<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0023" id="link2HCH0023"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Chapter XXIII. </h2>
<p>"The winde is great upon the highest hilles;<br/>
The quiet life is in the dale below;<br/>
Who tread on ice shall slide against their willes;<br/>
They want not cares, that curious arts should know.<br/>
Who lives at ease and can content him so,<br/>
Is perfect wise, and sets us all to schoole:<br/>
Who hates this lore may well be called a foole."<br/>
<br/>
Thomas Churchyard, "Shore's Wife," xlvii.<br/></p>
<p>The meeting between Deerslayer and his friends in the Ark was grave and
anxious. The two Indians, in particular, read in his manner that he was
not a successful fugitive, and a few sententious words sufficed to let
them comprehend the nature of what their friend had termed his 'furlough.'
Chingachgook immediately became thoughtful, while Hist, as usual, had no
better mode of expressing her sympathy than by those little attentions
which mark the affectionate manner of woman.</p>
<p>In a few minutes, however, something like a general plan for the
proceedings of the night was adopted, and to the eye of an uninstructed
observer things would be thought to move in their ordinary train. It was
now getting to be dark, and it was decided to sweep the Ark up to the
castle, and secure it in its ordinary berth. This decision was come to, in
some measure on account of the fact that all the canoes were again in the
possession of their proper owners, but principally, from the security that
was created by the representations of Deerslayer. He had examined the
state of things among the Hurons, and felt satisfied that they meditated
no further hostilities during the night, the loss they had met having
indisposed them to further exertions for the moment. Then, he had a
proposition to make; the object of his visit; and, if this were accepted,
the war would at once terminate between the parties; and it was improbable
that the Hurons would anticipate the failure of a project on which their
chiefs had apparently set their hearts, by having recourse to violence
previously to the return of their messenger. As soon as the Ark was
properly secured, the different members of the party occupied themselves
in their several peculiar manners, haste in council, or in decision, no
more characterizing the proceedings of these border whites, than it did
those of their red neighbors. The women busied themselves in preparations
for the evening meal, sad and silent, but ever attentive to the first
wants of nature. Hurry set about repairing his moccasins, by the light of
a blazing knot; Chingachgook seated himself in gloomy thought, while
Deerslayer proceeded, in a manner equally free from affectation and
concern, to examine 'Killdeer', the rifle of Hutter that has been already
mentioned, and which subsequently became so celebrated, in the hands of
the individual who was now making a survey of its merits. The piece was a
little longer than usual, and had evidently been turned out from the work
shops of some manufacturer of a superior order. It had a few silver
ornaments, though, on the whole, it would have been deemed a plain piece
by most frontier men, its great merit consisting in the accuracy of its
bore, the perfection of the details, and the excellence of the metal.
Again and again did the hunter apply the breech to his shoulder, and
glance his eye along the sights, and as often did he poise his body and
raise the weapon slowly, as if about to catch an aim at a deer, in order
to try the weight, and to ascertain its fitness for quick and accurate
firing. All this was done, by the aid of Hurry's torch, simply, but with
an earnestness and abstraction that would have been found touching by any
spectator who happened to know the real situation of the man.</p>
<p>"'Tis a glorious we'pon, Hurry!" Deerslayer at length exclaimed, "and it
may be thought a pity that it has fallen into the hands of women. The
hunters have told me of its expl'ites, and by all I have heard, I should
set it down as sartain death in exper'enced hands. Hearken to the tick of
this lock—a wolf trap has'n't a livelier spring; pan and cock speak
together, like two singing masters undertaking a psalm in meetin'. I never
did see so true a bore, Hurry, that's sartain!"</p>
<p>"Ay, Old Tom used to give the piece a character, though he wasn't the man
to particularize the ra'al natur' of any sort of fire arms, in practise,"
returned March, passing the deer's thongs through the moccasin with the
coolness of a cobbler. "He was no marksman, that we must all allow; but he
had his good p'ints, as well as his bad ones. I have had hopes that Judith
might consait the idee of giving Killdeer to me."</p>
<p>"There's no saying what young women may do, that's a truth, Hurry, and I
suppose you're as likely to own the rifle as another. Still, when things
are so very near perfection, it's a pity not to reach it entirely."</p>
<p>"What do you mean by that?—Would not that piece look as well on my
shoulder, as on any man's?"</p>
<p>"As for looks, I say nothing. You are both good-looking, and might make
what is called a good-looking couple. But the true p'int is as to conduct.
