Let us now examine into the political
views of the Mormons, and follow Smith in his lofty
and aspiring visions of sovereignty for the future.
He is a rogue and a swindler, no one can
doubt that; yet there is something grand in his composition.
Joe, the mean, miserable, half-starved money-digger
of western New York, was, as I have before observed,
cast in the mould of conquerors, and out of that same
clay which Nature had employed for the creation of
a Mahomet.
His first struggle was successful;
the greater portion of his followers surrounded him
in Kirkland, and acknowledged his power, as that of
God’s right hand; while many individuals from
among the better classes repaired to him, attracted
by the ascendency of a bold genius, or by the expectation
of obtaining a share in his fame, power, and glory.
Kirkland, however, was an inland place;
there, on every side, Smith had to contend with opposition;
his power was confined and his plans had not sufficient
room for development. He turned his mind towards
the western borders of Missouri: it was but a
thought; but with him, rapid action was as much a
natural consequence of thought as thunder is of lightning.
Examine into the topography of that country, the holy
Zion and promised land of the Mormons, and it will
be easy to recognise the fixed and unchangeable views
of Smith, as connected with the formation of a vast
empire.
For the last twelve or fifteen years
the government of the United States has, through a
mistaken policy, been constantly engaged in sending
to the western borders all the eastern Indian tribes
that were disposed to sell their land, and also the
various tribes who, having rebelled against their
cowardly despotism, had been overpowered and conquered
during the struggle. This gross want of policy
is obvious.
Surrounded and demoralised by white
men, the Indian falls into a complete state of decadence
and abrutissement. Witness the Choctaw
tribes that hover constantly about Mobile and New Orleans;
the Winnebegoes, who have of late come into immediate
contact with the settlers of Wisconsin; the Pottawatomies,
on both shores of Lake Michigan; the Miamis of North
Indiana, and many more. On the contrary, the
tribes on the borders, or in the wilderness, are on
the increase. Of course, there are a few exceptions,
such as the Kansas, or the poor Mandans, who have
lately been almost entirely swept away from the earth
by the small-pox. Some of the smaller tribes
may be destroyed by warfare, or they may incorporate
themselves with others, and thus lose their name and
nationality; but the increase of the Indian population
is considerable among the great uncontrolled nations;
such as the Chippewas and Dahcotahs (Siouxes), of
the north United States; the Comanches and the
Pawnees, on the boundaries, or even in the very heart,
of Texas; the Shoshones (Snakes), on the southern
limits of Oregon; and the brave Apaches of Sonora,
those bold Bedouins of the Mexican deserts, who, constantly
on horseback, wander, in immense phalanxes, from the
eastern shores of the Gulf of California to the very
waters of the Rio Grande.
Admitting, therefore, as a fact, that
the tribes on the borders do increase, in the same
ratio with their material strength, grows also their
invincible, stern, and unchangeable hatred towards
the American. In fact, more or less, they have
all been ill-treated and abused, and every additional
outrage to one tribe is locked up in the memory of
all, who wait for the moment of retaliation and revenge.
In the Wisconsin war (Black Hawk, 1832), even after
the poor starved warriors had surrendered themselves
by treaty, after a noble struggle, more than two hundred
old men, women, and children were forced by the Americans
to cross the river without boats or canoes.
The poor things endeavoured to pass it with the help
of their horses; the river there was more than half
a mile broad, and while these unfortunates were struggling
for life against a current of nine miles an hour,
they were treacherously shot in the water.
This fact is known to all the tribes even
to the Comanches, who are so distant. It
has satisfied them as to what they may expect from
those who thus violate all treaties and all faith.
The remainder of that brave tribe is now dwelling
on the west borders of Ioway, but their wrongs are
too deeply dyed with their own blood to be forgotten
even by generations, and their cause is ready to be
espoused by every tribe, even those who have been
their hereditary enemies; for what is, after all,
their history but the history of almost every Indian
nation transplanted on the other side of the Mississippi?
This belt of Indian tribes, therefore,
is rather an unsafe neighbour, especially in the event
of a civil war or of a contest with England.
Having themselves, by a mistaken policy, collected
together a cordon of offended warriors, the United
States will some day deplore, when too late, their
former greediness, cowardice, and cruelty towards the
natural owners of their vast territories.
It is among these tribes that Joe
Smith wishes to lay the foundation of his future empire;
and settling at Independence, he was interposing as
a neutral force between two opponents, who would,
each of them, have purchased his massive strength
and effective energy with the gift of supremacy over
an immense and wealthy territory. As we have
seen, chance and the fortune of war have thrown Smith
and the Mormons back on the eastern shores of the
Mississippi, opposite the entrance of Desmoines river;
but when forced back, the Mormons were an unruly and
turbulent crowd, without means or military tactics;
now, such is not the case. Already, the prophet
has sent able agents over the river; the Sacs
and Foxes, the same tribe we have just spoken of as
the much-abused nation of Wisconsin, and actually
residing at about eighty miles North North West from
Nauvoo, besides many others, are on a good understanding
with the Latter-day Saints. A few bold apostles
of Mormonism have also gone to the far, far west,
among the unconquered tribes of the prairies, to organise
an offensive power, ever ready for action.
Thus, link after link, Smith extends
his influence, which is already felt in Illinois,
in Iowa, in Missouri, at Washington, and at the very
foot of the Rocky Mountains. Moreover, hundreds
of Mormons, without avowing their creed, have gone
to Texas, and established themselves there.
