’The woods oh! solemn are the boundless
woods;
Of the great western
world, when day declines,
And louder sounds the roll of distant floods,
More deep the rustling
of the ancient pines;
When dimness gathers on the stilly air,
And mystery seems o’er
every leaf to brood,
Awful is it for human heart to bear
The might and burden
of the solitude!’ Hemans.
Many weeks elapsed after the Nausett
party had joined the friendly Pequodees, ere any preparations
were made for journeying to the west; and these days
were chiefly employed by Henrich in improving his
knowledge of the Indian language, and especially of
the Nausett dialect, by conversing with Oriana and
her young companions, both male and female.
He also endeavored to learn as much as possible of
the habit and the ideas of the simple people among
whom his lot was now cast; for he hoped, at some future
time, when he had succeeded in returning to his own
countrymen, that such a knowledge might prove useful
both to himself and them.
He was treated with much kindness
by Tisquantum; and his favor with the Chief ensured
the respect and attention of all his dependants and
followers. From the day that the white boy had
been spared from a cruel and violent death, and established
as a regular inmate of Tisquantum’s dwelling,
it seemed as if he had regarded him as a son, and had
adopted him to fill the place of him whose death he
so deeply deplored; and Oriana already looked on him
as a brother, and took the greatest delight in his
society. No apprehensions were now felt of his
escaping to the settlement; for the distance which
they had traveled through woods, and over hills and
plains, to reach the Pequodee encampment, was so great,
that it was utterly impossible for any one but an Indian,
well accustomed to the country, to traverse it alone.
Henrich was, therefore, allowed to enjoy perfect liberty,
and to ramble unmolested around the camp; and it was
his greatest pleasure to climb to the summit of a
neighboring hill, which was crowned by a few ancient
and majestic pines, and there to look in wonder and
admiration at the scenery around him. To the
west, a vast and trackless forest spread as far as
the eye could reach, unbroken save by some distant
lakes, that shone like clear mirrors in their dark
green setting. Trees of gigantic growth rose
high above their brethren of the wood, but wild luxuriant
creepers, many of them bearing clusters of bright blossoms,
had climbed ambitiously to their summits, seeking
the light of day, and the warmth of the sunbeams,
which could not penetrate the thick underwood that
was their birth-place. It was a sea of varied
and undulating foliage, beautiful and striking, but
almost oppressive to the spirit; and Henrich gazed
sadly over the interminable forest, and thought of
the weeks, and months and, possibly, the
years that this wilderness was to be his home.
Escape, under present circumstances, he felt to be
impossible; and he endeavored to reconcile himself
to his fate, and to look forward with hope to a dim
and uncertain future. Could his parents and Edith
but have been assured of his safety, he thought he
could have borne his captivity more cheerfully; but
to feel that they were mourning him as dead, and that,
perhaps, they would never know that his blood had
not been cruelly shed by his captors, was hard for
the affectionate boy to endure.
To Oriana, alone, could he tell his
feelings, and pour out his griefs and anxieties; and
Edith herself could not have listened to him with
more attention and sympathy than was shown by the young
Indian girl. When her domestic duties were accomplished,
she would accompany her new friend to his favorite
retreat on the hill-top; and there, seated by his
side beneath the tall pines, she would hold his hand,
and gaze into his sorrowful countenance, and listen
to his fond regrets for his distant home, and all
its dearly-loved inmates, till tears would gather
in her soft black eyes, and she almost wished that
she could restore him to his countrymen. But
this she was powerless to do, even if she could have
made up her mind to the sacrifice of her ‘white
brother,’ as she called him. She had, indeed,
wrought upon her father so far as to save his life,
and have him adopted into their tribe and family; but
she well knew that nothing would ever induce him to
give up his possession of Rodolph’s son, or
suffer his parents to know that he lived.
All this she told to Henrich; and
his spirit, sanguine as it was, sickened at the prospect
of a lengthened captivity among uncivilized and heathen
beings. He gazed mournfully to the east; he looked
over the wide expanse of country that he had lately
traversed, and his eye seemed to pierce the rising
hills, and lofty forests, that lay between him and
his cherished home; and in the words of the Psalmist
he cried, ’Oh that I had wings as a dove, for
then would I flee away and be at rest!’
Would you leave me, my brother?’
said Oriana, in reply to this unconscious utterance
of his feelings; ’would you leave me again alone,
to mourn the brother I have lost?’ The Sachem
loves you, and I love you, too; and you may be happy
in our lodge, and become a brave like our young men.’
