Then stood Pecksuot forth, self-vaunting, insulting
Miles Standish:
While with his fingers he petted the knife that hung
at his bosom,
Drawing it half from its sheath, and plunging it back,
as he muttered,
“By and by it shall see; it shall eat; ah, ha!
but shall speak not!
This is the mighty Captain the white men have sent
to destroy us!
He is a little man; let him go and work with the women!”
Meanwhile Standish had noted the faces and figures
of Indians
Peeping and creeping about from bush to tree in the
forest,
Feigning to look for game, with arrows set on their
bow-strings,
Drawing about him still closer and closer the net
of their ambush.
But undaunted he stood, and dissembled and treated
them smoothly;
So the old chronicles say, that were writ in the days
of the fathers.
But when he heard their defiance, the boast, the taunt,
and the insult,
All the hot blood of his race, of Sir Hugh and of
Thurston de Standish,
Boiled and beat in his heart, and swelled in the veins
of his temples.
Headlong he leaped on the boaster, and, snatching
his knife from its scabbard,
Plunged it into his heart, and, reeling backward,
the savage
Fell with his face to the sky, and a fiendlike fierceness
upon it.
Straight there arose from the forest the awful sound
of the war-whoop,
And, like a flurry of snow on the whistling wind of
December,
Swift and sudden and keen came a flight of feathery
arrows,
Then came a cloud of smoke, and out of the cloud came
the lightning,
Out of the lightning thunder, and death unseen ran
before it.
Frightened the savages fled for shelter in swamp and
in thicket,
Hotly pursued and beset; but their sachem, the brave
Wattawamat,
Fled not; he was dead. Unswerving and swift
had a bullet
Passed through his brain, and he fell with both hands
clutching the greensward,
Seeming in death to hold back from his foe the land
of his fathers.
There on the flowers of the meadow the warriors
lay, and above them,
Silent, with folded arms, stood Hobomok, friend of
the white man.
Smiling at length he exclaimed to the stalwart Captain
of Plymouth:
“Pecksuot bragged very loud, of his courage,
his strength, and his stature,—
Mocked the great Captain, and called him a little
man; but I see now
Big enough have you been to lay him speechless before
you!”
Thus the first battle was fought and won by the
stalwart Miles Standish.
When the tidings thereof were brought to the village
of Plymouth,
And as a trophy of war the head of the brave Wattawamat
Scowled from the roof of the fort, which at once was
a church and a fortress,
All who beheld it rejoiced, and praised the Lord,
and took courage.
Only Priscilla averted her face from this spectre
of terror,
Thanking God in her heart that she had not married
Miles Standish;
Shrinking, fearing almost, lest, coming home from
his battles,
He should lay claim to her hand, as the prize and
reward of his valor.