They save all their crops, and have numerous cattle
and droves of horses, undoubtedly to feed and sustain
a Mormon army on any future invasion. Let us
now examine further into this cunning and long-sighted
policy, and we shall admire the great genius that presides
over it. We are not one of those, so common
in these days, who have adopted the nil admirari
for their motto. Genius, well or ill guided,
is still genius; and if we load with shame the former
life of Smith and his present abominable religious
impositions, still we are bound to do justice to that
conquering spirit which can form such vast ideas, and
work such a multitude to his will.
The population of Texas does not amount
to seventy thousand souls, among whom there are twenty-five
different forms of religion. Two-thirds of the
inhabitants are scoundrels, who have there sought a
refuge against the offended laws of their country.
They are not only a curse and a check to civilisation,
but they reflect dishonour upon the remaining third
portion of the Texians, who have come from distant
climes for the honest purposes of trade and agriculture.
This mongrel and mixed congregation of beings, though
firmly united in one point (war with Mexico, and that
in the expectation of a rich plunder), are continually
at variance on other points. Three thousand Texians
would fight against Mexico, but not two hundred against
the Mormons; and that for many reasons: government
alone, and not an individual, would be a gainer by
a victory in Texas, not a soul cares for any thing
but himself. Besides, the Mormons are Yankees,
and can handle a rifle, setting aside their good drilling
and excellent discipline. In number, they would
also have the advantage; while I am now writing, they
can muster five thousand well-drilled soldiers, and,
in the event of an invasion of Texas, they could easily
march ten thousand men from the Sabine to the Rio Grande,
from the Red River to the Gulf of Mexico. Opposition
they will not meet. A year after the capture,
the whole of Texas becomes Mormon, while Joe king,
emperor, Pharaoh, judge or regenerator rules
over a host of two hundred and fifty thousand devoted
subjects.
Let our reader observe that these
are not the wild utopias of a heated imagination.
No; we speak as we do believe, and our intercourse
with the Mormons, during our travels, has been sufficiently
close to give us a clear insight into their designs
for the future.
Joe’s policy is, above all,
to conciliate the Indians, and that once done, there
will not be in America a power capable of successfully
opposing him. In order to assist this he joins
them in his new faith. In admitting the Indians
to be the “right, though guilty,” descendants
of the sacred tribes, he flatters them with an acknowledgment
of their antiquity, the only point on which a white
can captivate and even blind the shrewd though untutored
man of the wilds.
In explanation of the plans and proceedings
of Joe Smith and the Mormons, it may not be amiss
to make some remarks upon the locality which he has
designed as the seat of his empire and dominion, and
where he has already established his followers, as
the destined instruments of his ambition.
According to the Mormon prophets,
the whole region of country between the Rocky Mountains
and the Alleghanies was, at a period of about thirteen
hundred years ago, densely peopled by nations descended
from a Jewish family, who emigrated from Jerusalem
in the time of the prophet Jeremiah, some six or seven
hundred years before Christ; immense cities were founded,
and sumptuous edifices reared, and the whole land
overspread with the results of a high and extensive
civilisation.
The Book of Mormon speaks of cities
with stupendous stone walls, and of battles, in which
hundreds of thousands were slain. The land afterwards
became a waste and howling wilderness, traversed by
a few straggling bands or tribes of savages, descended
from a branch of the aforesaid Jewish family, who,
in consequence of their wickedness, had their complexion
changed from white to red; but the emigrants from Europe
and their descendants, having filled the land, and
God having been pleased to grant a revelation by which
is made known the true history of the past in America,
and the events which are about to take place, he has
also commanded the Saints of the Latter Day to assemble
themselves together there, and occupy the land which
was once held by the members of the true church.
The states of Missouri and Illinois,
and the territory of Iowa, are the regions to which
the prophet has hitherto chiefly directed his schemes
of aggrandisement, and which are to form the nucleus
of the Mormon empire. The remaining states are
to be licked up like salt, and fall before
the sweeping falchion of glorious prophetic dominion,
like the defenceless lamb before the mighty king of
the forest.
I have given the results of my notes
taken relative to the Mormons, not, perhaps, in very
chronological order, but as I gathered them from time
to time. The reader will agree with me, that
the subject is well worth attention. Absurd
and ridiculous as the creed may be, no creed ever,
in so short a period, obtained so many or such devoted
prosélytes. From information I have since
received, they may now amount to three hundred thousand;
and they have wealth, energy, and unity they
have every thing in their favour; and the federal
government has been so long passive, that I doubt
if it has the power to disperse them. Indeed,
to obtain their political support, they have received
so many advantages, and, I may say, such assistance,
that they are now so strong, that any attempt to wrest
from them the privileges which have been conceded would
be the signal for a general rising.
They have fortified Nauvoo; they can
turn out a disciplined force as large as the States
are likely to oppose to them, and, if successful,
can always expect the co-operation of seventy thousand
Indians, or, if defeated, a retreat among them, which
will enable them to coalesce for a more fortunate
opportunity of action. Neither do I imagine that
the loss of their leader, Joe Smith, would now much
affect their strength; there are plenty to replace
him, equally capable, not perhaps to have formed the
confederacy, religious and political, which he has
done, but to uphold it, now that it is so strong.
The United States appear to me to be just now in
a most peculiar state of progression, and very soon
the eyes of the whole world will be directed towards
them and the result of their institutions. A
change is about to take place; what that change will
be, it is difficult to say; but a few years will decide
the question.