More deer would fall in one day, by that piece, in some man's hands, than
would fall in a week in your'n, Hurry! I've seen you try; yes, remember
the buck t'other day."</p>
<p>"That buck was out of season, and who wishes to kill venison out of
season. I was merely trying to frighten the creatur', and I think you will
own that he was pretty well skeared, at any rate."</p>
<p>"Well, well, have it as you say. But this is a lordly piece, and would
make a steady hand and quick eye the King of the Woods!"</p>
<p>"Then keep it, Deerslayer, and become King of the Woods," said Judith,
earnestly, who had heard the conversation, and whose eye was never long
averted from the honest countenance of the hunter. "It can never be in
better hands than it is, at this moment, and there I hope it will remain
these fifty years.</p>
<p>"Judith you can't be in 'arnest!" exclaimed Deerslayer, taken so much by
surprise, as to betray more emotion than it was usual for him to manifest
on ordinary occasions. "Such a gift would be fit for a ra'al King to make;
yes, and for a ra'al King to receive."</p>
<p>"I never was more in earnest, in my life, Deerslayer, and I am as much in
earnest in the wish as in the gift."</p>
<p>"Well, gal, well; we'll find time to talk of this ag'in. You mustn't be
down hearted, Hurry, for Judith is a sprightly young woman, and she has a
quick reason; she knows that the credit of her father's rifle is safer in
my hands, than it can possibly be in yourn; and, therefore, you mustn't be
down hearted. In other matters, more to your liking, too, you'll find
she'll give you the preference."</p>
<p>Hurry growled out his dissatisfaction, but he was too intent on quitting
the lake, and in making his preparations, to waste his breath on a subject
of this nature. Shortly after, the supper was ready, and it was eaten in
silence as is so much the habit of those who consider the table as merely
a place of animal refreshment. On this occasion, however, sadness and
thought contributed their share to the general desire not to converse, for
Deerslayer was so far an exception to the usages of men of his cast, as
not only to wish to hold discourse on such occasions, but as often to
create a similar desire in his companions.</p>
<p>The meal ended, and the humble preparations removed, the whole party
assembled on the platform to hear the expected intelligence from
Deerslayer on the subject of his visit. It had been evident he was in no
haste to make his communication, but the feelings of Judith would no
longer admit of delay. Stools were brought from the Ark and the hut, and
the whole six placed themselves in a circle, near the door, watching each
other's countenances, as best they could, by the scanty means that were
furnished by a lovely star-light night. Along the shores, beneath the
mountains, lay the usual body of gloom, but in the broad lake no shadow
was cast, and a thousand mimic stars were dancing in the limpid element,
that was just stirred enough by the evening air to set them all in motion.</p>
<p>"Now, Deerslayer," commenced Judith, whose impatience resisted further
restraint—"now, Deerslayer, tell us all the Hurons have to say, and
the reason why they have sent you on parole, to make us some offer."</p>
<p>"Furlough, Judith; furlough is the word; and it carries the same meaning
with a captyve at large, as it does with a soldier who has leave to quit
his colors. In both cases the word is passed to come back, and now I
remember to have heard that's the ra'al signification; 'furlough' meaning
a 'word' passed for the doing of any thing of the like. Parole I rather
think is Dutch, and has something to do with the tattoos of the garrisons.
But this makes no great difference, since the vartue of a pledge lies in
the idee, and not in the word. Well, then, if the message must be given,
it must; and perhaps there is no use in putting it off. Hurry will soon be
wanting to set out on his journey to the river, and the stars rise and
set, just as if they cared for neither Injin nor message. Ah's! me;
'Tisn't a pleasant, and I know it's a useless ar'n'd, but it must be
told."</p>
<p>"Harkee, Deerslayer," put in Hurry, a little authoritatively—"You're
a sensible man in a hunt, and as good a fellow on a march, as a
sixty-miler-a-day could wish to meet with, but you're oncommon slow about
messages; especially them that you think won't be likely to be well
received. When a thing is to be told, why tell it; and don't hang back
like a Yankee lawyer pretending he can't understand a Dutchman's English,
just to get a double fee out of him."</p>
<p>"I understand you, Hurry, and well are you named to-night, seeing you've
no time to lose. But let us come at once to the p'int, seeing that's the
object of this council—for council it may be called, though women
have seats among us. The simple fact is this. When the party came back
from the castle, the Mingos held a council, and bitter thoughts were
uppermost, as was plain to be seen by their gloomy faces. No one likes to
be beaten, and a red-skin as little as a pale-face. Well, when they had
smoked upon it, and made their speeches, and their council fire had burnt
low, the matter came out. It seems the elders among 'em consaited I was a
man to be trusted on a furlough—They're wonderful obsarvant, them
Mingos; that their worst mimics must allow—but they consaited I was
such a man; and it isn't often—" added the hunter, with a pleasing
consciousness that his previous life justified this implicit reliance on
his good faith—"it isn't often they consait any thing so good of a
pale-face; but so they did with me, and, therefore, they didn't hesitate
to speak their minds, which is just this: You see the state of things. The
lake, and all on it, they fancy, lie at their marcy. Thomas Hutter is
deceased, and, as for Hurry, they've got the idee he has been near enough
to death to-day, not to wish to take another look at him this summer.
