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<h2> CHAPTER X </h2>
<h3> THE WAR PARTIES </h3>
<p>The summer of 1846 was a season of much warlike excitement among all the
western bands of the Dakota. In 1845 they encountered great reverses. Many
war parties had been sent out; some of them had been totally cut off, and
others had returned broken and disheartened, so that the whole nation was
in mourning. Among the rest, ten warriors had gone to the Snake country,
led by the son of a prominent Ogallalla chief, called The Whirlwind. In
passing over Laramie Plains they encountered a superior number of their
enemies, were surrounded, and killed to a man. Having performed this
exploit the Snakes became alarmed, dreading the resentment of the Dakota,
and they hastened therefore to signify their wish for peace by sending the
scalp of the slain partisan, together with a small parcel of tobacco
attached, to his tribesmen and relations. They had employed old Vaskiss,
the trader, as their messenger, and the scalp was the same that hung in
our room at the fort. But The Whirlwind proved inexorable. Though his
character hardly corresponds with his name, he is nevertheless an Indian,
and hates the Snakes with his whole soul. Long before the scalp arrived he
had made his preparations for revenge. He sent messengers with presents
and tobacco to all the Dakota within three hundred miles, proposing a
grand combination to chastise the Snakes, and naming a place and time of
rendezvous. The plan was readily adopted and at this moment many villages,
probably embracing in the whole five or six thousand souls, were slowly
creeping over the prairies and tending towards the common center at La
Bonte's Camp, on the Platte. Here their war-like rites were to be
celebrated with more than ordinary solemnity, and a thousand warriors, as
it was said, were to set out for the enemy country. The characteristic
result of this preparation will appear in the sequel.</p>
<p>I was greatly rejoiced to hear of it. I had come into the country almost
exclusively with a view of observing the Indian character. Having from
childhood felt a curiosity on this subject, and having failed completely
to gratify it by reading, I resolved to have recourse to observation. I
wished to satisfy myself with regard to the position of the Indians among
the races of men; the vices and the virtues that have sprung from their
innate character and from their modes of life, their government, their
superstitions, and their domestic situation. To accomplish my purpose it
was necessary to live in the midst of them, and become, as it were, one of
them. I proposed to join a village and make myself an inmate of one of
their lodges; and henceforward this narrative, so far as I am concerned,
will be chiefly a record of the progress of this design apparently so easy
of accomplishment, and the unexpected impediments that opposed it.</p>
<p>We resolved on no account to miss the rendezvous at La Bonte's Camp. Our
plan was to leave Delorier at the fort, in charge of our equipage and the
better part of our horses, while we took with us nothing but our weapons
and the worst animals we had. In all probability jealousies and quarrels
would arise among so many hordes of fierce impulsive savages, congregated
together under no common head, and many of them strangers, from remote
prairies and mountains. We were bound in common prudence to be cautious
how we excited any feeling of cupidity. This was our plan, but unhappily
we were not destined to visit La Bonte's Camp in this manner; for one
morning a young Indian came to the fort and brought us evil tidings. The
newcomer was a dandy of the first water. His ugly face was painted with
vermilion; on his head fluttered the tail of a prairie cock (a large
species of pheasant, not found, as I have heard, eastward of the Rocky
Mountains); in his ears were hung pendants of shell, and a flaming red
blanket was wrapped around him. He carried a dragoon sword in his hand,
solely for display, since the knife, the arrow, and the rifle are the
arbiters of every prairie fight; but no one in this country goes abroad
unarmed, the dandy carried a bow and arrows in an otter-skin quiver at his
back. In this guise, and bestriding his yellow horse with an air of
extreme dignity, The Horse, for that was his name, rode in at the gate,
turning neither to the right nor the left, but casting glances askance at
the groups of squaws who, with their mongrel progeny, were sitting in the
sun before their doors. The evil tidings brought by The Horse were of the
following import: The squaw of Henry Chatillon, a woman with whom he had
been connected for years by the strongest ties which in that country exist
between the sexes, was dangerously ill. She and her children were in the
village of The Whirlwind, at the distance of a few days' journey. Henry
was anxious to see the woman before she died, and provide for the safety
and support of his children, of whom he was extremely fond. To have
refused him this would have been gross inhumanity. We abandoned our plan
of joining Smoke's village, and of proceeding with it to the rendezvous,
and determined to meet The Whirlwind, and go in his company.</p>
<p>I had been slightly ill for several weeks, but on the third night after
reaching Fort Laramie a violent pain awoke me, and I found myself attacked
by the same disorder that occasioned such heavy losses to the army on the
Rio Grande. In a day and a half I was reduced to extreme weakness, so that
I could not walk without pain and effort. Having within that time taken
six grains of opium, without the least beneficial effect, and having no
medical adviser, nor any choice of diet, I resolved to throw myself upon
Providence for recovery, using, without regard to the disorder, any
portion of strength that might remain to me. So on the 20th of June we set
out from Fort Laramie to meet The Whirlwind's village. Though aided by the
high-bowed "mountain saddle," I could scarcely keep my seat on horseback.
