<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0028" id="link2HCH0028"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Chapter XXVIII. </h2>
<p>"Nor widows' tears, nor tender orphans' cries<br/>
Can stop th' invader's force;<br/>
Nor swelling seas, nor threatening skies,<br/>
Prevent the pirate's course:<br/>
Their lives to selfish ends decreed<br/>
Through blood and rapine they proceed;<br/>
No anxious thoughts of ill repute,<br/>
Suspend the impetuous and unjust pursuit;<br/>
But power and wealth obtain'd, guilty and great,<br/>
Their fellow creatures' fears they raise, or urge their hate."<br/>
<br/>
Congreve, "Pindaric Ode," ii.<br/></p>
<p>By this time Deerslayer had been twenty minutes in the canoe, and he began
to grow a little impatient for some signs of relief from his friends. The
position of the boat still prevented his seeing in any direction, unless
it were up or down the lake, and, though he knew that his line of sight
must pass within a hundred yards of the castle, it, in fact, passed that
distance to the westward of the buildings. The profound stillness troubled
him also, for he knew not whether to ascribe it to the increasing space
between him and the Indians, or to some new artifice. At length, wearied
with fruitless watchfulness, the young man turned himself on his back,
closed his eyes, and awaited the result in determined acquiescence. If the
savages could so completely control their thirst for revenge, he was
resolved to be as calm as themselves, and to trust his fate to the
interposition of the currents and air.</p>
<p>Some additional ten minutes may have passed in this quiescent manner, on
both sides, when Deerslayer thought he heard a slight noise, like a low
rubbing against the bottom of his canoe. He opened his eyes of course, in
expectation of seeing the face or arm of an Indian rising from the water,
and found that a canopy of leaves was impending directly over his head.
Starting to his feet, the first object that met his eye was Rivenoak, who
had so far aided the slow progress of the boat, as to draw it on the
point, the grating on the strand being the sound that had first given our
hero the alarm. The change in the drift of the canoe had been altogether
owing to the baffling nature of the light currents of the air, aided by
some eddies in the water.</p>
<p>"Come," said the Huron with a quiet gesture of authority, to order his
prisoner to land, "my young friend has sailed about till he is tired; he
will forget how to run again, unless he uses his legs."</p>
<p>"You've the best of it, Huron," returned Deerslayer, stepping steadily
from the canoe, and passively following his leader to the open area of the
point; "Providence has helped you in an onexpected manner. I'm your
prisoner ag'in, and I hope you'll allow that I'm as good at breaking gaol,
as I am at keeping furloughs."</p>
<p>"My young friend is a Moose!" exclaimed the Huron. "His legs are very
long; they have given my young men trouble. But he is not a fish; he
cannot find his way in the lake. We did not shoot him; fish are taken in
nets, and not killed by bullets. When he turns Moose again he will be
treated like a Moose."</p>
<p>"Ay, have your talk, Rivenoak; make the most of your advantage. 'Tis your
right, I suppose, and I know it is your gift. On that p'int there'll be no
words atween us, for all men must and ought to follow their gifts.
