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BT JOHN rAUilSKll, ESQ. ^-'l ■'^^.^t^iviyNf*'- mmj If* Mm' ^ iV^<^ -ilSA,'""^- i I 'V iHi .'ti'.'.t liVt V ■^rrrsj&am *^\ ' % LO IRGE ROUTLEDGE & 4; HRRINGDON STBEETj AND 18, BEEKMAN STIi^^T,; iJ^|W! Yp^^. \- ; 1856. "rr*r:-~-.--"rr"''' ' ' y V C. '/r'.r V {'.■■■ *'' " '^' (Fj THE SOLITARY HUNTER; OB, Sporting ^bijeiitures in i\t ^mirits. BY JOHN PALLISER, ESQ. Clje ^igfjtfj ^ijousmti, iuitfj SUustrations* LONDON: C. ROUTLEDGE & CO. FARRINGDON STREET; NEW YORK: 18, BEEKMAN STREET, 1856. M m TO MY BBOTHER SPORTSMEN OF ENGLAND, IRELAND, AND SCOTLAND. Dear Friends, I WAS induced, on my return from America, to collect the very scanty contents of an imperfect journal, which recorded, for the perusal of a few intimate friends, my experiences of adventure in the far West. These kind critics afterwards tempted me to enlarge the circle of my readers, by many assurances of the [indulgence which a courteous public extends towards [deficiencies of style and composition in a writer more accustomed to the use of the rifle and hunting-knife [than to that of the pen. In this age of literature, when so many v crks of [imagination are appearing every day, I should iespair of such a mere matter-of-fact story finding any place in [the attention or interests of the reading world, did I [not firmly rely on your sympathies. Without further apology, therefore, I will preface [my story by an attempt to give you the benefit of what jxperience I have acquired in outfitting for distant [hunting expeditions, in the hope that it may prove of [use to such of you as may contemplate similar excur- jsions ; in helping you to provide yourselves with things which are really necessary, and also to avoid burthening Till DEDICATION. yourselves with what is cumbersome, and comparatively useless. Of guns, the most valuable and indispensable is. the plain, smooth-bdre, doubled-barrelled gun, about fourteen to twelve in the bore. Let it be made by a first- rate maker, one who himself superintends the manufac- ture of every portion of his guns ; for, in a country where there are no gunsmiths to run to in case of an accident, the breaking of a trigger or a shear, or the failure of some screw of inferior metal or workmanship, may involve the most serious consequences. I, for my own part, as well as both my brothers, in our numerous hunting expeditions in America, India, and Ceylon, have always used the guns and rifles of Trulock and Son, of Dawson Street, Dublin, which, ^or accuracy, power, and trustworthiness, I have seldom Sccn equalled, and never excelled. Nothing gives the sportsman so much confidence in using the heavy charges required in elephant-shooting, as the knowledge that the barrels in his hands have been forged by a good maker. I do not deny that good barrels may be made in Birmingham ; but I am convinced that there is nothing like the master's eye over a gun in every stage of its construction. For close and dangerous shooting I know nothing equal to the double-barrelled, smooth-bore gun. You can load it more rapidly, and handle it more quickly and dexterously, than any other, also at the same time sufficiently depend upon it for accuracy as far as sixty or seventy yards. Next in importance I would suggest a single-barrelled DEDICATION. IX paratively 3nsable is. un, about by a first- manufac- a country :ase of an sar, or the kmanship, I, for my numerous id Ceylon, :ulock and accuracy, )fi equalled, rtsmau so •equired in I barrels in 3 made in is nothing bage of its- no; I know -bore gun. it more so at the jcuracy as j-barrelled Iwo-grooved rifle, which I much prefer to the poly- or lany-groovcd, for the reasons that with the former you inn use a larger charge of powder without danger of the gullet tripping ; you may fire a greater number of shots rithout fouliui; the barrel or losing in accuracy, an A it ^ou use fancy conical projectiles, you may do so with less chance of damage to your rifle. f Were I so circumstanced that I could take a third gim with me, it would be a double-barrelled, two-grooved liflc, whose execution at long range, though below that of the single rifle, is, of course, far more accurate than fiiat of the smooth-bore : experience has, indeed, satis - ^d me that, for a very long shot, you never can count ^pon the same precision with a double as with a single farrel. Even supposing the barrels to be perfectly piarallel (which is almost an impossibility), still the direction of recoil of each when fired is different, and ||as a different effect upon the flight of the bullet ; so iiat barrels, which would throw almost exactly parallel hen discharged from a vice, will slightly diverge from ^ch other when fired from the shoulder. You must l|>t infer from these remarks that I undervalue the (jkuble rifle. For deer-shooting, especially, it is invalu- )le ; and often, when I have missed a deer with the rst barrel, has the animal stood still at the report, as H from curiosity, and afforded me a second shot. I ?rely would not have you expect too much from it, reckon that its accuracy of execution beyond one mdred and fifty yards is equal to that of a good igle-barrel rifle. X DEDICATION. As to calibre, sportsmen of the Western arc much at variance with those of the Eastern world, the former preferring the small bullet ot thirty-two, forty, or even iifty, to the pound, while their East-Indian brethren are as strongly in favour of the large ball, running from sixteen to twelve, or even eight only to the pound. The reason of this discrepancy I fimcy is this, that the difficulty of obtaining good powder is much greater in the West than in the East ; for, the larger the ball, the greater the necessity for superior powder.* For my own part, I should be inclined to select a size carrying from twenty-four to sixteen to the pound. In your choice of knives, do not be induced to encumber yourself with any thick-bladed, highly- illuminated cutlery of the German jdger fashion: they are very handsome to look at, when hung up over a chimney-piece, but very ineffective in the field, wearying and blistering the hands, and splintering against the bones of any large animal. The best knife for hunting purposes, in my opinion, is a good, plain, wooden-handled butcher-knife : let the handle be long, and the blade thin. In horses, your great object should be to combine the greatest hardiness with the highest courage. A thorough- •) * By increasiDg your charge beyond a certain quantity you do not increase the force. No more powder will ignite than is sufii cient to cover the bullet if it is placed on a table and powde: poured gently over it until it is concealed. If you hear your bal strike the object fired at, it is a pretty sure indication of deficiencj of force, either in the quantity or the quality of the powder. lagin i\ DEDICATION. XI irc much at the former irty, or even Ml brctliron iinning from the pound. [lis, that the uch greater larger the or powder.* to select a the pound. induced tc led, highly- fer fashion; n hung up in the field, splintering The best I, is a good the handle combine the A thorough- antity you do than is suffi' e and powde: hear your bal n of deficiencj owder. red horse you can train to rush at anything : his being imid at first, or apt to shy, has nothing to do with any )scncc of courage. By patience and perso/erance, you rill teach him to charge any animal, not excepting a nsly bear ; while a common, badly-bred brute will not 'cn pursue a bison. Mules, for packing, arc, in some jspects, superior to horses ; but they cannot support intense cold nearly so well. I strongly advise especial Hid constant attention to saddles. Go where you will, md all over the world, you will find nothing to equal <|ie English saddle. Provide yourselves with them at my cost, and transport them at any inconvenience. When on the prairie, travel with a blanket saddle-cloth. 1"ou will find it a comfortable addition to your bed ; but be careful before putting the saddle over it on the il^rse, that there is no crease in its folds ; for a sore on jjbur horse's back is a serious inconvenience to a long journey. It is a good plan, before fastening the girths, to pass your forefinger under the saddle-cloth, and lift slightly off the horse's withers. For clothing, I think there is nothing like Scotch )ollen stuffs ; leather, after all, is but an inconvenient ^bstitute for these ; for though it has its advantages in point of wear, it is horribly uncomfortable in wet wea- € ., aad dries as hard and stiff as parchment. Keep your gunpowder in air-tight packages ; expo- tre to the atmosphere weakens it. Do not burthen purselves uselessly by trying to forestall a thousand laginary necessities. Beyond your guns and horses, ith their several appurtenances, you will absolutely !i ill i i {I Sll DEDICATION. require nothing on the prairie but your knife, flint and steel, and pipe, an iron ladle for melting lead, a tir mug, and two iron kettles, one for cooking, the othei for boiling cofifee — with iron covers to them, which will respectively do for frying meat, and for roasting your coflfee. Before leaving the Settlements, provide yourselves with lead, tobacco, coffee, sugar, salt, needles, awls strong thread, and shoemaker's wax, and also one or two dressed sldns, for making and mending mocassins ; and with this equipment, you may pass from Independ- ence to the Pacific Ocean. I jaKT - ur-i- igey-^i life, flint and ig lead, a tin ing, the othei m, which will roasting youi de yourselvci leedles, awls i also one or g mocassins ; >m Independ- CONTENTS. CHAPTER I. 'tjk^ Stfirt. — Gen. Tom Thumb. — Halifax. — Astor House. — American llailways. — Philadelphia. — Baltimore Beauties. — A Clinical Pro- fessor, — Mark Tapley's Eden. — The great Missouri. — Drinks.— Kew Orleans. — Night Adventure. — Creole Ladies. — Col. Wbite'a Oratorio of " David."