Alhalla, or the Lord of Talladega: A Tale of the Creek War. Henry Rowe Schoolcraft

Читать онлайн.
Название Alhalla, or the Lord of Talladega: A Tale of the Creek War
Автор произведения Henry Rowe Schoolcraft
Жанр Языкознание
Серия
Издательство Языкознание
Год выпуска 0
isbn 4064066151263



Скачать книгу

tion>

       Henry Rowe Schoolcraft

      Alhalla, or the Lord of Talladega: A Tale of the Creek War

      With Some Selected Miscellanies, Chiefly of Early Date

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066151263

       ALHALLA, OR THE LORD OF TALLADEGA.

       INTRODUCTORY STANZAS.

       ALHALLA, OR THE LORD OF TALLADEGA.

       CANTO I. TRADITIONARY GLEAMS OF THE CREATION. THE COUNCIL.

       CANTO II. THE SACRED ISLAND. A DISCOVERY.

       CANTO III. THE BATTLES OF TALLASATCHES AND TALLADEGA.

       CANTO IV. THE WARRIOR’S DREAM. A PROPHECY.

       CANTO V. THE FALL OF THE MUSCOGEE RACE. THE VOLUNTARY EXILE.

       CANTO VI. THE RE-UNION.

       MISCELLANIES.

       PONTIAC’S APPEAL.

       GEEHALE. AN INDIAN LAMENT.

       THE CHOICE. ADDRESSED TO A YOUNG LADY.

       THE BIRCHEN CANOE.

       ON LEAVING THE VILLAGE OF GENEVA IN 1812.

       ON THOSE WHO FELL IN THE WAR OF 1812.

       ON THE MARRIAGE OF MR. SAVAGE TO MISS WILD. [1811.]

       LIKES AND DISLIKES.

       WASHINGTON.

       THE WHITE FISH.

       A TALE OF THE NORTH, [1830.]

       THERE IS A TIME TO DIE.

       LINES, ON THE DEATH OF CAPT. M. M. DOX, LATE OF THE UNITED STATES ARMY.

       THE CHIPPEWA GIRL.

       SHINGABAWOSSIN.

       OR

       THE LORD OF TALLADEGA.

       Table of Contents

      A TALE OF THE CREEK WAR.

      WITH SOME SELECTED MISCELLANIES,

       CHIEFLY OF EARLY DATE.

      BY

       HENRY ROWE COLCRAFT.

      NEW-YORK AND LONDON:

       WILEY AND PUTNAM. MDCCCXLIII.

      Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1843,

       by HENRY ROWE COLCRAFT,

       in the Clerk’s Office of the District Court of the

       Southern District of New-York.

      John F. Trow, Printer,

       33 Ann-street.

      TO WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT, ESQ.

      OF NEW-YORK.

      Sir:—Whatever may be the particular estimate set upon the intellectual character of the American aborigines, or the decision had on the perplexing question of their remote origin, or their actual and varying condition, few will dispute the large share of interest which they have in the public mind. And it is a species of interest which, I think we shall perceive, will be found to assume a higher and more imaginative cast, connected with the advancing state of letters and the fine arts, as we recede from the historical era, when these tribes were confessedly the lords and rulers of the land.

      Their name and semblance are, in truth, infiltrated, if I may use a chemical phrase, into the very elements of the American landscape, which can hardly ever be contemplated without bringing out from the latent depths of the imagination, the image of the lithe Indian, with his Robin Hood arms and his picturesque costume. The policy which an enlightened government and people ought to pursue towards them, at all times, is a question that chiefly concerns the statesman and the philanthropist. But there are a hundred subordinate questions which come home for decision to the bosoms of all readers and thinkers, travellers and writers, to whom the race itself, viewed as a broken link in the ethnological chain, is a fruitful theme, both for retrospection and for actual observation. I have indeed, myself, participated largely in this field of observation, and may with truth affirm, that I return to society, after completing a period of but little short of four and twenty years in their territories.

      How far the interest of these reminiscences of a noble race are realized, or communicated in the following tale, I cannot pretend to predict. But if I may rely on the American press, and it is an authority which, in this instance, is sustained abroad, there are few persons who are so well qualified to judge of success in this particular as yourself. This consideration would plead a justification for the liberty I take, of addressing the present sketch to you; but it is a liberty which I should hardly venture on, were I not,

      Very truly yours,

       The Author.

      ADVERTISEMENT.

      The treaty of Ghent, concluded in the autumn of 1814, terminated the contest then existing between the United States and Great Britain, although it was not promulgated in time to arrest one of the severest battles of the war. In this contest, as in all prior ones of a general character, subsequent to the settlement of European nations in the new world, the native tribes were deeply involved. Indeed, it was under the influence of an extraordinary prophetic delusion, that it may be said to have commenced, on their part, on the plains of Tippecanoe.

      If