placid smile exhibits their impotence upon a spirit whose endurance is the prelude to his national canonization. One sigh, one struggle, would exclude him for ever from the tribe's respect and the hero's paradise; and his captivity, affords him the most signal and most durable triumph over his enemies. A very fine instance of this heroism has been handed down in the person of the Virginian chief, Opechauchanough. Bold, artful, and insinuating; master alike of arms and intrigue, he kept the early settlers of Virginia in a state of continual alarm; and when so decrepid from age as to be unable to walk, he, from the litter in which he was borne, directed the onset and retreat of his warriors in the dreadful massacre of 1641, which almost exterminated the colony. At last, worn out, exhausted, and almost blind, he was taken prisoner, and carried to James Town, where he was mortally wounded by the less civilized savage who was appointed to guard him. To the last moment his courage remained unbroken. Like the staff of the prophet it was his support alike in prosperity and adversity, in sickness and in death. His last words, indeed, proved this remarkably. Just as he was expiring, he heard an unusual bustle in his prison, and faintly opening his eyes, he discovered a number of persons crowding around for the purpose of gratifying a cruel and unseasonable curiosity. The dying chieftain's sensibility was indignantly excited. Without seeming to notice the intruders, he raised himself from his mat, and, with a voice and air of authority, desired that the governor should instantly be sent for; when he arrived, the Indian, looking at him steadfastly and scornfully, exclaimed, "Had it been my lot to have captured Sir William Berkeley, I should have disdained to have thus exposed him to my people." The sudden burst of passion was too much for his debilitated frame. Nature yielded, and he fell back in death before indignation's hectic had faded from his cheek. There is sometimes to be found amongst the fragments of this people a spirit of policy, which, perhaps, more civilized nations might imitate without disadvantage. The following appeal from a Cherokee chief to some of his countrymen who were about to join our troops against the colonists, contains some precepts, which, by a little change of words, might be rendered applicable to every people upon earth, but more par ticularly to those whose internal dissensions have sometimes induced the madness of calling in a foreign arbitrament :· My countrymen! God made us all, both red and white Americans, to live on the same land. Since he has said that we should live together, why do we join the people who come from the salt waters! We can do without them, we and our children. When the Great Spirit gave us a country, he gave it to be a residence for our lives, and a resting-place for our bones; and this he says to all to whom he has given a country. The cold water which he gave us still runs: so are the paths for the government of good men still here. Foolish as I am, my little understanding tells me, when I see these things, that they are God's works. When the white people first came amongst us, the Great Spirit had forbid our mixture:-we did mix-and, to avoid the pain of separating the husband from the wife, the father from his children, and the brother from his sister, he has continued the course of the mixed blood in our veins. We must remain so, because he directs it so. From this mixture of our blood, and acccession of our strength, Washington, the white man's brother, has gained a name in warfare a name far above the names of white men. But you all know how slow was his progress when opposed by the united arm of our fathers; and you all know how rapid it has been since whiskey and calico have divided us. Remember, then, that we are one people." There are countries in Europe, and not far from England, to whom both in ancient and modern times the Cherokee's advice might have spared some affliction.-Our missionaries have discovered, that the talents of some of the tribes in the arts of peace have been quite commensurate with their warlike capabilities; and they have skilfully and successfully enlisted their co-operation. Even in the propogation of the gospel, and the diffusion of Christian knowledge, they have often found them eminently useful. Enthusiasm is the natural characteristic of a savage life; the chase, the scenery, the power of wandering wherever fancy leads, and the preeminence which superiority either in mind or person never fails to ensure, awaken the savage into constant exertion, and he becomes, in some degree, more or less excited and elevated, as it were, by the romance of nature. This disposition has particularly evinced itself wherever conversion has been successful; and the dreams and trances which monks invented in the corruptions of the church, for the deception of credulity, the Indian zealots have either really experienced in their moments of excitement, or, what in its effect is much the same, they have conscientiously worked themselves into a belief of their existence. The most remarkable of those personages was a chief of the Alleganies, whose miraculous conversion and restless piety procured for him the appellation of " the Indian Prophet." During the first fifty years of his life he was remarkable for nothing except his stupidity and intoxication. In his fiftieth year, however, while in the act of lighting his pipe, he suddenly fell back upon his bunk, upon which he was then sitting, and continued in a state of insensibility for several hours; his family supposing him dead, had made preparations for laying him out, according to their barbarous practice, the tribe was invited to the funeral festivity, and they were in the very act of removing him when he revived. His first words were, "Don't be alarmed. I have seen heaven. Call the nation together, that I may tell them what has appeared to me." The nation were accordingly summoned round the chieftain, when with much solemnity he informed them that he had seen four beautiful young men, who had been sent from heaven by the Great Spirit, and who thus addressed him: "The Great Spirit is angry with you, and with all the red men; and unless you refrain from drunkenness, lying, and stealing, and turn yourselves to him, you shall never enter the beautful place which we will now shew you." He stated that he was then conducted by these young men to the gate of heaven, which was opened, but he was not allowed to enter; that it was more beautful than any thing which he could describe or they conceive; that the inhabitants appeared to be in a state of the most perfect happiness; that he was suffered to remain there three or