THE IROQUOIS TOWN
Henry lay fully an hour in the bushes.
He had forgotten about the dogs that he dreaded,
but evidently he was right in his surmise that the
camp contained none. Nothing disturbed him while
he stared at what was passing by the firelight.
There could be no doubt that the meeting of Timmendiquas
and Thayendanegea portended great things, but he would
not be stirred from his task of rescuing his comrades
or discovering their fate.
They two, great chiefs, sat long in
close converse. Others-older men, chiefs, also-came
at times and talked with them. But these two,
proud, dominating, both singularly handsome men of
the Indian type, were always there. Henry was
almost ready to steal away when he saw a new figure
approaching the two chiefs. The walk and bearing
of the stranger were familiar, and Henry knew
him even before his face was lighted tip by the fire.
It was Braxton Wyatt, the renegade, who had escaped
the great battles on both the Ohio and the Mississippi,
and who was here with the Iroquois, ready to do to
his own race all the evil that he could. Henry
felt a shudder of repulsion, deeper than any Indian
could inspire in him. They fought for their
own land and their own people, but Braxton Wyatt had
violated everything that an honest man should hold
sacred.
Henry, on the whole, was not surprised
to see him. Such a chance was sure to draw Braxton
Wyatt. Moreover, the war, so far as it pertained
to the border, seemed to be sweeping toward the northeast,
and it bore many stormy petrels upon its crest.
He watched Wyatt as he walked toward
one of the fires. There the renegade sat down
and talked with the warriors, apparently on the best
of terms. He was presently joined by two more
renegades, whom Henry recognized as Blackstaffe and
Quarles. Timmendiquas and Thayendanegea rose
after a while, and walked toward the center of the
camp, where several of the bark shelters had been
enclosed entirely. Henry judged that one had
been set apart for each, but they were lost from his
view when they passed within the circling ring of
warriors.
Henry believed that the Iroquois and
Wyandots would form a fortified camp here, a place
from which they would make sudden and terrible forays
upon the settlements. He based his opinion upon
the good location and the great number of saplings
that had been cut down already. They would build
strong lodges and then a palisade around them with
the saplings. He was speedily confirmed in this
opinion when he saw warriors come to the forest with
hatchets and begin to cut down more saplings.
He knew then that it was time to go, as a wood chopper
might blunder upon him at any time.
He slipped from his covert and was
quickly gone in the forest. His limbs were somewhat
stiff from lying so long in one position, but that
soon wore away, and he was comparatively fresh when
he came once more to the islet in the swamp.
A good moon was now shining, tipping the forest with
a fine silvery gray, and Henry purveyed with the greatest
satisfaction the simple little shelter that he had
found so opportunely. It was a good house, too,
good to such a son of the deepest forest as was Henry.
It was made of nothing but bark and poles, but it
had kept out all that long, penetrating rain of the
last three or four days, and when he lifted the big
stone aside and opened the door it seemed as snug
a place as he could have wished.
He left the door open a little, lighted
a small fire on the flat stones, having no fear that
it would be seen through the dense curtain that shut
him in, and broiled big bear steaks on the coals.
When he had eaten and the fire had died he went out
and sat beside the hut. He was well satisfied
with the day’s work, and he wished now to think
with all the concentration that one must put upon
a great task if he expects to achieve it. He
intended to invade the Indian camp, and he knew full
well that it was the most perilous enterprise that
he had ever attempted. Yet scouts and hunters
had done such things and had escaped with their lives.
He must not shrink from the path that others had
trodden.
He made up his mind firmly, and partly
thought out his plan of operations. Then he
rested, and so sanguine was his temperament that he
began to regard the deed itself as almost achieved.
Decision is always soothing after doubt, and he fell
into a pleasant dreamy state. A gentle wind
was blowing, the forest was dry and the leaves rustled
with the low note that is like the softest chord of
a violin. It became penetrating, thrillingly
sweet, and hark! it spoke to him in a voice that he
knew. It was the same voice that he had heard
on the Ohio, mystic, but telling him to be of heart
and courage. He would triumph over hardships
and dangers, and he would see his friends again.
Henry started up from his vision.