— Pa^^e 1. CHAPTER II. tansas forests. — Deer-shooting. — The Major's good shots. — Fire- 'J*an-hunting. — Fine fat Bucks. — Still-hunting. — First night in ihe Woods. — Panther shot. — Black bait for an Alligator. — Assaa- jnation of a Bear. — Page 27. CHAPTEPt III. Mipnmoth Caves. — Stalactite Architecture. — Ancient America.-— Hambles in the Earth. — Mummy found. — Subterranean Ball.— ■it. Louis Hunting Club. — A good run. — A fat Buck killed.—- tospitable Hunters. — Kentucky talked down. — American Fui )mpany. —Pa^fc 48. XIV CONTENTS. CHAPTER IV. Old Mr. Kipp. — Prep-arin*-- for the Start. — Mormons.— Camping ,t Night. — Duck-.shooting. — fJigantic Vegetation. — Prairie on Fiiv — Fort Vermilion. — Scalp Dance. — A Dog Fe.ast. — A Won>;ii bought and saved. — Hint from a Bullet. — Fort Pien'o. — Page 51' IM CHAPTER V. Clear Atmospliere. — Sec Buffalo. — Arrival at Fort Union. — Buffal hunting. — Winter sets in. — 1-iunting Party. — Escape from ; War Party. — A Race for Life or Death. — Wanton Cruelty of tli Sioux. — A heroic old Bull. — Domestic Calves and Bisou Bull.- Twjc 75. CHAPTER VI. Tossed by a Buffalo. — Elk-shooting. — Wolves. — Spoil a Canniba Feast. — Ishmah, — Hard up for Meat. — Owen Mackenzie's Post —The Traders.— Pcri/e 100. CHAPTER VII. Glutton Feast. — My Indian Companion. — Hunting in Snow. — Roa Loin ol Wolf. — Black-tail Deer. — Rapacious Beauties. — Anothe: Journey. — A Long Shot. — Indian Vomcity. — Larpenter\s Poh! — Start for the Minitarces. — Awful Night. — Peekay and tlv Bull.— Reach Fort Berthold.— Pa^/e 121. CHAPTER VIII. Mr. Chardon. — Boucharville. — Geese put their heads together.- Ice breaks up. — A Cold Bath. — Arrive at the Fort. — Preparation- — An Afternoon's Hunt. — Elk shows Fight. — Shot at Sun-dowi: —Hard Woik.— Page 143. CONTENTS. sv »s.— Camping .t -I'rairie on File lat. — A Woniai ene. — PaQC 59, CHArTER IX. tunt on the Yellow Rtonc. — Grosso-Corne Hunting. — A Beautiful Camp. — Beaver, — Good Hunting Country. — Cat Fishing. — Skin- boat Buikling. — Tailoring. — Crow Indians. — Descend the Yellow Stone. — Surprise a Crow Camp. — Return to Fort Union. — Jnion. — Buffalo •Escape from ; a Crueltv of tli id Bisou BuU.- poil a Canniba ackenzie'a Post n Snow. — Eoa • ities. — Anollie: irpenter's Pos' eekay and tli- CHAPTER X. lispose of the Meat. — Descend the Missouri. — A War-party. — I They decline the attack. — Obtain two more followers. — Kill .1 young Bear. — The grisly Bear. — A breakfast of Marrow. — Nearly ^kill two eagles with a ball. — Chase and capture two Bison calves. ,,;| — Return to Minitartje Village. — Scaffoldings for the dead. — :^j Indian Games. — Death oi Mr. Chardon. — ParjQ 175. CHAPTER XI. other Hunting Expedition. — The Turtle Mountains. — Dangerous 'rjlunting Country. — My last Buffalo-hunt. — Sold by an Antelope. "-$— Attacked by and kill a grisly Bear. — Her cub shows fight. — X)epart from Turtle Mountain. — Attack a grisly Bear. — More |;risly Bears. — Mr. Denig's Adventure. — Bear smashing a Buffalo. *— Murray and his Mackinaw boats. — The Pipeot Peace. — Shake iiands with an old Enemy. — An Indian Battle. — Cannibalism. — l^^rrlval of the Martha. — Death of poor Smith. — Page 189. '"J CHAPTER XIT. ids together ,- — I'reparation- l4j|ive the Indian country. —A blasted Cannon.— Mr. Mackenzie, t at Sun-dowt 1-Ishraah forages for himseh. — The Yellow Fever. — Doctor arrell. — Geneial Taylor's Address. — *'Leauty'(i" History and I ' Ml ". i I' svi CONTENTS. Adventures. — Marriage Feast. — My pretty Hostess. — A Music; Smash — Bruin takes care of Number One. — "Beauty" create jj a Sensation. — Bruin rescues the Antelope — The Bali;2e.- Puf/e 207. CHAPTER XIII. Snipe and Duck-shooting. — Norwegian Sportsman. — A wouncie Alligator proves a disagreeable Boating Companion. — Negr torn by an Alligator. — The Falcon, — Chagres. — Storming t!: Spanish Fort. — Tropical Thunderstorm, — PanamH. — Santa Anr Cathedral. — The Pope inexorable. — Home by English ^h Steamer. — Page 22 i!' ifll :,e8s. — A !Music; Beauty" create -The Balize.- EAMBLES AND ADVENTUEES. ,n. — A wounde ipanion. — Negr — Storming ti ihr. — Santa Anr. y £ngli-f disarming raud or con- as new in a scovered one sellers ; viz.. ;s at night; ollinG: alonif casual pas- r!"— "Sir, my reply; sation, that, otive of mv » jmmittino- a ected me to cellent one ; iter renck'is the extreme ourney was ' steamboats i up. The captain of our boat prudently remained all night at New London, on accoimt of the weather, of which these boats lire by no means independent. Next day we resumed ^thc railway once more to New York. An American railway-carriage reminds one a little ■of Wombwell's waggon for transporting wild beasts, so Hdv as its external appearance is concerned ; and there is abundance of room inside for tlie passengers to walk 11]) and down, the seats being so arranged as to allow an uninterrupted passage from one end of each carriage to lie other. They contain open stoves, round which you ay sit occasionally, and change your place from time time, which all those who are in the habit of travel- ling know to be a great luxury ; besides this, the car- Iriages themselves are so closely chained together in ieuccession, that you can walk from one end of the train ^0 the other. The seats, or benches rather, in the carriages are ranged in rows down each side of the pas- gage, and at right angles to it, except in the vicinity ^f the stoves, where passengers are at liberty to sit in liny direction they please, on camp-chairs left for that fairpose. I may also here mention a very good regula- jtion adopted with regard to the luggage : brass tickets lire chained to each separate trunk or portmanteau, and l^uplicates of these tickets are given to the passenger, '|vho need have no further trouble with his luggage than firing them to a help (/. e. servant) on arriving at his destination. ^ At New York I stayed at the Astor House, a mag- fificcnt " block '' (/. e. building), far larger than any otc'l I ever beheld in the Old World. Many of my J?aders will doubtless remember the hotel of VEmpereur *^o/min, and I' Hotel de Bussie, in Frankfort: the Astor ouse, I thought, strongly resembled these, though on still larger scale — indeed I doubt whether it be not rger than both these hotels put together. The plat- 8 RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. form anterior to the huge hall-door is reached from the street by double rows of large stone staircases. The charges I found moderate. Breakfast, dinner, and sup- per are performed much in the same way as at the table d'hote on the Continent, except with far greater rapidity. At breakfast here, I ate for the first time cakes made from the flour of buckwheat, which I thought excellent, and deserving a place among the many luxuries of even an English country-house : in shape and size they re- semble a muffin ; in consistence, a pancake ; but they arc rougher, and of a dark-brown colour. These cakes arc eaten either with butter, like muffins, or with refined molasses, contained in glass jars, shaped something like claret-decanters, which are placed at intervals all along the extensive breakfast-table. Neither is the hominy, which consists of rice and Indian-corn meal, mixed and fried in butter, to be despised. The waiters were Irish, Germans, and men of colour. I started about the 25th of March, on a cold but brilliantly beautiful day, at about nine o'clock in the morning, for Philadelphia, and, on my arrival, drove immediately to the Mansion-house Hotel. Having no time to lose, I walked out to see the town ; and although I was in some degree prepared to like Philadelphia, I had no idea what a splendid city it is ; its beautiful houses being very regular, and mostly built of brick ; and, from their wide pavements, the excellent repair in which they are kept, and the splendid shops and lofty buildings, the streets struck me as being really mag- nificent. The extraordinary cleanliness of the city particularly attracts one's admiration : it is occasioned principally by the abundant supply of water which is afforded by the waterworks of the Schuylkill : hand- some cast-iron pumps are among the most prominent features in the streets, and its public buildings are both graceful and classical. BALTIMORE. 1 from the ISC3. The ', and sup- t the table }r rapidity, akes made r excellent, ies of even ze they re- ; but they 'hese cakes rith refined something*; itervals all her is the com meal, ['he waiters a cold but )ck in the ival, drove laving no d although idelphia, I beautiful of brick ; repair in J and lofty eally mag- the city occasioned • which is 11 : hand- prominent ;s are both After a hasty dinner, att«^nded by four huge, clean, ^olly, sable vagabonds, whose lana'aage, peculiar pro- lunciation, ana absurd atf inpts at jokes amused me jroatly, I resumed my journey l>y railway to Baltimore, frhe view as you leave Philadelphia is very beautiful, 'or some distance, as you recede from the town, you )ehold the whole city stretched out before you, forming splendid panorama. On the right, above the town, ire the celebrated waterworks by which it is supplied rith water from the Schuylkill, and to the left is the )road estuary of the Delaware, covered with vessels of ill sizes, from the light pilot-boat to the lordly three- lecker. We reached Baltimore the same evening. This rapid journey southward causes, in the course of one single lay, a most sensible change in temperature and climate, inch as we might perhaps experience in the Old World, if we were to breakfast at Moscow and dine at Naples. \ Into Baltimore, according to Jonathan's go-ahead )iinciples, we drove the train, right through the streets, [o the imminent danger of the lives of its peaceful citi- fens, though not of their liberties, there being no barrier prevent their getting up a little Juggernaut oblation themselves to their favourite goddess. In the railway- jarriage, I sat next a gentleman who, from natural [oliteness, or from a lively dread of Dickens and