<h3><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXVI" id="CHAPTER_XXVI">CHAPTER XXVI.</SPAN> <br/>Pod under arrest</h3>
<p class="toclink"><SPAN href="#TOC-II">TOC</SPAN></p>
<p class="center">BY PYE POD.</p>
<div class="poembox">
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Thou hast described</div>
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A hot friend cooling.</div>
<cite class="citefarright">
—Julius Cæsar.</cite></div>
<p>It was nine o'clock in the evening. While we were
chatting with the landlord of the only tavern in Luzerne,
a portly, smooth-looking individual entered the room.
He was clad in a great fur ulster and top boots. After
a familiar "hello" to the landlord, he eyed me searchingly,
and added, "Your name is Pod, ain't it?"</p>
<p>I said, "I believe so; yours is what, don't it?"</p>
<p>Evidently not pleased with my expression, he instantly
struck an attitude, or something equally hard, and announced,
"I'm the sheriff of Borden County, and have
come for a jack belonging to Mr. K——."</p>
<p>"Jack?" I interrogated; "boot-jack, apple-jack—"</p>
<p>"Just plain jack," interrupted the officer.</p>
<p>"Well," I replied, carelessly, "I have no jack belonging
to Mr. K——, but I have the jenny he sold me for
five dollars. Mr. K—— imposed upon me, and if he
will refund the money, I will be only too glad to return
his hundred-year old mule."</p>
<p>Here K—— himself entered. He stormed about, and
said that I told only a section of the truth.</p>
<p>The sheriff gave his client a look, which quelled his
ire for a moment, then, turning to me, said: "You talk
reasonably enough, Mr. Pod, and doubtless mean right,
but Mr. K—— has sworn out a warrant for your arrest;
and if you don't want trouble and a double-jointed advertisement
just turn over to K—— the jack he claims,
and send your man back for the gray jenny."</p>
<p>It may not seem strange that I was converted to the
officer's way of thinking.</p>
<p>"Take the donkey you claim," I said to K——, "you
have the advantage of me. I haven't time to fight my
case in the courts."</p>
<p>My black-bearded adversary now calmed his temper;
his victory must have tasted sweet. I calculated the cost
of the warrant and the sheriff's services to be at least ten
dollars, since the officer had sacrificed angling for posse
duty; although he was prevented from catching fish,
there was a nice mess for me.</p>
<p>With reluctant equanimity the man who had wished
to help me along explained that he had boasted of having
acquired one of Pye Pod's noted donkeys, but when
he found I had outwitted him, he swore vengeance.</p>
<p>On the other hand, the officer had conducted himself
as a gentleman.</p>
<p>"Here, Coonskin," said the officer, "take this dollar
and fetch us a pail of beer;" and, turning to me, added,
"we must drown ill feeling amongst us, for when you
come this way again, we'll show you how to catch fish."</p>
<p>By one o'clock next day Coonskin, weary, hungry,
and morose, had managed to steer his slow "craft" into
Luzerne and to moor it in front of the tavern barn. That
closed the interesting event.</p>
<p>On our way to Tama City I was greeted by a member
of assembly, who tendered me an invitation from the
Mayor to dine with them that day. Lounging about the
shop doors and strolling the streets, on our arrival in
Tama, were many stately, still proud redskins, who, when
they espied me with the wealth of canines collected on
my way, shied off the scent for "fire-water" and dogged
my trail to the hotel.</p>
<p>After dinner with the Mayor and Assemblyman, I
escorted them to the stable to discover Mac A'Rony
devouring a new hair-cushioned carriage seat. At once
the Mayor wanted to buy that donkey outright, head and
seat, for a round sum.</p>
<p>On expressing my intention to visit the Indian Reservation,
some three miles away, his Honor gave me letters
of introduction to the Indian Teacher and the Indian
Instructor in agriculture. There lived the Sac and Fox
tribe of the Musquaques. I was told that they were one
of the most primitive tribes in the States, holding on to
the primeval, and often evil, customs of feeding on dog
soup, indulging in various kinds of dances, living in teepees,
or wickey-ups, and wearing bears' teeth, eagles'
claws, scalps, skins and moccasins. As you know, I had
long hoped to be welcomed as their guest. I was tired
and weary of the care of my dog pack, and wished to
present it bodly, save Don, to the Chief.</p>
<p>About two o'clock we saddled and packed. When
