<SPAN name="link2HCH0026" id="link2HCH0026"></SPAN>
<h2> CHAPTER 27 </h2>
<p>"Ant. I shall remember: When C'sar says<br/>
Do this, it is performed."<br/>
—Julius Caesar<br/></p>
<p>The impatience of the savages who lingered about the prison of Uncas, as
has been seen, had overcome their dread of the conjurer's breath. They
stole cautiously, and with beating hearts, to a crevice, through which the
faint light of the fire was glimmering. For several minutes they mistook
the form of David for that of the prisoner; but the very accident which
Hawkeye had foreseen occurred. Tired of keeping the extremities of his
long person so near together, the singer gradually suffered the lower
limbs to extend themselves, until one of his misshapen feet actually came
in contact with and shoved aside the embers of the fire. At first the
Hurons believed the Delaware had been thus deformed by witchcraft. But
when David, unconscious of being observed, turned his head, and exposed
his simple, mild countenance, in place of the haughty lineaments of their
prisoner, it would have exceeded the credulity of even a native to have
doubted any longer. They rushed together into the lodge, and, laying their
hands, with but little ceremony, on their captive, immediately detected
the imposition. Then arose the cry first heard by the fugitives. It was
succeeded by the most frantic and angry demonstrations of vengeance.
David, however, firm in his determination to cover the retreat of his
friends, was compelled to believe that his own final hour had come.
Deprived of his book and his pipe, he was fain to trust to a memory that
rarely failed him on such subjects; and breaking forth in a loud and
impassioned strain, he endeavored to smooth his passage into the other
world by singing the opening verse of a funeral anthem. The Indians were
seasonably reminded of his infirmity, and, rushing into the open air, they
aroused the village in the manner described.</p>
<p>A native warrior fights as he sleeps, without the protection of anything
defensive. The sounds of the alarm were, therefore, hardly uttered before
two hundred men were afoot, and ready for the battle or the chase, as
either might be required. The escape was soon known; and the whole tribe
crowded, in a body, around the council-lodge, impatiently awaiting the
instruction of their chiefs. In such a sudden demand on their wisdom, the
presence of the cunning Magua could scarcely fail of being needed. His
name was mentioned, and all looked round in wonder that he did not appear.
Messengers were then despatched to his lodge requiring his presence.</p>
<p>In the meantime, some of the swiftest and most discreet of the young men
were ordered to make the circuit of the clearing, under cover of the
woods, in order to ascertain that their suspected neighbors, the
Delawares, designed no mischief. Women and children ran to and fro; and,
in short, the whole encampment exhibited another scene of wild and savage
confusion. Gradually, however, these symptoms of disorder diminished; and
in a few minutes the oldest and most distinguished chiefs were assembled
in the lodge, in grave consultation.</p>
<p>The clamor of many voices soon announced that a party approached, who
might be expected to communicate some intelligence that would explain the
mystery of the novel surprise. The crowd without gave way, and several
warriors entered the place, bringing with them the hapless conjurer, who
had been left so long by the scout in duress.</p>
<p>Notwithstanding this man was held in very unequal estimation among the
Hurons, some believing implicitly in his power, and others deeming him an
impostor, he was now listened to by all with the deepest attention. When
his brief story was ended, the father of the sick woman stepped forth,
and, in a few pithy expression, related, in his turn, what he knew. These
two narratives gave a proper direction to the subsequent inquiries, which
were now made with the characteristic cunning of savages.</p>
<p>Instead of rushing in a confused and disorderly throng to the cavern, ten
of the wisest and firmest among the chiefs were selected to prosecute the
investigation. As no time was to be lost, the instant the choice was made
the individuals appointed rose in a body and left the place without
speaking. On reaching the entrance, the younger men in advance made way
for their seniors; and the whole proceeded along the low, dark gallery,
with the firmness of warriors ready to devote themselves to the public
good, though, at the same time, secretly doubting the nature of the power
with which they were about to contend.</p>
<p>The outer apartment of the cavern was silent and gloomy. The woman lay in
her usual place and posture, though there were those present who affirmed
they had seen her borne to the woods by the supposed "medicine of the
white men." Such a direct and palpable contradiction of the tale related
by the father caused all eyes to be turned on him. Chafed by the silent
imputation, and inwardly troubled by so unaccountable a circumstance, the
chief advanced to the side of the bed, and, stooping, cast an incredulous
look at the features, as if distrusting their reality. His daughter was
dead.</p>
<p>The unerring feeling of nature for a moment prevailed and the old warrior
hid his eyes in sorrow. Then, recovering his self-possession, he faced his
companions, and, pointing toward the corpse, he said, in the language of
his people:</p>
<p>"The wife of my young man has left us! The Great Spirit is angry with his
children."</p>
<p>The mournful intelligence was received in solemn silence. After a short
pause, one of the elder Indians was about to speak, when a dark-looking
object was seen rolling out of an adjoining apartment, into the very
center of the room where they stood. Ignorant of the nature of the beings
they had to deal with, the whole party drew back a little, and, rising on
end, exhibited the distorted but still fierce and sullen features of
Magua. The discovery was succeeded by a general exclamation of amazement.</p>
<p>As soon, however, as the true situation of the chief was understood,
several knives appeared, and his limbs and tongue were quickly released.
