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<h2> CHAPTER V </h2>
<h3> "THE BIG BLUE" </h3>
<p>The great medley of Oregon and California emigrants, at their camps around
Independence, had heard reports that several additional parties were on
the point of setting out from St. Joseph's farther to the northward. The
prevailing impression was that these were Mormons, twenty-three hundred in
number; and a great alarm was excited in consequence. The people of
Illinois and Missouri, who composed by far the greater part of the
emigrants, have never been on the best terms with the "Latter Day Saints";
and it is notorious throughout the country how much blood has been spilt
in their feuds, even far within the limits of the settlements. No one
could predict what would be the result, when large armed bodies of these
fanatics should encounter the most impetuous and reckless of their old
enemies on the broad prairie, far beyond the reach of law or military
force. The women and children at Independence raised a great outcry; the
men themselves were seriously alarmed; and, as I learned, they sent to
Colonel Kearny, requesting an escort of dragoons as far as the Platte.
This was refused; and as the sequel proved, there was no occasion for it.
The St. Joseph's emigrants were as good Christians and as zealous
Mormon-haters as the rest; and the very few families of the "Saints" who
passed out this season by the route of the Platte remained behind until
the great tide of emigration had gone by; standing in quite as much awe of
the "gentiles" as the latter did of them.</p>
<p>We were now, as I before mentioned, upon this St. Joseph's trail. It was
evident, by the traces, that large parties were a few days in advance of
us; and as we too supposed them to be Mormons, we had some apprehension of
interruption.</p>
<p>The journey was somewhat monotonous. One day we rode on for hours, without
seeing a tree or a bush; before, behind, and on either side, stretched the
vast expanse, rolling in a succession of graceful swells, covered with the
unbroken carpet of fresh green grass. Here and there a crow, or a raven,
or a turkey-buzzard, relieved the uniformity.</p>
<p>"What shall we do to-night for wood and water?" we began to ask of each
other; for the sun was within an hour of setting. At length a dark green
speck appeared, far off on the right; it was the top of a tree, peering
over a swell of the prairie; and leaving the trail, we made all haste
toward it. It proved to be the vanguard of a cluster of bushes and low
trees, that surrounded some pools of water in an extensive hollow; so we
encamped on the rising ground near it.</p>
<p>Shaw and I were sitting in the tent, when Delorier thrust his brown face
and old felt hat into the opening, and dilating his eyes to their utmost
extent, announced supper. There were the tin cups and the iron spoons,
arranged in military order on the grass, and the coffee-pot predominant in
the midst. The meal was soon dispatched; but Henry Chatillon still sat
cross-legged, dallying with the remnant of his coffee, the beverage in
universal use upon the prairie, and an especial favorite with him. He
preferred it in its virgin flavor, unimpaired by sugar or cream; and on
the present occasion it met his entire approval, being exceedingly strong,
or, as he expressed it, "right black."</p>
<p>It was a rich and gorgeous sunset—an American sunset; and the ruddy
glow of the sky was reflected from some extensive pools of water among the
shadowy copses in the meadow below.</p>
<p>"I must have a bath to-night," said Shaw. "How is it, Delorier? Any chance
for a swim down here?"</p>
<p>"Ah! I cannot tell; just as you please, monsieur," replied Delorier,
shrugging his shoulders, perplexed by his ignorance of English, and
extremely anxious to conform in all respects to the opinion and wishes of
his bourgeois.</p>
<p>"Look at his moccasion," said I. "It has evidently been lately immersed in
a profound abyss of black mud."</p>
<p>"Come," said Shaw; "at any rate we can see for ourselves."</p>
<p>We set out together; and as we approached the bushes, which were at some
distance, we found the ground becoming rather treacherous. We could only
get along by stepping upon large clumps of tall rank grass, with
fathomless gulfs between, like innumerable little quaking islands in an
ocean of mud, where a false step would have involved our boots in a
catastrophe like that which had befallen Delorier's moccasins. The thing
looked desperate; we separated, so as to search in different directions,
Shaw going off to the right, while I kept straight forward. At last I came
to the edge of the bushes: they were young waterwillows, covered with
their caterpillar-like blossoms, but intervening between them and the last
grass clump was a black and deep slough, over which, by a vigorous
exertion, I contrived to jump. Then I shouldered my way through the
willows, tramping them down by main force, till I came to a wide stream of
water, three inches deep, languidly creeping along over a bottom of sleek
mud. My arrival produced a great commotion. A huge green bull-frog uttered
an indignant croak, and jumped off the bank with a loud splash: his webbed
feet twinkled above the surface, as he jerked them energetically upward,
and I could see him ensconcing himself in the unresisting slime at the
bottom, whence several large air bubbles struggled lazily to the top. Some
little spotted frogs instantly followed the patriarch's example; and then
three turtles, not larger than a dollar, tumbled themselves off a broad
"lily pad," where they had been reposing. At the same time a snake, gayly
striped with black and yellow, glided out from the bank, and writhed
across to the other side; and a small stagnant pool into which my foot had
inadvertently pushed a stone was instantly alive with a congregation of
black tadpoles.</p>
<p>"Any chance for a bath, where you are?" called out Shaw, from a distance.</p>
<p>The answer was not encouraging. I retreated through the willows, and
rejoining my companion, we proceeded to push our researches in company.
