which he assumed to be a hunter’s memoranda of the
-produce of the chase. A more complex record, found in the
-rock-shelter of Gorge d’Enfer, is inscribed on a plate of ivory.
-Its groups of horizontal and oblique lines along the edges, and
-symmetrical rows of dots on the flat surface, combine to
-furnish a record graven in characters as well-defined as many
-a runic or ogham inscription. If it be no more than the
-memoranda of a successful hunt, with a classification of the
-different kinds of game secured for distribution among the
-members of the tribe, it is not greatly inferior to the early
-system of numeration among the Egyptians. But when such
-a piece of arithmetic was supplemented by a pictorial record
-of the hunt; or by the incident, so acceptable to a bevy of
-hunters over their camp-fire, of the fight of the male deer in
-the rutting season; or the charge of the enraged elephant with
-elevated trunk, trumpeting wrath and defiance: much had been
-accomplished that admits of comparison with records of the
-modern penman.<a id='r87'/><a href='#f87' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[87]</span></sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is difficult for the men of a lettered age, with all the
-facilities of the printing-press in fullest use, to realise the
-condition of intellectual activity, or the natural modes of its
-expression, among an unlettered people. The transmission of
-Homeric or Ossianic poems, of a Niebelungen Lied or an
-Albanic Duan, from generation to generation, by the mere aid of
-memory, is scarcely conceivable to us now. Yet I recall the
-account given by Ozahwahguaquzuebe, an Ojibway Indian, who
-told of his habitually accumulating his tobacco till he saved
-enough to bribe an aged chief of the tribe to repeat to him,
-again and again, in all its marvellous details, the legend of
-Nanaboozo and the post-diluvial creation, in order that he
-might be able, in his turn, to recount it in full, as it had come
-down from elder generations of his people.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There are some results of the introduction of the printing-press
-still very partially appreciated. Its direct influence on
-<span class='pageno' title='202' id='Page_202'></span>
-social and intellectual progress receives ample recognition;
-but not so all indirect influences traceable to its operations.
-In elder centuries, before Gutenberg and Faust superseded
-the labours of the scribe, not a few ballad-epics and lyrics
-were consigned to the wandering minstrels, to whose tenacious
-memories we are so largely indebted. But there were other
-avenues in those old centuries for fancy and passion, not
-greatly dissimilar to those by which the observation and
-descriptive powers of the post-glacial Troglodytes found vent.
-It is vain for a Pugin or a Ruskin to bewail the mechanical
-character of modern art. It was easier for the mediæval
-satirist to find free scope for his humour in a sculptured
-corbel, or on a boss of the beautiful groined ceiling, or to
-carve his grosser caricature within easy access under the
-<span class='it'>miserere</span> in the choir, than to spend long hours at his lectern
-in the scriptorium, committing his fancies with laborious pains
-to less accessible parchments. And so, both satires and
-sermons were then graven in stone, which now find utterance
-in ways more suited to the age in which we live:—</p>
-
-<div class='poetry-container' style=''><div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<p class='line0'>For nature brings not back the Mastodon,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Nor we those times.</p>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='noindent'>Taste and fancy have now a thousand avenues at their command
-for the humour and satire which mingled, in quaint
-incongruity with the devout aspirations inwrought into
-mediæval architecture. With the revival of learning, and the
-introduction of the printing-press, came the Renaissance.
-Europe renounced mediæval art as “Gothic.” Classic, or what
-passed for classic art, ruled for the next three centuries.
-Architecture became more and more mechanical; while
-æsthetic taste sought elsewhere, and more especially in the
-novel arena of the printing-press, for avenues where it could
-sport in unrestrained freedom.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The ingenious skill of the palæolithic artists and tool-makers,
-who wrought in their rock-shelters and limestone
-caves, in that remote era when the climate along the northern
-slope of the Pyrenees resembled that of Labrador at the
-present day, has naturally awakened a lively interest. The
-rigour of the climate during a greatly prolonged winter
-prevented their obtaining stone or flint for purposes of
-<span class='pageno' title='203' id='Page_203'></span>
-manufacture. They wrought, accordingly, in bone, in mammoth
-ivory, and in the horn of the reindeer, fashioning from
-such materials their lances, fish-spears, knives, daggers, and
-bodkins; turning to account the deer’s tynes for tallies; and
-carving out of the larger bones what are assumed to have
-been maces or official batons, elaborately ornamented with
-symbolic devices designed for other purposes than mere
-decoration.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Eskimo are recognised as presenting the nearest type
-to the cave-men of Europe’s Post-Glacial era. It is even
-possible that, like the natives of Labrador, the latter may
-have occupied winter snow-huts, and only resorted to their
-cave-shelters during the brief heat of a semi-arctic summer.
-This, however, is rendered doubtful by the occurrence of
-reindeer horns and bones of young fawns, along with others
-of such varying age as to indicate the presence of the
-hunter during nearly every season of the year. Among a
-people so situated the industrial arts are called into constant
-requisition, alike for clothing and tools; and the experience
-of the hunter directs him to the products of the chase for
-the easiest supply of both. The pointed horn of the deer
-furnished the ready-made dagger, lance head, and harpoon;
-the incisor tooth of the larger rodents supplied a more delicately
-edged chisel than primitive art could devise; and the
-very process of fracturing the bones of the larger mammalia,
-in order to obtain the prized marrow, produced the splinters
-and pointed fragments which an easy manipulation converted
-into daggers, bodkins, and needles. The ivory of walrus,
-narwhal, or elephant is readily wrought into many desirable
-forms, and is less liable to fracture than flint or stone; and
-all those materials are abundant in the most rigorous winters,
-when the latter are sealed up under the frozen soil. Implements
-of horn or bone may therefore be assumed to have
-preceded all but the rudest flint celts and hammer-stones
-or unwrought missiles; and although, owing to the nearly
-indestructible nature of their material, it is from the latter
-that our ideas of primeval tool-making are chiefly derived,
-enough has been recovered from contemporary cave deposits
-to confirm the analogy of their arts to those of the hyperborean
-workmen of the North American continent.
-<span class='pageno' title='204' id='Page_204'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The necessity which, to a large extent, determined the
-material of the ancient workers in bone and ivory, was favourable
-to the development of the imitative faculty. The
-ingenious ivory and bone carvings of the Tawatins and other
-tribes of British Columbia, of the Thlinkets of Alaska, and the
-Eskimo, equally suffice, with the examples of European
-palæolithic art, to show how favourable such material was to
-the development of artistic feeling, which must have lain dormant
-had the artificers been limited to flint and stone. The
-same influence may be seen in operation in many stages of
-art: as in massive but bald Gothic structures, such as St.
-Machar’s Cathedral on the Dee, where the builders were
-limited to granite, while contemporary architecture in localities
-where good sandstone or limestone abounds is rich in
-elaborate details; and, where the soft and easily wrought Caen
-stone is available, runs to excess in the florid exuberance of
-its carvings.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The ingenious artist of the Palæolithic era not only
-ornamented the hafts of his tools and weapons with representations
-of familiar objects of the chase, but is also accredited
-with carving, on his mace or baton, symbolic emblems
-expressing the rank and official duties of the owner. The
-analogous practice of the Haidahs of the Queen Charlotte
-Islands at the present day shows that there is nothing inconsistent
-with primitive thought in the symbolic, significance
-assigned to some of the carved batons; and, if so, we have
-there examples of imitative art employed in a way which
-involved the germ of ideographic graving or picture-writing.
-The mere fact of pictorial imitation implies the interpretation
-of its representations. Eskimo implements are to be seen in
-various collections, as at Copenhagen and Stockholm, in the
-British Museum, in those of San Francisco and the Smithsonian
-Institution at Washington, ornamented with representations
-of adventures incident to their habits of life. An Arctic
-collection, presented by Captain Beechy to the Ashmolean
-Museum at Oxford, furnishes interesting illustrations of the
-skill of the Eskimo draughtsman. The carvings and linear
-drawings represent, for the most part, incidents in the life of
-the polar hunter; and this is so effectively done that, as
-Captain Beechy says: “By comparing one with another,
-<span class='pageno' title='205' id='Page_205'></span>
-a little history was obtained which gave us a better insight
-into their habits than could be elicited from any signs or
-intimations.”<a id='r88'/><a href='#f88' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[88]</span></sup></a> Mr. W. H. Dall figures in his <span class='it'>Alaska and
-its Resources</span>, analogous examples of Innuit or Western
-Eskimo art; and in an interesting communication by Dr J.
-W. Hoffman to the Anthropological Society of Washington,
-on Eskimo pictographs as compared with those of other
-American aborigines, he figures and interprets similar
-examples.<a id='r89'/><a href='#f89' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[89]</span></sup></a> One of these, copied from an ivory bow used
-in making fire, which he examined in the Museum of the
-Alaska Commercial Company of San Francisco, depicts three
-incidents in the Innuit hunter’s experience. In one, the
-hunter supplicates the <span class='it'>Shaman</span>, or native medicine-man, for
-success in the chase; another group represents the results of
-the chase; while the third records the incidents of an unsuccessful
-appeal to another shaman. Another graving from the
-same locality embodies the incidents of success and failure in
-a prolonged hunting expedition. In their interpretation, Dr.
-Hoffman was assisted by a Kadiack half-breed who happened
-to visit San Francisco at the time. A design of the same
-class copied from a piece of walrus ivory, carved by a
-Kiatégamut Indian of Southern Alaska, records a successful
-feat of the shaman in curing two patients. He is represented
-in the act of exorcising the demons, who are seen just cast out
-from the men restored to health by his agency. From the
-interpretations thus given, it may be inferred that such
-drawings as those described by Captain Beechy represent in
-nearly every case actual incidents. The hunter celebrates his
-return from a successful chase, his experience in the attempt
-to propitiate the supernatural powers on his behalf, or any
-other notable event, by recording the impressive incidents on
-the handle of his hunting knife or his ivory bow, or even in
-some cases on a tablet of walrus ivory; just as the enthusiastic
-sportsman will at times enter in his journal the special
-occurrences of the fox-hunt, or the more adventurous feats of
-deer-stalking, or commission an artist to perpetuate them on
-canvas. Incidents of exceptional skill or daring are no doubt
-recalled, and listened to with eager interest by the home
-<span class='pageno' title='206' id='Page_206'></span>
-circle in the Arctic snow-hut; and are confirmed in their
-most thrilling details by appeals to such graven records.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The more durable material employed alike by the ancient
-cave-dwellers of Europe and by the modern Innuit and
-Eskimo, has secured their preservation in a form best calculated
-to command attention. But similar graphic representations
-of incidents and ideas are common to various tribes of
-North American Indians. Throughout the wide region of the
-old Algonkin tribes rock-carvings, such as that of the famous
-Dighton Bock, abound. The same are no less frequent in the
-South-West from New Mexico to California; while similar
-pictographs are executed by the Ojibways in less durable
-fashion on their grave-posts, or even on strips of birch-bark.
-In like fashion, the Crees and Blackfeet of the Canadian
-North-West adorn their buffalo-skin tents with incidents of
-war and the chase, and blazon on their buffalo robes their
-personal feats of daring, and the discomfiture of their foes.
-In this way, the aboriginal draughtsman is seen in his pictorial
-devices to aim at the like result with that achieved by the old
-minstrel chronicler or the courtly herald.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Of the ornamented handles of implements recovered from
-the abodes of the ancient cave-dwellers of Europe, the most
-notable examples are far in advance of any Eskimo carvings.
-One of those, from the cave at Laugerie Basse, has been
-repeatedly engraved. It is fashioned from a piece of reindeer’s
-horn. The carver has so modified his design, and
-availed himself of the natural contour of his material, as to
-adapt it admirably to its purpose as the handle of a poignard.
-It was apparently intended to include both handle and blade;
-but probably broke in the process of manufacture, and was
-flung aside unfinished. The design is a spirited adaptation to
-the special requirements. The horns are thrown back on the
-neck, the fore legs doubled up, and the hind legs stretched
-out, as if in the act of leaping. Another finely finished
-example of a dagger-handle, from Montastrue, Peccadeau de
-l’Isle, figured by Professor de Quatrefages in his <span class='it'>Hommes
-fossiles</span>, also represents the deer with its horns thrown back;
-but from its fractured condition the position of the limbs can
-only be surmised to have corresponded to the example from
-Laugerie Basse. With those may be classed such carvings as
-<span class='pageno' title='207' id='Page_207'></span>
-the pike, so characteristically represented on a tooth of the
-cave-bear, recovered from a refuse heap in the cave of
-Durntly in the Western Pyrenees, and other similar sports of
-primitive artistic skill.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Such carvings had no other aim, we may presume, than
-the decoration of a favourite weapon, or the beguiling of a
-leisure hour. But they show the fruits of skill, and the
-observation of a practised eye, by the ingenious workmen
-whose drawings and etchings merit our careful study. Considerable
-taste and still more ingenuity are exhibited by
-many of the American aborigines, in their decorative
-carvings, and the ornamentation both of their weapons and
-dress. The characteristics of Eskimo art have been noted.
-The Thlinkets of Alaska, lying on their western border,
-manifest a like skill, making ladles and spoons from the horns
-of the deer, the mountain sheep, and goat, and carving them
-with elaborate ingenuity. They also work in walrus ivory,
-fashioning their bodkins, combs, and personal ornaments with
-varied ornamentation; decorate their knife-handles of bone,
-their paddles, and other implements; and carve grotesque
-masks, with much inventive ingenuity in the variety of the
-design, though scarcely in a style of high art. But it is
-interesting to note the different phases of this imitative
-faculty. Some tribes, such as the Algonkins, confine their
-art mainly to literal reproductions of natural objects; while
-others, such as the Chimpseyans or Babeens, the Tawatins,
-and the Clalam Indians of Vancouver Island, have developed
-a conventional style of art, often exhibiting much ingenious
-fancy in its grotesque ornamentation. This is specially
-apparent in the claystone pipes of the Chimpseyans, in
-carving which they rival the ingenious Haidahs of the Queen
-Charlotte Islands in exuberance of detail. But while the art
-has become conventional, where it is not displaced by imitations
-of the novel objects brought under their notice in their
-intercourse with Europeans its combinations are in most
-cases referable to native myths.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In many of the elaborately carved Chimpseyan pipes, their
-special purpose seems to be lost sight of in the whimsical
-profusion of ornament, embracing every native or foreign
-object that has chanced to attract the notice of the sculptor.
-<span class='pageno' title='208' id='Page_208'></span>
-Nevertheless, it may help us to do justice to the true aim of
-the Indian artist, if we call to remembrance how much of
-Christian symbolism was embodied in many a mediæval
-sculpturing of what, to the unsympathetic observer, seem now
-only conventional vines and lilies, or a mere fanciful grouping
-of dragons and snakes, with apples, figs, grapes, and thorns.
-This has to be kept in view while noting in the pipe sculptures
-human figures in strangest varieties of posture, intertwined
-with zoomorphic devices, in which the bear and the frog have
-a prominent place; and, as will be seen, a mythic significance.
-It is no less suggestive to note, alike in the Chimpseyan and
-in the Tawatin and Haidah carvings, curious analogies to the
-sculptures of Mexico, Yucatan, and Central America. This
-resemblance has been noticed, independently, by many
-observers.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Marchand, a French navigator who visited the Queen
-Charlotte Islands in 1791, after having recently seen the
-Mexican sculpture and paintings, formed the opinion that the
-Haidah works of art could be distinctly traced to Aztec
-origin.<a id='r90'/><a href='#f90' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[90]</span></sup></a> He remarks of their paintings and carvings: “The
-taste for ornament prevails in all the works of their hands;
-their canoes, their chests, and different little articles of furniture
-in use among them, are covered with figures which might
-be taken for a species of hieroglyphics; fishes and other
-animals, heads of men, and various whimsical designs, are
-mingled and confounded in order to compose a subject.
-It undoubtedly will not be expected that these figures
-should be perfectly regular and the proportions in them
-exactly observed, for here every man is a painter and
-sculptor; yet they are not deficient in a sort of elegance
-and perfection.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The imitative faculty thus manifested so generally
-among a people still in the condition of savage life, shows
-itself no less strikingly in the modern claystone carvings
-of objects of foreign introduction. The collection formed
-by the United States Exploring Expedition, and largely
-augmented since, includes numerous carvings in which
-representations of log and frame houses, forts, boats, horses,
-and fire-arms, are introduced; and where cords, pulleys,
-<span class='pageno' title='209' id='Page_209'></span>
-anchors, and other details copied from the shipping which
-frequent the coasts, furnish evidence of a practised eye,
-and considerable powers of imitation. To the unfamiliar
-observer, the result presents, in many cases, a very
-arbitrary and even incongruous jumble of miscellaneous
-details. But, most probably, the native designer had, in every
-case, a special meaning, and even some specific incident in
-view.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The interest awakened by such manifestations of observant
-accuracy and artistic skill among savage tribes is not diminished
-by the fact that in nearly all other respects they are
-devoid of culture. Notwithstanding the absence in most of
-them of the very rudiments of civilisation, experience proves
-that among the tribes to the west of the Rocky Mountains
-distinguished by artistic capacity, there is an aptitude for
-industrious and settled habits, the want of which is so noticeable
-in the nomad tribes of the prairies. Their linear patterns
-are often singularly graceful; and they employ colour lavishly,
-and with some degree of taste, in decorating their masks,
-boats, and dwellings. This is specially noticeable among the
-Haidahs, in the different dialects of whose language we find
-not only names for nearly all the primary colours, but also
-the word <span class='it'>kigunijago</span>, “a picture.” The symbolical and
-mythological significance of many of their carvings is indisputable;
-while the affinities, traceable at times to the
-ornamentation most characteristic of the architectural
-remains in the principal seats of native American civilisation
-in Central America, confer on them a peculiar interest
-and value.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The curiously conventional style of ornamentation of the
-Haidahs of Queen Charlotte Islands is lavishly expended on
-their idols, or manitous, carved in black argillaceous stone,
-and on their council-houses and lodges. In front of each
-Haidah dwelling stands an ornamented column, formed of the
-trunk of a tree, large enough, in many cases, to admit of the
-doorway being cut through it. These columns, or “totem-poles”
-as they have been called, are, in some cases, sixty or
-seventy feet high, elaborately carved with the symbols or
-totems of their owners. The height of the pole indicates the
-rank of the inmate, and any attempt at undue assumption in
-<span class='pageno' title='210' id='Page_210'></span>
-this respect is jealously resented by rival chiefs. The symbols
-of their four clans—the eagle, beaver, dog-fish, and black
-duck,—are represented in conventional style on the carved
-house-pole, along with their individual or family totems. In
-some cases boxes are attached to the poles containing the
-remains of their dead. Dr. Hoffman, whose previous studies
-in native symbolism and ideography specially prepared him
-for the intelligent observation of such monuments, has
-furnished an interpretation of their most familiar devices.
-“When the posts are the property of some individual, the
-personal totemic sign is carved at the top. Other animate
-and grotesque figures follow in rapid succession, down to the
-base, so that unless one is familiar with the mythology and
-folk-lore of the tribe, the subject would be utterly unintelligible.
-A drawing was made of one post with only seven pronounced
-carvings, but which related to three distinct myths. The bear,
-in the act of devouring a hunter, or tearing out his heart, is
-met with on many of the posts, and appears to form an
-interesting theme for the native artists. The story connected
-with this is as follows:—Toivats, an Indian, had occasion to
-visit the lodge of the King of the Bears, but found him out.
-The latter’s wife, however, was at home, and Toivats made love
-to her. Upon the return of the Bear, everything seemed to
-be in confusion. He charged his wife with infidelity, which
-she denied. The Bear pretended to be satisfied, but his
-suspicions caused him to watch his wife very closely, and he
-soon found that her visits away from the lodge for wood and
-water occurred each day at precisely the same hour. Then
-the Bear tied a magic thread to her dress, and when his wife
-again left the lodge, he followed the magic thread, and soon
-came upon his wife, finding her in the arms of Toivats. The
-Bear was so enraged at this that he tore out the heart of the
-destroyer of his happiness.”<a id='r91'/><a href='#f91' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[91]</span></sup></a> Dr. Hoffman found this myth,
-with the corresponding carvings in walrus ivory, among the
-Thlinkit Indians, who, as he conceives, obtained both the story
-and the design for their ivory carvings from the Haidahs.
-This appears to receive confirmation from the peculiar style of
-art common to both.
-<span class='pageno' title='211' id='Page_211'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But the decorations of the Haidah lodge-poles admit at
-times of a much more homely interpretation. Mr. James G.
-Swan, the author of an article on “The Haidah Indians,” in
-Vol. XXI. of the <span class='it'>Smithsonian Contributions to Knowledge</span>, in
-a communication to the <span class='it'>West Shore</span>, an Oregon journal, thus
-describes an Indian lodge and house-pole which attracted his
-notice, owing to its carved figures, in round hat and other
-European costume, surmounting the two corner-posts of the
-lodge. He accordingly made a careful drawing of the whole,
-which, as he says, “is interesting as illustrative of the grim
-humour of an Indian in trying to be avenged for what he
-considered an act of injustice a number of years ago. Bear
-Skin, a somewhat noted Haidah chief, belonging to Skidegate
-village, Queen Charlotte Islands, was in Victoria, when for
-some offence he was fined and imprisoned by Judge Pemberton,
-the police magistrate. Bear Skin felt very much insulted;
-and in order to get even with the magistrate he carved the
-two figures, which are said to be good likenesses of the Judge,
-who in this dual capacity mounts guard at each corner of the
-front of the chiefs residence. The gigantic face on the front
-of the house, and the two bears on the two mortuary columns,
-seem to be grinning with fiendish delight, while the raven on
-top of one of the columns has cocked his eye so as to have a
-fair look at the effigies beneath him. Bear Skin is dead, but
-the images still remain. It has been suggested that they be
-removed to Victoria, and be placed over the entrance to the
-police barracks, to keep watch and ward like Gog and Magog
-at the gates of old London city.” But, on the other hand, a
-symbolical meaning appears to be most frequently embodied
-in the Haidah devices; of which Mr. Swan reproduces various
-illustrations, accompanied with native interpretations of them.
-One drawing, for example, represents a grouping of conventional
-patterns such as are common on the Haidah blankets of
-goats’ hair, and in which the untutored student can discern
-little more than confused scroll-work, with here and there an
-enormous eye, rows of teeth, and a symmetrical repetition of
-the design on either side of the central device. Yet, according
-to Kitelswa, the native Haidah interpreter, “it represents
-cirrus clouds, or, as sailors term them, ‘mares’ tails and
-‘mackerel sky,’ the sure precursors of a change of weather.
-<span class='pageno' title='212' id='Page_212'></span>
-The centre figure is T’kul, the wind spirit. On the right and
-left are his feet, which are indicated by long streaming clouds;
-above are his wings, and on each side are the different winds,
-each designated by an eye, and represented by the patches
-of cirrus clouds. When T’kul determines which wind is to
-blow, he gives the word and the other winds retire. The
-change in the weather is usually followed by rain, which is
-indicated by the tears which stream from the eyes of T’kul.”
-The difficulty with which the inexperienced observer has to
-contend, in any attempt to interpret such native conventional
-art, finds apt illustration in Mr. Swan’s account of an elaborately
-sculptured lodge-pole of which he made a drawing at
-Kioosta village, on Graham Island, one of the Queen Charlotte
-group. When describing it in minute detail, he says: “I
-could make out all the figures but the butterfly, which I
-thought at first was an elephant with its trunk coiled up; but
-on inquiry of old Edinso, the chief who was conveying me in
-his canoe from Massett to Skidegate, he told me it was a
-butterfly, and pointed out one which had just lit near by on a
-flower.” The same characteristics have already been referred
-to in describing the claystone carvings of the Chimpseyans.
-They also mark the Haidah sculptures executed in the soft
-argillaceous slate which abounds in their vicinity. But the
-Haidahs work with no less ability in other materials; and
-were familiar of old with the native copper, which is brought
-from some still unascertained locality, it is believed, in Alaska.
-The collections of the Geological Survey at Ottawa include
-some of their beautifully wrought copper daggers and a massive
-and finely finished copper neck-collar. They have now learned
-to work with equal skill in iron. Their bracelets, rings, and ear
-ornaments of gold and silver; their copper shields and richly
-carved emblematic weapons, bows and arrows, iron daggers
-and war knives; as well as their wooden and horn dishes,
-spoons, masks, and toys, are eagerly sought after. The
-carvings on them, when properly explained, are of great
-interest; for every device has a meaning, and each illustrates
-a story or a legend, readily understood by the Indian, but by
-no means willingly interpreted to strangers.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A knowledge of the myths of the Haidahs and other coast
-tribes is indispensable to any interpretation of their carvings;
-<span class='pageno' title='213' id='Page_213'></span>
-and to those, accordingly, Dr. Hoffman has directed his
-attention. “A very common object,” as he says, “found
-carved upon various household vessels, handles of wooden
-spoons, etc., is the head of a human being in the act of eating
-a toad; or, as it frequently occurs, the toad placed a short
-distance below the mouth. This refers to the evil spirit,
-supposed to live in the wooded country, who has great power
-of committing evil by means of poison, supposed to be extracted
-from the toad”; but, as Dr. Hoffman adds, it is a
-difficult matter to get an Indian to acknowledge the common
-belief in the mythic being, even when aware that the inquirer
-is in possession of the main facts.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The interpretations thus furnished by a careful study of the
-carvings of the Haidahs and other artistic native tribes of
-British Columbia, and the evidence of a specific meaning and
-application discoverable in their most conventional designs,
-have a significant hearing on the study of analogous productions
-of the cave-men of Europe’s palæolithic dawn. The
-manifestations of an active imitative faculty and some degree
-of artistic skill, among different rude native tribes of this
-continent, present some striking parallels to the æsthetic aptitudes
-of the primeval draughtsmen and carvers of Europe.
-There are, moreover, undoubted resemblances in style and
-mode of representation of the objects, as depicted on some of
-the ancient and the modern bone and ivory carvings and
-drawings of the two continents; but the latter exhibit no
-evidence of progress. The Innuit and Eskimo designs do,
-indeed, more nearly approximate to those of the primitive
-draughtsmen than other aboriginal efforts; but their inferiority
-in all respects is equally striking and indisputable.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The evidence of artistic ability in the native races both of
-Central and Southern America is abundant; nor is the northern
-continent lacking in its specially artistic race. But the
-achievements of the ancient Mayas, Peruvians, or Mound-Builders,
-are of very recent date, compared with the palæolithic,
-or even the neolithic productions of Europe. It need not,
-therefore, excite our wonder to find American antiquaries
-welcoming a disclosure, only too strikingly analogous to the
-famous mammoth drawing of the La Madeleine cave. There
-recently issued from the American press a tastefully printed
-<span class='pageno' title='214' id='Page_214'></span>
-volume, in which its author, Mr. H. C. Mercer, gives an
-account of the discovery, near Doylestown, Pennsylvania, of a
-“gorget stone” of soft shale, on which is graven what the
-author describes as “unquestionably a picture of a combat
-between savages and the hairy mammoth. The monster,
-angry, and with erect tail, approaches the forest, in which
-through the pine-trunks are seen the wigwams of an Indian
-village.” The sun, moon, and the forked lightning overhead,
-complete a design which could scarcely deserve serious notice,
-so palpable is the evidence of the fabrication, were it not for
-the unmistakable sincerity with which the author sets forth
-the narration, and assures us that after the most careful
-inquiry “nothing has occurred to shake his faith in the unimpeachable
-evidence of an honest discovery.”<a id='r92'/><a href='#f92' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[92]</span></sup></a> The figure of
-the mammoth has a suspiciously near resemblance, in all but
-one respect, to the La Madeleine graving on mammoth ivory.
-It charges its assailants with lowered trunk and erect tail;
-but instead of presenting, as in the ancient cave-dweller’s
-drawing, evidence of aptitude in the free use of the pencil or
-graving tool, the scratchings on the Lenape Stone are crude
-and inartistic, even if tried by the rudest standard of Indian
-art. It may, perhaps, be worth noting that—if the design
-has not been purposely reversed in order to evade comparison
-with the genuine European example,—it is a left-handed
-drawing. The forgery of palæolithic implements has become a
-systematic branch of manufacture in Europe; and the “Grave
-Creek Stone,” the “Ohio Holy Stone,” and other similar productions
-of perverted American ingenuity are familiar to us.
-It need not, therefore, excite any special wonder to find a like
-activity in the production of fictitious examples of pictorial
-art.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But North America has its own ancient artistic race, which,
-though claiming no such antiquity as that of Aquitaine, is, in
-the primary sense of the term, essentially prehistoric. Among
-the æsthetic productions of older races of the continent, the
-carvings and sculptures of the ancient Mound-Builders of Ohio
-not only admit of comparison with those of Europe’s primitive
-workers in bone and ivory, but even, in one respect, surpass
-<span class='pageno' title='215' id='Page_215'></span>
-them. For it is curious to observe that the palæolithic artists,
-whose carvings and drawings manifest such a capacity for
-appreciating the grace of animal form, and for reproducing
-with such truthfulness objects and scenes familiar to them in
-the chase, seem to have invariably failed, or at least shown a
-surprising lack of skill, in their attempts to delineate the
-human face and figure. Professor de Quatrefages notes of one
-such carving: “M. Massénat has brought from Laugerie Basse
-a fragment of reindeer’s horn, on which is graven a male
-aurochs fleeing before a man armed with a lance or javelin.
-The animal is magnificent; the man, on the contrary, is
-detestable, devoid alike of proportion and true portraiture.”<a id='r93'/><a href='#f93' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[93]</span></sup></a>
-Some beautiful Mexican terra-cotta human masks have been
-preserved; and, amid the endless varieties of quaint and
-whimsical device in Peruvian pottery, singularly graceful
-portrait-vases occur. But, as a rule, even among the civilised
-Mexicans, imitations of the human face and figure seldom
-passed beyond the grotesque; and although the sculptors of
-Central America and Yucatan manifested an artistic power
-which accords with the civilisation of a lettered people, yet,
-in the majority of their statues and reliefs, the human form
-and features are subordinated to the symbolism of their
-mythology, or to mere decorative requirements. In the
-carvings of the old Mound-Builders, as in those of the vastly
-more ancient artists of palæolithic Europe, we have to deal
-with miniature works of art; but both include productions
-meriting the designation. The variety and expressiveness of
-many of the mound sculptures, their careful execution, and the
-evidence of imitative skill which they furnish, all combine to
-render them objects of interest. But foremost in every trait
-of value are the human heads. In view of the accuracy of
-many of the miniature sculptures of animals, it has been
-reasonably assumed that they perpetuate no less trustworthy
-representations of the workmen by whom they were carved.
-Equally well-executed examples of contemporary portraiture,
-recovered from palæolithic caves of Europe, would be prized
-above all other relics of its Mammoth or Reindeer period.
-Nevertheless, striking as is the character of the art of the
-Aligéwi, it differs only in degree of merit from that of many
-<span class='pageno' title='216' id='Page_216'></span>
-modern Indian races; and in some of the Algonkin stone-pipes
-the human figure is carved with well-proportioned
-symmetry. In such carvings, moreover, even when expended
-on the decoration of the pipe,—which was employed among so
-many native tribes in their most important ceremonial and
-religious observances,—there is rarely anything to suggest a
-higher aim of the artist than mere decoration. The same may
-be assumed of the ancient carvers, in such work as they
-expended on the hafts of the daggers found at Montastrue or
-Laugerie Basse. But when a carefully executed linear drawing
-occurs on a rough slab of schist, with its fractured edges left
-untrimmed, as is the case in examples from the caves of Les
-Eysies and Massat, the artist manifestly had some other
-purpose in view; and this I conceive to have been the earliest
-stage of ideography or picture-writing. He was communicating
-facts in detail by means of his pencil which his best attempts
-at verbal description would have failed to convey.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Language is even now a very inadequate means of communicating
-to others specific ideas of form; and some of the
-most fluent lecturers in those departments of science, such as
-geology, biology, and anthropology, in which there is a frequent
-demand for the appreciation of details in form and structure,
-habitually resort to the chalk and blackboard. Students of
-my own earlier days will recall, as among their most pleasant
-memories, the facile pencil with which the gifted naturalist,
-Edward Forbes, seemed equally eloquent with hand and tongue;
-and no one who enjoyed the lucid demonstrations of Agassiz
-in the same fields of scientific research can think of him otherwise
-than with chalk in hand. To the uncultured, yet
-strangely gifted Troglodyte of the primeval dawn, language
-was still more inadequate for his requirements; and hence, as
-I imagine, the facile pencil was in frequent requisition for
-purposes of demonstration, with ever-growing skill to the
-practised hand. Professor de Quatrefages, who has enjoyed
-unusually favourable opportunities for the study of those
-productions, thus directs attention to their artistic merits: “The
-art of the draughtsman, or rather of the engraver, almost constantly
-applied to the representation of animals, was first tried
-on bone or horn. They have attempted it on stone. The
-burin must have been almost always a mere pointed flint.
-<span class='pageno' title='217' id='Page_217'></span>
-With this instrument, imperfect though it was, the Troglodytes
-of the Reindeer age succeeded by degrees in producing results
-altogether remarkable. The first lines are simple and more or
-less vague. At a later stage they become more defined, and
-acquire a singular firmness and precision; the principal lines
-become deeper; details, such as the fur and mane, are indicated
-by lighter lines, and even the shading is expressed by
-delicate hatching. But what is nearly always apparent is a
-sense of truthful realisation, and the exact copying of characteristics
-which enable us often to recognise not only the order,
-but the precise species, which the artist wished to represent.
-The bear, engraved on a piece of schist which was found by
-M. Garrigou in the lower cave at Massat, with the characteristic
-projecting forehead, can be no other than the cave-bear,
-the bones of which were recovered by that observer in the
-same place. When we compare the drawings and anatomical
-details of the Siberian mammoth with the engraving on ivory
-discovered by M. Lartet at La Madeleine, it is impossible to
-avoid recognising the <span class='it'>Elephas primigenius</span> which existed
-throughout the Glacial period, and which has been recovered
-entire in the frozen soil of Northern Asia. Oxen, wild goats,
-the stag, the antelope, the otter, the beaver, the horse, the
-aurochs, whales, certain species of fish, etc., have been found
-recognisable with the like certainty. The reindeer especially
-is frequently represented with remarkable skill. This may be
-seen by the engraving found near Thayingen, in Switzerland.”<a id='r94'/><a href='#f94' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[94]</span></sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>M. de Quatrefages is disposed to estimate the artistic merit
-of the carvings in ivory as even greater than that of the drawings
-or etchings. But specific form and contour are more
-easily realisable than their indication on a plane surface. To
-do full justice to the wonderful skill of the Troglodyte draughtsman,
-we must compare the most highly-finished paintings on
-Egyptian temples and tombs with the works of their sculptors;
-or even the perfect realisations of the Greek sculptors’ chisel,
-with drawings on the most beautiful Hellenic vases. The
-mastery of perspective, as shown in some of the works of those
-palæolithic artists is remarkable when compared, for example,
-with the Assyrian bas-reliefs; not to speak of the infantile
-<span class='pageno' title='218' id='Page_218'></span>
-efforts of the Chinese on their otherwise justly prized ceramic
-ware.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The potter’s art is at all times an interesting study to the
-archæologist. We owe to Etruscan and Hellenic fictile ware
-our sole knowledge of painting, contemporary with the most
-gifted masters of the sculptor’s art. But it is in the form,
-rather than the decoration, that the chief excellency of the art
-of the potter consists. It is one of the plastic arts. The clay
-in the hands of the skilled modeller is even more facile than
-the pencil of the draughtsman; and the distinction between the
-purely decorative sports of an exuberant fancy, and the purposed
-symbolism of the carver or painter, is nowhere more
-strikingly manifest than in the modellings of the ingenious
-worker in clay. But fictile art belongs, for the most part, to
-periods greatly more recent than that of the ancient Stone
-age. Not that the work of the primitive potter involved such
-laboriously accumulated skill as lay beyond reach of the palæolithic
-carver and draughtsman; for clay cylinders from the banks
-of the Euphrates, and the terra-cottas from the Nile valley,
-carry us back to times that long antedate definite history.
-But alike among the ancient cave-dwellers of Aquitaine, and
-the modern Eskimo, the prevailing conditions of an Arctic or
-semi-Arctic climate rendered clay, fuel, and other needful appliances
-so rarely available, that among the latter, their pots and
-lamps are fashioned for the most part of the <span class='it'>Lapis ollaris</span>, or
-potstone. But traces of the pottery of many periods and races
-abound, and furnish interesting materials for comparison. The
-aptitude of the potter’s clay for a display of skill, alike in
-modelling and in tracing on the surface imitative designs and
-ornamental patterns, renders the fictile ware of widely different
-eras a ready test of æsthetic feeling, as well as a trustworthy
-guide to the age and race of its artificers. To the ancient
-cave-men, to whose skill such carvings as the reindeer from
-Laugerie Basse, or Montastrue, are due, modelling in clay
-would have been as easy and natural as to the modern sculptor;
-and pottery, if well-burnt, when not exposed to violence,
-is little less durable than flint or stone. The rarity, or total
-absence, of pottery among the contents of the palæolithic caves
-accords with other indications of a rigorous climate. A piece
-of plain earthenware was, indeed, recovered from the Belgian
-<span class='pageno' title='219' id='Page_219'></span>
-cave of Trou de Frontal; and Sir W. Dawson, in his <span class='it'>Fossil
-Men</span>, calls attention to the discovery, recorded by Fournal and
-Christie, of fragments of pottery in the mud and breccia of
-caverns in the south of France, along with bones of man and
-animals, including those of the hyæna and rhinoceros. Those,
-however, whatever be their true epoch, are mere potsherds,
-valuable in so far as they indicate the practice of the potter’s
-art at such a time, but furnishing no illustration of skill in
-modelling.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The pottery found in graves of the Neolithic period is
-mostly so imperfectly burned, that, however abundant it may
-have been, it could scarcely leave a trace in the breccia, or
-river gravel, from which the larger number of relics of palæolithic
-man have been recovered. But the pottery and terra-cottas
-which abound on the sites of Indian villages in North
-America everywhere exhibit traces of imitative art, in the
-efforts at modelling the human form, and the more or less
-successful reproduction of familiar natural objects. Squier
-remarks in his “Aboriginal Monuments of the State of New
-York,” that “upon the site of every Indian town, as also
-within all of the ancient enclosures, fragments of pottery occur
-in great abundance. It is rare, however, that any entire
-vessels are recovered.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. In general there was no
-attempt at ornament; but sometimes the exteriors of the pots
-and vases were elaborately, if not tastefully, ornamented with
-dots and lines, which seem to have been formed in a very rude
-manner with a pointed stick or sharpened bone. Bones which
-appear to have been adapted for the purpose are often found.”<a id='r95'/><a href='#f95' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[95]</span></sup></a>
-Ornamentation of a more artistic kind appears to have been
-most frequently reserved by the native workers in clay for
-their pipes, to which at times a sacred character was attached,
-and on which accordingly they lavished their highest skill as
-modellers and carvers. Some of the smaller articles of burnt
-clay, however, which Squier denominates terra-cottas, were
-probably fragments of domestic pottery similar to those hereafter
-described among the relics of the ancient Indian town of
-Hochelaga. One example of an ingeniously modelled pipe,
-found within an enclosure in Jefferson County, New York, is
-specially selected as a good illustration of Indian art. It is of
-<span class='pageno' title='220' id='Page_220'></span>
-fine red clay, smoothly moulded, with two serpents coiling
-round the bowl. “Bushels of fragments of pipes,” he adds,
-“have been found within the same enclosure.” A carved stone
-pipe, from a grave in Cayuga County, is described as fashioned
-in the form of a bird with eyes made of silver inserted in the
-head, and Mr. Squier notes of another specimen: “The most
-beautiful terra-cotta which I found in the State, and which in
-point of accuracy and delicacy of finish is unsurpassed by any
-similar article which I have seen of aboriginal origin, is the
-head of a fox. The engraving fails to convey the spirit of the
-original, which is composed of fine clay slightly burned. It
-seems to have been once attached to a body, or perhaps to a
-vessel of some kind. It closely resembles some of the terra-cottas
-from the mounds of the west and south-west. It was
-found upon the site of an ancient enclosure in Jefferson
-County, in the town of Ellisburg.” Again, in describing some
-similar relics from the site of an old Seneca village in Munroe
-County, he adds: “The spot is remarkable for the number and
-variety of its ancient relics. Vast quantities of these have
-been removed from time to time. Some of the miniature
-representations of animals found here are remarkable for their
-accuracy.”<a id='r96'/><a href='#f96' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[96]</span></sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The descriptions thus furnished of the traces of aboriginal art
-in the State of New York closely correspond to the remains
-recovered on the sites of ancient Indian villages in Canada.
-A finely modelled clay-pipe, with a serpent twined round it,
-and holding a human head in its jaws, now in my possession,
-was dug up, along with numerous other clay-pipes, bone pins,
-and other relics, in Norfolk County, on the north shore of
-Lake Erie. I also possess casts of some ingeniously modelled
-clay-pipes found a few years since in an ossuary at Lake
-Medad, near Watertown, about ten miles west from Hamilton,
-Ontario. This no doubt marks the site of an ancient town of
-the Attiwendaronks, or Neuter Nation, who were finally conquered
-and driven out by the Iroquois in 1635, when the little
-remnant that survived was adopted into the Seneca nation.
-Mr. B. E. Charlton, who explored the Lake Medad ossuaries,
-after describing the human remains, along with large tropical
-shells, shell-beads and other relics, adds: “With these were
-<span class='pageno' title='221' id='Page_221'></span>
-found antique pipes of stone and clay, many of them bearing
-extraordinary devices, figures of animals, and of human heads
-wearing the conical cap noticed on similar relics in Mexico
-and Peru.”<a id='r97'/><a href='#f97' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[97]</span></sup></a> Similar discoveries rewarded the researches of
-Dr. Taché in the Huron ossuaries on the Georgian Bay,
-examples of which are now in the museum of Laval
-University.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the site of the famous Indian town of Hochelaga, the
-precursor of the city of Montreal, detached fragments, in well-burnt
-clay, including modellings of the human head and neck,
-had been repeatedly found, before the recovery of larger
-portions of the Hochelaga pottery showed that projections
-modelled in this form within the mouths of their earthern pots
-or kettles were designed to admit of their suspension over the
-fire. Any projection within the mouth of the pot would have
-answered the purpose of protecting the cord or withe from the
-risk of burning; so that the moulding of it into the human
-form furnishes an illustration of the play of the imitative
-faculty under circumstances little calculated to call it forth.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The decoration of domestic pottery by the American Indian
-workers in clay is greatly developed among the more southern
-tribes. The ornamentation of a few prominent points, moulded
-more or less rudely into human or animal heads, gives place
-with them to the modelling of the vessel itself into animal
-forms, or to its decoration, chiefly with human or animal
-figures. Among the examples of native art in the National
-Museum at Washington are two large vases, remarkable for
-their elaborate workmanship, which were brought from
-Mexico, by General Alfred Gibbs. They are figured, along
-with other specimens of Mexican pottery and terra-cottas, in
-Mr. Charles Rau’s account of the Archæological Collection of
-the United States National Museum. They are there spoken
-of as “two large vases of exquisite workmanship,” and one of
-them is not only described as an admirable specimen of Mexican
-pottery, but it is added: “As far as the general outline is
-concerned, it might readily be taken for a vessel of Etruscan or
-Greek origin. The peculiar ornamentation, however, stamps it
-at once as a Mexican product of art:”<a id='r98'/><a href='#f98' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[98]</span></sup></a> and, it may be added,
-<span class='pageno' title='222' id='Page_222'></span>
-in doing so, places it in very marked contrast to any example
-of Etruscan or Greek workmanship. Its modelling, both in
-general form and in all its curious zoomorphic details, is
-essentially barbarous, yet manifesting ingenious skill in the
-workmanship, and exuberant fancy in design. The influence
-of Mexican art extended northward; and its characteristics
-may be traced in much of the native pottery of the Southern
-States. But throughout Mexico, Central America, and the
-Isthmus, the modeller in clay appears to have revelled in feats
-of skill. Clay masks and caricatures, and heads of men and
-animals, in endless variety of dress and fashioning, abound.
-Utility is in many cases rendered altogether subsidiary to the
-sports of fancy. Musical instruments are made in the form of
-animals; and vases and earthenware vessels of every kind are
-modelled in imitation of vegetables, fruit, and shells, or decorated
-with familiar natural objects. This is still more apparent
-in Peruvian pottery, where an unrestrained exuberance of
-fancy sports with the pliant clay. Animal and vegetable
-forms are combined. Men and women are represented in their
-daily avocations, as porters, water-carriers, etc. Portrait-vases
-represent the human head, characterised at times by grace and
-beauty; but more frequently grotesquely caricatured. The
-human head surmounts the lithe body of the monkey, sporting
-in ape-like antics; melons and gourds have animal heads for
-spouts; while the duck, parrot, toucan, pelican, turkey, crane,
-land-turtle, lynx, otter, deer, llama, cayman, shark, toad, etc.,
-are ingeniously reproduced, singly or in groups, as models for
-bottles, jars, or pitchers. The double or triple goblets, and
-two-necked bottles or jugs, acquire a fresh interest from resemblances
-traceable between some of them and others belonging
-to distant localities and remote ages. The Fijians, on the
-extreme western verge of the Polynesian archipelago, have
-already been referred to for their skill in the finished workmanship
-of their implements, and of their pottery, some of
-which suggest curious analogies to Peruvian types. But it is
-more interesting to note the apparent reproduction of Egyptian,
-Etruscan, and other antique forms in Peruvian fictile ware;
-and to recognise on the latter the Vitruvian scroll, the Grecian
-fret and other ancient classic and Assyrian patterns—not as
-evidence of common origin, but as originating independently
-<span class='pageno' title='223' id='Page_223'></span>
-from the ornamentation naturally produced in the work of the
-straw-plaiter and weaver. Still more curious are their analogies
-to ancient Asiatic art, as disclosed in a comparison with
-many of the objects recovered by Dr. Schliemann on Homeric
-sites. Among the relics which rewarded his exploration of the
-site of the classic Ilios, are examples of double-necked jugs,
-terra-cotta groups of goblets united as single vessels, along
-with others terminating with mouthpieces in the forms of
-human or animal heads; or modelled with such quaint
-ingenuity to represent the hippopotamus, horse, pig, hedgehog,
-mole, and other animals, that, were it not for the strange fauna
-selected for imitation, they would seem little out of place in
-any collection of Peruvian pottery.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The same exuberant sportiveness of the imitative faculty,
-so characteristic of the races of the New World, reappears in
-productions of the native metallurgists of Mexico and Central
-America. Casting, engraving, chasing, and carving in metal,
-were all practised by the Mexicans with a lavish expenditure
-of misspent labour. Ingenious toys, birds and beasts with
-moveable wings and limbs, fish with alternate scales of gold
-and silver, and personal ornaments in many fanciful forms,
-were wrought by the Mexican goldsmiths with such skill that
-the Spaniards acknowledged the superiority of the native
-workmanship over any product of European art. The ancient
-graves of the Isthmus of Panama have yielded immense
-numbers of gold relics of the same class, though inferior to
-the finest examples described above. They include beasts,
-birds, and fishes, frogs and other natural objects, wrought in
-gold with much skill and ingenuity. The frog is made with
-sockets for the eyes, an oval slit in front, and within each a
-detached ball of gold, executed apparently in a single casting.
-Balls of clay are also frequently found enclosed in detached
-chambers in the pottery of the Isthmus. Human figures
-wrought in gold, and monstrous or grotesque hybrids, with the
-head of the cayman, eagle, vulture, and other animals, attached
-to the human form, are also of frequent occurrence; though
-in this class of works the modelling of the human form is
-generally inferior to that of other animate designs. All of those
-curious relics are found in graves, which, judging from the
-condition of the human remains, are of great antiquity; if,
-<span class='pageno' title='224' id='Page_224'></span>
-indeed, they do not point to the central cradle and common
-source of Aztec and Peruvian art.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is thus apparent that the imitative faculty, which manifests
-itself in very different degrees among diverse races, was
-widely diffused throughout the native tribes of the American
-continent. But, while a certain aptitude for art is seen to be
-prevalent among some of the rudest tribes, there were, no
-doubt, among all of them exceptional examples of artistic
-ability. There were the Jossakeeds and the Wabenos, skilled
-in picturing on bark and deer-skin; and the official annalists
-or “Wampum-keepers,” who perpetuated the national traditions.
-Among the arrow-makers were some famed for their
-dexterity in fashioning the hornstone or jasper into arrow
-heads; and, while the art of the potter proved no less easy to
-female hands than that of the baker, there were, doubtless,
-among them some few rarely-gifted modellers, whose skill in
-fashioning clay into favourite forms of imitative art won them
-a name among the ceramic artists of their tribe. Pabahmesad,
-the old Chippewa, of the Great Manitoulin Island, in Lake
-Huron, famed for his skill in pipe carving, has been referred
-to in illustrating the trade and manufacture of the Stone age.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The little remnant of the once-powerful Huron race now
-settled on the river St. Charles, near Quebec, expend their
-ingenious art on the manufacture of bark canoes, snow-shoes,
-la-crosse clubs, basket-work, and moccasins. In this they show
-much skill and dexterity; but among their most adroit workers
-in recent years was Zacharee Thelariolin, who claimed to be
-the last full-blood Indian belonging to the band. He manifested
-considerable ability as an artist, had an apt faculty for
-sketching from nature, and painted successfully in oil. A
-portrait of himself, in full Indian costume, now in the
-possession of Mr. Clint of Quebec, is a relic of much interest
-as the work of an untaught native Indian, in whom the
-hereditary imitative faculty thus manifested itself under
-circumstances little calculated to favour its development. He
-was sixty-six years of age when he executed this portrait.
-Had it been his fortune to attract the attention of some
-appreciative patron in early years he might have made a name
-for himself and his people.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Another curious and exceptional example of native artistic
-<span class='pageno' title='225' id='Page_225'></span>
-ability may be noted here. The studio of Edmonia Lewis, the
-sculptor, has long been known to tourists visiting Rome. Her
-history is a curious one. Her father was a Negro, and her
-mother a Chippewa Indian. She was born at Greenbush, on
-the Hudson river, and reared among the Indians till the age of
-fourteen, both of her parents having died in her childhood. Her
-Indian name was <span class='it'>Suhkuhegarequa</span>, or Wildfire; but she changed
-it to that by which she is now known on being admitted to
-the Moravian school at Oberlin, Ohio. After three years
-schooling she went to Boston, where, it is said, the sight of
-the fine statue of Franklin awoke in her the ambition to be a
-sculptor. She sought out William Lloyd Garrison, and in
-simple directness told him she wanted to do something like
-the statue of the printer-statesman. The great abolitionist
-befriended her. She received needful training in a local
-studio, started an <span class='it'>atelier</span> of her own, and when I saw her in
-Boston, in 1864, she was modelling a life-size statue emblematic
-of the emancipation of the race to which she, in part,
-belonged. Africa was impersonated, raising herself from a
-prostrate attitude, and, with her hand shading her eyes, was
-looking at the dawn. Soon after the sculptor went to Rome,
-and she has there executed works of considerable merit. Her
-most successful productions may be assumed to reflect the
-artistic aptitudes of her mother’s race. Her two best works
-in marble are “Hiawatha’s Wooing” and “Hiawatha’s Wedding.”
-A Boston critic, in reviewing her works, says: “She
-has always had remarkable power of manipulation, beginning
-with beads and wampum, and rising to clay. She has fine
-artistic feeling and talent, a sort of instinct for form and beauty
-demanding outward expression.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The wide diffusion of this imitative faculty and feeling for
-form was no doubt stimulated by its employment for representative
-and symbolic purposes. The relation of imitative
-drawing to written language is equally manifest in the graven
-records of the Nile valley and the analogous inscriptions of
-Yucatan or Peru. Quipus, wampum, and all other mnemonic
-systems, dependent on the transmission of images and ideas
-from one generation to another, literally, by word of mouth,
-have within themselves no such germ of higher development
-as the picture-writing or sculpturing of the early Egyptians,
-<span class='pageno' title='226' id='Page_226'></span>
-from which all the alphabets of Europe have been evolved.
-The phonetic signs, inherited by us directly from the Romans,
-seem so simple, and yet are of such priceless value in their
-application, that it seems natural to think of the letters of
-Cadmus as a gift not less wonderful than speech; since, by
-their instrumentality, the wise of all ages speak to us still.
-Plutarch tells, in his <span class='it'>De Iside et Osiride</span>, that when Thoth, the
-god of letters, first appeared on the earth, the inhabitants of
-Egypt had no language, but only uttered the cries of animals.
-They had, at least, no language with which to speak to other
-generations; nor any common speech to supersede the confusion
-of tongues which characterised their great river valley,
-bordering on Asia, and forming the highway from Ethiopia to
-the Mediterranean Sea. The light thrown for us on the climate,
-the fauna, the people, and the whole social life of Europe’s
-Palæolithic era, by a few graphic delineations of its primitive
-artists, suffices to show how the northern Thoth may have
-manifested his advent among them.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The condition of the Indian tribes in the North-West, in
-British Columbia, and in the territories of the United States,
-abundantly illustrates the effect of a multiplicity of languages
-among nomad savages. The Blackfeet are in reality a political
-and not an ethnical confederation, with at least three distinct
-languages, and numerous dialects spoken among their dispersed
-tribes. The same condition is found among the Kiawakaskaia
-Indians, beyond the Rocky Mountains. In the confluence of
-the nomad hunters to common centres of trade, speech accordingly
-fails them for all purposes of intercommunication; and
-travellers and fur-traders have long been familiar with the
-growth of a common language at more than one of the chief
-meeting-places of diverse tribes and races on the Pacific coast.
-The Clatsop, in so far as it is native, is a dialect of the Cowlitz
-language; but, as now in use, it is one of the jargons or “trade
-languages” of the Pacific. But Fort Vancouver, long one of
-the largest trading-posts of the Hudson Bay Company, has
-been the special Babel where, out of the strangest confusion of
-tongues, a new language has been evolved.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The organisation of part of the territory west of the Rocky
-Mountains into the province of British Columbia is rapidly
-modifying the character of its native population. But in
-<span class='pageno' title='227' id='Page_227'></span>
-recent years there were frequently to be found at Fort Vancouver
-upwards of two hundred <span class='it'>voyageurs</span> with their Indian
-wives and families, in addition to the factors and clerks.
-Thither also resorted for trading purposes, Chinook, Nootka,
-Nisqually, Walla-walla, Klikatat, Kalapurgas, Klackamuss,
-Cowlitz, and other Indians. A discordant Babel of languages
-accordingly prevailed; and hence the growth of a <span class='it'>patois</span> by
-which all could hold intercourse together. The principal native
-tribe of the locality is the Chinook, a branch of the Flathead
-Indians on the Columbia river. They speak a language rivalling
-that of the Hottentots in its seemingly inarticulate character.
-Some of its sounds, according to Dr. Charles Pickering,
-could scarcely be represented by any combination of known
-letters; and Paul Kane, who travelled as an artist among them,
-described it to me as consisting of harsh spluttering sounds proceeding
-from the throat, apparently unguided either by the
-tongue or lips. This language accordingly repelled every
-attempt at its mastery by others. The Cree is the native
-language most familiar to the traders, many of their wives
-being Cree women. Both French and English are spoken
-among themselves; while, in addition to the tribes already
-named, natives of the Sandwich Islands, Chinese, and other
-foreigners, add to the strange character and speech of this
-miscellaneous community. Out of all those elements the
-“Chinook jargon” or trade-language of the locality has
-fashioned itself.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Vocabularies of the Oregon or Chinook jargon have been
-repeatedly published since 1838, when the Rev. Samuel
-Parker made the first attempt to reduce it to writing. But
-it is necessarily in an unstable condition, with local variations
-and a changing vocabulary. The latest <span class='it'>Dictionary of the
-Chinook Jargon, or Trade Language of Oregon</span>, is that of Mr.
-George Gibbs, published by the Smithsonian Institution in
-1863, and includes nearly five hundred words. When studied
-in all its bearings, it is a singularly interesting example of the
-effort at the development of a means of intercommunication
-among such a strange gathering of heterogeneous races. In an
-analysis of the various sources of its vocabulary, Mr. Gibbs
-assigns about two-fifths of the words to the Chinook and
-Clatsop languages. But in this he includes one of the most
-<span class='pageno' title='228' id='Page_228'></span>
-characteristic elements of the jargon. The representatives of
-so many widely dissimilar peoples, in their efforts at mutual
-communication, naturally resorted to diverse forms of imitation;
-foremost among which was onomatopœia. There are
-such mimetic words as <span class='it'>he-he</span>, “laughter”; <span class='it'>hoh-hoh</span>, “to cough”;
-<span class='it'>tish-tish</span>, “to drive”; <span class='it'>lip-lip</span>, “to boil”; <span class='it'>poh</span>, “to blow out”;
-<span class='it'>tik-tik</span>, “a watch”; <span class='it'>tin-lin</span> or <span class='it'>ting-ling</span>, “a bell”; <span class='it'>tum-tum</span>,
-“the heart,” from its pulsation; and hence a number of modifications
-in which the heart is used as equivalent to mind or
-will, etc. Again, varying intonations are resorted to in order
-to express different shades of meaning, as <span class='it'>sey-yaw</span>, “far off,” in
-which the first syllable is lengthened out according to the idea
-of greater or less distance indicated. Many of their words, as
-in all interjectional utterances, depend for their specific meaning
-on the intonations of the speaker. Such utterances play so
-small a part in our own speech, that we are apt to overlook
-the force of the interrogative, affirmative, and negative tones,
-and even the change of meaning that is often produced by the
-transfer of emphasis from one to another word.<a id='r99'/><a href='#f99' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[99]</span></sup></a> But with
-such an imperfect means of intercommunication as the trade
-jargon, there is a constant motive not only to help out the
-meaning by expressive intonation, but also by signs or gesture-language.
-“A horse” for example, is <span class='it'>kuatan</span>; but “riding” or
-“on horseback” is expressed by accompanying the word with
-the gesture of two fingers placed astride over the other hand.
-<span class='it'>Tenas</span> is “little” or “a child,”—in the latter case, accompanied
-by the gesture suggestive of its size,—or it may mean
-“an infant,” by the first syllable being prolonged to indicate
-that it is very small. In addition to all this, words are
-borrowed from all sources; and the miscellaneous vocabulary
-is completed from English, French, Cree, Ojibway, Nootka,
-Chihalis, Nisqually, Kalapuy, and other tongues.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The late Paul Kane is my authority for some of the details
-<span class='pageno' title='229' id='Page_229'></span>
-of intonation and gesture-language. He brought back with
-him a valuable collection of studies of the different races in
-British North America; and, by means of the jargon, he
-learned in a short time to converse without difficulty with the
-chiefs of most of the tribes around Fort Vancouver. But as
-an artist he was in constant use of his pencil; and, as he told
-me, he frequently appealed to it, sketching himself, or at times
-putting his pencil and note-book into their hands, with considerable
-success in thus supplementing less definite signs.
-The gesture-language furnishes Cheyenne, Dakota, Apache, and
-other signs for “paint, colour, draw,” and “write”; the act of
-writing or drawing being expressed by holding up the palm of
-one hand and moving the forefinger of the other over it, as if
-drawing. The jargon has also its word <span class='it'>pent</span>, “paint,” transformed
-to a verb by prefixing the word <span class='it'>mamook</span>, “to do,
-to make”; and its <span class='it'>tzum</span>, “painting,” or “mixed colours”;
-<span class='it'>mamooktzum</span>, “to paint.” In the gesture-language of the
-Dakotas and Apaches the equivalent sign is primarily indicative
-of daubing the face with colour; but the tribes of the Pacific
-coast paint their masks, boats, and houses in diverse coloured
-devices, with some degree of taste. There is, therefore, reason
-to look for terms expressive of the art in any language in use
-among them; though the habitual employment of signs may in
-some cases check the evolution of phonetic equivalents. But
-among many tribes gesture-language has been systematised into
-universally recognised pictographs, and so developed into a native
-system of hieroglyphics.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Among the Algonkin, Lenape, Iroquois, and other northern
-tribes, and in the region comprising New Mexico, Arizona,
-Colorado, and other south-western territory, rock-carvings and
-pictographs abound. Wherever large surfaces of rock, or slabs
-of stone, offer a favourable opportunity for such records, they
-are found, at times executed with great elaboration of detail.
-But less durable records are in use, dependent on the materials
-most available to the scribe. The Algonkins and Iroquois
-ordinarily resort to birch-bark; the Crees, Blackfeet, and other
-prairie Indians, substitute the dressed skins of the buffalo;
-while, as already noted, the tribes on the Pacific coast, as well as
-the Innuit and Eskimo, employ deerhorn and ivory. In the
-South-West, in the Sierra Nevada and Southern California, the
-<span class='pageno' title='230' id='Page_230'></span>
-sculptured pictograph, after being incised on the surface of a
-rock, or the wall of a cave, is frequently finished by colouring
-in much the same way as was the custom with the ancient
-Egyptian chroniclers.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Among a series of reports to the Topographical Bureau,
-issued from the War Department at Washington, in 1850, is
-the journal of a military reconnaissance from Santa Fé, New
-Mexico, to the Navajo Country, by Lieutenant James K. Simpson
-of the Corps of Topographical Engineers. His narrative is
-accompanied with a map and illustrations of a remarkable
-series of inscriptions, engraved on the smooth surface of a rock
-called the Moro. They are of two classes, the native pictographs,
-and also numerous Spanish inscriptions and devices;
-one of which records the hasty visit of an old Spanish explorer
-to the Moro Rock in 1606. The route of Lieutenant Simpson
-lay up the valley of the Rio de Zuñi, where he met an old
-trader among the Navajos, who was waiting to offer his services
-as guide to a rock, upon the face of which were, according to
-his repeated assertions, “half an acre of inscriptions.” After
-travelling about eight miles, through a country diversified
-by cliffs of basalt and red and white sandstone, in every
-variety of bold and fantastic form, they came in sight of a
-quadrangular mass of white sandstone rock, from 200 feet
-to 250 feet in height. This was the Moro, or Inscription
-Rock, on ascending a low mound at the base of which, the
-journalist states, “sure enough here were inscriptions, and
-some of them very beautiful; and although, with those we
-afterwards examined on the south face of the rock, there could
-not be said to be half an acre of them, yet the hyperbole was
-not near so extravagant as I was prepared to find it.” The
-inscriptions, some in Spanish, and others in, Latin, apparently
-include examples nearly coeval with the conquest of this region,
-by Juan de Onate, in 1595; and from their historical interest
-they naturally received greater attention from the Topographical
-Corps than the Indian hieroglyphics. But the same
-locality was visited at a later date by surveyors appointed to
-ascertain the most practicable route for a railroad to the Pacific
-coast; and in a Report of explorations and surveys, published
-by the Senate of the United States in 1856, Lieutenant
-Whipple furnishes an interesting series of Indian hieroglyphics
-<span class='pageno' title='231' id='Page_231'></span>
-or pictographs seen on his route. “The first of the Indian
-hieroglyphics,” he remarks, “were at Rocky Dell Creek, between
-the edge of the Llano Estacado and the Canadian. The stream
-flows through a gorge, upon one side of which a shelving sandstone
-rock forms a sort of cave. The roof is covered with
-paintings, some evidently ancient; and beneath are innumerable
-carvings of footprints, animals, and symmetrical lines.”<a id='r100'/><a href='#f100' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[100]</span></sup></a>
-Examples of these are given; but of one series, the sketches
-of which had been lost, Lieutenant Whipple remarks: “This
-series, more than the others, seems to represent a chain of
-historical events, being embraced by serpentine lines. First is
-a rude sketch, resembling a ship with sails; then comes a
-horse with gay trappings, a man with a long speaking-trumpet
-being mounted upon him, while a little bare-legged Indian
-stands in wonder behind. Below this group are several
-singular-looking figures: men with the horns of an ox, with
-arms, hands, and fingers extended as if in astonishment, and
-with clawed feet. Following the curved line we come to the
-circle, enclosing a Spanish caballero, who extends his hands in
-amity to the naked Indian standing without. Next appears a
-group with an officer, and a priest bearing the emblem of
-Christianity.” The Pueblo Indians, who still worship the sun,
-recognised in those picturings records of the thoughts and
-deeds of their ancestors. They pointed to representations of
-Montezuma, whom they still expect to return, and who is regarded
-as a divine power; and recognised in the horned men a representation
-of the buffalo-dance, from time immemorial a national
-festival, at which they crowned themselves with horns and corn-shucks.
-The drawing is in all probability an historical record
-executed at a date not long subsequent to the first intrusion of
-the Spaniards.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Lieutenant Whipple next describes the carvings found at
-El Moro inscription rock where, he says, “Spanish adventurers
-and explorers, from as early a period as the first settlement of
-Plymouth, have been in the habit of recording their expeditions
-to and from Zuñi.” He refers for those to Captain Simpson’s
-report upon the Navajo expedition; but specimens of the
-Indian drawings are given, which, he says, “are evidently
-<span class='pageno' title='232' id='Page_232'></span>
-more ancient than the oldest of the Spanish inscriptions.”<a id='r101'/><a href='#f101' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[101]</span></sup></a>
-The latter are, for the most part, regular literal records in the
-Spanish or Latin language, with names, and, in a few instances,
-the date of their engraving. But the European epigraphists
-appear at times to have borrowed the ideographic art of their
-Indian guides, from the way several of their inscriptions are
-accompanied with pictorial devices, or rebuses, somewhat after
-the native fashion of writing. One, for example, which reads
-<span class='it'>Pito Vaca ye Jarde</span>, has also the symbol of the <span class='it'>Vaca</span>, or “cow.”
-Another group, consisting of certain initials interwoven into a
-monogram, accompanied by an open hand with a double thumb,
-all enclosed in cartouche-fashion, is supposed by the transcriber
-to be, even more than the previous bit of pictorial symbolism,
-a pictured pun. “The characters,” he remarks, “in the double
-rectangle seem to be literally a sign-<span class='it'>manual</span>, and may possibly
-be symbolical of Francisco Manuel, though the double thumb
-would seem to indicate something more.” The Provincial
-Secretary, Donaciano Vigil, after noting for Lieutenant Simpson
-some data relative to the Spanish inscriptions, adds: “The
-other signs or characters are traditional remembrances, by
-means of which the Indians transmit historical accounts of all
-their remarkable successes. To discover (or interpret) these
-sets by themselves, is very difficult. Some of the Indians
-make trifling indications, which divulge, with a great deal of
-reserve, something of the history, to persons in whom they
-have entire confidence.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the summit of the cliff the ruins of a pueblo
-of bold native masonry formed a rectangle of 206 feet
-by 307 feet, around which lay an immense accumulation
-of broken pottery of novel and curious patterns. At Los
-Ojos Calientes, Lieutenant Simpson visited the <span class='it'>estuffas</span>,
-buildings one story high, called the churches of Montezuma.
-“On the walls were representations of plants, birds, and
-animals; the turkey, the deer, the wolf, the fox, and the dog,
-being plainly depicted; none of them, however, approaching
-to exactness except the deer, the outline of which showed
-certainly a good eye for proportion.” These are the work of
-the Jemez Indians, who worshipped the sun, moon, and fire;
-<span class='pageno' title='233' id='Page_233'></span>
-representations of which in circular form, and with zigzag
-barbed lines for lightning, also occur on the walls.<a id='r102'/><a href='#f102' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[102]</span></sup></a> Lieutenant
-Simpson remarks that he asked a Jemez Indian “Whether they
-still worshipped the Sun, as God, with contrition of heart.”
-His reply was: “Why not? He governs the World!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dr. Hoffman figures and interprets a curious rock-painting,
-copied by him from a granite boulder at Tulare river, California.
