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TH E Author of the following Tale has endeavoured to adhere as clofely as pofTible to the true reprc^ fentation of Indian manners : And if in fbme paiTages, the change from enmity to friendlWp^ or from friendfhip to enmity, fliall feeni abrupt, he begs that any cenfure againft him may be fufpended, till enquiry be made^ whether or not, in rude and favage minds, fuch fudden, and feemingly violent tranfitions, may not be natural. — Tho' the Tale be in profe, th-e Author does not affedl meafured or fradlical profe i At the fame time his refpe<3: for his readers, has made him attend ta the didlion, in fo far as not to appear before them in a flovenly or carelefs manner. His intention was to intereft, or amufe them y and he offers them his^ performance with the utmofl diffidence* ^ ■ -!■-■■ THE : N i 3 y. THE CACIQUE O F ONTARIO. An INDIAN TALE. MA R A N O, amiable in her fbrrow, fat alone by a fhelving rock. She fought in folitude tc indulge the anguilh of her foul. She leaned on her Ihowy arm. Her treflcs flowed carelefs to the gale. The blooming beauty of her complexion was flufhed with weeping. Her blue eyes were full of tender anxiety ; and her bofom heaved with repeated (ighs, " When will he return !'* flie faid, " my beloved Oneyo ! the •* hu{band of my afFedlions ! How I long to behold him I Ye waves of " Ontario, convey him to his native Ihore; refiore him to his friends, •* reftore him to my tender embrace. O when Ihall I behold him ? ♦* When will the fwift canoe come bounding over the lake, and waft B ** the »T^ r n E C A C I Q^ U E ** the hero to his glaclfome Iflc I Yes, thou happy ifle ! Thy rocks, thy " refoundiiig glades, and thy fortfts (hall then rejoice. Gladncrs fliall *' be ill the village. The Elders (hall come forth to receive him. The *' feftival fliall be prepared. Ah me ! Peradventurc he hath peridicd ! *' Or now expires in Tome bloody field ! Impetuous in his valour, and ** eager in the ardour of youth, perchance he ru(hes on the foe, and ** falls !" While Marano thus indulged her inquietude, the venerable Ononthio was drawing nigh to conible her. He had perceived the uneafinefs of her foul, and had followed her unobferved from the village. He was the father of Oneyo, one of the Elders of the nation, revered for his wifdom, and beloved for his humanity. Temperate in his youth and adive, in his old age he was vigorous and chearful. The furrows on his brow, were not thofe of anxiety, but of time. His gait was flately, and his afpe£l gracious. He loved Marano with the affedlion of a father. " Be comforted," he faid ; " give not thy foul to delpon- ** dency. The great Spirit who rides in the whirlwind, and fpeaks ** from the pafling thunder, tiie father and governor of all things, will *' proted thee. But to merit his favour, be refigned to his will. It is *' impious to anticipate mifery, and render ourfelves unhappy before we ♦' are aftually afBided. Yet capricious inconliftent mortals, timid at ** once and prefumptuous, tremble with the imagination of danger, and *' complain as if their fufFerings were real. They create miferies to ** themfelves, and arrogantly charge them on the Almighty. Beware, ** my daughter, beware of rebellion againft the Almighty Spirit, If " you repine inconfiderately, if you complain without adlual caufe, you ♦' rebel. He hath commanded us to be happy, he is ever ofi^nded with " bur difobedience ; but if we encourage groundlefs anxiety, we difobey. ** By deftroying your own tranquillity, you are no lefs an enemy to the ** general lyftem of happinefs he hath ordained, than if you injured the peace of another. Be comforted. Oneyo may fooa return loaded " with « i or O N 1* A R I O. 3 «* with the Ipoils of the Briton, and extolled by the gallant warriors of ** France.'* ** To fee my hufband return in fafety," (he replied, " Is the fum of ** my defires. To fee him loaded with the fpoils of the Briton will be ** no addition to my joy." The Indian feemed aftonifhied. " Have ** you forgotten," flie continued, " that I myfelf am a Briton ? That ** I was carried violently from my father's houfe, when the Out ag ami ** ravaged our land, and carried terror to the gates of Albany ? My ** parents perllhed. I was yet a child, but I remember the bloody car- ♦* nage. My brother of riper years was refcued, but I became the prey *' of their fury. Since that time, many years arc fhpfed ; yet at the ** name of Briton, my bofoni glows with peculiar tranlport." " I fondly imagined," anfwered the Indian, " that you loved us. We *' named you after the manner of our tribe. But your afFedlons are *' eftranged, and you languifli for the land of your fathers. I