Whitewing was a Red Indian of the
North American prairies. Though not a chief
of the highest standing, he was a very great man in
the estimation of his tribe, for, besides being possessed
of qualities which are highly esteemed among all savages-such
as courage, strength, agility, and the like-he
was a deep thinker, and held speculative views in regard
to the Great Manitou (God), as well as the ordinary
affairs of life, which perplexed even the oldest men
of his tribe, and induced the younger men to look
on him as a profound mystery.
Indeed the feelings of the latter
towards Whitewing amounted almost to veneration, for
while, on the one hand, he was noted as one of the
most fearless among the braves, and a daring assailant
of that king of the northern wilderness, the grizzly
bear, he was, on the other hand, modest and retiring-never
boasted of his prowess, disbelieved in the principle
of revenge, which to most savages is not only a pleasure
but a duty, and refused to decorate his sleeves or
leggings with the scalp-locks of his enemies.
Indeed he had been known to allow more than one enemy
to escape from his hand in time of war when he might
easily have killed him. Altogether, Whitewing
was a monstrous puzzle to his fellows, and much beloved
by many of them.
The only ornament which he allowed
himself was the white wing of a ptarmigan. Hence
his name. This symbol of purity was bound to
his forehead by a band of red cloth wrought with the
quills of the porcupine. It had been made for
him by a dark-eyed girl whose name was an Indian word
signifying “light heart.” But let
it not be supposed that Lightheart’s head was
like her heart. On the contrary, she had a good
sound brain, and, although much given to laughter,
jest, and raillery among her female friends, would
listen with unflagging patience, and profound solemnity,
to her lover’s soliloquies in reference to things
past, present, and to come.
One of the peculiarities of Whitewing
was that he did not treat women as mere slaves or
inferior creatures. His own mother, a wrinkled,
brown old thing resembling a piece of singed shoe-leather,
he loved with a tenderness not usual in North American
Indians, some tribes of whom have a tendency to forsake
their aged ones, and leave them to perish rather than
be burdened with them. Whitewing also thought
that his betrothed was fit to hold intellectual converse
with him, in which idea he was not far wrong.
At the time we introduce him to the
reader he was on a visit to the Indian camp of Lightheart’s
tribe in Clearvale, for the purpose of claiming his
bride. His own tribe, of which the celebrated
old warrior Bald Eagle was chief, dwelt in a valley
at a considerable distance from the camp referred
to.
There were two other visitors at the
Indian camp at that time. One was a Wesleyan
missionary who had penetrated to that remote region
with a longing desire to carry the glad tidings of
salvation in Jesus to the red men of the prairie.
The other was a nondescript little white trapper,
who may be aptly described as a mass of contradictions.
He was small in stature, but amazingly strong; ugly,
one-eyed, scarred in the face, and misshapen; yet
wonderfully attractive, because of a sweet smile,
a hearty manner, and a kindly disposition. With
the courage of the lion, Little Tim, as he was styled,
combined the agility of the monkey and the laziness
of the sloth. Strange to say, Tim and Whitewing
were bosom friends, although they differed in opinion
on most things.
“The white man speaks again
about Manitou to-day,” said the Indian, referring
to the missionary’s intention to preach, as he
and Little Tim concluded their midday meal in the
wigwam that had been allotted to them.
“It’s little I cares for
that,” replied Tim curtly, as he lighted the
pipe with which he always wound up every meal.
Of course both men spoke in the Indian
language, but that being probably unknown to the reader,
we will try to convey in English as nearly as possible
the slightly poetical tone of the one and the rough
Backwoods’ style of the other.
“It seems strange to me,”
returned the Indian, “that my white brother
thinks and cares so little about his Manitou.
He thinks much of his gun, and his traps, and his
skins, and his powder, and his friend, but cares not
for Manitou, who gave him all these-all
that he possesses.”