Therefore, they account all your forces as reduced to Chingachgook and the
two young women, and, while they know the Delaware to be of a high race,
and a born warrior, they know he's now on his first war path. As for the
gals, of course they set them down much as they do women in gin'ral."</p>
<p>"You mean that they despise us!" interrupted Judith, with eyes that
flashed so brightly as to be observed by all present.</p>
<p>"That will be seen in the end. They hold that all on the lake lies at
their marcy, and, therefore, they send by me this belt of wampum," showing
the article in question to the Delaware, as he spoke, "with these words.
'Tell the Sarpent, they say, that he has done well for a beginner; he may
now strike across the mountains for his own villages, and no one shall
look for his trail. If he has found a scalp, let him take it with him, for
the Huron braves have hearts, and can feel for a young warrior who doesn't
wish to go home empty-handed. If he is nimble, he is welcome to lead out a
party in pursuit. Hist, howsever, must go back to the Hurons, for, when
she left there in the night, she carried away by mistake, that which
doesn't belong to her."</p>
<p>"That can't be true!" said Hetty earnestly. "Hist is no such girl, but one
that gives every body his due—"</p>
<p>How much more she would have said in remonstrance cannot be known,
inasmuch as Hist, partly laughing and partly hiding her face in shame,
passed her own hand across the speaker's mouth in a way to check the
words.</p>
<p>"You don't understand Mingo messages, poor Hetty—" resumed
Deerslayer, "which seldom mean what lies exactly uppermost. Hist has
brought away with her the inclinations of a young Huron, and they want her
back again, that the poor young man may find them where he last saw them!
The Sarpent they say is too promising a young warrior not to find as many
wives as he wants, but this one he cannot have. That's their meaning, and
nothing else, as I understand it."</p>
<p>"They are very obliging and thoughtful, in supposing a young woman can
forget all her own inclinations in order to let this unhappy youth find
his!" said Judith, ironically; though her manner became more bitter as she
proceeded. "I suppose a woman is a woman, let her colour be white, or red,
and your chiefs know little of a woman's heart, Deerslayer, if they think
it can ever forgive when wronged, or ever forget when it fairly loves."</p>
<p>"I suppose that's pretty much the truth with some women, Judith, though
I've known them that could do both. The next message is to you. They say
the Muskrat, as they called your father, has dove to the bottom of the
lake; that he will never come up again, and that his young will soon be in
want of wigwams if not of food. The Huron huts, they think, are better
than the huts of York, and they wish you to come and try them. Your colour
is white, they own, but they think young women who've lived so long in the
woods would lose their way in the clearin's. A great warrior among them
has lately lost his wife, and he would be glad to put the Wild Rose on her
bench at his fireside. As for the Feeble Mind, she will always be honored
and taken care of by red warriors. Your father's goods they think ought to
go to enrich the tribe, but your own property, which is to include
everything of a female natur', will go like that of all wives, into the
wigwam of the husband. Moreover, they've lost a young maiden by violence,
lately, and 'twill take two pale-faces to fill her seat."</p>
<p>"And do you bring such a message to me," exclaimed Judith, though the tone
in which the words were uttered had more in it of sorrow than of anger.