Not far on the right, a rising ground, covered with trees and bushes,
seemed to sink down abruptly to the water, and give hope of better
success; so toward this we directed our steps. When we reached the place
we found it no easy matter to get along between the hill and the water,
impeded as we were by a growth of stiff, obstinate young birch-trees,
laced together by grapevines. In the twilight, we now and then, to support
ourselves, snatched at the touch-me-not stem of some ancient sweet-brier.
Shaw, who was in advance, suddenly uttered a somewhat emphatic
monosyllable; and looking up I saw him with one hand grasping a sapling,
and one foot immersed in the water, from which he had forgotten to
withdraw it, his whole attention being engaged in contemplating the
movements of a water-snake, about five feet long, curiously checkered with
black and green, who was deliberately swimming across the pool. There
being no stick or stone at hand to pelt him with, we looked at him for a
time in silent disgust; and then pushed forward. Our perseverence was at
last rewarded; for several rods farther on, we emerged upon a little level
grassy nook among the brushwood, and by an extraordinary dispensation of
fortune, the weeds and floating sticks, which elsewhere covered the pool,
seemed to have drawn apart, and left a few yards of clear water just in
front of this favored spot. We sounded it with a stick; it was four feet
deep; we lifted a specimen in our cupped hands; it seemed reasonably
transparent, so we decided that the time for action was arrived. But our
ablutions were suddenly interrupted by ten thousand punctures, like
poisoned needles, and the humming of myriads of over-grown mosquitoes,
rising in all directions from their native mud and slime and swarming to
the feast. We were fain to beat a retreat with all possible speed.</p>
<p>We made toward the tents, much refreshed by the bath which the heat of the
weather, joined to our prejudices, had rendered very desirable.</p>
<p>"What's the matter with the captain? look at him!" said Shaw. The captain
stood alone on the prairie, swinging his hat violently around his head,
and lifting first one foot and then the other, without moving from the
spot. First he looked down to the ground with an air of supreme
abhorrence; then he gazed upward with a perplexed and indignant
countenance, as if trying to trace the flight of an unseen enemy. We
called to know what was the matter; but he replied only by execrations
directed against some unknown object. We approached, when our ears were
saluted by a droning sound, as if twenty bee-hives had been overturned at
once. The air above was full of large black insects, in a state of great
commotion, and multitudes were flying about just above the tops of the
grass blades.</p>
<p>"Don't be afraid," called the captain, observing us recoil. "The brutes
won't sting."</p>
<p>At this I knocked one down with my hat, and discovered him to be no other
than a "dorbug"; and looking closer, we found the ground thickly
perforated with their holes.</p>
<p>We took a hasty leave of this flourishing colony, and walking up the
rising ground to the tents, found Delorier's fire still glowing brightly.
