TECUMSEH _A DRAMA_ BY CHARLES MAIR. "When the white men first set foot on our shores, theywere hungry; they had no places on which to spreadtheir blankets or to kindle their fires. They werefeeble; they could do nothing for themselves. Ourfathers commiserated their distress, and shared freelywith them whatever the Great Spirit had given to hisred children. " _From_ TECUMSEH'S _speech to the Osages_. DRAMATIS PERSONAE. INDIANS: TECUMSEH _(Chief of the Shawanoes)_. THE PROPHET _(Brother of Tecumseh)_. TARHAY _(A Chief in love with Iena)_. STAYETA _(Chief of the Wyandots)_. MIAMI, DELAWARE, KICKAPOO and DAHCOTA CHIEFS. _Warriors, Braves, Josakeeds and Runners_. MAMATEE _(Wife of Tecumseh)_. IENA _(Niece of Tecumseh)_. WEETAMORE, WINONA _and other Indian Maidens_. AMERICANS: GENERAL HARRISON _(Governor of IndianaTerritory)_. GENERAL HULL. COLONEL CASS. BARRON _(An Indian Agent)_. TWANG, SLAUGH, GERKIN and BLOAT _(Citizens ofVincennes)_. _Five Councillors of Indiana Territory, Officers, Soldiers, Volunteers, Orderlies and Scouts_. BRITISH AND CANADIANS: GENERAL BROCK _(Administrator of the Government ofUpper Canada)_. COLONEL _(afterwards General)_ PROCTOR. GLEGG, MACDONELL, _Aides-de-camp to General Brock_. NICHOL, BABY, ELIOTT, _Colonels of CanadianVolunteers_. McKEE, ROBINSON, _Captains of Canadian Volunteers_. LEFROY _(A poet-artist, enamoured of Indian life, andin love with IENA. )_ _Two Old men of York, U. E. Loyalists, and otherCitizens, Alien Settlers, Officers, Soldiers, Volunteers, Orderlies and Messengers_. TECUMSEH ACT I. SCENE FIRST. --THE FOREST NEAR THE PROPHET'S TOWN ONTHE TIPPECANOE. _Enter the_ PROPHET. PROPHET. Twelve moons have wasted, and no tidingsstill! Tecumseh must have perished! Joy has tearsAs well as grief, and mine will freely flow--Sembling our women's piteous privilege--Whilst dry ambition ambles to its ends. My schemes have swelled to greatness, and my nameHas flown so far upon the wings of fearThat nations tremble at its utterance. Our braves abhor, yet stand in awe of me, Who ferret witchcraft out, commune with Heaven, And ope or shut the gloomy doors of death. All feelings and all seasons suit ambition!Yet my vindictive nature hath a craft, In action slow, which matches mother-earth's:First seed-time--then the harvest of revenge. Who works for power, and not the good of men, Would rather win by fear than lose by love. Not so Tecumseh--rushing to his ends, And followed by men's love--whose very foesTrust him the most. Rash fool! Him do I dread, And his imperious spirit. Twelve infant moonsHave swung in silver cradles o'er these woods, And, still no tidings of his enterprise, Which--all too deep and wide--has swallowed him. And left me here unrivalled and alone. _Enter an_ INDIAN RUNNER. Ha! There's a message in your eyes--what now? RUNNER. Your brother, great Tecumseh, has returned, And rests himself a moment ere he comesTo counsel with you here. [_Exit Runner_. ] PROPHET. He has returned!So then the growing current of my powerMust fall again into the stately streamOf his great purpose. But a moment pastI stood upon ambition's height, and nowMy brother comes to break my greatness up, And merge it in his own. I know his thoughts--That I am but a helper to his ends;And, were there not a whirlpool in my soulOf hatred which would fain ingulf our foes, I would engage my cunning and my craft'Gainst his simplicity, and win the lead. But, hist, he comes! I must assume the roleBy which I pander to his purposes. _Enter_ TECUMSEH. TECUMSEH. Who is this standing in the darkened robes? PROPHET. The Prophet! Olliwayshilla, who probesThe spirit-world, and holds within his kenLife's secrets and the fateful deeds of men. The "One-Eyed!" Brother to the Shooting Star-- TECUMSEH. With heart of wax, and hands not made forwar. PROPHET. Would that my hands were equal to my hate!Then would strange vengeance traffic on the earth;For I should treat our foes to what they crave--Our fruitful soil--yea, ram it down their throats, And choke them with the very dirt they love. 'Tis you Tecumseh! You, are here at last, And welcome as the strong heat-bearing SpringWhich opens up the pathways of revenge. What tidings from afar? TECUMSEH. Good tidings thence. I have not seen the Wyandots, but allThe distant nations will unite with usTo spurn the fraudful treaties of Fort Wayne. From Talapoosa to the HarricanawI have aroused them from their lethargy. From the hot gulf up to those confines rude, Where Summer's sides are pierced with icicles, They stand upon my call. What tidings here? PROPHET. No brand has struck to bark our enterpriseWhich grows on every side. The Prophet's robe, That I assumed when old Pengasega died--With full accord and countenance from you--Fits a strong shoulder ampler far than his;And all our people follow me in fear. TECUMSEH. Would that they followed you in love!Proceed! My ears are open to my brother's tongue. PROPHET. I have myself, and by swift messengers, Proclaimed to all the nations far and near, I am the Open-Door, and have the powerTo lead them back to life. The sacred fireMust burn forever in the red-man's lodge, Else will that life go out. All earthly goodsBy the Great Spirit meant for common useMust so be held. Red shall not marry white, To lop our parent stems; and never moreMust vile, habitual cups of deadlinessDistort their noble natures, and unseatThe purpose of their souls. They must returnTo ancient customs; live on game and maize;Clothe them with skins, and love both wife and child, Nor lift a hand in wrath against their race. TECUMSEH. These are wise counsels which are noisedafar, And many nations have adopted themAnd made them law. PROPHET. These counsels were your own!Good in themselves, they are too weak to swayOur fickle race. I've much improved on themSince the Great Spirit took me by the hand. TECUMSEH. Improved! and how? Your mission was to leadOur erring people back to ancient ways--Too long o'ergrown--not bloody sacrifice. They tell me that the prisoners you have ta'en--Not captives in fair fight, but wanderersBewildered in our woods, or such as tillOutlying fields, caught from the peaceful plough--You cruelly have tortured at the stake. Nor this the worst! In order to augmentYour gloomy sway you craftily have playedUpon the zeal and frenzy of our tribes, And, in my absence, hatched a monstrous chargeOf sorcery amongst them, which hath sparedNor feeble age nor sex. Such horrid deedsRecoil on us! Old Shataronra's graveSends up its ghost, and Tetaboxti's hairs--White with sad years and counsel--singed by you!In dreams and nightmares, float on every breeze. Ambition's madness might stop short of this, And shall if I have life. PROPHET. The Great SpiritHath urged me, and still urges me to all. He puts his hand to mine and leads me on. Do you not hear him whisper even now--"Thou art the Prophet?" All our followersBehold in me a greater than yourself, And worship me, and venture where I lead. TECUMSEH. Your fancy is the common slip of fools, Who count the lesser greater being near. Dupe of your own imposture and designs, I cannot bind your thoughts! but what you doHenceforth must be my subject; so take heed, And stand within my sanction lest you fall. PROPHET. You are Tecumseh--else you should choke forthis! [_Haughtily crosses the stage and pauses. _] Stay! Let me think! I must not break with him--'Tis premature. I know his tender part, And I shall touch it. [_Recrosses the stage. _] Brother, let me ask, Do you remember how our father fell? TECUMSEH. Who can forget Kanawha's bloody fray?He died for home in battle with the whites. PROPHET. And you remember, too, that boyish morn, When all our braves were absent on the chase--That morn when you and I half-dreaming layIn summer grass, but woke to deadly painOf loud-blown bugles ringing through the air. They came!--a rush of chargers from the woods, With tramplings, cursings, shoutings manifold, And headlong onset, fierce with brandished swords, Of frontier troopers eager for the fight. Scarce could a lynx have screened itself from sight, So sudden the attack--yet, trembling there, We crouched unseen, and saw our little townStormed, with vile slaughter of small babe and crone, And palsied grandsire--you remember it? TECUMSEH. Remember it! Alas, the echoingOf that wild havoc lingers in my brain!O wretched age, and injured motherhood, And hapless maiden-wreck! PROPHET. Yet this has beenOur endless history, and it is thisWhich crams my very veins with cruelty. My pulses bound to see those devils fallBrained to the temples, and their women castAs offal to the wolf. TECUMSEH. Their crimes are great--Our wrongs unspeakable! yet my revengeIs open war. It never shall be saidTecumseh's hate went armed with cruelty. There's reason in revenge; but spare our own!These gloomy sacrifices sap our strength;And henceforth from your wizard scrutiniesI charge you to forbear. But who's the whiteYou hold as captive? PROPHET. He is called LEFROY--A captive, but too free to come and go. Our warriors struck his trail by chance, and foundHis tent close by the Wabash, where he layWith sprained ankle, foodless and alone. He had a book of pictures with him thereOf Long-Knife forts, encampments and their chiefs--Most recognizable; so, reasoning thence, Our warriors took him for a daring spy, And brought him here, and tied him to the stake. Then he declared he was a Saganash--No Long-Knife he! but one who loved our race, And would adopt our ways--with honeyed words, Couched in sweet voice, and such appealing eyesThat Iena, our niece--who listened near--Believing, rushed, and cut him from the tree. I hate his smiles, soft ways, and smooth-paced tread, And would, ere now, have killed him but for her;For ever since, unmindful of her race, She has upheld him, and our matrons thinkThat he has won her heart. TECUMSEH. But not her hand! This cannot be, and I mustsee to it:Red shall not marry white--such is our law. But graver matters are upon the wing, Which I must open to you. Know you, then, The nation that has doomed our Council-Fires--Splashed with our blood--will on its Father turn, Once more, whose lion-paws, stretched o'er the sea, Will sheathe their nails in its unnatural tides, Till blood will flow, as free as pitch in spring, To gum the chafed seams of our sinking bark. This opportunity, well-nursed, will giveA respite to our wrongs, and heal our wounds;And all our nations, knit by me and rangedIn headship with our Saganash allies, Will turn the mortal issue 'gainst our foes, And wall our threatened frontiers with their slain. But till that ripened moment, not a sheafOf arrows should be wasted, not a braveShould perish aimlessly, nor discord reignAmongst our tribes, nor jealousy distrainThe large effects of valour. We must nowPack all our energies. Our eyes and earsNo more must idle with the hour, but workAs carriers to the brain, where we shall store, As in an arsenal, deep schemes of war! [_A noise and shouting without. _] But who is this? [_Enter_ BARRON _accompanied and half-dragged bywarriors. The_ PROPHET _goes forward to meethim. _] BARRON. I crave protection as a messengerAnd agent sent by General Harrison. Your rude, unruly braves, against my wish, Have dragged me here as if I were a spy. PROPHET. What else!Why come you here if not a spy?Brouillette came, and Dubois, who were spies--Now you are here. Look on it! There's your grave. [_Pointing to the ground at_ BARRON'S_feet. _] TECUMSEH. (_Joining them_. ) Unhand this man!He is a messenger, And not a spy. Your life, my friend, is safeIn these rough woods as in your general's town. But, quick--your message? BARRON. The Governor of Indiana sendsThis letter to you, in the which he says (_Readingletter_) "You are an enemy to the Seventeen Fires. I have been told that you intend to liftThe hatchet 'gainst your father, the great Chief, Whose goodness, being greater than his fearOr anger at your folly, still would stretchHis bounty to his children who repent, And ask of him forgiveness for the past. Small harm is done which may not be repaired, And friendship's broken chain may be renewed;But this is in your doing, and dependsUpon the choice you make. Two roadsAre lying now before you: one is large, Open and pleasant, leading unto peace, Your own security and happiness;The other--narrow, crooked and constrained--Most surely leads to misery and death. Be not deceived! All your united forceIs but as chaff before the Seventeen Fires. Your warriors are brave, but so are ours;Whilst ours are countless as the forest leaves, Or grains of sand upon the Wabash shores. Rely not on the English to protect you!They are not able to protect themselves. They will not war with us, for, if they do, Ere many moons have passed our battle flagShall wave o'er all the forts of Canada. What reason have you to complain of us?What have we taken? or what treaties maimed?You tell us we have robbed you of your lands--Bought them from nameless braves and village chiefsWho had no right to sell--prove that to us, And they will be restored. I have full powerTo treat with you. Bring your complaint to me, And I, in honor, pledge your safe return. " TECUMSEH. Is this it all? BARRON. Yes, all. I have commandsTo bear your answer back without delay. PROPHET. This is our answer, then, to Harrison:Go tell that bearded liar we shall come, With forces which will pledge our own return! TECUMSEH. What shall my answer be? PROPHET. Why, like my own--There is no answer savethat we shall go. TECUMSEH. (_To_ BARRON. ) I fear that our complaintlies all too deep For your Chief's curing. The GreatSpirit gaveThe red men this wide continent as theirs, And in the east another to the white;But, not content at home, these crossed the sea, And drove our fathers from their ancient seats. Their sons in turn are driven to the Lakes, And cannot further go unless they drown. Yet now you take upon yourselves to sayThis tract is Kickapoo, this Delaware, And this Miami; but your Chief should knowThat all our lands are common to our race!How can one nation sell the rights of allWithout consent of all? No! For my part I am a Red Man, not a Shawanoe, And here I mean to stay. Go to your chief, And tell him I shall meet him at Vincennes. [_Exeunt all but_ TECUMSEH. ] What is there in my nature so supineThat I must ever quarrel with revenge?From vales and rivers which were once our ownThe pale hounds who uproot our ancient gravesCome whining for our lands, with fawning tongues, And schemes and subterfuge and subtleties. O for a Pontiac to drive them backAnd whoop them to their shuddering villages!O for an age of valour like to his, When freedom clothed herself with solitude, And one in heart the scattered nations stood, And one in hand. It comes! and mine shall beThe lofty task to teach them to be free--To knit the nations, bind them into one, And end the task great Pontiac begun! SCENE II. --ANOTHER PART OF THE FOREST. _Enter_ LEFROY, _carrying his rifle, andexamining a knot of wild flowers. _ LEFROY. This region is as lavish of its flowersAs Heaven of its primrose blooms by night. This is the Arum which within its rootFolds life and death; and this the Prince's Pine, Fadeless as love and truth--the fairest formThat ever sun-shower washed with sudden rain. This golden cradle is the Moccasin Flower, Wherein the Indian hunter sees his hound;And this dark chalice is the Pitcher-PlantStored with the water of forgetfulness. Whoever drinks of it, whose heart is pure, Will sleep for aye 'neath foodful asphodel, And dream of endless love. I need it not!I am awake, and yet I dream of love. It is the hour of meeting, when the sunTakes level glances at these mighty woods, And Iena has never failed till now, To meet me here! What keeps her? Can it beThe Prophet? Ah, that villain has a thought, Undreamt of by his simple followers, Dark in his soul as midnight! If--but no--He fears her though he hates! What shall I do?Rehearse to listening woods, or ask these oaksWhat thoughts they have, what knowledge of the