<h3> CHAPTER IV </h3>
<h4>
THE MANDAN INDIANS
</h4>
<p>It was towards the end of November when La Verendrye and his party
reached the point where the Mandans had promised to meet them. When he
arrived no one was on the spot; but presently, after he had encamped, a
Mandan chief appeared with thirty followers. This chief advanced to La
Verendrye and presented him with Indian corn in the ear and with a roll
of Indian tobacco. These were tokens of friendship. He told La
Verendrye how glad he and his countrymen were to welcome him to their
villages, and begged him to consider the Mandans as his children.</p>
<p>La Verendrye was surprised to find the appearance of the Mandans very
much like that of the other tribes he had met. Stories told by the
Crees and the Assiniboines had prepared him to find them of a different
type, a type like that of the white men. In reality they looked like
the Assiniboines and dressed
in the same fashion. Their clothing
was scanty enough, for it consisted of only a buffalo robe worn from
the shoulders. It was clear now that the Indians had been telling him
not what was true but what they thought he would like to hear. 'I knew
then,' he says shrewdly, 'that a heavy discount must be taken off
everything that an Indian tells you.'</p>
<p>The Mandan chief invited La Verendrye to be his guest in the nearest
village, and the whole party made ready to continue their journey to
that point. Then the chief made a speech to the Assiniboines, very
friendly in tone, but artfully intended to make them uneasy and send
them back home. He was really anxious to have the white men as his
guests, but he was not at all anxious to have as guests and to be
obliged to feed an entire village of Assiniboines; and so, thinking to
get rid of them, he played on their well-known fear of the fiery Sioux.
'We thank you,' he said to them, 'for having brought the French to see
us. They could not have arrived at a better time. The Sioux are on
the war-path, and may be here at any moment. We know the valour and
courage of the French, and also of the Assiniboines, and we hope that
you will both help us to defend ourselves from the Sioux.'</p>
<p>La Verendrye was at first as much imposed upon by this story as were
the Assiniboines, but with a very different effect. They were
dismayed, while he rejoiced at the opportunity of having at last a fair
chance to avenge the cruel death of his son. After the speech, the
Mandan chief took him aside, and explained that the alarm was merely a
trick to get rid of the Assiniboines. They had not food enough at the
village, he said, to satisfy such a hungry horde. But, to the surprise
and disgust of the chief, the Assiniboines swallowed their fears and
decided to go forward. At first, in their terror, the majority of the
tribe had thought it better to turn back; but one of their old chiefs
shamed them into a different course. 'Do not think,' he said, in
scornful accents, 'that our Father [La Verendrye] is a coward,' and he
looked about him at the young Assiniboine warriors until each felt that
he himself was branded as a coward. 'I know him,' he continued,
'better than you do, and I tell you that the Sioux cannot frighten him
or any of his men. What will he think of us? At our request, he went
out of his way to visit our village. We promised to conduct him to the
Mandans, and to bring him safely back to his fort. And now you talk of
abandoning him, because you fear the Sioux. This must never be.
Let those of you who are faint-hearted remain here in camp with the
women; but let those who are without fear follow our father.' After
this scornful eloquence there was no further talk of turning back.</p>
<p>Early on the following morning the camp broke up, and the whole party,
French and Assiniboines and Mandans, marched across the plains towards
the Mandan village. One can imagine the striking picture made up by
the little party of white men in their picturesque costumes, surrounded
by hundreds of half-naked savages. Had the Indians cared to exercise
their power, they might have overwhelmed the French at any moment, but
apparently they had no thought of doing so. Indeed it is quite true
that the Indians of North America, when first they met white men,
treated them in nearly every case with the utmost friendship. Only
after the Indians had been deceived or betrayed by some rascals among
the white men did they learn to look upon them as enemies and become
cruel and treacherous in dealing with them.</p>
<p>When La Verendrye had travelled some distance from the camp, he found
that the bag
containing his papers and many other things that
would be required at the Mandan villages had been stolen by one of the
Assiniboines. The thief, he also learned, had made off with his spoil.