-It covers an area of about twelve feet by eight; and the largest
-figure is about six feet in length, and appears to be the work
-of an advanced party of native explorers, intended for the
-guidance of those who followed on their trail.<a id='r103'/><a href='#f103' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[103]</span></sup></a> Dr. Hoffman
-also furnishes some interesting illustrations of the reproduction
-of gesture-language in native pictographs preserved in the
-Museum of San Francisco. Certain symbols are in very
-general use. But the description of an Innuit drawing on
-a slat of wood, as interpreted by a native, partly in his own
-dialect, but largely supplemented by gestures, will best illustrate
-this development of a system of picture-writing among a savage
-people. A human figure directs his right hand to his own side,
-while, with his left, he points away from him. This is the <span class='it'>Ego</span>,
-the personal pronoun <span class='it'>I</span>. Again, a simple tracing of the like
-figure, successively with a boat-paddle over his head; his right
-hand to the side of his head; one finger elevated; his hand
-stretched out in the direction indicated, with his harpoon,
-or his bow and arrow, expresses his various actions. A spot
-enclosed in a circle, and again a blank circle, mark the islands—inhabited
-or uninhabited,—to which he is bound. A canoe,
-with two persons in it, defines the number going and the mode
-of transport; a phoca, or other animal, indicates the prey; and
-the record closes with an outline of the house, or tent, towards
-which the canoe is directed. The whole is equivalent to a
-written memorandum left behind, to inform the members of
-his family that he has gone in his boat to a particular island,
-where he will pass the night,—the right hand to the side of
-the head being a symbol of sleep. From thence he will proceed
-to another island, where he purposes to catch a seal or
-sea-lion, and then he will return home. It is in no degree
-surprising to find that nearly the same symbols are in use by
-<span class='pageno' title='234' id='Page_234'></span>
-widely different tribes; for, alike in their pictographs and
-gestures, they naturally aim at the most familiar and literal
-representations. The Eskimo and Alaskans represent death,
-in their drawings and bone carvings, by the symbol of a
-headless body, in nearly the same way as the Iroquois, the
-Algonkins, and the Blackfeet. To this is added the spear, the
-bow and arrow, or the gun, to indicate the mode of death by
-violence. The ordinary symbol of sepulchral memorial is the
-reversing of the totem and other objects pictured on the grave-post.
-A succession of lines in rows or columns is the simplest
-mode of primitive numeration, perpetuated among the Egyptians
-even so late as the Ptolemaic dynasty. It appears to have
-been in use among the cave-men of the Vézère in palæolithic
-times, and is common to all such records. But in the Eskimo
-and Indian pictographs the elevated hand, with one or more
-fingers extended, serves for numeration; and where the
-extended fingers and thumbs of both hands are represented
-on an exaggerated scale, it signifies <span class='it'>multitude</span>. The native
-gestures, drawings, and spoken languages, have indeed to be
-studied together to understand fully the processes resorted to
-for the expression and interchange of ideas.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>To the philologist, the efforts at supplying equivalent terms
-for objects and ideas common to the many diverse races furnish
-a study full of interest. A Chinook or Clatsop word modified
-to <span class='it'>saghalie</span>, signifying “above,” or “high,” is compounded with
-the Nootka <span class='it'>tyee</span>, as the name of the High Chief, or God. <span class='it'>Elip</span>,
-a Chihalis word, signifies “first,” or “before”; <span class='it'>tilikum</span>, Chinook,
-is “people, a tribe,” or “band”; but the two words conjoined,
-<span class='it'>elip-tilikum</span>, lit. “the first people,” is employed in reference to
-a race of beings who preceded the Indians as inhabitants of
-the world, just as we speak of the Antediluvians. <span class='it'>Ipsoot</span> is the
-Chinook word for “to hide,” <span class='it'>ipsoot wau-wau</span> is “to hide one’s
-speech,” <span class='it'>i.e.</span> “to whisper.” Or, again, <span class='it'>opitsah</span> is a modification
-of the Chinook for “a knife”; <span class='it'>opitsah-yakka-sikha</span>, literally,
-“the knife’s friend,” is “a fork.” The same word is also
-applied to a sweetheart. Such economic use of words is
-indeed by no means rare. But this branch of the subject
-lies apart from the aim of the present paper. It may be
-noted, however, in passing, that many of the jargon words,
-according to Mr. Gibbs, “have been adopted into ordinary
-<span class='pageno' title='235' id='Page_235'></span>
-conversation in Oregon, and threaten to become permanently
-incorporated as a local addition to the English.” Mr. Horatio
-Hale, long ago, stated as a result of his own observations, at an
-earlier date: “There are Canadians and half-breeds married to
-Chinook women, who can only converse with their wives in this
-speech; and it is the fact, strange as it may seem, that many
-young children are growing up to whom this factitious language
-is really the mother-tongue, and who speak it with more readiness
-and perfection than any other.”<a id='r104'/><a href='#f104' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[104]</span></sup></a> As to grammar, the
-jargon has no more than the inevitable rudiments involved in
-the necessity for expressing in some way ideas relating to time
-and number; and in these directions there is frequent resort
-to signs. But this, which accords with the first stage of picture-writing,
-is true of the speech of many Indian tribes. Their
-gesture-language is being reduced to the equivalent of a
-vocabulary, and is much more copious than that of the Oregon
-jargon. In 1880 the United States Bureau of Ethnology
-issued “A Collection of the gesture-signs and signals of
-the North American Indians”; and although this was only
-designed as a preliminary step towards the complete elucidation
-of the subject, it suffices to show how important a part signs
-and gestures play in the dialogue of many rude tribes. The
-Arapahoes, for example, according to Burton, “possess a very
-scanty vocabulary, and can hardly converse with one another
-in the dark. To make a stranger understand them they must
-always repair to the camp-fire for pow-wow.”<a id='r105'/><a href='#f105' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[105]</span></sup></a> We are not
-without some due appreciation, even now, of the eloquence of
-action, as well as of speech, in the effective orator; and Charles
-Lamb, in one of the <span class='it'>Essays of Elia</span>, aptly reminds us how
-much even ordinary dialogue owes to expression for its full
-effect. Candle-light, “our peculiar and household planet,” is
-the theme of the quaint humorist. “Wanting it,” he says,
-“what savage unsocial nights must our ancestors have spent,
-wintering in caves and unillumined fastnesses! .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. What
-repartees could have passed, when you must have felt about
-for a smile, and handled a neighbour’s cheek to be sure that he
-understood it?” And so the grave humorist goes on to picture
-the privations of a supper party in “those unlanterned nights.”
-<span class='pageno' title='236' id='Page_236'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But the Indian, in many cases, resorts to the pencil, or its
-equivalent, for the elucidation of subjects in which language
-fails him. He will take a burnt stick and draw a map
-indicating the route that has to be taken, the portages on a
-river, or the trail through the forest, after he has failed by signs
-and gestures to convey his meaning; and he can interpret
-with ease the drawings of Indians of other tribes. When
-camping out on the Nepigon River in 1866, with Indian
-guides from the Saskatchewan, who were strangers to the
-locality, they interpreted the drawings or carvings on a soft
-metamorphic rock overlaid by the syenite of that district;
-and were able thereby to tell us who had preceded them, and
-to determine the route we should take. Lieutenant Whipple
-in the narration of his route near the thirty-fifth parallel,
-remarks: “Near the Llano Extacado were seen Pueblo
-Indians from San Domingo. After an introductory smoke
-they became quite communicative, furnishing curious information
-as to their traditions and peculiar faith. When questioned
-regarding the numbers and positions of the Pueblos in
-New Mexico, they rudely traced upon the ground a sketch
-from which a map of the country is reproduced in the Government
-Reports.”<a id='r106'/><a href='#f106' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[106]</span></sup></a> The Rev. Dr. O’Meara, for many years a
-missionary among the Ojibway Indians of Lake Superior, thus
-writes to me: “The Indians were always pictorial, even in
-common conversation, <span class='it'>i.e.</span> they liked to explain what they
-meant by making figures; and always, if you asked one of
-them for information as to the route to any place, he would
-make a rough map of it, either on the sand or on a piece of
-birch-bark.” This fully accords with my own experience. I
-have repeatedly seen Indian guides take a piece of birch-bark
-and indicate on it some idea otherwise inexpressible from our
-ignorance of any common language. Their map-making must
-be familiar to all who have travelled much with Indian guides.
-They delineate with much accuracy the leading geographical
-features of any familiar locality. I have in my note-books
-sketches made by Indians, when I have placed the pencil
-in their hand, and indicated by signs some information I
-desired to obtain, about game, fishing, or other matters familiar
-to them; or about their own tribal relationships, which they
-<span class='pageno' title='237' id='Page_237'></span>
-generally express in totemic fashion by their symbolic bear,
-deer, beaver, eagle, turtle, or other animal. Such signs of the
-clan, tribe, or nation are familiar to every Indian, as well as
-the ideographs of his own and others’ names; and when
-represented on the roll of birch-bark, painted on the chiefs
-buffalo robe, or inverted on his grave-post, they can be interpreted
-with the same facility with which an heraldic student
-discerns the family history on the painted hatchment or the
-sculptured shields of some noble mausoleum.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>By an alphabet, strictly so called, we understand a series
-of symbols which have become the conventional equivalents to
-the eye of the sounds which combine to form the speech of a
-people. But <span class='it'>alpha</span>, <span class='it'>beta</span>, etc., were undoubtedly, in their first
-stage, pictures, and not arbitrary signs; though they passed
-undesignedly into the demotic characters of the Egyptian
-current hand, and were then transformed, from ideographic
-and syllabic characters, into the true phonetics out of which
-have come the later alphabets of the civilised world. Egypt
-is justly credited with the origination of a system of writing
-which lies at the foundation of all our inherited knowledge,
-and which, as Bacon says, “makes ages so distant to participate
-of the wisdom, illuminations and inventions, the one of
-the other.” Yet the germ of all this lay in the graphic
-records of the palæolithic cave-men; and the very same
-process of evolution from pure pictorial representation to
-picture-writing or ideography, and so to arbitrary hieroglyphic
-signs, or word-writing, is seen in the graven records of Copan
-or Palenque, and on the ancient monuments of the Nile.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is replete with interest thus to turn aside from the Old
-World, with all its wealth of intellectual progress associated
-with the letters of Cadmus, and find that in the western
-hemisphere the human mind has followed the very same path
-in its struggle towards the light. Longfellow, in his “Song of
-Hiawatha,” has interwoven Algonkin and Iroquois legends into
-a national epic, in which the elements of Indian progress are
-all traced to this mythic benefactor, subsequently identified by
-Mr. Horatio Hale, in his <span class='it'>Book of Iroquois Rites</span>, with a wise
-Onondaga chief of the fifteenth century. But, tracing in
-legendary fashion the early steps of Indian progress, the poet
-represents the mythic reformer mourning how all things perish
-<span class='pageno' title='238' id='Page_238'></span>
-and pass into oblivion. Even the great achievements and the
-traditions of their people fade away from the memory of the
-old men. And so he inaugurates the method of recording
-events, which in reality we recognise as the natural product of
-the human mind in the exercise of that imitative faculty which
-the discoveries of comparatively recent years have revealed to
-us as in full activity among the men of Europe’s remote Post-Glacial
-era. With his paints of diverse colours he depicts on
-the smooth birch-bark simple figures and symbols, such as are
-to be seen graven on hundreds of rocks throughout the North
-American continent, and are in constant use by the Indian in
-chronicling his own deeds on his buffalo robe, or recording
-those of the deceased chief on his grave-post. The result is a
-simple process of picture-writing, readily translatable, with
-nearly equal facility, into the language of every tribe. Deeds
-of daring against Indians or white men are set forth by the
-native chronicler, and the rivals are clearly indicated by means
-of their characteristic costume and weapons. Headless figures
-are the symbols of the dead; scalps represent his own special
-victims; and in like manner incidents of the chase, or feats
-against the buffalo or grizzly bear, are recorded in graphic
-picturings, which are as intelligible as any monumental
-inscription of ancient or modern times. The description in
-Longfellow’s Indian epic of the celestial and terrestrial symbols,
-in actual use as Algonkin and other aboriginal hieroglyphics,
-would answer, with slight modification, for those still to be
-seen on the walls of Egyptian temples and catacombs: —</p>
-
-<div class='poetry-container' style=''><div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<p class='line0'>For the earth he drew a straight line,</p>
-<p class='line0'>For the sky a bow above it;</p>
-<p class='line0'>White the span between for day-time,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Filled with little stars for night-time;</p>
-<p class='line0'>On the left a point for sunrise,</p>
-<p class='line0'>On the right a point for sunset,</p>
-<p class='line0'>On the top a point for noontide;</p>
-<p class='line0'>And for rain and cloudy weather</p>
-<p class='line0'>Waving lines descending from it.</p>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>The picture-writing of the Aztecs, though greatly improved
-in execution, and simplified by abbreviations, was the same in
-principle as that of the rude northern tribes. The recognised
-signs of the months and days of their calendar are not greatly
-<span class='pageno' title='239' id='Page_239'></span>
-in advance of Indian symbolism; while some of their pictorial
-records are as definite pieces of literal representation as the
-battle of the reindeer from the Dordogne cave, or the
-peaceful grazing scene recovered from a Swiss grotto near
-Thayingen. One example of such a pictorial chronicling of an
-important event has been repeatedly described, and aptly
-illustrates its practical application. When Cortez held his
-first interview with the emissaries of Montezuma, one of the
-attendants of Teuhtlile, the chief Aztec noble, was observed
-sketching the novel visitors, their peculiar costumes and arms,
-their horses and ships; and by such means a report of all that
-pertained to the strange invaders of his dominion was transmitted
-to the Aztec sovereign. The skill with which every
-object was delineated excited the admiration of the Spaniards.
-But however superior this may have been as a piece of art, it
-was manifestly no advance on the principle of Indian picture-writing;
-nor can we be in much doubt as to its style of
-execution, since Lord Kingsborough’s elaborate work furnishes
-many facsimiles of nearly contemporary Mexican drawings.
-In the majority of these, the totemic symbols, and the representations
-of individuals by means of their animal or other
-cognomens, are abundantly apparent. The specific aim of the
-artist has to be kept in view. The figures are for the most
-part grotesque, from the necessity of giving predominance to
-the special feature in which the symbol is embodied. To the
-generation for which such were produced, the connection
-between the sign, and the person or thing signified, would be
-manifest; and as a mnemonic aid, supplemented by verbal
-descriptions of the trained official registrars, the record would
-be ample. But a brief interval suffices to render such abbreviated
-symbols obscure, if not wholly unintelligible; and
-within less than a century after the Conquest, De Alva could
-not find more than two surviving Mexicans, both very aged,
-who were able to interpret the native pictorial records.
-Nevertheless a system of picture-writing, originating among
-the rude forest tribes with the simple employment of the
-imitative faculty in the representation of familiar objects, with
-their associated ideas, had advanced on this continent to the
-very same stage from which, in ancient Egypt, the next step
-was taken, resulting in the evolution of a phonetic alphabet,
-<span class='pageno' title='240' id='Page_240'></span>
-and so of all that is implied in letters in the largest
-sense.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>To this grand aim of ideography, or an equivalent of written
-speech, may, as it appears to me, be traced the earliest efforts
-at drawing and painting, reaching back to that strange dawn
-of intellectual vigour revealed to us in the graphic art of the
-men of Europe’s Palæolithic age. The same effort at written
-speech underlies all the manifestations of the artistic faculty,
-common alike to the semi-civilised and to the barbarous native
-races of this continent; and in the terms by which they
-express the graphic art in their various dialects, the common
-significance of drawing and writing is generally apparent.
-But the æsthetic faculty was thus stimulated into activity with
-results which tended to develop art in all its forms of carving,
-modelling, sculpture, and painting. An appreciation of colour,
-not merely for personal adornment, but in its artistic application—alike
-as a decorative art, and as the means whereby
-natural objects can be presented with vivid truthfulness to the
-eye,—is widely diffused; though the mastery of form by the
-modeller or sculptor long precedes that of chiaroscuro, or aerial
-perspective. Aboriginal painting is crude, consisting mainly of
-colour without tone or shading, even where the drawing is
-correct. But paints and dyes, both of mineral and vegetable
-origin, are largely in use by many Indian tribes. The Eskimo
-execute tasteful patterns on their skin robes in diverse colours;
-and the northern tribes both to the east and west of the Rocky
-Mountains dye porcupine quills and grasses, and with them
-work ornamental patterns on their dresses and in basket-work.
-The pottery of the Pueblo Indians is elaborately decorated in
-colours; and in various other ways—as in the colouring of their
-masks, and the painting of their boats and houses, by the
-Indians of Oregon and British Columbia,—the native taste for
-colour is manifested. Mr. Hugh Martin, in a communication
-of an early date to the American Philosophical Society, gives
-an account of the principal dyes employed by the North
-American Indians.<a id='r107'/><a href='#f107' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[107]</span></sup></a> The Shawnees obtained a vegetable red,
-which they called <span class='it'>hau-ta-the-caugh</span>, from the root of a marsh
-plant, and largely used it in dyeing wool, porcupine quills, and
-the white hair of deers’ tails. From another root, the <span class='it'>Radix</span>
-<span class='pageno' title='241' id='Page_241'></span>
-<span class='it'>flava</span>, a bright yellow was obtained, by mixing which with the
-red an orange tint is made. But they also extracted a rich
-orange colour from the Poccon root. A fine vegetable blue is
-also easily procured, and this was transformed to green by
-means of a yellow liquor of the smooth hickory bark. Black,
-which is much in demand, was obtained both from the sumack
-and from the bark of the white walnut. All the colours thus
-far named are vegetable dyes, but mineral colours are in
-general use for painting, and especially for personal decoration,
-which is no doubt the primary idea associated in the Indian
-mind with the verb “to paint.” The Lenapes, Dr. Brinton
-remarks, “obtained red, white, and blue clays, which were in
-such extensive demand that the vicinity of those streams in
-Newcastle County, Delaware, which are now called White
-Clay Creek and Red Clay Creek, are widely known to the
-natives as <span class='it'>Walamink</span>, ‘the place of paint.’ ”<a id='r108'/><a href='#f108' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[108]</span></sup></a> The Shawnees
-applied the name <span class='it'>Alamonee-sepee</span>, “Paint Creek,” to the stream
-which falls into the Scioto close to Chilicothe. The word
-<span class='it'>walamen</span>, signifying “to paint,” is the Shawnee <span class='it'>alamon</span>, and
-the Abnaki <span class='it'>wramann</span>, the <span class='it'>r</span> being substituted for the <span class='it'>l</span>.
-Roger Williams, describing the New England Indians, speaks
-of “<span class='it'>wunnam</span>, their red painting, which they most delight in,—both
-the bark of the pine, as also a red earth.” The word is
-derived from Narr. <span class='it'>wunne</span>, Del. <span class='it'>wulit</span>, Chip. <span class='it'>gwanatseh</span>:
-“beautiful, handsome, good, pretty,” etc. “The Indian who
-had bedaubed his skin with red ochreous clay, was esteemed
-in full dress, and delightful to look upon. Hence the term
-<span class='it'>wulit</span>, ‘fine, pretty,’ came to be applied to the paint itself.”<a id='r109'/><a href='#f109' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[109]</span></sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A review of the terms of art in the diverse aboriginal
-vocabularies would furnish an interesting supplement to the
-general question of the manifestation of an artistic faculty, and
-the evidences of appreciation of art among savage races. I note
-a few illustrations, which the languages of some Northern
-Indian tribes supply, of the ideas associated in the native
-mind with terms of art. The Algonkin languages generally
-have no distinctive words clearly discriminating between
-painting, drawing, and writing in the sense of ideography;
-though the inevitable tendency to invent or appropriate words,
-as equivalents expressive of any novel object or idea, is in
-<span class='pageno' title='242' id='Page_242'></span>
-operation in those as in other languages. The Ojibways have
-no generic term for painting the body or face, but express it
-by some word connected with the specific colour in use. For
-example, the painting the face black, as is done to a youth on
-attaining puberty, is <span class='it'>muhkuhdaekawin</span>. This consists of <span class='it'>muh-kuh-da</span>,
-meaning “black,” <span class='it'>eka</span>, the form which gives it the
-verbal significance, “he makes himself black,” with the
-termination <span class='it'>win</span>, constituting the whole a noun. So <span class='it'>misquah</span>,
-“red,” is the root of <span class='it'>misquah-ne-ga-zoo</span>, “he is painted red”;
-<span class='it'>misquah-ne-gah-da</span>, “it is painted red.” <span class='it'>Oozahwah</span>, “yellow,”
-gives <span class='it'>oo-zah-we-ne-gah-zoo</span>, “he is painted yellow”; with the
-corresponding terminal change for the neuter. But the word
-<span class='it'>oozahnamahne</span>, from <span class='it'>oonah</span>, “the cheek,” is also used for
-painting the face either red or yellow. <span class='it'>Quahnaiy</span>, or <span class='it'>gwanai</span>,
-the word for “beautiful,” is applied to moral as well as physical
-beauty, <span class='it'>e.g.</span> <span class='it'>gwanaienene</span> would be used of a fair, honourable
-dealing man, as well as of one who was handsome or good-looking.
-But such rhetorical tropes are common to many
-languages.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I was indebted to the late Silas T. Rand, for upwards of
-thirty years a missionary among the Micmac Indians of Nova
-Scotia, for the following illustrative details: “The Micmac is
-rich in words relating to art, the making and ornamenting of
-garments, moccasins, snow-shoes, etc., of weapons and implements
-for domestic use, making pottery and modelling in clay. For
-building and managing a canoe there are at least seventy-six
-words. They have words for carving on stone, and also on
-wood, for marking dressed skins with flower patterns, for
-carving flowers in stone, for scraping them on birch-bark dishes,
-for drawing a likeness, making models and patterns, and for
-working after them. When I was engaged in translating
-Exodus, and largely dependent on my Indian teacher for the
-words to express all the parts of the Tabernacle, its coverings
-and furniture, mortices, tenons, hooks, fillets, loops, bars, pins,
-sockets, etc., I fully expected to be baffled. What was my
-surprise to find that there were words in the language by which
-to express all I needed. Boards, bars, bolts, pillars, poles,
-rings, everything was made, put together, and my ‘pundit’ an
-excellent mechanic, when he returned next day to go on with
-our work, assured me that he had been dreaming about that
-<span class='pageno' title='243' id='Page_243'></span>
-‘wigwam’ we had been erecting the previous day, and he was
-sure he could make such a one. He had the pattern in his
-head as clearly as Moses had it, after he had seen it up the
-mountain.” In the Micmac, <span class='it'>aweekum</span> is “a drawing,” lit.
-“I write it,” “I draw it”; <span class='it'>essum</span>, “I colour it”; <span class='it'>elapskudaaga</span>,
-“I am carving,” or “cutting stone”; <span class='it'>elapskudaam</span>, “I am
-carving it in stone”; <span class='it'>apsk</span>, which here denotes “stone,” is only
-used in composition; <span class='it'>coondow</span> is the word for “stone”;
-<span class='it'>eloksowa</span>, “I am carving in wood”; <span class='it'>noojeweekuga</span>, “a painter,”
-“drawer,” “writer,” lit. “a maker of marks”; <span class='it'>aweegasik</span>, “a
-picture,” lit. “it is marked down,” etc.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Algonkin root <span class='it'>walam</span>, “red,” is the term employed in
-the <span class='it'>Walum Olum</span>, or “Red Score of the Lenape,” which was
-brought under the notice of the New York Historical Society,
-in 1848, by Mr. E. G. Squier, as <span class='it'>The Bark Record of the
-Lenni-Lenape</span>. His narrative has been more than once reprinted;
-but the carefully edited version of this curious Indian
-ideograph given by Dr. Brinton, in his <span class='it'>Lenape and their
-Legends</span>, will supersede earlier and less accurate versions.
-The full translation with which the pictographic record of the
-<span class='it'>Walum Olum</span> is accompanied, abundantly suffices to prove
-that it may be most correctly described as a series of mnemonic
-signs employed for the purpose of keeping in memory a
-national chant, of a class very familiar to the students of
-primitive history. The ballad-epics of the ancient Germans,
-and the still earlier lays of ancient Rome, the Abanic Duan,
-and others of the genealogical and historical poems of the
-Celtic nations, were all of this class; and analogous traditionary
-chants have been perpetuated among the Maoris of New
-Zealand. The system of pictography corresponds to that in
-use among the Ojibways and other Algonkin tribes, including
-the totems, or sign-names; but it falls far short of true picture-writing.
-Section IV. records the conquest by the Lenape tribe,
-of the northern country, which they call “The Snake Land.”
-Bald Eagle, Beautiful Head, White Owl, Keeping Guard, Snow
-Bird, and a succession of other chiefs are named, all of whom
-are more or less graphically indicated by their totems; but a
-paraphrastic interpretation accompanies them setting forth ideas
-that have no pictorial representation. Then comes a horizontal
-line with ten oblique lines rising from it, and three cross-lines
-<span class='pageno' title='244' id='Page_244'></span>
-below, with the interpretation: “After the Seizer there were
-ten chiefs and there was much warfare south and north.” Next
-follows another succession of chiefs, each symbolised with some
-associated idea. Thus a group of six small circles, arranged
-upright in two columns, is surmounted by a larger circle, with
-three oblique lines rising from the top. This is paraphrased:
-“After him, Corn-Breaker was chief, who brought about the
-planting of corn.” It is not difficult to imagine in the
-drawing the conventional representation of an ear of corn; but
-the major idea can be no more than one suggested to the
-memory by association. In some instances the picture-writing
-is more manifest. A horizontal line surmounted by two <span class='it'>téepees</span>,
-or buffalo-skin tents, is “the buffalo land.” In one group, a
-semicircle with radiating lines, placed on a straight line, is
-translated: “Let us go together to the east, to the sunrise.”
-In another case, nearly the same symbol—assumed, no doubt,
-to represent the sun setting in the ocean,—is rendered, “at the
-great sea.” It is, indeed, a system of picture-writing; but
-instead of being abbreviated into word-symbols, it is reduced
-to mere catch-words or mnemonic signs. Their value would be
-unquestionable as an aid to memory in the perpetuation of a
-mythic or historical poem; but, if the tradition were lost, they
-embody no sufficient record from which to recover it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Neither the Iroquois nor the Algonkin nation can be
-pointed to as specially gifted with imitative powers, or in other
-ways furnishing evidence of any highly developed artistic
-faculty. They cannot compare in this respect with the Zuñi,
-or others of the Pueblo Indians, among whom the arts of long-settled,
-agricultural communities have been developed for
-purposes of ornament as well as utility; nor is their inferiority
-less questionable when we compare them with some of the
-barbarous tribes of the north-west coast, and the neighbouring
-islands. Their languages confirm this; for while, as Mr.
-Cushing has shown, the Zuñi language possesses many words
-relating to art-processes, the Iroquois and Algonkin dialects
-supply such terms, for the most part, in descriptive holophrasms,
-and not in primitive roots. Nevertheless, alike in their
-pottery and carvings, and in their picture-writing, they show a
-degree of artistic capacity of which few traces are found in
-Europe’s Neolithic age.
-<span class='pageno' title='245' id='Page_245'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the Ojibway, <span class='it'>oozhebegawin</span> is used indiscriminately for
-“writing, drawing, painting,” <span class='it'>wazhebeegad</span>, for “a man who
-writes, draws.” In combination with <span class='it'>muh-ze-ne</span>, “figure, form,”
-such words are in use as <span class='it'>muhzenebeégawin</span>, “a painting, drawing”;
-<span class='it'>muhzenebeégawenene</span> (M.), <span class='it'>muhzenebeégawequa</span> (F.), “a
-painter, an artist”; <span class='it'>muhzenebeégun</span>, “a picture.” “To carve,” or
-“engrave on a rock,” is <span class='it'>muhzeneko</span>; <span class='it'>muhzenekojegun</span>, “a
-sculptor’s chisel”; <span class='it'>muhzenekoda</span>, “it is carved,” etc. Again
-with <span class='it'>wahbegun</span>, “clay,” such holophrasms are obtained as
-<span class='it'>wahbegunoonahgunekawenene</span>, “a man who makes earthen
-vessels, a potter,” <span class='it'>wahbeguhega</span>, “a worker in clay,” lit. “I
-work with clay.”<a id='r110'/><a href='#f110' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[110]</span></sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In previous remarks on the main subject of this paper,
-the development of the artistic faculty has been noted as,
-in many cases, an exceptional manifestation of intellectual
-activity, alike in ancient and modern barbarous races. The
-striking contrast between the richly fluent forms of the
-language, and the infantile condition of this people in relation
-to so much else, including metallurgy, and the application
-of the arts generally to the practical requirements of life,
-furnishes a no less interesting illustration of intellectual
-development fostered by special influences in another direction.
-The habitual practice of oratory made the Iroquois acute
-reasoners; and their language abounds in abstract terms to a
-degree altogether surprising in an uncivilised race. The purposes
-of the rhetorician also encouraged the tropical use of
-literal terms. It is not, therefore, difficult to understand how
-the primary sense of the verb “to track” or “trace out” should
-ultimately yield the meaning of “drawing” or “sketching,” and
-so finally of “painting.” On the other hand, it abundantly
-coincides with the instinctive use of the imitative faculty as
-a means of conveying definite ideas to others, that in the
-Iroquois, as in other languages, the same terms are used to
-express the idea of making a mark, drawing, or writing. The
-primitive hieroglyphics, from whence our phonetic alphabets
-have come, were first literal drawings, and then their abbreviations
-employed to express associated ideas. An ideographic
-purpose appears to underlie the earliest efforts of imitative
-art.</p>
-
-<hr class='footnotemark'/>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_79'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f79'><a href='#r79'>[79]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Essai sur les déformations artificielles du Crâne</span>, p. 74.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_80'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f80'><a href='#r80'>[80]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Crania Britannica</span>, vi. Pl. 15; xiv. Pl. 12; xxxii. Pl. 42.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_81'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f81'><a href='#r81'>[81]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Vide <span class='it'>Prehistoric Annals of Scotland</span>, 2d ed. i. 495.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_82'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f82'><a href='#r82'>[82]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Trans. Ethnol. Soc.</span>, N.S. iii. 227.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_83'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f83'><a href='#r83'>[83]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Prehistoric Annals of Scotland</span>, i. 495.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_84'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f84'><a href='#r84'>[84]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>I.e.</span> the Island of Santa Barbara. See “Remarks on Aboriginal Art,” in
-<span class='it'>Proc. Davenport Acad. Nat. Science</span>, iv. 121.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_85'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f85'><a href='#r85'>[85]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The Right Hand:” <span class='it'>Left-handedness</span>, pp. 35, 37.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_86'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f86'><a href='#r86'>[86]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Proc. Soc. Antiq. Scot.</span>, ix. 297, 301.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_87'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f87'><a href='#r87'>[87]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Vide <span class='it'>Prehistoric Man</span>, 3rd ed. ii. 54.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_88'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f88'><a href='#r88'>[88]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Narrative of a Voyage to the Pacific</span>, i. 241.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_89'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f89'><a href='#r89'>[89]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Trans. Anthropol. Soc. Washington</span>, ii. 140.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_90'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f90'><a href='#r90'>[90]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Marchand’s Voyages</span>, ii. 282.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_91'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f91'><a href='#r91'>[91]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Remarks on Aboriginal Art in California and Queen Charlotte Islands</span>,
-p. 118.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_92'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f92'><a href='#r92'>[92]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>The Lenape Stone: or the Indian and the Mammoth</span>, by H. C. Mercer. New
-York, 1885, pp. 5, 17.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_93'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f93'><a href='#r93'>[93]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Hommes fossiles et Hommes sauvages</span>, p. 49.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_94'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f94'><a href='#r94'>[94]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Hommes fossiles</span>, etc., p. 46.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_95'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f95'><a href='#r95'>[95]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Smithsonian Contributions to Knowledge</span>, ii. 75.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_96'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f96'><a href='#r96'>[96]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Aboriginal Monuments,” etc., p. 76.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_97'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f97'><a href='#r97'>[97]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Proceedings of Hamilton Association</span>, i. 54.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_98'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f98'><a href='#r98'>[98]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Smithsonian Contributions to Knowledge</span>, xxii. 82.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_99'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f99'><a href='#r99'>[99]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Rev. Mark Pattison, according to one biographer, Mr. Althaus, had cultivated
-a habit of reticence, till it became one of his most marked characteristics.
-His usual response to any remark was “Ah”; but his biographer adds: “It
-was interesting to observe of what a variety of shades of meaning that characteristic
-ejaculation ‘Ah’ was capable. Many times it was his sole answer. Mostly
-it signified that something had aroused his interest; sometimes it conveyed
-approval, sometimes surprise, sometimes doubt; sometimes it was said in a way
-that indicated he did not wish to express himself on the point in question.”</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_100'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f100'><a href='#r100'>[100]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Reports of Explorations and Surveys for Route for a Railroad to Pacific
-Ocean</span>, 1885. Part iii. p. 39.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_101'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f101'><a href='#r101'>[101]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Reports of Explorations and Surveys for Route for a Railroad to Pacific Ocean</span>,
-1885. Part iii. p. 39.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_102'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f102'><a href='#r102'>[102]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Reports of Secretary of War, U.S.</span>, 1850, p. 67.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_103'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f103'><a href='#r103'>[103]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Transactions of Anthropol. Soc., Washington</span>, ii. 130.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_104'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f104'><a href='#r104'>[104]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>United States Exploring Expedition</span>, vii. 644.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_105'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f105'><a href='#r105'>[105]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Burton’s City of the Saints</span>, p. 157.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_106'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f106'><a href='#r106'>[106]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Explorations and Surveys, Washington</span>, 1856, iii. 10, 36.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_107'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f107'><a href='#r107'>[107]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Trans. Amer. Phil. Soc.</span> iii. 222.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_108'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f108'><a href='#r108'>[108]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>The Lenape and their Legends</span>, p. 53.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_109'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f109'><a href='#r109'>[109]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Ibid.</span>, pp. 60, 104.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_110'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f110'><a href='#r110'>[110]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'>See pp. 300, 301 for examples in Iroquois.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' title='246' id='Page_246'></span><h1>VI<br/> THE HURON-IROQUOIS: A TYPICAL RACE</h1></div>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='sc'>It</span> has already been noted in treating of pre-Aryan American
-men that throughout the northern continent, from the Arctic
-circle to the Mexican Gulf, no trace has been recovered of the
-previous existence of anything that properly admits of the
-term “native civilisation.” The rude arts of Europe’s Stone
-age belong to a period lying far behind its remotest traditions;
-unless we appeal to the mythic allusions of Hesiod, or to such
-poetic imaginings as the <span class='it'>Prometheus</span> of Æschylus. But all
-available evidence serves to show that the condition of the native
-tribes throughout the northern continent has never advanced
-beyond the stage which finds its aptest illustration in the arts
-of their Stone period, including the rudimentary efforts at
-turning to account their ample resources of native copper
-without the use of fire.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But this uniformity in the condition of the aborigines, and
-the consequent resemblance in their arts, habits, and mode of
-life, has been the fruitful source of misleading assumptions.
-Everywhere the European explorer met only rude hunting and
-warring tribes, exhibiting such slight variations in all that
-first attracts the eye of the most observant traveller, that an
-exaggerated idea of their ethnical uniformity was the natural
-result. In the systematisings of the ethnologist, the American
-type was classed apart as at once uniform and distinctive;
-and, strange as it may now seem, this idea found nowhere
-such ready favour as among those who had the fullest access
-to the evidence by which its truth could be tested. It was
-the most comprehensive induction of the author of <span class='it'>Crania
-<span class='pageno' title='247' id='Page_247'></span>
-Americana</span>, as the fruit of his conscientious researches in
-American craniology. The authors of <span class='it'>Indigenous Races of the
-Earth</span> and <span class='it'>Types of Mankind</span>, no less unhesitatingly affirmed
-that “identical characters pervade all the American races,
-ancient and modern, over the whole continent.”<a id='r111'/><a href='#f111' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[111]</span></sup></a> In this they
-were sustained by the high authority of Agassiz, who, after
-discussing in his <span class='it'>Provinces of the Animal World, and their
-relation to Types of Man</span>, the fauna peculiar to the American
-continent, and pointing out the much greater uniformity of its
-natural productions, when its twin continents are compared
-with those of the eastern hemisphere, thus summed up the
-result of his investigations: “With these facts before us, we
-may expect that there should be no great diversity among the
-tribes of man inhabiting this continent; and indeed the most
-extensive investigation of their peculiarities has led Dr. Morton
-to consider them as constituting but a single race, from the
-confines of the Esquimaux down to the southernmost extremity
-of the continent. But, at the same time, it should be remembered
-that, in accordance with the zoological character of
-the whole realm, this race is divided into an infinite number
-of small tribes, presenting more or less difference one from
-another.” It was natural and reasonable that the men of the
-sixteenth century should believe in Calibans, or Ewaipanoma,
-“the Anthropophagi, and men whose heads do grow beneath
-their shoulders.” America was to them, in the most literal
-sense, another world; and it was easier for them to think of
-it as peopled with such monstrosities than with human beings
-like ourselves. But it is curious to note in this nineteenth
-century the lingering traces of the old sentiment; and to see
-men of science still finding it difficult to emancipate themselves
-from the idea that this continent is so essentially another
-world, that it is inconceivable to them that the races by which
-it is peopled should bear any affinity to themselves or to others
-of the Old World. American ethnologists long clung to the
-idea of an essentially distinct indigenous race; and Dr. Nott,
-Dr. Meigs, and other investigators welcomed every confirmation
-of the view of Dr. Morton as to the occupation of the
-whole American continent by one peculiar type from which
-alone the Eskimo were to be excepted, as an immigrant
-<span class='pageno' title='248' id='Page_248'></span>
-element, possibly—according to the ingenious speculations of
-one distinguished student of science,—of remotest European
-antiquity. Professor Huxley in an address to the Ethnological
-Society in 1869, suggests hypothetically, that the old Mexican
-and South American races represent the true American stock;
-and that the Red Indians of North America may be the product
-of an intermixture of the indigenous native race with the
-Eskimo. It is noticeable, at any rate, that nearly all writers,
-however widely differing on other points, follow Humboldt in
-classing the Eskimo apart as a distinct type. He remarks in
-his preface to his <span class='it'>American Researches</span>, that, “except those
-which border the polar circle, the nations of America form a
-single race characterised by the formation of the skull, the
-colour of the skin, the extreme thinness of the beard, and the
-straight glossy hair.” Some of the characteristics thus noted
-are undoubtedly widely prevalent; but the head-form, or
-“formation of the skull,” is the most important; and a careful
-comparison of the skulls of different tribes has long since
-modified the opinion, expressed by the great traveller and
-reasserted by distinguished American ethnologists.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In reality, were the typical feature most insisted on as
-universal as it was assumed to be, it would furnish the
-strongest argument for classifying the predominant Asiatic and
-American types as one. All the points appealed to suggest
-affinity to the Asiatic Mongol. But so far from the Eskimo
-standing apart as a markedly exceptional type, if due allowance
-be made for the prolonged influence of an Arctic climate,
-the Huron-Iroquois approximate to them in some very notable
-ethnical features. The dolichocephalic head-form, especially,
-is common to them, and to the Algonkin and other Northern
-Indians. Of those Dr. Latham remarks: “The Iroquois and
-Algonkins exhibit in the most typical form the characteristics
-of the North American Indians as exhibited in the earliest
-descriptions, and are the two families upon which the current
-notions respecting the physiognomy, habits, and moral and
-intellectual powers of the so-called Red Race are chiefly
-founded.” Of the former, Mr. Parkman, who has studied
-their later history with the minutest care, says: “In this
-remarkable family of tribes occur the fullest developments of
-Indian character, and the most conspicuous examples of Indian
-<span class='pageno' title='249' id='Page_249'></span>
-intelligence. If the higher traits popularly ascribed to the
-race are not to be found here, they are to be found nowhere.”<a id='r112'/><a href='#f112' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[112]</span></sup></a>
-To this typical American race, accordingly, and to some of its
-peculiarly distinctive usages, special attention is here directed.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Iroquois were an important branch of the great stock
-which included also the Hurons, or Wyandots, the native
-historical race of Canada. But divided as the two were
-throughout the whole period of French Canadian history by
-the bitterest antagonism, it is convenient to speak of them
-under the term of Huron-Iroquois. In reviewing the history
-of this indigenous stock, with the suggestions prompted by
-their peculiar characteristics, it is desirable not only to note
-the physical geography of the country which they occupied,
-as a region of forest and lakes, but, still more, to keep in view
-this fact as a predominant characteristic of the continent, and
-as one important factor in the evolution of whatever may seem
-to be peculiar in the forest tribes of North America.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The effects resulting from the physical features of a country
-on the development and intermingling of its races can nowhere
-be wisely overlooked. Even within the limits of the British
-Islands the influences of mountain and lowlands: of the fertile
-stretches of Kent and the valley of the Thames, the fens of
-Lincolnshire, the moorlands of Northumbria, and the Welsh
-and Scottish Highlands, have largely contributed to the perpetuation,
-if not in some degree to the development, of ethnical
-distinctions and the diversities in language.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In this respect Britain is an epitome of Europe, with its
-great mountain ranges and detached peninsulas, by means of
-which races have been isolated within well-defined areas, and
-their languages and other distinctive peculiarities preserved.
-Russia alone, of all European countries, presents analogies to
-Northern Asia as a region favourable to nomadic life; and in
-so far as its history differs from that of the continent at large,
-it accords with such physical conditions. Throughout the
-whole historic period, as doubtless in prehistoric times, the
-great chain of mountains reaching from the western spur of
-the Pyrenees to the Balkans has influenced European progress;
-while the chief navigable river, the Danube, traversing the
-<span class='pageno' title='250' id='Page_250'></span>
-continent through one uniform temperate zone, has tended
-still further to the perpetuation of certain distinctive ethnical
-characteristics in Central Europe. In all its most important
-geographical features, the northern continent of America
-presents a striking contrast to this. An isosceles triangle
-with its base within the Arctic circle, it tapers to a narrow
-isthmus towards the equator. Its great mountain chain runs
-from north to south, and in near proximity to the Pacific
-coast; and its chief navigable river, rising within the Canadian
-Dominion, and receiving as its tributaries rivers draining vast
-regions on either hand, traverses twenty degrees of latitude
-before it reaches the Gulf of Mexico. A lower range of
-highlands towards the Atlantic seaboard forms the eastern
-boundary of the great interior plain. But the Alleghanies or
-Appalachian system of mountains, though they may be said
-to extend from the St. Lawrence to the Mexican Gulf, rise
-only at a few points, as in the White Mountains of New
-Hampshire, to any great elevation. They form rather a long
-plateau, intersected by wide valleys, diversifying the landscape,
-without constituting strongly defined barriers or lines of demarcation.
-As a whole, the continent of North America,
-eastward from the Rocky Mountains, may be described as a
-level area, so slightly modified by any elevated regions
-throughout its whole extent, from the Arctic circle to the
-Gulf of Mexico, as to present no other impediment except
-its forests to the wanderings of nomadic tribes. It is interlaced
-with rivers, and diversified everywhere with lakes, alike
-available for navigation and for fishing; and, until the intrusion
-of European immigrants, its forests and prairies abounded
-with game far in excess of the wants of its population. Everything
-thus tended to perpetuate the condition of nomadic hunter
-tribes. This stage of native American history inevitably drew
-to a close under the influence of European institutions and
-civilisation; but it is interesting to note, that the same absence
-of any well-defined geographical limitations of area, which
-tended to perpetuate the nomadic habits of the savage, has
-aided in consolidating the great confederacy of the United
-States, and maintaining an ethnical and political conformity
-throughout the northern continent in striking contrast to the
-diversities in race and political institutions in Europe.
-<span class='pageno' title='251' id='Page_251'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>History and native traditions alike confirm the idea that
-the valley of the St. Lawrence was the habitat of the Huron-Iroquois
-stock as far back as evidence can be appealed to.
-The Huron traditions tell of a time when the Province of
-Quebec was the home of the race eastward to the sea; while
-those of three at least of the members of the Iroquois confederacy
-in legendary fashion claimed their birth from the soil
-south of the great river. When the French explorers, under
-the leadership of Jacques Cartier, first entered the St. Lawrence,
-in 1535, they found at Stadaconé and Hochelaga—the old
-native sites now occupied by the cities of Quebec and Montreal,—a
-population apparently of the Huron-Iroquois stock; and,
-in so far as reliance may be placed on their traditions, Canada
-was then populous throughout the whole valley of the St.
-Lawrence with industrious native tribes, the representatives of
-a race that had occupied the same region for unnumbered
-centuries. “Some fanciful tales of a supernatural origin from
-the heart of a mountain; of a migration to the eastern seaboard;
-and of a subsequent return to the country of the lakes
-and rivers, where they finally settled, comprise,” says Brownell,<a id='r113'/><a href='#f113' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[113]</span></sup></a>
-“most that is noticeable in the native traditions of the Six
-Nations prior to the grand confederation.” But the value of
-such traditionary transmission of national history among unlettered
-tribes has received repeated confirmation; and incidents
-in the history of their famous league, perpetuated with circumstantial
-minuteness in the traditions of the Iroquois, are
-assignable apparently to the fifteenth century. The older
-event of the overthrow of the Alligéwi, in the Ohio valley,
-of which independent traditional records have been handed
-down by the Lenni-Lenape, or Delawares, and by the Iroquois,
-is now believed to be correctly assignable to a date nearly
-contemporaneous with the assumption of the authority of
-Bretwalda of the Heptarchy by Egbert of Wessex,—that
-memorable step in the fusion of “nations” not greatly more
-important than those of the Iroquois league, until their
-divisions in speech and polity were effaced in the unity of
-the English people. As to “the fanciful tale of a supernatural
-origin from the heart of a mountain,” it is simply a literal
-rendering of the old Greek metaphor of the autochthones, or
-<span class='pageno' title='252' id='Page_252'></span>
-children of the soil, symbolised by the Athenians wearing the
-grasshopper in their hair; and is by no means peculiar to the
-Iroquois. Mr. Horatio Hale derived from Manderong, an old
-Wyandot chief, the story, as narrated to him by the Hurons
-of Lorette. They took him, he said, to a mountain, and
-showed him the opening in its side from whence the progenitors
-of the people emerged, when they “first came out of
-the ground.”<a id='r114'/><a href='#f114' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[114]</span></sup></a> The late Huron chief, Tahourenché, or François-Xavier
-Picard, communicated to me the same legendary tradition
-of the indigenous origin of his people; telling me,
-though with a smile, that they came out of the side of a
-mountain between Quebec and the great sea. He connected
-this with other incidents, all pointing to a traditional belief
-that the northern shores of the lower St. Lawrence were the
-original home of the race; and he spoke of certain ancient
-events in the history of his people as having occurred when
-they lived beside the big sea. The earliest authentic reference
-to this tradition occurs in the <span class='it'>Relations</span> for 1636, where
-Brebeuf, after a brief allusion to certain of their magical songs
-and dances, says: “The origin of all such mysteries is assigned
-by them to a being of superhuman stature, who was wounded
-in the forehead by one of their nation, at the time when they
-lived near the sea.” The references to a migration from the
-seaboard obviously point to one of those incidents in the life
-of the nation which marked for them an epoch like the Hegira
-of the Arabs. When Champlain followed Cartier nearly
-seventy years later he found only a few Algonkins in their
-birch-bark wigwams, where the palisaded towns of the Huron-Iroquois
-had stood. But no Algonkin legend claims this as
-their early home. The invariable tradition of the Ojibways
-points to the Lake Superior region and the country stretching
-towards Hudson Bay as the ancestral home of the Algonkin
-tribes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Such information as can thus be gleaned from a variety of
-independent sources, as from the somewhat confused yet trustworthy
-narrative of David Cusick, the Tuscarora historian, and
-from Peter Dooyentate, the Wyandot historian, all leads to the
-same conclusion. From remote and altogether pre-Columbian
-centuries, the Hurons and other allied tribes—the occupants
-<span class='pageno' title='253' id='Page_253'></span>
-in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries of various detached
-portions of the country north of the St. Lawrence and eastward
-of the Georgian Bay,—appear to have been in possession of
-the whole region to which their oldest traditions pointed as the
-cradle of the race; while nations of the Algonkin stock lay
-beyond them to the north-west. The great river and the
-lakes from whence it flows into the lower valley formed a
-well-defined southern boundary for affiliated tribes; but the
-first Dutch and English explorers of the Hudson, and of the
-tract of country which now constitutes the western part of the
-State of New York, found the river-valleys and lake shores in
-occupation of the Iroquois confederacy, then consisting of
-Mohawks, Oneidas, Onondagas, Cayugas and Senecas. These
-constituted the five nations of the famous Iroquois league.
-But the Hurons of Canada, with whom they were latterly at
-deadly feud, appear to have been the oldest representatives of
-the common race, and were still in occupation of their ancestral
-home when Cartier first explored the St. Lawrence. The same
-race had spread far to the south; and its representatives, in
-detached groups, long continued to perpetuate its influence.
-These included the Conestogas or Andastes, the Andastogues,
-the Carantouans, the Cherohakahs or Nottoways, the Tuscaroras,
-and others, under various names. It is not always easy
-to recognise the same tribe under its widely dissimilar designations.
-The Susquehannocks of the English and the Minquas
-of the Dutch, appear to be the Andastes under other designations,
-and Champlain’s Carantouans may have been the Eries.
-Under those and other names the Huron-Iroquois stock
-extended to the country of the Tuscaroras in North Carolina.
-Still farther south Gallatin surmised, from linguistic evidence,
-a connection between the Cherokees and the Iroquois.<a id='r115'/><a href='#f115' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[115]</span></sup></a> This
-fact Mr. Hale has placed beyond doubt; and having detected
-in the language of the former a grammatical structure mainly
-Huron-Iroquois, while the vocabulary is to a great extent
-foreign, he is inclined to think that we thus recover traces of
-a people, far south in Alabama and Georgia, the descendants
-of refugees of the conquered Alligéwi, adopted into one of the
-nations of their Iroquois conquerors.<a id='r116'/><a href='#f116' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[116]</span></sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>From one after another of the outlying southern offshoots
-<span class='pageno' title='254' id='Page_254'></span>
-of the common stock, additions were made from time to time,
-to restore the numbers of the decimated Iroquois. Westward
-of the confederacy was the country of the Eries, an offshoot of
-the Seneca nation, occupying the southern shore of the great
-lake which perpetuates their name. Immediately to the north
-of the Eries, within the Canadian frontier, the Attiwendaronks,
-or Neuters, occupied the peninsula of Niagara, while the Tiontates
-or Petuns, and other tribes of the same stock, were settled
-in the fertile region between Lakes Erie and Huron. In 1714,
-the Tuscaroras, when driven by the English out of North
-Carolina, were welcomed by their Iroquois kinsmen, and received
-into the league which thenceforth bore the name of the
-Six Nations. Towards the middle of the same century the
-waste of war made them ready to welcome any additions to
-their numbers; and the Tuteloes and Nanticokes, both apparently
-Algonkin, furnished fresh accessions to the diminished
-numbers of the confederacy, but without taking their place as
-distinct nations.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But of all the nations of the stock thus widely spread westward
-and southward, the Hurons are the native historical race
-of Canada, intimately identified with incidents of its early
-settlement and of friendly intercourse with <span class='it'>La Nouvelle France</span>.
-Their language is now recognised as the oldest form of the
-common speech of the Huron-Iroquois, and it is not creditable
-to Canadian philologists that its grammar still remains unrepresented
-in any accurate printed form. The Literary and
-Historical Society of Quebec did, indeed, publish in its <span class='it'>Transactions</span>,
-in 1831, the translation of a Latin MS., compiled
-with much industry by a missionary who had laboured among
-the Hurons of Lorette, and whose anonymous work was found
-amongst the papers of the mission. But it is the production
-of one ignorant of the science of language, and gives no
-adequate idea either of the grammatical structure or of the
-variety and richness of the Huron tongue.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The languages or dialects spoken by many native Indian
-tribes have undoubtedly perished with the races to which they
-pertained; but the numerous Huron-Iroquois dialects still
-existing, not only in written form, but as living tongues,
-afford valuable materials for ethnical study. The history of
-other Indian tribes abundantly accounts for the multiplication
-<span class='pageno' title='255' id='Page_255'></span>
-of a minute diversity of languages so specially characteristic
-of the American continent, with the endless subdivisions of
-its indigenous population into petty tribes, kept apart by
-internecine feuds. The number of native American languages
-is estimated by Vater, in his <span class='it'>Linguarum Totius Orbis Index</span>, at
-about five hundred. But the question forthwith arises: What
-shall be regarded as constituting a language? For, in the
-wanderings of little bands of Indian nomads, and the adoption
-of refugees from disbanded tribes, dialects multiply indefinitely.
-Nearly six hundred of such are catalogued by Mr.
-Bancroft, in his <span class='it'>Native Races of the Pacific States</span>, as spoken
-between Alaska and the Isthmus of Panama.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Until recently the tendency has been to assume an underlying
-unity of speech for the whole American languages,
-based on the polysynthetic or holophrastic characteristic
-ascribed to the whole; just as by an exaggerated estimate of
-the prevalence of a predominant head-form, one physical type
-was long assumed to characterise the American race from
-Hudson Bay to Tierra del Fuego. Perhaps, so far as language
-is concerned, the present tendency is towards the opposite
-extreme. Major Powell, the chief of the Ethnographical
-Bureau at Washington, recognises eighty groups of languages
-in North America, between which no affinity is thus far apparent.
-Fifty-five of those he believes to be satisfactorily
-determined as distinct stocks. On the other hand, Professor
-Whitney, after noticing the complexity of the inquiry when
-directed to the native American languages, thus proceeds:
-“Yet it is the confident opinion of linguistic scholars that a
-fundamental unity lies at the base of all these infinitely varying
-forms of speech; that they may be, and probably are, all
-descended from a single parent language.”<a id='r117'/><a href='#f117' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[117]</span></sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Here then is a field for much useful research, with the
-promise of valuable results. The subject is rendered more
-important owing to the fact that, of nearly all the nations of
-the North American continent, their languages are the only
-surviving memorials of the race. Already, under the efficient
-supervision of the Ethnographic Bureau of the United States,
-systematic contributions are being secured for this important
-branch of knowledge, so far as their own geographical area is
-<span class='pageno' title='256' id='Page_256'></span>
-concerned. A no less important area is embraced in the
-Dominion of Canada, and the attention of the Government is
-now directed to the necessity for timely action in this matter.
-In the North-West, and in British Columbia, languages are
-disappearing and races becoming extinct. Mr. Hale has
-contributed to the American Philosophical Society’s <span class='it'>Transactions</span>
-a valuable monogram on the Tutelo tribe and language,
-derived mainly from Nikonha, the last full-blood Tutelo, who
-survived till upwards of a hundred years of age. He was
-married to a Cayuga woman, and lived among her people on
-their Grand river reserve. “My only knowledge of the
-Tuteloes,” says Mr. Hale, “had been derived from the few
-notices comprised in Gallatin’s <span class='it'>Synopsis of the Indian Tribes</span>,
-where they are classed with the nations of the Huron-Iroquois
-stock. At the same time the distinguished author, with the
-scientific caution which marked all his writings, is careful to
-mention that no vocabulary of the language was known.
-That which was now obtained showed, beyond question, that
-the language was totally distinct from the Huron-Iroquois
-tongues, and that it was closely allied to the language of the
-Dakota family.”<a id='r118'/><a href='#f118' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[118]</span></sup></a> But for the timely exertion of a philological
-student, this interesting link in the history of the
-Huron-Iroquois relations with affiliated tribes would have
-been lost beyond recall.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The history of the Huron-Iroquois race, and especially of
-the Six Nation Indians, since the settlement of the main
-body for the past century on their reserves on the Grand
-river, in the Province of Ontario, curiously illustrates the
-pertinacity with which they have cherished the dialectic
-varieties of a common tongue. But while the essential
-differences of language everywhere constitute one of the most
-obvious distinctions of race, it is interesting to note the
-recognition by the Indians of affinities of dialects, and even
-remote kinship based on such evidence; as in the readmission
-of the Tuscaroras to the Iroquois family of nations. According
-to Brebeuf, the kinship of the Attiwendaronks of the
-Niagara peninsula was recognised by the Hurons in that
-designation which classed them as a “people of a language
-a little different.”<a id='r119'/><a href='#f119' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[119]</span></sup></a> Peter Jones Kahkewaquonaby, a civilised
-<span class='pageno' title='257' id='Page_257'></span>
-Ojibway, adopted into the Mohawk nation, in speaking of
-the traditions of the Indians as to their own origin, says:
-“All the information I have been able to gain in relation
-to the question amounts to the following. Many, many
-winters ago the Great Spirit, Keche-Manedoo, created the
-Indians. Every nation speaking a different language is a
-second creation, but all were made by the same Supreme
-Being.”<a id='r120'/><a href='#f120' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[120]</span></sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Among the races of the northern continent, none east of
-the Rocky Mountains more fitly represent their special
-characteristics than the great Huron-Iroquois family. Their
-language is remarkable for its compass and elaborate grammatical
-structure; and the numerous dialects of the
-common mother tongue furnish evidence of migration and
-conquest over a wide region eastward of the Mississippi.
-To such philological evidence many inquirers are now
-turning for a clue to the origin of the races of the New
-World, and for the recovery of proofs of their affinity to one
-or other of the Old World stocks. Professor Whitney, after
-dwelling on the “exaggeratedly agglutinative type” of the
-ancient Iberian language, and its isolation among the essentially
-dissimilar languages of Aryan Europe, thus proceeds:
-“The Basque forms a suitable stepping-stone from which to
-enter the peculiar linguistic domain of the New World, since
-there is no other dialect of the Old World which so much
-resembles in structure the American languages”<a id='r121'/><a href='#f121' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[121]</span></sup></a>; not indeed,
-as he adds, that they are all of accordant form; for he
-pronounces the grouping of them in a single great family as
-“a classification of ignorance.” The possibilities of ancient
-communication between the opposite shores of the Atlantic,
-and the migration of colonists of the New World from the
-Mediterranean Sea, have already been discussed in dealing
-with the legend of the Lost Atlantis. Great indeed as is the
-interval of time therein implied, it would not suffice to erase
-all traces of affinity of languages. But it would be vain to
-hope for any historical guidance recoverable from the oldest
-of Iroquois legends. If, moreover, Iberian, Hittite, Egyptian,
-Phœnician, or other of the world’s gray fathers, transplanted
-<span class='pageno' title='258' id='Page_258'></span>
-to America the germs of its long indigenous stock, we look in
-vain for any traces of their Old World civilisation north of the
-Mexican Gulf. Nor is it by any means an established truth
-that the arts of Central America or Peru are of any very
-great antiquity. Their metallurgy was at a crude, yet suggestive,
-stage at which it was not likely to be long arrested.
-The same may be said of their hieroglyphic records; though
-they certainly present some highly significant analogies to the
-Chinese phase of word-writing, calculated, along with other
-aspects of resemblance to that stage of partial, yet long-enduring,
-civilisation of which China is the Asiatic exemplar,
-to modify our estimate of the possible duration of Central
-and Southern American civilisation. Nevertheless the assumption
-of an antiquity in any degree approximating to that
-of Egypt seems wholly irreconcilable with the evidence.
-Their architecture was barbaric, though imposing from the
-scale on which their great temples and palaces were built.
-In Central America especially, the aggregation of numerous
-ill-lighted little chambers, like honey-comb cells excavated
-out of the huge pile, is strongly suggestive of affinity to
-the Casas Grandes, and the Pueblos of the Zuñi; and this is
-confirmed by the correspondence traceable between many of
-their architectural details and the ornamentation of the
-Pueblo pottery.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The astronomy and the calendars, both of Mexico and
-Peru, with their detailed methods of recording their divisions
-of time, are all suggestive of an immature phase of civilisation
-in the very stage of its emergence from barbarism,
-modified, in some cases, by the recent acquisition of certain
-arts. As to the peculiar phase of Mexican art, and whatever
-other evidence of progress Mexico supplies, they appear to me
-no more than natural products of the first successful intrusion
-of the barbarians of the northern continent on the seats of
-tropical civilisation. Certain it seems, at least, that if an
-earlier civilisation had ever existed in the north, or if the
-representatives of any Old World type were present there in
-numbers for any length of time, some traces of their lost arts
-must long since have come to light.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But the conservative power of language is indisputable;
-and if the kinship now claimed for the polysynthetic languages
-<span class='pageno' title='259' id='Page_259'></span>
-of both hemispheres be correct, we are on the threshold of
-significant disclosures. The Huron-Iroquois tongue, in its
-numerous ramifications, as well as some of the native languages
-that have outlived the last of the races to which
-they belonged, may preserve traces of affinities as yet unrecognised.
-But in no respect are the Huron-Iroquois more
-correctly adducible as a typical race of American aborigines
-than in the absence of all evidence of their ever having
-acquired any of the arts upon which civilisation depends.
-We look in vain in their vocabularies for terms of science,
-or for names adapted to the arts and manufactures on which
-social progress depends. But they had developed a gift of
-oratory, for which their language amply sufficed, and from which
-we may infer the presence in this race of savages of latent
-powers, capable of wondrous development. “Their languages
-show, in their elaborate mechanism, as well as in their fulness
-of expression and grasp of thought, the evidence of the
-mental capacity of those who speak them. Scholars who
-admire the inflections of the Greek and Sanscrit verb, with
-their expressive force and clearness, will not be less impressed
-with the ingenious structure of the verb in Iroquois. It
-comprises nine tenses, three moods, the active and passive
-voices, and at least, twenty of those forms which in the
-Semitic grammars are styled conjugations. The very names
-of these forms will suffice to give evidence of the care and
-minuteness with which the framers of this remarkable language
-have endeavoured to express every shade of meaning.
-We have the diminutive and augmentative forms, the cis-locative
-and trans-locative, the duplicative, reiterative, motional,
-causative, progressive, attributive, frequentative, and many
-others.”<a id='r122'/><a href='#f122' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[122]</span></sup></a> To speak, indeed, of the Iroquois as, in a consciously
-active sense, the framers of all this would be misleading.
-But it unquestionably grew up in the deliberations
-around the council fire, where the conflicting aims of confederate
-tribes were swayed by the eloquence of some commanding
-orator, until the fiercest warrior of this forest race learned
-to value more the successful wielding of the tongue in the
-<span class='it'>Kanonsionni</span>, or figurative Long House of the League, even
-than the wielding of the tomahawk in the field. At the
-<span class='pageno' title='260' id='Page_260'></span>
-organisation of the confederacy, the Canyengas or Mohawks
-were figuratively said to have “built a house,” <span class='it'>rodinonsonnih</span>,
-or rather to have “built the long house” in which the council
-fire of the Five Nations was kindled. Of this the Senecas,
-lying on the extreme west, were styled the “door-keepers,”
-and the Onondagas, whose territory was central, were the
-custodians. The whole usage is rhetorical and figurative.
-Under such influences the language of the Huron-Iroquois
-was framed, and it grew rich in emotional and persuasive
-forms. It only needed the evolution of a true alphabet out
-of the pictorial symbolism on their painted robes, or the
-grave-posts of their chiefs, to inaugurate a literature which
-should embody the orations of the Iroquois Demosthenes,
-and the songs of a native Homer, for whom a vehicle of
-thought was already prepared, rich and flexible as poet could
-desire.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So far as the physical traits of the American aborigines
-furnish any evidence of ethnical affinity they unquestionably
-suggest some common line of descent with the Asiatic
-Mongol; and this is consistent with the agglutinate characteristics
-common to a large class of languages of both
-continents. But, on the other hand, the characteristic head-form
-of the Huron-Iroquois, as well as that of Algonkin and
-other northern tribes, deviates alike from the brachycephalic
-type of the southern Indians and from that of the Asiatic
-Mongols. Humboldt, who enjoyed rare opportunities for
-studying the ethnical characteristics of both continents, but
-to whom, nevertheless, the northern races, with their dolichocephalic
-type of head were unknown, dwells, in his <span class='it'>American
-Researches</span>, on the striking resemblance which the American
-race bear to the Asiatic Mongols. Latham classes both under
-the common head of Mongolidæ; and Dr. Charles Pickering,
-of the American Exploring Expedition, arrived at the same
-conclusion as the result of his own independent study of the
-races of both continents. Nevertheless, however great may be
-the resemblance in many points between the true Red Indian
-and the Asiatic Mongol, it falls short of even an approximate
-physical identity. The Mongolian of Asia is not indeed to be
-spoken of as one unvarying type any more than the American.
-But the extent to which the Mongolian head-form and peculiar
-<span class='pageno' title='261' id='Page_261'></span>
-physiognomy characterise one widely diffused section of the
-population of the eastern continent, gives it special prominence
-among the great ethnical divisions of the human race.
-Morton assigns 1421 as the cranial capacity of eighteen
-Mongol, and only 1234 as that of 164 American skulls
-other than Peruvian or Mexican. Dr. Paul Topinard, in
-discussing the American type, adds: “If we are to rely on
-the method of cubic measurement followed by Morton, the
-American skull is one of the least capacious of the whole
-human race.”<a id='r123'/><a href='#f123' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[123]</span></sup></a> But Dr. Morton’s results are in some respects
-misleading. The mean capacity yielded by the measurements
-of 214 American skulls in the Peabody Museum of Archæology,
-including a considerable number of females, is 1331;
-and with a carefully selected series, excluding exceptionally
-large and small crania, the results would be higher. Twenty-six
-male California skulls, for example, yield a mean capacity
-of 1470. The Huron-Iroquois crania would rank among such
-exceptional examples.<a id='r124'/><a href='#f124' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[124]</span></sup></a> The forehead is, indeed, low and
-receding, but the general cerebral capacity is good; and
-Dr. Morton specially notes its approximation to the European
-mean.<a id='r125'/><a href='#f125' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[125]</span></sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But the assumption of uniformity in the ethnical characteristics
-of the various races of North and South America
-is untenable. All probabilities rather favour the idea of different
-ethnical centres, a diversity of origin, and considerable
-admixture of races. All evidence, moreover, whether physical
-or philological, whatever else it may prove, leaves no room for
-doubt as to a greatly prolonged period of isolation of the
-native races of the New World. Whether they came from
-the Mediterranean, in that old mythic dawn the memory of
-which survived in the legend of a submerged Atlantis; or the
-history of their primeval migration still lingers among fading
-traces of philological affinity with the Basques; or if, with the
-still more remote glimpses which affinite Arctic ethnology has
-been assumed to supply, we seek to follow the palæolithic race
-of Central Europe’s Reindeer period in the long pilgrimage to
-Behring Straits, and so to the later home of the American
-<span class='pageno' title='262' id='Page_262'></span>
-Mongol; this, at least, becomes more and more obvious, that
-they brought with them no arts derived from the ancient
-civilisations of Egypt or of Asia. So far, at least, as the
-northern continent is concerned, no evidence tends to suggest
-that the aborigines greatly differed at any earlier period from
-the condition in which they were found by Cartier when
-he first entered the St. Lawrence. They were absolutely
-ignorant of metallurgy; and notwithstanding the abundance
-of pure native copper accessible to them, they cannot be said
-even to have attained to that rudimentary stage of metallurgic
-art which for Europe is spoken of as its “Copper Age.”
-Copper was to them no more than a malleable stone, which
-they fashioned into axes and knives with their stone hammers.
-Their pottery was of the most primitive crudeness, hand-fashioned
-by their women without the aid of the potter’s
-wheel. The grass or straw-plaiting of their basket-work
-might seem to embody the hint of the weaver’s loom; but
-the products of the chase furnished them with skins of the
-bear and deer, sufficient for all purposes of clothing. They
-had advanced in no degree beyond the condition of the
-neolithic savage of Europe’s Stone age when, at the close
-of the fifteenth century, they were abruptly brought into
-contact with its cultured arts. The gifted historian, Mr.
-Francis Parkman, who has thrown so fascinating an interest
-over the story of their share in the long-protracted struggle
-of the French and English colonists of North America, says
-of them: “Among all the barbarous nations of the continent
-the Iroquois stand paramount. Elements which among other
-tribes were crude, confused, and embryotic, were among them
-systematised and concreted into an established polity. The
-Iroquois was the Indian of Indians. A thorough savage,
-yet a finished and developed savage. He is perhaps an
-example of the highest elevation which man can reach without
-emerging from his primitive condition of the hunter.” Yet
-with this high estimate of the race as pre-eminent among Red
-Indian nations, he adds: “That the Iroquois, left under their
-institutions to work out their destiny undisturbed, would ever
-have developed a civilisation of their own, I do not believe.”<a id='r126'/><a href='#f126' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[126]</span></sup></a>
-They had not, in truth, taken the first step in such a direction;
-<span class='pageno' title='263' id='Page_263'></span>
-and, were it not for the evidence which language
-supplies, it would be conceivable that they, and the whole
-barbarian nations of which they are a type, were Mongol
-intruders of a later date than the Northmen of the tenth
-century; who, it seems far from improbable, encountered only
-the Eskimo of the Labrador coast, or their more southern
-congeners, then extending to the south of the St. Lawrence.
