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His Physical Mien and Characteristics
It will be interesting, perhaps, to
notice the particulars, as to physical conformation, in
which the Indian differs from his white brother.
He maintains a higher average as to height, to fix
which at five feet ten would, I think, be a just estimate. It is
rare, however, to find him attain the exceptional stature, quite
commonly observed with the white, though, where he yields to the
latter in this respect, there is compensation for it in the way
of greater breadth and compactness. There are, of course,
isolated cases, in which he is distinguished by as great height
as has ever been reached by ordinary man, and, in these
instances, I have never failed to notice that his form discloses
almost faultless proportions, the Indian being never ungainly or
gaunt. I think, on the whole, that I do no injustice to the
white man, when I credit the Indian with a better-knit frame
than himself.
I am disposed to ascribe, in great measure, the
evolving of the erect form that the Indian, as a rule,
possesses, to the custom in vogue of the mother carrying her
child strapped across the back, as well as to the fact of her
discouraging and interdicting any attempts at walking on the
part of the child, until the muscles shall have been so
developed as to justify such being made. To this practice, at
least, I am safe in attributing the rarity, if not the positive
absence, with the Indian, of that unhappy condition of bow-leggedness,
of not too slight prevalence with us, and which renders its
victim often a butt for not very charitable or approving
comment.
The Indian is built more, perhaps, for fleetness than
strength; and his litheness and agility will come in, at another
place, for their due illustration, when treating of certain of
his pastimes.
The Indian has a large head, high cheek bones, in
general, large lips and mouth; a contour of face inclining, on
the whole, to undue breadth, and lacking that pleasantly-rounded
appearance so characteristic of the white. He has usually a
scant beard, his chin and cheeks seldom, if ever, asserting that
sturdy and bountiful growth of whisker and moustache, in such
esteem with adults among ourselves, and which they are so
careful to stimulate and insure. Indeed, it is said that the
Indian holds rather in contempt what we so complacently regard,
and will often testify to his scorn by plucking out the hairs
which protrude, and would fain lend themselves to his adornment.
The Indian, normally, has a stolid expression, redeemed
slightly, perhaps, by its exchange often for a lugubrious one. I
should feel disposed to predict for him the scoring of an
immense success in the personation of such characters as those
of the melancholy Dane; or of Antonio, in the Merchant of
Venice, after the turn of the tide in his fortunes, when the
vengeful figure of the remorseless Shylock rests upon his life
to blight and to afflict it.
He is easily-moved to tears, though, perhaps, his
facile transition from the condition presented in the foregoing
allusion, into a positively lachrymose state, will be readily
conceived of, without proclaiming specially, the fact. He will
maintain a mien, which shall consist eminently with the
atmosphere of the house of mourning; in truth, as an efficient
mourner, the Indian may be freely depended upon.
It is contended that the complexion of the Indian has
had the tendency to grow darker and darker, from his having
inhabited smoky, bark wigwams, and having held cleanliness in no
very exceptional honor; and the contention is sought to be made
good by the citing of a case of a young, fair-skinned boy, who,
taking up with an Indian tribe, and adopting in every particular
their mode of life, developed by his seventieth year a
complexion as swarthy, and of as distinctively Indian a hue, as
that of any pure specimen of the race.
If we accept this as a sound view, which, however,
carried to its logical sequence, should have evolved, one would
imagine, the negro out of the Indian long are this, why may we
not, in the way of argument, fairly and legitimately provoked by
the theory, look for and consider the converse picture (now that
the Indian lives in much the same manner as the ordinary poor
husbandman, and now that we have certainly no warrant for
imputing to him uncleanly habits) the gradual approach in his
complexion to the Anglo-Saxon type? If we entertain this
counter-proposition, it will then be a question between its
operation, and his marriage with the white, as to which explains
the fact of the decline now of the dark complexion with the
Indian.
The custom of piercing the nose, and suspending
nose-jewels there from, has fallen into disrepute, the Indian,
perhaps, having been brought to view these as contributing, in a
questionable way, to his adornment.
The Indian woman has a finer development, as a rule,
than the white woman. We may, in part, discover the cause for
this in the prevalence of the custom, already alluded to, of the
mother carrying her offspring on her back, which, with its not
undue strain on the dorsal muscles, no doubt, promotes and
conserves muscular strength. The Indian woman being commonly a
wife and mother before a really full maturity has been reached,
or any absolute unyieldingness of form been contracted, the
figure yet admits of such-like beneficent processes being
exerted upon it. In making mention of this custom, and, in a
certain way, paying it honor, let me not be taken as wishing to
precipitate a revolution in the accepted modes, with
refined-communities, of bringing up children. To a community,
however, like that of which we are treating, such plan is not
ill-suited, the Indian mother being secure against any very
critical observation of her acts, or of the fashion she adopts.
Let the custom, then, continue, as it can be shown, I think, to
favor the production of a healthier and stronger frame both in
the mother and in the child. A good figure is also insured to
the Indian woman, from her contemning, perhaps at the bid of
necessity, arising from her poverty, though, I verily believe,
from a well-grounded conception of their deforming tendencies,
the absurdly irrational measures, which, adopted by many among
ourselves to promote symmetry, only bring about distortion.
The Indian has very symmetrical hands, and the
variation in size, in this respect, in the case of the two
sexes, is often very slight, and, sometimes, scarce to be
traced. The compliment, in the case of the man, has, and is
meant to have, about it a quite appreciable tinge of
condemnation, as suggesting his self-compassionate recoiling
from manual exertion; and the explanation of the near approach
in the formation of the hand of the woman to that of the man,
may be found in the delegating to her, by the latter, in
unstinted measure, and in merciless fashion, work that should be
his. It is rare, also, to find a really awkwardly shaped foot in
an Indian. The near conformity to a uniform size in the case of
the two sexes, which I have noticed as being peculiar with the
hand, may also be observed with the foot. I would sum up my
considerations here with the confident assertion that the
examination of a number of specimens of the hand or foot in an
Indian, would demonstrate a range in size positively immaterial.
The Indian woman keeps up, to a large extent, the
practice of wearing leggings and moccasins.
I should be disposed to think that the blood coursing
through the Indian's frame is of a richer consistency, and has,
altogether, greater vitalizing properties than that in
ourselves, since on the severest day in winter he will
frequently scorn any covering beyond his shirt, and the nether
garments usually suggested by its mention, and, so apparelled,
will not recoil from the keenest blast.
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A Treatise of the Six Nation Indians
Six Nation Indians
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