<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0032" id="link2H_4_0032"></SPAN></p>
<h2> PHILIP OF POKANOKET. </h2>
<h3> AN INDIAN MEMOIR. </h3>
<p>As monumental bronze unchanged his look:<br/>
A soul that pity touch'd, but never shook;<br/>
Train'd from his tree-rock'd cradle to his bier,<br/>
The fierce extremes of good and ill to brook<br/>
Impassive—fearing but the shame of fear—<br/>
stoic of the woods—a man without a tear.<br/>
CAMPBELL.<br/></p>
<p>IT is to be regretted that those early writers who treated of the
discovery and settlement of America have not given us more particular and
candid accounts of the remarkable characters that flourished in savage
life. The scanty anecdotes which have reached us are full of peculiarity
and interest; they furnish us with nearer glimpses of human nature, and
show what man is in a comparatively primitive state and what he owes to
civilization. There is something of the charm of discovery in lighting
upon these wild and unexplored tracts of human nature—in witnessing,
as it were, the native growth of moral sentiment, and perceiving those
generous and romantic qualities which have been artificially cultivated by
society vegetating in spontaneous hardihood and rude magnificence.</p>
<p>In civilized life, where the happiness, and indeed almost the existence,
of man depends so much upon the opinion of his fellow-men, he is
constantly acting a studied part. The bold and peculiar traits of native
character are refined away or softened down by the levelling influence of
what is termed good-breeding, and he practises so many petty deceptions
and affects so many generous sentiments for the purposes of popularity
that it is difficult to distinguish his real from his artificial
character. The Indian, on the contrary, free from the restraints and
refinements of polished life, and in a great degree a solitary and
independent being, obeys the impulses of his inclination or the dictates
of his judgment; and thus the attributes of his nature, being freely
indulged, grow singly great and striking. Society is like a lawn, where
every roughness is smoothed, every bramble eradicated, and where the eye
is delighted by the smiling verdure of a velvet surface; he, however, who
would study Nature in its wildness and variety must plunge into the
forest, must explore the glen, must stem the torrent, and dare the
precipice.</p>
<p>These reflections arose on casually looking through a volume of early
colonial history wherein are recorded, with great bitterness, the outrages
of the Indians and their wars with the settlers New England. It is painful
to perceive, even from these partial narratives, how the footsteps of
civilization may be traced in the blood of the aborigines; how easily the
colonists were moved to hostility by the lust of conquest; how merciless
and exterminating was their warfare. The imagination shrinks at the idea
of how many intellectual beings were hunted from the earth, how many brave
and noble hearts, of Nature's sterling coinage, were broken down and
trampled in the dust.</p>
<p>Such was the fate of PHILIP OF POKANOKET, an Indian warrior whose name was
once a terror throughout Massachusetts and Connecticut. He was the most
distinguished of a number of contemporary sachems who reigned over the
Pequods, the Narragansetts, the Wampanoags, and the other eastern tribes
at the time of the first settlement of New England—a band of native
untaught heroes who made the most generous struggle of which human nature
is capable, fighting to the last gasp in the cause of their country,
without a hope of victory or a thought of renown. Worthy of an age of
poetry and fit subjects for local story and romantic fiction, they have
left scarcely any authentic traces on the page of history, but stalk like
gigantic shadows in the dim twilight of tradition.*</p>
<p>* While correcting the proof-sheets of this article the<br/>
author is informed that a celebrated English poet has nearly<br/>
finished an heroic poem on the story of Philip of Pokanoket.<br/></p>
<p>When the Pilgrims, as the Plymouth settlers are called by their
descendants, first took refuge on the shores of the New World from the
religious persecutions of the Old, their situation was to the last degree
gloomy and disheartening. Few in number, and that number rapidly perishing
away through sickness and hardships, surrounded by a howling wilderness
and savage tribes, exposed to the rigors of an almost arctic winter and
the vicissitudes of an ever-shifting climate, their minds were filled with
doleful forebodings, and nothing preserved them from sinking into
despondency but the strong excitement of religious enthusiasm. In this
forlorn situation they were visited by Massasoit, chief sagamore of the
Wampanoags, a powerful chief who reigned over a great extent of country.