We sat down around it, and Shaw began to expatiate on the admirable
facilities for bathing that we had discovered, and recommended the captain
by all means to go down there before breakfast in the morning. The captain
was in the act of remarking that he couldn't have believed it possible,
when he suddenly interrupted himself, and clapped his hand to his cheek,
exclaiming that "those infernal humbugs were at him again." In fact, we
began to hear sounds as if bullets were humming over our heads. In a
moment something rapped me sharply on the forehead, then upon the neck,
and immediately I felt an indefinite number of sharp wiry claws in active
motion, as if their owner were bent on pushing his explorations farther. I
seized him, and dropped him into the fire. Our party speedily broke up,
and we adjourned to our respective tents, where, closing the opening fast,
we hoped to be exempt from invasion. But all precaution was fruitless. The
dorbugs hummed through the tent, and marched over our faces until
day-light; when, opening our blankets, we found several dozen clinging
there with the utmost tenacity. The first object that met our eyes in the
morning was Delorier, who seemed to be apostrophizing his frying-pan,
which he held by the handle at arm's length. It appeared that he had left
it at night by the fire; and the bottom was now covered with dorbugs,
firmly imbedded. Multitudes beside, curiously parched and shriveled, lay
scattered among the ashes.</p>
<p>The horses and mules were turned loose to feed. We had just taken our
seats at breakfast, or rather reclined in the classic mode, when an
exclamation from Henry Chatillon, and a shout of alarm from the captain,
gave warning of some casualty, and looking up, we saw the whole band of
animals, twenty-three in number, filing off for the settlements, the
incorrigible Pontiac at their head, jumping along with hobbled feet, at a
gait much more rapid than graceful. Three or four of us ran to cut them
off, dashing as best we might through the tall grass, which was glittering
with myriads of dewdrops. After a race of a mile or more, Shaw caught a
horse. Tying the trail-rope by way of bridle round the animal's jaw, and
leaping upon his back, he got in advance of the remaining fugitives, while
we, soon bringing them together, drove them in a crowd up to the tents,
where each man caught and saddled his own. Then we heard lamentations and
curses; for half the horses had broke their hobbles, and many were
seriously galled by attempting to run in fetters.</p>
<p>It was late that morning before we were on the march; and early in the
afternoon we were compelled to encamp, for a thunder-gust came up and
suddenly enveloped us in whirling sheets of rain. With much ado, we
pitched our tents amid the tempest, and all night long the thunder
bellowed and growled over our heads. In the morning, light peaceful
showers succeeded the cataracts of rain, that had been drenching us
through the canvas of our tents. About noon, when there were some
treacherous indications of fair weather, we got in motion again.</p>
<p>Not a breath of air stirred over the free and open prairie; the clouds
were like light piles of cotton; and where the blue sky was visible, it
wore a hazy and languid aspect. The sun beat down upon us with a sultry
penetrating heat almost insupportable, and as our party crept slowly along
over the interminable level, the horses hung their heads as they waded
fetlock deep through the mud, and the men slouched into the easiest
position upon the saddle. At last, toward evening, the old familiar black
heads of thunderclouds rose fast above the horizon, and the same deep
muttering of distant thunder that had become the ordinary accompaniment of
our afternoon's journey began to roll hoarsely over the prairie. Only a
few minutes elapsed before the whole sky was densely shrouded, and the
prairie and some clusters of woods in front assumed a purple hue beneath
the inky shadows. Suddenly from the densest fold of the cloud the flash
leaped out, quivering again and again down to the edge of the prairie; and
at the same instant came the sharp burst and the long rolling peal of the
thunder. A cool wind, filled with the smell of rain, just then overtook
us, leveling the tall grass by the side of the path.</p>
<p>"Come on; we must ride for it!" shouted Shaw, rushing past at full speed,
his led horse snorting at his side. The whole party broke into full
gallop, and made for the trees in front. Passing these, we found beyond
them a meadow which they half inclosed. We rode pell-mell upon the ground,
leaped from horseback, tore off our saddles; and in a moment each man was
kneeling at his horse's feet. The hobbles were adjusted, and the animals
turned loose; then, as the wagons came wheeling rapidly to the spot, we
seized upon the tent-poles, and just as the storm broke, we were prepared
to receive it. It came upon us almost with the darkness of night; the
trees, which were close at hand, were completely shrouded by the roaring
torrents of rain.</p>
<p>We were sitting in the tent, when Delorier, with his broad felt hat
hanging about his ears, and his shoulders glistening with rain, thrust in
his head.</p>
<p>"Voulez-vous du souper, tout de suite? I can make a fire, sous la charette—I
b'lieve so—I try."</p>
<p>"Never mind supper, man; come in out of the rain."</p>
<p>Delorier accordingly crouched in the entrance, for modesty would not
permit him to intrude farther.</p>
<p>Our tent was none of the best defense against such a cataract. The rain