Before we left the fort we hired another man, a long-haired Canadian, with
a face like an owl's, contrasting oddly enough with Delorier's mercurial
countenance. This was not the only re-enforcement to our party. A vagrant
Indian trader, named Reynal, joined us, together with his squaw Margot,
and her two nephews, our dandy friend, The Horse, and his younger brother,
The Hail Storm. Thus accompanied, we betook ourselves to the prairie,
leaving the beaten trail, and passing over the desolate hills that flank
the bottoms of Laramie Creek. In all, Indians and whites, we counted eight
men and one woman.</p>
<p>Reynal, the trader, the image of sleek and selfish complacency, carried
The Horse's dragoon sword in his hand, delighting apparently in this
useless parade; for, from spending half his life among Indians, he had
caught not only their habits but their ideas. Margot, a female animal of
more than two hundred pounds' weight, was couched in the basket of a
travail, such as I have before described; besides her ponderous bulk,
various domestic utensils were attached to the vehicle, and she was
leading by a trail-rope a packhorse, who carried the covering of Reynal's
lodge. Delorier walked briskly by the side of the cart, and Raymond came
behind, swearing at the spare horses, which it was his business to drive.
The restless young Indians, their quivers at their backs, and their bows
in their hand, galloped over the hills, often starting a wolf or an
antelope from the thick growth of wild-sage bushes. Shaw and I were in
keeping with the rest of the rude cavalcade, having in the absence of
other clothing adopted the buckskin attire of the trappers. Henry
Chatillon rode in advance of the whole. Thus we passed hill after hill and
hollow after hollow, a country arid, broken and so parched by the sun that
none of the plants familiar to our more favored soil would flourish upon
it, though there were multitudes of strange medicinal herbs, more
especially the absanth, which covered every declivity, and cacti were
hanging like reptiles at the edges of every ravine. At length we ascended
a high hill, our horses treading upon pebbles of flint, agate, and rough
jasper, until, gaining the top, we looked down on the wild bottoms of
Laramie Creek, which far below us wound like a writhing snake from side to
side of the narrow interval, amid a growth of shattered cotton-wood and
ash trees. Lines of tall cliffs, white as chalk, shut in this green strip
of woods and meadow land, into which we descended and encamped for the
night. In the morning we passed a wide grassy plain by the river; there
was a grove in front, and beneath its shadows the ruins of an old trading
fort of logs. The grove bloomed with myriads of wild roses, with their
sweet perfume fraught with recollections of home. As we emerged from the
trees, a rattlesnake, as large as a man's arm, and more than four feet
long, lay coiled on a rock, fiercely rattling and hissing at us; a gray
hare, double the size of those in New England, leaped up from the tall
ferns; curlew were screaming over our heads, and a whole host of little
prairie dogs sat yelping at us at the mouths of their burrows on the dry
plain beyond. Suddenly an antelope leaped up from the wild-sage bushes,
gazed eagerly at us, and then, erecting his white tail, stretched away
like a greyhound. The two Indian boys found a white wolf, as large as a
calf in a hollow, and giving a sharp yell, they galloped after him; but
the wolf leaped into the stream and swam across. Then came the crack of a
rifle, the bullet whistling harmlessly over his head, as he scrambled up
the steep declivity, rattling down stones and earth into the water below.
