founded. Near and far the news was circulated. Redmen from all tribes came
flocking to the new colony. Chiefs and warriors, squaws and maidens, were
attracted by the new
doctrine of the
converted Indians. They were astonished
at the missionaries' teachings. Many doubted, some were
converted, all
listened. Great
excitement prevailed when old Glickhican, one of the wisest
chiefs of the Turtle tribe of the Delawares, became a
convert to the
palefaces' religion.
The interest widened, and in a few years a beautiful,
prosperous town arose,
which was called Village of Peace. The Indians of the
warlike tribes bestowed
the
appropriate name. The vast forests were rich in every
variety of game; the
deep, swift
streams were teeming with fish. Meat and grain in
abundance,
buckskin for clothing, and soft furs for winter garments were to be had for
little labor. At first only a few wigwams were erected. Soon a large log
structure was thrown up and used as a church. Then followed a school, a mill,
and a
workshop. The verdant fields were
cultivated and surrounded by rail
fences. Horses and cattle grazed with the timid deer on the
grassy plains.
The Village of Peace blossomed as a rose. The reports of the love and
happiness existing in this
converted
community spread from mouth to mouth,
from town to town, with the result that
inquisitivesavages journeyed from all
points to see this haven. Peaceful and
hostile Indians were alike amazed at
the change in their brethren. The good-fellowship and industry of the
converts
had a
widespread and wonderful influence. More, perhaps, than any other thing,
the great fields of waving corn, the hills covered with horses and cattle,
those evidences of
abundance, impressed the visitors with the
well-being of
the Christians. Bands of traveling Indians, whether friendly or otherwise,
were treated with
hospitality, and never sent away empty-handed. They were
asked to
partake of the
abundance and solicited to come again.
A feature by no means
insignificant in the
popularity of the village was the
church bell. The Indians loved music, and this bell charmed them. On still
nights the
savages in distant towns could hear at dusk the deep-toned,
mellownotes of the bell summoning the
worshipers to the evening service. Its ringing
clang, so strange, so sweet, so
solemn, breaking the vast dead
wildernessquiet,
haunted the
savage ear as though it were a call from a
woodland god.
"You have arrived most opportunely," continued Mr. Zeisberger. "Mr. Edwards
and Mr. Young are
working to establish other
missionary posts. Heckewelder is
here now in the interest of this branching out."
"How long will it take me to learn the Delaware language?" inquired Jim.
"Not long. You do not, however, need to speak the Indian tongue, for we have
excellent interpreters."
"We heard much at Fort Pitt and Fort Henry about the danger, as well as
uselessness, of our venture," Jim continued. "The frontiersmen declared that
every rod of the way was beset with
savage foes, and that, even in the
unlikely event of our arriving
safely at the Village of Peace, we would then
be hemmed in by
fierce, vengeful tribes."
"Hostile
savages
abound here, of course; but we do not fear them. We invite
them. Our work is to
convert the
wicked, to teach them to lead good, useful
lives. We will succeed."
Jim could not help
warming to the
minister for his unswervable faith, his
earnestbelief that the work of God could not fail;
nevertheless, while he
felt no fear and intended to put all his heart in the work, he remembered with
disquietude Colonel Zane's warnings. He thought of the wonderful precaution
and
eternalvigilance of Jonathan and Wetzel--men of all men who most
understood Indian craft and
cunning. It might well be possible that these good
missionaries, wrapped up in saving the souls of these children of the forest
so full of God's teachings as to have little mind for aught else, had no
knowledge of the Indian nature beyond what the narrow scope of their work
invited. If what these frontiersmen asserted was true, then the
ministers'
zeal had struck them blind.
Jim had a growing idea of the way in which the
savages could be best taught.
He
resolved to go slowly; to study the redmen's natures; not to
preach one
word of the
gospel to them until he had mastered their language and could
convey to their simple minds the real truth. He would make Christianity as
clear to them as were the deer-trails on the moss and leaves of the forest.
"Ah, here you are. I hope you have rested well," said Mr. Zeisberger, when at
the
conclusion of this long
recital Nell and Kate came into the room.
"Thank you, we feel much better," answered Kate. The girls certainly looked
refreshed. The substitution of clean gowns for their former travel-stained
garments made a change that called forth the
minister's surprise and
admiration.
