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<h2> CHAPTER XI </h2>
<h3> SCENES AT THE CAMP </h3>
<p>Reynal heard guns fired one day, at the distance of a mile or two from the
camp. He grew nervous instantly. Visions of Crow war parties began to
haunt his imagination; and when we returned (for we were all absent), he
renewed his complaints about being left alone with the Canadians and the
squaw. The day after, the cause of the alarm appeared. Four trappers, one
called Moran, another Saraphin, and the others nicknamed "Rouleau" and
"Jean Gras," came to our camp and joined us. They it was who fired the
guns and disturbed the dreams of our confederate Reynal. They soon
encamped by our side. Their rifles, dingy and battered with hard service,
rested with ours against the old tree; their strong rude saddles, their
buffalo robes, their traps, and the few rough and simple articles of their
traveling equipment, were piled near our tent. Their mountain horses were
turned to graze in the meadow among our own; and the men themselves, no
less rough and hardy, used to lie half the day in the shade of our tree
lolling on the grass, lazily smoking, and telling stories of their
adventures; and I defy the annals of chivalry to furnish the record of a
life more wild and perilous than that of a Rocky Mountain trapper.</p>
<p>With this efficient re-enforcement the agitation of Reynal's nerves
subsided. He began to conceive a sort of attachment to our old camping
ground; yet it was time to change our quarters, since remaining too long
on one spot must lead to certain unpleasant results not to be borne with
unless in a case of dire necessity. The grass no longer presented a smooth
surface of turf; it was trampled into mud and clay. So we removed to
another old tree, larger yet, that grew by the river side at a furlong's
distance. Its trunk was full six feet in diameter; on one side it was
marked by a party of Indians with various inexplicable hieroglyphics,
commemorating some warlike enterprise, and aloft among the branches were
the remains of a scaffolding, where dead bodies had once been deposited,
after the Indian manner.</p>
<p>"There comes Bull-Bear," said Henry Chatillon, as we sat on the grass at
dinner. Looking up, we saw several horsemen coming over the neighboring
hill, and in a moment four stately young men rode up and dismounted. One
of them was Bull-Bear, or Mahto-Tatonka, a compound name which he
inherited from his father, the most powerful chief in the Ogallalla band.
One of his brothers and two other young men accompanied him. We shook
hands with the visitors, and when we had finished our meal—for this
is the orthodox manner of entertaining Indians, even the best of them—we
handed to each a tin cup of coffee and a biscuit, at which they ejaculated
from the bottom of their throats, "How! how!" a monosyllable by which an
Indian contrives to express half the emotions that he is susceptible of.
Then we lighted the pipe, and passed it to them as they squatted on the
ground.</p>
<p>"Where is the village?"</p>
<p>"There," said Mahto-Tatonka, pointing southward; "it will come in two
days."</p>
<p>"Will they go to the war?"</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>No man is a philanthropist on the prairie. We welcomed this news most
cordially, and congratulated ourselves that Bordeaux's interested efforts
to divert The Whirlwind from his congenial vocation of bloodshed had
failed of success, and that no additional obstacles would interpose
between us and our plan of repairing to the rendezvous at La Bonte's Camp.</p>
<p>For that and several succeeding days, Mahto-Tatonka and his friends
remained our guests. They devoured the relics of our meals; they filled
the pipe for us and also helped us to smoke it. Sometimes they stretched
themselves side by side in the shade, indulging in raillery and practical
jokes ill becoming the dignity of brave and aspiring warriors, such as two
of them in reality were.</p>
<p>Two days dragged away, and on the morning of the third we hoped
confidently to see the Indian village. It did not come; so we rode out to
look for it. In place of the eight hundred Indians we expected, we met one
solitary savage riding toward us over the prairie, who told us that the
Indians had changed their plans, and would not come within three days;
still he persisted that they were going to the war. Taking along with us
this messenger of evil tidings, we retraced our footsteps to the camp,
amusing ourselves by the way with execrating Indian inconstancy. When we
came in sight of our little white tent under the big tree, we saw that it
no longer stood alone. A huge old lodge was erected close by its side,
discolored by rain and storms, rotted with age, with the uncouth figures
of horses and men, and outstretched hands that were painted upon it,
well-nigh obliterated. The long poles which supported this squalid
habitation thrust themselves rakishly out from its pointed top, and over
its entrance were suspended a "medicine-pipe" and various other implements
of the magic art. While we were yet at a distance, we observed a greatly
increased population of various colors and dimensions, swarming around our
quiet encampment. Moran, the trapper, having been absent for a day or two,
had returned, it seemed, bringing all his family with him. He had taken to
himself a wife for whom he had paid the established price of one horse.