Advancing a little, we beheld on the farther bank of the stream, a
spectacle not common even in that region; for, emerging from among the
trees, a herd of some two hundred elk came out upon the meadow, their
antlers clattering as they walked forward in dense throng. Seeing us, they
broke into a run, rushing across the opening and disappearing among the
trees and scattered groves. On our left was a barren prairie, stretching
to the horizon; on our right, a deep gulf, with Laramie Creek at the
bottom. We found ourselves at length at the edge of a steep descent; a
narrow valley, with long rank grass and scattered trees stretching before
us for a mile or more along the course of the stream. Reaching the farther
end, we stopped and encamped. An old huge cotton-wood tree spread its
branches horizontally over our tent. Laramie Creek, circling before our
camp, half inclosed us; it swept along the bottom of a line of tall white
cliffs that looked down on us from the farther bank. There were dense
copses on our right; the cliffs, too, were half hidden by shrubbery,
though behind us a few cotton-wood trees, dotting the green prairie, alone
impeded the view, and friend or enemy could be discerned in that direction
at a mile's distance. Here we resolved to remain and await the arrival of
The Whirlwind, who would certainly pass this way in his progress toward La
Bonte's Camp. To go in search of him was not expedient, both on account of
the broken and impracticable nature of the country and the uncertainty of
his position and movements; besides, our horses were almost worn out, and
I was in no condition to travel. We had good grass, good water, tolerable
fish from the stream, and plenty of smaller game, such as antelope and
deer, though no buffalo. There was one little drawback to our satisfaction—a
certain extensive tract of bushes and dried grass, just behind us, which
it was by no means advisable to enter, since it sheltered a numerous brood
of rattlesnakes. Henry Chatillon again dispatched The Horse to the
village, with a message to his squaw that she and her relatives should
leave the rest and push on as rapidly as possible to our camp.</p>
<p>Our daily routine soon became as regular as that of a well-ordered
household. The weather-beaten old tree was in the center; our rifles
generally rested against its vast trunk, and our saddles were flung on the
ground around it; its distorted roots were so twisted as to form one or
two convenient arm-chairs, where we could sit in the shade and read or
smoke; but meal-times became, on the whole, the most interesting hours of
the day, and a bountiful provision was made for them. An antelope or a
deer usually swung from a stout bough, and haunches were suspended against
the trunk. That camp is daguerreotyped on my memory; the old tree, the
white tent, with Shaw sleeping in the shadow of it, and Reynal's miserable
lodge close by the bank of the stream. It was a wretched oven-shaped
structure, made of begrimed and tattered buffalo hides stretched over a
frame of poles; one side was open, and at the side of the opening hung the
powder horn and bullet pouch of the owner, together with his long red
pipe, and a rich quiver of otterskin, with a bow and arrows; for Reynal,
an Indian in most things but color, chose to hunt buffalo with these
primitive weapons. In the darkness of this cavern-like habitation, might
be discerned Madame Margot, her overgrown bulk stowed away among her
domestic implements, furs, robes, blankets, and painted cases of PAR'
FLECHE, in which dried meat is kept. Here she sat from sunrise to sunset,
a bloated impersonation of gluttony and laziness, while her affectionate
proprietor was smoking, or begging petty gifts from us, or telling lies
concerning his own achievements, or perchance engaged in the more
profitable occupation of cooking some preparation of prairie delicacies.
Reynal was an adept at this work; he and Delorier have joined forces and
are hard at work together over the fire, while Raymond spreads, by way of
tablecloth, a buffalo hide, carefully whitened with pipeclay, on the grass
before the tent. Here, with ostentatious display, he arranges the teacups
and plates; and then, creeping on all fours like a dog, he thrusts his
head in at the opening of the tent. For a moment we see his round owlish
eyes rolling wildly, as if the idea he came to communicate had suddenly
escaped him; then collecting his scattered thoughts, as if by an effort,
he informs us that supper is ready, and instantly withdraws.</p>
<p>When sunset came, and at that hour the wild and desolate scene would
assume a new aspect, the horses were driven in. They had been grazing all
day in the neighboring meadow, but now they were picketed close about the
camp. As the prairie darkened we sat and conversed around the fire, until
becoming drowsy we spread our saddles on the ground, wrapped our blankets
around us and lay down. We never placed a guard, having by this time
become too indolent; but Henry Chatillon folded his loaded rifle in the
same blanket with himself, observing that he always took it to bed with
him when he camped in that place. Henry was too bold a man to use such a
precaution without good cause. We had a hint now and then that our
situation was none of the safest; several Crow war parties were known to
be in the vicinity, and one of them, that passed here some time before,
had peeled the bark from a neighboring tree, and engraved upon the white
wood certain hieroglyphics, to signify that they had invaded the
territories of their enemies, the Dakota, and set them at defiance. One
morning a thick mist covered the whole country. Shaw and Henry went out to
ride, and soon came back with a startling piece of intelligence; they had
found within rifle-shot of our camp the recent trail of about thirty
horsemen. They could not be whites, and they could not be Dakota, since we
knew no such parties to be in the neighborhood; therefore they must be
Crows. Thanks to that friendly mist, we had escaped a hard battle; they
would inevitably have attacked us and our Indian companions had they seen
our camp. Whatever doubts we might have entertained, were quite removed a
day or two after, by two or three Dakota, who came to us with an account
of having hidden in a ravine on that very morning, from whence they saw
and counted the Crows; they said that they followed them, carefully
keeping out of sight, as they passed up Chugwater; that here the Crows
discovered five dead bodies of Dakota, placed according to the national
custom in trees, and flinging them to the ground, they held their guns
against them and blew them to atoms.</p>
<p>If our camp were not altogether safe, still it was comfortable enough; at
least it was so to Shaw, for I was tormented with illness and vexed by the
delay in the accomplishment of my designs. When a respite in my disorder
gave me some returning strength, I rode out well-armed upon the prairie,
or bathed with Shaw in the stream, or waged a petty warfare with the
inhabitants of a neighborhood prairie-dog village. Around our fire at
night we employed ourselves in inveighing against the fickleness and
inconstancy of Indians, and execrating The Whirlwind and all his village.