rollope, restrained himself from spitting out of the rindow, which was at my other side ; but when the xigencies of expectoration required, took oif his hat and jsted its waterproof qualities in a manner not yet usual this part of the world. I inferred from this that he lust have heard of the American in England, who, )itting across a fellow-passenger out of the window of a tage-coach, learned how little his apology was apprc- lated when he observed, " I guess I cleared you." Baltimore is mostly built of brick, but there arc also 10 KAMULES AND ADVEN'TURES. r t til' ^;h '•:! !i many liandsome stone buildings, and it is altogether a noble city. I bad little time to see much of it, but was struck \vith the principal streets, which, both in size rnd paving, ike, are equal to any I ever saw. The shops are handsomely lighted up in the evening, and the crowded streets exhibited a numerous and well- dressed population. I had heard of the beauty of tlie Baltimore women, and was not disappointed in them, for I never saw so many pretty faces before in so short ii time. A splendid fire took place that night in Baltimore, which was extinguished, fortunately, without any further effects than giving us a good appetite for our supper ; the attack on which was most furious, and the consumption far more extensive than that of the fire we had assisted to put out. At Cumberland, we took the stage-coach across the Alleghany range of mountains to Wheeling, which is not far from the head of the navigation of the river Ohio. An American stage-coach is a very primitive, rough sort of conveyance, something like the diligence on the Continent, but far stronger in construction, botli as to wheels and springs, and calculated to meet the very severe shocks to which the nature and state of the roads necessarily subject it. It is built to accommo- date, or rather torture, nine persons inside, and as many outside as have the skill or the courage to sit along with the driver. This functionary is truly a wonderful man. He drives four horses, at a very tolerable pace, over a road where the depth of the ruts and the number of stumps of trees bafile description. When the wheel strikes one of the latter, the centrifugal effect is sub- lime. The top of my head was so battered against the roof of this notable conveyance, that, after a while, I preferred sharing the driver's fortunes outside, notwith- standiniT the cold encountered amonji; these hills, from THE ALL7-GIIANIES. 11 1 altogether a of it, but was both in size }r saw. The evening, and us and well- beauty of tlie ted in thoiD, e in so short in Baltimore, without anv petite for our furious, and L that of the 3h across the ng, which is of the river Ty primitive, the diligence ruction, botli to meet the state of the accommo- and as maiiv to sit along a wonderful lerable pace, the number en the wheel ffect is sub- 1 aofainst the er a while, I de, notwitli- e hills, from l^hicli, however, the continual exertion of clinging on |was quite suflicient to prevent my suffering. But how i)ur Jehu contrived to drive, to manage the drag (which lie did by means of a screw handle on liis right), and to i-emain on the box, is a mystery that to this day I am tmable to solve. This road the coachman declared to ine to have been usually a very good one, although it ^unavoidably fell into a bad state of repair in winter. J I never saw a more beautiful range of mountains than |hc Alleghanies — full of deep dark gorges and ravines, through which the road winds, now under lofty preci- |)ices, reminding me of some of the passes in the Tyrol ; flow along a high crest of mountain, overlooking a vast fextent of beautiful country ; now through some thick |)rimeval forest, capital lurking-places for bears, wolves, #nd panthers, or painters, as they are there called. iDuring a great part of the day, we travelled up the "Monogahela River, celebrated all over the States for the whiskey made along its banks. Every now and then He made a rapid descent at full gallop down some deep jtorge filled with snow, into which, at this season, the Beams of the sun never penetrate. Coal of the finest Icind is found all through the Alleghanies in great Quantities, and in the towns along the road it is to be fought at four and sixpence a ton. I reached Wheeling, heartily sick of stage-coach fiavelling, but consoling myself with the reflection that the rest of my journey to New Orleans was to be by the fiver. Here I first beheld those justly celebrated American fiver-steamboats, so indicative of the enterprise and i)mmcrcial prosperity of the country. By means of l^esc vessels, the productions of the most remote parts it^ the interior are transferred to suitable markets at a #iiiing expense to the producer ; so that the furs and fkins from the remotest savages, the wheat and Indian 12 RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. ■IIP II i..ill 11 .. I i i Ml : ji '■; corn of the agriculturist, the cotton and the sugar of the planter, are rendered valuable and profitable by the free choice among the many market-towns studding the banks of its rivers, from the remote Missouri, Ohio, and Arkansas, to New Orleans, where the Mississippi rollg its vast united flood into the waters of the Atlantic Ocean. These boats are flat-bottomed, and not built with a view to durability ; a fact which, together with the economical manner of their construction, renders them often very dangerous to the lives and limbs of the numerous passengers that crowd their decks. Much has been said of the comparative merits of the high-pressure and low-pressure engines ; but I am inclined to believe that the high-pressure engine would be quite sufficiently safe, provided the captains of the boats were chosen a little more judiciously from men conversant with steam-engines in general, and particu- larly with the nature and capabilities of the machinery under their command. It is true there is a practical engineer immediately controlling the said machinery ; but the poor fellow is frequently obliged seriously to overtax the powers of the engine, by the frantic anathemas of the captain — *' D — n you, go ahead ! fire up there ! fire up, will you?'' — when excited either by the speed of a boat astern of him, or by his eagerness to overhaul a " tarnation oppositioner '' ahead, who is no doubt bent on securing all the passengers from the next town on the river. On account of the low state of the water in the Ohio, I took my passage as far as Louisville in a small stern- wheel boat. These steamers are driven by one wheel only, which is placed astern ; they draw very little water, and are available in places where others could not answer the purpose so well. My travelling com- panions were very entertaining. Their inquisitiveness amused more than it annoyed me ; for I was prepared UNLOOKED-FOR ARRIVAL. 13 ;he sugar of table by the studding the i, Ohio, and sissippi roll3 he Atlantic id not built )gether with ;ion, renders limbs of the • lerits of the but I am ngine would tains of the y from men and particu- B machinery a practical machinery ; seriously to the frantic ahead ! fire d either by agerness to who is no )m the next the Ohio, I mall stern- one wheel very little ;hers could )lling com- Liisitiveness us prepared for it, by the accounts of English authors, many of fwliom, I think, have animadverted on it too severely. |Thcy certainly, so far as I myself was concerned, quite ^compensated me for their tendency to ask questions, by Hheir great readiness in answering them ; and I must *56ay I found a general willingness amongst them to be Icommunicative and obliging to a stranger, and the greatest deference towards any one that spins a yarn for them — a tendency to which, I dare say, most of my irother-sportsmen will confess. Who has not, after a hard and successful run in the pursuit of an elk, or a fortunate skirmish with a bear, been inveigled into a kiinute detail of the chase or contest, with a description hi every trivial circumstance, from the start to the death ? or, even after its lucky termination, who has iiot dilated on the fine condition of the animal, and the size of its horns, boring you with his sensations as he strides beside his weary horse, heavily laden with the trophies of his successful encounter ? However, we must iiope that the world is very charitable, and allows a fair license to sportsmen, as well as to other enthusiasts. ^ The next day we were thrown into great confusion on board, by the announcement that one of the ladies Iras about to contribute an additional little member to bur society. At the time she was taken ill, I was fitting in the cabin talking to an amusing youngster of some seventeen years of age. I could not better describe him, than by referring my readers to the ^rtrait of Bob Sawyer, in *' Pickwick,'' of which character he very strongly reminded me. He wore a fough blue coat, which he had decidedly outgrown, for the sleeves were far up his arms ; shirt- sleeves he had Hone — at all events they did not figure in the visible of his costume, which really was very perfect without them, «Bpccially as its style was consistently maintained by a tal absence of shirt-collar. He for some time eagerly 14 RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. !i! ihi! 'I ^'■ ' t observed the lady's husband, who was just then deplorinir the absence of medical aid, and imploring the captaiu to do some such impossibility as to put the vessel about, and go back again, when my Bob Sawyer broke in at tli'.