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How American Indians Love
Are North American Indians Gallant?
Henry Theophilus Finck
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       _ Having failed to find mental purity and admiration of personal beauty in the Indian's love-affairs, let us now see how he stands in regard to the altruistic impulses which differentiate love from self-love. Do Indians behave gallantly toward their women? Do they habitually sacrifice their comfort and, in case of need, their lives for their wives?
       Dr. Brinton declares (_Am. R._, 48) that "the position of women in the social scheme of the American tribes has often been portrayed in darker colors than the truth admits." Another eminent American anthropologist, Horatio Hale, wrote[209] that women among the Indians and other savages are not treated with harshness or regarded as inferiors except under special circumstances. "It is entirely a question of physical comfort, and mainly of the abundance or lack of food," he maintains. For instance, among the sub-arctic Tinneh, women are "slaves," while among the Tinneh (Navajos) of sunny Arizona they are "queens." Heckewelder declares (_T.A.P.S._, 142) that the labors of the squaws "are no more than their fair share, under every consideration and due allowance, of the hardships attendant on savage life." This benevolent and oft-cited old writer shows indeed such an eager desire to whitewash the Indian warrior that an ignorant reader of his book might find some difficulty in restraining his indignation at the horrid, lazy squaws for not also relieving the poor, unprotected men of the only two duties which they have retained for themselves--murdering men or animals. But the most "fearless" champion of the noble red man is a woman--Rose Yawger--who writes (in _The Indian and the Pioneer_, 42) that "the position of the Indian woman in her nation was not greatly inferior to that enjoyed by the American woman of to-day." ... "They were treated with great respect." Let us confront these assertions with facts.
       [FOOTNOTE 209: _Journ. Anthrop. Inst._, 1892, 427.]
       Beginning with the Pacific Coast, we are told by Powers (405) that, on the whole, California Indians did not make such slaves of women as the Indians of the Atlantic side of the continent. This, however, is merely comparative, and does not mean that they treat them kindly, for, as he himself says (23), "while on a journey the man lays far the greatest burdens on his wife." On another page (406) he remarks that while a California boy is not "taught to pierce his mother's flesh with an arrow to show him his superiority over her, as among the Apaches and Iroquois," he nevertheless afterward "slays his wife or mother-in-law, if angry, with very little compunction." Colonel McKee, in describing an expedition among California Indians (Schoolcraft, III., 127), writes:
       "One of the whites here, in breaking in his squaw to
       her household duties, had occasion to beat her several
       times. She complained of this to her tribe and they
       informed him that he must not do so; if he was
       dissatisfied, _let him kill her and take another_!"
       "The men," he adds, "allow themselves the privilege of
       shooting any woman they are tired of."

       The Pomo Indians make it a special point to slaughter the women of their enemies during or after battle. "They do this because, as they argue with the greatest sincerity, one woman destroyed is tantamount to five men killed" (Bancroft, I., 160), for without women the tribe cannot multiply. A Modoc explained why he needed several wives--one to take care of his house, a second to hunt for him, a third to dig roots . Bancroft cites half a dozen authorities for the assertion that among the Indians of Northern California "boys are disgraced by work" and "women work while men gamble or sleep" (I., 351). John Muir, in his recent work on _The Mountains of California_ , says it is truly astonishing to see what immense loads the haggard old Pah Ute squaws make out to carry bare-footed over the rugged passes. The men, who are always with them, stride on erect and unburdened, but when they come to a difficult place they "kindly" pile stepping-stones for their patient pack-animal wives, "just as they would prepare the way for their ponies."
       Among some of the Klamath and other California tribes certain women are allowed to attain the rank of priestesses. To be "supposed to have communication with the devil" and be alone "potent over cases of witchcraft and witch poisoning" is, however, an honor which women elsewhere would hardly covet. Among the Yurok, Powers relates, when a young man cannot afford to pay the amount of shell-money without which marriage is not considered legal, he is sometimes allowed to pay half the sum and become what is termed "half-married." "Instead of bringing her to his cabin and making her his slave, he goes to live in her cabin and becomes her slave." This, however, "occurs only in case of soft uxorious fellows." Sometimes, too, a squaw will take the law in her own hands, as in a case mentioned by the same writer. A Wappo Indian abandoned his wife and went down the river to a ranch where he took another woman. But the lawful spouse soon discovered his whereabouts, followed him up, confronted him before his paramour, upbraided him fiercely, and then seized him by the hair and led him away triumphantly to her bed and basket. It is to check such unseemly "new-womanish" tendencies in their squaws that the Californians resorted to the bugaboo performances already referred to. The Central Californian women, says Bancroft, are more apt than the others to rebel against the tyranny of their masters; but the men usually manage to keep them in subjection. The Tatu and Pomo tribes intimidate them in this way:
        "A man is stripped naked, painted with red and black
       stripes, and then at night takes a sprig of poison oak,
       dips it in water, and sprinkles it on the squaws, who,
       from its effects on their skins, are convinced of the
       man's satanic power, so that his object is attained."