At last the thing grew insufferable.</p>
<p>"To-morrow morning," said I, "I will start for the fort, and see if I can
hear any news there." Late that evening, when the fire had sunk low, and
all the camp were asleep, a loud cry sounded from the darkness. Henry
started up, recognized the voice, replied to it, and our dandy friend, The
Horse, rode in among us, just returned from his mission to the village. He
coolly picketed his mare, without saying a word, sat down by the fire and
began to eat, but his imperturbable philosophy was too much for our
patience. Where was the village? about fifty miles south of us; it was
moving slowly and would not arrive in less than a week; and where was
Henry's squaw? coming as fast as she could with Mahto-Tatonka, and the
rest of her brothers, but she would never reach us, for she was dying, and
asking every moment for Henry. Henry's manly face became clouded and
downcast; he said that if we were willing he would go in the morning to
find her, at which Shaw offered to accompany him.</p>
<p>We saddled our horses at sunrise. Reynal protested vehemently against
being left alone, with nobody but the two Canadians and the young Indians,
when enemies were in the neighborhood. Disregarding his complaints, we
left him, and coming to the mouth of Chugwater, separated, Shaw and Henry
turning to the right, up the bank of the stream, while I made for the
fort.</p>
<p>Taking leave for a while of my friend and the unfortunate squaw, I will
relate by way of episode what I saw and did at Fort Laramie. It was not
more than eighteen miles distant, and I reached it in three hours; a
shriveled little figure, wrapped from head to foot in a dingy white
Canadian capote, stood in the gateway, holding by a cord of bull's hide a
shaggy wild horse, which he had lately caught. His sharp prominent
features, and his little keen snakelike eyes, looked out from beneath the
shadowy hood of the capote, which was drawn over his head exactly like the
cowl of a Capuchin friar. His face was extremely thin and like an old
piece of leather, and his mouth spread from ear to ear. Extending his long
wiry hand, he welcomed me with something more cordial than the ordinary
cold salute of an Indian, for we were excellent friends. He had made an
exchange of horses to our mutual advantage; and Paul, thinking himself
well-treated, had declared everywhere that the white man had a good heart.
He was a Dakota from the Missouri, a reputed son of the half-breed
interpreter, Pierre Dorion, so often mentioned in Irving's "Astoria." He
said that he was going to Richard's trading house to sell his horse to
some emigrants who were encamped there, and asked me to go with him. We
forded the stream together, Paul dragging his wild charge behind him. As
we passed over the sandy plains beyond, he grew quite communicative. Paul
was a cosmopolitan in his way; he had been to the settlements of the
whites, and visited in peace and war most of the tribes within the range
of a thousand miles. He spoke a jargon of French and another of English,
yet nevertheless he was a thorough Indian; and as he told of the bloody
deeds of his own people against their enemies, his little eye would
glitter with a fierce luster. He told how the Dakota exterminated a
village of the Hohays on the Upper Missouri, slaughtering men, women, and
children; and how an overwhelming force of them cut off sixteen of the
brave Delawares, who fought like wolves to the last, amid the throng of
their enemies. He told me also another story, which I did not believe
until I had it confirmed from so many independent sources that no room was
left for doubt. I am tempted to introduce it here.</p>
<p>Six years ago a fellow named Jim Beckwith, a mongrel of French, American,
and negro blood, was trading for the Fur Company, in a very large village
of the Crows. Jim Beckwith was last summer at St. Louis. He is a ruffian
of the first stamp; bloody and treacherous, without honor or honesty; such
at least is the character he bears upon the prairie. Yet in his case all
the standard rules of character fail, for though he will stab a man in his
sleep, he will also perform most desperate acts of daring; such, for
instance, as the following: While he was in the Crow village, a Blackfoot
war party, between thirty and forty in number came stealing through the
country, killing stragglers and carrying off horses. The Crow warriors got
upon their trail and pressed them so closely that they could not escape,
at which the Blackfeet, throwing up a semicircular breastwork of logs at
the foot of a precipice, coolly awaited their approach. The logs and
sticks, piled four or five high, protected them in front. The Crows might
have swept over the breastwork and exterminated their enemies; but though
out-numbering them tenfold, they did not dream of storming the little
fortification. Such a proceeding would be altogether repugnant to their
notions of warfare. Whooping and yelling, and jumping from side to side
like devils incarnate, they showered bullets and arrows upon the logs; not
a Blackfoot was hurt, but several Crows, in spite of their leaping and
dodging, were shot down. In this childish manner the fight went on for an