Howsever, when your women begin to ta'nt and abuse me, as I suppose will
soon happen, let 'em remember that if a pale-face struggles for life so
long as it's lawful and manful, he knows how to loosen his hold on it,
decently, when he feels that the time has come. I'm your captyve; work
your will on me."</p>
<p>"My brother has had a long run on the hills, and a pleasant sail on the
water," returned Rivenoak more mildly, smiling, at the same time, in a way
that his listener knew denoted pacific intentions. "He has seen the woods;
he has seen the water. Which does he like best? Perhaps he has seen enough
to change his mind, and make him hear reason."</p>
<p>"Speak out, Huron. Something is in your thoughts, and the sooner it is
said, the sooner you'll get my answer."</p>
<p>"That is straight! There is no turning in the talk of my pale-face friend,
though he is a fox in running. I will speak to him; his ears are now open
wider than before, and his eyes are not shut. The Sumach is poorer than
ever. Once she had a brother and a husband. She had children, too. The
time came and the husband started for the Happy Hunting Grounds, without
saying farewell; he left her alone with his children. This he could not
help, or he would not have done it; le Loup Cervier was a good husband. It
was pleasant to see the venison, and wild ducks, and geese, and bear's
meat, that hung in his lodge in winter. It is now gone; it will not keep
in warm weather. Who shall bring it back again? Some thought the brother
would not forget his sister, and that, next winter, he would see that the
lodge should not be empty. We thought this; but the Panther yelled, and
followed the husband on the path of death. They are now trying which shall
first reach the Happy Hunting Grounds. Some think the Lynx can run
fastest, and some think the Panther can jump the farthest. The Sumach
thinks both will travel so fast and so far that neither will ever come
back. Who shall feed her and her young? The man who told her husband and
her brother to quit her lodge, that there might be room for him to come
into it. He is a great hunter, and we know that the woman will never
want."</p>
<p>"Ay, Huron this is soon settled, accordin' to your notions, but it goes
sorely ag'in the grain of a white man's feelin's. I've heard of men's
saving their lives this-a-way, and I've know'd them that would prefar
death to such a sort of captivity. For my part, I do not seek my end, nor
do I seek matrimony."</p>
<p>"The pale-face will think of this, while my people get ready for the
council. He will be told what will happen. Let him remember how hard it is
to lose a husband and a brother. Go; when we want him, the name of
Deerslayer will be called."</p>
<p>This conversation had been held with no one near but the speakers. Of all
the band that had so lately thronged the place, Rivenoak alone was
visible. The rest seemed to have totally abandoned the spot. Even the
furniture, clothes, arms, and other property of the camp had entirely
disappeared, and the place bore no other proofs of the crowd that had so
lately occupied it, than the traces of their fires and resting places, and
the trodden earth that still showed the marks of their feet. So sudden and
unexpected a change caused Deerslayer a good deal of surprise and some
uneasiness, for he had never known it to occur, in the course of his
experience among the Delawares. He suspected, however, and rightly, that a
change of encampment was intended, and that the mystery of the movement
was resorted to in order to work on his apprehensions.</p>
<p>Rivenoak walked up the vista of trees as soon as he ceased speaking,
leaving Deerslayer by himself. The chief disappeared behind the covers of
the forest, and one unpractised in such scenes might have believed the
prisoner left to the dictates of his own judgment. But the young man,
while he felt a little amazement at the dramatic aspect of things, knew
his enemies too well to fancy himself at liberty, or a free agent. Still,
he was ignorant how far the Hurons meant to carry their artifices, and he
determined to bring the question, as soon as practicable, to the proof.
Affecting an indifference he was far from feeling, he strolled about the
area, gradually getting nearer and nearer to the spot where he had landed,
when he suddenly quickened his pace, though carefully avoiding all
appearance of flight, and pushing aside the bushes, he stepped upon the
beach. The canoe was gone, nor could he see any traces of it, after
walking to the northern and southern verges of the point, and examining
the shores in both directions. It was evidently removed beyond his reach
and knowledge, and under circumstances to show that such had been the
intention of the savages.</p>
<p>Deerslayer now better understood his actual situation. He was a prisoner
on the narrow tongue of land, vigilantly watched beyond a question, and
with no other means of escape than that of swimming. He, again, thought of
this last expedient, but the certainty that the canoe would be sent in
chase, and the desperate nature of the chances of success deterred him
