<h2><SPAN name="chap20"></SPAN>CHAPTER XX</h2>
<p class="poem">
Welcome, ancient Pistol.<br/>
—Shakespeare.</p>
<p>It was not long before the trapper pointed out the commanding person of
Mahtoree, as the leader of the Siouxes. This chief, who had been among the last
to obey the vociferous summons of Weucha, no sooner reached the spot where his
whole party was now gathered, than he threw himself from his horse, and
proceeded to examine the marks of the extraordinary trail, with that degree of
dignity and attention which became his high and responsible station. The
warriors, for it was but too evident that they were to a man of that fearless
and ruthless class, awaited the result of his investigation with patient
reserve; none but a few of the principal braves, presuming even to speak, while
their leader was thus gravely occupied. It was several minutes before Mahtoree
seemed satisfied. He then directed his eyes along the ground to those several
places where Ishmael had found the same revolting evidences of the passage of
some bloody struggle, and motioned to his people to follow.</p>
<p>The whole band advanced in a body towards the thicket, until they came to a
halt, within a few yards of the precise spot, where Esther had stimulated her
sluggish sons to break into the cover. The reader will readily imagine that the
trapper and his companions were not indifferent observers of so threatening a
movement. The old man summoned all who were capable of bearing arms to his
side, and demanded, in very unequivocal terms, though in a voice that was
suitably lowered, in order to escape the ears of their dangerous neighbours,
whether they were disposed to make battle for their liberty, or whether they
should try the milder expedient of conciliation. As it was a subject in which
all had an equal interest, he put the question as to a council of war, and not
without some slight exhibition of the lingering vestiges of a nearly extinct
military pride. Paul and the Doctor were diametrically opposed to each other in
opinion; the former declaring for an immediate appeal to arms, and the latter
was warmly espousing the policy of pacific measures. Middleton, who saw that
there was great danger of a hot verbal dispute between two men, who were
governed by feelings so diametrically opposed, saw fit to assume the office of
arbiter; or rather to decide the question, his situation making him a sort of
umpire. He also leaned to the side of peace, for he evidently saw that, in
consequence of the vast superiority of their enemies, violence would
irretrievably lead to their destruction.</p>
<p>The trapper listened to the reasons of the young soldier with great attention;
and, as they were given with the steadiness of one who did not suffer
apprehension to blind his judgment, they did not fail to produce a suitable
impression.</p>
<p>“It is rational,” rejoined the trapper, when the other had
delivered his reasons; “it is very rational, for what man cannot move
with his strength he must circumvent with his wits. It is reason that makes him
stronger than the buffaloe, and swifter than the moose. Now stay you here, and
keep yourselves close. My life and my traps are but of little value, when the
welfare of so many human souls are concerned; and, moreover, I may say that I
know the windings of Indian cunning. Therefore will I go alone upon the
prairie. It may so happen, that I can yet draw the eyes of a Sioux from this
spot and give you time and room to fly.”</p>
<p>As if resolved to listen to no remonstrance, the old man quietly shouldered his
rifle, and moving leisurely through the thicket, he issued on the plain, at a
point whence he might first appear before the eyes of the Siouxes, without
exciting their suspicions that he came from its cover.</p>
<p>The instant that the figure of a man dressed in the garb of a hunter, and
bearing the well known and much dreaded rifle, appeared before the eyes of the
Siouxes, there was a sensible, though a suppressed sensation in the band. The
artifice of the trapper had so far succeeded, as to render it extremely
doubtful whether he came from some point on the open prairie, or from the
thicket; though the Indians still continued to cast frequent and suspicious
glances at the cover. They had made their halt at the distance of an
arrow-flight from the bushes; but when the stranger came sufficiently nigh to
show that the deep coating of red and brown, which time and exposure had given
to his features, was laid upon the original colour of a Pale-face, they slowly
receded from the spot, until they reached a distance that might defeat the aim
of fire-arms.</p>
<p>In the mean time the old man continued to advance, until he had got nigh enough
to make himself heard without difficulty. Here he stopped, and dropping his
rifle to the earth, he raised his hand with the palm outward, in token of
peace. After uttering a few words of reproach to his hound, who watched the
savage group with eyes that seemed to recognise them, he spoke in the Sioux
tongue—</p>
<p>“My brothers are welcome,” he said, cunningly constituting himself
the master of the region in which they had met, and assuming the offices of
hospitality. “They are far from their villages, and are hungry. Will they
follow to my lodge, to eat and sleep?”</p>
<p>No sooner was his voice heard, than the yell of pleasure, which burst from a
dozen mouths, convinced the sagacious trapper, that he also was recognised.