hour or two. Now and then a Crow warrior in an ecstasy of valor and
vainglory would scream forth his war song, boasting himself the bravest
and greatest of mankind, and grasping his hatchet, would rush up and
strike it upon the breastwork, and then as he retreated to his companions,
fall dead under a shower of arrows; yet no combined attack seemed to be
dreamed of. The Blackfeet remained secure in their intrenchment. At last
Jim Beckwith lost patience.</p>
<p>"You are all fools and old women," he said to the Crows; "come with me, if
any of you are brave enough, and I will show you how to fight."</p>
<p>He threw off his trapper's frock of buckskin and stripped himself naked
like the Indians themselves. He left his rifle on the ground, and taking
in his hand a small light hatchet, he ran over the prairie to the right,
concealed by a hollow from the eyes of the Blackfeet. Then climbing up the
rocks, he gained the top of the precipice behind them. Forty or fifty
young Crow warriors followed him. By the cries and whoops that rose from
below he knew that the Blackfeet were just beneath him; and running
forward, he leaped down the rock into the midst of them. As he fell he
caught one by the long loose hair and dragging him down tomahawked him;
then grasping another by the belt at his waist, he struck him also a
stunning blow, and gaining his feet, shouted the Crow war-cry. He swung
his hatchet so fiercely around him that the astonished Blackfeet bore back
and gave him room. He might, had he chosen, have leaped over the
breastwork and escaped; but this was not necessary, for with devilish
yells the Crow warriors came dropping in quick succession over the rock
among their enemies. The main body of the Crows, too, answered the cry
from the front and rushed up simultaneously. The convulsive struggle
within the breastwork was frightful; for an instant the Blackfeet fought
and yelled like pent-up tigers; but the butchery was soon complete, and
the mangled bodies lay piled up together under the precipice. Not a
Blackfoot made his escape.</p>
<p>As Paul finished his story we came in sight of Richard's Fort. It stood in
the middle of the plain; a disorderly crowd of men around it, and an
emigrant camp a little in front.</p>
<p>"Now, Paul," said I, "where are your Winnicongew lodges?"</p>
<p>"Not come yet," said Paul, "maybe come to-morrow."</p>
<p>Two large villages of a band of Dakota had come three hundred miles from
the Missouri, to join in the war, and they were expected to reach
Richard's that morning. There was as yet no sign of their approach; so
pushing through a noisy, drunken crowd, I entered an apartment of logs and
mud, the largest in the fort; it was full of men of various races and
complexions, all more or less drunk. A company of California emigrants, it
seemed, had made the discovery at this late day that they had encumbered
themselves with too many supplies for their journey. A part, therefore,
they had thrown away or sold at great loss to the traders, but had
determined to get rid of their copious stock of Missouri whisky, by
drinking it on the spot. Here were maudlin squaws stretched on piles of
buffalo robes; squalid Mexicans, armed with bows and arrows; Indians
sedately drunk; long-haired Canadians and trappers, and American
backwoodsmen in brown homespun, the well-beloved pistol and bowie knife
displayed openly at their sides. In the middle of the room a tall, lank
man, with a dingy broadcloth coat, was haranguing the company in the style
of the stump orator. With one hand he sawed the air, and with the other
clutched firmly a brown jug of whisky, which he applied every moment to
his lips, forgetting that he had drained the contents long ago. Richard
formally introduced me to this personage, who was no less a man than
Colonel R., once the leader of the party. Instantly the colonel seizing
me, in the absence of buttons by the leather fringes of my frock, began to
define his position. His men, he said, had mutinied and deposed him; but
still he exercised over them the influence of a superior mind; in all but
the name he was yet their chief. As the colonel spoke, I looked round on
the wild assemblage, and could not help thinking that he was but ill
qualified to conduct such men across the desert to California. Conspicuous
among the rest stood three tail young men, grandsons of Daniel Boone. They
had clearly inherited the adventurous character of that prince of
pioneers; but I saw no signs of the quiet and tranquil spirit that so
remarkably distinguished him.</p>
<p>Fearful was the fate that months after overtook some of the members of
that party. General Kearny, on his late return from California, brought in
the account how they were interrupted by the deep snows among the
mountains, and maddened by cold and hunger fed upon each other's flesh.</p>
<p>I got tired of the confusion. "Come, Paul," said I, "we will be off." Paul
sat in the sun, under the wall of the fort. He jumped up, mounted, and we
rode toward Fort Laramie. When we reached it, a man came out of the gate
with a pack at his back and a rifle on his shoulder; others were gathering
about him, shaking him by the hand, as if taking leave. I thought it a
strange thing that a man should set out alone and on foot for the prairie.
