But love itself could never pant
For all that beauty sighs to grant,
With half the fervor hate bestows
Upon the last embrace of foes,
When grappling in the fight, they fold
Those arms that ne’er shall lose
their hold;
Friends meet to part; love laughs at faith:
True foes, once met, are joined till death!
BYRON’S GIAOUR
Pownal, upon parting with Esther,
sought his father. But the expression of his
apprehensions was so vague, he was so incapable of
giving his fears any definite shape, that he made no
more impression than the woman. The calm austerity
of the Solitary’s face almost melted into a
smile at the idea that any event could occur except
in the determined course of things. It was the
pride of the human heart; it was the presumption of
the human intellect that dreamed of freedom of choice
or of action. If individual wills were permitted
to cross and jostle each other, the universe would
be a scene of confusion. Freedom was only in
appearance. One grand, serene, supreme will embraced
the actual and the ideal in its circle, and all things
were moved by a law as certain and irresistible as
that which impels worlds in their orbits. The
conviction was a part of Holden’s self.
He could no more be convinced of its fallacy than
of his own non-existence, and his son left him with
the full assurance that, even were he to know that
his life was menaced, he would be the last one to take
any precautionary measures for its protection.
But, in truth, the fears of Pownal were so slight,
that after an allusion to them, he forbore to dwell
upon the subject, especially as the conversation took
a turn as interesting to him as it was unexpected.
“Thou art of an age, my son,”
said Holden, abruptly, “to take to thee a wife,
and the bounty of the good man whose name I permit
thee still to bear, hath placed thee in a condition
to gratify an innocent and natural desire. Hath
thy heart moved at all in this matter?”
The question was excessively embarrassing,
and the young man blushed and hesitated as he replied,
that there was yet abundant time to think of such
things.
“Think not,” said the
Solitary, observing his son’s hesitation, “that
I desire to intrude into thy confidence, though the
heart of a son should be like a clear stream, the
bottom of which may be seen by a father’s eye.
I speak, because partly common fame, and partly my
own observation, connect thy name in some wise with
a young lady’s.”
“And who is the lady,”
inquired Pownal, laughing, “whom my indiscreet
gallantry has so compromised?”
“Nay, if thou wilt not be frank
with me, or choosest to reply in the language of trifling,
we will drop the subject.”
“I will be frank. I will
answer any question you may ask.”
“Tell me, then, is there any
relation between thee and Anne Bernard tenderer
than that of common acquaintance?”
Pownal expected the question, and
was therefore prepared.
“I esteem Miss Bernard highly,”
he said. “I am acquainted with no young
lady who is her superior. I should consider myself
fortunate to attract her attention. But nothing,
except the language of friendship, has passed betwixt
us.”
“I am satisfied,” said
Holden, “and it is evidence of excellence in
thyself that one possessing the lovable and noble qualities
of Anne should attract thee. But though, in the
limited circle of the small town, thy presence may
be acceptable in the withdrawing room of the wealthy
lawyer, thinkest thou he will be willing to give thee
the hand of his only daughter?”
“I have made no pretensions
to the hand of Miss Bernard; and even if I did, I
see in it no presumption. There is no distinction
of patrician and plebeian in this country.”
“There are no such names, and
yet there is a distinction. Will it please the
rich and polished Judge to ally his daughter with the
son of one like me?”
“Judge Bernard is above the
mean conceit of valuing himself upon his riches.
I never heard anything that sounded like arrogance
or superciliousness from him, and he has uniformly
treated me with kindness. For yourself, dear
father, though for reasons of your own you have chosen
to lead hitherto this life of solitude and privation,
why continue to do so? Why not leave this miserable
hut for comforts more befitting your age and the society
you are capable of adorning?”
“Forbear! In this miserable
hut, as thou callest it, I found the peace that passeth
understanding, and its walls are to me more glorious
than the gildings of palaces. If thou lovest
Anne Bernard, as I strongly suspect, I say not unto
thee cease to love her, but wait, hoarding thy love
in secrecy and silence, until the fullness of the time
is come. Wilt thou not promise me this, for a
short time?”
“I will do nothing, father,
that may be contrary to your inclinations.”