ready to start, a diminutive bicyclist, mud-bespattered
and perspiring from a hot century run, he affirmed,
wheeled up to the stable and, almost before catching his
breath, introduced himself to me.</p>
<p>"My name is Barley Korker," said he, "de champion
lightest-weight wheelman in de United States, weighin'
jest sixty-eight pounds. I'm jest troo wid a trip from
New York in one month and tirty-two days. My bicycle
was giv me by de Cormorant Club of Phil'delfia. De
Bourbon Club of Chowchow Wheelman of Pittsburg
put up five hundred dollars 'gainst de wall dat I couldn't
go all de way to San Francisco and git dere. On de way
I hears of de great donkey traveler, Professor Pod, so
I says, I'll jest catch up wid him, and mebbe he'll take
me 'long wid him."</p>
<p>I at once made the little fellow a proposition, which
he accepted; if he would wheel ahead of my caravan
every day, carrying a small flagstaff with a streamer containing
the words, "Official Courier to Pye Pod," I
would, as long as he gave satisfaction, defray his traveling
expenses. Barley was delighted. He forthwith purchased
a piece of plum-colored silk and a bit of white silk
for letters, needles and thread, and, having once been a
tailor by trade, when we went into camp that night said
that he would make a beautiful streamer, one I would be
proud of. He promised to have it completed in a couple
of days.</p>
<p>I had not more than finished my business with my
courier, when a rustic-looking boy rode up on a white
donkey, and called to me, "Want ter trade?"</p>
<p>"Not anxious," I returned, but showed no signs of a
desire to flee.</p>
<p>"Trade with yer, if you give me five dollars to boot,"
said the enterprising lad.</p>
<p>I recalled how I had been swindled recently in a trade,
and resolved to make a deal with that boy by hook or
by crook.</p>
<p>"Do you suppose I would think of trading this thoroughbred
Irish ass that has gone around the world for
your common beast, just because mine is tired from fast
and long traveling, and yours is fresh?" I saw I had
made an impression; the lad dismounted, and examined
Cheese IV, critically.</p>
<p>"I hain't no money to-day," said the boy, "but if you'll
give me two dollars to boot I'll trade."</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <SPAN name="I_killed_my_first_rattlesnake"></SPAN> <SPAN href="images/i200a-hd.jpg">larger <ANTIMG src="images/i200a.jpg" width-obs="480" height-obs="600" alt="" /></SPAN> <div class="caption">"I killed my first rattlesnake."</div>
</div>
<div class="figcenter"> <SPAN name="That_was_the_town"></SPAN> <SPAN href="images/i200b-hd.jpg">larger <ANTIMG src="images/i200b.jpg" width-obs="480" height-obs="600" alt="" /></SPAN> <div class="caption">"That was the town."</div>
</div>
<div class="figcenter"> <SPAN name="Over-the-Platte"></SPAN> <SPAN href="images/i200c-hd.jpg">larger <ANTIMG src="images/i200c.jpg" width-obs="453" height-obs="600" alt="" /></SPAN> <div class="caption">"Over the Platte
.  .  . after blindfolding them."</div>
</div>
<p>"What! do you want the earth?" I exclaimed. "Only
before dinner I paid two dollars to have this donkey
shod. I don't intend to pay two dollars more to shoe
your animal."</p>
<p>The lad replied "All right," and galloped away, but
had only gone a short distance when I hailed him. He
came back without hesitation, and I then concluded a
bargain. It was agreed that a blacksmith should take
the new shoes off Cheese and put them on his donkey,
and that I should pay him three dollars to boot. An
hour later Cheese V was shod, bridled and saddled, and
that afternoon became Coonskin's mount, Damfino carrying
the principal portion of our luggage, and Mac
A'Rony his master.</p>
<p>My party reached the Reservation in time for me to
meet the Indian teacher before he left school, my courier
having wheeled ahead to announce my coming.</p>
<p>I was greeted warmly when I presented the Mayor's
letter, was shown some of the lodges of the tribe, and
made acquainted with a few of the foremost braves of
the camp. The teacher was an admirable interpreter,
and the Indians grunted approvingly at meeting such a
noted personage as Professor Pye Pod.</p>
<p>A fat old buck named Ne-tah-twy-tuck (old one), on
being presented, extended me his hand, muttering, "How
do?" His grip almost mashed my fingers.</p>
<p>"Much dog," he observed, eyeing my pack with doubtful
admiration.</p>
<p>"Yes, too much," I replied; "I want to visit Me-tah-ah-qua,
your great chief, and give him a heap of dogs."
