CHAPTER XVIII. Narrative of my captivity among the Sioux Indians. | ||
CHAPTER XVIII.
LAST DAYS WITH THE OGALALLA SIOUX—MASSACRE OF A PARTY RETURNING
FROM IDAHO—A WOMAN'S SCALP—A SCALP DANCE—SUSPICIOUS
CIRCUMSTANCE—ARRIVAL OF BLACKFEET INDIANS—NEGOTIATIONS
FOR MY RANSOM—TREACHERY.
My last days with the Ogalalla Sioux Indians were
destined to be marked by a terrible remembrance.
On the first of October, while the savages lingered
in camp about the banks of the Yellowstone River,
apparently fearing, yet almost inviting attack by their
near vicinity to the soldiers, a large Mackinaw, or
flat-boat, was seen coming down the river.
From their hiding-places in the rocks and bushes,
they watched its progress with the stealthy ferocity of
the tiger waiting for his prey.
At sundown the unsuspecting travelers pushed their
boat toward the shore, and landed for the purpose of
making a fire and camping for the night.
The party consisted of about twenty persons, men,
women, and children. Suspecting no danger, they left
their arms in the boat.
With a simultaneous yell, the savages dashed down
strokes.
The defenseless emigrants made an attempt to rush
to the boat for arms, but were cut off, and their bleeding
bodies dashed into the river as fast as they were
slain. Then followed the torture of the women and
children.
Horrible thought! from which all will turn with
sickened soul, and shuddering, cry to Heaven, "How
long, O Lord! how long shall such inhuman attrocities
go unpunished?"
Not a soul was left alive when that black day's
work was done; and the unconscious river bore away
a warm tide of human blood, and sinking human
forms.
When the warriors returned to camp, they brought
their frightful trophies of blood-stained clothes and
ghastly scalps.
My heart-sick eyes beheld the dreadful fruits of
carnage; and, among the rest, I saw a woman's scalp,
with heavy chestnut hair, a golden brown, and four
feet in length, which had been secured for its beauty.
The tempting treasure lost the poor girl her life, which
might have been spared; but her glorious locks were
needed to hang on the chief's belt.
Nearly all the flat-boats that passed down the Yellowstone
River to the Missiouri, from the mining regions,
during that season, were attacked, and in some
approach of this boat was known, and the Indians had
ample time to plan their attack so that not a soul
should escape.
That night the whole camp of braves assembled to
celebrate the fearful scalp dance; and from the door
of my tent I witnessed the savage spectacle, for I was
ill, and, to my great relief, was not forced to join in
the horrid ceremony.
A number of squaws occupied the center of the ring
they formed, and the pitiless wretches held up the fresh
scalps that day reaped in the harvest of death.
Around them circled the frantic braves, flourishing
torches, and brandishing weapons, with the most ferocious
barks and yells, and wild distortions of countenance.
Some uttered boasts of bravery and prowess, and
others lost their own identity in mocking their dying
victims in their agony.
Leaping first on one foot, then on the other, accompanying
every movement with wild whoops of excitement,
they presented a scene never to be forgotten.
The young brave who bore the beautiful locks as
his trophy, did not join in the dance. He sat alone,
looking sad.
I approached and questioned him, and he replied
that he regretted his dead victim. He brought a
blood-stained dress from his lodge, and told me it was
haunted him and made him sorry.
After being cognizant of this frightful massacre, I
shrank more than ever from my savage companions,
and pursued my tasks in hopeless despondence of ever
being rescued or restored to civilized life.
One day I was astonished to notice a strange Indian,
whom I had never seen before, making signs to me of
a mysterious nature.
He indicated by signs that he wanted me to run
away with him to the white people. I had become so
suspicious, from having been deceived so many times
that I turned from him and entered the chief's tent
where, despite his cruelty and harshness to me, I felt
comparatively safe.
I afterward saw this Indian, or rather white man.
or half-breed, as I believe him to have been, though
he could not, or would not speak a word of English.
His long hair hung loosely about his shoulders, and
was of a dark brown color. He had in no respect the
appearance of an Indian, but rather that of a wild,
reckless frontier desperado. I had never seen him before,
though he seemed well known in the camp.
One thing that perhaps made me more suspicious
and afraid to trust any one, was a knowledge of the
fact that many of the Indians who had lost relatives in
the recent battles with General Sully, were thirsting
for my blood, and would have been glad to decoy me
from the fury of the old chief, my task-master.
This stranger came one day into a tent where I was,
and showed me a small pocket bible that had belonged
to my husband, and was presented to him by his now
sainted mother many years before. His object was to
assure me that I might trust him; but such an instinctive
horror of the man had taken possession of me
that I refused to believe him; and at last he became
enraged and threatened to kill me if I would not go
with him.
I plead with him to give me the bible, but he refused.
How dear it would have been to me from association,
and what strength and comfort I would have
received from its precious promises, shut out, as I was,
from my world and all religious privileges and surrounded
by heathen savages.
Soon after the foregoing incident, the old chief and
his three sisters went away on a journey, and I was
sent to live with some of his relatives, accompanied by
my little companion, Yellow Bird. We traveled all
day to reach our destination, a small Indian village.
The family I was to live with until the return of the
chief and his sisters, consisted of a very old Indian
and his squaw, and a young girl.
I had a dread of going among strangers, but was
thankful for the kindness with which I was received
by this old couple. I was very tired, and so sad and
the old squaw, seeming to understand my feelings, considerately
placed before me meat and water, and kindly
ministered to my wants in every way their means
would allow.
I was with this family nearly three weeks, and was
treated with almost affectionate kindness, not only by
them, but by every member of the little community.
