<h2><SPAN name="chap30"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXX</h2>
<p class="poem">
Is this proceeding just and honourable?<br/>
—Shakespeare.</p>
<p>During the occurrence of these events on the upland plain, the warriors on the
bottom had not been idle. We left the adverse bands watching one another on the
opposite banks of the stream, each endeavouring to excite its enemy to some act
of indiscretion, by the most reproachful taunts and revilings. But the Pawnee
chief was not slow to discover that his crafty antagonist had no objection to
waste the time so idly, and, as they mutually proved, in expedients that were
so entirely useless. He changed his plans, accordingly, and withdrew from the
bank, as has been already explained through the mouth of the trapper, in order
to invite the more numerous host of the Siouxes to cross. The challenge was not
accepted, and the Loups were compelled to frame some other method to attain
their end.</p>
<p>Instead of any longer throwing away the precious moments, in fruitless
endeavours to induce his foe to cross the stream, the young partisan of the
Pawnees led his troops, at a swift gallop, along its margin, in quest of some
favourable spot, where by a sudden push he might throw his own band without
loss to the opposite shore. The instant his object was discovered, each mounted
Teton received a footman behind him, and Mahtoree was still enabled to
concentrate his whole force against the effort. Perceiving that his design was
anticipated, and unwilling to blow his horses by a race that would disqualify
them for service, even after they had succeeded in outstripping the more
heavily-burdened cattle of the Siouxes, Hard-Heart drew up, and came to a dead
halt on the very margin of the water-course.</p>
<p>As the country was too open for any of the usual devices of savage warfare, and
time was so pressing, the chivalrous Pawnee resolved to bring on the result by
one of those acts of personal daring, for which the Indian braves are so
remarkable, and by which they often purchase their highest and dearest renown.
The spot he had selected was favourable to such a project. The river, which
throughout most of its course was deep and rapid, had expanded there to more
than twice its customary width, and the rippling of its waters proved that it
flowed over a shallow bottom. In the centre of the current there was an
extensive and naked bed of sand, but a little raised above the level of the
stream and of a colour and consistency which warranted, to a practised eye,
that it afforded a firm and safe foundation for the foot. To this spot the
partisan now turned his wistful gaze, nor was he long in making his decision.
First speaking to his warriors, and apprising them of his intentions, he dashed
into the current, and partly by swimming, and more by the use of his
horse’s feet, he reached the island in safety.</p>
<p>The experience of Hard-Heart had not deceived him. When his snorting steed
issued from the water, he found himself on a tremendous but damp and compact
bed of sand, that was admirably adapted to the exhibition of the finest powers
of the animal. The horse seemed conscious of the advantage, and bore his
warlike rider, with an elasticity of step and a loftiness of air, that would
have done no discredit to the highest trained and most generous charger. The
blood of the chief himself quickened with the excitement of his situation. He
sat the beast as if conscious that the eyes of two tribes were on his
movements; and as nothing could be more acceptable and grateful to his own
band, than this display of native grace and courage, so nothing could be more
taunting and humiliating to their enemies.</p>
<p>The sudden appearance of the Pawnee on the sands was announced among the
Tetons, by a general yell of savage anger. A rush was made to the shore,
followed by a discharge of fifty arrows and a few fusees, and, on the part of
several braves, there was a plain manifestation of a desire to plunge into the
water, in order to punish the temerity of their insolent foe. But a call and a
mandate, from Mahtoree, checked the rising, and nearly ungovernable, temper of
his band. So far from allowing a single foot to be wet, or a repetition of the
fruitless efforts of his people to drive away their foe with missiles, the
whole of the party was commanded to retire from the shore, while he himself
communicated his intentions to one or two of his most favoured followers.</p>
<p>When the Pawnees observed the rush of their enemies, twenty warriors rode into
the stream; but so soon as they perceived that the Tetons had withdrawn, they
fell back to a man, leaving the young chief to the support of his own
often-tried skill and well-established courage. The instructions of Hard-Heart,
