| [AUTHOR’S
NOTE.—This is the story of my mother’s life,
every incident of which she related to me herself. I
have neither exaggerated nor curtailed a single circumstance
in relating this story. I have supplied nothing through
imagination, nor have I heightened the coloring of her
unusual experiences. Had I done so I could not possibly
feel as sure of her approval as I now do, for she is
as near me to-day as she was before she left me to join
her husband, my beloved father, whose feet have long
since wandered to the “Happy Hunting Grounds”
of my dear Red Ancestors.]
PART
I.
IT
was a very lonely little girl that stood on the deck
of a huge sailing vessel while the shores of England
slipped down into the horizon and the great, grey Atlantic
yawned desolately westward. She was leaving so much
behind her, taking so little with her, for the child
was grave and old even at the age of eight, and realized
[Page 25] that this day meant the updragging
of all the tiny roots that clung to the home soil of
the older land. Her father was taking his wife and family,
his household goods, his fortune and his future to America,
which, in the days of 1829, was indeed a venturesome
step, for America was regarded as remote as the North
Pole, and good-byes were, alas! very real good-byes,
when travellers set sail for the New World in those
times before steam and telegraph brought the two continents
hand almost touching hand.
So little Lydia Bestman stood
drearily watching with sorrow-filled eyes the England
of her babyhood fade slowly into the distance—eyes
that were fated never to see again the royal old land
of her birth. Already the deepest grief that life could
hold had touched her young heart. She had lost her own
gentle, London-bred mother when she was but two years
old. Her father had married again, and on her sixth
birthday little Lydia, the youngest of a large family,
had been sent away to boarding-school with an elder
sister, and her home knew her no more. She was taken
from school to the sailing ship; little stepbrothers
and sisters had arrived and she was no longer the baby.
Years afterwards she told her own little children that
her one vivid recollection of England was the exquisite
music of the church chimes as the ship weighed anchor
in Bristol harbour—chimes that [Page 26]
were ringing for evensong from the towers of the quaint
old English churches. Thirteen weeks later that sailing
vessel entered New York harbor, and life in the New
World began.
Like most transplanted Englishmen,
Mr. Bestman cut himself completely off from the land
of his fathers; his interests and his friends henceforth
were all in the country of his adoption, and he chose
Ohio as a site for his new home. He was a man of vast
peculiarities, prejudices and extreme ideas—a
man of contradictions so glaring that even his own children
never understood him. He was a very narrow religionist,
of the type that say many prayers and quote much Scripture,
but he beat his children—both girls and boys—so
severely that outsiders were at times compelled to interfere.
For years these unfortunate children carried the scars
left on their backs by the thongs of cat-o’-nine-tails
when he punished them for some slight misdemeanor. They
were all terrified at him, all obeyed him like soldiers,
but none escaped his severity. The two elder ones, a
boy and a girl, had married before they left England.
The next girl married in Ohio, and the boys drifted
away, glad to escape from a parental tyranny that made
home anything but a desirable abiding-place. Finally
but two remained of the first family—Lydia and
her sister Elizabeth, a most lovable girl of seventeen,
whose beauty of character and self-sacrificing [Page
27] heart made the one bright memory that remained
with these scattered fledglings throughout their entire
lives.
The lady who occupied the undesirable
position of stepmother to these unfortunate children
was of the very cold and chilling type of Englishwoman,
more frequently met with two generations ago than in
this age. She simply let her husband’s first family
alone. She took no interest in them, neglected them
absolutely, but in her neglect was far kinder and more
humane than their own father. Yet she saw that all the
money, all the pretty clothes, all the dainties, went
to her own children.
Perhaps the reader will think
these unpleasant characteristics of a harsh father and
a self-centred stepmother might better be omitted from
this narrative, particularly as death claimed these
two many years ago; but in the light of after events,
it is necessary to reveal what the home environment
of these children had been, how little of companionship
or kindness or spoken love had entered their baby lives.
The absence of mother kisses, of father comradeship,
of endeavor to understand them individually, to probe
their separate and various dispositions—things
so essential to the development of all that is best
in a child—went far towards governing their later
actions in life. It drove the unselfish sweet-hearted
Elizabeth to a loveless marriage; [Page 28]
it flung poor, little love-hungry Lydia into alien but,
fortunately, loyal and noble arms. Outsiders said, “What
strange marriages!” But Lydia, at least, married
where the first real kindness she had ever known called
to her, and not one day of regret for that marriage
ever entered into her life.
It came about so strangely,
so inevitably, from such a tiny source, that it is almost
incredible.
One day the stepmother, contrary
to her usual custom, went into the kitchen and baked
a number of little cakelets, probably what we would
call cookies. For what sinister reason no one could
divine, but she counted these cakes as she took them
from the baking-pans and placed them in the pantry.
There were forty-nine, all told. That evening she counted
them again; there were forty-eight. Then she complained
to her husband that one of the children had evidently
stolen a cake. (In her mind the two negro servants employed
in the house did not merit the suspicion.) Mr. Bestman
inquired which child was fond of the cakes. Mrs. Bestman
replied that she did not know, unless it was Lydia,
who always liked them.
Lydia was called. Her father,
frowning, asked if she had taken the cake. The child
said no.
“You are not telling the
truth,” Mr. Bestman shouted, as the poor little
downtrodden girl [Page 29] stood half
terrified, consequently half guilty-mannered, before
him.
“But I am truthful,”
she said. “I know nothing of the cake.”
“You are not truthful.
You stole it—you know you did. You shall be punished
for this falsehood,” he stormed, and reached for
the cat-o’-nine-tails.
The child was beaten brutally
and sent to her room until she could tell the truth.
When she was released she still held that she had not
taken the cooky. Another beating followed, then a third,
when finally the stepmother interfered and said magnanimously:
“Don’t whip her
any more; she has been punished enough.” And once
during one of the beatings she protested, saying, “Don’t
strike the child on the head that way.”
But the iron had entered into
Lydia’s sister’s soul. The injustice of
it all drove gentle Elizabeth’s gentleness to
the winds.
“Liddy darling,”
she said, taking the thirteen-year-old girl-child into
her strong young arms, “I know truth
when I hear it. You never stole that cake.”
“I didn’t,”
sobbed the child, “I didn’t.”
“And you have been beaten
three times for it!” And the sweet young mouth
hardened into lines that were far too severe for a girl
of seventeen. Then: “Liddy, do you know that Mr.
Evans has asked me to marry him?” [Page
30]
“Mr. Evans!” exclaimed
the child. “Why, you can’t marry him,
’Liza! He’s ever so old, and he lives away
up in Canada, among the Indians.”
“That’s one of the
reasons that I should like to marry him,” said
Elizabeth, her young eyes starry with zeal. “I
want to work among the Indians, to help in Christianizing
them, to—oh! just to help.”
But Mr. Evans is so old,”
reiterated Lydia.
“Only thirty,” answered
the sister; “and he is such a splendid missionary,
dear.”
Love? No one talked of love
in that household except the contradictory father, who
continually talked of the love of God, but forgot to
reflect that love towards his own children.
Human love was considered a
non-essential in that family. Beautiful-spirited Elizabeth
had hardly heard the word. Even Mr. Evans had not made
use of it. He had selected her as his wife more for
her loveliness of character than from any personal attraction,
and she in her untaught womanhood married him, more
for the reason that she desired to be a laborer in Christ’s
vineyard than because of any wish to be the wife of
this one man.
But after the marriage ceremony,
this gentle girl looked boldly into her father’s
eyes and said:
“I am going to take Liddy
with me into the wilds of Canada.” [Page
31]
“Well, well, well!”
said her father, English-fashion. “If she wants
to go, she may.”
Go? The child fairly clung to
the fingers of this savior-sister—the poor little,
inexperienced, seventeen-year-old bride who was giving
up her youth and her girlhood to lay it all upon the
shrine of endeavor to bring the radiance of the Star
that shone above Bethlehem to reflect its glories upon
a forest-bred people of the North!
It was a long, strange journey
that the bride and her little sister took. A stage coach
conveyed them from their home in Ohio to Erie, Pennsylvania,
where they went aboard a sailing vessel bound for Buffalo.
There they crossed the Niagara River, and at Chippewa,
on the Canadian side, again took a stage coach for the
village of Brantford, sixty miles west.
At this place they remained
over night, and the following day Mr. Evans’ own
conveyance arrived to fetch them to the Indian Reserve,
ten miles to the southeast.
In after years little Lydia
used to tell that during that entire drive she thought
she was going through an English avenue leading to some
great estate, for the trees crowded up close to the
roadway on either side, giant forest trees—gnarled
oaks, singing firs, jaunty maples, graceful elms—all
stretching their branches overhead. But the “avenue”
seemed endless. “When do we come to the house?”
she asked, innocently. “This lane is very long.”
[Page 32]
But it was three hours, over
a rough corduroy road, before the little white frame
parsonage lifted its roof through the forest, its broad
verhandahs and green outside shutters welcoming the
travellers with an atmosphere of home at last.
As the horses drew up before
the porch the great front door was noiselessly opened
and a lad of seventeen, lithe, clean-limbed, erect,
copper-colored, ran swiftly down the steps, lifted his
hat, smiled, and assisted the ladies to alight. The
boy was Indian to the finger-tips, with that peculiar
native polish and courtesy, that absolute ease of manner
and direction of glance, possessed only by the old-fashioned
type of red man of this continent. The missionary introduced
him as “My young friend, the church interpreter,
Mr. George Mansion, who is one of our household.”
(Mansion, or “Grand Mansion,” is the English
meaning of this young Mohawk’s native name.)
The entire personality of the
missionary seemed to undergo a change as his eyes rested
on this youth. His hitherto rather stilted manner relaxed,
his eyes softened and glowed, he invited confidence
rather than repelled it; truly his heart was bound up
with these forest people; he fairly exhaled love for
them with every breath. He was a man of marked shyness,
and these silent Indians made him forget this peculiarity
of which he was sorrowfully conscious. It was probably
this shyness that caused him to open [Page 33]
the door and turn to his young wife with the ill-selected
remark: “Welcome home, madam.”