The Indian grinned majestically, while his teacher turned
his head to control his risibles.</p>
<p>"Make pleasant?" the redskin grunted, and shook his
head disapprovingly. "Me-tah-ah-qua say no dog good—old—make
tough soup." And the brave pinched one
of the mongrels, causing such a ky-eying that my interpreter
feared it would put the whole camp on the war-path.</p>
<p>Presently an Indian boy notified the teacher that the
chief had heard of Mr. Pod's arrival, and wished him to
dine with him at his lodge. I accepted, and the boy departed;
and soon afterward Coonskin and I were escorted
to the chief's wigwam, taking my dog pack with me.</p>
<p>Me-tah-ah-qua met us with a grunt, rubbed my nose
against his until it became lopsided, and likewise greeted
Coonskin.</p>
<p>Then the chief waved us into the wigwam. He seated
me on his right, and Coonskin on his left, while opposite
to me he placed his disenchanting daughter of forty-five
summers. Opposite the chief sat his first councilman,
Muck-qua-push-e-too (young one), and at my right, at
the entrance of the tent in full view of the host was seated
our Government interpreter, seemingly much amused by
the event. I lost no time in presenting my dogs to the
chief, who in broken sentences, half Indian, half English,
accepted the munificent gift in befitting words.</p>
<p>The spread consisted of a wolf skin, and on it rested a
large flat stone on which to stand the kettle of soup when
ready.</p>
<p>For some moments the chief regarded me searchingly,
then said, "Me-tah-ah-qua wants—big donk man to live
with him—and marry—his only daughter—Ne-nah-too-too.
Me-tah-ah-qua will give—him a bow and a quiver
of arrows—three seasoned pipes—five ponies—a new
wicky-up—two red blankets—a deer skin—bag full of
dogs' teeth—fifteen scalps taken by his father."</p>
<p>The chief left off abruptly, as if for my answer, but I
shook my head thoughtfully, and the chief continued:</p>
<p>"If you—will marry my daughter (here the chief
glanced at me, then let his eyes dwell fondly on that aged
belle of forty-five summers), Me-tah-ah-qua will make—you
chief of his tribe—before he goes to—the Happy
Hunting Grounds. He will call—your first born Chicky-pow-wow-wake-up."</p>
<p>I was never more embarrassed, and eyed the damsel of
forty-five summers, trying to persuade myself that she
was beautiful and rich, and still shook my head. The
old chief, seeing his inducements were not alluring, motioned
to his councilman to pass the pipe of peace. After
we had all taken a puff at it, the kettle of dog soup was
set before us, and we all dipped in our ladles, the chief
first, and began to eat.</p>
<p>When I first looked into that caldron of bouillon, I
could see in my mind's eye, all kinds and conditions of
dog staring at me, and almost fancied I could hear them
barking. The soup wasn't bad, after all; it reminded
me of Limburger cheese, in that it tasted better than it
smelled. But Coonskin and I, and even our interpreter,
ate sparingly (I use the word "ate," because there was so
much meat in it). I learned from the teacher that the
whole kettleful of soup was extracted from one small
spaniel. "Dog gone!" I sighed.</p>
<p>The feast at an end, I thanked the chief for the honor
conferred upon me, shook hands with his daughter, and
departed. Barley Korker, Mac A'Rony and the rest of
the party welcomed me with glee, and soon we were
marching over the hill toward the house of the Indian
farmer.</p>
<p>In front of a wigwam sat the chief's squaw, an old,
wrinkled and parched woman of a hundred and five winters,
weaving a flat mat; a little way off two Indian boys
were filling pails with sand, making believe they were at
Coney Island; and still beyond I saw two squaws carrying
huge bundles of faggots for the wigwam fires, round
which sat the lazy bucks, smoking.</p>
<p>A half-mile further on we met the Indian Farmer, and
I presented my letter of introduction. He extended me
a glad hand, and invited us all to supper, and on the way
to his house, enlightened me about Indian farming, and
the results of our Government's efforts to civilize the
savage tribes. The Reservation contains 2,800 acres of
woodland and arable soil.</p>
<p>After supper on bread and milk with the farmer, we
travelers made our beds of hay and horse-blankets in the
barn, and then followed the trail half way back to the
Indian village, until we came to a house, where I discovered
in the darkness its rustic incumbent leaning on
the fence, smoking. There we lay down on the dry sod,
lit our pipes, and listened for the first sound of the Indian
drum beats which, the farmer told us, we would soon
hear; that was the night for an Assembly dance, and the
first drum beat was to assemble the tribe to its nocturnal
orgie.</p>
<p>As I reclined on the grass in the starlight that mild
May evening, my mind recalling the harrowing tales of
the early settlers of the West, the first sound of the drum
beat sent a thrill through my frame. I mentally counted
the weapons comprising the arsenal in our belts; and
even Don crept closer to me and rubbed his face against
mine. After a few moments' interim the drum again
beat, but for a longer period, sounding something like
the army long-roll, only more weird. The farmer said
this was the signal for the dance to begin, so we strolled
leisurely down the hill trail through the woods to the
grotesque scene.</p>
<p>A circular corral, fenced with three or four strands of
wire, surrounded a pole driven slantingly in the ground,
and from the pole was suspended a very bright lantern.
