[Grandfather’s Chair by Nathaniel Hawthorne]@TWC D-Link book
Grandfather’s Chair

CHAPTER VII
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The Connecticut settlers, assisted by a celebrated Indian chief named Uncas, bore the brunt of this war, with but little aid from Massachusetts.

Many hundreds of the hostile Indians were slain or burned in their wigwams.

Sassacus, their sachem, fled to another tribe, after his own people were defeated; but he was murdered by them, and his head was sent to his English enemies.
From that period down to the time of King Philip's War, which will be mentioned hereafter, there was not much trouble with the Indians.

But the colonists were always on their guard, and kept their weapons ready for the conflict.
"I have sometimes doubted," said Grandfather, when he had told these things to the Children,--"I have sometimes doubted whether there was more than a single man among our forefathers who realized that an Indian possesses a mind, and a heart, and an immortal soul.

That single man was John Eliot.


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