-The prevalence of a brachycephalic type of head among
-southern Indian tribes, while dolichocephalic characteristics
-are common to the Eskimo and to the Huron-Iroquois and
-other northern nations, lends countenance to the idea of an intermixture
-of Red Indian and Eskimo blood. The head-forms,
-however, though both long, differ in other respects; and a
-divergence is apparent on comparing the bones of the face,
-with a corresponding difference in their physiognomy.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dr. Latham recognised the Iroquois as one of the most
-typical families of the North American race, and Mr. Parkman
-styles them “the Indian of the Indians.” The whole Huron-Iroquois
-history illustrates their patient, politic diplomacy, their
-devotion to hunting and to war. But their policy gave no
-comprehensive aim to wars which reduced their numbers, and
-threatened their very existence as a race. Throughout the
-entire period of any direct knowledge of them by Europeans,
-there is constant evidence of feuds between members of the
-common stock, due in part, indeed, to their becoming involved
-in the rivalries of French and English colonists, but also
-traceable to hereditary animosities perpetuated through many
-generations. The strongly marked diversities in the dialects of
-the Six Nations is itself an evidence of their long separation,
-prior to their confederation, in the earlier half of the fifteenth
-century. By far the most trustworthy narrative of this famous
-league is embodied by Mr. Horatio Hale in <span class='it'>The Iroquois Book
-of Rites</span>, a contribution to aboriginal American literature of
-singular interest and value. Among the members of this
-confederacy the Tuscaroras occupy a peculiar position. They
-were reunited to the common stock so recently as 1714, but
-their traditions accord with those of the whole Huron-Iroquois
-family in pointing to the Lower St. Lawrence as their original
-home; and the diversity of the Tuscarora dialect from those of
-the older nations of the league furnishes a valuable gauge of
-<span class='pageno' title='264' id='Page_264'></span>
-the significance of such differences as evidence of the length
-of period during which the various members of the common
-stock had been separated. On the other hand, the manner in
-which, in the absence of any hereditary feud, the Iroquois
-respected the bonds of consanguinity, and welcomed the
-fugitive immigrants from North Carolina, throws an interesting
-light on the history of the race, and the large extent of country
-occupied by it in the time of its greatest prosperity.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The earliest home of the whole Huron-Iroquois stock was
-within the area of Quebec and Eastern Ontario, and they have
-thus a claim on the interest of Canadians as their precursors in
-the occupation of the soil; while, in so far as its actual
-occupancy by the representatives of the common stock is concerned,
-the Hurons were welcomed to a friendly, if fatal,
-alliance with the early French colonists; and the Iroquois of
-the Six Nations have enjoyed a home, under the protection of
-England, on the western Canadian reserves set apart for their
-use upwards of a century ago.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There is one notable inconsistency in the traditions of the
-Huron-Iroquois which is significant. The fathers of the
-common stock dwelt, according to their most cherished
-memories, in their northern home on the St. Lawrence, and
-beside the great sea. It ranked also among the ancient
-traditions of the “Wampum-keepers,” or official annalists, that
-there came a time when, from whatever cause, the Caniengas—Ka-nyen-ke-ha-ka,
-or Flint people, <span class='it'>i.e.</span> the Mohawks,—the
-“eldest brother” of the family, led the way from the northern
-shore of the St. Lawrence to their later home in what is now
-the State of New York. But the prehistoric character of
-this later tradition is shown by the fact that the Oneidas,
-Onondagas, and Senecas, all claimed for themselves the character
-of autochthones in their later home. The precise spot
-where, according to the cherished legend of the Oneidas, they
-literally sprang from the soil, is still marked by “the Oneida
-Stone,” a large boulder of flesh-coloured syenite, from which the
-latter called themselves Oniota-aug, “the people begot from
-the stone.” It occupies a commanding site overlooking a fine
-expanse of country stretching to the Oneida Lake. But,
-according to Mr. Hale, the name of the Oneida nation, in the
-council of the league, was <span class='it'>Nihatirontakowa</span>, usually rendered
-<span class='pageno' title='265' id='Page_265'></span>
-the “great-tree people,” or literally “those of the great log.”
-This designation is connected, most probably as an afterthought,
-with a legendary meeting of their people with
-Hiawatha.<a id='r127'/><a href='#f127' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[127]</span></sup></a> The beautiful legend of this benefactor of his
-people has been embalmed in the Indian epic of Longfellow,
-and dealt with as a chapter of genuine history in Mr. Horatio
-Hale’s <span class='it'>Iroquois Book of Rites</span>. At a period when the tribes were
-being wasted by constant wars within and without, a wise and
-beneficent chief arose among the Onondagas. His name is
-rendered: “he who seeks the wampum belt.” He had long
-viewed with grief the dissensions and misery of his people, and
-conceived the idea of a federal union which should ensure
-peace. The system which he devised was to be not a loose and
-transitory league, such as the Indian tribes were familiar with;
-but a permanent organisation, foreshadowing as it were the
-federal union of the Anglo-American Colonies. “While each
-nation was to retain its own council and its management of
-local affairs, the general control was to be lodged in a federal
-senate, composed of representatives elected by each nation,
-holding office during good behaviour, and acknowledged as
-ruling chiefs throughout the confederacy. Still further, and
-more remarkably, the confederation was not to be a limited one.
-It was to be infinitely expansive. The avowed design of its
-proposer was to abolish war altogether. He wished the
-federation to extend until all the tribes of men should be
-included in it. Such,” says Mr. Hale, “is the positive testimony
-of the Iroquois themselves, and their statement is supported by
-historical evidence.”<a id='r128'/><a href='#f128' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[128]</span></sup></a> The league survived far on into the
-eighteenth century; but the dream of universal peace among
-the nations of the New World, if it ever found any realisation,
-had vanished in the reawakening of the demon of strife.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In all the accounts of the Iroquois their league is noted as
-distinguishing them from the Algonkins and other ruder tribes
-of North America. The story of this league has been reproduced
-by successive historians, not without rhetorical exaggerations
-borrowed from the institutions of civilised nations, both of
-ancient and modern times. The late Hon. L. H. Morgan
-says of this tribal union: “Under their federal system the
-Iroquois flourished in independence, and capable of self-protection,
-<span class='pageno' title='266' id='Page_266'></span>
-long after the New England and Virginia races had
-surrendered their jurisdictions, and fallen into the condition of
-dependent nations; and they now stand forth upon the canvas
-of Indian history, prominent alike for the wisdom of their civil
-institutions, their sagacity in the administration of the league,
-and their courage in its defence. When their power and
-sovereignty finally passed away, it was through the events of
-peaceful intercourse, gradually progressing to this result.”<a id='r129'/><a href='#f129' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[129]</span></sup></a>
-Schoolcraft in like manner refers to “their advancement in the
-economy of living, in arms, in diplomacy, and in civil polity,”
-as evidence of a remote date for their confederacy.<a id='r130'/><a href='#f130' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[130]</span></sup></a> But while
-thus contrasting the “power and sovereignty” of the Iroquois
-with the “dependent nations” to the south, Schoolcraft leaves
-it manifest that, whatever may have been the extent of the
-ancient confederacy, in the seventeenth century their whole
-numbers fell short of 12,000; and in 1677 their warriors or
-fighting men were carefully estimated at 2150. The diversity
-of dialects of the different members of the league is a source of
-curious interest to the philologist; but the fact that, among a
-people numerically so small, local dialects were thus perpetuated,
-is a proof of the very partial influence of the league as a
-bond of union. It serves to illustrate the general defect of
-native American polity. “Nothing,” says Max Müller, “surprised
-the Jesuit missionaries so much as the immense number
-of languages spoken by the natives of America. But this, far
-from being a proof of a high state of civilisation, rather showed
-that the various races of America had never submitted for any
-length of time to a powerful political concentration.<a id='r131'/><a href='#f131' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[131]</span></sup></a> The
-Iroquois were undoubtedly pre-eminent in the highest virtues of
-the savage; and could they have been isolated in the critical
-transitional stage, like the ancient Egyptians in their Nile
-valley, the Greeks in their Hellenic peninsula, or the Anglo-Saxons
-in their insular stronghold—</p>
-
-<div class='poetry-container' style=''><div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<p class='line0'>.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. set in the silver sea</p>
-<p class='line0'>Which serves it in the office of a wall</p>
-<p class='line0'>Or as a moat defensive—</p>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='noindent'>until they learned to unite with their courage and persistency in
-<span class='pageno' title='267' id='Page_267'></span>
-war some of the elements of progress in civilisation ascribed to
-them, they might have proved the regenerators of the continent,
-and reserved it for permanent occupation by races of native
-origin. “Wherever they went,” says Schoolcraft, “they carried
-proofs of their energy, courage, and enterprise. At one period
-we hear the sound of their war-cry along the Straits of the St.
-Mary’s, and at the foot of Lake Superior; at another, under the
-walls of Quebec, where they finally defeated the Hurons under
-the eyes of the French.”<a id='r132'/><a href='#f132' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[132]</span></sup></a> And after glancing at the long
-history of their triumphs, he adds: “Nations trembled when
-they heard the name of the Konoshioni.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In older centuries, while the Huron-Iroquois still constituted
-one united people in their ancestral home to the north
-of the St. Lawrence, they must have been liable to contact
-with the Eskimo, both on the north and the east; and greatly
-as the two races differ, the dolichocephalic type of head common
-to both is not only suggestive of possible intermixture,
-but also of encroachments on the Eskimo in early centuries
-by this aggressive race. In the sixteenth and seventeenth
-centuries, as probably at a much earlier date, when the Iroquois
-had parted from the Hurons, they became unquestionably
-<span class='it'>the</span> aggressive race of the northern continent; and were
-an object of dread to widely severed nations. Their earliest
-foes were probably the Algonkins, whose original home appears
-to have been between Lake Superior and Hudson Bay.
-Nevertheless, there was a time, according to the traditions
-of both, apparently in some old pre-Columbian century,
-when Iroquois and Algonkins combined their forces against
-the long-extinct stock whose name survives in that of the
-Alleghany Mountains and river. But if so, their numbers
-must have then vastly exceeded that of their whole combined
-nations at any period subsequent to their first intercourse with
-Europeans. For if the growing opinion is correct that the
-Alligéwi were the so-called “Mound-Builders” of the Mississippi
-and Ohio valleys, they must have been a numerous
-people, occupying a territory of great extent, and carrying on
-agriculture on a large scale. So far as metallurgy—that
-crucial test of civilisation,—is concerned, they had not advanced
-beyond the stage of Iroquois progress. Their pottery and
-<span class='pageno' title='268' id='Page_268'></span>
-ingenious carvings in stone have already been noted, along
-with their singular geometrical earthworks which still puzzle
-the American archæologist, from the evidence they show of
-skill in a people still practically in their Stone period. The
-only conceivable solution of the mystery, as already suggested,
-seems to me the assumption of some “Druidic” or Brahminical
-caste, distinct from the native Alligéwi stock, who ruled in
-those great northern river-valleys, as in Peru; and, like the
-mythic Quetzalcoatl of the Aztecs, taught them agriculture,
-and directed the construction of the marvellous works to which
-they owe their later distinctive name. But for some unknown
-reason they provoked the united fury of Iroquois and Algonkins;
-and after long-protracted strife were driven out, if not
-wholly exterminated. A curious phase of incipient native
-civilisation thus perished; and, notwithstanding all the
-romance attached to the league of the Iroquois, it is impossible
-to credit them at any stage of their own history with
-the achievement of such a progress in agriculture or primitive
-arts as we must ascribe to this ancient people of the Ohio
-valley. To the triumph of the Iroquois in this long-protracted
-warfare may have been due the haughty spirit which
-thenceforth demanded a recognition of their supremacy from
-all surrounding nations. Their partial historians ascribe to
-them a spirit of magnanimity in the use of their power, and
-a mediatorial interposition among the weaker nations that
-acknowledged their supremacy. They appear, indeed, to have
-again entered into alliance with an Algonkin nation. Their
-annalists have transmitted the memory of a treaty effected with
-the Ojibways, when the latter dwelt on the shores of Lake
-Superior; and the meeting-place of the two powerful races
-was at the great fishing-ground of the Sault Ste. Marie rapids,
-within reach of the copper-bearing rocks of the Keweenaw
-peninsula. The league then established is believed to have
-been faithfully maintained on both sides for upwards of two
-hundred years. But if so, it had been displaced by bitter
-feud in the interval between the visits of Cartier and Champlain
-to the St. Lawrence.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The historical significance given to the legend of Hiawatha
-by the coherent narrative so ingeniously deduced by Mr.
-Horatio Hales from <span class='it'>The Iroquois Book of Rites</span>, points to a
-<span class='pageno' title='269' id='Page_269'></span>
-long-past era of beneficent rule and social progress among the
-Huron-Iroquois. But the era is pre-Columbian, if not mythic.
-The pipe of peace had been long extinguished, and the buried
-tomahawk recovered, when the early French explorers were
-brought into contact with the Iroquois and Hurons. The
-history of their deeds, as recorded by the Jesuit Fathers from
-personal observation, is replete with the relentless ferocity of
-the savage. War was their pastime; and they were ever
-ready to welcome the call to arms. La Salle came in contact
-with them on the discovery of the Illinois; and Captain John
-Smith, the founder of Virginia, encountered their canoes on
-the Chesapeake Bay bearing a band of Iroquois warriors to the
-territories of the Powhattan confederacy. They were then, as
-ever, the same fierce marauders, intolerant of equality with
-any neighbouring tribe. The Susquehannocks experienced at
-their hands the same fate as the Alligéwi. The Lenapes,
-Shawnees, Nanticokes, Unamis, Delawares, Munsees, and Manhattans,
-were successively reduced to the condition of dependent
-tribes. Even the Canarse Indians of Long Island were
-not safe from their vengeance; and their power seems to have
-been dreaded throughout the whole region from the Atlantic
-to the Mississippi.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It thus appears probable that in remote centuries, before
-the discovery of America by European voyagers, the region
-extending westward from the Labrador coast to Lake Ontario,
-if not, indeed, to Lake Huron, had been in occupation by those
-who claimed to be autochthones, and who were known and
-feared far beyond their own frontiers. But though thus maintaining
-a haughty predominancy; so far as their arts afford
-any evidence, they were in their infancy. The country occupied
-by them, except in so far as it was overgrown with the
-forest, was well adapted for agriculture; and the Iroquois and
-Hurons alike compared favourably with the Algonkins in their
-agricultural industry. A confirmatory evidence of exceptional
-superiority among this remarkable race is that their women
-were held in unwonted respect. They had their own representatives
-in the council of the tribe; and exercised considerable
-influence in the choice of a chief. But on them devolved
-all domestic labour, including the cultivation of their fields.
-This work was entirely carried on by the women, while the
-<span class='pageno' title='270' id='Page_270'></span>
-share of the men in the joint provision of food was the product
-of the chase. The beautiful region was still so largely
-under forest that it must have afforded abundant resources for
-the hunter; but it furnished no facilities for the inauguration
-of a copper or bronze age, such as the shores of Lake Superior
-in vain offered to its Algonkin nomads. Of metallic ores they
-had no knowledge; and while they doubtless prized the copper
-brought occasionally from Lake Superior, copper implements
-are rare in the region which they occupied. Their old alliance
-with the Algonkins of the great copper region had long come
-to an end; and when brought under the notice of the French
-and English colonists, the Algonkins had joined with the
-Hurons as the implacable foes of the Iroquois confederacy.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the ancient warfare in which Algonkins and Huron-Iroquois
-are found united against the nation of the great river
-valleys, we see evidences of a conflict between widely distinct
-stocks of northern and southern origin. It is an antagonism
-between well-defined dolichocephalic and brachycephalic races.
-In the dolichocephalic Iroquois or Huron, we have the highest
-type of the forest savage; maintaining as his own the territory
-of his fathers, and building palisaded towns for the secure
-shelter of his people. The brachycephalic Mound-Builder, on
-the other hand, may still survive in one or other of the members
-of the semi-civilised village communities of New Mexico
-or Arizona. But if the interpretation of native traditions have
-any value, they carry us back to pre-Columbian centuries, and
-tell of long-protracted strife, until what may at first have been
-no more than the aggressions of wild northern races, tempted
-by the resources of an industrious agricultural community,
-became a war of extermination. The elaborately constructed
-forts of the Mound-Builders, no less abundant throughout the
-Ohio valley than their curious geometrical earthworks, prove
-the dangers to which they were exposed, no less than the skill
-and determination with which the aggressors were withstood,
-it may be through successive generations, before their final
-overthrow.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The palisaded Indian town of Hochelaga, one of the chief
-urban centres of the Huron-Iroquois tribes in the older home
-of the race, and a sample of the later Huron defences on the
-Georgian Bay, stood, in the sixteenth century, at the foot of
-<span class='pageno' title='271' id='Page_271'></span>
-Mount Royal, whence the city of Montreal takes its name;
-and some of the typical skulls of its old occupants, as well as
-flint implements and pottery from its site, are now preserved
-in the Museum of M’Gill University. The latter relics reveal
-no more than had long been familiar in the remains which
-abound within the area of the Iroquois confederacy, and elsewhere
-throughout the eastern states of North America. Their
-earthenware vessels were decorated with herring-bone and
-other incised patterns; and their tobacco pipes and the handles
-of their clay bowls were, at times, rudely modelled into human
-and animal forms. Their implements of flint and stone were
-equally rude. They had inherited little more than the most
-infantile savage arts; and when those were at length superseded,
-in some degree, by implements and weapons of European
-manufacture, they prized the more effective weapons, but
-manifested no desire for mastering the arts to which they were
-due. To all appearance, through unnumbered centuries, the
-tide of human life has ebbed and flowed in the valley of the
-St. Lawrence as unprogressively as on the great steppes of
-Asia. Such footprints as the wanderers have left on the
-sands of time tell only of the unchanging recurrence of generations
-of men as years and centuries came and passed away.
-Illustrations of native art are now very familiar to us. The
-ancient flint pits have been explored; and the flint cores and
-rough-hewn nodules recovered. The implements of war and
-the chase were the work of the Indian brave. His spears and
-arrow heads, his knives, chisels, celts, and hammers, in flint and
-stone, abound. Fish-hooks, lances or spears, awls, bodkins,
-and other implements of bone and deer’s horn, are little less
-common. The highest efforts of artistic skill were expended
-on the carving of his stone pipe, and fashioning the pipe-stem.
-The pottery, the work of female hands, is usually in the
-simplest stage of coarse, handmade, fictile ware. The patterns,
-incised on the soft clay, are the conventional reproductions of
-the grass or straw-plaiting; or, at times, the actual impressions
-of the cordage or wicker-work by which the larger clay vessels
-were held in shape, to be dried in the sun before they were
-imperfectly burned in the primitive kiln. But the potter also
-indulged her fancy at times in modelling artistic devices of
-men and animals, as the handles of the smaller ware, or the
-<span class='pageno' title='272' id='Page_272'></span>
-forms in which the clay tobacco pipe was wrought. Nevertheless
-the northern continent lingered to the last in its
-primitive stage of neolithic art; and its most northern were
-its rudest tribes, until we pass within the Arctic circle and
-come in contact with the ingenious handiwork of the Eskimo.
-Southward beyond the great lakes, and especially within the
-area of the Mound-Builders, a manifest improvement is noticeable.
-Alike in their stone carvings and their modelling in
-clay, the more artistic design and better finish of industrious
-settled communities are apparent. Still further to the south,
-the diversified ingenuity of fancy, especially in the pottery, is
-suggestive of an influence derived from Mexican and Peruvian
-art. The carved work of some western tribes was also of a
-higher character. But taking such work at its best, it cannot
-compare in skill or practical utility with the industrial arts of
-Europe’s Neolithic age. This region has now been visited and
-explored by Europeans for four centuries, during a large portion
-of which time they have been permanent settlers. Its
-soil has been turned up over areas of such wide extent that the
-results may be accepted, with little hesitation, as illustrations
-of the arts and social life subsequent to the occupation of the
-continent by its aboriginal races. But we look in vain for
-evidence of an extinct native civilisation. However far back
-the presence of man in the New World may be traced, throughout
-the northern continent, at least, he seems never to have
-attained to any higher stage than what is indicated by such
-evidences of settled occupation as were shown in the palisaded
-Indian town of Hochelaga; or at most, in the ancient settlements
-of the Ohio valley. Everywhere the agriculturist only
-disturbs the graves of the savage hunter. The earthworks of
-the Mound-Builders, and still more their configuration, are
-indeed suggestive of a people in a condition analogous to that
-of the ancient populace of Egypt or Assyria, toiling under the
-direction of an overruling caste, and working out intellectual
-conceptions of which they themselves were incapable. Yet,
-even in their case, this inference finds no confirmation from
-the contents of their mounds or earthworks. They disclose
-only implements of bone, flint, and stone, with some rare
-examples of equally rude copper tools, hammered into shape
-without the use of fire. Working in the metals appears to
-<span class='pageno' title='273' id='Page_273'></span>
-have been confined to the southern continent; or, at least,
-never to have found its way northward of the Mexican plateau.
-Nothing but the ingeniously sculptured tobacco pipe, or the
-better-fashioned pottery, gives the slightest hint of progress
-beyond the first infantile stage of the tool-maker.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Whatever may have been the source of special skill among
-the old agricultural occupants of the Ohio valley, their
-Iroquois supplanters borrowed from them no artistic aptitude.
-No remains of its primitive occupants give the slightest hint
-that the aborigines of Canada, or of the country immediately
-to the south of the St. Lawrence, derived any knowledge from
-the old race so curiously skilled in the construction of geometrical
-earthworks. Any native burial mounds or embankments
-are on a small scale, betraying no more than the
-simplest operations of a people whose tools were flint hoes,
-and horn or wooden picks and shovels. Wherever evidence
-is found of true working in metals, as distinct from the cold-hammered
-native copper, as in the iron tomahawk, the copper
-kettles, and silver crosses, recovered from time to time from
-Indian graves, their European origin is indisputable. Small
-silver buckles, or brooches, of native workmanship are indeed
-common in their graves; for a metallic currency was so
-unintelligible to them that this was the use to which they
-most frequently turned French or English silver coinage.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But notwithstanding the general correspondence in arts,
-habits, and conditions of life, among the forest and prairie
-tribes of North America, their distinctive classification into
-various dolichocephalic and brachycephalic types points to
-diversity of origin and a mingling of several races. So far as
-the native races of Canada are considered, it has been shown
-that they belong to the dolichocephalic type. The Alligéwi,
-or Mound-Builders, on the contrary, appear to have been a
-strongly marked brachycephalic race; and the bitter antagonism
-between the two, which ended in the utter ruin of the latter,
-may have been originally due to race distinctions such as have
-frequently been the source of implacable strife.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The short globular head-form, which, in the famous Scioto-mound
-skull, is shown in a strongly marked typical example
-with the longitudinal and parietal diameters nearly equal,
-appears to have been common among the southern tribes,
-<span class='pageno' title='274' id='Page_274'></span>
-such as the Osages, Ottoes, Missouries, Shawnees, Cherokees,
-Seminoles, Uchees, Savannahs, Catawbas, Yamasees, Creeks,
-and many others. This seems to point to such a convergence,
-of two distinct ethnical lines of migration from opposite centres,
-as is borne out by much other evidence. In noting this aspect
-of the question anew, the further significant fact may also be
-once more repeated, that the Eskimo cranium, along with
-certain specialties of its own, is pre-eminently distinctive as
-the northern type.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Among what may be accepted as typical Canadian skulls,
-those recovered from the old site of Hochelaga, and from the
-Huron ossuaries around Lake Simcoe, have a special value.
-They represent the native race which, under various names,
-extended from the Lower St. Lawrence westward to Lake St.
-Clair. The people encountered by Cartier and the first French
-explorers of 1535, and those whom Champlain found settled
-around the Georgian Bay sixty-eight years later, appear to
-have been of the same stock. Such primitive local names, as
-Stadaconé and Hochelaga, are not Algonkin, but Huron-Iroquois.
-Native traditions, as well as the allusions of the
-earliest French writers, confirm this idea of the occupation by
-a Huron-Iroquois or Wyandot population of the “region north-eastward
-from the mouth of the St. Lawrence, at or somewhere
-along the Gulf coast, before they ever met with the French, or
-any European adventurers,” as reaffirmed in the narrative of
-their own native historian, Peter Dooyentate.<a id='r133'/><a href='#f133' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[133]</span></sup></a> But whatever
-confirmation may be found for this native tradition,
-it is certain that the European adventurers bore no part in
-their expulsion from their ancient home. The aborigines, whom
-Jacques Cartier found a prosperous people, safe in the shelter
-of their palisaded towns, had all vanished before the return of
-the French under Champlain; and they were found by him
-in new settlements, which they had formed far to the westward
-on Lake Simcoe and the Georgian Bay.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Questions of considerable interest are involved in the consideration
-of this migration of the Hurons; and the circumstances
-under which they deserted their earlier home. They
-were visited by Champlain in 1615, and subsequently by the
-missionary Fathers, who, in 1639, found them occupying
-<span class='pageno' title='275' id='Page_275'></span>
-thirty-two palisaded villages, fortified in the same fashion as
-those described by the first French explorers at Stadaconé
-and Hochelaga. Their numbers are variously estimated.
-Brebeuf reckoned them at 30,000; and described them as
-living together in towns sometimes of fifty, sixty, or a hundred
-dwellings,—that is, of three or four hundred householders,—and
-diligently cultivating their fields, from which they derived
-food for the whole year. Whatever higher qualities distinguished
-the Iroquois from Algonkin or other native races,
-were fully shared in by the Hurons; and they are even
-spoken of with a natural partiality by their French allies,
-like Sagard, as a patrician order of savages, in comparison
-with those of the Five Nations. When first visited by
-French explorers, after their protracted journey through the
-desolate forests between the Ottawa and Lake Huron, their
-palisaded towns and cultivated fields must have seemed like
-an oasis in the desert. “To the eye of Champlain,” says Mr.
-Parkman, “accustomed to the desolation he had left behind,
-it seemed a land of beauty and abundance. There was a
-broad opening in the forest, fields of maize with pumpkins
-ripening in the sun, patches of sun-flowers, from the seeds of
-which the Indians made hair-oil, and in the midst the Huron
-town of Otouacha. In all essential points it resembled that
-which Cartier, eighty years before, had seen at Montreal; the
-same triple palisade of crossed and intersecting trunks, and
-the same long lodges of bark, each containing many households.
-Here, within an area of sixty or seventy miles, was
-the seat of one of the most remarkable savage communities of
-the continent.”<a id='r134'/><a href='#f134' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[134]</span></sup></a> The Hurons, thus settled in their latter
-home, consisted of several “nations,” including their kinsmen
-to the south, as far as Lake Erie and the Niagara river. They
-had their own tribal divisions, still perpetuated among their
-descendants. The Rev. Prosper Vincent Sa∫∫atannen, a native
-Huron, and the first of his race admitted to the priesthood,
-informs me that the Hurons of Lorette still perpetuate their
-ancient classification into four <span class='it'>grandes compagnies</span>, each of
-which has its five tribal divisions or clans, by which of old all
-intermarriage was regulated. The members of the same clan
-regarded themselves as brothers and sisters, and so were precluded
-<span class='pageno' title='276' id='Page_276'></span>
-from marriage with one another. The small number
-of the whole band at La Jeune Lorette renders the literal
-enforcement of this rule impossible; but the children are still
-regarded as belonging to the mother’s clan. The five clans
-into which each of the four companies is divided are:—1. The
-Deer, <span class='it'>Oskanonton</span>; 2. The Bear, <span class='it'>Anniolen</span>; 3. The Wolf,
-<span class='it'>Annenarisk∫∫a</span>; 4. The Tortoise, <span class='it'>Andia∫∫ik</span>; 5. The Beaver,
-<span class='it'>Tsotai</span>. There were two, if not more dialects spoken by the
-old Hurons, or Wyandots; and that of Hochelaga probably
-varied from any form of the language now surviving. This
-has to be kept in view in estimating the value of the lists of
-words furnished by Jacques Cartier of “le langage des pays et
-Royaulmes de Hochelaga et Canada, aultrement appellée par
-nous la nouvelle France.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Of the condition of the region to the west of the Ottawa
-prior to the seventeenth century nothing is known from
-direct observation. Before Champlain had an opportunity of
-visiting it, the whole region westward to Lake Huron had
-been depopulated and reduced to a desert. The fact that the
-few natives found by Champlain occupying the once populous
-region of the Hochelaga Indians were Algonkins, has been the
-chief ground for the assumption that the expulsion of that old
-Wyandot stock was due to their hostility. But such an idea
-is irreconcilable with the fact that the latter, instead of
-retreating southward to their Huron-Iroquois kinsmen, took
-refuge among Algonkin tribes. According to the narrative
-of their own Wyandot historian, Peter Dooyentate, gathered,
-as he tells us, from traditions that lived in the memory of
-a few among the older members of his tribe, the island of
-Montreal was occupied in the sixteenth century by Wyandots
-or Hurons, and Senecas, sojourning peaceably in separate
-villages. The tradition is vague which traces the cause of
-their hostility to the wrath of a Seneca maiden, who had
-been wronged by the object of her affections, and gave her
-hand to a young Wyandot warrior on the condition of his
-slaying the Seneca chief, to whose influence she ascribed the
-desertion of her former lover. Whatever probability may
-attach to this romance of the Indian lovers, the tradition
-that the Hurons were driven from their ancient homes on
-the St. Lawrence by their Seneca kinsmen is consistent with
-<span class='pageno' title='277' id='Page_277'></span>
-ascertained facts, as well as with the later history of the
-Senecas, who are found playing the same part to the Eries
-under a somewhat similar incentive to revenge, and appear to
-have taken the lead in the destruction of the Attiwendaronks.
-The native tradition is of value in so far as it shows that the
-fatal enmity of the Iroquois to the Hurons was not originally
-due to the alliance of the latter with the French; but Senecas
-and Hurons had alike disappeared before Champlain visited
-the scene of Cartier’s earlier exploration. The Attiwendaronks,
-who dwelt to the south of the later home of the Hurons, on
-the shores of Lakes Ontario and Erie, may have formed
-another of the nations of the Wyandot stock expelled from
-the valley of the St. Lawrence. Situated as they were in
-their later home, midway between the Hurons and Iroquois,
-they strove in vain to maintain a friendly neutrality. Charlevoix
-assigns the year 1635 as the date of their destruction
-by the latter. Certain it is that between that date and the
-middle of the century their towns were utterly destroyed;
-and such of the survivors as lingered in the vicinity were
-incorporated into the nation of the Senecas, who lay nearest
-to them.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Eries were another Huron-Iroquois nation who appear
-to have persistently held aloof from the league. They were
-seemingly a fiercer and more warlike people than the Attiwendaronks;
-they fought with poisoned arrows, and were
-esteemed or dreaded as warriors. Their numbers must have
-been considerable, since they were an object of apprehension
-to the nations of the league whose western frontiers marched
-with their own. They are affirmed by the native historian,
-Cusick, to have sprung from the Senecas; but, if so, their
-separation was probably of remote date, as they were both
-numerous and powerful. The country which they occupied
-was noted among the French <span class='it'>coureurs des bois</span> for its lynx
-furs; and they gave accordingly to its people the name of
-“La Nation du Chat.” Their ancient home is still indicated
-in the name of the great lake beside which they dwelt. But,
-for some unknown reason, they refused all alliance with the
-Senecas and the league of their Iroquois kin, and perished by
-their violence within seven years after the Huron country
-was laid waste. “To the Eries, and to the Neuter nation,”
-<span class='pageno' title='278' id='Page_278'></span>
-or Attiwendaronks, says Schoolcraft, “according to tradition,
-the Iroquois offered the alternative of admission into the
-league or extermination; and the strangeness of this proposition
-will disappear, when it is remembered that an Indian
-nation regards itself as at war with all others not in actual
-alliance.”<a id='r135'/><a href='#f135' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[135]</span></sup></a> Peace, he adds, was the ultimate aim of the
-founders of the Iroquois oligarchy; and, for lovers of peace
-on such terms of supremacy, the <span class='it'>casus belli</span> would not be more
-difficult to find than it has proved to be among the most
-Christian of kings. In the case of the Eries, as of the elder
-Wyandots of Hochelaga, the final rupture is ascribed to a
-woman’s implacable wrath.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Father Le Moyne, while on a mission to the Onondagas in
-1654, learned that the Iroquois confederacy were excited to
-fury against the Eries. A captive Onondaga chief is said to
-have been burnt at the stake after he had been offered,
-according to Indian custom, to one of the Erie women, to
-take the place of her brother who had been murdered while
-on a visit to the Senecas. It is a characteristic illustration of
-how the feuds of ages were perpetuated. The traditions of
-the Iroquois preserved little more than the fact that the Eries
-had perished by their fury. But a story told to Mr. Parkman
-by a Cayuga Indian, only too aptly illustrates the hideous
-ferocity of their assailants. It represented that the night
-after the great battle in which the Eries suffered their final
-defeat, the forest was lighted up with more than a thousand
-fires, at each of which an Erie was being tortured at the
-stake.<a id='r136'/><a href='#f136' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[136]</span></sup></a> The number is probably exaggerated. But it is only
-thus, as it were in the lurid glare of its torturing fires, that we
-catch a glimpse of this old nation as it vanished from the
-scene. Of the survivors, the greater number were adopted,
-according to Indian fashion, into the Seneca nation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Some of the earthworks met with to the south of Lake Erie
-show proofs of greater constructive labour than anything found
-in Canada. Still more interesting are the primitive hieroglyphics
-of an inscription on Cunningham’s Island, ascribed to
-the Eries, and which Schoolcraft describes as by far the most
-elaborate work of its class hitherto found on the continent.<a id='r137'/><a href='#f137' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[137]</span></sup></a>
-<span class='pageno' title='279' id='Page_279'></span>
-But the rock inscription, though highly interesting as an
-example of native symbolism and pictographic writing, throws
-no light on the history of its carvers; and of their language no
-memorial is recoverable, for they had ceased to exist before the
-great lake which perpetuates their name was known to the
-French.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>More accurate information has been preserved in reference
-to the Hurons, among whom the Jesuit Fathers laboured with
-self-denying zeal, from time to time reporting the results
-in their <span class='it'>Relations</span> to the Provincial of the Order at Paris.
-One of the most characteristic religious ceremonies of the
-Hurons was the great “Feast of the Dead,” celebrated apparently
-at intervals of twelve years, when the remains of their
-dead were gathered from scaffolded biers, or remote graves, and
-deposited amid general mourning in the great cemetery of the
-tribe. Valuable robes and furs, pottery, copper kettles and
-others of their choicest possessions, including the pyrulæ, or
-large tropical shells brought from the Gulf of Mexico, with
-wampum, prized implements, and personal ornaments, were all
-thrown into the great trench, which was then solemnly covered
-over. By the exploration of those Huron ossuaries, the sites
-of the palisaded villages of the Hurons of the seventeenth
-century have been identified in recent years; and there are
-now preserved in the Laval University at Quebec upwards of
-eighty skulls recovered from cemeteries at St. Ignace, St.
-Joachin, Ste. Marie, St. Michael, and other villages, the scenes
-of self-denying labour, and in some cases of the cruel torturings,
-of the French missionaries by whom they were thus
-designated. Other examples of skulls from the same ossuaries,
-I may add, are now in the Museums of the University of
-Toronto, the London Anthropological Society, and the Jardin
-des Plantes at Paris. The skulls recovered from those ossuaries
-have a special value from the fact that the last survivors
-were driven out of the country by their Iroquois foes in 1649;
-and hence the crania recovered from them may be relied upon
-as fairly illustrating the physical characteristics of the race
-before they had been affected by intercourse with Europeans.
-The Huron skull is of a well-defined dolichocephalic type,
-with, in many cases, an unusual prominence of the occipital
-region; the parietal bones meet more or less at an angle at
-<span class='pageno' title='280' id='Page_280'></span>
-the sagittal suture; the forehead is flat and receding; the
-superciliary ridges in the male skulls are strongly developed;
-the malar bones are broad and flat, and the profile is orthognathic.
-Careful measurements of thirty-nine male skulls yield
-a mean longitudinal diameter of 7.39 to a parietal diameter of
-5.50; and of eighteen female skulls, a longitudinal diameter
-of 7.07 to a parietal diameter of 5.22.<a id='r138'/><a href='#f138' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[138]</span></sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Who were the people found by Cartier in 1535, seemingly
-long-settled and prosperous, occupying the fortified towns of
-Stadaconé and Hochelaga, and lower points on the St.
-Lawrence? The question is not without a special interest to
-Canadians. According to the native Wyandot historian, they
-were Wyandots or Hurons, and Senecas. That they were
-Huron-Iroquois, at any rate, and not Algonkins, is readily
-determined. We owe to Cartier two brief vocabularies of their
-language, which, though obscured probably in their original
-transcription, and corrupted by false transliterations in their
-transference to the press, leave no doubt that the people spoke
-a Huron-Iroquois dialect. To which of the divisions it
-belonged is not so obvious. The languages, in the various
-dialects, differ only slightly in most of the words which Cartier
-gives. Sometimes they agree with Huron, and sometimes
-with Iroquois equivalents. The name of Hochelaga, “at the
-beaver-dam,” is Huron, and the agreement as a whole preponderates
-in favour of a Huron rather than an Iroquois dialect.
-But there was probably less difference between the two then,
-than at the more recent dates of their comparison. In dealing
-with this important branch of philological evidence, I have
-been indebted to the kindness of my friend, Mr. Horatio Hale,
-for a comparative analysis of the vocabulary supplied by
-Cartier, embodying the results of long and careful study. He
-has familiarised himself with the Huron language by personal
-intercourse with members of a little band of civilised Wyandots,
-settled on their reserve at Anderdon, in Western Ontario.
-The language thus preserved by them, after long separation
-from other members of the widely scattered race, probably
-presents the nearest approximation to the original forms of the
-native tongue, as spoken on the Island of Montreal and the
-lower St. Lawrence. In comparing them allowance has to be
-<span class='pageno' title='281' id='Page_281'></span>
-made for varieties of dialect among the old occupants of the
-lower valley of the St. Lawrence, and also for the changes
-wrought on the Huron language in the lapse of three and a
-half centuries, not simply by time, but also as the result of
-intercourse and intermixture with other peoples. The habit
-of recruiting their numbers by the adoption of prisoners and
-broken tribes could not fail to exercise some influence on
-the common tongue. The <span class='it'>k</span> or hard <span class='it'>g</span> of Cartier is, in the
-Wyandot, frequently softened to a <span class='it'>y</span>; and on the other
-hand, the <span class='it'>n</span> is strengthened by a <span class='it'>d</span> sound, as in Cartier’s
-pregnant term <span class='it'>Canada</span>, the old Hochelaga word for a town,
-which has become in the Wyandot <span class='it'>Yandata</span>; and so in other
-instances.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The revolution which, at the critical period of the advent of
-the Trench in the valley of the St. Lawrence, in the interval
-of sixty-eight years between the visits of Cartier and Champlain,
-displaced the fortified and populous Indian capital of
-Hochelaga and left the surrounding regions a desolate wilderness,
-is a mysterious event. Had Champlain been curious to
-learn the facts of an occurrence then so recent there could
-have been little difficulty in recovering the history of the
-exodus of the Hochelagans. But it had no interest for the
-French adventurers of that day. The well-fortified Wyandot
-towns had given place to a few ephemeral birch-bark
-wigwams belonging to another race; and the readiest solution
-of the mystery has been to ascribe the expulsion of the
-Wyandots, or Hurons, from their ancient home in Eastern
-Canada, to the Algonkins. This, as already shown, is irreconcilable
-with the fact that Champlain found them in friendly
-alliance with the latter against their common foe, the Iroquois.
-If, however, the Wyandot tradition of the expulsion of the
-Hurons from the island of Montreal by the Senecas be
-accepted, it is in no degree inconsistent with the circumstances
-subsequently reported by Champlain; but rather serves to
-account for some of them, if it is assumed that the Senecas
-were, in their turn, driven out by the Algonkins, and then
-finally withdrew beyond the St. Lawrence.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But there is another kind of evidence bearing on the question
-of the affinities of the people first met with by Cartier in
-1535, which also has its value here. The descriptions of the
-<span class='pageno' title='282' id='Page_282'></span>
-palisaded towns of the Hurons on the Georgian Bay very
-accurately reproduce that which Cartier gives of Hochelaga.
-Ephemeral as such fortifications necessarily were, the construction
-of a rampart formed of a triple row of trunks of trees,
-surmounted with galleries, from whence to hurl stones and
-other missiles on their assailants, was a formidable undertaking
-for builders provided with no better tools than stone
-hatchets, and with no other means of transport than their
-united labour supplied. But the design had the advantage of
-furnishing a self-supporting wall, and so of saving the greater
-labour of digging a trench, with such inadequate tools, in soil
-penetrated everywhere with the roots of forest trees. It was
-the Huron-Iroquois system of military engineering, in which
-they contrasted favourably with the Algonkins, among whom
-the absence of such evidence of settled habits as those secure
-defences supplied, was characteristic of these ruder nomads.
-But such urban fortifications no less strikingly contrast with
-the elaborate and enduring military earthworks to the south of
-the great lakes. The pottery and implements found on the
-site of Hochelaga are of the same character as many examples
-recovered from the Huron ossuaries. On the other hand the
-peculiar rites, of which those ossuaries are the enduring
-memorials, appear to have distinguished the western Hurons
-from the older settlers on the St. Lawrence. The great Feast
-of the Dead, with its recurrent solemnities, when after the
-lapse of years the remains of their dead were exhumed, or
-removed from their scaffold biers, was the most characteristic
-religious ceremonial of the Hurons; and was practised with
-still more revolting rites by the kindred Attiwendaronks.
-Festering dead bodies were kept in their dwellings, preparatory
-to scraping the flesh from their bones; and the decaying
-remains of recently buried corpses were exhumed for reinterment
-in the great trench, which was prepared with enormous
-labour, and furnished with the most lavish expenditure of
-prized furs, wampum, and other possessions.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In all ages and states of society unavailing sorrow has tempted
-the survivors to extravagant excesses in the effort to do honour
-to the loved dead; and sumptuary laws have been repeatedly
-enacted to restrain such demonstrations within reasonable
-bounds. <span class='it'>The Book of Rites</span> suffices to suggest that the ancient
-<span class='pageno' title='283' id='Page_283'></span>
-funeral rites of the Iroquois were of the same revolting and
-wasteful character, until their mythic reformer, Hiawatha,
-superseded them with a simpler symbolical funeral service.
-“I have spoken of the solemn event which has befallen you,”
-are the introductory words to the thirteenth paragraph of “The
-Condoling Council,” and it thus proceeds: “Every day you
-are losing your great men. They are being borne into the
-earth; also the warriors, and also your women, and also your
-grandchildren; so that in the midst of blood you are sitting.” It
-is therefore enacted, in the twenty-seventh paragraph, evidently
-in lieu of older practices: “This shall be done. We will suspend
-a pouch upon a pole, and will place in it some mourning
-wampum, some short strings, to be taken to the place where
-the loss was suffered. The bearer will enter, and will stand
-by the hearth, and will speak a few words to comfort those
-who will be mourning; and then they will be comforted, and
-will conform to the great law.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A string of black wampum sent round the settlement is still,
-among the Indians of the Six Nations, the notice of the death
-of a chief, as a belt of black wampum was a declaration of
-war. It seems not improbable that the people of Stadaconé
-and Hochelaga had submitted to the wise social and religious
-reforms by which the ancient rites of their dead were superseded
-by the symbolism of the mourning wampum, and hence
-the absence of ossuaries throughout the island of Montreal and
-the whole region to the east. But when the fugitive Wyandots
-fled into the wilderness, and reared new homes around Lake
-Simcoe and in the western peninsula, they may have revived
-traditional usages of their fathers, and resumed rites which had
-been reluctantly abandoned. Among the civilised Indians of
-the Six Nations some memorials of their ancestral rites of the
-dead still survive. A visitor to the reserve at the time of the
-death of a late highly esteemed chief told me that on the event
-being known it was immediately responded to by all within
-hearing by the prolonged utterance, in a mournful tone, of the
-cry <span class='it'>Kwé</span>, and this, passing from station to station, spread the
-news of their loss throughout the reserve. Nearly the same
-sound, uttered in a quicker note, <span class='it'>Quaig!</span> is the salutation among
-the Hurons of Lorette.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The later history of the Hurons and Iroquois is not without
-<span class='pageno' title='284' id='Page_284'></span>
-its special interest. One little band, the Hurons of Lorette,
-the representatives of the refugees from the massacre of 1648,
-has lingered till our own day in too close proximity to the
-French <span class='it'>habitants</span> of Quebec to preserve in purity the blood of
-the old race. But great as are the alterations which time and
-intermixture with the white race have effected, they still
-retain many intellectual as well as physical traits of their
-original stock after an interval of two hundred and thirty-six
-years, during which intimate intercourse, and latterly frequent
-intermarriage with those of European blood, have wrought
-inevitable change on the race.<a id='r139'/><a href='#f139' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[139]</span></sup></a> Other more vigorous representatives
-of the old Huron stock occupy a small reservation
-in the Township of Anderdon, in Western Ontario, from whom
-the vocabulary was derived which furnished a test of the
-language of the Hochelagans in the sixteenth century. But
-the Hurons of Lorette have also preserved their native tongue;
-and an ample vocabulary<a id='r140'/><a href='#f140' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[140]</span></sup></a> of the older form of their language
-survives. A third modification of the ancient tongue no doubt
-exists; for the larger remnant of the survivors of the Hurons,
-after repeated wanderings, is now settled, far from the native
-home of the race, on reserves conceded to them by the American
-Government in Kansas.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Hurons have thus, for the most part, disappeared from
-Canada; but it is not without interest to note that the revolution
-which, upwards of a century ago, severed the connection
-of the old colonies to the south of the St. Lawrence with the
-region to the north, restored to Canada its ancient Iroquois.
-This race of savage warriors acquired the mastery of a region
-equal in extent to Central Europe; and by a system of warfare,
-not, after all, more inherently barbarous or recklessly
-bloody than that of Europe’s Grand Monarch, reconstructed the
-social and political map of the continent east of the Mississippi.
-Their influence acquired a novel importance when, in the
-seemingly insignificant rivalries of French and English fur-traders,
-they practically determined the balance of power
-<span class='pageno' title='285' id='Page_285'></span>
-between the two foremost nations of Europe on this continent.
-Their indomitable pertinacity proved more than a match alike
-for European diplomacy and military skill; and, as they
-maintained an uncompromising hostility to the French at a
-time when the rival colonists were nearly equally balanced, the
-failure of the magnificent schemes of Louis XIV. and his
-successors to establish in North America such a supremacy as
-Charles V. and Philip II. had held in Mexico and Peru, is
-largely traceable to them. It is natural that the Anglo-American
-student of history should estimate highly the polity
-of savage warriors who thus foiled the schemes of one of the
-most powerful monarchies of Europe for the mastery of this
-continent. The late Hon. L. H. Morgan thus writes of them:
-“They achieved for themselves a more remarkable civil organisation,
-and acquired a higher degree of influence, than any
-other race of Indian lineage except those of Mexico and Peru.
-In the drama of European colonisation they stood, for nearly
-two centuries, with an unshaken front against the devastations
-of war, the blighting influence of foreign intercourse, and the
-still more fatal encroachments of a restless and advancing
-border population. Under their federal system the Iroquois
-flourished in independence, and capable of self-protection, long
-after the New England and Virginia races had surrendered
-their jurisdictions, and fallen into the condition of dependent
-nations; and they now stand forth upon the canvas of Indian
-history, prominent alike for the wisdom of their civil institutions,
-their sagacity in the administration of the league, and
-their courage in its defence.”<a id='r141'/><a href='#f141' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[141]</span></sup></a> But in this their historian
-applies to the Iroquois a European standard, similar to that
-by which Prescott unconsciously magnified Mexican barbarism
-into a rivalry with the contemporary civilisation of Spain.
-The romance attached to the Hodenosauneega, or Kononsionni,
-the famous league of the Long House or United Households,
-more truly derives its chief interest and value from the fact
-that its originators remained to the last savages. It is, at any
-rate, important to keep this fact in view, and to interpret the
-significance of the league in that light. When the treaty
-which initiated it was entered into by the Caniengas and the
-Oneidas, they were both in that primitive stage of unsophisticated
-<span class='pageno' title='286' id='Page_286'></span>
-barbarism to which the term “Stone Period” has been
-applied. In the absence of all knowledge of metallurgy, their
-implements and weapons were alike simple and rude. Agriculture,
-under such conditions, must have been equally primitive;
-and as for their wars, when they were not defensive, they
-appear to have had no higher aim than revenge. Gallatin, no
-unappreciative witness, says of them: “The history of the Five
-Nations is calculated to give a favourable opinion of the
-intelligence of the Red Man. But they may be ranked among
-the worst of conquerors. They conquered only in order to
-destroy, and, it would seem, solely for the purpose of gratifying
-their thirst for blood. Towards the south and the west they
-made a perfect desert of the whole country within 500 miles
-of their seats. A much greater number of those Indians,
-who since the commencement of the seventeenth century have
-perished by the sword in Canada and the United States, have
-been destroyed by that single nation than in all their wars with
-the Europeans.”<a id='r142'/><a href='#f142' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[142]</span></sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>To characterise the combination effected among such tribes
-as one presenting elements of wise civil institutions; or indeed
-to introduce such terms as league and federal system, in the
-sense in which they have been repeatedly employed, as though
-they referred to a confederation akin to those of the ancient
-Achæans or Ætolians, is to suggest associations altogether misleading.
-Though an interesting phase of American savage life,
-to which its long duration gives a marked significance, the
-Iroquois league was by no means unique; though it was the
-oldest, and may have been the model on which others were
-framed. The Creek confederacy embraced numerous tribes
-between the Mobile, Alabama, and Savannah rivers, and the
-Gulf of Mexico. At the head of it were the Muskhogees, a
-numerous and powerful, but wholly savage race of hunters.
-Like the Oneidas, Onandagas, and the still older Wyandots,
-they and the Choctaws claimed to be autochthones. The
-Muskhogees appealed to a tradition of their ancestors that they
-issued from a cave near the Alabama river; while the Choctaws
-pointed to the frontier region between them and the Chickasaws,
-where, as they affirmed, they suddenly emerged from a hole in
-the earth, a numerous and mighty people. The system of
-<span class='pageno' title='287' id='Page_287'></span>
-government amongst the members of this southern confederacy
-seems to have borne considerable resemblance to that of the
-Iroquois; if it was not borrowed from it. Every village was
-the centre of an independent tribe or nation, with its own
-chief; and the restraints imposed on the individual members,
-except when co-operating in some special enterprise or religious
-ceremonial, appear to have been slight.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mr. Hale has shown that the language of the Cherokees
-has a grammar mainly Huron-Iroquois, and a vocabulary largely
-recruited from some foreign source. From this he infers that
-one portion of the conquered Alligéwi, while the conflict still
-lasted, may have cast in their lot with the conquering race,
-just as the Tlascalans did with the Spaniards in their war
-against the Aztecs, and hence the origin of the great Cherokee
-nation. The fugitive Alligéwi, he surmises, may have fled
-down the Mississippi till they reached the country of the
-Choctaws, themselves a mound-building people; and to the
-alliance of the two he would thus trace the difference in the
-language of the latter from that of their eastern kindred, the
-Creeks or Muskhogees.<a id='r143'/><a href='#f143' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[143]</span></sup></a> On the assumption of such a combination
-of ethnical elements, the origin of the Creek confederacy
-is easily accounted for. It is to this same element of language
-that we have to revert for guidance in the interpretation of the
-history of this remarkable race. It would be an evasion of the
-most essential evidence on which any reliable conclusions must
-be based, if the fact were overlooked that the Iroquois never
-emerged beyond the primitive stage of the Stone period.
-Nevertheless in one element of intellectual development their
-progress had been great. Each nation of the Iroquois league
-had its chief, to whom pertained the right of kindling the
-symbolic council-fire, and of taking the lead in all public
-assemblies. When the representative chiefs of the nations
-gathered in the Long House around the common council-fire
-of the league, it was no less necessary that they should be able
-and persuasive speakers than brave warriors. Rhetoric was
-cultivated in the council-house of the Iroquois no less earnestly
-than in the Athenian ekklesia or the Roman forum. Acute
-reasoning and persuasive eloquence demanded all the discriminating
-refinements of grammar, and the choice of terms which an
-<span class='pageno' title='288' id='Page_288'></span>
-ample vocabulary supplies. The holophrastic element has been
-noted as a peculiar characteristic of American languages. The
-word-sentences thus constructed not only admitted of, but
-encouraged, an elaborate nicety of discrimination; while the
-marked tendency of the process, so far as the language itself is
-concerned, was to absorb all other parts in the verb. Time,
-place, manner, aim, purpose, degree, and all the other modifications
-of language are combined polysynthetically with the root.
-Nouns are to a large extent verbal forms; and not only nouns
-and adjectives, but adverbs and prepositions, are regularly conjugated.
-Elaborated polysyllables, flexibly modified by
-systematic internal changes, give expression, in one compounded
-word-sentence, to every varying phase of intricate reasoning or
-emotion; and the complex structure shows the growth of a
-language in habitual use for higher purposes than the mere
-daily wants of life. The vocabulary in use in some rural districts
-in England has been found to include less than three
-hundred words; and in provincial dialects, thus restricted, the
-refinements of grammatical expression disappear. Among such
-rustic communities speech plays a very subordinate part in the
-business of life. But upon the deliberations of the Indian
-council-house depended the whole action of the confederacy.
-Hence, while in all else the Iroquois remained an untutored
-savage, his language is a marvellously systematised and beautiful
-structure, well adapted to the requirements of intricate
-reasoning and persuasive subtlety.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Professor Whitney says, in reference to American languages
-generally, what may more especially be applied to the Huron-Iroquois:
-“There are infinite possibilities of expressiveness in
-such a structure; and it would only need that some native American
-Greek race should arise, to fill it full of thought and
-fancy, and put it to the uses of a noble literature, and it would
-be rightly admired as rich and flexible, perhaps beyond anything
-else that the world knew.”<a id='r144'/><a href='#f144' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[144]</span></sup></a> Yet, on the other hand, the
-Iroquois dispense with the whole labials, never articulate with
-their lips, and throw entirely aside from their alphabetical series
-of phonetics six of those most constantly in use by us.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In this direction, then, lies an ethnological problem which
-cannot fail to awaken ever-increasing interest. To the native
-<span class='pageno' title='289' id='Page_289'></span>
-languages of the New World we must look for a true key to
-the solution of some of the most curious and difficult questions
-involved in the peopling of the continent. “There lies before
-us,” says Professor Whitney, “a vast and complicated problem
-in the American races; and it is their language that must do
-by far the greatest part of the work in solving it.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Of the languages of the Huron-Iroquois, the Huron appears
-to be the oldest, if not the parent stock. When this aggressive
-race had spread, as conquerors, far to the south of the St.
-Lawrence, the mother nation appears to have held on to the
-cradleland of the race, where its representatives were found
-still in possession when the first European explorers entered
-the St. Lawrence. Colonists, of French or English origin, have
-been in more or less intimate intercourse with them ever since,
-yet the materials for any satisfactory study of the Huron
-language, or of a comparison between it and the various
-Iroquois dialects, are still scanty and very inadequate. The
-languages of the Five Nations that originally constituted the
-members of the Iroquois league, are, in the strictest sense of the
-term, dialects. In their council-house on the Grand river, the
-chiefs of the Mohawks, Oneidas, Onandagas, Cayugas, and
-Senecas, speak each in their own language and need no interpreter.
-Nevertheless, the differences are considerable; and a
-Seneca would scarcely find the language of a Mohawk intelligible
-to him in ordinary conversation. But the separation of
-the Tuscaroras from the Iroquois on the Mohawk river had
-been of long duration, and their language differs much more
-widely from the others.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Mohawk language was adopted at an early date for
-communicating with the Indians of the Six Nations. The New
-England Company, established in 1649, under favour of the
-Lord Protector, Cromwell, “for the propagation of the Gospel
-in New England,” was revived on the restoration of Charles II.
-under a royal charter; and with the eminent philosopher,
-Robert Boyle, as its first governor, vigorous steps were taken
-for the religious instruction of the Indians. The correspondence
-of Eliot, “the Apostle of the Indians,” with the first governor
-of the Company, is marked by their anxiety for the completion
-of the Massachusetts Bible, which, along with other books, he
-had translated for the benefit of the Indians of New England.
-<span class='pageno' title='290' id='Page_290'></span>
-The silver Communion Service, still preserved at the reserve on
-the Grand river, presented to the ancestors of the Mohawk
-nation by Queen Anne, is an interesting memorial of the early
-efforts for their Christianisation. It bears the inscription:
-“A. R., 1711. <span class='sc'>The Gift of Her Majesty, by the Grace of
-God, of Great Britain, France, and Ireland, and of her
-Plantations in North America, Queen: to her Indian
-Chappel of the Mohawks.</span>” The date has a special interest in
-evidence of the transforming influences already at work; for it
-was not till three years later that the Tuscaroras were received
-into the confederation, and the Iroquois became known by their
-later appellation as the Six Nation Indians. In accordance
-with the efforts indicated by the royal gift, repeated steps were
-taken for translating the Scriptures and the Prayer-Book into
-their language. In a letter of the Rev. Dr. Stuart, missionary
-to the Six Nations, dated 1771, he describes his introduction
-to Captain Brant at the Mohawk village of Canajoharie, and
-the aid received from him in revising the Indian Prayer-Book,
-and in translating the Gospel of St. Mark and the Acts of the
-Apostles into the Mohawk language. The breaking out of the
-revolutionary war arrested the printing of these translations.
-The manuscripts were brought to Canada in 1781, and placed
-in the hands of Colonel Clause, the Deputy Superintendent of
-Indian Affairs. This gentleman subsequently carried them to
-England, where they were at length printed. A more recent
-edition of the Mohawk Prayer-Book, prepared under the
-direction of the Rev. Abraham Nelles, a missionary of the New
-England Company, with the aid of a native catechist, issued
-from the Canadian press in 1842. The Indian text is accompanied
-with its English equivalent on the opposite page, and
-this <span class='it'>Kaghyadouhsera ne Yoedereanayeadagwha</span>, or Book of
-Common Prayer, is still in use in the religious services of
-the Six Nation Indians at their settlement on the Grand
-river.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Some characteristics of the language, such as the absence of
-labials, constitute not only a distinctive difference from the
-old Huron speech, but afford proof of the latter being the older
-form. “It is a fact,” says Professor Max Müller, in referring
-to his intercourse with an intelligent native Mohawk, then a
-student at Oxford, “that the Mohawks never, either as infants
-<span class='pageno' title='291' id='Page_291'></span>
-or as grown-up people, articulate with their lips. They have
-no <span class='it'>p</span>, <span class='it'>b</span>, <span class='it'>m</span>, <span class='it'>f</span>, <span class='it'>v</span>, <span class='it'>w</span>—no labials of any kind.”<a id='r145'/><a href='#f145' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[145]</span></sup></a> The statement,
-so far as the Mohawk infants are concerned, is open to further
-inquiry; but Dr. Oronhyatekha, the Mohawk referred to, who
-pursued his studies for a time in the University of Toronto, and
-to whom I have been largely indebted in this and other
-researches in Indian philology, not only rejects the six letters
-already named, but also <span class='it'>c</span>, <span class='it'>g</span>, <span class='it'>l</span>, <span class='it'>z</span>. The alphabet is thus reduced
-to seventeen letters. Professor Max Müller notes in passing,
-that the name “Mohawk” would seem to prove the use of the
-labial. But it is of foreign origin, though possibly derived from
-their own term: <span class='it'>oegwehokough</span>, “people.” The name employed
-by themselves is “Canienga.” The practice of speaking without
-ever closing the lips is an acquired habit of later origin
-than the forms of the parent tongue. A comparison of any of
-the Iroquois dialects with the Huron as still spoken by the
-Wyandots of Ontario, shows the <span class='it'>m</span> in use by the latter in what
-is no doubt a surviving example of the oldest form of the
-Huron-Iroquois language. This Huron <span class='it'>m</span> frequently becomes
-<span class='it'>w</span> in the Iroquois dialects, <span class='it'>e.g.</span> <span class='it'>skatamendjaweh</span>, “one hundred,”
-becomes in Mohawk <span class='it'>unskadewennyaweh</span>; <span class='it'>rume</span>, “man,” Mohawk,
-<span class='it'>ronkwe</span>, etc. These and other examples of this interchangeable
-characteristic of Indian phonology, and the process of substitution
-in the absence of labials, are illustrated in the table of
-Huron-Iroquois numerals on the following page. The habit of
-invariably speaking with the lips open is the source of very
-curious modifications in the Iroquois vocabularies when compared
-with that of the Wyandots. The <span class='it'>m</span> gives place to <span class='it'>w</span>,
-<span class='it'>nw</span>, <span class='it'>nh</span>, or <span class='it'>nhu</span>; also to <span class='it'>ku</span> and <span class='it'>nkw</span>, and so frequently changes
-the whole character of the word by the modifications it gives
-rise to.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A comparison of the numerals of cognate languages and
-dialects is always instructive; and with the growing disposition
-of American philologists to turn to the Basques, as the only
-prehistoric race of Europe that has perpetuated the language
-of an Allophylian stock with possible analogies to the native
-languages of America, their numerals may be placed alongside
-of those of the Huron-Iroquois. The permanency of the names
-for numerals, and their freedom from displacement by synonyms,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='292' id='Page_292'></span></p>
-
-<h3 id='tablecomp'><span class='sc'>Comparative Table of Numerals.</span></h3>
-
-<table id='tab2' summary='' class='center' style='font-size:.7em;'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 2em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 5em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 9em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 10em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 8em;'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'></td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab2c3 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab2c4 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab2c5 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'></td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle4'><span class='sc'>Hochelaga.</span></td><td class='tab2c3 tdStyle5'><span class='sc'>Huron.</span></td><td class='tab2c4 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab2c5 tdStyle4'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'></td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle5'>(Cartier.)</td><td class='tab2c3 tdStyle5'>(Lorette.)</td><td class='tab2c4 tdStyle5'><span class='sc'>Wyandot.</span></td><td class='tab2c5 tdStyle5'><span class='sc'>Mohawk.</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'></td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab2c3 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab2c4 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab2c5 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'></td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab2c3 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab2c4 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab2c5 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'>1</td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle4'>segada}</td><td class='tab2c3 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab2c4 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab2c5 tdStyle4'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'></td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle4'>secata}</td><td class='tab2c3 tdStyle4'>skāt</td><td class='tab2c4 tdStyle4'>scat</td><td class='tab2c5 tdStyle4'>unska</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'>2</td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle4'>tigneny}</td><td class='tab2c3 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab2c4 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab2c5 tdStyle4'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'></td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle4'>tignem }</td><td class='tab2c3 tdStyle4'>tendi</td><td class='tab2c4 tdStyle4'>tendee</td><td class='tab2c5 tdStyle4'>dekenih</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'>3</td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle4'>asche</td><td class='tab2c3 tdStyle4'>chin</td><td class='tab2c4 tdStyle4'>shaight</td><td class='tab2c5 tdStyle4'>ahsunh</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'>4</td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle4'>honnacon</td><td class='tab2c3 tdStyle4'>ndak</td><td class='tab2c4 tdStyle4'>andaght</td><td class='tab2c5 tdStyle4'>kayerih</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'>5</td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle4'>ouiscon</td><td class='tab2c3 tdStyle4'>wisch</td><td class='tab2c4 tdStyle4'>weeish</td><td class='tab2c5 tdStyle4'>wisk</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'>6</td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle4'>indahir</td><td class='tab2c3 tdStyle4'>wahia</td><td class='tab2c4 tdStyle4'>waushau</td><td class='tab2c5 tdStyle4'>yayak</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'>7</td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle4'>ayaga</td><td class='tab2c3 tdStyle4'>tsotaré</td><td class='tab2c4 tdStyle4'>sootaie</td><td class='tab2c5 tdStyle4'>jadah</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'>8</td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle4'>adigue</td><td class='tab2c3 tdStyle4'>ateré</td><td class='tab2c4 tdStyle4'>autarai</td><td class='tab2c5 tdStyle4'>sadekonh</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'>9</td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle4'>madellon</td><td class='tab2c3 tdStyle4'>entson</td><td class='tab2c4 tdStyle4'>aintru</td><td class='tab2c5 tdStyle4'>tyodonh</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'>10</td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle4'>assem</td><td class='tab2c3 tdStyle4'>asen</td><td class='tab2c4 tdStyle4'>aughsagh</td><td class='tab2c5 tdStyle4'>oyerih</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'>11</td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...</td><td class='tab2c3 tdStyle4'>asenskatiskaré</td><td class='tab2c4 tdStyle4'>assan escate escarhet</td><td class='tab2c5 tdStyle4'>unskayawenreh</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'>12</td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...</td><td class='tab2c3 tdStyle4'>asentenditiskaré</td><td class='tab2c4 tdStyle4'>asanteni escarhet</td><td class='tab2c5 tdStyle4'>dekenihyawenreh</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'>13</td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...</td><td class='tab2c3 tdStyle4'>āsenachinskaré</td><td class='tab2c4 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...</td><td class='tab2c5 tdStyle4'>ahsunhyawenreh</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'>14</td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...</td><td class='tab2c3 tdStyle4'>asendakskaré</td><td class='tab2c4 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...</td><td class='tab2c5 tdStyle4'>kayerihyawenreh</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'>15</td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...</td><td class='tab2c3 tdStyle4'>asenwischskaré</td><td class='tab2c4 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...</td><td class='tab2c5 tdStyle4'>wiskyawenreh</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'>16</td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...</td><td class='tab2c3 tdStyle4'>asenwahiaskaré</td><td class='tab2c4 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...</td><td class='tab2c5 tdStyle4'>yayakyawenreh</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'>17</td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...</td><td class='tab2c3 tdStyle4'>asentsotaréskaré</td><td class='tab2c4 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...</td><td class='tab2c5 tdStyle4'>jadahyawenreh</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'>18</td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...</td><td class='tab2c3 tdStyle4'>asenateréskaré</td><td class='tab2c4 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...</td><td class='tab2c5 tdStyle4'>sadekonhyawenreh</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'>19</td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...</td><td class='tab2c3 tdStyle4'>asenentsonskaré</td><td class='tab2c4 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...</td><td class='tab2c5 tdStyle4'>tyodonhyawenreh</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'>20</td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...</td><td class='tab2c3 tdStyle4'>tendi eouasen</td><td class='tab2c4 tdStyle4'>tendeitawaughsa</td><td class='tab2c5 tdStyle4'>dewasunh</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'>30</td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...</td><td class='tab2c3 tdStyle4'>achink iouasen</td><td class='tab2c4 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...</td><td class='tab2c5 tdStyle4'>ahsunhniwasunh</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'>100</td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...</td><td class='tab2c3 tdStyle4'>enniot iouasen</td><td class='tab2c4 tdStyle4'>scutemaingarwe</td><td class='tab2c5 tdStyle4'>unskadewennyaweh</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'>1000</td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...</td><td class='tab2c3 tdStyle4'>asenate ouendiaré</td><td class='tab2c4 tdStyle4'>assen attenoignauoy</td><td class='tab2c5 tdStyle4'>oyerih-</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'></td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab2c3 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab2c4 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab2c5 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;nadewennyaweh</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'></td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab2c3 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab2c4 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab2c5 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='293' id='Page_293'></span></p>
-
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-
-<p class='noindent'>are seen in the universality of one series of names throughout
-the whole ancient and modern Aryan languages of Asia and
-Europe. But the Basque numerals bear little or no resemblance
-to either, unless such can be traced in the <span class='it'>bi</span>, “two,” and the <span class='it'>sei</span>,
-“six,” as in the <span class='it'>assem</span>, “ten” (<span class='it'>decem</span>), of the old Hochelaga, the
-<span class='it'>ahsen</span> of the later Wyandots. The <span class='it'>ehun</span> of the Basque has
-also its remote, and probably accidental resemblance; but the
-<span class='it'>milla</span>, “one thousand,” is certainly borrowed, and serves to
-show that the higher numerals, with the evidence they afford
-of advancing civilisation, were the result of intrusive Aryan
-influences in the natives of the Iberian peninsula. With the
-growing tendency to turn to the prehistoric Iberians of Europe
-for one possible key to the origin of the races and languages
-of America, it is well to keep this test in view for comparison
-with the widely varying native numerals. But the correspondence
-is slight, even with probable Turanian congeners. One
-Biscayan form of “three,” <span class='it'>hirun</span>, is not unlike the Magyar
-<span class='it'>harom</span>; while the <span class='it'>eyg</span>, “one,” of the latter, seems to find its
-counterpart in the inseparable particle that transforms the
-Basque radical <span class='it'>ham</span>, “ten,” into the <span class='it'>hamaika</span>, “eleven.” But
-such fragmentary traces are in striking contrast to the radical
-agreement of Sanskrit, Zend, Greek, Latin, Celtic, Slavonic, and
-Teutonic numerals. Mr. Hale has drawn my attention to the
-curious manner in which the names of the first five Hochelaga
-numerals in Cartier’s list are contracted and strengthened in
-the modern Wyandot; and some of the modifications in the
-Iroquois dialects are no less interesting. <span class='it'>Secata</span>, the Hochelaga
-“one,” survives in the Onondaga <span class='it'>skadah</span>, while it becomes <span class='it'>skat</span>
-in the modern Huron, the Cayuga, and the Seneca. But in
-the compounded form of the Wyandot “one hundred,” <span class='it'>skatamendjawe</span>,
-as in the Onondaga <span class='it'>skadahdewennyachweh</span>, the terminal
-<span class='it'>a</span> reappears. <span class='it'>Tigneny</span>, the old form of “two,” is abridged and
-strengthened to <span class='it'>tendi</span>; <span class='it'>asche</span>, “three” (originally, in all probability,
-<span class='it'>aschen</span>, or, as still in use by the Hurons of Lorette, <span class='it'>achin</span>),
-survives as <span class='it'>ahsunh</span> or <span class='it'>ahsenh</span> in nearly all the Iroquois dialects,
-including the Tuscarora. In the Nottoway it is still discernible
-in the modified <span class='it'>arsa</span>. The exceptions are the Seneca, where
-it becomes <span class='it'>sen</span>, while one Wyandot form is <span class='it'>shenk</span>; which
-reappears in the Seneca compounded form of “thirty,” <span class='it'>shenkwashen</span>.
