Poetry

The Last Taschastas

by Joaquin Miller


  • The hills were brown, the heavens were blue,
  • A woodpecker pounded a pine-top shell,
  • While a partridge whistled the whole day through
  • For a rabbit to dance in the chapparal,
  • And a grey grouse drumm'd, "All's well, all's well."

  • I.

  • Wrinkled and brown as a bag of leather,
  • A squaw sits moaning long and low.
  • Yesterday she was a wife and mother,
  • To-day she is rocking her to and fro,
  • A childless widow, in weeds and woe.

  • An Indian sits in a rocky cavern
  • Chipping a flint in an arrow head;
  • His children are moving as still as shadows,
  • His squaw is moulding some balls of lead,
  • With round face painted a battle-red.

  • An Indian sits in a black-jack jungle,
  • Where a grizzly bear has rear'd her young,
  • Whetting a flint on a granite boulder.
  • His quiver is over his brown back hung—
  • His face is streak'd and his bow is strung.

  • An Indian hangs from a cliff of granite,
  • Like an eagle's nest built in the air,
  • Looking away to the east. and watching
  • The smoke of the cabins curling there,
  • And eagle's feathers are in his hair.

  • In belt of wampum, in battle fashion
  • An Indian watches with wild desire.
  • He is red with paint, he is black with passion;
  • And grand as a god in his savage ire,
  • He leans and listens till stars are a-fire.

  • All somber and sullen and sad, a chieftain
  • Now looks from the mountain far into the sea.
  • Just before him beat in the white billows,
  • Just behind him the toppled tall tree
  • And woodmen chopping, knee buckled to knee.

  • II.

  • All together, all in council,
  • In a canyon wall'd so high
  • That no thing could ever reach them
  • Save some stars dropp'd from the sky.
  • And the brown bats sweeping by:

  • Tawny chieftains thin and wiry,
  • Wise as brief, and brief as bold;
  • Chieftains young and fierce and fiery,
  • Chieftains stately, stern and old,
  • Bronzed and battered-battered gold,

  • Flamed the council-fire brighter,
  • Flash'd black eyes like diamond beads,
  • When a woman told her sorrows,
  • While a warrior told his deeds,
  • And a widow tore her weeds.

  • Then was lit the pipe of council
  • That their fathers smoked of old,
  • With its stem of manzanita,
  • And its bowl of quartz and gold,
  • And traditions manifold.

  • How from lip to lip in silence
  • Burn'd it round the circle red,
  • Like an evil star slow passing
  • (Sign of battles and bloodshed)
  • Round the heavens overhead.

  • Then the silence deep was broken
  • By the thunder rolling far,
  • As gods muttering in anger,
  • Or the bloody battle-car
  • Of some Christian king at war.

  • ''Tis the spirits of my Fathers
  • Mutt'ring vengeance in the skies;
  • And the flashing of the lightning
  • Is the anger of their eyes,
  • Bidding us in battle rise,"

  • Cried the war-chief, now uprising,
  • Naked all above the waist,
  • While a belt of shells and silver
  • Held his tamoos to its place,
  • And the war-paint streaked his face.

  • Women melted from the council,
  • Boys crept backward out of sight,
  • Till alone a wall of warriors
  • In their paint and battle-plight
  • Sat reflecting back the light.

  • "O my Fathers in the storm-cloud!"
  • (Red arms tossing to the skies,
  • While the massive walls of granite
  • Seem'd to shrink to half their size,
  • And to mutter strange replies)—

  • "Soon we come, O angry Fathers,
  • Down the darkness you have cross'd:
  • Speak for hunting-grounds there for us;
  • Those you left us we have lost—
  • Gone like blossoms in a frost.

  • "Warriors!" (and his arms fell folded
  • On his tawny swelling breast,
  • While his voice, now low and plaintive
  • As the waves in their unrest,
  • Touching tenderness confess'd),

  • "Where is Wrotto, wise of counsel,
  • Yesterday here in his place?
  • A brave lies dead down in the valley,
  • Last brave of his line and race,
  • And a Ghost sits on his face.

  • "Where his boy the tender-hearted,
  • With his mother yestermorn?
  • Lo! a wigwam door is darken'd,
  • And a mother mourns forlorn,
  • With her long locks toss'd and torn.

  • "Lo! our daughters have been gather'd
  • From among us by the foe,
  • Like the lilies they once gather'd
  • In the spring-time all aglow
  • From the banks of living snow.

  • "'Through the land where we for ages
  • Laid the bravest, dearest dead,
  • Grinds the savage white man's plowshare
  • Grinding sires' bones for bread—
  • We shall give them blood instead.