The song was gone, and he heard only the wind softly
moving the leaves. It had been vague and shadowy
as gossamer, light as the substance of a dream, but
it was real to him, nevertheless, and the deep glow
of certain triumph permeated his being, body and mind.
It was not strange that he had in his nature something
of the Indian mysticism that personified the winds
and the trees and everything about him. The
Manitou of the red man and the ancient Aieroski of
the Iroquois were the same as his own God. He
could not doubt that he had a message. Down
on the Ohio he had had the same message more than
once, and it had always come true.
He heard a slight rustling among the
bushes, and, sitting perfectly still, he saw a black
bear emerge into the open. It had gained the
islet in some manner, probably floundering through
the black mire, and the thought occurred to him that
it was the mate of the one he had slain, drawn perhaps
by instinct on the trail of a lost comrade.
He could have shot the bear as he sat-and he would
need fresh supplies of food soon-but he did not have
the heart to do it.
The bear sniffed a little at the wind,
which was blowing the human odor away from him, and
sat back on his haunches. Henry did not believe
that the animal had seen him or was yet aware of his
presence, although he might suspect. There was
something humorous and also pathetic in the visitor,
who cocked his head on one side and looked about him.
He made a distinct appeal to Henry, who sat absolutely
still, so still that the little bear could not be
sure at first that he was a human being. A minute
passed, and the red eye of the bear rested upon the
boy. Henry felt pleasant and sociable, but he
knew that he could retain friendly relations only
by remaining quiet.
If I have eaten your comrade, my friend,”
he said to himself, “it is only because of hard
necessity.” The bear, little, comic, and
yet with that touch of pathos about him, cocked his
head a little further over on one side, and as a silver
shaft of moonlight fell upon him Henry could see one
red eye gleaming. It was a singular fact, but
the boy, alone in the wilderness, and the loser of
his comrades, felt for the moment a sense of comradeship
with the bear, which was also alone, and doubtless
the loser of a comrade, also. He uttered a soft
growling sound like the satisfied purr of a bear eating
its food.
The comical bear rose a little higher
on his hind paws, and looked in astonishment at the
motionless figure that uttered sounds so familiar.
Yet the figure was not familiar. He had never
seen a human being before, and the shape and outline
were very strange to him. It might be some new
kind of animal, and he was disposed to be inquiring,
because there was nothing in these forests which the
black bear was afraid of until man came.
He advanced a step or two and growled
gently. Then he reared up again on his hind
paws, and cocked his held to one side in his amusing
manner. Henry, still motionless, smiled at him.
Here, for an instant at least, was a cheery visitor
and companionship. He at least would not break
the spell.
“You look almost as if you could
talk, old fellow,” he said to himself, “and
if I knew your language I’d ask you a lot of
questions.”
The bear, too, was motionless now,
torn by doubt and curiosity. It certainly was
a singular figure that sat there, fifteen or twenty
yards before him, and he had the most intense curiosity
to solve the mystery of this creature. But caution
held him back.
There was a sudden flaw in the light
breeze. It shifted about and brought the dreadful
man odor to the nostrils of the honest black bear.
It was something entirely new to him, but it contained
the quality of fear. That still strange figure
was his deadliest foe. Dropping down upon his
four paws, he fled among the trees, and then scrambled
somehow through the swamp to the mainland.
Henry sighed. Despite his own
friendly feeling, the bear, warned by instinct, was
afraid of him, and, as he was bound to acknowledge
to himself, the bear’s instinct was doubtless
right. He rose, went into the hut, and slept
heavily through the night. In the morning he
left the islet once more to scout in the direction
of the Indian camp, but he found it a most dangerous
task. The woods were full of warriors hunting.
As he had judged, the game was abundant, and he heard
rifles cracking in several directions. He loitered,
therefore, in the thickest of the thickets, willing
to wait until night came for his enterprise.
It was advisable, moreover, to wait, because be did
not see yet just how he was going to succeed.
He spent nearly the whole day shifting here and there
through the forest, but late in the afternoon, as
the Indians yet seemed so numerous in the woods, he
concluded to go back toward the islet.
