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Reflections as to the Possible Effect upon
Him of Enfranchisement
We cannot estimate the transforming power that his
enfranchisement might exert over the Indian character.
The Indian youth, who is now either a listless wanderer
over the confines of his Reserve; or who finds his highest
occupation in putting in, now and then, desultory work for some
neighboring farmer at harvest-time; who looks even upon
elementary education as useless, and as something to be gone
through, perforce, as a concession to his parents' wish, or at
those parents' bid, would, if enfranchisement were assured to
him, esteem it in its true light, as the first step to a higher
training, which should qualify him for enjoying offices or
taking up callings, from which he is now debarred, and in which,
mayhap, he might achieve a degree of honor and success which
should operate, in an incalculable way, as a stimulus to others
of his race, to strive after and attain the like station and
dignity.
There can, I think, be no gainsaying of the view that
the Indian, if he were enfranchised, would avail much more
generally than he does now, of the excellent educational
facilities which surround him. The very consciousness, which
would then be at work within him, of his eligibility for filling
any office of honor in the country, which enfranchisement would
confer, would minister to a worthy ambition, and would spur him
on to develop his powers of mind, and, viewing education as the
one grand mean for subserving this end, he would so use it and
honor it, as that he should not discredit his office, if, haply,
he should be chosen to fill one.
Concluding Remarks
The present Indian legislation, in
my judgment, operates in every way to blight, to grind, and to
oppress; blasts each roseate hope of an ameliorated, a less
abject, estate: quenches each swelling aspiration after a higher
and more tolerable destiny; withers each ennobling aim, cancels
each creditable effort that would assure its eventuation;
opposes each soul-stirring resolve to no longer rest under the
galling, gangrenous imputation of a partial manhood.
Though not authorized to speak for the Indian, I
believe I express his views, when I say that he cherishes an
ardent wish for enfranchisement, a right which should be
conceded to him by the Legislature, though it should be urged
only by the silent, though not, therefore, the less weighty and
potent, appeal, of the unswerving devotion of his forefathers to
England's crown.
He desires, nay, fervently longs, to break free from
his condition of tutelage; to bring to the general Government
the aid of his counsels, feeble though such may seem, if we
measure him by his present status; aid, which, erstwhile, was
not despised, but was, rather, a mighty bulwark of the British
crown; and pants for the occasion to assert, it may be on the
honor-scroll of the nation's fame, his descent from a vaunted
ancestry.
Addenda To Section On
Enfranchisement
It will be said, perhaps, that to
harbor the idea of the Indian's elevation, following, in any
way, upon his closer assimilation with the white; his
divestiture of the badge of political serfdom, and deliverance
from even the suggestion of thraldom--all of which his
enfranchisement contemplates; or that these would assure, in
greater degree, his national weal, would be to indulge a wild
chimera, which could but superinduce the purest visionary
picture of his condition under the operation of the gift. Some
might be found, as well, to discredit the notion that there
would supervene, on the consigning to the limbo of inutile
political systems of the disabling regime that now governs, an
epoch, which would witness the shaking off, by the heavy,
phlegmatic red man of the present, of his dull lethargy, with
the casting behind him of former inaction and unproductiveness;
and his being moved to assert a healthy, genuine, wholesome
activity, to be directed to lofty or soulful purpose, or
expressed in high and honorable endeavour. And it might be set
down as a reasoning from the standpoint of an illusory optimism,
to look for, through any change in the Indian's political
condition, the incoming of an age, which should be distinguished
by a hopeful and helpful accession to his character of honesty,
uprightness, and self-respect, or by their conservation; or
which should be the natal time for the benign rule over him of
contentment, charity, and sobriety, or for the dominance of a
seemly morality. That, likewise, might be deemed idle
expectancy, which would foresee, as a result of the changed
order of things, now being prospectively considered, a season in
the Indian's experience, when should be illustrated the greater
sacredness of the marriage relation, and the happy prevalence of
full domestic inter-communion, harmony, and order; or should be
honored a more gracious definition of the woman's province, with
the license to her to embrace a kindlier lot than one decreeing
for her mere slavish labour; or project a mission, to see its
fruit in the softening and refining, and in the reviving of the
slumbrous chivalry, of the man, or to leave, mayhap, some
beauteous impress on the race.