on quitting his band, had been worthy of the self-devotion and daring of his
character. So long as single warriors came against him, he was to be left to
the keeping of the Wahcondah and his own arm; but should the Siouxes attack him
in numbers, he was to be sustained, man for man, even to the extent of his
whole force. These generous orders were strictly obeyed; and though so many
hearts in the troop panted to share in the glory and danger of their partisan,
not a warrior was found, among them all, who did not know how to conceal his
impatience under the usual mask of Indian self-restraint. They watched the
issue with quick and jealous eyes, nor did a single exclamation of surprise
escape them, when they saw, as will soon be apparent, that the experiment of
their chief was as likely to conduce to peace as to war.</p>
<p>Mahtoree was not long in communicating his plans to his confidants, whom he as
quickly dismissed to join their fellows in the rear. The Teton entered a short
distance into the stream and halted. Here he raised his hand several times,
with the palm outwards, and made several of those other signs, which are
construed into a pledge of amicable intentions among the inhabitants of those
regions. Then, as if to confirm the sincerity of his faith, he cast his fusee
to the shore, and entered deeper into the water, where he again came to a
stand, in order to see in what manner the Pawnee would receive his pledges of
peace.</p>
<p>The crafty Sioux had not made his calculations on the noble and honest nature
of his more youthful rival in vain. Hard-Heart had continued galloping across
the sands, during the discharge of missiles and the appearance of a general
onset, with the same proud and confident mien, as that with which he had first
braved the danger. When he saw the well-known person of the Teton partisan
enter the river, he waved his hand in triumph, and flourishing his lance, he
raised the thrilling war-cry of his people, as a challenge for him to come on.
But when he saw the signs of a truce, though deeply practised in the treachery
of savage combats, he disdained to show a less manly reliance on himself, than
that which his enemy had seen fit to exhibit. Riding to the farthest extremity
of the sands, he cast his own fusee from him, and returned to the point whence
he had started.</p>
<p>The two chiefs were now armed alike. Each had his spear, his bow, his quiver,
his little battle-axe, and his knife; and each had, also, a shield of hides,
which might serve as a means of defence against a surprise from any of these
weapons. The Sioux no longer hesitated, but advanced deeper into the stream,
and soon landed on a point of the island which his courteous adversary had left
free for that purpose. Had one been there to watch the countenance of Mahtoree,
as he crossed the water that separated him from the most formidable and the
most hated of all his rivals, he might have fancied that he could trace the
gleamings of a secret joy, breaking through the cloud which deep cunning and
heartless treachery had drawn before his swarthy visage; and yet there would
have been moments, when he might have believed that the flashings of the
Teton’s eye and the expansion of his nostrils, had their origin in a
nobler sentiment, and one more worthy of an Indian chief.</p>
<p>The Pawnee awaited the time of his enemy with calmness and dignity. The Teton
made a short run or two, to curb the impatience of his steed, and to recover
his seat after the effort of crossing, and then he rode into the centre of the
place, and invited the other, by a courteous gesture, to approach. Hard-Heart
drew nigh, until he found himself at a distance equally suited to advance or to
retreat, and, in his turn, he came to a stand, keeping his glowing eye riveted
on that of his enemy. A long and grave pause succeeded this movement, during
which these two distinguished braves, who were now, for the first time,
confronted, with arms in their hands, sat regarding each other, like warriors
who knew how to value the merits of a gallant foe, however hated. But the mien
of Mahtoree was far less stern and warlike than that of the partisan of the
Loups. Throwing his shield over his shoulder, as if to invite the confidence of
the other, he made a gesture of salutation and was the first to speak.</p>
<p>“Let the Pawnees go upon the hills,” he said, “and look from
the morning to the evening sun, from the country of snows to the land of many
flowers, and they will see that the earth is very large. Why cannot the Red-men
find room on it for all their villages?”</p>
<p>“Has the Teton ever known a warrior of the Loups come to his towns to beg
a place for his lodge?” returned the young brave, with a look in which