Instantly he sent two young warriors to secure him. The culprit was
overtaken on the following day and the bag was recovered. The
pursuers, however, instead of bringing it back to La Verendrye, carried
it on to their village to keep for him until his return. This singular
conduct was due to their fear of the Sioux. The white man's bag would
be safe at the Assiniboine village, but if they ventured to carry it
back to La Verendrye they were not so sure that either it or their own
scalps would be safe at the Mandan village, with the ferocious Sioux
hovering about. They did not know, of course, that the story of the
Sioux was nothing but a hoax.</p>
<p>When La Verendrye arrived within a few miles of the Mandan village, he
found awaiting him another party of Mandans under two of their chiefs.
They had lighted a camp-fire and had brought food for their guests.
The chiefs welcomed him, led him to the place of honour beside the
fire, and presented him with some of their native dishes—corn pounded
into a paste and baked in the coals and something
that looked like
a pumpkin pie without the pastry. The party smoked the pipe of peace
and carried on a rather clumsy conversation by means of an interpreter.
Then they resumed the journey and presently the Mandan village appeared
in sight. If the explorer had been disappointed in finding the Mandans
very similar in appearance to other western tribes, now at least he was
gratified to find their buildings more elaborate and interesting than
any he had before met with. The village was in fact a fort, apparently
strong enough to protect the inhabitants from anything less powerful
than artillery, of which of course they had no knowledge.</p>
<p>La Verendrye, knowing that the Indians were always impressed by an
imposing ceremony, now drew up his men in military order. He told his
son Fran�ois to march in front, bearing the flag of France. The
Mandans, who looked upon the explorer as a great white chief, would not
permit him to walk, but carried him upon their shoulders to the gate of
the fort. Naturally he did not like this mode of travel, but he
submitted to it for fear of displeasing his hosts. As they drew near
the fort, he ordered his men to fire a volley as a salute to the
Mandans. The
principal chiefs and warriors flocked out to meet
him, and escorted him within their walls. When he marched in with his
force, he saw the ramparts crowded with men, women, and children, who
looked with astonishment upon the first white men they had ever seen.
The principal chief of the tribe led La Verendrye into his own lodge,
and told him to consider it his home so long as he cared to remain in
the village. When the two entered the lodge a crowd of Mandans
followed and the place became suffocating. La Verendrye told the crowd
that they should have many opportunities later to see him, and after
some difficulty he managed to have the place cleared.</p>
<p>This, however, was not effected before the unfortunate explorer had
suffered another loss. He found that, in the confusion, an
enterprising Indian had snatched the bag of presents from one of his
men, and had made off with it. This was serious. The bag contained
nearly all the gifts which he had brought for the chiefs of the
Mandans, and he feared that these chiefs might now look coldly upon a
white man who was unable to offer the customary presents. He explained
what had happened to the principal chief. The chief seemed very much
put out and told La Verendrye for his
consolation that there were
a good many rascals among the Mandans. Later, when the Assiniboines
told the chief that he was himself the thief, he made the weak retort
that one of his accusers might be the culprit. He promised to do his
best to recover the bag, but La Verendrye never saw it again.</p>
<p>In a day or two the Assiniboines took leave of La Verendrye, and, much
to the relief of the Mandans, prepared to return to their own village.
Before their departure, the chief of the Assiniboines made a speech to
the Mandans. 'We are leaving you our father,' he said. 'Take great
care of him, and of all the French. Learn to know them, for they are
wise; they know how to do everything. We love our father, and we also
fear him. Do as we do.' The Mandans promised to take every care of
the visitors. Everything the village contained, they said, was at
their service for the asking. They begged that the white chief would
count them among the members of his family. In compliance with their
wish, La Verendrye went through the usual ceremony of placing his hands
on the heads of each of the chiefs. By this ceremony they became his
'children.' The Assiniboines, though they had taken leave of La
Verendrye,
still delayed their departure. The Mandans, alarmed at
the quantities of provisions their unwelcome guests required, again
spread the report that the Sioux were approaching. Indeed, they said,
several Mandan hunters had caught sight of them. This time the ruse
succeeded. The Assiniboines, in a panic of alarm, marched off in great
haste, lest the Sioux should intercept them before they could reach
their own country.</p>
<p>Further troubles awaited La Verendrye. The day following the departure
of the Assiniboines he found that his Cree interpreter had gone off
with them, although he had promised faithfully to remain. Even with
this interpreter communications with the Mandans had been difficult.
