The Prairie (Fiscle Part 3) Of 2 by J Fenimore Cooper (top non fiction books of all time .TXT) 📖
- Author: J Fenimore Cooper
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The Route Of The Party Led Them At No Great Distance From One Of Those
Watchful Youths, Who Was Charged With A Trust Heavy As The Principal
Wealth Of His Tribe. He Heard The Trampling Of The Horses, And Cast
His Eye Aside, But Instead Of Manifesting Curiosity Or Alarm, His Look
Instantly Returned Whence It Had Been Withdrawn, To The Spot Where The
Village Was Known To Stand.
"There Is Something Remarkable In All This," Muttered Middleton, Half
Offended At What He Conceived To Be Not Only A Slight To His Rank, But
Offensive To Himself, Personally; "Yonder Boy Has Heard Of Our
Approach, Or He Would Not Fail To Notify His Tribe; And Yet He
Scarcely Deigns To Favour Us With A Glance. Look To Your Arms, Men; It
May Be Necessary To Let These Savages Feel Our Strength."
"Therein, Captain, I Think You're In An Error," Returned Paul, "If
Honesty Is To Be Met On The Prairies At All, You Will Find It In Our
Old Friend Hard-Heart; Neither Is An Indian To Be Judged Of By The
Rules Of A White. See! We Are Not Altogether Slighted, For Here Comes
A Party At Last To Meet Us, Though It Is A Little Pitiful As To Show
And Numbers."
Paul Was Right In Both Particulars. A Group Of Horsemen Were At Length
Seen Wheeling Round A Little Copse, And Advancing Across The Plain
Directly Towards Them. The Advance Of This Party Was Slow And
Dignified. As It Drew Nigh, The Partisan Of The Loups Was Seen At Its
Head, Followed By A Dozen Younger Warriors Of His Tribe. They Were All
Unarmed, Nor Did They Even Wear Any Of Those Ornaments Or Feathers,
Which Are Considered Testimonials Of Respect To The Guest An Indian
Part 3 Chapter 34 Pg 171Receives, As Well As Evidence Of His Own Importance.
The Meeting Was Friendly, Though A Little Restrained On Both Sides.
Middleton, Jealous Of His Own Consideration No Less Than Of The
Authority Of His Government, Suspected Some Undue Influence On The
Part Of The Agents Of The Canadas; And, As He Was Determined To
Maintain The Authority Of Which He Was The Representative, He Felt
Himself Constrained To Manifest A Hauteur, That He Was Far From
Feeling. It Was Not So Easy To Penetrate The Motives Of The Pawnees.
Calm, Dignified, And Yet Far From Repulsive, They Set An Example Of
Courtesy, Blended With Reserve, That Many A Diplomatist Of The Most
Polished Court Might Have Strove In Vain To Imitate.
In This Manner The Two Parties Continued Their Course To The Town.
Middleton Had Time, During The Remainder Of The Ride, To Revolve In
His Mind, All The Probable Reasons Which His Ingenuity Could Suggest
For This Strange Reception. Although He Was Accompanied By A Regular
Interpreter, The Chiefs Made Their Salutations In A Manner That
Dispensed With His Services. Twenty Times The Captain Turned His
Glance On His Former Friend, Endeavouring To Read The Expression Of
His Rigid Features. But Every Effort And All Conjectures Proved
Equally Futile. The Eye Of Hard-Heart Was Fixed, Composed, And A
Little Anxious; But As To Every Other Emotion, Impenetrable. He
Neither Spoke Himself, Nor Seemed Willing To Invite Discourse In His
Visiters; It Was Therefore Necessary For Middleton To Adopt The
Patient Manners Of His Companions, And To Await The Issue For The
Explanation.
When They Entered The Town, Its Inhabitants Were Seen Collected In An
Open Space, Where They Were Arranged With The Customary Deference To
Age And Rank. The Whole Formed A Large Circle, In The Centre Of Which,
Were Perhaps A Dozen Of The Principal Chiefs. Hard-Heart Waved His
Hand As He Approached, And, As The Mass Of Bodies Opened, He Rode
Through, Followed By His Companions. Here They Dismounted; And As The
Beasts Were Led Apart, The Strangers Found Themselves Environed By A
Thousand, Grave, Composed, But Solicitous Faces.
Middleton Gazed About Him, In Growing Concern, For No Cry, No Song, No
Shout Welcomed Him Among A People, From Whom He Had So Lately Parted
With Regret. His Uneasiness, Not To Say Apprehensions, Was Shared By
All His Followers. Determination And Stern Resolution Began To Assume
The Place Of Anxiety In Every Eye, As Each Man Silently Felt For His
Arms, And Assured Himself, That His Several Weapons Were In A State
For Service. But There Was No Answering Symptom Of Hostility On The
Part Of Their Hosts. Hard-Heart Beckoned For Middleton And Paul To
Follow, Leading The Way Towards The Cluster Of Forms, That Occupied
The Centre Of The Circle. Here The Visiters Found A Solution Of All
The Movements, Which Had Given Them So Much Reason For Apprehension.
The Trapper Was Placed On A Rude Seat, Which Had Been Made, With
Studied Care, To Support His Frame In An Upright And Easy Attitude.