past?They dwarf me with their greatness, but shall comeA meaner and a mightier than they, And cut them down. Yet rather would I dwellWith them, with wildness and its stealthy forms--Yea, rather with wild men, wild beasts and birds, Than in the sordid town that here may rise. For here I am a part of Nature's self, And not divorced from her like men who plodThe weary streets of care in search of gain. And here I feel the friendship of the earth:Not the soft cloying tenderness of handWhich fain would satiate the hungry soulWith household honey-combs and parloured sweets, But the strong friendship of primeval things--The rugged kindness of a giant heart, And love that lasts. I have a poem madeWhich doth concern earth's injured majesty--Be audience, ye still untroubled stems! (_Recites_) There was a time on this fair continent When all things throve in spacious peacefulness. The prosperous forests unmolested stood, For where the stalwart oak grew there it lived Long ages, and then died among its kind. The hoary pines--those ancients of the earth-- Brimful of legends of the early world, Stood thick on their own mountains unsubdued. And all things else illumined by the sun, Inland or by the lifted wave, had rest. The passionate or calm pageants of the skies No artist drew; but in the auburn west Innumerable faces of fair cloud Vanished in silent darkness with the day. The prairie realm--vast ocean's paraphrase-- Rich in wild grasses numberless, and flowers Unnamed save in mute Nature's inventory No civilized barbarian trenched for gain. And all that flowed was sweet and uncorrupt. The rivers and their tributary streams, Undammed, wound on forever, and gave up Their lonely torrents to weird gulfs of sea, And ocean wastes unshadowed by a sail. And all the wild life of this western world Knew not the fear of man; yet in those woods, And by those plenteous streams and mighty lakes, And on stupendous steppes of peerless plain, And in the rocky gloom of canyons deep, Screened by the stony ribs of mountains hoar Which steeped their snowy peaks in purging cloud, And down the continent where tropic suns Warmed to her very heart the mother earth, And in the congeal'd north where silence self Ached with intensity of stubborn frost, There lived a soul more wild than barbarous; A tameless soul--the sunburnt savage free-- Free, and untainted by the greed of gain: Great Nature's man content with Nature's food. But hark! I hear her footsteps in the leaves--And so my poem ends. _Enter_ IENA, _downcast. _ My love! my love! What! Iena in tears! your looks, like clouds, O'erspread my joy which, but a moment past, Rose like the sun to high meridian. Ah, how is this? She trembles, and she starts, And looks with wavering eyes through oozing tears, As she would fly from me. Why do you weep? IENA. I weep, for I have come to say--farewell. LEFROY. Farewell! I have fared well in love till now;For you are mine, and I am yours, so sayFarewell, farewell, a thousand times farewell. IENA. How many meanings has the word? since yoursIs full of joy, but mine, alas, of pain. The pale-face and the Shawanoe must part. LEFROY. Must part? Yes part--we parted yesterday--And shall to-day--some dream disturbs my love. IENA. Oh, that realities were dreams! 'Tis notA dream that parts us, but a stern command. Tecumseh has proclaimed it as his law--Red shall not marry white; so must you leave;And therefore I have come to say farewell. LEFROY. That word is barbed, and like an arrow aimed. The maid who saved my life would mar it too! IENA. Speak not of that! Your life's in danger now. Tecumseh has returned, and--knowing all--Has built a barrier betwixt our loves, More rigid than a palisade of oak. LEFROY. What means he? And what barrier is this? IENA. The barrier is the welfare of our race--Wherefore his law--"Red shall not marry white. "His noble nature halts at cruelty, So fear him not! But in the Prophet's hand, Dark, dangerous and bloody, there is death, And, sheltered by Tecumseh's own decree, He who misprizes you, and hates, will strike--Then go at once! Alas for Iena, Who loves her race too well to break its law. LEFROY. I love you better than I love my race;And could I mass my fondness for my friends, Augment it with my love of noble brutes, Tap every spring of reverence and respect, And all affections bright and beautiful--Still would my love for you outweigh them all. IENA. Speak not of love! Speak of the Long-Knife'shate!Oh, it is pitiful to creep in fearO'er lands where once our fathers stept in pride!The Long-Knife strengthens, whilst our race decays, And falls before him as our forests fall. First comes his pioneer, the bee, and soonThe mast which plumped the wild deer fats his swine. His cattle pasture where the bison fed;His flowers, his very weeds, displace our own--Aggressive as himself. All, all thrust back!Destruction follows us, and swift decay. Oh, I have lain for hours upon the grass, And gazed into the tenderest blue of heaven--Cleansed as with dew, so limpid, pure and sweet--All flecked with silver packs of standing cloudMost beautiful! But watch them narrowly!Those clouds will sheer small fleeces from their sides, Which, melting in our sight as in a dream, Will vanish all like phantoms in the sky. So melts our heedless race! Some weaned away, And wedded to rough-handed pioneers, Who, fierce as wolves in hatred of our kind, Yet from their shrill and acid women turn, Prizing our maidens for their gentleness. Some by outlandish fevers die, and some--Caught in the white man's toils and vices mean--Court death, and find it in the trader's cup. And all are driven from their heritage, Far from our fathers' seats and sepulchres, And girdled with the growing glooms of war;Resting a moment here, a moment there, Whilst ever through our plains and forest realmsBursts the pale spoiler, armed, with eager quest, And ruinous lust of land. I think of all--And own Tecumseh right. 'Tis he aloneCan stem this tide of sorrows dark and deep;So must I bend my feeble will to his, And, for my people's welfare, banish love. LEFROY. Nay, for your people's welfare keep your love!My heart is true: I know that braggart nation, Whose sordid instincts, cold and pitiless, Would cut you off, and drown your Council-Fires. I would defend you, therefore keep me here!My love is yours alone, my hand I give, With this good weapon in it, to your race. IENA. Oh, heaven help a weak untutored maid, Whose head is warring 'gainst a heart that tells, With every throb, I love you. Leave me! Fly! LEFROY. I kneel to you--it is my leave-taking, So, bid me fly again, and break my heart! (IENA _sings_. ) Fly far from me, Even as the daylight flies, And leave me in the darkness of my pain! Some earlier love will come to thee again, And sweet new moons will rise, And smile on it and thee. Fly far from me, Even whilst the daylight wastes-- Ere thy lips burn me in a last caress; Ere fancy quickens, and my longings press, And my weak spirit hastes For shelter unto thee! Fly far from me, Even whilst the daylight pales-- So shall we never, never meet again! Fly! for my senses swim--Oh, Love! Oh, Pain!-- Help! for my spirit fails-- I cannot fly from thee! [IENA _sinks into_ LEFROY'S _arms_. ] LEFROY. No Iena! You cannot fly from me--My heart is in your breast, and yours in mine;Therefore our love-- _Enter_ TECUMSEH, _followed by_ MAMATEE. TECUMSEH. False girl! Is this your promise?Would that I had a pale-face for a niece--Not one so faithless to her pledge! You oweAll duty and affection to your race, Whose interest--the sum of our desires--Traversed by alien love, drops to the ground. IENA. Tecumseh ne'er was cruel until now. Call not love alien which includes our race--Love for our people, pity for their wrongs!He loves our race because his heart is here--And mine is in his breast. Oh, ask him there, And he will tell you-- LEFROY. Iena, let me speak!Tecumseh, we as strangers have becomeStrangely familiar through sheer circumstance, Which often breeds affection or disdain, Yet lighting but the surface of the man, Shows not his heart. I know not what you think, And care not for your favour or your love, Save as desert may crown me. Your decree, "Red shall not marry white, " is arbitrary, And off the base of nature; for if theyShould marry not, then neither should they love. Yet Iena loves me, and I love her. Be merciful! I ask not IenaTo leave her race; I rather would engageThese willing arms in her defence and yours. Heap obligation up, conditions stern--But send not your cold "Nay" athwart our lives. IENA. Be merciful! Oh, uncle, pity us! TECUMSEH. My pity, Iena, goes with reproach, Blunting the edge of anger; yet my willIs fixed, and the command to be obeyed--This stranger must depart--you to your lodge! MAMATEE. Tecumseh, I am in the background here, As ever I have been in your affection. For I have ne'er known what good women prize--Earth's greatest boon to them--a husband's love. TECUMSEH. My nation has my love, in which you share, With special service rendered to yourself;So that your cabin flows with mouffles sweet, And hips of wapiti and bedded robes. Teach me my duty further if you will!My love is wide, and broods upon my race. MAMATEE. The back is clad--the heart, alas! goes bare. Oh, I would rather shiver in the snow--My heart downed softly with Tecumseh's love--Than sleep unprized in warmest couch of fur. I know your love is wide, and, for that IShare but a millionth part of it, and feelIts meagreness, I plead most eagerlyFor this poor white, whose heart is full of love, And gives it all to her. TECUMSEH. It cannot be!You know not what you ask. 'Tis 'gainst our law, Which, breached, would let our untamed people through. LEFROY. I care not for your cruel law! The heartHas statutes of its own which make for love. TECUMSEH. You'd cross me too! This child's play of theheart, Which sterner duty has repressed in me, Makes even captives bold. (_Aside_. ) I like hiscourage! MAMATEE. If duty makes Tecumseh's heart grow cold, Then shame on it! and greater shame on himWho ever yet showed mercy to his foes, Yet, turning from his own, in pity's spiteDenies it to a girl. See, here I kneel! IENA. And I! O uncle, frown not on our love! TECUMSEH. By the Great Spirit this is over much!My heart is made for pity, not for war, Since women's tears unman me. Have your will!I shall respect your love, (_To Lefroy_. ) yoursafety too. I go at once to sound the WyandotsConcerning some false treaties with the whites. The Prophet hates you, therefore come with me. [_The_ PROPHET _rushes in with a band ofBraves. _] PROPHET. She's here! Take hold of her and bear heroff! TECUMSEH. (_Menacingly_) Beware! Lay not a fingeron the girl! [_The Braves fall back_. ] PROPHET. There is no law Tecumseh will not break, When women weep, and pale-face spies deceive. MAMATEE. Ah, wretch! not all our people's groans couldwringA single tear from out your murderous eye. PROPHET. This is my captive, and his life is mine! [_Seizing_ LEFROY, _and lifting hishatchet_. ] IENA. (_Rushing to_ LEFROY) Save him! Save him! TECUMSEH. Your life will go for his--One blow and you are doomed! [TECUMSEH _grasps the_ PROPHET'S _upliftedaxe_. ] END OF FIRST ACT. ACT II. SCENE FIRST:--BEFORE THE PROPHET'S TOWN. _Enter_ TECUMSEH _and_ LEFROY. TECUMSEH. No guard or outlook--here! This is moststrange. Chance reigns where prudence sleeps! _Enter a_ BRAVE. Here comes a braveWith frenzy in his faceWhere is the Prophet? BRAVE. He fasts alone within the medicine-lodge, And talks to our Great Spirit. All our braves, Huddling in fear, stand motionless without, Thrilled by strange sounds, and voices not of earth. TECUMSEH. How long has it been thus? BRAVE. Four nights have passedAnd none have seen his face; but all have heardHis dreadful tongue, in incantations deep, Fetch horrors up--vile beings flashed from hell, Who fought as devils fight, until the lodgeShook to its base with struggling, and the earthQuaked as, with magic strength, he flung them down. These strove with him for mastery of our fate;But, being foiled, Yohewa has appeared, And, in the darkness of our sacred lodge, Communes with him. TECUMSEH. Our Spirit great and good!He comes not here for nought. What has he promised? BRAVE. Much! for henceforth we are invulnerable. The bullets of the Long-Knives will rebound, Like petty hailstones, from our naked breasts;And, in the misty morns of our attack, Strange lights will shine on them to guide our aim, Whilst clouds of gloom will screen us from their sight. TECUMSEH. The Prophet is a wise interpreter, And all his words, by valour backed, will stand;For valour is the weapon of the soul, More dreaded by our vaunting enemiesThan the plumed arrow, or the screaming ball. What wizardry and witchcraft has he foundConspiring 'gainst our people's good? BRAVE. Why, none! Wizard and witch are weeded out, hesays;Not one is left to do us hurt. TECUMSEH. 'Tis well! My brother has the eyeball of thehorse, And swerves from danger. (_Aside_. ) Bid ourwarriors come! I wait them here. [_Exit_ BRAVE. ] The Prophet soon will follow. LEFROY. Now opportunity attend my heartWhich waits for Iena! True love's behest, Outrunning war's, will bring her to my armsEre cease the braves from gasping wonderment. TECUMSEH. First look on service ere you look on love;You shall not see her here. LEFROY. My promisesAre sureties of my service-- TECUMSEH. But your deeds, Accomplishments; our people count on deeds. Be patient! Look upon our warriorsRoped round with scars and cicatrized wounds, Inflicted in deep trial of their spiritTheir skewered sides are proofs of manly souls, Which--had one groan escaped from agony--Would all have sunk beneath our women's heels, Unfit for earth or heaven. So try your heart, And let endurance swallow all love's sighs. Yoke up your valour with our people's cause, And I, who love your nation, which is just, When deeds deserve it, will adopt you here, By ancient custom of our race, and join Iena's hand toyours. LEFROY. Your own hand first In pledge of this! TECUMSEH. It ever goes with truth! LEFROY. Now come some wind of chance, and show me herBut for one heavenly moment! as when leavesAre blown aside in summer, and we seeThe nested oriole. [_Enter Chiefs and warriors--The warriors clusteraround_ TECUMSEH, _shouting and discharging theirpieces_. ] TECUMSEH. My chiefs and braves! MIAMI CHIEF. Fall back! Fall back! Ye press too closeon him. TECUMSEH. My friends! our joy is like to meetingstreams, Which draw into a deep and prouder bed. [_Shouts from the warriors_. ] DELAWARE CHIEF. Silence, ye braves! let great Tecumsehspeak! [_The warriors fall back_. ] TECUMSEH. Comrades, and faithful warriors of our race!Ye who defeated Hartnar and St Clair, And made their hosts a winter's feast for wolves!I call on you to follow me again, Not now for war, but as forearmed for fight. As ever in the past so is it still:Our sacred treaties are infringed and torn;Laughed out of sanctity, and spurned away;Used by the Long-Knife's slave to light his fire, Or turned to kites by thoughtless boys, whose wristsAnchor their fathers' lies in front of heaven. And now we're asked to Council at Vincennes;To bend to lawless ravage of our lands, To treacherous bargains, contracts false, whereinOne side is bound, the other loose as air!Where are those villains of our race and bloodWho signed the treaties that unseat us here;That rob us of rich plains and forests wide;And which, consented to, will drive us henceTo stage our lodges in the Northern Lakes, In penalties of hunger worse than death?Where are they? that we may confront them nowWith your wronged sires, your mothers, wives and babes, And, wringing from their false and slavish lipsConfession of their baseness, brand with shameThe traitor hands which sign us to our graves. MIAMI CHIEF. Some are age-bent and blind, and otherssprawl, And stagger in the Long-Knife's villages;And some are dead, and some have fled away, And some are lurking in the forest here, Sneaking, like dogs, until resentment cools. KICKAPOO CHIEF. We all disclaim their treaties. Shouldthey come, Forced from their lairs by hunger, to our doors, Swift punishment will light upon their heads. TECUMSEH. Put yokes upon them! let their mouths bebound!For they are swine who root with champing jawsTheir fathers' fields, and swallow their own offspring. _Enter the_ PROPHET _in his robe--his facediscoloured_. The Prophet! Welcome, my brother, from the lodge ofdreams!Hail to thee, sagest among men--great heirOf all the wisdom of Pengasega! PROPHET. This pale-face here again! this hateful snake, Who crawls between our people and their laws!