The Huron arose, and shook himself like a lion quitting his lair. Not a
word escaped him, though his hand played convulsively with the handle of
his knife, while his lowering eyes scanned the whole party, as if they
sought an object suited to the first burst of his vengeance.</p>
<p>It was happy for Uncas and the scout, and even David, that they were all
beyond the reach of his arm at such a moment; for, assuredly, no
refinement in cruelty would then have deferred their deaths, in opposition
to the promptings of the fierce temper that nearly choked him. Meeting
everywhere faces that he knew as friends, the savage grated his teeth
together like rasps of iron, and swallowed his passion for want of a
victim on whom to vent it. This exhibition of anger was noted by all
present; and from an apprehension of exasperating a temper that was
already chafed nearly to madness, several minutes were suffered to pass
before another word was uttered. When, however, suitable time had elapsed,
the oldest of the party spoke.</p>
<p>"My friend has found an enemy," he said. "Is he nigh that the Hurons might
take revenge?"</p>
<p>"Let the Delaware die!" exclaimed Magua, in a voice of thunder.</p>
<p>Another longer and expressive silence was observed, and was broken, as
before, with due precaution, by the same individual.</p>
<p>"The Mohican is swift of foot, and leaps far," he said; "but my young men
are on his trail."</p>
<p>"Is he gone?" demanded Magua, in tones so deep and guttural, that they
seemed to proceed from his inmost chest.</p>
<p>"An evil spirit has been among us, and the Delaware has blinded our eyes."</p>
<p>"An evil spirit!" repeated the other, mockingly; "'tis the spirit that has
taken the lives of so many Hurons; the spirit that slew my young men at
'the tumbling river'; that took their scalps at the 'healing spring'; and
who has, now, bound the arms of Le Renard Subtil!"</p>
<p>"Of whom does my friend speak?"</p>
<p>"Of the dog who carries the heart and cunning of a Huron under a pale skin—La
Longue Carabine."</p>
<p>The pronunciation of so terrible a name produced the usual effect among
his auditors. But when time was given for reflection, and the warriors
remembered that their formidable and daring enemy had even been in the
bosom of their encampment, working injury, fearful rage took the place of
wonder, and all those fierce passions with which the bosom of Magua had
just been struggling were suddenly transferred to his companions. Some
among them gnashed their teeth in anger, others vented their feelings in
yells, and some, again, beat the air as frantically as if the object of
their resentment were suffering under their blows. But this sudden
outbreaking of temper as quickly subsided in the still and sullen
restraint they most affected in their moments of inaction.</p>
<p>Magua, who had in his turn found leisure for reflection, now changed his
manner, and assumed the air of one who knew how to think and act with a
dignity worthy of so grave a subject.</p>
<p>"Let us go to my people," he said; "they wait for us."</p>
<p>His companions consented in silence, and the whole of the savage party
left the cavern and returned to the council-lodge. When they were seated,
all eyes turned on Magua, who understood, from such an indication, that,
by common consent, they had devolved the duty of relating what had passed
on him. He arose, and told his tale without duplicity or reservation. The
whole deception practised by both Duncan and Hawkeye was, of course, laid
naked, and no room was found, even for the most superstitious of the
tribe, any longer to affix a doubt on the character of the occurrences. It
was but too apparent that they had been insultingly, shamefully,
disgracefully deceived. When he had ended, and resumed his seat, the
collected tribe—for his auditors, in substance, included all the
fighting men of the party—sat regarding each other like men
astonished equally at the audacity and the success of their enemies. The
next consideration, however, was the means and opportunities for revenge.</p>
<p>Additional pursuers were sent on the trail of the fugitives; and then the
chiefs applied themselves, in earnest, to the business of consultation.
Many different expedients were proposed by the elder warriors, in
succession, to all of which Magua was a silent and respectful listener.