could not enter bodily, but it beat through the canvas in a fine drizzle,
that wetted us just as effectively. We sat upon our saddles with faces of
the utmost surliness, while the water dropped from the vizors of our caps,
and trickled down our cheeks. My india-rubber cloak conducted twenty
little rapid streamlets to the ground; and Shaw's blanket-coat was
saturated like a sponge. But what most concerned us was the sight of
several puddles of water rapidly accumulating; one in particular, that was
gathering around the tent-pole, threatened to overspread the whole area
within the tent, holding forth but an indifferent promise of a comfortable
night's rest. Toward sunset, however, the storm ceased as suddenly as it
began. A bright streak of clear red sky appeared above the western verge
of the prairie, the horizontal rays of the sinking sun streamed through it
and glittered in a thousand prismatic colors upon the dripping groves and
the prostrate grass. The pools in the tent dwindled and sunk into the
saturated soil.</p>
<p>But all our hopes were delusive. Scarcely had night set in, when the
tumult broke forth anew. The thunder here is not like the tame thunder of
the Atlantic coast. Bursting with a terrific crash directly above our
heads, it roared over the boundless waste of prairie, seeming to roll
around the whole circle of the firmament with a peculiar and awful
reverberation. The lightning flashed all night, playing with its livid
glare upon the neighboring trees, revealing the vast expanse of the plain,
and then leaving us shut in as by a palpable wall of darkness.</p>
<p>It did not disturb us much. Now and then a peal awakened us, and made us
conscious of the electric battle that was raging, and of the floods that
dashed upon the stanch canvas over our heads. We lay upon india-rubber
cloths, placed between our blankets and the soil. For a while they
excluded the water to admiration; but when at length it accumulated and
began to run over the edges, they served equally well to retain it, so
that toward the end of the night we were unconsciously reposing in small
pools of rain.</p>
<p>On finally awaking in the morning the prospect was not a cheerful one. The
rain no longer poured in torrents; but it pattered with a quiet
pertinacity upon the strained and saturated canvas. We disengaged
ourselves from our blankets, every fiber of which glistened with little
beadlike drops of water, and looked out in vain hope of discovering some
token of fair weather. The clouds, in lead-colored volumes, rested upon
the dismal verge of the prairie, or hung sluggishly overhead, while the
earth wore an aspect no more attractive than the heavens, exhibiting
nothing but pools of water, grass beaten down, and mud well trampled by
our mules and horses. Our companions' tent, with an air of forlorn and
passive misery, and their wagons in like manner, drenched and woe-begone,
stood not far off. The captain was just returning from his morning's
inspection of the horses. He stalked through the mist and rain, with his
plaid around his shoulders; his little pipe, dingy as an antiquarian
relic, projecting from beneath his mustache, and his brother Jack at his
heels.</p>
<p>"Good-morning, captain."</p>
<p>"Good-morning to your honors," said the captain, affecting the Hibernian
accent; but at that instant, as he stooped to enter the tent, he tripped
upon the cords at the entrance, and pitched forward against the guns which
were strapped around the pole in the center.</p>
<p>"You are nice men, you are!" said he, after an ejaculation not necessary
to be recorded, "to set a man-trap before your door every morning to catch
your visitors."</p>
<p>Then he sat down upon Henry Chatillon's saddle. We tossed a piece of
buffalo robe to Jack, who was looking about in some embarrassment. He
spread it on the ground, and took his seat, with a stolid countenance, at
his brother's side.</p>
<p>"Exhilarating weather, captain!"</p>
<p>"Oh, delightful, delightful!" replied the captain. "I knew it would be so;
so much for starting yesterday at noon! I knew how it would turn out; and
I said so at the time."</p>
<p>"You said just the contrary to us. We were in no hurry, and only moved
because you insisted on it."</p>
<p>"Gentlemen," said the captain, taking his pipe from his mouth with an air
of extreme gravity, "it was no plan of mine. There is a man among us who
is determined to have everything his own way. You may express your
opinion; but don't expect him to listen. You may be as reasonable as you
like: oh, it all goes for nothing! That man is resolved to rule the roost
and he'll set his face against any plan that he didn't think of himself."</p>
<p>The captain puffed for a while at his pipe, as if meditating upon his
grievances; then he began again:</p>
<p>"For twenty years I have been in the British army; and in all that time I
never had half so much dissension, and quarreling, and nonsense, as since
I have been on this cursed prairie. He's the most uncomfortable man I ever
met."</p>
<p>"Yes," said Jack; "and don't you know, Bill, how he drank up all the
coffee last night, and put the rest by for himself till the morning!"</p>
<p>"He pretends to know everything," resumed the captain; "nobody must give
orders but he! It's, oh! we must do this; and, oh! we must do that; and
the tent must be pitched here, and the horses must be picketed there; for
nobody knows as well as he does."</p>
<p>We were a little surprised at this disclosure of domestic dissensions