from the undertaking. While on the strand, he came to a spot where the
bushes had been cut, and thrust into a small pile. Removing a few of the
upper branches, he found beneath them the dead body of the Panther. He
knew that it was kept until the savages might find a place to inter it,
where it would be beyond the reach of the scalping knife. He gazed
wistfully towards the castle, but there all seemed to be silent and
desolate, and a feeling of loneliness and desertion came over him to
increase the gloom of the moment.</p>
<p>"God's will be done!" murmured the young man, as he walked sorrowfully
away from the beach, entering again beneath the arches of the wood. "God's
will be done, on 'arth as it is in heaven! I did hope that my days would
not be numbered so soon, but it matters little a'ter all. A few more
winters, and a few more summers, and 'twould have been over, accordin' to
natur'. Ah's! me, the young and actyve seldom think death possible, till
he grins in their faces, and tells 'em the hour is come!"</p>
<p>While this soliloquy was being pronounced, the hunter advanced into the
area, where to his surprise he saw Hetty alone, evidently awaiting his
return. The girl carried the Bible under her arm, and her face, over which
a shadow of gentle melancholy was usually thrown, now seemed sad and
downcast. Moving nearer, Deerslayer spoke.</p>
<p>"Poor Hetty," he said, "times have been so troublesome, of late, that I'd
altogether forgotten you; we meet, as it might be to mourn over what is to
happen. I wonder what has become of Chingachgook and Wah!"</p>
<p>"Why did you kill the Huron, Deerslayer?—" returned the girl
reproachfully. "Don't you know your commandments, which say 'Thou shalt
not kill!' They tell me you have now slain the woman's husband and
brother!"</p>
<p>"It's true, my good Hetty—'tis gospel truth, and I'll not deny what
has come to pass. But, you must remember, gal, that many things are lawful
in war, which would be onlawful in peace. The husband was shot in open
fight—or, open so far as I was consarned, while he had a better
cover than common—and the brother brought his end on himself, by
casting his tomahawk at an unarmed prisoner. Did you witness that deed,
gal?"</p>
<p>"I saw it, and was sorry it happened, Deerslayer, for I hoped you wouldn't
have returned blow for blow, but good for evil."</p>
<p>"Ah, Hetty, that may do among the Missionaries, but 'twould make an
onsartain life in the woods! The Panther craved my blood, and he was
foolish enough to throw arms into my hands, at the very moment he was
striving a'ter it. 'Twould have been ag'in natur' not to raise a hand in
such a trial, and 'twould have done discredit to my training and gifts. No—no—I'm
as willing to give every man his own as another, and so I hope you'll
testify to them that will be likely to question you as to what you've seen
this day."</p>
<p>"Deerslayer, do you mean to marry Sumach, now she has neither husband nor
brother to feed her?"</p>
<p>"Are such your idees of matrimony, Hetty! Ought the young to wive with the
old—the pale-face with the red-skin—the Christian with the
heathen? It's ag'in reason and natur', and so you'll see, if you think of
it a moment."</p>
<p>"I've always heard mother say," returned Hetty, averting her face more
from a feminine instinct than from any consciousness of wrong, "that
people should never marry until they loved each other better than brothers
and sisters, and I suppose that is what you mean. Sumach is old, and you
are young!"</p>
<p>"Ay and she's red, and I'm white. Beside, Hetty, suppose you was a wife,
now, having married some young man of your own years, and state, and
colour—Hurry Harry, for instance—" Deerslayer selected this
example simply from the circumstance that he was the only young man known
to both—"and that he had fallen on a war path, would you wish to
take to your bosom, for a husband, the man that slew him?"</p>
<p>"Oh! no, no, no—" returned the girl shuddering—"That would be
wicked as well as heartless! No Christian girl could, or would do that! I
never shall be the wife of Hurry, I know, but were he my husband no man
should ever be it, again, after his death!"</p>
<p>"I thought it would get to this, Hetty, when you come to understand
sarcumstances. 'Tis a moral impossibility that I should ever marry Sumach,
and, though Injin weddin's have no priests and not much religion, a white
man who knows his gifts and duties can't profit by that, and so make his
escape at the fitting time. I do think death would be more nat'ral like,
and welcome, than wedlock with this woman."</p>
<p>"Don't say it too loud," interrupted Hetty impatiently; "I suppose she
will not like to hear it. I'm sure Hurry would rather marry even me than
suffer torments, though I am feeble minded; and I am sure it would kill me
to think he'd prefer death to being my husband."</p>
<p>"Ay, gal, you ain't Sumach, but a comely young Christian, with a good
heart, pleasant smile, and kind eye. Hurry might be proud to get you, and
that, too, not in misery and sorrow, but in his best and happiest days.
