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<h2> CHAPTER XVIII </h2>
<h3> A MOUNTAIN HUNT </h3>
<p>The camp was full of the newly-cut lodge-poles; some, already prepared,
were stacked together, white and glistening, to dry and harden in the sun;
others were lying on the ground, and the squaws, the boys, and even some
of the warriors were busily at work peeling off the bark and paring them
with their knives to the proper dimensions. Most of the hides obtained at
the last camp were dressed and scraped thin enough for use, and many of
the squaws were engaged in fitting them together and sewing them with
sinews, to form the coverings for the lodges. Men were wandering among the
bushes that lined the brook along the margin of the camp, cutting sticks
of red willow, or shongsasha, the bark of which, mixed with tobacco, they
use for smoking. Reynal's squaw was hard at work with her awl and buffalo
sinews upon her lodge, while her proprietor, having just finished an
enormous breakfast of meat, was smoking a social pipe along with Raymond
and myself. He proposed at length that we should go out on a hunt. "Go to
the Big Crow's lodge," said he, "and get your rifle. I'll bet the gray
Wyandotte pony against your mare that we start an elk or a black-tailed
deer, or likely as not, a bighorn, before we are two miles out of camp.
I'll take my squaw's old yellow horse; you can't whip her more than four
miles an hour, but she is as good for the mountains as a mule."</p>
<p>I mounted the black mule which Raymond usually rode. She was a very fine
and powerful animal, gentle and manageable enough by nature; but of late
her temper had been soured by misfortune. About a week before I had
chanced to offend some one of the Indians, who out of revenge went
secretly into the meadow and gave her a severe stab in the haunch with his
knife. The wound, though partially healed, still galled her extremely, and
made her even more perverse and obstinate than the rest of her species.</p>
<p>The morning was a glorious one, and I was in better health than I had been
at any time for the last two months. Though a strong frame and well
compacted sinews had borne me through hitherto, it was long since I had
been in a condition to feel the exhilaration of the fresh mountain wind
and the gay sunshine that brightened the crags and trees. We left the
little valley and ascended a rocky hollow in the mountain. Very soon we
were out of sight of the camp, and of every living thing, man, beast,
bird, or insect. I had never before, except on foot, passed over such
execrable ground, and I desire never to repeat the experiment. The black
mule grew indignant, and even the redoubtable yellow horse stumbled every
moment, and kept groaning to himself as he cut his feet and legs among the
sharp rocks.</p>
<p>It was a scene of silence and desolation. Little was visible except
beetling crags and the bare shingly sides of the mountains, relieved by
scarcely a trace of vegetation. At length, however, we came upon a forest
tract, and had no sooner done so than we heartily wished ourselves back
among the rocks again; for we were on a steep descent, among trees so
thick that we could see scarcely a rod in any direction.</p>
<p>If one is anxious to place himself in a situation where the hazardous and
the ludicrous are combined in about equal proportions, let him get upon a
vicious mule, with a snaffle bit, and try to drive her through the woods
down a slope of 45 degrees. Let him have on a long rifle, a buckskin frock
with long fringes, and a head of long hair. These latter appendages will
be caught every moment and twitched away in small portions by the twigs,
which will also whip him smartly across the face, while the large branches
above thump him on the head. His mule, if she be a true one, will
alternately stop short and dive violently forward, and his position upon
her back will be somewhat diversified and extraordinary. At one time he
will clasp her affectionately, to avoid the blow of a bough overhead; at
another, he will throw himself back and fling his knee forward against the
side of her neck, to keep it from being crushed between the rough bark of
a tree and the equally unyielding ribs of the animal herself. Reynal was
cursing incessantly during the whole way down. Neither of us had the
remotest idea where we were going; and though I have seen rough riding, I
shall always retain an evil recollection of that five minutes' scramble.</p>
<p>At last we left our troubles behind us, emerging into the channel of a
brook that circled along the foot of the descent; and here, turning
joyfully to the left, we rode in luxury and ease over the white pebbles
and the rippling water, shaded from the glaring sun by an overarching
green transparency. These halcyon moments were of short duration. The
friendly brook, turning sharply to one side, went brawling and foaming
down the rocky hill into an abyss, which, as far as we could discern, had
no bottom; so once more we betook ourselves to the detested woods. When
next we came forth from their dancing shadow and sunlight, we found
ourselves standing in the broad glare of day, on a high jutting point of
the mountain. Before us stretched a long, wide, desert valley, winding
away far amid the mountains. No civilized eye but mine had ever looked
upon that virgin waste. Reynal was gazing intently; he began to speak at
last:</p>
<p>"Many a time, when I was with the Indians, I have been hunting for gold
all through the Black Hills. There's plenty of it here; you may be certain
of that. I have dreamed about it fifty times, and I never dreamed yet but
what it came true. Look over yonder at those black rocks piled up against
that other big rock. Don't it look as if there might be something there?