-<span class='it'>Honnacon</span>, “four,” loses both its initial and terminal
-<span class='pageno' title='294' id='Page_294'></span>
-syllables, and becomes <span class='it'>dak</span> in the Wyandot, and <span class='it'>keih</span> or <span class='it'>kei</span>, an
-abbreviation of the Mohawk <span class='it'>kayerih</span>, in the Cayuga and the
-Seneca dialects. The ancient form of “five,” <span class='it'>ouiscon</span>, has
-partially survived in the Huron <span class='it'>ouisch</span>. It becomes <span class='it'>wisk</span>,
-<span class='it'>whisk</span>, <span class='it'>wish</span>, or (in the Seneca) <span class='it'>wis</span>, in all the Iroquois dialects,—the
-Wyandot and Cayuga once more agreeing in form. The
-<span class='it'>ayaga</span>, “seven,” of the old Hochelaga, nearly resembles the
-<span class='it'>jadah</span> of several of the Iroquois dialects, as in the Cayuga
-<span class='it'>jadak</span>, in the Tuscarora <span class='it'>janah</span>, and in the Nottoway <span class='it'>oyag</span>;
-whereas in the Wyandot it is <span class='it'>tsotaré</span>. The <span class='it'>adigue</span>, “eight,” in
-its oldest form is <span class='it'>sadekonh</span> in the Mohawk, and <span class='it'>dekrunh</span> in the
-Cayuga; with the substitution of the <span class='it'>l</span> for <span class='it'>r</span> it becomes <span class='it'>deklonh</span>
-in the Oneida; and after changing to <span class='it'>tekion</span> in the Seneca, and
-<span class='it'>nagronh</span> in the Tuscarora, it reappears in the Nottoway as
-<span class='it'>dekra</span>. The ancient <span class='it'>madellon</span>, “nine,” curiously survives in
-abridged form, with the substitute for the labial, in the Oneida
-<span class='it'>wadlonh</span> and the Onondaga <span class='it'>wadonh</span>, while one Wyandot form
-is <span class='it'>entron</span>, and that of the Hurons of Lorette <span class='it'>entson</span>. In the
-Hochelaga <span class='it'>assem</span>, “ten,” we have the old form which is perpetuated
-in the Wyandot <span class='it'>ahsen</span>, the Onondaga and Cayuga <span class='it'>wasenh</span>,
-the Tuscarora <span class='it'>wasunh</span>, and the Nottoway <span class='it'>washa</span>; while the
-Mohawk and the Oneida have the diverse <span class='it'>oyerih</span>, or <span class='it'>oyelih</span>, with
-the characteristic change of <span class='it'>r</span> into <span class='it'>l</span>. The form of the Mohawk
-for “one thousand,” <span class='it'>oyerihnadewunnyaweh</span>, is an interesting
-illustration of the progressive development of numbers. <span class='it'>Na</span> is
-probably a contraction of <span class='it'>nikonh</span>, “of them,” or “of it,”—the
-whole reading “of them ten hundred.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In comparing the languages of the different members of the
-Iroquois confederacy with the Wyandot or Huron, some of the
-facts already noted in the history of the former have to be
-kept in view. Two and a half centuries have transpired since
-the three western nations of the confederacy, the Onondagas,
-Cayugas, and Senecas received great additions to their numbers
-by the successive adoption of Attiwendaronk, Huron, and Erie
-captives, while the Caniengas, or Mohawks, and the Oneidas
-remained unaffected by such intrusions. There is direct evidence
-that the Onondaga language has undergone great change; as
-a Jesuit dictionary of the seventeenth century exists which
-shows a much nearer resemblance between the Mohawk and
-Onondaga languages at that date than now appears. Allowance
-<span class='pageno' title='295' id='Page_295'></span>
-must be made for similar changes affecting the Hurons
-in their enforced migration from the St. Lawrence to their
-later homes. Here, as in so many other instances, it becomes
-interesting to note how the language of a people reflects its
-history.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In tracing out slighter and more remote resemblances, such
-as may be discerned on a close scrutiny, where the variation
-between the Hochelaga and the modern Wyandot numerals is
-widest, the different sources of change have to be kept in view.
-In all such comparisons, moreover, allowance must be made for
-the phonetic reproduction of unfamiliar words learned solely by
-ear, as well as for the peculiar representation of the nasal
-sounds in their reduction to writing by a French or English
-transcriber.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The tradition, mentioned by Dooyentate, of Senecas and
-Wyandots living in friendly contiguity on the Island of
-Montreal in the sixteenth century, naturally suggests the
-probability that their dialects did not greatly differ. Certain
-noticeable resemblances between the Seneca and the Wyandot
-numerals have been noted above, but it is only their modern
-forms that are thus open to comparison; and in the process of
-phonetic decay the Seneca has suffered the greatest change.
-But after making every allowance for modifications wrought
-by time, by adoption of strangers into the tribe, and other
-internal sources of change, as well as for the imperfection
-of Cartier’s renderings of the Hochelaga tongue, and for subsequent
-errors of transcribers and printers, there still remains
-satisfactory evidence of relationship between nearly half of
-Cartier’s vocabulary and the corresponding words of the
-Wyandot tongue. A comparison has been made between the
-Hochelaga numerals and those of the Wyandots of Anderdon.
-In the comparative table of numerals given on page <a href='#Page_292'>292</a>,
-I have placed alongside of the old Hochelaga series derived
-from Cartier’s lists those now in use among the Hurons of
-Lorette, as supplied to me by M. Paul Picard, the son of the
-late Huron chief. In the third column another version of the
-Wyandot numerals is given, from Gallatin’s comparative
-vocabulary. It is derived from different sources, including the
-United States War Department; and therefore, no doubt,
-illustrates the changes which the language has undergone
-<span class='pageno' title='296' id='Page_296'></span>
-among the Wyandots on their remote Texas reserve. Gallatin
-also gives another version of Huron numerals derived from
-Sagard. It will be seen that M. Picard used the <span class='it'>t</span> as in
-Cartier’s lists, and in that of the southern Wyandots, where
-the <span class='it'>d</span> is employed in others, except in the Nottoway numerals,
-where the use of both is, no doubt, due to the English
-transcriber. In comparing the different lists, this variation
-in orthography and also the interchangeable <span class='it'>k</span> and <span class='it'>g</span> have to
-be kept in view. Thus the Cayuga has <span class='it'>dekrunh</span>, in the Oneida
-<span class='it'>dekelonh</span>, where the Tuscarora has <span class='it'>nagronh</span>. But the Huron
-<span class='it'>tendi</span>, in use now both at Lorette and Anderdon, shows the
-result of long intercourse with Europeans begetting an appreciation
-of their discrimination between the hard and soft consonants.
-Had the whole series been derived from one source, such
-orthographic variations would have disappeared. The lists
-have been furnished to me by the Rev. J. G. Vincent and M.
-Picard, educated Hurons; L. A. Dorion, an educated Iroquois;
-Dr. Oronhyatekha, an educated Mohawk; Mr. Horatio Hale;
-and also from Gallatin’s valuable comparative tables of Indian
-vocabularies in the <span class='it'>Archæologia Americana</span>. In the <span class='it'>Synopsis
-of the Indian Tribes</span>, to which these vocabularies form an
-appendix, Gallatin classed both the Tuteloes and the Nottoways,
-along with the Tuscaroras, as southern Iroquois tribes. But
-recent researches of Mr. Hale have established the true place
-of the Tuteloes to be with the Dakotan, and not the Huron-Iroquois
-family. It is otherwise with the Cherohakahs, or
-Nottoways, whose home was in south-eastern Virginia, where
-their memory is perpetuated in the name of the river on which
-they dwelt. At the close of the seventeenth century they still
-numbered 130 warriors, or about 700 in all; but twenty years
-later, of the whole tribe only twenty souls survived. At that
-date two vocabularies of the language were obtained, which
-furnish satisfactory evidence of the correctness of their classification
-among southern Iroquois tribes. Their numerals, as
-shown in the tables, approximate, as might be anticipated, to
-those of the Tuscaroras, at least in the majority of the primary
-numbers; whereas those of the Tuteloes are totally dissimilar.
-As to the Basque numerals introduced alongside of them in
-the comparative tables, they only suffice to show that the pre-Aryan
-language still spoken, in varying dialects, on both slopes
-<span class='pageno' title='297' id='Page_297'></span>
-of the Pyrenees, differed equally widely from the Aryan languages
-of Europe, and from the Iroquois or any other known American
-language, except in so far as the latter are agglutinative in
-structure. Van Eys, in his <span class='it'>Basque Grammar</span>, draws attention
-to the words <span class='it'>buluzkorri</span>, and <span class='it'>larrugori</span>, “naked”; the first of
-which literally signifies “red hair,” and the second “red skin.”
-They are interesting illustrations of the way in which important
-historical facts lie embedded in ancient languages. But the
-colour of the hair forbids the inference that the ruddy Basques
-of primitive centuries were akin to the “Redskins” of the
-New World.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The phonology of the Iroquois languages is notable in other
-respects besides those already referred to. According to M.
-Cuoq, an able philologist, who has laboured for many years as
-a missionary among the Iroquois of the Province of Quebec,
-the sounds are so simple that he considers an alphabet of
-twelve letters sufficient for their indication: <span class='it'>a</span>, <span class='it'>e</span>, <span class='it'>f</span>, <span class='it'>h</span>, <span class='it'>i</span>, <span class='it'>k</span>, <span class='it'>n</span>,
-<span class='it'>o</span>, <span class='it'>r</span>, <span class='it'>s</span>, <span class='it'>t</span>, <span class='it'>w</span>. The transliterations noticeable in the various Iroquois
-dialects, follow a well-known phonetic law. Thus the <span class='it'>l</span>
-and <span class='it'>r</span> are interchangeable, as <span class='it'>ronkwe</span>, “man,” in the Mohawk,
-becomes in the Oneida <span class='it'>lonhwe</span>; <span class='it'>raxha</span>, “boy,” becomes <span class='it'>laxha</span>;
-<span class='it'>rakeniha</span>, “my father,” becomes <span class='it'>lakenih</span>, etc. The same is
-seen throughout the compound numerals from “eleven” onward.
-The Cayuga and Tuscarora most nearly approach to
-the Mohawk in this use of the <span class='it'>r</span>. A characteristic change of
-a different kind is seen in the grammatical value of the initial
-<span class='it'>r</span> in the Mohawk in relation to gender. For example, <span class='it'>onkwe</span>
-is applied to mankind, as distinguished from <span class='it'>karyoh</span>, “the
-brute.” It becomes <span class='it'>ronkwe</span>, “man,” <span class='it'>yonkwe</span> “woman.” So also
-<span class='it'>raxah</span>, “boy,” changes to <span class='it'>kaxha</span>, “girl”; <span class='it'>rihyeinah</span>, “my son,”
-to <span class='it'>kheyenah</span>, “my daughter,” etc. The change of gender is
-further illustrated in such examples as <span class='it'>raohih</span>, his apple;
-<span class='it'>raoyen</span>, his arrow; <span class='it'>ahkohih</span>, her apple; <span class='it'>ahkoyen</span>, her arrow;
-<span class='it'>raonahih</span> (masc.), <span class='it'>aonahih</span> (fem.), their apples; <span class='it'>raodiyenkwireh</span>
-(masc.), <span class='it'>aodiyenkwireh</span> (fem.), their arrows, etc. But this
-arrangement of the formative element as a prefix is characteristic
-of American languages, though not peculiar to them.
-Thus <span class='it'>Seshatsteaghseragwekough</span>, Almighty God (literally, “Thou
-who hast all power, or strength”), becomes, in the third person,
-<span class='it'>Rashatsteaghseragwekough</span>.
-<span class='pageno' title='298' id='Page_298'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The vowel sounds are very limited. No distinction is
-apparent in any Huron-Iroquois language between the <span class='it'>o</span> and
-the <span class='it'>u</span>. In writing it the <span class='it'>e</span> and <span class='it'>u</span> sounds are also often interchangeable.
-Where, for example, <span class='it'>e</span> is used in one set of the
-Tuscarora numerals supplied to me, another substitutes <span class='it'>u</span> for
-it wherever it is followed by an <span class='it'>n</span>; e.g. <span class='it'>enjih</span>, <span class='it'>unjih</span>; <span class='it'>ahsenh</span>,
-<span class='it'>ahsunh</span>; <span class='it'>endah</span>, <span class='it'>undah</span>, etc. So also the word for “man” is
-written for me in one case <span class='it'>onkwe</span>, and in another <span class='it'>unkweh</span>. It
-requires an acute and practised ear to discriminate the niceties
-of Indian pronunciation, and a no less practised tongue to
-satisfy the critical native ear. Dr. Oronhyatekha, when pressed
-to define the value of the <span class='it'>t</span> sound in his own name, replied “It is
-not quite <span class='it'>t</span> nor <span class='it'>d</span>.” The name is compounded of <span class='it'>oronya</span>, “blue,”
-the word used in the Prayer-Book for “heaven,” and <span class='it'>yodakha</span>,
-“burning.” In very similar terms, Asikinack, an educated
-Odahwah Indian, when asked by me whether we should say
-Ottawa, or Odawa—the Utawa of Morris’s “Canadian Boat
-Song,”—replied that the sound lay between the two,—a nicety
-discernible only by Indian ears.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The euphonic changes which mark the systematic transitions
-in the Mohawk language, though by no means peculiar
-to it, cannot fail to awaken an interest in the thoughtful
-student, who reflects on the social condition of the people
-among whom this elaborated vehicle of thought was the constraining
-power by means of which their chiefs and elders
-swayed the nations of the Iroquois confederacy with an eloquence
-more powerful and persuasive than that of many
-civilised nations. They have been illustrated in the verb;
-but the same systematic application of euphonic change through
-all the transitions of their vocabulary is seen in the elaborate
-word-sentences, so characteristic of the extreme length to
-which the incorporating mode of structure of the Turanian
-family of languages is carried in many of those spoken by the
-American nations. The habitual concentration of complex ideas
-in a single word has long been recognised, not only as giving
-a peculiar character to many of the Indian languages, but as
-one source of their adaptability to the aims of native oratory.
-From the Massachusetts Bible of Eliot, Professor Whitney
-quotes a word of eleven syllables; and Gallatin produces from
-the Cherokee another of seventeen syllables. This frequently
-<span class='pageno' title='299' id='Page_299'></span>
-embodies a descriptive holophrasm, and so aids the native
-rendering of novel objects and ideas into a language, the vocabulary
-of which is necessarily devoid of the requisite terms.
-But in such cases the agglutinative process is obvious, and the
-elements of the compounded word must be present to the mind
-of speaker and hearer. The English word “almighty” is itself
-an example of the process. It becomes in the Mohawk Prayer-Book
-<span class='it'>seshatsteaghseragwekonh</span>, from <span class='it'>seshatsteh</span>, “you are strong,”
-and <span class='it'>ahkwekonh</span>, “all,” or “the whole.” When the missionaries
-first undertook to render into the Mohawk language the Gospels
-and Service-Books for Christian worship, it may be doubted if
-many of their converts had ever seen a sheep. But they had
-to reproduce in Mohawk this general confession: “We have
-erred and strayed from Thy ways like lost sheep.” They did
-it accordingly in this fashion: <span class='it'>Teyagwaderyeadawearyesneoni
-yoegwathaharagwaghtha tsisahate tsiniyouht yodiyadaghtoeouh
-teyodinakaroetoeha</span>, which may be literally rendered: “We make
-a mistake, and get off the track where your road is, the same
-as strayed animals with small horns.” The extreme literalness
-of the rendering may probably strike the mind of the
-English reader in a way that would not occur to the Indian,
-familiar with such descriptive holophrasms. But it illustrates
-a difficulty with which Eliot was very familiar when engaged
-on his Massachusetts Indian Bible. In translating, for
-example, the song of Deborah and Barak, where the mother of
-Sisera “cried through the lattice,” the good missionary looked
-in vain in the Indian wigwam for anything that corresponded
-to the term. At length he called an Indian and
-described to him a lattice as wicker-work, and obtained in
-response a rendering of the text which literally meant:
-“The mother of Sisera looked through an eel-pot.” It was
-the only kind of wicker-work of which the Indian had any
-knowledge.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Evidences of an exceptional development of the æsthetic
-faculty among the nations of the New World have already
-been noted; but the Iroquois cannot be included among those
-specially noticeable for their imitative powers, or in other ways
-furnishing evidence of any highly developed artistic faculty.
-They cannot compare in this respect with the Zuñi or others
-of the Pueblo Indians, among whom the arts of long-settled
-<span class='pageno' title='300' id='Page_300'></span>
-agricultural communities have been developed for purposes of
-ornament as well as utility; nor is their inferiority less questionable
-when we compare them with some of the tribes of
-the north-west coast and the neighbouring islands. Their
-languages confirm this; for while, as Mr. Cushing has shown,
-the Zuñi language possesses many words relating to art-processes,
-the Iroquois and Algonkin dialects supply such terms
-for the most part only in descriptive holophrasms, and not in
-primitive roots.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In Iroquois, the word <span class='it'>kar</span> or <span class='it'>kare</span> signifies “to paint” or
-“draw.” The initial <span class='it'>k</span> in Iroquois words is usually not radical,
-and so rarely enters into composite terms. The root of <span class='it'>kar</span>, is
-<span class='it'>ar</span> or <span class='it'>are</span>, which added to <span class='it'>kaiata</span>, or <span class='it'>oiata</span>, “living thing, person,
-body,” makes <span class='it'>kaiatare</span>, “image” or “likeness,” <span class='it'>i.e.</span> “pictured
-body,” or as a verb “to paint” or “depict anything.” To this
-is added the verbal suffix <span class='it'>ta</span> or <span class='it'>tha</span>, which occasionally becomes
-<span class='it'>stha</span>, and has different meanings, causative and instrumental.
-The Mohawk supplies such words and terms of art as <span class='it'>ahyeyatonh</span>,
-“to grave”; <span class='it'>rahyatonhs</span>, “an engraver”; <span class='it'>ahyekonteke</span>, “to paint”;
-<span class='it'>rakonteks</span>, “a painter”; <span class='it'>s’hakoyatarha</span>, “an artist”; <span class='it'>rahkaratahkwas</span>,
-“a carver”; <span class='it'>rateanakerahtha</span>, “a modeller,” or “one who
-models figures in clay.” In the Iroquois version of the Gospel
-of St. John, chap. viii. verse 6 reads thus: <span class='it'>Nok tanon ne Iesos
-wathastsake ehtake nok rasnonsake</span> (more correctly, <span class='it'>rasnonkenh</span>)
-<span class='it'>warate wahiaton onwentsiake</span>, lit. “But instead Jesus bent low
-and with hand used, wrote,” or “engraved, on the earth.” The
-version of the second commandment in the Mohawk Prayer-Book
-affords another illustration, in the holophrasm <span class='it'>asadatyaghdoenihseroenyea</span>.
-It is compounded of <span class='it'>ahsonniyon</span>, “make”;
-<span class='it'>ahsadadonnyen</span>, “to make for yourself”; <span class='it'>kayadonnihsera</span>, “an
-image” or “doll.” <span class='it'>Toghsa asadatyaghdoenihseroenyea, shekonh
-othenouh taoesakyatayerea nene enekea karouhyakouh, neteas
-eghtake oughweatsyakonh</span>, etc., lit. “Do not make an image or
-idol for yourself, even anything like above in the sky, nor
-below in the earth,” etc.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The word <span class='it'>kaiata</span>, or <span class='it'>oiata</span>, as already noted, signifies “a
-living thing, person,” or “body”; <span class='it'>kakonsa</span> or <span class='it'>okonsa</span>, is the
-“face” or “visage”; and from those come many derivatives.
-Bruyas gives <span class='it'>gaiata</span>, “a living thing”; <span class='it'>gaiatare</span> (or <span class='it'>kaiatare</span>)
-“image,” and as a verb, “to paint.” There is also <span class='it'>gaiatonni</span>,
-<span class='pageno' title='301' id='Page_301'></span>
-“a doll” or “puppet,” <span class='it'>i.e.</span> “a made person,” from <span class='it'>oiata</span> and
-<span class='it'>konnis</span>, “to make.” From the same root we may probably
-derive <span class='it'>kiaton</span>, “to write,” as in the Iroquois Gospels, <span class='it'>wahaiaton</span>,
-“wrote”; <span class='it'>kahiaton</span>, “it is written,” etc. The original meaning
-was, no doubt, picture-writing, <span class='it'>i.e.</span> making images of things.
-In the old Onondaga dictionary of the Jesuit Fathers is the
-word <span class='it'>kiatonnion</span>, “I keep writing.” The same authority also
-gives <span class='it'>guianatonh</span> (<span class='it'>kianatonh</span>), “I paint,” apparently from another
-root, <span class='it'>oiana</span> (<span class='it'>kaiana</span>) “track, walk, gait,” etc., which has many
-derivatives. The remarkable compass and minute nicety of
-expression which the Iroquois grammar had acquired in the
-various languages of the Six Nations, approximates to the
-wonderful expansion effected on the crude Anglo-Saxon verb
-by the evolution of the auxiliaries out of vague active
-verbs. This has been effected through the habitual resort to
-oratory as a source of combined action in the councils of the
-tribes, which constituted one of the most remarkable characteristics
-of this representative Indian stock. In this respect the
-expressive flexibility and rhetorical aptitude of the Iroquois
-languages stand out in striking contrast to the limited compass
-of grammatical discrimination in those of Europe’s Scandinavian
-and Teutonic races by whom the Roman empire was overthrown.
-They had indeed their “tun-moot,” the council meeting of the
-village community for justice and government; but the deliberations
-on the moot-hill, though they embodied the germ of all
-later parliaments, gave birth to no such development of
-language. It is when entering on the history of the grand
-constitutional struggle for a free parliament that Carlyle, in
-quaint irony, exclaims, or assigns to his apocryphal Dryasdust
-the exclamation: “I have known nations altogether destitute
-of printers’ types and learned appliances, with nothing better
-than old songs, monumental stone heaps and quipo-thrums to
-keep record by, who had truer memory of their memorable
-things.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. The English, one can discern withal, have been
-perhaps as brave a people as their neighbours; perhaps, for
-valour of action and true hard labour in this earth, since brave
-peoples were first made in it, there has been none braver any
-where or any when:—but also, it must be owned, in stupidity
-of speech they have no fellow!”<a id='r146'/><a href='#f146' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[146]</span></sup></a> It suited the purpose of
-<span class='pageno' title='302' id='Page_302'></span>
-the satirist to ignore for the moment that Shakespeare came
-of that same speechless race. But in its earlier stage when
-any comparison with Indian nations is permissible the irony
-is not extravagant.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But apart from the great compass of the Iroquois verb as
-illustrative of grammatical development in the languages of
-unlettered nations, another characteristic feature is the distinction
-between masculine and feminine forms both in speaking
-of and to a man or woman. In the study of the minute
-niceties of the Iroquois verb I have been largely indebted
-to Dr. Oronhyatekha, and to the Rev. Isaac Bearfoot, both
-educated Mohawks. When tracing out the comprehensive power
-of the Mohawk verb, I had in view at the same time the recovery
-of evidences that the language might supply of an inherent
-recognition of the artistic faculty. This is much more strongly
-manifested in other American races in all stages of progress,
-from the ingenious Haidahs and Tawatins of British Columbia,
-and the Pueblo Indians of Arizona, to the semi-civilised nations
-of Mexico and the lettered races of Central and Southern
-America. Nevertheless the Iroquois recorded in primitive
-picture-writing the deeds of their departed braves, and have
-left records in the same crude hieroglyphics, such as the graven
-rock on Cunningham Island, Lake Erie. Their pipes were
-carved, and their pottery modelled into representations of
-familiar objects indicative of a habitual, though simple practice
-of imitative art that could not fail to beget some counterpart
-in their languages. Hence the choice of the verb <span class='it'>kyadarahste</span>,
-“to draw.” <span class='it'>Kayadareh</span>, or <span class='it'>kyadareh</span>, signifies “a body or form
-<span class='it'>in</span>,” <span class='it'>e.g.</span> “in a frame” or “group”; <span class='it'>kyadarastonh</span>, on the other
-hand, implies “a body” or “form transferred <span class='it'>on</span> to something,”
-<span class='it'>e.g.</span> a board or canvas. The latter is therefore the more
-expressive and correct term to use for drawing or painting,
-while it illustrates the process of augmenting the vocabulary to
-meet the requirements of novel acquisitions in art. But its
-chief value consists in its affording illustration not only of the
-inherent capacity of the language to express with minute nicety
-of detail the manifestations of an æsthetic faculty, as yet very
-partially developed, but of the compass of its grammar to indicate
-every distinctive variation of form expressive of time,
-place, action, object, or subject. The latest results of philological
-<span class='pageno' title='303' id='Page_303'></span>
-research in this direction are set forth in the <span class='it'>Lexique</span> and
-the <span class='it'>Études philologique</span> of Abbé Cuoq, and in an admirable
-<span class='it'>résumé</span> in Mr. Horatio Hale’s introduction to <span class='it'>The Iroquois
-Book of Rites</span>.<a id='r147'/><a href='#f147' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[147]</span></sup></a> The systematic processes by which the moods
-and tenses are indicated, either by changes of termination or
-prefixed particles, or by both conjoined, are carefully indicated
-by Mr. Hale; but he adds: “A complete grammar of this
-speech, as full and minute as the best Sanscrit or Greek
-grammars, would probably equal, and perhaps surpass those
-grammars in extent. The unconscious forces of memory and
-of discrimination required to maintain this complicated intellectual
-machine, and to preserve it constantly exact, and in
-good working order, must be prodigious.” This tendency to
-elaborate niceties of discrimination is in striking contrast to
-that of the modern cultivated languages of Europe; and it is
-not without reason that it is spoken of as a “complicated
-intellectual machine.” The contrast, for example, between the
-Mohawk or other Iroquois verb, in all its complex variations,
-and the extreme simplicity of the Anglo-Saxon verb, with only
-its Indefinite and Perfect Tenses,—the former predicated either
-of the present, or of a future time, and the latter of any past
-time,—can scarcely fail to impress the thoughtful student who
-keeps in view the relative civilisation of the Iroquois, and of
-the English people at the period when Anglo-Saxon in its
-purely inflectional stage was still the national language. The
-English verb has since then acquired wonderful power and
-compass by means of the auxiliary verbs; but its whole
-tendency is at variance with the elaborations in number and
-gender of the Iroquois verb. These are only partially
-illustrated in the above example, and might easily have been
-carried further. For example, the rendering of the Active,
-Indicative, Past Progressive, with Feminine Object is really a
-verb in the passive voice. To realise the full inflectional
-niceties of such minute grammatical distinctions, the two
-genders should be given; and also a mixed gender, <span class='it'>i.e.</span> the two
-genders together, as the artists may consist of both sexes.
-This is indicated in the two forms of the Future Indefinite, by
-<span class='it'>eas’hakodiyadarahste</span>, “they (mas.) shall draw her,” <span class='it'>eayaktodiyadarahste</span>,
-“they (fem.) shall draw her.” But a study of the
-<span class='pageno' title='304' id='Page_304'></span>
-paradigm of the Mohawk verb will be found to illustrate
-in a variety of interesting aspects the process of unpremeditated
-grammatical evolution among an unlettered people,
-with whom the influence of oratory in the councils of the
-tribe was one of their most powerful resources as a preliminary
-to war.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The grand movement of the barbarian races of Northern
-Europe in the fifth and following centuries is spoken of as the
-wandering of the nations. The natural barriers of the continent
-seemed for a time to have given way, and the unknown tribes
-from beyond the Baltic and from the shores of the North Sea
-poured into the valley of the Danube, and swept beyond the Alps
-and the Pyrenees to the furthest shores of the Mediterranean
-Sea. The physical geography of the New World presents
-fewer barriers to be surmounted. But if the student of North
-American ethnology spread before him a map of the continent,
-and trace out the wanderings of the Huron-Iroquois, he must
-revert in fancy to that remote era when confederated Iroquois
-and Algonkins swept in triumphant fury through the wasted
-valley of the Ohio, and repeated there what Goth and Hun did
-for Europe, in Rome’s decline and fall. The long-settled and
-semi-civilised Mound-Builders fled before the furious onset,
-leaving the great river-valley a desolate waste. The barrier of
-an old-settled and well-organised community, which, probably
-for centuries, had kept America’s northern barbarians in check,
-was removed, and the fierce Huron-Iroquois ranged at will over
-the eastern regions of the continent, far southward of the North
-Carolina river-valleys, where the Nottoways and Tuscaroras
-found a new home. As to the Nottoways, they appear to have
-passed out of all remembrance as an Iroquois tribe; yet it is
-suggestive of a long-forgotten chapter of Indian history, that
-the name is still in use among the northern Algonkins as the
-designation of the whole Iroquois stock. The Nottawa saga is
-doubtless a memorial of their presence on the Georgian Bay,
-and the Notaway (<span class='it'>Náhdahwe</span>) river which falls into Hudson
-Bay at James Bay, is so named in memory of Huron-Iroquois
-wanderers into that Algonkin region.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Some portion of the ancient Huron stock tarried on the
-banks of the St. Lawrence, in what is known to us now as
-the traditional cradleland of those Canadian aborigines.
-<span class='pageno' title='305' id='Page_305'></span>
-Others found their way down the Hudson, or selected new
-homes for themselves on the rivers and lakes that lay to the
-west, till they reached the shores of Lake Erie; and all that
-is now the populous region of Western New York was in
-occupation of the Iroquois race. Feuds broke out between
-them and the parent stock in the valley of the St. Lawrence.
-They meted out to those of their own race the same vengeance
-as to strangers; and the survivors, abandoning their homes,
-fled westward in search of settlements beyond their reach.
-The Georgian Bay lay remote from the territory of the
-Iroquois, but the nations of the Wyandot stock spread beyond
-it, until the Niagara peninsula and the fertile regions between
-Lake Huron and Lake Erie were occupied by them, and the
-Niagara river alone kept apart what were now hostile tribes.
-But wherever the test of linguistic evidence can be obtained
-their affinities are placed beyond dispute. On the other hand,
-the multiplication of dialects is no less apparent, and in
-many ways helps to throw light on the history of the race.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The old Huron mother tongue still partially preserves the
-labials which have disappeared from all the Iroquois languages.
-The Mohawk approaches nearest to this, and appears
-to be the main stem from whence other languages of the Six
-Nations have branched off. But the diversities in speech of
-the various members of the confederacy leave no room to
-doubt the prolonged isolation of the several tribes, or “nations,”
-before they were induced to recognise the claims of consanguinity,
-and to band together for their common interest.
-Some of the noteworthy diversities of tongue may be pointed
-out, such as the <span class='it'>r</span> sound which predominates in the Mohawk,
-while the <span class='it'>l</span> takes its place in the Oneida. In the Onondaga,
-Cayuga, and Seneca, they are no longer heard. The last of
-these reduces the primary forms to the narrowest range; but
-beyond, to the westward, the old Eries dwelt, speaking, it may
-be presumed, a modified Seneca dialect, but of which unfortunately
-no record survives. As to the Tuscaroras and the
-Nottoways, if we knew nothing of their history, their languages
-would suffice to tell that they had been longest and most
-widely separated from the parent stock.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is not without interest to note in conclusion that the
-main body of the representatives of the nations of the ancient
-<span class='pageno' title='306' id='Page_306'></span>
-Iroquois league sprung from the Huron-Iroquois stock of
-Eastern Canada,—after sojourning for centuries beyond the St.
-Lawrence, until the traditions of the home of the race had
-faded out of memory, or given place to mythic legends of
-autochthon origin,—has returned to Canadian soil. At Caughnawaga,
-St. Regis, Oka, and on the river St. Charles, in the
-Province of Quebec; at Anderdon, the Bay of Quinté, and
-above all, on the Grand river, in Ontario; the Huron-Iroquois
-are now settled to the number of upwards of 8000, without
-reckoning other tribes. If, indeed, the surviving representatives
-of the aborigines in the old provinces of the Canadian
-Dominion are taken as a whole, they number upwards of
-34,000, apart from the many thousands in Manitoba, British
-Columbia, and the North-west Territories. But the nomad
-Indians must be classed wholly apart from the settlers on the
-Grand river reserves. The latter are a highly intelligent,
-civilised people, more and more adapting themselves to the
-habits of the strangers who have supplanted them; and they
-are destined as certainly to merge into the predominant race,
-as the waters of their ancient lakes mingle and are lost in the
-ocean. Yet the process is no longer one of extinction but of
-absorption; and will assuredly leave traces of the American
-autochthones, similar to those which still in Europe perpetuate
-some ethnical memorial of Allophylian races.</p>
-
-<hr class='footnotemark'/>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_111'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f111'><a href='#r111'>[111]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Types of Mankind</span>, p. 291.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_112'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f112'><a href='#r112'>[112]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>The Jesuits in North America</span>, p. 43.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_113'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f113'><a href='#r113'>[113]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>The Indian Races of North and South America</span>, p. 286.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_114'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f114'><a href='#r114'>[114]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Magazine of American History</span>, vol. x. p. 479.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_115'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f115'><a href='#r115'>[115]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Archæologia Americana</span>, vol. ii. p. 173.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_116'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f116'><a href='#r116'>[116]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Indian Migrations</span>, p. 17.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_117'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f117'><a href='#r117'>[117]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Whitney’s Study of Language</span>, p. 348.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_118'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f118'><a href='#r118'>[118]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>The Tutelo Tribe and Language</span>, p. 9.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_119'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f119'><a href='#r119'>[119]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Relation</span>, 1641, p. 72.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_120'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f120'><a href='#r120'>[120]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Peter Jones and the Ojibway Indians</span>, p. 31.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_121'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f121'><a href='#r121'>[121]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>The Life and Growth of Languages</span>, p. 259.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_122'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f122'><a href='#r122'>[122]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Hale’s <span class='it'>Indian Migrations as evidenced by Language</span>, p. 3.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_123'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f123'><a href='#r123'>[123]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Anthropology</span>, by Dr. Paul Topinard: Eng. Trans., p. 480.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_124'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f124'><a href='#r124'>[124]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The Huron Race and Head-form:” N. S. <span class='it'>Canadian Journal</span>, vol. xiii.
-p. 113.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_125'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f125'><a href='#r125'>[125]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Crania Americana</span>, p. 195.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_126'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f126'><a href='#r126'>[126]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>The Jesuits in North America</span>, p. 47.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_127'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f127'><a href='#r127'>[127]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>The Iroquois Book of Rites</span>, p. 78.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_128'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f128'><a href='#r128'>[128]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Ibid.</span>, pp. 21, 22.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_129'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f129'><a href='#r129'>[129]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>League of the Iroquois</span>, p. 4.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_130'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f130'><a href='#r130'>[130]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Notes on the Iroquois</span>, p. 51.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_131'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f131'><a href='#r131'>[131]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Lectures on the Science of Language</span>, 5th ed. p. 58.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_132'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f132'><a href='#r132'>[132]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Notes on the Iroquois</span>, p. 52.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_133'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f133'><a href='#r133'>[133]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Origin and Traditional History of the Wyandotts</span>, p. 4.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_134'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f134'><a href='#r134'>[134]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Pioneers of France in the New World</span>, p. 367.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_135'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f135'><a href='#r135'>[135]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>League of the Iroquois</span>, p. 76.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_136'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f136'><a href='#r136'>[136]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>The Jesuits in North America</span>, p. 441 note.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_137'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f137'><a href='#r137'>[137]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>History of the Indian Tribes</span>, vol. ii. p. 78.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_138'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f138'><a href='#r138'>[138]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Huron Race and Head-form,” <span class='it'>Canadian Journal</span>, N. S., vol. xiii. p. 113.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_139'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f139'><a href='#r139'>[139]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Some American Illustrations of the Evolution of new Varieties of Man,”
-<span class='it'>Journal of Anthropology</span>, May 1879.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_140'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f140'><a href='#r140'>[140]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Huron vocabulary prepared by the Jesuit Father, Chaumonot, is, as I
-have recently learned, still in existence, and will, I hope, be speedily published
-under trustworthy editorial supervision.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_141'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f141'><a href='#r141'>[141]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>The League of the Iroquois</span>, p. 2.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_142'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f142'><a href='#r142'>[142]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Archæologia Americana</span>, vol. ii. p. 79.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_143'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f143'><a href='#r143'>[143]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Indian Migrations</span>, p. 22.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_144'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f144'><a href='#r144'>[144]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Life and Growth of Language</span>, p. 261.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_145'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f145'><a href='#r145'>[145]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Lectures on the Science of Language</span>, 2nd series, p. 162.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_146'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f146'><a href='#r146'>[146]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Cromwell’s <span class='it'>Letters and Speeches</span>, Introduction.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_147'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f147'><a href='#r147'>[147]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'>See p. 110.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' title='307' id='Page_307'></span><h1>VII<br/> HYBRIDITY AND HEREDITY</h1></div>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='sc'>Four</span> centuries have now completed their course since the
-discovery of America revealed to Europe an indigenous people,
-distinct in many respects from all the races of the Old World.
-There, as in the older historic areas, man is indeed seen in
-various stages: from the rudest condition of savage life, without
-any knowledge of metallurgy, and subsisting solely by the
-chase, to the comparatively civilised nations of Mexico,
-Central America, and Peru, familiar with some of the most
-important arts, skilled in agriculture, and with a system of
-writing embodying the essential germs of intellectual progress.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The western hemisphere, which was the arena of such
-ethnical development, had lain, for unnumbered centuries,
-apart from Asia and Europe; and so its various nationalities
-and races were left to work out their own destinies, and to
-develop in their own way whatever inherent capacities for
-progress pertained to them. But this done, it was abruptly
-brought into intimate relations with Europe by the maritime
-discoveries which marked the closing years of the fifteenth
-century.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>From that date a constant transfer of races from the Old
-to the New World has been taking place, alike by voluntary
-and enforced migration; with results involving a series of
-undesigned yet exhaustive ethnological experiments carried
-out on the grandest scale. There alike has been tested to
-what extent the European and the African are affected by
-migration to new regions, and by admixture with diverse
-<span class='pageno' title='308' id='Page_308'></span>
-races. There can now be witnessed the results of a transference,
-for upwards of three centuries, of indigenous populations
-of the Old World to a continent where they have been subjected
-to many novel geographical, climatic, and social influences.
-There, too, has taken place, on a scale without any
-parallel elsewhere, an intimate and prolonged intermixture of
-some of the most highly cultured races of Europe with purely
-savage tribes, under circumstances which have tended to place
-them, for the time being, on an equality as hunters, trappers,
-or explorers of their vast forest and prairie wilds.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The whole question of heredity, its phenomena and results,
-is now in process of review under the novel phases that affect
-anthropology; and in this view the illustrations which the New
-World supplies in reference to hybridity and absorption have
-a distinctive value. The anthropologist recognises various
-elements marking diversity of race in stature, colour, proportion
-of limbs, conformation of skull, colour and other characteristics
-of eye and hair. He also notes no less distinctively
-the diverse intellectual and moral aptitudes. Noticeable as
-are the diversities of national type in Europe, the range of
-variation is trifling when compared with the conditions under
-which the White, Red, and Black races have met and
-intermingled in the West Indies and in North and South
-America. The cultured and civilised races of Europe have
-there united their blood with the African negro and the native
-Indian savage; and both admixtures have been carried out on
-so great a scale as to furnish indisputable data for determining
-the question how far the half-breed is a mean between the
-two parents; or if there is any inevitable preponderance of
-one of them, with a tendency to revert to one or the other
-type. The intermarriage of fair and dark races of the Old
-World has gone on throughout the whole historic period,
-with apparently resultant intermediate types. The Iberians
-and “black Celts” of Western Europe, and the dark brunettes
-of the Mediterranean shores, stand out in marked contrast to
-the blondes of the Baltic shores. Whatever may be said of
-other diversities of race, Professor Huxley is led to the opinion
-that the Melanochroi, or dark whites, are not a distinct
-group, but the metis resultant from just such a mixture of his
-“Australioids” and his “Xanthocroi,” as has been going on
-<span class='pageno' title='309' id='Page_309'></span>
-for centuries on the American continent between the blondes
-of Europe and the native olive-skinned American, and between
-both of them and the dark African race.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Yet, on the other hand, many anthropologists insist on the
-survival of distinct types, even among approximate races, as
-shown in the remarkable persistency of the Jewish type, notwithstanding
-the modifications that have resulted from intermarriage
-with fair and dark races of many lands. Dr. F. von
-Luschan, in describing the Tachtadschy,<a id='r148'/><a href='#f148' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[148]</span></sup></a> calls attention to the
-fact that the Greeks of Lycia represent a mixture of two
-distinct types. From this he draws the following inference:
-“At first glance it appears remarkable and hardly probable
-that two disparate types should remain distinct, although
-intermarriage has continued without interruption through
-thousands of years. But we must acknowledge that it would
-be just as remarkable if continued intercrossing should result
-in the production of a middle type (<span class='it'>Mischform</span>). It is true
-that at the present time the greater number of anthropologists
-appear to be of the opinion that middle forms originate
-wherever two distinct types live in close contact for a long
-time. If this is true at all, it is true only in a very limited
-sense, and still needs to be proven. <span class='it'>A priori</span>, we rather
-ought to expect that one or the other of these types would
-soon succumb in the struggle for existence. It would become
-extinct, and give way to the other type; or both types might
-continue to co-exist, although intercrossing might go on for
-centuries. They would undergo no other changes than those
-which each singly, uninfluenced by the other, would have
-undergone by the agency of physical causes.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The evidence we possess of the physical characteristics of
-the succession of races in Europe from palæolithic times is
-already considerable; and in reference to neolithic and later
-periods is ample. Within the recent historic period of the
-decline and fall of Rome, and the influx of Northern and
-Asiatic barbarians, the evidence of admixture of race is
-abundant; and the physical, intellectual, and moral changes
-resulting therefrom have stamped their ineffaceable impress
-on history. But the conditions under which the meeting of
-the Aryans with Allophylians, Neolithians, or other prehistoric
-<span class='pageno' title='310' id='Page_310'></span>
-races took place in older centuries, can only be surmised; and
-the many analogies resulting from the intrusion of the European
-races on the aborigines of the western hemisphere are
-calculated to render useful aid in determining some definite
-results.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>History has familiarised us with the idea of sovereign and
-subject races. The monuments of Egypt perpetuate the fact
-from its remote dawn, Punic, Roman, Gothic, Frank, Saracenic,
-and Scandinavian races, have in turn subdued others, and
-made them subservient to their will. Evidence of a different
-kind, but little less definite, points to the intrusion into
-Europe in prehistoric times of races superior alike in physical
-type, and in the arts upon which progress depends, to the
-Autochthones, or primitive occupants of the soil. Further
-indications have been assumed to point to the contemporaneous
-presence, in primeval Britain, as elsewhere, of races of diverse
-type, and apparently in the relation of lord and serf: a natural
-if not indeed inevitable consequence of the intrusion of a
-superior race of conquerors.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But in the New World the inaptitude of the native race
-for useful serfdom largely contributed to the introduction there
-of other and very diverse races from Africa and Asia; so that
-now within a well-defined North American area, indigenous
-populations of the three continents of the Old World are displacing
-its native races. Still more, all three meet there
-under circumstances which inevitably lead to their intermixture
-with one another, and with the native races.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Various terms, such as Iberian, Silurian, Canstadt, Cimbric,
-Finnish, and Turanian, have been applied to primitive types
-as expressive of the hypothesis of their origin. But on turning
-to the American continent we see vast regions occupied exclusively
-until a comparatively recent period by tribes of
-savage hunters, upon whom some of the most civilised races
-of Europe have intruded, with results in many respects so
-strikingly accordant with the supposed evolution of the
-Melanochroi of the Old World, that we seem to look upon a
-series of ethnological experiments prolonged through centuries,
-with synthetic results to a large extent confirmatory of previous
-inductions.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The intermingling of very diverse races at present taking
-<span class='pageno' title='311' id='Page_311'></span>
-place on the American continent includes some of widely
-diverse types. There is seen the Portuguese in Brazil; the
-Spaniard in Peru, Mexico, Central America, and in Cuba; the
-African in the West Indies and the Southern States; the
-Chinese on the Pacific; the Frenchman on the St. Lawrence;
-the German, the Italian, the Norwegian, the Icelander, the
-Celt, and the Anglo-Saxon: all subjected to novel influences,
-necessarily testing the results of a change of climate, of diet,
-and of social habits, on the ethnical character of each. There
-too, alike in the Red and the Black races, we can study the
-results of hybridity carried out on a scale adequate to determine
-many important points calculated to throw light on the
-origin and perpetuation of diverse races of mankind.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The growth of a race of hybrid African blood has been one
-of the results of the substitution at an early date of imported
-negro slaves to supply the place of the rapidly disappearing
-Indians who perished under the exactions of their taskmasters.
-According to careful data set forth in the United States
-census for 1850, the whole number of native Africans imported
-cannot have exceeded 400,000. At present the coloured race—hybrids
-chiefly—of African blood numbers nearly 7,000,000.
-In 1715 there were 58,000 negroes in British America; in
-1775, when the revolution broke out, there were 501,102.
-After the epoch of independence the increase became more
-rapid. In 1790 the numbers were 757,208; in 1800,
-893,041; in 1810, 1,191,364. At the date of emancipation
-in 1865 there were, in round numbers, in slavery, 4,000,000;
-and at the census in 1880 the negro population in the United
-States had risen to 6,580,793;<a id='r149'/><a href='#f149' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[149]</span></sup></a> and in the returns thus far
-published relative to the later census of 1890, in the
-Southern States alone they are reported to number 6,996,116;
-so that with the added numbers of the Northern States and
-Canada they can fall little short of 8,000,000. Of this
-numerous intrusive race, the larger number are hybrids; and,
-as was inevitable, they include some small proportion of
-mixed negro and Indian blood.<a id='r150'/><a href='#f150' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[150]</span></sup></a> But it is the Metis, or White
-and Red half-breed, that constitutes the subject of special
-interest here.
-<span class='pageno' title='312' id='Page_312'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Various causes have tended to beget more friendly relations
-between the older colonists of New France, and at a later
-date between those of British America and the native Indian
-race, than have existed either in Spanish America or the
-United States.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The great North-West, with its warlike Chippeways, Crees,
-Sioux, and Blackfeet; and beyond the Rocky Mountains its
-Tinné, Babeens, Clalams, Newatees, Chinooks, Cowlitz, and
-numerous other native tribes; had till recently been under the
-control of the all-powerful fur-trading company of Hudson
-Bay. The interests of the fur-traders stimulated them to fair
-and honourable dealing with the native tribes; and while they
-had no motive to encourage the Indians to abandon their
-nomadic life for the civilised habits of a settled people, or even
-to interpose in the wars which varied the monotony of the
-Indians’ wild hunter-life, they had so thoroughly won the
-confidence of the natives, that tribes at open enmity with each
-other were ready to repose equal confidence in the Hudson
-Bay factors.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The late Paul Kane, author of <span class='it'>Wanderings of an Artist
-among the Indians of North America</span>, informed me that when
-travelling beyond the Rocky Mountains he found no difficulty
-in transmitting his correspondence home, even when among
-the rudest Flathead savages. His packet, entrusted to one of
-the tribe, was accompanied with a small gift of tobacco, and
-the request to have it forwarded to Fort Garry, or other
-Hudson Bay fort. The messenger—Cowlitz, Chinook, Nasquallie,
-or other Indian,—carried it to the frontier of his own
-hunting-grounds, and then sold it for so much tobacco to some
-Indian of another tribe; by him it was passed on, by like
-process of barter, till it crossed the Rocky Mountains into the
-territory of the Blackfeet, the Crees, and so onward to its
-destination, in full confidence that the officers of the Hudson
-Bay Fort would sustain the credit of the White Medicine-man
-(for so the painter was regarded), and redeem the packet at its
-full value in tobacco or other equivalent.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The personal interests of the little bands of European fur-traders
-thus settled in the heart of a wilderness, and surrounded
-by savage hunters, no less strongly prompted them to
-exclude the maddening fire-water from the vast regions under
-<span class='pageno' title='313' id='Page_313'></span>
-their control. Guns and ammunition, kettles, axes, knives,
-beads, and other trinkets, with the no less prized tobacco, were
-abundantly provided for barter. Even nails and the iron
-hoops of their barrels were traded with the Indians, and displaced
-the primitive tomahawk and arrow head of flint or
-stone. Thus, curiously, the Stone period of a people still in
-the most primitive stage of barbarism has been superseded by
-the use of metals obtained solely by barter, and without any
-advance either in the knowledge of metallurgy, or in the
-mastery of the arts which lie at the foundation of all civilisation.
-Long before the advent of Europeans, the Chippeways
-along the shores of Lake Superior had been familiar with the
-native copper which abounds there in the condition of pure
-metal. But they knew it only as a kind of malleable stone;
-nor have they even now learned the application of fire in their
-simple metallurgic processes. The root of their names for
-iron and copper is the same abstract term, <span class='it'>wahbik</span>, used only
-in compound words, and apparently in the sense of rock or
-stone. <span class='it'>Pewahbik</span> is iron; <span class='it'>ozahwahbik</span>, copper, literally the
-yellow stone. It formed no part of the Hudson Bay traders’
-aim to advance him beyond the stage of a savage hunter. It
-was incompatible with the interests of the fur-trader to teach
-him any higher use of the rich prairie land than that of
-a wilderness inhabited by fur-bearing animals, or a grazing
-ground for the herds of buffalo which furnished their annual
-supply of pemmican; or to familiarise him with more of the
-borrowed arts of civilisation than helped to facilitate the
-accumulation of peltries in the factory stores. Hence the
-intrusive Europeans and the native tribes met on common
-ground, engaged in the same pursuits, all tending to foster the
-habits of hunter-life; and so presenting a close analogy to the
-condition of Europe when, in its Neolithic age, its rude hunter
-tribes were invaded by the Aryans. Thus engaged to a large
-extent in the same pursuits, the Whites and Indians of the
-Canadian North-West have dwelt together for successive
-generations on terms of comparative equality, and with results
-of curious interest, hereafter referred to, in relation to the
-intermingling of the races.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the long-settled provinces of Canada it has been otherwise.
-There the aborigines had to be gathered together on
-<span class='pageno' title='314' id='Page_314'></span>
-suitable reserves, and induced to accommodate themselves in
-some degree to the habits of an industrious agricultural population;
-or to be driven out, to wander off into the great
-hunting-grounds of the uncleared West. The exterminating
-native wars, which preceded the settlement of Upper Canada,
-greatly facilitated this; and the tribes with which the English
-colonists of Ontario have had to deal have been for the most
-part immigrants, not greatly less recent than themselves. As
-to the Six Nation Indians settled on the Grand River and at
-the Bay of Quinté (the most numerous and the farthest
-advanced in civilisation of all the Indians in the British provinces),
-they are a body of loyalist refugees who followed the
-fortunes of their English allies on the declaration of independence
-by the revolted Colonies; and there is now in use,
-at the little Indian Church at Tuscarora, the silver Communion
-Plate presented to their ancestors while still in the valley of
-the Mohawk, in the State of New York, the gift of Her
-Majesty Queen Anne, “to her Indian Chappel of the
-Mohawks.”<a id='r151'/><a href='#f151' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[151]</span></sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But the civilisation which has thus resulted from prolonged
-and intimate relations with the Whites, has been accompanied
-by an inevitable admixture of blood, of which the results are
-abundantly manifest in the physical characteristics of the
-Indian settlers, both on the Grand river and at the Bay of
-Quinté. The system of adopting members of other tribes,
-including even those of their vanquished foes, to recruit their
-own numbers, was practised by many of the North American
-tribes, and was familiar to the Iroquois, or Indians of the Five
-Nations, as they were styled before the admission of the
-Tuscaroras to their confederacy. In 1649, for example, the
-survivors of two of the Huron towns which they had ravaged,
-besought the favour of the victors, and were adopted into the
-Seneca nation. Nor did extreme differences of race interfere
-with affiliation, as in the case of children kidnapped from the
-White colonists in their vicinity. One interesting example of
-the latter suffices to illustrate the extent to which such a
-process tended to affect the ethnical purity of the race.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the year 1779, while the Mohawks still dwelt in their
-native valley in the State of New York, Ste-nah, a white girl,
-<span class='pageno' title='315' id='Page_315'></span>
-then about twelve years of age, was captured in one of their
-marauding expeditions, and adopted into the tribe. In 1868,
-while still living, she was described to me by an educated
-Mohawk India, as a full-blood <span class='it'>Sko-ha-ra</span>, or Dutchwoman. She
-grew up among her captors, accompanied the tribe on their
-removal from the Mohawk valley to the shores of the Bay of
-Quinté, and married one of the Mohawk braves. She had
-reached mature years, and was the mother of Indian children,
-when an aged stranger visited the reserve in search of his
-long-lost daughter. He had heard of a captive white woman
-who survived among the emigrant Mohawks there, and was
-able, by certain marks, and the scar of a wound received in
-childhood, to identify his long-lost daughter. But the discovery
-came too late. As my Mohawk informant told me, she had
-got an Indian heart. She had, indeed, lost her native tongue;
-had acquired the habits and sympathies of her adopted people;
-and coldly repelled the advances of her aged father, who in
-vain recalled his long-lost daughter Christina in the Mohawk
-white-blood, <span class='it'>Ste-nah</span>. If the date of her capture and her
-estimated age can be relied on, she must have been in her
-hundred and fifth year at the time of her death, in December
-1871. I have received through one of her grandsons—himself
-a Mohawk chief,—a genealogical table of her descendants,
-from which it appears that there are at the present time fifty-seven
-of them living and twenty-three dead. It is thus
-apparent, that by the adoption of a single White captive into
-the tribe, there are, in the fourth generation, fifty-seven survivors
-out of eighty members of the tribe, all of them of
-hybrid character.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The influence of a single case of admixture of White blood,
-thus followed out to its results in the fourth generation, suffices
-to show how largely those tribes must be affected who dwell
-for any length of time in close vicinity to White settlers, and
-in intimate friendly relations with them. The earlier French
-and English colonists, like the Hudson Bay traders of later
-times, were mostly young adventurers, without wives, and
-readily entering into alliance with the native women. The
-children of such unions were admitted to a perfect equality
-with the Whites, when trained up in their settlements; and in
-the older period of French and English rivalry the Indians
-<span class='pageno' title='316' id='Page_316'></span>
-were dealt with on very different terms from those with which
-they are now regarded, though even yet some memory of older
-relations survives.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>During the wars between the French and English colonists
-to the north and south of the St. Lawrence, in the seventeenth
-and eighteenth centuries, the alliance of neighbouring Indian
-tribes was courted; and the traditions of the fidelity of the
-Hurons to the French, and the loyalty of the Iroquois to the
-English, are cherished as incentives to the fulfilment of obligations
-entered into on behalf of the little remnant of the Huron
-nation remaining on the river St. Charles, below Quebec; and
-to a liberal and generous policy towards the Six Nation
-Indians settled on the Grand river and elsewhere in Western
-Canada.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But also in the primitive simplicity of border life, the half-civilised
-Indian and the rude settler meet on common ground;
-and in some cases the friendly relations established between
-them have survived the more settled condition of agricultural
-progress in the clearings. In this respect the older colonists
-of Quebec fraternised far more readily with the native population
-than has been the case with English settlers. The relations
-in which the early French colonists stood to the Indians
-of Lower Canada bore more resemblance to those of the fur-traders
-of the North-West in later times, and were of a kindlier
-nature than those of the intrusive European emigrants of the
-present century. Prior to the accession of Louis XIV. to the
-throne, the French possessions in the New World had been
-regarded as little more than a hunting-ground to be turned to
-the same account as the Hudson Bay Company’s territory;
-and the peopling of Canada had given little promise of permanent
-colonisation. Priests and nuns alone varied the usual
-class of trading adventurers who resort to a young colony.
-But soon after the King reached his majority, a systematic
-shipment of emigrants to Canada was organised under the
-direction of Colbert; sundry companies of soldiers were disbanded
-in the colony; and then, at last, the necessity of finding
-wives for the settlers was recognised. Thereupon a system
-of female emigration, with bounties on marriage, was established.
-Colbert, writing to the Canadian Intendant, tells him that the
-prosperity of the people, and all that is most dear to them as
-<span class='pageno' title='317' id='Page_317'></span>
-colonists, depend upon their securing the marriage of youths
-not later than their eighteenth or nineteenth year to girls
-at fourteen or fifteen; and the next step was to impose a
-fine on the father of a family who neglected to marry his
-children when they reached the respective ages of twenty
-and sixteen.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Up to this period the native women had chiefly supplied
-wives for the colonists; nor was this element now ignored or
-slighted. In the <span class='it'>Mémoire sur l’Etat Présent du Canada</span>, 1667,
-it is stated: “At this time it was believed that the Indians,
-mingled with the French, might become a valuable part of the
-population. The reproductive qualities of Indian women therefore
-became an object of attention to Talon, the Royal Intendant;
-and he reports that they impair their fertility by nursing
-their children longer than is needful; but, he adds, ‘this
-obstacle to the speedy building up of the colony can be overcome
-by regulations of police.’ ” Thus it is apparent that the
-strongest encouragement was given to such alliances.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The religious element, moreover, among a purely Roman
-Catholic population, helped to foster a sense of equality in the
-case of the Christianised Indian; while the gentler and less
-progressive habits of the French habitants have tended to
-prevent direct collision with the Indians settled in their midst.
-Hence in the province of Quebec, half-breeds, and men and
-women of partial Indian blood, are frequently to be met with
-in all ranks of life; and slighter traces, discernible in the hair,
-the eye, the cheek-bone, and peculiar mouth, as well as certain
-traits of Indian character, suggest to the close observer remote
-indications of the same admixture of blood.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But while favouring influences in national character, political
-institutions, and religion, all united to encourage a more
-friendly intercourse between the native and European population
-of Lower Canada, the circumstances attendant on the
-settlement of new clearings have everywhere led in some
-degree to similar results; and experience abundantly proves
-the impossibility of preserving distinct two races living in
-close proximity to each other.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Throughout the old provinces of Upper and Lower Canada,
-and the Maritime Provinces, where the aborigines are mostly
-congregated on reserves, under the charge of Government
-<span class='pageno' title='318' id='Page_318'></span>
-officers of the Indian Department, they appear, with few exceptions,
-to have passed the critical stage of transition from a
-nomadic state to that of assimilation to the habits of settled
-industry of the Whites.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The native tribes of the old provinces of the Dominion,
-though bearing a variety of names, may all be classed under
-the two essentially distinct groups of Algonkins and Iroquois.
-Under the former head properly rank the Micmacs, and other
-tribes of Prince Edward’s Island, Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick;
-and the Chippeways, including Ottawas, Mississagas,
-Pottawattomies, etc., of Ontario. Under the other head have
-to be placed not only the Six Nations—Mohawks, Oneidas,
-Onondagas, Cayugas, Senecas, and Tuscaroras,—but also the
-Wyandots, or Hurons, both of Upper and Lower Canada;
-though among the one were found the faithful allies of the
-English, while the other adhered persistently to the French;
-and to the deadly enmity between them was due the expulsion
-of the Hurons from their ancient territory on the Georgian
-Bay, and the extermination of all but an insignificant remnant,
-including the refugees on the St. Charles river, below Quebec.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Canadian census of 1871 includes the aborigines in
-the enumeration of the population of the Dominion, and states
-the grand total of the Indians of the Provinces of Quebec,
-Ontario, Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick, at 23,035.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That the Indian population, gathered on their own reserved
-lands under the care of Government superintendents, is not
-diminishing in numbers, appears to be universally admitted.
-But as, at the same time, the pure race is being largely replaced
-by younger generations of mixed blood, the results cannot be
-looked upon as encouraging the hope of perpetuating the native
-Indian race under such exceptional conditions; nor can it be
-overlooked that the increase is partly begot by the addition of
-a foreign element. At best the results point rather to such a
-process of absorption as appears to be the inevitable result
-wherever a race, alike inferior in numbers and in progressive
-energy, escapes extirpation at the hands of the intruders.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the boyhood of the older generation of Toronto, hundreds
-of Indians, including those of the old Mississaga tribe, were to
-be seen about the streets. Now, at rare intervals, two or three
-squaws, in round hats, blue blankets, and Indian leggings,
-<span class='pageno' title='319' id='Page_319'></span>
-attract attention less by their features than their dress; for in
-complexion they are nearly as white as those of pure European
-descent. The same is the case on all the oldest Indian reserves.
-The Hurons of Lorette, whose forefathers were brought
-to Lower Canada after the massacre of their nation by the
-Iroquois in 1649, are reported to have considerably increased
-in numbers in the interval between 1844 and the last census.
-But while the Commissioners refer to them as a band of Indians
-“the most advanced in civilisation in the whole of Canada,”
-they add that “they have, by the intermixture of White blood,
-so far lost the original purity of race as scarcely to be considered
-as Indians.” In their case this admixture with the
-European race has been protracted through a period of upwards
-of two centuries, till they have lost their Indian language, and
-substituted for it a French patois. Were it not for their
-hereditary right to a share in certain Indian funds, which
-furnishes an inducement to perpetuate their descent from the
-Huron nation, they would long since have merged in the common
-stock. Yet the results would not thereby have been
-eradicated, but only lost sight of. Their baptismal registers
-and genealogical traditions supply the record of a practical,
-though undesigned, experiment as to the influence of hybridity
-on the perpetuation of the race, and show the mixed descendants
-of Huron and French blood still, after a lapse of upwards
-of two centuries, betraying no traces of a tendency towards
-infertility or extinction.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the Maritime Provinces the Micmacs are the representatives
-of the aboriginal owners of the soil. Small encampments
-of them may be encountered in summer on the Lower
-St. Lawrence, busily engaged in the manufacture of staves,
-barrel-hoops, axe-handles, and baskets of various kinds, which
-they dispose of, with much shrewdness, to the traders of Quebec,
-and the smaller towns on the Gulf. So far as I have seen, the
-pure-blood Micmac has more of the dark-red, in contrast to the
-prevalent olive hue, than other Indians. But the Micmacs of
-Nova Scotia and New Brunswick reveal the same evidence of
-inevitable amalgamation with the predominant race as elsewhere.
-The Rev. S. T. Rand—a devoted missionary labouring
-among the Indians of Nova Scotia,—on being asked to
-obtain a photograph of a pure-blood representative of the
-<span class='pageno' title='320' id='Page_320'></span>
-tribe, had some difficulty in finding a single example, and
-stated that not one is to be found among the younger
-generation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the old provinces the Indians are in the minority; but
-the same process is apparent where little bands of pioneers
-leave the settled provinces and states to begin new clearings,
-or to engage in the adventurous life of hunters and trappers
-in the far West. The hunter finds a bride among the native
-women; and when at length the wild tribe recedes before the
-growing clearing and the diminished supplies of game, it not
-only leaves behind a half-breed population as the nucleus of
-the civilised community, but it also carries away with it a like
-element, increasingly affecting the ethnical character of the
-whole tribe.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The same circumstances have continued, in every frontier
-settlement, to involve the inevitable production of a race of
-half-breeds. Even the cruellest exterminations of hostile tribes
-have rarely been carried out so effectually as to preclude this.
-In New England, for example, after the desolating war of
-1637, which resulted in the extinction of the Pequot tribe,
-Winthrop thus summarily records the policy of the victors:
-“We sent the male children to Bermuda by Mr. William
-Pierce, and the women and maid children are disposed about
-in the towns.” Such a female population could not grow up
-in a young colony, with the wonted preponderance of males,
-and leave no traces in subsequent generations.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Seeing, then, that the meeting of two types of humanity so
-essentially distinct as the European and the native Indian of
-America, has, for upwards of three centuries, led to the production
-of a hybrid race, it becomes an interesting question,
-what has been the ultimate result? Has the mixed breed
-proved infertile, and so disappeared; has it perpetuated a new
-and permanent type of intermediate characteristics; or has it
-been absorbed into the predominant European race without
-leaving traces of this foreign element? These questions are
-not without their significance even in reference to the policy in
-dealing with the Indian settlements in old centres of population;
-for the traces of this intermingling of the races of the
-Old and New World are neither limited to frontier settlements
-nor to Indian reserves.
-<span class='pageno' title='321' id='Page_321'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Among Canadians of mixed blood there are men at the
-Bar and in the Legislature, in the Church, in the medical profession,
-holding rank in the army, in aldermanic and other
-civic offices, and engaged in active trade and commerce. A
-curious case was recently brought before the law courts in
-Ontario. A son of the chief of the Wyandot Indians settled
-in Western Canada, left the reserves of his tribe, engaged in
-business, and acquired a large amount of real estate and personal
-property. He won for himself, moreover, such general
-respect that he was elected Reeve of Anderdon by a considerable
-majority over a White candidate. Thereupon his rival
-applied to have him unseated, on the plea that a person of
-Indian blood was not a citizen in the eye of the law. Fortunately
-the judge took a common-sense view of the case, and
-decided that as he held a sufficient property-qualification within
-the county, the election was valid.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That an Indian ceases to be such in the eye of the law,
-and in all practical relations to society, when he becomes an
-educated industrious member of the general community, and
-competes not only for its privileges but for its highest honours, is
-inevitable. But it is not with the Indian as with the Negro
-mixed race. The privileges and the disabilities of the Indian
-ward may both be cast off; but a certain degree of romance
-attaches to Indian blood, when accompanied with the culture
-and civilisation of the European. The descendants of Brant
-and other distinguished native chiefs are still proud to claim
-their lineage, where the physical traces of such an ancestry
-would escape the eye of a common observer. Traces of Indian
-descent may be recognised among ladies of attractive refinement
-and intelligence, and with certain mental as well as
-physical traits which add to the charm of their society. Similar
-indications of the blood of the aborigines are familiar to
-Canadians in the gay assemblies of a Governor-General’s receptions,
-in the halls of Legislature, in the diocesan synods and
-other ecclesiastical assemblies, and amongst the undergraduates
-of Canadian universities.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But the condition of men and women of mixed blood,
-admitted to all the privileges of citizenship, and mingling in
-perfect equality with all other members of the community, is
-in striking contrast to that of the occupants of the Indian
-<span class='pageno' title='322' id='Page_322'></span>
-reserves, where they are settled, for the most part in isolated
-bands, in the midst of a progressive White population. Such
-a condition is manifestly an unfavourable one, and one, moreover,
-which cannot be regarded as other than transitional.