Instead of taking advantage of the scanty number of the strangers and
expelling them from his territories, into which they had intruded, he
seemed at once to conceive for them a generous friendship, and extended
towards them the rites of primitive hospitality. He came early in the
spring to their settlement of New Plymouth, attended by a mere handful of
followers, entered into a solemn league of peace and amity, sold them a
portion of the soil, and promised to secure for them the good-will of his
savage allies. Whatever may be said of Indian perfidy, it is certain that
the integrity and good faith of Massasoit have never been impeached. He
continued a firm and magnanimous friend of the white men, suffering them
to extend their possessions and to strengthen themselves in the land, and
betraying no jealousy of their increasing power and prosperity. Shortly
before his death he came once more to New Plymouth with his son Alexander,
for the purpose of renewing the covenant of peace and of securing it to
his posterity.</p>
<p>At this conference he endeavored to protect the religion of his
forefathers from the encroaching zeal of the missionaries, and stipulated
that no further attempt should be made to draw off his people from their
ancient faith; but, finding the English obstinately opposed to any such
condition, he mildly relinquished the demand. Almost the last act of his
life was to bring his two sons, Alexander and Philip (as they had been
named by the English), to the residence of a principal settler,
recommending mutual kindness and confidence, and entreating that the same
love and amity which had existed between the white men and himself might
be continued afterwards with his children. The good old sachem died in
peace, and was happily gathered to his fathers before sorrow came upon his
tribe; his children remained behind to experience the ingratitude of white
men.</p>
<p>His eldest son, Alexander, succeeded him. He was of a quick and impetuous
temper, and proudly tenacious of his hereditary rights and dignity. The
intrusive policy and dictatorial conduct of the strangers excited his
indignation, and he beheld with uneasiness their exterminating wars with
the neighboring tribes. He was doomed soon to incur their hostility, being
accused of plotting with the Narragansetts to rise against the English and
drive them from the land. It is impossible to say whether this accusation
was warranted by facts or was grounded on mere suspicions. It is evident,
however, by the violent and overbearing measures of the settlers that they
had by this time begun to feel conscious of the rapid increase of their
power, and to grow harsh and inconsiderate in their treatment of the
natives. They despatched an armed force to seize upon Alexander and to
bring him before their courts. He was traced to his woodland haunts, and
surprised at a hunting-house where he was reposing with a band of his
followers, unarmed, after the toils of the chase. The suddenness of his
arrest and the outrage offered to his sovereign dignity so preyed upon the
irascible feelings of this proud savage as to throw him into a raging
fever. He was permitted to return home on condition of sending his son as
a pledge for his re-appearance; but the blow he had received was fatal,
and before he reached his home he fell a victim to the agonies of a
wounded spirit.</p>
<p>The successor of Alexander was Metamocet, or King Philip, as he was called
by the settlers on account of his lofty spirit and ambitious temper.
These, together with his well-known energy and enterprise, had rendered
him an object of great jealousy and apprehension, and he was accused of
having always cherished a secret and implacable hostility towards the
whites. Such may very probably and very naturally have been the case. He
considered them as originally but mere intruders into the country, who had
presumed upon indulgence and were extending an influence baneful to savage
life. He saw the whole race of his countrymen melting before them from the
face of the earth, their territories slipping from their hands, and their
tribes becoming feeble, scattered, and dependent. It may be said that the
soil was originally purchased by the settlers; but who does not know the
nature of Indian purchases in the early periods of colonization? The
Europeans always made thrifty bargains through their superior adroitness
in traffic, and they gained vast accessions of territory by
easily-provoked hostilities. An uncultivated savage is never a nice
inquirer into the refinements of law by which an injury may be gradually
and legally inflicted. Leading facts are all by which he judges; and it
was enough for Philip to know that before the intrusion of the Europeans
his countrymen were lords of the soil, and that now they were becoming
vagabonds in the land of their fathers.</p>
<p>But whatever may have been his feelings of general hostility and his
particular indignation at the treatment of his brother, he suppressed them
for the present, renewed the contract with the settlers, and resided
peaceably for many years at Pokanoket, or as, it was called by the
English, Mount Hope,* the ancient seat of dominion of his tribe.