Madam! The little bride
was chilled to the heart with the austere word. She
hurried within, followed by her wondering child-sister,
as soon as possible sought her room, then gave way to
a storm of tears.
“Don’t mind me,
Liddy,” she sobbed. “There’s nothing
wrong; we’ll be happy enough here, only I think
I looked for a little—petting.”
With a wisdom beyond her years,
Lydia did not reply, but went to the window and gazed
absently at the tiny patch of flowers beyond the door—the
two lilac trees in full blossom, the thread of glistening
river, and behind it all, the northern wilderness. Just
below the window stood the missionary and the Indian
boy talking eagerly.
“Isn’t George Mansion
splendid!” said the child.
“You must call him Mr.
Mansion; be very careful about the Mister,
Liddy dear,” said her sister, rising and drying
her eyes bravely. “I have always heard that the
Indians treat one just as they are treated by one. Respect
Mr. Mansion, treat him as you would treat a city gentleman.
Be sure he will gauge his deportment by ours. Yes, dear,
he is splendid. I like him already.”
“Yes, ’Liza, so
do I, and he is a gentleman. He looks it and
acts it. I believe he thinks gentlemanly things.”
[Page 34]
Elizabeth laughed. “You
dear little soul!” she said. “I know what
you mean, and I agree with you.”
That laugh was all that Lydia
wanted to hear in this world, and presently the two
sisters, with arms entwined, descended the stairway
and joined in the conversation between Mr. Evans and
young George Mansion.
“Mrs. Evans,” said
the boy, addressing her directly for the first time,
“I hoped you were fond of game. Yesterday I hunted;
it was partridge I got, and one fine deer. Will you
offer me the compliment of having some for dinner to-night?”
His voice was low and very distinct,
his accent and his expressions very marked as a foreigner
to the tongue, but his English was perfect.
“Indeed I shall, Mr. Mansion,”
smiled the girl-bride, “but I’m afraid that
I don’t know how to cook it.”
“We have an excellent
cook,” said Mr. Evans. “She has been with
George and me ever since I came here. George is a splendid
shot, and keeps her busy getting us game suppers.”
Meanwhile Lydia had been observing
the boy. She had never seen an Indian, consequently
was trying to reform her ideas regarding them. She had
not expected to see anything like this self-poised,
scrupulously-dressed, fine-featured, dark stripling.
She thought all Indians wore savage-looking clothes,
had fierce eyes and stern, set [Page 35]
mouths. This boy’s eyes were narrow and shrewd,
but warm and kindly, his lips were like a Cupid’s
bow, his hands were narrower, smaller, than her own,
but the firmness of those slim fingers, the power in
those small palms, as he had helped her from the carriage,
remained with her through all the years to come.
That evening at supper she noted
his table deportment; it was correct in every detail.
He ate leisurely, silently, gracefully; his knife and
fork never clattered, his elbows never were in evidence,
he made use of the right plates, spoons, forks, knives;
he bore an ease, an unconsciousness of manner, that
amazed her. The missionary himself was a stiff man,
and his very shyness made him angular. Against such
a setting young Mansion gleamed like a brown gem.
*
*
* *
*
*
For
seven years life rolled slowly by. At times Lydia went
to visit her two other married sisters, sometimes she
remained for weeks with a married brother, and at rare
intervals made brief trips to her father’s house;
but she never received a penny from her strange parent,
and knew of but one home which was worthy the name.
That was in the Canadian wilderness where the Indian
Mission held out its arms to her, and the beloved sister
made her more welcome than words could imply. Four pretty
[Page 36] children had come to grace
this forest household, where young George Mansion, still
the veriest right hand of the missionary, had grown
into a magnificent type of Mohawk manhood. These years
had brought him much, and he had accomplished far more
than idle chance could ever throw in his way. He had
saved his salary that he earned as interpreter in the
church, and had purchased some desirable property, a
beautiful estate of two hundred acres, upon which he
some day hoped to build a home. He had mastered six
Indian languages, which, with his knowledge of English
and his wonderful fluency in his own tribal Mohawk,
gave him command of eight tongues, an advantage which
soon brought him the position of Government interpreter
in the Council of the great “Six Nations,”
composing the Iroquois race. Added to this, through
the death of an uncle he came into the younger title
of his family, which boasted blood of two noble lines.
His father,
speaker of the Council, held the elder title, but that
did not lessen the importance of young George’s
title of chief.
Lydia
never forgot the first time she saw him robed in the
full costume of his office. Hitherto she had regarded
him through all her comings and goings as her playmate,
friend and boon companion; he had been to her something
that had never before entered her life—he had
brought warmth, kindness, fellowship and a peculiar
[Page 37] confidential humanity that
had been entirely lacking in the chill English home
of her childhood. But this day, as he stood beside his
veteran father, ready to take his place among the chiefs
of the Grand Council, she saw revealed another phase
of his life and character; she saw that he was destined
to be a man among men, and for the first time she realized
that her boy companion had gone a little beyond her,
perhaps a little above her. They were a strange pair
as they stood somewhat apart, unconscious of the picture
they made. She, a gentle-born, fair English girl of
twenty, her simple blue muslin frock vying with her
eyes in color. He, tawny skinned, lithe, straight as
an arrow, the royal blood of generations of chiefs and
warriors pulsing through his arteries, his clinging
buckskin tunic and leggings fringed and embroidered
with countless quills, and endless stitches of colored
moosehair. From his small, neat moccasins to his jet
black hair tipped with an eagle plume he was every inch
a man, a gentleman, a warrior.
But he was approaching her with
the same ease with which he wore his ordinary “white”
clothes—garments, whether buckskin or broadcloth,
seemed to make but slight impression on him.
“Miss Bestman,”
he said, “I should like you to meet my mother
and father. They are here, [Page 38]
and are old friends of your sister and Mr. Evans. My
mother does not speak the English, but she knows you
are my friend.”
And presently Lydia found herself
shaking hands with the elder chief, speaker of the council,
who spoke English rather well, and with a little dark
woman folded within a “broadcloth” and wearing
the leggings, moccasins and short dress of her people.
A curious feeling of shyness overcame the girl as her
hand met that of George Mansion’s mother, who
herself was the most retiring, most thoroughly old-fashioned
woman of her tribe. But Lydia felt that she was in the
presence of one whom the young chief held far and away
as above himself, as above her, as the best and greatest
woman of his world; his very manner revealed it, and
Lydia honored him within her heart at that moment more
than she had ever done before.
But Chief George Mansion’s
mother, small and silent through long habit and custom,
had acquired a certain masterful dignity of her own,
for within her slender brown fingers she held a power
that no man of her nation could wrest from her. She
was “Chief Matron” of her entire blood relations,
and commanded the enviable position of being the one
and only person, man or woman, who could appoint a chief
to fill the vacancy of one of the great Mohawk law-makers
whose seat in Council had been left vacant when [Page
39] the voice of the Great Spirit called him
to the happy hunting grounds. Lydia had heard of this
national honor which was the right and title of this
frail little moccasined Indian woman with whom she was
shaking hands, and the thought flashed rapidly through
her girlish mind: “Suppose some one lady
in England had the marvellous power of appointing who
the member should be in the British House of Lords or
Commons. Wouldn’t Great Britain honor
and tremble before her?”
And here was Chief George Mansion’s
silent, unpretentious little mother possessing all this
power among her people, and she, Lydia Bestman, was
shaking hands with her! It seemed very marvellous.
But that night the power of
this same slender Indian mother was brought vividly
before her when, unintentionally, she overheard young
George say to the missionary:
“I almost lost my new
title to-day, after you and the ladies had left the
Council.”
“Why, George boy!”
exclaimed Mr. Evans. “What have you done?”
“Nothing, it seems, except
to be successful. The Council objected to my holding
the title of chief and having a chief’s vote in
the affairs of the people, and at the same time being
Government interpreter. They said it would give me too
much power to retain both positions. I [Page
40] must give up one—my title or my Government
position.”
“What did you do?”
demanded Mr. Evans, eagerly.
“Nothing, again,”
smiled the young chief. “But my mother did something.
She took the floor of the Council, and spoke for forty
minutes. She said I must hold the position of chief
which she had made for me, as well as of interpreter
which I had made for myself; that if the Council objected,
she would forever annul the chief’s title in her
own family; she would never appoint one in my place,
and that we proud, arrogant Mohawks would then have
only eight representatives in Council—only be
on a level with, as she expressed it, ‘those dogs
of Senecas.’ Then she clutched her broadcloth
about her, turned her back on us all, and left the Council.”
“What did the Council
do?” gasped Mr. Evans.
“Accepted me as chief
and interpreter,” replied the young man, smiling.
“There was nothing else to do.”
“Oh, you royal woman!
You loyal, loyal mother!” cried Lydia to herself.
“How I love you for it!”
Then she crept away just as
Mr. Evans had sprung forward with both hands extended
towards the young chief, his eyes beaming with almost
fatherly delight. [Page 41]
Unconsciously to herself, the
English girl’s interest in the young chief had
grown rapidly year after year. She was also unconscious
of his aim at constant companionship with herself. His
devotion to her sister, whose delicate health alarmed
them all, more and more, as time went on, was only another
royal road to Lydia’s heart. Elizabeth was becoming
frail, shadowy, her appetite was fitful, her eyes larger
and more wistful, her fingers smaller and weaker. No
one seemed to realize the insidious oncreepings of “the
white man’s disease,” consumption, that
was paling Elizabeth’s fine English skin, heightening
her glorious English color, sapping her delicate English
veins. Only young George would tell himself over and
over: “Mrs. Evans is going away from us some day,
and Lydia will be left with no one in the world but
me—no one but me to understand—or to—care.”
So he scoured the forest for
dainties, wild fruits, game, flowers, to tempt the appetite
and the eye of the fading wife of the man who had taught
him all the English and the white man’s etiquette
that he had ever mastered. Night after night he would
return from day-long hunting trips, his game-bag filled
with delicate quail, rare woodcock, snowy-breasted partridge,
and when the illusive appetite of the sick woman could
be coaxed to partake of a morsel, he felt repaid for
miles of tramping through forest trails, for hours of
search and skill. [Page 42]
PART
II.