-They are confessedly dealt with as wards, in a state of
-pupilage.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A growing sense of the necessity for some modification of
-this system has been felt for a considerable time; and in
-1867 “An Act to encourage the gradual Civilisation of the
-Indian Tribes,” received the royal assent. This Act avowedly
-aims at the “gradual removal of all legal distinctions between
-them and Her Majesty’s other Canadian subjects; and to
-facilitate the acquisition of property, and of the rights accompanying
-it, by such individual members of the said tribes
-as shall be found to desire such encouragement, and to have
-deserved it.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That the ultimate result of this will involve the disappearance
-of the Indian as a distinct race is inevitable. He will be
-absorbed into the dominant race; not to be displaced or driven
-out of the community; but to be perpetuated, as the precursors
-of the blonde Aryans of Europe still survive in the
-“dark Whites” that now, in undisputed equality, enjoy all the
-rights of citizenship of a common race. They will indeed constitute
-but a small remnant of the nations of Euramerican
-blood. That whole tribes and peoples of the American
-aborigines have been exterminated in the process of colonisation
-of the New World is no more to be questioned, than that
-a similar result followed from the Roman conquest and colonisation
-of Britain. Nevertheless, long and careful study of
-the subject has satisfied me that a larger amount of absorption
-of the Indian into the Anglo-American race has occurred than
-is generally recognised.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Fully to appreciate this, it is necessary to retrace the course
-of events by which America has been transferred to the descendants
-of European colonists. At every fresh stage of
-colonisation, or of pioneering into the wild West, the work
-has necessarily been accomplished by hardy young adventurers,
-or the hunters or trappers of the clearing. It is rare
-indeed for such to be accompanied by wives or daughters.
-Where they find a home they take to themselves wives from
-<span class='pageno' title='323' id='Page_323'></span>
-among the native women; and their offspring share in whatever
-advantages the father transplants with him to this home
-in the wilderness. To such mingling of blood, in its least
-favourable aspects, the prejudices of the Indian present little
-obstacle. Henry, in his narrative of travel among the Cristineaux
-on Lake Winipagoos upwards of a century ago, after
-describing the dress and allurements of the women, adds:
-“One of the chiefs assured me that the children borne by their
-women to Europeans were bolder warriors and better hunters
-than themselves.” This idea recurs in various forms. The
-half-breed lumberers and trappers are valued throughout Canada
-for their hardihood and patient endurance; the half-breed
-hunters and trappers are equally esteemed in the Hudson
-Bay territory; and beyond their remotest forts Dr. Kane reported,
-as his experience within the Arctic circle, that “the
-half-breeds of the coast rival the Esquimaux in their powers of
-endurance.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mr. Charles Horetskey, in his <span class='it'>Canada on the Pacific</span>, after
-remarking on the well-known fact that Japanese junks have
-been known to drift on to the Pacific coast of America, and so
-contribute new elements of Mongolian character to the native
-population, thus proceeds to notice another element of hybridity.
-“There is,” he says, “another mixture in the blood
-on the west coast of Vancouver Island, and a very marked one—the
-Spanish, owing to the Spaniards having long had a
-settlement at Nootka. Strangely enough, the Spanish cast of
-countenance does not show in the women, who have the same
-flat features as their sisters to the eastward. Nor is it so
-noticeable among the young men, many of whom, however,
-have beards—a most unusual appendage among American
-Indians, and of course traceable to the cause referred to. The
-features are more observable among the older men, many of
-whom, with their long, narrow, pointed faces and beards, would,
-if washed, present very fair models for Don Quixote.” Within
-the region of Alaska, Russian traders have contributed another
-element to the mingling of races; and Mr. Wm. H. Dall, in
-his <span class='it'>Alaska and its Resources</span>, states specifically the number of the
-Creoles or half-breeds of that region as 1421. But the present
-condition of society there favours their increase. In 1842,
-they were, for the first time, qualified to enter the Church as
-<span class='pageno' title='324' id='Page_324'></span>
-priests; and in 1865, the American Expedition found Ivan
-Pavloff, the son of a Russian father and a native woman of
-Kenai, filling the office of Bidarshik, or commander of the post
-at Nulato. He was legally married to a full-blooded Indian
-woman, by whom he had a large family.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Another intrusive element, that of the Asiatic Mongol, has
-awakened alarm for the possible future of the white race of
-settlers, both in America and in Australia. In 1875 the
-number of Chinese in California amounted to 130,000;
-19,000 arrived in a single year. They speedily made their
-way to the New England States, and to Eastern Canada; till it
-has been deemed politic to forbid further immigration. It is
-the intrusion of a type approximating to the American Mongol,
-and so has a special interest in its bearing on the ethnology
-of the continent; for here we see the approximate types of
-Asia and America brought into contact, it may be as descendants
-of a common stock, separated through unnumbered
-centuries by untraversed oceans.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Indians of Vancouver Island and British Columbia
-were estimated in 1860 to number 75,000. The observations
-of Paul Kane in 1846 showed that a considerable half-breed
-population already existed then in the vicinity of every Hudson
-Bay fort. But at the later date the reported richness of
-the gold-diggings was attracting hundreds of settlers; and as
-usual, in such cases, nearly all males. The admixture of blood
-with the native population consequent on such a social condition
-is inevitable; and though such a population is least
-likely to leave behind it any permanent traces among settled
-civilised colonists, yet the condition of things which it presents
-illustrates the social life of every frontier settlement of the
-New World. Everywhere the colonisation of the outlying
-territory begins with a migration of males, and by and by the
-cry comes from Australia, Canada, and elsewhere, for stimulated
-female emigration. It is a state of things old as the dispersion
-of the human race, and typified in such ancient legends
-as the Roman Rape of the Sabines. The abstract of the
-United States census of 1860 showed that the old settled
-states of New England are affected even more than European
-countries by this inevitable source of the disparity of the
-sexes. In Massachusetts, at that date, the females outnumbered
-<span class='pageno' title='325' id='Page_325'></span>
-the males by upwards of 37,000; while in Indiana, on
-the contrary, they fell short of the males by 48,000.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the latter case, on a frontier state, where the services of
-the Indian women must necessarily be courted in any attempt
-at domestic life, intermixture between the native and intruding
-races is inevitable, and the feeling with which it is regarded
-finds expression constantly through the genuine New World
-lyrics of Joaquin Miller, with his “brown bride won from an
-Indian town”—</p>
-
-<div class='poetry-container' style=''><div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<p class='line0'>Where some were blonde and some were brown,</p>
-<p class='line0'>And all as brave as Sioux.</p>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='noindent'>Thus the same process still repeats itself along the widening
-frontier of the far West, which has been in operation on the
-American continent from the days of Columbus and Cabot.
-Hardy bands of pioneer adventurers, or the solitary hunter and
-trapper, wander forth to brave the dangers of the prairie or
-savage-haunted forest, and to such, an Indian bride proves
-the fittest mate. Of the mixed offspring a portion cling to the
-fortunes of the mother’s race, and are involved in its fate;
-but more adhere to those of the white father, share with him
-the vicissitudes of border life, and cast in their lot with the
-first nucleus of a settled community. As the border land
-slowly recedes into the further West, new settlers crowd into
-the clearing; the little cluster of primitive log-huts grows up
-into the city, perhaps the capital of a state, and with a new
-generation the traces of Indian blood are well nigh forgotten.
-If any portion of the aboriginal owners of the soil linger in the
-neighbourhood, they are no less affected by the predominant
-intruding race.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The transfer of the rich prairie lands of the great North-West
-from the care of Hudson Bay factors and trappers, the
-organisation of it into the Province of Manitoba, and the
-territories already in preparation for new provinces, under the
-government of their own legislatures, has necessarily brought
-to an end the condition of things so favourable to friendly
-relations between the White and Red races. The region,
-moreover, is now traversed by the Canadian Pacific Railway;
-and the herds of buffalo, on which the Indian mainly depended
-for his supplies of food, fur robes, and teepe skins, have finally
-<span class='pageno' title='326' id='Page_326'></span>
-disappeared. Railways, telegraph lines, and other appliances
-of civilisation are equally incompatible with the existence of
-the wild buffalo and the wild Indian. The former inevitably
-vanished from the scene. It remains to be seen if the latter
-can adapt himself to the novel conditions of such an environment.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As some preparation for the inevitable revolution, the
-half-breeds, already numbering thousands, accustomed to mingle
-on perfect equality with the Whites, and trained in some
-partial degree to agricultural industry, entered on the possession
-of farms allotted to them by the Government. But such a
-transitional stage, forced into premature development, could
-scarcely be expected to pass through all its revolutionary stages
-without a conflict, and clashing of interests; and the efforts of
-the Dominion Government to deal with this novel condition of
-things were only partially successful. But perhaps the most
-notable feature in the results has been that the chief difficulty
-was, not with the wild tribes transferred from the management
-of the fur-traders to the direct jurisdiction of the
-Government, but with the half-breeds, claiming civil rights,
-and jealously resenting encroachments on lands appropriated
-for their own settlement.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The reports of the Indian Department supply interesting
-glimpses of the process of adjustment with the various tribes
-of natives reluctantly yielding to the new condition of things.
-Returns made to an address of the House of Commons at
-Ottawa, dated March 1873, disclose the jealousies and suspicions
-of the native tribes, and the anxiety evinced by the
-Government officials to remove all just grounds of complaint.
-Mr. Beatty, a contractor for certain surveys on the Upper
-Assiniboine, reports that the Portage Indians, under their
-chief, Yellow Quill, had absolutely forbidden any survey of
-their lands, and driven him and his party off the field. The
-Lieutenant-Governor thereafter held an interview with Yellow
-Quill and a party of his braves, and after a long <span class='it'>pow-wow</span>
-succeeded in pacifying him. Again, a party of about two
-thousand Sioux are reported to have left in high dudgeon,
-with a threat to return in force next spring; and the Hon.
-Alexander Morris—now Lieutenant-Governor of Manitoba—writes
-to the Provincial Secretary at Ottawa, that “The Red
-<span class='pageno' title='327' id='Page_327'></span>
-Lake Indians on the American side have been sending
-tobacco to the Sioux in our territory, as it is believed, with
-the view of common action with regard to the Boundary
-Survey.” For the settlement of provinces, and the surveying
-of the prairie for disposal to its new occupants, had necessitated
-the determination of a well-defined boundary between
-the Canadian territories and those of the United States.
-Only a few years had elapsed since the State of Minnesota
-was desolated by a cruel war, carried on by the Sioux at the
-instigation, as was then affirmed, of Southern agents, with a
-view to a diversion in favour of the South during the great
-Civil War. A large number of the Sioux have since crossed
-the boundary, and settled within the British lines; and the
-Hon. Mr. Morris writes from Fort Garry in December last:
-“Some of the Sioux assist the white settlers as labourers in
-the summer. They have asked for land, and were led to
-believe that they would be assigned a reserve, and, if so, they
-would plant crops, and could then be removed from the settlement.”
-But Mr. Morris specially draws the attention of the
-provincial authorities to the excited state apparent among all
-the Western tribes, and adds: “I believe it to be in part
-created by the Boundary Commission. They do not understand
-it, and think the two nations are uniting against them.”
-The difficulties, however, were overcome; and the reports of
-the Indian agents contain some curious illustrations of the
-difficulties inevitable in the first attempt at transforming wild
-Indian tribes into prairie farmers. One of them thus writes:
-“The full demands of the Indians cannot be complied with;
-but there is, nevertheless, a certain paradox in asking a wild
-Indian, who has hitherto gained his livelihood by hunting and
-trapping, to settle down on a reservation and cultivate the
-land, without at the same time offering him some means of
-making his living. As they say themselves: ‘We cannot
-tear down the trees and build huts with our teeth, we cannot
-break the prairie with our hands, nor reap the harvest, if we
-had grown it, with our knives.’ ” But even among the wild
-tribes of the prairies a great diversity in habits, and in
-aptitude for the new life now forced upon them as their only
-chance of survival, is apparent. The Portage Indians clung
-to their old status as hunters living in their buffalo-skin
-<span class='pageno' title='328' id='Page_328'></span>
-lodges on the prairies; the St. Peter Indians form permanent
-settlements, not only of birch-bark wigwams, but many of
-them have built log-houses for themselves. Even among the
-tribes already settling down to steady agricultural labour, such
-as the Saulteux and the Swampies of Manitoba, a very great
-difference both in sentiments and customs prevail. Thirty-four
-Indian families from one tribe in Pembina are reported
-by the agent as demanding their allocation of farms; the
-chiefs and headmen of other tribes are in negotiation for
-farming implements, stock, etc., and some of their demands
-curiously illustrate the form in which the new life thus
-opening up to them presents its most tempting aspects.
-Hoes, axes, and other indispensable implements have been
-readily granted to them. Ploughs, harrows, and oxen are in
-request, and have been conceded or promised where the
-Government agent is satisfied that they will be turned to
-good account. But in special demand is “a bull and cow for
-each chief, and a boar for each reserve.” The incipient idea
-of the stock farm is indeed apparent in the universal demand
-of all: “A promise,” says one of the agents, “which the
-Indians never omit to mention, that they shall be supplied
-with a male and female of each animal used by a farmer.”
-But the transformation of the wild hunter into an industrious
-agriculturist is a difficult process; and even in the new
-generation, born under such changed conditions, the Indian
-boy shows much greater aptitude for mechanical employments;
-and takes more readily to the work of the carpenter than to
-that of tilling the soil, which, so long as the Indian was its
-lord, was practised exclusively by the women of the tribe.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Could the older condition of interblended prairie life have
-been sufficiently long perpetuated, the results would far more
-fully have presented results in close analogy to the intermingling
-of Europe’s aboriginal and Aryan races in prehistoric
-times. A settlement begun by Lord Selkirk in 1811,
-was formed on the Red River within the area now embraced
-in the Province of Manitoba. It consisted of hardy Orkney
-men and Sutherlandshire Highlanders; and on the amalgamation
-of the North-West and the Hudson Bay Companies,
-the settlement received considerable additions to its numbers.
-When at length the great fur Companies’ supremacy came to
-<span class='pageno' title='329' id='Page_329'></span>
-an end, the community numbered upwards of two thousand
-whites, chiefly occupied in farming, or in the service of the
-Company. At a later date, another settlement was formed on
-the Assiniboine river, chiefly by French Canadians. In
-those, as at the forts and trading-posts of the Hudson Bay
-Company, the settlers consisted chiefly of young men. They
-had no choice but to wed or cohabit with the Indian women;
-and the result has been, not only the growth of a half-breed
-population greatly out-numbering the Whites, but the formation
-of a tribe of half-breeds, divided into two distinct bands,
-according to their Scottish or French paternity, who kept
-themselves distinct in manners, habits, and allegiance, alike
-from the Whites and the Indians.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This rise of an independent half-breed tribe is one of the
-most remarkable results of the great, though undesigned,
-ethnological experiment which has been in progress ever since
-the meeting of the diverse races of the Old and New World
-on the continent of America; and when the peculiar circumstances
-which favoured this result came to an end, it became
-a matter of great interest to note the most striking phases
-presented by it, before they are effaced by the influx of
-European emigration. I accordingly printed and circulated
-as widely as possible a set of queries relative to the Indian
-and half-breed population both of Canada and the Hudson
-Bay territory; and from the returns made to me by Hudson
-Bay factors, missionaries, and others, most of the following
-results are derived. The number of the settled population,
-either half-breed or more or less of Indian blood, in Red
-River and the surrounding settlements was about 7200.
-The intermarriage there has been chiefly with Indian women
-of the plain Crees, though alliances also occur with the
-Swampies (another branch of the Crees), and with Sioux,
-Chippeway, and Blackfeet women. But the most noticeable
-differences are traceable to the white paternity. The French
-half-breeds have more demonstrativeness and vivacity, but
-they are reported to take less readily to the steady drudgery
-of the farm than those of Scotch descent. But, at best, the
-temptations of a border settlement, with its buffalo hunts and
-its chief market for peltries, were little calculated to develop
-the industrious habits of a settled community; and the
-<span class='pageno' title='330' id='Page_330'></span>
-intrusion of farmers from the old provinces, and immigrants
-from Europe, ignorant of their habits and wholly indifferent
-to their interests, necessarily interfered with the healthful
-process of transformation into a settled industrious community
-of civilised half-breeds.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Some of the results elicited by the inquiries are of value
-in their bearing on the question of mixed races, and the
-apparent tendency to develop permanent varieties; and all
-the more so as the data thus obtained show the condition of
-the North-West community immediately prior to the formation
-of the Province of Manitoba, and the inauguration of the
-revolution which inevitably followed in its train. The half-breeds
-are a large and robust race, with greater powers of
-endurance than the native Indian. Mr. S. J. Dawson, of the
-Red River Exploring Expedition, speaks of the French half-breeds
-as a gigantic race as compared with the French
-Canadians of Lower Canada. Professor Hind refers in
-equally strong language to their great physical powers and
-vigorous muscular developments; and the venerable Archdeacon
-Hunter, of Red River, replied in answer to my
-inquiry: “In what respects do the half-breed Indians differ
-from the pure Indians as to habits of life, courage, strength,
-increase of numbers, etc.?” “They are superior in every
-respect, both mentally and physically.” Much concurrent
-evidence points to the fact that the families descended from
-mixed parentage are larger than those of the whites; and
-though the results are in some degree counteracted by a
-tendency to consumption, yet it does not amount to such a
-source of diminution on the whole as to interfere with their
-steady numerical increase. One of the questions circulated
-by me was in this form: “State any facts tending to prove or
-disprove that the offspring descended from mixed White and
-Indian blood fails in a few generations.” To this the Rev.
-J. Gilmour answered: “I know many large and healthy
-families of partial Indian blood, and have formed the opinion
-that they are likely to perpetuate a hardy race.” The venerable
-Archdeacon Hunter, familiar with the facts by long
-residence as a clergyman of the Roman Catholic Church
-among the mixed population of the Red River Settlement,
-answered still more decidedly: “The offspring descended from
-<span class='pageno' title='331' id='Page_331'></span>
-mixed White and Indian blood does not fail, but, generally
-speaking, by intermarriages it becomes very difficult to
-determine whether they are pure Whites or half-breeds.”
-Living, however, for many years among a people in whom
-the Indian traits are more or less traceable, it is probable
-that Archdeacon Hunter is less attracted by the modified,
-ample black hair, the large full mouth, and the dark, though
-gentle and softly expressive eye, which strikes a stranger on
-first coming among any frontier population of mixed blood.
-The half-breeds also retain much of the reserved and unimpressible
-manner of the Indian; though a good deal of
-intercourse with the native race has led me to the conclusion
-that this is more of an acquired habit than a strictly
-hereditary trait: a piece of Indian education akin to certain
-habits of social life universally inculcated among ourselves.
-When off his guard, the wild Indian betrays great inquisitiveness,
-and when relaxing over the camp-fire after a laborious
-day gives free play to mirth and loquacity.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So far, however, much that has been said applies to the
-mixed population of the Red River Settlement, living on a
-perfect equality with the white settlers, and constituting an
-integral part of the colony. They are neither to be confounded
-with the remarkable tribe of half-breed hunters, nor with the
-Indians of mixed blood already described, on older Canadian
-reserves. Remote as this settlement has hitherto been from
-ordinary centres of colonisation, and inaccessible except through
-the agency of the Hudson Bay Company, every tendency has
-been to encourage the introduction of the young adventurer,
-trapper, or <span class='it'>voyageur</span>, rather than the married settler. The
-habits of life incident to the fur trade made the distinction less
-marked between the Indian and the white man; and thus a
-people of peculiar type grew up there as intermediate in
-habits and mode of life as in blood from those of the old
-settled provinces of Upper and Lower Canada. Much property
-is now possessed by men of mixed blood. Their young
-men have in some cases been sent to the colleges of Canada,
-and, after creditably distinguishing themselves, have returned
-to lend their aid in the progress of the settlement. Thus a
-favourable concurrence of circumstances in all respects tended
-to give ample opportunity for testing the experiment of intermingling
-<span class='pageno' title='332' id='Page_332'></span>
-the blood of Europe and America, and raising up a
-civilised race peculiar to its soil. With the rapid influx of
-emigrants; the settling of the prairie lands with a population
-of yeomen farmers; and the rise of villages and towns along
-the railways and river highways; the ultimate absorption of
-this half-breed population, and its merging into the homogeneous
-community that will ultimately be fashioned out of
-a meeting of very diverse settlers, is inevitable. Icelanders
-and Danes, Germans, Russians, Italians, French, Highland
-crofters, and Irish Celts, are all being interfused into the new
-community of which the half-breed element will form no
-unimportant factor.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But a greater interest attaches to that other class of half-breeds
-already alluded to, which the new order of things has
-inevitably tended to efface, though not necessarily to eradicate,
-as an element in the population of the future province.
-Besides the civilised race of half-breeds, mingling on a perfect
-equality with the Whites; brought up in many cases in full
-enjoyment of such domestic training as the Hudson Bay factor
-and hunter could furnish in the wilderness; there remained
-apart from them a half-breed race, the offspring born to native
-women as the inevitable results of such a social condition as
-pertains to the occupants of the forts and trading-posts of that
-remote region. These half-breed buffalo hunters were wholly
-distinct from the civilised settlers, and yet more nearly related
-to them than to the wild Indian tribes. They belonged to the
-settlement, possessed land, and cultivated farms, though their
-agricultural labours were very much subordinated to the claims
-of the chase, and they scarcely aimed at more than supplying
-their own wants. The two bands numbered in all between
-6000 and 7000. Each division had its separate tribal
-organisation and distinct hunting-grounds, extending beyond
-the British American frontier. In 1849 the White Horse
-plain half-breeds on the Strayenne river, Dakota territory,
-rendered the following returns to an officer appointed to take
-the census: “700 half-breeds, 200 Indians, 603 carts, 600
-horses, 200 oxen, 400 dogs, and 1 cat.” This may illustrate
-the general character of a people partaking of the nomad
-habits of the Indian, and yet possessed of a considerable
-amount of movable property and real estate. They are a
-<span class='pageno' title='333' id='Page_333'></span>
-hardy race, fearless horsemen, and capable of enduring the
-greatest privations. They have adopted the Roman Catholic
-faith, and specially coveted the presence of a priest with them
-when on their hunting expeditions. The mass was celebrated
-on the open prairie, and was prized as a guarantee of success in
-the hunting-field. On such expeditions, it has to be borne in
-view, they were not tempted by mere love of the chase or by
-the prospect of a supply of game. Winter-hunting supplies to
-the trapper the valued peltries of the fur-bearing animals; but
-they depended on the summer and autumn buffalo hunts for
-the supply of pemmican, which furnished one of the main
-resources of the whole Hudson Bay population. The summer
-hunt kept them abroad on the prairie from about the 15th of
-June to the end of August, and smaller bands resumed the
-hunt in the autumn. With this as the favourite and engrossing
-work of the tribe, it is inevitable that farming could be
-carried on only in the most desultory fashion. Nevertheless,
-the severity of the winter compelled them to make provision
-for the numerous horses and oxen on which the summer hunt
-depended; and thus habits of industry and forethought were
-engendered.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The half-breed hunters regarded the Sioux and Blackfeet
-as their natural enemies, and carried on warfare with them
-much after the fashion of the Indian tribes that have acquired
-fire-arms and horses; but they gave proof of their “Christian”
-civilisation by taking no scalps. In the field, whether preparing
-for hunting or war, the superiority of the half-breeds was
-strikingly apparent. They then evinced a discipline, courage,
-and self-control, of which the wild Sioux, Crees, or Blackfeet
-are wholly incapable; and they accordingly looked with undisguised
-contempt on their Indian foes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Such are some of the most noticeable characteristics of this
-interesting race, called into being by the contact of the
-European with the native tribes of the forest and prairie.
-With so many of the elements of civilisation which it is found
-so hard to introduce among the most intelligent native tribes,
-an aptitude for social organisation, and a thorough independence
-of all external superintendence or control, there seems no
-reason to doubt that here is an example of an intermediate
-race, combining characteristics derived from two extremely
-<span class='pageno' title='334' id='Page_334'></span>
-diverse types of man, with all apparent promise of perpetuity
-and increase, if they could have been secured in the exclusive
-occupation of the region in which they have originated. But
-the railway has traversed the trail of the buffalo; and they
-have been compelled to make their choice between conformity
-to the industrial habits of agricultural settlers, or follow the
-herds of the buffalo in search of some remote wilderness
-beyond the shriek of the locomotive and the hail of the
-pioneer immigrant.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The inevitable revolution was not permitted to be inaugurated
-without very practical protest. The Red River Expedition
-of Sir Garnet Wolseley in 1870 was directed to put down a
-revolt of the half-breeds, under their leader, Louis Riel,
-resolute to oppose the intrusion of immigrant settlers. The
-struggle was renewed in 1885 under the same leader, but with
-the more legitimate grievance of neglected land claims, and
-the assertion of their rights to property in the prairie lands
-and on the river fronts. They were encountered by a Canadian
-volunteer force; Batoche, their little urban stronghold, was
-captured; and the North-West rebellion was brought to an
-end. But it was freely acknowledged that, poorly armed and
-ill-provided with the indispensable requisites for meeting a
-well-organised force of militia, under an experienced British
-soldier, General Middleton, they displayed unflinching courage,
-and held out bravely against overwhelming numbers furnished
-with the deadly appliances of modern warfare.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It could not be supposed that the invasion of the western
-hemisphere by the wanderers from the later homes of the
-Aryans beyond the Atlantic could reproduce in all respects
-the old phenomena that marked the displacement of Europe’s
-prehistoric races. But making due allowance for the changes
-wrought on the Aryan stock by the civilising influences of
-twenty centuries or more; and the consequent disparity
-between them and the rude hunter tribes of the American forests
-and prairies; much remains to aid us in the interpretation of
-the past. Ethnological investigation and induction enable us
-to realise the condition of Europe when its thinly-dispersed
-population consisted of a dark-skinned race, small in stature,
-and, as we may conceive, with hair and eyes of corresponding
-hue. Sepulchral deposits and the chance disclosures in their old
-<span class='pageno' title='335' id='Page_335'></span>
-cave-shelters have made us familiar with their physical form.
-Their modern representatives survive on the outskirts of
-Europe’s civilised centres. Still more, their ethnical characteristics
-have been perpetuated by the very same process as may
-now be seen in progress in the frontier states of America and
-the newest provinces of the Canadian Dominion. Not only are
-the modern representatives of Europe’s Allophyliæ to be found
-among the Lapps, Finns, and the Iberians of Northern and
-Western Europe; but everywhere in the British Isles, and
-throughout Western Europe, the Melanochroic elements stand
-out distinctly from the predominant Xanthocroic stock, among
-a people unconscious of any diversity of race. Here then
-we see evidences of the intermingling and the partial absorption
-of the Australioid savage of prehistoric Europe by the
-later Xanthocroi, the product of which survives in the brunette
-of Britain, France, Germany, Spain, and Italy. In Britain
-the contrasting characteristics of the diverse ethnical elements
-attracted the attention of Tacitus in the first century of
-our era. In Spain the Iberian still preserves the evidence
-of an individuality apart from the Indo-European races in the
-vernacular Euskara, while a large Moorish element in the
-southern portion of the peninsula perpetuates the results of
-another foreign intrusion and interblending of races within
-historic times.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The diversity apparent in some of the results of the meeting
-of dissimilar races in the Old World and the New, is due to
-the geographical characteristics of the two hemispheres. Alike
-by sea and land, Europe could be entered by invading colonists,
-gradually, and at many diverse points. Hence, the aggression
-of the higher races may be assumed to have begun while the
-difference between them and the aborigines of Europe was
-much less than that which distinguishes the European from the
-Bed Indian savage. The conquest would thus be protracted
-over a period probably of many generations, and so would
-involve no such collisions as inevitably result in the destruction
-of savage races when brought into abrupt contact with
-those far advanced in civilisation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But the peculiar relations of the frontier populations of the
-New World, and especially of the factors, trappers, and
-<span class='it'>voyageurs</span> of the Hudson Bay Company, with the native tribes,
-<span class='pageno' title='336' id='Page_336'></span>
-helped to create a partial equality between the civilised
-European and the savage, and so to beget results akin to
-those which have left such enduring evidences of the mingling
-of diverse races in the population of Europe.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This accordingly suggests a question affecting the whole
-relations of British and European colonists generally to the
-native population of new lands settled and colonised by them.
-Not only English, Scotch, and Irish, but German, Norwegian,
-Icelandic, French, Polish, Russian, and Italian emigrants flock
-in thousands to the New World, merge in the common stock,
-and in the third generation learn to speak of themselves as
-“Anglo-Saxon!” The investigations of ethnologists have well-nigh
-put an end to the supposed purity of an Anglo-Saxon or
-Anglo-Scandinavian population in all but the assumed purely
-Celtic areas of the British Islands; and the latest system of
-ethnical classification is based on the recognition of the
-survival in the mixed population of modern Britain of a race-element
-which still perpetuates an enduring influence derived
-from aborigines of Europe anterior to the advent of Celt or
-Teuton. The power of absorption and assimilation of a predominant
-race is great; and ethnological displacement is no
-more necessarily a process of extinction now than in primitive
-times; though intermixture must ever be most easily effected
-where the ethnical distinctions are least strongly marked, and
-the conditions of civilisation are nearly akin.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The permanent survival of a disparate type in America
-perpetuating the evidences of the interblending of the Red
-and White races may be doubted. That some ineffaceable
-results will remain I cannot doubt; but the enormous disparity
-in numbers between the millions of European nationalities,
-and the little remnant of the native race brought in contact
-with them, precludes the possibility of results such as have
-perpetuated in the modern races of Europe elements derived
-from some of its earliest savage tribes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It has indeed been such a favourite idea with some physiologists
-that in the undoubted developments of something like a
-distinct Anglo-American type, there is a certain approximation
-to the Indian, that Dr. Carpenter, in his <span class='it'>Essay on the Varieties
-of Mankind</span>, lays claim to originality in the idea “that the
-conformation of the cranium seems to have undergone a certain
-<span class='pageno' title='337' id='Page_337'></span>
-amount of alteration, even in the Anglo-Saxon race of the
-United States, which assimilates it in some degree to that of
-the aboriginal inhabitants.” This he dwells on in some detail,
-and arrives at what he seems to regard as an indisputable
-conclusion, that the peculiar American physiognomy to which
-he adverts presents a transition, however slight, toward that of
-the North American Indian. But the long-cherished opinion,
-to which Dr. Morton gave currency, of the existence of one
-special type of skull-form common to the whole aborigines of
-America, has been abandoned by all who have given any
-attention to the evidence which Dr. Morton’s own <span class='it'>Crania
-Americana</span> supplies. I doubt if the idea of such an approximation
-of the Anglo-American to the Red Indian type
-would ever have occurred to a physiologist of Canada or of
-New England, to whom abundant opportunities for comparing
-the Indian and Anglo-American features, and of noting the
-actual transitional forms between the two, are accessible.
-But if such examples can be clearly recognised, they may
-be assigned with probability to a reverting to the type of
-some Bed ancestress whose blood is transmitted to a late
-descendant.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But it is otherwise with the millions of the Coloured
-race who now constitute the indigenous population of the
-Southern States. They are at home there in a climate to
-which the White race adapts itself with very partial success.
-The offspring of white fathers and of mothers of the African
-races, they have multiplied to millions; and now with the
-recently acquired rights of citizenship, and with the advantages
-of education within their reach, the country is their own.
-The very social prejudices against miscegenation protect them
-from the effacing influences to which the Indian half-breed
-is exposed by ever recurrent intermarriage with the dominant
-race. As yet, there are discernible the various degrees of
-heredity from the Mulatto to the Quinteron. But the
-abolishing of slavery has placed the Coloured race on an
-entirely new footing; and left as it now is, free to enjoy the
-healthful social relations of a civilised community, and protected
-by the very prejudices of race and caste from any
-large intermixture with the White race, it can scarcely admit
-of doubt that there will survive on the American continent a
-<span class='pageno' title='338' id='Page_338'></span>
-Melanocroi of its own, more distinctly separated from the
-White race, not only by heredity, but also by climatic
-influences, than the “dark Whites” of Europe are from the
-blonde types of Hellenic, Slavic, Teutonic, or Scandinavian
-stocks.</p>
-
-<hr class='footnotemark'/>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_148'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f148'><a href='#r148'>[148]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Reisen in Lykien</span>, etc., Vienna, 1889.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_149'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f149'><a href='#r149'>[149]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Vide <span class='it'>History of the Negro Race in America</span>. G. W. Williams.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_150'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f150'><a href='#r150'>[150]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Science</span>, Feb. 13, 1891. A. F. Chamberlain.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_151'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f151'><a href='#r151'>[151]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'>See p. 290.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' title='339' id='Page_339'></span><h1>VIII<br/> RELATIVE RACIAL BRAIN-WEIGHT AND SIZE</h1></div>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='sc'>Consistently</span> with the recognition of the brain as the organ of
-intellectual activity, it seems not unnatural to assume for man,
-as the rational animal, a very distinctive cerebral development.
-One of the most distinguished of living naturalists, Professor
-Owen, has even made this organ the basis of a system of
-classification, by means of which he separates man into a
-sub-class, distinct from all other mammalia. But while a
-comparison between man and the anthropoid apes, as the
-animals most nearly approximating to him in physical structure,
-lends confirmation to the idea not only that a well-developed
-brain is essential to natural activity, but that there is a close
-relation between the development of the brain and the manifestation
-of intellectual power; the distinctive features in the
-human brain, as compared with those of the anthropomorpha,
-prove to be greatly less than had been assumed under imperfect
-knowledge. The substantial difference is in volume.
-“No one, I presume,” says Darwin, “doubts that the large size
-of the brain in man, relatively to his body, in comparison to
-that of the gorilla or orang, is closely connected with his higher
-mental powers”;<a id='r152'/><a href='#f152' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[152]</span></sup></a> and it might not unfairly be reasoned from
-analogy, that the same test distinguishes the intellectual man
-from the stolid, and the civilised man from the savage. A
-careful study of the subject, however, shows some remarkable
-deviations from such a scale of progression. Attention is
-indeed directed to greatly more ample proofs of inequality
-between the organic source of power and the manifestations of
-<span class='pageno' title='340' id='Page_340'></span>
-mental energy; as, for example, in the ant, with its cerebral
-ganglia not so large as the quarter of a small pin’s head, displaying
-instincts and apparent affections of wonderful intensity
-and compass. Viewed in this aspect, “the brain of an ant is
-one of the most marvellous atoms of matter in the world,
-perhaps more marvellous than the brain of man.” Here,
-however, we look on elements of contrast rather than analogy;
-and seek in vain in this direction for any appreciable test of
-the soundness of the popular belief in the size of the brain as a
-measure of intellectual power. It is otherwise when we turn
-to the anthropomorpha. There, alike in the scientific and in the
-popular creed, very special and exceptional affinities to man
-are admitted; and a careful study of their anatomical structure
-tends to increase the recognised points of analogy.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mr. Lockhart Clarke, in a contribution to Dr. Maudsley’s
-work on the Physiology and Pathology of Mind, gives a
-minute description of the concentric layers of nervous substance
-which combine to form the convolutions of the human
-brain; and of the forms and disposition of the various nerve-cells
-of which its vesicular structure consists. Comparing the
-human brain with those of other animals, he says: “Between
-the cells of the convolutions in man and those of the ape
-tribe I could not perceive any difference whatever; but they
-certainly differ in some respects from those of the larger
-mammalia: from those, for instance, of the ox, sheep, or
-cat.”<a id='r153'/><a href='#f153' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[153]</span></sup></a> Apart from the difference in volume (55 to 115 cubic
-inches), the only distinctive features, according to Professor
-Huxley, between the brain of the anthropomorpha and that
-of man, are “the filling up of the occipito-temporal fissure;
-the greater complexity and less symmetry of the other sulci
-and gyri; the less excavation of the orbital face of the frontal
-lobe; and the larger size of the cerebral hemispheres, as
-compared with the cerebellum and the cerebral nerves.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The brain of the orang is the one which seems most nearly
-to approximate to that of man. In volume it is about 26
-or 27 cubic inches; or about half the minimum size of a
-normal human brain. The frontal height is greater than in
-that of other anthropomorpha; the frontal lobe is in all
-respects larger as compared with the occipital lobe; and
-<span class='pageno' title='341' id='Page_341'></span>
-certain folds of brain-substance, styled “bridging convulsions,”
-which in the human brain are interposed between the parietal
-and occipital lobes, also occur, though greatly reduced, in the
-brain of the orang; while they appear to be wholly wanting
-in the chimpanzee, the gibbon, and other apes which superficially
-present a greater resemblance to man. Referring to
-the convolutions of the central cerebral lobe, Huschke says:
-“With their formation in the ape, the brain enters the last
-stage of development until it arrives at its perfection in man”;
-and the higher class of brains may be arranged between the
-extremes of poorly and richly convoluted examples.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But it must not be overlooked that, apart from structural
-differences, relative, and not absolute mass and weight of brain
-has to be considered, otherwise the elephant and the whale
-would take the foremost place. “The brain of the porpoise,”
-Professor Huxley remarks,<a id='r154'/><a href='#f154' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[154]</span></sup></a> “is quite wonderful for its mass,
-and for the development of the cerebral convolutions”; but it
-is the centre of a nervous system of corresponding capacity,
-while as compared with the size of the animal, the brain is
-not relatively large. Vogt states the weight of the human
-body to be to the brain, on an average, as 36 to 1; whereas
-in the most intelligent animals the difference is rarely less
-than 100 to 1.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Assuming the existence of some uniform relation between
-the size of the brain and the development of the intellectual
-faculties, along with whatever is recognised as most closely
-analogous to them in the lower animals, it might be anticipated
-that we should find not only a graduated development of
-brain in the anthropomorpha as they approximate in resemblance
-to man; but, still more, that the progressive stages
-from the lowest savage condition to that of the most civilised
-nations should be traceable in a comparative size and weight
-of brain. Dr. Carl Vogt, after discussing certain minor and
-doubtful exceptions, thus proceeds: “We find that there is an
-almost regular series in the cranial capacity of such nations
-and races as, since historic times, have taken no part in
-civilisation. Australians, Hottentots, and Polynesians, nations
-in the lowest state of barbarism, commence the series; and no
-one can deny that the place they occupy in relation to cranial
-<span class='pageno' title='342' id='Page_342'></span>
-capacity and cerebral weight corresponds with the degree of
-their intellectual capacity and civilisation.”<a id='r155'/><a href='#f155' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[155]</span></sup></a> But the position
-thus confidently assigned to the Polynesians receives no confirmation
-from the evidence supplied by the measurements of
-Dr. J. B. Davis, in his <span class='it'>Thesaurus Craniorum</span>; and a careful
-study of the subject reveals other remarkable deviations from
-such a scale of progression, not only in individuals but in
-races. To these exceptional deviations, with their bearing on
-the comparative capacity of races, the following remarks are
-chiefly directed. The largest and heaviest brains do indeed
-appear, for the most part, to pertain to the nations highest in
-civilisation, and to the most intelligent of their number. But
-this cannot be asserted as a uniform law, either in relation to
-races or individuals. The more carefully the requisite evidence
-is accumulated, the less does it appear that the volume of
-brain, or the cubic contents of the skull, supply a uniform
-gauge of intellectual capacity. In the researches which have
-thus far been instituted into the characteristics of the human
-brain among the lowest races, the development is in many
-respects remarkable; and, as was to be expected, no organic
-differences between diverse races of men have been traced.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Professor C. Luigi Calori has published the results of a
-careful examination of the brain of a negro of Guinea. It
-presented the marked excess of length over breadth so
-characteristic of the negro cranium; but in other respects it
-corresponded generally to the fully developed European brain.
-The distribution of the white and gray substances was the
-same; the cerebral convolutions were collected into an equal
-number of lobes; and the only special difference was that the
-convolutions were a little less frequently folded, and the
-separating sulci somewhat less marked than in the average
-European brain. But even in those respects the complication
-was great. The actual weight of the brain, according to
-Professor Calori, was 1260 grammes, equivalent to 44.4
-cubic inches. The complexity of convolution, and consequent
-extension of superficies of the encephalon, appears to be an
-essential element in the development of the brain as the
-organ of highest mental capacity; and to the cerebrum,
-apparently, the true functions of intellectual activity pertain.
-<span class='pageno' title='343' id='Page_343'></span>
-Professor Wagner undertook the measurement of the convex
-surface of the frontal lobe in a series of brains. The heaviest,
-as a rule, had also the greatest development of surface. But
-the two elements were not in uniform ratio. Some of the
-lighter brains presented a much greater degree of convolution
-and consequent extent of convex superficies than others
-which ranked above them in weight. It is thus apparent
-that in estimating the comparative characteristics of brains,
-various elements are necessary for an exhaustive comparison.
-Besides the functional differences of the cerebrum, cerebellum,
-and pons varolii, they have different specific gravities, so that
-brains of equal weight may differ widely in quality. Dr.
-Peacock, taking distilled water as 1000, gives the values of
-the subdivisions of the brain thus: cerebrum, 1034; cerebellum,
-1041; pons varolii, 1040. Again, Dr. Sankey states
-the mean specific gravity of the gray matter of the brain in
-either sex as 1034.6, and of the white matter as 1041.2.
-The variations from these results, as given by Bastian, Thurnam,
-and others, are trifling. But it is significant to note
-that recent researches show that where greater specific gravity
-of brain occurs in the insane, it appears to be limited to the
-gray matter.<a id='r156'/><a href='#f156' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[156]</span></sup></a> Professor Goodsir maintained that symmetry
-of brain has more to do with the higher faculties than bulk of
-form. It is, at any rate, apparent that two brains of equal
-weight may differ widely in quality.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Nevertheless, the popular estimate embodied in such expressions
-as “a good head,” “a long-headed fellow,” and “a
-poor head,” like many other popular inductions, has truth for
-its basis. Up to a certain stage the growth of the brain
-determines the capacity of the skull. Then it seems as
-though more complex convolutions accompanied the packing
-of the elaborated cerebral mass within the fixed limits of its
-osseous chamber.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A comparison of races, based on minute investigation of an
-adequate number of brains of fair typical examples, may be
-expected to yield important results; but in the absence of
-such direct evidence, the chief data available for this purpose
-are derived from measurements of the internal capacity of
-their skulls. Among English observers who have devoted
-<span class='pageno' title='344' id='Page_344'></span>
-themselves to this class of observations, the foremost place
-is due to Dr. J. Barnard Davis, who, in 1867, summed up
-the results of his extensive researches in a contribution to
-the Royal Society, entitled “Contributions towards determining
-the Weight of the Brain in different Races of Man.”<a id='r157'/><a href='#f157' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[157]</span></sup></a> Inferior
-as such evidence must necessarily be, if compared with the
-examination of the brain itself, nevertheless the number of
-skulls of the different races gauged unquestionably furnishes
-some highly valuable data for ethnical comparison. The
-evidence, moreover, is obtained from a source in some respects
-less variable than the encephalon; and will always constitute
-a corrective element in estimating results based on direct
-examinations of the brain. Dr. Davis, indeed, claims “that
-the examination of a large series of skulls in ascertaining their
-capacities and deducing from those capacities the average
-volume of the brain, affords in some respects more available
-data for determining this relative volume for any particular
-race than the weighing of the brain itself.” The defect is,
-that its most important results are necessarily based on the
-assumption of a uniform density of brain; whereas some
-notable ethnical differences, hereafter referred to, may prove
-to be due to the fact that certain races derive their special
-characteristics from a prevailing diversity in this very respect.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But the extensive observations of Dr. Davis, as of Dr.
-Morton, have a special value from the fact that each furnishes
-results based on a uniform system of observation; for the
-diverse methods and materials employed by different observers
-in gauging the human skull have greatly detracted from their
-practical value. In a communication by the late Professor
-Jeffreys Wyman to the Boston Natural History Society,<a id='r158'/><a href='#f158' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[158]</span></sup></a> he
-presented the results of a series of measurements of the
-internal capacity of the same skull with pease, beans, rice,
-flax-seed, shot, and coarse and fine sand. From repeated
-experiments he arrived at the conclusion that the apparent
-capacity varied according to the different substances used, so
-that the same skull measured respectively, with pease 1193
-centimetres, with shot 1201.8, with rice 1220.2, and with
-fine sand 1313 centimetres. Professor Wyman was led to the
-<span class='pageno' title='345' id='Page_345'></span>
-conclusion that, for exactness, small shot, as employed latterly
-by Dr. Morton, is preferable to sand, were it not for its weight,
-which, in the case of old and fragile skulls, is apt to be
-destructive to them. With a view to avoid the latter evil,
-Dr. J. B. Davis has used fine Calais sand of 1.425 specific
-gravity. The diversity in apparent volume, consequent on
-the employment of different substances in gauging the internal
-capacity of the skull, necessarily detracts from the value of
-comparative results of Morton, Davis, and others. But the
-elaborate measurements of their great collections of human
-crania furnish reliable series of data, each uniform in system,
-and sufficiently minute to satisfy many requirements of comparative
-craniometry and approximate cerebral development.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Without assuming an invariable correspondence in cubical
-capacity and brain-weight, there is a sufficient approximation
-in the cubical capacity of the skull and the average weight of
-the encephalon to render the deductions derived from gauging
-the capacities of skulls of different races an important addition
-to this department of comparative ethnology. For minute
-cerebral comparisons, however, it is apparent that much more
-is required; and the special functions assigned to the various
-organs within the cranium have to be kept in view. Of these
-the medulla oblongata, in direct contact with the spinal cord,
-is now recognised as the centre of the vital actions in breathing
-and swallowing; and is believed also to be the direct source of
-the muscular action employed in speech. Next to it are the
-sensory ganglia, arranged in pairs along the base of the brain.
-To the cerebellum, which the phrenologist sets apart as the
-source of the emotions and passions embraced in his terminology
-of amativeness, philoprogenitiveness, etc., physiologists now
-assign the function of conveying to the mind the conditions
-of tension and relaxation of the muscles, and so controlling
-their voluntary action. But above all those is the cerebrum,
-or brain-proper, consisting of two large lobes of nervous substance,
-which in man are so large that, when viewed vertically,
-they cover and conceal the cerebellum. To this organ is
-specially assigned emotion, volition, and ratiocination. It is
-the assumed seat of the mind; and, in a truer sense than the
-skull—</p>
-
-<div class='poetry-container' style=''><div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<p class='line0'>The dome of thought, the palace of the soul;</p>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='346' id='Page_346'></span></p>
-
-<p class='noindent'>if indeed it be not, to one class of reasoners, the mind itself.
-Certain it is that no acute disease can affect it without a
-corresponding disorder of the functions of mind; and with
-this organ much below the average size, intellectual weakness
-may always be predicated. But at the same time, it is
-significant to note that the human brain, stinted in its full
-proportions, and reduced to a seeming equality with the
-anthropomorpha, exhibits no corresponding capacities or instincts
-in lieu of the higher mental qualities. Microcephaly is the
-invariable index, not of mere limited intelligence and mental
-capacity, but of actual mental imbecility. If the augmentation
-of the brain of the anthropomorpha from 55 to 115 cubic
-inches be all that is requisite for the transformation of the
-irrational ape into the reasoning man, it would seem to be in no
-degree illogical to look for the accompaniment of the inversion
-of the process by an approximation, in some instances, to
-certain capacities and functions of the ape. But there are no
-indications of this. In some examples of microcephaly, the
-so-called animal propensities do indeed manifest themselves to
-excess; but there is no reproduction of the animal nature,
-instincts, or capacities, analogous to the scale of cerebral
-development of the orang or chimpanzee. A microcephalous
-idiot, who died at the age of twenty-two, in St. Bartholomew’s
-Hospital, London, had a brain weighing only 13.125 oz., or
-372 grammes. In describing this case, Professor Owen remarks:
-“Here nature may be said to have performed for us the experiment
-of arresting the development of the brain almost
-exactly at the size which it attains in the chimpanzee, and
-where the intellectual faculties were scarcely more developed.
-Yet no anatomist would hesitate in at once referring the cranium
-to the human species.” And so is it with the encephalon. The
-brain of the chimpanzee is a healthy, well-developed organ,
-adequate to the amplest requirements of the animal; whereas
-the microcephalous human brain is inadequate for any efficient,
-continuous cerebral activity: not merely limited in its range of
-powers. Much, however, may yet be learned from a careful
-attention to the imperfect manifestations of activity in certain
-directions, in cases of microcephalic idiocy, and noting the
-predominant tendency in each case, with a view to subsequent
-examination of the brain. By this means it may be found
-<span class='pageno' title='347' id='Page_347'></span>
-possible to refer certain forms of mental activity to special
-variations in the structure of the organ, or to distinct members
-of the encephalon.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dr. Laennec exhibited to the Anthropological Society of
-Paris a microcephalous idiot of the male sex, aged fourteen
-years. “This child is entirely unconscious of his own actions,
-and his intellectual operations are very few in number, and
-very rudimentary. His language consists of two syllables, <span class='it'>oui</span>
-and <span class='it'>la</span>, and he takes an evident pleasure in pronouncing them.
-He takes no heed in what direction he walks. He would step
-off a precipice, or into a fire.” Attention was specially directed
-to the idiot’s hands: “The thumbs are atrophied, and cannot
-be opposed to the other fingers. The palms of the hands have
-the transverse creases, but not the diagonal—the result of the
-atrophy of the thumbs. Hence the hand resembles that of the
-chimpanzee. The dentition too is defective. Though fourteen
-years of age, the child has only twelve teeth.” Here it is
-curious to note the analogies in physical structure to the lower
-anthropomorpha in other organs besides the brain, for it only
-renders more striking the absence of any corresponding aptitudes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dr. J. Barnard Davis, in his interesting monograph on
-<span class='it'>Synostotic Crania among Aboriginal Races of Man</span>, produces
-some remarkable illustrations of the effect of premature ossification
-of the sutures of the skull in arresting the full development
-of the brain, and so rendering it unequal to the due performance
-of its functions. “I have,” he says, “the cranium of a convict
-who was executed on Norfolk Island, which I owe to the kindness
-of Admiral H. M. Denham. This man was executed there
-when that beautiful isle was appropriated to the reception of
-the most dangerous and irreclaimable convicts from the other
-penal settlements. It is a microcephalic skull, rather dolichocephalic,
-of a man apparently about forty years of age. It
-exhibits a perfect ossification of the sagittal and of the greater
-portion of the lambdoidal sutures. The coronal suture is
-partially obliterated at the sides in the temporal regions, and
-can only be distinguished by faint traces in all its middle parts.
-In this case there has not been any compensatory development
-of moment in other directions. The calvarium is not abridged
-in its length, which is 7.1 inches, equal to 179 millimetres;
-probably it is a little elongated. It is, however, very narrow
-<span class='pageno' title='348' id='Page_348'></span>
-being only 4.8 inches, or 122 mm. at its widest part, between
-the temporal bones. So that the result is a very small, dwarfed,
-almost cylindrical calvarium. The internal capacity is only 59
-ounces of sand,<a id='r159'/><a href='#f159' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[159]</span></sup></a> which is equal to 71.4 cubic inches, or 1169
-cubic centimetres.” Here is a skull considerably below the
-lowest mean of the crania of any race in Morton’s enlarged
-tables, or in the more comprehensive ones furnished in Dr.
-Davis’s <span class='it'>Thesaurus Craniorum</span>. Another skull nearly approximating
-to it is that of a Cole, one of the savage tribes of
-Nagpore, in Central India, who are said to go entirely naked.
-It is described in the supplement to the <span class='it'>Thesaurus Craniorum</span>
-as that of “Chara,” a Cole farmer, aged fifty, and its internal
-capacity is stated as 59.5 oz. av., equivalent to 71.7 cubic inches.
-The Coles appear to be small of stature. The heights of three
-of them, whose skulls are in the same collection, were respectively
-5 ft. 5 in., 5 ft. 2 in., and 5 ft., and the average
-internal capacity of five male skulls is only 66.6. The small
-stature in this and others of the native races of Central India,
-has to be taken into account in estimating the relative size of
-the brain. But, after making all due allowance for this, the
-Cole skulls are remarkable for their small size, being smaller
-even than the ordinary Hindoos of Bengal. Yet one of them,
-“Cootlo,” whose skull is among those included in the above
-mean, commanded a band of insurgents in the Porahant rebellion
-of 1858, and made himself a terror to the district.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The microcephalism of races, as well as of individuals, of
-small stature, must not be confounded with the true microcephaly
-of a dwarfed or imperfectly developed brain, which is
-invariably accompanied with mental imbecility. The Mincopies
-of the Andaman Islands are spoken of by Professor Owen as
-“perhaps the most primitive, or lowest in the scale of civilisation,
-of the human race.”<a id='r160'/><a href='#f160' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[160]</span></sup></a> Mr. G. E. Dobson, in describing
-<span class='pageno' title='349' id='Page_349'></span>
-his first visit to one of their “homes,” says: “Although none
-of the tribe exceeded 64 inches in height, so that on first seeing
-them we thought the shed contained none but boys and girls, I
-was especially struck by the remarkable contrast between the size
-of the males and females.”<a id='r161'/><a href='#f161' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[161]</span></sup></a> Dr. J. B. Davis has given, in the
-supplement to <span class='it'>Thesaurus Craniorum</span>, the dimensions of a
-male Mincopie skeleton in his collection. The age he assumes
-to have been about thirty-five. The internal capacity of the
-skull is 62 oz. (Calais sand), equivalent to 75.5 cubic inches,
-and the entire height of the skeleton is 58.7 inches. It belongs,
-says Dr. Davis, to a pigmy race, is small in all its dimensions,
-and is particularly small in the dimensions of the pelvis. Of
-their skulls, moreover, he adds, “it is somewhat difficult to
-determine the sex with confidence. They are all small (but
-this is a character of the race), they are delicate in development,
-and they have that fulness of the occipital region, and smallness
-of the mastoid processes, which are marks of femininism.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mr. Alfred R. Wallace connects the Mincopies with the
-Negritos and Semangs of the Malay peninsula, a dark woolly-haired
-race, dwarfs in stature. Dr. Davis says of the six
-Mincopie skulls in his collection, four male and two female,
-as well as of others which he has seen: “They are all remarkably
-and strikingly alike, not merely in size but in form also.
-They are all small, round, brachycephalic crania of beautiful
-form.” Moreover, though classed as “lowest in the scale of
-civilisation,” the Mincopies betray no deficiency of intellect.
-The admirable photographs which illustrate Mr. Dobson’s
-narrative show in the majority of them good frontal development.
-The brain is not, indeed, relatively small. Their canoes
-are made of the trunk of a tree, hollowed out; and Mr. Dobson
-remarks: “The construction of their peculiar arrows and fish-spears
-with movable heads exhibits much ingenuity, and the
-use of no small reasoning power in adapting means to an end.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We are indeed too apt to apply our own artificial standards
-as the sole test of intellectual vigour; whereas it is probable
-that in the amount of acquired knowledge and acuteness of
-reasoning many savage races surpass the majority of the
-illiterate peasantry in the most civilised countries of Europe.
-Mr. Wallace, in viewing the subject in one special light,
-<span class='pageno' title='350' id='Page_350'></span>
-remarks: “The brain of the lowest savages, and, as far as we
-yet know, of the prehistoric races, is little inferior in size to
-that of the higher types of man, and is immensely superior to
-that of the higher animals; while it is universally admitted
-that quantity of brain is one of the most important, and
-probably the most essential of the elements which determine
-mental power. Yet the mental requirements of savages, and
-the faculties actually exercised by them, are very little above
-those of animals. The higher feelings of pure morality and
-refined emotion, and the power of abstract reasoning and ideal
-conception, are useless to them; are rarely, if ever, manifested;
-and have no important relations to their habits, wants, desires,
-and well-being. They possess a mental organ beyond their
-needs.”<a id='r162'/><a href='#f162' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[162]</span></sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Here, however, it may be well to guard against the confusion
-of two very distinct elements. The higher feelings of pure
-morality and refined emotion are not manifestations of intellectual
-vigour in the same sense as is the power of abstract
-reasoning and ideal conception. It is not rare to find an
-English or Scottish peasant with little intellectual culture or
-capacity for abstract reasoning, but with an acutely instinctive
-moral sense. On the other hand, among the criminal class,
-it is by no means rare to find examples of wonderfully vigorous
-intellectual power applied to the planning and accomplishing
-of schemes which involve as much foresight and skill as many
-a triumph of diplomacy; but which at the same time seem to
-be nearly incompatible with any moral sense. Moreover, it is
-needless to say that intellectual vigour and high moral principle
-are by no means invariable concomitants in any class of society;
-nor can they be traced to a common source. Mr. Wallace
-recognises that “a superior intelligence has guided the development
-of man in a definite direction, and for a special purpose”;
-and such guidance involves much more than the mere evolution
-of a higher animal organisation. But, appreciating as he does
-the difficulties involved in any acceptance of a theory of evolution
-which assumes man to be the mere latest outgrowth of
-a development from lower forms of animal life, Mr. Wallace
-points out that “natural selection could only have endowed
-savage man with a brain a little superior to that of an ape,
-<span class='pageno' title='351' id='Page_351'></span>
-whereas he actually possesses one very little inferior to that
-of a philosopher.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Yet neither Mr. Wallace, nor Professor Huxley when controverting
-this argument, withholds a due recognition of the
-activity of the intellect of the savage. No one indeed can have
-much intercourse with savage races wholly dependent on their
-own resources without recognising that, within a certain range,
-their faculties are kept in constant activity. The savage hunter
-has not merely an intimate familiarity with all the capabilities
-and resources of many regions traversed by him in pursuit of
-his game; his geographical information includes much useful
-knowledge of the topography of ranges of country which he has
-never visited. I found, on one occasion, when exploring the
-Nepigon River, on Lake Superior, that my Chippeway guides,
-though fully 500 miles from their own country, and visiting
-the region for the first time, were nevertheless on the lookout
-for a metamorphic rock underlying the syenite which
-abounds there; and they made their way by well-recognised
-land-marks to this favourite “pipestone rock.” While moreover
-the Indian, like other savages, is devoid of much of what
-we style “useful knowledge,” but which would be very useless
-to him, he is fully informed on many subjects embraced within
-the range of the natural sciences; and has a very practical
-knowledge of meteorology, zoology, botany, and much else
-which constitutes useful knowledge to him. He is familiar
-with the habits of animals, and the medicinal virtues of many
-plants; will find his way through the forest by noting the
-special side of the trunks on which certain lichens grow; and
-follow the tracks of his game, or discover the nests of birds,
-by indications which would escape the most observant naturalist.
-The Australian savage, stimulated apparently to an unwonted
-ingenuity by the privations of an arid climate, is the inventor
-of two wonderfully ingenious implements, the <span class='it'>wommera</span> or
-throwing stick, and the <span class='it'>bomerang</span>, which, when employed by
-the native expert, accomplish feats entirely beyond any efforts
-of European skill. Moreover, as Professor Huxley remarks,
-he “can make excellent baskets and nets, and neatly fitted and
-beautifully balanced spears; he learns to use these so as to
-be able to transfix a quartern loaf at sixty yards; and very
-often, as in the case of the American Indians, the language of
-<span class='pageno' title='352' id='Page_352'></span>
-a savage exhibits complexities which a well-trained European
-finds it difficult to master.” Again he goes on to say:
-“Consider that every time a savage tracks his game he employs
-a minuteness of observation, and an accuracy of inductive and
-deductive reasoning which, applied to other matters, would
-assure some reputation to a man of science, and I think we
-need ask no further why he possesses such a fair supply of brains.
-In complexity and difficulty, I should say that the intellectual
-labour of a good hunter or warrior considerably exceeds that
-of an ordinary Englishman.” Hence Professor Huxley is not
-prepared to admit that the American or Australian savage
-possesses in his brain a mental organ which he fails to turn to
-full account. But without entering on the questions of evolution
-and natural selection in all their comprehensive bearings,
-it is still apparent that the brain of the savage is an instrument
-of great capacity, employed within narrow limits.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In estimating the comparative size of the brain, it is seen
-to be necessary to discriminate between individuals or races
-of small stature and cases of true microcephaly. On the other
-hand, it is not to be overlooked that examples of idiocy are
-not rare where the head is of a fair average size, and where
-the mental imbecility is regarded as congenital. But in this
-as in other researches of the physiologist, he is limited in his
-observations mainly to the chance opportunities which offer
-for study; and not unfrequently the prejudices of affection
-arrest the hand of the student, and prevent a <span class='it'>post-mortem</span>
-examination in cases where science has much to hope for from
-freedom of investigation. Hence the data thus far accumulated
-in evidence of the actual structure, size, and weight, of the
-human brain fall far short of what is requisite for a solution
-of many questions in reference to the relations between cerebration
-and mental activity. From time to time men of science
-have sought by example, as well as by precept, to lessen such
-impediments to scientific research. Dr. Dalton left instructions
-for a <span class='it'>post-mortem</span> examination in order to test the peculiarity
-of his vision, which he had assumed to be due to a colouring
-of the vitreous humour; Jeremy Bentham bequeathed his
-body to his friend Dr. Southwood Smith, for the purposes of
-anatomical science; and the will of Harriet Martineau contained
-this provision: “It is my desire, from an interest in
-<span class='pageno' title='353' id='Page_353'></span>
-the progress of scientific investigation, that my skull should
-be given to Henry George Atkinson, of Upper Gloucester Place,
-London, and also my brain, if my death should take place
-within such distance of his then present abode as to enable
-him to have it for purposes of scientific investigation.” The
-will is dated March 10, 1864; but by a codicil, dated
-October 5, 1871, this direction is revoked, with the explanation
-which follows in these words: “I wish to leave it on
-record that this alteration in my testamentary directions is
-not caused by any change of opinion as to the importance of
-scientific observation on such subjects, but is made in consequence
-merely of a change of circumstances in my individual
-case.” The natural repugnance of surviving relatives to any
-mutilation of the body must always tend to throw impediments
-in the way of such researches; though it may be anticipated
-that, with the increasing diffusion of knowledge, such obstacles
-to its pursuit will be diminished. Thus far, however, notwithstanding
-the persevering labours of Welcker, Bergmann,
-Parchappe, Broca, Boyd, Skae, Owen, Thurnam, and other
-physiologists, their observations have been necessarily limited
-almost exclusively to certain exceptional sources of evidence,
-embracing to a large extent only the pauper and the insane
-classes; and in the case of the latter especially, the functional
-disorder or chronic disease of the organ under consideration
-renders it peculiarly desirable that such results should be
-brought, as far as possible, into comparison with a corresponding
-number of observations on healthy brains of a class fairly
-representing the social and intellectual status of a civilised
-community.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The average brain-weight of the human adult, as determined
-by a numerous series of observations, ranges for man from 40
-oz. to 52½ oz., and for woman from 35 oz. to 47½ oz. But
-some indications among ancient crania tend to suggest a doubt
-as to whether this difference in cerebral capacity was a uniformly
-marked sexual distinction among early races; due
-allowance being made for difference in stature. Dr. Thurnam
-made the race of the British Long Barrows a special subject of
-study; and Dr. Rolleston followed up his researches with
-valuable results. Amongst other points, he noted that the
-males appear to have averaged 5 ft. 6 in., and the females
-<span class='pageno' title='354' id='Page_354'></span>
-4 ft. 10 in. in height. But while the difference of stature
-between the male and the female exceeds what is observable in
-most modern races, the variation in the size and internal
-capacity of their skulls appears to be less than among civilised
-races. The like characteristics are noticeable in the larger
-race of Europe’s Palæolithic era. Nothing is more striking in
-the discovery of those ancient remains of European man than
-the remarkable development of the skulls and the good brain
-capacity of the race of the palæotechnic dawn, where man is
-proved, by his works of art and all the traces of his hearth and
-home, to have been still a rude hunter and cave-dweller. The
-Canstadt type of skull is assumed to be that of the earliest
-European race of which traces have thus far been discovered;
-and it is unquestionably markedly inferior in development to
-that of the artistic Troglodytes of the French Reindeer period.
-Yet remarkable examples of atavism, as in the skull of St.
-Mansuy, the missionary bishop of Toul, in Lorraine, in the
-fourth century, and in that of Robert the Bruce, show a
-reversion to this early type, in accompaniment with exceptional
-intellectual capacity. The Neanderthal skull, an extreme
-example of the primitive type, is pronounced by Professor
-Schaaffhausen to be the most brutal of all human skulls;
-though this impression is mainly due to the abnormal development
-of the superciliary ridges, in which it undoubtedly
-approximates to the chimpanzee or the gorilla. But it has an
-estimated capacity of 75 cubic inches, and a corresponding
-cerebral development in no degree incompatible with the idea
-that the remains recovered from the Neanderthal cave may be
-those of a skilled hunter; and one apt in the ingenious arts of
-the primitive tool-maker.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Whatever other changes, therefore, may have affected the
-brain as the organ of human thought and reasoning, it does not
-thus far appear that the average mass of brain has greatly
-increased since the advent of European man. Important
-exceptions have indeed been noted. Professor Broca’s observations
-on the cerebral capacity of the Parisian population at
-different periods, based on nearly 400 skulls derived from
-vaults and cemeteries of dates from the eleventh or twelfth to
-the nineteenth century, appear to him to show a progressive
-cerebral development in that centre of European
-<span class='pageno' title='355' id='Page_355'></span>
-civilisation.<a id='r163'/><a href='#f163' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[163]</span></sup></a> But though the assumption is not inconsistent with
-other results of civilisation, and is the necessary corollary of
-the postulate that intellectual activity tends to development of
-brain, the fact that the crania presented a still greater diversity
-in type than in size reminds us of the intermixture of races on
-the banks of the Seine, and the consequent necessity for much
-more extended observations before so important a deduction
-can be received as an established truth.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Taking the average brain-weight of the human adult as
-already stated, all male brains falling much below 40 oz. or
-1130 grammes, and female brains below 35 oz. or 990 grammes,
-may be classed as <span class='it'>microcephalous</span>; and all above the maxima
-of the medium male and female brain, viz. 52½ oz. or 1480
-grammes, and 47½ oz. or 1345 grammes, may be ranked as
-<span class='it'>megalocephalous</span>, or great brains.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Professor Welcker, who devoted special attention to the
-whole subject under review, assumes another and simpler test
-when he says that skulls of more than 540 to 550 millimetres,
-or 21.26 to 21.65 inches in circumference—the weight of
-brain belonging to which is 1490 to 1560 grammes (52.5-55
-oz. av.)—are to be regarded as exceptionally large. But
-while an excess of horizontal circumference may be accepted as
-indicating good cerebral capacity, it must not be overlooked
-that the adoption of it as the key to any definite or even
-approximate brain-weight ignores the important elements of
-variation involved in the difference between acrocephalic and
-platycephalic head-forms. The volume of brain in Scott, and
-probably in Shakespeare, appears to have depended more on its
-elevation than its horizontal expansion. The same was also
-the case with Byron. The intermastoid arch, measured across
-the vertex of the skull from the tip of one mastoid process to
-the other, furnishes an accurate gauge of this development.
-Of thirteen selected male English skulls in Dr. Davis’s collection,
-the mean of this measurement is 15.1; and of thirty-nine
-male and female English skulls, it is only 14.4. Of the whole
-number of eighty-one English skulls described in the <span class='it'>Thesaurus
-Craniorum</span>, three exceptionally large ones are: No. 123, that
-of an ancient British chief, of fully 6 ft. 2 in. in stature, from
-<span class='pageno' title='356' id='Page_356'></span>
-the Grimsthorpe Barrow, Yorkshire; No. 905, a calvarium of
-great magnitude, very brachycephalic, and with the elevation
-across the middle of the parietals apparently exaggerated by
-compression in infancy, from Hythe, Kent; and No. 1029,
-another male skull, remarkable alike for its size and weight,
-and with a peculiarity of conformation ascribed by Dr. Davis to
-synostosis of the coronal suture. The intermastoid arch in
-those exceptionally large skulls measures respectively 16.0,
-16.2, and 16.9, whereas the same measurement derived from
-the cast of Scott’s head taken after death, yields the extraordinary
-dimensions of 19 inches. This last measurement is
-over the hairy scalp. But after making ample allowance for
-this, the vertical measurement of the skull and consequently of
-the brain is remarkable.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Full value has been assigned at all periods to the well-developed
-forehead. It is characteristic of man. The physiognomist
-and the phrenologist have each given significance to it
-in their respective systems; and it has received no less
-prominent recognition from the poets. A fully developed
-forehead is assumed as distinctive of the male skull. But
-Juliet, in <span class='it'>The Two Gentlemen of Verona</span>, when depreciating
-her rival, exclaims, “Ay, but her forehead’s low”; and the
-jealous Queen of Egypt, in <span class='it'>Antony and Cleopatra</span>, is told of
-Octavia that “her forehead is as low as she would wish it.”