pride and contempt were not attempted to be concealed, “when the Pawnees
hunt, do they send runners to ask Mahtoree if there are no Siouxes on the
prairies?”</p>
<p>“When there is hunger in the lodge of a warrior, he looks for the
buffaloe, which is given him for food,” the Teton continued, struggling
to keep down the ire excited by the other’s scorn. “The Wahcondah
has made more of them than he has made Indians. He has not said, This buffaloe
shall be for a Pawnee, and that for a Dahcotah; this beaver for Konza, and that
for an Omawhaw. No; he said, There are enough. I love my red children, and I
have given them great riches. The swiftest horse shall not go from the village
of the Tetons to the village of the Loups in many suns. It is far from the
towns of the Pawnees to the river of the Osages. There is room for all that I
love. Why then should a Red-man strike his brother?”</p>
<p>Hard-Heart dropped one end of his lance to the earth, and having also cast his
shield across his shoulder, he sat leaning lightly on the weapon, as he
answered with a smile of no doubtful expression—</p>
<p>“Are the Tetons weary of the hunts, and of the warpath? Do they wish to
cook the venison, and not to kill it? Do they intend to let the hair cover
their heads, that their enemies shall not know where to find their scalps? Go;
a Pawnee warrior will never come among such Sioux squaws for a wife!”</p>
<p>A frightful gleam of ferocity broke out of the restraint of the
Dahcotah’s countenance, as he listened to this biting insult; but he was
quick in subduing the tell-tale feeling, in an expression much better suited to
his present purpose.</p>
<p>“This is the way a young chief should talk of war,” he answered
with singular composure; “but Mahtoree has seen the misery of more
winters than his brother. When the nights have been long, and darkness has been
in his lodge, while the young men slept, he has thought of the hardships of his
people. He has said to himself, Teton, count the scalps in your smoke. They are
all red but two! Does the wolf destroy the wolf, or the rattler strike his
brother? You know they do not; therefore, Teton, are you wrong to go on a path
that leads to the village of a Red-skin, with a tomahawk in your hand.”</p>
<p>“The Sioux would rob the warrior of his fame? He would say to his young
men, Go, dig roots in the prairies, and find holes to bury your tomahawks in;
you are no longer braves!”</p>
<p>“If the tongue of Mahtoree ever says thus,” returned the crafty
chief, with an appearance of strong indignation, “let his women cut it
out, and burn it with the offals of the buffaloe. No,” he added,
advancing a few feet nigher to the immovable Hard-Heart, as if in the sincerity
of confidence; “the Red-man can never want an enemy: they are plentier
than the leaves on the trees, the birds in the heavens, or the buffaloes on the
prairies. Let my brother open his eyes wide: does he no where see an enemy he
would strike?”</p>
<p>“How long is it since the Teton counted the scalps of his warriors, that
were drying in the smoke of a Pawnee lodge? The hand that took them is here,
and ready to make eighteen, twenty.”</p>
<p>“Now, let not the mind of my brother go on a crooked path. If a Red-skin
strikes a Red-skin for ever, who will be masters of the prairies, when no
warriors are left to say, ‘They are mine?’ Hear the voices of the
old men. They tell us that in their days many Indians have come out of the
woods under the rising sun, and that they have filled the prairies with their
complaints of the robberies of the Long-knives. Where a Pale-face comes, a
Red-man cannot stay. The land is too small. They are always hungry. See, they
are here already!”</p>
<p>As the Teton spoke, he pointed towards the tents of Ishmael, which were in
plain sight, and then he paused, to await the effect of his words on the mind
of his ingenuous foe. Hard-Heart listened like one in whom a train of novel
ideas had been excited by the reasoning of the other. He mused for a minute
before he demanded—</p>
<p>“What do the wise chiefs of the Sioux say must be done?”</p>
<p>“They think that the moccasin of every Pale-face should be followed, like
the track of the bear. That the Long-knife, who comes upon the prairie, should
never go back. That the path shall be open to those who come, and shut to those
who go. Yonder are many. They have horses and guns. They are rich, but we are
poor. Will the Pawnees meet the Tetons in council? and when the sun is gone
behind the Rocky Mountains, they will say, This is for a Loup and this for a
Sioux.”</p>
<p>“Teton—no! Hard-Heart has never struck the stranger. They come into
his lodge and eat, and they go out in safety. A mighty chief is their friend!