(_Aside_. )Your greeting, brother, takes the chill from mine, When last we parted you were not so kind. TECUMSEH. The Prophet's wisdom covers all. He knowsWhy Nature varies in her handiwork, Moulding one man from snow, the next from fire-- PROPHET. Which temper is your own, and blazes up, In winds of passion like a burning pine. TECUMSEH. 'Twill blaze no more unless to scorch ourfoes. My brother, there's my hand--for I am grievedThat aught befell to shake our proper love. Our purpose is too high, and full of danger;We have too vast a quarrel on our handsTo waste our breath on this. [_Steps forward and offers his hand_. ] PROPHET. My hand to yours. SEVERAL CHIEFS. Tecumseh and the Prophet are rejoined! TECUMSEH. Now, but one petty cloud distains our sky. My brother, this man loves our people well. [_Pointing to_ LEFROY. ] LEFROY. I know he hates me, yet I hope to winMy way into his heart. PROPHET. There--take my hand! I must dissemble. Would this palm were poison! (_Aside_. ) (_To_TECUMSEH)What of the Wyandots? And yet I know!I have been up among the clouds, and downInto the entrails of the earth, and seenThe dwelling-place of devils. All my dreamsAre from above, and therefore favour us. TECUMSEH. With one accord the Wyandots disclaimThe treaties of Fort Wayne, and burn with rage. Their tryst is here, and some will go with meTo Council at Vincennes. Where's Winnemac? MIAMI CHIEF. That recreant has joined our enemies, And with the peace-pipe sits beside their fire, And whins away our lives. KICKAPOO CHIEF. The Deaf-Chief, too, With head awry, who cannot hear us speakThough thunder shouted for us from the skies, Yet hears the Long-Knives whisper at Vincennes;And, when they jest upon our miseries, Grips his old leathern sides, and coughs with laughter. DELAWARE CHIEF. And old Kanaukwa--famed when we wereyoung--Has hid his axe, and washed his honours off. TECUMSEH. 'Tis honor he has parted with, not honors;Good deeds are ne'er forespent, nor wiped away. I know these men; they've lost their followers, And, grasping at the shadow of command, Where sway and custom once had realty, By times, and turn about, follow each other. They count for nought--but Winnemac is true, Though over-politic; he will not leave us. PROPHET. Those wizened snakes must be destroyed atonce! TECUMSEH. Have mercy, brother--those poor men are old. PROPHET. Nay, I shall teaze them till they stingthemselves;Their rusty fangs are doubly dangerous. TECUMSEH. What warriors are ready for Vincennes? WARRIORS. All! All are ready. Tecumseh leads us on--wefollow him. TECUMSEH. Four hundred warriors will go with me, All armed, yet only for securityAgainst the deep designs of Harrison. For 'tis my purpose still to temporize, Not break with him in war till once againI scour the far emplacements of our tribes. Then shall we close at once on all our foes. They claim our lands, but we shall take their lives;Drive out their thievish souls, and spread their bonesTo bleach upon the misty Alleghanies;Or make death's treaty with them on the spot, And sign our bloody marks upon their crownsFor lack of schooling--ceding but enoughOf all the lands they covet for their graves. MIAMI CHIEF. Tecumseh's tongue is housed in wisdom'scheeks;His valour and his prudence march together. DELAWARE CHIEF. 'Tis wise to draw the distant nationson. This scheme will so extend the Long-Knife force, In lines defensive stretching to the sea, Their bands will be but morsels for our braves. PROPHET. How long must this bold project take to ripen?Time marches with the foe, and his surveyorsAlready smudge our forests with their fires. It frets my blood and makes my bowels turnTo see those devils blaze our ancient oaks, Cry "right!" and drive their rascal pickets down. Why not make war on them at once? TECUMSEH. Not now! Time will make room for weightieraffairs. Be this the disposition for the hour:Our warriors from Vincennes will all return, Save twenty--the companions of my journey--And this brave white, who longs to share our toil, And win his love by deeds in our defence. You, brother, shall remain to guard our town, Our wives, our children, all that's dear to us--Receive each fresh accession to our strength;And from the hidden world, which you inspect, Draw a divine instruction for their souls. Go, now, ye noble chiefs and warriors!Make preparation--I'll be with you soon. To-morrow we shall make the Wabash boil, And beat its current, racing to Vincennes. [_Exeunt all but_ TECUMSEH _and the_PROPHET. ] PROPHET. I shall return unto our sacred lodge, And there invoke the Spirit of the WindTo follow you, and blow good tidings back. TECUMSEH. Our strait is such we need the help ofheaven. Use all your wisdom, brother, but--beware!Pluck not our enterprise while it is green, And breed no quarrel here till I return. Avoid it as you would the rattling snake;And, when you hear the sound of danger, shrink, And face it not, unless with belts of peace. White wampum, not the dark, till we can strikeWith certain aim. Can I depend on you? PROPHET. Trust you in fire to burn, or cold to freeze?So may you trust in me. The heavy chargeWhich you have laid upon my shoulders nowWould weigh the very soul of rashness down. [_Exit the_ PROPHET. ] TECUMSEH. I think I can depend on him--I must!Yet do I know his crafty nature well--His hatred of our foes, his love of self, And wide ambition. What is mortal man?Who can divine this creature that doth takeSome colour from all others? Nor shall IPush cold conclusions 'gainst my brother's sumOf what is good--so let dependence rest! [_Exit_. ] SCENE SECOND--VINCENNES--A STREET. _Enter Citizens_ GERKIN, SLAUGH and TWANG. GERKIN. Ain't it about time Barron was back, Jedge? TWANG. I reckon so. Our Guvner takes a crazy sight morepains than I would to sweetin thet ragin' devilTecumseh's temper. I'd sweetin it wi' sugar o lead ef Ihad _my_ way. SLAUGH. It's a reekin' shame--dang me ef it aint. Endthet two-faced, one-eyed brother o' his, the Prophet. --I'll be darned ef folks don't say thet the Shakers inthem 'ere parts claims him fer a disciple! TWANG. Them Shakers is a queer lot. They dance jestlike wild Injuns, and thinks we orter be kind to thered rascals, end use them honestly. GERKIN. Wall! Thet's what our Guvner ses tew. But Ireckon he's shammin' a bit Twist you and me, he's onthe make like the rest o' us. Think o' bein' kind to ared devil thet would lift your har ten minutes arter!End as fer honesty--I say "set 'em up" every time, andthen rob 'em. Thet's the way to clar them out o' thekentry. Whiskey's better 'n gunpowder, end costs lessthan fightin' 'em in the long run. _Enter_ CITIZEN BLOAT. TWANG. Thet's so! Hello, Major, what's up? You lookkind o' riled to-day. BLOAT. Wall, Jedge, I dew feel right mad--have youheerd the noos? TWANG. No! has old Sledge bust you at the keerds again? BLOAT. Old Sledge be darned! I had jest clar'd him outo' continentals--fifty to the shillin'--at his owngame, when in ript Roudi--the Eyetalian that knifed theMuskoe Injun for peekin' through his bar-room winderlast spring--jest down from Fort Knox. You know thechap, General; you was on his jury. SLAUGH. I reckon I dew. The Court was agin him, but weacquitted him afore the Chief-Justice finished hischarge, and gave him a vote o' thanks to boot. There'sa heap o' furriners creepin' inter these parts--poordowntrodden cusses from Europe--end, ef they're alllike Roudi, they'll dew--a'most as hendy wi' the knifeas our own people. But what's up? BLOAT. Roudi saw Barron at Fort Knox, restin' thar onhis way back from the Prophet's Town, end he sez thetred assassin Tecumseh's a-cumin' down wi' four hundredo' his painted devils to convarse wi' our Guvner. They're all armed, he sez, end will be here afore mid-day. SLAUGH. Wall! our Guvner notified him to come--he'sonly gettin' what he axed for. There'll be a deal o'loose har flitterin' about the streets afore night, Ireckon. Harrison's a heap too soft wi' them redroosters; he h'aint got cheek enough. GERKIN. I've heerd say the Guvner, end the ChiefJustice tew, thinks a sight o' this tearin' red devil. They say he's a great man. They say, tew, thet ourtreaty Injuns air badly used--thet they shouldn't bemeddled wi' on their resarves, end should hev skoolin'. BLOAT. Skoolin'! That gits me! Dogoned ef I wouldn'tlarn them jest one thing--what them regler officers upto the Fort larns their dogs--"to drap to shot, " onlyin a different kind o' way like; end, es fer theirresarves, I say, give our farmers a chance--let themlocate! TWANG. Thet's so, Major! What arthly use air they--plouterin' about their little bits o' fields, wi' theirlittle bits o' cabins, end livin' half the time on mush-rats? I say, let them move out, end give reliablecitizens a chance. SLAUGH. Wall, I reckon our Guvner's kind's about playedout. They call themselves the old stock--the clean pea--the rale gentlemen o' the Revolooshun. But, gentlemen, ain't we the Revolooshun? Jest wait till the livecitizens o' these United States end Territories gits achance, end we'll show them gentry what a free people, wi' our institooshuns, _kin_ do. There'll be nomore talk o' skoolin fer Injuns, you bet! I'd give themKernel Crunch's billet. GERKIN. What was thet, General? SLAUGH. Why, they say he killed a hull family o'redskins, and stuck 'em up as scar' crows in his wheatfields. Gentlemen, there's nothin' like original idees! TWANG. Thet war an original idee! The Kernel orter hevtuk out a patent. I think I've heerd o' Crunch. Wam'the wi' Kernel Crawford, o' the melish', at one time? SLAUGH Whar? TWANG. Why over to the Muskingum. You've heerd o' themDelaware Moravians over to the Muskingum, surely? SLAUGH. Oh, them convarted chaps! but I a'most forgitthe carcumstance. TWANG. Wall, them red devils had a nice resarve thar--as yieldin' a bit o' sile as one could strike this sideo' the Alleghanies. They was all convarted by theMoravians, end pertended to be as quiet and peaceableas the Shakers hereabout But Kernel Crawford--who knewgood sile when he sot his eyes on it--diskivered thetthem prayin' chaps had helped a war-party from theNorth, wi' provisions--or thort they did, which was thesame thing. So--one fine Sunday--he surrounds theirchurch wi' his melish'--when the Injuns was all a-prayin'--end walks in himself, jest for a minute ortwo, end prays a bit so as not to skeer them tew soon, end then walks out, end locks the door. The Kernel thencutely--my heart kind o' warms to thet man--put a squado' melish' at each winder wi' their bayonets pinted, end sot fire to the Church, end charred up the hullkit, preacher and all! The heft o' them was burnt; butsome thet warn't thar skinned out o' the kentry, endgot lands from the British up to the Thames River inCanady, end founded what they call the Moravian Townsthar; and thar they is still--fur them Britishers kindo' pampers the Injuns, so they may git at our scalps. SLAUGH. I reckon we'll hev a tussle wi' them gentryafore long. But for Noo England we'd a hed it aforenow; but them Noo Englanders kind o' curries to theBritishers. A war would spile their shippin', end sothey're agin it. But we h'aint got no ships to spile inthis western kentry, end so I reckon we'll pitch in. GERKIN. We'd better git out o' this Injun fry-pan fust, old hoss! I could lick my own weight in wild-cats, butthis ruck o' Injuns is jest a little tew hefty. BLOAT. Maybe they want to come to skool, end startstore, end sich! GERKIN. Gentlemen--I mean to send my lady down stream, end I reckon you'd better dew the same wi' your 'uns--jest fer safety like. My time's limited--will youliquor? ALL. You bet! BLOAT. (_Meditatively_) Skoolin! Wall, I'll bedarned! [_Exeunt_. ] SCENE THIRD. THE SAME. A ROOM IN GENERAL HARRISON'SHOUSE. _Enter_ GENERAL HARRISON, _and some Officers ofthe American Army_. HARRISON. What savage handiwork keeps Barron back? _Enter_ BARRON. Ah, here he comes, his looks interpretingMischief and failure! It is as I feared. What answer doyou bring? BARRON. Tecumseh comesTo council, with four hundred men at back, To which, with all persuasion, I objected--As that it would alarm our citizens, Whose hasty temper, by suspicion edged, Might break in broils of quarrel with his braves;But, sir, it was in vain--so be prepared!Your Council records may be writ in blood. HARRISON. Will he attack us, think you? BARRON. No, not now. His present thought is tointimidate. But, lest some rash and foulmouthed citizenShould spur his passion to the run, fore-arm! HARRISON. Tut! Arms are scarce as soldiers in our town, And I am sick of requisitioning. Nay, we must trust to something else than arms. Tecumseh is a savage but in name--Let's trust to him!What says he of our treaties? BARRON. O, he discharges them as heavy loads, Which borne by red men only, break their backs. All lands, he says, are common to his race;Not to be sold but by consent of all. HARRISON. Absurd! This proposition would preventAll purchase and all progress. No, indeed;We cannot tie our hands with such conditions. What of the Prophet? Comes he with the rest? BARRON. The Prophet stays behind. HARRISON. He is a foilUsed by Tecumseh to augment his greatness;And, by good husbandry of incantation, And gloomy charms by night, this Prophet worksSo shrewdly on their braves that every man, Inflamed by auguries of victory, Would rush on death. 1ST OFFICER. Why, General, I heardHe over-trumpt you once and won the trick. HARRISON. How so? 1ST OFFICER. Well, once, before his braves, 'tis said, You dared him to a trial of his spells, Which challenge he accepted, having heardFrom white men of a coming sun-eclipse. Then, shrewdly noting day and hour, he calledBoldly his followers round him, and declaredThat he would hide the sun. They stood and gazed, And, when the moon's colossal shadow fell, They crouched upon the ground, and worshipped him. HARRISON. He caught me there, and mischief came of it. Oh, he is deep. How different those brothers!One dipt in craft, the dye of cruelty, The other frank and open as the day. _Enter an_ ORDERLY. ORDERLY. Tecumseh and his braves have reached thelanding! [_Excitement. All rise hastily_. ] HARRISON. This room is smaller than our audience:Take seats and benches to the portico--There we shall treat with him. [_Exeunt all but_ GENERAL HARRISON. ] Could I but strainMy charge this chief might be our trusty friend. Yet I am but my nation's servitor;Gold is the king who overrides the right, And turns our people from the simple ways, And fair ideal of our fathers' lives. [_Exit_. ] SCENE FOURTH. --THE SAME. THE PORTICO OF GENERALHARRISON'S HOUSE. AN OPEN GROVE AT A LITTLE DISTANCE INFRONT. [_Curtain rises and discovers_ GENERAL HARRISON, _army officers and citizens, of various quality, including_ TWANG, SLAUGH, GERKIN _and_ BLOAT, _seated in the portico. A sergeant and guard ofsoldiers near by. Enter_ TECUMSEH _and his followers with_ LEFROY_in Indian dress. They all stop at the grove_. ] HARRISON. Why halts he there? Go tell him he is welcometo our house. [_An Orderly goes down with message_. ] 1ST OFFICER. How grave and decorous they look--"the mien Of pensive people born in ancient woods. "But look at him! Look at Tecumseh there--How simple in attire! that eagle, plumeSole ornament, and emblem of his spirit. And yet, far-scanned, there's something in his faceThat likes us not. Would we were out of this! HARRISON. Yes; even at a distance I can seeHis eyes distilling anger. 