It won't do for a white man to be rummaging too much about these
mountains; the Indians say they are full of bad spirits; and I believe
myself that it's no good luck to be hunting about here after gold. Well,
for all that, I would like to have one of these fellows up here, from down
below, to go about with his witch-hazel rod, and I'll guarantee that it
would not be long before he would light on a gold mine. Never mind; we'll
let the gold alone for to-day. Look at those trees down below us in the
hollow; we'll go down there, and I reckon we'll get a black-tailed deer."</p>
<p>But Reynal's predictions were not verified. We passed mountain after
mountain, and valley after valley; we explored deep ravines; yet still to
my companion's vexation and evident surprise, no game could be found. So,
in the absence of better, we resolved to go out on the plains and look for
an antelope. With this view we began to pass down a narrow valley, the
bottom of which was covered with the stiff wild-sage bushes and marked
with deep paths, made by the buffalo, who, for some inexplicable reason,
are accustomed to penetrate, in their long grave processions, deep among
the gorges of these sterile mountains.</p>
<p>Reynal's eye was ranging incessantly among the rocks and along the edges
of the black precipices, in hopes of discovering the mountain sheep
peering down upon us in fancied security from that giddy elevation.
Nothing was visible for some time. At length we both detected something in
motion near the foot of one of the mountains, and in a moment afterward a
black-tailed deer, with his spreading antlers, stood gazing at us from the
top of a rock, and then, slowly turning away, disappeared behind it. In an
instant Reynal was out of his saddle, and running toward the spot. I,
being too weak to follow, sat holding his horse and waiting the result. I
lost sight of him, then heard the report of his rifle, deadened among the
rocks, and finally saw him reappear, with a surly look that plainly
betrayed his ill success. Again we moved forward down the long valley,
when soon after we came full upon what seemed a wide and very shallow
ditch, incrusted at the bottom with white clay, dried and cracked in the
sun. Under this fair outside, Reynal's eye detected the signs of lurking
mischief. He called me to stop, and then alighting, picked up a stone and
threw it into the ditch. To my utter amazement it fell with a dull splash,
breaking at once through the thin crust, and spattering round the hole a
yellowish creamy fluid, into which it sank and disappeared. A stick, five
or six feet long lay on the ground, and with this we sounded the insidious
abyss close to its edge. It was just possible to touch the bottom. Places
like this are numerous among the Rocky Mountains. The buffalo, in his
blind and heedless walk, often plunges into them unawares. Down he sinks;
one snort of terror, one convulsive struggle, and the slime calmly flows
above his shaggy head, the languid undulations of its sleek and placid
surface alone betraying how the powerful monster writhes in his
death-throes below.</p>
<p>We found after some trouble a point where we could pass the abyss, and now
the valley began to open upon the plains which spread to the horizon
before us. On one of their distant swells we discerned three or four black
specks, which Reynal pronounced to be buffalo.</p>
<p>"Come," said he, "we must get one of them. My squaw wants more sinews to
finish her lodge with, and I want some glue myself."</p>
<p>He immediately put the yellow horse at such a gallop as he was capable of
executing, while I set spurs to the mule, who soon far outran her plebeian
rival. When we had galloped a mile or more, a large rabbit, by ill luck,
sprang up just under the feet of the mule, who bounded violently aside in
full career. Weakened as I was, I was flung forcibly to the ground, and my
rifle, falling close to my head, went off with a shock. Its sharp spiteful
report rang for some moments in my ear. Being slightly stunned, I lay for
an instant motionless, and Reynal, supposing me to be shot, rode up and
began to curse the mule. Soon recovering myself, I rose, picked up the
rifle and anxiously examined it. It was badly injured. The stock was
cracked, and the main screw broken, so that the lock had to be tied in its
place with a string; yet happily it was not rendered totally
unserviceable. I wiped it out, reloaded it, and handing it to Reynal, who
meanwhile had caught the mule and led her up to me, I mounted again. No
sooner had I done so, than the brute began to rear and plunge with extreme
violence; but being now well prepared for her, and free from incumbrance,
I soon reduced her to submission. Then taking the rifle again from Reynal,
we galloped forward as before.</p>
<p>We were now free of the mountain and riding far out on the broad prairie.