I soon got an explanation. Perrault—this, if I recollect right was
the Canadian's name—had quarreled with the bourgeois, and the fort
was too hot to hold him. Bordeaux, inflated with his transient authority,
had abused him, and received a blow in return. The men then sprang at each
other, and grappled in the middle of the fort. Bordeaux was down in an
instant, at the mercy of the incensed Canadian; had not an old Indian, the
brother of his squaw, seized hold of his antagonist, he would have fared
ill. Perrault broke loose from the old Indian, and both the white men ran
to their rooms for their guns; but when Bordeaux, looking from his door,
saw the Canadian, gun in hand, standing in the area and calling on him to
come out and fight, his heart failed him; he chose to remain where he was.
In vain the old Indian, scandalized by his brother-in-law's cowardice,
called upon him to go upon the prairie and fight it out in the white man's
manner; and Bordeaux's own squaw, equally incensed, screamed to her lord
and master that he was a dog and an old woman. It all availed nothing.
Bordeaux's prudence got the better of his valor, and he would not stir.
Perrault stood showering approbrious epithets at the recent bourgeois.
Growing tired of this, he made up a pack of dried meat, and slinging it at
his back, set out alone for Fort Pierre on the Missouri, a distance of
three hundred miles, over a desert country full of hostile Indians.</p>
<p>I remained in the fort that night. In the morning, as I was coming out
from breakfast, conversing with a trader named McCluskey, I saw a strange
Indian leaning against the side of the gate. He was a tall, strong man,
with heavy features.</p>
<p>"Who is he?" I asked. "That's The Whirlwind," said McCluskey. "He is the
fellow that made all this stir about the war. It's always the way with the
Sioux; they never stop cutting each other's throats; it's all they are fit
for; instead of sitting in their lodges, and getting robes to trade with
us in the winter. If this war goes on, we'll make a poor trade of it next
season, I reckon."</p>
<p>And this was the opinion of all the traders, who were vehemently opposed
to the war, from the serious injury that it must occasion to their
interests. The Whirlwind left his village the day before to make a visit
to the fort. His warlike ardor had abated not a little since he first
conceived the design of avenging his son's death. The long and complicated
preparations for the expedition were too much for his fickle, inconstant
disposition. That morning Bordeaux fastened upon him, made him presents
and told him that if he went to war he would destroy his horses and kill
no buffalo to trade with the white men; in short, that he was a fool to
think of such a thing, and had better make up his mind to sit quietly in
his lodge and smoke his pipe, like a wise man. The Whirlwind's purpose was
evidently shaken; he had become tired, like a child, of his favorite plan.
Bordeaux exultingly predicted that he would not go to war. My philanthropy
at that time was no match for my curiosity, and I was vexed at the
possibility that after all I might lose the rare opportunity of seeing the
formidable ceremonies of war. The Whirlwind, however, had merely thrown
the firebrand; the conflagration was become general. All the western bands
of the Dakota were bent on war; and as I heard from McCluskey, six large
villages already gathered on a little stream, forty miles distant, were
daily calling to the Great Spirit to aid them in their enterprise.
McCluskey had just left and represented them as on their way to La Bonte's
Camp, which they would reach in a week, UNLESS THEY SHOULD LEARN THAT
THERE WERE NO BUFFALO THERE. I did not like this condition, for buffalo
this season were rare in the neighborhood. There were also the two
Minnicongew villages that I mentioned before; but about noon, an Indian
came from Richard's Fort with the news that they were quarreling, breaking
up, and dispersing. So much for the whisky of the emigrants! Finding
themselves unable to drink the whole, they had sold the residue to these
Indians, and it needed no prophet to foretell the results; a spark dropped
into a powder magazine would not have produced a quicker effect. Instantly
the old jealousies and rivalries and smothered feuds that exist in an
Indian village broke out into furious quarrels. They forgot the warlike
enterprise that had already brought them three hundred miles. They seemed
like ungoverned children inflamed with the fiercest passions of men.
Several of them were stabbed in the drunken tumult; and in the morning
they scattered and moved back toward the Missouri in small parties. I
feared that, after all, the long-projected meeting and the ceremonies that
were to attend it might never take place, and I should lose so admirable
an opportunity of seeing the Indian under his most fearful and
characteristic aspect; however, in foregoing this, I should avoid a very
fair probability of being plundered and stripped, and, it might be,
stabbed or shot into the bargain. Consoling myself with this reflection, I
prepared to carry the news, such as it was, to the camp.</p>
<p>I caught my horse, and to my vexation found he had lost a shoe and broken
his tender white hoof against the rocks. Horses are shod at Fort Laramie
at the moderate rate of three dollars a foot; so I tied Hendrick to a beam
in the corral, and summoned Roubidou, the blacksmith. Roubidou, with the
hoof between his knees, was at work with hammer and file, and I was
inspecting the process, when a strange voice addressed me.</p>
<p>"Two more gone under! Well, there is more of us left yet. Here's Jean Gars
and me off to the mountains to-morrow. Our turn will come next, I suppose.