PERHAPS
it was this grey shadow stealing on the forest mission,
the thought of the day when that beautiful mothering
sister would leave his little friend Lydia alone with
a bereft man and four small children, or perhaps it
was a yet more personal note in his life that brought
George Mansion to the realization of what this girl
had grown to be to him.
Indian-wise,
his parents had arranged a suitable marriage for him,
selecting a girl of his own tribe, of the correct clan
to mate with his own, so that the line of blood heritage
would be intact, and the sons of the next generation
would be of the “Blood Royal,” qualified
by rightful lineage to inherit the title of chief.
This Mohawk girl was attractive,
young, and had a partial English education. Her parents
were fairly prosperous, owners of many acres, and much
forest and timber country. The arrangement was regarded
as an ideal one—the young people as perfectly
and diplomatically mated as it was possible to be; but
when his parents approached the young chief with the
proposition, he met it with instant refusal.
“My father, my mother,”
he begged, “I ask you to forgive me this one disobedience.
I ask you to forgive that I have, amid my fight and
struggle [Page 43] for English education,
forgotten a single custom of my people. I have tried
to honor all the ancient rules and usages of my forefathers,
but I forgot this one thing, and I cannot, cannot do
it! My wife I must choose for myself.”
“You will marry—whom,
then?” asked the old chief.
“I have given no thought
to it—yet,” he faltered.
“Yes,” said his
mother, urged by the knowing heart of a woman, “yes,
George, you have thought of it.”
“Only this hour,”
he answered, looking directly into his mother’s
eyes. “Only now that I see you want me to give
my life to someone else. But my life belongs to the
white girl, Mrs. Evans’ sister, if she will take
it. I shall offer it to her to-morrow—to-day.”
His mother’s face took
on the shadow of age. “You would marry a white
girl?” she exclaimed, incredulously.
“Yes,” came the
reply, briefly, decidedly.
“But your children, your
sons and hers—they could never hold the title,
never be chief,” she said, rising to her feet.
He winced. “I know it.
I had not thought of it before—but I know it.
Still, I would marry her.”
“But there would be no
more chiefs of the Grand Mansion name,” cut in
his father. “The [Page 44] title
would go to your aunt’s sons. She is a Grand Mansion
no longer; she, being married, is merely a Straight-Shot,
her husband’s name. The Straight-Shots never had
noble blood, never wore a title. Shall our family title
go to a Straight-Shot?” and the elder
chief mouthed the name contemptuously.
Again the boy winced. The hurt
of it all was sinking in—he hated the Straight-Shots,
he loved his own blood and bone. With lightning rapidity
he weighed it all mentally, then spoke: “Perhaps
the white girl will not marry me,” he said slowly,
and the thought of it drove the dark red from his cheeks,
drove his finger-nails into his palms.
“Then, then you will marry
Dawendine, our choice?” cried his mother, hopefully.
“I shall marry no one
but the white girl,” he answered, with set lips.
“If she will not marry me, I shall never marry,
so the Straight-Shots will have our title, anyway.”
The door closed behind him.
It was as if it had shut forever between him and his
own.
But even with this threatened
calamity looming before her, the old Indian mother’s
hurt heart swelled with a certain pride in his wilful
actions.
“What bravery!”
she exclaimed. “What courage to hold to his own
choice! What a man!”
“Yes,” half bemoaned
his father, “he is a red [Page 45]
man through and through. He defies his whole nation
in his fearlessness, his lawlessness. Even I bow to
his bravery, his self-will, but that bravery is hurting
me here, here!” and the ancient chief laid his
hand above his heart.
There was no reply to be made
by the proud though pained mother. She folded her “broadcloth”
about her, filled her small carven pipe and sat for
many hours smoking silently, silently. Now and again
she shook her head mournfully, but her dark eyes would
flash at times with an emotion that contradicted her
dejected attitude. It was an emotion born of self-exaltation,
for had she not mothered a man?—albeit
that manhood was revealing itself in scorning the traditions
and customs of her ancient race.
And young George was returning
from his father’s house to the Mission with equally
mixed emotions. He knew he had dealt an almost unforgivable
blow to those beloved parents whom he had honored and
obeyed from his babyhood. Once he almost turned back.
Then a vision arose of a fair young English girl whose
unhappy childhood he had learned of years ago, a sweet,
homeless face of great beauty, lips that were made for
love they had never had, eyes that had already known
more of tears than they should have shed in a lifetime.
Suppose some other youth should win this girl away from
him? Already [Page 46] several of the
young men from the town drove over more frequently than
they had cause to. Only the week before he had found
her seated at the little old melodeon playing and singing
a duet with one of these gallants. He locked his teeth
together and strode rapidly through the forest path,
with the first full realization that she was the only
woman in all the world for him.
Some inevitable force seemed
to be driving him towards—circumstances seemed
to pave the way to—their ultimate union; even
now chance placed her in the path, literally, for as
he threaded his way uphill, across the open, and on
to the little log bridge which crossed the ravine immediately
behind the Mission, he saw her standing at the further
side, leaning upon the unpeeled sapling which formed
the bridge-guard. She was looking into the tiny stream
beneath. He made no sound as he approached. Generations
of moccasin-shod ancestors had made his own movements
swift and silent. Notwithstanding this, she turned,
and, with a bright girlish smile, she said:
“I knew you were coming,
Chief.
“Why? How?” he asked,
accepting his new title from her with a graceful indifference
almost beyond his four-and-twenty years.
“I can hardly say just
how—but—” she ended with only a smile.
For a full minute he caught [Page 47]
and held her glance. She seemed unable to look away,
but her grave, blue English eyes were neither shy nor
confident. They just seemed to answer his—then,
“Miss Bestman, will you
will be my wife?” he asked gently. She was neither
surprised nor dismayed, only stood silent, as if she
had forgotten the art of speech. “You knew I should
ask this some day,” he continued, rather rapidly.
“This is the day.”
“I did not really know—I
don’t know how I feel—” she began,
faltering.
“I did not know how I
felt, either, until an hour ago,” he explained.
“When my father and my mother told me they had
arranged my marriage with—”
“With whom?” she
almost demanded.
“A girl of my own people,”
he said, grudgingly. “A girl I honor and respect,
but—”
“But what?” she
said weakly, for the mention of his possible marriage
with another had flung her own feelings into her very
face.
“But unless you will be
my wife, I shall never marry.” He folded his arms
across his chest as he said it—the very action
expressed finality. For a second he stood erect, dark,
slender, lithe, immovable, then with sudden impulse
he held out one hand to her and spoke very quietly.
“I love you, Lydia. Will you come to me?”
“Yes,” she answered
clearly. “I will come.” [Page 48]
He caught her hands very tightly,
bending his head until his fine face rested against
her hair. She knew then that she had loved him through
all these years, and that come what might, she would
love him through all the years to be.
That night she told her frail
and fading sister, whom she found alone resting among
her pillows.
“’Liza dear, you
are crying,” she half sobbed in alarm, as the
great tears rolled slowly down the wan cheeks. “I
have made you unhappy, and you are ill, too. Oh, how
selfish I am! I did not think that perhaps it might
distress you.”
“Liddy, Liddy darling,
these are the only tears of joy that I have ever shed!”
cried Elizabeth. “Joy, joy, girlie! I have so
wished this to come before I left you, wished it for
years. I love George Mansion better than I ever loved
brother of mine. Of all the world I should have chosen
him for your husband. Oh! I am happy, happy, child,
and you will be happy with him, too.”
And that night Lydia Bestman
laid her down to rest, with her heart knowing the greatest
human love that had ever entered into her life.
Mr. Evans was almost beside
himself with joyousness when the young people rather
shyly confessed their engagement to him. He was deeply
attached to his wife’s young sister, and George
Mansion had been more to him than many [Page
49] a man’s son ever is. Seemingly cold
and undemonstrative, this reserved Scotch missionary
had given all his heart and life to the Indians, and
this one boy was the apple of his eye. Far-sighted and
cautious, he saw endless trouble shadowing the young
lovers—opposition to the marriage from both sides
of the house. He could already see Lydia’s family
smarting under the seeming disgrace of her marriage
to an Indian; he could see George’s family indignant
and hurt to the core at his marriage with a white girl;
he could see how impossible it would be for Lydia’s
people to ever understand the fierce resentment of the
Indian parents that the family title could never continue
under the family name. He could see how little George’s
people would ever understand the “white”
prejudice against them. But the good man kept his own
counsel, determining only that when the war did break
out, he would stand shoulder to shoulder with these
young lovers and be their friend and helper when even
their own blood and kin should cut them off.
*
*
* *
*
*
It
was two years before this shy and taciturn man fully
realized what the young chief and the English girl really
were to him, for affliction had laid a heavy hand on
his heart. First, his gentle and angel-natured wife
said her long, last good-night to him. Then an unrelenting
scourge of [Page 50] scarlet fever
swept three of his children into graves. Then the eldest,
just on the threshold of sweet young maidenhood, faded
like a flower, until she, too, said good-night and slept
beside her mother. Wifeless, childless, the stricken
missionary hugged to his heart these two—George
and Lydia—and they, who had labored weeks and
months, night and day, nursing and tending these loved
ones, who had helped fight and grapple with death five
times within two years, only to be driven back heartsore
and conquered by the enemy—these two put away
the thought of marriage for the time. Joy would have
been ill-fitting in that household. Youth was theirs,
health was theirs, and duty also was theirs—duty
to this man of God, whose house was their home, whose
hand had brought them together. So the marriage did
not take place at once, but the young chief began making
preparations on the estate he had purchased to build
a fitting home for this homeless girl who was giving
her life into his hands. After so many dark days, it
was a relief to get Mr. Evans interested in the plans
of the house George was to build, to select the proper
situation, to arrange for a barn, a carriage house,
a stable, for young Mansion had saved money and acquired
property of sufficient value to give his wife a home
that would vie with anything in the large border towns.