This looks cheap at first sight, but in truth the purchase of a squaw is a
transaction which no man should enter into without mature deliberation,
since it involves not only the payment of the first price, but the
formidable burden of feeding and supporting a rapacious horde of the
bride's relatives, who hold themselves entitled to feed upon the
indiscreet white man. They gather round like leeches, and drain him of all
he has.</p>
<p>Moran, like Reynal, had not allied himself to an aristocratic circle. His
relatives occupied but a contemptible position in Ogallalla society; for
among those wild democrats of the prairie, as among us, there are virtual
distinctions of rank and place; though this great advantage they have over
us, that wealth has no part in determining such distinctions. Moran's
partner was not the most beautiful of her sex, and he had the exceedingly
bad taste to array her in an old calico gown bought from an emigrant
woman, instead of the neat and graceful tunic of whitened deerskin worn
ordinarily by the squaws. The moving spirit of the establishment, in more
senses than one, was a hideous old hag of eighty. Human imagination never
conceived hobgoblin or witch more ugly than she. You could count all her
ribs through the wrinkles of the leathery skin that covered them. Her
withered face more resembled an old skull than the countenance of a living
being, even to the hollow, darkened sockets, at the bottom of which
glittered her little black eyes. Her arms had dwindled away into nothing
but whipcord and wire. Her hair, half black, half gray, hung in total
neglect nearly to the ground, and her sole garment consisted of the
remnant of a discarded buffalo robe tied round her waist with a string of
hide. Yet the old squaw's meager anatomy was wonderfully strong. She
pitched the lodge, packed the horses, and did the hardest labor of the
camp. From morning till night she bustled about the lodge, screaming like
a screech-owl when anything displeased her. Then there was her brother, a
"medicine-man," or magician, equally gaunt and sinewy with herself. His
mouth spread from ear to ear, and his appetite, as we had full occasion to
learn, was ravenous in proportion. The other inmates of the lodge were a
young bride and bridegroom; the latter one of those idle, good-for nothing
fellows who infest an Indian village as well as more civilized
communities. He was fit neither for hunting nor for war; and one might
infer as much from the stolid unmeaning expression of his face. The happy
pair had just entered upon the honeymoon. They would stretch a buffalo
robe upon poles, so as to protect them from the fierce rays of the sun,
and spreading beneath this rough canopy a luxuriant couch of furs, would
sit affectionately side by side for half the day, though I could not
discover that much conversation passed between them. Probably they had
nothing to say; for an Indian's supply of topics for conversation is far
from being copious. There were half a dozen children, too, playing and
whooping about the camp, shooting birds with little bows and arrows, or
making miniature lodges of sticks, as children of a different complexion
build houses of blocks.</p>
<p>A day passed, and Indians began rapidly to come in. Parties of two or
three or more would ride up and silently seat themselves on the grass. The
fourth day came at last, when about noon horsemen suddenly appeared into
view on the summit of the neighboring ridge. They descended, and behind
them followed a wild procession, hurrying in haste and disorder down the
hill and over the plain below; horses, mules, and dogs, heavily burdened
travaux, mounted warriors, squaws walking amid the throng, and a host of
children. For a full half-hour they continued to pour down; and keeping
directly to the bend of the stream, within a furlong of us, they soon
assembled there, a dark and confused throng, until, as if by magic, 150
tall lodges sprung up. On a sudden the lonely plain was transformed into
the site of a miniature city. Countless horses were soon grazing over the
meadows around us, and the whole prairie was animated by restless figures
careening on horseback, or sedately stalking in their long white robes.