Howsever, take my advice, and never talk to Hurry about these things; he's
only a borderer, at the best."</p>
<p>"I wouldn't tell him, for the world!" exclaimed the girl, looking about
her like one affrighted, and blushing, she knew not why. "Mother always
said young women shouldn't be forward, and speak their minds before
they're asked; Oh! I never forget what mother told me. 'Tis a pity Hurry
is so handsome, Deerslayer; I do think fewer girls would like him then,
and he would sooner know his own mind."</p>
<p>"Poor gal, poor gal, it's plain enough how it is, but the Lord will bear
in mind one of your simple heart and kind feelin's! We'll talk no more of
these things; if you had reason, you'd be sorrowful at having let others
so much into your secret. Tell me, Hetty, what has become of all the
Hurons, and why they let you roam about the p'int as if you, too, was a
prisoner?"</p>
<p>"I'm no prisoner, Deerslayer, but a free girl, and go when and where I
please. Nobody dare hurt me! If they did, God would be angry, as I can
show them in the Bible. No—no—Hetty Hutter is not afraid;
she's in good hands. The Hurons are up yonder in the woods, and keep a
good watch on us both, I'll answer for it, since all the women and
children are on the look-out. Some are burying the body of the poor girl
who was shot, so that the enemy and the wild beasts can't find it. I told
'em that father and mother lay in the lake, but I wouldn't let them know
in what part of it, for Judith and I don't want any of their heathenish
company in our burying ground."</p>
<p>"Ahs! me; Well, it is an awful despatch to be standing here, alive and
angry, and with the feelin's up and ferocious, one hour, and then to be
carried away at the next, and put out of sight of mankind in a hole in the
'arth! No one knows what will happen to him on a warpath, that's sartain."</p>
<p>Here the stirring of leaves and the cracking of dried twigs interrupted
the discourse, and apprised Deerslayer of the approach of his enemies. The
Hurons closed around the spot that had been prepared for the coming scene,
and in the centre of which the intended victim now stood, in a circle, the
armed men being so distributed among the feebler members of the band, that
there was no safe opening through which the prisoner could break. But the
latter no longer contemplated flight, the recent trial having satisfied
him of his inability to escape when pursued so closely by numbers. On the
contrary, all his energies were aroused in order to meet his expected
fate, with a calmness that should do credit to his colour and his manhood;
one equally removed from recreant alarm, and savage boasting.</p>
<p>When Rivenoak re-appeared in the circle, he occupied his old place at the
head of the area. Several of the elder warriors stood near him, but, now
that the brother of Sumach had fallen, there was no longer any recognised
chief present whose influence and authority offered a dangerous rivalry to
his own. Nevertheless, it is well known that little which could be called
monarchical or despotic entered into the politics of the North American
tribes, although the first colonists, bringing with them to this
hemisphere the notions and opinions of their own countries, often
dignified the chief men of those primitive nations with the titles of
kings and princes. Hereditary influence did certainly exist, but there is
much reason to believe it existed rather as a consequence of hereditary
merit and acquired qualifications, than as a birthright. Rivenoak,
however, had not even this claim, having risen to consideration purely by
the force of talents, sagacity, and, as Bacon expresses it in relation to
all distinguished statesmen, "by a union of great and mean qualities;" a
truth of which the career of the profound Englishman himself furnishes so
apt an illustration. Next to arms, eloquence offers the great avenue to
popular favor, whether it be in civilized or savage life, and Rivenoak had
succeeded, as so many have succeeded before him, quite as much by
rendering fallacies acceptable to his listeners, as by any profound or
learned expositions of truth, or the accuracy of his logic. Nevertheless,
he had influence; and was far from being altogether without just claims to
its possession. Like most men who reason more than they feel, the Huron
was not addicted to the indulgence of the more ferocious passions of his
people: he had been commonly found on the side of mercy, in all the scenes
of vindictive torture and revenge that had occurred in his tribe since his
own attainment to power. On the present occasion, he was reluctant to
proceed to extremities, although the provocation was so great. Still it
exceeded his ingenuity to see how that alternative could well be avoided.