It may be maintained, indeed, that the withdrawal from
the Indian of the Government's protecting arm, and the
recognition of his position, as no longer that of a needy,
grovelling annuitant, but as one of equal footing with the white
before the law, would--far from bringing blessings in their
train--promote, with other evils, a pernicious development, with
calamitous reaction upon him, of the aggrandizing instinct of
the white, who would lure and entrap him into every kind of
disastrous negotiation--its outcome, in truth, a very maelstrom
of artful intrigue and shameless rapacity, looking to the
absorption of the Indian's land, and of the few worldly
possessions he now has. Nay, many would foresee for the Indian,
through the consummation of his enfranchisement, naught but
gloom and sorest plight. These would invest their picture with
the sombrest hues; and, making this assume, under their
pessimist delineation, blackest Tartarean aspect, would crown it
with the exhibition of the Indian, as one sunken, at the
instance of the white, in extremest depths of human sorrow; as
plunged, engulphed, and detained in a horrible slough of
degradation and misery. Such would, in short, have an era opened
up, which should mark, at once, the exaltation of the white to a
revolting height of infamy, proclaiming the high carnival of
unblushing trickery and chicane; and should signalize the
whelming of the Indian in the noxious flood of the high-handed,
unrighteous, and unprincipled practice of the white, who would
project for him, and through whose unholy machinations he would
be consigned to, a state of existence which should be the
hideous climax of physical and moral debasement.
Now I contend that the claim to ascendancy of the
Indian over the white, in respect of sagacity and cunning and
craft, which this condition of things presupposes, is not
satisfactorily made out. And I can readily conceive of the
application of that astuteness, that distinguishes the Indian in
his present trading relations with the white, to the wider field
for its display, which would arise from the extended intercourse
and more frequent contact with the white, that would ensue upon
the Indian's enfranchisement; and of this astuteness operating
as his efficient shield against evil hap or worsting by the
white in any coping of the kind with him.
I do not deny, however, that there might be
realization, in part, of such painful spectacle, as has just
been imagined, were enfranchisement, pure and simple, conferred
upon the Indian; and I would distinctly demur to being taken as
an advocate of enfranchisement for him without certain
safeguards. Yet I honor a somewhat wide use of the term, and
discredit the system of individual election for the right (if I
may so call it)--which, I believe, obtains--with its vexatious
exactions as to mental and moral fitness, and the very
objectionable feature, to my mind, of laying upon the band, as a
collective organization, the obligation of assigning to the
individual member seeking enfranchisement so much land, thus
imposing upon it, in effect, the onus of conferring the land
qualification. Let its consummation be approached gradually, and
with caution; and let a modified form of it, designed to meet
the Indian's peculiar situation, be recognized and enforced. Let
the enfranchisement be made a tentative thing; and let there be
a provision for the divestiture of the Indian of the right, in
case disaster to him should supervene upon its application.
I have spoken elsewhere of the fact of the Indian's
enfranchisement prompting him, in view of the prospect of
occupying various stations of dignity in the country, which,
through the extension to him of the franchise, would be thrown
open to him, to set a greater value upon education, as
qualifying him for enjoying and filling with credit these
stations. Perhaps, it would be the stricter view, and more
apropos, to regard the Indian's more thorough education as that
which would lead him to more readily perceive and better
appreciate the full import and. significance of enfranchisement;
which would bring home to his mind a clear apprehension of the
duties and obligations it exacts, and enable him, as well, to
exercise the rights thereto pertaining with a wiser foresight
and greater intelligence.
Let a higher order of mental attainment than he now
displays be insured, by all means, and if possible, to the
Indian; and, to this end, let the authorities concerned invite,
through the inducement of something better than a mere
bread-and-butter salary, the accession to the Reserve of
teachers, no one of whom it shall be possible for an Indian
youth of tender years to outstrip in knowledge; or shall be
reduced to parrying, as best as he can, the questionings of a
pupil on points bearing upon merely elementary education.
I would mention a prospective result of the Indian's
enfranchisement, which would suggest, forcibly, the desirability
of, and the need for his anticipatory instruction in the English
language. He, unlike the German or Frenchman, has never been
able to maintain, indeed, has never had, a literature; and I can
scarcely conceive of his tongue even surviving the more general
mingling with the white, which would be the certain concomitant
of enfranchisement, which, indeed, with its other subverting
tendencies, would seem to me to ordain its utter effacement.
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