It's a hard life, anyhow!"</p>
<p>I looked up and saw a little man, not much more than five feet high, but
of very square and strong proportions. In appearance he was particularly
dingy; for his old buckskin frock was black and polished with time and
grease, and his belt, knife, pouch, and powder-horn appeared to have seen
the roughest service. The first joint of each foot was entirely gone,
having been frozen off several winters before, and his moccasins were
curtailed in proportion. His whole appearance and equipment bespoke the
"free trapper." He had a round ruddy face, animated with a spirit of
carelessness and gayety not at all in accordance with the words he had
just spoken.</p>
<p>"Two more gone," said I; "what do you mean by that?"</p>
<p>"Oh," said he, "the Arapahoes have just killed two of us in the mountains.
Old Bull-Tail has come to tell us. They stabbed one behind his back, and
shot the other with his own rifle. That's the way we live here! I mean to
give up trapping after this year. My squaw says she wants a pacing horse
and some red ribbons; I'll make enough beaver to get them for her, and
then I'm done! I'll go below and live on a farm."</p>
<p>"Your bones will dry on the prairie, Rouleau!" said another trapper, who
was standing by; a strong, brutal-looking fellow, with a face as surly as
a bull-dog's.</p>
<p>Rouleau only laughed, and began to hum a tune and shuffle a dance on his
stumps of feet.</p>
<p>"You'll see us, before long, passing up our way," said the other man.
"Well," said I, "stop and take a cup of coffee with us"; and as it was
quite late in the afternoon, I prepared to leave the fort at once.</p>
<p>As I rode out, a train of emigrant wagons was passing across the stream.
"Whar are ye goin' stranger?" Thus I was saluted by two or three voices at
once.</p>
<p>"About eighteen miles up the creek."</p>
<p>"It's mighty late to be going that far! Make haste, ye'd better, and keep
a bright lookout for Indians!"</p>
<p>I thought the advice too good to be neglected. Fording the stream, I
passed at a round trot over the plains beyond. But "the more haste, the
worse speed." I proved the truth in the proverb by the time I reached the
hills three miles from the fort. The trail was faintly marked, and riding
forward with more rapidity than caution, I lost sight of it. I kept on in
a direct line, guided by Laramie Creek, which I could see at intervals
darkly glistening in the evening sun, at the bottom of the woody gulf on
my right. Half an hour before sunset I came upon its banks. There was
something exciting in the wild solitude of the place. An antelope sprang
suddenly from the sagebushes before me. As he leaped gracefully not thirty
yards before my horse, I fired, and instantly he spun round and fell.
Quite sure of him, I walked my horse toward him, leisurely reloading my
rifle, when to my surprise he sprang up and trotted rapidly away on three
legs into the dark recesses of the hills, whither I had no time to follow.
Ten minutes after, I was passing along the bottom of a deep valley, and
chancing to look behind me, I saw in the dim light that something was
following. Supposing it to be wolf, I slid from my seat and sat down
behind my horse to shoot it; but as it came up, I saw by its motions that
it was another antelope. It approached within a hundred yards, arched its
graceful neck, and gazed intently. I leveled at the white spot on its
chest, and was about to fire when it started off, ran first to one side
and then to the other, like a vessel tacking against a wind, and at last
stretched away at full speed. Then it stopped again, looked curiously
behind it, and trotted up as before; but not so boldly, for it soon paused
and stood gazing at me. I fired; it leaped upward and fell upon its
tracks. Measuring the distance, I found it 204 paces. When I stood by his
side, the antelope turned his expiring eye upward. It was like a beautiful
woman's, dark and rich. "Fortunate that I am in a hurry," thought I; "I
might be troubled with remorse, if I had time for it."</p>
<p>Cutting the animal up, not in the most skilled manner, I hung the meat at
the back of my saddle, and rode on again. The hills (I could not remember
one of them) closed around me. "It is too late," thought I, "to go
forward. I will stay here to-night, and look for the path in the morning."
As a last effort, however, I ascended a high hill, from which, to my great
satisfaction, I could see Laramie Creek stretching before me, twisting
from side to side amid ragged patches of timber; and far off, close
beneath the shadows of the trees, the ruins of the old trading fort were
visible. I reached them at twilight. It was far from pleasant, in that
uncertain light, to be pushing through the dense trees and shrubbery of
the grove beyond. I listened anxiously for the footfall of man or beast.
Nothing was stirring but one harmless brown bird, chirping among the
branches. I was glad when I gained the open prairie once more, where I
could see if anything approached. When I came to the mouth of Chugwater,
it was totally dark. Slackening the reins, I let my horse take his own
course. He trotted on with unerring instinct, and by nine o'clock was
scrambling down the steep ascent into the meadows where we were encamped.
