Many of the Strange Peoples are becoming less “strange” every year. Old customs and peculiar practices are dying out in every part of the world. Travellers, missionaries, and merchants from white men’s lands are taking our ideas, our tools, our weapons, our dress, our learning, our religion, and our vices to the remotest parts of the world. Some of the Strange Peoples here described have already lost most of their old customs. The Polynesians and Fijians have little of the old life which we have described. Many American Indian tribes have changed less. Some populations have still changed little. But a tribe must indeed be remote and difficult of access to actually escape our touch absolutely. Usually the change is not improvement. Other people more quickly adopt our vices than our virtues. Many tribes have become drunken, diseased, and depraved through the white man’s influence. It is rare, indeed, that a lower people gains in happiness or virtue by contact with “higher civilization.”
Many of the Strange Peoples will disappear. The Tasmanians were killed off almost like so many animals by the English. American Indian tribes have suffered almost as badly at our hands. Many tribes have gone; others are going. The Lipans were once a fairly numerous tribe. In 1892 I saw all who were left in the United States—four women and one man; six months later I saw them again—the man was dead and only four women remained. The Tonkaways are dying out at the rate of one-third each eight years. The Polynesians, strong, handsome, active, and happy as they were when James Cook visited their islands little more than one hundred years ago, have dwindled, and fifty years more may blot them from the earth. Not all American Indian tribes are dying out; it is possible too that Polynesian decline began before Cook’s travels. But it is certain that on the whole the changes brought by the newcomers sealed the doom of the Indian and Polynesian.
There have always been movements of peoples from place to place. We have seen the Malays pouring three great masses of immigrants into the Philippines. There are white peoples in Asia; there are yellow peoples in Europe. Recently plenty of whites and of blacks have poured into America. Such movements contain some danger. The fair whites will probably never be able to live in the tropical lands. A certain sort of skin, hair, nose, breathing apparatus, is necessary for men who are to live and prosper in low, hot, marshy parts of Africa. For Germans to try to colonize equatorial Africa is probably a fatal blunder. So far as we know the dark whites—Spaniards, Italians, south Frenchmen—make better tropical colonizers than we do; but even they are not successful. The negro is a bad colonizer, he hardly holds his own even in our Southern states. Of all the peoples of the globe the Chinese seem to be the best able to colonize differing countries. He seems to go to hot lands and cold lands, to small islands and to great continents, but flourishes everywhere. So true is this that some writers have urged that Africa be opened up for settlement to the crowded millions of the old empire. For most peoples, however, migration, if they must migrate, is best along the lines of latitude into lands as much like the old home as possible. Many Scandinavians live to-day happily where Wisconsin, Iowa, and Michigan join; and they may be expected to prosper there, for land and water, soil and products, scenery and climate, are there much what they were in the fatherland.
LIST OF BOOKS REGARDING STRANGE PEOPLES.
This list makes no pretension to completeness; a few only of the many books of the kind are mentioned. Those with a prefixed asterisk will be useful to teachers; those without will interest children; those followed by an asterisk have directly contributed to this book in reading matter or illustration.
- Arnold: Japonica.*
- Batcheller: The Ainu of Japan.*
- Bramhall: The Wee Ones of Japan.*
- *Brinton: Races and Peoples.
- Du Chaillu: The Land of the Dwarfs.*
- *Deniker: The Races of Man.
- Doolittle: Social Life of the Chinese.*
- Ellis: Polynesian Researches.*
- Fielde: A Corner of Cathay.
- Hearn: Glimpses of Unfamiliar Japan.
- Huc: Travels in Tartary, Thibet, and China.*
- *Keane: Ethnology.
- *Keane: Man; Past and Present.
- Lane: The Modern Egyptians.
- Leonowens: The English Governess at the Siamese Court.
- *Lowell: Chosön.*
- *Lubbock: Origin of Civilization.
- *Lummis: The Land of Poco Tiempo.*
- Marshall: Phrenologist among the Todas.*
- *Meyer: Album von Philippinen-Typen.*
- Miln: Little Folk of Many Lands.*
- Nansen: Eskimo Life.
- *Peschel: The Races of Man.
- De Quatrefages: The Pygmies.
- *Ratzel: History of Mankind.
- *Ratzel: Völkerkunde.*
- *Réclus: Primitive Folk.
- Rockhill: The Land of the Lamas.
- Schweinfurth: The Heart of Africa.*
- Smith: Chinese Characteristics.
- Stanley: In Darkest Africa.*
- *Turner: Samoa.
- *Tylor: Anthropology.*
- *Verneau: Les Races Humaines.*
- Wallace: The Malay Archipelago.
- Ward: India and the Hindoos.*
- Williams: Fiji and the Fijians.*
ADVERTISEMENTS
| American Indians | ||
| By FREDERICK STARR, Ph.D., | ||
| Associate Professor of Anthropology, University of Chicago. | ||
| Cloth. 240 Pages. | Fully Illustrated. | Price, 45 Cents. |
| D. C. HEATH & CO., Publishers, | ||
| BOSTON. | NEW YORK. | CHICAGO. |