He was about two miles from the swamp
when he heard a cry, sharp but distant. It was
that of the savages, and Henry instinctively divined
the cause. A party of the warriors had come somehow
upon his trail, and they would surely follow it.
It was a mischance that he had not expected.
He waited a minute or two, and then heard the cry
again, but nearer. He knew that it would come
no more, but it confirmed him in his first opinion.
Henry had little fear of being caught,
as the islet was so securely hidden, but he did not
wish to take even a remote chance of its discovery.
Hence he ran to the eastward of it, intending as
the darkness came, hiding his trail, to double back
and regain the hut.
He proceeded at a long, easy gait,
his mind not troubled by the pursuit. It was
to him merely an incident that should be ended as
soon as possible, annoying perhaps, but easily cured.
So he swung lightly along, stopping at intervals
among the bushes to see if any of the warriors had
drawn near, but he detected nothing. Now and
then he looked up to the sky, willing that night should
end this matter quickly and peacefully.
His wish seemed near fulfillment.
An uncommonly brilliant sun was setting. The
whole west was a sea of red and yellow fire, but in
the east the forest was already sinking into the dark.
He turned now, and went back toward the west on a
line parallel with the pursuit, but much closer to
the swamp. The dusk thickened rapidly.
The sun dropped over the curve of the world, and the
vast complex maze of trunks and boughs melted into
a solid black wall. The incident of the pursuit
was over and with it its petty annoyances. He
directed his course boldly now for the stepping stones,
and traveled fast. Soon the first of them would
be less than a hundred yards away.
But the incident was not over.
Wary and skillful though the young forest runner
might be, he had made one miscalculation, and it led
to great consequences. As he skirted the edge
of the swamp in the darkness, now fully come, a dusky
figure suddenly appeared. It was a stray warrior
from some small band, wandering about at will.
The meeting was probably as little expected by him
as it was by Henry, and they were so close together
when they saw each other that neither had time to
raise his rifle. The warrior, a tall, powerful
man, dropping his gun and snatching out a knife, sprang
at once upon his enemy.
Henry was borne back by the weight
and impact, but, making an immense effort, he recovered
himself and, seizing the wrist of the Indian’s
knife hand, exerted all his great strength. The
warrior wished to change the weapon from his right
band, but he dared not let go with the other lest
he be thrown down at once, and with great violence.
His first rush having failed, he was now at a disadvantage,
as the Indian is not generally a wrestler. Henry
pushed him back, and his hand closed tighter and tighter
around the red wrist. He wished to tear the knife
from it, but he, too, was afraid to let go with the
other hand, and so the two remained locked fast.
Neither uttered a cry after the first contact, and
the only sounds in the dark were their hard breathing,
which turned to a gasp now and then, and the shuffle
of their feet over the earth.
Henry felt that it must end soon.
One or the other must give way. Their sinews
were already strained to the cracking point, and making
a supreme effort he bore all his weight upon the warrior,
who, unable to sustain himself, went down with the
youth upon him. The Indian uttered a groan,
and Henry, leaping instantly to his feet, looked down
upon his fallen antagonist, who did not stir.
He knew the cause. As they fell the point of
the knife bad been turned upward, and it had entered
the Indian’s heart.
Although he had been in peril at his
hands, Henry looked at the slain man in a sort of
pity. He had not wished to take anyone’s
life, and, in reality, he had not been the direct cause
of it. But it was a stern time and the feeling
soon passed. The Wyandot, for such he was by
his paint, would never have felt a particle of remorse
had the victory been his.
The moon was now coming out, and Henry
looked down thoughtfully at the still face.
Then the idea came to him, in fact leaped up in his
brain, with such an impulse that it carried conviction.
He would take this warrior’s place and go to
the Indian camp. So eager was he, and so full
of his plan, that he did not feel any repulsion as
he opened the warrior’s deerskin shirt and took
his totem from a place near his heart. It was
a little deerskin bag containing a bunch of red feathers.
This was his charm, his magic spell, his bringer
of good luck, which had failed him so woefully this
time. Henry, not without a touch of the forest
belief, put it inside his own hunting shirt, wishing,
although he laughed at himself, that if the red man’s
medicine had any potency it should be on his own side.
