Home > Authors Index > Browse all available works of Edward Eggleston > Text of Scouwa Becomes A White Man Again
A short story by Edward Eggleston |
||
Scouwa Becomes A White Man Again |
||
________________________________________________
Title: Scouwa Becomes A White Man Again Author: Edward Eggleston [More Titles by Eggleston] The next year after this hard winter in the woods, the Indians that Scouwa lived with went down the River St. Lawrence to Canada. At this time Canada belonged to the French. The French were at war with the English, to whom Pennsylvania belonged. The Indians were on the side of the French. Scouwa heard that there were prisoners from his country who were to be sent back in exchange for French prisoners. He slipped away from the Indians, and went to Montreal. Here he put himself among the other prisoners. After a while the prisoners were sent back to their own country. Scouwa came to his own family again. They did not know that he was alive. He put on white man's clothes. He let his hair grow like a white man's. He spoke English once more. He was no longer called Scouwa, but James Smith. But still he walked like an Indian. All his movements were those of an Indian. He had lived nearly six years among the savages. He afterward became a colonel among the white men. He moved to Kentucky, and fought against the Indians. But he made his men dress and fight as the red men did. He thought it was the best way of fighting in the woods. [The end] GO TO TOP OF SCREEN |