The conversation that I had with Wauna
gave me so much uneasiness that I sought her mother.
I cannot express the shock I felt at hearing such
youthful and innocent lips speak of the absurdity of
religious forms, ceremonies, and creeds. She
regarded my belief in them as a species of barbarism.
But she had not convinced me. I was resolved not
to be convinced. I believed she was in error.
Surely, I thought, a country so far
advanced in civilization, and practicing such unexampled
rectitude, must, according to my religious teaching,
have been primarily actuated by religious principles
which they had since abandoned. My only surprise
was that they had not relapsed into immorality, after
destroying church and creed, and I began to feel anxious
to convince them of the danger I felt they were incurring
in neglecting prayer and supplication at the throne
to continue them in their progress toward perfection
of mental and moral culture.
I explained my feelings to the Preceptress
with great earnestness and anxiety for their future,
intimating that I believed their immunity from disaster
had been owing to Divine sufferance. “For
no nation,” I added, quoting from my memory
of religious precepts, “can prosper without
acknowledging the Christian religion.”
She listened to me with great attention,
and when I had finished, asked:
“How do you account for our
long continuance in prosperity and progress, for it
is more than a thousand years since we rooted out the
last vestige of what you term religion, from the mind.
We have had a long immunity from punishment.
To what do you attribute it?”
I hesitated to explain what had been
in my mind, but finally faltered out something about
the absence of the male sex. I then had to explain
that the prisons and penitentiaries of my own land,
and of all other civilized lands that I knew of, were
almost exclusively occupied by the male sex.
Out of eight hundred penitentiary prisoners, not more
than twenty or thirty would be women; and the majority
of them could trace their crimes to man’s
infidelity.
“And what do you do to reform
them?” inquired the Preceptress.
“We offer them the teachings
of Christianity. All countries, however, differ
widely in this respect. The government of my country
is not as generous to prisoners as that of some others.
In the United States every penitentiary is supplied
with a minister who expounds the Gospel to the prisoners
every Sunday; that is once every seven days.”
“And what do they do the rest of the time?”
“They work.”
“Are they ignorant?”
“Oh, yes, indeed;” I replied,
earnestly. “You could not find one scholar
in ten thousand of them. Their education is either
very limited, or altogether deficient.”
“Do the buildings they are confined in cost
a great deal?”
“Vast sums of money are represented
by them; and it often costs a community a great deal
of money to send a criminal to the penitentiary.
In some States the power to pardon rests entirely with
the governor, and it frequently occurs that a desperate
criminal, who has cost a county a great deal of money
to get rid of him, will be pardoned by the governor,
to please a relative, or, as it is sometimes believed,
for a bribe.”
“And do the people never think
of educating their criminals instead of working them?
“That would be an expense to the government,”
I replied.
“If they would divide the time,
and compel them to study half a day as rigorously
as they make them work, it would soon make a vast change
in their morals. Nothing so ennobles the mind
as a broad and thorough education.”
“They are all compelled to listen
to religious instruction once a week,” I answered.
“That surely ought to make some improvement in
them. I remember hearing an American lady relate
her attendance at chapel service in a State penitentiary
one Sunday. The minister’s education was
quite limited, as she could perceive from the ungrammatical
language he used, but he preached sound orthodox doctrine.
The text selected had a special application to his
audience: ’Depart from me ye accursed, into
everlasting torment prepared for the Devil and his
angels.’ There were eight hundred prisoners,
and the minister assured them, in plain language,
that such would surely be their sentence unless they
repented.”
“And that is what you call the
consolations of religion, is it?” asked the
Preceptress with an expression that rather disconcerted
me; as though my zeal and earnestness entirely lacked
the light of knowledge with which she viewed it.
“That is religious instruction;”
I answered. “The minister exhorted the
prisoners to pray and be purged of their sins.
And it was good advice.”
“But they might aver,”
persisted the Preceptress, “that they had prayed
to be restrained from crime, and their prayers had
not been answered.”
“They didn’t pray with
enough faith, then;” I assured her in the confidence
of my own belief. “That is wherein I think
my own church is so superior to the other religions
of the world,” I added, proudly. “We
can get the priest to absolve us from sin, and then
we know we are rid of it, when he tells us so.”
“But what assurance have you
that the priest can do so?” asked the Preceptress.
“Because it is his duty to do so.”