among our allies, for though we knew of their existence, we were not aware
of their extent. The persecuted captain seeming wholly at a loss as to the
course of conduct that he should pursue, we recommended him to adopt
prompt and energetic measures; but all his military experience had failed
to teach him the indispensable lesson to be "hard," when the emergency
requires it.</p>
<p>"For twenty years," he repeated, "I have been in the British army, and in
that time I have been intimately acquainted with some two hundred
officers, young and old, and I never yet quarreled with any man. Oh,
'anything for a quiet life!' that's my maxim."</p>
<p>We intimated that the prairie was hardly the place to enjoy a quiet life,
but that, in the present circumstances, the best thing he could do toward
securing his wished-for tranquillity, was immediately to put a period to
the nuisance that disturbed it. But again the captain's easy good-nature
recoiled from the task. The somewhat vigorous measures necessary to gain
the desired result were utterly repugnant to him; he preferred to pocket
his grievances, still retaining the privilege of grumbling about them.
"Oh, anything for a quiet life!" he said again, circling back to his
favorite maxim.</p>
<p>But to glance at the previous history of our transatlantic confederates.
The captain had sold his commission, and was living in bachelor ease and
dignity in his paternal halls, near Dublin. He hunted, fished, rode
steeple-chases, ran races, and talked of his former exploits. He was
surrounded with the trophies of his rod and gun; the walls were
plentifully garnished, he told us, with moose-horns and deer-horns,
bear-skins, and fox-tails; for the captain's double-barreled rifle had
seen service in Canada and Jamaica; he had killed salmon in Nova Scotia,
and trout, by his own account, in all the streams of the three kingdoms.
But in an evil hour a seductive stranger came from London; no less a
person than R., who, among other multitudinous wanderings, had once been
upon the western prairies, and naturally enough was anxious to visit them
again. The captain's imagination was inflamed by the pictures of a
hunter's paradise that his guest held forth; he conceived an ambition to
add to his other trophies the horns of a buffalo, and the claws of a
grizzly bear; so he and R. struck a league to travel in company. Jack
followed his brother, as a matter of course. Two weeks on board the
Atlantic steamer brought them to Boston; in two weeks more of hard
traveling they reached St. Louis, from which a ride of six days carried
them to the frontier; and here we found them, in full tide of preparation
for their journey.</p>
<p>We had been throughout on terms of intimacy with the captain, but R., the
motive power of our companions' branch of the expedition, was scarcely
known to us. His voice, indeed, might be heard incessantly; but at camp he
remained chiefly within the tent, and on the road he either rode by
himself, or else remained in close conversation with his friend Wright,
the muleteer. As the captain left the tent that morning, I observed R.
standing by the fire, and having nothing else to do, I determined to
ascertain, if possible, what manner of man he was. He had a book under his
arm, but just at present he was engrossed in actively superintending the
operations of Sorel, the hunter, who was cooking some corn-bread over the
coals for breakfast. R. was a well-formed and rather good-looking man,
some thirty years old; considerably younger than the captain. He wore a
beard and mustache of the oakum complexion, and his attire was altogether
more elegant than one ordinarily sees on the prairie. He wore his cap on
one side of his head; his checked shirt, open in front, was in very neat
order, considering the circumstances, and his blue pantaloons, of the John
Bull cut, might once have figured in Bond Street.</p>
<p>"Turn over that cake, man! turn it over, quick! Don't you see it burning?"</p>
<p>"It ain't half done," growled Sorel, in the amiable tone of a whipped
bull-dog.</p>
<p>"It is. Turn it over, I tell you!"</p>
<p>Sorel, a strong, sullen-looking Canadian, who from having spent his life
among the wildest and most remote of the Indian tribes, had imbibed much
of their dark, vindictive spirit, looked ferociously up, as if he longed
to leap upon his bourgeois and throttle him; but he obeyed the order,
coming from so experienced an artist.</p>
<p>"It was a good idea of yours," said I, seating myself on the tongue of a
wagon, "to bring Indian meal with you."</p>
<p>"Yes, yes" said R. "It's good bread for the prairie—good bread for
the prairie. I tell you that's burning again."</p>
<p>Here he stooped down, and unsheathing the silver-mounted hunting-knife in
his belt, began to perform the part of cook himself; at the same time
requesting me to hold for a moment the book under his arm, which
interfered with the exercise of these important functions. I opened it; it
was "Macaulay's Lays"; and I made some remark, expressing my admiration of
the work.</p>
<p>"Yes, yes; a pretty good thing. Macaulay can do better than that though. I
know him very well. I have traveled with him. Where was it we first met—at
Damascus? No, no; it was in Italy."</p>
<p>"So," said I, "you have been over the same ground with your countryman,
the author of 'Eothen'? There has been some discussion in America as to
who he is. I have heard Milne's name mentioned."</p>
<p>"Milne's? Oh, no, no, no; not at all. It was Kinglake; Kinglake's the man.