Then he found also the little bag
in which the Indian carried his war paint and the
feather brush with which he put it on. The next
hour witnessed a singular transformation. A white
youth was turned into a red warrior. He cut
his own hair closely, all except a tuft in the center,
with his sharp hunting knife. The tuft and the
close crop he stained black with the Indian’s
paint. It was a poor black, but he hoped that
it would pass in the night. He drew the tuft
into a scalplock, and intertwined it with a feather
from the Indian’s own tuft. Then he stained
his face, neck, hands, and arms with the red paint,
and stood forth a powerful young warrior of a western
nation.
He hid the Indian’s weapons
and his own raccoon-skin cap in the brush. Then
he took the body of the fallen warrior to the edge
of the swamp and dropped it in. His object was
not alone concealment, but burial as well. He
still felt sorry for the unfortunate Wyandot, and
he watched him until he sank completely from sight
in the mire. Then he turned away and traveled
a straight course toward the great Indian camp.
He stopped once on the way at a clear
pool irradiated by the bright moonlight, and looked
attentively at his reflection. By night, at
least, it was certainly that of an Indian, and, summoning
all his confidence, he continued upon his chosen and
desperate task.
Henry knew that the chances were against
him, even with his disguise, but he was bound to enter
the Indian camp, and he was prepared to incur all
risks and to endure all penalties. He even felt
a certain lightness of heart as he hurried on his way,
and at length saw through the forest the flare of
light from the Indian camp.
He approached cautiously at first
in order that he might take a good look into the camp,
and he was surprised at what he saw. In a single
day the village had been enlarged much more.
It seemed to him that it contained at least twice
as many warriors. Women and children, too, had
come, and he heard a stray dog barking here and there.
Many more fires than usual were burning, and there
was a great murmur of voices.
Henry was much taken aback at first.
It seemed that he was about to plunge into the midst
of the whole Iroquois nation, and at a time, too,
when something of extreme importance was going on,
but a little reflection showed that he was fortunate.
Amid so many people, and so much ferment it was not
at all likely that he would be noticed closely.
It was his intention, if the necessity came, to pass
himself off as a warrior of the Shawnee tribe who
had wandered far eastward, but he meant to avoid sedulously
the eye of Timmendiquas, who might, through his size
and stature, divine his identity.
As Henry lingered at the edge of the
camp, in indecision whether to wait a little or plunge
boldly into the light of the fires, he became aware
that all sounds in the village-for such it was instead
of a camp-had ceased suddenly, except the light tread
of feet and the sound of many people talking low.
He saw through the bushes that all the Iroquois,
and with them the detachment of Wyandots under White
Lightning, were going toward a large structure in
the center, which he surmised to be the Council House.
He knew from his experience with the Indians farther
west that the Iroquois built such structures.
He could no longer doubt that some
ceremony of the greatest importance was about to begin,
and, dismissing indecision, he left the bushes and
entered the village, going with the crowd toward the
great pole building, which was, indeed, the Council
House.
But little attention was paid to Henry.
He would have drawn none at all, had it not been
for his height, and when a warrior or two glanced
at him he uttered some words in Shawnee, saying that
he had wandered far, and was glad to come to the hospitable
Iroquois. One who could speak a little Shawnee
bade him welcome, and they went on, satisfied, their
minds more intent upon the ceremony than upon a visitor.
The Council House, built of light
poles and covered with poles and thatch, was at least
sixty feet long and about thirty feet wide, with a
large door on the eastern side, and one or two smaller
ones on the other sides. As Henry arrived, the
great chiefs and sub-chiefs of the Iroquois were entering
the building, and about it were grouped many warriors
and women, and even children. But all preserved
a decorous solemnity, and, knowing the customs of
the forest people so well, he was sure that the ceremony,
whatever it might be, must be of a highly sacred nature.
He himself drew to one side, keeping as much as possible
in the shadow, but he was using to its utmost power
every faculty of observation that Nature had given
him.