- top of his voice, with '' Hullo, mister, now don't rilf yourself for nothing ; Tra a medical man, and passed in clinicals, and will fix her nicely and handsomely ;' then jumping up, and slapping the poor old negro nurse (who was in tears) on the shoulder, added, " Come. look alive,'' and ran in to the assistance of the invalid forthwith. In less than half an hour he sauntered slowly back to his seat, and calling to a friend, observed. " 1 say, Tom, an almighty fine boy, and rich folks, I calculate ; " and then proceeded to discuss with him the propriety of asking twenty dollars for "the job," as they termed it ; Bob Sawyer, in the difficulty of agree- ment, even doing me the honour of appealing to me. I could only suggest a valuation of the baby, and a com- mission of so many cents on the dollar. This would not do, however. Tom was conscientious and firm, said that it Avould not be rij>;ht to take an unfair advantaore of tlie way in which the gentleman and lady were circumstanced, and that his friend oudit not to ask more than the rea'u- lar fee of eight dollars. What the amount ultimatelv received by our clinical professor was, I did not learn ; but the next morning I observed him called aside by the old black nurse, who took, him to visit her mistress, wiience he presently returned to me, vowing the lady's husband to be " a real trump, and an almighty fine gentleman, by G — ! " We arrived that day at St. Louis, where it had been the lady's intention to have remained for her confinement and recovery ; but the poor thing was obliged to stay on board instead ; and I felt for her when I heard tlie deafening continuous roar of the steam-escapement close to the cabin where she was a prisoner. CAIRO. 15 len deploriii[f the captaih vessel about, )ke in at tli'.' )w don't rili. nd passed in indsomely ;' . negro nurse ^ed, '* Come. f the invahd LC sauntered ;id, observed. rich folks, I ,Yith him the the job/' as Ity of agree- ng to me. I , and a com- lis would not rm, said that .ntage of the •cumstanced, lan the rc2;u- it ultimatelv I not learn ; aside by the ler mistress. g the lady's hnighty line day at ISt. ;ion to have y ; but the ;ead ; and I tinuous roar n where she I As I intended returning to Louisville again, I stayed |here but one day, and proceeded on another boat bound fcr St. Louis (Missouri), as far as Cairo, at the mouth |f tlie Ohio, where that river joins the Mississippi. On landing and looking about me, I soon became convinced |hat Cairo must be the spot that suggested to Dickens Ibis description of '' Eden,'' and Martin Chuzzlewit's ind Mark Tapley's doings there, when bent on seeking their fortunes in the Western States. Cairo really is a Ireary waste. Great exertions were once made to bank k up and reclaim it, by damming the rivers, so as to form a site for a market- town ; but all attempts have litherto utterly failed, and it still is, as it will I think long remain, an unhealthy swamp. The hotel, when I Iras there, was a floating one, constructed out of a con- demned river-steamer, the lower part of which was fitted ip as a store or shop, the upper part requiring no change m its internal arrangements. ^ I went out with my double-barrelled gun, whilst waiting |Dr a New Orleans boat, and after some wading, brought lack several ducks and quails. Early next morning a flississippi steamer passed, and in her I took my pas- ge for New Orleans. The Great Missouri was then e most splendid vessel on the river, and plied between . Louis and New Orleans. The ladies' sitting-room ciibin was most beautifully furnished, affording all the lixurics of sofas, rocking-chairs, and a pianoforte, ^his room, as in all river-steamers, is a continuation of e general dining-cabin, the ladies having the power of [jutting it off at any time in the evening, when they * \ to retire, by pushing together concealed sliding- ors, which meet in the middle. The sleeping-cabins afe ranged along the sides of this saloon, the doors opening inwards from it. Each of them contains two births ; but when there are not a great many passengers, 3f«u can secure the whole room to yourself by paying a 16 RAMBLES AND ADVENTUIIES. h I! ; i.ii it:'^' little more than the usual fare. Outside these, again, there is a passage round on the deck of the steamer, enabling the passengers to walk about in the open air protected from the sun's rays by the hurricane-deck ; and from this external walk there are glass doors into the bed-rooms on the side opposite to that by which you enter from the dining-saloon. The hurricane-deck overhead is supported by stanchions, connecting it with the passengers' deck, on which it stands. On the hurri- cane-deck, again, is placed the pilot's glass house or caboose, covered with a wooden roof rendered waterproof. From his position he can command a good view of the river — a power he stands much in need of in order to avoid the numerous snags and shallows which perpe- tually present themselves ahead, threatening the safety of the boat. I ought here perhaps to inform my readers that a " snag" is a tree, or part of a lar^re tree, whose progress down the river has been arrested by the accu- mulation of sand or earth, or some such cause ; and as it is frequently quite hidden from view, the experienced eye of the pilot alone can discover its presence by the peculiar ripple of the water at the spot where his dan- gerous enemy lies concealed. A keen power of observa- tion in this respect is only to be acquired by long attention and practice, like that arrived at by the hunter who tracks his game on the prairie. We proceeded at a tremendous pace in this beautiful boat, averaging eighteen or nineteen miles an hour, the stream running strongly in our favour. We passed va^t tracts of forest on either side, chiefly consistinsj of cotton- trees, presenting various successions of ^rowoh, whicli have a very pretty effect, and are caused by the river, on account of its abrupt curves, continually changing; its course, and those banks of sand and mud which it con- sequently abandons receiving from the wings of the wind into their genial soil the seeds shed by the old patriarchal LIFE IN A RIVER STEAMER. 17 these, again, the steamer, the open air e-deck ; and )ors into the y which you rricane-deck cting it with In the hurri- ,ss house or i waterproof. view of the f in order to rhich perpe- ig the safety a my readers 3 tree, whose by the accu- se ; and as it experienced sence by the lere his dan- r of observa- red by long I at by the his beautiful an hour, the 3 passed va«t nsc of cotton- rovvth, whicli by the river, lly changinf; which it con- of the win^ d patriarchal I trees. The successive gradations of the miniature woods thus formed make a pleasing variety in the otherwise monotonous character of the landscape, and often sug- gested to me reflections on the similarity in the human [world of the progress of population from mother-coun- jtrics to their colonies. The principal use made of the jotton-tree is to provide fuel for the steamers, which is hewn down, cut up, and piled by contract on the river's )ank, and carried on board by the crew called the deck hands of the steamer. This operation of taking in wood occurs about three times in the twenty-four hours, and .occupies about an hour and a half at each time, the men liaving to carry the logs on their shoulders along a Couple of planks thrown out from the side of the boat on io the bank ; so that you can frequently go ashore 0vhile the boat is "wooding/' '% Life on board a river boat resembles life at an hotel, only it is a great deal pleasanter. A bell rings a little \itcv sunrise : you get up and proceed to the washing- louse, next to which, by paying a few cents, you can have a bath. At your exit from this you will most likely find a grinning negro barber bowing and scraping |t the bath-room door, soliciting permission to test upon ^our chin, for a trifling consideration, his powers of py shaving. That operation has hardly terminated rhen you hear the bar-keeper vociferating, " Now, then, mtlemen, come on ; come on ; choose your drinks. That shall I fix you, sir?'' Then commences the ^nasty of brandy-smashes, mint-juleps, gin-slings, and |hiskey-cocktails, and you may finally observe some of le gentlemen sitting down to breakfast with tears in icir eyes, the effect of some awful gulp of alcohol and formwood, elegantly denominated a phlegm-cutter. A lell gives the signal for breakfast, but even before that W}^. y<^^ will see each man standing behind his chair, '^' ling it tightly by the back, and ready to vault into c 18 RAMBLES AND ADVKXTURES. 31 m "WW m ii !:'|i; 111! 1 ! I m III 1' 'fl mi i •! tii his seat as soon as the iron tongue, impelled by Snow- ball's sable arm, strikes the galvanic shock among the guests. The captain sits at the head of the table and his lieutenant at the foot ; opposite to each of these gentle- men is placed a larc^e dish of hissing-hot beefsteaks, on a pewter receiver filled with hot water, which is kept boiling by a spirit-lamp placed underneath. The guests are attended by negro servants, who hand about coffee, tea, kc. After the first breakfast is served the second breakfast, for the officers and those that arc not exactly passengers, after which follows the third breakfast, for the people of colour. The passengers, while all this is going on, sit outside and in front of the cabin, smoking, and reading the papers, which they always have the opportunity of exchanging for later news at the different towns where they touch for freight or passengers. Your day passes cheerfully from the consciousness of proceed- ing at a rapid rate towards your destination, coupled with the enjoyment of being able to read and write at your ease, and having plenty of room to eat, drink, smoke, and enjoy yourself. Previous to the announce- ment of dinner, the passengers again assemble at the bar, the keeper of which is at his post, displaying pro- digies of activity in supplying the demands of his customers, some of whom keep him pretty well employed until the dishing of dinner commences, when they fly to their chairs as at breakfast. Durino; dinner scarcelv anything was drunk but water. After the cloth was removed the company removed themselves, and not even a glass of wine was called for. I completely failed in getting an amusing acquaintance to assist me in discuss- ing a bottle of Madeira, the invariable answer to my re- quest being, '' I thank you, I have eaten my dinner.'' The habit of takinoj these stimulatino; drinks before eating is attributable to the relaxing influences of the 1 'jft ^ 'i c S a (1 k ^ a s V NEW ORLEANS. 