<h2><SPAN name="chap01"></SPAN>CHAPTER I</h2>
<p class="poem">
I pray thee, shepherd, if that love or gold,<br/>
Can in this desert place buy entertainment,<br/>
Bring us where we may rest ourselves and feed.<br/>
—As you like it.</p>
<p>Much was said and written, at the time, concerning the policy of adding the
vast regions of Louisiana, to the already immense and but half-tenanted
territories of the United States. As the warmth of controversy however
subsided, and party considerations gave place to more liberal views, the wisdom
of the measure began to be generally conceded. It soon became apparent to the
meanest capacity, that, while nature had placed a barrier of desert to the
extension of our population in the west, the measure had made us the masters of
a belt of fertile country, which, in the revolutions of the day, might have
become the property of a rival nation. It gave us the sole command of the great
thoroughfare of the interior, and placed the countless tribes of savages, who
lay along our borders, entirely within our control; it reconciled conflicting
rights, and quieted national distrusts; it opened a thousand avenues to the
inland trade, and to the waters of the Pacific; and, if ever time or necessity
shall require a peaceful division of this vast empire, it assures us of a
neighbour that will possess our language, our religion, our institutions, and
it is also to be hoped, our sense of political justice.</p>
<p>Although the purchase was made in 1803, the spring of the succeeding year was
permitted to open, before the official prudence of the Spaniard, who held the
province for his European master, admitted the authority, or even of the
entrance of its new proprietors. But the forms of the transfer were no sooner
completed, and the new government acknowledged, than swarms of that restless
people, which is ever found hovering on the skirts of American society, plunged
into the thickets that fringed the right bank of the Mississippi, with the same
careless hardihood, as had already sustained so many of them in their toilsome
progress from the Atlantic states, to the eastern shores of the “father
of rivers.”<SPAN href="#linknote-1" name="linknoteref-1" id="linknoteref-1"><sup>[1]</sup></SPAN></p>
<p>Time was necessary to blend the numerous and affluent colonists of the lower
province with their new compatriots; but the thinner and more humble population
above, was almost immediately swallowed in the vortex which attended the tide
of instant emigration. The inroad from the east was a new and sudden
out-breaking of a people, who had endured a momentary restraint, after having
been rendered nearly resistless by success. The toils and hazards of former
undertakings were forgotten, as these endless and unexplored regions, with all
their fancied as well as real advantages, were laid open to their enterprise.
The consequences were such as might easily have been anticipated, from so
tempting an offering, placed, as it was, before the eyes of a race long trained
in adventure and nurtured in difficulties.</p>
<p>Thousands of the elders, of what were then called the New States<SPAN href="#linknote-2" name="linknoteref-2" id="linknoteref-2"><sup>[2]</sup></SPAN>,
broke up from the enjoyment of their hard-earned indulgences, and were to be
seen leading long files of descendants, born and reared in the forests of Ohio
and Kentucky, deeper into the land, in quest of that which might be termed,
without the aid of poetry, their natural and more congenial atmosphere. The
distinguished and resolute forester who first penetrated the wilds of the
latter state, was of the number. This adventurous and venerable patriarch was
now seen making his last remove; placing the “endless river”
between him and the multitude his own success had drawn around him, and seeking
for the renewal of enjoyments which were rendered worthless in his eyes, when
trammelled by the forms of human institutions.<SPAN href="#linknote-3"
name="linknoteref-3" id="linknoteref-3"><sup>[3]</sup></SPAN></p>
<p>In the pursuit of adventures such as these, men are ordinarily governed by
their habits or deluded by their wishes. A few, led by the phantoms of hope,
and ambitious of sudden affluence, sought the mines of the virgin territory;
but by far the greater portion of the emigrants were satisfied to establish
themselves along the margins of the larger water-courses, content with the rich
returns that the generous, alluvial, bottoms of the rivers never fail to bestow
on the most desultory industry. In this manner were communities formed with
magical rapidity; and most of those who witnessed the purchase of the empty