       (Powers, 141.)

       The pages of Bancroft contain many references besides those already quoted, showing how far the Indians of California were from treating their women with chivalrous, self-sacrificing devotion. "The principal labor falls to the lot of the women" (I., 351). Among the Gallinomeros,
        "_as usual_, the women are treated with great contempt
       by the men, and forced to do all the hard and menial
       work; they are not even allowed to sit at the same fire
       or eat at the same repast with their lords"
.
       Among the Shoshones "the weaker sex _of course_ do the hardest labor" , etc. With the Hupa a girl will bring in the market $15 to $50--"about half the valuation of a man." (Powers, 85.)
       Nor do matters mend if we proceed northward on the Pacific coast. Thus, Gibbs says of the Indians of Western Oregon and Washington, "the condition of the woman is that of slavery under any circumstances;" and similar testimony might be adduced regarding the Indians of British Columbia and Alaska.
       Among the eastern neighbors of the Californians there is one Indian people--the Navajos of Arizona and New Mexico--that calls for special attention, as its women, according to Horatio Hale, are not slaves but "queens." The Navajos have lived for centuries in a rich and fertile country; their name is said to mean "large cornfields" and the Spaniards found, about the middle of the sixteenth century, that they practised irrigation. A more recent writer, E.A. Graves,[210] says that the Navajos "possess more wealth than all the wild tribes in New Mexico combined. They are rich in horses, mules, asses, goats, and sheep." Bancroft cites evidence (I., 513) that the women were the owners of the sheep; that they were allowed to take their meals with the men, and admitted to their councils; and that they were relieved of the drudgery of menial work. Major E. Backus also noted (Schoolcraft, IV., 214) that Navajo women "are treated more kindly than the squaws of the northern tribes, and perform far less of laborious work than the Sioux or Chippewa women." But when we examine the facts more closely we find that this comparative "emancipation" of the Navajo women was not a chivalrous concession on the part of the men, but proceeded simply from the lack of occasion for the exercise of their selfish propensities. No one would be so foolish as to say that even the most savage Indian would put his squaw into the treadmill merely for the fun of seeing her toil. He makes a drudge of her in order to save himself the trouble of working. Now the Navajos were rich enough to employ slaves; their labor, says Major Backus, was "mostly performed by the poor dependants, both male and female." Hence there was no reason for making slaves of their wives. Backus gives another reason why these women were treated more kindly than other squaws. After marriage they became free, for sufficient cause, to leave their husbands, who were thus put on their good behavior. Before marriage, however, they had no free choice, but were the property of their fathers. "The consent of the father is absolute, and the one so purchased assents or is taken away by force."[211]
       [FOOTNOTE 210: _Indian Com. Rep_., 1854, p. 179.]
       [FOOTNOTE 211: Bristol in _Ind. Aff. Rep. Spec. Com_., 1867, p. 357.]
       A total disregard of these women's feelings was also shown in the "very extensive prevalence of polygamy," and in the custom that the wife last chosen was always mistress of her predecessors. (Bancroft, I., 512.) But the utter incapacity of Navajo men for sympathetic, gallant, chivalrous sentiment is most glaringly revealed by the barbarous treatment of their female captives, who, as before stated, were often shot or delivered up for indiscriminate violence. Where such a custom prevails as a national institution it would be useless to search for refined feeling toward any woman. Indeed, the Navajo women themselves rendered the growth of refined sexual feeling impossible by their conduct. They were notorious, even among Indians, for their immodesty and lewd conduct, and were consequently incapable of either feeling or inspiring any but the coarsest sensual passion. They were not queens, as the astonishing Hale would have it, but they certainly were queans.
       Concerning other Indians of the Southwest--Yumas, Mojaves, Pueblos, etc.--M.A. Dorchester writes:[212]
       "The native Indian is naturally polite, but until
       touched by civilization, it never occurred to him to be
       polite to his wife." "If there is one drawback to
       Indian civilization more difficult to overcome than any
       other, it is to convince the Indian that he ought not
       to put the hardest work upon the Indian women."
