r
jacket as each boy chose.
CHAPTER FIFTEEN.
THE SAULTEAUX CHIEFTAINESS; OR, A SEARCHER AFTER THE TRUTH.
She was a large woman, and as she came into our mission home her conduct
was so different from that of the ordinary Indian woman, that I was
somewhat prejudiced against her. Generally the Indian women when they
enter a house are quiet, and modest, and unobtrusive in their movements;
but here stalked in a large woman, who gazed at us with searching
glances, and had such decided ways, that I felt disturbed at her
presence and soon left the house for a couple of hours in the woods
where some of my Indian men were at work.
When I returned, it was with the hope that she had finished her visit
and retired. But no, there she was; and it was quite evident that she
had come to stay. When my good wife saw my apparent annoyance at this
new visitor, she called me to one side and said:
"You must not be annoyed at this woman. She is a chieftainess, and the
daughter of a chief. Her husband was a chief, and when he died, she, at
the request of her people, took his position, and has maintained it ever
since."
She had heard from some fur-hunters about our having come to live in the
land of the Saulteaux. She had also heard of the wonderful book we had,
which was the word of the Great Spirit; and this too, had excited her
curiosity. She had listened to these rumours with incredulity and did
not believe them; but as they increased, her curiosity was so excited,
that she resolved at length to find out for herself if these things were
true, and had actually come many days journey to investigate for
herself. Here she was, thoroughly installed in our little home, and I,
at first, much prejudiced against her on account of her decided emphatic
sort of way.
I sat down beside her, and had her tell me her story. She was indeed a
clever woman, and was full of anxiety to learn if what she had heard
were true. She was an anxious inquirer after truth, literally
insatiable in her curiosity, and in her desire to learn all she could.
She could talk morning, noon and night, and would keep one of us busy
answering her questions all the time she was not sleeping or eating.
She stayed with us about two weeks, and then returned to her people;
meanwhile attending every religious service, and receiving many lessons
in divine truth. The simple plan of salvation was explained to her, and
she was taught how to pray.
Ere she we
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