I know him very well; that is, I have seen him."</p>
<p>Here Jack C., who stood by, interposed a remark (a thing not common with
him), observing that he thought the weather would become fair before
twelve o'clock.</p>
<p>"It's going to rain all day," said R., "and clear up in the middle of the
night."</p>
<p>Just then the clouds began to dissipate in a very unequivocal manner; but
Jack, not caring to defend his point against so authoritative a
declaration, walked away whistling, and we resumed our conversation.</p>
<p>"Borrow, the author of 'The Bible in Spain,' I presume you know him too?"</p>
<p>"Oh, certainly; I know all those men. By the way, they told me that one of
your American writers, Judge Story, had died lately. I edited some of his
works in London; not without faults, though."</p>
<p>Here followed an erudite commentary on certain points of law, in which he
particularly animadverted on the errors into which he considered that the
judge had been betrayed. At length, having touched successively on an
infinite variety of topics, I found that I had the happiness of
discovering a man equally competent to enlighten me upon them all, equally
an authority on matters of science or literature, philosophy or fashion.
The part I bore in the conversation was by no means a prominent one; it
was only necessary to set him going, and when he had run long enough upon
one topic, to divert him to another and lead him on to pour out his heaps
of treasure in succession.</p>
<p>"What has that fellow been saying to you?" said Shaw, as I returned to the
tent. "I have heard nothing but his talking for the last half-hour."</p>
<p>R. had none of the peculiar traits of the ordinary "British snob"; his
absurdities were all his own, belonging to no particular nation or clime.
He was possessed with an active devil that had driven him over land and
sea, to no great purpose, as it seemed; for although he had the usual
complement of eyes and ears, the avenues between these organs and his
brain appeared remarkably narrow and untrodden. His energy was much more
conspicuous than his wisdom; but his predominant characteristic was a
magnanimous ambition to exercise on all occasions an awful rule and
supremacy, and this propensity equally displayed itself, as the reader
will have observed, whether the matter in question was the baking of a
hoe-cake or a point of international law. When such diverse elements as he
and the easy-tempered captain came in contact, no wonder some commotion
ensued; R. rode roughshod, from morning till night, over his military
ally.</p>
<p>At noon the sky was clear and we set out, trailing through mud and slime
six inches deep. That night we were spared the customary infliction of the
shower bath.</p>
<p>On the next afternoon we were moving slowly along, not far from a patch of
woods which lay on the right. Jack C. rode a little in advance;</p>
<p>The livelong day he had not spoke;</p>
<p>when suddenly he faced about, pointed to the woods, and roared out to his
brother:</p>
<p>"O Bill! here's a cow!"</p>
<p>The captain instantly galloped forward, and he and Jack made a vain
attempt to capture the prize; but the cow, with a well-grounded distrust
of their intentions, took refuge among the trees. R. joined them, and they
soon drove her out. We watched their evolutions as they galloped around
here, trying in vain to noose her with their trail-ropes, which they had
converted into lariettes for the occasion. At length they resorted to
milder measures, and the cow was driven along with the party. Soon after
the usual thunderstorm came up, the wind blowing with such fury that the
streams of rain flew almost horizontally along the prairie, roaring like a
cataract. The horses turned tail to the storm, and stood hanging their
heads, bearing the infliction with an air of meekness and resignation;
while we drew our heads between our shoulders, and crouched forward, so as
to make our backs serve as a pent-house for the rest of our persons.
