Wide o’er the brim with many a torrent
swelled,
And the mixed ruin of its banks o’erspread,
At last the roused up river pours along:
Resistless, roaring, dreadful, down it
comes
From the rude mountain and the mossy wild.
THOMSON’S SEASONS.
The company expressed their acknowledgments
to Bernard for the entertainment he had furnished,
although they all seemed to consider the conduct of
Wampum-hair inconsistent with his amiable character,
and to pity the fate of Leelinau.
“The writer must have had some
suspicion of the inconsistency himself,” said
Bernard, “to judge from his attempt to obviate
the difficulty, by ascribing a magic change in his
hero, to the application of the child’s hand
to the head, instead of as before, to the heart.
This part of the tale is slightly and unskillfully
developed.”
“I cannot agree with you,”
said Faith, “and think you do your friend injustice.
The idea is, that the guardian genius exercised a
controlling influence over the destiny of the young
man; and I see no reason why if we concede the power
to the genius to soften his nature, we may not grant
also the ability to harden it.”
“Especially,” observed
Pownal, “as the object of the protecting spirit
would have been frustrated, had the lovers been united.”
All looked inquiringly towards him for an explanation.
“I mean,” said he, “that
with such a fierce little squaw for a wife, the gentleman
with the unpronounceable name, would not have continued
a man of peace long. There certainly would have
been war within the wigwam, however dense the puffs
of smoke from the calumet of peace outside.”
All laughed at the sally, but Anne
intimated that she would have preferred a different
termination.
“At least,” said Mr. Armstrong,
who had listened in silence to the criticisms of the
young people, “it teaches a profitable lesson
to you girls.”
“What is that, Mr. Armstrong?” inquired
Anne.
“That young ladies should know their own minds.”
“A most unreasonable expectation!”
exclaimed Anne. “We should become as stupid as
stupid as reasonable people.”
“Besides,” said Faith,
coming to her friend’s assistance, “the
story was intended for the benefit of Indian girls,
and not for those who read Shakspeare.”
“I suspect,” said Bernard,
“that the writer was better acquainted with
the Shakspearean ladies, than with Indian girls.”
“Why do you think so?” asked Faith.
“Do you not observe,”
answered Bernard, “that he confines himself to
generalities? Not a word does he venture to say
about the toilette of the beauty. A description
of the dress of the heroine, has always been considered
indispensable in every tale.”
“Poh, William!” said Anne,
“what a savage critic you are. But, probably,
there was so little to describe, the author did not
think it worth his while.”
“And,” said Pownal, “is
anything admissible in a picture which distracts the
attention and withdraws it from the principal figure?
Good taste excludes ear-rings and gold chains from
portraits.”
“Well,” said Bernard,
“I dare say you are right. It may be, too,
that the dress was indescribable.”
“Who is this Manabozho, who
comes in so opportunely, yet, without effecting much
after all?” inquired Anne. “I am charmed
with his appearance; particularly, his big eyes.”
“He is a sort of Indian Hercules,”
replied Bernard, “who plays a conspicuous part
in many legends. He is a compound of wisdom and
folly, of benevolence and mischief, of strength and
weakness, partly Manitou and partly man, and is privileged
to do anything, however absurd and impossible, at
one moment, while, at the next, he may be shorn of
his power, so as to be incapable of taking care of
himself.”
“A very convenient person indeed,” said
Anne.
“Loosing the knot of a difficulty
by the intervention of such a Power, shows but little
ingenuity, I confess,” said Bernard.
“There is classical authority
for it, though,” said Mr. Armstrong. “Homer,
himself, condescends to introduce a God, when he cannot
extricate himself from embarrassment without his help.”
“Aye,” said Bernard, “but
the rule of Horace must not be forgotten, nec
Deus,” &c.
“True,” said Mr. Armstrong;
“but how would you have accomplished the feat,
like one of the labors of Hercules, without some such
means?”
“I do not pretend to be able
to do it,” answered Bernard, modestly; “but,
doubtless, one possessed of more imagination could
have accomplished it.”
“You are but a cold advocate
for your friend,” said Faith. “You
do not allow him half the merit he deserves”
“He would not complain were
he to hear me,” said Bernard. “No
one can be more sensible than himself, of the defects
of his work.”
“And I say,” said Anne,
“that I like his story exceedingly; only, he
knows nothing about our sex. It may be all very
well for a man to praise that hard-hearted Wampum-head,
and make poor Leelinau pine away for his precious
sake, but, I do not believe she was so silly as to
care much about him.”
“If the truth were known,”
said Pownal, “I have no doubt that the girl
rejected him, because she liked some one else better.”