The buffalo were still some two miles in advance of us. When we came near
them, we stopped where a gentle swell of the plain concealed us from their
view, and while I held his horse Reynal ran forward with his rifle, till I
lost sight of him beyond the rising ground. A few minutes elapsed; I heard
the report of his piece, and saw the buffalo running away at full speed on
the right, and immediately after, the hunter himself unsuccessful as
before, came up and mounted his horse in excessive ill-humor. He cursed
the Black Hills and the buffalo, swore that he was a good hunter, which
indeed was true, and that he had never been out before among those
mountains without killing two or three deer at least.</p>
<p>We now turned toward the distant encampment. As we rode along, antelope in
considerable numbers were flying lightly in all directions over the plain,
but not one of them would stand and be shot at. When we reached the foot
of the mountain ridge that lay between us and the village, we were too
impatient to take the smooth and circuitous route; so turning short to the
left, we drove our wearied animals directly upward among the rocks. Still
more antelope were leaping about among these flinty hillsides. Each of us
shot at one, though from a great distance, and each missed his mark. At
length we reached the summit of the last ridge. Looking down, we saw the
bustling camp in the valley at our feet, and ingloriously descended to it.
As we rode among the lodges, the Indians looked in vain for the fresh meat
that should have hung behind our saddles, and the squaws uttered various
suppressed ejaculations, to the great indignation of Reynal. Our
mortification was increased when we rode up to his lodge. Here we saw his
young Indian relative, the Hail-Storm, his light graceful figure on the
ground in an easy attitude, while with his friend the Rabbit, who sat by
his side, he was making an abundant meal from a wooden bowl of wasna,
which the squaw had placed between them. Near him lay the fresh skin of a
female elk, which he had just killed among the mountains, only a mile or
two from the camp. No doubt the boy's heart was elated with triumph, but
he betrayed no sign of it. He even seemed totally unconscious of our
approach, and his handsome face had all the tranquillity of Indian
self-control; a self-control which prevents the exhibition of emotion,
without restraining the emotion itself. It was about two months since I
had known the Hail-Storm, and within that time his character had
remarkably developed. When I first saw him, he was just emerging from the
habits and feelings of the boy into the ambition of the hunter and
warrior. He had lately killed his first deer, and this had excited his
aspirations after distinction. Since that time he had been continually in
search of game, and no young hunter in the village had been so active or
so fortunate as he. It will perhaps be remembered how fearlessly he
attacked the buffalo bull, as we were moving toward our camp at the
Medicine-Bow Mountain. All this success had produced a marked change in
his character. As I first remembered him he always shunned the society of
the young squaws, and was extremely bashful and sheepish in their
presence; but now, in the confidence of his own reputation, he began to
assume the airs and the arts of a man of gallantry. He wore his red
blanket dashingly over his left shoulder, painted his cheeks every day
with vermilion, and hung pendants of shells in his ears. If I observed
aright, he met with very good success in his new pursuits; still the
Hail-Storm had much to accomplish before he attained the full standing of
a warrior. Gallantly as he began to bear himself among the women and
girls, he still was timid and abashed in the presence of the chiefs and
