![]()
The following text by Native American writer Scott Momaday consists of three paragraphs that have been broken up into individual sentences and sorted alphabetically. See if you can reconstruct the original text by rearranging the sentences. You can download a Word 97 version of this activity to work on. The three topic sentences are in bold type to help you get started. When you have finished, send me an e-mail (jsuther@uni-bremen.de) to ask for the solution.
Above all, it was wild, definitively wild.
And it was inhabited by a people who were to him altogether alien and inscrutable, who were essentially dangerous and deceptive, often invisible, who were savage and unholy - and who were perfectly at home.
By virtue of their culture and history - a culture of acquisition and a history of conquest - they were peculiarly prepared to commit sacrilege, the theft of the sacred.
Even the Indians succumbed to the kind of narcissism the Europeans brought to bear on the primeval landscape, the imposition of a belief - essentially alien to both the land and the peoples who inhabited it - that would locate them once again within their own field of vision.
For the European who came from a community of congestion and confinement, the West was beyond dreaming; it must have inspired him to formulate an idea of the infinite.
For the Indian, the mirage of the ghost dance - to which the concepts of a messiah and immortality, both foreign, European imports, were central - was surely an ignis fatuus, and the cause of frightful suffering and death.
He was surely bewildered, wary, afraid.
In spite of their narcissism, some aspect of their intrusion must have occurred to them as sacrilege, for they were in the unfortunate position of robbing the native peoples of their homeland and the land of its spiritual resources.
It was desolate and unforgiving, and yet it was a world of paradisal possibility.
It was the home of peoples who had come upon the North American continent many thousands of years before, who had in the course of their habitation become the spirit and intelligence of the earth, who had died into the ground again and again and so made it sacred.
The landscape was anomalously beautiful and hostile.
There he could walk through geologic time; he could see into eternity.
This is a crucial point, then: the West was occupied.
Those Europeans who ventured into the West must have seen themselves in some wise as latecomers and intruders.
UWS
Syllabus | Self-Assessment
Grid | Handouts, Exercises, Assignments
| Online Writing Labs
APA Citation Style | MLA Citation
Style | Solution