The Whirlwind was come at last! One question yet remained to be answered:
"Will he go to the war, in order that we, with so respectable an escort,
may pass over to the somewhat perilous rendezvous at La Bonte's Camp?"</p>
<p>Still this remained in doubt. Characteristic indecision perplexed their
councils. Indians cannot act in large bodies. Though their object be of
the highest importance, they cannot combine to attain it by a series of
connected efforts. King Philip, Pontiac, and Tecumseh all felt this to
their cost. The Ogallalla once had a war chief who could control them; but
he was dead, and now they were left to the sway of their own unsteady
impulses.</p>
<p>This Indian village and its inhabitants will hold a prominent place in the
rest of the narrative, and perhaps it may not be amiss to glance for an
instant at the savage people of which they form a part. The Dakota (I
prefer this national designation to the unmeaning French name, Sioux)
range over a vast territory, from the river St. Peter's to the Rocky
Mountains themselves. They are divided into several independent bands,
united under no central government, and acknowledge no common head. The
same language, usages, and superstitions form the sole bond between them.
They do not unite even in their wars. The bands of the east fight the
Ojibwas on the Upper Lakes; those of the west make incessant war upon the
Snake Indians in the Rocky Mountains. As the whole people is divided into
bands, so each band is divided into villages. Each village has a chief,
who is honored and obeyed only so far as his personal qualities may
command respect and fear. Sometimes he is a mere nominal chief; sometimes
his authority is little short of absolute, and his fame and influence
reach even beyond his own village; so that the whole band to which he
belongs is ready to acknowledge him as their head. This was, a few years
since, the case with the Ogallalla. Courage, address, and enterprise may
raise any warrior to the highest honor, especially if he be the son of a
former chief, or a member of a numerous family, to support him and avenge
his quarrels; but when he has reached the dignity of chief, and the old
men and warriors, by a peculiar ceremony, have formally installed him, let
it not be imagined that he assumes any of the outward semblances of rank
and honor. He knows too well on how frail a tenure he holds his station.
He must conciliate his uncertain subjects. Many a man in the village lives
better, owns more squaws and more horses, and goes better clad than he.
Like the Teutonic chiefs of old, he ingratiates himself with his young men
by making them presents, thereby often impoverishing himself. Does he fail
in gaining their favor, they will set his authority at naught, and may
desert him at any moment; for the usages of his people have provided no
sanctions by which he may enforce his authority. Very seldom does it
happen, at least among these western bands, that a chief attains to much
power, unless he is the head of a numerous family. Frequently the village
is principally made up of his relatives and descendants, and the wandering
community assumes much of the patriarchal character. A people so loosely
united, torn, too, with ranking feuds and jealousies, can have little
power or efficiency.</p>
<p>The western Dakota have no fixed habitations. Hunting and fighting, they
wander incessantly through summer and winter. Some are following the herds
of buffalo over the waste of prairie; others are traversing the Black
Hills, thronging on horseback and on foot through the dark gulfs and
somber gorges beneath the vast splintering precipices, and emerging at
last upon the "Parks," those beautiful but most perilous hunting grounds.