Meanwhile the cow, taking advantage of the tumult, ran off, to the great
discomfiture of the captain, who seemed to consider her as his own
especial prize, since she had been discovered by Jack. In defiance of the
storm, he pulled his cap tight over his brows, jerked a huge buffalo
pistol from his holster, and set out at full speed after her. This was the
last we saw of them for some time, the mist and rain making an
impenetrable veil; but at length we heard the captain's shout, and saw him
looming through the tempest, the picture of a Hibernian cavalier, with his
cocked pistol held aloft for safety's sake, and a countenance of anxiety
and excitement. The cow trotted before him, but exhibited evident signs of
an intention to run off again, and the captain was roaring to us to head
her. But the rain had got in behind our coat collars, and was traveling
over our necks in numerous little streamlets, and being afraid to move our
heads, for fear of admitting more, we sat stiff and immovable, looking at
the captain askance, and laughing at his frantic movements. At last the
cow made a sudden plunge and ran off; the captain grasped his pistol
firmly, spurred his horse, and galloped after, with evident designs of
mischief. In a moment we heard the faint report, deadened by the rain, and
then the conqueror and his victim reappeared, the latter shot through the
body, and quite helpless. Not long after the storm moderated and we
advanced again. The cow walked painfully along under the charge of Jack,
to whom the captain had committed her, while he himself rode forward in
his old capacity of vedette. We were approaching a long line of trees,
that followed a stream stretching across our path, far in front, when we
beheld the vedette galloping toward us, apparently much excited, but with
a broad grin on his face.</p>
<p>"Let that cow drop behind!" he shouted to us; "here's her owners!" And in
fact, as we approached the line of trees, a large white object, like a
tent, was visible behind them. On approaching, however, we found, instead
of the expected Mormon camp, nothing but the lonely prairie, and a large
white rock standing by the path. The cow therefore resumed her place in
our procession. She walked on until we encamped, when R. firmly
approaching with his enormous English double-barreled rifle, calmly and
deliberately took aim at her heart, and discharged into it first one
bullet and then the other. She was then butchered on the most approved
principles of woodcraft, and furnished a very welcome item to our somewhat
limited bill of fare.</p>
<p>In a day or two more we reached the river called the "Big Blue." By titles
equally elegant, almost all the streams of this region are designated. We
had struggled through ditches and little brooks all that morning; but on
traversing the dense woods that lined the banks of the Blue, we found more
formidable difficulties awaited us, for the stream, swollen by the rains,
was wide, deep, and rapid.</p>
<p>No sooner were we on the spot than R. had flung off his clothes, and was
swimming across, or splashing through the shallows, with the end of a rope
between his teeth. We all looked on in admiration, wondering what might be
the design of this energetic preparation; but soon we heard him shouting:
"Give that rope a turn round that stump! You, Sorel: do you hear? Look
sharp now, Boisverd! Come over to this side, some of you, and help me!"
The men to whom these orders were directed paid not the least attention to
them, though they were poured out without pause or intermission. Henry
Chatillon directed the work, and it proceeded quietly and rapidly. R.'s
sharp brattling voice might have been heard incessantly; and he was
leaping about with the utmost activity, multiplying himself, after the
manner of great commanders, as if his universal presence and supervision
were of the last necessity. His commands were rather amusingly
inconsistent; for when he saw that the men would not do as he told them,
he wisely accommodated himself to circumstances, and with the utmost
vehemence ordered them to do precisely that which they were at the time
engaged upon, no doubt recollecting the story of Mahomet and the
refractory mountain. Shaw smiled significantly; R. observed it, and,
approaching with a countenance of lofty indignation, began to vapor a
little, but was instantly reduced to silence.</p>
<p>The raft was at length complete. We piled our goods upon it, with the
exception of our guns, which each man chose to retain in his own keeping.
Sorel, Boisverd, Wright and Delorier took their stations at the four
corners, to hold it together, and swim across with it; and in a moment
more, all our earthly possessions were floating on the turbid waters of
the Big Blue. We sat on the bank, anxiously watching the result, until we
saw the raft safe landed in a little cove far down on the opposite bank.
The empty wagons were easily passed across; and then each man mounting a
horse, we rode through the stream, the stray animals following of their
own accord.</p>
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