19 ed by Snow- 1 climate k among tlic tabic and his these gcntlc- )eefstcak3, on hich is kept The guests about cofl'oe. d the second c not exactly 3reakfast, for ile all this is bin, smoking, ays have the 1 the dilFerciit mo-ers. Your 5S of proceed- tion, coupled and ^vrite at ) eat, drink, he announce- emble at the splaying pro- lands of his i^ell employed m they fly to mer scarcely he cloth was and not even ;ely failed in le in discuss- er to my re- ny dinner/' irinks before ence.s of the ligestion. o le southern States ; the stomach requiring lie to provoke an appetite and strengtliei [ do not think the habit a good one, ha^ ' always found, in my experience of hot climates, that stimulants do more harm than good when taken with the view of acquiring an appetite ; the safest way being to wait without eating until the appetite arrives, or, if possible, treat yourself to half an hour's sleep before dinner. I subsequently found that in the large towns the custom of drinking wine in the English way, ^. ^., leisurely and sociably after dinner, is gradually becoming the habit of the wealthier and more influential merchants. Occasionally, though not frequently, you meet the most eligible society on board the large river steam- boats, particularly when the hot season induces many of the higher classes of society to migrate northwards, at which period they frequently form parties to travel together ; and on these occasions, when the party thus formed has been so attractive as to include many agree- able young ladies, I have often known young men (old acquaintances, perhaps) join it expressly for the river voyage and the pleasure of their society, and enjoy lots of music and dancing in the spacious ladies' saloon purposely fitted up for that object. 4 We proceeded rapidly southward, passing frequent : cotton plantations, which afi'ord almost constant light ^ work to the negroes, both in keeping the crop free from J weeds, and finally gathering it ; till, at last, the whirl- ing panorama on each side of us rolled Missouri and ^Arkansas from our view, revealing to our eyes the lands tand sugar-plantations of Louisiana. J As you approach New Orleans the scene becomes Ivery interesting, and the eye is greeted with a strange ^contrast of luxuriant plantations studded with orange trees, where aromatic shrubs and rare plants may be [traced to the gentle hand and graceful taste of the high- c 2 20 RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. i ! i !\ |i Si n- ■'•■ itr.'lli. 1' m born Creole lady, gradually and diffidently intrudin*^ themselves on the vast outskirts of dreary forest, dismal SAvamp, and impenetrable cane brake. New Orleans cannot fail to strike a visitor with vivid emotions of pleasure and surprise. It is, you may say, reclaimed from the river by banks called *' levees," somewhat in the same manner as in Hollar d. The town is divided into several municipalities, and though these are sepa- rated one from another by but a single street, yet on one side of it you may imagine yourself in England, and on the other forget that you are not in France — so strongly are the characteristic diflferences mark<:'.I in all you see around you ; in the buildings, manners, even in the sign-boards over the stores and shops, which are printed in diflferent languages in the opposite municipa- lities. This diiference is quite as remarkable in the in- habitants themselves. The American is essentially Eng- lish, despite his affectation of the contrary ; he is so in his business habits, in his conversation, in his preference for spending his evenings at home with his wife and family, instead of at public amusements. The Creole, although his position may be that of a man of business, is yet quite wanting in the daring speculation and un- remitting industry of the Anglo-Saxon ; seeking to support himself by economy and bargaining, while the American is striving to increase his fortune by extend- ing his operations. It is of his time, not of his money, that he is economical ; of his dollars indeed he is most liberal, and frequently lavish. The Creole considers his business at a certain hour of the day terminated, and his unambitious evening is devoted to the journal, the Theatre Fran9ais, and a cup of coffee. The Ame- rican, if occasion require, will burn the midnight oil in his office, and may often be found at two o'clock in the morning winding up the pressure of additional business for the departure of the weekly British steamer. ii:i| H'i ■'^' CREOLE LADIES. 21 }st, dismal rv Orleans motions of reclaimed mowhat in is divided 2 are scpa- eet, yet on England, ^'raace — so rkvd in all miimcipa- ! in the in- tially Eng- lie is so in preference is wife and 'he Creole, )f business, on and un- seeking to while the )y extend- lis money, he is most I considers erminated, le journal, The Ame- light oil in lock in the al business ler. Upon landing I went to the St. Charles Hotel, an cnonnous building in Grecian architecture, with a tine St. Puul's-like dome, more resembling a large cathedral than a hotel, and presenting a most imposing appear- ance from the river. There, however, I did not remain long, for on presenting my letters of introduction I dined with some new Iriends, who persuaded me most kindly to take up my residence in their house during my stay. There is a great charm about New Orleans : the old style of Spanish architecture wraps round it a feeling of romance which, alas ! there is so much in America's civiUsation calculated to suppress. The verandahs, partes cochh'es, and small Creole [houses, built of wood, only one story high and opening finto the street, are very picturesque. I enjoyed myself greatly there, and shall never forget the kindness and hospitality that greeted me on every side. Among the Creoles there is a simplicity and cordiality that soon induces the stranger to feel himself at home with them, particularly if he is from " la Grande Bretagne," in which case he is sure to meet with an universal welcome. I ought here perhaps to explain to my readers the ftrict meaning of the term " Creole ;'' at all events, the fense in which the word is used in America. Creole ineans born in the country ; and tlie term is generally applied to the descendants of the old French and Bpanish founders of the colony : indeed you could not ofend or hurt the feelings of a Creole gentleman or lady more, than by supposing either of them even in the femotest degree of coloured origin. The marked dis- tinction which I found in the French and English parts of the town, as I have already described, I found |s strongly characterised among the inhabitants. The Creole, rich or poor, you can easily distinguish by the french cut of his clothes and hat, and perhaps a (.)•> rvAMDLES AND ADVENTUnrS. IliiH S it liii i *'i ' I r I' I. m «■! ■■I;!'', French-triinmcd liciml. Probably he is dirty and un- shaven, cliary of displaying too much or too clean linen. Lool< at tlie American over tlie way as he rolls alon his clothes not made by " a tarnation French snip/' but all boui^ht at the ready-made clothes store : his face is well shaven, and although he wears a beard, it is not allowed to trespass on the chin : ho wears no gloves, but his hands are always clean, and so is his scrupulou,?ly white linen, of which he makes rather an extensive dis- play, for he seldom wears a waistcoat, and his loose coat is always unbuttoned. In his bosom he wears a large pin, may be a diamond, may be a piece of glass. Well, go ahead Jonathan : with all your faults (and which of us is without them ?) you are a fine, noble fellow ! How difficult it is to admire and appreciate without comparing ! Comparisons are odious ; but avoid them you cannot, when the contrast between the American and the Creole lady is so strongly presented to the strauGjer's observation as on his introduction to New Orleans society. The poor American lady is like an exotic plant. In the first placp, the climate disagrees with her : she is languid from the heat, and her good looks rapidly fade. Then she dresses badly, though expensively ; her choice of colours is extensive but not good, and when she is dressed her clothes cling about much as you could fiincy they would had she fallen into the river and been drawn out again. If she dances she does so awkwardly, and a quadrille or two (for she seldom ventures on a higher flight) soon fatigues her. The Creole, on the contrary, combines the ndivete of the Spanish girl, with the polished elegance of the French lady, whose toilet she scrupulously imitates. Though not expensively dressed, her beautifully rounded figure is attired with an exquisite neatness that makes her at once the ornament of the opera, and the light and ^'Aiiii NIGHT ADVENTURE. 