The buffalo supplies them with almost all the necessaries of life; with
habitations, food, clothing, and fuel; with strings for their bows, with
thread, cordage, and trail-ropes for their horses, with coverings for
their saddles, with vessels to hold water, with boats to cross streams,
with glue, and with the means of purchasing all that they desire from the
traders. When the buffalo are extinct, they too must dwindle away.</p>
<p>War is the breath of their nostrils. Against most of the neighboring
tribes they cherish a deadly, rancorous hatred, transmitted from father to
son, and inflamed by constant aggression and retaliation. Many times a
year, in every village, the Great Spirit is called upon, fasts are made,
the war parade is celebrated, and the warriors go out by handfuls at a
time against the enemy. This fierce and evil spirit awakens their most
eager aspirations, and calls forth their greatest energies. It is chiefly
this that saves them from lethargy and utter abasement. Without its
powerful stimulus they would be like the unwarlike tribes beyond the
mountains, who are scattered among the caves and rocks like beasts, living
on roots and reptiles. These latter have little of humanity except the
form; but the proud and ambitious Dakota warrior can sometimes boast of
heroic virtues. It is very seldom that distinction and influence are
attained among them by any other course than that of arms. Their
superstition, however, sometimes gives great power, to those among them
who pretend to the character of magicians. Their wild hearts, too, can
feel the power of oratory, and yield deference to the masters of it.</p>
<p>But to return. Look into our tent, or enter, if you can bear the stifling
smoke and the close atmosphere. There, wedged close together, you will see
a circle of stout warriors, passing the pipe around, joking, telling
stories, and making themselves merry, after their fashion. We were also
infested by little copper-colored naked boys and snake-eyed girls. They
would come up to us, muttering certain words, which being interpreted
conveyed the concise invitation, "Come and eat." Then we would rise,
cursing the pertinacity of Dakota hospitality, which allowed scarcely an
hour of rest between sun and sun, and to which we were bound to do honor,
unless we would offend our entertainers. This necessity was particularly
burdensome to me, as I was scarcely able to walk, from the effects of
illness, and was of course poorly qualified to dispose of twenty meals a
day. Of these sumptuous banquets I gave a specimen in a former chapter,
where the tragical fate of the little dog was chronicled. So bounteous an
entertainment looks like an outgushing of good will; but doubtless
one-half at least of our kind hosts, had they met us alone and unarmed on
the prairie, would have robbed us of our horses, and perchance have
bestowed an arrow upon us beside. Trust not an Indian. Let your rifle be
ever in your hand. Wear next your heart the old chivalric motto SEMPER
PARATUS.</p>
<p>One morning we were summoned to the lodge of an old man, in good truth the
Nestor of his tribe. We found him half sitting, half reclining on a pile
of buffalo robes; his long hair, jet-black even now, though he had seen
some eighty winters, hung on either side of his thin features. Those most
conversant with Indians in their homes will scarcely believe me when I
affirm that there was dignity in his countenance and mien. His gaunt but
symmetrical frame, did not more clearly exhibit the wreck of bygone
strength, than did his dark, wasted features, still prominent and
commanding, bear the stamp of mental energies. I recalled, as I saw him,
the eloquent metaphor of the Iroquois sachem: "I am an aged hemlock; the
winds of a hundred winters have whistled through my branches, and I am
dead at the top!" Opposite the patriarch was his nephew, the young
aspirant Mahto-Tatonka; and besides these, there were one or two women in
the lodge.</p>
<p>The old man's story is peculiar, and singularly illustrative of a
superstitious custom that prevails in full force among many of the Indian
tribes. He was one of a powerful family, renowned for their warlike
exploits. When a very young man, he submitted to the singular rite to
which most of the tribe subject themselves before entering upon life. He
painted his face black; then seeking out a cavern in a sequestered part of
the Black Hills, he lay for several days, fasting and praying to the Great
Spirit. In the dreams and visions produced by his weakened and excited
state, he fancied like all Indians, that he saw supernatural revelations.
Again and again the form of an antelope appeared before him. The antelope
is the graceful peace spirit of the Ogallalla; but seldom is it that such
a gentle visitor presents itself during the initiatory fasts of their
young men. The terrible grizzly bear, the divinity of war, usually appears
to fire them with martial ardor and thirst for renown. At length the
antelope spoke. He told the young dreamer that he was not to follow the
path of war; that a life of peace and tranquillity was marked out for him;
that henceforward he was to guide the people by his counsels and protect
them from the evils of their own feuds and dissensions. Others were to
gain renown by fighting the enemy; but greatness of a different kind was
in store for him.</p>
<p>The visions beheld during the period of this fast usually determine the
whole course of the dreamer's life, for an Indian is bound by iron
superstitions. From that time, Le Borgne, which was the only name by which
we knew him, abandoned all thoughts of war and devoted himself to the
labors of peace. He told his vision to the people. They honored his
commission and respected him in his novel capacity.</p>
<p>A far different man was his brother, Mahto-Tatonka, who had transmitted
his names, his features, and many of his characteristic qualities to his
son. He was the father of Henry Chatillon's squaw, a circumstance which
proved of some advantage to us, as securing for us the friendship of a
family perhaps the most distinguished and powerful in the whole Ogallalla
band. Mahto-Tatonka, in his rude way, was a hero. No chief could vie with
him in warlike renown, or in power over his people. He had a fearless
spirit, and a most impetuous and inflexible resolution. His will was law.