empire, have lived to see already a populous and sovereign state, parcelled
from its inhabitants, and received into the bosom of the national Union, on
terms of political equality.</p>
<p>The incidents and scenes which are connected with this legend, occurred in the
earliest periods of the enterprises which have led to so great and so speedy a
result.</p>
<p>The harvest of the first year of our possession had long been passed, and the
fading foliage of a few scattered trees was already beginning to exhibit the
hues and tints of autumn, when a train of wagons issued from the bed of a dry
rivulet, to pursue its course across the undulating surface, of what, in the
language of the country of which we write, is called a “rolling
prairie.” The vehicles, loaded with household goods and implements of
husbandry, the few straggling sheep and cattle that were herded in the rear,
and the rugged appearance and careless mien of the sturdy men who loitered at
the sides of the lingering teams, united to announce a band of emigrants
seeking for the Elderado of the West. Contrary to the usual practice of the men
of their caste, this party had left the fertile bottoms of the low country, and
had found its way, by means only known to such adventurers, across glen and
torrent, over deep morasses and arid wastes, to a point far beyond the usual
limits of civilised habitations. In their front were stretched those broad
plains, which extend, with so little diversity of character, to the bases of
the Rocky Mountains; and many long and dreary miles in their rear, foamed the
swift and turbid waters of La Platte.</p>
<p>The appearance of such a train, in that bleak and solitary place, was rendered
the more remarkable by the fact, that the surrounding country offered so
little, that was tempting to the cupidity of speculation, and, if possible,
still less that was flattering to the hopes of an ordinary settler of new
lands.</p>
<p>The meagre herbage of the prairie, promised nothing, in favour of a hard and
unyielding soil, over which the wheels of the vehicles rattled as lightly as if
they travelled on a beaten road; neither wagons nor beasts making any deeper
impression, than to mark that bruised and withered grass, which the cattle
plucked, from time to time, and as often rejected, as food too sour, for even
hunger to render palatable.</p>
<p>Whatever might be the final destination of these adventurers, or the secret
causes of their apparent security in so remote and unprotected a situation,
there was no visible sign of uneasiness, uncertainty, or alarm, among them.
Including both sexes, and every age, the number of the party exceeded twenty.</p>
<p>At some little distance in front of the whole, marched the individual, who, by
his position and air, appeared to be the leader of the band. He was a tall,
sun-burnt, man, past the middle age, of a dull countenance and listless manner.
His frame appeared loose and flexible; but it was vast, and in reality of
prodigious power. It was, only at moments, however, as some slight impediment
opposed itself to his loitering progress, that his person, which, in its
ordinary gait seemed so lounging and nerveless, displayed any of those
energies, which lay latent in his system, like the slumbering and unwieldy, but
terrible, strength of the elephant. The inferior lineaments of his countenance
were coarse, extended and vacant; while the superior, or those nobler parts
which are thought to affect the intellectual being, were low, receding and
mean.</p>
<p>The dress of this individual was a mixture of the coarsest vestments of a
husbandman with the leathern garments, that fashion as well as use, had in some
degree rendered necessary to one engaged in his present pursuits. There was,
however, a singular and wild display of prodigal and ill judged ornaments,
blended with his motley attire. In place of the usual deer-skin belt, he wore
around his body a tarnished silken sash of the most gaudy colours; the
buck-horn haft of his knife was profusely decorated with plates of silver; the
marten’s fur of his cap was of a fineness and shadowing that a queen
might covet; the buttons of his rude and soiled blanket-coat were of the
glittering coinage of Mexico; the stock of his rifle was of beautiful mahogany,
riveted and banded with the same precious metal, and the trinkets of no less
than three worthless watches dangled from different parts of his person. In
addition to the pack and the rifle which were slung at his back, together with
the well filled, and carefully guarded pouch and horn, he had carelessly cast a
keen and bright wood-axe across his shoulder, sustaining the weight of the
whole with as much apparent ease, as if he moved, unfettered in limb, and free
