When All Who Walked These Forests Were Hunters...
“Here is room to breathe in!” exclaimed the liberated
forester, as soon as he found himself under a clear sky, shaking
his huge frame like a mastiff that has just escaped from a snowbank.
“Hurrah! Deerslayer; here is daylight, at last, and yonder
is the lake.”
These words were scarcely uttered when the second forester dashed
aside the bushes of the swamp, and appeared in the area. After
making a hurried adjustment of his arms and disordered dress,
he joined his companion, who had already begun his disposition
for a halt.
“Do you know this spot!” demanded the one called
Deerslayer, “or do you shout at the sight of the sun?”
“Both, lad, both; I know the spot, and am not sorry to
see so useful a fri’nd as the sun. Now we have got the
p’ints of the compass in our minds once more, and ‘t
will be our own faults if we let anything turn them topsy-turvy
ag’in, as has just happened. My name is not Hurry Harry,
if this be not the very spot where the land-hunters camped the
last summer, and passed a week. See I yonder are the dead bushes
of their bower, and here is the spring. Much as I like the sun,
boy, I’ve no occasion for it to tell me it is noon; this
stomach of mine is as good a time-piece as is to be found in
the colony, and it already p’ints to half-past twelve.
So open the wallet, and let us wind up for another six hours’
run.”
At this suggestion, both set themselves about making the preparations
necessary for their usual frugal but hearty meal. We will profit
by this pause in the discourse to give the reader some idea
of the appearance of the men, each of whom is destined to enact
no insignificant part in our legend.
It would not have been easy to find a more noble specimen of
vigorous manhood than was offered in the person of him who called
himself Hurry Harry. His real name was Henry March but the frontiersmen
having caught the practice of giving sobriquets from the Indians,
the appellation of Hurry was far oftener applied to him than
his proper designation, and not unfrequently he was termed Hurry
Skurry, a nickname he had obtained from a dashing, reckless
offhand manner, and a physical restlessness that kept him so
constantly on the move, as to cause him to be known
along the whole line of scattered habitations that lay between
the province and the Canadas. The stature of Hurry Harry exceeded
six feet four, and being unusually well proportioned, his strength
fully realized
the idea created by his gigantic frame. The face did no discredit
to the rest of the man, for it was both good-humored and handsome.
His air was free, and though his manner necessarily partook
of the rudeness of a border life, the grandeur that pervaded
so noble a physique prevented it from becoming altogether vulgar.
Deerslayer, as Hurry called his companion, was a very different
person
in appearance, as well as in character. In stature he stood
about six feet in his moccasins, but his frame was comparatively
light and slender, showing muscles, however, that promised unusual
agility, if not
unusual strength. His face would have had little to recommend
it except youth, were it not for an expression that seldom failed
to win upon those who had leisure to examine it, and to yield
to the feeling of
confidence it created. This expression was simply that of guileless
truth, sustained by an earnestness of purpose, and a sincerity
of feeling, that rendered it remarkable. At times this air of
integrity seemed to be so simple as to awaken the suspicion
of a want of the usual means to discriminate between artifice
and truth; but few came in serious contact with the man, without
losing this distrust in respect for his opinions and motives.
Both these frontiersmen were still young, Hurry having reached
the age of six or eight and twenty, while Deerslayer was several
years his junior. Their attire needs no particular description,
though it may be well to add that it was composed in no small
degree of dressed deer-skins, and had the usual signs of belonging
to those who pass their
time between the skirts of civilized society and the boundless
forests. There was, notwithstanding, some attention to smartness
and the picturesque in the arrangements of Deerslayer’s
dress, more particularly in the part connected with his arms
and accoutrements. His rifle was in perfect condition, the handle
of his hunting-knife was neatly carved, his powder-horn was
ornamented with suitable devices lightly cut into the material,
and his shot-pouch was decorated with wampum.
On the other hand, Hurry Harry, either from constitutional recklessness,
or from a secret consciousness how little his appearance required
artificial aids, wore everything in a careless, slovenly manner,
as if he felt a noble scorn for the trifling accessories of
dress and ornaments. Perhaps the peculiar effect of his fine
form and great stature was increased rather than lessened, by
this unstudied and disdainful air of indifference.
“Come, Deerslayer, fall to, and prove that you have a
Delaware stomach,
as you say you have had a Delaware edication,” cried Hurry,
setting the example by opening his mouth to receive a slice
of cold venison steak that would have made an entire meal for
a European peasant; “fall to, lad, and prove your manhood
on this poor devil of a doe with your teeth,
as you’ve already done with your rifle.”
“Nay, nay, Hurry, there’s little manhood in killing
a doe, and that too out of season; though there might be some
in bringing down a painter or a catamount,” returned the
other, disposing himself to comply. “The Delawares have
given me my name, not so much on account of a bold heart, as
on account of a quick eye, and an actyve foot. There may not
be any
cowardyce in overcoming a deer, but sartain it is, there’s
no great valor.”
“Harkee, Master Deerslayer, answer me one question; you
have had so much luck among the game as to have gotten a title,
it would seem, but did you ever hit anything human or intelligible:
did you ever pull trigger on an inimy that was capable of pulling
one upon you?”
“To own the truth, I never did,” answered Deerslayer;
“seeing that a fitting occasion never offered. The Delawares
have been peaceable since my sojourn with ‘em, and I hold
it to be onlawful to take the life of man, except in open and
generous warfare.”
“What! did you never find a fellow thieving among your
traps and skins, and do the law on him with your own hands,
by way of saving the magistrates trouble in the settlements,
and the rogue himself the cost of the suit!”
“I am no trapper, Hurry,” returned the young man
proudly: “I live by the rifle, a we’pon at which
I will not turn my back on any man of my years, atween the Hudson
and the St. Lawrence. I never offer a skin that has not a hole
in its head besides them which natur’ made to see with
or to breathe through.”
from The Deerslayer
by James Fenimore Cooper