“It is enough: then let
there be no change in thy conduct. If thou have
the love of Anne, keep it as a precious jewel, but
for the present be content with the knowledge thereof:
if thou have it not, seek not thereafter. I promise
thee it shall be for thy good, nor will I unreasonably
try thy patience.”
Here the interview ended, and Pownal
departed, wondering over the mystery his father affected,
though he could not but confess to himself there was
a worldly wisdom (as he supposed it to be) in the
advice, not to be precipitate, but to watch the course
of events. Though unacquainted with the motives
of his parent, he was bound to respect his wishes,
and felt a natural desire to gratify him to the extent
of his ability. He had never found him unreasonable,
whatever might be his singularities, and besides,
no plan of his own was crossed. He was obliged
to admit the possibility of a failure of his suit.
To break up the pleasant relations existing betwixt
the Bernard family and himself; not to be allowed
to approach Anne as before; a cold constraint to be
substituted for a confiding friendship! No, the
hazard was too great. Things should continue as
they were. He and Anne were still young:
there was time enough; his father was right; the counsels
of age were wiser than those prompted by the rashness
and impetuosity of youth.
The following morning was calm and
warm, when Holden stood at the door of his cabin,
on the second occasion we choose to intrude upon his
devotions. Not a cloud was to be seen, and the
pearly hue which overspreads a clear summer sky, just
stealing out of the shades of night, had not disappeared,
except in the eastern quarter of the heavens, where
a faint suffusion heralded, like a distant banner,
the approach of the sun, welcomed, at first, by the
low twittering of the birds, which gradually increased
in frequency and loudness, until they swelled into
bold strains, and rose melodiously into the air.
The Solitary stood, as before, with
eyes fixed steadfastly upon the kindling east.
Could it be possible that an expectation, which had
been so often disappointed, should still be cherished;
that no experience, no arguments could dissipate the
delusion? It would seem so. By that subtle
process, whereby minds possessed by an engrossing
idea convert facts, and language, and any circumstances,
however trifling, and which, to well-balanced intellects,
would seem but little adapted to the purpose, into
proofs incontrovertible of their opinions, had he,
by dwelling upon certain texts of Scripture, which,
with a mad shrewdness, he had collated, imparted to
them gigantic proportions, and a peculiar coloring,
which dominated and threw light upon the context,
but received no qualification or disparagement in
return. Without the necessity of repetition, various
passages will occur to the reader, which, taken out
of connection with what precedes and follows, may
easily be made to support a theory of the kind he had
adopted.
Holden stood as before, obedient to
the command to watch, and verily do we believe, that
had he, indeed, seen the Son of Man in the clouds
of heaven, the magnificent vision would have impressed
him with as much joy as solemnity. But in vain
he looked, and having waited until the yellow sunshine,
like a shower of gold, fell all around him, he retired
into his hut. Not unobserved, however. The
Indian, Ohquamehud, with his rifle by his side, from
his place of concealment, on the right shore, had
been watching all his motions. There had he lain
in ambush ever since the stars had deserted the sky.
Patiently he lay, with his eyes fixed on the little
island. The sun mounted higher; hour after hour
passed away, and yet he moved not. The time for
the noonday meal arrived, but he heeded it not.
The hut of Peena was scarcely more than a couple of
miles distant, and he might reach it in a few moments,
but he stirred not. In the interval of his absence
Onontio might leave the island, and go, he knew not
whither, and his watch for the day would be in vain.
And now the lengthening shadows were falling towards
the east. The middle of the afternoon had arrived.
It was then Ohquamehud saw Holden,
or Onontio, as he called him, leave his cabin and
enter the canoe. Its bow was turned toward that
bank of the river on which the Indian was concealed,
but somewhat higher up the stream, and, impelled by
a vigorous arm, the light boat skimmed rapidly over
the water. It passed so near to the Indian, that
a bullet sent from a steady aim must have brought
inevitable death, and the thought crossed the mind
of the lurking spy, whether it were not better to
fire from his ambush, but the recollection of his adventure
on the island, and of his offering to the Manito of
the Falls, occurred to him, and he allowed the tempting
opportunity to escape.
Holden having run the canoe upon a
sandy beach that curved in between two rocks, fastened
it by a rope to a heavy stone, and pursued his course
along the shore in the direction of the village.
