This little volume is a contribution to the comparative study of religions. It
is an endeavor to present in a critically correct light some of the fundamental
conceptions which are found in the native beliefs of the tribes of America.
So little has heretofore been done in this field that it has yielded a very
scanty harvest for purposes of general study. It has not yet even passed the
stage where the distinction between myth and tradition has been recognized.
Nearly all historians continue to write about some of the American hero-gods as
if they had been chiefs of tribes at some undetermined epoch, and the effort to
trace the migrations and affiliations of nations by similarities in such stories
is of almost daily occurrence. How baseless and misleading all such arguments
must be, it is one of my objects to set forth.
At the same time I have endeavored to be temperate in applying the
interpretations of mythologists. I am aware of the risk one runs in looking at
every legend as a light or storm myth. My guiding principle has been that when
the same, and that a very extraordinary, story is told by several tribes wholly
apart in language and location, then the probabilities are enormous that it is
not a legend but a myth, and must be explained as such. It is a spontaneous
production of the mind, not a reminiscence of an historic event.
The importance of the study of myths has been abundantly shown of recent years,
and the methods of analyzing them have been established with satisfactory
clearness.
The time has long since passed, at least among thinking men, when the religious
legends of the lower races were looked upon as trivial fables, or as the
inventions of the Father of Lies. They are neither the one nor the other. They
express, in image and incident, the opinions of these races on the mightiest
topics of human thought, on the origin and destiny of man, his motives for duty
and his grounds of hope, and the source, history and fate of all external
nature. Certainly the sincere expressions on these subjects of even humble
members of the human race deserve our most respectful heed, and it may be that
we shall discover in their crude or coarse narrations gleams of a mental light
which their proud Aryan brothers have been long in coming to, or have not yet
reached.
The prejudice against all the lower faiths inspired by the claim of Christianity
to a monopoly of religious truth--a claim nowise set up by its founder--has led
to extreme injustice toward the so-called heathen religions. Little effort has
been made to distinguish between their good and evil tendencies, or even to
understand them. I do not know of a single instance on this continent of a
thorough and intelligent study of a native religion made by a Protestant
missionary.
So little real work has been done in American mythology that very diverse
opinions as to its interpretation prevail among writers. Too many of them apply
to it facile generalizations, such as "heliolatry," "animism," "ancestral
worship," "primitive philosophizing," and think that such a sesame will unloose
all its mysteries. The result has been that while each satisfies himself, he
convinces no one else.
I have tried to avoid any such bias, and have sought to discover the source of
the myths I have selected, by close attention to two points: first, that I
should obtain the precise original form of the myth by a rigid scrutiny of
authorities; and, secondly, that I should bring to bear upon it modern methods
of mythological and linguistic analysis.
The first of these requirements has given me no small trouble. The sources of
American history not only differ vastly in merit, but many of them are almost
inaccessible. I still have by me a list of books of the first order of
importance for these studies, which I have not been able to find in any public
or private library in the United States.
I have been free in giving references for the statements in the text. The
growing custom among historians of omitting to do this must be deplored in the
interests of sound learning. It is better to risk the charge of pedantry than to
leave at fault those who wish to test an author's accuracy or follow up the line
of investigation he indicates.
On the other hand, I have exercised moderation in drawing comparisons with
Aryan, Semitic, Egyptian and other Old World mythologies. It would have been
easy to have noted apparent similarities to a much greater extent. But I have
preferred to leave this for those who write upon general comparative mythology.
Such parallelisms, to reach satisfactory results, should be attempted only by
those who have studied the Oriental religions in their original sources, and
thus are not to be deceived by superficial resemblances.
The term "comparative mythology" reaches hardly far enough to cover all that I
have aimed at. The professional mythologist thinks he has completed his task
when he has traced a myth through its transformations in story and language back
to the natural phenomena of which it was the expression. This external history
is essential. But deeper than that lies the study of the influence of the myth
on the individual and national mind, on the progress and destiny of those who
believed it, in other words, its true religious import. I have
endeavored, also, to take some account of this.
The usual statement is that tribes in the intellectual condition of those I am
dealing with rest their religion on a worship of external phenomena. In
contradiction to this, I advance various arguments to show that their chief god
was not identified with any objective natural process, but was human in nature,
benignant in character, loved rather than feared, and that his worship carried
with it the germs of the development of benevolent emotions and sound ethical
principles.
Media, Pa., Oct., 1882.