He was politic and sagacious, and with true Indian craft he always
befriended the whites, well knowing that he might thus reap great
advantages for himself and his adherents. When he had resolved on any
course of conduct, he would pay to the warriors the empty compliment of
calling them together to deliberate upon it, and when their debates were
over, he would quietly state his own opinion, which no one ever disputed.
The consequences of thwarting his imperious will were too formidable to be
encountered. Woe to those who incurred his displeasure! He would strike
them or stab them on the spot; and this act, which, if attempted by any
other chief, would instantly have cost him his life, the awe inspired by
his name enabled him to repeat again and again with impunity. In a
community where, from immemorial time, no man has acknowledged any law but
his own will, Mahto-Tatonka, by the force of his dauntless resolution,
raised himself to power little short of despotic. His haughty career came
at last to an end. He had a host of enemies only waiting for their
opportunity of revenge, and our old friend Smoke, in particular, together
with all his kinsmen, hated him most cordially. Smoke sat one day in his
lodge in the midst of his own village, when Mahto-Tatonka entered it
alone, and approaching the dwelling of his enemy, called on him in a loud
voice to come out, if he were a man, and fight. Smoke would not move. At
this, Mahto-Tatonka proclaimed him a coward and an old woman, and striding
close to the entrance of the lodge, stabbed the chief's best horse, which
was picketed there. Smoke was daunted, and even this insult failed to call
him forth. Mahto-Tatonka moved haughtily away; all made way for him, but
his hour of reckoning was near.</p>
<p>One hot day, five or six years ago, numerous lodges of Smoke's kinsmen
were gathered around some of the Fur Company's men, who were trading in
various articles with them, whisky among the rest. Mahto-Tatonka was also
there with a few of his people. As he lay in his own lodge, a fray arose
between his adherents and the kinsmen of his enemy. The war-whoop was
raised, bullets and arrows began to fly, and the camp was in confusion.
The chief sprang up, and rushing in a fury from the lodge shouted to the
combatants on both sides to cease. Instantly—for the attack was
preconcerted—came the reports of two or three guns, and the twanging
of a dozen bows, and the savage hero, mortally wounded, pitched forward
headlong to the ground. Rouleau was present, and told me the particulars.
The tumult became general, and was not quelled until several had fallen on
both sides. When we were in the country the feud between the two families
was still rankling, and not likely soon to cease.</p>
<p>Thus died Mahto-Tatonka, but he left behind him a goodly army of
descendants, to perpetuate his renown and avenge his fate. Besides
daughters he had thirty sons, a number which need not stagger the
credulity of those who are best acquainted with Indian usages and
practices. We saw many of them, all marked by the same dark complexion and
the same peculiar cast of features. Of these our visitor, young
Mahto-Tatonka, was the eldest, and some reported him as likely to succeed
to his father's honors. Though he appeared not more than twenty-one years
old, he had oftener struck the enemy, and stolen more horses and more
squaws than any young man in the village. We of the civilized world are
not apt to attach much credit to the latter species of exploits; but
horse-stealing is well known as an avenue to distinction on the prairies,
and the other kind of depredation is esteemed equally meritorious. Not
that the act can confer fame from its own intrinsic merits. Any one can
steal a squaw, and if he chooses afterward to make an adequate present to
her rightful proprietor, the easy husband for the most part rests content,
his vengeance falls asleep, and all danger from that quarter is averted.
Yet this is esteemed but a pitiful and mean-spirited transaction. The
danger is averted, but the glory of the achievement also is lost.
Mahto-Tatonka proceeded after a more gallant and dashing fashion. Out of
several dozen squaws whom he had stolen, he could boast that he had never
paid for one, but snapping his fingers in the face of the injured husband,
had defied the extremity of his indignation, and no one yet had dared to
lay the finger of violence upon him. He was following close in the
footsteps of his father. The young men and the young squaws, each in their
way, admired him. The one would always follow him to war, and he was
esteemed to have unrivaled charm in the eyes of the other. Perhaps his
impunity may excite some wonder. An arrow shot from a ravine, a stab given
in the dark, require no great valor, and are especially suited to the
Indian genius; but Mahto-Tatonka had a strong protection. It was not alone
his courage and audacious will that enabled him to career so dashingly
among his compeers. His enemies did not forget that he was one of thirty
warlike brethren, all growing up to manhood. Should they wreak their anger
upon him, many keen eyes would be ever upon them, many fierce hearts would
thirst for their blood. The avenger would dog their footsteps everywhere.
