[The Winning of the West, Volume Two by Theodore Roosevelt]@TWC D-Link bookThe Winning of the West, Volume Two CHAPTER VIII 30/48
The ordinary backwoodsmen vied together as hunters, axemen, or wrestlers; as they rose to leadership their rivalries grew likewise, and the more ambitious, who desired to become the civil and military chiefs of the community, were sure to find their interests clash.
Thus old Evan Shelby distrusted Sevier; Arthur Campbell was jealous of both Sevier and Isaac Shelby; and the two latter bore similar feelings to William Campbell. When a great crisis occurred all these petty envies were sunk; the nobler natures of the men came uppermost; and they joined with unselfish courage, heart and hand, to defend their country in the hour of her extreme need.
But when the danger was over the old jealousies cropped out again. Some one or other of the leaders was almost always employed against the Indians.
The Cherokees and Creeks were never absolutely quiet and at peace. Indian Troubles. After the chastisement inflicted upon the former by the united forces of all the southern backwoodsmen, treaties were held with them, [Footnote: See _ante_, Chapter XI.
of Vol.
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