The Indian followed at a distance in the woods, taking
care to keep his own person concealed, but that of
the pursued in sight. Ohquamehud had no means
of determining from the movements of Holden, for a
considerable time, what were his intentions, whether
to enter the village or go to the Falls, but when
he reached the spot where, if his design had been
to do the latter, he would have turned to the left,
to the Indian’s bitter disappointment, he advanced
up the road to the right. Ohquamehud pretty much
gave up all hope of succeeding in his design that
day, but, notwithstanding, still continued his observation.
Holden did not proceed far before he entered a small
house that stood by the roadside. (This delay, as
we shall presently observe, was attended with important
consequences.) The person whom the Solitary wanted
to see was, probably, not at home, but whatever may
have been the reason, he presently left the house,
and retracing his steps, struck off, to the delight
of Ohquamehud, across the fields, and in a direction
towards the Yaupaae. The Indian waited until Holden
was out of sight, hidden by the woods on the opposite
side of the field, when he slowly followed, looking
around, as if in search of game. Having reached
the woods, he seemed to think it necessary to use greater
precaution in his further approach, the nearer he came
to his enemy. With this view, he moved slowly,
carefully avoiding stepping on any dry sticks or fallen
branches, and stopping if, by any chance, he made
the slightest noise. One would have supposed such
extreme caution unnecessary, for so loud was the incessant
roar of the cataract, that where the Indian stood
the keenest hearing could not, even within a few rods,
have detected the noise made by walking. It is
probable that habit, quite as much as reflection,
determined the proceeding of the Indian.
With stealthy tread, creeping like
the catamount of his native forests, when he is about
to leap upon his prey, the wily and revengeful Indian
stole along, holding his rifle in his hand, while
each sense was quickened and strained to the utmost.
The wood extended quite to the margin of the Falls,
so that he was enabled to come near without exposing
his person. At length, from behind a large oak,
one of the original Sachems of the wood, he beheld
his foe. Holden was unarmed, for though, at certain
times of the year, when game was in season, he often
carried a gun, it was not an uniform practice with
him. He stood, unconscious of danger, with his
back to the Indian, his arms folded, and gazing upon
the water, that roared and tumbled below. The
eyes of Ohquamehud gleamed with ferocious satisfaction
as he beheld his foe in his power. Thrice he
raised the rifle to his shoulder, after carefully
examining the priming, and as often let the butt slide
gently to the ground, pausing a little while each time
between, and never taking his eyes off the victim.
This conduct might be mistaken for irresolution.
Far from it. The fell purpose of the savage never
burnt more intensely; his hatred was never more bitter;
and he was debating with himself whether to shoot the
Solitary as he stood, nor allow him to know his destroyer,
or to rouse him to his peril, to play with his agonies,
and thus give him a foretaste of death. Holden
was at a distance of not more than fifty feet; before
him were the precipice and the Falls, behind him was
the Indian; there was no retreat. The fiendish
desire agitating Ohquamehud was the same as that which
the savages feel when they torture a prisoner at the
stake, and delay the fatal stroke that is a mercy.
He felt sure of his prey, and after a short period
of hesitation, determined to gratify the diabolical
passion.
He stepped softly from behind the
oak, and glided onwards, until the distance betwixt
himself and Holden was reduced to thirty feet.
The back of the latter was still towards the Indian,
and he seemed absorbed in contemplations that shut
his senses to the admission of outward objects.
Again Ohquamehud paused, but it was only for a moment,
and then uttered in a distinct tone the word, “Onontio.”
The sound caught the ears of Holden,
who instantly turned, and beheld the threatening looks
and attitude of the savage. He comprehended, at
once, the hostile purpose of Ohquamehud, and the imminence
of his own danger, but betrayed not the slightest
fear. His cheek blanched not. His eye lost
none of its usual daring as he surveyed the assassin;
nor did his voice falter, as, disguising his suspicions,
he exclaimed
“Ohquamehud! he is welcome.
He hath come to listen to the voice of the Great Spirit,
who speaks in the Yaupaae.”
“Onontio is mistaken,”
said the Indian. “The eyes of Ohquamehud
are sharp. They have seen the blood of his kindred
on the hands of Onontio, and he will wash it off.”
“Indian, thou hast discovered I
know not how that I once bore the name
you have mentioned. It was given to me in the
days of madness and folly by the western tribes.
