March
observed, with a little surprise, that she placed the choicest bits
before Deerslayer, and that in the little nameless attentions it
was in her power to bestow, she quite obviously manifested a desire
to let it be seen that she deemed him the honored guest.
Accustomed, however, to the waywardness and coquetry of the beauty,
this discovery gave him little concern, and he ate with an appetite
that was in no degree disturbed by any moral causes. The
easily-digested food of the forests offering the fewest possible
obstacles to the gratification of this great animal indulgence,
Deerslayer, notwithstanding the hearty meal both had taken in the
woods, was in no manner behind his companion in doing justice to
the viands.
An hour later the scene had greatly changed. The
lake was still placid and glassy, but the gloom of the hour had
succeeded to the soft twilight of a summer evening, and all within
the dark setting of the woods lay in the quiet repose of night. The
forests gave up no song, or cry, or even murmur, but looked down
from the hills on the lovely basin they encircled, in solemn
stillness; and the only sound that was audible was the regular dip
of the sweeps, at which Hurry and Deerslayer lazily pushed,
impelling the ark towards the castle. Hutter had withdrawn to the
stern of the scow, in order to steer, but, finding that the young
men kept even strokes, and held the desired course by their own
skill, he permitted the oar to drag in the water, took a seat on
the end of the vessel, and lighted his pipe. He had not been thus
placed many minutes, ere Hetty came stealthily out of the cabin, or
house, as they usually termed that part of the ark, and placed
herself at his feet, on a little bench that she brought with her.
As this movement was by no means unusual in his feeble-minded
child, the old man paid no other attention to it than to lay his
hand kindly on her head, in an affectionate and approving manner;
an act of grace that the girl received in meek silence.
After a pause of several minutes, Hetty began to
sing. Her voice was low and tremulous, but it was earnest and
solemn. The words and the tune were of the simplest form, the first
being a hymn that she had been taught by her mother, and the last
one of those natural melodies that find favor with all classes, in
every age, coming from and being addressed to the feelings. Hutter
never listened to this simple strain without finding his heart and
manner softened; facts that his daughter well knew, and by which
she had often profited, through the sort of holy instinct that
enlightens the weak of mind, more especially in their aims toward
good.
Hetty's low, sweet tones had not been raised many
moments, when the dip of the oars ceased, and the holy strain arose
singly on the breathing silence of the wilderness. As if she
gathered courage with the theme, her powers appeared to increase as
she proceeded; and though nothing vulgar or noisy mingled in her
melody, its strength and melancholy tenderness grew on the ear,
until the air was filled with this simple homage of a soul that
seemed almost spotless. That the men forward were not indifferent
to this touching interruption, was proved by their inaction; nor
did their oars again dip until the last of the sweet sounds had
actually died among the remarkable shores, which, at that witching
hour, would waft even the lowest modulations of the human voice
more than a mile. Hutter was much affected; for rude as he was by
early habits, and even ruthless as he had got to be by long
exposure to the practices of the wilderness, his nature was of that
fearful mixture of good and evil that so generally enters into the
moral composition of man.
"You are sad tonight, child," said the father, whose
manner and language usually assumed some of the gentleness and
elevation of the civilized life he had led in youth, when he thus
communed with this particular child; "we have just escaped from
enemies, and ought rather to rejoice."
"You can never do it, father!" said Hetty, in a low,
remonstrating manner, taking his hard, knotty hand into both her
own; "you have talked long with Harry March; but neither of you
have the heart to do it!"
"This is going beyond your means, foolish child; you
must have been naughty enough to have listened, or you could know
nothing of our talk."
"Why should you and Hurry kill people ñ especially
women and children?"
"Peace, girl, peace; we are at war, and must do to
our enemies as our enemies would do to us."
"That's not it, father! I heard Deerslayer say how
it was. You must do to your enemies as you wish your enemies would
do to you. No man wishes his enemies to kill him."
"We kill our enemies in war, girl, lest they should
kill us. One side or the other must begin; and them that begin
first, are most apt to get the victory. You know nothing about
these things, poor Hetty, and had best say nothing."
"Judith says it is wrong, father; and Judith has
sense though I have none."
"Jude understands better than to talk to me of these
matters; for she has sense, as you say, and knows I'll not bear it.
Which would you prefer, Hetty; to have your own scalp taken, and
sold to the French, or that we should kill our enemies, and keep
them from harming us?"
"That's not it, father! Don't kill them, nor let
them kill us. Sell your skins, and get more, if you can; but don't
sell human blood."
"Come, come, child; let us talk of matters you
understand. Are you glad to see our old friend, March, back again?
You like Hurry, and must know that one day he may be your brother ñ
if not something nearer."
"That can't be, father," returned the girl, after a
considerable pause; "Hurry has had one father, and one mother; and
people never have two."
"So much for your weak mind, Hetty. When Jude
marries, her husband's father will be her father, and her husband's
sister her sister. If she should marry Hurry, then he will be your
brother."
"Judith will never have Hurry," returned the girl
mildly, but positively; "Judith don't like Hurry."
"That's more than you can know, Hetty. Harry March
is the handsomest, and the strongest, and the boldest young man
that ever visits the lake; and, as Jude is the greatest beauty, I
don't see why they shouldn't come together. He has as much as
promised that he will enter into this job with me, on condition
that I'll consent."
Hetty began to move her body back and forth, and
other-wise to express mental agitation; but she made no answer for
more than a minute. Her father, accustomed to her manner, and
suspecting no immediate cause of concern, continued to smoke with
the apparent phlegm which would seem to belong to that particular
species of enjoyment.
"Hurry is handsome, father," said Hetty, with a
simple emphasis, that she might have hesitated about using, had her
mind been more alive to the inferences of others.
"I told you so, child," muttered old Hutter, without
removing the pipe from between his teeth; "he's the likeliest youth
in these parts; and Jude is the likeliest young woman I've met with
since her poor mother was in her best days."
"Is it wicked to be ugly, father?'"
"One might be guilty of worse things ñ but you're by
no means ugly; though not so comely as Jude."
"Is Judith any happier for being so handsome?"
"She may be, child, and she may not be. But talk of
other matters now, for you hardly understand these, poor Hetty. How
do you like our new acquaintance, Deerslayer?"
"He isn't handsome, father. Hurry is far handsomer
than Deerslayer."
"That's true; but they say he is a noted hunter! His
fame had reached me before I ever saw him; and I did hope he would
prove to be as stout a warrior as he is dexterous with the deer.
All men are not alike, howsever, child; and it takes time, as I
know by experience, to give a man a true wilderness heart."
"Have I got a wilderness heart, father ñ and Hurry,
is his heart true wilderness?"
"You sometimes ask queer questions, Hetty! Your
heart is good, child, and fitter for the settlements than for the
woods; while your reason is fitter for the woods than for the
settlements."
"Why has Judith more reason than I, father?"
"Heaven help thee, child: this is more than I can
answer. God gives sense, and appearance, and all these things; and
he grants them as he seeth fit. Dost thou wish for more sense?"
"Not I. The little I have troubles me; for when I
think the hardest, then I feel the unhappiest. I don't believe
thinking is good for me, though I do wish I was as handsome as
Judith!"
"Why so, poor child? Thy sister's beauty may cause
her trouble, as it caused her mother before her.
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