Sumach resented her rejection more than she did the deaths of her husband
and brother, and there was little probability that the woman would pardon
a man who had so unequivocally preferred death to her embraces. Without
her forgiveness, there was scarce a hope that the tribe could be induced
to overlook its loss, and even to Rivenoak, himself, much as he was
disposed to pardon, the fate of our hero now appeared to be almost
hopelessly sealed.</p>
<p>When the whole band was arrayed around the captive, a grave silence, so
much the more threatening from its profound quiet, pervaded the place.
Deerslayer perceived that the women and boys had been preparing splinters
of the fat pine roots, which he well knew were to be stuck into his flesh,
and set in flames, while two or three of the young men held the thongs of
bark with which he was to be bound. The smoke of a distant fire announced
that the burning brands were in preparation, and several of the elder
warriors passed their fingers over the edges of their tomahawks, as if to
prove their keenness and temper. Even the knives seemed loosened in their
sheathes, impatient for the bloody and merciless work to begin.</p>
<p>"Killer of the Deer," recommenced Rivenoak, certainly without any signs of
sympathy or pity in his manner, though with calmness and dignity, "Killer
of the Deer, it is time that my people knew their minds. The sun is no
longer over our heads; tired of waiting on the Hurons, he has begun to
fall near the pines on this side of the valley. He is travelling fast
towards the country of our French fathers; it is to warn his children that
their lodges are empty, and that they ought to be at home. The roaming
wolf has his den, and he goes to it when he wishes to see his young. The
Iroquois are not poorer than the wolves. They have villages, and wigwams,
and fields of corn; the Good Spirits will be tired of watching them alone.
My people must go back and see to their own business. There will be joy in
the lodges when they hear our whoop from the forest! It will be a
sorrowful whoop; when it is understood, grief will come after it. There
will be one scalp-whoop, but there will be only one. We have the fur of
the Muskrat; his body is among the fishes. Deerslayer must say whether
another scalp shall be on our pole. Two lodges are empty; a scalp, living
or dead, is wanted at each door."</p>
<p>"Then take 'em dead, Huron," firmly, but altogether without dramatic
boasting, returned the captive. "My hour is come, I do suppose, and what
must be, must. If you are bent on the tortur', I'll do my indivours to
bear up ag'in it, though no man can say how far his natur' will stand
pain, until he's been tried."</p>
<p>"The pale-face cur begins to put his tail between his legs!" cried a young
and garrulous savage, who bore the appropriate title of the Corbeau Rouge;
a sobriquet he had gained from the French by his facility in making
unseasonable noises, and an undue tendency to hear his own voice; "he is
no warrior; he has killed the Loup Cervier when looking behind him not to
see the flash of his own rifle. He grunts like a hog, already; when the
Huron women begin to torment him, he will cry like the young of the
catamount. He is a Delaware woman, dressed in the skin of a Yengeese!"</p>
<p>"Have your say, young man; have your say," returned Deerslayer, unmoved;
"you know no better, and I can overlook it. Talking may aggravate women,
but can hardly make knives sharper, fire hotter, or rifles more sartain."</p>
<p>Rivenoak now interposed, reproving the Red Crow for his premature
interference, and then directing the proper persons to bind the captive.