'Tis no signOf treachery, which ever drapes with smilesThe most perfidious purpose. Our poor strengthWould fall at once should he break out on us;But let us hope 'tis yet a war of witsWhere firmness may enact the part of force. [_Orderly returns_. ] What answer do you bring? ORDERLY. Tecumseh says: "Houses are built for whites--the red man's house, Leaf-roofed, and walled withliving oak, is there-- [_Pointing to the grove_. ] Let our white brother meet us in it!" 2ND OFFICER. Oh! White brother! So he levels to yourheight, And strips your office of its dignity. 3RD OFFICER. 'Tis plain he cares not for your dignity, And touchingly reminds us of our tenets. Our nation spurns the outward shows of state, And ceremony dies for lack of service. Pomp is discrowned, and throned regalityDissolved away in our new land and laws. Man is the Presence here! 1ST OFFICER. Well, for my part, I like not that one inparticular. [_Pointing toward_ TECUMSEH. ] 3RD OFFICER. No more do I! I wish I were a crab, And had its courtly fashion of advancing. HARRISON. Best yield to him, the rather that he nowInvites our confidence. His heavy forceScants good opinion somewhat, yet I knowThere's honor, aye, and kindness in this Chief. [_Rising_. ] 3RD OFFICER. Yes, faith, he loves us all, and means tokeepLocks of our hair for memory. Here goes. [_All rise_. ] _Servants and soldiers carrychairs and benches to the grove, followed by_GENERAL HARRISON _and others, who seat themselves--_TECUMSEH _and his followers still standing in thelower part of the grove_. HARRISON. We have not met to bury our respect, Or mar our plea with lack of courtesy. The Great Chiefknows it is his father's wish That he should sit byhim. TECUMSEH. My father's wish! My father is the sun; theearth my mother [_Pointing to each in turn_. ] And on her mighty bosom I shall rest. [TECUMSEH _and his followers seat themselves on thegrass_. ] HARRISON. (_Rising_. ) I asked Tecumseh to conferwith me, Not in war's hue, but for the ends of peace. Our own intent--witness our presence here, Unarmed save those few muskets and our swords. How comes it, then, that he descends on usWith this o'erbearing and untimely strength?Tecumseh's virtues are the theme of all;Wisdom and courage, frankness and good faith--To speak of these things is to think of him!Yet, as one theft makes men suspect the thief--Be all his life else spent in honesty--So does one breach of faithfulness in manWound all his after deeds. There is a pauseIn some men's goodness like the barren timeOf those sweet trees which yield each second year, Wherein what seems a niggardness in nature;Is but good husbandry for future gifts. But this tree bears, and bears most treacherous fruit!Here is a gross infringement of all lawsThat shelter men in council, where should sitNo disproportioned force save that of reason--Our strong dependence still, and argument, Of better consequence than that of arms, If great Tecumseh should give ear to it. TECUMSEH. (_Rising_. ) You called upon Tecumseh andhe came!You sent your messenger, asked us to bringOur wide complaint to you--and it is here! [_Waving his arm toward his followers_. ] Why is our brother angry at our force, Since every man but represents a wrong?Nay! rather should our force be multiplied!Fill up your streets and overflow your fields, And crowd upon the earth for standing room;Still would our wrongs outweigh our witnesses, And scant recital for the lack of tongues. I know your reason, and its bitter heart, Its form of justice, clad with promises--The cloaks of death! That reason was the snareWhich tripped our ancestors in days of yore--Who knew not falsehood and so feared it not:Men who mistook your fathers' vows for truth, And took them, cold and hungry, to their hearts. Filled them with food, and shared with them theirhomes, With such return as might make baseness blush. What tree e'er bore such treacherous fruit as this?But let it pass! let wrongs die with the wronged!The red man's memory is full of graves. But wrongs live with the living, who are here--Inheritors of all our fathers' sighs, And tears, and garments wringing wet with blood. The injuries which you have done to usCry out for remedy, or wide revenge. Restore the forests you have robbed us of--Our stolen homes and vales of plenteous com!Give back the boundaries, which are our lives, Ere the axe rise! aught else is reasonless. HARRISON. Tecumseh's passion is a dangerous floodWhich sweeps away his judgment. Let him liftHis threatened axe to hit defenceless heads!It cannot mar the body of our right, Nor graze the even justice of our claim:These still would live, uncancelled by our death. Let reason rule us, in whose sober lightWe read those treaties which offend him thus:What nation was the first established here, Settled for centuries, with title sound?You know that people, the Miamies, well. Long ere the white man tripped his anchors cold, To cast them by the glowing western isles, They lived upon these lands in peace, and noneDared cavil at their claim. We bought from them, For such equivalent to largess joined, That every man was hampered with our goods, And stumbled on profusion. But give ear!Jealous lest aught might fail of honesty--Lest one lean interest or poor shade of rightShould point at us--we made the KickapooAnd Delaware the sharer of our gifts, And stretched the arms of bounty over headsWhich held but by Miami sufferance. But, you! whence came you? and what rights have you?The Shawanoes are interlopers here--Witness their name! mere wanderers from the South!Spurned thence by angry Creek and Yamasee--Now here to stir up strife, and tempt the tribesTo break the seals of faith. I am surprisedThat they should be so led, and more than grievedTecumseh has such ingrates at his back. TECUMSEH. Call you those ingrates who but claim theirown, And owe you nothing but revenge? Those menAre here to answer and confront your lies. [_Turning to his followers_. ] Miami, Delaware and Kickapoo!Ye are alleged as signers of those deeds--Those dark and treble treacheries of Fort Wayne. --Ye chiefs whose cheeks are tanned with battle-smoke, Stand forward then, and answer if you did it! KICKAPOO CHIEF. (_Rising_. ) Not I! I disavow them!They were made By village chiefs whose vanity o'ercameTheir judgment, and their duty to our race. DELAWARE CHIEF. (_Rising_. ) And I reject thetreaties in the nameOf all our noted braves and warriors. They have no weight save with the palsied headsWhich dote on friendly compacts in the past. MIAMI CHIEF. (_Rising_. ) And I renounce them also. They were signed By sottish braves--the Long-Knife'stavern-chiefs--Who sell their honor like a pack of fur, Make favour with the pale-face for his fee, And caper with the hatchet for his sport. I am a chief by right of blood, and flingYour false and flimsy treaties in your face. I am my nation's head, and own but oneAs greater than myself, and he is here! [_Pointing to_ TECUMSEH. ] TECUMSEH. You have your answer, and from those whoserightsStand in your own admission. But from me--The Shawanoe--the interloper here--Take the full draught of meaning, and wash downTheir dry and bitter truths. Yes! from the SouthMy people came--fall'n from their wide estateWhere Altamaha's uncongealing springsKept a perpetual summer in their sight--Sweet with magnolia blooms, and dropping balm, And scented breath of orange and of pine. And from the East the hunted Delawares came, Flushed from their coverts and their native streams;Your old allies, men ever true to you, Who, resting after long and weary flight, Are by your bands shot sitting on the ground. HARRISON. Those men got ample payment for their lands, Full recompense, and just equivalent. TECUMSEH. They flew from death to light upon it here!And many a tribe comes pouring from the East, Smitten with fire--their outraged women, maimed, Screaming in horror o'er their murdered babes, Whose sinless souls, slashed out by white men's swords, Whimper in Heaven for revenge. Oh, God!--'Tis thus the pale-face prays, then cries 'Amen':--He clamours, and his Maker answers him, Whilst our Great Spirit sleeps! O, no, no, no, --He does not sleep! He will avenge our wrongs!That Christ the white men murdered, and thought dead--Who, if He died for mankind, died for us--He is alive, and looks from heaven on this!Oh, we have seen your baseness and your guile;Our eyes are opened and we know your ways!No longer shall you hoax us with your pleas, Or with the serpent's cunning wake distrust, Range tribe 'gainst tribe--then shoot the remnant down, And in the red man's empty cabin grin, And shake with laughter o'er his desolate hearth. No, we are one! the red men all are oneIn colour as in love, in lands and fate! HARRISON. Still, with the voice of wrath Tecumsehspeaks, And not with reason's tongue. TECUMSEH. O keep your reason! It is a thief whichsteals away our lands. Your reason is our deadly foe, and writesThe jeering epitaphs for our poor graves. It is the lying maker of your books, Wherein our people's vengeance is set down, But not a word of crimes which led to it. These are hushed up and hid, whilst all our deeds, Even in self-defence, are marked as wrongsHeaped on your blameless heads. But to the point! Just as our brother's SeventeenCouncil FiresUnite for self-protection so do we. How can you blame us, since your own exampleIs but our model and fair precedent?The Long-Knife's craft has kept our tribes apart, Nourished dissensions, raised distinctions up, Forced us to injuries which, soon as done, Are made your vile pretexts for bloody war. But this is past our nations now are one--Ready to rise in their imbanded strength. You promised to restore our ravaged landsOn proof that they are ours--that proof is here, And by the tongues of truth has answered you. Redeem your sacred pledges, and no moreOur "leaden birds" will sing amongst your corn:But love will shine on you, and startled peaceWill come again, and build by every hearth. Refuse--and we shall strike you to the ground!Pour flame and slaughter on your confines wide, Till the charred earth, up to the cope of Heaven, Reeks with the smoke of smouldering villages, And steam of awful fires half-quenched with blood. [_Citizens converse in undertones_. ] TWANG. Did you ever hear the like! Ef I hed my shootin'-iron darn me ef I wouldn't draw a bead on thet barkin'savage. The hungry devil gits under-holts on our Guvnerevery time. SLAUGH. You bet! I reckon he'd better put a lump o'bacon in his mouth to keep his bilin' sap o' passiondown. BLOAT. Thet's mor'n I'd do. This is jest what we gitfor allowin' the skulkin' devils to live. I'd vittle'em on lead pills ef I was Guvner. TWANG. Thet's so! Our civilizashun is jest this--weknow what's what. Ef I hed _my_ way-- HARRISON. Silence, you fools! If you provoke him hereyour blood be on your heads. GERKIN. Right you air, Guvner! We'll close our dampers. TECUMSEH. My brother's ears have heard. Where is histongue? HARRISON. My honest ears ache in default of reason. Tecumseh is reputed wise, yet nowHis fuming passions from his judgment fly, Like roving steeds which gallop from the catch, And kick the air, wasting in wantonnessMore strength than in submission. His threats fallOn fearless ears. Knows he not of our force, Which in the East swarms like mosquitoes here?Our great Kentucky and Virginia fires?Our mounted men and soldier-citizens?These all have stings--let him beware of them! TECUMSEH. Who does not know your vaunting citizens!Well drilled in fraud and disciplined in crime;But in aught else--as honor, justice, truth--A rabble, and a base disordered herd. We know them; and our nations, knit in one, Will challenge them, should this, our last appeal, Fall on unheeding ears. My brother, hearken!East of Ohio you possess our lands, Thrice greater than your needs, but west of itWe claim them all; then, let us make its floodA common frontier, and a sacred streamOf which our nations both may drink in peace. HARRISON. Absurd! The treaties of Fort Wayne muststand. Your village chiefs are heads of civil rule, Whose powers you seek to centre in yourself, Or vest in warriors whose trade is blood. We bought from those, and from your peaceful men--Your wiser brothers--who had faith in us. TECUMSEH. Poor, ruined brothers, weaned from honestlives! HARRISON. They knew our wisdom, and preferred to sellTheir cabins, fields, and wilds of unused landsFor rich reserves and ripe annuities. As for your nations being one like ours--'Tis false--else would they speak one common tongue. Nay, more! your own traditions trace you here--Widespread in lapse of ages through the land--From o'er the mighty ocean of the West. What better title have you than ourselves, Who came from o'er the ocean of the East, And meet with you on free and common ground?Be reasonable, and let wisdom's wordsDisplace your passion, and give judgment ventThink more of bounty, and talk less of rights--Our hands are full of gifts, our hearts of love. TECUMSEH. My brother's love is like the trader'swarmth--O'er with the purchase. Oh, unhappy lives--Our gifts which go for yours! Once we were strong. Once all this mighty continent was ours, And the Great Spirit made it for our use. He knew no boundaries, so had we peaceIn the vast shelter of His handiwork, And, happy here, we cared not whence we came. We brought no evils thence--no treasured hate, No greed of gold, no quarrels over God;And so our broils, to narrow issues joined, Were soon composed, and touched the ground of peace. Our very ailments, rising from the earth, And not from any foul abuse in us, Drew back, and let age ripen to death's hand. Thus flowed our lives until your people came, Till from the East our matchless misery came!Since then our tale is crowded with your crimes, With broken faith, with plunder of reserves--The sacred remnants of our wide domain--With tamp'rings, and delirious feasts of fire, The fruit of your thrice-cursed stills of death, Which make our good men bad, our bad men worse, Aye! blind them till they grope in open day, And stumble into miserable graves. Oh, it is piteous, for none will hear!There is no hand to help, no heart to feel, No tongue to plead for us in all your land. But every hand aims death, and every heart, Ulcered with hate, resents our presence here;And every tongue cries for our children's landTo expiate their crime of being born. Oh, we have ever yielded in the past, But we shall yield no more! Those plains are ours!Those forests are our birth-right and our home!Let not the Long-Knife build one cabin there--Or fire from it will spread to every roof, To compass you, and light your souls to death! HARRISON. Dreams he of closing up our empty plains?Our mighty forests waiting for the axe?Our mountain steeps engrailed with iron and gold?There's no asylumed madness like to this!Mankind shall have its wide possession here;And these rough assets of a virgin worldStand for its coming, and await its hand. The poor of every land shall come to this, Heart-full of sorrows and shall lay them down. LEFROY. (_Springing to his feet_. ) The poor!What care your rich thieves for the poor?Those graspers hate the poor, from whom they spring, More deeply than they hate this injured race. Much have they taken from it--let them nowTake this prediction, with the red man's curse!The time will come when that dread power--the Poor--Whom, in their greed and pride of wealth, they spurn--Will rise on them, and tear them from their seats;Drag all their vulgar splendours down, and pluckTheir shallow women from their lawless beds, Yea, seize their puling and unhealthy babes, And fling them as foul pavement to the streets. In all the dreaming of the UniverseThere is no darker vision of despairs! 1ST OFFICER. What man is that? 'Tis not an Indian. HARRISON. Madman, you rave!