Like most Indians, he was recklessly extravagant, and
[Page 51] many a time the thrifty Scotch
blood of the missionary would urge more economy, less
expenditure. But the building went on; George determined
it was to be a “Grand Mansion.” His very
title demanded that he give his wife an abode worthy
of the ancestors who appropriated the name as their
own.
“When you both go from
me, even if it is only across the fields to the new
home, I shall be very much alone,” Mr. Evans had
once said. Then in an agony of fear that his solitary
life would shadow their happiness, he added quickly,
“But I have a very sweet and lovely niece who
writes me she will come to look after this desolated
home if I wish it, and perhaps her brother will come,
too, if I want him. I am afraid I shall want
him sorely, George. For though you will be but five
minutes walk from me, your face will not be at my breakfast
table to help me begin each day with a courage it has
always inspired. So I beg that you two will not delay
your marriage; give no thought to me. You are young
but once, and youth has wings of wonderful swiftness.
Margaret and Christopher shall come to me; but although
they are my own flesh and blood, they will never become
to me what you two have been, and always will be.”
Within their recollection, the
lovers had never heard the missionary make so long a
speech. They felt the earnestness of it, the truth of
it, [Page 52] and arranged to be married
when the golden days of August came. Lydia was to go
to her married sister, in the eastern part of Canada,
whose husband was a clergyman, and at whose home she
had spent many of her girlhood years. George was to
follow. They were to be quietly married and return by
sailing vessel up the lakes, then take the stage from
what is now the city of Toronto, arrive at the Indian
Reserve, and go direct to the handsome home the young
chief had erected for his English bride. So Lydia Bestman
set forth on her long journey from which she was to
return as the wife of the head chief of a powerful tribe
of Indians—a man revered, respected, looked up
to by a vast nation, a man of sterling worth, of considerable
wealth as riches were counted in those days, a man polished
in the usages and etiquette of her own people, who conducted
himself with faultless grace, who would have shone brilliantly
in any drawing-room (and who in after years was the
guest of honor at many a great reception by the governors
of the land), a man young, stalwart, handsome, with
an aristocratic lineage that bred him a native gentleman,
with a grand old title that had come down to him through
six hundred years of honor in warfare and the high places
of his people. That this man should be despised by her
relatives and family connections because of his warm,
red skin and Indian blood, never [Page 53]
occurred to Lydia. Her angel sister had loved the youth,
the old Scotch missionary little short of adored him.
Why, then, this shocked amazement of her relatives,
that she should wish to wed the finest gentleman she
had ever met, the man whose love and kindness had made
her erstwhile blackened and cruel world a paradise of
sunshine and contentment? She was but little prepared
for the storm of indignation that met her announcement
that she was engaged to marry a Mohawk Indian chief.
Her sister, with whom she never
had anything in common, who was years older, and had
been married in England when Lydia was but three years
of age, implored, entreated, sneered, ridiculed and
stormed. Lydia sat motionless through it all, and then
the outraged sister struck a vital spot with: “I
don’t know what Elizabeth has been thinking of
all these years, to let you associate with Indians on
an equality. She is to blame for this.”
Then and only then, did Lydia
blaze forth. “Don’t you dare speak
of ’Liza like that!” flung the girl. “She
was the only human being in our whole family, the only
one who ever took me in her arms, who ever called me
‘dear,’ who ever kissed me as if she meant
it. I tell you, she loved George Mansion better than
she loved her cold, chilly English brothers. She loved
me, and her house was my home, which yours
never was. [Page 54] Yes, she loved
me, angel girl that she was, and she died in a halo
of happiness because I was happy and because I was to
marry the noblest, kingliest gentleman I ever met.”
The girl ceased, breathless.
“Yes,” sneered her
sister, “yes, marry an Indian!”
“Yes,” defied Lydia,
“an Indian, who can give me not only
a better home than this threadbare parsonage of yours”—here
she swept scornful eyes about the meagre little, shabby
room—“yes, a home that any Bestman would
be proud to own; but better than that,” she continued
ragingly, “he has given me love—love,
that you in your chilly, inhuman home sneer at, but
that I have cried out for; love that my dead mother
prayed should come to me, from the moment she left me
a baby, alone, in England, until the hour when this
one splendid man took me into his heart.
“Poor mother!” sighed
the sister. “I am grateful she is spared this.”
“Don’t think she
doesn’t know it!” cried Lydia. “If
’Liza approved, mother does, and she is glad of
her child’s happiness.”
“Her child—yes,
her child,” taunted the sister. “Child!
child! Yes, and what of the child you will
probably mother?”
The crimson swept painfully
down the young girl’s face, but she braved it
out. [Page 55]
“Yes,” she stammered,
“a child, perhaps a son, a son of mine,
who, poor boy, can never inherit his father’s
title.”
“And why not, pray?”
remarked her sister.
“Because the female line
of lineage will be broken,” explained the girl.
“He should marry someone else, so that
the family title could follow the family name. His father
and mother have practically cast him off because of
me. Don’t you see? Can’t you understand
that I am only an untitled commoner to his people? I
am only a white girl.”
“Only a white
girl!” repeated the sister, sarcastically. “Do
you mean to tell me that you believe these wretched
Indians don’t want him to marry you? You,
a Bestman, and an English girl? Nonsense, Lydia!
You are talking utter nonsense.” But the sister’s
voice weakened, nevertheless.
“But it’s true,”
asserted the girl. “You don’t understand
the Indian nation as ’Liza did; it’s perfectly
true—a son of mine can claim no family title;
the honor of if must leave the name of Mansion forever.
Oh, his parents have completely shut him out of their
lives because I am only a white girl!” and the
sweet young voice trembled woefully.
“I decline to discuss
this disgraceful matter with you any further,”
said the sister coldly. “Perhaps my good husband
can bring you to [Page 56] your senses,”
and the lady left the room in a fever of indignation.
But her “good husband,”
the city clergyman, declined the task of “bringing
Lydia to her senses.” He merely sent for her to
go to his study, and, as she stood timidly in the doorway,
he set his small steely eyes on her and said:
“You will leave this house
at once, to-night. To-night, do you hear? I’ll
have no Indian come here after my wife’s
sister. I hope you quite understand me?”
“Quite, sir,” replied
the girl, and with a stiff bow she turned and went back
to her room.
In the haste of packing up her
poor and scanty wardrobe, she heard her sister’s
voice saying to the clergyman: “Oh! how could
you send her away? You know she has no home, she has
nowhere to go. How could you do it?”
All Lydia caught of his reply was: “Not another
night, not another meal, in this house while I
am its master.”
Presently her sister came upstairs
carrying a plate of pudding. Her eyes were red with
tears, and her hands trembled. “Do eat this, my
dear; some tea is coming presently,” she said.
But Lydia only shook her head,
strapped her little box, and, putting on her bonnet,
she commanded her voice sufficiently to say: “I
am going now. I’ll send for this box later.”
“Where are you going to?”
her sister’s voice trembled. [Page 57]
“I—don’t know,”
said the girl. “But wherever I do go, it will
be a kindlier place than this. Good-bye, sister.”
She kissed the distressed wife softly on each cheek,
then paused at the bedroom door to say, “The man
I am to marry loves me, honors me too much to treat
me as a mere possession. I know that he will
never tell me he is ‘master.’ George Mansion
may have savage blood in his veins, but he has grasped
the meaning of the word ‘Christianity’ far
more fully than your husband has.”
Her sister could not reply,
but stood with streaming eyes and watched the girl slip
down the black stairs and out of a side door.
For a moment Lydia Bestman stood
on the pavement and glanced up and down the street.
The city was what was known as a garrison town in the
days when the British regular troops were quartered
in Canada. Far down the street two gay young officers
were walking, their brilliant uniforms making a pleasant
splash of color in the sunlight. They seemed to suggest
to the girl’s mind a more than welcome thought.
She knew the major’s wife well, a gracious, whole-souled
English lady whose kindness had oftentimes brightened
her otherwise colorless life. Instinctively the girl
turned to the quarters of the married officers. She
found the major’s wife at home, and, burying her
drawn little face in the good lady’s lap, she
poured forth her entire story. [Page 58]
“My dear,” blazed
out the usually placid lady, “if I were only the
major for a few moments, instead of his wife, I should—I
should—well, I should just swear! There,
now I’ve said it, and I’d do it,
too. Why, I never heard of such an outrage! My dear,
kiss me, and tell me—when, how, do you expect
your young chief to come for you?”
“Next week,” said
the girl, from the depths of those sheltering arms.
“Then here you stay, right
here with me. The major and I shall go to the church
with you, see you safely married, bring you and your
Hiawatha home for a cosy little breakfast, put you aboard
the boat for Toronto, and give you both our blessing
and our love.” And the major’s wife nodded
her head with such emphasis that her quaint English
curls bobbed about, setting Lydia off into a fit of
laughter. “That’s right, my dear. You just
begin to laugh now, and keep it up for all the days
to come. I’ll warrant you’ve had little
of laughter in your young life,” she said knowingly.
“From what I’ve known of your father, he
never ordered laughter as a daily ingredient in his
children’s food. Then that sweet Elizabeth leaving
you alone, so terribly alone, must have chased the sunshine
far from your little world. But after this,” she
added brightly, “it’s just going to be love
and laughter. And now, my dear, we must get back the
rosy [Page 59] English color in your
cheeks, or your young Hiawatha won’t know his
little white sweet-heart. Run away to my spare room,
girlie. The orderly will get a man to fetch your box.
Then you can change your frock. Leave yesterday behind
you forever. Have a little rest; you look as if you
had not slept for a week. Then join the major and me
at dinner, and we’ll toast you and your redskin
lover in true garrison style.”
And Lydia, with the glorious
recuperation of youth, ran joyously upstairs, smiling
and singing like a lark, transformed with the first
unadulterated happiness she had ever felt or known.
PART
III.