Suspicions, however, which were at first but vague and indefinite, began
to acquire form and substance, and he was at length charged with
attempting to instigate the various eastern tribes to rise at once, and by
a simultaneous effort to throw off the yoke of their oppressors. It is
difficult at this distant period to assign the proper credit due to these
early accusations against the Indians. There was a proneness to suspicion
and an aptness to acts of violence on the part of the whites that gave
weight and importance to every idle tale. Informers abounded where
tale-bearing met with countenance and reward, and the sword was readily
unsheathed when its success was certain and it carved out empire.</p>
<p>* Now Bristol, Rhode Island.<br/></p>
<p>The only positive evidence on record against Philip is the accusation of
one Sausaman, a renegado Indian, whose natural cunning had been quickened
by a partial education which he had received among the settlers. He
changed his faith and his allegiance two or three times with a facility
that evinced the looseness of his principles. He had acted for some time
as Philip's confidential secretary and counsellor, and had enjoyed his
bounty and protection. Finding, however, that the clouds of adversity were
gathering round his patron, he abandoned his service and went over to the
whites, and in order to gain their favor charged his former benefactor
with plotting against their safety. A rigorous investigation took place.
Philip and several of his subjects submitted to be examined, but nothing
was proved against them. The settlers, however, had now gone too far to
retract; they had previously determined that Philip was a dangerous
neighbor; they had publicly evinced their distrust, and had done enough to
insure his hostility; according, therefore, to the usual mode of reasoning
in these cases, his destruction had become necessary to their security.
Sausaman, the treacherous informer, was shortly afterwards found dead in a
pond, having fallen a victim to the vengeance of his tribe. Three Indians,
one of whom was a friend and counsellor of Philip, were apprehended and
tried, and on the testimony of one very questionable witness were
condemned and executed as murderers.</p>
<p>This treatment of his subjects and ignominious punishment of his friend
outraged the pride and exasperated the passions of Philip. The bolt which
had fallen thus at his very feet awakened him to the gathering storm, and
he determined to trust himself no longer in the power of the white men.
The fate of his insulted and broken-hearted brother still rankled in his
mind; and he had a further warning in the tragical story of Miantonimo, a
great Sachem of the Narragansetts, who, after manfully facing his accusers
before a tribunal of the colonists, exculpating himself from a charge of
conspiracy and receiving assurances of amity, had been perfidiously
despatched at their instigation. Philip therefore gathered his
fighting-men about him, persuaded all strangers that he could to join his
cause, sent the women and children to the Narragansetts for safety, and
wherever he appeared was continually surrounded by armed warriors.</p>
<p>When the two parties were thus in a state of distrust and irritation, the
least spark was sufficient to set them in a flame. The Indians, having
weapons in their hands, grew mischievous and committed various petty
depredations. In one of their maraudings a warrior was fired on and killed
by a settler. This was the signal for open hostilities; the Indians
pressed to revenge the death of their comrade, and the alarm of war
resounded through the Plymouth colony.</p>
<p>In the early chronicles of these dark and melancholy times we meet with
many indications of the diseased state of the public mind. The gloom of
religious abstraction and the wildness of their situation among trackless
forests and savage tribes had disposed the colonists to superstitious
fancies, and had filled their imaginations with the frightful chimeras of
witchcraft and spectrology. They were much given also to a belief in
omens. The troubles with Philip and his Indians were preceded, we are
told, by a variety of those awful warnings which forerun great and public
calamities. The perfect form of an Indian bow appeared in the air at New
Plymouth, which was looked upon by the inhabitants as a "prodigious
apparition." At Hadley, Northampton, and other towns in their neighborhood
"was heard the report of a great piece of ordnance, with a shaking of the
earth and a considerable echo."* Others were alarmed on a still sunshiny
morning by the discharge of guns and muskets; bullets seemed to whistle
past them, and the noise of drums resounded in the air, seeming to pass
away to the westward; others fancied that they heard the galloping of
horses over their heads; and certain monstrous births which took place
about the time filled the superstitious in some towns with doleful
forebodings. Many of these portentous sights and sounds may be ascribed to
natural phenomena—to the northern lights which occur vividly in
those latitudes, the meteors which explode in the air, the casual rushing
of a blast through the top branches of the forest, the crash of fallen
trees or disrupted rocks, and to those other uncouth sounds and echoes
which will sometimes strike the ear so strangely amidst the profound
stillness of woodland solitudes. These may have startled some melancholy
imaginations, may have been exaggerated by the love for the marvellous,
and listened to with that avidity with which we devour whatever is fearful
and mysterious. The universal currency of these superstitious fancies and
the grave record made of them by one of the learned men of the day are
strongly characteristic of the times.</p>
<p>* The Rev. Increase Mather's History.<br/></p>
<p>The nature of the contest that ensued was such as too often distinguishes
the warfare between civilized men and savages. On the part of the whites