“And her ungallant beau,”
said Anne, “made up the story, to cover his
confusion.”
“I am satisfied with it as it
is,” said Faith. “We pity and love
Leelinau, now; her haughtiness and pride are forgotten
in her misfortunes, and we remember her as one faithful
unto death.”
“Your tale reminds me,”
said Pownal, addressing Bernard, “that there
is a tremendous freshet in the Wootuppocut, and that
the waters are increasing. Suppose, if the ladies
consent, we make up a party, to view it, to-morrow?”
The proposition was received with
approbation by all, and it was agreed, that they would
meet at the house of Mr. Armstrong, as the starting-point,
on the afternoon of the next day. The evening
being now considerably advanced, Faith’s friends
took their leave.
The nine o’clock bell was ringing,
as the young people passed through the quiet streets.
The custom of ringing a bell, at that hour, is one
which has fallen into desuetude, although, once, almost
universal in New England, and may be said to bear
some relation to the vesper-bell, in Roman Catholic
countries. Its avowed object, indeed, was not,
as in the case of the latter, to call the people to
prayers, but, its effect, perhaps, was the same; for,
it marked the hour at which the population of the
village were in the habit of retiring to rest; and,
in those days of simple faith, many were the families
whose members united together, before seeking their
pillows, to return thanks for the blessings of the
day, and ask for protection during the defenceless
hours of the night. Luxury and dissipation have
since crept in, and parties assemble, now, at an hour
when they formerly broke up. We call ourselves
more refined, but, it may admit of a doubt, whether
all our show and parade are not purchased at too dear
a rate, at the price of substantial comfort and happiness.
The shore was lined with spectators,
when the little party approached the scene of the
freshet. We do not know that we have succeeded
in conveying a clear idea of the river we have attempted
to describe. It may be recollected, that it was
spoken of as one of the tributaries of the Severn,
coming in from the East, and sweeping round that side
of the town. The banks, on the side opposite,
were high and precipitous; but, on the hither side with
the exception of the narrow passage through which
the river poured itself into the Severn, and for a
short distance above the ground rose gently
from the stream before it reached the foot of the
hill, interposing a piece of comparatively level land.
The road that ran on this flat spot, and connected
the eastern portion (which, from the extempore character
of its buildings, as well as from other causes we
do not choose to mention, was called Hasty-Pudding),
with the rest of the town, was, usually, in very high
floods, overflowed. Such was the fact in the present
instance, and boats were busily engaged in transporting
persons over the submerged road. As you stood
near the mouth of the river, and looked up the current,
a scene of considerable interest, and, even grandeur,
presented itself. At that time, the innumerable
dams higher up the stream, that have been since constructed,
had not been built, nor had the rocks, at the throat,
been blasted to make a wider egress. The ice,
which then rushed down, as it were by agreement, simultaneously
and in huge blocks but, now-a-days, at intervals,
and broken up by falling over the dams unable
to escape in the eager rivalry of the cakes to pass
each other, was jammed in the throat, and piled up
high in the air, looking like ice-bergs that had floated
from the North Pole. You saw the stream, at all
times, rapid, and now, swollen vastly beyond its ordinary
proportions, rushing with ten-fold force, and hurrying,
in its channel, with hoarse sounds, the ice-cakes,
which, in the emulous race, grated against, and, sometimes,
mutually destroyed one another, to drive some under
the icy barrier, thence to glide away to the ocean,
and to toss others high above the foaming torrent on
the collected masses, more gradually to find their
way to the same bourne. Looking away from the
channel, one saw the cakes caught in the eddies, whirled
up against the banks, and, in some instances, forced
into smoother and shoaler water, where they grounded,
or were floated into little creeks and bays formed
by the irregularities of the shores. These quiet
places were, of course, on the side nearest the town,
the opposite bank being too abrupt and the water too
deep, for there was the channel, and there the water
tore along with the greatest violence.
In one of these placid bays a party
of school-boys were amusing themselves with getting
upon the loose blocks and pushing them about like
boats. The amusement appeared to be unattended
with danger, the place being so far from the current,
and the water but two or three feet deep. The
children, therefore, were but little noticed, especially
as they were at quite a distance from where the multitude
of spectators was assembled, being considerably higher
up and near the flat-land, bearing the undignified
name which only historical accuracy compels us to
introduce. After a time a cake, on which one of
the boys was standing, began slowly to slip away from
the shore. So gradually was this done that it
was unobserved by the boys themselves until it had
quite separated itself from the neighborhood of the
other cakes, so that no assistance could be rendered,
when one of his companions cried out to the little
fellow upon it, to push for the shore. This he
had already been attempting to do, but in spite of
all exertions he was unable to come nearer. On
the contrary, it was evident he was receding.