’Yes, Oriana, you and your father
are kind to me; and I had never known any other mode
of life, I might be happy in your lodge. But I
cannot forget my parents, and me dear Edith who loved
me so fondly, and my little brother also. And
then I had a friend a kind friend, and full
of wisdom and goodness who used to teach
me all kinds of knowledge; and, above all, the knowledge
of the way to heaven. How can I think that I
may, perhaps, never see all these again, and not be
sad?’ And Henrich buried his face in his hands
and wept without restraint.
Oriana gazed at him affectionately,
and tears of sympathy filled her large eyes also.
But she drew away Henrich’s hand, and kissed
it, and tried to cheer him in the best way that her
simple mind could suggest.
‘My brother must not weep,’
she said; ’for he is not a child, and our Indian
youths are ashamed of tears. Henrich will be a
brave some day, and he will delight in hunting, and
in war, as our red warriors do; and he will, I know,
excel them all in strength and courage. What can
he desire more than to be a Nausett warrior?’
‘Oh, Oriana,’ replied
the boy as he wiped away his tears, and
almost smiled at her attempts to console him by such
a future prospect ’ I desire to return
to my home, and my friends, and the worship of my God.
Among your people none know anything of the true God,
and none believe in His Son. I have no one to
speak to me as my parents, and my venerable teacher,
used to do; and no one to kneel with me in prayer to
the Almighty.’
’Do not you worship the Great
Mahneto the Mighty Spirit from whom every
good gift comes?’ asked Oriana, with surprise.
’He is the one true God, and all the red men
know and worship him.’
’Yes, Oriana, I do worship the
one Great Spirit; the God and Father of all men of
every color and of every clime. But the Christian’s
God is far more wise, and good, and merciful than
the Indian’s Mahneto: and He has told his
servants what He is, and how they ought to serve Him.’
‘Does your Mahneto speak to
you?’ asked the Indian girl. ’Could
I hear him speak?’
‘He has spoken to our fathers
long ages ago,’ replied Henrich; ’and we
have His words written in a book. Oh, that I had
that blessed book with me! How it would comfort
me to read it now!’
’And you would read it to me,
my brother? But tell me some of your Mahneto’s
words; and tell me why you say He is greater and better
than the Good Spirit who protects the red men.’
’I will gladly tell you all
I know of the God whom I have been taught to love
and worship ever since I was a little child. I
wish I could make you love Him too, Oriana, and teach
you to pray to Him, and to believe in His Son as your
friend and Savior.’
‘I will believe all you tell
me, dear Henrich,’ answered the ingenuous girl;
’for I am sure you would never say the thing
that is not. But what do you mean by a Savior?
Is it some one who will save you from the power of
the evil spirit Hobbamock the enemy of the
red men?’
Then Henrich told her of Jesus the
Merciful Him who came to save a world that
was lost and ruined through sin; and to die for those
who deserve nothing but wrath and condemnation.
Long the youthful teacher and his attentive pupil
conversed; and many and strange were the questions
that Oriana asked, and that Henrich was enabled, by
the help of the Spirit, to answer. The dark searching
eyes of the intelligent young Indian were fixed on
his, and her glossy black hair was thrown back over
her shoulders, while she listened in wonder and admiration
to every word that fell from the lips of her’
white brother.’
That evening, a new and awakening
source of interest was opened to the young captive,
and the dreariness of his life seemed almost to have
passed away. The affection of Oriana had hitherto
been his only solace and comfort, and now the hope
of repaying that affection by becoming the humble
means of leading her out of the darkness of heathenism,
and pointing out to her the way of eternal salvation,
raised his spirits, and almost reconciled him to his
present banishment from home, and all its cherished
joys and comforts.
More deeply than ever did he now regret
that he was deprived of all access to the Word of
Life, from which he might have read and translated
the story of mercy to his young disciple, and have
taught her the gracious promises of God. But
Henrich had been well taught at home; his truly pious
parents had early stored his mind with numerous passages
of Scripture; and the effort he now made to recall
to his memory all the most interesting stories, and
most striking texts, that he had learnt from the Word
of God, was the means of fixing them indelibly on
his own heart. He never in after life forgot what
he now taught to Oriana. The instruction was,
as is generally the case, quite as much blessed to
the teacher as to the learner; and Henrich was himself
surprised to find how readily he could call to mind
the very passage he wanted; and how easily he could
convey its import to Oriana in her own melodious language.