from incumbrance.</p>
<p>A short distance in the rear of this man, came a group of youths very similarly
attired, and bearing sufficient resemblance to each other, and to their leader,
to distinguish them as the children of one family. Though the youngest of their
number could not much have passed the period, that, in the nicer judgment of
the law, is called the age of discretion, he had proved himself so far worthy
of his progenitors as to have reared already his aspiring person to the
standard height of his race. There were one or two others, of different mould,
whose descriptions must however be referred to the regular course of the
narrative.</p>
<p>Of the females, there were but two who had arrived at womanhood; though several
white-headed, olive-skinned faces were peering out of the foremost wagon of the
train, with eyes of lively curiosity and characteristic animation. The elder of
the two adults, was the sallow and wrinkled mother of most of the party, and
the younger was a sprightly, active, girl, of eighteen, who in figure, dress,
and mien, seemed to belong to a station in society several gradations above
that of any one of her visible associates. The second vehicle was covered with
a top of cloth so tightly drawn, as to conceal its contents, with the nicest
care. The remaining wagons were loaded with such rude furniture and other
personal effects, as might be supposed to belong to one, ready at any moment to
change his abode, without reference to season or distance.</p>
<p>Perhaps there was little in this train, or in the appearance of its
proprietors, that is not daily to be encountered on the highways of this
changeable and moving country. But the solitary and peculiar scenery, in which
it was so unexpectedly exhibited, gave to the party a marked character of
wildness and adventure.</p>
<p>In the little valleys, which, in the regular formation of the land, occurred at
every mile of their progress, the view was bounded, on two of the sides, by the
gradual and low elevations, which gave name to the description of prairie we
have mentioned; while on the others, the meagre prospect ran off in long,
narrow, barren perspectives, but slightly relieved by a pitiful show of coarse,
though somewhat luxuriant vegetation. From the summits of the swells, the eye
became fatigued with the sameness and chilling dreariness of the landscape. The
earth was not unlike the Ocean, when its restless waters are heaving heavily,
after the agitation and fury of the tempest have begun to lessen. There was the
same waving and regular surface, the same absence of foreign objects, and the
same boundless extent to the view. Indeed so very striking was the resemblance
between the water and the land, that, however much the geologist might sneer at
so simple a theory, it would have been difficult for a poet not to have felt,
that the formation of the one had been produced by the subsiding dominion of
the other. Here and there a tall tree rose out of the bottoms, stretching its
naked branches abroad, like some solitary vessel; and, to strengthen the
delusion, far in the distance, appeared two or three rounded thickets, looming
in the misty horizon like islands resting on the waters. It is unnecessary to
warn the practised reader, that the sameness of the surface, and the low stands
of the spectators, exaggerated the distances; but, as swell appeared after
swell, and island succeeded island, there was a disheartening assurance that
long, and seemingly interminable, tracts of territory must be passed, before
the wishes of the humblest agriculturist could be realised.</p>
<p>Still, the leader of the emigrants steadily pursued his way, with no other
guide than the sun, turning his back resolutely on the abodes of civilisation,
and plunging, at each step, more deeply if not irretrievably, into the haunts
of the barbarous and savage occupants of the country. As the day drew nigher to
a close, however, his mind, which was, perhaps, incapable of maturing any
connected system of forethought, beyond that which related to the interests of
the present moment, became, in some slight degree, troubled with the care of
providing for the wants of the hours of darkness.</p>
<p>On reaching the crest of a swell that was a little higher than the usual
elevations, he lingered a minute, and cast a half curious eye, on either hand,
in quest of those well known signs, which might indicate a place, where the
three grand requisites of water, fuel and fodder were to be obtained in
conjunction.</p>
<p>It would seem that his search was fruitless; for after a few moments of
indolent and listless examination, he suffered his huge frame to descend the