old men; for he had never yet killed a man, or stricken the dead body of
an enemy in battle. I have no doubt that the handsome smooth-faced boy
burned with keen desire to flash his maiden scalping-knife, and I would
not have encamped alone with him without watching his movements with a
distrustful eye.</p>
<p>His elder brother, the Horse, was of a different character. He was nothing
but a lazy dandy. He knew very well how to hunt, but preferred to live by
the hunting of others. He had no appetite for distinction, and the
Hail-Storm, though a few years younger than he, already surpassed him in
reputation. He had a dark and ugly face, and he passed a great part of his
time in adorning it with vermilion, and contemplating it by means of a
little pocket looking-glass which I gave him. As for the rest of the day,
he divided it between eating and sleeping, and sitting in the sun on the
outside of a lodge. Here he would remain for hour after hour, arrayed in
all his finery, with an old dragoon's sword in his hand, and evidently
flattering himself that he was the center of attraction to the eyes of the
surrounding squaws. Yet he sat looking straight forward with a face of the
utmost gravity, as if wrapped in profound meditation, and it was only by
the occasional sidelong glances which he shot at his supposed admirers
that one could detect the true course of his thoughts.</p>
<p>Both he and his brother may represent a class in the Indian community;
neither should the Hail-Storm's friend, the Rabbit, be passed by without
notice. The Hail-Storm and he were inseparable; they ate, slept, and
hunted together, and shared with one another almost all that they
possessed. If there be anything that deserves to be called romantic in the
Indian character, it is to be sought for in friendships such as this,
which are quite common among many of the prairie tribes.</p>
<p>Slowly, hour after hour, that weary afternoon dragged away. I lay in
Reynal's lodge, overcome by the listless torpor that pervaded the whole
encampment. The day's work was finished, or if it were not, the
inhabitants had resolved not to finish it at all, and all were dozing
quietly within the shelter of the lodges. A profound lethargy, the very
spirit of indolence, seemed to have sunk upon the village. Now and then I
could hear the low laughter of some girl from within a neighboring lodge,
or the small shrill voices of a few restless children, who alone were
moving in the deserted area. The spirit of the place infected me; I could
not even think consecutively; I was fit only for musing and reverie, when
at last, like the rest, I fell asleep.</p>
<p>When evening came and the fires were lighted round the lodges, a select
family circle convened in the neighborhood of Reynal's domicile. It was
composed entirely of his squaw's relatives, a mean and ignoble clan, among
whom none but the Hail-Storm held forth any promise of future distinction.
Even his protests were rendered not a little dubious by the character of
the family, less however from any principle of aristocratic distinction
than from the want of powerful supporters to assist him in his
undertakings, and help to avenge his quarrels. Raymond and I sat down
along with them. There were eight or ten men gathered around the fire,
together with about as many women, old and young, some of whom were
tolerably good-looking. As the pipe passed round among the men, a lively
conversation went forward, more merry than delicate, and at length two or
three of the elder women (for the girls were somewhat diffident and
bashful) began to assail Raymond with various pungent witticisms. Some of
the men took part and an old squaw concluded by bestowing on him a
ludicrous nick name, at which a general laugh followed at his expense.
Raymond grinned and giggled, and made several futile attempts at repartee.
