"The Delawares have given me my name,
not so much on account of a bold heart, as on account of a quick
eye, and an actyve foot. There may not be any cowardyce in
overcoming a deer, but sartain it is, there's no great valor."
"The Delawares themselves are no heroes," muttered
Hurry through his teeth, the mouth being too full to permit it to
be fairly opened, "or they would never have allowed them loping
vagabonds, the Mingos, to make them women."
"That matter is not rightly understood ñ has never
been rightly explained," said Deerslayer earnestly, for he was as
zealous a friend as his companion was dangerous as an enemy; "the
Mengwe fill the woods with their lies, and misconstruct words and
treaties. I have now lived ten years with the Delawares, and know
them to be as manful as any other nation, when the proper time to
strike comes."
"Harkee, Master Deerslayer, since we are on the
subject, we may as well open our minds to each other in a
man-to-man way; answer me one question; you have had so much luck
among the game as to have gotten a title, it would seem, but did
you ever hit anything human or intelligible: did you ever pull
trigger on an inimy that was capable of pulling one upon you?"
This question produced a singular collision between
mortification and correct feeling, in the bosom of the youth, that
was easily to be traced in the workings of his ingenuous
countenance. The struggle was short, however; uprightness of heart
soon getting the better of false pride and frontier
boastfulness.
"To own the truth, I never did," answered
Deerslayer; "seeing that a fitting occasion never offered. The
Delawares have been peaceable since my sojourn with 'em, and I hold
it to be onlawful to take the life of man, except in open and
generous warfare."
"What! did you never find a fellow thieving among
your traps and skins, and do the law on him with your own hands, by
way of saving the magistrates trouble in the settlements, and the
rogue himself the cost of the suit!"
"I am no trapper, Hurry," returned the young man
proudly: "I live by the rifle, a we'pon at which I will not turn my
back on any man of my years, atween the Hudson and the St.
Lawrence. I never offer a skin that has not a hole in its head
besides them which natur' made to see with or to breathe
through."
"Ay, ay, this is all very well, in the animal way,
though it makes but a poor figure alongside of scalps and ambushes.
Shooting an Indian from an ambush is acting up to his own
principles, and now we have what you call a lawful war on our
hands, the sooner you wipe that disgrace off your character, the
sounder will be your sleep; if it only come from knowing there is
one inimy the less prowling in the woods. I shall not frequent your
society long, friend Natty, unless you look higher than four-footed
beasts to practice your rifle on."
"Our journey is nearly ended, you say, Master March,
and we can part to-night, if you see occasion. I have a fri'nd
waiting for me, who will think it no disgrace to consort with a
fellow-creatur' that has never yet slain his kind."
"I wish I knew what has brought that skulking
Delaware into this part of the country so early in the season,"
muttered Hurry to himself, in a way to show equally distrust and a
recklessness of its betrayal. "Where did you say the young chief
was to give you the meeting!"
"At a small round rock, near the foot of the lake,
where they tell me, the tribes are given to resorting to make their
treaties, and to bury their hatchets. This rock have I often heard
the Delawares mention, though lake and rock are equally strangers
to me. The country is claimed by both Mingos and Mohicans, and is a
sort of common territory to fish and hunt through, in time of
peace, though what it may become in war-time, the Lord only
knows!"
"Common territory" exclaimed Hurry, laughing aloud.
"I should like to know what Floating Tom Hutter would say to that!
He claims the lake as his own property, in vartue of fifteen years'
possession, and will not be likely to give it up to either Mingo or
Delaware without a battle for it!"
"And what will the colony say to such a quarrel! All
this country must have some owner, the gentry pushing their
cravings into the wilderness, even where they never dare to
ventur', in their own persons, to look at the land they own."
"That may do in other quarters of the colony,
Deerslayer, but it will not do here. Not a human being, the Lord
excepted, owns a foot of sile in this part of the country. Pen was
never put to paper consarning either hill or valley hereaway, as
I've heard old Tom say time and ag'in, and so he claims the best
right to it of any man breathing; and what Tom claims, he'll be
very likely to maintain."