The children would come to see me, and manifest in
various ways their interest in me. They would say,
"Wasechawea (white woman) looks sad; I want to
shake hands with her."
I soon began to adapt myself to my new surroundings,
and became more happy and contented than I
had ever yet been since my captivity began. My time
was occupied in assisting the motherly old squaw in
her sewing and other domestic work.
There was but once a cloud come between us. The
old chief had given orders that I was not to be permitted
to go out among the other villagers alone, orders
of which I knew nothing. Feeling a new sense of
freedom, I had sometimes gone out, and on one occasion,
having been invited into different tipis by the
squaws, staid so long that the old Indian sent for me,
and seemed angry when I returned. He said it was
good for me to stay in his tent, but bad to go out
among the others. I pacified him at last by saying
I knew his home was pleasant, and I was happy there,
other tents.
The old chief returned, finally, and my brief season
of enjoyment ended. He seemed to delight in torturing
me, often pinching my arms until they were black
and blue. Regarding me as the cause of his wounded
arm, he was determined that I should suffer with him.
While in this village "Man-Afraid-of-His-Horses"
arrived, and I was made aware of his high standing
as a chief and warrior by the feasting and dancing
which followed. He was splendidly mounted and
equipped, as also was another Indian who accompanied
him.
I have since learned from my husband that the
treacherous chief made such statements of his influence
with the hostile Indians as to induce him to purchase
for them both an expensive outfit, in the hope of my
release. I saw and conversed with him several times,
and though he told me that he was from the Platte,
he said nothing of the real errand on which he was
sent, but returned to the fort and reported to Mr.
Kelly that the band had moved and I could not be
found.
Captain Fisk had made known to General Sully
the fact of my being among the Indians, and the efforts
he had made for my release; and when the
Blackfeet presented themselves before the General,
asking for peace, and avowing their weariness of hostility,
for the approaching winter, he replied:
"I want no peace with you. You hold in captivity
a white woman; deliver her up to us, and we will believe
in your professions. But unless you do, we will
raise an army of soldiers as numerous as the trees on
the Missouri River and exterminate the Indians."
The Blackfeet assured General Sully that they held
no white woman in their possession, but that I was
among the Ogalallas.
"As you are friendly with them," said the General,
"go to them and secure her, and we will then reward
you for so doing."
The Blackfeet warriors appeared openly in the village
a few days afterward, and declared their intentions,
stating in council the determination of General Sully.
The Ogalallas were not afraid, they said, and refused
to let me go. They held solemn council for two days,
and at last resolved that the Blackfeet should take me
as a ruse, to enable them to enter the fort, and a
wholesale slaughter should exterminate the soldiers.
While thus deliberating as to what they thought
best—part of them willing, the other half refusing to
let me go—Hunkiapa, a warrior, came into the lodge,
and ordered me out, immediately following me.
He then led me into a lodge where there were fifty
warriors, painted and armed—their bows strung and
their quivers full of arrows.
From thence, the whole party, including three
squaws, who, noting my extreme fear, accompanied me,
started toward a creek, where there were five horses
and warriors to attend us to the Blackfeet village.
Placing me on a horse, we were rapidly pursuing
our way, when a party of the Ogalallas, who were unwilling,
came up with us, to reclaim me.
Here they parleyed for a time, and, finally, after a
solemn promise on the part of my new captors that I
should be returned safely, and that I should be cared
for and kindly treated, we were allowed to proceed.
In their parleying, one of the warriors ordered me
to alight from the horse, pointing a pistol to my
breast. Many of them clamored for my life, but,
finally, they settled the matter, and permitted us to
proceed on our journey.
After so many escapes from death, this last seemed
miraculous; but God willed it otherwise, and to him I
owe my grateful homage.
It was a bitter trial for me to be obliged to go with
this new and stranger tribe. I was unwilling to exchange
my life for an unknown one, and especially as
my companionship with the sisters of the chief had
been such as to protect me from injury or insult. A
sort of security and safety was felt in the lodge of the
chief, which now the fear of my new position made
me appreciate still more.
Savages they were, and I had longed to be free
and misgiving.
Though my new masters, for such I considered
them, held out promise of liberty and restoration to
my friends, knowing the treacherous nature of the
Indians, I doubted them. True, the Ogalallas had
treated me at times with great harshness and cruelty,
yet I had never suffered from any of them the slightest
personal or unchaste insult. Let me bear testimony to
this redeeming feature in their treatment of me.
At the time of my capture I became the exclusive
property of Ottawa, the head chief, a man over seventy-five
years of age, and partially blind, yet whose
power over the band was absolute. Receiving a severe
wound in a melee I have already given an account of,
I was compelled to become his nurse or medicine
woman; and my services as such were so appreciated,
that harsh and cruel as he might be, it was dangerous
for others to offer me insult or injury; and to this
fact, doubtless, I owe my escape from a fate worse
than death.
The Blackfeet are a band of the Sioux nation; consequently,
are allies in battle. The chief dared not
refuse on this account; besides, he was an invalid, and
wounded badly.
The Blackfeet left three of their best horses as a
guarantee for my safe return.
The chief of the Ogalallas had expressed the desire
that I might be killed, in order to become his attendant
to the spirit land.
It was now the commencement of November, and
their way seemed to lead to the snowy regions, where
the cold might prove unendurable.
When I heard the pledge given by the Blackfeet,
my fears abated; hope sprang buoyant at the thought
of again being within the reach of my own people,
and I felt confident that, once in the fort, I could frustrate
their plans by warning the officers of their intentions.
I knew what the courage and discipline of fort
soldiers could accomplish, and so hoped, not only to
thwart the savage treachery, but punish the instigators.
CHAPTER XVIII. Narrative of my captivity among the Sioux Indians. | ||