--you know not what you say. TECUMSEH. Master of guile, this axe should speak forhim! [_Drawing his hatchet as if to hurl it at_HARRISON. ] 2ND OFFICER. This man means mischief! Quick! Bring upthe guard! [GENERAL HARRISON _and officers draw their swords. The warriors spring to their feet and cluster about_TECUMSEH, _their eyes fixed intently upon_HARRISON, _who stands unmoved. _ TWANG _and hisfriends disappear. The soldiers rush forward and takeaim, but are ordered not to fire_. ] END OF SECOND ACT. ACT III. SCENE FIRST. --VINCENNES. --A COUNCIL CHAMBER IN GENERALHARRISON'S HOUSE. _Enter_ HARRISON _and five_ COUNCILLORS. HARRISON. Here are despatches from the President, As well as letters from my trusted friends, Whose tenor made me summon you to Council. [_Placing papers on table_. ] 1ST COUNCILLOR. Why break good news so gently? Is ittrueWar is declared 'gainst England? HARRISON. Would it were! That war is still deferred. Our news is draff, And void of spirit, since NewEngland turnsA fresh cheek to the slap of Britain's palm. Great God! I am amazed at such supineness. Our trade prohibited, our men impressed, Our flag insulted--still her people bend, Amidst the ticking of their wooden clocks, Bemused o'er small inventions. Out upon't!Such tame submission yokes not with my spirit, And sends my southern blood into my cheeks, As proxy for New England's sense of shame. 2ND COUNCILLOR. We all see, save New England, what todo;But she has eyes for her one interest--A war might sink it. So the way to warPuzzles imagining. HARRISON. There is a wayWhich lies athwart the President's command. The reinforcements asked for from MonroeAre here at last, but with this strict injunction, They must not be employed save in defence, Or in a forced attack. [_Taking up a letter_. ] Now, here is news, Fresh from the South, of boldTecumseh's work, The Creeks and Seminoles have conjoined, Which means a general union of the tribes, And ravage of our Southern settlements. Tecumseh's master hand is seen in this, And these fresh tidings tally with his threatsBefore he left Vincennes. 3RD COUNCILLOR. You had a closeEncounter with him here. HARRISON. Not over close, Nor dangerous--I saw he wouldnot strike. His thoughts outran his threats, and looked beyondTo wider fields and trials of our strength. 4TH COUNCILLOR. Our tree is now too bulky for his axe. HARRISON. Don't underrate his power! But for our StatesThis man would found an empire to surpassOld Mexico's renown, or rich Peru. Allied with England, he is to be fearedMore than all other men. 1ST COUNCILLOR. You had some talkIn private, ere he vanished to the South? HARRISON. Mere words, yet ominous. Could we restoreOur purchases, and make a treaty line, All might be well; but who would stand to it? 2ND COUNCILLOR. It is not to be thought of. OTHER COUNCILLORS. No, no, no. HARRISON. In further parley at the river's edge, Scenting a coming war, he clapped his hands, And said the English whooped his people on, As if his braves were hounds to spring at us;Compared our nation to a whelming flood, And called his scheme a dam to keep it back--Then proffered the old terms; whereat I urgedA peaceful mission to the President. But, by apt questions, gleaning my opinion, Ere I was ware, of such a bootless trip, He drew his manly figure up, then smiled, And said our President might drink his wineIn safety in his distant town, whilst we--Over the mountains here--should fight it out:Then entering his bark, well-manned with braves, Bade me let matters rest till he returnedFrom his far mission to the distant tribes, Waved an adieu, and, in a trice, was gone. 2ND COUNCILLOR. Your news is but an earnest of hiswork. 4TH COUNCILLOR. This Chief's dispatch should be our ownexample. Let matters rest, forsooth, till he can setOur frontier in a blaze! Such cheap advicePulls with the President's, not mine. HARRISON. Nor mine! The sum of my advice is to attackThe Prophet ere Tecumseh can return. 5TH COUNCILLOR. But what about the breach of yourinstructions? HARRISON. If we succeed we need not fear the breach--In the same space we give and heal the wound. [_Enter a Messenger, who hands letters to_HARRISON. ] Thank you, Missouri and good Illinois--Your governors are built of western clay. Howard and Edwards both incline with me, And urge attack upon the Prophet's force. This is the nucleus of Tecumseh's strength--His bold scheme's very heart. Let's cut it out. Yes! yes! and every other part will fail. 1ST COUNCILLOR. Let us prepare to go at once! 2ND COUNCILLOR. Agreed. 3RD COUNCILLOR. I vote for war. 5TH COUNCILLOR. But should the Prophet win? 4TH COUNCILLOR. Why then, the Prophet, not Tecumseh, kills us--Which has the keener axe? 1ST COUNCILLOR. Breech-clouted dogs!Let us attack them, and, with thongs of fire, Whip their red bodies to a deeper red. HARRISON. This feeling bodes success, and with successComes war with England; for a well-won fightWill rouse a martial spirit in the landTo emulate our deeds on higher ground. Now hasten to your duties and prepare:Bronzed autumn comes, when copper-colored oaksDrop miserly their stiff leaves to the earth;And ere the winter's snow doth silver them, Our triumph must be wrought. [_Exeunt_. ] SCENE SECOND. --TECUMSEH'S CABIN IN THE PROPHET'S TOWN. [_Enter_ IENA _and_ MAMATEE, _agitated_. ] IENA. My heart is sad, and I am faint with fear. My friend, my more than mother, go again--Plead with the Prophet for a single day!Perchance within his gloomy heart will stirSome sudden pulse of pity for a girl. MAMATEE. Alas, my Iena, it is in vain!He swore by Manitou this very morn, That thou should'st wed the chief, Tarhay, to-night. IENA. Nay try once more, Oh Mamatee, once more!I had a dream, and heard the gusty breezeHurtle from out a sea of hissing pines, Then dwindle into voices, faint and sweet, Which cried--we come! It was my love and yours!They spoke to me--I know that they are near, And waft their love to us upon the wind. MAMATEE. Some dreams are merely fancies in our sleep:I'll make another trial, but I feelYour only safety is in instant flight. IENA. Flight! Where and how--beset by enemies?My fear sits like the partridge in the tree, And cannot fly whilst these dogs bark at me. SCENE THIRD. --AN ELEVATED PLATEAU, DOTTED WITH HEAVYOAKS, WEST OF THE PROPHET'S TOWN. _Enter three of_ HARRISON'S _staff Officers_. 1ST OFFICER. Well, here's the end of all our northwardmarching! 2ND OFFICER. A peaceful end, if we can trust thosechiefsWho parleyed with us lately. 3RD OFFICER. Yes, for ifThey mean to fight, why point us to a spotAt once so strong and pleasant for our camp? 1ST OFFICER. Report it so unto our General! [_Exit_ 3RD OFFICER. ] 'Tis worth our long march through the forest wildTo view these silent plains! The Prophet's Town, Sequestered yonder like a hermitage, Disturbs not either's vast of solitude, But rather gives, like graveyard visitors, To deepest loneliness a deeper awe. [_Re enter_ 3RD OFFICER. ] 3RD OFFICER. I need not go, for Harrison is here. [_Enter_ GENERAL HARRISON, _his forcefollowing_. ] 1ST OFFICER. Methinks you like the place; some thankswe oweUnto the Prophet's chiefs for good advice. HARRISON. (_Looking around keenly_). These noble oaks, the streamlet to our rear, This rank wild grass--wood, water and soft beds!The soldier's luxuries are here together. 1ST OFFICER. Note, too, the place o'erlooks the springyplainWhich lies betwixt us and the Prophet's Town. I think, sir, 'tis a very fitting place. HARRISON. A fitting place if white men were our foes;But to the red it gives a clear advantage. Sleep like the weasel here, if you are wise! 1ST OFFICER. Why, sir, their chiefs, so menacing atfirst, Became quite friendly at the last. They fearA battle, and will treat on any terms. The Prophet's tide of strength will ebb away, And leave his stranded bark upon the mire. HARRISON. 'Tis the mixed craft of old dissemblingNature!If I could look upon her smallest web, And see in it but crossed and harmless hairs, Then might I trust the Prophet's knotted seine. I did not like the manner of those chiefsWho spoke so fairly. What but highest greatnessPlucks hatred from its seat, and in its steadPlants friendship in an instant? This our campIs badly placed; each coulee and ravineIs dangerous cover for approach by night;And all the circuit of the spongy plainA treacherous bog to mire our cavalry. They who directed us so warmly hereHad other than our comfort in their eye. 2ND OFFICER. Fear you a night-attack, sir? HARRISON. Fear it! No! I but anticipate, and shallprepare. 'Tis sunset, and too late for better choice, Else were the Prophet welcome to his ground. Pitch tents and draw our baggage to the centre;Girdle the camp with lynx-eyed sentinels;Detail strong guards of choice and wakeful menAs pickets in advance of all oar lines;Place mounted riflemen on both our flanks;Our cavalry take post in front and rear, But still within the lines of infantry, Which, struck at any point, must hold the groundUntil relieved. Cover your rifle pans--The thick clouds threaten rain. I look to youTo fill these simple orders to the letter. But stay! Let all our camp fires burnTill, if attacked, we form--then drown them out. The darkness falls--make disposition straight;Then, all who can, to sleep upon their arms. I fear me, ere night yields to morning pale, The warriors' yell will sound our wild reveille. SCENE FOURTH. --TECUMSEH'S CABIN. _Enter_ IENA. IENA. Tis night, and Mamatee is absent still!Why should this sorrow weigh upon my heart, And other lonely things on earth have rest?Oh, could I be with them! The lily shoneAll day upon the stream, and now it sleepsUnder the wave in peace--in cradle softWhich sorrow soon may fashion for my grave. Ye shadows which do creep into my thoughts--Ye curtains of despair! what is my fault, That ye should hide the happy earth from me?Once I had joy of it, when tender Spring, Mother of beauty, hid me in her leaves;When Summer led me by the shores of song, And forests and far-sounding cataractsMelted my soul with music. I have heardThe rough chill harpings of dismantled woods, When Fall had stripped them, and have felt a joyDeeper than ear could lend unto the heart;And when the Winter from his mountains wildLooked down on death, and, in the frosty sky, The very stars seemed hung with icicles, Then came a sense of beauty calm and cold, That weaned me from myself, yet knit me stillWith kindred bonds to Nature. All is past, And he--who won from me such love for him, And he--my valiant uncle and my friend, Comes not to lift the cloud that drapes my soul, And shield me from the fiendish Prophet's power. [_Enter_ MAMATEE. ] Give me his answer in his very words! MAMATEE. There is a black storm raging in his mind--His eye darts lightning like the angry cloudWhich hangs in woven darkness o'er the earth. Brief is his answer--you must go to him. The Long-Knife's camp fires gleam among the oaksWhich dot yon western hill. A thousand menAre sleeping there cajoled to fatal dreamsBy promises the Prophet breaks to-night. Hark! 'tis thewar-song. IENA. Dares the Prophet nowBetray Tecumseh's trust, and break his faith? MAMATEE. He dares do anything will feed ambition. His dancing braves are frenzied by his tongue, Which prophesies revenge and victory. Before the break of day he will surpriseThe Long-Knife's camp, and hang our people's fateUpon a single onset. IENA. Should he fail? MAMATEE. Then all will fail;--Tecumseh's scheme willfail. IENA. It shall not! Let us go to him at once! MAMATEE. And risk your life? IENA. Risk hovers everywhereWhen night and man combine for darksome deeds. I'll go to him, and argue on my knees--Yea, yield my hand--would I could give my heart!To stay his purpose and this act of ruin. MAMATEE. He is not in the mood for argumentRash girl! they die who would oppose him now. IENA. Such death were sweet as life--I go!But, first--Great Spirit! I commit my soul to Thee. [_Kneels_. ] SCENE FIFTH. --AN OPEN SPACE IN THE FOREST NEAR THEPROPHET'S TOWN. A FIRE OF BILLETS BURNING. WAR CRIESARE HEARD FROM THE TOWN. _Enter the_ PROPHET. PROPHET. My spells do work apace! Shout yourselveshoarse, Ye howling ministers by whom I climb!For this I've wrought until my weary tongue, Blistered with incantation, flags in speech, And half declines its office. Every braveInflamed by charms and oracles, is nowA vengeful serpent, who will glide ere mornTo sting the Long-Knife's sleeping camp to death. Why should I hesitate? My promises!My duty to Tecumseh! What are theseCompared with duty here? Where I perceiveA near advantage, there my duty lies;Consideration strong which overweighsAll other reason. Here is Harrison--Trepanned to dangerous lodgment for the night--Each deep ravine which grooves the prairie's breastA channel of approach; each winding creekA screen for creeping death. Revenge is sickTo think of such advantage flung aside. For what?To let Tecumseh's greatness grow, Who gathers his rich harvest of renownOut of the very fields that I have sown!By Manitou, I will endure no more!Nor, in the rising flood of our affairs, Fish like an osprey for this eagle longer. But, soft! It is the midnight hour when comesTarhay to claim his bride, (_calls_) Tarhay!Tarhay! [_Enter_ TARHAY _with several braves_. ] TARHAY. Tarhay is here! PROPHET. The Long-Knives die to-night. The spirits which do minister to meHave breathed this utterance within my ear. You know my sacred office cuts me offFrom the immediate leadership in fight. My nobler work is in the spirit-world, And thence come promises which make us strong. Near to the foe I'll keep the Magic Bowl, Whilst you, Tarhay, shall lead our warriors on. TARHAY. I'll lead them; they are wild with eagerness. But fill my cold and empty cabin firstWith light and heat! You know I love your niece, And have the promise of her hand to-night. PROPHET. She shall be yours! (_To the braves_) Go bring her here at once--But, look! Fulfilment of mypromise comesIn her own person. _Enter_ IENA _and_ MAMATEE. Welcome, my sweet niece! You have forestalled mymessage by these braves, And come unbidden to your wedding place. IENA. Uncle! you know my heart is far away-- PROPHET. But still your hand is here! this little hand!(_Pulling her forward_) IENA. Dare you enforce a weak and helpless girl, Who thought to move you by her misery?Stand back! I have a message for you too. What means the war-like song, the dance of braves, And bustle in our town? PROPHET. It means that weAttack the foe to-night. IENA. And risk our all?O that Tecumseh knew! his soul would rushIn arms to intercept you. What! break faith, And on the hazard of a doubtful strife, Stake his great enterprise and all our lives!The dying curses of a ruined raceWill wither up your wicked heart for this! PROPHET. False girl! your heart is with our foes;Your hand I mean to turn to better use. IENA. Oh, could it turn you from your mad intentHow freely would I give it! Drop this scheme, Dismiss your frenzied warriors to their beds;And, if contented with my hand, TarhayCan have it here. TARHAY. I love you, Iena! IENA. Then must you love what I do! Love our race!'Tis this love nerves Tecumseh to uniteIts scattered tribes--his fruit of noble toil, Which you would snatch unripened from his hand, And feed to sour ambition. Touch it not--Oh, touch it not Tarhay! and though my heartBreaks for it, I am yours. PROPHET. His anyway, Or I am not the Prophet! TARHAY. For my part I have no leaning to this rashattempt, Since Iena consents to be my wife. PROPHET. Shall I be thwarted by a yearning fool! _(Aside. )_ This soft, sleek girl, to outward seeming good, I know to be a very fiend beneath--Whose sly affections centre on herself, And feed the gliding snake within her heart. TARHAY. I cannot think her so-- MAMATEE. She is not so!There is the snake that creeps among our race;Whose venomed fangs would bite into our lives, And poison all our hopes. PROPHET. She is the head--The very neck of danger to me here, Which I must break at once! (_aside_)Tarhay--attend! I can see dreadful visions in the air;I can dream awful dreams of life and fate;I can bring darkness on the heavy earth;I can fetch shadows from our fathers' graves, And spectres from the sepulchres of hellWho dares dispute with me, disputes with death! Dosthear, Tarhay? [TARHAY and braves cower before the PROPHET. ] TARHAY. I hear, and will obey. Spare me! Spare me! PROPHET. As for this foolish girl, The hand she offers you on one condition, I give to you upon a better one; And, since she has no mind to give her heartWhich, rest assured, is in her body stityThere, --take it at my hands! _Flings_ IENA _violently toward_ TARHAY, _into whose arms she falls fainting, and is thenborne away by_ MAMATEE. (_To_ TARHAY. ) Go bring the braves to view theMystic TorchAnd belt of Sacred Beans grown from my fleshOne touch of it makes them invulnerableThen creep, like stealthy panthers, on the foe! SCENE SIXTH. --MORNING. THE FIELD OF TIPPECANOE AFTERTHE BATTLE. THE GROUND STREWN WITH DEAD SOLDIERS ANDWARRIORS. _Enter_ HARRISON, _officers and soldiers and_BARRON. HARRISON. A costly triumph reckoned by our slain!Look how some lie still clenched with savagesIn all-embracing death, their bloody handsGlued in each other's hair! Make burial straightOf all alike in deep and common graves:Their quarrel now is ended. 