gentle declivity, in the same sluggish manner that an over fatted beast would
have yielded to the downward pressure.</p>
<p>His example was silently followed by those who succeeded him, though not until
the young men had manifested much more of interest, if not of concern in the
brief enquiry, which each, in his turn, made on gaining the same look-out. It
was now evident, by the tardy movements both of beasts and men, that the time
of necessary rest was not far distant. The matted grass of the lower land,
presented obstacles which fatigue began to render formidable, and the whip was
becoming necessary to urge the lingering teams to their labour. At this moment,
when, with the exception of the principal individual, a general lassitude was
getting the mastery of the travellers, and every eye was cast, by a sort of
common impulse, wistfully forward, the whole party was brought to a halt, by a
spectacle, as sudden as it was unexpected.</p>
<p>The sun had fallen below the crest of the nearest wave of the prairie, leaving
the usual rich and glowing train on its track. In the centre of this flood of
fiery light, a human form appeared, drawn against the gilded background, as
distinctly, and seemingly as palpable, as though it would come within the grasp
of any extended hand. The figure was colossal; the attitude musing and
melancholy, and the situation directly in the route of the travellers. But
imbedded, as it was, in its setting of garish light, it was impossible to
distinguish its just proportions or true character.</p>
<p>The effect of such a spectacle was instantaneous and powerful. The man in front
of the emigrants came to a stand, and remained gazing at the mysterious object,
with a dull interest, that soon quickened into superstitious awe. His sons, so
soon as the first emotions of surprise had a little abated, drew slowly around
him, and, as they who governed the teams gradually followed their example, the
whole party was soon condensed in one, silent, and wondering group.
Notwithstanding the impression of a supernatural agency was very general among
the travellers, the ticking of gun-locks was heard, and one or two of the
bolder youths cast their rifles forward, in readiness for service.</p>
<p>“Send the boys off to the right,” exclaimed the resolute wife and
mother, in a sharp, dissonant voice; “I warrant me, Asa, or Abner will
give some account of the creature!”</p>
<p>“It may be well enough, to try the rifle,” muttered a dull looking
man, whose features, both in outline and expression, bore no small resemblance
to the first speaker, and who loosened the stock of his piece and brought it
dexterously to the front, while delivering this opinion; “the Pawnee
Loups are said to be hunting by hundreds in the plains; if so, they’ll
never miss a single man from their tribe.”</p>
<p>“Stay!” exclaimed a soft toned, but alarmed female voice, which was
easily to be traced to the trembling lips of the younger of the two women;
“we are not altogether; it may be a friend!”</p>
<p>“Who is scouting, now?” demanded the father, scanning, at the same
time, the cluster of his stout sons, with a displeased and sullen eye.
“Put by the piece, put by the piece;” he continued, diverting the
other’s aim, with the finger of a giant, and with the air of one it might
be dangerous to deny. “My job is not yet ended; let us finish the little
that remains, in peace.”</p>
<p>The man, who had manifested so hostile an intention, appeared to understand the
other’s allusion, and suffered himself to be diverted from his object.
The sons turned their inquiring looks on the girl, who had so eagerly spoken,
to require an explanation; but, as if content with the respite she had obtained
for the stranger, she sunk back, in her seat, and chose to affect a maidenly
silence.</p>
<p>In the mean time, the hues of the heavens had often changed. In place of the
brightness, which had dazzled the eye, a gray and more sober light had
succeeded, and as the setting lost its brilliancy, the proportions of the
fanciful form became less exaggerated, and finally distinct. Ashamed to
hesitate, now that the truth was no longer doubtful, the leader of the party
resumed his journey, using the precaution, as he ascended the slight acclivity,
to release his own rifle from the strap, and to cast it into a situation more
convenient for sudden use.</p>
<p>There was little apparent necessity, however, for such watchfulness. From the
moment when it had thus unaccountably appeared, as it were, between the heavens
and the earth, the stranger’s figure had neither moved nor given the
smallest evidence of hostility. Had he harboured any such evil intention, the