Before La Verendrye's thoughts expressed in French could reach the
Mandans, they had to pass through the medium of three other languages.
One of La Verendrye's sons, who understood Cree, was able to translate
the explorer's questions into that language; then the Cree interpreter
put the questions into Assiniboine; and several of the Mandans were
sufficiently familiar with the language of the Assiniboines to complete
the chain and express the ideas in their own tongue. With the Cree
interpreter gone, the problem of
communication became much more
difficult. Indeed, the only method that remained of carrying on
conversation with the Mandans was by means of signs and gestures.</p>
<p>One of La, Verendrye's principal reasons for visiting the Mandans had
been to find out from them as much as possible of the country which lay
westward. He had hoped that they would be able to tell him something
definite about the Western Sea, something of the best way of reaching
it, and of the tribes he should meet on the way. He had had very
little time to put questions before his interpreter deserted, and now
he feared that he should have to turn back, because he had no means of
getting information from the Mandans. With a great deal of difficulty
he managed to learn that there were six Mandan villages or forts, some
on one side of the Missouri, some on the other, and that farther down
this river lived two other tribes, the Panana and the Pananis, who were
at war with the Mandans, although they had formerly been their fast
friends. The Mandans told him by signs that as one went down the
Missouri it became very wide, and that there a race dwelt who were
white like himself. These people, they said, rode on horseback both
when they hunted
and when they went to war; they wore armour and
fought with lances and sabres, which they handled with great skill.
Their forts and houses were of stone and they cultivated their fields.
A whole summer was necessary to reach their country from the Mandan
villages.</p>
<p>La Verendrye did not know how much of this to believe, and he was not
even sure that he correctly understood what the Mandans tried to convey
to him by signs. He was not at all certain that the quarter in which
these people, so different from the Mandans, were said to live was the
direction it was necessary to take in order to reach the Western Sea.
He did not know the truth, that the river by which he stood, the
Missouri, emptied into the Mississippi, and that the settlements spoken
of by the Mandans were probably the Spanish settlements on the lower
waters of the Mississippi. In order to extend his information, he used
every agency to learn as much as possible about the Mandans themselves.
He sent his son Fran�ois to another village near by, to examine it and
to make further inquiries.</p>
<p>La Verendrye himself made close observations. He walked about the
village in which he was quartered, and examined the
fortifications
with a great deal of interest. There were about one hundred and thirty
cabins within the walls; the streets and squares were laid out
regularly and were kept remarkably neat and clean. The smooth, wide
ramparts were built of timber strengthened with cross-pieces. At each
corner was a bastion, and the fort was surrounded by a ditch fifteen
feet deep and from fifteen to eighteen feet wide. He was astonished to
find such elaborate fortifications among a savage tribe. Nowhere else
in the New World had he seen anything of the kind.</p>
<p>The dwellings of the Mandans were large and comfortable; they were
divided into several rooms and round the walls were beds in the form of
bunks. They had earthen vessels in which they cooked their food. The
women made very neat baskets of wicker-work. The most remarkable thing
about these people was their prudence for the future. They had
storerooms underground in which they stored the dressed skins which
they preserved to trade with neighbouring tribes for guns and
ammunition; they had products of Europe in use, though they had not yet
come into direct contact with Europeans. In these storerooms they
preserved also dried meat and grain for food in the winter. This
foresight
impressed La Verendrye. Most of the Indian tribes lived
only in the present; when they had food they feasted upon it from
morning to night, and when their provisions were gone they starved.