Many of the fires were still burning,
but the moon had come out with great brightness, throwing
a silver light over the whole village, and investing
with attributes that savored of the mystic and impressive
this ceremony, held by a savage but great race here
in the depths of the primeval forest. Henry was
about to witness a Condoling Council, which was at
once a mourning for chiefs who had fallen in battle
farther east with his own people and the election
and welcome of their successors.
The chiefs presently came forth from
the Council House or, as it was more generally called,
the Long House, and, despite the greatness of Thayendanegea,
those of the Onondaga tribe, in virtue of their ancient
and undisputed place as the political leaders and
high priests of the Six Nations, led the way.
Among the stately Onondaga chiefs were: Atotarho
(The Entangled), Skanawati (Beyond the River), Tehatkahtons
(Looking Both Ways), Tehayatkwarayen (Red Wings),
and Hahiron (The Scattered). They were men of
stature and fine countenance, proud of the titular
primacy that belonged to them because it was the Onondaga,
Hiawatha, who had formed the great confederacy more
than four hundred years before our day, or just about
the time Columbus was landing on the shores of the
New World.
Next to the Onondagas came the fierce
and warlike Mohawks, who lived nearest to Albany,
who were called Keepers of the Eastern Gate, and who
were fully worthy of their trust. They were
content that the Onondagas should lead in council,
so long as they were first in battle, and there was
no jealousy between them. Among their chiefs
were Koswensiroutha (Broad Shoulders) and Satekariwate
(Two Things Equal).
Third in rank were the Senecas, and
among their chiefs were Kanokarih (The Threatened)
and Kanyadariyo (Beautiful Lake).
These three, the Onondagas, Mohawks,
and Senecas, were esteemed the three senior nations.
After them, in order of precedence, came the chiefs
of the three junior nations, the Oneidas, Cayugas,
and Tuscaroras. All of the great chiefs had assistant
chiefs, usually relatives, who, in case of death, often
succeeded to their places. But these assistants
now remained in the crowd with other minor chiefs
and the mass of the warriors. A little apart
stood Timmendiquas and his Wyandots. He, too,
was absorbed in the ceremony so sacred to him, an
Indian, and he did not notice the tall figure of the
strange Shawnee lingering in the deepest of the shadows.
The head chiefs, walking solemnly
and never speaking, marched across the clearing, and
then through the woods to a glen, where two young
warriors had kindled a little fire of sticks as a
signal of welcome. The chiefs gathered around
the fire and spoke together in low tones. This
was Deyuhnyon Kwarakda, which means “The Reception
at the Edge of the Wood.”
Henry and some others followed, as
it was not forbidden to see, and his interest increased.
He shared the spiritual feeling which was impressed
upon the red faces about him. The bright moonlight,
too, added to the effect, giving it the tinge of an
old Druidical ceremony.
The chiefs relapsed into silence and
sat thus about ten minutes. Then rose the sound
of a chant, distant and measured, and a procession
of young and inferior chiefs, led by Oneidas, appeared,
slowly approaching the fire. Behind them were
warriors, and behind the warriors were many women and
children. All the women were in their brightest
attire, gay with feather headdresses and red, blue,
or green blankets from the British posts.
The procession stopped at a distance
of about a dozen yards from the chiefs about the council
fire, and the Oneida, Kathlahon, formed the men in
a line facing the head chiefs, with the women and
children grouped in an irregular mass behind them.
The singing meanwhile had stopped. The two
groups stood facing each other, attentive and listening.
Then Hahiron, the oldest of the Onondagas,
walked back and forth in the space between the two
groups, chanting a welcome. Like all Indian
songs it was monotonous. Every line he uttered
with emphasis and a rising inflection, the phrase
“Haih-haih” which may be translated “Hail
to thee!” or better, “All hail!”
Nevertheless, under the moonlight in the wilderness
and with rapt faces about him, it was deeply impressive.
Henry found it so.
Hahiron finished his round and went
back to his place by the fire. Atotarho, head
chief of the Onondagas, holding in his hands beautifully
beaded strings of Iroquois wampum, came forward and
made a speech of condolence, to which Kathlahon responded.
Then the head chiefs and the minor chiefs smoked
pipes together, after which the head chiefs, followed
by the minor chiefs, and these in turn by the crowd,
led the way back to the village.