it was conducted with superior skill and success, but with a wastefulness
of the blood and a disregard of the natural rights of their antagonists:
on the part of the Indians it was waged with the desperation of men
fearless of death, and who had nothing to expect from peace but
humiliation, dependence, and decay.</p>
<p>The events of the war are transmitted to us by a worthy clergyman of the
time, who dwells with horror and indignation on every hostile act of the
Indians, however justifiable, whilst he mentions with applause the most
sanguinary atrocities of the whites. Philip is reviled as a murderer and a
traitor, without considering that he was a true-born prince gallantly
fighting at the head of his subjects to avenge the wrongs of his family,
to retrieve the tottering power of his line, and to deliver his native
land from the oppression of usurping strangers.</p>
<p>The project of a wide and simultaneous revolt, if such had really been
formed, was worthy of a capacious mind, and had it not been prematurely
discovered might have been overwhelming in its consequences. The war that
actually broke out was but a war of detail, a mere succession of casual
exploits and unconnected enterprises. Still, it sets forth the military
genius and daring prowess of Philip, and wherever, in the prejudiced and
passionate narrations that have been given of it, we can arrive at simple
facts, we find him displaying a vigorous mind, a fertility of expedients,
a contempt of suffering and hardship, and an unconquerable resolution that
command our sympathy and applause.</p>
<p>Driven from his paternal domains at Mount Hope, he threw himself into the
depths of those vast and trackless forests that skirted the settlements
and were almost impervious to anything but a wild beast or an Indian. Here
he gathered together his forces, like the storm accumulating its stores of
mischief in the bosom of the thundercloud, and would suddenly emerge at a
time and place least expected, carrying havoc and dismay into the
villages. There were now and then indications of these impending ravages
that filled the minds of the colonists with awe and apprehension. The
report of a distant gun would perhaps be heard from the solitary woodland,
where there was known to be no white man; the cattle which had been
wandering in the woods would sometimes return home wounded; or an Indian
or two would be seen lurking about the skirts of the forests and suddenly
disappearing, as the lightning will sometimes be seen playing silently
about the edge of the cloud that is brewing up the tempest.</p>
<p>Though sometimes pursued and even surrounded by the settlers, yet Philip
as often escaped almost miraculously from their toils, and, plunging into
the wilderness, would be lost to all search or inquiry until he again
emerged at some far distant quarter, laying the country desolate. Among
his strongholds were the great swamps or morasses which extend in some
parts of New England, composed of loose bogs of deep black mud, perplexed
with thickets, brambles, rank weeds, the shattered and mouldering trunks
of fallen trees, overshadowed by lugubrious hemlocks. The uncertain
footing and the tangled mazes of these shaggy wilds rendered them almost
impracticable to the white man, though the Indian could thread their
labyrinths with the agility of a deer. Into one of these, the great swamp
of Pocasset Neck, was Philip once driven with a band of his followers. The
English did not dare to pursue him, fearing to venture into these dark and
frightful recesses, where they might perish in fens and miry pits or be
shot down by lurking foes. They therefore invested the entrance to the
Neck, and began to build a fort with the thought of starving out the foe;
but Philip and his warriors wafted themselves on a raft over an arm of the
sea in the dead of night, leaving the women and children behind, and
escaped away to the westward, kindling the flames of war among the tribes
of Massachusetts and the Nipmuck country and threatening the colony of
Connecticut.</p>
<p>In this way Philip became a theme of universal apprehension. The mystery
in which he was enveloped exaggerated his real terrors. He was an evil
that walked in darkness, whose coming none could foresee and against which
none knew when to be on the alert. The whole country abounded with rumors
and alarms. Philip seemed almost possessed of ubiquity, for in whatever
part of the widely-extended frontier an irruption from the forest took
place, Philip was said to be its leader. Many superstitious notions also
were circulated concerning him. He was said to deal in necromancy, and to
be attended by an old Indian witch or prophetess, whom he consulted and
who assisted him by her charms and incantations. This, indeed, was
frequently the case with Indian chiefs, either through their own credulity
or to act upon that of their followers; and the influence of the prophet
and the dreamer over Indian superstition has been fully evidenced in
recent instances of savage warfare.</p>
<p>At the time that Philip effected his escape from Pocasset his fortunes
were in a desperate condition. His forces had been thinned by repeated
fights and he had lost almost the whole of his resources. In this time of
adversity he found a faithful friend in Canonchet, chief Sachem of all the
Narragansetts. He was the son and heir of Miantonimo, the great sachem
who, as already mentioned, after an honorable acquittal of the charge of
conspiracy, had been privately put to death at the perfidious instigations
of the settlers. "He was the heir," says the old chronicler, "of all his
father's pride and insolence, as well as of his malice towards the
English;" he certainly was the heir of his insults and injuries and the
legitimate avenger of his murder. Though he had forborne to take an active
part in this hopeless war, yet he received Philip and his broken forces
with open arms and gave them the most generous countenance and support.