"My! My! Won't Edwards and Young beg me to keep them here now!" he exclaimed,
his pleased eyes resting on Nell's piquant beauty and Kate's noble proportions
and rich coloring. "Come; I will show you over the Village of Peace."
"Are all these Indians Christians?" asked Jim.
"No, indeed. These Indians you see here, and out yonder under the shade,
though they are friendly, are not Christians. Our
converts employ themselves
in the fields or shops. Come; take a peep in here. This is where we
preach in
the evenings and during
inclement weather. On pleasant days we use the maple
grove yonder."
Jim and the others looked in at the door of the large log
structure. They saw
an
immense room, the floor covered with benches, and a raised
platform at one
end. A few windows let in the light. Spacious and barn-like was this
apartment; but
undoubtedly, seen through the
beaming eyes of the
missionary,
it was a grand amphitheater for
worship. The hard-packed clay floor was velvet
carpet; the rude seats soft as eiderdown; the
platform with its white-oak
cross, an altar of
marble and gold.
"This is one of our shops," said Mr. Zeisberger, leading them to a cabin.
"Here we make brooms,
harness for the horses, farming implements--everything
useful that we can. We have a forge here. Behold an Indian blacksmith!"
The
interior of the large cabin presented a scene of bustling activity.
Twenty or more Indians bent their backs in
earnestemployment. In one corner a
savage stood
holding a piece of red-hot iron on an anvil, while a brawny brave
wielded a sledge-hammer. The sparks flew; the anvil rang. In another corner a
circle of braves sat around a pile of dried grass and flags. They were
twisting and fashioning these materials into baskets. At a bench three Indian
carpenters were pounding and sawing. Young braves ran back and forth, carrying
pails, rough-hewn boards and blocks of wood.
Instantly struck by two things, Jim voiced his curiosity:
"Why do these Indians all wear long hair, smooth and shiny, without
adornment?"
"They are Christians. They wear neither headdress, war-bonnet, nor
scalp-lock," replied Mr. Zeisberger, with
unconscious pride.
"I did not expect to see a blacksmith's anvil out here in the
wilderness.
Where did you
procure these tools?"
"We have been years getting them here. Some came by way of the Ohio River;
others
overland from Detroit. That anvil has a history. It was lost once, and
lay for years in the woods, until some Indians found it again. It is called
the Ringing Stone, and Indians come from miles around to see and hear it."
The
missionarypointed out wide fields of corn, now growing yellow, and
hillsides doted with browsing cattle, droves of sturdy-limbed horses, and pens
of fat, grunting pigs--all of which attested to the growing
prosperity of the
Village of Peace.
On the way back to the cabin, while the others listened to and questioned Mr.
Zeisberger, Jim was silent and
thoughtful, for his thoughts reverted to his
brother.
Later, as he walked with Nell by the golden-fringed
stream, he spoke of Joe.
"Joe wanted so much to hunt with Wetzel. He will come back; surely he will
return to us when he has satisfied his wild
craving for adventure. Do you not
think so?"
There was an
eagerness that was almost pleading in Jim's voice. What he so
much hoped for--that no harm had
befallen Joe, and that he would return--he
doubted. he needed the
encouragement of his hope.
"Never," answered Nell,
solemnly.
"Oh, why--why do you say that?"
"I saw him look at you--a strange,
intent glance. He gazed long at me as we
separated. Oh! I can feel his eyes. No; he will never come back."
"Nell, Nell, you don not mean he went away deliberately--because, oh! I cannot
say it."
"For no reason, except that the
wilderness called him more than love for you
or--me."
"No, no," returned Jim, his face white. "You do not understand. He really
loved you--I know it. He loved me, too. Ah, how well! He has gone because--I
can't tell you."
"Oh, Jim, I hope--he loved--me," sobbed Nell, bursting into tears. "His
coldness--his
neglect those--last few days--hurt me--so. If he cared--as you
say--I won't be--so--miserable."
"We are both right--you when you say he will never return, and I when I say he
loved us both," said Jim sadly, as the bitter
certainty forced itself into his
mind.
As she sobbed
softly, and he gazed with set, stern face into the darkening
forest, the deep,
mellow notes of the church bell pealed out. So thrilled, so
startled were they by this
melody wondrously breaking the
twilight stillness,
that they gazed mutely at each other. Then they remembered. It was the
missionary's bell summoning the Christian Indians to the evening service.