Many hundreds of persons were in this
procession, which was still very grave and solemn,
every one in it impressed by tile sacred nature of
this ancient rite. The chief entered the great
door of the Long House, and all who could find places
not reserved followed. Henry went in with the
others, and sat in a corner, making himself as small
as possible. Many women, the place of whom was
high among the Iroquois, were also in the Long House.
The head chiefs sat on raised seats
at the north end of the great room. In front
of them, on lower seats, were the minor chiefs of
the three older nations on the left, and of the three
younger nations on the right. In front of these,
but sitting on the bark floor, was a group of warriors.
At the east end, on both high and low seats, were
warriors, and facing them on the western side were
women, also on both high and low seats. The southern
side facing the chiefs was divided into sections,
each with high and low seats. The one on the
left was occupied by men, and the one on the right
by women. Two small fires burned in the center
of the Long House about fifteen feet apart.
It was the most singular and one of
the most impressive scenes that Henry had ever beheld.
When all had found their seats there was a deep silence.
Henry could hear the slight crackling made by the
two fires as they burned, and the light fell faintly
across the multitude of dark, eager faces. Not
less than five hundred people were in the Long House,
and here was the red man at his best, the first of
the wild, not the second or third of the civilized,
a drop of whose blood in his veins brings to the white
man now a sense of pride, and not of shame, as it does
when that blood belongs to some other races.
The effect upon Henry was singular.
He almost forgot that he was a foe among them on
a mission. For the moment he shared in their
feelings, and he waited with eagerness for whatever
might come.
Thayendanegea, the Mohawk, stood up
in his place among the great chiefs. The role
he was about to assume belonged to Atotarho, the Onondaga,
but the old Onondaga assigned it for the occasion
to Thayendanegea, and there was no objection.
Thayendanegea was an educated man, be had been in
England, he was a member of a Christian church, and
be had translated a part of the Bible from English
into his own tongue, but now he was all a Mohawk, a
son of the forest.
He spoke to the listening crowd of
the glories of the Six Nations, how Hah-gweh-di-yu
(The Spirit of Good) had inspired Hiawatha to form
the Great Confederacy of the Five Nations, afterwards
the Six; how they had held their hunting grounds for
nearly two centuries against both English and French;
and how they would hold them against the Americans.
He stopped at moments, and deep murmurs of approval
went through the Long House. The eyes of both
men and women flashed as the orator spoke of their
glory and greatness. Timmendiquas, in a place
of honor, nodded approval. If he could he would
form such another league in the west.
The air in the Long House, breathed
by so many, became heated. It seemed to have
in it a touch of fire. The orator’s words
burned. Swift and deep impressions were left
upon the excited brain. The tall figure of the
Mohawk towered, gigantic, in the half light, and the
spell that he threw over all was complete.
He spoke about half an hour, but when
he stopped he did not sit down. Henry knew by
the deep breath that ran through the Long House that
something more was coming from Thayendanegea.
Suddenly the red chief began to sing in a deep, vibrant
voice, and this was the song that he sung:
This was the roll of you,
All hail! All hail! All hail!
You that joined in the work,
All hail! All hail! All hail!
You that finished the task,
All hail! All hail! All hail!
The Great League,
All hail! All hail! All hail!
There was the same incessant repetition
of “Haih haih!” that Henry had noticed
in the chant at the edge of the woods, but it seemed
to give a cumulative effect, like the roll of thunder,
and at every slight pause that deep breath of approval
ran through the crowd in the Long House. The
effect of the song was indescribable. Fire ran
in the veins of all, men, women, and children.
The great pulses in their throats leaped up.
They were the mighty nation, the ever-victorious,
the League of the Ho-de-no-sau-nee, that had held
at bay both the French and the English since first
a white man was seen in the land, and that would keep
back the Americans now.
Henry glanced at Timmendiquas.
The nostrils of the great White Lightning were twitching.
The song reached to the very roots of his being,
and aroused all his powers. Like Thayendanegea,
he was a statesman, and he saw that the Americans
were far more formidable to his race than English
or French had ever been. The Americans were
upon the ground, and incessantly pressed upon the
red man, eye to eye. Only powerful leagues like
those of the Iroquois could withstand them.
