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LITR 5535: American
Romanticism Sheila Newell God in Nature a
Suggestion of Transcendentalism
God in nature is a stylized Romantic ideal that saturates the Romantic
landscape. The lofty language in Romantic literature describing how an
individual experiences nature creates a correspondence between man and nature:
“The landscapes of romance are often outward manifestations of the hero’s or
heroine’s inner state” (Bedford 414). And it is this correspondence that
suggests a spiritual union of humanity with nature. Exploring the spiritual
concept of God in nature begins with our readings in Genesis, The
Iroquois Creation Story, two of Anne Bradstreet’s works and James Fenimore
Cooper’s, The Deerslayer. Comparing the Pre-Romantic works with
Cooper’s work might suggest how Pre-Romantic ideas may have influenced the
Romantic landscape, specifically the Romantic landscape in The Deerslayer. One ancient text
from which the Romantics seem to form their idea of God in nature is the book of
Genesis: “the Lord God formed man of the dust of the ground, and breathed life
into his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living soul” (Genesis
2:7 handout). God breathing into “the dust of the ground” suggests a
synthesizing of God and nature. Nature and humanity are fused when the “dust
of the ground” becomes “a living soul.” The fusion forms a trinity: God,
nature, and humankind. Romanticism embraces this fusion through
Transcendentalism, which Cooper also adopts in The Deerslayer. He loved the
woods for their freshness, their sublime solitudes, their vastness, and the
impress that they everywhere bore of the divine hand of their Creator. He rarely
moved through them without pausing to dwell on some peculiar beauty that gave
him pleasure, though seldom attempting to investigate the causes; and never did
a day pass without his communing in spirit, and this, too, without the aide of
forms or language, with the infinite Source of all he saw, felt, and beheld.
(250) The glorious scenery causes a
spiritual transcendence for the protagonist Deerslayer. Nature, God, and
Humankind are represented with the words “woods,” “divine Creator,” and
the personal pronoun “he.” The fusion of the trinity is clear in Cooper’s
language.
American Indian narratives add to the mystical nature of creation too. So
it would be good, at this point, to consider a point of view from another
antiquity source. In The Iroquois Creation Story, as in the Biblical
account, a “good mind,” suggesting a god, creates people out of the earth:
“he formed two images of the dust of the ground in his own likeness, male and
female, and by his breathing into their nostrils he gave them the living
souls…” (Norton 20). Humankind coming out of the earth suggests a connection
to the earth but this time it is the Indian race and not the White race. A
common denominator for both creation stories is the concept that the creator
spirit (God) breathes life into the images that are created from “the dust of
the ground.” The life breathing act of God into “the dust of the ground”
creates the spirit of humankind, thus completing the connection of man to
nature. Corresponding The Iroquois Creation Story with the Biblical
creation account suggests that the breath of God breathed life into all
humanity, which includes the Indian race. Moreover, using an Aristotelian
analogy—since a characteristic of God is goodness, and humankind is created in
his image according to Genesis 1:27 (handout), then God breathing the breathe of
life into the Indian race could suggest the idea of “good” Indians. Although we
don’t know for sure if Cooper knew the above Iroquois story, the story does
fit into his philosophical ideals. Cooper creates “good Indians” in The
Deerslayer, which draws criticism and accusations: “ ‘[Cooper’s]
characters were Indians of the school of Heckewelder, rather than of the school
of nature’ “ (Cooper X). Heckewelder was a missionary to the Indians who
believed that Indians “had the soul, reason, and characteristics of a fellow
being” (X). Heckewelder is worth mentioning because Cooper’s defense of his
Indian characterization suggests that he might have used Heckewelder’s ideas
in his work. Additionally, it is likely that Cooper knew Genesis and some
version(s) of the Indian creation story, so then it becomes increasingly
probable that Cooper does model his Indian characters according to metaphysical
concepts rather than the common prejudices of the society. Cooper’s Indian
characterization works in three ways to fuse God, man and nature. Firstly,
Cooper identifies Deerslayer as “a poor Delaware hunter,” which successfully
juxtaposes Deerslayer with the Delaware Indians (384). Secondly, this
positioning does two things: it humanizes the Indians and also suggests that
some Indians, just as some White men, have a good nature. Thirdly, an Indian who
has good qualities like the White man must have a God-breathed spirit within
him, which brings us back to the concept that God is in both humanity and
nature. Cooper moralizes the Indian through the character of Chingachgook, a
Delaware Indian: “Chingachgook will be with his friend, Deerslayer; if he be
in the land of spirits, the Great Serpent will crawl at his side, if beneath
yonder sun, its warmth and light shall fall on both’ (397). This loyalty to
Deerslayer suggests the moral and good character of an Indian; it also
personifies the idea of Indians being fused with God and nature just like white
people. Another blending
of God into nature comes from Anne Bradstreet. She writes from a Puritan
perspective and connects nature’s grandeur with God’s existence. Although I
don’t think Bradstreet sees God in nature, I do think that one might glean
some Romantic ideas of God in nature from her work. It is interesting to follow
a progression in her epic poem Contemplations (Norton 117) as the idea of
God in nature seems to develop but also collapses: Then higher on
the glistering Sun I gazed. Whose beams was
shaded by the leafy tree; The more I
looked, the more I grew amazed, And softly said,
‘What glory’s like to thee?’ Soul of this
world, this universe’s eye, No wonder some
made thee a deity; Had I not better
known, alas, the same had I.