Feeling that it was too late to retreat, he profited by the confusion which
prevailed among them, while Weucha was explaining his character, to advance,
until he was again face to face with the redoubtable Mahtoree. The second
interview between these two men, each of whom was extraordinary in his way, was
marked by the usual caution of the frontiers. They stood, for nearly a minute,
examining each other without speaking.</p>
<p>“Where are your young men?” sternly demanded the Teton chieftain,
after he found that the immovable features of the trapper refused to betray any
of their master’s secrets, under his intimidating look.</p>
<p>“The Long-knives do not come in bands to trap the beaver? I am
alone.”</p>
<p>“Your head is white, but you have a forked tongue. Mahtoree has been in
your camp. He knows that you are not alone. Where is your young wife, and the
warrior that I found upon the prairie?”</p>
<p>“I have no wife. I have told my brother that the woman and her friend
were strangers. The words of a grey head should be heard, and not forgotten.
The Dahcotahs found travellers asleep, and they thought they had no need of
horses. The women and children of a Pale-face are not used to go far on foot.
Let them be sought where you left them.”</p>
<p>The eyes of the Teton flashed fire as he answered—</p>
<p>“They are gone: but Mahtoree is a wise chief, and his eyes can see a
great distance!”</p>
<p>“Does the partisan of the Tetons see men on these naked fields?”
retorted the trapper, with great steadiness of mien. “I am very old, and
my eyes grow dim. Where do they stand?” The chief remained silent a
moment, as if he disdained to contest any further the truth of a fact,
concerning which he was already satisfied. Then pointing to the traces on the
earth, he said, with a sudden transition to mildness, in his eye and
manner—</p>
<p>“My father has learnt wisdom, in many winters; can he tell me whose
moccasin has left this trail?”</p>
<p>“There have been wolves and buffaloes on the prairies; and there may have
been cougars too.”</p>
<p>Mahtoree glanced his eye at the thicket, as if he thought the latter suggestion
not impossible. Pointing to the place, he ordered his young men to reconnoitre
it more closely, cautioning them, at the same time, with a stern look at the
trapper, to beware of treachery from the Big-knives. Three or four half-naked,
eager-looking youths lashed their horses at the word, and darted away to obey
the mandate. The old man trembled a little for the discretion of Paul, when he
saw this demonstration. The Tetons encircled the place two or three times,
approaching nigher and nigher at each circuit, and then galloped back to their
leader to report that the copse seemed empty. Notwithstanding the trapper
watched the eye of Mahtoree, to detect the inward movements of his mind, and if
possible to anticipate, in order to direct his suspicions, the utmost sagacity
of one so long accustomed to study the cold habits of the Indian race, could
however detect no symptom, or expression, that denoted how far he credited or
distrusted this intelligence. Instead of replying to the information of his
scouts, he spoke kindly to his horse, and motioning to a youth to receive the
bridle, or rather halter, by which he governed the animal, he took the trapper
by the arm, and led him a little apart from the rest of the band.</p>
<p>“Has my brother been a warrior?” said the wily Teton, in a tone
that he intended should be conciliating.</p>
<p>“Do the leaves cover the trees in the season of fruits? Go. The Dahcotahs
have not seen as many warriors living as I have looked on in their blood! But
what signifies idle remembrancing,” he added in English, “when
limbs grow stiff, and sight is failing!”</p>
<p>The chief regarded him a moment with a severe look, as if he would lay bare the
falsehood he had heard; but meeting in the calm eye and steady mien of the
trapper a confirmation of the truth of what he said, he took the hand of the
old man and laid it gently on his head, in token of the respect that was due to
the other’s years and experience.</p>
<p>“Why then do the Big-knives tell their red brethren to bury the
tomahawk,” he said, “when their own young men never forget that
they are braves, and meet each other so often with bloody hands?”</p>
<p>“My nation is more numerous than the buffaloes on the prairies, or the
pigeons in the air. Their quarrels are frequent; yet their warriors are few.
