The Princess Pocahontas by Virginia Watson
page 73 of 240 (30%)
page 73 of 240 (30%)
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upon them, terrifying them with his awful war-cry as he had terrified so
many of his enemies. Yet he dared not do this yet: he was not only a great war chief, but a leader of his people in peace. Okee had not yet spoken. Perchance the men with strange faces and strange tongues would of their own accord acknowledge his sovereignty, and there might be no need of sacrificing against them the lives of his young men. All this he was thinking when he bade Nautauquas wait; but there was no one who read his mind, yet no one who dared to disobey him. When Nautauquas came out from his father's lodge he took his bow and quiver and went into the forest to hunt. In his disappointment he had a hatred of more words and a longing for deeds. He ran swiftly and had reached a spot where he felt sure that he would find a flock of wild turkeys, when he saw Pocahontas ahead of him. She too was hurrying, bent evidently on some errand that absorbed her, for she did not stop to peer up at the birds or to pull the flowers as she was wont to do. "Matoaka," he called, "whither goest thou?" "To see the strangers and their great white birds again which I beheld from Kecoughtan, Brother. I cannot rest for my eagerness to know what they are like nearby." "Hast thou not heard our father's word that no one shall go near the island where the strangers be?" he asked. "My father meaneth not me," she answered proudly. "As thou knowest, he permitteth me much that is forbidden to others." |
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