He could give them all rich dowers,
and divorce them easily any day to a succeeding line of legal Abenaqui
husbands. The lax code of the wilderness was irresistible to a
Frenchman; but he was near enough in age and in texture of soul
to this noble pagan to see at once, with her eyesight, how he had
degraded the very vices of her people.
"Before the sun goes down," vowed Saint-Castin, "there shall be nobody
in my house but the two Etchemin slave men that your father gave me."
The girl heard of his promised reformation without any kindling of the
spirit.
"I am not for a wife," she answered him, and walked on with the pail.
Again Saint-Castin followed her, and took the sap pail from her hand.
He set it aside on the leaves, and folded his arms. The blood came
and went in his face. He was not used to pleading with women. They
belonged to him easily, like his natural advantages over barbarians
in a new world. The slopes of the Pyrenees bred strong-limbed men,
cautious in policy, striking and bold in figure and countenance. The
English themselves have borne witness to his fascinations. Manhood had
darkened only the surface of his skin, a milk-white cleanness breaking
through it like the outflushing of some inner purity. His eyes and
hair had a golden beauty. It would have been strange if he had not
roused at least a degree of comradeship in the aboriginal woman living
up to her highest aspirations.
"I love you. I have thought of you, of nobody but you, even when I
behaved the worst. You have kept yourself hid from me, while I have
been thinking about you ever since I came to Acadia. You are the woman
I want to marry."
Madockawando's daughter shook her head. She had patience with his
fantastic persistence, but it annoyed her.
"I am not for a wife," she repeated. "I do not like men."
"Is it that you do not like me?"
"No," she answered sincerely, probing her mind for the truth. "You
yourself are different from our Abenaqui men."
"Then why do you make me unhappy?"
"I do not make you unhappy. I do not even think of you."
Again she took to her hurried course, forgetting the pail of sap.
Saint-Castin seized it, and once more followed her.
"I beg that you will kiss me," he pleaded, trembling.
The Abenaqui girl laughed aloud.
"Does the sagamore think he is an object of veneration, that I should
kiss him?"
"But will you not at least touch your lips to my forehead?"
"No. I touch my lips to holy thin
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