This at once drew upon him the hostility of the English, and it was
determined to strike a signal blow that should involve both the Sachems in
one common ruin. A great force was therefore gathered together from
Massachusetts, Plymouth, and Connecticut, and was sent into the
Narragansett country in the depth of winter, when the swamps, being frozen
and leafless, could be traversed with comparative facility and would no
longer afford dark and impenetrable fastnesses to the Indians.</p>
<p>Apprehensive of attack, Canonchet had conveyed the greater part of his
stores, together with the old, the infirm, the women and children of his
tribe, to a strong fortress, where he and Philip had likewise drawn up the
flower of their forces. This fortress, deemed by the Indians impregnable,
was situated upon a rising mound or kind of island of five or six acres in
the midst of a swamp; it was constructed with a degree of judgment and
skill vastly superior to what is usually displayed in Indian
fortification, and indicative of the martial genius of these two
chieftains.</p>
<p>Guided by a renegado Indian, the English penetrated, through December
snows, to this stronghold and came upon the garrison by surprise. The
fight was fierce and tumultuous. The assailants were repulsed in their
first attack, and several of their bravest officers were shot down in the
act of storming the fortress, sword in hand. The assault was renewed with
greater success. A lodgment was effected. The Indians were driven from one
post to another. They disputed their ground inch by inch, fighting with
the fury of despair. Most of their veterans were cut to pieces, and after
a long and bloody battle, Philip and Canonchet, with a handful of
surviving warriors, retreated from the fort and took refuge in the
thickets of the surrounding forest.</p>
<p>The victors set fire to the wigwams and the fort; the whole was soon in a
blaze; many of the old men, the women, and the children perished in the
flames. This last outrage overcame even the stoicism of the savage. The
neighboring woods resounded with the yells of rage and despair uttered by
the fugitive warriors, as they beheld the destruction of their dwellings
and heard the agonizing cries of their wives and offspring. "The burning
of the wigwams," says a contemporary writer, "the shrieks and cries of the
women and children, and the yelling of the warriors, exhibited a most
horrible and affecting scene, so that it greatly moved some of the
soldiers." The same writer cautiously adds, "They were in much doubt then,
and afterwards seriously inquired, whether burning their enemies alive
could be consistent with humanity, and the benevolent principles of the
gospel."*</p>
<p>* MS. of the Rev. W. Ruggles.<br/></p>
<p>The fate of the brave and generous Canonchet is worthy of particular
mention: the last scene of his life is one of the noblest instances on
record of Indian magnanimity.</p>
<p>Broken down in his power and resources by this signal defeat, yet faithful
to his ally and to the hapless cause which he had espoused, he rejected
all overtures of peace offered on condition of betraying Philip and his
followers, and declared that "he would fight it out to the last man,
rather than become a servant to the English." His home being destroyed,
his country harassed and laid waste by the incursions of the conquerors,
he was obliged to wander away to the banks of the Connecticut, where he
formed a rallying-point to the whole body of western Indians and laid
waste several of the English settlements.</p>
<p>Early in the spring he departed on a hazardous expedition, with only
thirty chosen men, to penetrate to Seaconck, in the vicinity of Mount
Hope, and to procure seed corn to plant for the sustenance of his troops.