UPON
George Mansion’s arrival at the garrison town
he had been met on the wharf by the major, who took
him to the hotel, while hurriedly explaining just why
he must not go near Lydia’s sister and the clergyman
whom George had expected would perform the marriage
ceremony. “So,” continued the major, “you
and Lydia are not to be married at the cathedral after
all, but Mrs. Harold and I have arranged that the ceremony
shall take place at little St. Swithin’s Church
in the West End. So you’ll be there at eleven
o’clock, eh, boy?” [Page 60]
“Yes, major, I’ll
be there, and before eleven, I’m afraid, I’m
so anxious to take her home. I shall not endeavor to
thank you and Mrs. Harold for what you have done for
my homeless girl. I can’t even—”
“Tut, tut, tut!”
growled the major. “Haven’t done anything.
Bless my soul, Chief, take my word for it, haven’t
done a thing to be thanked for. Here’s your hotel.
Get some coffee to brace your nerves up with, for I
can assure you, boy, a wedding is a trying ordeal, even
if there is but a handful of folks to see it through.
Be a good boy, now—good-bye until eleven—St.
Swithin’s, remember, and God bless you!”
and the big-hearted, blustering major was whisked away
in his carriage, leaving the young Indian half overwhelmed
with his kindness, but as happy as the golden day.
An hour or so later he stood
at the hotel door a moment awaiting the cab that was
to take him to the church. He was dressed in the height
of the fashion of the early fifties—very dark
wine broadcloth, the coat shaped tightly to the waist
and adorned with a silk velvet collar, a pale lavender,
flowered satin waistcoat, a dull white silk stock collar,
a bell-shaped black silk hat. He carried his gloves,
for throughout his entire life he declared he breathed
though his hands, and the wearing of gloves was abhorrent
to him. Suddenly a gentleman accosted him with: [Page
61]
“I hear an Indian chief
is in town. Going to be married here this morning. Where
is the ceremony to take place? Do you know anything
of it?”
Like all his race, George Mansion
had a subtle sense of humour. It seized upon him now.
“Certainly I know,”
he replied. “I happened to come down on the boat
with the chief. I intend to go to the wedding myself.
I understand the ceremony was arranged to be at the
cathedral.”
“Splendid!” said
the gentleman. “And thank you, sir.”
Just then the cab arrived. Young
Mansion stepped hastily in, nodded good-bye to his acquaintance,
and smilingly said in an undertone to the driver, “St.
Swithin’s Church—and quickly.”
*
*
* *
*
*
“With
this ring I thee wed,” he found himself saying
to a little figure in a soft grey gown at his side,
while a gentle-faced old clergyman in a snowy surplice
stood before him, and a square-shouldered, soldierly
person in a brilliant uniform almost hugged his elbow.
“I
pronounce you man and wife.” At the words she
turned towards her husband like a carrier pigeon winging
for home. Then somehow the solemnity all disappeared.
The major, [Page 62] the major’s
wife, two handsome young officers, one girl friend,
the clergyman, the clergyman’s wife, were all
embracing her, and she was dimpling with laughter and
happiness; and George Mansion stood proudly by, his
fine dark face eager, tender and very noble.
“My dear,” whispered
the major’s wife, “he’s a perfect
prince—he’s just as royal as he can be!
I never saw such manners, such ease. Why, girlie, he’s
a courtier!”
“Confound the young rogue!”
growled the major, in her ear. “I haven’t
an officer on my staff that can equal him. You’re
a lucky girl. Yes, confound him, I say!”
“Bless you, child, said
the clergyman’s wife. “I think he’ll
make you happy. Be very sure you make him happy.”
And to all these whole-hearted
wishes and comments, Lydia replied with smiles and carefree
words. Then came the major, watch in hand, military
precision and promptitude in his very tone.
“Time’s up, everybody!
There’s a bit to eat at the barracks, then these
youngsters must be gone. The boat is due at one o’clock—time’s
up.”
As the little party drove past
the cathedral they observed a huge crowd outside, waiting
for the doors to be opened. Lydia laughed like a child
as George told her of his duplicity of the [Page
63] morning, when he had misled the inquiring
stranger into thinking the Indian chief was to be married
there.
“Nice way to begin your
wedding morning, young man!” scowled the major,
fiercely. “Starting this great day with a network
of falsehoods.”
“Not at all,” smiled
the Indian. “It was arranged for the cathedral,
and I did attend the ceremony.”
“No excuses, you bare-faced
scoundrel! I won’t listen to them. Here you are
happily married, and all those poor would-be sight-seers
sizzling out there in this glaring August sun. I’m
ashamed of you!” But his arm was about George’s
shoulders, and he was wringing the dark, slender hand
with a genuine good fellowship that was pleasant to
see. “Bless my soul, I love you, boy!” he
added, sincerely. “Love you through and through;
and remember, I’m your white father from this
day forth.”
“And I am your white mother,”
said the major’s wife, placing her hands on his
shoulders.
For a second the bridegroom’s
face sobered. Before him flashed a picture of a little
old Indian woman with a broadcloth folded about her
shoulders, a small carven pipe between her lips, a world
of sorrow in her deep eyes—sorrow that he had
brought there. He bent suddenly and [Page 64]
kissed Mrs. Harold’s fingers with a grave and
courtly deference. “Thank you,” he said
simply.
But motherlike, she knew that
his heart was bleeding. Lydia had told of his parents’
antagonism, of the lost Mansion title. So the good lady
just gave his hand a little extra, understanding squeeze,
and the good-byes began.
“Be off with you, youngsters!”
growled the major. “The boat is in—poste
haste now, or you’ll miss it. Begone, both of
you!”
And presently they found themselves
once more in the carriage, the horses galloping down
to the wharf. And almost before they realized it they
were aboard, with the hearty “God bless you’s”
of the splendid old major and his lovable wife still
echoing in their happy young hearts.
*
*
* *
*
*
It
was evening, five days later, when they arrived at their
new home. All about the hills, and the woods, above
the winding river, and along the edge of the distant
forest, brooded that purple smokiness that haunts the
late days of August—the smokiness that was born
of distant fires, where the Indians and pioneers were
“clearing” their lands. The air was like
amethyst, the setting sun a fire opal. As on the day
when she first had come into his life, George helped
her to alight from the carriage, and they stood a moment,
hand in hand, and looked over the [Page 65]
ample acres that composed their estate. The young Indian
had worked hard to have most of the land cleared, leaving
here and there vast stretches of walnut groves, and
long lines of majestic elms, groups of sturdy oaks,
and occasionally a single regal pine tree. Many a time
in later years his utilitarian friends would say, “Chief,
these trees you are preserving so jealously are eating
up a great deal of your land. Why not cut them away
and grow wheat?” But he would always resent the
suggestion, saying that his wheat lands lay back from
the river. They were for his body, doubtless, but here,
by the river, the trees must be—they were for
his soul. And Lydia would champion him immediately with,
“Yes, they were there to welcome me as a bride,
those grand old trees, and they will remain there, I
think, as long as we both shall live.” So, that
first evening at home they stood and watched the imperial
trees, the long, open flats bordering the river, the
nearby lawns which he had taken such pains to woo from
the wilderness; stood palm to palm, and that moment
seemed to govern all their after life.
Someone has said that never
in the history of the world have two people been perfectly
mated. However true this may be, it is an undeniable
fact that between the most devoted of life-mates there
will come inharmonious moments. Individuality would
cease to exist were it not so. [Page 66]
These two lived together of upwards of thirty years,
and never had one single quarrel, but oddly enough,
when the rare inharmonious moments came, these groups
of trees bridged the fleeting difference of opinion
or any slight antagonism of will and purpose; when these
unresponsive moments came, one or the other would begin
to admire those forest giants, to suggest improvements,
to repeat the admiration of others for their graceful
outlines—to, in fact, direct thought and conversation
into the common channel of love for those trees. This
peculiarity was noticeable to outsiders, to their own
circle, to their children. At mere mention of the trees
the shadow of coming cloud would lessen, then waste,
then grow invisible. Their mutual love for these voiceless
yet voiceful and kingly creations was as the love of
children for a flower—simple, nameless, beautiful
and powerful beyond words.
That first home night, as she
stepped within doors, there awaited two inexpressible
surprises for her. First, on the dining-room table a
silver tea service of seven pieces, imported from England—his
wedding gift to her. Second, in the quaint little drawing-room
stood a piano. In the “early fifties” this
latter was indeed a luxury, even in city homes. She
uttered a little cry of delight, and flinging herself
before the instrument, ran her fingers over the keys,
and broke [Page 67] into his favourite
song, “Oft in the Stilly Night.” She had
a beautiful voice, the possession of which would have
made her renowned had opportunity afforded its cultivation.
She had “picked up” music and read it remarkably
well, and he, Indian wise, was passionately fond of
melody. So they laughed and loved together over this
new luxurious toy, until Milly, the ancient Mohawk maid,
tapped softly at the drawing-room and bade them come
to tea. With that first meal in her new home, the darkened
hours and days and years smothered their haunting voices.
She had “left yesterday behind her,” as
the major’s royal wife had wished her to, and
for the first time in all her checkered and neglected
life she laughed with the gladness of a bird at song,
flung her past behind her, and the grim unhappiness
of her former life left her forever.
*
*
* *
*
*
It
was a golden morning in July when the doctor stood grasping
George Mansion’s slender hands, searching into
his dusky, anxious eyes, and saying with ringing cheeriness,
“Chief, I congratulate you. You’ve got the
most beautiful son upstairs—the finest boy I ever
saw. Hail to the young chief, I say!”
The
doctor was white. He did not know of the broken line
of lineage—that “the boy upstairs”
could never wear his father’s title. A [Page
68] swift shadow fought for a second with glorious
happiness. The battlefield was George Mansion’s
face, his heart. His unfilled duty to his parents assailed
him like a monstrous enemy, then happiness conquered,
came forth a triumphant victor, and the young father
dashed noiselessly, fleetly up the staircase, and, despite
the protesting physician, in another moment his wife
and son were in his arms. Titles did not count in that
moment; only Love in its tyrannical majesty reigned
in that sacred room.
The boy was a being of a new
world, a new nation. Before he was two weeks old he
began to show the undeniable physique of the two great
races from whence he came; all the better qualities
of both bloods seemed to blend within his small body.
He was his father’s son, he was his mother’s
baby. His grey-blue eyes held a hint of the dreaming
forest, but also a touch of old England’s skies.
