Rene by Chateaubriand
Overview of the Story
This story involves a young man who leaves Europe to emigrate in the U.S. early in the 18th Century, where he joins with the Natchez Indians. For a while he is reticent to explain to his Native American friends why he is so moody and melancholy, but he finally gives in and explains to the blind Indian chief, Chactas, his whole repertoire of laments. To wit, his mother died during his birth, his father died too, and Rene traveled around Europe trying to find peace and joy but failed in that effort. Upon returning to France he discovered it was clouded with corruption so he was drawn ever closer to his sister Amelie, whom he loved dearly, likely in a sexual way, and Amelie did in fact love him so fervently the reader had the impression is was incestuous on her part. In fact Rene threatens to kill himself if Amelie does not return to him. A lengthy sub-plot emerges from that association. Upon receiving a letter from Europe, announcing that his loving sister Amelie had in fact died, makes him bitterly tearful. In the end, "…at last he perished in Louisiana…in a massacre of the Natchez Indians" (Johnson, 1908, p. 1-2).
There is in literature and in historical records...
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