But, my hands are unstained by any blood, save what
was shed in fair and open warfare.”
“Ha! Onontio hath forgotten
the fight in the night of storms, on the banks of
the Yellow Wabash, when the sister of Ohquamehud was
slain and his brother pierced by the knife of the
accursed pale face, with the curling-hair.”
“Indian! I sought to save
the maiden’s life. I can show the scar I
received in her defence. As for thy brother, I
know naught of him. If he fell by me, it was
in the manner in which one brave warrior meets another.”
“It is a lie! The heart
of the pale-face is fainting. He is a weasel,
that tries to creep through a small hole.”
“If I were armed thou wouldst
not dare to speak thus,” said Holden, some of
the spirit of his youthful years flashing up.
“But, go; thou art a coward to come armed against
a defenceless man.”
“Onontio is a fool! Who
told him to leave his rifle in his lodge? He
knoweth not so much as a beast or a reptile. When
the bear roameth in the forest, doth he leave his
claws in his den, or the rattlesnake, his teeth in
the hole in the rocks? Let Onontio sing his death-song,
but, softly, lest the north wind bear it to the cub,
who is waiting for the second bullet in the pouch
of Ohquamehud.”
A pang of inexpressible agony cut,
like a knife, through the heart of Holden. He
could brave death himself, but, good God! that his
son should be murdered by the savage! The thought
was too horrible. For a moment, the courageous
heart almost stopped, and, with quivering lips, he
commended the young man to the protection of Providence.
But the momentary weakness soon passed away, as the
dogma of divine decrees or fate occurred to his mind.
The blood flowed freer in his veins; his form straightened,
and with a dignified gesture, he answered
“Heathen! I have no death-song
to sing. The Christian goeth not to his Maker,
boasting of his fancied merits, but, like a child,
hiding its face in its mother’s bosom, and asking
to be forgiven. And know that of thyself thou
art powerless. Thou canst do only what is permitted.”
“It is well!” exclaimed
Ohquamehud, a glow of admiration, at the courage with
which Holden met his fate, flashing in spite
of himself across his countenance, and
which he vainly tried to conceal. “The
dog of a pale-face is tired of his life, and will thank
Ohquamehud for sending him to the spirits of his fathers.”
So saying, he raised the rifle to
his shoulder and fired. The eyes of the Solitary
had been intently fastened upon every motion of his
foe, and, the instant before the gun was discharged,
he threw his arms violently into the air. Whether
the gesture disconcerted the aim of the Indian, or
intemperance had weakened his nerves, the rifle was
aimed too high and failed of its mark. But Holden’s
escape was extremely narrow. The bullet grazed
his scalp, perforating the cap, and throwing it from
his head. In the colloquy, he had, probably,
determined upon his line of conduct; for, immediately,
upon the flash, he started, with an activity which
his appearance hardly promised, towards his antagonist,
and before the latter could club his rifle or draw
a knife, had seized him around the waist, and strove
to throw him on the ground. The Indian dropped
the useless gun, and returned the death-grapple.
“Child of the devil!”
cried Holden, whose passions were now thoroughly roused,
and who fancied himself back again to the time when
he fought the red man of the West, “I will send
thee, this day, to the place appointed for thee.”
Ohquamehud answered not a word, but,
straining the other in an embrace as close as his
own, summoned all his powers to the deadly struggle.
The two were more equally matched
than might at first be supposed. The Indian was
more active, but Holden was stronger, and towered above
him. The habits of Holden had been eminently conducive
to health and strength. There was no superfluous
flesh about him, and his sinews were like cord.
But, on the other hand, the youth of the Indian was
a great advantage, promising an endurance beyond that
to be expected from one of the years of Holden.
With desperate struggles each strove
to gain an advantage; but strength on the one side,
and activity on the other, foiled their opposing exertions.
The turf was torn up under their feet, and they were
whirled round, now in this direction, and now in that,
until, maddened by the contest, neither thought of
his personal safety, nor heeded the frightful abyss
on the brink of which they fought. At length,
foaming and endeavoring to throttle each other, the
foot of one tripped and he stumbled over the precipice,
carrying the other down with him in his arms.
