FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   12   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   >>  
ver. Captain B., however, took up her body to the lake; and not meeting with any of her people, left it where they were afterwards likely to meet with it. It appears the Indians were this winter encamped on the banks of the River Exploits, and observed Captain B.'s party passing up the river on the ice. They retired from their encampments in consequence; and, some weeks afterwards, went by a circuitous route to the lake, to ascertain what the party had been doing there. They found _Mary March's_ body, and removed it from where Captain B. had left it to where it now lies, by the side of her husband. With the exception of Captain Buchan's first expedition, by order of the local government of Newfoundland, in the winter of 1810, [Sic: 1815] to endeavour to open a friendly intercourse with the Red Indians, the two parties just mentioned are the only two we know of that had ever before been up to the Red Indian Lake. Captain B. at that time succeeded in forcing an interview with the principal encampment of these people. All of the tribe that remained at that period were then at the Great Lake, divided into parties, and in their winter encampments, at different places in the woods on the margin of the lake. Hostages were exchanged; but Captain B. had not been absent from the Indians two hours, in his return to a depot left by him at a short distance down the river, to take up additional presents for them, when the want of confidence of these people in the whites evinced itself. A suspicion spread among them that he had gone down to bring up a reinforcement of men to take them all prisoners to the sea-coast; and they resolved immediately to break up their encampment and retire farther into the country, and alarm and join the rest of their tribe, who were all at the western parts of the lake. To prevent their proceedings being known, they killed and then cut off the heads of the two English hostages; and, on the same afternoon on which Captain B. had left them, they were in full retreat across the lake, with baggage, children, &c. The whole of them afterwards spent the remainder of the winter together, at a place twenty to thirty miles to the south-west, on the south-east side of the lake. On Captain B.'s return to the lake next day or the day after, the cause of the scene there was inexplicable; and it remained a mystery until now, when we can gather some facts relating to these people from the Red Indian woman _Shawnawdithi
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   12   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   >>  



Top keywords:

Captain

 

winter

 

people

 

Indians

 

parties

 

return

 

remained

 

Indian

 

encampment

 
encampments

western
 
farther
 

retire

 
country
 

prevent

 
killed
 
proceedings
 

suspicion

 

spread

 

evinced


confidence

 

whites

 
resolved
 
prisoners
 

reinforcement

 

immediately

 

afternoon

 

inexplicable

 

relating

 

Shawnawdithi


gather

 

mystery

 

baggage

 

children

 

retreat

 

hostages

 

twenty

 
thirty
 

remainder

 

English


additional

 

endeavour

 
government
 

Newfoundland

 

friendly

 

intercourse

 
observed
 
mentioned
 

passing

 
expedition