To kill Mahto-Tatonka would be no better than an act of suicide.</p>
<p>Though he found such favor in the eyes of the fair, he was no dandy. As
among us those of highest worth and breeding are most simple in manner and
attire, so our aspiring young friend was indifferent to the gaudy
trappings and ornaments of his companions. He was content to rest his
chances of success upon his own warlike merits. He never arrayed himself
in gaudy blanket and glittering necklaces, but left his statue-like form,
limbed like an Apollo of bronze, to win its way to favor. His voice was
singularly deep and strong. It sounded from his chest like the deep notes
of an organ. Yet after all, he was but an Indian. See him as he lies there
in the sun before our tent, kicking his heels in the air and cracking
jokes with his brother. Does he look like a hero? See him now in the hour
of his glory, when at sunset the whole village empties itself to behold
him, for to-morrow their favorite young partisan goes out against the
enemy. His superb headdress is adorned with a crest of the war eagle's
feathers, rising in a waving ridge above his brow, and sweeping far behind
him. His round white shield hangs at his breast, with feathers radiating
from the center like a star. His quiver is at his back; his tall lance in
his hand, the iron point flashing against the declining sun, while the
long scalp-locks of his enemies flutter from the shaft. Thus, gorgeous as
a champion in his panoply, he rides round and round within the great
circle of lodges, balancing with a graceful buoyancy to the free movements
of his war horse, while with a sedate brow he sings his song to the Great
Spirit. Young rival warriors look askance at him; vermilion-cheeked girls
gaze in admiration, boys whoop and scream in a thrill of delight, and old
women yell forth his name and proclaim his praises from lodge to lodge.</p>
<p>Mahto-Tatonka, to come back to him, was the best of all our Indian
friends. Hour after hour and day after day, when swarms of savages of
every age, sex, and degree beset our camp, he would lie in our tent, his
lynx eye ever open to guard our property from pillage.</p>
<p>The Whirlwind invited us one day to his lodge. The feast was finished, and
the pipe began to circulate. It was a remarkably large and fine one, and I
expressed my admiration of its form and dimensions.</p>
<p>"If the Meneaska likes the pipe," asked The Whirlwind, "why does he not
keep it?"</p>
<p>Such a pipe among the Ogallalla is valued at the price of a horse. A
princely gift, thinks the reader, and worthy of a chieftain and a warrior.
The Whirlwind's generosity rose to no such pitch. He gave me the pipe,
confidently expecting that I in return should make him a present of equal
or superior value. This is the implied condition of every gift among the
Indians as among the Orientals, and should it not be complied with the
present is usually reclaimed by the giver. So I arranged upon a gaudy
calico handkerchief, an assortment of vermilion, tobacco, knives, and
gunpowder, and summoning the chief to camp, assured him of my friendship
and begged his acceptance of a slight token of it. Ejaculating HOW! HOW!
he folded up the offerings and withdrew to his lodge.</p>
<p>Several days passed and we and the Indians remained encamped side by side.
