The Cherokee Nation
Long before the white man came to America, the land belonged to the American
Indian nations. The nation of the Cherokees lived in what is now the
southeastern part of the United States. After the white man
came, the Cherokees copied many of their ways. One Cherokee named Sequoyah saw
how important reading and writing were to the white man. He decided to invent a
way to write down the spoken Cherokee language. He began by making word
pictures. For each word he drew a picture. But that proved impossible—there were
just too many words. Then he took the 85 sounds that made up the language. Using
his own imagination and an English spelling book, Sequoyah invented a sign for
each sound. His alphabet proved amazingly easy to learn. Before long, many
Cherokees knew how to read and write in their own language. By 1828, they were
even printing their own newspaper. In 1830, the U.S. Congress
passed a law. It allowed the government to remove Indians from their lands. The
Cherokees refused to go. They had lived on their lands for centuries. It
belonged to them. Why should they go to a strange land far beyond the
Mississippi River The army was sent to drive the Cherokees
out. Soldiers surrounded their villages and marched them at gunpoint (在枪品的威胁下)
into the western territory. The sick, the old and the small children went in
carts, along with their belongings. The rest of the people marched on foot or
rode on horseback. It was November, yet many of them still wore their summer
clothes. Cold and hungry, the Cherokees were quickly exhausted by the hardships
of the journey. Many dropped dead and were buried by the roadside. When the last
group arrived in their new home in March 1839, more than 4,000 had died. It was
indeed a march of death. The Cherokees used to live ______.
A. by the roadside
B. in the southeastern part of the US
C. beyond the Mississippi River
D. in the western territory