This expedient was adopted, not from any apprehensions that he would
escape, or from any necessity that was yet apparent of his being unable to
endure the torture with his limbs free, but from an ingenious design of
making him feel his helplessness, and of gradually sapping his resolution
by undermining it, as it might be, little by little. Deerslayer offered no
resistance. He submitted his arms and legs, freely if not cheerfully, to
the ligaments of bark, which were bound around them by order of the chief,
in a way to produce as little pain as possible. These directions were
secret, and given in the hope that the captive would finally save himself
from any serious bodily suffering by consenting to take the Sumach for a
wife. As soon as the body of Deerslayer was withed in bark sufficiently to
create a lively sense of helplessness, he was literally carried to a young
tree, and bound against it in a way that effectually prevented him from
moving, as well as from falling. The hands were laid flat against the
legs, and thongs were passed over all, in a way nearly to incorporate the
prisoner with the tree. His cap was then removed, and he was left
half-standing, half-sustained by his bonds, to face the coming scene in
the best manner he could.</p>
<p>Previously to proceeding to any thing like extremities, it was the wish of
Rivenoak to put his captive's resolution to the proof by renewing the
attempt at a compromise. This could be effected only in one manner, the
acquiescence of the Sumach being indispensably necessary to a compromise
of her right to be revenged. With this view, then, the woman was next
desired to advance, and to look to her own interests; no agent being
considered as efficient as the principal, herself, in this negotiation.
The Indian females, when girls, are usually mild and submissive, with
musical tones, pleasant voices and merry laughs, but toil and suffering
generally deprive them of most of these advantages by the time they have
reached an age which the Sumach had long before passed. To render their
voices harsh, it would seem to require active, malignant, passions,
though, when excited, their screams can rise to a sufficiently conspicuous
degree of discordancy to assert their claim to possess this distinctive
peculiarity of the sex. The Sumach was not altogether without feminine
attraction, however, and had so recently been deemed handsome in her
tribe, as not to have yet learned the full influence that time and
exposure produce on man, as well as on woman. By an arrangement of
Rivenoak's, some of the women around her had been employing the time in
endeavoring to persuade the bereaved widow that there was still a hope
Deerslayer might be prevailed on to enter her wigwam, in preference to
entering the world of spirits, and this, too, with a success that previous
symptoms scarcely justified. All this was the result of a resolution on
the part of the chief to leave no proper means unemployed, in order to get
transferred to his own nation the greatest hunter that was then thought to
exist in all that region, as well as a husband for a woman who he felt
would be likely to be troublesome, were any of her claims to the attention
and care of the tribe overlooked.</p>
<p>In conformity with this scheme, the Sumach had been secretly advised to
advance into the circle, and to make her appeal to the prisoner's sense of
justice, before the band had recourse to the last experiment. The woman,
nothing loth, consented, for there was some such attraction in becoming
the wife of a noted hunter, among the females of the tribes, as is
experienced by the sex, in more refined life, when they bestow their hands
on the affluent. As the duties of a mother were thought to be paramount to
all other considerations, the widow felt none of that embarrassment, in
preferring her claims, to which even a female fortune hunter among
ourselves might be liable. When she stood forth before the whole party,
therefore, the children that she led by the hands fully justified all she
did.</p>
<p>"You see me before you, cruel pale-face," the woman commenced; "your
spirit must tell you my errand. I have found you; I cannot find le Loup
Cervier, nor the Panther; I have looked for them in the lake, in the
woods, in the clouds. I cannot say where they have gone."</p>
<p>"No man knows, good Sumach, no man knows," interposed the captive. "When
the spirit leaves the body, it passes into a world beyond our knowledge,
and the wisest way, for them that are left behind, is to hope for the
best. No doubt both your warriors have gone to the Happy Hunting Grounds,
and at the proper time you will see 'em ag'in, in their improved state.
The wife and sister of braves must have looked forward to some such
tarmination of their 'arthly careers."</p>
<p>"Cruel pale-face, what had my warriors done that you should slay them!