They could not decide whether or not to go to war. Toward evening, scores
of them would surround our tent, a picturesque group. Late one afternoon a
party of them mounted on horseback came suddenly in sight from behind some
clumps of bushes that lined the bank of the stream, leading with them a
mule, on whose back was a wretched negro, only sustained in his seat by
the high pommel and cantle of the Indian saddle. His cheeks were withered
and shrunken in the hollow of his jaws; his eyes were unnaturally dilated,
and his lips seemed shriveled and drawn back from his teeth like those of
a corpse. When they brought him up before our tent, and lifted him from
the saddle, he could not walk or stand, but he crawled a short distance,
and with a look of utter misery sat down on the grass. All the children
and women came pouring out of the lodges round us, and with screams and
cries made a close circle about him, while he sat supporting himself with
his hands, and looking from side to side with a vacant stare. The wretch
was starving to death! For thirty-three days he had wandered alone on the
prairie, without weapon of any kind; without shoes, moccasins, or any
other clothing than an old jacket and pantaloons; without intelligence and
skill to guide his course, or any knowledge of the productions of the
prairie. All this time he had subsisted on crickets and lizards, wild
onions, and three eggs which he found in the nest of a prairie dove. He
had not seen a human being. Utterly bewildered in the boundless, hopeless
desert that stretched around him, offering to his inexperienced eye no
mark by which to direct his course, he had walked on in despair till he
could walk no longer, and then crawled on his knees until the bone was
laid bare. He chose the night for his traveling, lying down by day to
sleep in the glaring sun, always dreaming, as he said, of the broth and
corn cake he used to eat under his old master's shed in Missouri. Every
man in the camp, both white and red, was astonished at his wonderful
escape not only from starvation but from the grizzly bears which abound in
that neighborhood, and the wolves which howled around him every night.</p>
<p>Reynal recognized him the moment the Indians brought him in. He had run
away from his master about a year before and joined the party of M.
Richard, who was then leaving the frontier for the mountains. He had lived
with Richard ever since, until in the end of May he with Reynal and
several other men went out in search of some stray horses, when he got
separated from the rest in a storm, and had never been heard of up to this
time. Knowing his inexperience and helplessness, no one dreamed that he
could still be living. The Indians had found him lying exhausted on the
ground.</p>
<p>As he sat there with the Indians gazing silently on him, his haggard face
and glazed eye were disgusting to look upon. Delorier made him a bowl of
gruel, but he suffered it to remain untasted before him. At length he
languidly raised the spoon to his lips; again he did so, and again; and
then his appetite seemed suddenly inflamed into madness, for he seized the
bowl, swallowed all its contents in a few seconds, and eagerly demanded
meat. This we refused, telling him to wait until morning, but he begged so
eagerly that we gave him a small piece, which he devoured, tearing it like
a dog. He said he must have more. We told him that his life was in danger
if he ate so immoderately at first. He assented, and said he knew he was a
fool to do so, but he must have meat. This we absolutely refused, to the
great indignation of the senseless squaws, who, when we were not watching
him, would slyly bring dried meat and POMMES BLANCHES, and place them on
the ground by his side. Still this was not enough for him. When it grew
dark he contrived to creep away between the legs of the horses and crawl
over to the Indian village, about a furlong down the stream. Here he fed
to his heart's content, and was brought back again in the morning, when
Jean Gras, the trapper, put him on horseback and carried him to the fort.
He managed to survive the effects of his insane greediness, and though
slightly deranged when we left this part of the country, he was otherwise
in tolerable health, and expressed his firm conviction that nothing could
ever kill him.</p>
<p>When the sun was yet an hour high, it was a gay scene in the village. The
warriors stalked sedately among the lodges, or along the margin of the
streams, or walked out to visit the bands of horses that were feeding over
the prairie. Half the village population deserted the close and heated
lodges and betook themselves to the water; and here you might see boys and
girls and young squaws splashing, swimming, and diving beneath the
afternoon sun, with merry laughter and screaming. But when the sun was
just resting above the broken peaks, and the purple mountains threw their
prolonged shadows for miles over the prairie; when our grim old tree,
lighted by the horizontal rays, assumed an aspect of peaceful repose, such
as one loves after scenes of tumult and excitement; and when the whole
landscape of swelling plains and scattered groves was softened into a
tranquil beauty, then our encampment presented a striking spectacle. Could
Salvator Rosa have transferred it to his canvas, it would have added new
renown to his pencil. Savage figures surrounded our tent, with quivers at
their backs, and guns, lances, or tomahawks in their hands. Some sat on
horseback, motionless as equestrian statues, their arms crossed on their
breasts, their eyes fixed in a steady unwavering gaze upon us. Some stood
erect, wrapped from head to foot in their long white robes of buffalo
hide. Some sat together on the grass, holding their shaggy horses by a
rope, with their broad dark busts exposed to view as they suffered their
robes to fall from their shoulders. Others again stood carelessly among
the throng, with nothing to conceal the matchless symmetry of their forms;
and I do not exaggerate when I say that only on the prairie and in the
Vatican have I seen such faultless models of the human figure. See that
warrior standing by the tree, towering six feet and a half in stature.