“Education will root out more
sin than all your creeds can,” gravely answered
the Preceptress. “Educate your convicts
and train them into controlling and subduing their
criminal tendencies by their own will, and
it will have more effect on their morals than all the
prayers ever uttered. Educate them up to that
point where they can perceive for themselves the happiness
of moral lives, and then you may trust them to temptation
without fear. The ideas you have expressed about
dogmas, creeds and ceremonies are not new to us, though,
as a nation, we do not make a study of them.
They are very, very ancient. They go back to the
first records of the traditionary history of man.
And the farther you go back the deeper you plunge
into ignorance and superstition.
“The more ignorant the human
mind, the more abject was its slavery to religion.
As history progresses toward a more diffuse education
of the masses, the forms, ceremonies and beliefs in
religion are continually changing to suit the advancement
of intelligence; and when intelligence becomes universal,
they will be renounced altogether. What is true
of the history of one people will be true of the history
of another. Religions are not necessary to human
progress. They are really clogs. My ancestors
had more trouble to extirpate these superstitious ideas
from the mind than they had in getting rid of disease
and crime. There were several reasons for this
difficulty. Disease and crime were self-evident
evils, that the narrowest intelligence could perceive;
but beliefs in creeds and superstitions were perversions
of judgment, resulting from a lack of thorough mental
training. As soon, however, as education of a
high order became universal, it began to disappear.
No mind of philosophical culture can adhere to such
superstitions.
“Many ages the people made idols,
and, decking them with rich ornaments, placed them
in magnificent temples specially built for them and
the rites by which they worshipped them. There
have existed many variations of this kind of idolatry
that are marked by the progressive stages of civilization.
Some nations of remote antiquity were highly cultured
in art and literature, yet worshipped gods of their
own manufacture, or imaginary gods, for everything.
Light and darkness, the seasons, earth, air, water,
all had a separate deity to preside over and control
their special services. They offered sacrifices
to these deities as they desired their co-operation
or favor in some enterprise to be undertaken.
“In remote antiquity, we read
of a great General about to set out upon the sea to
attack the army of another nation. In order to
propitiate the god of the ocean, he had a fine chariot
built to which were harnessed two beautiful white
horses. In the presence of a vast concourse of
people collected to witness the ceremony, he drove
them into the sea. When they sank out of sight
it was supposed that the god had accepted the present,
and would show his gratitude for it by favoring winds
and peaceful weather.
“A thousand years afterward
history speaks of the occurrence derisively, as an
absurd superstition, and at the same time they believed
in and lauded a more absurd and cruel religion.
They worshipped an imaginary being who had created
and possessed absolute control of everything.
Some of the human family it had pleased him to make
eminently good, while others he made eminently bad.
For those whom he had created with evil desires, he
prepared a lake of molten fire into which they were
to be cast after death to suffer endless torture for
doing what they had been expressly created to do.
Those who had been created good were to be rewarded
for following out their natural inclinations, by occupying
a place near the Deity, where they were to spend eternity
in singing praises to him.
“He could, however, be persuaded
by prayer from following his original intentions.
Very earnest prayer had caused him to change his mind,
and send rain when he had previously concluded to
visit the country with drouth.
“Two nations at war with each
other, and believing in the same Deity, would pray
for a pestilence to visit their enemy. Death was
universally regarded as a visitation of Providence
for some offense committed against him instead of
against the laws of nature.
“Some believed that prayer and
donations to the church or priest, could induce the
Deity to take their relatives from the lake of torment
and place them in his own presence. The Deity
was prayed to on every occasion, and for every trivial
object. The poor and indolent prayed for him
to send them food and clothes. The sick prayed
for health, the foolish for wisdom, and the revengeful
besought the Deity to consign all their enemies to
the burning lake.
“The intelligent and humane
began to doubt the necessity of such dreadful and
needless torment for every conceivable misdemeanor,
and it was modified, and eventually dropped altogether.
Education finally rooted out every phase of superstition
from the minds of the people, and now we look back
and smile at the massive and magnificent structures
erected to the worship of a Deity who could be coaxed
to change his mind by prayer.”
I did not tell the Preceptress that
she had been giving me a history of my own ancestry;
but I remarked the resemblance with the joyous hope
that in the future of my own unhappy country lay the
possibility of a civilization so glorious, the ideal
heaven of which every sorrowing heart had dreamed.
But always with the desire to believe it had a spiritual
eternity.