Walt Whitman wrote
The Half-Breed; A Tale of the Western Frontier during the lead up to the
Mexican-American War, while he was editor of the
Brooklyn Daily Eagle. He frequently voiced his opinions of Mexico, especially regarding the wars between the United States and Mexican territories. When talking about how Mexico will be affected by the war, Whitman says "Mexico will be a severed and cut up nation. She deserves this,—or rather her
government deserves it, because Mexican rule has been more a libel
on liberty than liberty itself". He believed in
manifest destiny, and wanted the United States to expand as far as it could. Therefore, he supported the wars fought against anyone who would get in the way of that. As Shivley states, "Whitman supported the
Wilmot Proviso that would exclude slavery from conquered territories and called for an end to the war. Those like Whitman who could not support the extension of slavery founded the
Free Soil Party".
The Half-Breed is one of Whitman's early novels, which include
Franklin Evans, or the Inebriate (1842), a
temperance novel, and
Life and Adventures of Jack Engle (1852), which was rediscovered in 2015. Throughout his works, Whitman alludes to Native Americans and contributes to the "
vanishing Indian" trope. Critics disagree about Whitman's racial bias towards Native Americans. Some argue that he shows "fondness for Indian subjects" because of his frequent inclusion of Natives in his narratives. Others argue that the representation of Native people contributed to a negative mindset toward them. For example, some say that in
The Half-Breed Whitman "lapses into the stock racial profile of an 'apathetic' and expressionless Native American." The silent Native character, mixed in with Whitman's inclusion of expansion, feeds into the vanishing Indian trope. In
The Half Breed, Whitman seems to include another political statement. Many say he is creating an argument against
capital punishment. In the story Arrow-Tip "dies as a result of mistaken testimony, revenge, and a precipitant legal hanging." Arrow-Tip's unnecessary death highlights the dangers of capital punishment's being imposed on the wrongfully accused, and shows that the aftermath of that situation is messy and difficult to deal with. == Plot ==