That subtle savage had recovered his artifice and self-command, and now
proceeded toward his object with his customary caution and skill. It was
only when each one disposed to speak had uttered his sentiments, that he
prepared to advance his own opinions. They were given with additional
weight from the circumstance that some of the runners had already
returned, and reported that their enemies had been traced so far as to
leave no doubt of their having sought safety in the neighboring camp of
their suspected allies, the Delawares. With the advantage of possessing
this important intelligence, the chief warily laid his plans before his
fellows, and, as might have been anticipated from his eloquence and
cunning, they were adopted without a dissenting voice. They were, briefly,
as follows, both in opinions and in motives.</p>
<p>It has been already stated that, in obedience to a policy rarely departed
from, the sisters were separated so soon as they reached the Huron
village. Magua had early discovered that in retaining the person of Alice,
he possessed the most effectual check on Cora. When they parted,
therefore, he kept the former within reach of his hand, consigning the one
he most valued to the keeping of their allies. The arrangement was
understood to be merely temporary, and was made as much with a view to
flatter his neighbors as in obedience to the invariable rule of Indian
policy.</p>
<p>While goaded incessantly by these revengeful impulses that in a savage
seldom slumber, the chief was still attentive to his more permanent
personal interests. The follies and disloyalty committed in his youth were
to be expiated by a long and painful penance, ere he could be restored to
the full enjoyment of the confidence of his ancient people; and without
confidence there could be no authority in an Indian tribe. In this
delicate and arduous situation, the crafty native had neglected no means
of increasing his influence; and one of the happiest of his expedients had
been the success with which he had cultivated the favor of their powerful
and dangerous neighbors. The result of his experiment had answered all the
expectations of his policy; for the Hurons were in no degree exempt from
that governing principle of nature, which induces man to value his gifts
precisely in the degree that they are appreciated by others.</p>
<p>But, while he was making this ostensible sacrifice to general
considerations, Magua never lost sight of his individual motives. The
latter had been frustrated by the unlooked-for events which had placed all
his prisoners beyond his control; and he now found himself reduced to the
necessity of suing for favors to those whom it had so lately been his
policy to oblige.</p>
<p>Several of the chiefs had proposed deep and treacherous schemes to
surprise the Delawares and, by gaining possession of their camp, to
recover their prisoners by the same blow; for all agreed that their honor,
their interests, and the peace and happiness of their dead countrymen,
imperiously required them speedily to immolate some victims to their
revenge. But plans so dangerous to attempt, and of such doubtful issue,
Magua found little difficulty in defeating. He exposed their risk and
fallacy with his usual skill; and it was only after he had removed every
impediment, in the shape of opposing advice, that he ventured to propose
his own projects.</p>
<p>He commenced by flattering the self-love of his auditors; a never-failing
method of commanding attention. When he had enumerated the many different
occasions on which the Hurons had exhibited their courage and prowess, in
the punishment of insults, he digressed in a high encomium on the virtue
of wisdom. He painted the quality as forming the great point of difference
between the beaver and other brutes; between the brutes and men; and,
finally, between the Hurons, in particular, and the rest of the human
race. After he had sufficiently extolled the property of discretion, he
undertook to exhibit in what manner its use was applicable to the present
situation of their tribe. On the one hand, he said, was their great pale
father, the governor of the Canadas, who had looked upon his children with
a hard eye since their tomahawks had been so red; on the other, a people
as numerous as themselves, who spoke a different language, possessed
different interests, and loved them not, and who would be glad of any
pretense to bring them in disgrace with the great white chief. Then he
spoke of their necessities; of the gifts they had a right to expect for
their past services; of their distance from their proper hunting-grounds
and native villages; and of the necessity of consulting prudence more, and
inclination less, in so critical circumstances. When he perceived that,
while the old men applauded his moderation, many of the fiercest and most
distinguished of the warriors listened to these politic plans with
lowering looks, he cunningly led them back to the subject which they most
loved. He spoke openly of the fruits of their wisdom, which he boldly
pronounced would be a complete and final triumph over their enemies. He
even darkly hinted that their success might be extended, with proper
caution, in such a manner as to include the destruction of all whom they
had reason to hate. In short, he so blended the warlike with the artful,
the obvious with the obscure, as to flatter the propensities of both
parties, and to leave to each subject of hope, while neither could say it
clearly comprehended his intentions.</p>
<p>The orator, or the politician, who can produce such a state of things, is
commonly popular with his contemporaries, however he may be treated by
posterity. All perceived that more was meant than was uttered, and each
one believed that the hidden meaning was precisely such as his own
faculties enabled him to understand, or his own wishes led him to
anticipate.</p>
<p>In this happy state of things, it is not surprising that the management of
Magua prevailed. The tribe consented to act with deliberation, and with
one voice they committed the direction of the whole affair to the
government of the chief who had suggested such wise and intelligible
expedients.</p>
<p>Magua had now attained one great object of all his cunning and enterprise.
