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The Indian Voice


Article # : 12752 

Section : Book World
Issue Date : 3 / 1987  2,957 Words
Author : Wallace Stegner
Wallace Stegner is professor emeritus of humanities at Stanford University and is the author of Angle of Repose

       FOOLS CROW
       James Welch
       New York: Viking Penguin Inc., 1986
       391 pp., $18.95
       
       RED EARTH, WHITE EARTH
       Will Weaver
       New York: Simon and Schuster
       383 pp., $17.95
       
        The Indian has been no stranger in American literature. He began as Noble Savage, endowed with all the primitive virtues imagined and admired by Romantic philosophers, degenerated into a bloodthirsty tomahawker of women and children when he took the warpath against our invasions, and was sentimentalized into a tragic dignity and eloquence as the spokesman of a vanishing race, as soon as we could be certain that he was indeed vanishing.
       
        Like savages ourselves, gaining virtue by eating the hearts of our enemies, we have come to take a possessive pride in his courage against great odds, and to regret that his destiny was to get in our road. Our pantheon is full of heroes we borrowed from him--Chief Logan, Billy Bowlegs, Pontiac, Tecumseh, Sequoia, Crazy Horse, Chief Joseph, Geronimo. It stirs us to read that General Howard, who finally ran down the Nez perces in the Bearpaw Mountains, called them "the bravest men and the best marksmen" he ever knew. Contemporary audiences viewing the movie Little Big Man cheer not the Seventh Cavalry but the Sioux and Cheyennes who annihilated it. We accept a comfortable guilt for our complicity in, or at least our benefiting from, the long record bad faith, broken ... (1995 of 17179 Characters)
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