Knowing the impolicy and even danger of suffering myself to be placed in a
ludicrous light among the Indians, I maintained a rigid inflexible
countenance, and wholly escaped their sallies.</p>
<p>In the morning I found, to my great disgust, that the camp was to retain
its position for another day. I dreaded its languor and monotony, and to
escape it, I set out to explore the surrounding mountains. I was
accompanied by a faithful friend, my rifle, the only friend indeed on
whose prompt assistance in time of trouble I could implicitly rely. Most
of the Indians in the village, it is true, professed good-will toward the
whites, but the experience of others and my own observation had taught me
the extreme folly of confidence, and the utter impossibility of foreseeing
to what sudden acts the strange unbridled impulses of an Indian may urge
him. When among this people danger is never so near as when you are
unprepared for it, never so remote as when you are armed and on the alert
to meet it any moment. Nothing offers so strong a temptation to their
ferocious instincts as the appearance of timidity, weakness, or security.</p>
<p>Many deep and gloomy gorges, choked with trees and bushes, opened from the
sides of the hills, which were shaggy with forests wherever the rocks
permitted vegetation to spring. A great number of Indians were stalking
along the edges of the woods, and boys were whooping and laughing on the
mountain-sides, practicing eye and hand, and indulging their destructive
propensities by following birds and small animals and killing them with
their little bows and arrows. There was one glen, stretching up between
steep cliffs far into the bosom of the mountain. I began to ascend along
its bottom, pushing my way onward among the rocks, trees, and bushes that
obstructed it. A slender thread of water trickled along its center, which
since issuing from the heart of its native rock could scarcely have been
warmed or gladdened by a ray of sunshine. After advancing for some time, I
conceived myself to be entirely alone; but coming to a part of the glen in
a great measure free of trees and undergrowth, I saw at some distance the
black head and red shoulders of an Indian among the bushes above. The
reader need not prepare himself for a startling adventure, for I have none
to relate. The head and shoulders belonged to Mene-Seela, my best friend
in the village. As I had approached noiselessly with my moccasined feet,
the old man was quite unconscious of my presence; and turning to a point
where I could gain an unobstructed view of him, I saw him seated alone,
immovable as a statue, among the rocks and trees. His face was turned
upward, and his eyes seemed riveted on a pine tree springing from a cleft
in the precipice above. The crest of the pine was swaying to and fro in
the wind, and its long limbs waved slowly up and down, as if the tree had
life. Looking for a while at the old man, I was satisfied that he was
engaged in an act of worship or prayer, or communion of some kind with a
supernatural being. I longed to penetrate his thoughts, but I could do
nothing more than conjecture and speculate. I knew that though the
intellect of an Indian can embrace the idea of an all-wise, all-powerful
Spirit, the supreme Ruler of the universe, yet his mind will not always
ascend into communion with a being that seems to him so vast, remote, and
incomprehensible; and when danger threatens, when his hopes are broken,
when the black wing of sorrow overshadows him, he is prone to turn for
relief to some inferior agency, less removed from the ordinary scope of
his faculties. He has a guardian spirit, on whom he relies for succor and
guidance. To him all nature is instinct with mystic influence. Among those
mountains not a wild beast was prowling, a bird singing, or a leaf
fluttering, that might not tend to direct his destiny or give warning of
what was in store for him; and he watches the world of nature around him
as the astrologer watches the stars. So closely is he linked with it that
his guardian spirit, no unsubstantial creation of the fancy, is usually
embodied in the form of some living thing—a bear, a wolf, an eagle,
or a serpent; and Mene-Seela, as he gazed intently on the old pine tree,
might believe it to inshrine the fancied guide and protector of his life.</p>
<p>Whatever was passing in the mind of the old man, it was no part of sense
or of delicacy to disturb him. Silently retracing my footsteps, I
descended the glen until I came to a point where I could climb the steep
precipices that shut it in, and gain the side of the mountain. Looking up,
I saw a tall peak rising among the woods. Something impelled me to climb;
I had not felt for many a day such strength and elasticity of limb. An
hour and a half of slow and often intermittent labor brought me to the
very summit; and emerging from the dark shadows of the rocks and pines, I
stepped forth into the light, and walking along the sunny verge of a
precipice, seated myself on its extreme point. Looking between the
mountain peaks to the westward, the pale blue prairie was stretching to
the farthest horizon like a serene and tranquil ocean. The surrounding
mountains were in themselves sufficiently striking and impressive, but
this contrast gave redoubled effect to their stern features.</p>
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