called *' you my daughter, but, Marano, you would leave me," Uttering thefe words he looked tenderly upon her. " You would leave me," he repeated, and a tear rofe in his eye. Marano was afFeifled. She clafped his hand and prefled it to her rofy lips. *' No I will never leave ** thee. My heart is thine and my beloved Oneyo's. I revere thee. *' Can I forget thy compaflion. Can I forget the dreadful day when *' theOuTAGAMi, in an aflbmbly of their nation, decreed me afacrificc *' to their god Areskoui. You was prefent on an embafly from your *' people. Oneyo in the bloom of early years had accompanied his " father. He was befide you. He fighed when he beheld me weeping. ** Alas ! I was feeble, friendlefs, and befet with foes. Oneyo intreated " you to relieve me. Your own heart was afFeded, you interpofed in *' my behalf, you redeemed me and called me your*s. Oneyo haftened *' to my deliverance, he loofened my fetters and dlafped me to his bread. ** Our affedion grew with our years ; you belield it with kind iudul- B 2 " gence^ 4 THE C A C I Q^ U E *' gencc, aiul ratified our wlflies with your coiifcnt. I have heard of ** European rdiiieiiients, of coftly raiment and lofty palaces; yet tome ** the rimpliciiy of thcfe rocks and forefts Teems far more delightful. " But if Oneyo returns not, I am undone. Many moons have arifen " fince with the flower of our tribe he departed. The matrons are ** already wailing for their fons. — Oneyo, alas! is impetuous, and the ** warriors of Albion are undaunted. The blood of their foes has ** already tinged the Ohio; Canada trembled at their approach, and " may ere now have become the prize of their valour. Ah me I if thy *' ft. I hath fallen, grief will fubdue thee ; I know the tendcrnefs of " thine affection, it will pull thee down to the grave. Who then will " be a comforter to me ? Who will be my friend ? Among a ftrange ** people I have no father to protect me, no brother to counfel and give «* me aid." Ononthio was about to reply, when an Indian from the village accofted them. He told them with a forrowful afpe»ft that the hopes of their tribe were blafted, for thatfome Indians of a neighbouring nation, having returned from Canada, brought certain intelligence of the total overthrow of their friends ; that they had with difficulty efcaped ; that Oneyo was Ccen fierce and intrepid in the heat of the battle ; that he was furrounded by the foe, and muft have fallen a vivftim to their fury. Marano was overwhelmed. Ononthio heaved a fiffh : but the haplefs condition of his daughter, and the delire of yielding her confo- lation, fufpended and relieved his forrow. ** If my fon hath fallen," he faid, " he hath fallen as became a warrior. His praife (hall be pre- ** ferved by his kindred and defcend to pofterity in the war-fong. His " name Ihall terrify the European, when the chieftains of future times ** rulhing fierce from their forefts, fhall furround his habitations at ♦* midnight, and raife the yell of death in his ear. Oneyo fhall not die ** unrevenged." " He (hall not," interrupted the Indian. " The mef- " fengers O F ONTARIO. (( (( " fcngers of our misfortune hovered after tlic clircoinfiturc of their ** aUies, around the walls of Quebec. They furprifed a party of the foe ; they have brought captives to our iflands : the Elders of the nation are now aflembled : they have doomed them a facriHce to the *' memory of the dead, and defer their execution only till your arrival." '* Alas !" laid Marano, " the facrifice of a captive will atforu me *' fmall confolation. Will the death of a foe reftore life to my iiuf- *' band ? Or heal his ghaftly wounds ? Or reanimate his breathlefs ** bofom ? Ixave me to my woe. Leave me to wail on thefe lonely " mountains. Here I will not long be a fojourner. I will away to *' my love. I will meet him beyond the defa-ts, in fome blifsful *' valley, where no bloody foe fliall invade ns. Leave me to my " forrow, for I will not live." She intreated in vain : the Indian was urgent, and Ononthio feconded his Iblicitation. That nation of Indians of which Oneyo was a leader, inhabited an ifland in the lake Ontario. Their principal village was fituated by a pleafant ftream ifl'uing from a rock, and running through a narrow valley into the lake. The furrounding hills were adorned with forefts. The adjacent meadows were arrayed with verdure, or enamelled with flowers. The village was of a circular form, and was fenced by a wooden palliliide. The walls of the cottages were com- pofed of green turf with interwoven branches, and the roofs were covered with reeds and withv.ied leaves. Every thing was fimple. No pompous pillars, embeilifhed with quaint devices and the pa- rade