Frequently were these interesting
conversations renewed, and never without Henrich’s
perceiving, with thankfulness, that Oriana was making
progress in spiritual knowledge, and also in quickness
of understanding and general intelligence; for it
may truly be said, that no kind of learning awakens
the dormant powers of the intellect, or quickens the
growth of the mind so effectually, as the knowledge
of the one true God, who created the spirit, and of
his Son who died to redeem it from the ignominious
and degrading bondage, of sin and Satan. Henrich
had, at first, imagined that it would be utterly impossible
for him to find an intelligent companion among the
savage race into whose hands he bad fallen and he
had deeply felt that sense of loneliness which a cultivated
mind, however young, must experience in the society
of those whose ideas and feelings are altogether beneath
its own, and who can in no way sympathize with any
of its hopes, and fears, and aspirations. But
now the well-informed English boy began to perceive
that the superiority of the white men over the dark
aborigines of America might, possibly, arise much
more from difference of education, than from difference
of race and color. He remembered, also, how ardently
he had desired to share with the pious Brewster and
Winslow, in their projected plans for the conversion
of the natives; and he hoped that, young and comparatively
ignorant as he knew himself to be, it might, perhaps,
please God to make him the instrument of bestowing
spiritual blessings on some, at least, of the heathen
among whom he dwelt. He, therefore, resolved
to employ all ’his powers of argument and persuasion
to convince the mind, and touch the heart of the young
Squaw-Sachem; not only for the sake of her own immortal
soul, but also in the hope that her influence, if
she became a sincere Christian, might greatly tend
to the conversion of her father and his tribe.
Since the night when Tisquantum had
seen his young captive kneel in prayer, and had questioned
him as to the object of his worship, he had never
spoken to him on the subject of his religion; and,
Henrich had feared to address the stern old Chief,
or to introduce a theme which, though constantly present
to his own mind, and the source of all his consolation,
would, probably, he rejected with scorn and contempt
by the Sachem.
The more the Christian boy became
acquainted with the character of Tisquantum, the stronger
became this fear, and the more he despaired of any
influence proving sufficiently strong to break the
chains of error and superstition that bound him to
heathenism. The Chief was a distinguished Powow,
or conjuror; and was regarded by his own people, and
even by many other tribes, as possessing great super
natural powers. His pretensions were great,
and fully accredited by his subjects, who believed
that he could control the power of the subordinate
evil spirits, and even exercise a certain influence
on Hobbamock himself. He was called a Mahneto,
or priest; as being the servant or deputy of the Great
Mahneto, and permitted by him to cure diseases by
a word or a charm, to bring down rain on the thirsty
land, and to foretell the issue of events, such as
the results of wars or negotiations. The influence
which these acknowledged powers gave him over other
tribes besides his own was very gratifying to his pride
and ambition; and could Henrich hope that he, a young
and inexperienced boy, could have wisdom or eloquence
sufficient to ’bring down the high thoughts’
that exalted him, and to persuade him to ’become
a disciple of the meek and lowly Jesus? No; he
knew that such a hope was, humanly speaking, vain:
but he knew, also, that ’with God all things
are possible’; and he ceased not to pray that
the Spirit of light and truth might enter the soul
of the heathen Chief, and banish the spirit of evil
that now reigned so triumphantly there.
Henrich’s desire to see the
Sachem become a Christian was increased in the same
measure that his hope of its accomplishment became
less; for the more intimately he became acquainted
with him, the more he found in his natural character
that was interesting, and even estimable. Tisquantum
was brave; and he was also generous and sincere, far
beyond the generality of his race. We have said
that the influence of his wife, whom he had, loved
to an unusual degree for an Indian, had tended to
soften his temper and disposition; and his regret for
her loss, and his anxiety that his only daughter should
resemble her, had made him more domestic in his habits
than most of his brother chiefs. He was kind,
also, when not roused to harshness and cruelty by either
revenge or superstition; and he was capable of strong
attachments where he had once taken a prepossession
in favor of any individual.
Such a prepossession he had formed
for his English captive on the evening when his child
had pleaded for his life, and when his own ingenuous
and beautiful countenance had joined so eloquently
in her supplications. No insidious efforts
of the wily Coubitant had availed to change the Sachem’s
sentiments; and he continued to treat Henrich as an
adopted son, and to allow him all the privileges and
indulgences that had once been bestowed on his beloved
Tekoa. The white boy was permitted to enjoy full
and unrestricted liberty, now that he was beyond all
possible reach of his countrymen. He was encouraged
to hunt, and sport, and practice all athletic games
and exercises with the Nausett and Pequodee youths;
and he was presented with such of the arms and ornaments
of the lost Tekoa as were deemed suitable to his use,
and his unusually tall and muscular figure.