(22-28) In these lines, Bradstreet
recognizes the glory of the sun and understands why some might see God in the
sun, but she knows better, and she pulls back into her Puritan roots.
Nonetheless, even as she pulls back, the idea of God in nature still resonates
in her writing and fits well into the Cooper Romantic landscape.
An additional passage from Bradstreet’s life, that might suggest
Romantic ideals of God in nature, is when she struggles with “the verity of
the Scriptures” (130). She writes to her children explaining her struggles,
and how she comes to an understanding of who God is: I never saw any
miracles to confirm me, and those which I read of, how did I know but they were
feigned? That there is a God my reason would soon tell me by the wondrous works
that I see, the vast frame of heaven and the earth, the order of all things,
night and day, summer and winter, spring and autumn, the daily providing for
this great household upon the earth, the preserving and directing of all to its
proper end. The consideration of these things would with amazement certainly
resolve me that there is an Eternal Being.
(130) Bradstreet’s epiphany experience
is directly related to her observation of nature. She did not find God in the
Scriptures, nor did she find God in any miracle because she had not seen a
miracle, but she could see the evidence of God by looking at nature, which might
suggests that God is in nature. A similar passage can be found in The
Deerslayer. The character of Deerslayer, like Bradstreet, finds God in
nature too: My edication has
been altogether in the woods; the only book I read or care about reading, is the
one which God has opened afore all his creatur’s in the noble forest, broad
lakes, rolling rivers, blue skies, and the winds, and tempests, and sunshine,
and other glorious marvels of the land! This book I can read, and I find it full
of wisdom and knowledge.
(Cooper 383) This passage is clearly a
transcendentalist way of thinking. The woods illustrate the fullness of the
Creator. Since the woods “are full of wisdom and knowledge,” which are also
a characteristic of God, then the fullness of God is also in nature. Bradstreet,
similar to the character of Deerslayer, understands that she can experience God
through His creation, which again suggests that God is in nature.
Biblical nuances are the stylistic devices that Romantics use to
romanticize nature effectively creating the “God in nature” of Romanticism.
In the antiquity literature, God breathing into the “dust of the ground”
creates an indwelling of God into all of His creation, as Deerslayer notes:
“God is observable in all nat’ral objects” (Cooper 397). Kayla Logan
concurs with the fusion concept when she writes in her midterm introduction that
Romanticists “use Biblical allusions to achieve an elevated style and to
present a moral appeal to their audiences.” The synthesizing of God, man and
nature, from Pre-Romantic texts exemplifies the Biblical allusion that Cooper
incorporates into The Deerslayer effectively creating the “God in
nature” concept that Romanticism embraces. Works
Cited Bradstreet, Anne. “Contemplations.” The Norton Anthology of American Literature. Ed. Nina Baym. New York: W W Norton & Company, 2003. 116. ----------- “To My Dear
Children.” New York: W W Norton & Company, 2003. 130 Cusick, David. “The Iroquois
Creation Story.” The Norton Anthology of American Literature. Ed. Nina
Baym. New York: W W Norton & Company, 2003. Trans. David Cusick. 17-21. Cooper, James Fenimore. The
Deerslayer. New York: Bantam Books, 1982. Logan, Kayla. “American
Romanticism Midterm.” 13 June 2002. 17 September 2003<http://coursesite.uhcl.edu/HSH/Whitec/LITR/5535/models/2002/midterms/logan.htm> Murfin, Ross, Supryia M. Ray. The
Bedford Glossary of Critical and Literary Terms. New York: Bedford/St.Martin’s,
2003. The Holy Bible, King James
Version (1611; New York: American Bible Society.). “The First Book of Moses,
called Genesis.” (Class Handout).
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