       [FOOTNOTE 212: _Rep. Com. Ind. Aff_., 1892, p. 607.]
       The ferocious Apaches make slaves of their women. (Bancroft, I., 512.) Among the Comanches "the women do all the menial work." The husband has the pleasant excitement of killing the game, while the women do the hard work even here: "they butcher and transport the meat, dress the skins, etc." "The females are abused and often beaten unmercifully." (Schoolcraft, I., 236, V., 684.) The Moquis squaws were exempt from field labor not from chivalrous feelings but because the men feared amorous intrigues. (Waitz, IV., 209.) A Snake, Lewis and Clarke found,
       "would consider himself degraded by being compelled to
       walk any distance; and were he so poor as to possess
       only two horses, he would ride the best of them, and
       leave the other for his wives and children and their
       baggage; and if he has too many wives or too much
       baggage for the horse, the wives have no alternative
       but to follow him on foot."
       Turning to the great Dakota or Sioux stock, we run against one of the most naive of the sentimentalists, Catlin, who perpetrated several books on the Indians and made many "fearless" assertions about the red men in general and the Mandans in particular. G.E. Ellis, in his book, _The Red Man and the While Man_, justly observes of Catlin that "he writes more like a child than a well-balanced man," and Mitchell (in Schoolcraft, III., 254) declares that much of what Catlin wrote regarding the Mandans existed "entirely in the fertile imagination of that gentleman," Yet this does not prevent eminent anthropologists like Westermarck (359) from soberly quoting Catlin's declaration that "it would be untrue and doing injustice to the Indians, to say that they were in the least behind us in conjugal, in filial, and in paternal affection" (_L.N.N.A.I._, I., 121). There is only one way of gauging a man's affection, and that is by his actions. Now how, according to Catlin himself, does an Indian act toward his wife? Even among the Mandans, so superior to the other Indians he visited, he found that the women, however attractive or hungry they might be,
       "are not allowed to sit in the same group with
       the men while at their meals. So far as I have yet
       travelled in the Indian country I have never seen
       an Indian woman eating with her husband. Men form
       the first group at the banquet, and _women and
       children and dogs_ all come together at the next."
       Men first, women and dogs next--yet they are "not in the least behind us in conjugal affection!" With his childish disregard of logic and lack of a sense of humor Catlin goes on to tell us that Mandan women lose their beauty soon because of their early marriages and "the slavish life they lead." In many cases, he adds, the inclinations of the girl are not considered in marriage, _the father selling her to the highest bidder_.
       Mandan conjugal affection, "just like ours," is further manifested by the custom, previously referred to, which obliges mourning women to crop off all their hair, while of a man's locks, which "are of much greater importance," only one or two can be spared. (Catlin, _l.c._, I., 95, 119, 121; II., 123.) An amusing illustration of the Mandan's supercilious contempt for women, also by Catlin, will be given later.[213]
       [FOOTNOTE 213: Even the wives of chiefs were treated no better than slaves. Catlin himself tells us of the six wives of a Mandan chief who were "not allowed to speak, though they were in readiness to obey his orders." (_Smithson. Rep._. 1885, Pt. II., 458.)]
       The Sioux tribes in general have always been notorious for the brutal treatment of their women. Mrs. Eastman, who wrote a book on their customs, once received an offer of marriage from a chief who had a habit of expending all his surplus bad temper upon his wives. He had three of them, but was willing to give them all up if she would live with him. She refused, as she "did not fancy having her head split open every few days with a stick of wood." G.P. Belden, who also knew the Sioux thoroughly, having lived among them twelve years, wrote (270, 303-5) that "the days of her childhood are the only happy or pleasant days the Indian girl ever knows." "From the day of her marriage [in which she has no choice] until her death she leads a most wretched life." The women are "the servants of servants." "On a winter day the Sioux mother is often obliged to travel eight or ten miles and carry her lodge, camp-kettle, ax, child, and several small dogs on her back and head." She has to build the camp, cook, take care of the children, and even of the pony on which her lazy and selfish husband has ridden while she tramped along with all those burdens. "So severe is their treatment of women, a happy female face is hardly ever seen in the Sioux nation." Many become callous, and take a beating much as a horse or ox does. "Suicide is very common among Indian women, and, considering the treatment they receive, it is a wonder there is not more of it."[214]
       [FOOTNOTE 214: Such cruel treatment of women argues a total lack of sympathy in Indians, and without sympathy there can be no love. The systematic manner in which sympathy is crushed among Indians I have described in a previous chapter. Here let me add a few remarks by Theodore Roosevelt (I., 86) which coincide with what John Hance, the famous Arizona guide, told me:
       "Anyone who has ever been in an encampment of wild
       Indians and has had the misfortune to witness the
       delight the children take in torturing little animals
       will admit that the Indian's love of cruelty for
       cruelty's sake cannot possibly be exaggerated. The
       young are so trained that when old they shall find
       their keenest pleasure in inflicting pain in its
       most appalling form. Among the most brutal white
       borderers a man would be instantly lynched if he
       practiced on any creature the fiendish torture
       which in the Indian camp either attracts no
       notice at all, or else excites merely laughter."
