Home / Ruttenber, E.M. Footprints of the Red Men: Indian Geographical Names in the Valley of Hudson's River, the Valley of the Mohawk, and on the Delaware. Published in the Proceedings of the New York State Historical Association, Vol. VI. 1906. / Passage

Footprints of the Red Men: Indian Geographical Names

Ruttenber, E.M. Footprints of the Red Men: Indian Geographical Names in the Valley of Hudson's River, the Valley of the Mohawk, and on the Delaware. Published in the Proceedings of the New York State Historical Association, Vol. VI. 1906. 340 words

While its history reeks with blood, carnage, oppression, injustice, cruelty, in which sad facts the pessimist hears '' the eternal note of sadness,''' and unwisely rushes into a denial of the moral order -- it has its sun-bright triumphs of rectitude, and the illuminating picture of the steady and glorious advance of mankind from brutishness into an orderly, moralized life. Readers of Matthew Arnold -- an author whose intellectual vision was great, and whose style is one of the literary ornaments of the last century -- will recall how he was taken with what he called " Mr. Darwin's famous proposition " that " our ancestor was a hairy quadruped, furnisihed with a tail and pointed ears, probably arboreal in his habits." Mr. Arnold, the apostle of culture, played again and again around this sonorous phrase. Far be it from me to enter upon any discussion of the Darwinian hypothesis of the genesis of the human race. On this large theme the last word has

THE DEMOCRATIC IDEAL. 137

not been said. Knowledge must grow from more to more before we can posit anything definite on a subject veiled at present in inscrutable mystery. But, in its essence, the evolutionary theory has soaked into our modern thought. The literature and the progressive teaching of our latter day are drenched with it. It certainly can be said of it, that it explains many things which have heretofore seemed inexplicable, and marks a great advance in popular intelligence. But the most ambitious generalization is only a temporary expedient. Fact will merge in fact; law will melt into a larger law ; one deep of knowledge will call unto another deep ; much that the proudest scientist of our day calls knowledge will vanish away ; many theories now popular will be dissected and pruned and will be found to be " such stuflf as dreams are made on," before the most enlightened humanity of a future age catches any one phase of nature in its snare and compresses it into rigid laws.