23 :ty and un- clean linen, rolls alonj]^, inch snip/' re : his face rd, it is not I gloves, but 5crupulou,?ly [tensive dis- is loose coat rears a large ;lass. Well, ud which of cllow ! iatc without avoid them c American Qted to the ion to New is like an ite disagrees nd her good dly, though ;ivc but not cling about e fallen into she dances or two (for )on fatigues e iidivete of mcc of the ly imitates, illy rounded that makes le light and life of the ball-V' loni. She is passionately fond of dancin in the enjoyment of which she is as graceful as slic is V indoftitigable. '^ 1 had taken apartments in the Hue lloyale, situated \\\\ the old Spanish-looking part of the town. The I similarity of many of its buildings led me into a strange i mistake, which I mention here as indicative of the Uibsence of all apprehension of danger at night from rubbers, or any other cause. On my return from an fc'vening party, I wandered up and down the Rue Jioyale by the light of a beautiful moon, which was then at its full, at which time the lamps in the streets arc not lighted, nor indeed are they needed ; and the 'f my fire- ' kind host novel and L foot to a , there are ■here a doe alted, and D the pine ire supply t was most ping about n from my of shining!" balls of fire j-aii, a pair ot sinning oaiis oi nre moving up and down a short distance oil". At first I took tliem for lireflies ; 1>ut, on more attentive o1)servation, I saw, by their i^imultaneous motion, that they must be the eyes of a ('ecr. After groping a little farther in that direction, the eyes again appeared ; and as they began to approach, the distance between them seemed gradually to increase, like the lamps of a travelling-carriage to a spectator watching its progress towards him, till the animal came so near that I could trace his outline ; so, holding my pan steadily on my slioulder with the left hand, I raised my ritie with the right, the barrel resting in the notch before mentioned, and suspecting, that, at night, from not being able to determine the hind sight, one is apt to shoot high in catching the front one clearly, I aimed so low that I ?ould hardly, from force of habit, persuade myself to puil the trigger. When I lired, the deer gave a convulsive bound into the shades of night, and I thought he was lost. Presently, another came ; and j^s soon as he approached within about thirty paces, as well as I could judge by the appearance of the eyes (for I could not see his outline), he began to snort and whistle, " Wheeoo, whoo," which indicated plainly three things to me : — First, that the deer I had just iired '.t was struck and bleeding. Secondly, that this one ji.iielt the blood. Thirdly, that there was, there- fore, no chance of my getting a nearer shot, and that I had very little time to lose if I intended to fire at all. I therefore drew up my rifle, aimed a foot under the eyes, and pulled the trigger. All was silent : the eyes had disappeared. 1 listened eagerly, but heard nothing, loaded again, and waited a long time. Then I heard Thibault fire ; the wounded buck ran in the direction of a pool of water, in which I soon heard him kicking and splashing. I put down my pan, and I'ushed to the place, and my friend coming up at the same time, wo d2 3G HAMBLES AND AIIVOIUBES. ^t sM sccnrcd him, an«l tlrew him away ])y a circuitous route out of the ncii^hhourhood. I liacl resumed my hunting-pan and rifle, and was leaning against a tree, wlien, like some jdiantom, the faint dusky outline of an enormous stag walked noise- lessly up, and was actually passing me. It made me, from the high state of excitement in which I tlien was, almost superstitious enough to fancy him the departed shade of an ancient denizen of these primeval forests. I fired rapidly as he passed in front of me. On receiv- ing tlic ball, he rushed violently oil'; but from the way in which I heard him thrash the bushes, I knew I had a good chance of finding him at daybreak. I had hardly loaded again, when three or four pairs of glowing eyes presented themselves, glancing about in several direc- tions. I fired a chance shot at one, which fortunately brou^^ht the animal down on his tracks : hearinf^ hiin struggling on the ground, I feared, by the sound, that he was not for one moment safe ; I then threw down rifle and pan, and rushed up knife in hand. It was fortunate that I did so, for the stag was recovering, and just as I had seized him with my left hand by one of his horns, which being then only in the velvet, it broke in my grasp, so that I was compelled to drop my knife, and hold on to him with both hands, holloaing loudly for assistance, till the animal tore the front and sleeve of my shirt with his fore-feet, and made such a powerful fight, that had it not been for Thibault, who came up, attracted by my shouts, and stabbed him through the heart, I should not only have lost my stag, but have got the worst of it into the bargain. I do not think I ever longed so much for daybreak, being all this time in suspense as to the result of my first three shots ; but morning beamed at last, when, guided by the blood, we immediately commenced our search. I found the first buck I had fired at struck riVi: FAT BUCKS KILLED. S7 itous route an torn, the Iked noisc- mado me, '. then was, c departed i^al forests. On receiv- m the way ;new I had had hardly owing eyes eral direc- fortunately 3aring him ound, that ircw down i It was /■oring, and i by one of jt, it broke I my knife, ing loudly and sleeve a powerful 3 came up, hrough the it have got daybreak, ?sult of my last, when, Lienced our , at struck behind the fore-shoulder ; he had run about forty yards from where he liad received the ball, and was lying dead. The second had fillen upon the spot, the bullet having ]):\ssed throuiih his head. Thil)ault found the third, — and a most splendid animal he was,— the largest buck, we both ajzreed, we had ever seen. I have shot a great many since then, but never one of so great a size. Altogether, we numbered five capital fat ])ueks, one two years old, one three years old, two four years old, and one colossal old patriarch, whose head, however, was no use for mv collection, his horns, at this time of year, being mere soft excrescences. We had hard work to skin and cut up our game before the Hies came to torment us ; when just as wc had finished, a friend rode down to the scene of action, leading a coujile of spare horses for us. So wc jogged off home in high spirits to a late breakfast, at a little after eight, and after stretching and nailing up our deer-skins, and canvassing our night's adventures, Jlidr'S Keatts, who was sufficiently recovered to move back to his plantation, and I took leave of our kind host and hunting companion, and departed in different directions ; I carrying, as trophies of the hunt, seven- teen prime skins which I carefully saved, July being the best month in the year for buck-leather. Shortly after I had parted from Keatts, while walk- ing one day through the woods in the neighbourhood of Lake Jefferson looking for deer, I perceived the smell of smoke, which I found proceeding from a fire that had been piled up with green wood, and to leeward of which I saw, with great satisfaction, three fine deer, who had evidently taken up this position to screen themselves from the attacks of the flies which plague them greatly, and cause their heads and ears to be in constant motion. In fact, it is the twitching of the ears of a deer that, nine times out of ten, betrays his locality to the eye I S8 KAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. I h''l ■i.iMi of an experienced hunter ; for the eye, from long prcic- tice, acqmres a habit of seizing instantly on every ohject in motion, so as to occupy its utmost attention until it is satisfied as to the cause of the movement. Again, nature has so assimilated the colour of all the creatures of her animated world to those of the sur- rounding' vegetation, that, divested of their distinguish- ing attribute, motion, it is difficult to detect them. Even among the scanty vegetation in our northern latitudes, our experience testifies in favour of this remarkable provision, by which animals without mucji means of defence are enabled, in some measure, to evade their manv enemies. Thus, if you go to a mountain in the higldands either of Scotk\nd or other countries (for there is a, great similarity in all highlands, both as regards their animals and vegetation), you will notice a grada- tion of colours from the base to the summit : at the base and where tlie o-round is dark, the moor-fowl and hares wear the same dark hue, the former so nearly approach- ing the colour of the ground as not to be discernible unless in motion. Higher up the mountain, if there are vast tracts almost destitute of vea'etation, and where the prevailing colour of the rock is blue or grey, there you will find hares of the same hue, commonly called '' blue hares.'' Amoncj; some of the sombre cliffs in the mountainous parts of Ireland, black rabbits are found. Further up again, when we ascend the mountains that are capped with never-yielding snow, the hares (of course more seldom met with) arc generally pure white. But the most remarkable instance is that of the ptar- migan, which seldom or never quits the snowy peaks. This bird is a species of grouse, to which it is closely allied, and in its habits and appearance the same ; it is quite white in vrinter, while, in summer, when the snow lies in patches, the bird becomes sliglitly tinged with riRiVT CAMP ALONE IN THE FOREST. 89 long prac- on every i attention novement. ur of all )f the sur- stinguish- ect them, northern r of this out mucli e, to evade hio'hlancls there is a s re2;ar(l3 e a grada- u the base and hares approacli- :liscernible i, if there and where ^rey, there inly called .iffs in the are found, tains that hares (of ure white, the ptar- 'wy peaks, is closely ame ; it is the snow ia:ed with ■1 i '..rov.n and grey. All sportsmen know how difficult it is to discover a partridge, which thus in comparative safety seeks its food, from the wonderful combination of coluurs in its various brown feathers, which arc striped with straw tints, thus completing the similarity in the ijird's appearance to the stubble which surrounds it. Neither is the rank and wild vegetation of a tropical climate disobedient to this law; enabling the spotted leopard to lie hidden by leaves when crouching along the horizontal bough speckled with lichens and discolora- •ions in the bark, and screening the striped tiger with tiie similarly vertical reeds of an Indian jungle. But to return to my narrative : I stalked noiselessly r.'