Thayendanegea sat down, and then there
was another silence, a period lasting about two minutes.
These silences seemed to be a necessary part of all
Iroquois rites. When it closed two young warriors
stretched an elm bark rope across the room from east
to west and near the ceiling, but between the high
chiefs and the minor chiefs. Then they hung
dressed skins all along it, until the two grades of
chiefs were hidden from the view of each other.
This was the sign of mourning, and was followed by
a silence. The fires in the Long House had died
down somewhat, and little was to be seen but the eyes
and general outline of the people. Then a slender
man of middle years, the best singer in all the Iroquois
nation, arose and sang:
To the great chiefs bring we greeting,
All hail! All hail! All hail!
To the dead chiefs, kindred greeting,
All hail! All hail! All hail!
To the strong men ’round him greeting,
All hail! All hail! All hail!
To the mourning women greeting,
All hail! All hail! All hail!
There our grandsires’ words repeating,
All hail! All hail! All hail!
Graciously, Oh, grandsires, hear,
All hail! All hail! All hail!
The singing voice was sweet, penetrating,
and thrilling, and the song was sad. At the
pauses deep murmurs of sorrow ran through the crowd
in the Long House. Grief for the dead held them
all. When he finished, Satekariwate, the Mohawk,
holding in his hands three belts of wampum, uttered
a long historical chant telling of their glorious
deeds, to which they listened patiently. The
chant over, he handed the belts to an attendant, who
took them to Thayendanegea, who held them for a few
moments and looked at them gravely.
One of the wampum belts was black,
the sign of mourning; another was purple, the sign
of war; and the third was white, the sign of peace.
They were beautiful pieces of workmanship, very old.
When Hiawatha left the Onondagas and
fled to the Mohawks he crossed a lake supposed to
be the Oneida. While paddling along he noticed
that man tiny black, purple, and white shells clung
to his paddle. Reaching the shore he found such
shells in long rows upon the beach, and it occurred
to him to use them for the depiction of thought according
to color. He strung them on threads of elm bark,
and afterward, when the great league was formed, the
shells were made to represent five clasped hands.
For four hundred years the wampum belts have been
sacred among the Iroquois.
Now Thayendanegea gave the wampum
belts back to the attendant, who returned them to
Satekariwate, the Mohawk. There was a silence
once more, and then the chosen singer began the Consoling
Song again, but now he did not sing it alone.
Two hundred male voices joined him, and the time
became faster. Its tone changed from mourning
and sorrow to exultation and menace. Everyone
thought of war, the tomahawk, and victory. The
song sung as it was now became a genuine battle song,
rousing and thrilling. The Long House trembled
with the mighty chorus, and its volume poured forth
into the encircling dark woods.
All the time the song was going on,
Satekariwate, the Mohawk, stood holding the belts
in his hand, but when it was over he gave them to
an attendant, who carried them to another head chief.
Thayendanegea now went to the center of the room
and, standing between the two fires, asked who were
the candidates for the places of the dead chiefs.
The dead chiefs were three, and three
tall men, already chosen among their own tribes, came
forward to succeed them. Then a fourth came,
and Henry was startled. It was Timmendiquas,
who, as the bravest chief of the brave Wyandots, was
about to become, as a signal tribute, and as a great
sign of friendship, an adopted son and honorary chief
of the Mohawks, Keepers of the Western Gate, and most
warlike of all the Iroquois tribes.
As Timmendiquas stood before Thayendanegea,
a murmur of approval deeper than any that had gone
before ran through all the crowd in the Long House,
and it was deepest on the women’s benches, where
sat many matrons of the Iroquois, some of whom were
chiefs-a woman could be a chief among the Iroquois.
The candidates were adjudged acceptable
by the other chiefs, and Thayendanegea addressed them
on their duties, while they listened in grave silence.
With his address the sacred part of the rite was
concluded. Nothing remained now but the great
banquet outside — although that was much —
and they poured forth to it joyously, Thayendanegea,
the Mohawk, and Timmendiquas, the Wyandot, walking
side by side, the finest two red chiefs on all the
American continent.