"Am I a girl to be an Indian's slave?"</p>
<p>"If you wish my honest thoughts on this p'int, Judith, I shall answer that
I don't think you'll, willingly, ever become any man's slave; red-skin or
white. You're not to think hard, howsever, of my bringing the message, as
near as I could, in the very words in which it was given to me. Them was
the conditions on which I got my furlough, and a bargain is a bargain,
though it is made with a vagabond. I've told you what they've said, but
I've not yet told you what I think you ought, one and all, to answer."</p>
<p>"Ay; let's hear that, Deerslayer," put in Hurry. "My cur'osity is up on
that consideration, and I should like, right well, to hear your idees of
the reasonableness of the reply. For my part, though, my own mind is
pretty much settled on the p'int of my own answer, which shall be made
known as soon as necessary."</p>
<p>"And so is mine, Hurry, on all the different heads, and on no one is it
more sartainly settled that on your'n. If I was you, I should say—'Deerslayer,
tell them scamps they don't know Harry March! He is human; and having a
white skin, he has also a white natur', which natur' won't let him desart
females of his own race and gifts in their greatest need. So set me down
as one that will refuse to come into your treaty, though you should smoke
a hogshead of tobacco over it.'"</p>
<p>March was a little embarrassed at this rebuke, which was uttered with
sufficient warmth of manner, and with a point that left no doubt of the
meaning. Had Judith encouraged him, he would not have hesitated about
remaining to defend her and her sister, but under the circumstances a
feeling of resentment rather urged him to abandon them. At all events,
there was not a sufficiency of chivalry in Hurry Harry to induce him to
hazard the safety of his own person unless he could see a direct
connection between the probable consequences and his own interests. It is
no wonder, therefore, that his answer partook equally of his intention,
and of the reliance he so boastingly placed on his gigantic strength,
which if it did not always make him outrageous, usually made him impudent,
as respects those with whom he conversed.</p>
<p>"Fair words make long friendships, Master Deerslayer," he said a little
menacingly. "You're but a stripling, and you know by exper'ence what you
are in the hands of a man. As you're not me, but only a go between sent by
the savages to us Christians, you may tell your empl'yers that they do
know Harry March, which is a proof of their sense as well as his. He's
human enough to follow human natur', and that tells him to see the folly
of one man's fighting a whole tribe. If females desart him, they must
expect to be desarted by him, whether they're of his own gifts or another
man's gifts. Should Judith see fit to change her mind, she's welcome to my
company to the river, and Hetty with her; but shouldn't she come to this
conclusion, I start as soon as I think the enemy's scouts are beginning to
nestle themselves in among the brush and leaves for the night."</p>
<p>"Judith will not change her mind, and she does not ask your company,
Master March," returned the girl with spirit.</p>
<p>"That p'int's settled, then," resumed Deerslayer, unmoved by the other's
warmth. "Hurry Harry must act for himself, and do that which will be most
likely to suit his own fancy. The course he means to take will give him an
easy race, if it don't give him an easy conscience. Next comes the
question with Hist—what say you gal?—Will you desart your
duty, too, and go back to the Mingos and take a Huron husband, and all not
for the love of the man you're to marry, but for the love of your own
scalp?"</p>
<p>"Why you talk so to Hist!" demanded the girl half-offended. "You t'ink a
red-skin girl made like captain's lady, to laugh and joke with any officer
that come."</p>
<p>"What I think, Hist, is neither here nor there in this matter. I must
carry back your answer, and in order to do so it is necessary that you
should send it. A faithful messenger gives his ar'n'd, word for word."</p>
<p>Hist no longer hesitated to speak her mind fully. In the excitement she
rose from her bench, and naturally recurring to that language in which she
expressed herself the most readily, she delivered her thoughts and
intentions, beautifully and with dignity, in the tongue of her own people.</p>
<p>"Tell the Hurons, Deerslayer," she said, "that they are as ignorant as
moles; they don't know the wolf from the dog. Among my people, the rose
dies on the stem where it budded, the tears of the child fall on the
graves of its parents; the corn grows where the seed has been planted. The
Delaware girls are not messengers to be sent, like belts of wampum, from
tribe to tribe. They are honeysuckles, that are sweetest in their own
woods; their own young men carry them away in their bosoms, because they
are fragrant; they are sweetest when plucked from their native stems. Even
the robin and the martin come back, year after year, to their old nests;
shall a woman be less true hearted than a bird? Set the pine in the clay
and it will turn yellow; the willow will not flourish on the hill; the
tamarack is healthiest in the swamp; the tribes of the sea love best to
hear the winds that blow over the salt water. As for a Huron youth, what
is he to a maiden of the Lenni Lenape. He may be fleet, but her eyes do
not follow him in the race; they look back towards the lodges of the
Delawares. He may sing a sweet song for the girls of Canada, but there is
no music for Wah, but in the tongue she has listened to from childhood.