None go out on the war-path but they who are gifted with the qualities of a
brave, and therefore such see many battles.”</p>
<p>“It is not so—my father is mistaken,” returned Mahtoree,
indulging in a smile of exulting penetration, at the very instant he corrected
the force of his denial, in deference to the years and services of one so aged.
“The Big-knives are very wise, and they are men; all of them would be
warriors. They would leave the Red-skins to dig roots and hoe the corn. But a
Dahcotah is not born to live like a woman; he must strike the Pawnee and the
Omahaw, or he will lose the name of his fathers.”</p>
<p>“The Master of Life looks with an open eye on his children, who die in a
battle that is fought for the right; but he is blind, and his ears are shut to
the cries of an Indian, who is killed when plundering, or doing evil to his
neighbour.”</p>
<p>“My father is old,” said Mahtoree, looking at his aged companion,
with an expression of irony, that sufficiently denoted he was one of those who
overstep the trammels of education, and who are perhaps a little given to abuse
the mental liberty they thus obtain. “He is very old: has he made a
journey to the far country; and has he been at the trouble to come back, to
tell the young men what he has seen?”</p>
<p>“Teton,” returned the trapper, throwing the breach of his rifle to
the earth with startling vehemence, and regarding his companion with steady
serenity, “I have heard that there are men, among my people, who study
their great medicines until they believe themselves to be gods, and who laugh
at all faith except in their own vanities. It may be true. It is true; for I
have seen them. When man is shut up in towns and schools, with his own follies,
it may be easy to believe himself greater than the Master of Life; but a
warrior, who lives in a house with the clouds for its roof, where he can at any
moment look both at the heavens and at the earth, and who daily sees the power
of the Great Spirit, should be more humble. A Dahcotah chieftain ought to be
too wise to laugh at justice.”</p>
<p>The crafty Mahtoree, who saw that his free-thinking was not likely to produce a
favourable impression on the old man, instantly changed his ground, by alluding
to the more immediate subject of their interview. Laying his hand gently on the
shoulder of the trapper, he led him forward, until they both stood within fifty
feet of the margin of the thicket. Here he fastened his penetrating eyes on the
other’s honest countenance, and continued the discourse—</p>
<p>“If my father has hid his young men in the bush, let him tell them to
come forth. You see that a Dahcotah is not afraid. Mahtoree is a great chief! A
warrior, whose head is white, and who is about to go to the Land of Spirits,
cannot have a tongue with two ends, like a serpent.”</p>
<p>“Dahcotah, I have told no lie. Since the Great Spirit made me a man, I
have lived in the wilderness, or on these naked plains, without lodge or
family. I am a hunter and go on my path alone.”</p>
<p>“My father has a good carabine. Let him point it in the bush and
fire.”</p>
<p>The old man hesitated a moment, and then slowly prepared himself to give this
delicate assurance of the truth of what he said, without which he plainly
perceived the suspicions of his crafty companion could not be lulled. As he
lowered his rifle, his eye, although greatly dimmed and weakened by age, ran
over the confused collection of objects, that lay embedded amid the
party-coloured foliage of the thicket, until it succeeded in catching a glimpse
of the brown covering of the stem of a small tree. With this object in view, he
raised the piece to a level and fired. The bullet had no sooner glided from the
barrel than a tremor seized the hands of the trapper, which, had it occurred a
moment sooner, would have utterly disqualified him for so hazardous an
experiment. A frightful silence succeeded the report, during which he expected
to hear the shrieks of the females, and then, as the smoke whirled away in the
wind, he caught a view of the fluttering bark, and felt assured that all his
former skill was not entirely departed from him. Dropping the piece to the
earth, he turned again to his companion with an air of the utmost composure,
and demanded—</p>
<p>“Is my brother satisfied?”</p>
<p>“Mahtoree is a chief of the Dahcotahs,” returned the cunning Teton,
laying his hand on his chest, in acknowledgment of the other’s sincerity.