The First Glance Of The Eye Told His Former Friends, That The Old Man
Was At Length Called Upon To Pay The Last Tribute Of Nature. His Eye
Part 3 Chapter 34 Pg 172Was Glazed, And Apparently As Devoid Of Sight As Of Expression. His
Features Were A Little More Sunken And Strongly Marked Than Formerly;
But There, All Change, So Far As Exterior Was Concerned, Might Be Said
To Have Ceased. His Approaching End Was Not To Be Ascribed To Any
Positive Disease, But Had Been A Gradual And Mild Decay Of The
Physical Powers. Life, It Is True, Still Lingered In His System; But
It Was As If At Times Entirely Ready To Depart, And Then It Would
Appear To Re-Animate The Sinking Form, Reluctant To Give Up The
Possession Of A Tenement, That Had Never Been Corrupted By Vice, Or
Undermined By Disease. It Would Have Been No Violent Fancy To Have
Imagined, That The Spirit Fluttered About The Placid Lips Of The Old
Woodsman, Reluctant To Depart From A Shell, That Had So Long Given It
An Honest And An Honourable Shelter.
His Body Was Placed So As To Let The Light Of The Setting Sun Fall
Full Upon The Solemn Features. His Head Was Bare, The Long, Thin,
Locks Of Grey Fluttering Lightly In The Evening Breeze. His Rifle Lay
Upon His Knee, And The Other Accoutrements Of The Chase Were Placed At
His Side, Within Reach Of His Hand. Between His Feet Lay The Figure Of
A Hound, With Its Head Crouching To The Earth As If It Slumbered; And
So Perfectly Easy And Natural Was Its Position, That A Second Glance
Was Necessary To Tell Middleton, He Saw Only The Skin Of Hector,
Stuffed By Indian Tenderness And Ingenuity In A Manner To Represent
The Living Animal. His Own Dog Was Playing At A Distance, With The
Child Of Tachechana And Mahtoree. The Mother Herself Stood At Hand,
Holding In Her Arms A Second Offspring, That Might Boast Of A
Parentage No Less Honourable, Than That Which Belonged To The Son Of
Hard-Heart. Le Balafre Was Seated Nigh The Dying Trapper, With Every
Mark About His Person, That The Hour Of His Own Departure Was Not Far
Distant. The Rest Of Those Immediately In The Centre Were Aged Men,
Who Had Apparently Drawn Near, In Order To Observe The Manner, In
Which A Just And Fearless Warrior Would Depart On The Greatest Of His
Journeys.
The Old Man Was Reaping The Rewards Of A Life Remarkable For
Temperance And Activity, In A Tranquil And Placid Death. His Vigour In
A Manner Endured To The Very Last. Decay, When It Did Occur, Was
Rapid, But Free From Pain. He Had Hunted With The Tribe In The Spring,
And Even Throughout Most Of The Summer, When His Limbs Suddenly
Refused To Perform Their Customary Offices. A Sympathising Weakness
Took Possession Of All His Faculties; And The Pawnees Believed, That
They Were Going To Lose, In This Unexpected Manner, A Sage And
Counsellor, Whom They Had Begun Both To Love And Respect. But As We
Have Already Said, The Immortal Occupant Seemed Unwilling To Desert
Its Tenement. The Lamp Of Life Flickered Without Becoming
Extinguished. On The Morning Of The Day, On Which Middleton Arrived,
There Was A General Reviving Of The Powers Of The Whole Man. His
Tongue Was Again Heard In Wholesome Maxims, And His Eye From Time To
Time Recognised The Persons Of His Friends. It Merely Proved To Be A
Brief And Final Intercourse With The World On The Part Of One, Who Had
Already Been Considered, As To Mental Communion, To Have Taken His
Leave Of It For Ever.
When He Had Placed His Guests In Front Of The Dying Man, Hard-Heart,
Part 3 Chapter 34 Pg 173After A Pause, That Proceeded As Much From Sorrow As Decorum, Leaned A
Little Forward And Demanded--
"Does My Father Hear The Words Of His Son?"
"Speak," Returned The Trapper, In Tones That Issued From His Chest,
But Which Were Rendered Awfully Distinct By The Stillness That Reigned
In The Place. "I Am About To Depart From The Village Of The Loups, And
Shortly Shall Be Beyond The Reach Of Your Voice."
"Let The Wise Chief Have No Cares For His Journey," Continued Hard-
Heart With An Earnest Solicitude, That Led Him To Forget, For The
Moment, That Others Were Waiting To Address His Adopted Parent; "A
Hundred Loups Shall Clear His Path From Briars."
"Pawnee, I Die As I Have Lived, A Christian Man," Resumed The Trapper
With A Force Of Voice That Had The Same Startling Effect Upon His
Hearers, As Is Produced By The Trumpet, When Its Blast Rises Suddenly
And Freely On The Air, After Its Obstructed Sounds Have Been Heard
Struggling In The Distance: "As I Came Into Life So Will I Leave It.
Horses And Arms Are Not Needed To Stand In The Presence Of The Great
Spirit Of My People. He Knows My Colour, And According To My Gifts
Will He Judge My Deeds."
"My Father Will Tell My Young Men, How Many Mingoes He Has Struck, And
What Acts Of Valour And Justice He Has Done, That They May Know How To
Imitate Him."
"A Boastful Tongue Is Not Heard In The Heaven Of A White Man,"
Solemnly Returned The Old Man. "What I Have Done, He Has Seen. His
Eyes Are Always Open. That, Which Has Been Well Done, Will He
Remember; Wherein I Have Been Wrong Will He Not Forget To Chastise,
Though He Will Do The Same In Mercy. No, My Son; A Pale-Face May Not
Sing His Own Praises, And Hope To Have Them Acceptable Before His
God."
A Little Disappointed, The Young Partisan Stepped Modestly
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