When my people call the young men to go on the war-path, the moccasin of
Hard-Heart is the last. But his village is no sooner hid by the trees, than it
is the first. No, Teton; his arm will never be lifted against the
stranger.”</p>
<p>“Fool; die, with empty hands!” Mahtoree exclaimed, setting an arrow
to his bow, and sending it, with a sudden and deadly aim, full at the naked
bosom of his generous and confiding enemy.</p>
<p>The action of the treacherous Teton was too quick, and too well matured, to
admit of any of the ordinary means of defence on the part of the Pawnee. His
shield was hanging at his shoulder, and even the arrow had been suffered to
fall from its place, and lay in the hollow of the hand which grasped his bow.
But the quick eye of the brave had time to see the movement, and his ready
thoughts did not desert him. Pulling hard and with a jerk upon the rein, his
steed reared his forward legs into the air, and, as the rider bent his body
low, the horse served for a shield against the danger. So true, however, was
the aim, and so powerful the force by which it was sent, that the arrow entered
the neck of the animal, and broke the skin on the opposite side.</p>
<p>Quicker than thought Hard-Heart sent back an answering arrow. The shield of the
Teton was transfixed, but his person was untouched. For a few moments the twang
of the bow and the glancing of arrows were incessant, notwithstanding the
combatants were compelled to give so large a portion of their care to the means
of defence. The quivers were soon exhausted; and though blood had been drawn,
it was not in sufficient quantities to impair the energy of the combat.</p>
<p>A series of masterly and rapid evolutions with the horses now commenced. The
wheelings, the charges, the advances, and the circuitous retreats, were like
the flights of circling swallows. Blows were struck with the lance, the sand
was scattered in the air, and the shocks often seemed to be unavoidably fatal;
but still each party kept his seat, and still each rein was managed with a
steady hand. At length the Teton was driven to the necessity of throwing
himself from his horse, to escape a thrust that would otherwise have proved
fatal. The Pawnee passed his lance through the beast, uttering a shout of
triumph as he galloped by. Turning in his tracks, he was about to push the
advantage, when his own mettled steed staggered and fell, under a burden that
he could no longer sustain. Mahtoree answered his premature cry of victory, and
rushed upon the entangled youth, with knife and tomahawk. The utmost agility of
Hard-Heart had not sufficed to extricate himself in season from the fallen
beast. He saw that his case was desperate. Feeling for his knife, he took the
blade between a finger and thumb, and cast it with admirable coolness at his
advancing foe. The keen weapon whirled a few times in the air, and its point
meeting the naked breast of the impetuous Sioux, the blade was buried to the
buck-horn haft.</p>
<p>Mahtoree laid his hand on the weapon, and seemed to hesitate whether to
withdraw it or not. For a moment his countenance darkened with the most
inextinguishable hatred and ferocity, and then, as if inwardly admonished how
little time he had to lose, he staggered to the edge of the sands, and halted
with his feet in the water. The cunning and duplicity, which had so long
obscured the brighter and nobler traits of his character, were lost in the
never dying sentiment of pride, which he had imbibed in youth.</p>
<p>“Boy of the Loups!” he said with a smile of grim satisfaction,
“the scalp of a mighty Dahcotah shall never dry in Pawnee smoke!”</p>
<p>Drawing the knife from the wound, he hurled it towards the enemy in disdain.
