It also did not help the European’s case when they had other Europeans writing about how cruel their fellow countrymen where. It is understandable why we often side with natives, after all it was the Europeans who invaded their home and made it theirs. However, can we honestly say that the natives were so much better? In Mary Rowlandson’s captivity narrative, we get to see a unique perspective on the events. Rowlandson’s narrative is different from the other narratives that bash on the natives because Rowlandson was what some would deem innocent, whereas the other narratives come from military men who obviously would describe natives as savages. We get to see for once how the natives in the view of the simple colonist who were not there for war. Rowlandson, who was just a simple minister’s wife, described the natives as “murderous” and “barbarous creatures.” She was held captive by the natives and got to see firsthand how they acted and she was full of hated and fear. She viewed them as monsters and even when they showed an act of kindness to her, she still only saw them as such. We as outsiders can understand why the natives acted in that manner, but she able to throw away Williams’ notion that the natives were courteous and capture sympathy for the colonists by explaining her perspective on the
It also did not help the European’s case when they had other Europeans writing about how cruel their fellow countrymen where. It is understandable why we often side with natives, after all it was the Europeans who invaded their home and made it theirs. However, can we honestly say that the natives were so much better? In Mary Rowlandson’s captivity narrative, we get to see a unique perspective on the events. Rowlandson’s narrative is different from the other narratives that bash on the natives because Rowlandson was what some would deem innocent, whereas the other narratives come from military men who obviously would describe natives as savages. We get to see for once how the natives in the view of the simple colonist who were not there for war. Rowlandson, who was just a simple minister’s wife, described the natives as “murderous” and “barbarous creatures.” She was held captive by the natives and got to see firsthand how they acted and she was full of hated and fear. She viewed them as monsters and even when they showed an act of kindness to her, she still only saw them as such. We as outsiders can understand why the natives acted in that manner, but she able to throw away Williams’ notion that the natives were courteous and capture sympathy for the colonists by explaining her perspective on the