individual who now came plainly into view, seemed but little qualified to
execute them.</p>
<p>A frame that had endured the hardships of more than eighty seasons, was not
qualified to awaken apprehension, in the breast of one as powerful as the
emigrant. Notwithstanding his years, and his look of emaciation, if not of
suffering, there was that about this solitary being, however, which said that
time, and not disease, had laid his hand heavily on him. His form had withered,
but it was not wasted. The sinews and muscles, which had once denoted great
strength, though shrunken, were still visible; and his whole figure had
attained an appearance of induration, which, if it were not for the well known
frailty of humanity, would have seemed to bid defiance to the further
approaches of decay. His dress was chiefly of skins, worn with the hair to the
weather; a pouch and horn were suspended from his shoulders; and he leaned on a
rifle of uncommon length, but which, like its owner, exhibited the wear of long
and hard service.</p>
<p>As the party drew nigher to this solitary being, and came within a distance to
be heard, a low growl issued from the grass at his feet, and then, a tall,
gaunt, toothless, hound, arose lazily from his lair, and shaking himself, made
some show of resisting the nearer approach of the travellers.</p>
<p>“Down, Hector, down,” said his master, in a voice, that was a
little tremulous and hollow with age. “What have ye to do, pup, with men
who journey on their lawful callings?”</p>
<p>“Stranger, if you ar’ much acquainted in this country,” said
the leader of the emigrants, “can you tell a traveller where he may find
necessaries for the night?”</p>
<p>“Is the land filled on the other side of the Big River?” demanded
the old man, solemnly, and without appearing to hearken to the other’s
question; “or why do I see a sight, I had never thought to behold
again?”</p>
<p>“Why, there is country left, it is true, for such as have money, and
ar’ not particular in the choice,” returned the emigrant;
“but to my taste, it is getting crowdy. What may a man call the distance,
from this place to the nighest point on the main river?”</p>
<p>“A hunted deer could not cool his sides, in the Mississippi, without
travelling a weary five hundred miles.”</p>
<p>“And what may you name the district, hereaway?”</p>
<p>“By what name,” returned the old man, pointing significantly
upward, “would you call the spot, where you see yonder cloud?”</p>
<p>The emigrant looked at the other, like one who did not comprehend his meaning,
and who half suspected he was trifled with, but he contented himself by
saying—</p>
<p>“You ar’ but a new inhabitant, like myself, I reckon, stranger,
otherwise you would not be backward in helping a traveller to some advice;
words cost but little, and sometimes lead to friendships.”</p>
<p>“Advice is not a gift, but a debt that the old owe to the young. What
would you wish to know?”</p>
<p>“Where I may camp for the night. I’m no great difficulty maker, as
to bed and board; but, all old journeyers, like myself, know the virtue of
sweet water, and a good browse for the cattle.”</p>
<p>“Come then with me, and you shall be master of both; and little more is
it that I can offer on this hungry prairie.”</p>
<p>As the old man was speaking, he raised his heavy rifle to his shoulder, with a
facility a little remarkable for his years and appearance, and without further
words led the way over the acclivity to the adjacent bottom.</p>
<p class="footnote">
<SPAN name="linknote-1" id="linknote-1"></SPAN> <SPAN href="#linknoteref-1">[1]</SPAN>
The Mississippi is thus termed in several of the Indian languages. The reader
will gain a more just idea of the importance of this stream, if he recalls to
mind the fact, that the Missouri and the Mississippi are properly the same
river. Their united lengths cannot be greatly short of four thousand miles.</p>
<p class="footnote">
<SPAN name="linknote-2" id="linknote-2"></SPAN> <SPAN href="#linknoteref-2">[2]</SPAN>
All the states admitted to the American Union, since the revolution, are
called New States, with the exception of Vermont: that had claims before the
war; which were not, however, admitted until a later day.</p>
<p class="footnote">
<SPAN name="linknote-3" id="linknote-3"></SPAN> <SPAN href="#linknoteref-3">[3]</SPAN>
Colonel Boon, the patriarch of Kentucky. This venerable and hardy pioneer
of civilisation emigrated to an estate three hundred miles west of the
Mississippi, in his ninety-second year, because he found a population of ten to
the square mile, inconveniently crowded!</p>
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