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Indian Prodigality, Characteristic of their
Feasts
Prodigality was as much a characteristic of their feasts as their dances and
other amusements, with which they were often associated, and like them are
supposed to have had their origin in religion. They were often participated in
by whole villages, sometimes even by neighboring villages, and in this way a
vain or ambitious host applied all his substance to one entertainment. Br‚beuf
relates an instance of this kind which occurred in the winter of 1635, at the
village of Contarrea, where thirty kettles were over the fires, and twenty deer
and four bears were served up.61 The invitation was
simple and consisted in the concise summons, "Come and eat." To refuse was a
grave offense. Each guest took his dish and spoon and as he entered, greeted his
host with the ejaculation, Ho! He then ranged himself with the rest, squatted on
the earthen floor or on the platform along the sides of the house, around the
steaming kettles. A long prelude of lugubrious singing preceded the feast. The
host, who took no share in the feast, then proclaimed in a loud voice the
contents of each kettle and at each announcement the company responded in
unison, Ho! The attendant squaws then filled the bowls of the guests, who
interspersed their feasting with talking, laughing, jesting, singing and
smoking, at times protracting the entertainment throughout the day.
When the feast partook of a medical character it was indispensable that each
guest should eat all that was served to him, however enormous the quantity, even
if he should die. Should he fail, the host would be outraged, the community
shocked, and the spirits roused to vengeance. Disaster would befall the nation;
death, perhaps, the individual. A vicarious alternative was provided, however;
and when one found himself unable to conform to the ridiculous practice, he
engaged, when he could, another of the company to eat what remained of his
portion, generally rewarding his benefactor with a present. This was the only
way of getting out of the dilemma. "in some cases the imagined efficacy of the
feast was proportioned to the rapidity with which the viands were dispatched.
Prizes of tobacco were offered to the most rapid feeder; and the spectacle then
became truly porcine." These feasts were much dreaded, but were never known to
be declined.62
The Indians had rude, though positive religious ideas, which were associated
with--almost entirely embodied in--superstition, that natural concomitant of
ignorance. As observed by the early Jesuits, before being contaminated by those
of civilized nations, they were in strict accordance, as with other nations,
civilized or barbarous, with their mental and moral development, and hence
differed in different nations. They evinced, in perfect analogy with the
barbaric condition of the Indians themselves, a greater fear of evil than of
reverence for good; and hence their devotions consisted more in propitiating
evil spirits than invoking the interposition of the good. Indeed, and here we
realize the beauty of their simplicity, it was deemed superfluous to importune
the source of goodness. Analogous to this difference in their religious ideas is
their differing cosmogonies.63 The belief in
immortality was almost universal, but, though rarely, there were those who
denied it;64 even animals were endowed with it, and
were deified and worshiped.65 This veneration for
the animal kingdom is reflected in the common practice of selecting from it the
names by which the tribes were designated.
The Indians' God, whom the Iroquois called Hawenniio (meaning he rules, he is
master,) was endowed with attributes akin to their own, but primitively not with
that of moral goodness. The Indian language had no word expressive of our
abstract idea of deity. The Iroquois had another God, with equal claims to
supremacy. Him they called Areskoui, and his most prominent attribute was that
of a god of war. He was often invoked, and the flesh of animals and captive
enemies was burned in his honor. They had also a third deity, called
Tarenyowagon, or Teharonhiawagon, whose place and character is not well defined.
In some traditions he appears as the son of Jouskeha, the ruler of the world,
and endowed with great influence, for he it was who spoke to men in dreams. Some
writers identify him with Hiawatha, to whom the Iroquois ascribe their
confederation; while Vander Donck assumes that he is God, and Areskoui, the
Devil.66 Beside these they had numerous objects,
both animate and inanimate, which were endowed with supernatural powers and
supplicated. These the Iroquois called Okies; the Algonquins and other tribes,
Manitous. There were local manitous of streams, rocks, mountains, cataracts and
forests, which, when they revealed themselves to mortal sight, bore the
semblance of beasts, reptiles or birds, in unusual or distorted shapes, their
conception betraying, for the most part, a striking poverty of imagination.
There were manitous without local habitations, some good, some evil, countless
in number and indefinite in attributes. They filled the world and controlled the
destinies of Indians, who were held to be under a spiritual rule distinct from
that which governs the white man. These were, for the most part, in the shape of
animals. Sometimes they took the form of stones, and, though less frequently,
assumed human she was soon delivered of a daughter, who, in turn loved two boys,
whose paternity is unexplained. They were called Taouscaron and Jouskeha, and
presently fell to blows, Jouskeha killing his brother with the horn of a stag.
The back of the tortoise grew into a
world full of verdure and life; and Jouskeha
with his grandmother Antaentsic ruled over
its destinies."
"According to Van der Donck, Antaentsic
become mother of a deer, a bear, and a wolf,
by whom she afterwards bore all the other
animals, mankind included."--Parkman's
Jesuits.
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61 Parkman's Jesuits.
62 Kip's and Parkman's Jesuits.
63 That of the Iroquois is thus described by Brebeuf, Relations
des Hurons, 1636, 86, and, though no two Indians told it precisely alike, nearly
all agreed as to its essential points:--
"While the world was as yet a waste of waters there was * * * a heaven filled
with lakes, streams, plains and forests, inhabited by animals, by spirits, and,
as some affirm, by human beings. Here a certain female spirit, named Antaentsic,
was once chasing a bear, which slipping through a hole, fell down to the earth.
Antaentsic's dog followed, when she herself, struck with despair, jumped after
them. Others declare that she was kicked out of heaven by the spirit, her
husband, for an amour with a man; while others, again, hold the belief, that she
fell in the attempt to gather for her husband the medicinal leaves of a certain
tree. Be this as it may, the animals swimming in the watery waste below saw her
falling, and hastily met in council to determine what should be done. The case
was referred to the beaver. The beaver commended it to the judgment of the
tortoise, who thereupon called on the other animals to dive, bring up mud, and
place it on his back. Thus was formed a floating island, on which Antaentsic
fell; and here, being pregnant.....
64 "Father Gravier says that a Peoria Indian once told him that
there was no future life."--Parkman's Jesuits.
65 "It is the settled belief among the northern Algonquins that
animals will fare better in another world, in the precise ratio that their lives
and enjoyments have been curtailed in this life.--Schoolcraft's Notes.
66 Loskiel says the Devil is an European importation; that they
seem to have had no idea of him previous to the advent of the whites. Ruttenber
says, "to them God had less to do with the world than did the devil, who was the
principal subject of their fears, and the source of their earthly hopes. No
expeditions of hunting, fishing or war were undertaken unless the devil was
first consulted, and to him they offer the first fruits of the chase, or a
victory."
Notes About the Book:
Source: Smith, James H., History of Chenango and Madison Counties, New York.
D. Mason & Co. Syracuse, NY 1880
Online Publication: The manuscript was scanned and
then ocr'd. Minimal editing has been done, and readers can and should expect
some errors in the textual output.
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