1ST OFFICER. I have heard. The red man fears our steel--'twas not so here;From the first shots, which drove our pickets in, Till daylight dawned they rushed upon our lines, And flung themselves upon our bayonet pointsIn frenzied recklessness of bravery. BARRON. They trusted in the Prophet's rites and spells, Which promised them immunity from death. All night he sat on yon safe eminence, Howling his songs of war and mystery, Then fled, at dawn, in fear of his own braves. [_Enter an AIDE_] HARRISON. What tidings bring you from the Prophet'sTown? AIDE. The wretched women with their children flyTo distant forests for concealment. InTheir village is no living thing save miceWhich scampered as we oped each cabin door. Their pots still simmered on the vacant hearths, Standing in dusty silence and desertion. Naught else we saw, save that their granariesWere crammed with needful corn. HARRISON. Go bring it all--Then burn their village down! [_Exit_ AIDE. ] 2ND OFFICER. This victoryWill shake Tecumseh's project to the baseWere I the Prophet I should drown myselfRather than meet him. BARRON. We have news of him--Our scouts report him near in heavy force. HARRISON. 'Twill melt or draw across the British line, And wait for war. But double the night watch, Lest he should strike, and give an instant careTo all our wounded men: to-morrow's sunMust light us on our backward march for homeThence Rumour's tongue will spread so proud a storyNew England will grow envious of our glory;And, greedy for renown so long abhorred, Will on old England draw the tardy sword! SCENE SEVENTH. --THE RUINS OF THE PROPHET'S TOWN. [_Enter the_ PROPHET, _who gloomily surveys theplace_. ] PROPHET. Our people scattered, and our town in ashes!To think these hands could work such madness here--This envious head devise this misery!Tecumseh, had not my ambition drawnSuch sharp and fell destruction on our raceYou might have smiled at me! for I have matchedMy cunning 'gainst your wisdom, and have draggedMyself and all into a sea of ruin. [_Enter_ TECUMSEH. ] TECUMSEH. Devil! I have discovered you at last!You sum of treacheries, whose wolfish fangsHave torn our people's flesh--you shall not live! [_The_ PROPHET _retreats facing and followedby_ TECUMSEH. ] PROPHET. Nay--strike me not! I can explain it all!It was a woman touched the Magic Bowl, And broke the brooding spell. TECUMSEH. Impostor! Slave! Why should I spare you? [_Lifts his hand as if to strike. _] PROPHET. Stay, stay, touch me not!One mother bore us in the self-same hour. TECUMSEH. Then good and evil came to light together. Go to the corn-dance, change your name to villain!Away! Your presence tempts my soul to mischief. [_Exit the_ PROPHET _hastily_. ] Would that I were a woman, and could weep, And slake hot rage with tears! O spiteful fortune, To lure me to the limit of my dreams, Then turn and crowd the ruin of my toilInto the narrow compass of a night. My brother's deep disgrace--myself the scornOf envious harriers and thieves of fame, Who fain would rob me of the lawful meedOf faithful services and duties done--Oh, I could bear it all! But to beholdOur ruined people hunted to their graves--To see the Long-Knife triumph in their shame--This is the burning shaft, the poisoned woundThat rankles in my soul! But, why despair?All is not lost--the English are our friends. My spirit rises--manhood bear me up!I'll haste to Malden, join my force to theirs, And fall with double fury on our foes. Farewell ye plains and forests, but rejoice!Ye yet shall echo to Tecumseh's voice. [_Enter_ LEFROY. ] LEFROY. What tidings have you gleaned of Iena? TECUMSEH. My brother meant to wed her to Tarhay--The chief who led his warriors to ruin;But, in the gloom and tumult of the night, She fled into the forest all alone. LEFROY. Alone! In the wide forest all alone!Angels are with her now, for she is dead. TECUMSEH. You know her to be skilful with the bow. 'Tis certain she would strike for some great Lake--Erie or Michigan. At the DetroitAre people of our nation, and perchanceShe fled for shelter there. I go at onceTo join the British force. [_Exit_ TECUMSEH. ] LEFROY. But yesterday I climbed to Heaven upon theshining stairsOf love and hope, and here am quite cast down. My little flower amidst a weedy world, Where art thou now? In deepest forest shade?Or onward, where the sumach stands arrayedIn Autumn splendour, its alluring formFruited, yet odious with the hidden worm?Or, farther, by some still sequestered lake, Loon-haunted, where the sinewy panthers slakeTheir noon-day thirst, and never voice is heardJoyous of singing waters, breeze or bird, Save their wild waitings. --(_A halloo without_)'Tis Tecumseh calls! Oh Iena! If dead, where'er thouart--Thy saddest grave will be this ruined heart![_Exit_. ] END OF THIRD ACT. ACT IV. _Enter_ CHORUS. War is declared, unnatural and wild, By Revolution's calculating sons!So leave the home of mercenary minds, And wing with me, in your uplifted thoughts, Away to our unyielding Canada!There to behold the Genius of the Land, Beneath her singing pine and sugared tree, Companioned with the lion, Loyalty. SCENE FIRST. --A ROOM IN FORT GEORGE. [_Enter_ GENERAL BROCK _reading a despatch fromMontreal_. ] BROCK. Prudent and politic Sir George Prevost!Hull's threatened ravage of our western coast, Hath more breviloquence than your despatch. Storms are not stilled by reasoning with air, Nor fires quenched by a syrup of sweet words. So to the wars, Diplomacy, for nowOur trust is in our arms and argumentsDelivered only from the cannon's mouth! [_Rings_. ] [_Enter an_ ORDERLY. ] ORDERLY. Your Exc'llency? BROCK. Bid Colonel Proctor come! [_Exit Orderly_. ] Now might the head of gray ExperienceShake o'er the problems that surround us here. I am no stranger to the brunt of war, But all the odds so lean against our sideThat valour's self might tremble for the issue, Could England stretch its full, assisting handThen might I smile though velvet-footed timeStruck all his claws at once into our flesh;But England, noble England, fights for life, Couching the knightly lance for liberty'Gainst a new dragon that affrights the world. And, now, how many noisome elementsWould plant their greed athwart this country's good!How many demagogues bewray its cause!How many aliens urge it to surrender!Our present good must match their present ill, And, on our frontiers, boldest deeds in war, Dismay the foe, and strip the loins of faction. [_Enter_ COLONEL PROCTOR. ] Time waits not our conveniency; I trustYour preparations have no further needs. PROCTOR. All is in readiness, and I can leaveFor Amherstburg at once. BROCK. Then tarry not, For time is precious to us now as powder. You understand my wishes and commands? PROCTOR. I know them and shall match them withobedience. BROCK. Rest not within the limit of instructionsIf you can better them, for they should bindThe feeble only; able men enlargeAnd shape them to their needs. Much must be doneThat lies in your discretion. At DetroitHull vaunts his strength, and meditates invasion, And loyalty, unarmed, defenceless, bare, May let this boaster light upon our shoresWithout one manly motion of resistance. So whilst I open Parliament at York, Close it again, and knit our volunteers, Be yours the task to head invasion off. Act boldly, but discreetly, and so drawOur interest to the balance, that affairsMay hang in something like an even scale, Till I can join you with a fitting force, And batter this old Hull until he sinks. So fare-you-well--success attend your mission! PROCTOR. Farewell, sir! I shall do my best in this, And put my judgment to a prudent useIn furtherance of all. [_Exit_ PROCTOR. ] BROCK. Prudent he will be--'tis a vice in him. For in the qualities of every mindThere's one o'ergrows, and prudence in this manTops all the rest. 'Twill suit our present needs. But, boldness, go with me! for, if I knowMy nature well, I shall do something soonWhose consequence will make the nation cheer, Or hiss me to my grave. [_Re-enter_ ORDERLY. ] ORDERLY. Your Exc'llency, Some settlers wait without. BROCK. Whence do they come? [_Enter_ COLONEL MACDONELL. ] ORDERLY. From the raw clearings up Lake Erie, Sir. BROCK. Go bring them here at once. [_Exit_ORDERLY. ] The very men Who meanly shirk their serviceto the crown!A breach of duty to be remedied, For disaffection like an ulcer spreadsUntil the caustic ointment of the law, Sternly applied, eats up and stays corruption. [(_Enter_ DEPUTATION OF YANKEE SETTLERS). ] Good morrow, worthy friends; I trust you bearGood hopes in loyal hearts for Canada. 1ST SETTLER. That kind o' crop's a failure in ourcounty. Gen'ral, we came to talk about this warWith the United States. It ain't quite fairTo call out settlers from the other side. BROCK. From it yet on it too! Why came you thence?Is land so scarce in the United States?Are there no empty townships, wilds or wastesIn all their borders but you must encroachOn ours? And, being here, how dare you makeYour dwelling-places harbours of seditionAnd furrow British soil with alien ploughsTo feed our enemies? There is not scope, Not room enough in all this wildernessFor men so base. 2ND SETTLER. Why, General, we thoughtYou wanted settlers here. BROCK. Settlers indeedBut with the soldier's courage to defendThe land of their adoption. This attackOn Canada is foul and unprovoked;The hearts are vile, the hands are traitorousThat will not help to hurl invasion back. Beware the lariat of the law! 'Tis thrownWith aim so true in Canada it bringsSedition to the ground at every cast. 1ST SETTLER. Well, General, we're not your Britishsort, But if we were we know that CanadaIs naught compared with the United States. We have no faith in her, but much in them. BROCK. You have no faith! Then take a creed from me!For I believe in Britain's Empire, andIn Canada, its true and loyal son, Who yet shall rise to greatness, and shall standAt England's shoulder helping her to guardTrue liberty throughout a faithless world. Here is a creed for arsenals and camps, For hearts and heads that seek their country's good;So, go at once, and meditate on it!I have no time to parley with you now--But think on this as well! that traitors, spies, And aliens who refuse to take up arms, Forfeit their holdings, and must leave this land, Or dangle nearer Heaven than they wish. So to your homes, and ponder your condition. [_Exeunt Settlers ruefully_. ] This foreign element will hamper us. Its alien spirit ever longs for change, And union with the States. MACDONELL. O fear it not, Nor magnify the girth of noisy men!Their name is faction, and their numbers few. While everywhere encompassing them standsThe silent element that doth not change;That points with steady finger to the Crown--True as the needle to the viewless pole, And stable as its star! BROCK. I know it well, And trust to it alone for earnestness, Accordant counsels, loyalty and faith. But give me these--and let the Yankees come!With our poor handful of inhabitants, We can defend our forest wilderness, And spurn the bold invader from our shores. [_Re-enter_ ORDERLY. ] ORDERLY. Your boat is ready, sir! BROCK. Man it at once--I shall forthwith to York. [_Exeunt_. ] SCENE SECOND. --YORK THE CAPITAL OF UPPER CANADA. THESPACE IN FRONT OF OLD GOVERNMENT HOUSE. [_Enter two_ U. E. LOYALISTS, _separately_. ] 1ST U. E. LOYALIST. Well met, my friend! A stirrer likemyself. 2ND U. E. LOYALIST. Yes, affairs make me so. Suchstirring timesSince Brock returned and opened Parliament! Read youhis speech? 1ST U. E. LOYALIST. That from the Throne? 2ND U. E. LOYALIST. Ay, that! 1ST U. E. LOYALIST. You need not ask, since 'tis onevery tongue, Unstaled by repetition. I affirmWords never showered upon more fruitful soilTo nourish valour's growth. 2ND U. E. LOYALIST. That final phrase--Oh it struck home: a sentence to be framedAnd hung in every honourable heartFor daily meditation. "_We are engaged in an awful and eventful contest. Byunanimity and dispatch in our councils, and by vigourin our operations, we may teach the enemy this lesson, that a country defended by free men, enthusiasticallydevoted to the cause of their king and constitution, can never be conquered. _" 1ST U. E. LOYALIST. That reaches far; a text to fortifyImperial doctrine and Canadian rights. Sedition skulks, and feels its blood a-cold, Since first it fell upon the public ear. 2ND U. E. LOYALIST. There is a magic in this soldier'stongue. O language is a common instrument;But when a master touches it--what sounds! 1ST U. E. LOYALIST. What sounds indeed!But Brock can use his swordStill better than his tongue. Our state affairs, Conned and digested by his eager mindDraw into form, and even now his voiceCries, Forward! To the Front! 2ND U. E. LOYALIST. Look--here he comes! 1ST U. E. LOYALIST. There's matter in the wind; let'sdraw a-near. [_Enter_ GENERAL BROCK, _accompanied by_MACDONELL, NICHOL, ROBINSON _and other CanadianOfficers and friends conversing_. ] BROCK. 'Tis true our Province faces heavy odds:Of regulars but fifteen hundred menTo guard a frontier of a thousand miles;Of volunteers what aidance we can drawFrom seventy thousand widely scattered souls. A meagre showing 'gainst the enemy'sIf numbers be the test. But odds lie notIn numbers only, but in spirit too--Witness the might of England's little isle!And what made England great will keep her so--The free soul and the valour of her sons;And what exalts her will sustain you nowIf you contain her courage and her faith. So not the odds so much are to be fearedAs private disaffection, treachery--Those openers of the door to enemies--And the poor crouching spirit that gives wayEre it is forced to yield. ROBINSON. No fear of that! BROCK. I trust there is not; yet I speak of itAs what is to be feared more than the odds. For like to forests are communities--Fair at a distance, entering you findThe rubbish and the underbrush of states, 'Tis ever the mean soul that counts the odds, And, where you find this spirit, pluck it up--'Tis full of mischief. MACDONELL. It is almost dead. England's vast war, our weakness, and the eagleWhetting his beak at Sandwich, with one clawAlready in our side, put thought to steepIn cold conjecture for a time, and gaveA text to alien tongues. But, since you came, Depression turns to smiling, and men seeThat dangers well-opposed may be subduedWhich shunned would overwhelm us. BROCK. Hold to this!For since the storm has struck us we must face it. What is our present count of volunteers? NICHOL. More than you called for have assembled, Sir--The flower of York and Lincoln. BROCK. Some will goTo guard our frontier at Niagara. Which must be strengthened even at the costOf York itself. The rest to the Detroit, Where, with Tecumseh's force, our regulars, And Kent and Essex loyal volunteers, We'll give this Hull a taste of steel so coldHis teeth will chatter at it, and his schemeOf easy conquest vanish into air. [_Enter a_ COMPANY _of_ MILITIA _withtheir_ OFFICERS, _unarmed. They salute, marchacross the stage, and make their exit_. ] What men are those? Their faces are familiar. ROBINSON. Some farmers whom you furloughed at FortGeorge, To tend their fields, which still they leave half-reapedTo meet invasion. BROCK. I remember it!The jarring needs of harvest-time and war, Twixt whose necessities grave hazards lay. ROBINSON. They only thought to save their children'sbread, And then return to battle with light hearts. For, though their hard necessities o'erpoisedTheir duty for the moment, these are men. Who draw their pith from loyal roots, their sires, Dug up by revolution, and cast outTo hovel in the bitter wilderness, And wring, with many a tussle, from the wolfThose very fields which cry for harvesters. BROCK. O I observed them closely at Fort George--Red-hot for action in their summer-sleeves, And others drilling in their naked feet--Our poor equipment (which disgraced us there)Too scanty to go round. See they get arms, An ample outfit and good quarters too. NICHOL. They shall be well provided for in all. [_Enter_ COLONELS BABY [Footnote: Pronounced Baw-bee. ] _and_ ELLIOTT. ] BROCK. Good morning both; what news from home, Baby? BABY. None, none your Excellency--whereat we fearThis Hull is in our rear at Amherstburg. BROCK. Not yet; what I unsealed last night reportsTecumseh to have foiled the enemyIn two encounters at the Canard bridge. A noble fellow; as I hear, humane, Lofty and bold and rooted in our cause. BABY. I know him well; a chief of matchless force. If Mackinaw should fall--that triple keyTo inland seas and teeming wilderness--The bravest in the west will flock to him. BROCK. 