"By what I've heard you say, Hurry, this Floating
Tom must be an oncommon mortal; neither Mingo, Delaware, nor
pale-face. His possession, too, has been long, by your tell, and
altogether beyond frontier endurance. What's the man's history and
natur'?"
"Why, as to old Tom's human natur', it is not much
like other men's human natur', but more like a muskrat's human
natar', seeing that he takes more to the ways of that animal than
to the ways of any other fellow-creatur'. Some think he was a free
liver on the salt water, in his youth, and a companion of a sartain
Kidd, who was hanged for piracy, long afore you and I were born or
acquainted, and that he came up into these regions, thinking that
the king's cruisers could never cross the mountains, and that he
might enjoy the plunder peaceably in the woods."
"Then he was wrong, Hurry; very wrong. A man can
enjoy plunder peaceably nowhere."
"That's much as his turn of mind may happen to be.
I've known them that never could enjoy it at all, unless it was in
the midst of a jollification, and them again that enjoyed it best
in a corner. Some men have no peace if they don't find plunder, and
some if they do. Human nature' is crooked in these matters. Old Tom
seems to belong to neither set, as he enjoys his, if plunder he has
really got, with his darters, in a very quiet and comfortable way,
and wishes for no more."
"Ay, he has darters, too; I've heard the Delawares,
who've hunted this a way, tell their histories of these young
women. Is there no mother, Hurry?"
"There was once, as in reason; but she has now been
dead and sunk these two good years."
"Anan?" said Deerslayer, looking up at his companion
in a little surprise.
"Dead and sunk, I say, and I hope that's good
English. The old fellow lowered his wife into the lake, by way of
seeing the last of her, as I can testify, being an eye-witness of
the ceremony; but whether Tom did it to save digging, which is no
easy job among roots, or out of a consait that water washes away
sin sooner than 'arth, is more than I can say."
"Was the poor woman oncommon wicked, that her
husband should take so much pains with her body?"
"Not onreasonable; though she had her faults. I
consider Judith Hutter to have been as graceful, and about as
likely to make a good ind as any woman who had lived so long beyond
the sound of church bells; and I conclude old Tom sunk her as much
by way of saving pains, as by way of taking it. There was a little
steel in her temper, it's true, and, as old Hutter is pretty much
flint, they struck out sparks once-and-a-while; but, on the whole,
they might be said to live amicable like. When they did kindle, the
listeners got some such insights into their past lives, as one gets
into the darker parts of the woods, when a stray gleam of sunshine
finds its way down to the roots of the trees. But Judith I shall
always esteem, as it's recommend enough to one woman to be the
mother of such a creatur' as her darter, Judith Hutter!"
"Ay, Judith was the name the Delawares mentioned,
though it was pronounced after a fashion of their own. From their
discourse, I do not think the girl would much please my fancy."
"Thy fancy!" exclaimed March, taking fire equally at
the indifference and at the presumption of his companion, "what the
devil have you to do with a fancy, and that, too, consarning one
like Judith? You are but a boy ñ a sapling, that has scarce got
root. Judith has had men among her suitors, ever since she was
fifteen; which is now near five years; and will not be apt even to
cast a look upon a half-grown creatur' like you!"
"It is June, and there is not a cloud atween us and
the sun, Hurry, so all this heat is not wanted," answered the
other, altogether undisturbed; "any one may have a fancy, and a
squirrel has a right to make up his mind touching a catamount."
"Ay, but it might not be wise, always, to let the
catamount know it," growled March. "But you're young and
thoughtless, and I'll overlook your ignorance. Come, Deerslayer,"
he added, with a good-natured laugh, after pausing a moment to
reflect, "come, Deerslayer, we are sworn friends, and will not
quarrel about a light-minded, jilting jade, just because she
happens to be handsome; more especially as you have never seen her.
Judith is only for a man whose teeth show the full marks, and it's
foolish to be afeard of a boy.
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