{"id":"01KG8AK7Z886GWF9T9Y7PGQPD6","cid":"bafkreifttpylcqbavyni3vevidwvdggdjwftjpqwjio3a2ebukycl7puzq","type":"chunk","properties":{"end_line":6694,"extracted_at":"2026-01-30T20:47:57.725Z","extracted_by":"structure-extraction-lambda","label":"Chunk 4","source_file":"01KG89J1JMR8XVKPA0G8ADAPC4","start_line":6634,"text":"as effectually as in bush-tactics he can another, yet his theory and his\r\npractice as above contrasted seem to involve an inconsistency so\r\nextreme, that the backwoodsman only accounts for it on the supposition\r\nthat when a tomahawking red-man advances the notion of the benignity of\r\nthe red race, it is but part and parcel with that subtle strategy which\r\nhe finds so useful in war, in hunting, and the general conduct of life.'\r\n\r\n\"In further explanation of that deep abhorrence with which the\r\nbackwoodsman regards the savage, the judge used to think it might\r\nperhaps a little help, to consider what kind of stimulus to it is\r\nfurnished in those forest histories and traditions before spoken of. In\r\nwhich behalf, he would tell the story of the little colony of Wrights\r\nand Weavers, originally seven cousins from Virginia, who, after\r\nsuccessive removals with their families, at last established themselves\r\nnear the southern frontier of the Bloody Ground, Kentucky: 'They were\r\nstrong, brave men; but, unlike many of the pioneers in those days,\r\ntheirs was no love of conflict for conflict's sake. Step by step they\r\nhad been lured to their lonely resting-place by the ever-beckoning\r\nseductions of a fertile and virgin land, with a singular exemption,\r\nduring the march, from Indian molestation. But clearings made and houses\r\nbuilt, the bright shield was soon to turn its other side. After repeated\r\npersecutions and eventual hostilities, forced on them by a dwindled\r\ntribe in their neighborhood--persecutions resulting in loss of crops and\r\ncattle; hostilities in which they lost two of their number, illy to be\r\nspared, besides others getting painful wounds--the five remaining\r\ncousins made, with some serious concessions, a kind of treaty with\r\nMocmohoc, the chief--being to this induced by the harryings of the\r\nenemy, leaving them no peace. But they were further prompted, indeed,\r\nfirst incited, by the suddenly changed ways of Mocmohoc, who, though\r\nhitherto deemed a savage almost perfidious as Caesar Borgia, yet now put\r\non a seeming the reverse of this, engaging to bury the hatchet, smoke\r\nthe pipe, and be friends forever; not friends in the mere sense of\r\nrenouncing enmity, but in the sense of kindliness, active and familiar.\r\n\r\n\"'But what the chief now seemed, did not wholly blind them to what the\r\nchief had been; so that, though in no small degree influenced by his\r\nchange of bearing, they still distrusted him enough to covenant with\r\nhim, among other articles on their side, that though friendly visits\r\nshould be exchanged between the wigwams and the cabins, yet the five\r\ncousins should never, on any account, be expected to enter the chief's\r\nlodge together. The intention was, though they reserved it, that if\r\never, under the guise of amity, the chief should mean them mischief, and\r\neffect it, it should be but partially; so that some of the five might\r\nsurvive, not only for their families' sake, but also for retribution's.\r\nNevertheless, Mocmohoc did, upon a time, with such fine art and pleasing\r\ncarriage win their confidence, that he brought them all together to a\r\nfeast of bear's meat, and there, by stratagem, ended them. Years after,\r\nover their calcined bones and those of all their families, the chief,\r\nreproached for his treachery by a proud hunter whom he had made captive,\r\njeered out, \"Treachery? pale face! 'Twas they who broke their covenant\r\nfirst, in coming all together; they that broke it first, in trusting\r\nMocmohoc.\"'\r\n\r\n\"At this point the judge would pause, and lifting his hand, and rolling\r\nhis eyes, exclaim in a solemn enough voice, 'Circling wiles and bloody\r\nlusts. The acuteness and genius of the chief but make him the more\r\natrocious.'\r\n\r\n\"After another pause, he would begin an imaginary kind of dialogue\r\nbetween a backwoodsman and a questioner:\r\n\r","title":"Chunk 4"},"relationships":[{"peer":"01KG8AJM4RTQF2ZVZVJD07P1FR","peer_type":"chapter","predicate":"in"},{"peer":"01KG89J1JMR8XVKPA0G8ADAPC4","peer_type":"file","predicate":"extractedFrom"},{"peer":"01KG89HMDZKNY753EZE1CJ8HZW","peer_type":"collection","predicate":"collection"},{"peer":"01KG8AKE27GT1QHKFH05RJ0XSF","peer_type":"chunk","predicate":"prev"},{"peer":"01KG8AK7Z86J51FJZBNBHJCX4S","peer_type":"chunk","predicate":"next"}],"ver":2,"created_at":"2026-01-30T20:47:57.928Z","ts":"2026-01-30T20:48:11.469Z","edited_by":{"method":"manual","user_id":"01KFF0H3YRP9ZSM033AM0QJ47H"}}