This little hand of adventurers had passed safely through the Pequod
country, and were in the centre of the Narragansett, resting at some
wigwams near Pautucket River, when an alarm was given of an approaching
enemy. Having but seven men by him at the time, Canonchet despatched two
of them to the top of a neighboring hill to bring intelligence of the foe.</p>
<p>Panic-struck by the appearance of a troop of English and Indians rapidly
advancing, they fled in breathless terror past their chieftain, without
stopping to inform him of the danger. Canonchet sent another scout, who
did the same. He then sent two more, one of whom, hurrying back in
confusion and affright, told him that the whole British army was at hand.
Canonchet saw there was no choice but immediate flight. He attempted to
escape round the hill, but was perceived and hotly pursued by the hostile
Indians and a few of the fleetest of the English. Finding the swiftest
pursuer close upon his heels, he threw off, first his blanket, then his
silver-laced coat and belt of peag, by which his enemies knew him to be
Canonchet and redoubled the eagerness of pursuit.</p>
<p>At length, in dashing through the river, his foot slipped upon a stone,
and he fell so deep as to wet his gun. This accident so struck him with
despair that, as he afterwards confessed, "his heart and his bowels turned
within him, and he became like a rotten stick, void of strength."</p>
<p>To such a degree was he unnerved that, being seized by a Pequod Indian
within a short distance of the river, he made no resistance, though a man
of great vigor of body and boldness of heart. But on being made prisoner
the whole pride of his spirit arose within him, and from that moment we
find, in the anecdotes given by his enemies, nothing but repeated flashes
of elevated and prince-like heroism. Being questioned by one of the
English who first came up with him, and who had not attained his twenty
second year, the proud-hearted warrior, looking with lofty contempt upon
his youthful countenance, replied, "You are a child—you cannot
understand matters of war; let your brother or your chief come: him will I
answer."</p>
<p>Though repeated offers were made to him of his life on condition of
submitting with his nation to the English, yet he rejected them with
disdain, and refused to send any proposals of the kind to the great body
of his subjects, saying that he knew none of them would comply. Being
reproached with his breach of faith towards the whites, his boast that he
would not deliver up a Wampanoag nor the paring of a Wampanoag's nail, and
his threat that he would burn the English alive in their houses, he
disdained to justify himself, haughtily answering that others were as
forward for the war as himself, and "he desired to hear no more thereof."</p>
<p>So noble and unshaken a spirit, so true a fidelity to his cause and his
friend, might have touched the feelings of the generous and the brave; but
Canonchet was an Indian, a being towards whom war had no courtesy,
humanity no law, religion no compassion: he was condemned to die. The last
words of his that are recorded are worthy the greatness of his soul. When
sentence of death was passed upon him, he observed "that he liked it well,
for he should die before his heart was soft or he had spoken anything
unworthy of himself." His enemies gave him the death of a soldier, for he
was shot at Stoning ham by three young Sachems of his own rank.</p>
<p>The defeat at the Narraganset fortress and the death of Canonchet were
fatal blows to the fortunes of King Philip. He made an ineffectual attempt
to raise a head of war by stirring up the Mohawks to take arms; but,
though possessed of the native talents of a statesman, his arts were
counteracted by the superior arts of his enlightened enemies, and the
terror of their warlike skill began to subdue the resolution of the
neighboring tribes. The unfortunate chieftain saw himself daily stripped
of power, and his ranks rapidly thinning around him. Some were suborned by
the whites; others fell victims to hunger and fatigue and to the frequent
attacks by which they were harassed. His stores were all captured; his
chosen friends were swept away from before his eyes; his uncle was shot
down by his side; his sister was carried into captivity; and in one of his
narrow escapes he was compelled to leave his beloved wife and only son to
the mercy of the enemy. "His ruin," says the historian, "being thus
gradually carried on, his misery was not prevented, but augmented thereby;
being himself made acquainted with the sense and experimental feeling of
the captivity of his children, loss of friends, slaughter of his subjects,
bereavement of all family relations, and being stripped of all outward
comforts before his own life should be taken away."</p>
<p>To fill up the measure of his misfortunes, his own followers began to plot
against his life, that by sacrificing him they might purchase dishonorable
safety. Through treachery a number of his faithful adherents, the subjects
of Wetamoe, an Indian princess of Pocasset, a near kinswoman and
confederate of Philip, were betrayed into the hands of the enemy. Wetamoe
was among them at the time, and attempted to make her escape by crossing a
neighboring river: either exhausted by swimming or starved with cold and
hunger, she was found dead and naked near the water-side. But persecution
ceased not at the grave. Even death, the refuge of the wretched, where the
wicked commonly cease from troubling, was no protection to this outcast
female, whose great crime was affectionate fidelity to her kinsman and her
friend. Her corpse was the object of unmanly and dastardly vengeance: the
head was severed from the body and set upon a pole, and was thus exposed
at Taunton to the view of her captive subjects. They immediately
recognized the features of their unfortunate queen, and were so affected
at this barbarous spectacle that we are told they broke forth into the
"most horrid and diabolical lamentations."</p>
<p>However Philip had borne up against the complicated miseries and
misfortunes that surrounded him, the treachery of his followers seemed to
wring his heart and reduce him to despondency. It is said that "he never
rejoiced afterwards, nor had success in any of his designs." The spring of
hope was broken—the ardor of enterprise was extinguished; he looked
around, and all was danger and darkness; there was no eye to pity nor any
arm that could bring deliverance. With a scanty band of followers, who
still remained true to his desperate fortunes, the unhappy Philip wandered
back to the vicinity of Mount Hope, the ancient dwelling of his fathers.