Were the Huron born of the people that once owned the shores of the salt
lake, it would be in vain, unless he were of the family of Uncas. The
young pine will rise to be as high as any of its fathers. Wah-ta-Wah has
but one heart, and it can love but one husband."</p>
<p>Deerslayer listened to this characteristic message, which was given with
an earnestness suited to the feelings from which it sprung, with
undisguised delight, meeting the ardent eloquence of the girl, as she
concluded, with one of his own heartfelt, silent, and peculiar fits of
laughter.</p>
<p>"That's worth all the wampum in the woods!" he exclaimed. "You don't
understand it, I suppose, Judith, but if you'll look into your feelin's,
and fancy that an inimy had sent to tell you to give up the man of your
ch'ice, and to take up with another that wasn't the man of your ch'ice,
you'll get the substance of it, I'll warrant! Give me a woman for ra'al
eloquence, if they'll only make up their minds to speak what they feel. By
speakin', I don't mean chatterin', howsever; for most of them will do that
by the hour; but comm' out with their honest, deepest feelin's in proper
words. And now, Judith, having got the answer of a red-skin girl, it is
fit I should get that of a pale-face, if, indeed, a countenance that is as
blooming as your'n can in any wise so be tarmed. You are well named the
Wild Rose, and so far as colour goes, Hetty ought to be called the
Honeysuckle."</p>
<p>"Did this language come from one of the garrison gallants, I should deride
it, Deerslayer, but coming from you, I know it can be depended on,"
returned Judith, deeply gratified by his unmeditated and characteristic
compliments. "It is too soon, however, to ask my answer; the Great Serpent
has not yet spoken."</p>
<p>"The Sarpent! Lord; I could carry back his speech without hearing a word
of it! I didn't think of putting the question to him at all, I will allow;
though 'twould be hardly right either, seeing that truth is truth, and I'm
bound to tell these Mingos the fact and nothing else. So, Chingachgook,
let us hear your mind on this matter—are you inclined to strike
across the hills towards your village, to give up Hist to a Huron, and to
tell the chiefs at home that, if they're actyve and successful, they may
possibly get on the end of the Iroquois trail some two or three days a'ter
the inimy has got off of it?"</p>
<p>Like his betrothed, the young chief arose, that his answer might be given
with due distinctness and dignity. Hist had spoken with her hands crossed
upon her bosom, as if to suppress the emotions within, but the warrior
stretched an arm before him with a calm energy that aided in giving
emphasis to his expressions. "Wampum should be sent for wampum," he said;
"a message must be answered by a message. Hear what the Great Serpent of
the Delawares has to say to the pretended wolves from the great lakes,
that are howling through our woods. They are no wolves; they are dogs that
have come to get their tails and ears cropped by the hands of the
Delawares. They are good at stealing young women; bad at keeping them.
Chingachgook takes his own where he finds it; he asks leave of no cur from
the Canadas. If he has a tender feeling in his heart, it is no business of
the Hurons. He tells it to her who most likes to know it; he will not
bellow it in the forest, for the ears of those that only understand yells
of terror. What passes in his lodge is not for the chiefs of his own
people to know; still less for Mingo rogues—"</p>
<p>"Call 'em vagabonds, Sarpent—" interrupted Deerslayer, unable to
restrain his delight—"yes, just call 'em up-and-down vagabonds,
which is a word easily intarpreted, and the most hateful of all to their
ears, it's so true. Never fear me; I'll give em your message, syllable for
syllable, sneer for sneer, idee for idee, scorn for scorn, and they
desarve no better at your hands—only call 'em vagabonds, once or
twice, and that will set the sap mounting in 'em, from their lowest roots
to the uppermost branches!"</p>
<p>"Still less for Mingo vagabonds," resumed Chingachgook, quite willingly
complying with his friend's request. "Tell the Huron dogs to howl louder,
if they wish a Delaware to find them in the woods, where they burrow like
foxes, instead of hunting like warriors. When they had a Delaware maiden
in their camp, there was a reason for hunting them up; now they will be
forgotten unless they make a noise. Chingachgook don't like the trouble of
going to his villages for more warriors; he can strike their run-a-way
trail; unless they hide it under ground, he will follow it to Canada
alone. He will keep Wah-ta-Wah with him to cook his game; they two will be
Delawares enough to scare all the Hurons back to their own country."</p>
<p>"That's a grand despatch, as the officers call them things!" cried
Deerslayer; "'twill set all the Huron blood in motion; most particularily
that part where he tells 'em Hist, too, will keep on their heels 'til
they're fairly driven out of the country. Ahs! me; big words ain't always
big deeds, notwithstanding! The Lord send that we be able to be only one
half as good as we promise to be! And now, Judith, it's your turn to
speak, for them miscreants will expect an answer from each person, poor
Hetty, perhaps, excepted."</p>
<p>"And why not Hetty, Deerslayer? She often speaks to the purpose; the
Indians may respect her words, for they feel for people in her condition."</p>
<p>"That is true, Judith, and quick-thoughted in you. The red-skins do
respect misfortunes of all kinds, and Hetty's in particular. So, Hetty, if
you have any thing to say, I'll carry it to the Hurons as faithfully as if
it was spoken by a schoolmaster, or a missionary."</p>