'Twere well he had an inkling of affairs. My letters say he chafes at my delay, Not mine, but thine, thou dull and fatuous House--Which, in a period that whips delay, When men should spur themselves and flash in action, Let'st idly leak the unpurchasable hoursFrom our scant measure of most precious time! BABY. 'Tis true, Your Exc'llency, some cankered mindsHave been a daily hind'rance in our House. No measure so essential, bill so fair, But they would foul it by some cunning clause, Wrenching the needed statute from its aimBy sly injection of their false opinion. But this you cannot charge to us whose heartsAre faithful to our trust; nor yet delay;For, Exc'llency, you hurry on so fastThat other men wheeze after, out of breath, And haste itself, disparaged, lags behind. BROCK. Friends, pardon me, you stand not in reproof. But haste, the evil of the age in peace, Is war's auxiliary, confederateWith time himself in urgent great affairs. So must we match it with the flying hours!I shall prorogue this tardy Parliament, And promptly head our forces for DetroitMeanwhile, I wish you, in advance of us, To speed unto your homes. Spread everywhereThroughout the West, broad tidings of our coming, Which, by the counter currents of reaction, Will tell against our foes and for our friends. As for the rest, such loyal men as youNeed not our counsel; so, good journey both! BABY. We shall not spare our transport or ourselves. [_Enter a travel-stained_ MESSENGER. ] ELLIOTT. Good-bye. BABY. Tarry a moment, Elliott! Here comes a messenger--let's have his news. MESSENGER. It is his Excellency whom I seek. I come, sir, with despatches from the west. BROCK. Tidings I trust to strengthen all our hopes. MESSENGER. News of grave interest, this not the worst. [_Handing a letter to_ GENERAL BROCK. ] BROCK. No, by my soul, for Mackinaw is ours!That vaunted fort, whose gallant capture freesOur red allies. This is important news! What ofDetroit! MESSENGER. Things vary little there. Hull's soldiers scour our helpless settlements, Our aliens join them, but the loyal mass--Sullen, yet overawed, longs for relief. BROCK. I hope to better this anon. You, sirs, [_To his aides_. ] Come with me; here is matter to despatchAt once to Montreal. Farewell, my friends. [_To Baby and Elliott. _] BABY. We feel now what will follow this, farewell! [_Exeunt_ BABY, ELLIOTT _and_ MESSENGER. ] BROCK. Now, gentlemen, prepare against our needs, That no neglect may check us at the start, Or mar our swift advance. And, for our cause, As we believe it just in sight of God, So should it triumph in the sight of man, Whose generous temper, at the first, assignsRight to the weaker side, yet coldly drawsDamning conclusions from its failure. NowBetake you to your tasks with double zeal;And, meanwhile, let our joyful tidings spread! [_Exeunt. _] SCENE THIRD. --THE SAME. _Enter two_ OLD MEN _of York, severally_. 1ST OLD MAN. Good morrow, friend! a fair and fittingtimeTo take our airing, and to say farewell. 'Tis here, I think, we bid our friends God-speed, A waftage, peraventure, to their graves. 2ND OLD MAN. 'Tis a good cause they die for, if theyfallBy this grey pate, if I were young again, I would no better journey. Young again!This hubbub sets old pulses on the boundAs I were in my teens. _Enter_ a CITIZEN. What news afoot? CITIZEN. Why everyone's afoot and coming here. York's citizens are turned to warriors;The learned professions go a-soldiering, And gentle hearts beat high for Canada!For, as you pass, on every hand you see, Through the neglected openings of each house--Through doorways, windows--our Canadian maidsStrained by their parting lovers to their breasts;And loyal matrons busy round their lords, Buckling their arms on, or, with tearful eyes, Kissing them to the war! 1ST OLD MAN. The volunteersWill pass this way? CITIZEN. Yes, to the beach, and thereEmbark for Burlington, whence they will marchTo Long Point, taking open boats again, To plough the shallow Erie's treacherous flood. Such leaky craft as farmers market with:Rare bottoms, one sou-wester-driven waveWould heave against Lake Erie's wall of shore, And dash to fragments. 'Tis an awful hazard--A danger which in apprehension lies, Yet palpable unto the spirit's touch, As earth to finger. 1ST OLD MAN. Let us hope a calmMay lull this fretful and ill-tempered lakeWhilst they ascend. [_Military music is heard. _] CITIZEN. Hark! here our soldiers come. _Enter_ GENERAL BROCK, _with his aides, _MACDONELL _and_ GLEGG, NICHOL, _and other Officers, followed by the Volunteers in companies. A concourse ofcitizens. _ MACDONELL. Our fellows show the mark of training, sir, And many, well in hand, yet full of fire, Are burning for distinction. BROCK. This is good: Love of distinction is thefruitful soilFrom which brave actions spring; and, superposedOn love of country, these strike deeper root, And grow to greater greatness. Cry a halt--A word here--then away! [_Flourish. The volunteers halt, form line, and orderarms. _] Ye men of Canada! Subjects with me of that ImperialPowerWhose liberties are marching round the earth:I need not urge you now to follow me, Though what befalls will try your stubborn faithIn the fierce fire and crucible of war. I need not urge you, who have heard the voiceOf loyalty, and answered to its call. Who has not read the insults of the foe--The manifesto of his purposed crimes?That foe, whose poison-plant, false-liberty, Runs o'er his body politic and killsWhilst seeming to adorn it, fronts us now!Threats our poor Province to annihilate, And should he find the red men by our side--Poor injured souls, who but defend their own--Calls black Extermination from its hell, To stalk abroad, and stench your land with slaughter. These are our weighty arguments for war, Wherein armed justice will enclasp its sword, And sheath it in its bitter adversary;Wherein we'll turn our bayonet-points to pens, And write in blood:--_Here lies the poor invader_;Or be ourselves struck down by hailing death;Made stepping-stones for foes to walk upon--The lifeless gangways to our country's ruin. For now we look not with the eye of fear;We reck not if this strange mechanic frame--Stop in an instant in the shock of war. Our death may build into our country's life, And failing this, 'twere better still to dieThan live the breathing spoils of infamy. Then forward for our cause and Canada!Forward for Britain's Empire--peerless archOf Freedom's raising, whose majestic spanIs axis to the world! On, on, my friends!The task our country sets must we perform--Wring peace from war, or perish in its storm! [_Excitement and leave-taking. The volunteers breakinto column and sing:_] O hark to the voice from the lips of the free! O hark to the cry from the lakes to the sea! Arm! arm! the invader is wasting our coasts, And tainting the air of our land with his hosts. Arise! then, arise! let us rally and form, And rush like the torrent, and sweep like the storm, On the foes of our King, --of our country adored, Of the flag that was lost, but in exile restored! And whose was the flag? and whose was the soil? And whose was the exile, the suffering, the toil? Our Fathers'! who carved in the forest a name, And left us rich heirs of their freedom and fame. Oh, dear to our hearts is that flag, and the land Our Fathers bequeathed--'tis the work of their hand! And the soil they redeemed from the woods with renown The might of their sons will defend for the Crown! Our hearts they are one, and our hands they are free, From clime unto clime, and from sea unto sea! And chaos will come to the States that annoy, But our Empire united what foe can destroy? Then away! to the front! march! comrades away! In the lists of each hour crowd the work of a day! We will follow our leader to fields far and nigh, And for Canada fight, and for Canada die! [_Exeunt with military music. _] SCENE FOURTH. --FORT DETROIT. --THE AMERICAN CAMP. _Enter_ GENERAL HULL, COLONEL CASS _and otherOfficers. _ CASS. Come, General, we must insist on reasons!Your order to withdraw from CanadaWill blow to mutiny, and put to shameThat proclamation which I wrote for you, Wherein 'tis proudly said, "_We are preparedTo look down opposition, our strong forceBut vanguard of a mightier still to come!_"And men have been attracted to our causeWho now will curse us for this breach of faith. Consider, sir, again! HULL. I am not boundTo tack my reasons to my orders; thisIs my full warrant and authority-- [_Pointing to his Instructions. _] Yet, I have ample grounds for what I do. CASS. What are they, then? HULL. First, that this proclamationMeets not with due response, wins to our sideThe thief and refugee, not honest men. These plainly rally round their government. 1ST OFFICER. Why, yes; there's something lacking inthis people, If we must conquer them to set them free. HULL. Ay, and our huge force must be larger still, If we would change these Provinces to States. Then, Colonel Proctor's intercepted letter--Bidding the captor of Fort MackinawSend but five thousand warriors from the West, Which, be it artifice or not, yet pointsTo great and serious danger. Add to this Brock's rumoured coming with hisVolunteers, All burning to avenge their fathers'wrongs, And our great foe, Tecumseh, fired o'er his;These are the reasons; grave enough, I think, Which urge me to withdraw from Canada, And wait for further force; so, go at once, And help our soldiers to recross the river. CASS. But I see---- HULL. No "buts"! You have my orders. CASS. No solid reason here, naught but a groupOf flimsy apprehensions---- HULL. Go at once!Who kicks at judgment, lacks it. CASS. I---- HULL. No more! I want not wrangling but obedience here. [_Exeunt_ CASS _and other officersincensed. _] Would I had ne'er accepted this command!Old men are out of favour with the time, And youthful folly scoffs at hoary age. There's not a man who executes my ordersWith a becoming grace; not one but sulks, And puffs his disapproval with a frown. And what am I? A man whom WashingtonNodded approval of, and wrote it too!Yet here, in judgment and discretion both, Ripe to the dropping, scorned and ridiculed. Oh, Jefferson, what mischief have you wrought--Confounding Nature's order, setting foolsTo prank themselves, and sit in wisdom's seatBy right divine, out Heroding a King's!But I shall keep straight on--pursue my course, Responsible and with authority, Though boasters gird at me, and braggarts frown. [_Exit. _] SCENE FIFTH. --SANDWICH, ON THE DETROIT. --A ROOM IN THEBABY MANSION. _Enter_ GENERAL BROCK, COLONELS PROCTOR, GLEGG, BABY, MACDONELL, NICHOL, ELLIOTT _and otherOfficers_. BABY. Welcome! thrice welcome!Brave Brock, to Sandwich and this loyal roof!Thank God, your oars, those weary levers bentIn many a wave, have been unshipped at last;And, now methinks those lads who stemmed the floodWould boldly face the fire. BROCK. I never ledMen of more cheerful and courageous heart, But for whose pluck, foul weather and short seas, 'Twere truth to say, had made an end of us. Another trial will, I think, approveThe manly strain this Canada hath bred. PROCTOR. 'Tis pity that must be denied them now, Since all our enemies have left our shores. BROCK. No, by my soul, it shall not be denied!Our foe's withdrawal hath a magnet's powerAnd pulls my spirit clean into his fort. But I have asked you to confer on this. What keeps Tecumseh? ELLIOTT. 'Tis his friend, Lefroy, Who now rejoins him, after bootless questOf Iena, Tecumseh's niece. BROCK. Lefroy! I had a gentle playmate of that nameIn Guernsey, long ago. BABY. It may be he. I know him, and, discoursing our affairs, Have heard him speak of you, but in a strainPeculiar to the past. BROCK. He had in youth. All goods belonging to the human heart, But fell away to Revolution's side--Impulsive ever, and o'er prompt to seeIn kings but tyrants, and in laws but chains. I have not seen or heard of him for years. BABY. The very man! BROCK. 'Tis strange to find him here! ELLIOTT. He calls the red men freedom's last survival;Says truth is only found in Nature's growth--Her first intention, ere false knowledge roseTo frame distinctions, and exhaust the world. BROCK. Few find like him the substance of their dreams. But, Elliott, let us seek Tecumseh now. Stay, friends, till we return. [_Exeunt_ BROCK _and_ ELLIOTT. ] GLEGG. How odd to findAn old friend in this fashion! PROCTOR. Humph! a foolWho dotes on forest tramps and savages. Why, at the best, they are the worst of men;And this Tecumseh has so strained my temper, So over-stept my wishes, thrid my orders, That I would sooner ask the devil's aidThan such as his. NICHOL. Why, Brock is charmed with him!And, as you saw, at Amherstburg he putMost stress upon opinion when he spoke. MACDONELL. Already they've determined on assault. PROCTOR. Then most unwisely so! There are no boundsTo this chief's rashness, and our General seemSwayed by it too, or rashness hath a twin. NICHOL. Well, rashness is the wind of enterprise, And blows its banners out. But here they comeWho dig beneath their rashness for their reasons. _Re-enter_ GENERAL BROCK _and_ COLONELELLIOTT, _accompanied by_ TECUMSEH, _conversing_. TECUMSEH. We have been much abused! and have abusedOur fell destroyers too--making our wrongsThe gauge of our revenge. And, still forced backFrom the first justice and the native right, Ever revenge hath sway. This we would void, And, by a common boundary, prevent. So, granting that a portion of our ownIs still our own, then let that portion beConfirmed by sacred treaty to our tribes. This is my sum of asking--you have ears! BROCK. Nay, then, Tecumseh, speak of it no more!My promise is a pledge, and from a manWho never turned his back on friend or foe. The timely service you have done our cause, Rating not what's to come, would warrant it. So, if I live, possess your soul of this--No treaty for a peace, if we prevail, Will bear a seal that doth not guard your rights. Here, take my sash, and wear it for my sake--Tecumseh can esteem a soldier's gift. TECUMSEH. Thanks, thanks, my brother, I have faith in you;My life is at your service! BROCK. Gentlemen, Have you considered my proposal wellTouching the capture of Detroit by storm? What say youColonel Proctor? PROCTOR. I object! 