While I was looking in vain for the light of the fire, Hendrick, with
keener perceptions, gave a loud neigh, which was immediately answered in a
shrill note from the distance. In a moment I was hailed from the darkness
by the voice of Reynal, who had come out, rifle in hand, to see who was
approaching.</p>
<p>He, with his squaw, the two Canadians and the Indian boys, were the sole
inmates of the camp, Shaw and Henry Chatillon being still absent. At noon
of the following day they came back, their horses looking none the better
for the journey. Henry seemed dejected. The woman was dead, and his
children must henceforward be exposed, without a protector, to the
hardships and vicissitudes of Indian life. Even in the midst of his grief
he had not forgotten his attachment to his bourgeois, for he had procured
among his Indian relatives two beautifully ornamented buffalo robes, which
he spread on the ground as a present to us.</p>
<p>Shaw lighted his pipe, and told me in a few words the history of his
journey. When I went to the fort they left me, as I mentioned, at the
mouth of Chugwater. They followed the course of the little stream all day,
traversing a desolate and barren country. Several times they came upon the
fresh traces of a large war party—the same, no doubt, from whom we
had so narrowly escaped an attack. At an hour before sunset, without
encountering a human being by the way, they came upon the lodges of the
squaw and her brothers, who, in compliance with Henry's message, had left
the Indian village in order to join us at our camp. The lodges were
already pitched, five in number, by the side of the stream. The woman lay
in one of them, reduced to a mere skeleton. For some time she had been
unable to move or speak. Indeed, nothing had kept her alive but the hope
of seeing Henry, to whom she was strongly and faithfully attached. No
sooner did he enter the lodge than she revived, and conversed with him the
greater part of the night. Early in the morning she was lifted into a
travail, and the whole party set out toward our camp. There were but five
warriors; the rest were women and children. The whole were in great alarm
at the proximity of the Crow war party, who would certainly have destroyed
them without mercy had they met. They had advanced only a mile or two,
when they discerned a horseman, far off, on the edge of the horizon. They
all stopped, gathering together in the greatest anxiety, from which they
did not recover until long after the horseman disappeared; then they set
out again. Henry was riding with Shaw a few rods in advance of the
Indians, when Mahto-Tatonka, a younger brother of the woman, hastily
called after them. Turning back, they found all the Indians crowded around
the travail in which the woman was lying. They reached her just in time to
hear the death-rattle in her throat. In a moment she lay dead in the
basket of the vehicle. A complete stillness succeeded; then the Indians
raised in concert their cries of lamentation over the corpse, and among
them Shaw clearly distinguished those strange sounds resembling the word
"Halleluyah," which together with some other accidental coincidences has
given rise to the absurd theory that the Indians are descended from the
ten lost tribes of Israel.</p>
<p>The Indian usage required that Henry, as well as the other relatives of
the woman, should make valuable presents, to be placed by the side of the
body at its last resting place. Leaving the Indians, he and Shaw set out
for the camp and reached it, as we have seen, by hard pushing, at about
noon. Having obtained the necessary articles, they immediately returned.
It was very late and quite dark when they again reached the lodges. They
were all placed in a deep hollow among the dreary hills. Four of them were
just visible through the gloom, but the fifth and largest was illuminated
by the ruddy blaze of a fire within, glowing through the half-transparent
covering of raw hides. There was a perfect stillness as they approached.
The lodges seemed without a tenant. Not a living thing was stirring—there
was something awful in the scene. They rode up to the entrance of the
lodge, and there was no sound but the tramp of their horses. A squaw came
out and took charge of the animals, without speaking a word. Entering,
they found the lodge crowded with Indians; a fire was burning in the
midst, and the mourners encircled it in a triple row. Room was made for
the newcomers at the head of the lodge, a robe spread for them to sit
upon, and a pipe lighted and handed to them in perfect silence. Thus they
passed the greater part of the night. At times the fire would subside into
a heap of embers, until the dark figures seated around it were scarcely
visible; then a squaw would drop upon it a piece of buffalo-fat, and a
bright flame, instantly springing up, would reveal of a sudden the crowd
of wild faces, motionless as bronze. The silence continued unbroken. It
was a relief to Shaw when daylight returned and he could escape from this
house of mourning. He and Henry prepared to return homeward; first,
however, they placed the presents they had brought near the body of the
squaw, which, most gaudily attired, remained in a sitting posture in one
of the lodges. A fine horse was picketed not far off, destined to be
killed that morning for the service of her spirit, for the woman was lame,
and could not travel on foot over the dismal prairies to the villages of
the dead. Food, too, was provided, and household implements, for her use
upon this last journey.</p>
<p>Henry left her to the care of her relatives, and came immediately with
Shaw to the camp. It was some time before he entirely recovered from his
dejection.</p>
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