of mafonry, lifted the lofty edifice to the (kies. No magni- ficent temples, no threatening battlements, no ftupendous domes nor palaces, flattered the vanity of priefts, politicians and Ibldiers. The young men of the nation in the prime of health and vigour, were ufually engaged in the chace. Their principal bufinefs was to provide fuflenance for the community, or to defend them againft any t THE C A C I Q^ U E any hoftlie aflaiilt. The women, rnd all who were too old or too young to engage in any toilfome or hazardous enterprize, re- mained at the village, and had a variety of occupations fuited to their age and condition. They improved fome adjacent fields for the culture of maize and othei falutary plants. They alfo culti- vated medicinal herbs, ftudied their virtues, and prepared them for ufe. The women, befides the care of their children, and other domeftic concerns, were dexterous in weaving apparel, the materials of which were fupplied by the rind of odoriferous trees ; and in extracting tin£lures from various herbs and bloflbms, to ftain the faces of their warriors, and render their afpe<9: more terrible in the field. They were particularly ingenious in weaving firings and girdles of Wampum. Thefe, according as the colours were vari- oufly combined, ferved them as tokens of friendihip to their kin* dred, allies, and the captives whom they adopted into their tribe. Their children were early inured to labour, danger, and fatigue ; and were foon initiated in the ufe of the bow, the oar, the to- jnahauk, and the javelin. When their young men returned from the chace, or from any warlike expedition, the whole village was a fcene of joy and feftivity. Both old and young mingled in the dance, and recorded the exploits of their warriors in the fong. But when any bufinefs of confequence was to be tranfaded, every thing was coiidu<5led with gravity and compofure. The Elders o£ the village, who were promoted to authority not by fraud or vio- lence, but who were revered agreeably to ♦•he fimplicity of nature for their wifdom and experience, aflembled in an open fpace in the center of the village, and deliberated beneath a venerable oak. The bufinefs was propofed, and every one declared his opinion fedately, and without interruption. Their decrees Were ratified by a majority of Voices, and every one acqukic^ in their decifiooSf in this manner they lived OF ONTARIO. f lived Innocent and happy. As they had no particular property, tliey were untainted with the love of wealth, that bane of focial felicity, that poifon of the heart. As they poflefled every thing in common, they knew not the pangs of avarice, nor the torment of apprehended poverty, No fort of confequence was conferred by riches, and they were Innocent of guile, perfidy, and oppreflion. Power and autliority could only be obtained by fuperlor and ac- knowledged merit ; they were exerted without any vain parade ; there was therefore no room for ambition, no occafion of envy, nor any incitement to revenge. Temperate and inured to labour, they were brave, vigorous and a£tive. 1 heir affections of love and friend- {hip, as they were unwarped by unnatural diftinClIons, and unre- ftrained by fupercilious and pedantic formalities, were ardent and unaffected. They exprefled their emotions with all the freedom and fimpliclty of nature : their joy was rapturous, and their for- row vehentient. They were therefore no fooner informed of the death of Oneyo and of their brethren, than they abandoned themfelves to loud la- mentatioUr The matrons, with rent garments and diflievelled trefles, ran forth into the fields, and filled the air with their wailing. They then crowded around the captives, whom in the bitternefs of their woe, they loaded with keen inve gefture. The ufual benignity of his countenance was foftened with forrow. He fpoke the language of his foul, and was eloquent ; fpoke the language of feeling, and was perfuafive. They liftened to him with profound veneration, were moved, and deferred the facrifice. He then comforted Marano, and conveyed the captives to a place of fecurity. When they were apart from the multitude, " Tell me," (Iild he to the Briton, " are you guiltlefs of the death of my fon !" " I know *' not," he replied, for he had refumed the pride of indignant courage, " I know not whom I have flain. I drew my fword againft the foes of " my country, and I am not anfwerable for the blood I have Ipilt." ** Young man," faid Ononthio, full of folitude and parental tender- nefs, " O reflect on a father's feelings. I had an only fon. He was *' valiant. He was the prop and folace of my old age : if he hath ** gone down to darknefs and the grave, I have no longer any joy in ** exiftence. But if he lives, and lives by thy clemency, the prayers " of an old man (hall implore bleflings upon thee, and the great Spirit *' (hall reward thee." While he was yet fpeaking, a tear rofe in his eye, his voice faultered, he fighed— " O tell me if my fon furvives." « I flew j6 THE CACIQ^UE • ** I flew him not," he replied. " I know not that I flew thy Ton, ** To his name and quality I was a ftranger. In tlie heat of the cn- ♦* counter a gallant Indian afliiilcd me. He v^as tired and exhaufted. I " difarmed him, and my fword was lifted againft his life." ** Briton," faid he, with a refolute tone, " think not that death difmays me. I " have braved perils and the fword. I am not a fuppllant for myfelf. ** I have an aged parent whofc life depends upon mine : the wife of *' my bofom is a fl:ranger among my people, and I alone can protefl her." ** Generous youth," I replied, " go comfort and proted thy friends. ** I fent him forthwith from the field. I never enquired into his con- " dition, for in prefervlng him I obeyed my heart." Ma rang and Ononthio were overjoyed. But refleding that many days had elapfed fince the difcomfiture of their allies, and that hitherto they had received no intelligence of On.eyo, their joy fuffered abatement. Meantime Ononthio counfelled his daughter to conduct the Gran- gers to a difl:ant retreat, and preferve them there, till by his influence and authority he had appeafed the violence of his brethren. " Judge '* not unfavourably of my nation," faid he, " from this inftance of im- *' petuolity. They follow the immediate impulfe of nature, and are " often extravagant. But the vehemence of pafllon will foon abate, *' and reafon will refume her authority. You fee nature unreftrained, *' but not perverted ; luxuriant, but not corrupt. My brethren are •* wrathful ; but to latent or lafting enmity they are utter ftrangers." It was already night. The Indians were difperfed to their hamlets. The Iky was calm, and unclouded. The full-orbed moon in ferene and folemn majefty arofe In the eafl:. Her beams were reflected in a blaze of filver radiance from the fmooth and untroubled breaft of the : lake. The gray hills and awful forefl:s were folltary and filent. No iioife was heard, fave the roaring of a diftant cafcade, fave the Interrupt- ed wailing of matrons, who lamented the untimely death of their fons. -Mr| ■'■ ! O F ONTARIO. »7 fons. Marano with the captives, Iflliing unpeicelvcd from the village, purfued their way along the fileiit fhore, till they arrived at a narrow unfrequented recefs. It was open to the lake, hounded on either fide by abrupt and flielving precipices, arrayed with living verdure, and parted by a winding rivulet. A venerable oak overfliadowed the fountain, and rendered the fcene more folemn. The other captives were overcome with fatigue, and finding fome withered leaves in an adjoining cavern, they indulged themfelves in repofe. Marano con- verfed long with her brother, (lie poured out her foul in his fympa- thizing bofom, (he was comforted and relieved. While {he leaned on his breaft, while his arm was folded gently around her, a balmy {lum- ber furprifed them. Their features even in fleep preferved the cha- ra<51:er of their (buls. A fmile played innocent on the lips of Marano, her countenance was ineffiibly tender, and her trefl'es lay carelefs on her fnowy bofom. The features of Sidney, of a bolder and more manly expreffion, feemed full of benignity and complacence. Calm and unruffled was their repofe, they enjoyed the happy vifions of in- nocence, and dreamed not of impending danger. The moon in unrivalled glory had now attained her meridian, when the intermitting noife of rowers came flowly along the lake. A canoe was advancing, and the dripping oars arifing at Intervals from the water, (hone gleaming along the deep. The boat-men filent and un- ob(erved, moored their veflel on the fandy beach, and a young man of a keen and animated a(pe£l, arrayed in the (haggy (kin of a bear, armed with a bow and a javelin, having left his companions, was haftening along the (hore. It was Oneyo. Having received wounds iii the battle, he had been unable to pro(ecute his return, and had tarried with fome Indians in the neighbourhood of Montreal. By the (kilful application of herbs and balfams his cure was at length effectuated, and he returned impatient ta his nation, V D <* I wiU 8 THE CACIQ^UE *' I will return fccrctly," he fald, " I will enjoy the forrow and ** regret of Marano and of my brethren, who doubtlefs believe mc •* dead. I will enjoy the cxtacy of their afFe£lion, and their lurprifc ** on my unexpected arrival. My lovely Marano now laments un- *' confolcd. I will haften to relieve her, and pre (s her weeping with "joy to my faithful tranfported bofom.'