Then shaking his arm at his successful foe, his swarthy countenance appearing
to struggle with volumes of scorn and hatred, that he could not utter with the
tongue, he cast himself headlong into one of the most rapid veins of the
current, his hand still waving in triumph above the fluid, even after his body
had sunk into the tide for ever. Hard-Heart was by this time free. The silence,
which had hitherto reigned in the bands, was suddenly broken by general and
tumultuous shouts. Fifty of the adverse warriors were already in the river,
hastening to destroy or to defend the conqueror, and the combat was rather on
the eve of its commencement than near its termination. But to all these signs
of danger and need, the young victor was insensible. He sprang for the knife,
and bounded with the foot of an antelope along the sands, looking for the
receding fluid which concealed his prize. A dark, bloody spot indicated the
place, and, armed with the knife, he plunged into the stream, resolute to die
in the flood, or to return with his trophy.</p>
<p>In the mean time, the sands became a scene of bloodshed and violence. Better
mounted and perhaps more ardent, the Pawnees had, however, reached the spot in
sufficient numbers to force their enemies to retire. The victors pushed their
success to the opposite shore, and gained the solid ground in the melee of the
fight. Here they were met by all the unmounted Tetons, and, in their turn, they
were forced to give way.</p>
<p>The combat now became more characteristic and circumspect. As the hot impulses,
which had driven both parties to mingle in so deadly a struggle, began to cool,
the chiefs were enabled to exercise their influence, and to temper the assaults
with prudence. In consequence of the admonitions of their leaders, the Siouxes
sought such covers as the grass afforded, or here and there some bush or slight
inequality of the ground, and the charges of the Pawnee warriors necessarily
became more wary, and of course less fatal.</p>
<p>In this manner the contest continued with a varied success, and without much
loss. The Siouxes had succeeded in forcing themselves into a thick growth of
rank grass, where the horses of their enemies could not enter, or where, when
entered, they were worse than useless. It became necessary to dislodge the
Tetons from this cover, or the object of the combat must be abandoned. Several
desperate efforts had been repulsed, and the disheartened Pawnees were
beginning to think of a retreat, when the well-known war-cry of Hard-Heart was
heard at hand, and at the next instant the chief appeared in their centre,
flourishing the scalp of the Great Sioux, as a banner that would lead to
victory.</p>
<p>He was greeted by a shout of delight, and followed into the cover, with an
impetuosity that, for the moment, drove all before it. But the bloody trophy in
the hand of the partisan served as an incentive to the attacked, as well as to
the assailants. Mahtoree had left many a daring brave behind him in his band,
and the orator, who in the debates of that day had manifested such pacific
thoughts, now exhibited the most generous self-devotion, in order to wrest the
memorial of a man he had never loved, from the hands of the avowed enemies of
his people.</p>
<p>The result was in favour of numbers. After a severe struggle, in which the
finest displays of personal intrepidity were exhibited by all the chiefs, the
Pawnees were compelled to retire upon the open bottom, closely pressed by the
Siouxes, who failed not to seize each foot of ground ceded by their enemies.
Had the Tetons stayed their efforts on the margin of the grass, it is probable
that the honour of the day would have been theirs, notwithstanding the
irretrievable loss they had sustained in the death of Mahtoree. But the more
reckless braves of the band were guilty of an indiscretion, that entirely
changed the fortunes of the fight, and suddenly stripped them of their
hard-earned advantages.</p>
<p>A Pawnee chief had sunk under the numerous wounds he had received, and he fell,
a target for a dozen arrows, in the very last group of his retiring party.
Regardless alike of inflicting further injury on their foes, and of the
temerity of the act, the Sioux braves bounded forward with a whoop, each man
burning with the wish to reap the high renown of striking the body of the dead.