Already within the enclosure could be seen the dusky
forms of the Musquaques, some of them grouped in a
sitting posture, crosslegged, in the center of the corral,
beating a large shallow drum resting on the ground;
while maneuvring fantastically about them were four
agile reds, clad in loose-fitting, bright-colored robes,
feathers, moccasins and sleighbells, dancing, and pow-wowing
frightfully.</p>
<p>Finally we drew closer to the scene, and then an educated
Indian, named Sam Lincoln, welcomed us into the
enclosure. He said he was a graduate of the Carlisle
Indian School of Pennsylvania, and greeted us in the
true American style, but he still loved the primitive customs
of his people. We sat on the ground against the
fence, and occasionally one or another of the dancers
would put a pinch of tobacco into the hand of Sam,
seated next to me.</p>
<p>"What was that he just gave you?" I asked of the
Indian.</p>
<p>"He give pleasant of tobacco," said Sam. "Show
good feeling—Indian not steal—leave things around—Indian
no take—Indian honest." By that sign of distributing
tobacco among his fellows, the tamed savage
promises fair play among his tribe.</p>
<p>The men alone danced. Before long, the squaws, one
by one, came into the ring from various quarters with
pappooses bound on their backs in shawls or robes, and
squatted in a circle just behind the drummers. As the
dancers became fatigued, I noticed that they would exchange
places with the spectators, most of whom were
in dancing rig. Sam Lincoln, after a time, excused himself
politely and asked me to sit on his coat, reminding
me should I leave before his return not to forget to leave
the strap he loaned me to tie my dog to a post.</p>
<p>The weird proceedings were all too exciting for Don,
and it was all I could do to prevent his making mince-meat
out of the dancers and prowling squaws. The
whoops and pow-wowing and yells were thrilling enough
to frighten even a man "tenderfoot."</p>
<p>Toward midnight speech-making began. The drummers
stopped beating the drum, and an old patriarch
walked from the fence toward the center group, and
stood behind the squaws a moment in silence. Presently
he softly uttered something that sounded like a prayer,
to which all the dusky auditors responded feelingly at
the close in a monosyllable not unlike "Amen." Then
the drum-beating and dancing was resumed, continuing
some moments, to be followed by another prayer.</p>
<p>At last, a great pipe was put through a series of mysterious
calisthenics, and passed around among the drummers.</p>
<p>At midnight the full, round moon rose above the
wooded hills, and cast a broad, silvery sash across the
ring, illuminating the weird and grotesque scene. Now
a squaw entered with a large earthen jar and passed it
around to all the Indians, the bucks first. I was ignorant
of its contents, as it was not passed to me and my
white comrades. Fatigued from travel, I finally rested
my head on Don's warm body, and went to sleep; and it
must have been near one o'clock when Coonskin awoke
me. Then we three, accompanied by my dog, started
for the barn to lay ourselves out for a few hours' repose.
I shall never forget that night.</p>
<p>Sam Lincoln said that several members of the tribe, a
few weeks previous, had gone to visit another branch of
the tribe in Wisconsin, in the absence of which a "meeting
dance" was held every fourth night, when the Indians
appealed to the Great Father for their safe return. Sam
told me that in all their various dances a different drum
was beaten—there was one each respectively for the
snake dance, ghost dance, wolf dance, buffalo dance,
peace dance, war dance, meeting dance, etc. The drum
for the meeting dance, Sam pronounced beautiful, and
"much nice"—"seven dollars fifty cents worth of quarters
on it—all silver on drum—fine drum—much cost."
The Indians valued their drums, evidently, more than
any other of their possessions.</p>
<p>We rested well that night in our haymow bed, although
the rats kept the dog busy till morning, so Barley
said; he was the only one of us three who failed to sleep
soundly. We rose in good season, and traveled five
miles to Mountour, Barley Korker wheeling on in advance
to order breakfast. He proved himself a good
financier on this, his first, mission as Pod's official courier,
and pleasantly surprised me by having bargained
for three twenty-five cent breakfasts for fifty cents.</p>
<p>Before reaching Marshalltown, we met with a terrific
thunderstorm, and rode up to the hotel at six o'clock in
a drenched condition.</p>
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