       (See also Roosevelt's remarks--87, 831, 335 on Helen Hunt Jackson's _Century of Dishonor_.) The Indian was much wronged by unprincipled agents and others, but the border ruffians served him only as he served others of his race, the weaker being always driven out. Nor was there any real sympathy within the tribes themselves. "These people," wrote the old Jesuit missionary Le Jeune (VI., 245), "are very little moved by compassion. They give a sick person food and drink, but show otherwise no concern for him; to coax him with love and tenderness is a language which they do not understand. When he refuses food they kill him, partly to relieve him from suffering, partly to relieve themselves of the trouble of taking him with them when they go to some other place."
]
       Burton attests (_C.S._, 125, 130, 60) that "the squaw is a mere slave, living a life of utter drudgery." The husbands "care little for their wives." "The drudgery of the tent and field renders the squaw cold and unimpassioned." "The son is taught to make his mother toil for him." "One can hardly expect a smiling countenance from the human biped trudging ten or twenty miles under a load fit for a mule." "Dacotah females," writes Neill,
        "deserve the sympathy of every tender heart. From early
       childhood they lead worse than a dog's life.
       Uncultivated and treated like brutes, they are prone to
       suicide, and, when desperate, they act more like
       infuriated beasts than creatures of reason."

       Of the Crow branch of the Dakotas, Catlin wrote:[215] "They are, _like all other Indian women, the slaves of their husbands_ ... and not allowed to join in their religious rites and ceremonies, nor in the dance or other amusements." All of which is delightfully consistent with this writer's assertion that the Indians are "not in the least behind us in conjugal affection."[216]
       [FOOTNOTE 215: _Smithsonian Rep._, 1885, Pt. II., 108.]
       [FOOTNOTE 216: The humor of Catlin's assertions becomes more obvious still when we read how readily Indians dissolve their marriages, through love of change, caprice, etc. See cases in Westermarck, 518.]
       In his _Travels Through the Northwest Regions of the United States_ Schoolcraft thus sums up his observations:
       "Of the state of female society among the
       Northern Indians I shall say little, because on a
       review of it I find very little to admire, either
       in their collective morality, or personal
       endowments.... Doomed to drudgery and hardships
       from infancy ... without either mental resources
       or personal beauty--what can be said in favor of
       the Indian women?"

       A French author, Eugene A. Vail, writes an interesting summary of the realistic descriptions given by older writers of the brutal treatment to which the women of the Northern Indians were subjected. He refers, among other things, to the efforts made by Governor Cass, of Michigan, to induce the Indians to treat their women more humanely; but all persuasion was in vain, and the governor finally had to resort to punishment. He also refers to the selfish ingenuity with which the men succeeded in persuading the foolish squaws that it would be a disgrace for their lords and masters to do any work, and that polygamy was a desirable thing. The men took as many wives as they pleased, and if one of them remonstrated against a new rival, she received a sound thrashing.
       In Franklin's _Journey to the Shores of the Polar Sea_ we are informed that the women are obliged to drag the heavily laden sledges:
       "Nothing can more shock the feelings of a person
       accustomed to civilized life than to witness the state
       of their degradation. When a party is on a march the
       women have to drag the tent, the meat, and whatever the
       hunter possesses, whilst he only carries his gun and
       medicine case."

       When the men have killed any large beast, says Hearne (90), the women are always sent to carry it to the tent. They have to prepare and cook it,
       "and when it is done the wives and daughters of the
       greatest captains in the country are never served till
       all the males, even those who are in the capacity of
       servants, have eaten what they think proper."

       Of the Chippewas, Keating says (II., 153), that "frequently ... their brutal conduct to their wives produces abortions."