<p>The girl hesitated a moment, and then she answered in her own gentle, soft
tones, as earnestly as any who had preceded her.</p>
<p>"The Hurons can't understand the difference between white people and
themselves," she said, "or they wouldn't ask Judith and me to go and live
in their villages. God has given one country to the red men and another to
us. He meant us to live apart. Then mother always said that we should
never dwell with any but Christians, if possible, and that is a reason why
we can't go. This lake is ours, and we won't leave it. Father and mother's
graves are in it, and even the worst Indians love to stay near the graves
of their fathers. I will come and see them again, if they wish me to, and
read more out of the Bible to them, but I can't quit father's and mother's
graves."</p>
<p>"That will do—that will do, Hetty, just as well as if you sent them
a message twice as long," interrupted the hunter. "I'll tell 'em all
you've said, and all you mean, and I'll answer for it that they'll be
easily satisfied. Now, Judith, your turn comes next, and then this part of
my ar'n'd will be tarminated for the night."</p>
<p>Judith manifested a reluctance to give her reply, that had awakened a
little curiosity in the messenger. Judging from her known spirit, he had
never supposed the girl would be less true her feelings and principles
than Hist, or Hetty, and yet there was a visible wavering of purpose that
rendered him slightly uneasy. Even now when directly required to speak,
she seemed to hesitate, nor did she open her lips until the profound
silence told her how anxiously her words were expected. Then, indeed, she
spoke, but it was doubtingly and with reluctance.</p>
<p>"Tell me, first—tell us, first, Deerslayer," she commenced,
repeating the words merely to change the emphasis—"what effect will
our answers have on your fate? If you are to be the sacrifice of our
spirit, it would have been better had we all been more wary as to the
language we use. What, then, are likely to be the consequences to
yourself?"</p>
<p>"Lord, Judith, you might as well ask me which way the wind will blow next
week, or what will be the age of the next deer that will be shot! I can
only say that their faces look a little dark upon me, but it doesn't
thunder every time a black cloud rises, nor does every puff of wind blow
up rain. That's a question, therefore, much more easily put than
answered."</p>
<p>"So is this message of the Iroquois to me," answered Judith rising, as if
she had determined on her own course for the present. "My answer shall be
given, Deerslayer, after you and I have talked together alone, when the
others have laid themselves down for the night."</p>
<p>There was a decision in the manner of the girl that disposed Deerslayer to
comply, and this he did the more readily as the delay could produce no
material consequences one way or the other. The meeting now broke up,
Hurry announcing his resolution to leave them speedily. During the hour
that was suffered to intervene, in order that the darkness might deepen
before the frontierman took his departure, the different individuals
occupied themselves in their customary modes, the hunter, in particular,
passing most of the time in making further enquiries into the perfection
of the rifle already mentioned.</p>
<p>The hour of nine soon arrived, however, and then it had been determined
that Hurry should commence his journey. Instead of making his adieus
frankly, and in a generous spirit, the little he thought it necessary to
say was uttered sullenly and in coldness. Resentment at what he considered
Judith's obstinacy was blended with mortification at the career he had
since reaching the lake, and, as is usual with the vulgar and
narrow-minded, he was more disposed to reproach others with his failures
than to censure himself. Judith gave him her hand, but it was quite as
much in gladness as with regret, while the two Delawares were not sorry to
find he was leaving them. Of the whole party, Hetty alone betrayed any
real feeling. Bashfulness, and the timidity of her sex and character, kept
even her aloof, so that Hurry entered the canoe, where Deerslayer was
already waiting for him, before she ventured near enough to be observed.
Then, indeed, the girl came into the Ark and approached its end, just as
the little bark was turning from it, with a movement so light and steady
as to be almost imperceptible. An impulse of feeling now overcame her
timidity, and Hetty spoke.</p>
<p>"Goodbye Hurry—" she called out, in her sweet voice—"goodbye,
dear Hurry. Take care of yourself in the woods, and don't stop once, 'til
you reach the garrison. The leaves on the trees are scarcely plentier than
the Hurons round the lake, and they'll not treat a strong man like you as
kindly as they treat me."</p>
<p>The ascendency which March had obtained over this feebleminded, but
right-thinking, and right-feeling girl, arose from a law of nature. Her
senses had been captivated by his personal advantages, and her moral
communications with him had never been sufficiently intimate to counteract
an effect that must have been otherwise lessened, even with one whose mind
was as obtuse as her own. Hetty's instinct of right, if such a term can be
applied to one who seemed taught by some kind spirit how to steer her
course with unerring accuracy, between good and evil, would have revolted
at Hurry's character on a thousand points, had there been opportunities to
enlighten her, but while he conversed and trifled with her sister, at a
distance from herself, his perfection of form and feature had been left to
produce their influence on her simple imagination and naturally tender
feelings, without suffering by the alloy of his opinions and coarseness.