They were met by Hard-Heart and a chosen knot of warriors, all of whom were
just as stoutly bent on saving the honour of their nation, from so foul a
stain. The struggle was hand to hand, and blood began to flow more freely. As
the Pawnees retired with the body, the Siouxes pressed upon their footsteps,
and at length the whole of the latter broke out of the cover with a common
yell, and threatened to bear down all opposition by sheer physical superiority.</p>
<p>The fate of Hard-Heart and his companions, all of whom would have died rather
than relinquish their object, would have been quickly sealed, but for a
powerful and unlooked-for interposition in their favour. A shout was heard from
a little brake on the left, and a volley from the fatal western rifle
immediately succeeded. Some five or six Siouxes leaped forward in the death
agony, and every arm among them was as suddenly suspended, as if the lightning
had flashed from the clouds to aid the cause of the Loups. Then came Ishmael
and his stout sons in open view, bearing down upon their late treacherous
allies, with looks and voices that proclaimed the character of the succour.</p>
<p>The shock was too much for the fortitude of the Tetons. Several of their
bravest chiefs had already fallen, and those that remained were instantly
abandoned by the whole of the inferior herd. A few of the most desperate braves
still lingered nigh the fatal symbol of their honour, and there nobly met their
deaths, under the blows of the re-encouraged Pawnees. A second discharge from
the rifles of the squatter and his party completed the victory.</p>
<p>The Siouxes were now to be seen flying to more distant covers, with the same
eagerness and desperation as, a few moments before, they had been plunging into
the fight. The triumphant Pawnees bounded forward in chase, like so many
high-blooded and well-trained hounds. On every side were heard the cries of
victory, or the yell of revenge. A few of the fugitives endeavoured to bear
away the bodies of their fallen warriors, but the hot pursuit quickly compelled
them to abandon the slain, in order to preserve the living. Among all the
struggles, which were made on that occasion, to guard the honour of the Siouxes
from the stain which their peculiar opinions attached to the possession of the
scalp of a fallen brave, but one solitary instance of success occurred.</p>
<p>The opposition of a particular chief to the hostile proceedings in the councils
of that morning has been already seen. But, after having raised his voice in
vain, in support of peace, his arm was not backward in doing its duty in the
war. His prowess has been mentioned; and it was chiefly by his courage and
example, that the Tetons sustained themselves in the heroic manner they did,
when the death of Mahtoree was known. This warrior, who, in the figurative
language of his people, was called “the Swooping Eagle,” had been
the last to abandon the hopes of victory. When he found that the support of the
dreaded rifle had robbed his band of the hard-earned advantages, he sullenly
retired amid a shower of missiles, to the secret spot where he had hid his
horse, in the mazes of the highest grass. Here he found a new and an entirely
unexpected competitor, ready to dispute with him for the possession of the
beast. It was Bohrecheena, the aged friend of Mahtoree; he whose voice had been
given in opposition to his own wiser opinions, transfixed with an arrow, and
evidently suffering under the pangs of approaching death.</p>
<p>“I have been on my last war-path,” said the grim old warrior, when
he found that the real owner of the animal had come to claim his property;
“shall a Pawnee carry the white hairs of a Sioux into his village, to be
a scorn to his women and children?”</p>
<p>The other grasped his hand, answering to the appeal with the stern look of
inflexible resolution. With this silent pledge, he assisted the wounded man to
mount. So soon as he had led the horse to the margin of the cover, he threw
himself also on its back, and securing his companion to his belt, he issued on
the open plain, trusting entirely to the well-known speed of the beast for
their mutual safety. The Pawnees were not long in catching a view of these new
objects, and several turned their steeds to pursue. The race continued for a
mile without a murmur from the sufferer, though in addition to the agony of his
body, he had the pain of seeing his enemies approach at every leap of their
horses.</p>
<p>“Stop,” he said, raising a feeble arm to check the speed of his
companion; “the Eagle of my tribe must spread his wings wider. Let him
carry the white hairs of an old warrior into the burnt-wood village!”</p>
<p>Few words were necessary, between men who were governed by the same feelings of
glory, and who were so well trained in the principles of their romantic honour.
The Swooping Eagle threw himself from the back of the horse, and assisted the
other to alight. The old man raised his tottering frame to its knees, and first
casting a glance upward at the countenance of his countryman, as if to bid him
adieu, he stretched out his neck to the blow he himself invited. A few strokes
of the tomahawk, with a circling gash of the knife, sufficed to sever the head
from the less valued trunk. The Teton mounted again, just in season to escape a
flight of arrows which came from his eager and disappointed pursuers.
Flourishing the grim and bloody visage, he darted away from the spot with a
shout of triumph, and was seen scouring the plains, as if he were actually
borne along on the wings of the powerful bird from whose qualities he had
received his flattering name. The Swooping Eagle reached his village in safety.
He was one of the few Siouxes who escaped from the massacre of that fatal day;
and for a long time he alone of the saved was able to lift his voice, in the
councils of his nation, with undiminished confidence.</p>
<p>The knife and the lance cut short the retreat of the larger portion of the
vanquished. Even the retiring party of the women and children were scattered by
the conquerors; and the sun had long sunk behind the rolling outline of the
western horizon, before the fell business of that disastrous defeat was
entirely ended.</p>
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