His hair, thick and black, was straight as his father’s,
except just above the temples, where a suggestion of
his mother’s pretty English curls waved like strands
of fine silk. His small mouth was thin-lipped; his nose,
which, even in babyhood never had the infantile “snub,”
but grew straight, thin as his Indian ancestors’,
yet displayed a half-haughty English nostril; his straight
little back—all combined likenesses to his parents.
But who could say which blood dominated his tiny person?
Only [Page 69] the exquisite soft,
pale brown of his satiny skin called loudly and insistently
that he was of a race older than the composite English
could ever boast; it was the hallmark of his ancient
heritage—the birthright of his father’s
son.
But the odd little half-blood
was extraordinarily handsome even as an infant. In after
years when he grew into glorious manhood he was generally
acknowledged to be the handsomest man in the Province
of Ontario, but to-day—his first day in these
strange, new surroundings—he was but a wee, brown,
lovable bundle, whose tiny gossamer hands cuddled into
his father’s palm, while his little velvet cheek
lay rich and russet against the pearly whiteness of
his mother’s arm.
“I believe he is like
you, George,” she murmured, with a wealth of love
in her voice and eyes.
“Yes,” smiled the
young chief, “he certainly has Mansion blood;
but your eyes, Lydia, your dear eyes.”
“Which eyes must go to
sleep and rest,” interrupted the physician, severely.
“Come, Chief, you’ve seen your son, you’ve
satisfied yourself that Mrs. Mansion is doing splendidly,
so away you go, or I shall scold.”
And George slipped away after
one more embrace, slipped down the staircase, and out
into the radiant July sunshine, where his beloved [Page
70] trees arose about him, grand and majestic,
seeming to understand how full of joy, of exultation,
had been this great new day.
*
*
* *
*
*
The
whims of women are proverbial, but the whims of men
are things never to be accounted for. This beautiful
child was but a few weeks old when Mr. Bestman wrote,
announcing to his daughter his intention of visiting
her for a few days.
So
he came to the Indian Reserve, to the handsome country
home his Indian son-in-law had built. He was amazed,
surprised, delighted. His English heart revelled in
the trees. “Like an Old Country gentleman’s
estate in the Counties,” he declared. He kissed
his daughter with affection, wrung his son-in-law’s
hand with a warmth and cordiality unmistakable in its
sincerity, took the baby in his arms and said over and
over, “Oh, you sweet little child! You sweet little
child!” Then the darkness of all those harsh years
fell away from Lydia. She could afford to be magnanimous,
so with a sweet silence, a loving forgetfulness of all
the dead miseries and bygone whip-lashes, she accepted
her strange parent just as he presented himself, in
the guise of a man whom the years had changed from harshness
to tenderness, and let herself thoroughly enjoy his
visit. [Page 71]
But when he drove away she had
but one thing to say; it was, “George, I wonder
when your father will come to us, when your
mother will come. Oh, I want her to see the
baby, for I think my own mother sees him.”
“Some day, dear,”
he answered hopefully. “They will come some day;
and when they do, be sure it will be to take you to
their hearts.”
She sighed and shook her head
unbelievingly. But the “some day” that he
prophesied, but which she doubted, came in a manner
all too soon—all too unwelcome. The little son
had just begun to walk about nicely, when George Mansion
was laid low with a lingering fever that he had contracted
among the marshes where much of his business as an employee
of the Government took him. Evils had begun to creep
into his forest world. The black and subtle evil of
the white man’s firewater had commenced to touch
with its poisonous finger the lives and lodges of his
beloved people. The curse began to spread, until it
grew into a menace to the community. It was the same
old story: the white man had come with the Bible in
one hand, the bottle in the other. George Mansion had
striven side by side with Mr. Evans to overcome the
dread scourge. Together they fought the enemy hand to
hand, but it gained ground in spite of all their efforts.
The entire plan of the white liquor dealer’s campaign
was simply an effort to [Page 72] exchange
a quart of bad whiskey for a cord of first-class firewood,
or timber, which could be hauled off the Indian Reserve
and sold in the nearby town markets for five or six
dollars; thus a hundred dollars worth of bad whisky,
if judiciously traded, would net the white dealer a
thousand dollars cash. And the traffic went on, to the
depletion of the Indian forests and the degradation
of the Indian souls.
Then the Canadian Government
appointed young Mansion special forest warden, gave
him a “V.R.” hammer, with which he was to
stamp each and every stick of timber he could catch
being hauled off the Reserve by white men; licensed
him to carry firearms for self-protection, and told
him to “go ahead.” He “went ahead.”
Night after night he lay, concealing himself in the
marshes, the forests, the trails, the concession lines,
the river road, the Queen’s highway, seizing all
the timber he could, destroying all the whisky, turning
the white liquor traders off Indian lands, and fighting
as only a young, earnest and inspired man can fight.
These hours and conditions began to tell on his physique.
The marshes breathed their miasma into his blood—the
dreaded fever had him in its claws. Lydia was a born
nurse. She knew little of thermometers, of charts, of
technical terms, but her ability and instincts in the
sick-room were unerring; and, when her husband succumbed
to a raging [Page 73] fever, love lent
her hands an inspiration and her brain a clarity that
would have shamed many a professional nurse.
For hours, days, weeks, she
waited, tended, watched, administered, labored and loved
beside the sick man’s bed. She neither slept nor
ate enough to carry her through the ordeal, but love
lent her strength, and she battled and fought for his
life as only an adoring woman can. Her wonderful devotion
was the common talk of the country. She saw no one save
Mr. Evans and the doctors. She never left the sick-room
save when her baby needed her. But it all seemed so
useless, so in vain, when one dark morning the doctor
said, “We had better send for his father and mother.”
Poor Lydia! Her heart was nearly
breaking. She hurriedly told the doctor the cause that
had kept them away so long, adding, “Is it so
bad as that?” Oh, doctor, must I send for
them? They don’t want to come.” Before
the good man could reply, there was a muffled knock
at the door. Then Milly’s old wrinkled face peered
in, and Milly’s voice said whisperingly, “His
people—they here.”
“Whose people? Who are
here?” almost gasped Lydia.
For a brief moment there was
silence. Lydia could not trust herself to speak, but
ill as he [Page 74] was, George’s
quick Indian ear had caught Milly’s words. He
murmured, “Mother! mother! Oh, my mother!”
“Bring her, quickly, quickly!”
said Lydia to the doctor.
It seemed to the careworn girl
that a lifetime followed before the door opened noiselessly,
and there entered a slender little old Indian woman,
in beaded leggings, moccasins, “short skirt,”
and a blue “broadcloth” folded about her
shoulders. She glanced swiftly at the bed, but with
the heroism of her race went first towards Lydia, laid
her cheek silently beside the white girl’s, then
looked directly into her eyes.
“Lydia!” whispered
George, “Lydia!” At the word both women
moved swiftly to his side. “Lydia,” he repeated,
“my mother cannot speak the English, but her cheek
to yours means that you are her blood relation.”
The effort of speech almost
cost him a swoon, but his mother’s cheek was now
against his own, and the sweet, dulcet Mohawk language
of his boyhood returned to his tongue; he was speaking
it to his mother, speaking it lovingly, rapidly. Yet,
although Lydia never understood a word, she did not
feel an outsider, for the old mother’s hand held
her own, and she knew that at last the gulf was bridged.
*
*
* *
*
*
It
was two days later, when the doctor pronounced George
Mansion out of danger, that the [Page 75] sick
man said to his wife: “Lydia, it is all over—the
pain, the estrangement. My mother says that you are
her daughter. My father says that you are his child.
They heard of your love, your nursing, your sweetness.
They want to know if you will call them ‘father,
mother.’ They love you, for you are one of their
own.”
“At
last, at last!” half sobbed the weary girl. “Oh,
George, I am so happy! You are going to get
well, and they have come to us at last.”
“Yes, dear,” he
replied. Then with a half humorous yet wholly pathetic
smile flitting across his wan face, he added, “And
my mother has a little gift for you.” He nodded
then towards the quaint old figure at the further side
of the bed. His mother arose, and, drawing from her
bosom a tiny, russet-colored object, laid it in Lydia’s
hand. It was a little moccasin, just three and a quarter
inches in length. “Its mate is lost,” added
the sick man, “but I wore it as a baby. My mother
says it is yours, and should have been yours all these
years.”
For a second the two women faced
each other, then Lydia sat down abruptly on the bedside,
her arms slipped about the older woman’s shoulders,
and her face dropped quickly, heavily—at last
on a mother’s breast.
George Mansion sighed in absolute
happiness, then closed his eyes and slept the great,
strong, vitalizing sleep of reviving forces. [Page
76]
PART
IV.
HOW
closely the years chased one another after this! But
many and many a happy day within each year found Lydia
and her husband’s mother sitting together, hour
upon hour, needle in hand, sewing and harmonizing—the
best friends in all the world. It mattered not that
“mother” could not speak one word of English,
or that Lydia never mastered but a half dozen words
of Mohawk. These two were friends in the sweetest sense
of the world, and their lives swept forward in a unison
of sympathy that was dear to the heart of the man who
held them as the two most precious beings in all the
word.
And with the years came new
duties, new responsibilities, new little babies to love
and care for until a family, usually called “A
King’s Desire,” gathered at their hearthside—four
children, the eldest a boy, the second a girl, then
another boy, then another girl. These children were
reared on the strictest lines of both Indian and English
principles. They were taught the legends, the traditions,
the culture and the etiquette of both races to which
they belonged; but above all, their mother instilled
into them from the very cradle that they were of their
father’s people, not of hers. Her marriage had
made her an Indian by the laws which govern Canada,
[Page 77] as well as by the sympathies
and yearnings and affections of her own heart. When
she married George Mansion she had repeated to him the
centuries-old vow of allegiance, “Thy people shall
be my people, and thy God my God.” She determined
that should she ever be mother to his children, those
children should be reared as Indians in spirit and patriotism,
and in loyalty to their father’s race as well
as by heritage of blood. The laws of Canada held these
children as Indians. They were wards of the Government;
they were born on Indian lands, on Indian Reservations.