“He knows that a warrior, who has smoked at so many council-fires, until
his head has grown white, would not be found in wicked company. But did not my
father once ride on a horse, like a rich chief of the Pale-faces, instead of
travelling on foot like a hungry Konza?”</p>
<p>“Never! The Wahcondah has given me legs, and he has given me resolution
to use them. For sixty summers and winters did I journey in the woods of
America, and ten tiresome years have I dwelt on these open fields, without
finding need to call often upon the gifts of the other creatur’s of the
Lord to carry me from place to place.”</p>
<p>“If my father has so long lived in the shade, why has he come upon the
prairies? The sun will scorch him.”</p>
<p>The old man looked sorrowfully about for a moment, and then turning with a
confidential air to the other, he replied—</p>
<p>“I passed the spring, summer, and autumn of life among the trees. The
winter of my days had come, and found me where I loved to be, in the
quiet—ay, and in the honesty of the woods! Teton, then I slept happily,
where my eyes could look up through the branches of the pines and the beeches,
to the very dwelling of the Good Spirit of my people. If I had need to open my
heart to him, while his fires were burning above my head, the door was open and
before my eyes. But the axes of the choppers awoke me. For a long time my ears
heard nothing but the uproar of clearings. I bore it like a warrior and a man;
there was a reason that I should bear it: but when that reason was ended, I
bethought me to get beyond the accursed sounds. It was trying to the courage
and to the habits, but I had heard of these vast and naked fields, and I came
hither to escape the wasteful temper of my people. Tell me, Dahcotah, have I
not done well?”</p>
<p>The trapper laid his long lean finger on the naked shoulder of the Indian as he
ended, and seemed to demand his felicitations on his ingenuity and success,
with a ghastly smile, in which triumph was singularly blended with regret. His
companion listened intently, and replied to the question by saying, in the
sententious manner of his race—</p>
<p>“The head of my father is very grey; he has always lived with men, and he
has seen everything. What he does is good; what he speaks is wise. Now let him
say, is he sure that he is a stranger to the Big-knives, who are looking for
their beasts on every side of the prairies and cannot find them?”</p>
<p>“Dahcotah, what I have said is true. I live alone, and never do I mingle
with men whose skins are white, if—”</p>
<p>His mouth was suddenly closed by an interruption that was as mortifying as it
was unexpected. The words were still on his tongue, when the bushes on the side
of the thicket where they stood, opened, and the whole of the party whom he had
just left, and in whose behalf he was endeavouring to reconcile his love of
truth to the necessity of prevaricating, came openly into view. A pause of mute
astonishment succeeded this unlooked-for spectacle. Then Mahtoree, who did not
suffer a muscle or a joint to betray the wonder and surprise he actually
experienced, motioned towards the advancing friends of the trapper with an air
of assumed civility, and a smile, that lighted his fierce, dark, visage, as the
glare of the setting sun reveals the volume and load of the cloud, that is
charged to bursting with the electric fluid. He however disdained to speak, or
to give any other evidence of his intentions than by calling to his side the
distant band, who sprang forward at his beck, with the alacrity of willing
subordinates.</p>
<p>In the mean time the friends of the old man continued to advance. Middleton
himself was foremost, supporting the light and aerial looking figure of Inez,
on whose anxious countenance he cast such occasional glances of tender interest
as, in similar circumstances, a father would have given to his child. Paul led
Ellen, close in their rear. But while the eye of the bee-hunter did not neglect
his blooming companion, it scowled angrily, resembling more the aspect of the
sullen and retreating bear than the soft intelligence of a favoured suitor.
Obed and Asinus came last, the former leading his companion with a degree of
fondness that could hardly be said to be exceeded by any other of the party.
The approach of the naturalist was far less rapid than that of those who
preceded him. His feet seemed equally reluctant to advance, or to remain
stationary; his position bearing a great analogy to that of Mahomet’s
coffin, with the exception that the quality of repulsion rather than that of
attraction held him in a state of rest. The repulsive power in his rear however
appeared to predominate, and by a singular exception, as he would have said
himself, to all philosophical principles, it rather increased than diminished
by distance. As the eyes of the naturalist steadily maintained a position that
was the opposite of his route, they served to give a direction to those of the
observers of all these movements, and at once furnished a sufficient clue by
which to unravel the mystery of so sudden a debouchement from the cover.</p>
<p>Another cluster of stout and armed men was seen at no great distance, just
rounding a point of the thicket, and moving directly though cautiously towards
the place where the band of the Siouxes was posted, as a squadron of cruisers
is often seen to steer across the waste of waters, towards the rich but
well-protected convoy. In short, the family of the squatter, or at least such
among them as were capable of bearing arms, appeared in view, on the broad
prairie, evidently bent on revenging their wrongs.</p>
<p>Mahtoree and his party slowly retired from the thicket, the moment they caught
a view of the strangers, until they halted on a swell that commanded a wide and
unobstructed view of the naked fields on which they stood. Here the Dahcotah
appeared disposed to make his stand, and to bring matters to an issue.