       A friend of the Blackfoot Indians, G.B. Grinnell, relates (184, 216) that, while boys play and do as they please, a girl's duties begin at an early age, and she soon does all a woman's "and so menial" work. Their fathers select husbands for them and, if they disobey, have a right to beat or even kill them. "As a consequence of this severity, suicide was quite common among the Blackfoot girls."
       A passage in William Wood's _New England Prospect_, published in 1634,[217] throws light on the aboriginal condition of Indian women in that region. Wood refers to "the customarie churlishnesse and salvage inhumanitie" of the men. The Indian women, he says, are
        "more loving, pittiful and modest, milde, provident,
       and laborious than their lazie husbands.... Since the
       _English_ arrivall comparison hath made them miserable,
       for seeing the kind usage of the _English_ to their
       wives, they doe as much condemne their husbands for
       unkindnesse and commend the _English_ for love, as
       their husbands, commending themselves for their wit in
       keeping their wives industrious, doe condemn the
       _English_ for their folly in spoiling good working
       creatures."

       [FOOTNOTE 217: Cited by Schoolcraft, _Oneota_, 57.]
       Concerning the intelligent, widely scattered, and numerous Iroquois, Morgan, who knew them more intimately than anyone else, wrote (322), that "the Indian regarded woman as the inferior, the dependent, and the servant of man, and, from nature and habit, she actually considered herself to be so." "Adultery was punished by whipping; but the punishment was inflicted on the woman alone, who was supposed to be the only offender". "Female life among the Hurons had no bright side," wrote Parkman (_J.C._, XXXIII.). After marriage,
       "the Huron woman from a wanton became a drudge ... in
       the words of Champlain, 'their women were their mules.'
       The natural result followed. In every Huron town were
       shrivelled hags, hideous and despised, who, in
       vindictiveness, ferocity, and cruelty, far exceeded the
       men."

       The _Jesuit Relations_ contain many references to the merciless treatment of their women by the Canadian Indians. "These poor women are real pack-mules, enduring all hardships." "In the winter, when they break camp, the women drag the heaviest loads over the snow; in short, the men seem to have as their share only hunting, war, and trading" (IV., 205). "The women here are mistresses and servants" (Hurons, XV.). In volume III. of the _Jesuit Relations_, Biard writes under date of 1616:
        "These poor creatures endure all the misfortunes and
       hardships of life; they prepare and erect the houses,
       or cabins, furnishing them with fire, wood, and water;
       prepare the food, preserve the meat and other
       provisions, that is, dry them in the smoke to preserve
       them; go to bring the game from the place where it has
       been killed; sew and repair the canoes, mend and stitch
       the skins, curry them and make clothes and shoes of
       them for the whole family; they go fishing and do the
       rowing; in short, undertake all the work except that
       alone of the grand chase, besides having the care and
       so weakening nourishment of the children....
       "Now these women, although they have so much trouble,
       as I have said, yet are not cherished any more for it.
       The husbands beat them unmercifully, and often for a
       very slight cause. One day a certain Frenchman
       undertook to rebuke a savage for this; the savage
       answered, angrily: 'How now, have you nothing to do but
       to see into my house, every time I strike my dog?'"

       Surely Dr. Brinton erred grievously when he wrote, in his otherwise admirable book, _The American Race_ (49), that the fatigues of the Indian women were scarce greater than those of their husbands, nor their life more onerous than that of the peasant women of Europe to-day. Peasants in Europe work quite as hard as their wives, whereas the Indian--except during the delightful hunting period, or in war-time, which, though frequent, was after all merely episodic--did nothing at all, and considered labor a disgrace to a man, fit only for women. The difference between the European peasant and the American red man can be inferred by anyone from what observers reported of the Creek Indians of our Southern States (Schoolcraft, V., 272-77):
       "The summer season, with the men, is devoted to war, or
       their domestic amusements of riding, horse-hunting,
       ball-plays, and dancing, and by the women to their
       customary hard labor."
       "The women perform all the labor, both in the house and
       field, and are, in fact, but slaves to the men, without
       any will of their own, except in the management of the
       children."
       "A stranger going into the country must feel distressed
       when he sees naked women bringing in huge burdens of
       wood on their shoulders, or, bent under the scorching
       sun, at hard labor in the field, while the indolent,
       robust young men are riding about, or stretched at ease
       on some scaffold, amusing themselves with a pipe or a
       whistle."