Here he lurked about like a spectre among the scenes of former power and
prosperity, now bereft of home, of family, and of friend. There needs no
better picture of his destitute and piteous situation than that furnished
by the homely pen of the chronicler, who is unwarily enlisting the
feelings of the reader in favor of the hapless warrior whom he reviles.
"Philip," he says, "like a savage wild beast, having been hunted by the
English forces through the woods above a hundred miles backward and
forward, at last was driven to his own den upon Mount Hope, where he
retired, with a few of his best friends, into a swamp, which proved but a
prison to keep him fast till the messengers of death came by divine
permission to execute vengeance upon him."</p>
<p>Even in this last refuge of desperation and despair a sullen grandeur
gathers round his memory. We picture him to ourselves seated among his
care-worn followers, brooding in silence over his blasted fortunes, and
acquiring a savage sublimity from the wildness and dreariness of his
lurking-place. Defeated, but not dismayed—crushed to the earth, but
not humiliated—he seemed to grow more haughty beneath disaster, and
to experience a fierce satisfaction in draining the last dregs of
bitterness. Little minds are tamed and subdued by misfortune, but great
minds rise above it. The very idea of submission awakened the fury of
Philip, and he smote to death one of his followers who proposed an
expedient of peace. The brother of the victim made his escape, and in
revenge betrayed the retreat of his chieftain, A body of white men and
Indians were immediately despatched to the swamp where Philip lay
crouched, glaring with fury and despair. Before he was aware of their
approach they had begun to surround him. In a little while he saw five of
his trustiest followers laid dead at his feet; all resistance was vain; he
rushed forth from his covert, and made a headlong attempt to escape, but
was shot through the heart by a renegado Indian of his own nation.</p>
<p>Such is the scanty story of the brave but unfortunate King Philip,
persecuted while living, slandered and dishonored when dead. If, however,
we consider even the prejudiced anecdotes furnished us by his enemies, we
may perceive in them traces of amiable and lofty character sufficient to
awaken sympathy for his fate and respect for his memory. We find that
amidst all the harassing cares and ferocious passions of constant warfare
he was alive to the softer feelings of connubial love and paternal
tenderness and to the generous sentiment of friendship. The captivity of
his "beloved wife and only son" are mentioned with exultation as causing
him poignant misery: the death of any near friend is triumphantly recorded
as a new blow on his sensibilities; but the treachery and desertion of
many of his followers, in whose affections he had confided, is said to
have desolated his heart and to have bereaved him of all further comfort.
He was a patriot attached to his native soil—a prince true to his
subjects and indignant of their wrongs—a soldier daring in battle,
firm in adversity, patient of fatigue, of hunger, of every variety of
bodily suffering, and ready to perish in the cause he had espoused. Proud
of heart and with an untamable love of natural liberty, he preferred to
enjoy it among the beasts of the forests or in the dismal and famished
recesses of swamps and morasses, rather than bow his haughty spirit to
submission and live dependent and despised in the ease and luxury of the
settlements. With heroic qualities and bold achievements that would have
graced a civilized warrior, and have rendered him the theme of the poet
and the historian, he lived a wanderer and a fugitive in his native land,
and went down, like a lonely bark foundering amid darkness and tempest,
without a pitying eye to weep his fall or a friendly hand to record his
struggle.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />