med.
The extreme of misery that overwhelmed me at the moment when I beheld
my comrade driven forward like a trapped beast to a death by torture,
found expression in a sudden moan, which, fortunately for me, was
unnoted amid the shouts of greeting that arose around the fire when
those gathered there caught sight of the new-comers. Instantly all was
confusion and uproar; a scene of savage debauchery, unrelieved by a
redeeming feature or a sign of mercy. It was as if poor De Croix had
been hurled, bound and gagged, into a den of infuriated wolves, whose
jaws already dripped with the blood of slaughter. Gleaming weapons,
glaring and lustful eyes, writhing naked bodies, pressed upon him on
every side, hurling him back and forth in brute play, every tongue
mocking him, in every up-lifted hand a weapon for a blow.
The fierce animal nature within these red fiends was now uppermost,
fanned into hot flame by hours of diabolical torture of previous
victims, in which they had exhausted every expedient of cruelty to add
to the dying agony of their prey. To this, fiery liquor had yielded
its portion; while the weird incantations of their priests had
transformed the most sober among them into demons of malignity. If
ever, earlier in the night, their chiefs had exercised any control over
them, that time was long since past; and now the inflamed warriors,
bursting all restraint, answered only to the war-drum or made murderous
response to the superstition of their medicine-men.
The entire centre of the encampment was a scene of drunken orgy, a
phantasmagoria of savage figures, satanic in their relentless cruelty
and black barbarity. Painted hundreds, bedecked with tinkling beads
and waving feathers, howled and leaped in paroxysms of fury about the
central fire, hacking at the helpless bodies of the dead victims of
earlier atrocities, tearing their own flesh, beating each other with
whips like wire, their madly brandished weapons flashing angrily in the
flame-lit air.
Squaws, dirty of person and foul of mouth, often more ferocious in
appearance and cruel in action than their masters, were everywhere,
dodging amid the writhing bodies, screaming shrilly from excitement,
their long coarse hair whipping in the wind. Nor were they all
Pottawattomies: others had flocked into this carnival of
blood,---Wyandots and Sacs, even Miamis, until now it had become a
contest for supremacy in savagery. 'T was as if hell itself had
opened,
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