-“The fair large front” of Milton’s perfect man is the external
-index of an ample cerebrum: the organ to which the seat of
-consciousness, intelligence, and will is assigned. It is therefore
-consistent with this that a low, retreating forehead is popularly
-assumed to be the characteristic index of the savage, and of the
-unintellectual among civilised races. But the cerebral characteristics
-of both ancient and modern civilised races have still
-to be studied in detail; and the influence of race and sex on
-the form of the head and the mass and weight of the brain,
-involves some curious questions in relation to the oldest illustrations
-of the physical characteristics of man, and to the effect
-of civilisation on the relative development of the sexes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Early observations led Dr. Pruner-Bey and other ethnologists
-of France to recognise in certain ancient Gaulish skulls
-of a brachycephalic type the evidences of a primitive race,
-assumed to represent the inhabitants of France and of Central
-<span class='pageno' title='357' id='Page_357'></span>
-Europe during its Reindeer period, and which appeared to be
-assigned with reasonable probability to a Mongol origin. But
-in the Cro-Magnon cavern, and in other caves more recently
-explored, the remains of a race of men have been brought to
-light markedly dolichocephalic, and no less striking in cranial
-capacity. Dr. Broca speaks of these ancient cave-dwellers of
-the valley of the Vézère as characterised by “sure signs of a
-powerful cerebral organisation. The skulls are large. Their
-diameters, their curves, their capacity, attain, and even surpass,
-our medium skulls of the present day. The forehead is wide,
-by no means receding, but describing a fine curve. The amplitude
-of the frontal tuberosities denotes a large development of
-the anterior cerebral lobes, which are the seat of the most noble
-intellectual faculties.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This primitive race of hunters, marked by such exceptional
-characteristics, belonged to the remote Reindeer period of
-Western Europe, and was contemporary with the mammoth,
-the tichorine rhinoceros, and the fossil horse, as well as with
-the cave-lion, the cave-bear, and other long-extinct carnivora
-of Europe. The remarkable evidence of their intellectual
-capacity has already been reviewed, in considering the manifestations
-of the artistic faculty among primitive races. Their
-weapons and implements, including carved maces or official
-batons, as they are assumed to be, contribute additional evidence
-of skill and latent capacity among a primitive race of hunters
-and cave-dwellers. Dr. Broca, after a consideration of the
-merits of their ingenious arts, says: “They had advanced to
-the very threshold of civilisation”; and Dr. Pruner-Bey thus
-comments on their characteristics: “If we consider that its
-three individuals had a cranial capacity much superior to the
-average at the present day; that one of them was a female,
-and that female crania are generally below the average of <span class='it'>male</span>
-crania in size; and that nevertheless the cranial capacity of the
-Cro-Magnon woman surpasses the average capacity of male
-skulls of to-day, we are led to regard the great size of the
-brain as one of the more remarkable characters of the Cro-Magnon
-race. This cerebral volume seems to me even to
-exceed that with which at the present day a stature equal to
-that of our cave-folks would be associated; whilst the skulls
-from the Belgium caves are small, not only absolutely, but
-<span class='pageno' title='358' id='Page_358'></span>
-even relatively in the rather small stature of the inhabitants
-of those caves.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Canstadt head is undoubtedly an unintellectual type
-suggestive of an inferior, though not necessarily an older savage
-race; for the evidence of climate, contemporary fauna, and
-other indices of the environments of the Cro-Magnon cave-dwellers,
-all point to an early Post-Glacial era. Dr. Isaac
-Taylor, in his <span class='it'>Origin of the Aryans</span>, assuming the priority of
-the Canstadt man, speaks of him as “this primitive savage, the
-earliest inhabitant of Europe.” The forehead in this type is
-low and receding, and the cerebral capacity generally correspondingly
-inferior. The relative superposition in some discoveries
-of ancient human remains, as in the alluvium and
-gravels of a former bed of the Seine, at Grenelle, lends confirmation
-to the idea that in this poorly-developed cranial type
-we recover the physical characteristics of the earliest type of
-the European savage thus far brought to light. But no disclosure
-of regular sepulture, or of implements or carvings
-assignable to him, have hitherto furnished the means of determining
-his condition or mode of life.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The disclosures of the rock-shelters in the valley of the
-Vézère are, on the contrary, replete with interest, from the
-evidence they furnish of a race of savage hunters, in whom
-ingenious skill and great artistic aptitude gave evidence of
-latent intellectual capacity of a high order. The remarkable
-size of crania accompanying those examples of primitive art
-seemingly pertaining to the Troglodytes of the Mammoth and
-Reindeer periods of Central Europe, is the more significant from
-its bearing on the evidence of progressive cerebral development
-adduced by Dr. Broca from skulls recovered from ancient and
-modern cemeteries of Paris. It appears, indeed, to conflict
-with any theory of a progressive development from the Troglodyte
-of the Post-Glacial age to the civilised Frenchman of
-modern times. Professor Boyd Dawkins has accordingly been
-at some pains in his <span class='it'>Cave Hunting</span> to show that the conclusions
-formed by previous observers as to the epoch of their burial
-are not supported by the facts of the case; and he sums up
-his review of the whole evidence by expressing a conviction
-that he “should feel inclined to assign the interments to the
-Neolithic age, in which cave-burial was so common. The facts,”
-<span class='pageno' title='359' id='Page_359'></span>
-he adds, “do not warrant the human skeletons being taken as
-proving the physique of the palæolithic hunters of the Dordogne,
-or as a basis for an inquiry into the ethnology of the palæolithic
-races. Professor Boyd Dawkins also pronounces the
-same doubts in reference to the equally characteristic male
-skeleton found in a cave at Mentone, and to others obtained in
-the Lombrive and other caves. It is not to be overlooked that
-the possibility of the intrusion of human remains into earlier
-strata constitutes an important element suggesting caution in
-reasoning from such evidence. For the remains of man differ
-from those of other animals found in such series of deposits
-as mark a succession of periods, in so far as they pertain to
-the only animal habitually given to the practice of interment.
-Human skeletons found under such circumstances may have
-been artificially intruded long subsequent to the accumulation
-of the breccia in which they lay. Happily, however, any
-doubts as to the contemporaneity of the human remains with
-the other cave relics has been removed by the discovery of
-skeletons, similar in type, in other caverns in the same valley—and
-especially in that of Laugerie Basse,—in positions which
-seem to leave no room for questioning their being of the same
-age as the works of art found along with them.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Other examples of the ancient man of Europe show him in
-like manner endowed with a cerebral development in advance
-of the rudest races of modern times. The skull found by
-Dr. Schmerling in the Engis cave, near Liège, along with
-remains of six or seven human skeletons, was embedded in the
-same matrix with bones of the fossil elephant, rhinoceros,
-hyæna, and other extinct quadrupeds. It is a fairly proportioned,
-well-developed dolichocephalic skull; and, like others
-of the ancient human skulls of different types thus far found,
-has signally disappointed the expectations of those who count
-upon invariably finding a lower type the older the formation
-in which it occurs. “Assuredly,” says Professor Huxley,
-“there is no mark of degradation about any part of its structure.
-It is, in fact, a fair average human skull, which might have
-belonged to a philosopher, or might have contained the thoughtless
-brain of a savage.” Even the famous Neanderthal skull,
-of uncertain geological antiquity, but pronounced to be “the
-most brutal of all human skulls,” acquires its exceptional
-<span class='pageno' title='360' id='Page_360'></span>
-character, as already noted, chiefly from the abnormal development
-of the superciliary region.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is a universally accepted fact that the size of the male
-head and the weight of the brain are greater than those of the
-female. The average weight of the male brain is found to
-exceed that of the female by about 10 per cent; or, as it is
-stated by Professor Welcker, the brain-weight of man is to that
-of woman as 100 to 90. But the difference of stature between
-the two sexes has to be taken into account. The average,
-based on various series of observations to determine the mean
-stature for man and for woman, shows the latter to be about 8
-per cent less than the former; or, as Dr. Thurnam has stated
-it more precisely:</p>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-top:2em;margin-bottom:1em;font-size:.8em;'>RATIO OF STATURE AND BRAIN-WEIGHT IN THE TWO SEXES</p>
-
-<table id='tab3' summary='' class='center' style='font-size:.8em;'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 18em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 2em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 4em;'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td class='tab3c1 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab3c2 tdStyle3'><span class='sc'>Male.</span></td><td class='tab3c3 tdStyle3'><span class='sc'>Female.</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab3c1 tdStyle4'>Stature</td><td class='tab3c2 tdStyle3'>100</td><td class='tab3c3 tdStyle3'>92.0</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab3c1 tdStyle4'>Weight of brain</td><td class='tab3c2 tdStyle3'>100</td><td class='tab3c3 tdStyle3'>90.3</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Here again, however, it becomes important to take into
-consideration other elements of difference besides weight; for,
-as Tennyson insists, “Woman is not undevelopt man, but
-diverse.” The results of Wagner’s observations on the superficial
-measurements of the convolutions of the brain point to
-the conclusion that in the female the lesser brain-weight may
-be compensated by a larger superficies. Ranked in the order
-of their relative weights in grammes, six average brains of
-men and women were found to stand thus:—</p>
-
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-
-<table id='tab4' summary='' class='center' style='font-size:.8em;'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 1em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 18em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 2em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 2em;'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td class='tab4c1 tdStyle4'>1.</td><td class='tab4c2 tdStyle4'>Male</td><td class='tab4c3 tdStyle3'>(<span class='it'>a</span>)</td><td class='tab4c4 tdStyle3'>1340</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab4c1 tdStyle4'>2.</td><td class='tab4c2 tdStyle4'>Male</td><td class='tab4c3 tdStyle3'>(<span class='it'>b</span>)</td><td class='tab4c4 tdStyle3'>1330</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab4c1 tdStyle4'>3.</td><td class='tab4c2 tdStyle4'>Male</td><td class='tab4c3 tdStyle3'>(<span class='it'>c</span>)</td><td class='tab4c4 tdStyle3'>1273</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab4c1 tdStyle4'>4.</td><td class='tab4c2 tdStyle4'>Female</td><td class='tab4c3 tdStyle3'>(<span class='it'>d</span>)</td><td class='tab4c4 tdStyle3'>1254</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab4c1 tdStyle4'>5.</td><td class='tab4c2 tdStyle4'>Female</td><td class='tab4c3 tdStyle3'>(<span class='it'>e</span>)</td><td class='tab4c4 tdStyle3'>1223</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab4c1 tdStyle4'>6.</td><td class='tab4c2 tdStyle4'>Female</td><td class='tab4c3 tdStyle3'>(<span class='it'>f</span>)</td><td class='tab4c4 tdStyle3'>1185</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-
-<p class='noindent'>But the same brains, when tested by the degrees of convolution
-of the frontal lobe, measured in squares of sixteen square
-millimetres, irrespective of the question of relative size, ranked
-as follows, advancing the female (<span class='it'>d</span>) from the fourth to the first
-place, and reducing the male (<span class='it'>c</span>) from the third to the sixth
-place:—</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='361' id='Page_361'></span></p>
-
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-
-<table id='tab5' summary='' class='center' style='font-size:.8em;'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 1em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 18em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 2em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 2em;'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td class='tab5c1 tdStyle4'>1.</td><td class='tab5c2 tdStyle4'>Female</td><td class='tab5c3 tdStyle3'>(<span class='it'>d</span>)</td><td class='tab5c4 tdStyle3'>2498</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab5c1 tdStyle4'>2.</td><td class='tab5c2 tdStyle4'>Male</td><td class='tab5c3 tdStyle3'>(<span class='it'>a</span>)</td><td class='tab5c4 tdStyle3'>2451</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab5c1 tdStyle4'>3.</td><td class='tab5c2 tdStyle4'>Male</td><td class='tab5c3 tdStyle3'>(<span class='it'>b</span>)</td><td class='tab5c4 tdStyle3'>2309</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab5c1 tdStyle4'>4.</td><td class='tab5c2 tdStyle4'>Female</td><td class='tab5c3 tdStyle3'>(<span class='it'>f</span>)</td><td class='tab5c4 tdStyle3'>2300</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab5c1 tdStyle4'>5.</td><td class='tab5c2 tdStyle4'>Female</td><td class='tab5c3 tdStyle3'>(<span class='it'>e</span>)</td><td class='tab5c4 tdStyle3'>2272</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab5c1 tdStyle4'>6.</td><td class='tab5c2 tdStyle4'>Male</td><td class='tab5c3 tdStyle3'>(<span class='it'>c</span>)</td><td class='tab5c4 tdStyle3'>2117</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-
-<p class='noindent'>But, as already indicated, some modern disclosures tend to
-raise the question whether the difference between the sexes, in
-so far as relative volume of brain is concerned, has not been
-increased as a result of civilisation. The disparity in size
-between the Cro-Magnon male and female skeletons is quite as
-great as that of modern times, but the capacity of the female
-skull is relatively good.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Other observations, such as those of Professor Rolleston
-“On the People of the Long Barrow Period,” seem to indicate
-a nearer approximation in actual cranial capacity of the two
-sexes in prehistoric times than among modern civilised races.
-On the assumption that intellectual activity tends to permanent
-development of brain, it is consistent with the conditions of
-savage life that it should bring the mental energies of both
-sexes into nearly equal play. They have equally to encounter
-the struggle for existence, and have their faculties stimulated
-in a corresponding degree. As nations rise above the purely
-savage condition of the hunter stage, this relative co-operation
-of the sexes is subjected to great variations. The laws of
-Solon with reference to the right of sale of a daughter or sister,
-and the penalties for the violation of a free woman, show the
-position of the weaker sex among the Greeks at that early
-stage to have been a degrading one. But the change was
-great at a later stage; and much of our higher civilisation is
-traceable to the early establishment of the European woman’s
-rights, which Christianity subsequently tended to enlarge.
-The position of woman among the ancient Britons appears to
-have been one of perfect equality with man. Among the
-Arabians and other Mohammedan nations, including the
-modern Turks, the opposite is the case; and the whole tendency
-of the creed of the Koran, and the social life among
-Mohammedan nations, must be towards the intellectual atrophy
-of woman. Hence it is consistent with the diverse conditions
-of life that, in so far as cerebral development is the result of
-<span class='pageno' title='362' id='Page_362'></span>
-mental activity, a much closer approximation is to be looked for
-in the mass and weight of brain in the two sexes among savage
-races, than among nations where woman systematically occupies
-a condition of servile degradation, or of passive inertness.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Some interesting results of the actual brain-weights of
-Negroes and other typical representatives of inferior savage
-races have been published, including examples of both sexes;
-and although the observations are as yet too few for the
-deduction of any absolute or very comprehensive conclusions,
-they furnish a valuable contribution towards this department
-of ethnical comparison. In 1865, Dr. Peacock published the
-results of observations on the brains of four Negroes and two
-Negresses; and to those he subsequently added a seventh
-example.<a id='r164'/><a href='#f164' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[164]</span></sup></a> Others are included in the following table. But I
-have excluded some extremes of variation, such as the two
-given by Mascagni, one of which weighed 1458 grammes, or
-51.5 oz. av., and the other only 738 grammes, or 26.1 oz. av.
-In addition to such actual brain-weights, Morton, Tiedemann,
-Davis, Wyman, and others, have gauged the skulls of Negroes,
-American Indians, Mincopies, Tasmanians, Australians, and
-other savage races, as well as those of many civilised and semi-civilised
-nations, and thereby contributed valuable data towards
-determining their relative cranial capacity. In his
-<span class='it'>Crania Ægyptiaca</span>, Dr. Morton, when discussing the traces of a
-Negro element in the ancient Egyptian population, says: “I
-have in my possession seventy-nine crania of Negroes born in
-Africa, for which I am indebted to Drs. Goheen and M’Dowell,
-lately attached to the medical department of the colony of
-Liberia, in Western Africa; and especially to Don Jose Rodriguez
-Cisneros, M.D., of Havana, in the island of Cuba. Of
-the whole number, fifty-eight are adult, or sixteen years of age
-and upwards, and give eighty-five cubic inches for the average
-size of the brain. The largest head measures ninety-nine
-cubic inches; the smallest but sixty-five. The latter, which is
-that of a middle-aged woman, is the smallest adult head that
-has hitherto come under my notice.”<a id='r165'/><a href='#f165' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[165]</span></sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='363' id='Page_363'></span></p>
-
-<h3 id='table1'>TABLE I</h3>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-bottom:2em;font-size:.8em;'>NEGRO BRAIN-WEIGHT</p>
-
-<table id='tab6' summary='' class='center' style='font-size:.8em;'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 2em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 7em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 10em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 10em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 4em;'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td class='tab6c1 tdStyle5'></td><td class='tab6c2 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab6c3 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab6c4 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab6c5 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab6c1 tdStyle5'>Sex.</td><td class='tab6c2 tab6c2-col3 tdStyle5' colspan='2'>Race.</td><td class='tab6c4 tdStyle5'>Authority.</td><td class='tab6c5 tdStyle5'>Weight.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab6c1 tdStyle5'></td><td class='tab6c2 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab6c3 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab6c4 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab6c5 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab6c1 tdStyle5'></td><td class='tab6c2 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab6c3 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab6c4 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab6c5 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab6c1 tdStyle5'>M.</td><td class='tab6c2 tdStyle4'>African,</td><td class='tab6c3 tdStyle4'>Mozambique</td><td class='tab6c4 tdStyle4'>Peacock</td><td class='tab6c5 tdStyle5'>43.80</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab6c1 tdStyle5'>M.</td><td class='tab6c2 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;„</td><td class='tab6c3 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab6c4 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;„</td><td class='tab6c5 tdStyle5'>45.80</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab6c1 tdStyle5'>M.</td><td class='tab6c2 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;„</td><td class='tab6c3 tdStyle4'>Buenos Ayres</td><td class='tab6c4 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;„</td><td class='tab6c5 tdStyle5'>44.00</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab6c1 tdStyle5'>M.</td><td class='tab6c2 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;„</td><td class='tab6c3 tdStyle4'>Congo</td><td class='tab6c4 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;„</td><td class='tab6c5 tdStyle5'>46.25</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab6c1 tdStyle5'>M.</td><td class='tab6c2 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;„</td><td class='tab6c3 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab6c4 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;„</td><td class='tab6c5 tdStyle5'>42.80</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab6c1 tdStyle5'>M.</td><td class='tab6c2 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;„</td><td class='tab6c3 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab6c4 tdStyle4'>Sœmmering</td><td class='tab6c5 tdStyle5'>45.40</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab6c1 tdStyle5'>M.</td><td class='tab6c2 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;„</td><td class='tab6c3 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab6c4 tdStyle4'>Tiedemann</td><td class='tab6c5 tdStyle5'>35.20</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab6c1 tdStyle5'>M.</td><td class='tab6c2 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;„</td><td class='tab6c3 tdStyle4'>Congo</td><td class='tab6c4 tdStyle4'>C. Luigi Calori</td><td class='tab6c5 tdStyle5'>44.40</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab6c1 tdStyle5'>M.</td><td class='tab6c2 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;„</td><td class='tab6c3 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab6c4 tdStyle4'>Barkow</td><td class='tab6c5 tdStyle5'>50.80</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab6c1 tdStyle5'>M.</td><td class='tab6c2 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;„</td><td class='tab6c3 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab6c4 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;„</td><td class='tab6c5 tdStyle5'>45.90</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab6c1 tdStyle5'>M.</td><td class='tab6c2 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;„</td><td class='tab6c3 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab6c4 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;„</td><td class='tab6c5 tdStyle5'>38.90</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab6c1 tdStyle5'>M.</td><td class='tab6c2 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;„</td><td class='tab6c3 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab6c4 tdStyle4'>Sir A. Cooper</td><td class='tab6c5 tdStyle5'>49.00</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab6c1 tdStyle5'>F.</td><td class='tab6c2 tab6c2-col3 tdStyle4' colspan='2'>Hottentot Venus</td><td class='tab6c4 tdStyle4'>Marshall</td><td class='tab6c5 tdStyle5'>31.00</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab6c1 tdStyle5'>F.</td><td class='tab6c2 tab6c2-col3 tdStyle4' colspan='2'>Bushwoman</td><td class='tab6c4 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;„</td><td class='tab6c5 tdStyle5'>30.75</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab6c1 tdStyle5'>F.</td><td class='tab6c2 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;„</td><td class='tab6c3 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab6c4 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;„</td><td class='tab6c5 tdStyle5'>31.50</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab6c1 tdStyle5'>F.</td><td class='tab6c2 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;„</td><td class='tab6c3 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab6c4 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;„</td><td class='tab6c5 tdStyle5'>31.00</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab6c1 tdStyle5'>F.</td><td class='tab6c2 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;„</td><td class='tab6c3 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab6c4 tdStyle4'>Flower and Murie</td><td class='tab6c5 tdStyle5'>38.00</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab6c1 tdStyle5'>F.</td><td class='tab6c2 tdStyle4'>African</td><td class='tab6c3 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab6c4 tdStyle4'>Peacock</td><td class='tab6c5 tdStyle5'>46.00</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab6c1 tdStyle5'>F.</td><td class='tab6c2 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;„</td><td class='tab6c3 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab6c4 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;„</td><td class='tab6c5 tdStyle5'>41.00</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab6c1 tdStyle5'></td><td class='tab6c2 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab6c3 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab6c4 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab6c5 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The influence of race on the volume, weight, disposition,
-and relative proportions of the different subdivisions of the
-human brain, and so of brain on the character of races, has
-thus far been very partially tested. But the diversities of
-race head-forms—brachycephalic, dolichocephalic, platycephalic,
-acrocephalic, etc.—are now well-recognised, though their relation
-to cerebral development still requires much research for
-its elucidation. The ancient Roman forehead, as illustrated
-by classic busts, and confirmed by genuine Roman skulls, was
-low but broad, and the whole head was platycephalic. The
-Greek had a high forehead, and the works of the Greek
-sculptors show that this was regarded as typical. But contemporary
-with the classic races were the Macrocephali of the
-Euxine and the Caspian Seas, who, like many modern tribes
-<span class='pageno' title='364' id='Page_364'></span>
-of the New World, purposely aimed at depressing a naturally
-receding forehead, and thereby exaggerated the typical forehead
-characteristic of certain ancient barbaric races.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the case of hybrids the interchange of physical and
-mental characteristics of the parents, including modifications of
-head-form, is a familiar fact. The English head-form appears
-to be an insular product of intermingled Briton, Teuton, and
-Scandinavian elements, which has no continental analogue;
-and its subdivisions, or sub-types, vary with the ethnical
-intermixture. The Scottish head appears to exceed the English
-in length, while the latter is higher. Where the Celtic
-element most predominates, the longer form of head is found;
-but even in the most Teutonic districts the difference between
-the prevailing head-form and that of the continental German
-is so marked that the latter finds it difficult to obtain an
-English-made hat which will fit his head.<a id='r166'/><a href='#f166' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[166]</span></sup></a> Here the diversities
-of head-form are accompanied with no less marked
-differences of individual and national character.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Professor Welcker determined the average capacity of the
-German male skull as 1450 cubic centimetres, equivalent to
-88 cubic inches, and representing an average brain-weight of
-49 oz. Dr. Davis, by a similar process, assigns to the Germans,
-male and female, the larger mean brain-weight of
-50.28 oz.; but by combining the means of both sexes, as
-derived from his own tables and those of Huschke and Wagner,
-we obtain a mean weight of German brain of 1314 grms., or
-46.37 oz. The results of an extensive series of observations
-by Dr. Broca, on the male French skull, yield a mean capacity
-of 1502 cubic centimetres, or 91 cubic inches, representing an
-average brain-weight of 50.6 oz. Morton, taking his average
-from five English skulls, gives the great internal capacity of
-96 cubic inches; while Davis arrives at a capacity of only 90.9
-cubic inches from the examination of thirty-two skulls, male and
-female; and for the Scottish and Irish, each of 91.2 cubic inches,
-from an examination of thirty-five skulls. But unfortunately
-the Davis collection, so rich in other respects, derived its chief
-English specimens from a phrenological collection; and, along
-with a few large skulls, contains “many small and poor
-<span class='pageno' title='365' id='Page_365'></span>
-English examples.”<a id='r167'/><a href='#f167' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[167]</span></sup></a> The average weight of the English brain
-may therefore, as Dr. Davis admits, be assumed to be higher
-than the mean determined by him. “Still a comparison with
-actually tested weights of brains shows that there cannot be
-any material error.” The average brain-weight of twenty-one
-Englishmen, as given by him, is 50.28 oz., that of thirteen
-women is 43.13; and of the combined series, 47.50. The
-results determined by the same process in relation to the
-other nationalities of Europe are exhibited in detail in Dr.
-Davis’s tables, printed in the <span class='it'>Philosophical Transactions</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Such averages are, at best, only approximations to true
-results; and when obtained, as in Morton’s English race, from
-a very few examples, or in Davis’s, from exceptional skulls,
-collected under peculiar circumstances or for a special purpose,
-they must be tested by other observations. According to Dr.
-Morton, for example, the mean internal capacity of the English
-head is 96 cubic inches, while that of the Anglo-American is
-only 90 cubic inches. Such a conclusion, if established as the
-result of comparison of a sufficiently large number of well-authenticated
-skulls, would be of great importance in its bearing on the
-influence of change of climate, diet, habits, etc., as elements
-affecting varieties of the human race. But determined as it
-was in the Morton collection, from five English and seven
-Anglo-American specimens, it can be regarded as little more
-than a mere chance result. Ranged nearly in the order of
-mean internal capacity of skull, the following are the results
-arrived at, mainly by gauging the skulls in various collections
-available for such comparisons of different races of mankind.
-In presenting them here, I avail myself of Dr. Thurnam’s
-researches, augmenting them with other data subsequently
-published, including results deduced from Dr. Davis’s minute
-reports of his own extensive collections, and taking Tiedemann’s
-capacity of 92.3 for the European skull as 100.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='366' id='Page_366'></span></p>
-
-<h3 id='table2'>TABLE II</h3>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-bottom:2em;font-size:.8em;'>RATIO OF CUBICAL CAPACITY OF SKULLS OF DIFFERENT RACES</p>
-
-<table id='tab7' summary='' class='center' style='font-size:.8em;'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 10em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 10em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 5em;'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td class='tab7c1 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab7c2 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab7c3 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab7c1 tdStyle5'>Race.</td><td class='tab7c2 tdStyle5'>Authority.</td><td class='tab7c3 tdStyle5'>Capacity.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab7c1 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab7c2 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab7c3 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab7c1 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab7c2 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab7c3 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab7c1 tdStyle4'>European</td><td class='tab7c2 tdStyle4'>Tiedemann</td><td class='tab7c3 tdStyle5'>100.0</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab7c1 tdStyle4'>Asiatic</td><td class='tab7c2 tdStyle4'>Davis</td><td class='tab7c3 tdStyle5'>94.3</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab7c1 tdStyle4'>African</td><td class='tab7c2 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;„</td><td class='tab7c3 tdStyle5'>93.0</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab7c1 tdStyle4'>American</td><td class='tab7c2 tdStyle4'>Tiedemann</td><td class='tab7c3 tdStyle5'>95.0</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab7c1 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;„</td><td class='tab7c2 tdStyle4'>Davis</td><td class='tab7c3 tdStyle5'>94.7</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab7c1 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;„</td><td class='tab7c2 tdStyle4'>Morton</td><td class='tab7c3 tdStyle5'>87.0</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab7c1 tdStyle4'>Oceanic</td><td class='tab7c2 tdStyle4'>Davis</td><td class='tab7c3 tdStyle5'>96.9</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab7c1 tdStyle4'>Chinese</td><td class='tab7c2 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;„</td><td class='tab7c3 tdStyle5'>99.8</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab7c1 tdStyle4'>Mongol</td><td class='tab7c2 tdStyle4'>Morton</td><td class='tab7c3 tdStyle5'>94.0</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab7c1 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;„</td><td class='tab7c2 tdStyle4'>Tiedemann</td><td class='tab7c3 tdStyle5'>93.0</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab7c1 tdStyle4'>Hindoo</td><td class='tab7c2 tdStyle4'>Davis</td><td class='tab7c3 tdStyle5'>89.4</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab7c1 tdStyle4'>Malay</td><td class='tab7c2 tdStyle4'>Tiedemann</td><td class='tab7c3 tdStyle5'>89.0</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab7c1 tdStyle4'>American Indian</td><td class='tab7c2 tdStyle4'>Morton</td><td class='tab7c3 tdStyle5'>91.0</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab7c1 tdStyle4'>Esquimaux</td><td class='tab7c2 tdStyle4'>Davis</td><td class='tab7c3 tdStyle5'>98.8</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab7c1 tdStyle4'>Mexican</td><td class='tab7c2 tdStyle4'>Morton</td><td class='tab7c3 tdStyle5'>88.5</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab7c1 tdStyle4'>Peruvian</td><td class='tab7c2 tdStyle4'>Wyman</td><td class='tab7c3 tdStyle5'>81.2</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab7c1 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;„</td><td class='tab7c2 tdStyle4'>Morton</td><td class='tab7c3 tdStyle5'>81.2</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab7c1 tdStyle4'>Negro</td><td class='tab7c2 tdStyle4'>Tiedemann</td><td class='tab7c3 tdStyle5'>91.0</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab7c1 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;„</td><td class='tab7c2 tdStyle4'>Peacock</td><td class='tab7c3 tdStyle5'>88.0</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab7c1 tdStyle4'>Hottentot</td><td class='tab7c2 tdStyle4'>Morton</td><td class='tab7c3 tdStyle5'>86.0</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab7c1 tdStyle4'>Javan</td><td class='tab7c2 tdStyle4'>Davis</td><td class='tab7c3 tdStyle5'>94.8</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab7c1 tdStyle4'>Tasmanian</td><td class='tab7c2 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;„</td><td class='tab7c3 tdStyle5'>88.0</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab7c1 tdStyle4'>Australian</td><td class='tab7c2 tdStyle4'>Morton</td><td class='tab7c3 tdStyle5'>88.0</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab7c1 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;„</td><td class='tab7c2 tdStyle4'>Davis</td><td class='tab7c3 tdStyle5'>87.9</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab7c1 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab7c2 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab7c3 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The tables of Dr. Morton and Dr. Davis furnish materials
-for drawing comparisons between diverse nations of the great
-European family; but though they are of value as contributions
-to the required means for ethnical comparison, they fall
-far short of determining the average cranial capacity of the
-different nationalities. Whilst, for example, the tabular data
-in the <span class='it'>Thesaurus Craniorum</span> show a mean internal capacity
-of 94 cubic inches for the combined Teutonic family, the
-Finns yield the higher mean capacity of 96.3 cubic
-inches. Again, Dr. Thurnam found that the results
-of the weighing of fifty-nine brains of patients at the Friends’
-Retreat near York, mostly persons of the middle class of
-society, yielded weights considerably above those which he
-<span class='pageno' title='367' id='Page_367'></span>
-subsequently obtained from testing those of pauper patients in
-Wilts and Somerset. But this has to be estimated along with
-the undoubted ethnical differences which separate the population
-of Yorkshire from that of Somerset and Wiltshire. An
-interesting paper in the West-Riding Asylum Reports gives
-the results of the determination of 716 brain-weights, rather
-more than half being males. The average is 48.149 oz. for
-the male, and 43.872 for the female brain; whereas the
-average weights of 267 male brains of a similar class of
-patients in the Wilts County Asylum, as given by Dr.
-Thurnam, is 46.2 oz., and of 213 female brains, 41.0 oz. The
-results of the observations carried on by Dr. Boyd at St.
-Marylebone yield, from 680 male English brains, a mean
-weight of 47.1 oz., and from 744 female brains a mean
-weight of 42.3 oz.; whereas Dr. Peacock determined, from
-183 cases in the Edinburgh Infirmary, the weight of the male
-Scottish brain to average 49.7, and that of the female brain to
-average 44.3 oz. Here the results are determined by so
-numerous a series that they might be accepted as altogether
-reliable, were it not that in the former case they are based to
-a large extent on a purely pauper class; whereas the patients
-of the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh include respectable
-mechanics and others from many parts of Scotland, among
-whom education is common. It is not to be doubted, indeed,
-that a considerable difference in the form and size of the head,
-and no doubt also in brain-weight, is to be looked for amongst
-English, Scotch, Irish, German and French men and women,
-according to the county or province of which they are natives,
-and the class of society to which they belong.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The comparative ratio of the cubical capacity of the skull,
-or the average brain-weight, in so far as either is indicative of
-ethnical differences among members of the European family of
-nations, has thus to be determined by numerous examples; or
-dealt with in detail in reference to the different nationalities.
-Even in single provinces or counties, social position, and
-probably education, must be taken into account; so that a
-series of observations on hospital and pauper patients may be
-expected to fall below the general average; and fallacious
-comparisons between European peoples may be based on data,
-correct enough <span class='it'>per se</span>, but unjust when placed alongside of a
-<span class='pageno' title='368' id='Page_368'></span>
-different class of results. The great mass of evidence in reference
-to brain-weight has thus far been mainly derived, in the
-case of the sane, from one rank of life. A comparison of the
-results with those derived from the insane of various classes of
-society shows less discrepancy than might have been anticipated.
-But there are certain cases of hydrocephalous and
-other abnormally enlarged brains which have to be rigorously
-excluded from any estimate of the size or weight of the brain,
-either as a race-test or as an index of comparative mental power.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Were it possible to select from among the great intellects
-of all ages an adequate series of representative men, and
-ascertain their brain-weights, or even the cubical capacity of
-their skulls, one important step would be gained towards the
-determination of the relation between size of brain and power
-of intellect. But we have little other data than such hints as
-the busts of Æschylus, Pericles, Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, and
-other leaders of thought may supply. Malcolm Canmore—Malcolm
-of the great head, as his name implied,—stands forth
-with marked individuality from out the shadowy roll of names
-which figure in early Scottish history. Charlemagne, we
-should fancy, merited a similar designation. But the portraits
-of his modern imperial successor, Charles V., show no such
-loftiness of forehead. Judging from the portraits and busts of
-Chaucer, Shakespeare, Milton, Cromwell, Napoleon, and Scott,
-their brains must have considerably exceeded the ordinary size.
-In the report of the <span class='it'>post-mortem</span> examination of Scott, the
-physicians state that “the brain was not large.” But this, no
-doubt, means relatively to the internal capacity of the skull in
-its then diseased condition. The intermastoid arch, as already
-noted, shows a remarkably exceptional magnitude of 19 inches,
-whereas the average of fifty-eight ancient and modern European
-skulls, as given in the <span class='it'>Thesaurus Craniorum</span>, is only 14.60.
-The portraits of Wordsworth and Byron show an ample forehead;
-and the popular recognition of the “fair large front” of
-Milton’s typical man as the index of superior intellect is an
-induction universally accepted. But, on the other hand,
-examples of intellectual greatness undoubtedly occur with the
-brain little, if at all, in excess of the average size. On the
-discovery of Dante’s remains at Ravenna in 1865, the skull
-was pronounced to be ample, and exquisite in form. But its
-<span class='pageno' title='369' id='Page_369'></span>
-actual cubical capacity and estimated brain-weight fall considerably
-below those of the highest ascertained brain-weights
-of distinguished men. Again, looking at the casts of the skulls
-of Robert the Bruce and the poet Burns, the first impression is
-the comparatively small size of head, and the moderate frontal
-development in each. Robert Liston, the eminent surgeon,
-remarked of the former: “The division of the cranium behind
-the meatus auditorius is large in proportion to that situated
-before it. The skull is also remarkably wide and capacious in
-that part, whereas the forehead is rather depressed”;<a id='r168'/><a href='#f168' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[168]</span></sup></a> and
-more recent observers have not hesitated to recognise in it a
-reversion to the Canstadt type of the primitive European
-savage. Other characteristics so markedly indicate the elements
-of physical rather than intellectual vigour, that Liston
-expressly pointed out the analogy to “the heads of carnivorous
-animals.” The Bruce was indeed pre-eminently distinguished
-for courage and deeds of personal prowess; but it was no less
-by statesmanlike qualities, calm, resolute perseverance, and
-wise prudence, that he achieved the independence of his
-country.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>George Combe, the phrenologist, to whom the original cast
-of Burns’s skull was first submitted, thus states the case in
-reference to the frontal development of the poet: “An unskilful
-observer looking at the forehead might suppose it to be
-moderate in size; but when the dimensions of the anterior
-lobe, in both length and breadth, are attended to, the intellectual
-organs will be recognised to have been large. The
-anterior lobe projects so much that it gives an appearance of
-narrowness to the forehead which is not real.”<a id='r169'/><a href='#f169' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[169]</span></sup></a> The actual
-dimensions of the skull are, longitudinal diameter, 8 inches;
-parietal diameter, 5.95; and horizontal circumference, 22.25.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the year 1865 the bones of Italy’s greatest poet, Dante,
-were submitted to a minute examination under the direction
-of commissioners appointed by the Italian Government to
-verify the discovery; and careful measurements were taken
-of the skull. Dr. H. C. Barlow, describing it from personal
-observation, says: “The head was finely formed, and the
-cranium showed, by its ample and exquisite form, that it had
-<span class='pageno' title='370' id='Page_370'></span>
-held the brain of no ordinary man. It was the most intellectually
-developed head that I ever remember to have seen.
-The occipital region was prominently marked, but the frontal
-was also amply and broadly expanded, and the anterior part
-of the frontal bone had a vertical direction in relation to the
-bones of the face” (<span class='it'>Athenæum</span>, September 9, 1865). But
-however intellectually developed and exquisite in form the
-poet’s skull may have appeared, the actual measurements fall
-short of the amplitude here assigned to it. The dimensions
-are as follows: Internal capacity, determined by filling the
-calvarium with grains of rice, 3.1321 lbs. av., or a little
-over 50 oz.; circumference, 52 cent. 5 mill.; occipito-frontal
-diameter, 31 cent. 7 mill.; transverse diameter, taken between
-the ears, 31 cent. 8 mill.; height, 14 cent. If the internal
-capacity is accepted without any correction, it would yield
-57 oz., but if allowance be made, as in the actual weighing of
-the brain, for the abstraction of the dura mater and fluids, of
-say 8 per cent, this would reduce it to about 52.5, or nearly
-the same weight as that of the mathematician, Gauss. Professor
-Welcker deducts from 11.6 to 14 per cent, according
-to the size of the skull; Dr. J. B. Davis recommends a uniform
-deduction of 10 per cent. If we apply the latter rule, it will
-reduce the estimated weight of Dante’s brain to 51.3 oz.<a id='r170'/><a href='#f170' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[170]</span></sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Another interesting example of the skull of an Italian poet
-is that of Ugo Foscolo, a cast of which was taken on the
-transfer of his remains to the Church of Santa Croce at
-Florence. Though only fifty years old at the time of his
-death, the skull was marked by “the entire ossification of the
-coronal, sagittal, and lambdoidal sutures, and that atrophy of
-the outer table, manifested by a depression on each side in the
-posterior half of each parietal, leaving an elevated ridge in the
-<span class='pageno' title='371' id='Page_371'></span>
-middle, in the position of the sagittal, which is but rarely
-observed except in extremely advanced age.”<a id='r171'/><a href='#f171' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[171]</span></sup></a> Sir Henry
-Holland, who knew the poet intimately, describes him as resembling
-in temperament the painter Fuseli, “passionately eccentric
-in social life.” Full of genius and original thought, as the
-writings of Foscolo show him to have been, he “was fiery and
-impulsive, almost to the verge of madness.”<a id='r172'/><a href='#f172' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[172]</span></sup></a> He died in
-England in obscurity and neglect; but a regenerated Italy
-recalled the memory of her lost poet, and transferred his
-remains to Santa Croce’s consecrated soil. The estimated size
-of his brain is given as 1426 cubic cents., equivalent to 87
-cubic inches internal capacity, which corresponds to a weight of
-brain of 48.44 oz. The longitudinal diameter is 6.90; the
-parietal diameter 5.70; the intermastoid arch 15.0; and the
-horizontal circumference 520 mm., or 20.5 inches. The brain
-capacity of the poet was thus little more than the European
-mean deduced by Morton from the miscellaneous examples in
-his collection.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dr. J. C. Gustav Lucae, in his <span class='it'>Zur Organischen Formenlehre</span>,
-furnishes views and measurements of two other skulls of men
-of known intellectual capacity. One of these is Johan Jacob
-Wilhelm Heinse, the author of <span class='it'>Ardinghello</span>, a work of high
-character in the elements of æsthetic criticism, though as a
-romance fit to rank with <span class='it'>Don Juan</span> in subjective significance
-and morality. He wrote another romance entitled <span class='it'>Hildegard</span>;
-in addition to numerous articles and translations of Petronius,
-Tasso, etc., which won for him the high commendation of
-Goethe, and the more guarded admiration of Wieland. His
-skull, as figured by Dr. Lucae, shows the frontal suture still
-open at the age of fifty-three, at which he died. The internal
-capacity of the skull is stated as 41.4 oz., equivalent to 1173
-grms. In this, as in other examples hereafter referred to,
-Dr. Lucae has gauged the capacity of the skull with peas, and
-gives the weight in “unzen.” In the results deduced from
-them here the <span class='it'>unzen</span> are assumed to be Prussian ounces, the
-lb. of 12 oz. equal to 350.78348 grms. As already noted,
-the determination of the internal capacity of the skull by
-varying tests, such as pease, rice, and sands of diverse degrees
-<span class='pageno' title='372' id='Page_372'></span>
-of fineness, leads to uncertain results. In those here deduced
-from the data furnished by Dr. Lucae, the unzen have been
-tested by a series of experiments made with a view to correct
-the error necessarily resulting from the fact that peas do not
-entirely fill the cavity. The results show that 82.5 grms. of
-ordinary sized peas occupy the space of 100 grms. of water.
-Deducting 10 per cent for membranes and fluids, the estimated
-brain-weight of Heinse is 1379 grms. or 48.7 oz. av.
-The dimensions of the skull are given thus:—</p>
-
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-
-<table id='tab8' summary='' class='center' style='font-size:.8em;'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 7em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 5em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 5em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 5em;'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td class='tab8c1 tdStyle6'></td><td class='tab8c2 tdStyle7'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab8c3 tdStyle7'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab8c4 tdStyle7'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab8c1 tdStyle6'></td><td class='tab8c2 tdStyle7'>Height.</td><td class='tab8c3 tdStyle7'>Length.</td><td class='tab8c4 tdStyle7'>Breadth.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab8c1 tdStyle6'></td><td class='tab8c2 tdStyle7'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab8c3 tdStyle7'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab8c4 tdStyle7'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab8c1 tdStyle6'></td><td class='tab8c2 tdStyle7'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab8c3 tdStyle7'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab8c4 tdStyle7'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab8c1 tdStyle6'>Fore part</td><td class='tab8c2 tdStyle7'>4.9</td><td class='tab8c3 tdStyle7'>4.00</td><td class='tab8c4 tdStyle7'>4.1</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab8c1 tdStyle6'>Middle part</td><td class='tab8c2 tdStyle7'>4.1</td><td class='tab8c3 tdStyle7'>3.11</td><td class='tab8c4 tdStyle7'>5.3</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab8c1 tdStyle6'>Hind part</td><td class='tab8c2 tdStyle7'>3.9</td><td class='tab8c3 tdStyle7'>3.60</td><td class='tab8c4 tdStyle7'>4.1</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab8c1 tdStyle6'></td><td class='tab8c2 tdStyle7'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab8c3 tdStyle7'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab8c4 tdStyle7'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The other example produced by Dr. Lucae is that of Dr.
-Christian Heinrich Bünger, Professor of Anatomy in the University
-of Marburg. In this skull the frontal suture is still
-more strongly defined at the age of sixty than in that of Heinse.
-The internal capacity of the skull is stated as 42.8 oz., equivalent
-to 1213 grms., which, dealt with as above stated, yields
-1410 grms. or 49.8 oz. av. Other dimensions of the skull are
-given as follows:—</p>
-
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-
-<table id='tab9' summary='' class='center' style='font-size:.8em;'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 7em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 5em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 5em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 5em;'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td class='tab9c1 tdStyle6'></td><td class='tab9c2 tdStyle7'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab9c3 tdStyle7'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab9c4 tdStyle7'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab9c1 tdStyle6'></td><td class='tab9c2 tdStyle7'>Height.</td><td class='tab9c3 tdStyle7'>Length.</td><td class='tab9c4 tdStyle7'>Breadth.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab9c1 tdStyle6'></td><td class='tab9c2 tdStyle7'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab9c3 tdStyle7'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab9c4 tdStyle7'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab9c1 tdStyle6'></td><td class='tab9c2 tdStyle7'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab9c3 tdStyle7'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab9c4 tdStyle7'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab9c1 tdStyle6'>Fore part</td><td class='tab9c2 tdStyle7'>4.8</td><td class='tab9c3 tdStyle7'>4.1</td><td class='tab9c4 tdStyle7'>4.2</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab9c1 tdStyle6'>Middle part</td><td class='tab9c2 tdStyle7'>4.9</td><td class='tab9c3 tdStyle7'>4.1</td><td class='tab9c4 tdStyle7'>5.0</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab9c1 tdStyle6'>Hind part</td><td class='tab9c2 tdStyle7'>3.7</td><td class='tab9c3 tdStyle7'>3.1</td><td class='tab9c4 tdStyle7'>4.1</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab9c1 tdStyle6'></td><td class='tab9c2 tdStyle7'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab9c3 tdStyle7'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab9c4 tdStyle7'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The premature ossification of the sagittal suture, by arresting
-the expansion of the brain laterally, is a frequent source
-of abnormal elongation of the head. On the other hand the
-frontal suture, which ordinarily closes in the man-child before
-birth, though persistent in the lower animals, is occasionally
-found to remain open in man till maturity, as in the two
-notable cases here described. Darwin refers to it as a case of
-<span class='pageno' title='373' id='Page_373'></span>
-arrested development. “This suture,” he says, “occasionally
-persists, more or less distinctly, in man after maturity, and
-more frequently in ancient than in recent crania; especially,
-as Canestrini has observed, in those exhumed from the Drift,
-and belonging to the brachycephalic type. In this and other
-instances the cause of ancient races approaching the lower
-animals in certain characters more frequently than do the
-modern races, appears to be that the latter stand at a somewhat
-greater distance in the long line of descent from their
-early semi-human progenitors.”<a id='r173'/><a href='#f173' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[173]</span></sup></a> It may be permissible to
-express a doubt as to this relative frequency of the occurrence
-of the frontal suture in ancient and modern races, since the
-great naturalist does not state it as a result of his own observations.
-Not only am I led to do so from repeatedly noting its
-occurrence in modern crania; but its effect can in no way
-favour arrested development. It must rather admit of the
-free expansion of the frontal lobes of the brain, the decrease
-of which in a progressive ratio is characteristic of the orang,
-chimpanzee, and baboon.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the general question of cranial development as an index
-of cerebral capacity, Professor Welcker assigns a standard,
-which was accepted by Dr. Thurnam, thus: “Skulls of more
-than 540 to 550 millimetres in horizontal circumference (the
-weight of brain belonging to which is 1490 to 1560 grms.,
-or 52.5-55 oz. av.), are to be regarded as exceptionally
-large. The designation of <span class='it'>kephalones</span>, proposed by Virchow,
-might commence from this point. Men with great mental
-endowments fall, for the most part, under the definition of
-kephalony. If we consider the relations of capacity, 1800
-grms. (63.5 oz.) appears to be the greatest attainable weight
-of brain within a skull not pathologically enlarged.” But the
-brain of Cuvier—the heaviest healthy brain yet recorded,—exceeded
-this. Its weight is stated by Wagner as 1861
-grms., or 65.8 oz.; but this M. Broca corrects to 1829.96
-grms. Even thus reduced it exceeds the limits assigned by
-Professor Welcker to the normal healthy brain. But a curious
-commentary upon this is furnished by the fact that the modern
-English skull which Dr. Davis selects as presenting the most
-striking analogy to the Neanderthal skull—“the most ape-like
-<span class='pageno' title='374' id='Page_374'></span>
-skull which Professor Huxley had ever beheld,”—though
-marked not only by the prominence of the superciliary ridges,
-but by great depression of the frontal region, appears to have
-a cubical capacity equivalent to that of Dr. Abercrombie,
-whose brain is only surpassed by that of Cuvier among the
-ascertained brain-weights of distinguished men.<a id='r174'/><a href='#f174' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[174]</span></sup></a> Its capacity
-is 94 oz. of sand, or 113 cubic inches, equivalent—after
-making the requisite deduction for membranes and fluids,—to
-a brain-weight of 63 oz.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I have attempted in the following table to reduce to some
-common standard such imperfect glimpses as are recoverable
-of the cranial capacity of some distinguished men, of whose
-actual brain-weights no record exists:—</p>
-
-<h3 id='table3'>TABLE III</h3>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-bottom:2em;font-size:.8em;'>CRANIAL CAPACITY OF DISTINGUISHED MEN</p>
-
-<table id='tab10' summary='' class='center' style='font-size:.8em;'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 10em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 4em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 5em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 7em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 7em;'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td class='tab10c1 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab10c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab10c3 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab10c4 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab10c5 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab10c1 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab10c2 tdStyle5'>Length.</td><td class='tab10c3 tdStyle5'>Breadth.</td><td class='tab10c4 tdStyle5'>Circumference.</td><td class='tab10c5 tdStyle5'>Estimated</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab10c1 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab10c2 tdStyle5'></td><td class='tab10c3 tdStyle5'></td><td class='tab10c4 tdStyle5'></td><td class='tab10c5 tdStyle5'>Brain-Weight.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab10c1 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab10c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab10c3 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab10c4 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab10c5 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab10c1 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab10c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab10c3 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab10c4 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab10c5 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab10c1 tdStyle4'>Dante</td><td class='tab10c2 tdStyle5'>—</td><td class='tab10c3 tdStyle5'>—</td><td class='tab10c4 tdStyle5'>—</td><td class='tab10c5 tdStyle5'>51.3</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab10c1 tdStyle4'>Robert the Bruce</td><td class='tab10c2 tdStyle5'>7.70</td><td class='tab10c3 tdStyle5'>6.25</td><td class='tab10c4 tdStyle5'>22.25</td><td class='tab10c5 tdStyle5'>—</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab10c1 tdStyle4'>Burns</td><td class='tab10c2 tdStyle5'>8.00</td><td class='tab10c3 tdStyle5'>5.95</td><td class='tab10c4 tdStyle5'>22.25</td><td class='tab10c5 tdStyle5'>—</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab10c1 tdStyle4'>Scott (head)</td><td class='tab10c2 tdStyle5'>9.00</td><td class='tab10c3 tdStyle5'>6.40</td><td class='tab10c4 tdStyle5'>23.10</td><td class='tab10c5 tdStyle5'>—</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab10c1 tdStyle4'>Heinse</td><td class='tab10c2 tdStyle5'>—</td><td class='tab10c3 tdStyle5'>5.30</td><td class='tab10c4 tdStyle5'>—</td><td class='tab10c5 tdStyle5'>48.0</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab10c1 tdStyle4'>Bünger</td><td class='tab10c2 tdStyle5'>—</td><td class='tab10c3 tdStyle5'>5.00</td><td class='tab10c4 tdStyle5'>—</td><td class='tab10c5 tdStyle5'>49.8</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab10c1 tdStyle4'>Ugo Foscolo</td><td class='tab10c2 tdStyle5'>6.90</td><td class='tab10c3 tdStyle5'>5.70</td><td class='tab10c4 tdStyle5'>20.50</td><td class='tab10c5 tdStyle5'>48.4</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab10c1 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab10c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab10c3 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab10c4 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab10c5 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Some of the examples adduced in the above table appear
-to exhibit instances of mental endowment of high character,
-without the corresponding degree of cranial, and consequently
-cerebral development. The following table exhibits recorded
-examples of a series of actual brain-weights of distinguished
-men. It seems to lend confirmation to the idea that great
-manifestation of mental endowment is correlated, in the
-<span class='pageno' title='375' id='Page_375'></span>
-majority of observed cases, to a brain above the normal
-average in mass or weight. But even here intellect and
-brain-weight are not strictly in uniform ratio. Several of the
-following brain-weights, including that of Tiedemann, are
-furnished by Wagner, in the <span class='it'>Vorstudien des Menschlichen
-Gehirns</span>; but in an elaborate table of brain-weights given
-in the <span class='it'>Morphologie und physiologie des Menschlichen gehirns als
-Seelenorgan</span>, the brain of Byron is classed above all except
-Cuvier; while Vogt gives the same place, by estimate, to
-Schiller’s, as next in rank to that of the great naturalist
-among highly developed brains. Dr. Thurnam states his
-authorities for others, when producing them in his valuable
-contribution to the <span class='it'>Journal of Mental Science</span> “On the Weight
-of the Brain.” For that of Webster he refers to “the unsatisfactory
-article on the brain of Daniel Webster, <span class='it'>Edin. Med. Surg.
-Journ.</span>, vol. lxxix. p. 355.” Dr. J. C. Nott, in his “Comparative
-Anatomy of Races” (<span class='it'>Types of Mankind</span>, p. 453), says:
-“Dr. Wyman, in his <span class='it'>post-mortem</span> examination of the famed
-Daniel Webster, found the internal capacity of the cranium
-to be 122 cubic inches, and in a private letter to me, he says:
-‘The circumference was measured outside of the integuments
-before the scalp was removed, and may, perhaps, as there was
-much emaciation, be a little less than in health.’ It was 23¾
-inches in circumference; and the Doctor states that it is well
-known there are several heads in Boston larger than Webster’s.
-I have myself, in the last few weeks, measured half a dozen
-heads as large and larger.” The circumference, it will be seen,
-exceeds the corresponding measurement of Scott’s head, taken
-under similar circumstances. But the statement of 122 cubic
-inches as the internal capacity of Webster’s skull seems open
-to question. If correct, instead of 53.5 oz. of brain-weight
-as stated in the following table, it is the equivalent of a brain-weight
-of fully 65 oz., or one in excess even of that, of Cuvier.
-The brain-weights of Goodsir, Simpson, and Agassiz, are given
-in the following table from the reported autopsy in each
-case:—</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='376' id='Page_376'></span></p>
-
-<h3 id='table4'>TABLE IV</h3>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-bottom:2em;font-size:.8em;'>BRAIN-WEIGHTS OF DISTINGUISHED MEN</p>
-
-<table id='tab11' summary='' class='center' style='font-size:.8em;'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 2em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 10em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 12em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td class='tab11c1 tdStyle3'></td><td class='tab11c2 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab11c3 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab11c4 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab11c5 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab11c6 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab11c1 tdStyle3'></td><td class='tab11c2 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab11c3 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab11c4 tdStyle5'>Age.</td><td class='tab11c5 tdStyle4'>Oz.</td><td class='tab11c6 tdStyle5'>Grms.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab11c1 tdStyle3'></td><td class='tab11c2 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab11c3 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab11c4 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab11c5 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab11c6 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab11c1 tdStyle3'></td><td class='tab11c2 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab11c3 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab11c4 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab11c5 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab11c6 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab11c1 tdStyle3'>1</td><td class='tab11c2 tdStyle4'>Cuvier</td><td class='tab11c3 tdStyle4'>Naturalist</td><td class='tab11c4 tdStyle5'>63</td><td class='tab11c5 tdStyle4'>64.5</td><td class='tab11c6 tdStyle5'>1830</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab11c1 tdStyle3'>2</td><td class='tab11c2 tdStyle4'>Byron</td><td class='tab11c3 tdStyle4'>Poet</td><td class='tab11c4 tdStyle5'>36</td><td class='tab11c5 tdStyle4'>63.5?</td><td class='tab11c6 tdStyle5'>1799</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab11c1 tdStyle3'>3</td><td class='tab11c2 tdStyle4'>Abercrombie</td><td class='tab11c3 tdStyle4'>Philosopher, Physician</td><td class='tab11c4 tdStyle5'>64</td><td class='tab11c5 tdStyle4'>63.</td><td class='tab11c6 tdStyle5'>1785</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab11c1 tdStyle3'>4</td><td class='tab11c2 tdStyle4'>Schiller</td><td class='tab11c3 tdStyle4'>Poet</td><td class='tab11c4 tdStyle5'>46</td><td class='tab11c5 tdStyle4'>63.?</td><td class='tab11c6 tdStyle5'>1785</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab11c1 tdStyle3'>5</td><td class='tab11c2 tdStyle4'>Goodsir</td><td class='tab11c3 tdStyle4'>Anatomist</td><td class='tab11c4 tdStyle5'>53</td><td class='tab11c5 tdStyle4'>57.55</td><td class='tab11c6 tdStyle5'>1629</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab11c1 tdStyle3'>6</td><td class='tab11c2 tdStyle4'>George Brown</td><td class='tab11c3 tdStyle4'>Statesman (Canadian)</td><td class='tab11c4 tdStyle5'>61</td><td class='tab11c5 tdStyle4'>56.3</td><td class='tab11c6 tdStyle5'>1595</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab11c1 tdStyle3'>7</td><td class='tab11c2 tdStyle4'>Harrison</td><td class='tab11c3 tdStyle4'>Chief Justice</td><td class='tab11c4 tdStyle5'>45</td><td class='tab11c5 tdStyle4'>56.</td><td class='tab11c6 tdStyle5'>1586</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab11c1 tdStyle3'>8</td><td class='tab11c2 tdStyle4'>Spurzheim</td><td class='tab11c3 tdStyle4'>Phrenologist, Physician</td><td class='tab11c4 tdStyle5'>56</td><td class='tab11c5 tdStyle4'>55.06</td><td class='tab11c6 tdStyle5'>1575</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab11c1 tdStyle3'>9</td><td class='tab11c2 tdStyle4'>Simpson</td><td class='tab11c3 tdStyle4'>Physician, Archæologist</td><td class='tab11c4 tdStyle5'>59</td><td class='tab11c5 tdStyle4'>54.</td><td class='tab11c6 tdStyle5'>1530</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab11c1 tdStyle3'>10</td><td class='tab11c2 tdStyle4'>Dirichlet</td><td class='tab11c3 tdStyle4'>Mathematician</td><td class='tab11c4 tdStyle5'>54</td><td class='tab11c5 tdStyle4'>53.6</td><td class='tab11c6 tdStyle5'>1520</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab11c1 tdStyle3'>11</td><td class='tab11c2 tdStyle4'>De Morny</td><td class='tab11c3 tdStyle4'>Statesman</td><td class='tab11c4 tdStyle5'>50</td><td class='tab11c5 tdStyle4'>53.6</td><td class='tab11c6 tdStyle5'>1520</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab11c1 tdStyle3'>12</td><td class='tab11c2 tdStyle4'>Napoleon I.</td><td class='tab11c3 tdStyle4'>General, Statesman</td><td class='tab11c4 tdStyle5'>52</td><td class='tab11c5 tdStyle4'>53.5</td><td class='tab11c6 tdStyle5'>1516</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab11c1 tdStyle3'>13</td><td class='tab11c2 tdStyle4'>Daniel Webster</td><td class='tab11c3 tdStyle4'>Statesman</td><td class='tab11c4 tdStyle5'>70</td><td class='tab11c5 tdStyle4'>53.5</td><td class='tab11c6 tdStyle5'>1516</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab11c1 tdStyle3'>14</td><td class='tab11c2 tdStyle4'>Campbell</td><td class='tab11c3 tdStyle4'>Lord Chancellor</td><td class='tab11c4 tdStyle5'>80</td><td class='tab11c5 tdStyle4'>53.5</td><td class='tab11c6 tdStyle5'>1516</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab11c1 tdStyle3'>15</td><td class='tab11c2 tdStyle4'>Agassiz</td><td class='tab11c3 tdStyle4'>Naturalist</td><td class='tab11c4 tdStyle5'>66</td><td class='tab11c5 tdStyle4'>53.4</td><td class='tab11c6 tdStyle5'>1512</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab11c1 tdStyle3'>16</td><td class='tab11c2 tdStyle4'>Chalmers</td><td class='tab11c3 tdStyle4'>Author, Preacher</td><td class='tab11c4 tdStyle5'>67</td><td class='tab11c5 tdStyle4'>53.</td><td class='tab11c6 tdStyle5'>1502</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab11c1 tdStyle3'>17</td><td class='tab11c2 tdStyle4'>Fuchs</td><td class='tab11c3 tdStyle4'>Pathologist</td><td class='tab11c4 tdStyle5'>52</td><td class='tab11c5 tdStyle4'>52.9</td><td class='tab11c6 tdStyle5'>1499</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab11c1 tdStyle3'>18</td><td class='tab11c2 tdStyle4'>De Morgan</td><td class='tab11c3 tdStyle4'>Mathematician</td><td class='tab11c4 tdStyle5'>73</td><td class='tab11c5 tdStyle4'>52.7</td><td class='tab11c6 tdStyle5'>1493</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab11c1 tdStyle3'>19</td><td class='tab11c2 tdStyle4'>Gauss</td><td class='tab11c3 tdStyle4'>Mathematician</td><td class='tab11c4 tdStyle5'>78</td><td class='tab11c5 tdStyle4'>52.6</td><td class='tab11c6 tdStyle5'>1492</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab11c1 tdStyle3'>20</td><td class='tab11c2 tdStyle4'>Broca</td><td class='tab11c3 tdStyle4'>Anthropologist</td><td class='tab11c4 tdStyle5'>—</td><td class='tab11c5 tdStyle4'>52.5</td><td class='tab11c6 tdStyle5'>1488</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab11c1 tdStyle3'>21</td><td class='tab11c2 tdStyle4'>Dupuytren</td><td class='tab11c3 tdStyle4'>Surgeon</td><td class='tab11c4 tdStyle5'>58</td><td class='tab11c5 tdStyle4'>50.7</td><td class='tab11c6 tdStyle5'>1436</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab11c1 tdStyle3'>22</td><td class='tab11c2 tdStyle4'>Grote</td><td class='tab11c3 tdStyle4'>Historian</td><td class='tab11c4 tdStyle5'>76</td><td class='tab11c5 tdStyle4'>49.75</td><td class='tab11c6 tdStyle5'>1410</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab11c1 tdStyle3'>23</td><td class='tab11c2 tdStyle4'>Whewell</td><td class='tab11c3 tdStyle4'>Philosopher</td><td class='tab11c4 tdStyle5'>71</td><td class='tab11c5 tdStyle4'>49.</td><td class='tab11c6 tdStyle5'>1390</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab11c1 tdStyle3'>24</td><td class='tab11c2 tdStyle4'>Hermann</td><td class='tab11c3 tdStyle4'>Philologist</td><td class='tab11c4 tdStyle5'>51</td><td class='tab11c5 tdStyle4'>47.9</td><td class='tab11c6 tdStyle5'>1358</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab11c1 tdStyle3'>25</td><td class='tab11c2 tdStyle4'>Tiedemann</td><td class='tab11c3 tdStyle4'>Physiologist</td><td class='tab11c4 tdStyle5'>80</td><td class='tab11c5 tdStyle4'>44.2</td><td class='tab11c6 tdStyle5'>1254</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab11c1 tdStyle3'>26</td><td class='tab11c2 tdStyle4'>Hausmann</td><td class='tab11c3 tdStyle4'>Mineralogist</td><td class='tab11c4 tdStyle5'>77</td><td class='tab11c5 tdStyle4'>43.2</td><td class='tab11c6 tdStyle5'>1226</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab11c1 tdStyle3'></td><td class='tab11c2 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab11c3 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab11c4 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab11c5 tdStyle4'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab11c6 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dr. Thurnam, in producing fifteen of the above examples,
-remarks: “Altogether, they decidedly confirm the generally
-received view of the connection between size of brain and
-mental power and intelligence”; and he adds his conviction
-that if the examination of the brain in the upper ranks of
-society, and in men whose mental endowments are well known,
-were more generally available, further confirmation would be
-given to this conclusion. The converse, at least, is certain,
-that no great intelligence or unwonted mental power is possible
-with a brain much below the average in mass and weight
-<span class='pageno' title='377' id='Page_377'></span>
-But while the above list exhibits a series of exceptionally
-high brain-weights of distinguished men, the relative weights
-in some cases—as in Napoleon—are calculated to excite
-surprise if viewed as an index of comparative intellectual
-capacity. On the other hand, those lowest in the scale,
-and below the mean weight, include men of undoubted
-eminence in letters and science; while the proofs are no less
-unquestionable that a large healthy brain is not invariably the
-organ of unwonted intelligence or mental activity.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the <span class='it'>Philosophical Transactions</span> of 1861, Dr. Boyd published
-an elaborate series of researches illustrative of the
-weight of various organs of the human body, including the
-weights of two thousand brains. Most of the healthy brains
-are those of patients in the St. Marylebone Infirmary, and
-have already been referred to as necessarily representing the
-indigent and uneducated classes of London. Here, therefore,
-if an unusually large brain is the index of intellectual power,
-every probability was against the occurrence of brains above
-the average size or weight. But the results by no means
-confirm this assumption. Among the patients in the Edinburgh
-Royal Infirmary, in like manner, though including the
-better class of artizans and others from country districts, we
-might still look for a confirmation of M. Broca’s assumption,
-based on extensive observations of French crania, “that, other
-things being equal, whether as the result of education, or by
-hereditary transmission, the volume of the skull, and consequently
-of the brain, is greater in the higher than in the lower
-classes.” But Dr. Peacock’s tables include four brain-weights,
-three of them of a sailor, a printer, and a tailor, respectively,
-ranging from 61 to 62.75 oz.; and so surpassing all but two,
-or at the most three, of the heaviest ascertained brain-weights
-of distinguished men. Tried by the posthumous test of internal
-capacity, three skulls of nameless Frenchmen, derived from the
-common cemeteries of Paris, in like manner showed brains
-equalling in size that of Cuvier. The following are the
-maximum brain-weights among the St. Marylebone patients
-apparently unaffected by cerebral disease:—
-<span class='pageno' title='378' id='Page_378'></span></p>
-
-<h3 id='table5'>TABLE V</h3>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-bottom:2em;font-size:.8em;'>MAXIMUM BRAIN-WEIGHTS—ST. MARYLEBONE</p>
-
-<table id='tab12' summary='' class='center' style='font-size:.8em;'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 7em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 5em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 5em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 5em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 5em;'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td class='tab12c1 tdStyle5'></td><td class='tab12c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab12c3 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab12c4 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab12c5 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab12c1 tdStyle5'><span class='sc'>Age.</span></td><td class='tab12c2 tab12c2-col3 tdStyle5' colspan='2'><span class='sc'>Male.</span></td><td class='tab12c4 tab12c4-col5 tdStyle5' colspan='2'><span class='sc'>Female.</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab12c1 tdStyle5'></td><td class='tab12c2 tdStyle5'>Oz.</td><td class='tab12c3 tdStyle5'>Grms.</td><td class='tab12c4 tdStyle5'>Oz.</td><td class='tab12c5 tdStyle5'>Grms.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab12c1 tdStyle5'></td><td class='tab12c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab12c3 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab12c4 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab12c5 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab12c1 tdStyle5'></td><td class='tab12c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab12c3 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab12c4 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab12c5 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab12c1 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;7-14</td><td class='tab12c2 tdStyle5'>57.25</td><td class='tab12c3 tdStyle5'>1622</td><td class='tab12c4 tdStyle5'>52.00</td><td class='tab12c5 tdStyle5'>1473</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab12c1 tdStyle5'>14-20</td><td class='tab12c2 tdStyle5'>58.50</td><td class='tab12c3 tdStyle5'>1658</td><td class='tab12c4 tdStyle5'>52.00</td><td class='tab12c5 tdStyle5'>1473</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab12c1 tdStyle5'>20-30</td><td class='tab12c2 tdStyle5'>57.00</td><td class='tab12c3 tdStyle5'>1615</td><td class='tab12c4 tdStyle5'>55.25</td><td class='tab12c5 tdStyle5'>1565</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab12c1 tdStyle5'>30-40</td><td class='tab12c2 tdStyle5'>60.75</td><td class='tab12c3 tdStyle5'>1721</td><td class='tab12c4 tdStyle5'>53.00</td><td class='tab12c5 tdStyle5'>1502</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab12c1 tdStyle5'>40-50</td><td class='tab12c2 tdStyle5'>60.00</td><td class='tab12c3 tdStyle5'>1700</td><td class='tab12c4 tdStyle5'>52.50</td><td class='tab12c5 tdStyle5'>1488</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab12c1 tdStyle5'>50-60</td><td class='tab12c2 tdStyle5'>59.00</td><td class='tab12c3 tdStyle5'>1672</td><td class='tab12c4 tdStyle5'>52.50</td><td class='tab12c5 tdStyle5'>1488</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab12c1 tdStyle5'>60-70</td><td class='tab12c2 tdStyle5'>59.50</td><td class='tab12c3 tdStyle5'>1686</td><td class='tab12c4 tdStyle5'>54.00</td><td class='tab12c5 tdStyle5'>1530</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab12c1 tdStyle5'>70-80</td><td class='tab12c2 tdStyle5'>55.25</td><td class='tab12c3 tdStyle5'>1565</td><td class='tab12c4 tdStyle5'>49.50</td><td class='tab12c5 tdStyle5'>1403</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab12c1 tdStyle5'>80</td><td class='tab12c2 tdStyle5'>53.75</td><td class='tab12c3 tdStyle5'>1523</td><td class='tab12c4 tdStyle5'>48.00</td><td class='tab12c5 tdStyle5'>1360</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab12c1 tdStyle5'>All Ages.</td><td class='tab12c2 tdStyle5'></td><td class='tab12c3 tdStyle5'></td><td class='tab12c4 tdStyle5'></td><td class='tab12c5 tdStyle5'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab12c1 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;7-80</td><td class='tab12c2 tdStyle5'>60.75</td><td class='tab12c3 tdStyle5'>1721</td><td class='tab12c4 tdStyle5'>55.25</td><td class='tab12c5 tdStyle5'>1565</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab12c1 tdStyle5'></td><td class='tab12c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab12c3 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab12c4 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab12c5 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The stature, or relative size of body, has already been referred
-to as an element in testing the comparative male and
-female weight of brain; and it is one which ought not to be
-overlooked in estimating the comparative size and weight of
-the brains of distinguished men. From my own recollections
-of Dr. Chalmers, who was of moderate stature, his head appeared
-proportionally large. The same was noticeable in the
-cases of Lord Jeffrey, Lord Macaulay, Sir James Y. Simpson,
-and very markedly so in that of De Quincey. The philosopher
-Kant was also of small stature; and Dr. Thurnam refers to the
-observation of Carus that he had a head not absolutely large,
-though, in proportion to the small and puny body of that
-eminent thinker, it was of remarkable size. Among the large-brained
-artizans of the Marylebone Infirmary, on the contrary,
-the probabilities are in favour of a majority of them being men
-of full muscular development and ample stature. Nevertheless,
-with every allowance for this, it still remains probable, if
-not demonstrable, that from the same humble and unnoted
-class, examples of megalocephaly could be selected little short
-in cerebral mass, and apparently in brain-weight, of the group
-of men whose large brains are recognised as the concomitants
-<span class='pageno' title='379' id='Page_379'></span>
-of exceptionally great mental capacity and intellectual vigour.