four hours, and was then reconducted by the same young men, who, on taking their leave, promised they would visit him early, and commanded him to inform all other Indians of what he had seen and heard. immediately visited the different tribes in the western states, with the exception of the Oneidas. They all put the most implicit faith in what he told them, and revered him as a prophet. The consequences were most providential; his tribe, from being filthy, lazy, and drunken, became a cleanly, industrious, sober, and happy people. The prophet asserted that he annually received those heavenly visitations, immediately after each of which he visited the tribes in person; and it was during one of those annual pilgrimages that he died. He was called "the Prophet of Peace," in contradistinction to a brother of their ferocious chief Tecumseh, who was design He ated as "the Prophet of War." Many of the Indians, however, consider the zeal of the missionaries as misplaced, and complain loudly on the subject.-On the approach of the late war between Great Britain and the United States, a formal "talk" was held before American commissioners, when Hauanossa, their orator, thus announced the determination of the tribes, and took this no impolitic opportunity to state their grievance on that subject. "Brothers, we return thanks to the Great Spirit for the many favours he has bestowed on us, and we hope he will continue to cherish his children with his blessings. We rejoice that he has permitted us to meet you here to-day in friendship and in peace. We wish you to consider well what we are going to say to you; for we speak from the very bottom of our hearts, and not from the ends of our tongues, and we wish you to do the same. Brothers, we have been told that the king over the great waters has greatly injured our white brethren of the great council fires, and that war will soon take place. We have heard also that the supporters of this king are persuading our red brethren to join him, and to raise the tomahawk against the white brethren amongst whom we reside. We are told that he is endeavouring to win them by presents and by promises. Brothers, we do solemnly assure you that the agents of this king shall never succeed in destroying our affections for you. We wish to live retired. Our highest ambition is to cultivate our corn-fields in peace. War is our detestation. Our fathers have told us its dreadful evils. We well know that nothing is to be gained by spilling the blood of our fellow creatures, and our children are as dear to us as your children are to you. We value also our property, and by war be know we should lose it. Already, we are told, have the forces of the Prophet* made an attack on our white bre'thren towards the setting-sun. From our hearts we declare to you we shall not espouse his cause. We will never join his forces, or wield the tomahawk at the bidding of the king who lives beyond the waters. Brothers, we are not the terrible beings you have conceived us to be. "We do not thirst for blood. We are men, and are clothed in the feel'ings of humanity. Let your women and your children sleep in quiet, and tell the white men that our wish is peace. Brothers, we have a complaint to make to you. Certain white men often come amongst us for the purpose of inducing us to kneel before their altars. They come to shake the faith which the Great Spirit has breathed into our souls, which is our greatest comfort and worldly consolation. Now, our religion is as dear to us as the religion of the white man is to him. Why then should they obstinately come amongst us. They tend not only to destroy our hopes of a future life, but throw us into religious parties and confusion. We formerly stated this to the great father of the white people. We were admitted into his presence. We were pleased to find that he condemned the practice. He knew as well as we did that our red brethren had never prospered in their conversion to the *The brother of Tecumseh, before referred to.. religious faith of the white people. Brothers, we are happy to inform you that the resolution we adopted some years ago, to abolish the use of strong liquors, has not yet been violated. We wish we could say the same thing of our red brethren of the Buffaloe village. We are sorry to say that a barrel of whiskey is the god they worship. Bro thers, we have another complaint to make to you: our white brethren often come and carry away our timber; and last year they cut down more than they did in all the years preceding! Once we owned the whole country-the great forest was our own:-the whites have taken part of it the remainder is still ours; and is not property as dear to the red man and the red man's child as it is to white men? Brothers, make your laws known to them, and punish them. Make this talk known to all the white men, wherever they may be; and tell them, to live in harmony and peace is the wish of the heart and the tribe of Hauanossa." Infinitely, however, the most simple, soul-stirring, energetic speech, in the annals of Indian eloquence, is the wellknown speech of Logan, the celebrated Shawanee chieftain.* Nothing more reconciles the spirits of savage life to its close than the probability of a splendid funeral. For this they will endure almost any privation; and even at this day, in the remote parts of Ireland, the scanty savings of laborious poverty are not unfrequently left by will to provide the wretched peasant the posthumous reputation of a merry wake and well-attended burial. The opinion of the North American Indians upon this subject is strikingly exemplified by the following oration, delivered by a chief of the Teton tribe, over the body of "Black Buffaloe," the flower of the warriors, who had died, at a conference held with the Ame ricans at Portage de Sioux. It is pathetic in the extreme, and glows with a manly though mournful energy. "Warriors, do not grieve; misfortunes will happen to the best of men. Death will come, and always comes out of season. It is the command of the Great Spirit, and all nations and people must obey. What is passed and cannot be prevented should not be grieved for. Be not discouraged then, that in visiting your father here, you have lost your chief. Misfortunes are not peculiar to our path-they grow every where. What a misfortune for me that I did not die to-day instead of him who lies before us. My trifling loss would have been doubly repaid by the glories of my burial. They would have wiped away all tears. Instead of being covered with the cloud of sorrow, my warriors would have felt the sunshine of joy in their hearts. Hereafter when I die, instead of a noble grave and a grand procession, Vide the Notes to " Gertrude of Wyoming." |