  • "I saw white skulls in a furrow,
  • And around the cursed plowshare
  • Clung the flesh of my own children,
  • And my mother's tangled hair

  • "Warriors! braves! I cry for vengeance!
  • And the dim ghosts of the dead
  • Unavenged do wail and shiver
  • In the storm cloud overhead,
  • And shoot arrows battle-red."

  • Then he ceased, and sat among them,
  • With his long locks backward strown;
  • They as mute as men of marble,
  • He a king upon the throne,
  • And as still as any stone.

  • Then uprose the war chief's daughter,
  • Taller than the tassell'd corn,
  • Sweeter than the kiss of morning,
  • Sad as some sweet star of morn,
  • Half defiant, half forlorn.

  • Robed in skins of striped panther
  • Lifting loosely to the air
  • With a face a shade of sorrow
  • And black eyes that said, Beware!
  • Nestled in a storm or hair;

  • With her striped robes around her,
  • Fasten'd by an eagle's beak,
  • Stood she by the stately chieftain,
  • Proud and pure as Shasta's peak,
  • As she ventured thus to speak:

  • "Must the tomahawk of battle
  • Be unburied where it lies,
  • 0, last war chief of Taschastas?
  • Must the smoke of battle rise
  • Like a storm cloud in the skies?

  • "True, some wretch has laid a brother
  • With his swift feet to the sun,
  • But because one bough is broken,
  • Must the broad oak be undone?
  • All the fir trees fell'd as one?

  • "True, the braves have faded, wasted
  • Like ripe blossoms in the rain,
  • But when we have spent the arrows,
  • Do we twang the string in vain,
  • And then snap the bow in twain?"

  • Like a vessel in a tempest
  • Shook the warrior, wild and grim,
  • As he gazed out in the midnight,
  • As to things that beckon'd him,
  • And his eyes were moist and dim.

  • Then he turn'd, and to his bosom
  • Battle-scarr'd, and strong as brass,
  • Tenderly the warrior press'd her
  • As if she were made of glass,
  • Murmuring, "Alas! alas!

  • "Loua Ellah! Spotted Lily!
  • Streaks of blood shall be the sign,
  • On their cursed and mystic pages,
  • Representing me and mine!
  • By Tonatiu's fiery shrine!

  • "When the grass shall grow untrodden
  • In my war path, and the plow
  • Shall be grinding through this canyon
  • Where my braves are gather'd now,
  • Still shall they record this vow:

  • "War and vengeance! rise, my warrior,
  • Rise and shout the battle sign,
  • Ye who love revenge and glory!
  • Ye for peace, in silence pine,
  • And no more be braves of mine."

  • Then the war yell roll'd and echoed
  • As they started from the ground,
  • Till an eagle from his cedar
  • Starting, answer'd back the sound,
  • And flew circling round and round.

  • "Enough, enough, my kingly father,"
  • And the glory of her eyes
  • Flash'd the valor and the passion
  • That may sleep but never dies,
  • As she proudly thus replies:

  • "Can the cedar be a willow,
  • Pliant and as little worth?
  • It shall stand the king of forests,
  • Or its fall shall shake the earth,
  • Desolating heart and hearth!"

  • ******************

  • III.

  • ******************

  • From cold east shore to warm west sea
  • The red men followed the red sun,
  • And faint and failing fast as he,
  • They knew too well their race was run.
  • This ancient tribe, press'd to the wave,
  • There fain had slept a patient slave,
  • And died out as red embers die
  • From flames that once leapt hot and high;
  • But, roused to anger, half arose
  • Around that chief, a sudden flood,
  • A hot and hungry cry for blood;
  • Half drowsy shook a feeble hand,
  • Then sank back in a tame repose,
  • And left him to his fate and foes,
  • A stately wreck upon the strand.

  • **********************

  • His eye was like the lightning's wing,
  • His voice was like a rushing flood;
  • And when a captive bound he stood
  • His presence look'd the perfect king.

  •  'Twas held at first that he should die:
  • I never knew the reason why
  • A milder council did prevail,
  • Save that we shrank from blood, and save
  • That brave men do respect the brave.
  • Down sea sometimes there was a sail,
  • And far at sea, they said, an isle,
  • And he was sentenced to exile;
  • In open boat upon the sea
  • To go the instant on the main,
  • And never under penalty
  • Of death to touch the shore again.
  • A troop of bearded buckskinn'd men
  • Bore him hard-hurried to the wave,
  • Placed him swift in the boat; and then
  • Swift pushing to the bristling sea,
  • His daughter rush'd down suddenly,
  • Threw him his bow, leapt from the shore
  • Into the boat beside the brave,
  • And sat her down and seized the oar,
  • And never question'd, made replies,
  • Or moved her lips, or raised her eyes.