-Unless, therefore, we are contented to accept the poet’s dictum,
-“Their lot forbad,”<a id='r175'/><a href='#f175' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[175]</span></sup></a> and assume that “chill penury repressed
-their noble rage, and froze the genial current of the soul,” it is
-manifest that other elements besides those of volume or
-weight are essential as cerebral indices of mental power. Dr.
-Thurnam, after noting examples that had come under his own
-notice of brain-weights above the medium—but which, as those
-of insane patients, may be assigned to other causes than healthy
-cerebral development,—adds: “The heaviest brain weighed
-by me (62 oz., or 1760 grms.) was that of an uneducated
-butcher, who was just able to read, and who died suddenly of
-epilepsy, combined with mania, after about a year’s illness.
-The head was large, but well-formed; the brain of normal consistence;
-the <span class='it'>puncta vasculosa</span> numerous.” In cases like this,
-of weighty brain with no corresponding manifestation of intellectual
-power, something else was wanting besides an ampler
-sphere. The mere position of a humble artizan or labourer
-will not suffice to mar the capacity to “make by force his
-merit known,” which pertains to the “divinely gifted man.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Arkwright, Franklin, Watt, Stephenson, Farraday, Hugh Miller,
-and others of the like type of self-made men, are not rare.
-Among the large-brained artizans, scarcely one can have had a
-more limited sphere for the exercise of mental vigour than the
-poet Burns, the child of poverty and toil, who refers to his own
-early years as passed in “the unceasing moil of a galley-slave.”
-In his case the very means essential to a healthy physical
-development were stinted at the most critical period of life.
-His brother Gilbert says: “We lived sparingly. For several
-years butcher’s meat was a stranger to the house; while all
-exerted themselves to the utmost of their strength, and rather
-beyond it, in the labours of the farm. My brother, at the age
-of thirteen, assisted in thrashing the crop of corn, and at fifteen
-was the principal labourer on the farm.” Such premature toil
-and privations left their permanent stamp on his frame. “Externally,
-the consequences appeared in a stoop of the shoulders,
-which never left him; but internally, in the more serious form
-of mental depression, attended by a nervous disorder which
-affected the movements of the heart.” He had only exchanged
-<span class='pageno' title='380' id='Page_380'></span>
-the toil on his father’s farm for equally unremitting labour on
-his own, when the finest of his poems were written; nor would
-it be inconsistent with all the facts to assume that the privations
-of his early life diminished his capacity for continuous
-mental activity; as it undoubtedly impaired his physical constitution.
-But, while the possession of a brain much above
-the average in size might have seemed to account for his
-triumph over the depressing influences of his limited sphere,
-the fact that his brain appears to have been below the average
-size, points to some other requisite than mere cerebral mass as
-essential to intellectual vigour.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The brain is influenced in all its functions by the character
-and the amount of blood circulating through it, and promptly
-manifests the effects of any deleterious substance, such as
-alcohol or opium, introduced into its tissues. It depends, like
-other portions of the nervous system, on an adequate supply of
-nourishment. In both respects the brain of the Ayrshire poet
-was injuriously affected, in so far as we may infer from all the
-known circumstances of his life.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The human brain is large in proportion to the body in
-infancy and youth; and the opinions of leading anatomists and
-physiologists early in the present century favoured the idea
-that it attained its full size within a few years after birth.
-Professor Sœmmering assumed this to take place so early as
-the third year. Sir William Hamilton explicitly stated his
-conclusion thus: “In man the encephalon reaches its full
-size about seven years of age”; and Tiedemann assigns the
-eighth year as that in which it attains its greatest development.
-But the more accurate and extended observations since carried
-on rather tend to the conclusion that the brain not only goes
-on increasing in size and weight to a much later period of life;
-but that it is healthfully stimulated by habitual activity, and
-under exceptionally favouring circumstances it may increase in
-weight long after the body has attained its maximum.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The largest average brain-weights, as determined by observations
-on the brains of upwards of 2000 men and women in
-different countries of Europe, have indeed been found in those not
-above twenty years of age; and from a nearly equal number of
-English examples, Dr. Boyd determines the period of greatest
-average weight to be the interval between fourteen and twenty
-<span class='pageno' title='381' id='Page_381'></span>
-years of age; but this includes cases in which death has ensued
-from undue or premature brain development.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Other evidence leaves no room for doubt that cases are
-not rare of the growth, or increased density of the brain up to
-middle age; while the observations of Professor Welcker indicate
-this process extended to a later period of life. The average
-brain-weights, as given by Boyd, Peacock, and Broca, from
-healthy or sane cases, along with those of Welcker, include the
-weights of 47 male brains from ten to twenty years of age,
-giving an average of 49.6 oz., or 1405 grms.; and of 112
-male brains from twenty to thirty years of age, giving an average
-of 48.9 oz., or 1384 grms.; and the results of a nearly
-equal number of female brains closely approximate. They
-embrace English, Scotch, German, and French, men and women.
-Dr. Welcker’s results indicate the period of maximum brain-weight
-to be between 30-40, as shown in the following table:—</p>
-
-<h3 id='table6'>TABLE VI</h3>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-bottom:2em;font-size:.8em;'>AVERAGE WEIGHT OF THE BRAIN AT DIFFERENT AGES</p>
-
-<table id='tab13' summary='' class='center' style='font-size:.8em;'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 7em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 5em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 5em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 5em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 5em;'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td class='tab13c1 tdStyle3'></td><td class='tab13c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab13c3 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab13c4 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab13c5 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab13c1 tdStyle5'><span class='sc'>Age.</span></td><td class='tab13c2 tab13c2-col3 tdStyle5' colspan='2'><span class='sc'>Male.</span></td><td class='tab13c4 tab13c4-col5 tdStyle5' colspan='2'><span class='sc'>Female.</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab13c1 tdStyle3'></td><td class='tab13c2 tdStyle5'>Oz. Av.</td><td class='tab13c3 tdStyle5'>Grms.</td><td class='tab13c4 tdStyle5'>Oz. Av.</td><td class='tab13c5 tdStyle5'>Grms.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab13c1 tdStyle3'></td><td class='tab13c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab13c3 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab13c4 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab13c5 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab13c1 tdStyle3'></td><td class='tab13c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab13c3 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab13c4 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab13c5 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab13c1 tdStyle3'>From 10-20&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class='tab13c2 tdStyle5'>47.5</td><td class='tab13c3 tdStyle5'>1346</td><td class='tab13c4 tdStyle5'>43.1</td><td class='tab13c5 tdStyle5'>1221</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab13c1 tdStyle3'>20-30&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class='tab13c2 tdStyle5'>49.5</td><td class='tab13c3 tdStyle5'>1404</td><td class='tab13c4 tdStyle5'>44.1</td><td class='tab13c5 tdStyle5'>1251</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab13c1 tdStyle3'>30-40&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class='tab13c2 tdStyle5'>49.5</td><td class='tab13c3 tdStyle5'>1404</td><td class='tab13c4 tdStyle5'>44.8</td><td class='tab13c5 tdStyle5'>1272</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab13c1 tdStyle3'>40-50&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class='tab13c2 tdStyle5'>48.6</td><td class='tab13c3 tdStyle5'>1379</td><td class='tab13c4 tdStyle5'>43.5</td><td class='tab13c5 tdStyle5'>1234</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab13c1 tdStyle3'>50-60&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class='tab13c2 tdStyle5'>48.1</td><td class='tab13c3 tdStyle5'>1365</td><td class='tab13c4 tdStyle5'>43.5</td><td class='tab13c5 tdStyle5'>1234</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab13c1 tdStyle3'>60-70&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class='tab13c2 tdStyle5'>46.1</td><td class='tab13c3 tdStyle5'>1306</td><td class='tab13c4 tdStyle5'>42.8</td><td class='tab13c5 tdStyle5'>1213</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab13c1 tdStyle3'></td><td class='tab13c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab13c3 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab13c4 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab13c5 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the female examples, amounting to thirty-one between
-seventy and eighty years of age, and six between eighty and
-ninety, the continuous diminution of brain-weight corresponds
-with the increasing age; but in the male examples, sixty-five
-cases between sixty and seventy years of age yield an average
-brain-weight of 46.1 oz., while twenty-seven cases between
-seventy and eighty years of age give 47.9 as the average;
-falling in the next decade to 43.8.
-<span class='pageno' title='382' id='Page_382'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It may be inferred from the number of cases pointing to an
-early attainment of the highest average brain-weight, not that
-the brain differs from all other internal organs of the human
-body in attaining its maximum before the period of puberty;
-but that physical as well as mental vigour are dependent on
-the maintenance of a nice equilibrium between the brain and
-the other organs while in process of development. The observations
-of Dr. Boyd, including the results of 2614 <span class='it'>post-mortem</span>
-examinations of sane and insane patients of all ages, showed
-that the average weight of the brain of “still-born” children
-at the full period was much greater than that of the new-born
-living child. It is a legitimate inference, therefore, that death
-in the former cases was traceable to an excessive premature
-development of the brain. Again, when it is shown from
-numerous cases that the highest average weights of brain in
-both sexes occur not later than twenty years of age, it appears
-a more legitimate inference to trace to exceptional cerebral
-development towards the period of adolescence, the mortality
-which rendered available so many examples of unusually large
-or heavy brains, than to assume that the normal healthy brain
-begins to diminish at that age.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is a fact familiar to popular observation that a large
-head in youth is apt to be unfavourable to life. A tendency
-to epilepsy appears to be the frequent concomitant of an
-unusually large brain; and with the congestion accompanying
-its abnormal condition, this may account for the weights of
-such diseased brains as have been repeatedly found in excess
-of nearly all the recorded examples of megalocephaly in the
-cases of distinguished men. But a greater interest attaches to
-a remarkable example of healthy megalocephaly recorded in
-the <span class='it'>British Medical Journal</span> for 1872. The case was that of
-a boy thirteen years of age, who died in Middlesex Hospital
-from injuries caused by a fall from an omnibus. His brain
-was found to weigh 58 oz. He had been a particularly
-healthy lad, without any evidence of rachitis, and very intelligent.
-This is a strikingly exceptional case of a healthy brain,
-at the age of thirteen, exceeding in weight all but two of the
-greatest ascertained brain-weights of distinguished men.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>From the evidence already adduced of relative cubical
-capacity of the skulls of different races, it appears, as was to
-<span class='pageno' title='383' id='Page_383'></span>
-be expected, that there is a greater prevalence of the amply-developed
-brain among the higher and more civilised races.
-But all averages are apt to be deceptive; and the progressive
-scale from the smallest up to the greatest mass of brain is by
-no means in the precise ratio of an intellectual scale of progression.
-The results of Dr. J. B. Davis’s investigations, based
-on the study of a large, and in many cases a seemingly
-adequate number of skulls, bring out this remarkable fact, that,
-so far from the Polynesians occupying a rank in the lowest
-scale, as affirmed by Professor Vogt, the Oceanic races of the
-Pacific generally rank in internal capacity of skull, and consequent
-size of brain, next to the European.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But it is of more importance for our present inquiry to
-note that, as exceptionally large and heavy brains occur among
-the most civilised races, in some cases—and in some only—accompanied
-with corresponding manifestations of unusual
-intellectual power; so also it becomes apparent that skulls
-much exceeding the average, and some of remarkable internal
-capacity, are met with among barbarian races, and even among
-some of the lowest savages. Taking the crania in the elaborate
-series of tables in Dr. J. B. Davis’s <span class='it'>Thesaurus Craniorum</span>,
-with an internal capacity above 100 cubic inches, they will
-rank in order as follows:—</p>
-
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-
-<table id='tab14' summary='' class='center' style='font-size:.8em;'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 20em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 5em;'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td class='tab14c1 tdStyle4'>Chinese</td><td class='tab14c2 tdStyle4'>111.8</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab14c1 tdStyle4'>Maduran</td><td class='tab14c2 tdStyle4'>110.6</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab14c1 tdStyle4'>Marquesan</td><td class='tab14c2 tdStyle4'>110.6</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab14c1 tdStyle4'>Kanaka</td><td class='tab14c2 tdStyle4'>108.8</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab14c1 tdStyle4'>Javan</td><td class='tab14c2 tdStyle4'>107.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab14c1 tdStyle4'>Negro</td><td class='tab14c2 tdStyle4'>105.8</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab14c1 tdStyle4'>Australian</td><td class='tab14c2 tdStyle4'>104.5</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab14c1 tdStyle4'>Kafir</td><td class='tab14c2 tdStyle4'>104.5</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab14c1 tdStyle4'>Bakele</td><td class='tab14c2 tdStyle4'>103.3</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab14c1 tdStyle4'>Tidorese</td><td class='tab14c2 tdStyle4'>103.3</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab14c1 tdStyle4'>Bhotia</td><td class='tab14c2 tdStyle4'>102.7</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab14c1 tdStyle4'>Bodo</td><td class='tab14c2 tdStyle4'>100.9</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab14c1 tdStyle4'>Hindoo</td><td class='tab14c2 tdStyle4'>100.9</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab14c1 tdStyle4'>Sumatra</td><td class='tab14c2 tdStyle4'>100.9</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Among the European series the largest is an Irish cranium
-of 121.6 cubic inches, and next to it comes an Italian, 114.3,
-and an Englishman, 112.4; an ancient Briton from a Yorkshire
-Long Barrow, 109.4; an ancient Roman, 106.4; a
-<span class='pageno' title='384' id='Page_384'></span>
-Lapp, 105.8; an ancient Gaul, 103.7; a Briton of Roman
-times, 103.3; a Merovingian Frank, 101.5; and an Anglo-Saxon,
-100.9. Those and other examples of the like kind are
-full of interest as showing the recurrence of megalocephalic
-variations from the common cranial and cerebral standard
-among ancient races; and among rudest savages as well as
-among the most cultivated classes of modern civilised nations.
-But the order shown in the above instances is derived from
-purely exceptional examples, and is no key to the relative
-capacity of the races named.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Opportunities for testing the size and weight of the brain
-among barbarous races are only rarely accessible to those who
-are qualified to avail themselves of them for the purposes of
-science. Some near approximation to the relative brain-weight
-of the English, Scotch, German, and French, may now
-be assumed to have been established. Dr. Thurnam instituted
-a comparison between those and two of the prehistoric races of
-Britain—the Dolichocephali of the Long Barrows, and the
-Brachycephali of the Round Barrows of England.<a id='r176'/><a href='#f176' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[176]</span></sup></a> The results
-are curious, as showing not only a greater capacity in the
-ancient British skulls than the average modern German,
-French, or English head; but an actual average higher than
-that of all but five of the most distinguished men of Europe,
-whose brain-weights have been recorded. On comparing the
-ancient skulls with those of modern Europeans, as determined
-by gauging the capacity of both by the same process, the
-following are the results presented, according to the authorities
-named:—</p>
-
-<h3 id='table7'>TABLE VII</h3>
-
-<table id='tab15' summary='' class='center' style='font-size:.8em;'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 11em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 5em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 5em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 4em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 5em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 4em;'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td class='tab15c1 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab15c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab15c3 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab15c4 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab15c5 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab15c6 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab15c1 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab15c2 tdStyle5'></td><td class='tab15c3 tdStyle5'></td><td class='tab15c4 tdStyle5'></td><td class='tab15c5 tdStyle5'>Capacity.</td><td class='tab15c6 tdStyle5'>Brain-</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab15c1 tdStyle5'><span class='sc'>Skulls of Men.</span></td><td class='tab15c2 tdStyle5'>No.</td><td class='tab15c3 tdStyle5'>Weight</td><td class='tab15c4 tdStyle5'>Cubic</td><td class='tab15c5 tdStyle5'>Centi-</td><td class='tab15c6 tdStyle5'>weight</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab15c1 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab15c2 tdStyle5'></td><td class='tab15c3 tdStyle5'>of Sand.</td><td class='tab15c4 tdStyle5'>In.</td><td class='tab15c5 tdStyle5'>metres.</td><td class='tab15c6 tdStyle5'>oz. av.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab15c1 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab15c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab15c3 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab15c4 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab15c5 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab15c6 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab15c1 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab15c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab15c3 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab15c4 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab15c5 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab15c6 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab15c1 tdStyle4'>Anc. British, L. Barrows</td><td class='tab15c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;18</td><td class='tab15c3 tdStyle5'>82&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class='tab15c4 tdStyle5'>99</td><td class='tab15c5 tdStyle5'>1622</td><td class='tab15c6 tdStyle5'>54.0</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab15c1 tdStyle4'>Anc. British, R. Barrows</td><td class='tab15c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;18</td><td class='tab15c3 tdStyle5'>80½</td><td class='tab15c4 tdStyle5'>98</td><td class='tab15c5 tdStyle5'>1605</td><td class='tab15c6 tdStyle5'>53.5</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab15c1 tdStyle4'>Mod. English, <span class='it'>Morton</span></td><td class='tab15c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;28</td><td class='tab15c3 tdStyle5'>77&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class='tab15c4 tdStyle5'>94</td><td class='tab15c5 tdStyle5'>1540</td><td class='tab15c6 tdStyle5'>52.2</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab15c1 tdStyle4'>Mod. French, <span class='it'>Broca</span></td><td class='tab15c2 tdStyle5'>357</td><td class='tab15c3 tdStyle5'>74&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class='tab15c4 tdStyle5'>91</td><td class='tab15c5 tdStyle5'>1502</td><td class='tab15c6 tdStyle5'>50.6</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab15c1 tdStyle4'>Mod. German, <span class='it'>Welcker</span></td><td class='tab15c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;30</td><td class='tab15c3 tdStyle5'>72&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class='tab15c4 tdStyle5'>88</td><td class='tab15c5 tdStyle5'>1450</td><td class='tab15c6 tdStyle5'>49.0</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab15c1 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab15c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab15c3 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab15c4 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab15c5 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab15c6 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='385' id='Page_385'></span></p>
-
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The highest average of any nationality, as determined by
-Drs. Reid and Peacock from the weighing of 157 brains of
-male patients, chiefly Scottish Lowlanders, in the Royal Infirmary
-of Edinburgh, is little more than 50 oz., or 1417
-grammes; whereas the estimated average brain-weight in the
-ancient British skulls is 54 oz. for the Dolichocephali of the
-Long Barrows, which equals that of Sir James Simpson, and
-exceeds all but six of the most distinguished men adduced in
-<a href='#table4'>Table IV.</a> For the Brachycephali of the Round Barrows it is
-53.5 oz., which is in excess of the brain-weights of Agassiz,
-Chalmers, Whewell, and other distinguished men, and exactly
-accords with that of Daniel Webster and Lord Chancellor
-Campbell. In so far, moreover, as this illustrates the cerebral
-capacity of ancient races, it is in each case an average obtained
-by gauging eighteen skulls, and not the cranial capacity of one
-or two exceptionally large ones. Dr. Thurnam does indeed
-suggest that the Barrows may have been the sepulchres of
-chiefs; nor is this unlikely; but the superior vigour and
-mental endowment which this implies fails to account for a
-cerebral capacity surpassing all but the most distinguished men
-of science and letters in modern Europe referred to in the
-above table. Rather may we conclude from this, as from
-other evidence, that quality of brain may, within certain limits,
-be of more significance than mere quantity; and that brains
-of the same volume, and agreeing in weight, may greatly
-differ in minute structure and in powers of cerebration.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the case of the ancient British Barrow-Builders we seem
-to have large heads and remarkable development of brain,
-without any indications of an equivalent in intellectual power;
-and although the estimated brain-weight derived from gauging
-the capacity of the empty chamber of the skull proceeds on
-the assumption of mass and weight agreeing, sufficient data
-exist to justify the adoption of this for approximate results.
-The average weight of brain of twelve male Negroes of undetermined
-tribes, deduced from gauging their skulls, has been
-ascertained to amount to 1255 grammes, or 44.3 oz. The
-actual weight of brain of the Negro of Guinea, described by
-Professor Calori, was 1260 grammes; and other examples vary
-considerably from the average. Mascagni gives 1458 grammes
-as the weight of one Negro brain weighed by him; equivalent
-<span class='pageno' title='386' id='Page_386'></span>
-to an actual brain-weight of 51.5 oz., which is greater than
-that of Dupuytren, Whewell, Hermann, Tiedemann, or Grote.
-Nevertheless, although the extremes are great, and are confirmed
-by a like diversity in measurements of the horizontal
-circumference and of internal capacity, the average result given
-above appears to be a fair and reliable one.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Thus far the inquiry into data illustrative of comparative
-size and weight of brain has dealt chiefly with the races of
-the eastern hemisphere. The compass is great in point of
-time in so far as it embraces savage and civilised peoples,
-including the barbarians of Europe’s Palæolithic era, along with
-modern tribes of Asia, Africa, and Australia, and some of the
-most notable among the prehistoric races of the British Isles.
-The compass is equally great in the range of intellectual
-development, when to those are added data illustrative of the
-average brain-weight of some of the leading nations of modern
-Europe, and a series of examples derived from noted instances
-of the highest exceptional types of intellectual power and
-activity in recent times. Some general conclusions of a comprehensive
-kind seem to follow legitimately from this evidence.
-Notwithstanding the prominence given to the assumed evidence
-of a low type of skull, depressed forehead, and poor frontal
-development, in the assumed primitive European Canstadt
-race, when we keep in view the enormous interval of time
-assumed to separate “those savages who peopled Europe in the
-Palæolithic age” from our own era, the amount of difference
-in size and apparent brain-weight is not remarkable. Compared
-with those of contemporary savage races it suggests no
-more than the accompanying development of the brain in a
-ratio with the intellectual activities of progressive civilisation,
-and even then the relative brain-mass of the lowest type is
-suggestive of latent powers only needing development. But
-the old and later races of the New World stand in a different
-relation to each other; and the process thus far employed
-when applied to determine the comparative cranial capacities
-of the native American races, discloses results of a different
-character, and widely at variance with those above described
-relating to the ancient races of Britain. On the continent of
-America the native ethnical scale embraces a comparatively
-narrow range, and any intrusive elements are sufficiently
-<span class='pageno' title='387' id='Page_387'></span>
-recent to be easily eliminated. The Patagonian and the
-Fuegian rank alongside of the Bushman, the Andaman Islander,
-or the Australian, as among the lowest types of humanity;
-while the Aztecs, Mayas, Quichuas, and Aymaras, attained to
-the highest scale which has been reached independently by
-any native American race. We owe to the zealous and indefatigable
-labours of Dr. Morton, alike in the formation of his
-great collection of human crania, and in the published results
-embodied in the <span class='it'>Crania Americana</span>, a large amount of
-knowledge derived from this class of evidence in reference to
-the races of the New World. In one respect, at least, those
-results stand out in striking contrast to the large-headed
-barbarian Barrow-Builders of ancient Britain. Dr. Morton
-subdivides the American races into the Toltecan race, embracing
-the semi-civilised communities of Mexico, Bogota, and
-Peru, and the barbarous tribes scattered over the continent
-from the Arctic circle to Tierra del Fuego. His latest views
-are embodied in a contribution to Schoolcraft’s <span class='it'>History of
-the Indian Tribes of the United States</span>, entitled “The Physical
-Type of the American Indians.” In treating of the volume of
-brain, he draws special attention to the Peruvian skulls, 201
-in number, obtained for him from the cemeteries of Pisco,
-Pachacamac, and Arica. “Herera informs us that Pachacamac
-was sacred to priests, nobles, and other persons of distinction;
-and there is ample evidence that Arica and Pisco, though free
-to all classes, were among the most favoured cemeteries of
-Peru.” Dr. Morton accordingly adds: “It is of some importance
-to the present inquiry, that nearly one-half of this series
-of Peruvian crania was obtained at Pachacamac; whence the
-inference that they belonged to the most intellectual and cultivated
-portion of the Peruvian nation; for in Peru learning of
-every kind was an exclusive privilege of the ruling caste.” In
-reality, however, later additions to our knowledge of the
-physical characteristics of the ancient Peruvians tend to confirm
-the idea of the existence of two distinct races: a patrician
-order occupying a position analogous to the Franks of Gaul or
-the Normans of England, though more aptly to be compared
-to the Brahmins of India; and a more numerous class, constituting
-the labouring and industrial orders of the community,
-abundantly represented in the Pacific coast tribes of Peru, the
-<span class='pageno' title='388' id='Page_388'></span>
-cemeteries of which have furnished the larger number of crania
-to European and American collections.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>To such a patrician order or caste the intellectual superiority
-and privileges of the governing race pertained. But whatever
-may have been the exclusive prerogatives of the patrician
-and sacerdotal orders, there is no doubt that the Peruvians as
-a people had carried metallurgy to as high a development as
-has been attained by any race ignorant of working in iron.
-They had acquired great skill in the arts of the goldsmith, the
-engraver, chaser, and modeller. Pottery was fashioned into
-many artistic and fanciful forms, showing ingenuity and great
-versatility of fancy. They excelled as engineers, architects,
-sculptors, weavers, and agriculturists. Their public works
-display great skill, combined with comprehensive aims of
-practical utility; and alone, among all the nations of the New
-World, they had domesticated animals, and trained them as
-beasts of burden. It is not, therefore, without reason that
-Dr. Morton adds: “When we consider the institutions of the
-old Peruvians, their comparatively advanced civilisation, their
-tombs and temples, mountain roads and monolithic gateways,
-together with their knowledge of certain ornamental arts, it is
-surprising to find that they possessed a brain no larger than
-the Hottentot and New Hollander, and far below that of the
-barbarous hordes of their own race. For, on measuring 155
-crania, nearly all derived from the sepulchres just mentioned,
-they give but 75 cubic inches (equivalent, after due deduction
-for membranes and fluids, to a brain of 40.1 oz. av. in weight,)
-for the average bulk of the brain. Of the whole number, only
-one attains the capacity of 101 cubic inches, and the minimum
-sinks to 58, the smallest in the whole series of 641 measured
-crania. It is important further to remark that the sexes are
-nearly equally represented, namely, eighty men and seventy-five
-women.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Other collections subsequently formed have largely added
-to our means of testing the curious question thus raised of the
-apparent inverse ratio of volume of brain to intellectual power
-and progressive civilisation among the native races of the
-American continent. In 1866, Mr. E. G. Squier presented to
-the Peabody Museum of American Archæology and Ethnology
-at Harvard, a collection of seventy-five Peruvian skulls,
-<span class='pageno' title='389' id='Page_389'></span>
-obtained by himself from various localities both on the coast
-and in the interior. “The skulls from the interior represent
-the Aymara on Lake Titicaca, as well as the Quichua, Cuzco,
-or Inca families; and the skulls of every coast family from
-Tumbes to Atacama, or from Ecuador to Chili.”<a id='r177'/><a href='#f177' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[177]</span></sup></a> Subsequently
-the curator, the late Professor Jeffreys Wyman, made
-this collection, along with two others, of skulls from the
-mounds of Kentucky and Florida, the subject of careful comparative
-measurements. The following are the results: The
-crania from Florida were chiefly obtained from a burial place
-near an ancient Indian shell mound of gigantic proportions, a
-few miles distant from Cedar Keys. They are eighteen in
-number, and have a mean capacity of 1375.7 cubic centimetres,
-or nearly 84 cubic inches. The skulls from the
-Kentucky mounds, twenty-four in number, show a mean
-capacity of 1313 cubic centimetres, 80.21 cubic inches, with
-a difference of 125 cubic centimetres, or 7.61 cubic inches in
-favour of the males. Yet, small as the Kentucky skulls are,
-they exceed the Peruvian ones. Keeping in view the varied
-sources of the latter, Professor Wyman remarks: “Although
-the crania from the several localities show some differences as
-regards capacity, yet in most other respects they are alike.”
-And the numbers, when viewed separately, are too few to
-attach much importance to variations within so narrow a
-range. Nevertheless it is noteworthy that the highest mean
-is that of the Aymaras of Lake Titicaca; and this difference is
-considerably increased by measurements derived from subsequent
-additions to the Harvard collection, received since the
-death of Professor Wyman from the high valley of Lake
-Titicaca. In other respects besides their marked superiority
-in size, the latter crania differ from those of the Coast tribes,
-and confirm the earlier deduction of an ethnical distinction
-between the more numerous race so abundantly represented in
-the Coast cemeteries, and that which is chiefly represented by
-crania brought from the interior. The numbers from the
-several localities selected by Professor Wyman as fair average
-specimens of the whole stand thus: six from burial towers, or
-chulpas, near Lake Titicaca, 1292; five from Cajamaquilla,
-1268.75; fourteen from Casma, 1254; four from Truxillo,
-<span class='pageno' title='390' id='Page_390'></span>
-1236; four from Pachicamac, 1195; sixteen from Amacavilca,
-1176.2; and seven from Grand Chimu, 1094.28.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In 1872, the collection of Peruvian crania in the Peabody
-Museum was augmented by a large addition from 330 skulls
-obtained by Professor Agassiz, through the intervention of Mr.
-T. J. Hutchinson, British Consul at Callao, in Peru. From
-those contributed to the Harvard Museum, Dr. Wyman selected
-eleven as apparently the only ones unaffected by any artificial
-compression or distortion, and therefore valuable as illustrations
-of the normal shape of the Peruvian head. They are quite
-symmetrical. The occiput, instead of being flattened or
-vertical, as in the distorted crania, has the ordinary curves, and
-in some of them is prominent. Two of them are marked by a
-low, retreating forehead; but in all the others the forehead is
-moderately developed. As, moreover, the larger half appear to
-be the skulls of females, this accounts for the mean capacity
-falling below the Peruvian average. But they are all small.
-The largest of them is only 1260 cubic centimetres, or less
-than 74 cubic inches; and the average capacity of ten of them
-is 1129 cubic centimetres, or 69 cubic inches.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The collection, as a whole, differs from that of Mr. Squier,
-in having been derived from the huacas, or ancient graves of
-one locality, that of Ancon, near Callao. Professor Wyman
-stated as the result of his careful study of them: “The average
-capacity obtained from the whole collection, including those
-having the distorted as well as the natural shape, varies but
-little from that of previous measurements,” including those of
-Morton and Meigs, and his own results from the Squier
-collection.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Another collection of 150 ancient skulls, obtained by Mr.
-Hutchinson during his residence in Peru, and presented to the
-Anthropological Institute of London, has the additional value,
-like that of Squier, of having been carefully selected from
-different localities, including Santos, Ica, Ancon, Passamayo, and
-Cerro del Oro; and the same may be said of those enumerated
-in the <span class='it'>Thesaurus Craniorum</span> of Dr. Davis. We have thus
-unusually ample materials for determining the cranial characteristics
-of this remarkable people, and the results in every
-case are the same. After a careful examination of the Peruvian
-skulls, in the London anthropological collection, Professor Busk
-<span class='pageno' title='391' id='Page_391'></span>
-states his conclusions thus: “The mean capacity of the larger
-skulls, which may be regarded as males, appears, as far as I
-have gone, to be about 80 cubic inches, equivalent to a brain
-of about 45 ounces, roughly estimated. This capacity, and the
-measurements above cited, show that the crania generally are
-of small size”; and he adds: “this is in accord with the
-statements of all observers.”<a id='r178'/><a href='#f178' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[178]</span></sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dr. Davis has added to the valuable data included in his
-<span class='it'>Thesaurus Craniorum</span>, a series of measurements of skeletons.
-Unfortunately that of a male Quichua, procured by him in the
-form of a “Peruvian mummy,” proved to be affected with
-carious disease about the last dorsal and upper lumbar vertebræ;
-and consequently the length of the vertebral column essential
-for comparison with the skeletons of other races, is wanting;
-but the other measurements indicate in this example a stature
-below the average, while the skull exceeds it. The average
-internal capacity of eighteen Quichua male skulls, as given by
-Dr. Davis, is seventy-three, whereas this is 78.5. That the
-ancient Peruvian skulls are, with rare exceptions, of small size,
-is undoubted; and in view of this it becomes a matter of some
-importance to determine whether this was in any degree due
-to a correspondingly small stature. Obscure references are found
-in the legendary history of Peru to a pigmy race. Pedro de
-Cieza de Leon, whose travels have been translated by Mr.
-Markham, refers to the first emigration of the Indians of
-Chincha to that valley, “where they found many inhabitants,
-but all of such small stature, that the tallest was barely two
-cubits high” (p. 260). Garcilasso de la Vega repeats another
-tradition heard by himself in Peru, of a race of giants who
-came by sea to the country, and were so tall that the natives
-reached no higher than their knees. They lived by rapine, and
-wasted the whole country till they were destroyed by fire from
-heaven. Traditions of this class may possibly point to the
-existence of an aboriginal race of small stature. The aborigines
-of Guatemala, Salvador, and Nicaragua, are described as below
-the middle size (Bancroft, vol. i. p. 688); and Von Tchudi
-divides the wild Indians of Peru into the Iscuchanos, the
-natives of the highlands, a tall, slim, vigorous race, with the
-head proportionally large and the forehead low; and those of
-<span class='pageno' title='392' id='Page_392'></span>
-the hot lowlands, a smaller race, lank, but broad shouldered,
-with a broad face and small round chin. There appear,
-therefore, to be traces of one or more aboriginal races of small
-stature. But Dr. Morton says expressly of the Peruvians: “Our
-knowledge of their physical appearance is derived solely from
-their tombs. In stature they appear not to have been in any
-respect remarkable, nor to have differed from the cognate
-nations except in the conformation of the head, which is small,
-greatly elongated, narrow its whole length, with a very retreating
-forehead, and possessing more symmetry than is usual in
-skulls of the American race.” Some of the characteristics
-here referred to are, in part at least, the result of artificial
-modifications; but the small head appears to be an indisputable
-characteristic of the most numerous ancient people of Peru.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It may not unreasonably excite surprise that Dr. Morton
-should have adduced results apparently pointing to the conclusion
-that civilisation had progressed among the native races
-of the American continent in an inverse ratio to the volume of
-brain; and yet passed it over with such slight comment. The
-only hint at a recognition of the difficulty is where, as he draws
-his work to a close, he indicates his observation of a greater
-anterior and coronal development in the smaller Peruvian brain.
-“It is curious,” he says, “to observe that the barbarous nations
-possess a larger brain by 5½ cubic inches than the Toltecans;
-while, on the other hand, the Toltecans possess a greater relative
-capacity of the anterior chamber of the skull in the proportion
-of 42.3 to 41.8. Again, the coronal region, though
-absolutely greater in the barbarous tribes, is rather larger in
-proportion in the demi-civilised tribes.”<a id='r179'/><a href='#f179' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[179]</span></sup></a> But Dr. Morton
-also noted that the heads of nine Peruvian children in his
-possession “appear to be nearly if not quite as large as those
-of children of other nations at the same age”;<a id='r180'/><a href='#f180' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[180]</span></sup></a> so that he
-seemed to recognise something equivalent to an arrested
-cerebral development accompanying the intellectual activity
-of this remarkable people at some later stage, yet without
-apparently affecting their mental power. But it was characteristic
-of this minute and painstaking observer to accumulate
-and set forth his results, unaffected by any apparent difficulties
-or inconsistencies which they might seem to involve.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='393' id='Page_393'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Important advances have been made in craniometry, as in
-other branches of anthropology, since Dr. Morton formed the
-collection which now, with many later additions, constitutes an
-important department in the collections of the Academy of
-Science of Philadelphia. Zealous and well-trained labourers
-are following in his steps; but the value of his services to science
-are more fully appreciated with every addition to the work he
-inaugurated. Researches have been prosecuted for some years
-by a committee of the British Association with a view to
-securing reliable data relative to the tribes of the Canadian
-North-West and British Columbia. In following out their
-instructions, Dr. Franz Boas has prepared valuable tables of
-measurements, both of living examples of the Haidah, Tsimshian,
-Kwakintl, and Nootka tribes, and of crania of those and
-other natives of the Pacific coast; but unfortunately he has
-omitted the cerebral capacity. But a large collection of crania
-of tribes lying to the south of British Columbia, now in the
-Peabody Museum of Harvard University, has furnished to Mr.
-Lucien Carr opportunities for a series of careful measurements
-showing some very distinctive diversities among tribes of the
-coast and the islands of Southern California. From those the
-following table is derived. The capacity is given in cubic
-centimetres; and shows not only a marked diversity in cerebral
-capacity distinguishing different island tribes, but also notes
-the relative difference of the male and female head. Among
-the Indians of the Pacific coast are the Haidahs and others
-noted for exceptional ingenuity and skill in their carvings,
-pottery, and other handiwork. But besides the fair-skinned
-Haidahs and Tsimshians of the north, there are essentially
-diverse tribes of Southern California, noticeable for swarthy
-and almost black colour; and not only inferior, but essentially
-differing in the style of their arts.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='394' id='Page_394'></span></p>
-
-<h3 id='table8'>TABLE VIII</h3>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-bottom:2em;font-size:.8em;'>CRANIA OF PACIFIC COAST TRIBES</p>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-bottom:1em;font-size:.8em;'><span class='it'>Santa Catalina Island, California.</span></p>
-
-<table id='tab16' summary='' class='center' style='font-size:.8em;'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 7em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 5em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 7em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 7em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 7em;'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td class='tab16c1 tdStyle5'></td><td class='tab16c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab16c3 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab16c4 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab16c5 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab16c1 tdStyle5'>No. of Crania.</td><td class='tab16c2 tdStyle5'>Sex.</td><td class='tab16c3 tdStyle5'>Capacity</td><td class='tab16c4 tdStyle5'>Capacity</td><td class='tab16c5 tdStyle5'>Capacity</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab16c1 tdStyle5'></td><td class='tab16c2 tdStyle5'></td><td class='tab16c3 tdStyle5'>Average.</td><td class='tab16c4 tdStyle5'>Maximum.</td><td class='tab16c5 tdStyle5'>Minimum.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab16c1 tdStyle5'></td><td class='tab16c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab16c3 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab16c4 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab16c5 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab16c1 tdStyle5'></td><td class='tab16c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab16c3 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab16c4 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab16c5 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab16c1 tdStyle5'>26</td><td class='tab16c2 tdStyle5'>Male</td><td class='tab16c3 tdStyle5'>1470</td><td class='tab16c4 tdStyle5'>1719</td><td class='tab16c5 tdStyle5'>1282</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab16c1 tdStyle5'>12</td><td class='tab16c2 tdStyle5'>Female</td><td class='tab16c3 tdStyle5'>1279</td><td class='tab16c4 tdStyle5'>1451</td><td class='tab16c5 tdStyle5'>1098</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab16c1 tdStyle5'></td><td class='tab16c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab16c3 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab16c4 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab16c5 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-top:2em;margin-bottom:1em;font-size:.8em;'><span class='it'>San Clementé Island, California.</span></p>
-
-<table id='tab17' summary='' class='center' style='font-size:.8em;'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 7em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 5em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 7em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 7em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 7em;'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td class='tab17c1 tdStyle5'></td><td class='tab17c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab17c3 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab17c4 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab17c5 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab17c1 tdStyle5'>No. of Crania.</td><td class='tab17c2 tdStyle5'>Sex.</td><td class='tab17c3 tdStyle5'>Capacity</td><td class='tab17c4 tdStyle5'>Capacity</td><td class='tab17c5 tdStyle5'>Capacity</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab17c1 tdStyle5'></td><td class='tab17c2 tdStyle5'></td><td class='tab17c3 tdStyle5'>Average.</td><td class='tab17c4 tdStyle5'>Maximum.</td><td class='tab17c5 tdStyle5'>Minimum.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab17c1 tdStyle5'></td><td class='tab17c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab17c3 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab17c4 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab17c5 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab17c1 tdStyle5'></td><td class='tab17c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab17c3 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab17c4 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab17c5 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab17c1 tdStyle5'>9</td><td class='tab17c2 tdStyle5'>Male</td><td class='tab17c3 tdStyle5'>1452</td><td class='tab17c4 tdStyle5'>1747</td><td class='tab17c5 tdStyle5'>1300</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab17c1 tdStyle5'>6</td><td class='tab17c2 tdStyle5'>Female</td><td class='tab17c3 tdStyle5'>1315</td><td class='tab17c4 tdStyle5'>1352</td><td class='tab17c5 tdStyle5'>1268</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab17c1 tdStyle5'></td><td class='tab17c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab17c3 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab17c4 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab17c5 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-top:2em;margin-bottom:1em;font-size:.8em;'><span class='it'>Santa Cruz Island, California.</span></p>
-
-<table id='tab18' summary='' class='center' style='font-size:.8em;'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 7em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 5em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 7em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 7em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 7em;'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td class='tab18c1 tdStyle5'></td><td class='tab18c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab18c3 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab18c4 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab18c5 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab18c1 tdStyle5'>No. of Crania.</td><td class='tab18c2 tdStyle5'>Sex.</td><td class='tab18c3 tdStyle5'>Capacity</td><td class='tab18c4 tdStyle5'>Capacity</td><td class='tab18c5 tdStyle5'>Capacity</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab18c1 tdStyle5'></td><td class='tab18c2 tdStyle5'></td><td class='tab18c3 tdStyle5'>Average.</td><td class='tab18c4 tdStyle5'>Maximum.</td><td class='tab18c5 tdStyle5'>Minimum.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab18c1 tdStyle5'></td><td class='tab18c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab18c3 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab18c4 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab18c5 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab18c1 tdStyle5'></td><td class='tab18c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab18c3 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab18c4 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab18c5 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab18c1 tdStyle5'>45</td><td class='tab18c2 tdStyle5'>Male</td><td class='tab18c3 tdStyle5'>1365</td><td class='tab18c4 tdStyle5'>1625</td><td class='tab18c5 tdStyle5'>1144</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab18c1 tdStyle5'>35</td><td class='tab18c2 tdStyle5'>Female</td><td class='tab18c3 tdStyle5'>1219</td><td class='tab18c4 tdStyle5'>1528</td><td class='tab18c5 tdStyle5'>1040</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab18c1 tdStyle5'></td><td class='tab18c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab18c3 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab18c4 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab18c5 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-top:2em;margin-bottom:1em;font-size:.8em;'><span class='it'>Santa Barbara Islands and Mainland.</span></p>
-
-<table id='tab19' summary='' class='center' style='font-size:.8em;'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 7em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 5em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 7em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 7em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 7em;'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td class='tab19c1 tdStyle5'></td><td class='tab19c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab19c3 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab19c4 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab19c5 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab19c1 tdStyle5'>No. of Crania.</td><td class='tab19c2 tdStyle5'>Sex.</td><td class='tab19c3 tdStyle5'>Capacity</td><td class='tab19c4 tdStyle5'>Capacity</td><td class='tab19c5 tdStyle5'>Capacity</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab19c1 tdStyle5'></td><td class='tab19c2 tdStyle5'></td><td class='tab19c3 tdStyle5'>Average.</td><td class='tab19c4 tdStyle5'>Maximum.</td><td class='tab19c5 tdStyle5'>Minimum.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab19c1 tdStyle5'></td><td class='tab19c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab19c3 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab19c4 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab19c5 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab19c1 tdStyle5'></td><td class='tab19c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab19c3 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab19c4 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab19c5 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab19c1 tdStyle5'>9</td><td class='tab19c2 tdStyle5'>Male</td><td class='tab19c3 tdStyle5'>1324</td><td class='tab19c4 tdStyle5'>1441</td><td class='tab19c5 tdStyle5'>1167</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab19c1 tdStyle5'>5</td><td class='tab19c2 tdStyle5'>Female</td><td class='tab19c3 tdStyle5'>1247</td><td class='tab19c4 tdStyle5'>1316</td><td class='tab19c5 tdStyle5'>1175</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab19c1 tdStyle5'></td><td class='tab19c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab19c3 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab19c4 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab19c5 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='395' id='Page_395'></span></p>
-
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Among exceptional features claimed as more or less a racial
-characteristic of American crania, the <span class='it'>os Incæ</span>, or epactal
-bone in the occiput, has been noted as present in various stages
-of manifestation in 3.81 per cent; and among ancient
-Peruvian crania in 6.08 per cent; while it does not apparently
-exceed 2.65 per cent in the Negro; and only reaches
-1.19 per cent in Europeans.<a id='r181'/><a href='#f181' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[181]</span></sup></a> In so far as this may be regarded
-as a sign of arrested development, it is noteworthy as
-thus occurring in excess in the small-headed, yet highly
-ingenious and civilised Peruvian race. Dr. Morton noted as
-a remarkable fact that the skull of the Peruvian child
-appeared to equal in size that of other races; so that in a
-much ampler sense than in the perpetuation of a suture of the
-occiput beyond the stage of fœtal development, the small-sized
-skull and brain of the adult Peruvian is abnormal. But he
-followed out his observation of the phenomena no farther than
-to state, in summing up his investigations “On the internal
-capacity of the cranium in the different races of men:”<a id='r182'/><a href='#f182' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[182]</span></sup></a>
-“Respecting the American race, I have nothing to add, excepting
-the striking fact that of all the American nations, the
-Peruvians had the smallest heads, while those of the Mexicans
-were something larger, and those of the barbarous tribes the
-largest of all,” namely:—</p>
-
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-
-<table id='tab20' summary='' class='center' style='font-size:.8em;'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 10em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 12em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 2em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 4em;'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td class='tab20c1 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab20c2 tdStyle4'>{ Peruvians, collectively</td><td class='tab20c3 tdStyle4'>75</td><td class='tab20c4 tdStyle5'>cubic</td><td class='tab20c5 tdStyle5'>inches.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab20c1 tdStyle4'>Toltecan Nations</td><td class='tab20c2 tdStyle4'>{</td><td class='tab20c3 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab20c4 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab20c5 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab20c1 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab20c2 tdStyle4'>{ Mexicans,&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;„</td><td class='tab20c3 tdStyle4'>79</td><td class='tab20c4 tdStyle5'>„</td><td class='tab20c5 tdStyle5'>„</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab20c1 tdStyle4'>Barbarous Tribes</td><td class='tab20c2 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab20c3 tdStyle4'>82</td><td class='tab20c4 tdStyle5'>„</td><td class='tab20c5 tdStyle5'>„</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The enlarged tables given in the catalogue of Dr J. Aitken
-Meigs, increase this inverse ratio of cerebral capacity, thus:—</p>
-
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-
-<table id='tab21' summary='' class='center' style='font-size:.8em;'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 25em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 7em;'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td class='tab21c1 tdStyle4'>Peruvians</td><td class='tab21c2 tdStyle3'>75.3</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab21c1 tdStyle4'>Mexicans</td><td class='tab21c2 tdStyle3'>81.7</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab21c1 tdStyle4'>Barbarous Tribes</td><td class='tab21c2 tdStyle3'>84.0</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The great American group,” he says, “is, in several
-respects, well represented in the collection. It includes 490
-crania and 13 casts, making a total of 503 from nearly 70
-different nations and tribes. Of this large number 256
-belong to the Toltecan race (embracing the semi-civilised
-communities of Mexico, Bogota, and Peru), and 247 to the
-<span class='pageno' title='396' id='Page_396'></span>
-barbarous tribes scattered over the continent. Of 164
-measurements of crania of the barbarous tribes, the largest is
-104 cubic inches; the smallest 69; and the mean of all 84.
-One hundred and fifty-two Peruvian skulls give 101 cubic
-inches for the largest internal capacity, 58 for the smallest,
-and 75.3 for the average of all.”<a id='r183'/><a href='#f183' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[183]</span></sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The results which Professor Jeffreys Wyman arrived at
-from a careful comparative measurement of the Squier collection,
-were confirmed by his subsequent study of that of
-Professor Agassiz, and may be quoted as applying to both;
-for he sums up his later investigations with the remark:
-“These results agree with all previous conclusions with regard
-to the diminutive size of the ancient Peruvian brain.”<a id='r184'/><a href='#f184' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[184]</span></sup></a> Of
-the Squier collection he says: “The average capacity of the
-fifty-six crania measured agrees very closely with that indicated
-by Morton and Meigs, namely, 1230 centimetres, or
-75 cubic inches, which is considerably less than that of the
-barbarous tribes of America, and almost exactly that of the
-Australians and Hottentots as given by Morton and Meigs,
-and smaller than that derived from a larger number of
-measurements by Davis. Thus we have, in this particular,
-a race which has established a complex civil and religious
-polity, and made great progress in the useful and fine arts,—as
-its pottery, textile fabrics, wrought metals, highways and
-aqueducts, colossal architectural structures and court of almost
-imperial splendour prove,—on the same level, as regards the
-quantity of brain, with a race whose social and religious conditions
-are among the most degraded exhibited by the human
-race. All this goes to show, and cannot be too much insisted
-upon, that the relative capacity of the skull is to be considered
-merely as an anatomical and not as a physiological characteristic;
-and unless the quality of the brain can be represented
-at the same time as the quantity, brain measurement cannot
-be assumed as an indication of the intellectual position of races
-any more than of individuals.”<a id='r185'/><a href='#f185' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[185]</span></sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The only definite attempt of Dr. Morton to solve the difficulty
-thus presented to us, curiously evades its true point.
-“Something,” he says, “may be attributed to a primitive difference
-<span class='pageno' title='397' id='Page_397'></span>
-of stock; but more, perhaps, to the contrasted activity of
-the two races.” Here, however, it is not a case of intellectual
-activity accompanied by, and seemingly begetting an increased
-volume of brain; but only the assumption of greater activity
-in the small-brained race to account for its triumph over
-larger-brained barbarous tribes in the attainment of numerous
-elements of a native-born civilisation. The question is, how
-to account for this intellectual activity, with all its marvellous
-results, attained by a race with an average brain of no greater
-volume than that of the Bushman, the Australian, or other
-lowest types of humanity.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Nilotic Egyptian race, of composite ethnical character,
-presents striking elements of comparison, in the ingenious arts
-and constructive skill of the ancient dwellers in the Nile
-valley; but whether we take the Egyptian of the Catacombs,
-the Copt, or the Fellah, we seek in vain for like microcephalous
-characteristics. Among modern races the Chinese exhibit many
-analogies in arts and social life to the ancient Peruvians; but
-their cerebral capacity presents no correspondence to that of
-the American race. Dr. Morton gives a mean capacity for the
-Chinese skull of 85, as compared with the Peruvian 75.3,
-while Dr. Davis derives from nineteen skulls a mean internal
-capacity of 76.7 oz. av., or 93 cubic inches.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But another Asiatic race, that of the Hindoos—also
-associated with a remarkable ancient civilisation, and a social
-and religious organisation not without suggestive analogies both
-to ancient Egypt and Peru,—is noticeable for like microcephalous
-characteristics. In completing the anatomical measurements
-with which Dr. Morton closes his great work, he places
-the Ethiopian lowest in the scale of internal capacity of
-cranium; but, while including the Hindoo in his Caucasian
-group, he adds: “It is proper to mention that but three
-Hindoos are admitted in the whole number, because the skulls
-of these people are probably smaller than those of any other
-existing nation. For example, seventeen Hindoo heads give a
-mean of but 75 cubic inches.”<a id='r186'/><a href='#f186' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[186]</span></sup></a> The Vedahs of Ceylon, the
-Mincopies, the Negritos, and the Bushmen, appear to vie with
-the Hindoos in smallness of skull; but all of them are races
-of diminutive stature. This element, therefore, which has
-<span class='pageno' title='398' id='Page_398'></span>
-been referred to as important in individual comparisons, is no
-less necessary to be borne in view in determining such comparative
-results as those which distinguish the Peruvians from
-other American races. Certain races are unquestionably distinguished
-from others by difference of stature. Barrow
-determined the mean height of the Bushman, from measurements
-of a whole tribe, to be 4 ft. 3½ in. D’Orbigny, from
-nearly similar evidence, states that of the Patagonians to be
-5 ft. 8 in. The internal capacity of the Peruvian skull, as
-derived from eighteen male and six female Quichua skulls in
-Dr. Davis’s collection, is 70, while he states that of the Patagonian
-skull as 67 and of the Bushman as 65; but it is
-manifest that the latter figures, if taken without reference to
-relative stature, furnish a very partial index of the comparative
-volume of brain.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Professor Goodsir, as already noted, held that symmetry of
-brain has more to do with the higher faculties than mere bulk.
-In the case of the Peruvians the systematic distortion of the
-skull precludes the application of this test. But in the small
-Hindoo skull the fine proportions have been repeatedly noted.
-Dr. Davis, in describing one of a Hindoo of unmixed blood,
-born in Sumatra, says: “His pretty, diminutive skull is singularly
-contrasted with those of the races by whom, alive, he
-was surrounded”;<a id='r187'/><a href='#f187' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[187]</span></sup></a> and he adds: “The great agreement of
-the elegant skulls of Hindoos in their types and proportions,
-although not in dimensions, with those of European races, has
-afforded some support to that widespread and learned illusion,
-‘the Indo-European hypothesis.’ The Hindoo skulls are
-generally beautiful models of form in miniature.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mr. Alfred R. Wallace, in his <span class='it'>Malay Archipelago</span>, discusses
-the value of cranial measurements for ethnological purposes;
-and, employing those furnished by Dr. J. B. Davis in his
-<span class='it'>Thesaurus Craniorum</span> as a “means of determining whether the
-forms and dimensions of the crania of the eastern races would
-in any way support or refute his classification of them,” he
-finally selected as the best tests for his purpose—1. The
-capacity of the cranium; 2. The proportion of the width to
-the length taken as 100; 3. The proportion of the height to
-the length taken as 100. But here again, unfortunately, the
-<span class='pageno' title='399' id='Page_399'></span>
-systematic distortion of the Peruvian skull limits us to the
-first of those tests. There are, indeed, the eleven normal
-Peruvian crania selected as such from the numerous Ancon
-skulls brought by Professor Agassiz from Peru. But those
-are stated by Professor Wyman to be on an average less by
-six inches than the ordinary skull. Some partial results embodied
-in the following table admit of comparison with those
-based on the more ample data of <a href='#table10'>Table X.</a> Dr. Lucae, in his
-<span class='it'>Zur Organischen Formenlehre</span>, gives the cranial capacity of
-single skulls of different races, selected as examples of each.
-In these, as in others already referred to, the capacity was
-determined with peas; and the results—assumed to be given
-in Prussian ounces,—are dealt with here, as in the skulls of
-Heinse and Bünger. The experiments carried on for the purpose
-of testing the process fully confirmed the results stated
-by Professor Wyman as to the differences in apparent cubical
-capacity according to the material employed. Taking a sound
-Huron Indian skull, a mean internal capacity of 1490 grms.
-was obtained by repeatedly gauging it with peas, and of
-1439.5 with rice. The position of the Negro, heading the
-list, serves to show the exceptional nature of the evidence;
-though this is rather due to the inferiority of other examples,
-such as the Chinese and Greenlander, than to its capacity
-greatly exceeding the Negro mean. In the first column the
-unzen, as Prussian ounces, are rendered in grammes. The
-second column gives the nearer approximation to the true
-specific gravity, according to the standard referred to, based
-on a series of experiments carried out under my direction in
-the laboratory of the University of Toronto, and assuming
-82.5 grms. of peas to occupy the space of 100 grms. of water.
-The third and fourth columns represent the estimated brain-weight,
-after the requisite deductions, on the basis of s.g. of
-brain as 1.0408.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='400' id='Page_400'></span></p>
-
-<h3 id='table9'>TABLE IX</h3>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-bottom:2em;font-size:.8em;'>LUCAE</p>
-
-<table id='tab22' summary='' class='center' style='font-size:.8em;'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 7em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 7em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 7em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 7em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 5em;'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td class='tab22c1 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab22c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab22c3 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab22c4 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab22c5 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab22c1 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab22c2 tdStyle5'>Internal</td><td class='tab22c3 tdStyle5'>Internal Cap.</td><td class='tab22c4 tdStyle5'>Brain-Weight.</td><td class='tab22c5 tdStyle5'>Brain-</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab22c1 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab22c2 tdStyle5'>Capacity.</td><td class='tab22c3 tdStyle5'>Corrected.</td><td class='tab22c4 tdStyle5'>Grms.</td><td class='tab22c5 tdStyle5'>weight.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab22c1 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab22c2 tdStyle5'>Grms.</td><td class='tab22c3 tdStyle5'>Grms.</td><td class='tab22c4 tdStyle5'></td><td class='tab22c5 tdStyle5'>Oz. Av.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab22c1 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab22c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab22c3 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab22c4 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab22c5 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab22c1 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab22c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab22c3 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab22c4 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab22c5 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab22c1 tdStyle4'>Negro</td><td class='tab22c2 tdStyle5'>1169.28</td><td class='tab22c3 tdStyle5'>1424.12</td><td class='tab22c4 tdStyle5'>1281.71</td><td class='tab22c5 tdStyle5'>45.2</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab22c1 tdStyle4'>Chinese</td><td class='tab22c2 tdStyle5'>1081.58</td><td class='tab22c3 tdStyle5'>1364.48</td><td class='tab22c4 tdStyle5'>1228.04</td><td class='tab22c5 tdStyle5'>43.4</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab22c1 tdStyle4'>Nubian</td><td class='tab22c2 tdStyle5'>1041.24</td><td class='tab22c3 tdStyle5'>1313.54</td><td class='tab22c4 tdStyle5'>1182.19</td><td class='tab22c5 tdStyle5'>41.7</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab22c1 tdStyle4'>Floris</td><td class='tab22c2 tdStyle5'>1033.93</td><td class='tab22c3 tdStyle5'>1304.38</td><td class='tab22c4 tdStyle5'>1173.94</td><td class='tab22c5 tdStyle5'>41.4</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab22c1 tdStyle4'>Papuan</td><td class='tab22c2 tdStyle5'>1030.42</td><td class='tab22c3 tdStyle5'>1299.95</td><td class='tab22c4 tdStyle5'>1169.96</td><td class='tab22c5 tdStyle5'>41.3</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab22c1 tdStyle4'>Greenlander</td><td class='tab22c2 tdStyle5'>1023.12</td><td class='tab22c3 tdStyle5'>1290.74</td><td class='tab22c4 tdStyle5'>1161.67</td><td class='tab22c5 tdStyle5'>41.0</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab22c1 tdStyle4'>Javanese</td><td class='tab22c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;&nbsp;995.06</td><td class='tab22c3 tdStyle5'>1254.54</td><td class='tab22c4 tdStyle5'>1129.91</td><td class='tab22c5 tdStyle5'>39.8</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab22c1 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab22c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab22c3 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab22c4 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab22c5 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the following table the examples are derived from Dr.
-J. B. Davis’s tables, with the exception of the Peruvians. For
-these I have availed myself of Dr. Jeffreys Wyman’s careful
-observations on the large collection in the Peabody Museum,
-the results of which confirm Dr. Morton’s earlier data. One
-further fact, however, may be noted as a result of my own
-study of Peruvian crania, amply confirmed by the published
-observations of others, namely, that while the Peruvian head unquestionably
-ranks among those of the microcephalous races,
-the range of variation among the Peruvian coast tribes appears
-to be less than that even of the Australian. Of this there is
-good evidence, based on the comparison of several hundred
-crania. But exceptional examples of unusually large skulls
-may be looked for in all races; and a few of such abnormal
-Peruvian or other skulls would modify the mean capacities
-and weights in the following table. Nevertheless the average
-results, as a whole, are probably a close approximation to the
-truth:—</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='401' id='Page_401'></span></p>
-
-<h3 id='table10'>TABLE X</h3>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-bottom:2em;font-size:.8em;'>COMPARATIVE CEREBRAL CAPACITY OF RACES</p>
-
-<table id='tab23' summary='' class='center' style='font-size:.8em;'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 10em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 7em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 7em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 7em;'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td class='tab23c1 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab23c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab23c3 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab23c4 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab23c1 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab23c2 tdStyle5'></td><td class='tab23c3 tdStyle5'>Capacity.</td><td class='tab23c4 tdStyle5'>Brain-Weight.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab23c1 tdStyle5'>Race.</td><td class='tab23c2 tdStyle5'>Number.</td><td class='tab23c3 tdStyle5'>Cubic Inches.</td><td class='tab23c4 tdStyle5'>Oz. Av.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab23c1 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab23c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab23c3 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab23c4 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab23c1 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab23c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab23c3 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab23c4 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab23c1 tdStyle4'>European</td><td class='tab23c2 tdStyle5'>299</td><td class='tab23c3 tdStyle5'>92.3</td><td class='tab23c4 tdStyle5'>47.12</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab23c1 tdStyle4'>English</td><td class='tab23c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;&nbsp;21</td><td class='tab23c3 tdStyle5'>93.1</td><td class='tab23c4 tdStyle5'>47.50</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab23c1 tdStyle4'>Asiatic</td><td class='tab23c2 tdStyle5'>124</td><td class='tab23c3 tdStyle5'>87.1</td><td class='tab23c4 tdStyle5'>44.44</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab23c1 tdStyle4'>Chinese</td><td class='tab23c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;&nbsp;25</td><td class='tab23c3 tdStyle5'>92.1</td><td class='tab23c4 tdStyle5'>47.00</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab23c1 tdStyle4'>Hindoos</td><td class='tab23c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;&nbsp;35</td><td class='tab23c3 tdStyle5'>82.5</td><td class='tab23c4 tdStyle5'>42.11</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab23c1 tdStyle4'>Negroes</td><td class='tab23c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;&nbsp;16</td><td class='tab23c3 tdStyle5'>86.4</td><td class='tab23c4 tdStyle5'>44.08</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab23c1 tdStyle4'>Negro Tribes</td><td class='tab23c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;&nbsp;69</td><td class='tab23c3 tdStyle5'>85.2</td><td class='tab23c4 tdStyle5'>43.47</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab23c1 tdStyle4'>American Indians</td><td class='tab23c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;&nbsp;52</td><td class='tab23c3 tdStyle5'>87.5</td><td class='tab23c4 tdStyle5'>44.64</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab23c1 tdStyle4'>Mexicans</td><td class='tab23c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;&nbsp;25</td><td class='tab23c3 tdStyle5'>81.7</td><td class='tab23c4 tdStyle5'>41.74</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab23c1 tdStyle4'>Peruvians</td><td class='tab23c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;&nbsp;56</td><td class='tab23c3 tdStyle5'>75.0</td><td class='tab23c4 tdStyle5'>38.25</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab23c1 tdStyle4'>Eskimos</td><td class='tab23c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;&nbsp;13</td><td class='tab23c3 tdStyle5'>91.2</td><td class='tab23c4 tdStyle5'>46.56</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab23c1 tdStyle4'>Oceanic</td><td class='tab23c2 tdStyle5'>210</td><td class='tab23c3 tdStyle5'>89.4</td><td class='tab23c4 tdStyle5'>45.63</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab23c1 tdStyle4'>Javans</td><td class='tab23c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;&nbsp;30</td><td class='tab23c3 tdStyle5'>87.5</td><td class='tab23c4 tdStyle5'>44.64</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab23c1 tdStyle4'>Australians</td><td class='tab23c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;&nbsp;24</td><td class='tab23c3 tdStyle5'>81.1</td><td class='tab23c4 tdStyle5'>41.38</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab23c1 tdStyle4'></td><td class='tab23c2 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab23c3 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab23c4 tdStyle5'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Looking for some definite results from the various data
-here produced, the deductions which they seem to suggest
-may be thus stated. While Professor Wyman justly remarks
-that the relative capacity of the skull, and consequently of the
-encephalon, is to be considered as an anatomical and not as a
-physiological characteristic, relative largeness of the brain is
-nevertheless one of the most distinguishing attributes of man.
-Ample cerebral development is the general accompaniment
-of intellectual capacity, alike in individuals and races; and
-microcephaly, when it passes below well-defined limits, is no
-longer compatible with rational intelligence; though it amply
-suffices for the requirements of the highest anthropomorpha.
-Wagner thus definitely refers the special characteristics which
-separate man from the irrational creation to one member of
-the encephalon: “The relation of the lobes of the cerebrum
-to intelligence may, perhaps, be expressed thus: there is a
-certain development of the mass of the cerebrum, especially
-of the convolutions, requisite in order to such a development
-of intelligence as divides man from other animals.”
-<span class='pageno' title='402' id='Page_402'></span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The important data accumulated by Morton, Meigs, Davis,
-Tiedemann, Pruner-Bey, Broca, and others, by the process of
-gauging the skulls of different races, proceeds on the assumption
-of brain of a uniform density. But it seems by no means
-improbable that certain marked distinctions in races may be
-traceable to the very fact of a prevailing difference in the
-specific gravity of the brain, or of certain of its constituent
-portions; to the greater or less complexity of its convolutions;
-and to the relative characteristics of the two hemispheres.