The water had now become so deep that his pole could
no longer reach the bottom. The current had drawn
in the cake, and was sweeping it with its precious
freight to destruction. The children set up a
cry of alarm, which was heard by the spectators below,
and first attracted their attention.
A thrill of horror ran through the
crowd. Men drew in their breath hard, and women
shrieked, unable to turn away their eyes, fastened
by a terrible fascination on the peril. Horrid
apprehensions invaded the mind of many a parent.
The doomed boy might be his own son. Despairing
glances were cast around in every direction for help.
In vain: none could be given. There was
time for nothing: with every second the child
was swept more rapidly to destruction.
Meanwhile the brave little fellow,
planted firmly on the centre of the cake, was balancing
himself with the pole, and intrepidly confronting
the danger he could not avoid. Not a cry escaped,
nor did his self-possession desert him. As the
vexed and whirling water raised up the one side or
the other of his frail bark, he would incline his body
in this or that direction to preserve the equilibrium,
now standing upright and now cowering close to the
surface of the uncertain footing. And now the
block approached the throat, where the torrent ran
the swiftest and was most turbulent. The child
seemed to have escaped thus far by miracle, but now
it appeared impossible he would be able to maintain
his place. His head must become dizzy, his courage
fail in the awful confusion of so many threatening
dangers; the tormented waves must upset the block,
or another must strike against it and cast the boy
into the water. And now the cake has reached the
icy barrier stretched across the stream. It strikes;
it is sucked in below and disappears.
The spell-bound spectators, their
eyes fastened upon the danger of the boy, had not
noticed the figure of a man, who, descending the opposite
bank, and clambering at considerable risk over the
masses of heaped up ice, stood waiting for the approach
of the child. So truly had he judged the sweep
of the current, that he had planted himself upon the
edge of the ice at the precise spot where the block
struck. Reaching out his arm at the moment when
it slipped beneath, he seized the boy by the collar
of his jacket and drew him to the place on which he
stood. As soon as the crowd caught sight of the
man, they saw that it was Holden.
The position of the two was still
one of danger. A false step, the separating of
the ice, the yielding of a cake might precipitate both
into the torrent. But the heart of the man had
never felt the emotion of fear. He cast his eyes
deliberately round, and with a prompt decision took
his course. Raising the rescued child in his arms,
he started in the direction of the wharf, built just
below the narrow opening. Springing with great
agility and strength over the blocks, selecting for
footing those cakes which seemed thickest and fastened
in firmest, he made his way over the barrier and bounded
safely on the land. The spectators, seeing the
direction he was taking, had run down, many of them,
to the place, and were waiting to receive them.
“I vow,” said our friend,
Tom Gladding, who was among the first to welcome Holden,
“if it ain’t little Jim Davenport.
Why, Jim, you come pretty nigh gitting a ducking.”
“Yes,” said the boy, carelessly,
as if he had been engaged in a frolic, “I wet
my shoes some, and the lower part of my trousers.”
Here a man came hastening through
the crowd, for whom all made way. It was Mr.
Davenport. He had been, like the rest, a witness
of the danger and the rescue, but knew not that it
was his own son who had made the perilous passage.
But a report, running as if by magic from one to another,
had reached his ears, and he was now hurrying to discover
its truth. It was, indeed, his son, and Holden
was his preserver. He advanced to the boy, and
examined him from head to foot, as if to assure himself
of his safety before he spoke a word. Shaking
with agitation, he then turned to Holden, and grasping
his hand, wrung it convulsively.
“May God forget me, Mr. Holden,”
he stammered, in a broken voice, “if I forget
this service,” and taking the boy by the hand
he led him home.
“Well,” said Gladding,
who had been looking on, “Jim don’t mind
it much, but I guess it’ll do old Davenport
good.”
Holden, according to his custom, seemed
indisposed to enter into conversation with those around
him, or to accept the civilities tendered, and started
off as soon as possible, upon his solitary way.
As he emerged from the crowd, he caught sight of the
advancing figures of Faith and of her companions,
who had more leisurely approached, and stopped to
greet them. From them he seemed to receive with
pleasure the congratulations showered upon him, though
he disclaimed all merit for himself.
“Be the praise,” he said,
devoutly, “given to Him who, according to the
purpose of his own will, maketh and destroyeth.
The insensible block of ice and I were only instruments
in His hands.” He turned away, and walking
rapidly was soon out of sight.
Constable Basset, who was present,
had just sense enough to understand that this was
no occasion for his interference, and although he
followed the retreating figure of the Solitary with
longing eyes, while his hands clutched at the writ,
ventured on no attempt to exercise his authority.