       The excesses to which bias and unintelligent philanthropy can lead a man are lamentably illustrated in the writings of the Moravian missionary, Heckewelder, regarding the Delaware Indians.[218] He argues that
       "as women are not obliged to live with their husbands
       any longer than suits their pleasure or convenience, it
       cannot be supposed that they would submit to be loaded
       with unjust or unequal burdens" (!) "Were a man to take
       upon himself a part of his wife's duty, in addition to
       his own [hunting (!), for the Delawares were then a
       peaceful tribe], he must necessarily sink under the
       load, and of course his family must suffer with him."
       [FOOTNOTE 218: _Transactions of the American Philosophical Society._ Philadelphia, 1819.]
       The heartless sophistry of this reasoning--heartless because of its pitiless disregard of the burdens and sufferings of the poor women--is exposed in part by his own admissions regarding the selfish actions of the men. He does not deny that after the women have harvested their corn or maple sugar the men arrogate the right to dispose of it as they please. He relates that in case of a domestic quarrel the husband shoulders his gun and goes away a week or so. The neighbors naturally say that his wife is quarrelsome. All the odium consequently falls on her, and when he gets back she is only too willing to drudge for him more than ever. Heckewelder naively gives the Indian's recipe for getting a useful wife:
       "Indian, when he see industrious squaw, which he like,
       he go to _him_ [her], place his two forefingers close
       aside each other, make two look like one--see _him_
       [her] smile--which is all _he_ [she] say, _yes!_ so he
       take _him_ [her] home. Squaw know too well what Indian
       do if _he_ [she] cross! Throw _him_ [her] away and take
       another! Squaw love to eat meat! no husband! no meat!
       Squaw do everything to please husband! he do same to
       please squaw [??]! live happy."
       When that Indian said "he do the same to please the squaw," he must have chuckled at his own sarcasm. Heckewelder does, indeed, mention a few instances of kindness to a wife _(e.g._, going a great distance to get some berries which she, in a pregnant state, eagerly desired;) but these were obviously exceptional, as I have found nothing like them in other records of Indian life. It must be remembered that, as Roosevelt remarks (97) these Indians, under the influence of the Moravian missionaries, had been
       "transformed in one generation from a restless,
       idle, blood-thirsty people of hunters arid fishers
       into an orderly, thrifty, industrious folk;
       believing with all their hearts the Christian
       religion."
       It was impossible, however, to drive out the devil entirely, as the facts cited show, and as we may infer from what, according to Loskiel, was true a century ago of the Delawares as well as the Iroquois: "Often it happens that an Indian deserts his wife because she has a child to suckle, and marries another whom he presently abandons for the same reason." In this respect, however, the women are not much better than the men, for, as he adds, they often desert a husband who has no more presents to give them, and go with another who has. Truly Catlin was right when he said that the Indians (and these were the best of them) were "not in the least behind us in conjugal affection!"
       Thus do even the apparent exceptions to Indian maltreatment of women--which exceptions are constantly cited as illustrations of the rule--melt away like mists when sunlight is brought to bear upon them. One more of these exceptions, of which sly sentimentalists have made improper use, must be referred to here. It is maintained, on the authority of Charlevoix, that the women of the Natchez Indians asserted their rights and privileges even above those of the men, for they were allowed to put unfaithful husbands to death while they themselves could have as many paramours as they pleased. Moreover, the husband had to stand in a respectful posture in the presence of his wife, was not allowed to eat with her, and had to salute her in the same way as the servants. This, truly, would be a remarkable sociological fact--if it were a fact. But upon referring to the pages of Charlevoix (264) we find that these statements, while perfectly true, do not refer to the Natchez women in general, but only to the princesses, or "female suns." These were allowed to marry none but private men; but by way of compensation they had the right to discard their husbands whenever they pleased and take another. The other women had no more privileges than the squaws of other tribes; whenever a chief saw a girl he liked he simply informed the relatives of the fact and enrolled her among the number of his wives. Charlevoix adds that he knew of no nation in America where the women were more unchaste. The privileges conferred on the princesses thus appear like a coarse, topsy-turvy joke, while affording one more instance of the lowest degradation of woman.
       Summing up the most ancient and trustworthy evidence regarding Mexico, Bandelier writes:
       "The position of women was so inferior, they
       were regarded as so far beneath the male, that
       the most degrading epithet that could be applied
       to any Mexican, aside from calling him a dog,
       was that of woman."
       If a woman presumed to don a man's dress her death alone could wipe out the dishonor. _