* t Such were the fentiments of anticipated rapture that occupied the foul of Oneyo, when he difcovered Marano in the arms of a ftranger. He recoiled. He flood motionlefs in an agony of grief, anger, and aftonilhment. Pale and trembling he uttered fonie words incohe- rently. He again advanced, again recognized her, then turning ab- ruptly. In hitter anguifh, fmiting his breaft, ** Faithlefs and incon- ** ftant," he cried, " and is this my expe(fted meeting ! In the arms " of a Granger ! Arrogant invader of my felicity ! He (hall perifb ! " His blood (hall expiate his offence." Fury flafhed in hh eye, he grafped his javelin, he aimed the blow, and recognized his deliverer. Surprifc and horror feized him. ** Injured by my deliverer I By him " whom my foul revered ! And (hall I dip my hands in his blood ! " My life he prcferved. Would to heaven he had flain me ! Thus ** injured and betrayed Oneyo (hall not live. Thou great Univerfal ** Spirit whole path is in the clouds ! Whofe voice is in the thunder ! ** and whofe eye pierces the heart ! O conduft me to the blifsful ," valley, for Oneyo will not live." He fighed. ** One look, one ** parting look of my love. I believed her faithful, for her I lived, for *♦ her I die." He advanced towards her, he gazed on her with angui(h and regret. " She will not weep for me ! faithlefs and in- *' conflant. She will exult ! Exult to behold me bleeding ! And (hali ** it be ? For this have I cheri(hed her ? Laviihed my foul on her ? ** To be betrayed ! To give her love to a ftranger ?" He paufed, trem- bled, his countenance grew fierce, his eye wild, he grafped his javelin. l;.v I '> U ' —Marano ,y «^- V OF ONTARIO. '9 —Marano named him ; her voice was foft and plaintlvp tier vlfions were of Oneyo. " O come," (he iaid, ♦' Iiaften to thy lov ' Tarry •* not my Oneyo I How I long to behold thee !" " For this,' laid he, •* I'll embrace thee." Me embraced her ; (he awaked, diicovered her hufband, and flew eagerly into his arms. He flung from her in fierce indignation. ** Away," he cried, " go cheri(h thy (Irangcr. Away ** perfidious !" She followed him trembling and aghaft. '* He is my ** brother." ♦* Thy brother — Stranger," faid lie to the Briton who now approached him, ** you prefcrved my life. You are generous ♦* and valiant. I'ell me then, am I to (idutc thee as a iViend, and give " full vent to my gratitude ? Or muft I view thee as a guileful " ftducer, and lift my javelin againft thy life." The Briton perceiving his error, anfwered him with brevity and compofure : he related to him the circumftances of his captivity, and in confirmation appealed to the teftimony of his father. The Indian was fatlsfied. He embraced them. They returned by morning to the village. Ononthio received them with becoming gladnefs, ai d the day was crowned with rejoicing. .t FINIS. i .'j- pi^ f ' i K\ I ft ? 5 .» N ^ nv • B O^ O K s, Juft publifhed by JOHN FIELDING, Paternoster-Row. This Diiy was publiflied, in One Volume, price 38. •6d. fcucd, I. qpHE GAME LAWS, COM PL KTE TO THE PRESENT TIME: Containing all J. fuch Statutes at lurg€ as are now in Forc«' and Ufe, with a great Variety of new nn4 vfcfufl Obfcrv;^tions on thcin. Intended for the real Information ot the La.vytr, the JuHice of the Peace, and the Sportfman. "Likewife an Introdiidiou, explaining the general Nature *fForcft», Purlisas, Chaces, Parks, Free Warrens, Finicries, &c. &c. By GEORGE CLAllK, Efoi. Author of the PENAL STA lUTES ABRIDGED, ice. &c. In One Pocket Volume, price 2 s. 6 d. fcwed, II. A CONCISE ABSTRACT of all the PUBLIC ACTS ot PARLIAMENT, paflfcjl ■ifrom the z6th Day of January, lySj, ,to the end of the prefent S:(fion. Py LEONARD MAC N ALLY, Efq. o'^ the Middle Teftiple.; » '^his is iC lixtb Year of Mr. Fielding's jnjblifliing -this very ufeful Work, and the only 5)ne ihaf is done of all tlie Adts Complete. IIL WALL- TREE PRUNI N G. ' Price a&. fewci^, or 2i» 6d. bo«nd,.illul]rated with gl'lare of modern Defigns for Itot-Wall?, • ■ and Forcing Houfes for early Fruit, ThcMonEBN ENGLISH FRUIT GARDENER^ and PRACTICAL WALL-TREE PRUNERj explaining the moft fucccfsful "Methods of propagating, raifing, plannng, aaitt 4rainin5, all Soris of Froit'^rces for Walls, Efpaliers, and Standards, with the whole Proccfs .of Summer and Winter Pruning the different Kinds of Wall Trees, &c. fcf.'from at'tual Experiaice. Alio compieie' Lifts of all the different Species of Fruit Trees, ani their re- ipcitive Varieties ; tO{;,ether with the imprq^vcd Art jf forcing early Fruits in Mot VValls, 'Peach Houfes, Vmeries, &c. Sic. The whole being a regular Sy fie 11? of the geaerftl Culturp