“Look ’ee here, Whitewing,”
returned the trapper, in his matter-of-fact way, “there’s
nothing strange about it. I see you, and I see
my gun and these other things, and can handle ’em;
but I don’t know nothin’ about Manitou,
and I don’t see him, so what’s the good
o’ thinkin’ about him?”
Instead of answering, the red man
looked silently and wistfully up into the blue sky,
which could be seen through the raised curtain of the
wigwam. Then, pointing to the landscape before
them, he said in subdued but earnest tones, “I
see him in the clouds-in the sun, and moon,
and stars; in the prairies and in the mountains; I
hear him in the singing waters and in the winds that
scatter the leaves, and I feel him here.”
Whitewing laid his hand on his breast,
and looked in his friend’s face.
“But,” he continued sadly,
“I do not understand him, he whispers so softly
that, though I hear, I cannot comprehend. I wonder
why this is so.”
“Ay, that’s just it, Whitewing,”
said the trapper. “We can’t make
it out nohow, an’ so I just leaves all that
sort o’ thing to the parsons, and give my mind
to the things that I understand.”
“When Little Tim was a very
small boy,” said the Indian, after a few minutes’
meditation, “did he understand how to trap the
beaver and the martin, and how to point the rifle
so as to carry death to the grizzly bear?”
“Of course not,” returned
the trapper; “seems to me that that’s a
foolish question.”
“But,” continued the Indian,
“you came to know it at last?”
“I should just think I did,”
returned the trapper, a look of self-satisfied pride
crossing his scarred visage as he thought of the celebrity
as a hunter to which he had attained. “It
took me a goodish while, of course, to circumvent
it all, but in time I got to be-well, you
know what, an’ I’m not fond o’ blowin’
my own trumpet.”
“Yes; you came to it at last,”
repeated Whitewing, “by giving your mind to
things that at first you did not understand.”
“Come, come, my friend,”
said Little Tim, with a laugh; “I’m no
match for you in argiment, but, as I said before,
I don’t understand Manitou, an’ I don’t
see, or feel, or hear him, so it’s of no use
tryin’.”
“What my friend knows not, another
may tell him,” said Whitewing. “The
white man says he knows Manitou, and brings a message
from him. Three times I have listened to his
words. They seem the words of truth. I
go again to-day to hear his message.”
The Indian stood up as he spoke, and
the trapper also rose.
“Well, well,” he said,
knocking the ashes out of his pipe, “I’ll
go too, though I’m afeared it won’t be
o’ much use.”
The sermon which the man of God preached
that day to the Indians was neither long nor profound,
but it was delivered with the intense earnestness
of one who thoroughly believes every word he utters,
and feels that life and death may be trembling in
the balance with those who listen. It is not
our purpose to give this sermon in detail, but merely
to show its influence on Whitewing, and how it affected
the stirring incidents which followed.
Already the good man had preached
three times the simple gospel of Jesus to these Indians,
and with so much success that some were ready to believe,
but others doubted, just as in the days of old.
For the benefit of the former, he had this day chosen
the text, “Let us run with patience the race
that is set before us, looking unto Jesus.”
Whitewing had been much troubled in spirit.
His mind, if very inquiring, was also very sceptical.
It was not that he would not-but that he
could not- receive anything unless convinced.
With a strong thirst after truth, he went to hear
that day, but, strange to say, he could not fix his
attention. Only one sentence seemed to fasten
firmly on his memory: “It is the Spirit
that quickeneth.” The text itself also
made a profound impression on him.
The preacher had just concluded, and
was about to raise his voice in prayer, when a shout
was heard in the distance. It came from a man
who was seen running over the prairie towards the
camp, with the desperate haste of one who runs for
his life.
All was at once commotion. The
men sprang up, and, while some went out to meet the
runner, others seized their weapons. In a few
seconds a young man with bloodshot eyes, labouring
chest, and streaming brow burst into their midst,
with the news that a band of Blackfoot warriors, many
hundred strong, was on its way to attack the camp of
Bald Eagle; that he was one of that old chief’s
braves, and was hasting to give his tribe timely warning,
but that he had run so far and so fast as to be quite
unable to go another step, and had turned aside to
borrow a horse, or beg them to send on a fresh messenger.