'Tis true, the enemy has left ourshores, But what a sorry argument is this!For his withdrawal, which some sanguine men, Jumping all other motives, charge to fear, Prudence, more deeply searching, lays to craft. Why should a foe, who far outnumbers us, Retreat o'er this great river, save to lureOur poor force after him? And, having crossed--Our weakness seen, and all retreat cut off--What would ensue but absolute surrender, Or sheer destruction? 'Tis too hazardous!Discretion balks at such a mad design. BROCK. What say the rest? 1ST OFFICER. I fear 'tis indiscreet. 2ND OFFICER. 'Twould be imprudent with our scantyforce. BROCK. What say you, Nichol, to my foolish scheme? NICHOL. I think it feasible and prudent too. Hull's letters, captured by Tecumseh, proveHis soldiers mutinous, himself despondent. And dearly Rumor loves the wilderness, Which gives a thousand echoes to a tongueThat ever swells and magnifies our strength. And in this flux we take him, on the hingeOf two uncertainties--his force and ours. So, weighed, objections fall; and our attempt, Losing its grain of rashness, takes its riseIn clearest judgment, whose effect will nerveAll Canada to perish, ere she yield. BROCK. My very thoughts! What says Tecumseh now? TECUMSEH. I say attack the fort!This very night I'll cross my braves, if you decide onthis. BROCK. Then say no more! Glegg, take a flag of truce, And bear to Hull this summons to surrender. Tell him Tecumseh and his force are here--A host of warriors brooding on their wrongs, Who, should resistance flush them to revenge, Would burst from my control like wind-borne fire, And match on earth the miseries of hell. But, should he yield, his safety is assured. Tell him Tecumseh's word is pledged to this, Who, though his temperate will in peace is lawYet casts a loose rein to enforced rage. Add what your fancy dictates; but the stressPlace most on what I speak of--this he fears, And these same fears, well wrought upon by you, May prove good workers for us yet. GLEGG. I go, And shall acquit myself as best I can. [_Exit_ GLEGG. ] BROCK. Tecumseh, wonder not at such a message!The guilty conscience of your foes is judgeOf their deserts, and hence 'twill be believed. The answer may be 'nay, ' so to our work--Which perfected, we shall confer again, Then cross at break of morn. [_Exeunt all but_ TECUMSEH. ] TECUMSEH. This is a man!And our great father, waking from his sleep, Has sent him to oar aid. Master of Life, Endue my warriors with double strength!May the wedged helve be faithful to the axe, The arrow fail not, and the flint be firm!That our great vengeance, like the whirlwind fell, May cleave through thickets of our enemiesA broad path to our ravaged lands again. [_Exit_. ] SCENE SIXTH. --MOONLIGHT. THE BANK OF THE DETROIT RIVER, NEAR THE BABY MANSION. _Enter_ CAPTAIN ROBINSON. ROBINSON. I thought to find my brother here--poor boy, The day's hard labor woos him to his rest. How sweet the night! how beautiful the place!Who would not love thee, good old Sandwich town!Abode of silence and sweet summer dreams--Let speculation pass, nor progress touchThy silvan homes with hard, unhallowed hand!The light wind whispers, and the air is richWith vapours which exhale into the night;And, round me here, this village in the leavesDarkling doth slumber. How those giant pearsLoom with uplifted and high-ancient heads, Like forest trees! A hundred years agoThey, like their owner, had their roots in France--In fruitful Normandy--but here refuseUnlike, to multiply, as if their spiritsGrieved in their alien home. The village sleeps, So should I seek that hospitable roofOf thine, thou good old loyalist, Baby!Thy mansion is a shrine, whereto shall comeOn pilgrimages, in the distant days, The strong and generous youths of Canada, And, musing there in rich imaginings, Restore the balance and the beaver-packTo the wide hall; see forms of savagery, Vanished for ages, and the stately shadesOf great Tecumseh and high-hearted Brock. So shall they profit, drinking of the past, And, drinking loyally, enlarge the faithWhich love of country breeds in noble minds. But now to sleep--good night unto the world! [_Exit_. ] SCENE SEVENTH. --THE SAME. _Enter_ IENA, _in distress_. IENA. Oh, have I eaten of the spirit-plant!My head swims, and my senses are confused, And all grows dark around me. Where am I?Alas! I know naught save of wanderings, And this poor bosom's weight. What pang is here, Which all my pressing cannot ease away?Poor heart! poor heart! Oh, I have travelled far, And in the forest's brooding place, or whereNight-shrouded surges beat on lonely shores, Have sickened with my deep, dread, formless fears;But, never have I felt what now I feel!Great Spirit, hear me! help me!--this is death! [_Staggers and swoons behind some shrubbery. ] Enter_ GENERAL BROCK _and_ LEFROY. BROCK. You may be right, Lefroy! but, for my part, I stand by old tradition and the past. My father's God is wise enough for me, And wise enough this grey world's wisest men. LEFROY. I tell you, Brock, The world is wiser than its wisest men, And shall outlive the wisdom of its godsMade after man's own liking. The crippled throneNo longer shelters the uneasy king, And outworn sceptres and imperial crownsNow grow fantastic as an idiot's dream. These perish with the kingly pastime, war, And war's blind tool, the monster, Ignorance!Both hateful in themselves, but this the worst. One tyrant will remain--one impious fiend. Whose name is Gold--our earliest, latest foe!Him must the earth destroy, ere man can rise, Rightly self made, to his high destiny, Purged of his grossest faults; humane and kind;Co-equal with his fellows, and as free. BROCK. Lefroy, such thoughts, let loose, would wreckthe world. The kingly function is the soul of state, The crown the emblem of authority, And loyalty the symbol of all faith. Omitting these, man's government decays--His family falls into revolt and ruin. But let us drop this bootless argument, And tell me more of those unrivalled wastesYou and Tecumseh visited. LEFROY. We leftThe silent forest, and, day after day, Great prairies swept beyond our aching sightInto the measureless West; uncharted realms, Voiceless and calm, save when tempestuous windRolled the rank herbage into billows vast, And rushing tides, which never found a shore. And tender clouds, and veils of morning mistCast flying shadows, chased by flying light, Into interminable wildernesses, Flushed with fresh blooms, deep perfumed by the rose, And murmurous with flower-fed bird and bee. The deep-grooved bison-paths like furrows lay, Turned by the cloven hoofs of thundering herdsPrimeval, and still travelled as of yore. And gloomy valleys opened at our feet--Shagged with dusk cypresses and hoary pine;And sunless gorges, rummaged by the wolf, Which through long reaches of the prairie wound, Then melted slowly into upland vales, Lingering, far-stretched amongst the spreading hills. BROCK. What charming solitudes! And life was there! LEFROY. Yes, life was there! inexplicable life, Still wasted by inexorable death. There had the stately stag his battle-field--Dying for mastery among his hinds. There vainly sprung the affrighted antelope, Beset by glittering eyes and hurrying feet. The dancing grouse at their insensate sport, Heard not the stealthy footstep of the fox;The gopher on his little earthwork stood, With folded arms, unconscious of the fateThat wheeled in narrowing circles overhead, And the poor mouse, on heedless nibbling bent, Marked not the silent coiling of the snake. At length we heard a deep and solemn sound--Erupted moanings of the troubled earthTrembling beneath innumerable feet. A growing uproar blending in our ears, With noise tumultuous as ocean's surge, Of bellowings, fierce breath and battle shock, And ardor of unconquerable herds. A multitude whose trampling shook the plains, With discord of harsh sound and rumblings deep, As if the swift revolving earth had struck, And from some adamantine peak recoiled--Jarring. At length we topped a high-browed hill--The last and loftiest of a file of such--And, lo! before us lay the tameless stock, Slow-wending to the northward like a cloud!A multitude in motion, dark and dense--Far as the eye could reach, and farther still, In countless myriads stretched for many a league. BROCK. You fire me with the picture! What a scene! LEFROY. Nation on nation was invillaged there, Skirting the flanks of that imbanded host;With chieftains of strange speech and port of war, Who, battle-armed, in weather-brawny bulk, Roamed fierce and free in huge and wild content. These gave Tecumseh greetings fair and kind, Knowing the purpose havened in his soul. And he, too, joined the chase as few men dare;For I have seen him, leaping from his horse, Mount a careering bull in foaming flight, Urge it to fury o'er its burden strange, Yet cling tenacious, with a grip of steel, Then, by a knife-plunge, fetch it to its kneesIn mid-career, and pangs of speedy death. BROCK. You rave, Lefroy! or saw this in a dream. LEFROY. No, no; 'tis true--I saw him do it, Brock!Then would he seek the old, and with his spoilsRestore them to the bounty of their youth, Cheering the crippled lodge with plenteous feasts, And warmth of glossy robes, as soft as down, 'Till withered cheeks ran o'er with feeble smiles, And tongues, long silent, babbled of their prime. BROCK. This warrior's fabric is of perfect parts!A worthy champion of his race--he heapsSuch giant obligations on our headsAs will outweigh repayment. It is late, And rest must preface war's hot work to-morrow, Else would I talk till morn. How still the night!Here Peace has let her silvery tresses down, And falls asleep beside the lapping wave. Wilt go withme? LEFROY. Nay, I shall stay awhile. BROCK. You know my quarters and the countersign--Good-night, Lefroy! LEFROY. Good-night, good-night, good friend! [_Exit_ BROCK. ] Give me the open sleep, whose bed is earth, With airy ceiling pinned by golden stars, Or vaultage more confined, plastered with clouds!Your log-roofed barrack-sleep, 'twixt drum and drum, Suits men who dream of death, and not of love. Love cannot die, nor its exhausted life, Exhaling like a breath into the air, Blend with the universe again. It lives, Knit to its soul forever. Iena!Dead in the forest wild--earth cannot claimAught but her own from thee. Sleep on! sleep on! IENA. (_Reviving_) What place is this? LEFROY. Who's there? What voice is that! IENA. Where am I now? LEFROY. I'll follow up that sound!A desperate hope now ventures in my heart! IENA. Help me, kind Spirit! LEFROY. I could pick that voiceFrom out a choir of angels! Iena! [_Finds her behind the shrubbery. _] Tis she! 'tis she! Speak to me, Iena--No earthly power can mar your life again, For I am here to shield it with my own. IENA. Lefroy! LEFROY. Yes, he! IENA. My friends! found, found at last! LEFROY. Found, found my love! I swear it on your lips, And seal love's contract there! Again--again--Ah me! all earthly pleasure is a toilCompared with one long look upon your face. IENA. O, take me to my friends! A faintness cameUpon me, and no farther could I go. LEFROY. What spirit led you here? IENA. My little barkIs yonder by the shore--but take me hence!For I am worn and weak with wandering. LEFROY. Come with me then. _Enter the_ PROPHET, _who stalks gloomily acrossthe stage--scowling at_ IENA _and_ LEFROY_as he passes out. _ IENA. The Prophet! I am lost! LEFROY. This monster here! But he is powerless now. Fear him not, Iena! Tecumseh's wrathBurns 'gainst him still--he dare not do thee hurt. IENA. Must I endure for ever this fiend's hate?He stabbed me with his eye-- [_Swoons away. _] LEFROY. O, horrible! Let us but meet again, and I shallsendHis curst soul out of this accursed world! [_Exit_ LEFROY, _carrying_ IENA. ] SCENE EIGHTH. --THE HIGHWAY THROUGH THE FOREST LEADINGTO FORT DETROIT--THE FORT IN THE DISTANCE; CANNON ANDGUNNERS AT THE GATE. _Enter_ TECUMSEH, STAYETA, _and other Chiefs andWarriors. _ TECUMSEH. There is the Long-Knive's fort, within whosewallsWe lose our lives, or find our lands to-day. Fight for that little space--'tis wide domain!That small enclosure shuts us from our homes. There are the victors in the Prophet's strife--Within that fort they lie--those bloody menWho burnt your town, to light their triumph up, And drove your women to the withered woodsTo shudder through the cold slow-creeping night, And help their infants to out-howl the wolf. Oh, the base Long-Knife grows to head, not heart--A pitiless and murdering ministerTo his desires! But let us now be strong, And, if we conquer, merciful as strong!Swoop like the eagles on their prey, but turnIn victory your taste to that of doves;For ever it has been reproach to usThat we have stained our deeds with cruelty, And dyed our axes in our captives' blood. So, here, retort not on a vanquished foe, But teach him lessons in humanity. Now let the big heart, swelling in each breast, Strain every rib for lodgment! Warriors!Bend to your sacred task, and follow me. STAYETA. Lead on! We follow you! KICKAPOO CHIEF. Advance ye braves! TECUMSEH. Stay! make a circuit in the open woods--Cross, and recross, and double on the path--So shall the Long-Knives overcount our strength. Do this, Stayeta, whilst I meet my friend--My brave white brother, and confer with him. _Enter_ GENERAL BROCK, PROCTOR, NICHOL, MACDONELL_and other Officers and Forces, on the highway_. TECUMSEH _goes down to meet them. _ BROCK. Now by God's providence we face Detroit, Either to sleep within its walls to-night, Or in deep beds dug by exulting foes. Go, Nichol, make a swift reconnaissance--We'll follow on. NICHOL. I shall, but, ere I go I do entreat you, General, take the rear;Those guns are shrewdly placed without the gate--One raking fire might rob us of your life, And, this lost, all is lost. BROCK. Well meant, my friend!But I am here to lead, not follow, menWhose confidence has come with me thus far!Go, Nichol, to your task! [_Exit_ NICHOL. TECUMSEH _advances_. ] Tecumseh, hail! Brave chieftain, you have made yourpromise good. TECUMSEH. My brother stands to his! and I but waitHis orders to advance--my warriorsAre ripe for the assault. BROCK. Deploy them, then, Upon our landward flank, and skirt the woods, Whilst we advance in column to attack. [TECUMSEH _rejoins his warriors_. ] Signal our batteries on the farther shoreTo play upon the Fort! Be steady friends--Be steady! Now upon your country turnYour multiplying thoughts, and strike for her!Strike for your distant and inviolate homes, Perfumed with holy prayer at this hour!Strike! with your fathers' virtue in your veinsYou must prevail--on, on, to the attack! [BROCK _and forces advance towards the Port. A heavycannonading from the British batteries. ] Re-enter_ NICHOL _hastily_. NICHOL Stay, General! I saw a flag of truceCross from the Fort to the Canadian shore. BROCK. Halt! There's another from yon bastion flung;And, see! another waves adown the road--Borne by an officer--what think you, Nichol? NICHOL Your threats are conquerors! The Fort is ours! GLEGG. Yes, look! the gunners have been all withdrawnWho manned the cannon at yon western gate. PROCTOR. So many men to yield without a blow!Why, this is wonderful! It cannot be! BROCK. Say, rather, should not be, and yet it is!'Tis plainly written in this captain's face. _Officer with flag of truce approaches_. OFFICER. This letter from our General containsProposals to capitulate--pray sendAn officer to ratify the terms. [GENERAL BROCK _reads letter_. ] BROCK. You have a wise and politic commander! OFFICER. Our General knowing your superior force-- NICHOL. (_Aside_. ) O this is good! 'tis barelyhalf his own! OFFICER. And, noting your demand of yesterdayWith clearer judgment, doth accede to it, To bar effusion of much precious bloodBy reasonable treaty of surrender. BROCK. Why, this is excellent, and rare discretion! OFFICER. He fears your Indians could not be restrained. Our women's prayers--red visions of the knife--