  •  His breast was like a gate of brass,
  • His brow was like a gather'd storm;
  • There is no chisell'd stone that has
  • So stately and complete a form,
  • In sinew, arm, and every part,
  • In all the galleries of art.

  •  Gray, bronzed, and naked to the waist,
  • He stood half halting in the prow,
  • With quiver bare and idle bow.
  • The warm sea fondled with the shore,
  • And laid his white face to the sands.
  • His daughter sat with her sad face
  • Bent on the wave, with her two hands
  • Held tightly to the dripping oar;
  • And as she sat, her dimpled knee
  • Bent lithe as wand or willow tree,
  • So round and full, so rich and free,

  •  Her eyes were black, her face was brown,
  • Her breasts were bare and there fell down
  • Such wealth of hair, it almost hid
  • The two, in its rich jetty fold—
  • Which I had sometime fain forbid,
  • They were so richer, fuller far
  • Than any polish'd bronzes are,
  • And richer hued than any gold.
  • On her brown arms and her brown hands
  • Were bars of gold and golden bands,
  • Rough hammer'd from the virgin ore,
  • So heavy, they could hold no more.

  •  I wonder now, I wonderd then,
  • That men who fear'd not gods nor men
  • Laid no rude hands at all on her,—
  • I think she had a dagger slid
  • Down in her silvered wampum belt;
  • It might have been, instead of hilt,
  • A flashing diamond hurry-hid
  • That I beheld-I could not know
  • For certain, we did hasten so;
  • And I know now less sure than then:
  • Deeds strangle memories of deeds,
  • Red blossoms wither, choked with weeds,
  • And years drown memories of men.
  • Some things have happened since-and then
  • This happen'd years and years ago.

  •  "Go, go!" the captain cried, and smote
  • With sword and boot the swaying boat,
  • Until it quiver'd as at sea
  • And brought the old chief to his knee.
  • He turn'd his face, and turning rose
  • With hand raised fiercely to his foes:
  • "Yes, I will go, last of my race,
  • Push'd by you robbers ruthlessly
  • Into the hollows of the sea,
  • From this my last, last resting-place.
  • Traditions of my fathers say
  • A feeble few reached for this land,
  • And we reached them a welcome hand
  • Of old, upon another shore;
  • Now they are strong, we weak as they,
  • And they have driven us before
  • Their faces, from that sea to this:
  • Then marvel not if we have sped
  • Sometime an arrow as we fled,
  • So keener than a serpent's kiss."

  •  He turn'd a time unto the sun
  • That lay half hidden in the sea,
  • As in his hollows rock'd asleep,
  • All trembled and breathed heavily;
  • Then arch'd his arm, as you have done,
  • For sharp masts piercing through the deep
  • No shore or kind ship met his eye,
  • Or isle, or sail, or anything,
  • Save white sea gulls on dipping wing,
  • And mobile sea and molten sky.

  •  "Farewell!-push seaward, child!" he cried,
  • And quick the paddle-strokes replied.
  • Like lightning from the panther-skin,
  • That bound his loins round about
  • He snatch'd a poison'd arrow out,
  • That like a snake lay hid within,
  • And twang'd his bow. The captain fell
  • Prone on his face, and such a yell
  • Of triumph from that savage rose
  • As man may never hear again.
  • He stood as standing on the main,
  • The topmast main, in proud repose,
  • And shook his clench'd fist at his foes,
  • And call'd, and cursed them every one.
  • He heeded not the shouts and shot
  • That follow'd him, but grand and grim
  • Stood up against the level sun;
  • And, standing so, seem'd in his ire
  • So grander than some ship on fire.

  •  And when the sun had left the sea,
  • That laves Abrup, and Blanco laves,
  • And left the land to death and me,
  • The only thing that I could see
  • Was, ever as the light boat lay
  • High lifted on the white-back'd waves,
  • A head as gray and toss'd as they.

  •  We raised the dead, and from his hands
  • Pick'd out some shells, clutched as he lay
  • And two by two bore him away,
  • And wiped his lips of blood and sands.

  •  We bent and scooped a shallow home,
  • And laid him warm-wet in his blood,
  • Just as the lifted tide a-flood
  • Came charging in with mouth a-foam:
  • And as we turn'd, the sensate thing
  • Reached up, lick'd out its foamy tongue,
  • Lick'd out its tongue and tasted blood;
  • The white lips to the red earth clung
  • An instant, and then loosening
  • All hold just like a living thing,
  • Drew back sad-voiced and shuddering,
  • All stained with blood, a striped flood.