-Moreover, it may be that some of those sources of difference in
-races may not lie wholly out of our reach, or even beyond our
-control. The diversity of food, for example, of the Peruvians
-and of the American Indian hunter tribes was little less than
-that which distinguishes the Eskimo from the Hindoo, or the
-nomad Tartar from the Chinese. The remarkable cerebral
-capacity characteristic of the Oceanic races is the accompaniment
-of well-defined peculiarities in food, climate, and other
-physical conditions; and Australia is even more distinct in its
-physical specialties than in its variety of race.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Looking then to the unwonted persistency of the Peruvian
-cranium within such narrow limits, so far at least as the
-physical characteristics of the predominant population of Peru
-are illustrated by means of the great Coast cemeteries; and to
-the striking discrepancy between the volume of brain and the
-intellectual activity of the race; I am led to the conclusion
-that, in the remarkable exceptional characteristics thus established
-by the study of this class of Peruvian crania, we have
-as marked an indication of a distinctive race-character as anything
-hitherto noted in anthropology.</p>
-
-<hr class='footnotemark'/>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_152'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f152'><a href='#r152'>[152]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>The Descent of Man</span>, Part I. chap. iv.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_153'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f153'><a href='#r153'>[153]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Insanity and its Treatment</span>, by G. F. Blandford, M.D., p. 10.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_154'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f154'><a href='#r154'>[154]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Mr. Darwin’s Critics: Critiques and Addresses.</span></p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_155'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f155'><a href='#r155'>[155]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Vogt, <span class='it'>Lectures on Man</span>, Lecture III.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_156'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f156'><a href='#r156'>[156]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Journal of Mental Science</span>, vol. xii. p. 23.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_157'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f157'><a href='#r157'>[157]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Philosophical Transactions</span>, vol. clviii. p. 505.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_158'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f158'><a href='#r158'>[158]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Proceedings of the Boston Natural History Society</span>, vol. xl.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_159'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f159'><a href='#r159'>[159]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The internal capacity of 59 oz. is given here from the <span class='it'>Thesaurus Craniorum</span>,
-p. 40, in correction of that of 50 oz. stated in the memoir in <span class='it'>Transactions of the
-Dutch Society of Sciences</span>, Haarlem, p. 21, which may be presumed to be a
-misprint. Dr. Davis adds, in the <span class='it'>Thesaurus Craniorum</span>: “An early closure of
-the sutures has occasioned a stunted growth of the brain, especially of its convolutions,
-and thus prevented the development of those structures and faculties which
-might have given a different direction to his lower propensities”; and he justly
-adds his conviction that this was a case rather for timely treatment as a dangerous
-idiot, than for punishment as a criminal.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_160'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f160'><a href='#r160'>[160]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Report of British Association</span>, 1861.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_161'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f161'><a href='#r161'>[161]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Journal Anthrop. Inst.</span>, vol. iv. p. 464.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_162'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f162'><a href='#r162'>[162]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Limits of Natural Selection, as applied to Man.</span></p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_163'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f163'><a href='#r163'>[163]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Bull. de la Soc. d’Anthropologie de Paris</span>, 1861, ii. p. 501; 1862, iii.
-p. 192.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_164'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f164'><a href='#r164'>[164]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Mem. Anthropol. Soc. London</span>, vol. i. p. 65.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_165'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f165'><a href='#r165'>[165]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Crania Ægyptiaca</span>, p. 21.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_166'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f166'><a href='#r166'>[166]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Vide</span> “Physical Characteristics of the Ancient and Modern Celt”: <span class='it'>Canadian
-Journal</span>, vol. vii. p. 369.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_167'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f167'><a href='#r167'>[167]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Thesaurus Craniorum</span> (Appendix), p. 347.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_168'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f168'><a href='#r168'>[168]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Archæologia Scotica</span>, vol. ii. p. 450.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_169'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f169'><a href='#r169'>[169]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Phrenological Development of Robert Burns</span>, by George Combe, p. 7.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_170'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f170'><a href='#r170'>[170]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The use of different standards of weights and measures, and of diverse
-materials for determining the capacity of the skull in different countries, greatly
-complicates the researches of the craniologist. Some pains have been taken here
-to bring the various weights and measurements to a common standard. In
-attempting to do so in reference to the weight of brain of Italy’s great poet, the
-following process was adopted: It was ascertained by experiment that 912.5 grms.
-of rice, well shaken down, occupied the space of 1000 grms. of water. Hence
-3.1321 lbs. rice&nbsp;=&nbsp;3.4324 water. Multiplying this by 1.04, the s.g. of brain, the
-result is the capacity of the skull, viz. 3.5697 lbs., or 57 oz., as given above.
-In this and other investigations embodied in the present paper, I was indebted to
-the valuable co-operation of my late friend and colleague, Professor H. H. Croft.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_171'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f171'><a href='#r171'>[171]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dr. J. B. Davis, Supp. <span class='it'>Thesaurus Craniorum</span>, p. 7.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_172'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f172'><a href='#r172'>[172]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Sir H. Holland’s <span class='it'>Recollections of Past Life</span>, p. 254.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_173'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f173'><a href='#r173'>[173]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>The Descent of Man</span>, vol. i. p. 120. Appleton ed.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_174'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f174'><a href='#r174'>[174]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Memoirs of Anthrop. Soc. London</span>, vol. i. p. 289.
-<span class='it'>Thesaurus Craniorum</span>, p. 49.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_175'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f175'><a href='#r175'>[175]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Grey’s <span class='it'>Elegy</span>.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_176'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f176'><a href='#r176'>[176]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Mem. Anthropol. Soc. London</span>, vol. i. p. 465.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_177'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f177'><a href='#r177'>[177]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Peabody Museum Annual Report</span>, 1868, p. 7.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_178'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f178'><a href='#r178'>[178]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Journal of Anthropol. Inst.</span>, vol. iii. p. 92.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_179'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f179'><a href='#r179'>[179]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Crania Americana</span>, p. 260.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_180'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f180'><a href='#r180'>[180]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Ibid.</span>, p. 132.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_181'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f181'><a href='#r181'>[181]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Crania Americana</span>, p. 261.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_182'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f182'><a href='#r182'>[182]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Same as Footnote 181.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_183'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f183'><a href='#r183'>[183]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Introductory Note, Catalogue</span>, p. 10.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_184'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f184'><a href='#r184'>[184]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Peabody Museum Report</span>, 1874, p. 10.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_185'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f185'><a href='#r185'>[185]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Ibid</span>. 1871, p. 11.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_186'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f186'><a href='#r186'>[186]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Crania Americana</span>, p. 261.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote'>
-<table summary='footnote_187'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td style='vertical-align:top;'>
-<div id='f187'><a href='#r187'>[187]</a></div>
-</td><td>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Thesaurus Craniorum</span>, p. 148.</p>
-
-</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' title='403' id='Page_403'></span><h1>INDEX</h1></div>
-
-<div class='lgl' style=''> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<p class='line'>Abbeville, bones of extinct mammalia at, <a href='#Page_154'>154</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Abbot, Dr. Charles C., <span class='it'>Primitive Industry of the Native Races</span>, quoted, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a>, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a>;</p>
-<p class='line'>&ensp;&ensp;discoveries at Trenton, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a>, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a>, <a href='#Page_162'>162</a>, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a>, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a>, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a>, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Abercrombie, Dr., <a href='#Page_374'>374</a>, <a href='#Page_376'>376</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Adam, M. Lucien, papers by, <a href='#Page_19'>19</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Africa, circumnavigation of, in 611 <span class='sc'>b.c.</span>, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a></p>
-<p class='line'>African hybrid, the, <a href='#Page_311'>311</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Agassiz, Professor, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a>, <a href='#Page_375'>375</a>, <a href='#Page_376'>376</a>, <a href='#Page_385'>385</a>, <a href='#Page_390'>390</a>, <a href='#Page_396'>396</a>, <a href='#Page_399'>399</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Akkad, language of the Sumerian class, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Alaska, peopled by Eskimo, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Aleutian Island, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Algonkins, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a>, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a>, <a href='#Page_206'>206</a>, <a href='#Page_207'>207</a>, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a>, <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a>, <a href='#Page_241'>241</a>, <a href='#Page_243'>243</a>, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>, <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>, <a href='#Page_265'>265</a>, <a href='#Page_268'>268</a>, <a href='#Page_270'>270</a>, <a href='#Page_274'>274</a>, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>, <a href='#Page_276'>276</a>, <a href='#Page_280'>280</a>, <a href='#Page_281'>281</a>, <a href='#Page_282'>282</a>, <a href='#Page_300'>300</a>, <a href='#Page_304'>304</a>, <a href='#Page_318'>318</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Alleghans, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a>, <a href='#Page_172'>172</a>, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Alligéwi, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a>, <a href='#Page_172'>172</a>, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a>, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a>, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>, <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>, <a href='#Page_287'>287</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Alphabet, Indian, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Alton, find of flint implements, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Andaman Islander, <a href='#Page_348'>348</a>, <a href='#Page_387'>387</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Andastes, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Andastogues, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Anderdon, Indian reserve, <a href='#Page_280'>280</a>, <a href='#Page_284'>284</a>, <a href='#Page_295'>295</a>, <a href='#Page_306'>306</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Anne, Queen, gift to the Mohawks, <a href='#Page_314'>314</a></p>
-<p class='line'><span class='it'>Antiquitates Americanæ</span>, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a>, <a href='#Page_57'>57</a>, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Apaches, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>, <a href='#Page_229'>229</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Arapahoes, <a href='#Page_235'>235</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Arifrode’s Icelandic Saga, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Arnold, Dr., <a href='#Page_137'>137</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Arrowhead-makers, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Artist, the Indian, <a href='#Page_193'>193</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Ashbrandsson, Biorn, <a href='#Page_37'>37</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Assiniboins, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a>, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Athabaska river, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Athabascan, language of, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Atkinson, Henry George, <a href='#Page_353'>353</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Atlantis, legend of, <a href='#Page_1'>1</a>;</p>
-<p class='line'>&ensp;&ensp;supposed geographical position, <a href='#Page_2'>2</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Attiwendaronks, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>, <a href='#Page_220'>220</a>, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>, <a href='#Page_277'>277</a>, <a href='#Page_278'>278</a>, <a href='#Page_282'>282</a>, <a href='#Page_294'>294</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Aughey, Professor, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Avalldamon, Skræling chief, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Aymaras, <a href='#Page_387'>387</a>, <a href='#Page_389'>389</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Aztecs, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a>, <a href='#Page_238'>238</a>, <a href='#Page_268'>268</a>, <a href='#Page_287'>287</a>, <a href='#Page_387'>387</a></p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>Babeens, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a>, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>, <a href='#Page_207'>207</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Bacon, quoted, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Bancroft’s <span class='it'>Native Races of the Pacific States</span>, quoted, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Barlow, Dr. H. C., <a href='#Page_369'>369</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Basket-work, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Bastian, <a href='#Page_343'>343</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Bateman, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Batoche, <a href='#Page_334'>334</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Bauchman’s Beach, arrow-makers of, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Bay of Quinté, <a href='#Page_314'>314</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Bearfoot, Rev. Isaac, <a href='#Page_302'>302</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Bear Skin, a Haidah chief, and Judge Pemberton, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Beatty, Mr., <a href='#Page_326'>326</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Beechy, Captain, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Belgium caves, <a href='#Page_357'>357</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Bell, Dr. Robert, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a>, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Bentham, Jeremy, <a href='#Page_352'>352</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Berkeley landed at Rhode Island in 1728, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Bertram, the Cherokees described by, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Bible, Indian, translation of, <a href='#Page_298'>298</a>, <a href='#Page_299'>299</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Blackfeet, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a>, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>, <a href='#Page_178'>178</a>, <a href='#Page_206'>206</a>, <a href='#Page_226'>226</a>, <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>, <a href='#Page_329'>329</a>, <a href='#Page_333'>333</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Blankets, drawings on Haidah, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Boas, Dr. Franz, <a href='#Page_393'>393</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Bone implements, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Borlase, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Boucher de Perthes, M., <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a>, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a>, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Boyd, Dr., <a href='#Page_367'>367</a>, <a href='#Page_377'>377</a>, <a href='#Page_380'>380</a>, <a href='#Page_381'>381</a>, <a href='#Page_382'>382</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Boyle, Robert, <a href='#Page_289'>289</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Brain, the weight in proportion to the body, <a href='#Page_341'>341</a></p>
-<p class='line'><span class='pageno' title='404' id='Page_404'></span></p>
-<p class='line'>Brain, the average weight of, <a href='#Page_353'>353</a>, <a href='#Page_360'>360</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Brant, a native chief, <a href='#Page_321'>321</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Brasseur de Bourbourg, Abbé, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Brazil, discovery of, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a>;</p>
-<p class='line'>&ensp;&ensp;caves, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Brewster, Sir David, <a href='#Page_182'>182</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Brinton, Dr., <a href='#Page_14'>14</a>, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>, <a href='#Page_241'>241</a>, <a href='#Page_243'>243</a></p>
-<p class='line'>British Association at Montreal, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a></p>
-<p class='line'>British Columbia, tribes of, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a>, <a href='#Page_324'>324</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Brown, George, <a href='#Page_376'>376</a></p>
-<p class='line'>—— J. Allan, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Brownell’s <span class='it'>Indian Races</span>, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Broca, Professor, <a href='#Page_354'>354</a>, <a href='#Page_357'>357</a>, <a href='#Page_358'>358</a>, <a href='#Page_373'>373</a>, <a href='#Page_376'>376</a>, <a href='#Page_377'>377</a>, <a href='#Page_381'>381</a>, <a href='#Page_402'>402</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Bronze, sword, leaf-shaped, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a>;</p>
-<p class='line'>&ensp;&ensp;workers in, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Bruce, King Robert the, <a href='#Page_354'>354</a>, <a href='#Page_369'>369</a>, <a href='#Page_374'>374</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Buckland’s, Dean, <span class='it'>Reliquiæ Diluvianæ</span>, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Buffalo, <a href='#Page_178'>178</a>, <a href='#Page_325'>325</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Buffalo robe, pictured, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a>, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Bulmer, J. Y., <a href='#Page_55'>55</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Bünger, Professor, <a href='#Page_372'>372</a>, <a href='#Page_374'>374</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Burns’s head, <a href='#Page_369'>369</a>, <a href='#Page_374'>374</a>, <a href='#Page_379'>379</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Busk, Professor, <a href='#Page_390'>390</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Buslyde, Hierome, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Byron, <a href='#Page_355'>355</a>, <a href='#Page_375'>375</a>, <a href='#Page_376'>376</a></p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>Cabral, Pedro Alvares de, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a>, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Caliban, references to, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a>, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Calori, Professor C. L., <a href='#Page_342'>342</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Campbell, Lord Chancellor, <a href='#Page_376'>376</a>, <a href='#Page_385'>385</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Canarses of Long Island, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Caniengas, or Flint People, <a href='#Page_264'>264</a>, <a href='#Page_285'>285</a>, <a href='#Page_294'>294</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Cape Breton Island, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a>, <a href='#Page_54'>54</a>, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Cape Cod, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Carantouans, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Caribbees, shell-workers of the, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Caribs, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Carpenter, Dr., <a href='#Page_336'>336</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Carr, Lucien, <a href='#Page_393'>393</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Cartier, Jacques, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a>, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a>, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>, <a href='#Page_262'>262</a>, <a href='#Page_268'>268</a>, <a href='#Page_274'>274</a>, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>, <a href='#Page_277'>277</a>, <a href='#Page_280'>280</a>, <a href='#Page_281'>281</a>, <a href='#Page_282'>282</a>, <a href='#Page_295'>295</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Carved lodge-poles, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>, <a href='#Page_212'>212</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Cassiterides, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Catawbas, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a>, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a>, <a href='#Page_274'>274</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Catlin, Mr., artist, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Caughnawaga, <a href='#Page_306'>306</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Cave-men, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a>, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a>, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Cayugas, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>, <a href='#Page_278'>278</a>, <a href='#Page_289'>289</a>, <a href='#Page_294'>294</a>, <a href='#Page_297'>297</a>, <a href='#Page_305'>305</a>, <a href='#Page_318'>318</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Centennial Exposition of Philadelphia in 1876, <a href='#Page_166'>166</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Chalmers, Dr., <a href='#Page_376'>376</a>, <a href='#Page_378'>378</a>, <a href='#Page_385'>385</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Champlain, <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>, <a href='#Page_268'>268</a>, <a href='#Page_274'>274</a>, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>, <a href='#Page_276'>276</a>, <a href='#Page_277'>277</a>, <a href='#Page_281'>281</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Charlevoix, Père, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>, <a href='#Page_277'>277</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Charles River, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Charlton, B. E., <a href='#Page_220'>220</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Chattahoochee River, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Chatta-Muskogees, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a>, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Cherohakahs, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>, <a href='#Page_296'>296</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Cherokees, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a>, <a href='#Page_172'>172</a>, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a>, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>, <a href='#Page_274'>274</a>, <a href='#Page_287'>287</a>, <a href='#Page_298'>298</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Chesapeake Bay, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Cheyennes, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>, <a href='#Page_229'>229</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Chickasaws, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a>, <a href='#Page_286'>286</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Chichenitza sculptured tablets, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Chimpseyans, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>, <a href='#Page_207'>207</a>, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a></p>
-<p class='line'>China, money of, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Chincha, Indians of, <a href='#Page_391'>391</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Chinooks, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a>, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a>, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Chippeways, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a>, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>, <a href='#Page_318'>318</a>, <a href='#Page_329'>329</a>, <a href='#Page_351'>351</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Choctaws, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a>, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a>, <a href='#Page_286'>286</a>, <a href='#Page_287'>287</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Chuakouet, grape vine at, in 1606, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Cisneros, Dr., <a href='#Page_362'>362</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Cissbury, flint pits at, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Clalam Indians, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Clarke, Hyde, <span class='it'>Examination of the Legend</span>, quoted, <a href='#Page_2'>2</a>;</p>
-<p class='line'>&ensp;&ensp;<span class='it'>Khita and Khita-Peruvian Epoch</span>, quoted, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Clarke, Lockhart, <a href='#Page_340'>340</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Clatsops, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>, <a href='#Page_226'>226</a>, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Claussen, M., <a href='#Page_148'>148</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Cliff dwellings, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Cloyne, Bishop of, <a href='#Page_77'>77</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Colbert, shipment of emigrants under direction of, <a href='#Page_316'>316</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Coles, the, <a href='#Page_348'>348</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Columbus, <a href='#Page_1'>1</a>, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>, <a href='#Page_37'>37</a>, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a>, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a>, <a href='#Page_77'>77</a>, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>, <a href='#Page_325'>325</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Columns, ornamental, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Comanches, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Combe, George, <a href='#Page_369'>369</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Comparative cerebral capacity of races, <a href='#Page_400'>400</a>, <a href='#Page_401'>401</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Compass, the, of the Norse rovers, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Conestogas, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Cook, Captain, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Copan, statue at, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Copenhagen, rune-stones at, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Copper of Lake Superior, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a>, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a>, <a href='#Page_170'>170</a>, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a>, <a href='#Page_262'>262</a>, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a>;</p>
-<p class='line'>&ensp;&ensp;of Mexico, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a>, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a></p>
-<p class='line'>—— implements, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a>, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a>, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a>, <a href='#Page_182'>182</a>, <a href='#Page_212'>212</a>, <a href='#Page_262'>262</a></p>
-<p class='line'>—— ornaments, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a>, <a href='#Page_212'>212</a></p>
-<p class='line'>—— smelting, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Coral islands of the Pacific, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Correa, Pedro, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Corvo, coins found at, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Cowlitz, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>, <a href='#Page_226'>226</a>, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Crania of Pacific coast tribes, <a href='#Page_394'>394</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Creeks, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a>, <a href='#Page_274'>274</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Crees, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>, <a href='#Page_178'>178</a>, <a href='#Page_206'>206</a>, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a>, <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>, <a href='#Page_329'>329</a>, <a href='#Page_333'>333</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Cresson, H. T., <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a>, <a href='#Page_162'>162</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Cristineaux, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>, <a href='#Page_323'>323</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Cromagnon cavern, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a>, <a href='#Page_357'>357</a>, <a href='#Page_358'>358</a>, <a href='#Page_361'>361</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Cross-ness, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Cumshewa, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Cunningham’s Island, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>, <a href='#Page_278'>278</a></p>
-<p class='line'><span class='pageno' title='405' id='Page_405'></span></p>
-<p class='line'>Curtius, Professor, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Cushing, Mr., <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>, <a href='#Page_300'>300</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Cusick, David, <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>, <a href='#Page_277'>277</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Cuvier, <a href='#Page_373'>373</a>, <a href='#Page_374'>374</a>, <a href='#Page_375'>375</a>, <a href='#Page_376'>376</a>, <a href='#Page_377'>377</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Cuoq, M., <a href='#Page_297'>297</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Cuzco, <a href='#Page_389'>389</a></p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>Dakota, <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Dakotan, language of, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>, <a href='#Page_296'>296</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Dall, W. H., <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a>, <a href='#Page_205'>205</a>, <a href='#Page_323'>323</a></p>
-<p class='line'>D’Allyon, Father, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Dalton, Dr., <a href='#Page_352'>352</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Dante, <a href='#Page_368'>368</a>, <a href='#Page_369'>369</a>, <a href='#Page_374'>374</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Darwin, <a href='#Page_339'>339</a>, <a href='#Page_372'>372</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Davis, Dr. J. Barnard, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>, <a href='#Page_342'>342</a>, <a href='#Page_344'>344</a>, <a href='#Page_345'>345</a>, <a href='#Page_347'>347</a>, <a href='#Page_348'>348</a>, <a href='#Page_349'>349</a>, <a href='#Page_355'>355</a>, <a href='#Page_362'>362</a>, <a href='#Page_365'>365</a>, <a href='#Page_366'>366</a>, <a href='#Page_370'>370</a>, <a href='#Page_373'>373</a>, <a href='#Page_383'>383</a>, <a href='#Page_390'>390</a>, <a href='#Page_391'>391</a>, <a href='#Page_397'>397</a>, <a href='#Page_398'>398</a>, <a href='#Page_400'>400</a>, <a href='#Page_402'>402</a></p>
-<p class='line'>—— Straits, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Dawkins, Professor Boyd, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a>, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>, <a href='#Page_358'>358</a>, <a href='#Page_359'>359</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Dawson, Dr. G. M., <a href='#Page_114'>114</a>, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a>, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a></p>
-<p class='line'>—— S. J., <a href='#Page_330'>330</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Dawson’s, Sir W., <span class='it'>Fossil Men</span>, <a href='#Page_219'>219</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Delaware gravel beds, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a>, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Delawares, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a>, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a>, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a></p>
-<p class='line'>De Leon, Pedro de Cieza, <a href='#Page_391'>391</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Denham, Admiral H. M., <a href='#Page_347'>347</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Designs on pottery, Indian, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a>, <a href='#Page_220'>220</a>;</p>
-<p class='line'>&ensp;&ensp;by cave-men, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a></p>
-<p class='line'>De Quatrefages, Professor, <a href='#Page_206'>206</a>, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a>, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a></p>
-<p class='line'>De Quincey, <a href='#Page_378'>378</a></p>
-<p class='line'><span class='it'>Descriptio insularum aquilonis</span>, <a href='#Page_52'>52</a></p>
-<p class='line'>De Soto, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Dighton Rock, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a>, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>, <a href='#Page_54'>54</a>, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>, <a href='#Page_206'>206</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Dirichlet, the mathematician, <a href='#Page_376'>376</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Dobson, G. E., 3<a href='#Page_48'>48</a>, <a href='#Page_349'>349</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Donnelly’s <span class='it'>Atlantis</span>, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Dooyentate, Peter, <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>, <a href='#Page_274'>274</a>, <a href='#Page_276'>276</a>, <a href='#Page_295'>295</a></p>
-<p class='line'>D’Orbigny, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>, <a href='#Page_398'>398</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Dordogne cave, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a>;</p>
-<p class='line'>&ensp;&ensp;valley, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Dorion, L, A., <a href='#Page_296'>296</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Dowler, Dr., <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>, <a href='#Page_154'>154</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Drawings of Animals, Indian, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Dupuytren, Surgeon, <a href='#Page_376'>376</a>, <a href='#Page_386'>386</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Dyes employed by Indians, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a>-<a href='#Page_243'>243</a></p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>Ealing, palæolithic workshop at, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Earthworks, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Edda, Red Indian, <a href='#Page_178'>178</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Egilsson, Sveinbiorn, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Eider ducks, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Eliot, Indian Bible of, <a href='#Page_298'>298</a></p>
-<p class='line'>El Moro rock, <a href='#Page_231'>231</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Emigrants to New York, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a>;</p>
-<p class='line'>&ensp;&ensp;to Canada, <a href='#Page_316'>316</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Engis cave, <a href='#Page_359'>359</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Eric Saga, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Eric the Red, <a href='#Page_41'>41</a>, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>, <a href='#Page_52'>52</a>, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a>, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Eries, <a href='#Page_172'>172</a>, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>, <a href='#Page_277'>277</a>, <a href='#Page_278'>278</a>, <a href='#Page_294'>294</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Eriksson, Leif, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a>, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a>, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a>, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a>, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a>, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Eriksson, Thorwald, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a>, <a href='#Page_54'>54</a>, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Erlendsson Hauk, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Eskimo: a typical Mongol, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a>, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>;</p>
-<p class='line'>&ensp;&ensp;in Greenland, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a>, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>;</p>
-<p class='line'>&ensp;&ensp;migrations of, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>;</p>
-<p class='line'>&ensp;&ensp;in Alaska, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>;</p>
-<p class='line'>&ensp;&ensp;implements of, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>;</p>
-<p class='line'>&ensp;&ensp;pedigree, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a>;</p>
-<p class='line'>&ensp;&ensp;half-breed in Labrador, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a>, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>;</p>
-<p class='line'>&ensp;&ensp;implements of, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a>, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a>;</p>
-<p class='line'>&ensp;&ensp;and cave-men, <a href='#Page_203'>203</a>;</p>
-<p class='line'>&ensp;&ensp;designs by, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a>, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a>, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>, <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>, <a href='#Page_272'>272</a>;</p>
-<p class='line'>&ensp;&ensp;cranium of, <a href='#Page_274'>274</a>;</p>
-<p class='line'>&ensp;&ensp;powers of endurance, <a href='#Page_323'>323</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Evans, Sir John, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a>, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Ewaipanoma, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Eyrbyggja Saga, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a></p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>Farish, Dr. J. G., <a href='#Page_54'>54</a>, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Farms, allocation of, <a href='#Page_328'>328</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Fijians, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Figuier, M., <a href='#Page_193'>193</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Five Nations, the, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>, <a href='#Page_286'>286</a>, <a href='#Page_289'>289</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Flathead Indians, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Flint as a fire-producer, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Flint Ridge, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a>, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Flint River, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Flint-workers, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Flores, island, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Flower, Professor, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a>, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Forbes, Edward, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Fort M’Leod, Alberta, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Foscolo, Ugo, <a href='#Page_370'>370</a>, <a href='#Page_374'>374</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Foster, Dr. J. W., <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a>, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Fox, Colonel A. Lane, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Franklin, <a href='#Page_379'>379</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Fredericksburg, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a></p>
-<p class='line'>French half-breeds, <a href='#Page_330'>330</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Frere John, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a>, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Freydisa, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a>, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Fuchs, pathologist, <a href='#Page_376'>376</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Fuegians of Tierra del Fuego, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Furdustrandir, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a>, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a></p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>Gallatin, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a>, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>, <a href='#Page_286'>286</a>, <a href='#Page_295'>295</a>, <a href='#Page_296'>296</a>, <a href='#Page_298'>298</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Gama, Vasco da, voyage of, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Gamlison Thorhall, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Ganton, flint flakes at, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Garcilasso de la Vega, <a href='#Page_391'>391</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Garnett, Rev. Richard, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Garonne, valleys of, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Garrison, W. Lloyd, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Gauss, the mathematician, <a href='#Page_370'>370</a>, <a href='#Page_376'>376</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Geikie, Professor, <a href='#Page_154'>154</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Gellisson Thorkell, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Gesture-language, <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>, <a href='#Page_233'>233</a>, <a href='#Page_235'>235</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Gibbs, General Alfred, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Gibbs, George, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Gilbert, Sir Humphrey, <a href='#Page_50'>50</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Giles, Peter, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Gilmour, Rev. J., <a href='#Page_330'>330</a></p>
-<p class='line'><span class='pageno' title='406' id='Page_406'></span></p>
-<p class='line'>Gold, first metal wrought, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Goheen, Dr., <a href='#Page_362'>362</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Gold ornaments, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>, <a href='#Page_212'>212</a>, <a href='#Page_223'>223</a>, <a href='#Page_388'>388</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Gomara, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Goodsir, Professor, <a href='#Page_343'>343</a>, <a href='#Page_375'>375</a>, <a href='#Page_398'>398</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Gosse, Dr. L. A., <a href='#Page_188'>188</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Grænlendingathàttr, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Grand river reserves, <a href='#Page_306'>306</a>, <a href='#Page_314'>314</a>, <a href='#Page_316'>316</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Grapes, wild, of North America, <a href='#Page_48'>48</a>, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a>, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a>, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Grave Creek Stone, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Grave mounds, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Grave-posts, pictured, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Graves, flint implements in, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a>, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Greenland, <a href='#Page_41'>41</a>, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a>, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a>, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a>, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Greenwell, Rev. Canon, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a>, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a>, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a></p>
-<p class='line'><span class='it'>Grenlands Historiske Mindesmærker</span>, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Grimolfson Bjarne, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Grinnel Leads, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Grote, <a href='#Page_376'>376</a>, <a href='#Page_386'>386</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Grupson, Erik, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Gudleif, a Norse leader, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Gudrida, Karlsefne’s wife, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Guysborough, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Gwyneth, Owen, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a></p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>Haidahs, of Queen Charlotte Islands, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a>, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a>, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a>, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a>, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a>, <a href='#Page_207'>207</a>, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a>, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a>, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a>, <a href='#Page_393'>393</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Hake, the Scot, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a>, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a>, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Haki, a Scot, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a>, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Hakluyt, <a href='#Page_50'>50</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Hale, Horatio, on currency in China, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a>;</p>
-<p class='line'>&ensp;&ensp;grammar of the Hurons, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a>;</p>
-<p class='line'>&ensp;&ensp;<span class='it'>Indian Migrations</span>, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>, <a href='#Page_172'>172</a>, <a href='#Page_235'>235</a>;</p>
-<p class='line'>&ensp;&ensp;<span class='it'>Iroquois Rites</span>, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a>, <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>, <a href='#Page_263'>263</a>, <a href='#Page_264'>264</a>, <a href='#Page_268'>268</a>, <a href='#Page_280'>280</a>, <a href='#Page_287'>287</a>, <a href='#Page_293'>293</a>, <a href='#Page_296'>296</a>, <a href='#Page_303'>303</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Half-breeds, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a>;</p>
-<p class='line'>&ensp;&ensp;powers of endurance, <a href='#Page_323'>323</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Halliburton, R. G., <a href='#Page_69'>69</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Hamilton, Sir. W., <a href='#Page_380'>380</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Hamlet, quoted, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Hanno, voyage of, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Harkussen, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a>, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Harriot, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Harrison, Chief Justice, <a href='#Page_376'>376</a></p>
-<p class='line'><span class='it'>Hauks Vók</span>, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Hausmann, <a href='#Page_376'>376</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Hawkins, Sir John, <a href='#Page_50'>50</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Heinse, J. J. W., <a href='#Page_371'>371</a>, <a href='#Page_374'>374</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Helluland, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>, <a href='#Page_52'>52</a>, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a>, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a>, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Henry the Navigator, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a></p>
-<p class='line'>—— a traveller of last century, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>, <a href='#Page_323'>323</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Herjulfson, Bjarni, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a>, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Hermann, <a href='#Page_376'>376</a>, <a href='#Page_386'>386</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Hiawatha, quoted, <a href='#Page_265'>265</a>, <a href='#Page_268'>268</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Hieroglyphics, Indian, <a href='#Page_230'>230</a>, <a href='#Page_231'>231</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Hind, Professor, <a href='#Page_330'>330</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Hindoos, <a href='#Page_397'>397</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Hittite capital, Ketesh, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Hoare, Sir R. C., <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Hochelaga, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a>, <a href='#Page_270'>270</a>, <a href='#Page_272'>272</a>, <a href='#Page_274'>274</a>, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>, <a href='#Page_276'>276</a>, <a href='#Page_278'>278</a>, <a href='#Page_280'>280</a>, <a href='#Page_281'>281</a>, <a href='#Page_282'>282</a>, <a href='#Page_283'>283</a>, <a href='#Page_284'>284</a>, <a href='#Page_293'>293</a>, <a href='#Page_295'>295</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Hodges, Robert, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Hoffman, Dr. J. W., <a href='#Page_195'>195</a>, <a href='#Page_205'>205</a>, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>, <a href='#Page_233'>233</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Holland, Sir Henry, <a href='#Page_371'>371</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Holy Island, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Hóp, Mount Hope Bay, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a>, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Horetskey, Charles, <a href='#Page_323'>323</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Horn, engraving on, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a>, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Horsford, Professor E. N., <a href='#Page_49'>49</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Hoxme, flint implements found at, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Huidœrk inscription, <a href='#Page_57'>57</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Humboldt, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a>, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a>, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Hunter, Archdeacon, <a href='#Page_330'>330</a>, <a href='#Page_331'>331</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Hurons, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a>, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a>, <a href='#Page_280'>280</a>, <a href='#Page_318'>318</a>, <a href='#Page_319'>319</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Huron-Iroquois, language of, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a>, <a href='#Page_172'>172</a>, <a href='#Page_246'>246</a> <span class='it'>et seq.</span></p>
-<p class='line'>Huschke, <a href='#Page_341'>341</a>, <a href='#Page_364'>364</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Hutchinson, T. J., <a href='#Page_390'>390</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Huxley, Professor, quoted, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>, <a href='#Page_308'>308</a>, <a href='#Page_340'>340</a>, <a href='#Page_351'>351</a>, <a href='#Page_352'>352</a>, <a href='#Page_359'>359</a>, <a href='#Page_374'>374</a></p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>Iceland, <a href='#Page_41'>41</a>, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a>, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Icelandic Sagas, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a>, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Idols of the Haidah, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Igalikko runic monuments, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Ilium, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Illinois, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Incas, <a href='#Page_389'>389</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Indians of California, money of, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Indian lodge, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Innuit designs, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Iroquois, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a>, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a>, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>, <a href='#Page_172'>172</a>, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a>, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a>, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>, <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a>, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>, <a href='#Page_245'>245</a>, <a href='#Page_316'>316</a>, <a href='#Page_318'>318</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Isle de Bacchus, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a></p>
-<p class='line'>—— of Orleans, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a></p>
-<p class='line'>—— Royale, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Ivory, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a>, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a>, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a></p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>Jeffrey, Lord, <a href='#Page_378'>378</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Jemez Indians, <a href='#Page_232'>232</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Jones, Colonel C. C., <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Jossakeeds, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Jowett’s, Professor, <span class='it'>Dialogues of Plato</span>, quoted, <a href='#Page_1'>1</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Jugs, double-necked, <a href='#Page_223'>223</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Julian calendar, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a></p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>Kablunet, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Kalapurgas, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Kane, Paul, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a>, <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>, <a href='#Page_324'>324</a></p>
-<p class='line'>—— Dr., <a href='#Page_144'>144</a>, <a href='#Page_323'>323</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Kanienga, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Karlsefne, Thorfinn, <a href='#Page_41'>41</a>, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a>, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a>, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a>, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a>, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Karlseven, <a href='#Page_54'>54</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Keel-ness, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a></p>
-<p class='line'><span class='pageno' title='407' id='Page_407'></span></p>
-<p class='line'>Keenan, Mr., <a href='#Page_119'>119</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Kent’s Hole, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Kentucky skulls, <a href='#Page_389'>389</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Kettle, stone, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Kewenaw peninsula, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a>, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Khita or Hittites, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Kialarnes, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Kiatégamut Indians, <a href='#Page_205'>205</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Kiawakaskaia, <a href='#Page_226'>226</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Kingiktorsoak runic monuments, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a>, <a href='#Page_57'>57</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Kingsborough, Lord, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Kioosta village on Graham Island, <a href='#Page_212'>212</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Kjalarnes, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Klaskane Indians, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Klikatat, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Kona, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Konegan, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Krossanes, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a></p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>Labrador (Helluland), <a href='#Page_62'>62</a></p>
-<p class='line'>La-crosse clubs, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Laennec, Dr., <a href='#Page_347'>347</a></p>
-<p class='line'>La Jeune Lorette, <a href='#Page_276'>276</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Lake-dwellings of Switzerland, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Lake Simcoe, <a href='#Page_283'>283</a></p>
-<p class='line'>La Madeleine cave, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Lamb, Charles, quoted, <a href='#Page_235'>235</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Lane, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Languages—Huron-Iroquois, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>, <a href='#Page_281'>281</a>;</p>
-<p class='line'>&ensp;&ensp;Indian, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>, <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>;</p>
-<p class='line'>&ensp;&ensp;Mohawk, <a href='#Page_291'>291</a>;</p>
-<p class='line'>&ensp;&ensp;significance of, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a>;</p>
-<p class='line'>&ensp;&ensp;of uncivilised races, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a></p>
-<p class='line'>La Salle, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a>, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Latham, Dr., <a href='#Page_182'>182</a>, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>, <a href='#Page_263'>263</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Laugerie Basse, cave at, <a href='#Page_206'>206</a>, <a href='#Page_359'>359</a></p>
-<p class='line'>League of the Hodenosauneega, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Leavenworth, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Left-hand drawings, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Leidy, Professor Joseph, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a>, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Le Moyne, Father, <a href='#Page_278'>278</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Lenape, <a href='#Page_172'>172</a>, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>, <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>, <a href='#Page_241'>241</a>, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Lenni-Lenape, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Les Eysies, cave of, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Lewis, Professor H. C., <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Lewis, Edmonia, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Lindsay, Sir David, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Lion from Marash, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Lion of Piræus, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Liston, Robert, <a href='#Page_369'>369</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Little Falls, Minnesota, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Locke’s <span class='it'>Journal</span>, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Lombrive cave, <a href='#Page_359'>359</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Longfellow, quoted, <a href='#Page_178'>178</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Long, Major J. H., <a href='#Page_123'>123</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Lorette, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>, <a href='#Page_283'>283</a>, <a href='#Page_295'>295</a>, <a href='#Page_319'>319</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Los Ojos Calientes, <a href='#Page_232'>232</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Lucae, Dr. J. C. Gustav, <a href='#Page_371'>371</a>, <a href='#Page_399'>399</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Lukins, Mr., <a href='#Page_123'>123</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Lund, Dr., <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Luschan, Dr. F. von, <a href='#Page_309'>309</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Lyell’s, Sir Charles, <span class='it'>Principles of Geology</span>, quoted, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>, <a href='#Page_154'>154</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Lynx or wild cat, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a></p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>Macaulay, Lord, <a href='#Page_378'>378</a></p>
-<p class='line'>M’Dowell, Dr., <a href='#Page_362'>362</a></p>
-<p class='line'>MacEnery, J., <a href='#Page_147'>147</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Mackenzie, Major Colin, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Macrocephali, <a href='#Page_363'>363</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Madoc, a Welsh prince, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Maeshowe, Orkney, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Magnusen, Finn, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Malay race, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Malformation, artificial, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Mammoth, bones of, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a>;</p>
-<p class='line'>&ensp;&ensp;carvings of, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a>, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Mandans, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Mangue language, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Manhattans, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Manitoba, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Maps, earliest, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a></p>
-<p class='line'>—— by Rafn, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a></p>
-<p class='line'>—— of Vinland, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Marchand’s voyage, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Markham, Mr., <a href='#Page_391'>391</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Markland, <a href='#Page_57'>57</a>, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a>, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Martin, Hugh, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Martineau, Harriet, <a href='#Page_352'>352</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Mascagni, <a href='#Page_362'>362</a>, <a href='#Page_385'>385</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Massat, cave of, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Massénat, M., <a href='#Page_215'>215</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Mayas, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>, <a href='#Page_25'>25</a>, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>, <a href='#Page_387'>387</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Meigs, Dr. J. Aitken, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>, <a href='#Page_395'>395</a>, <a href='#Page_396'>396</a>, <a href='#Page_402'>402</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Melanochroi or dark whites, <a href='#Page_308'>308</a></p>
-<p class='line'><span class='it'>Mémoires de la Société Royale des Antiquaires du Nord</span>, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Mentone, skeleton found at, <a href='#Page_359'>359</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Mercer, H. C., <a href='#Page_214'>214</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Metallurgy, American, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Metis, the, <a href='#Page_311'>311</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Mexican calendar, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a></p>
-<p class='line'>—— sculptured monuments, <a href='#Page_39'>39</a></p>
-<p class='line'>—— terra-cotta human masks, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Mexicans, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Mexico, ruins of, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Micmacs, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a>, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>, <a href='#Page_242'>242</a>, <a href='#Page_318'>318</a>, <a href='#Page_319'>319</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Middleton, General, <a href='#Page_334'>334</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Miller, Joaquin, <a href='#Page_325'>325</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Millicet Indians, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a>, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Milton’s <span class='it'>Paradise Lost</span>, <a href='#Page_50'>50</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Minsi, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Mississagas, <a href='#Page_318'>318</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Missouries, <a href='#Page_274'>274</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Moccasins, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Mohawks, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>, <a href='#Page_264'>264</a>, <a href='#Page_289'>289</a>, <a href='#Page_290'>290</a>, <a href='#Page_294'>294</a>, <a href='#Page_297'>297</a>, <a href='#Page_299'>299</a>, <a href='#Page_302'>302</a>, <a href='#Page_305'>305</a>, <a href='#Page_314'>314</a>, <a href='#Page_318'>318</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Money, Origin of Primitive, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Montgomery’s <span class='it'>Greenland</span> epic, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a></p>
-<p class='line'>More, Sir Thomas, <a href='#Page_75'>75</a>, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>, <a href='#Page_77'>77</a></p>
-<p class='line'><span class='pageno' title='408' id='Page_408'></span></p>
-<p class='line'>Morgan, Hon. L. H., <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>, <a href='#Page_265'>265</a>, <a href='#Page_285'>285</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Moro rock, <a href='#Page_230'>230</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Morris, Hon. Alexander, <a href='#Page_326'>326</a>, <a href='#Page_327'>327</a></p>
-<p class='line'>—— William, quoted, <a href='#Page_37'>37</a>, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Morton, Dr., <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>, <a href='#Page_337'>337</a>, <a href='#Page_344'>344</a>, <a href='#Page_345'>345</a>, <a href='#Page_348'>348</a>, <a href='#Page_362'>362</a>, <a href='#Page_365'>365</a>, <a href='#Page_366'>366</a>, <a href='#Page_371'>371</a>, <a href='#Page_387'>387</a>, <a href='#Page_392'>392</a>, <a href='#Page_395'>395</a>, <a href='#Page_396'>396</a>, <a href='#Page_397'>397</a>, <a href='#Page_400'>400</a>, <a href='#Page_402'>402</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Mound builders, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a>, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a>, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a>, <a href='#Page_108'>108</a>, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a>, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a>, <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>, <a href='#Page_270'>270</a>, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Mount Hope Bay, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Müller, Professor Max, <a href='#Page_19'>19</a>, <a href='#Page_266'>266</a>, <a href='#Page_290'>290</a>, <a href='#Page_291'>291</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Munch, Professor, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Musical instruments in the form of animals, <a href='#Page_222'>222</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Muskogees, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a>, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a>, <a href='#Page_286'>286</a></p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>Naaman’s Creek, rock shelter, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Nanticokes, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Nantucket, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Napoleon, <a href='#Page_376'>376</a>, <a href='#Page_377'>377</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Narraganset Bible, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Nasquallie, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Natchez, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a>, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a>, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Naticokes, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Navajo Expedition, <a href='#Page_230'>230</a>, <a href='#Page_231'>231</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Neanderthal skull, <a href='#Page_354'>354</a>, <a href='#Page_359'>359</a>, <a href='#Page_373'>373</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Neepigon River, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>, <a href='#Page_236'>236</a>, <a href='#Page_351'>351</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Negroes, brain-weights of, <a href='#Page_362'>362</a>, <a href='#Page_363'>363</a>, <a href='#Page_385'>385</a>, <a href='#Page_395'>395</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Neolithians, <a href='#Page_309'>309</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Newark earthworks, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Newatees, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a></p>
-<p class='line'>New England, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Newfoundland, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a></p>
-<p class='line'>New Jersey, old implement-maker at, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a>, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a></p>
-<p class='line'>New Orleans, skeleton of, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Newport in Narragansett Bay, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a></p>
-<p class='line'>“Nina,” the, <a href='#Page_75'>75</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Nipissing, Lake, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Nisqually, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Nootkas, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a>, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a></p>
-<p class='line'>North Fork, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Norumbega, ancient city of, <a href='#Page_50'>50</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Nott, Dr. J. C., <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>, <a href='#Page_375'>375</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Nottawa saga, <a href='#Page_304'>304</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Nottoways, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>, <a href='#Page_296'>296</a>, <a href='#Page_305'>305</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Nova Scotia, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a>, <a href='#Page_54'>54</a>, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a>, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a></p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>Oar, with runic inscription, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Ohio Holy Stone, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Ohio Valley, earthworks of, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a>, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Ojibways, <a href='#Page_206'>206</a>, <a href='#Page_242'>242</a>, <a href='#Page_243'>243</a>, <a href='#Page_245'>245</a>, <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>, <a href='#Page_268'>268</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Oka, <a href='#Page_306'>306</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Olaf, the Saint, <a href='#Page_37'>37</a></p>
-<p class='line'>O’Meara, Rev. Dr., <a href='#Page_236'>236</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Oneidas, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>, <a href='#Page_264'>264</a>, <a href='#Page_285'>285</a>, <a href='#Page_286'>286</a>, <a href='#Page_289'>289</a>, <a href='#Page_294'>294</a>, <a href='#Page_297'>297</a>, <a href='#Page_305'>305</a>, <a href='#Page_318'>318</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Onondagas, chief, <a href='#Page_178'>178</a>, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a>, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>, <a href='#Page_264'>264</a>, <a href='#Page_278'>278</a>, <a href='#Page_286'>286</a>, <a href='#Page_289'>289</a>, <a href='#Page_294'>294</a>, <a href='#Page_305'>305</a>, <a href='#Page_318'>318</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Ontonagon, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Orang, brain of, <a href='#Page_340'>340</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Orinoco River, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Oronhyatekha, Dr., <a href='#Page_296'>296</a>, <a href='#Page_298'>298</a>, <a href='#Page_302'>302</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Osages, <a href='#Page_274'>274</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Otouacha, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Ottawas, <a href='#Page_318'>318</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Ottoes, <a href='#Page_274'>274</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Owen, Professor, <a href='#Page_339'>339</a>, <a href='#Page_346'>346</a>, <a href='#Page_348'>348</a></p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>Pabahmesad, the old Chippewa, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Pacasset River, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a>, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Paisley Block, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Palenque, sculptured tablets, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Parker, Rev. Samuel, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Parkman, Francis, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>, <a href='#Page_262'>262</a>, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>, <a href='#Page_278'>278</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Patagonians of Tierra del Fuego, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Paton, Sir Noel, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Patterson, George, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Pattison, Rev. Mark, <span class='it'>note</span> <a href='#Page_228'>228</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Pavloff, Ivan, <a href='#Page_324'>324</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Peacock, Dr., <a href='#Page_343'>343</a>, <a href='#Page_362'>362</a>, <a href='#Page_367'>367</a>, <a href='#Page_377'>377</a>, <a href='#Page_381'>381</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Peat mosses of Denmark and Ireland, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Pequot, <a href='#Page_320'>320</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Perkins, Mr., <a href='#Page_179'>179</a>, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Peruvian, natives, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>;</p>
-<p class='line'>&ensp;&ensp;pottery, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a>;</p>
-<p class='line'>&ensp;&ensp;skulls, <a href='#Page_387'>387</a>, <a href='#Page_388'>388</a>;</p>
-<p class='line'>&ensp;&ensp;crania, <a href='#Page_395'>395</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Petun Indians, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Philadelphia gravel beds, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Phillips, H., jun., <a href='#Page_57'>57</a>, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a>, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Phœnician, Cadmus, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Picard, Paul, <a href='#Page_295'>295</a>, <a href='#Page_296'>296</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Pickering, Dr. Charles, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a>, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a>, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Pictou harbour, <a href='#Page_54'>54</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Picture-writing, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>, <a href='#Page_233'>233</a>, <a href='#Page_238'>238</a>, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a>, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Pierce, William, <a href='#Page_320'>320</a></p>
-<p class='line'>“Pinta,” the, <a href='#Page_75'>75</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Piræus, lion of, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Plato’s <span class='it'>Critias</span>, quoted, <a href='#Page_1'>1</a>, <a href='#Page_2'>2</a>, <a href='#Page_75'>75</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Point Oken, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Population, and number of villages, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>;</p>
-<p class='line'>&ensp;&ensp;coloured, <a href='#Page_311'>311</a>, <a href='#Page_318'>318</a>, <a href='#Page_324'>324</a>, <a href='#Page_329'>329</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Porpoise, brain of, <a href='#Page_341'>341</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Port Dover, implements at, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Potomac, rock at the, <a href='#Page_57'>57</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Pottawattomies, <a href='#Page_318'>318</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Pottery, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a>, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a>, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a>, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a>, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a>, <a href='#Page_218'>218</a>, <a href='#Page_219'>219</a>, <a href='#Page_220'>220</a>, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a>, <a href='#Page_262'>262</a>, <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>, <a href='#Page_271'>271</a>, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>, <a href='#Page_282'>282</a>, <a href='#Page_388'>388</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Powell, York, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Powhattan, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Pre-Aryan Man, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a> <span class='it'>et seq.</span></p>
-<p class='line'>Pre-Columbian America, Copenhagen volume on, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a>, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>;</p>
-<p class='line'>&ensp;&ensp;intercourse between Europe and America, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Prescott, <a href='#Page_285'>285</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Prestwich, Professor, <a href='#Page_162'>162</a></p>
-<p class='line'><span class='pageno' title='409' id='Page_409'></span></p>
-<p class='line'>Pritchard, Dr., <a href='#Page_16'>16</a></p>
-<p class='line'><span class='it'>Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society</span>, <a href='#Page_57'>57</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Pruner-Bey, Dr., <a href='#Page_356'>356</a>, <a href='#Page_402'>402</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Pueblo Indians, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>, <a href='#Page_231'>231</a>, <a href='#Page_236'>236</a>, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a>, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>, <a href='#Page_299'>299</a></p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>Quebec and the Huron Indians, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Quichuas, <a href='#Page_387'>387</a>, <a href='#Page_389'>389</a>;</p>
-<p class='line'>&ensp;&ensp;skulls, <a href='#Page_398'>398</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Quiriqua sculptured tablets, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a></p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>Race-types, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Rae, Dr., <a href='#Page_144'>144</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Rafn, Professor Christian, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a>, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a>, <a href='#Page_52'>52</a>, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Ragnvald, Earl, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Rainy River, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Raleigh, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a>, <a href='#Page_77'>77</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Rand, Rev. Silas T., <a href='#Page_242'>242</a>, <a href='#Page_319'>319</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Rau, Charles, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a>, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Red Lake Indians, <a href='#Page_327'>327</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Red River, <a href='#Page_328'>328</a>, <a href='#Page_330'>330</a>, <a href='#Page_334'>334</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Reeve of Anderdon, <a href='#Page_321'>321</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Reeves’ <span class='it'>The Finding of Wineland the Good</span>, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a>, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a>, <a href='#Page_52'>52</a>, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Reid, Dr., <a href='#Page_385'>385</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Reindeer’s horn, engraving on, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Rhode Island, <a href='#Page_52'>52</a>, <a href='#Page_54'>54</a>, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a>, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a>, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Riel, Louis, <a href='#Page_334'>334</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Rink, Dr. Henry, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Rites, revolting, <a href='#Page_282'>282</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Riverview Cemetery, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Rocky Dell Creek, <a href='#Page_231'>231</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Rolleston, Dr., <a href='#Page_353'>353</a>, <a href='#Page_361'>361</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Rosehill, Lord, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Royal Society of Canada, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Rune-stones, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Runic inscriptions, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Russians in Alaska, <a href='#Page_323'>323</a></p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>Sa∫∫atannen, Rev. P. W., <a href='#Page_275'>275</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Sachem, chief, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Saco, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Saga of Barthar Snæfellsass, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Saga of Eric the Red, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Saga of Halfdan Eysteinsson, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Sagard, <a href='#Page_296'>296</a></p>
-<p class='line'>St. Brandon, Island of, <a href='#Page_37'>37</a></p>
-<p class='line'>St. Charles river reserves, <a href='#Page_306'>306</a>, <a href='#Page_316'>316</a>, <a href='#Page_318'>318</a></p>
-<p class='line'>St. John, New Brunswick, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a></p>
-<p class='line'>St. Mansuy, <a href='#Page_354'>354</a></p>
-<p class='line'>St. Molio’s Cave on the Clyde, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a></p>
-<p class='line'>St. Olaf, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a></p>
-<p class='line'>St. Peter Indians, <a href='#Page_328'>328</a></p>
-<p class='line'>St. Regis, <a href='#Page_306'>306</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Saline River, <a href='#Page_108'>108</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Salmon River, <a href='#Page_54'>54</a>, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a></p>
-<p class='line'>San Esteban, convent of, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Sankey, Dr., <a href='#Page_343'>343</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Saulteux, <a href='#Page_328'>328</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Savannahs, <a href='#Page_274'>274</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Schaaffhausen, Professor, <a href='#Page_354'>354</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Schiller, <a href='#Page_375'>375</a>, <a href='#Page_376'>376</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Schliemann, Dr., <a href='#Page_136'>136</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Schmerling, Dr., <a href='#Page_359'>359</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Schumacher, Paul, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Scioto-mound skull, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Scott, Sir Walter, brain of, <a href='#Page_355'>355</a>, <a href='#Page_368'>368</a>, <a href='#Page_374'>374</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Sculptured figures, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>;</p>
-<p class='line'>&ensp;&ensp;monuments of Mexico, Central America, and Peru, <a href='#Page_39'>39</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Seal hunting, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Sea-rovers, literary memorials of, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Selkirk, Lord, <a href='#Page_328'>328</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Sellers, G. E., <a href='#Page_106'>106</a>, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>, <a href='#Page_109'>109</a>, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a>, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Seminoles, <a href='#Page_274'>274</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Senecas, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>, <a href='#Page_264'>264</a>, <a href='#Page_276'>276</a>, <a href='#Page_277'>277</a>, <a href='#Page_278'>278</a>, <a href='#Page_280'>280</a>, <a href='#Page_281'>281</a>, <a href='#Page_289'>289</a>, <a href='#Page_294'>294</a>, <a href='#Page_295'>295</a>, <a href='#Page_305'>305</a>, <a href='#Page_318'>318</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Seven Islands, the, <a href='#Page_37'>37</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Shakespeare, brain of, <a href='#Page_355'>355</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Shaler, Professor, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a>, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Shawnees, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a>, <a href='#Page_241'>241</a>, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>, <a href='#Page_274'>274</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Sheep, mountain, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Shell, mounds, British and Danish, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a>;</p>
-<p class='line'>&ensp;&ensp;workers of the Caribbees, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a>;</p>
-<p class='line'>&ensp;&ensp;ornaments on, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Ships of the Norse rovers, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Short, J. T., <a href='#Page_180'>180</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Shoshones, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a>, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a>, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Sigurd, King of Norway, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Simpson, Lieut. James K., <a href='#Page_230'>230</a>, <a href='#Page_231'>231</a>, <a href='#Page_232'>232</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Simpson, Sir James Y., <a href='#Page_375'>375</a>, <a href='#Page_376'>376</a>, <a href='#Page_378'>378</a>, <a href='#Page_385'>385</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Sioux, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a>, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>, <a href='#Page_178'>178</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>, <a href='#Page_325'>325</a>, <a href='#Page_326'>326</a>, <a href='#Page_327'>327</a>, <a href='#Page_329'>329</a>, <a href='#Page_333'>333</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Six Nation Indians, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a>, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>, <a href='#Page_263'>263</a>, <a href='#Page_264'>264</a>, <a href='#Page_283'>283</a>, <a href='#Page_289'>289</a>, <a href='#Page_290'>290</a>, <a href='#Page_301'>301</a>, <a href='#Page_305'>305</a>, <a href='#Page_314'>314</a>, <a href='#Page_316'>316</a>, <a href='#Page_318'>318</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Skrælings, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a>, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Skulls, Mound-Builders, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>;</p>
-<p class='line'>&ensp;&ensp;cave-men, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>;</p>
-<p class='line'>&ensp;&ensp;Red Indian, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>;</p>
-<p class='line'>&ensp;&ensp;comparison of, <a href='#Page_187'>187</a>;</p>
-<p class='line'>&ensp;&ensp;capacity, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>;</p>
-<p class='line'>&ensp;&ensp;Canadian, <a href='#Page_274'>274</a>;</p>
-<p class='line'>&ensp;&ensp;Huron, <a href='#Page_279'>279</a>;</p>
-<p class='line'>&ensp;&ensp;table of cubical capacity, <a href='#Page_366'>366</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Smith, Captain John, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Smith, Dr. Southwood, <a href='#Page_352'>352</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Snorrason, Thorbrand, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Snorre, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Snovri, <a href='#Page_41'>41</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Snow Bird, <a href='#Page_243'>243</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Snow-shoes, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Sœmmering, Professor, <a href='#Page_380'>380</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Solon, <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>, <a href='#Page_75'>75</a>, <a href='#Page_361'>361</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Soto, Dr., <a href='#Page_103'>103</a>, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Southey, quoted, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Spenser, Edmund, quoted, <a href='#Page_77'>77</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Spider Islands in Lake Winnipeg, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Spurzheim, Dr., <a href='#Page_376'>376</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Squier, E. G., <a href='#Page_118'>118</a>, <a href='#Page_243'>243</a>, <a href='#Page_388'>388</a>, <a href='#Page_390'>390</a>, <a href='#Page_396'>396</a></p>
-<p class='line'><span class='pageno' title='410' id='Page_410'></span></p>
-<p class='line'>Squier and Davis’ <span class='it'>Ancient Monuments</span>, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Stadaconé, <a href='#Page_274'>274</a>, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>, <a href='#Page_280'>280</a>, <a href='#Page_283'>283</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Ste-nah, capture of, <a href='#Page_315'>315</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Stephens’ <span class='it'>Old Northern Runic Monuments</span>, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Stirling, whale at, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Stone implements, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a>, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a>, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a>, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a>, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a>, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a>, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a>, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a>, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a>, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a>, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a>, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a>, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a>, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a>, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a>, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a>, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a>, <a href='#Page_262'>262</a>, <a href='#Page_271'>271</a>;</p>
-<p class='line'>&ensp;&ensp;manufacture of, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a>-<a href='#Page_92'>92</a>, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a>, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Stone ornaments, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Storm, Professor Gustav, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a>, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a>, <a href='#Page_52'>52</a>, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Straumey (Stream Isle), <a href='#Page_59'>59</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Straumfiordr (Stream Firth), <a href='#Page_59'>59</a>, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Stuart, Rev. Dr., <a href='#Page_290'>290</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Sturluson, Snorro, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Sun-worshippers, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Survey, Government, <a href='#Page_326'>326</a>, <a href='#Page_327'>327</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Susquehannocks, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Swampies, <a href='#Page_328'>328</a>, <a href='#Page_329'>329</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Swan, James G., <a href='#Page_211'>211</a>, <a href='#Page_212'>212</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Symbols of the clans, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a></p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>Tadmor, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Tahiti, traditions of, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Talavera, Prior Fernando de, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Talligew, or Tallegewi, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a>, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a>, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>, <a href='#Page_172'>172</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Taunton River, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Tawatins, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a>, <a href='#Page_207'>207</a>, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Taylor, Dr. Isaac, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>, <a href='#Page_358'>358</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Tchudi, Von, <a href='#Page_391'>391</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Thelariolin Zacharee, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Temagamic, Lake, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Temissaming, Lake, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Texas reserve, <a href='#Page_296'>296</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Thales, a Greek astronomer, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a></p>
-<p class='line'>The Snake Land, <a href='#Page_243'>243</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Thlinkets, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a>, <a href='#Page_207'>207</a>, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Thomsen of Copenhagen, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Thomson’s, Professor Wyville, <span class='it'>Depths of the Sea</span>, quoted, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Thorbrandson, Snorre, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Thorfinn, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Thorgilsson’s <span class='it'>Iselandinga Vók</span>, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Thorhall, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a>, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Thorvald, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a>, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Thurnam, Dr., <a href='#Page_343'>343</a>, <a href='#Page_353'>353</a>, <a href='#Page_360'>360</a>, <a href='#Page_365'>365</a>, <a href='#Page_366'>366</a>, <a href='#Page_367'>367</a>, <a href='#Page_373'>373</a>, <a href='#Page_375'>375</a>, <a href='#Page_376'>376</a>, <a href='#Page_378'>378</a>, <a href='#Page_384'>384</a>, <a href='#Page_385'>385</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Tiedemann, <a href='#Page_362'>362</a>, <a href='#Page_375'>375</a>, <a href='#Page_376'>376</a>, <a href='#Page_380'>380</a>, <a href='#Page_386'>386</a>, <a href='#Page_402'>402</a></p>
-<p class='line'><span class='it'>Timæus</span> of Plato, <a href='#Page_1'>1</a>, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a>, <a href='#Page_75'>75</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Timucuas, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Tin-mines of Spain and Cornwall, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Tinné Indians, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Tiontates, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Tiontonones, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a></p>
-<p class='line'>T’kul, the wind spirit, <a href='#Page_212'>212</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Tlascalans, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Toad, emblematic of an evil spirit, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Tobacco in Queen Charlotte Islands, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Tobacco-pipes, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a>, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a>, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a>, <a href='#Page_178'>178</a>, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a>, <a href='#Page_207'>207</a>, <a href='#Page_219'>219</a>, <a href='#Page_271'>271</a>, <a href='#Page_272'>272</a>, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Toivats and the “King of the Bears,” <a href='#Page_210'>210</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Topinard, Dr. Paul, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Toscanelli, Paolo, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Toys, ingenious, <a href='#Page_223'>223</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Traffic, ancient routes of, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Trenton, gravel beds, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Tryggvason, King Olaf, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Tshugazzi, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Tshimsians, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Tshuma Indians, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Tubal-cain, art of, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a>, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Tulare River, rock at, <a href='#Page_233'>233</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Tuscaroras, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>, <a href='#Page_289'>289</a>, <a href='#Page_296'>296</a>, <a href='#Page_297'>297</a>, <a href='#Page_305'>305</a>, <a href='#Page_314'>314</a>, <a href='#Page_318'>318</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Tuteloes, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>, <a href='#Page_296'>296</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Tylor, Dr. E. B., <a href='#Page_61'>61</a></p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>Uchees, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a>, <a href='#Page_274'>274</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Unamis, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Unitah Mountains, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Usher, Dr., <a href='#Page_161'>161</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Uvaege, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Uxmal sculptured tablets, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a></p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>Valdidida, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Vancouver Island, Indians of, <a href='#Page_324'>324</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Vases, native art, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Vespucci, Amerigo, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Vespuce, Amerike, <a href='#Page_75'>75</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Vethilldi, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Vézère, valley of, <a href='#Page_357'>357</a>, <a href='#Page_358'>358</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Vigfusson, Gudbrand, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Vincent, Rev. J. G., <a href='#Page_296'>296</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Vinland, or Vineland, <a href='#Page_41'>41</a>;</p>
-<p class='line'>&ensp;&ensp;origin of name, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a>;</p>
-<p class='line'>&ensp;&ensp;booths in, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a>;</p>
-<p class='line'>&ensp;&ensp;coast of, <a href='#Page_54'>54</a>, <a href='#Page_57'>57</a>, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a>, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Virchow, Professor, <a href='#Page_373'>373</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Virginia, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Vogt, Dr. Carl, <a href='#Page_341'>341</a>, <a href='#Page_375'>375</a>, <a href='#Page_383'>383</a></p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>Wabenos, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Wagner, Professor, <a href='#Page_343'>343</a>, <a href='#Page_364'>364</a>, <a href='#Page_373'>373</a>, <a href='#Page_375'>375</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Wallace, A. R., <a href='#Page_192'>192</a>, <a href='#Page_349'>349</a>, <a href='#Page_350'>350</a>, <a href='#Page_351'>351</a>, <a href='#Page_398'>398</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Walla-walla, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a></p>
-<p class='line'>War-sling of the Skrælings, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Webster, Daniel, <a href='#Page_375'>375</a>, <a href='#Page_376'>376</a>, <a href='#Page_385'>385</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Welcker, Professor, <a href='#Page_355'>355</a>, <a href='#Page_360'>360</a>, <a href='#Page_364'>364</a>, <a href='#Page_370'>370</a>, <a href='#Page_373'>373</a>, <a href='#Page_381'>381</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Welsh Indians, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Weston, T. C., <a href='#Page_115'>115</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Whale at San Diego, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Whewell, <a href='#Page_376'>376</a>, <a href='#Page_385'>385</a>, <a href='#Page_386'>386</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Whipple, Lieutenant, <a href='#Page_231'>231</a>, <a href='#Page_236'>236</a></p>
-<p class='line'>White Man’s Land, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a></p>
-<p class='line'><span class='pageno' title='411' id='Page_411'></span></p>
-<p class='line'>White Owl, <a href='#Page_243'>243</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Whitney, Professor, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>, <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>, <a href='#Page_288'>288</a>, <a href='#Page_289'>289</a>, <a href='#Page_298'>298</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Wilde, Sir William, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Wild goat, carvings of, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Wilson, Thomas, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Wilts County Asylum, <a href='#Page_367'>367</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Winslow, Dr. C. F., <a href='#Page_149'>149</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Winthrop, Mr., <a href='#Page_320'>320</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Wolseley, Sir Garnet, <a href='#Page_334'>334</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Wright, Professor G. F., <a href='#Page_99'>99</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Wyandots, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a>, <a href='#Page_172'>172</a>, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a>, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>, <a href='#Page_276'>276</a>, <a href='#Page_277'>277</a>, <a href='#Page_278'>278</a>, <a href='#Page_280'>280</a>, <a href='#Page_283'>283</a>, <a href='#Page_286'>286</a>, <a href='#Page_293'>293</a>, <a href='#Page_295'>295</a>, <a href='#Page_305'>305</a>, <a href='#Page_318'>318</a>, <a href='#Page_321'>321</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Wyman, Professor Jeffreys, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>, <a href='#Page_344'>344</a>, <a href='#Page_362'>362</a>, <a href='#Page_375'>375</a>, <a href='#Page_389'>389</a>, <a href='#Page_390'>390</a>, <a href='#Page_396'>396</a>, <a href='#Page_399'>399</a>, <a href='#Page_400'>400</a>, <a href='#Page_401'>401</a></p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>Yamasees, <a href='#Page_274'>274</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Yarmouth, inscribed rock at, <a href='#Page_54'>54</a>, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a>, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a></p>
-<p class='line'>Yellowstone Park, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a></p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>Zuñi Indians, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>, <a href='#Page_299'>299</a>, <a href='#Page_300'>300</a></p>
-</div> <!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-top:3em;margin-bottom:2em;font-size:.8em;'>THE END</p>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;font-size:.6em;'><span class='it'>Printed by</span> <span class='sc'>R. &amp; R. Clark</span>, <span class='it'>Edinburgh</span></p>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-top:4em;margin-bottom:2em;font-size:1.2em;'>TRANSCRIBER NOTES</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Misspelled words and printer errors have been corrected.
-Where multiple spellings occur, majority use has been
-employed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Punctuation has been maintained except where obvious
-printer errors occur.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A cover was created for this eBook.</p>
-
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-
-<p class='noindent'>[The end of <span class='it'>The Lost Atlantis and Other
-Ethnographic Studies</span>, by Daniel Wilson.]</p>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Lost Atlantis and Other
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