“I will go,” said
Whitewing, on hearing this; “and my horse is
ready.”
He wasted no more time with words,
but ran towards the hollow where his steed had been
hobbled, that is, the two front legs tied together
so as to admit of moderate freedom without the risk
of desertion.
He was closely followed by his friend
Little Tim, who, knowing well the red man’s
staid and self-possessed character, was somewhat surprised
to see by his flashing eyes and quick breathing that
he was unusually excited.
“Whitewing is anxious,” he said, as they
ran together.
“The woman whom I love better
than life is in Bald Eagle’s camp,” was
the brief reply.
“Oho!” thought Little
Tim, but he spoke no word, for he knew his friend
to be extremely reticent in regard to matters of the
heart. For some time he had suspected him of
what he styled a weakness in that organ. “Now,”
thought he, “I know it.”
“Little Tim will go with me?”
asked the Indian, as they turned into the hollow where
the horses had been left.
“Ay, Whitewing,” answered
the trapper, with a touch of enthusiasm; “Little
Tim will stick to you through thick and thin, as long
as-”
An exclamation from the Indian at
that moment stopped him, for it was discovered that
the horses were not there. The place was so open
that concealment was not possible. The steeds
of both men had somehow got rid of their hobbles and
galloped away.
A feeling of despair came over the
Indian at this discovery. It was quickly followed
by a stern resolve. He was famed as being the
fleetest and most enduring brave of his tribe.
He would run home.
Without saying a word to his friend,
he tightened his belt, and started off like a hound
loosed from the leash. Little Tim ran a few hundred
yards after him at top speed, but suddenly pulled up.
“Pooh! It’s useless,”
he exclaimed. “I might as well run after
a streak o’ greased lightnin’. Well,
well, women have much to answer for! Who’d
iver have thowt to see Whitewing shook off his balance
like that? It strikes me I’ll sarve him
best by lookin’ after the nags.”
While the trapper soliloquised thus
he ran back to the camp to get one of the Indian horses,
wherewith to go off in search of his own and that
of his friend. He found the Indians busy making
preparations to ride to the rescue of their Bald Eagle
allies; but quick though these sons of the prairie
were, they proved too slow for Little Tim, who leaped
on the first horse he could lay hold of, and galloped
away.
Meanwhile Whitewing ran with the fleet,
untiring step of a trained runner whose heart is in
his work; but the way was long, and as evening advanced
even his superior powers began to fail a little.
Still he held on, greatly overtaxing his strength.
Nothing could have been more injudicious in a prolonged
race. He began to suspect that it was unwise,
when he came to a stretch of broken ground, which in
the distance was traversed by a range of low hills.
As he reached these he reduced the pace a little,
but while he was clambering up the face of a rather
precipitous cliff, the thought of the Blackfoot band
and of the much-loved one came into his mind; prudence
went to the winds, and in a moment he was on the summit
of the cliff, panting vehemently-so much
so, indeed, that he felt it absolutely necessary to
sit down for a few moments to rest.
While resting thus, with his back
against a rock, in the attitude of one utterly worn
out, part of the missionary’s text flashed into
his mind: “the race that is set before
us.”
“Surely,” he murmured,
looking up, “this race is set before me.
The object is good. It is my duty as well as
my desire.”
The thought gave an impulse to his
feelings; the impulse sent his young blood careering,
and, springing up, he continued to run as if the race
had only just begun. But ere long the pace again
began to tell, producing a sinking of the heart, which
tended to increase the evil. Hour after hour
had passed without his making any perceptible abatement
in the pace, and the night was now closing in.