-) to the deer, hiding behind the trees, and taking advantage of their heads being turned away to gain a nearer and a nearer tree, till at last, well in shot, I fired at the nearest, which fell unobserved by the others, who merely gave two or three graceful bounds, and, but sliiiaitly alarmed by the report of the shot, recommenced feeding at a little distance oif. So, having quietly loaded, I crept Tound, and had effectually, as I fancied, concealed myself behind a good-sized tree, when one of them suddenly turned and stared straight towards my cover, evidently suspecting something wrong, and trying to make me out. As he stood facing me, I fired, the ball passing through his throat and stretching him life- less. The third deer did not stop to inspect his fallen comrade, but sprang off at full speed. I was very busy skinning my prizes, wlien a negro man arrived from Keatts's on horseback, with a double-barrelled gun across his saddle (a most rare article in those parts) and lead- ing- another horse for me to ride back to his master's. I did not, however, fancy returning home tluit night, so, as I was near the lake, ^.nd the sight of " Snowball's scattering-iron " made me feel inclined for a little wild- fowl shooting, I determined, though in a very fever-and- 40 RAMBLES AKD ADVENTURES. i i aguish sort of place, to camp out for tlie first time alone. Before, however, sending the man back with his horses, I obtained his assistance to collect some wood, light my fire, and pack the meat for my friends, all of •which, except some tit-bits for my supper, and the skins, I loaded on the horse that I was to have ridden. I laid an embaro'o on the double-baiTelled ^m, and also on a bottle of whiskey that Blackey had with him ; and as my own saddle-bags contained some biscuits and salt, besides powder and shot, and, by great good luck, some swan- drops, and I had a tin mug fastened to the pummel of my saddle, I considered myself " pretty well fixed ofi" for the nio'ht.^' I roasted my venison very awkwardly, and cooked some liver and kidney infamously. I remember this circumstance particularly, because it was the first night I had ever camped out solus. It is only when left to our own resources, that we sportsmen of England feel how very little we are in the habit of doing for ourselves, and how helpless we are rendered by all our civilization. Very delightful, though, is that same refinement of sport in England, where you rise in the morning, not too early, and shave '.vith hot water ; a substantial breakfast with a cup of delicious cream-softened tea awaits you in the breakfast-room ; your guns are as clean as if they had not been used at all the day before ; and you take them without the slightest compunction from the hands of that invaluable individual called the gamekeeper, who is to attend you throughout the day, and who tells you not to trouble yourself by carrying too great a weight of shot, as he has a supply with which to replenish your little two-pound Sykes : finally, when the day's shooting is over, it matters little what the contents of tho bag may be so far as dinner is concerned ; your own or your host's larder is quite independent of your day's contri- bution, and the excellent dinner awaiting you is not the A PANTHER SHOT. 41 first time c with his )me wood, ncis, all of the skills, n. I laid also on a and as my It, besides •me swan- )iimmel of "fed off for id cooked mber this first nio'ht left to our I feel how elves, and iilization , it of sport :, not too breakfas ,D(y its you in is if thev you take } hands of )r, who is y^ou not to ; of shot, our little ooting is bag may or your 's contri- s not the OSS sumptuous in consequence of the gun not having 'cen held straight, or the birds having been wild. Your \dv lot is cast in the lap of England, a clime where ■imning is unnecessary — fatigue is unknown, beyond liat wholesome amount of exertion which is just suffi- ient to put you in wind and spirits for the merry dance tliat winds up the evening. Such thoughts as these were passing through my mind ff^ I sat by my solitary fire, but they presented them- iselves in much more forcible contrast on subsequent |occasions, when I found myself, after an unsuccessful day's hunting, tired, cold, and very hungry in the wild lains of the Ilocky Mountains. On tbc "p-^ent occasion, however, beingj verv com- brtable a t J^. iiply provided for, I lit my pipe and ixed mysuii some grog from the contents of lilackey's hiskey-bottle, and having drawn one of the charges of shot from my double-barrelled gun, and in its place upplied one of swan-drops, I laid it beside me, and had at smoking and musing for some time, when I per- eived a pair of eyes shining very brightly in the fire- iglit a short distance off. I was puzzled, for they eemed too low to be those of a deer ; and w^hen 1 took ip my gun they disappeared. Presently, however, I aw them again ; and it then occurred to me that they night be those of a wolf, attracted probably by the offal f the deer close by ; so I retreated a little way, leaving lira a free passage, to encourage his nearer approach, tationino^ mvself, at the same time, in a more favour- Sit.*' pole position for a shot. By-and-by, I descried the tiaint outline of some crouchino- animal stealinc;; towards the place where the offal lay and affording me a fair broadside. I fired, and saw no more of him ; but I thought it prudent to wait till daybreak to commence jii^v search, as I did not much like undertaking it alone in the dark ; so I contented myself with a slight sketch m 42 31AMI3LES A>;D ADYENTUIIES. '■1^*; M I fi ; ' 1, i,! Ji I '^;i SL( *r' another pipe, and lay down cliscovered how fortunate I liad been ; for, a short distance off, and stone dead, lay a splendid panther. I -was greatly elated by my night's performance ; and instead of starting off alone: the lake as I had intended, I remained to carefully flav off and stretch my panther's skin ; which done, I re- newed my fire, and cooked and ate a comfortable break- fast. Then, having arranged everything to my satisfac- tion durin,i;' my absence, I took the double-barrel and sallied forth for tome duck-shooting. Several species of ducks are to be met with on the lakes and morasses in this part of the country. I was fortunate enough to come across two or three different ones in the course of my morning's sport. One was a spe^-imen of the pin-tail duck, a fine but very shy bird ; his plumage shaded with the most beautiful browns intermixed with white. This duck has a remarkahk' black patch picked out ^vith white on the back of his neck, long black feathers in the tail, while his head is of soft rich brown colour, and exhibits altogether a vei'v handsome appearance. Some wood-ducks also fell to my gun this morning, very handsome fellows, witli splendid green plumage and a white stripe reaching from the bill to the eye and beyond it round the neck. They are web-footed, and provided, besides, with tole- rably strong claws to enable them to perch on trees. I bagged five or six, but lost several, as I did not dare venture too far into the water, on account of the alli- gators. Securing all I could reach to my belt, I walked back to cam]), and on my way shot a good-sized rattlesnake. I tried to skin him, but the flies forced me to abandon the attempt, from which I was indeed still farther discouraged by my having blown the head to pieces, and so rendered him of little use or ornament to my collection. I liorse; i lie ha BLACK BAIT TOK AN ALLIGATOR. 43 lay down fortunate stone dead, ted by my g off alone: refullv flav [lone, I re- able break- ny satisfac- barrel and ivith on the :ry. I was ee different One was a y sliy bird ; ful browns remarkable back of Lis his head is ther a very also fell io Hows, with )e reaching :1 the neck, , with tole- n trees. I d not dare 3f the alii- ny belt, I ^ good-sized | flies forced was indeed •n the head r ornament I found my host himself awaiting my return with the horses, greatly delighted at the fall of the panther, as lie had been a considerable sufferer from the depreda- tions of similar animals, and I had the pleasure of fight- ing my battles o'er again as we rode home together to ^ his house. \ I will close this chapter by recounting two hunting ? adventures of my brother Frederick, who, the year pre- i viuus to my departure for America, had hunted a good I ikal on the borders of Lake Jefferson, in the Arkansas country. After my return to England, w^e often talked over our adventures together ; so I have determined to chronicle the following for the entertainment of ^my readers, as nearly as possible in my brother's Vvrds : — ,^:- '' One day, ^vhcn comfortably seated with Jackson land his family, in the neighbourhood of Lake Jefferson, a little nigger come running in, shouting, ' Oh, massa ! terrible big alligator ; him run at me.' When we got him to speak a little more coherently, it appeared that Jie had been bathing in the lake, and that an alligator "^liad suddenly rushed at him, and when the boy, who ; luckily was not in deep water, had escaped by running to land, the brute had actually pursued him for some V distance along the shore. We instantly loaded our rifles and started off in quest of the monster, accom- panied by the boy, who came as guide. After carefully exploring the bank and reeds, though unsuccessfully, *ve concealed ourselves, in hopes of seeing him rise to the top of the water when he thought the coast was clear ; but as we waited a long time without any result, >':o proposed what certainly was a most nefarious project ; naniily, to make the boy strip off his clothes and start liim into the water again as a bait for the alligator. It was some time before we could get the boy to come r'.amd to our vieAv of the matter : his objections to our ■m 44 RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. r ♦ t^li plan were very stronf^, and his master's threats failed completely, as indeed they generally did ; for he was the kindest-hearted man in the world to his neo-rocs. At last I coaxed him with a bright new dollar. This inducement prevailed over his fears, and the poor boy began to undress, his eyes all the while reverting alter- nately from the water