Often when adorned with these strange
and curious specimens of Indian art and ingenuity,
did Haunch smile to think how Edith and Ludovico would
wonder and admire if they could see him thus attired:
and then he would sigh as he remembered that months
and years must probably elapse and possibly
even his life might come to an end ere he
could hope to see their loved countenances, or to
excite their surprise and interest by a relation of
all his perils and adventures. To Oriana, alone,
could he unburden his mind on such subjects; and from
her he always met with deep attention and heartfelt
sympathy; but every day she felt his presence to be
more necessary to her happiness, and her dread of
his escaping to his own people to become greater.
Not only did she shrink from the idea of parting with
her ’white brother ’ her newly-found
and delightful friend and companion but
daily, as she grew in the knowledge of Henrich’s
religion, and learnt to know and love the Christian’s
God and Savior more sincerely, did she fear the possibility
of losing her zealous young teacher, and being deprived
of all intercourse with the only civilized and enlightened
being whom she had ever known.
She therefore rejoiced when the time
arrived for leaving the Pequodee village, and pursuing
the intended route to the west; for in spite of the
distance and the many difficulties and obstacles that
divided Henrich from the British settlement, she had
lived in continual fear and expectation of either
seeing a band of the mighty strangers come to demand
his restitution, or revenge his supposed death; or
else of his escaping from the camp, and braving every
danger, in the attempt to return to his happy Christian
home. Henrich often assured her with sincerity
that he had no idea of venturing on so hopeless an
attempt; but whenever the Indian girl saw his eyes
fixed sadly on the eastern horizon, and dimmed, as
they often were, by tears of sad remembrance, she
felt her fears again arise, and longed more earnestly
to leave the spot, and plunge into the trackless forest
that lay between the Pequodee encampment and she proposed
hunting grounds.
The summer had passed away and autumn
was beginning to tinge the varied foliage of the forest
with all its gaudy hues of yellow, and scarlet, and
purple, when the Nausetts, and such of their Pequodee
friends as desired to share in their hunting expedition,
set forth from the village. Many women and girls
accompanied the caravan, the greater part on foot,
and bearing on their shoulders either the younger children,
or a large pack of baggage; while their husbands,
and fathers, and brothers, marched before them, encumbered
only with their arms and hunting accoutrements.
Such was, and still is, the custom among the uncivilized
tribes of America, where women have ever been regarded
as being very little more exulted than the beasts
that perish, and have been accustomed to meet with
scarcely more attention and respect. But there
are exceptions to this, as to every other rule; and
where women have possessed unusual strength of mind,
or powers of influence, their condition has been proportionately
better. Such had been the ease with Tisquantum’s
wife: and he had ever treated her with gentleness
and respect, and had never imposed on her any of those
servile duties that commonly fall to the lot of Indian
squaws, even though they may be the wives and
daughters of the most exalted chiefs. To his daughter
the Sachem was equally considerate, and none but the
lightest toils of domestic Indian life were ever required
from her; nor was any burden more weighty than her
own bow and quiver ever laid upon her slender and
graceful shoulders, when she followed her father in
his frequent wanderings.
On the present occasion, as the journey
promised to be unusually long and uninterrupted, Tisquantum
obtained for her a small and active horse of the wild
breed, that abounds in the western woods and plains;
and of which valuable animals the Pequodees possessed
a moderate number, which they had procured by barter
from the neighboring Cree Indians. The purchase
of this steed gave Henrich the first opportunity of
remarking the Indian mode of buying and selling, and
the article that formed their medium of commerce,
and was employed as money. This consisted of
square and highly-polished pieces of a peculiar kind
of a peculiar muscle-shell, called quahock, in each
of which a hole was bored, to enable it to be strung
on a slender cord. The general name for this
native money was wampum, or white, from the color of
those shells most esteemed; but a dark-colored species
was called luki, or black; and both were used, of
various forms and sizes, as ornaments by the warriors,
and their copper-colored wives and children.
Several strings of wampum, both white
and purple, were silently offered by the Sachem for
the horse which he selected as most suitable for his
daughter’s use, and, after a pause, were as silently
rejected by the possessor. Another pause ensued;
and Tisquantum added a fresh string of the precious
shell to the small heap that lay before him; and the
same scene was repeated, until the owner of the horse
was satisfied, when he placed the halter in the hands
of the purchaser, gathered up his treasure, and, with
a look of mournful affection at the faithful creature
whom he was resigning to the power of another master,
hurried away to his wigwam.