They were the best hunters, and the boldest young men of their tribe; the
Great Spirit intended that they should live until they withered like the
branches of the hemlock, and fell of their own weight—"</p>
<p>"Nay—nay—good Sumach," interrupted Deerslayer, whose love of
truth was too indomitable to listen to such hyperbole with patience, even
though it came from the torn breast of a widow—"Nay—nay, good
Sumach, this is a little outdoing red-skin privileges. Young man was
neither, any more than you can be called a young woman, and as to the
Great Spirit's intending that they should fall otherwise than they did,
that's a grievous mistake, inasmuch as what the Great Spirit intends is
sartain to come to pass. Then, agin, it's plain enough neither of your
fri'nds did me any harm; I raised my hand ag'in 'em on account of what
they were striving to do, rather than what they did. This is nat'ral law,
'to do lest you should be done by.'"</p>
<p>"It is so. Sumach has but one tongue; she can tell but one story. The pale
face struck the Hurons lest the Hurons should strike him. The Hurons are a
just nation; they will forget it. The chiefs will shut their eyes and
pretend not to have seen it; the young men will believe the Panther and
the Lynx have gone to far off hunts, and the Sumach will take her children
by the hand, and go into the lodge of the pale-face and say—'See;
these are your children; they are also mine—feed us, and we will
live with you.'"</p>
<p>"The tarms are onadmissable, woman, and though I feel for your losses,
which must be hard to bear, the tarms cannot be accepted. As to givin' you
ven'son, in case we lived near enough together, that would be no great
expl'ite; but as for becomin' your husband, and the father of your
children, to be honest with you, I feel no callin' that-a-way."</p>
<p>"Look at this boy, cruel pale-face; he has no father to teach him to kill
the deer, or to take scalps. See this girl; what young man will come to
look for a wife in a lodge that has no head? There are more among my
people in the Canadas, and the Killer of Deer will find as many mouths to
feed as his heart can wish for."</p>
<p>"I tell you, woman," exclaimed Deerslayer, whose imagination was far from
seconding the appeal of the widow, and who began to grow restive under the
vivid pictures she was drawing, "all this is nothing to me. People and
kindred must take care of their own fatherless, leaving them that have no
children to their own loneliness. As for me, I have no offspring, and I
want no wife. Now, go away Sumach; leave me in the hands of your chiefs,
for my colour, and gifts, and natur' itself cry out ag'in the idee of
taking you for a wife."</p>
<p>It is unnecessary to expatiate on the effect of this downright refusal of
the woman's proposals. If there was anything like tenderness in her bosom—and
no woman was probably ever entirely without that feminine quality—it
all disappeared at this plain announcement. Fury, rage, mortified pride,
and a volcano of wrath burst out, at one explosion, converting her into a
sort of maniac, as it might beat the touch of a magician's wand. Without
deigning a reply in words, she made the arches of the forest ring with
screams, and then flew forward at her victim, seizing him by the hair,
which she appeared resolute to draw out by the roots. It was some time
before her grasp could be loosened. Fortunately for the prisoner her rage
was blind; since his total helplessness left him entirely at her mercy.
Had it been better directed it might have proved fatal before any relief
could have been offered. As it was, she did succeed in wrenching out two
or three handsful of hair, before the young men could tear her away from
her victim.</p>
<p>The insult that had been offered to the Sumach was deemed an insult to the
whole tribe; not so much, however, on account of any respect that was felt
for the woman, as on account of the honor of the Huron nation. Sumach,
herself, was generally considered to be as acid as the berry from which
she derived her name, and now that her great supporters, her husband and
brother, were both gone, few cared about concealing their aversion.
Nevertheless, it had become a point of honor to punish the pale-face who
disdained a Huron woman, and more particularly one who coolly preferred
death to relieving the tribe from the support of a widow and her children.
The young men showed an impatience to begin to torture that Rivenoak
understood, and, as his older associates manifested no disposition to
permit any longer delay, he was compelled to give the signal for the
infernal work to proceed.</p>
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