Notwithstanding this retreat, in which he compelled the trapper to accompany
him, Middleton still advanced, until he too halted on the same elevation, and
within speaking distance of the warlike Siouxes. The borderers in their turn
took a favourable position, though at a much greater distance. The three groups
now resembled so many fleets at sea, lying with their topsails to the masts,
with the commendable precaution of reconnoitring, before each could ascertain
who among the strangers might be considered as friends, and who as foes.</p>
<p>During this moment of suspense, the dark, threatening, eye of Mahtoree rolled
from one of the strange parties to the other, in keen and hasty examination,
and then it turned its withering look on the old man, as the chief said, in a
tone of high and bitter scorn—</p>
<p>“The Big-knives are fools! It is easier to catch the cougar asleep, than
to find a blind Dahcotah. Did the white head think to ride on the horse of a
Sioux?”</p>
<p>The trapper, who had found time to collect his perplexed faculties, saw at once
that Middleton, having perceived Ishmael on the trail by which they had fled,
preferred trusting to the hospitality of the savages, than to the treatment he
would be likely to receive from the hands of the squatter. He therefore
disposed himself to clear the way for the favourable reception of his friends,
since he found that the unnatural coalition became necessary to secure the
liberty, if not the lives, of the party.</p>
<p>“Did my brother ever go on a war-path to strike my people?” he
calmly demanded of the indignant chief, who still awaited his reply.</p>
<p>The lowering aspect of the Teton warrior so far lost its severity, as to suffer
a gleam of pleasure and triumph to lighten its ferocity, as sweeping his arm in
an entire circle around his person he answered—</p>
<p>“What tribe or nation has not felt the blows of the Dahcotahs? Mahtoree
is their partisan.”</p>
<p>“And has he found the Big-knives women, or has he found them men?”</p>
<p>A multitude of fierce passions were struggling in the tawny countenance of the
Indian. For a moment inextinguishable hatred seemed to hold the mastery, and
then a nobler expression, and one that better became the character of a brave,
got possession of his features, and maintained itself until, first throwing
aside his light robe of pictured deer-skin, and pointing to the scar of a
bayonet in his breast, he replied—</p>
<p>“It was given, as it was taken, face to face.”</p>
<p>“It is enough. My brother is a brave chief, and he should be wise. Let
him look: is that a warrior of the Pale-faces? Was it one such as that who gave
the great Dahcotah his hurt?”</p>
<p>The eyes of Mahtoree followed the direction of the old man’s extended
arm, until they rested on the drooping form of Inez. The look of the Teton was
long, riveted, and admiring. Like that of the young Pawnee, it resembled more
the gaze of a mortal on some heavenly image, than the admiration with which man
is wont to contemplate even the loveliness of woman. Starting, as if suddenly
self-convicted of forgetfulness, the chief next turned his eyes on Ellen, where
they lingered an instant with a much more intelligible expression of
admiration, and then pursued their course until they had taken another glance
at each individual of the party.</p>
<p>“My brother sees that my tongue is not forked,” continued the
trapper, watching the emotions the other betrayed, with a readiness of
comprehension little inferior to that of the Teton himself. “The
Big-knives do not send their women to war. I know that the Dahcotahs will smoke
with the strangers.”</p>
<p>“Mahtoree is a great chief! The Big-knives are welcome,” said the
Teton, laying his hand on his breast, with an air of lofty politeness that
would have done credit to any state of society. “The arrows of my young
men are in their quivers.”</p>
<p>The trapper motioned to Middleton to approach, and in a few moments the two
parties were blended in one, each of the males having exchanged friendly
greetings, after the fashions of the prairie warriors. But, even while engaged
in this hospitable manner, the Dahcotah did not fail to keep a strict watch on
the more distant party of white men, as if he still distrusted an artifice, or
sought further explanation. The old man, in his turn, perceived the necessity
of being more explicit, and of securing the slight and equivocal advantage he
had already obtained. While affecting to examine the group, which still
lingered at the spot where it had first halted, as if to discover the
characters of those who composed it, he plainly saw that Ishmael contemplated
immediate hostilities. The result of a conflict on the open prairie, between a
dozen resolute border men, and the half-armed natives, even though seconded by
their white allies, was in his experienced judgment a point of great