This however mattered not, for the full moon was
sailing in a clear sky, ready to relieve guard with
the sun. Again the thought recurred that he acted
unwisely in thus pressing on beyond his powers, and
once more he stopped and sat down.
This time the text could not be said
to flash into his mind, for while running, it had
never left him. He now deliberately set himself
to consider it, and the word “patience”
arrested his attention.
“Let us run with patience,”
he thought. “I have not been patient.
But the white man did not mean this kind of race
at all; he said it was the whole race of life.
Well, if so, this is part of that race, and
it is set before me. Patience! patience!
I will try.”
With childlike simplicity the red
man rose and began to run slowly. For some time
he kept it up, but as his mind reverted to the object
of his race his patience began to ooze out.
He could calculate pretty well the rate at which the
Blackfoot foes would probably travel, and knowing the
exact distance, perceived that it would be impossible
for him to reach the camp before them, unless he ran
all the way at full speed. The very thought
of this induced him to put on a spurt, which broke
him down altogether. Stumbling over a piece
of rough ground, he fell with such violence that for
a moment or two he lay stunned. Soon, however,
he was on his legs again, and tried to resume his
headlong career, but felt that the attempt was useless.
With a deep irrepressible groan, he sank upon the
turf.
It was in this hour of his extremity
that the latter part of the preacher’s text
came to his mind: “looking unto Jesus.”
Poor Whitewing looked upwards, as
if he half expected to see the Saviour with the bodily
eye, and a mist seemed to be creeping over him.
He was roused from this semi-conscious state by the
clattering of horses’ hoofs.
The Blackfoot band at once occurred
to his mind. Starting up, he hid behind a piece
of rock. The sounds drew nearer, and presently
he saw horsemen passing him at a considerable distance.
How many he could not make out. There seemed
to be very few. The thought that it might be
his friend the trapper occurred, but if he were to
shout, and it should turn out to be foes, not only
would his own fate but that of his tribe be sealed.
The case was desperate; still, anything was better
than remaining helplessly where he was. He uttered
a sharp cry.
It was responded to at once in the
voice of Little Tim, and next moment the faithful
trapper galloped towards Whitewing leading his horse
by the bridle.
“Well, now, this is good luck,”
cried the trapper, as he rode up.
“No,” replied the Indian gravely, “it
is not luck.”
“Well, as to that, I don’t
much care what you call it-but get up.
Why, what’s wrong wi’ you?”
“The run has been very long,
and I pressed forward impatiently, trusting too much
to my own strength. Let my friend help me to
mount.”
“Well, now I come to think of
it,” said the trapper, as he sprang to the ground,
“you have come a tremendous way-a
most awful long way-in an uncommon short
time. A fellow don’t think o’ that
when he’s mounted, ye see. There now,”
he added, resuming his own seat in the saddle, “off
we go. But there’s no need to overdrive
the cattle; we’ll be there in good time, I warrant
ye, for the nags are both good and fresh.”
Little Tim spoke the simple truth,
for his own horse which he had discovered along with
that of his friend some time after parting from him,
was a splendid animal, much more powerful and active
than the ordinary Indian horses. The steed of
Whitewing was a half-wild creature of Spanish descent,
from the plains of Mexico.
Nothing more was spoken after this.
The two horsemen rode steadily on side by side, proceeding
with long but not too rapid strides over the ground:
now descending into the hollows, or ascending the gentle
undulations of the plains; anon turning out and in
to avoid the rocks and ruts and rugged places; or
sweeping to right or left to keep clear of clumps
of stunted wood and thickets, but never for a moment
drawing rein until the goal was reached, which happened
very shortly before the break of day.
The riding was absolute rest to Whitewing,
who recovered strength rapidly as they advanced.
“There is neither sight nor
sound of the foe here,” murmured the Indian.
“No, all safe!” replied
the trapper in a tone of satisfaction, as they cantered
to the summit of one of the prairie waves, and beheld
the wigwams of Bald Eagle shining peacefully
in the moonlight on the plain below.