The Mandans, however, kept on hand an ample supply of food, both for
their own use and for that of strangers who might visit them. They
amused themselves with rude sports. Among these La Verendrye mentions
a game of ball, but he does not describe it. Probably it was the game
of lacrosse, which was played by many of the Indian tribes long before
white men came to copy it from them.</p>
<p>After an absence of a few days, Fran�ois de La Verendrye returned from
the village which he had visited. He had been warmly welcomed. He
reported that the village was much larger than the one his father was
living in, and that it was fortified in the same way. He had tried to
question the Mandans of this village, but could make nothing out of
their answers. They were so impatient to speak that they would
constantly interrupt one another; when asked about one thing they would
answer about another, because they did not really understand the
question. The Mandans tried to make up in hospitality for
their
inability to answer the Frenchman's questions. 'As we found that it
was a waste of time to question them, we had to fall back on feasting
the whole time we were with them, and even then we could not attend
nearly all the feasts to which we were invited.'</p>
<SPAN name="img-068"></SPAN>
<center>
<ANTIMG CLASS="imgcenter" SRC="images/img-068.jpg" ALT="Mandan girls. From Pritchard's 'Natural History of Man.'" BORDER="2" WIDTH="708" HEIGHT="497">
<H4 CLASS="h4center" STYLE="width: 708px">
Mandan girls. <br/>
From Pritchard's 'Natural History of Man.'
</h4>
</center>
<p>Early in December La Verendrye decided to leave the Mandans and to make
the long return journey to Fort La Reine. He now saw that, even if he
could gain useful information from the Mandans about the nearest way to
the Western Sea, it would be impossible to attempt the journey without
a supply of presents for the tribes he should meet. To get these
presents he must return to the fort, but he would leave two of his men
with the Mandans for the winter, in order to learn the language. Then,
when he returned, he would have interpreters upon whom he could rely.
When he told the Mandans by signs that he must leave them, they seemed
sorry to lose him, and loaded him with provisions for his journey.
They also promised to take care of his two men during his absence. He
distributed among them all the small articles which he had in his
stores, particularly the needles, which they highly prized. To the
principal chief he gave a flag, and a lead tablet
bearing an
inscription to the effect that he had taken possession of the Missouri
country in the name of the king of France. This inscription the chief
promised to preserve as his greatest treasure.</p>
<p>Misfortune, however, still dogged the path of La Verendrye. The day
before that on which he had arranged to leave for the north, he was
taken violently ill and for three days could not move from his bed. As
ill luck would have it, his stock of medicines was in the bag which the
Assiniboines had carried off to their village, so that he could do
nothing for himself until he reached that place. About the middle of
December he was a little better, and made up his mind to attempt the
journey. When he and his men set out on their long march across the
plains, it was bitterly cold. They had no means of making a fire, and
were compelled to sleep at night on the open prairie in a half-frozen
condition. We can imagine what La Verendrye must have suffered before
at last he reached the Assiniboine village, more dead than alive.
After a few days' rest, he managed to make his way slowly to Fort La
Reine. 'Never in my life,' he says, 'did I endure so much misery,
pain, and fatigue as on that journey.'</p>
<p>While at the Assiniboine village La Verendrye reproached the Indians
with having lied to him about the Mandans, so as to lead him to believe
that they were white men. They replied that he had misunderstood them;
that they had not referred to the Mandans, but to another nation who
lived farther down the river. One of the Assiniboines sprang up before
him and exclaimed: 'I am the man best able to talk to you about this
matter. Last summer I killed one of this nation of white men. He was
covered with iron armour. If I had not killed his horse first, I
should myself have been destroyed.' La Verendrye asked him what he had
brought back to prove his story. 'I had no chance to bring anything,'
he said. 'When I was about to cut off his head, I saw some men on
horseback, who were trying to prevent my retreat, and I had much
difficulty in making my escape. I had to throw away everything I had,
even to my blanket, and ran away naked.'</p>
<p>La Verendrye thought that this man was probably telling the truth.
What he said agreed fairly well with what he had himself heard from the
Mandans, and was applicable probably to the Spaniards. But he was
still as far away as ever from any direct information
about the
road he should follow to reach the Western Sea, and this was first and
always the thought that occupied his mind. He hoped that the men whom
he had left behind to winter with the Mandans would be able to obtain
from them the facts for which he was so anxiously waiting, and he
looked forward eagerly to the spring, when they were to return to Fort
La Reine with such news as they had been able to gather.</p>
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