Wyandotté; Or, The Hutted Knoll: A Tale. James Fenimore Cooper

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Wyandotté; Or, The Hutted Knoll: A Tale - James Fenimore Cooper

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want land--good land--little, but good. I am about to get a grant--a patent--"

      "Yes," interrupted Nick, nodding; "I know him--paper to take away Indian's hunting-ground."

      "Why, I have no wish to do that--I am willing to pay the red men reasonably for their right, first."

      "Buy Nick's land, den--better dan any oder."

      "Your land, knave!--You own no land--belong to no tribe--have no rights to sell."

      "What for ask Nick help, den?"

      "What for?--Why because you know a good deal, though you own literally nothing. That's what for."

      "Buy Nick know, den. Better dan he great fader know, down at York."

      "That is just what I do wish to purchase. I will pay you well, Nick, if you will start to-morrow, with your rifle and a pocket-compass, off here towards the head-waters of the Susquehannah and Delaware, where the streams run rapidly, and where there are no fevers, and bring me an account of three or four thousand acres of rich bottom-land, in such a way as a surveyor can find it, and I can get a patent for it. What say you, Nick; will you go?"

      "He not wanted. Nick sell 'e captain, his own land: here in 'e fort."

      "Knave, do you not know me well enough not to trifle, when I am serious?"

      "Nick ser'ous too--Moravian priest no ser'ouser more dan Nick at dis moment. Got land to sell."

      Captain Willoughby had found occasion to punish the Tuscarora, in the course of his services; and as the parties understood each other perfectly well, the former saw the improbability of the latter's daring to trifle with him.

      "Where is this land of yours, Nick," he inquired, after studying the Indian's countenance for a moment. "Where does it lie, what is it like, how much is there of it, and how came you to own it?"

      "Ask him just so, ag'in," said Nick, taking up four twigs, to note down the questions, seriatim.

      The captain repeated his inquiries, the Tuscarora laying down a stick at each separate interrogatory.

      "Where he be?" answered Nick, taking up a twig, as a memorandum. "He out dere--where he want him--where he say.--One day's march from Susquehanna."

      "Well; proceed."

      "What he like?--Like land, to be sure. T'ink he like water! Got some water--no too much--got some land--got no tree--got some tree. Got good sugar-bush--got place for wheat and corn."

      "Proceed."

      "How much of him?" continued Nick, taking up another twig; "much as he want--want little, got him--want more, got him. Want none at all, got none at all--got what he want."

      "Go on."

      "To be sure. How came to own him?--How a pale face come to own America? Discover him--ha!--Well, Nick discover land down yonder, up dere, over here."

      "Nick, what the devil do you mean by all this?"

      "No mean devil, at all--mean land--good land. Discover him--know where he is--catch beaver dere, three, two year. All Nick say, true as word of honour; much more too."

      "Do you mean it is an old beaver-dam destroyed?" asked the captain, pricking up his ears; for he was too familiar with the woods, not to understand the value of such a thing.

      "No destroy--stand up yet--good as ever.--Nick dere, last season."

      "Why, then, do you tell of it? Are not the beaver of more value to you, than any price you may receive for the land?"

      "Cotch him all, four, two year ago--rest run away. No find beaver to stay long, when Indian once know, two time, where to set he trap. Beaver cunninger 'an pale face--cunning as bear."

      "I begin to comprehend you, Nick. How large do you suppose this pond to be?"

      "He 'm not as big as Lake Ontario. S'pose him smaller, what den? Big enough for farm."

      "Does it cover one or two hundred acres, think you?--Is it as large as the clearing around the fort?"

      "Big as two, six, four of him. Take forty skin, dere one season. Little lake; all 'e tree gone."

      "And the land around it--is it mountainous and rough, or will it be good for corn?"

      "All sugar-bush--what you want better? S'pose you want corn; plant him. S'pose you want sugar; make him."

      Captain Willoughby was struck with this description, and he returned to the subject, again and again. At length, after extracting all the information he could get from Nick, he struck a bargain with the fellow. A surveyor was engaged, and he started for the place, under the guidance of the Tuscarora. The result showed that Nick had not exaggerated. The pond was found, as he had described it to be, covering at least four hundred acres of low bottom-land; while near three thousand acres of higher river-flat, covered with beach and maple, spread around it for a considerable distance. The adjacent mountains too, were arable, though bold, and promised, in time, to become a fertile and manageable district. Calculating his distances with judgment, the surveyor laid out his metes and bounds in such a manner as to include the pond, all the low-land, and about three thousand acres of hill, or mountain, making the materials for a very pretty little "patent" of somewhat more than six thousand acres of capital land. He then collected a few chiefs of the nearest tribe, dealt out his rum, tobacco, blankets, wampum, and gunpowder, got twelve Indians to make their marks on a bit of deer-skin, and returned to his employer with a map, a field-book, and a deed, by which the Indian title was "extinguished." The surveyor received his compensation, and set off on a similar excursion, for a different employer, and in another direction. Nick got his reward, too, and was well satisfied with the transaction. This he afterwards called "sellin' beaver when he all run away."

      Furnished with the necessary means, Captain Willoughby now "sued out his patent," as it was termed, in due form. Having some influence, the affair was soon arranged; the grant was made by the governor in council, a massive seal was annexed to a famous sheet of parchment, the signatures were obtained, and "Willoughby's Patent" took its place on the records of the colony, as well as on its maps. We are wrong as respects the latter particular; it did not take its place, on the maps of the colony, though it took a place; the location given for many years afterwards, being some forty or fifty miles too far west. In this peculiarity there was nothing novel, the surveys of all new regions being liable to similar trifling mistakes. Thus it was, that an estate, lying within five-and-twenty miles of the city of New York, and in which we happen to have a small interest at this hour, was clipped of its fair proportions, in consequence of losing some miles that run over obtrusively into another colony; and, within a short distance of the spot where we are writing, a "patent" has been squeezed entirely out of existence, between the claims of two older grants.

      No such calamity befell "Willoughby's Patent," however. The land was found, with all its "marked or blazed trees," its "heaps of stones," "large butternut corners," and "dead oaks." In a word, everything was as it should be; even to the quality of the soil, the beaver-pond, and the quantity. As respects the last, the colony never gave "struck measure;" a thousand acres on paper, seldom falling short of eleven or twelve hundred in soil. In the present instance, the six thousand two hundred and forty-six acres of "Willoughby's Patent," were subsequently ascertained

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