uncertainty, and though far from reluctant to engage in the struggle on account
of himself, the aged trapper thought it far more worthy of his years, and his
character, to avoid than to court the contest. His feelings were, for obvious
reasons, in accordance with those of Paul and Middleton, who had lives still
more precious than their own to watch over and protect. In this dilemma the
three consulted on the means of escaping the frightful consequences which might
immediately follow a single act of hostility on the part of the borderers; the
old man taking care that their communication should, in the eyes of those who
noted the expression of their countenances with jealous watchfulness, bear the
appearance of explanations as to the reason why such a party of travellers was
met so far in the deserts.</p>
<p>“I know that the Dahcotahs are a wise and great people,” at length
the trapper commenced, again addressing himself to the chief; “but does
not their partisan know a single brother who is base?”</p>
<p>The eye of Mahtoree wandered proudly around his band, but rested a moment
reluctantly on Weucha, as he answered—</p>
<p>“The Master of Life has made chiefs, and warriors, and women;”
conceiving that he thus embraced all the gradations of human excellence from
the highest to the lowest.</p>
<p>“And he has also made Pale-faces, who are wicked. Such are they whom my
brother sees yonder.”</p>
<p>“Do they go on foot to do wrong?” demanded the Teton, with a wild
gleam from his eyes, that sufficiently betrayed how well he knew the reason why
they were reduced to so humble an expedient.</p>
<p>“Their beasts are gone. But their powder, and their lead, and their
blankets remain.”</p>
<p>“Do they carry their riches in their hands, like miserable Konzas? or are
they brave, and leave them with the women, as men should do, who know where to
find what they lose?”</p>
<p>“My brother sees the spot of blue across the prairie; look, the sun has
touched it for the last time to-day.”</p>
<p>“Mahtoree is not a mole.”</p>
<p>“It is a rock; on it are the goods of the Big-knives.”</p>
<p>An expression of savage joy shot into the dark countenance of the Teton as he
listened; turning to the old man he seemed to read his soul, as if to assure
himself he was not deceived. Then he bent his look on the party of Ishmael, and
counted its number.</p>
<p>“One warrior is wanting,” he said.</p>
<p>“Does my brother see the buzzards? there is his grave. Did he find blood
on the prairie? It was his.”</p>
<p>“Enough! Mahtoree is a wise chief. Put your women on the horses of the
Dahcotahs: we shall see, for our eyes are open very wide.”</p>
<p>The trapper wasted no unnecessary words in explanation. Familiar with the
brevity and promptitude of the natives, he immediately communicated the result
to his companions. Paul was mounted in an instant, with Ellen at his back. A
few more moments were necessary to assure Middleton of the security and ease of
Inez. While he was thus engaged, Mahtoree advanced to the side of the beast he
had allotted to this service, which was his own, and manifested an intention to
occupy his customary place on its back. The young soldier seized the reins of
the animal, and glances of sudden anger and lofty pride were exchanged between
them.</p>
<p>“No man takes this seat but myself,” said Middleton, sternly, in
English.</p>
<p>“Mahtoree is a great chief!” retorted the savage; neither
comprehending the meaning of the other’s words.</p>
<p>“The Dahcotah will be too late,” whispered the old man at his
elbow; “see; the Big-knives are afraid, and they will soon run.”</p>
<p>The Teton chief instantly abandoned his claim, and threw himself on another
horse, directing one of his young men to furnish a similar accommodation for
the trapper. The warriors who were dismounted, got up behind as many of their
companions. Doctor Battius bestrode Asinus; and, notwithstanding the brief
interruption, in half the time we have taken to relate it, the whole party was
prepared to move.</p>
<p>When he saw that all were ready, Mahtoree gave the signal to advance. A few of
the best mounted of the warriors, the chief himself included, moved a little in
front, and made a threatening demonstration, as if they intended to attack the
strangers. The squatter, who was in truth slowly retiring, instantly halted his
party, and showed a willing front. Instead, however, of coming within reach of
the dangerous aim of the western rifle, the subtle savages kept wheeling about
the strangers, until they had made a half circuit, keeping the latter in
constant expectation of an assault. Then, perfectly secure of their object, the
Tetons raised a loud shout, and darted across the prairie in a line for the
distant rock, with the directness and nearly with the velocity of the arrow,
that has just been shot from its bow.</p>
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