They could own and hold Indian lands, and their mother,
English though she was, made it her life service to
inspire, foster and elaborate within these children
the pride of race, the value of that copper-tinted skin
which they all displayed. When people spoke of blood
and lineage and nationality, these children would say,
“We are Indians,” with the air with which
a young Spanish don might say, “I am a Castilian.”
She wanted them to grow up nationalists, and they did,
every mother’s son and daughter of them. Thing
could never have been otherwise, for George Mansion
and his wife had so much in common that their offspring
could scarcely evince other than inherited parental
traits. Their tastes and distastes were so synonymous;
they hated hypocrisy, vulgarity, slovenliness, imitations.
[Page 78]
After forty years spent on a
Canadian Indian Reserve, Lydia Mansion still wore real
lace, real tortoise shell combs, real furs. If she could
not have procured these she would have worn plain linen
collars, no combs, and a woven woollen scarf about her
throat; but the imitation fabrics, as well as the “imitation
people,” had no more part in her life than they
had in her husband’s, who abhorred all such pinchbeck.
Their loves were identical. They loved nature—the
trees, best of all, and the river, and the birds. They
loved the Anglican Church, they loved the British flag,
they loved Queen Victoria, they loved beautiful, dead
Elizabeth Evans, they loved strange, reticent Mr. Evans.
They loved music, pictures and dainty china, with which
George Mansion filled his beautiful home. They loved
books and animals, but, most of all, these two loved
the Indian people, loved their legends, their habits,
their customs—loved the people themselves. Small
wonder, then, that their children should be born with
pride of race and heritage, and should face the world
with that peculiar, unconquerable courage that only
a fighting ancestry can give.
As the years drifted on, many
distinctions came to the little family of the “Grand
Mansions.” The chief’s ability as an orator,
his fluency of speech, his ceaseless war against the
inroads of the border white men and their lawlessness
among his own people—all gradually [Page
79] but surely brought him, inch by inch, before
the notice of those who sat in the “seats of the
mighty” of both church and state. His presence
was frequently demanded at Ottawa, fighting for the
cause of his people before the House of Commons, the
Senate, and the Governor-General himself. At such times
he would always wear his native buckskin costume, and
his amazing rhetoric, augmented by the gorgeous trappings
of his office and his inimitable courtesy of manner,
won him friends and followers among the lawmakers of
the land. He never fought for a cause and lost it, never
returned to Lydia and his people except in a triumph
of victory. Social honors came to him as well as political
distinctions. Once, soon after his marriage, a special
review of the British troops quartered at Toronto was
called in his honor and he rode beside the general,
making a brilliant picture, clad as he was in buckskins
and scarlet blanket and astride his pet black pony,
as he received the salutes of company after company
of England’s picked soldiers as they wheeled past.
And when King Edward of England visited Canada as Prince
of Whales, he fastened with his own royal hands a heavy
silver medal to the buckskin covering George Mansion’s
breast, and the royal words were very sincere as they
fell from the prince’s lips: “This medal
is for recognition of your loyalty in battling for your
own people, even as your ancestors battled for the British
[Page 80] Crown.” Then in later
years, when Prince Arthur of Connaught accepted the
title of “Chief,” conferred upon him with
elaborate ceremony by the chiefs, braves and warriors
of the great Iroquois Council, it was George Mansion
who was chosen as special escort to the royal visitor—George
Mansion and his ancient and honored father, who, hand-in-hand
with the young prince, walked to and fro, chanting the
impressive ritual of bestowing the title. Even Bismarck,
the “Iron Chancellor” of Germany, heard
of this young Indian warring for the welfare of his
race, and sent a few kindly words, with his own photograph,
from across seas to encourage the one who was fighting,
single-handed, the menace of white man’s greed
and white man’s firewater.
And Lydia, with her glad and
still girlish heart, gloried in her husband’s
achievements and in the recognition accorded him by
the great world beyond the Indian Reserve, beyond the
wilderness, beyond the threshold of their own home.
In only one thing were their lives at all separated.
She took no part in his public life. She hated the glare
of the fierce light that beat upon prominent lives,
the unrest of fame, the disquiet of public careers.
“No,” she would
answer, when oftentimes he begged her to accompany him
and share his success and honors, “no, I was homeless
so long [Page 81] that ‘home’
is now my ambition. My babies need me here, and you
need me here when you return, far more than you need
me on platform or parade. Go forth and fight the enemy,
storm the battlements and win the laurels, but let me
keep the garrison—here at home, with our babies
all about me and a welcome to our warrior husband and
father when he returns from war.”
Then he would laugh and coax
again, but always with the same result. Every day, whether
he went forth to the Indian Council across the river,
or when more urgent duties called him to the Capital,
she always stood at the highest window waving her handkerchief
until he was out of sight, and that dainty flag lent
strength to his purpose and courage to his heart, for
he knew the home citadel was there awaiting his return—knew
that she would be at that selfsame window, their children
clustered about her skirts, her welcoming hands waving
a greeting instead of a good-bye, as soon as he faced
the home portals once more, and in his heart of hearts
George Mansion felt that his wife had chosen the wiser,
greater part; that their children would some day arise
and call her blessed because she refused to wing away
from the home nest, even if by so doing she left him
to take his flights alone.
But in all their world there
was no one prouder of his laurels and successes than
his [Page 82] home-loving, little English
wife, and the mother-heart of her must be forgiven for
welcoming each new honor as a so much greater heritage
for their children. Each distinction won by her husband
only established a higher standard for their children
to live up to. She prayed and hoped and prayed again
that they would all be worthy such a father, that they
would never fall short of his excellence. To this end
she taught, labored for, and loved them, and they, in
turn, child-wise, responded to her teaching, imitating
her allegiance to their father, reflecting her fealty,
and duplicating her actions. So she molded these little
ones with the mother-hand that they felt through all
their after lives, which were but images of her own
in all that concerned their father.
*
*
* *
*
*
The
first great shadow that fell on this united little circle
was when George Mansion’s mother quietly folded
her “broadcloth” about her shoulders for
the last time, when the little old tobacco pipe lay
unfilled and unlighted, when the finely-beaded moccasins
were empty of the dear feet that had wandered so gently,
so silently into the Happy Hunting Grounds. George Mansion
was bowed with woe. His mother had been to him the queen
of all women, and her death left a desolation in his
heart that even his wife could not assuage. It was a
grief he really never overcame. [Page 83]
Fortunately his mother had grown so attached to Lydia
that his one disobedience—that of his marriage—never
reproached him. Had the gentle little old Indian woman
died before the episode of the moccasin which brought
complete reconciliation, it is doubtful if her son would
ever have been quite the same again. As it was, with
the silence and stoicism of his race he buried his grief
in his own heart, without allowing it to cast a gloom
over his immediate household.
But
after that the ancient chief, his father, came more
frequently to George’s home, and was always an
honored guest. The children loved him, Lydia had the
greatest respect and affection for him, the greatest
sympathy for his loneliness, and she ever made him welcome
and her constant companion when he visited them. He
used to talk to her much of George, and once or twice
gave her grave warnings as to his recklessness and lack
of caution in dealing with the ever-growing menace of
the whisky traffic among the Indians. The white men
who supplied and traded this liquor were desperadoes,
a lawless set of ruffians who for some time had determined
to rid their stamping-ground of George Mansion, as he
was the chief opponent to their business, and with the
way well cleared of him and his unceasing resistance,
their scoundrelly trade would be an easy matter. [Page
84]
“Use all your influence,
Lydia,” the old father would say, “to urge
him never to seize the ill-gotten timber or destroy
their whisky, unless he has other Indian wardens with
him. They’ll kill him if they can, those white
men. They have been heard to threaten.”
For some time this very thing
had been crowding its truth about his wife’s daily
life. Threatening and anonymous letters had more than
once been received by her husband—letters that
said he would be “put out of the way” unless
he stopped interfering in the liquor trade. There was
no ignoring the fact that danger was growing daily,
that the fervent young chief was allowing his zeal to
overcome his caution, was hazarding his life for the
protection of his people against a crying evil. Once
a writer of these unsigned letters threatened to burn
his house down in the dead of night, another to maim
his horses and cattle, others to “do away”
with him. His crusade was being waged under the weight
of a cross that was beginning to fall on his loyal wife,
and to overshadow his children. Then one night the blow
fell. Blind with blood, crushed and broken, he staggered
and reeled home, unaided, unassisted, and in excruciating
torture. Nine white men had attacked him from behind
in a border village a mile from his home, where he had
gone to intercept a load of whisky that was being hauled
into the Indian Reserve. Eight [Page 85]
of those lawbreakers circled about him, while the ninth
struck him from behind with a leaden plumb attached
to an elastic throw-string. The deadly thing crushed
in his skull; he dropped where he stood, as if shot.
Then brutal boots kicked his face, his head, his back,
and, with curses, his assailants left him—for
dead.
With a vitality born of generations
of warriors, he regained consciousness, staggered the
mile to his own gate, where he met a friend, who, with
extreme concern, began to assist him into his home.
But he refused the helping arm with, “No, I go
alone; it would alarm Lydia if I could not walk alone.”
These, with the few words he spoke as he entered the
kitchen, where his wife was overseeing old Milly get
the evening meal, were the last intelligent words he
spoke for many a day.
“Lydia, they’ve
hurt me at last,” he said, gently.
She turned at the sound of his
strained voice. A thousand emotions overwhelmed her
at the terrifying sight before her. Love, fear, horror,
all broke forth from her lips in a sharp, hysterical
cry, but above this cry sounded the gay laughter of
the children who were playing in the next room, their
shrill young voices raised in merriment over some new
sport. In a second the mother-heart asserted itself.
Their young eyes must not see this ghastly thing. [Page
86]
“Milly!” she cried
to the devoted Indian servant, “help Chief George.”
Then dashing into the next room, she half sobbed, “Children,
children! hush, oh, hush! Poor father—“
She never finished the sentence.
With a turn of her arm she swept them all into the drawing-room,
closed the door, and flew back to her patriot husband.