It is true she found him rough and rude; but her father was that, and most
of the other men she had seen, and that which she believed to belong to
all of the sex struck her less unfavorably in Hurry's character than it
might otherwise have done. Still, it was not absolutely love that Hetty
felt for Hurry, nor do we wish so to portray it, but merely that awakening
sensibility and admiration, which, under more propitious circumstances,
and always supposing no untoward revelations of character on the part of
the young man had supervened to prevent it, might soon have ripened into
that engrossing feeling. She felt for him an incipient tenderness, but
scarcely any passion. Perhaps the nearest approach to the latter that
Hetty had manifested was to be seen in the sensitiveness which had caused
her to detect March's predilection for her sister, for, among Judith's
many admirers, this was the only instance in which the dull mind of the
girl had been quickened into an observation of the circumstances.</p>
<p>Hurry received so little sympathy at his departure that the gentle tones
of Hetty, as she thus called after him, sounded soothingly. He checked the
canoe, and with one sweep of his powerful arm brought it back to the side
of the Ark. This was more than Hetty, whose courage had risen with the
departure of her hero, expected, and she now shrunk timidly back at this
unexpected return.</p>
<p>"You're a good gal, Hetty, and I can't quit you without shaking hands,"
said March kindly. "Judith, a'ter all, isn't worth as much as you, though
she may be a trifle better looking. As to wits, if honesty and fair
dealing with a young man is a sign of sense in a young woman, you're worth
a dozen Judiths; ay, and for that matter, most young women of my
acquaintance."</p>
<p>"Don't say any thing against Judith, Harry," returned Hetty imploringly.
"Father's gone, and mother's gone, and nobody's left but Judith and me,
and it isn't right for sisters to speak evil, or to hear evil of each
other. Father's in the lake, and so is mother, and we should all fear God,
for we don't know when we may be in the lake, too."</p>
<p>"That sounds reasonable, child, as does most you say. Well, if we ever
meet ag'in, Hetty, you'll find a fri'nd in me, let your sister do what she
may. I was no great fri'nd of your mother I'll allow, for we didn't think
alike on most p'ints, but then your father, Old Tom, and I, fitted each
other as remarkably as a buckskin garment will fit any reasonable-built
man. I've always been unanimous of opinion that Old Floating Tom Hutter,
at the bottom, was a good fellow, and will maintain that ag'in all inimies
for his sake, as well as for your'n."</p>
<p>"Goodbye, Hurry," said Hetty, who now wanted to hasten the young man off,
as ardently as she had wished to keep him only the moment before, though
she could give no clearer account of the latter than of the former
feeling; "goodbye, Hurry; take care of yourself in the woods; don't halt
'til you reach the garrison. I'll read a chapter in the Bible for you
before I go to bed, and think of you in my prayers."</p>
<p>This was touching a point on which March had no sympathies, and without
more words, he shook the girl cordially by the hand and re-entered the
canoe. In another minute the two adventurers were a hundred feet from the
Ark, and half a dozen had not elapsed before they were completely lost to
view. Hetty sighed deeply, and rejoined her sister and Hist.</p>
<p>For some time Deerslayer and his companion paddled ahead in silence. It
had been determined to land Hurry at the precise point where he is
represented, in the commencement of our tale, as having embarked, not only
as a place little likely to be watched by the Hurons, but because he was
sufficiently familiar with the signs of the woods, at that spot, to thread
his way through them in the dark. Thither, then, the light craft
proceeded, being urged as diligently and as swiftly as two vigorous and
skilful canoemen could force their little vessel through, or rather over,
the water. Less than a quarter of an hour sufficed for the object, and, at
the end of that time, being within the shadows of the shore, and quite
near the point they sought, each ceased his efforts in order to make their
parting communications out of earshot of any straggler who might happen to
be in the neighborhood.</p>
<p>"You will do well to persuade the officers at the garrison to lead out a
party ag'in these vagabonds as soon as you git in, Hurry," Deerslayer
commenced; "and you'll do better if you volunteer to guide it up yourself.
You know the paths, and the shape of the lake, and the natur' of the land,
and can do it better than a common, gin'ralizing scout. Strike at the
Huron camp first, and follow the signs that will then show themselves. A
few looks at the hut and the Ark will satisfy you as to the state of the
Delaware and the women, and, at any rate, there'll be a fine opportunity
to fall on the Mingo trail, and to make a mark on the memories of the
blackguards that they'll be apt to carry with 'em a long time. It won't be
likely to make much difference with me, since that matter will be
detarmined afore to-morrow's sun has set, but it may make a great change
in Judith and Hetty's hopes and prospects!"</p>
<p>"And as for yourself, Nathaniel," Hurry enquired with more interest than
he was accustomed to betray in the welfare of others—"And, as for
yourself, what do you think is likely to turn up?"</p>
<p>"The Lord, in his wisdom, only can tell, Henry March! The clouds look
black and threatening, and I keep my mind in a state to meet the worst.