The next day the march began; and
proud and happy was Oriana as she closely followed
her father’s steps, mounted on her new palfrey,
and led by her adopted brother; while by her side
bounded a favorite young dog, of the celebrated breed
now called Newfoundland, which had been given to her
brother as a puppy just before his melancholy death,
and had been her only playfellow and loved companion,
until Henrich had arrived to rival the faithful creature
in her affections. At his request, the dog received
the name of Rodolph, in memory of his father; and
Henrich was never tired of caressing him, and teaching
him to fetch and carry, and to plunge into his favorite
element, and bring from the foamy torrent, or the
placid lake, any object which he directed him to seize.
He was a noble fellow, and returned the care and kindness
of his new friend with all the ardor and faithfulness
of his nature. It was his duty to accompany Henrich
in all his expeditions in pursuit of game, and to
bring to his feet every bird, or small animal, that
his increasing skill in archery enabled him to pierce
with his light and bone-pointed arrows.
During his residence in the Pequodee
village, he had generally gone on such expeditions
in company with several other men and boys; and Oriana
had, consequently, enjoyed little opportunity of perceiving
how much he had improved in dexterity since he had
made his first trial before his captors. But
now, as they traversed the woods together, he frequently
aimed, at her desire, at some brilliant bird, or bounding
squirrel; and the young maiden exulted at his success,
and at the sagacity and obedience of Rodolph in bringing
her the game.
The constant occupation, and the change
of scene that Henrich enjoyed during this journey,
tended greatly to raise his spirits, and even to reconcile
him to his new mode of life. He did not forget
his friends and his home he did not even
cease to think of them with the same regret and affection;
but it was with softened feelings, and with a settled
hope of eventually returning to them after a certain
period of wandering and adventure. The kind of
life which he had often longed to try was now his
lot, and he enjoyed it under, peculiarly favorable
circumstances; for he partook of its wildness and excitement,
without enduring any of its hardships. No wonder,
then, that a high-spirited and active-minded youth
of Henrich’s age, should often forget that his
wanderings were compulsory; and should feel cheerful,
and even exhilarated, as he roamed through the boundless
primeval forests, or crossed the summits of the ranges
of lofty hills that occasionally lifted their barren
crags above the otherwise unbroken sea of foliage.
Pitching the camp for the night was
always a season of excitement and pleasure to the
young traveler, and his lively companion, Oriana.
The selection of an open glade, and the procuring
wood and water, and erecting temporary huts, were
all delightful from their novelty. And, then,
when all was done, and fires were kindled, and the
frugal evening meal was finished, it was pleasant
to sit with Oriana beneath the lofty trees, whose
smooth straight trunks rose like stately columns, and
to watch the glancing beams of the setting sun as
they shone on the varied foliage now tinted with all
the hues of autumn, and listen to the sighing of the
evening breeze, that made solemn music while it swept
through the forest. These were happy and tranquil
hours; for then Henrich would resume the interesting
topics to which his dusky pupil was never weary of
listening. He would tell her but no
longer with tears of his home, and all
its occupations and joys; he would repeat the holy
instructions that he had himself received; and, when
far removed from the observation of other eyes and
ears, he would teach her to kneel by his side, as
Edith used to do, and to join him in supplications
to ‘the High and Lofty One that inhabiteth eternity’;
but who yet listens to the humblest prayers that are
addressed to Him in sincerity, and hears every petition
that is offered up in the name of His beloved Son.
The heart of Oriana was touched; and
with a beautiful child-like simplicity, she received
all the blessed truths that her ’white brother’
taught her. Her affections were strongly drawn
towards the character of Jesus the Merciful, as she
always called the Savior; and she became sensitively
alive to the guilt of every sin, as showing ingratitude
to the Benefactor who had laid down His life for His
creatures. Oriana was, in fact, a Christian a
young and a weak one, it is true: but she possessed
that faith which alone can constitute any one ‘a
branch in the true vine’; and Henrich now felt
that lie had found a sister indeed.
As the young Indian grew in grace,
she grew also in sweetness of manner and refinement
of taste and behavior. She was no longer a savage,
either in mind or in conduct; and Henrich often looked
at her in wonder and admiration, when she had made
her simple toilette by the side of a clear stream,
and had decked her glossy raven hair with one of the
magnificent water lilies that be had gathered for her
on its brink: and he wished that his mother and
his fair young sister could behold his little Indian
beauty, for he knew that they would love her, and would
forget that she had a dusky skin, and was born of a
savage and heathen race.