For weeks and weeks he lay fighting
death as only a determined man can—his upper jaw
broken on both sides, his lower jaw splintered on one
side, his skull so crushed that to the end of his days
a silver dollar could quite easily be laid flat in the
cavity, a jagged and deep hole in his back, and injuries
about the knees and leg bones. And all these weeks Lydia
hovered above his pillow, night and day, nursing, tending,
helping, cheering. What effort it cost her to be bright
and smiling no tongue can tell, for her woman’s
heart saw that this was but the beginning of the end.
She saw it when in his delirium he raved to get better;
to be allowed to get up and go on with the fight; saw
that his spirit never rested, for fear that, now he
was temporarily inactive, the whisky dealers would have
their way. She knew then that she must school herself
to endure this thing again; that she must never ask
him to give up his life work, never be less courageous
than he, though that courage would mean never a peaceful
moment to her when he was outside their own home. [Page
87]
Mr. Evans was a great comfort
to her during those terrible weeks. Hour after hour
he would sit beside the injured man, never speaking
or moving, only watching quietly, while Lydia barely
snatched the necessary sleep a nurse must have, or attended
to the essential needs of the children, who, however,
were jealously cared for by faithful Milly. During those
times the children never spoke except in whispers, their
rigid Indian-English training in self-effacement and
obedience being now of untold value.
But love and nursing and bravery
all counted in the end, and one day George Mansion walked
downstairs, the doctor’s arm on one side, Lydia’s
on the other. He immediately asked for his pistol and
his dagger, cleaned the one, oiled and sharpened the
other, and said, “I’ll be ready for them
again in a month’s time.”
But while he lay injured his
influential white friends and the Government at Ottawa
had not been idle. The lawless creature who dealt those
unmerited blows was tried, convicted and sent to Kingston
Penitentiary for seven years. So one enemy was out of
the way for the time being. It was at this time that
advancing success lost him another antagonist, who was
placed almost in the rank of an ally.
George Mansion was a guest of
the bishop of his diocese, as he was a lay delegate
accompanying Mr. Evans to the Anglican Synod. The [Page
88] chief’s work had reached other ears
than those of the Government at Ottawa, and the bishop
was making much of the patriot, when in the See House
itself an old clergyman approached him with outstretched
hand and the words, “I would like you to call
bygones just bygones.”
“I don’t believe
I have the honor of knowing you, sir,” replied
the Indian, with a puzzled but gracious look.
“I am your wife’s
brother-in-law,” said the old clergyman, “the
man who would not allow her to be married from my house—that
is, married to you.”
The Indian bit his lip and instinctively
stepped backward. Added to his ancestral creed of never
forgiving such injury, came a rush of memory—the
backward-surging picture of his homeless little sweetheart
and all that she had endured. Then came the memory of
his dead mother’s teaching—teaching she
had learned from her own mother, and she in turn from
her mother: “Always forget yourself for old
people, always honor the old.”
Instantly George Mansion arose—arose
above the prejudices of his blood, above the traditions
of his race, arose to the highest plane a man can reach—the
memory of his mother’s teaching.
“I would hardly be here
as a lay delegate of my church were I not willing to
let bygones be bygones,” he said, simply, and
laid his hand in [Page 89] that of
the old clergyman, about whose eyes there was moisture,
perhaps because this opportunity for peacemaking had
come so tardily.
*
*
* *
*
*
The
little family of the “Grand Mansions” was
now growing to very “big childhood,” and
the inevitable day came when Lydia’s heart must
bear the wrench of having her firstborn say good-bye
to take his college course. She was not the type of
mother who would keep the boy at home because of the
heartache the good-byes must bring, but the parting
was certainly a hard one, and she watched his going
with a sense of loss that was almost greater than her
pride in him. He had given evidence of the most remarkable
musical talent. He played classical airs even before
he knew a note, and both his parents were in determined
unison about this talent being cultivated. The following
year the oldest daughter also entered college, having
had a governess at home for a year, as some preparation.
But these changes brought no difference into the home,
save that George Mansion’s arm grew stronger daily
in combat against the old foe. Then came the second
attack of the enemy, when six white men beset him from
behind, again knocking him insensible, with a heavy
blue beech hand-spike. They broke his hand and three
ribs, knocked out his teeth, injured his side and [Page
90] head; then seizing his pistol, shot at
him, the ball fortunately not reaching a vital spot.
As his senses swam he felt them drag his poor maimed
body into the middle of the road, so it would appear
as if horses trampled him, then he heard them say, “This
time the devil is dead.” But hours afterwards
he again arose, again walked home, five interminable
miles, again greeted his ever watchful and anxious wife
with, “Lydia, they’ve hurt me once more.”
Then came weeks of renewed suffering, of renewed care
and nursing, of renewed vitality, and at last of conquered
health.
These two terrible illnesses
seemed to raise Lydia into a peculiar, half-protecting
attitude towards him. In many ways she “mothered”
him almost as though he were her son—he who had
always been the leader, and so strong and self-reliant.
After this, when he went forth on his crusades, she
watched his going with the haunting fear with which
one would watch a child wandering on the edge of a chasm.
She waited on him when he returned, served him with
the tenderness with which one serves a cripple or a
baby. Once he caught her arm, as she carried to him
a cup of broth, after he had spent wearisome hours at
the same old battle, and turning towards her, said softly:
“You are like my mother used to be to me.”
She did not ask him in what way—she knew—and
carried [Page 91] broth to him when
next he came home half exhausted. Gradually he now gathered
about him a little force of zealous Indians who became
enthusiastic to take up arms with him against the whisky
dealers. He took greater precautions in his work, for
the growing mist of haunting anxiety in Lydia’s
eyes began to call to him that there were other claims
than those of the nation. His splendid zeal had brought
her many a sleepless night, when she knew he was scouring
the forests for hidden supplies of the forbidden merchandise,
and that a whole army of desperadoes would not deter
him from fulfilling his duty of destroying it. He felt,
rather than saw, that she never bade him good-bye but
that she was prepared not to see him again alive. Added
to this he began to suffer as she did—to find
that in his good-byes was the fear of never seeing her
again. He, who had always been so fearless, was now
afraid of the day when he should not return and she
would be once more alone.
So he let his younger and eager
followers do some of the battling, though he never relaxed
his vigilance, never took off his armor, so to speak.
But now he spent long days and quiet nights with Lydia
and his children. They entertained many guests, for
the young people were vigorous and laughter-loving,
and George and Lydia never grew old, never grew weary,
never grew commonplace. All the year round guests
[Page 92] came to the hospitable country house—men
and women of culture, of learning, of artistic tastes,
of congenial habits. Scientists, authors, artists, all
made their pilgrimages to this unique household, where
refinement and much luxury, and always a glad welcome
from the chief and his English wife, made their visits
long remembered. And in some way or other, as their
children grew up, those two seemed to come closer together
once more. They walked among the trees they had loved
in those first bridal days, they rested by the river
shore, they wandered over the broad meadows and bypaths
of the old estate, they laughed together frequently
like children, and always and ever talked of and acted
for the good of the Indian people who were so unquestionably
the greatest interest in their lives, outside their
own children. But one day, when the beautiful estate
he was always so proud of was getting ready to smile
under the suns of spring, he left her just when she
needed him most, for their boys had plunged forward
into the world of business in the large cities, and
she wanted a strong arm to lean on. It was the only
time he failed to respond to her devoted nursing, but
now she could not bring him back from the river’s
brink, as she had so often done before. Cold had settled
in all the broken places of his poor body, and he slipped
away from her, a sacrifice to his fight against evil
on the altar of his nation’s good. In [Page
93] his feverish wanderings he returned to
the tongue of his childhood, the beautiful, dulcet Mohawk.
Then recollecting and commanding himself, he would weakly
apologize to Lydia with: “I forgot; I thought
it was my mother,” and almost his last words were,
“It must be by my mother’s side,”
meaning his resting-place. So his valiant spirit went
fearlessly forth.
*
*
* *
*
*
“Do
you ever think, dear,” said Lydia to her youngest
child, some years later, “that you are writing
the poetry that always lived in an unexpressed state
here in my breast?”
“No,
Marmee,” answered the girl, who was beginning
to mount the ladder of literature, “I never knew
you wanted to write poetry, although I knew
you loved it.”
“Indeed, I did,”
answered the mother, “but I never could find expression
for it. I was made just to sing, I often think, but
I never had the courage to sing in public. But I did
want to write poetry, and now you, dear, are doing it
for me. How proud your father would have been of you!”
“Oh, he knows! I’m
sure he knows all that I have written,” answered
the girl, with the sublime faith that youth has in its
own convictions. “And if you like my verses, Marmee,
I am sure he does, for he knows.” [Page
94]
“Perhaps,” murmured
the older woman. “I often feel that he is very
near to us. I never have felt that he is really gone
very far away from me.”
“Poor little Marmee!”
the girl would say to herself. “She misses him
yet. I believe she will always miss him.”
Which was the truth. She saw
constantly his likeness in all her children, bits of
his character, shades of his disposition, reflections
of his gifts and talents, hints of bravery, and she
always spoke of these with a commending air, as though
they were characteristics to be cultivated, to be valued
and fostered.
At first her fear of leaving
her children, even to join him, was evident, she so
believed in a mother’s care and love being a necessity
to a child. She had sadly missed it all out of her own
strange life, and she felt she must live until
this youngest daughter grew to be a woman. Perhaps this
desire, this mother-love, kept her longer beside her
children than she would have stayed without it, for
the years rolled on, and her hair whitened, her once
springing step halted a little, the glorious blue of
her English eyes grew very dreamy, and tender, and wistful.
Was she seeing the great Hereafter unfold itself before
her as her steps grew nearer and nearer?
And one night the Great Messenger
knocked softly at her door, and with a sweet, gentle
sigh [Page 95] she turned and followed
where he led—joining gladly the father of her
children in the land that holds both whites and Indians
as one.
And the daughter who writes
the verses her mother always felt, but found no words
to express, never puts a last line to a story, or a
sweet cadence into a poem, but she says to herself as
she holds her mother’s memory within her heart:
“She knows—she knows.”
[Page 96]
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