The grappled foes turned over in the air, and then
fell upon the edge of a projecting shelf of a rock,
some half a dozen feet below. Ohquamehud was
undermost, receiving the full force of the fall, and
breaking it for Holden, who, as they touched the rock,
threw one arm around the trunk of a small tree that
grew out of a fissure. The Indian must have been
stunned, for Holden felt his grasp relax, and, still
clinging to the tree, he endeavored to withdraw himself
from the other’s hold. He had partially
succeeded, when the Indian, recovering consciousness,
made a movement that threw his body over the precipice,
down which he would have fallen had he not blindly
caught at the freed arm of Holden, which he clutched
with the tenacity of despair. The Indian had now
recovered from the stunning effect of the fall, and
become sensible of his danger. In rolling over
the edge of the rock, his moccasined feet had come
into contact with a slight projection where his toes
had caught, and by means of which, Holden, as well
as himself, was relieved in part of the weight of
his person. Using this as a support, he made repeated
and frantic attempts to spring to the level surface,
but the steepness of the rock, and the lowness at
which he hung, combined with the exhaustion occasioned
by the fierce and prolonged conflict, foiled every
effort. At last, he abandoned the attempt to save
himself as hopeless, and directed all his exertions
to drag his enemy down with him to destruction.
With this view, he strained, with all his remaining
strength, upon the arm he grasped, in order to force
Holden to let go his hold upon the tree. It was
now a question of endurance between them, and it is
probable that both would have perished, had not an
unexpected actor appeared upon the scene.
The boy Quadaquina had been watching
Ohquamehud. Like a trained blood-hound, he had
kept faithfully on the track and scarcely let the
Indian out of sight until he, came near the village.
Here he was met by a playmate, with whom, like a child
as he was, he stopped to amuse himself for a moment.
This was the cause of his not arriving sooner, the
delay corresponding nearly with the time Holden was
detained by his visit. The boy now came running
up, all out of breath, and gazed around, but saw no
one nor heard a sound, save the roar of the Fall.
His eyes fell upon the gun of the Indian, and the cap
of the Solitary, lying on the trampled turf, and his
mind foreboded disaster. He hastened to the margin
of the beetling crag, and peering over it, saw Ohquamehud
hanging by Holden’s arm, and struggling to pull
him down. Quadaquina stepped back, and from the
loose stones lying round, picked up one as large as
he could lift, and going to the edge, dropped it full
upon the head of Ohquamehud. The Indian instantly
let go his hold, falling a distance of eighty feet,
and grazing against the side of the huge rock on his
way, until with a splash he was swallowed up in the
foaming water that whirled him out of sight.
Quadaquina watched the body as it
went gliding down the rocks, and dashing into the
torrent, until it could be seen no more, and then,
as if terrified at his own act, and without waiting
to see what had become of the man to whom he had rendered
so timely a service, started on a run for his home.
As for Holden, upon the weight being
withdrawn from his arm, he slowly gathered himself
up and sat upright on the rock; nor did he know to
what he owed his deliverance. He possibly ascribed
it to the exhaustion of his foe. He felt jar’d
and bruised, but no bones were broken: his heart
swelled with thankfulness, and raising his eyes to
heaven, he poured forth a thanksgiving.
“The enemy came against me,”
he ejaculated, “like a lion that is greedy of
his prey, and as it were a young lion lurking in secret
places. But thou didst arise, O Lord, thou didst
disappoint him and cast him down; thou didst deliver
my soul from the wicked. For thou didst gird
me with strength unto the battle, thou didst enlarge
my steps under me, that my feet did not slip.
He was wounded that he was not able to rise.
He fell under my feet. It was Thy doing, O Lord,
because thou hadst respect unto the supplications
of thy servant. Therefore my lips shall greatly
rejoice, when I sing unto Thee, and my soul which
thou hast redeemed.”
After this expression of his thanks,
he clambered with some difficulty, by the assistance
of the shrubs that grew in the crevices along the
sloping platform, until he had attained to the top
of the rock whence he had fallen. He cast his
eyes below, but nothing was to be seen but the wild
torrent: no sign, no trace of the Indian.
Holden shuddered as he thought of Ohquamehud, cut
off in his atrocious attempt, and breathed a prayer
that his savage ignorance might palliate his crime;
then exhausted and sore, and pondering the frightful
danger he had escaped, slowly took his way towards
the village.