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The
White Wampum
by
Emily Pauline Johnson
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THE
CATTLE THIEF
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THEY
were coming across the prairie, they were
galloping hard and
fast;
For the eyes of those desperate riders had sighted
their man at last—
Sighted him off to Eastward, where the Cree encampment
lay,
Where the cotton woods fringed the river, miles
and miles away.
Mistake him? Never, Mistake him? the famous Eagle
Chief!
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That
terror to all the settlers, that desperate Cattle
Thief—
That monstrous, fearless Indian, who lorded it over
the plain,
Who thieved and raided, and scouted, who rode like
a hurricane!
But they’ve tracked him across the prairie;
they’ve followed him hard
and fast;
For those desperate English settlers have sighted
their man at last.
[Page 11]
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Up they wheeled to the tepees, all their British
blood aflame,
Bent on bullets and bloodshed, bent on bringing
down their game;
But they searched in vain for the Cattle Thief:
that lion had left his lair,
And they cursed like a troop of demons—for
the women alone were
there.
“The sneaking Indian coward,” they hissed;
“he hides while yet he
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He’ll
come in the night for cattle, but he’s scared
to face a man.”
“Never!” and up from the cotton woods,
rang the voice of Eagle Chief;
And right out into the open stepped, unarmed, the
Cattle Thief.
Was that the game they had coveted? Scarce fifty
years had rolled
Over that fleshless, hungry frame, starved to the
bone and old;
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Over
that wrinkled, tawny skin, unfed by the warmth of
blood,
Over those hungry, hollow eyes that glared for the
sight of food.
He turned, like a hunted lion: “I know not
fear,” said he;
And the words outleapt from his shrunken lips in
the language of the
Cree. [Page 12]
“I’ll fight you, white-skins, one by
one, till I kill you all,” he said;
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But
the threat was scarcely uttered, ere a dozen balls
of lead
Whizzed through the air about him like a shower
of metal rain,
And the gaunt old Indian Cattle Thief, dropped dead
on the open plain.
And that band of cursing settlers, gave one triumphant
yell,
And rushed like a pack of demons on the body that
writhed and
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“Cut
the fiend up into inches, throw his carcass on the
plain;
Let the wolves eat the cursed Indian, he’d
have treated us the same.”
A dozen hands responded, a dozen knives gleamed
high,
But the first stroke was arrested by a woman’s
strange, wild cry.
And out into the open, with a courage past belief,
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She
dashed, and spread her blanket o’er the corpse
of the Cattle Thief;
And the words outleapt from her shrunken lips in
the language of the
Cree,
“If you mean to touch that body, you must
cut your way through me.”
And that band of cursing settlers dropped backward
one by one, [Page
13]
For they knew that an Indian woman roused, was a
woman to let
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And
then she raved in a frenzy that they scarcely understood,
Raved of the wrongs she had suffered since her earliest
babyhood:
“Stand back, stand back, you white-skins,
touch that dead man to your
shame;
You have stolen my father’s spirit, but his
body I only claim.
You have killed him, but you shall not dare to touch
him now he’s
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You
have cursed, and called him a Cattle Thief, though
you robbed
him first of bread—
Robbed him and robbed my people—look there,
at that shrunken face,
Starved with a hollow hunger, we owe to you and
your race.
What have you left to us of land, what have you
left of game,
What have you brought but evil, and curses since
you came?
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How
have you paid us for our game? how paid us for our
land?
By a book, to save our souls from the sins
you brought in your other
hand.
Go back with your new religion, we never have understood
[Page 14]
Your robbing an Indian’s body, and
mocking his soul with food.
Go back with your new religion, and find—if
find you can—
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The
honest man you have ever made from out
a starving man.
You say your cattle are not ours, your meat is not
our meat;
When you pay for the land you live in,
we’ll pay for the meat we eat.
Give back our land and our country, give back our
herds of game;
Give back the furs and the forests that were ours
before you
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Give
back the peace and the plenty. Then come with your
new belief,
And blame if you dare, the hunger that drove
him to be a thief.”
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