By Henry Chappell
I can’t look at country
– plains, woodland, and mountains – without wondering what it looked like in
its primeval state. As a boy roaming wooded hills, creek bottoms, and pastures
in central Kentucky, I yearned for wilderness known by the Shawnee and
Cherokee. I don’t attribute that yearning to nostalgia, but to curiosity and a
sense of loss.
Years later, hunting
quail in the Texas Panhandle, I mourned long absent bison, knowing that their
annihilation sealed the Comanche’s fate and opened the southern Great Plains to
cattlemen and white, suburban quail hunters. I had no illusions about frontier
life, no fantasies of meeting Comanche raiders. Yet, I count as loss the
unlikelihood that mounted Plains Indians will ever again hunt wild bison with
bow and lance.
In Goodbye to a
River, John Graves wrote of the “proud names” that haunted the hills and
valleys of his beloved Brazos watershed: “…Bigfoot Wallace, Oliver Loving, Charles
Goodnight, Cynthia Ann Parker and her Indain son Quanah, Santanta, Iron Shirt …
Few people outside of West Texas ever heard of most of them. Long ago I learned
that the history of the upper-middle Brazos was not the pop of a cap gun in the
big pageant, but that knowledge never stopped the old names from ringing like a
bell in my head.”
Ringing like a bell in
my head. As my reading and
study expanded, and that gnawing sense that I had something to say and needed
to get it down grew more acute, those same names and others began to ring in my
own head: Noah Smithwick, Britt Johnson, Billy Dixon, Ten Bears, Juan Castro,
and Sarah Cockrell.
Some, like Noah
Smithwick and Juan Castro, showed up as fleshed out characters in Blood
Kin. Others, like Britt Johnson and Ten Bears contributed to composites:
plainsman Bob Durham and Comanche civil chief Cuts Something in The
Callings.
Later, the feel and
smell of historic buildings in Dallas and Plano, afternoon sun on old brick and
stone and fuzzy photos of nineteenth century town life stirred me. Studying
tintypes and painted portraits, I began to see familiar features in the stern faces
of town leaders, matriarchs and slaves. Through the inner lives of characters
in Silent We Stood, I grappled with the question of how such
settled; orderly people could turn hysterical and murderous.
Henry James famously
called historical fiction “humbug.” Certainly, much of it has been marred by
sentimentality and ideological blight. Nowadays, literary tastemakers seem to
consider historical fiction a genre. Serious fiction, we’re told, shows us who
we are today.
Let’s not flatter
ourselves. Let’s not confuse sensibility with human nature. We are who
we were. Imagining ourselves living with the bedevilments,
insecurity, and ignorance of the distant past could prove more enlightening
than literary reflections of ourselves struggling under ignorance and
unexamined assumptions that will baffle our descendants.
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Henry Chappell’s work has appeared in Orion, American Conservative, Field &
Stream, Sports Afield, and many
other national and regional magazines. His eight books include 6666: Portrait of a Texas Ranch (with
Wyman Meinzer), The Callings, and Blood Kin. His latest novel, Silent We Stood, won the 2014 Western
Writers of America Spur Award for historical fiction. He lives with his family in Parker, Texas. To
learn more, visit www.byhenrychappell.com
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