Your eyes may trace the whole of his graceful and majestic height, and
discover no defect or blemish. With his free and noble attitude, with the
bow in his hand, and the quiver at his back, he might seem, but for his
face, the Pythian Apollo himself. Such a figure rose before the
imagination of West, when on first seeing the Belvidere in the Vatican, he
exclaimed, "By God, a Mohawk!"</p>
<p>When the sky darkened and the stars began to appear; when the prairie was
involved in gloom and the horses were driven in and secured around the
camp, the crowd began to melt away. Fires gleamed around, duskily
revealing the rough trappers and the graceful Indians. One of the families
near us would always be gathered about a bright blaze, that displayed the
shadowy dimensions of their lodge, and sent its lights far up among the
masses of foliage above, gilding the dead and ragged branches. Withered
witchlike hags flitted around the blaze, and here for hour after hour sat
a circle of children and young girls, laughing and talking, their round
merry faces glowing in the ruddy light. We could hear the monotonous notes
of the drum from the Indian village, with the chant of the war song,
deadened in the distance, and the long chorus of quavering yells, where
the war dance was going on in the largest lodge. For several nights, too,
we could hear wild and mournful cries, rising and dying away like the
melancholy voice of a wolf. They came from the sisters and female
relatives of Mahto-Tatonka, who were gashing their limbs with knives, and
bewailing the death of Henry Chatillon's squaw. The hour would grow late
before all retired to rest in the camp. Then the embers of the fires would
be glowing dimly, the men would be stretched in their blankets on the
ground, and nothing could be heard but the restless motions of the crowded
horses.</p>
<p>I recall these scenes with a mixed feeling of pleasure and pain. At this
time I was so reduced by illness that I could seldom walk without reeling
like a drunken man, and when I rose from my seat upon the ground the
landscape suddenly grew dim before my eyes, the trees and lodges seemed to
sway to and fro, and the prairie to rise and fall like the swells of the
ocean. Such a state of things is by no means enviable anywhere. In a
country where a man's life may at any moment depend on the strength of his
arm, or it may be on the activity of his legs, it is more particularly
inconvenient. Medical assistance of course there was none; neither had I
the means of pursuing a system of diet; and sleeping on a damp ground,
with an occasional drenching from a shower, would hardly be recommended as
beneficial. I sometimes suffered the extremity of languor and exhaustion,
and though at the time I felt no apprehensions of the final result, I have
since learned that my situation was a critical one.</p>
<p>Besides other formidable inconveniences I owe it in a great measure to the
remote effects of that unlucky disorder that from deficient eyesight I am
compelled to employ the pen of another in taking down this narrative from
my lips; and I have learned very effectually that a violent attack of
dysentery on the prairie is a thing too serious for a joke. I tried repose
and a very sparing diet. For a long time, with exemplary patience, I
lounged about the camp, or at the utmost staggered over to the Indian
village, and walked faint and dizzy among the lodges. It would not do, and
I bethought me of starvation. During five days I sustained life on one
small biscuit a day. At the end of that time I was weaker than before, but
the disorder seemed shaken in its stronghold and very gradually I began to
resume a less rigid diet. No sooner had I done so than the same detested
symptoms revisited me; my old enemy resumed his pertinacious assaults, yet
not with his former violence or constancy, and though before I regained
any fair portion of my ordinary strength weeks had elapsed, and months
passed before the disorder left me, yet thanks to old habits of activity,
and a merciful Providence, I was able to sustain myself against it.</p>
<p>I used to lie languid and dreamy before our tent and muse on the past and
the future, and when most overcome with lassitude, my eyes turned always
toward the distant Black Hills. There is a spirit of energy and vigor in
mountains, and they impart it to all who approach their presence. At that
time I did not know how many dark superstitions and gloomy legends are
associated with those mountains in the minds of the Indians, but I felt an
eager desire to penetrate their hidden recesses, to explore the awful
chasms and precipices, the black torrents, the silent forests, that I
fancied were concealed there.</p>
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