The ground he had lost in the favor of his people was completely regained,
and he found himself even placed at the head of affairs. He was, in truth,
their ruler; and, so long as he could maintain his popularity, no monarch
could be more despotic, especially while the tribe continued in a hostile
country. Throwing off, therefore, the appearance of consultation, he
assumed the grave air of authority necessary to support the dignity of his
office.</p>
<p>Runners were despatched for intelligence in different directions; spies
were ordered to approach and feel the encampment of the Delawares; the
warriors were dismissed to their lodges, with an intimation that their
services would soon be needed; and the women and children were ordered to
retire, with a warning that it was their province to be silent. When these
several arrangements were made, Magua passed through the village, stopping
here and there to pay a visit where he thought his presence might be
flattering to the individual. He confirmed his friends in their
confidence, fixed the wavering, and gratified all. Then he sought his own
lodge. The wife the Huron chief had abandoned, when he was chased from
among his people, was dead. Children he had none; and he now occupied a
hut, without companion of any sort. It was, in fact, the dilapidated and
solitary structure in which David had been discovered, and whom he had
tolerated in his presence, on those few occasions when they met, with the
contemptuous indifference of a haughty superiority.</p>
<p>Hither, then, Magua retired, when his labors of policy were ended. While
others slept, however, he neither knew or sought repose. Had there been
one sufficiently curious to have watched the movements of the newly
elected chief, he would have seen him seated in a corner of his lodge,
musing on the subject of his future plans, from the hour of his retirement
to the time he had appointed for the warriors to assemble again.
Occasionally the air breathed through the crevices of the hut, and the low
flame that fluttered about the embers of the fire threw their wavering
light on the person of the sullen recluse. At such moments it would not
have been difficult to have fancied the dusky savage the Prince of
Darkness brooding on his own fancied wrongs, and plotting evil.</p>
<p>Long before the day dawned, however, warrior after warrior entered the
solitary hut of Magua, until they had collected to the number of twenty.
Each bore his rifle, and all the other accouterments of war, though the
paint was uniformly peaceful. The entrance of these fierce-looking beings
was unnoticed: some seating themselves in the shadows of the place, and
others standing like motionless statues, until the whole of the designated
band was collected.</p>
<p>Then Magua arose and gave the signal to proceed, marching himself in
advance. They followed their leader singly, and in that well-known order
which has obtained the distinguishing appellation of "Indian file." Unlike
other men engaged in the spirit-stirring business of war, they stole from
their camp unostentatiously and unobserved resembling a band of gliding
specters, more than warriors seeking the bubble reputation by deeds of
desperate daring.</p>
<p>Instead of taking the path which led directly toward the camp of the
Delawares, Magua led his party for some distance down the windings of the
stream, and along the little artificial lake of the beavers. The day began
to dawn as they entered the clearing which had been formed by those
sagacious and industrious animals. Though Magua, who had resumed his
ancient garb, bore the outline of a fox on the dressed skin which formed
his robe, there was one chief of his party who carried the beaver as his
peculiar symbol, or "totem." There would have been a species of profanity
in the omission, had this man passed so powerful a community of his
fancied kindred, without bestowing some evidence of his regard.
Accordingly, he paused, and spoke in words as kind and friendly as if he
were addressing more intelligent beings. He called the animals his
cousins, and reminded them that his protecting influence was the reason
they remained unharmed, while many avaricious traders were prompting the
Indians to take their lives. He promised a continuance of his favors, and
admonished them to be grateful. After which, he spoke of the expedition in
which he was himself engaged, and intimated, though with sufficient
delicacy and circumlocution, the expediency of bestowing on their relative
a portion of that wisdom for which they were so renowned.*</p>
<p>* These harangues of the beasts were frequent among the<br/>
Indians. They often address their victims in this way,<br/>
reproaching them for cowardice or commending their<br/>
resolution, as they may happen to exhibit fortitude or the<br/>
reverse, in suffering.<br/></p>
<p>During the utterance of this extraordinary address, the companions of the
speaker were as grave and as attentive to his language as though they were
all equally impressed with its propriety. Once or twice black objects were
seen rising to the surface of the water, and the Huron expressed pleasure,
conceiving that his words were not bestowed in vain. Just as he ended his
address, the head of a large beaver was thrust from the door of a lodge,
whose earthen walls had been much injured, and which the party had
believed, from its situation, to be uninhabited. Such an extraordinary
sign of confidence was received by the orator as a highly favorable omen;
and though the animal retreated a little precipitately, he was lavish of
his thanks and commendations.</p>
<p>When Magua thought sufficient time had been lost in gratifying the family
affection of the warrior, he again made the signal to proceed. As the
Indians moved away in a body, and with a step that would have been
inaudible to the ears of any common man, the same venerable-looking beaver
once more ventured his head from its cover. Had any of the Hurons turned
to look behind them, they would have seen the animal watching their
movements with an interest and sagacity that might easily have been
mistaken for reason. Indeed, so very distinct and intelligible were the
devices of the quadruped, that even the most experienced observer would
have been at a loss to account for its actions, until the moment when the
party entered the forest, when the whole would have been explained, by
seeing the entire animal issue from the lodge, uncasing, by the act, the
grave features of Chingachgook from his mask of fur.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />