"Thanks to the Maple" is from American anthropologist Lewis Henry
Morgan's important 1851 work League of the Iroquois--in which he wrote
of the complexity of Iroquois society. "Thanks to the Maple" describes
in great detail the Iroquois first festival of spring, also called the
Maple Dance. This significant annual ritual celebrated the rising of the
sap in maple trees, and included speeches, dancing, games, and a great
feast. According to Morgan, it was a festive day, "awakening the
eagerness of expectation in the minds of all."
This short work is part of Applewood's American Roots series, tactile
mementos of American passions by some of America's most famous writers
and thinkers.