Vengeful feelin's are uppermost in the hearts of the Mingos, and any
little disapp'intment about the plunder, or the prisoners, or Hist, may
make the torments sartain. The Lord, in his wisdom, can only detarmine my
fate, or your'n!"</p>
<p>"This is a black business, and ought to be put a stop to in some way or
other—" answered Hurry, confounding the distinctions between right
and wrong, as is usual with selfish and vulgar men. "I heartily wish old
Hutter and I had scalped every creatur' in their camp, the night we first
landed with that capital object! Had you not held back, Deerslayer, it
might have been done, and then you wouldn't have found yourself, at the
last moment, in the desperate condition you mention."</p>
<p>"'Twould have been better had you said you wished you had never attempted
to do what it little becomes any white man's gifts to undertake; in which
case, not only might we have kept from coming to blows, but Thomas Hutter
would now have been living, and the hearts of the savages would be less
given to vengeance. The death of that young woman, too, was on-called for,
Henry March, and leaves a heavy load on our names if not on our
consciences!"</p>
<p>This was so apparent, and it seemed so obvious to Hurry himself, at the
moment, that he dashed his paddle into the water, and began to urge the
canoe towards the shore, as if bent only on running away from his own
lively remorse. His companion humoured this feverish desire for change,
and, in a minute or two, the bows of the boat grated lightly on the
shingle of the beach. To land, shoulder his pack and rifle, and to get
ready for his march occupied Hurry but an instant, and with a growling
adieu, he had already commenced his march, when a sudden twinge of feeling
brought him to a dead stop, and immediately after to the other's side.</p>
<p>"You cannot mean to give yourself up ag'in to them murdering savages,
Deerslayer!" he said, quite as much in angry remonstrance, as with
generous feeling. "'Twould be the act of a madman or a fool!"</p>
<p>"There's them that thinks it madness to keep their words, and there's them
that don't, Hurry Harry. You may be one of the first, but I'm one of the
last. No red-skin breathing shall have it in his power to say that a Mingo
minds his word more than a man of white blood and white gifts, in any
thing that consarns me. I'm out on a furlough, and if I've strength and
reason, I'll go in on a furlough afore noon to-morrow!"</p>
<p>"What's an Injin, or a word passed, or a furlough taken from creatur's
like them, that have neither souls, nor reason!"</p>
<p>"If they've got neither souls nor reason, you and I have both, Henry
March, and one is accountable for the other. This furlough is not, as you
seem to think, a matter altogether atween me and the Mingos, seeing it is
a solemn bargain made atween me and God. He who thinks that he can say
what he pleases, in his distress, and that twill all pass for nothing,
because 'tis uttered in the forest, and into red men's ears, knows little
of his situation, and hopes, and wants. The woods are but the ears of the
Almighty, the air is his breath, and the light of the sun is little more
than a glance of his eye. Farewell, Harry; we may not meet ag'in, but I
would wish you never to treat a furlough, or any other solemn thing that
your Christian God has been called on to witness, as a duty so light that
it may be forgotten according to the wants of the body, or even accordin'
to the cravings of the spirit."</p>
<p>March was now glad again to escape. It was quite impossible that he could
enter into the sentiments that ennobled his companion, and he broke away
from both with an impatience that caused him secretly to curse the folly
that could induce a man to rush, as it were, on his own destruction.
Deerslayer, on the contrary, manifested no such excitement. Sustained by
his principles, inflexible in the purpose of acting up to them, and
superior to any unmanly apprehension, he regarded all before him as a
matter of course, and no more thought of making any unworthy attempt to
avoid it, than a Mussulman thinks of counteracting the decrees of
Providence. He stood calmly on the shore, listening to the reckless tread
with which Hurry betrayed his progress through the bushes, shook his head
in dissatisfaction at the want of caution, and then stepped quietly into
his canoe. Before he dropped the paddle again into the water, the young
man gazed about him at the scene presented by the star-lit night. This was
the spot where he had first laid his eyes on the beautiful sheet of water
on which he floated. If it was then glorious in the bright light of a
summer's noon-tide, it was now sad and melancholy under the shadows of
night. The mountains rose around it like black barriers to exclude the
outer world, and the gleams of pale light that rested on the broader parts
of the basin were no bad symbols of the faintness of the hopes that were
so dimly visible in his own future. Sighing heavily, he pushed the canoe
from the land, and took his way back with steady diligence towards the Ark
and the castle.</p>
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