to the dollar, and from the dollar to the water. We told him we did not want him to go in so deep as to be obliged to swim. ' By golly, then, me go for dollare ; ' and in he walked, but had hardly reached water higher than his knees, when crash went tlie reeds, and the little fellow cut in towards our place of concealment at an astonishing pace, pursued by the alligator. The savage beast, as before, came right out on the bank, where we nailed him with two capital shots through the head, that effectually checked his career. He struggled violently, but uselessly, to regain his congenial element, and, after two or three furious lashes of his ponderous tail, sullenly expired. The triumpli of the boy was complete : had he, like another inftint Hercules, strangled the alligator with his own hands, he could not have been more delighted : he yelled out, 'Me so berry glad,' tumbled head overheels, walked on his hands, and exhibited every symptom of nigger joy- *' Shortly after, a settler on Lake Jefferson hearing of my success, asked me to assist him in attacking a large black bear that had done a great deal of mischief, and destroyed several of his pigs. Jackson had often pursued him, but the brute had always succeeded in dodf^ina; his attacks, sometimes beatino- off the doss before he could come up to the scratch, at others evading' the silent stalker in the hiirh reeds of the forest. A S i had never had the good luck to fall in with Bruin, though I had often seen his tracks, I gladly consented, and we lost no time in settinir off. * Here are the SPRING-GUN SHOOTING. 45 reats failed he was the tgTOCS. At liar. This le poor boy rting alter- 1 the dollar t him to gi; l^olly, then, had hardly crash went Is our place ued by the le right out two capital hecked hi: reo-ain hi: rious lashc; he triumpli ther inftmt ti handS; he yelled out, els, walked 1 of nigger ion hearino' it tacking r. f mischief, 1 had often .cceeded in f the dogs i ers evadinif ( est. As I ] ith Bruin, consented, I'e are the brute's tracks again/ he exclaimed, as he pointed to some footprints, evidently those of a very large bear, and which he immediately recognized as belonging to his old enemy. * Look to your caps, and make sure of 110 snapping,' said he, as he put on a fresh one ; ' I oucss this lad is not to be trifled with.'' On we went n the tiptoe of expectation, until the tracks at last led ius into a dense cane-brake, where we could make but !:low progress, and had to use the utmost care to avoid makinoj an alarm from the rattling of the canes. Unfor- tunately, at last, one of us trod upon a horizontal stick, I which snapped loudly, and we had the mortification of f liearing Bruin start off with a growl and a crash through the canes close ahead, but of course unseen by either of us. It was of no use to pursue ; we could only creep glowly on, while he could run like a dog through a field of grass. " Poor Jackson ! how I pitied him : he looked at me, the picture of dismay, with his eyebrows up to the roots of his hair. I consoled him by proposing a new ^hunt at night, and, after holding a council of war, we ;^decided on adopting the fallowing stratagem: — R. Jack- 'fson knew a favourite pass of the bears, from the cane- brake to where the pigs were in the habit of feeding in the wood ; ' so,' said he, ' we can set my rifle for him, and the old musket that my father took from an Indian, to whom it was given by the Britishers ; so now we'll slope home and fix them off", as you say, to-morrow ■night/ '' On reaching his house, I looked up the musket in question, an old George III. Rex ; and what with clean- ing, repairino', and setting up the tackle for fixing both it and the rifle, it was late in the afternoon of the next day before we started with our apparatus complete. The rifle we set next to the cane-brake, as we were, after all iour work, not quite sure that the old musket would 4 4G RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. ]■ I? . 1- go off (time and rust havii\C'' destroyed almost all tlic steel facing" of the hammer), lut wc were determined to try it at all events, after the trouble we had had ; so we placed it fm'tlier towards tlie wood, having loaded it with five drachms of powder, a ball, and twenty buck- shot. All heinij: arranged to our satisfiiction, we retire! to some distance to await the result."^ " The night was bitterly cold, but wc dared not light a fire near our bear's path, and, what was worse, wi could not prudently smoke ; so, being without that pro- tection, and armed only with our knives, we thought it safest to climb a tree close at hand, out of the way of bears, wolves, and panthers. We sat on a branch till far into the night, hearing no sounds but the cry of the Whip-poor-Will and his widow, the howling of wolves. and the dismal hooting of the owls. At last we began to get very drowsy, and could hardly prevent ourselves from tumbling off our perch, whispering from time to time, ' I fear he's not coming to-night ; ' or, ' I don't give him up yet,' when snap went the cap of the rifle i Mutual ejaculations of disgust escaped us, for we fancied our main hopes dashed to the ground ; but they were scarcely uttered, when we heard brave old George III. * I might as well perhaps take this opportunity of initiating my brother-sportsmen into the mysteries of setting a spring- gun, ov rather what is termed a spring-gun in Arkansas. The stock of a gun is firmly laslied to a tree and the muzzle to a stake firmly driven into the ground, the gun being adjusted so as to point at right angles to the path the animal is expected to take, and pre- sented at such a distance from the ground, as that, when diseharged. it should lodge its contents in the region of the heart. A fine string' is then attached to the trigger, and passed round a piece of polisliec stick behind the trigger, and then passed forward again beyond tho path the animal is expected to take. The opposite end of the string is then fastened to a tree at the opposite side from the gun. Ti:r string must neither be slack, nor have any strain on it, otherwise the gun will not remain on full cock. When the animal passes, his chest comes against the string across his path, a slight jmsh strains it sufficiently to draw the trigger, and he is a gone coon. bled ( knife knowi i me, ai fcarfu 11]) to lvin<^ with f in th( enoug dead but fo bones plant( behin^ and ^^ watch l)Ut I rathei the af Li ASSASSINATION OF A BEAK. 4V St all tlic- rmincd to ad ; so avo loaded it nty buck- wc retired not licflit worse, ^vc that pro- ;liouglit it he way of )ranch till cry of the of wolves, we begaii ourselves Q time tu ' I don't the rifle I ;^'e fancied they were eorcce III. litiating my ing-gun, or ! stock of a take fivnilv to point at :e, and pre- disGharged; . fine strinir of polisliec: beyond tl.j f the string gun. The , otherwise . passes, his ush strains go off with the most tremendous explosion. We scram- ],»lcd down instantly, and ran to the scene of action, knife in hand. As the night was ver} dark, Jacksoi^, knowini*: the o-round better than I did, ^'ot there before me, and while cndeavouriiig to follow him, I heard a fearful cry for help, succeeded by a dead silence. I ran lip to the spot, and came in for such a scene ! the bear lying dead, and Jackson prostrate upon him, paralyzed with fright, caused by his having run against the bear in the dark, and rolled over the carcase, naturally enough fancying the bear a living beast, and himself a dead man. ' My God, arc you hurt V I exclaimed ; but found, on raising him up, neither blood nor broken bones : in short — '"The man recover'd of the fright, Tlie hear it was tliat died.' " The old flint musket had done its duty well, and planted bullet and swan-drops just in the luortal place beliind the shoulder. Soon afterwards, morning dawned, and we returned to the house well repaid for our night's watching. Our host was greatly elated at our success ; Itut I, who had not suffered the loss of any pigs, felt rather ashamed, I confess, of the share I had taken in the assassination of the previous night/' I ■ii 48 RAMBLES AND ADVENTl'RES, ■^M'r CIIAPTEll III. Mammoth Caves. — Stalactite Architecture. — Ancient America. — KamUes in the Earth. — Plummy fniiul. — Subti^rranean J5all. — St. Louis Hunting Ciuh. — A good run. — A lUt liuclc killed. — Hospitable Hunters. — Kentucky talked down. — American Fur Company. I LEFT off luintinoj in Arkansas ^vith reluctance; but as I knew that an expedition was ]ireparing to start from Independence for tlie Rocky Mountains, I thought it best to see about getting up the Mississippi again. Finding, however, when 1 reached St. Louis, that 1 had still some time to spare, I resolved on au excursion to Louisville, ea route for the Mammoth Caves of Kentucky. Louisville is a very pleasant, flourishing town on tlio Ohio ; and as I had several letters of introduction, I made the acquaintance of some very charming people, and was so fortunate as to find many of them also on the eve of starting for the caves, where the fashionable watering-place and summer residence of the Iiautv voice of Louisville is situated. Arrived at our destination, I presented my letter of introduction to the great Doctor Cronan, the famous -Slsculapius and proprietor of the caves, which are directly on, or r.iher under, his property. Dr. Cronan has built a most extensive and comfortable hotel, com- prising all the luxuries of baths, a fine large dining- room, and splendid ball-room, with a gallery at one end for the orchestra, which includes some first-rate German brass-instrument players. The whole range of buildings forms three sides of a square, built of wood, and most invitingly cool and comfortable. The caves are a few minutes' walk from the hotel. MAMiMOTII CAVES. 4.0 America. — lean J»all. — ;k killeil.— iierican Fur L'luctance ; 'paring to untains, I ^lississippi St. Louis, Ived on an M ammo til )\Yn oil tlie duction, I ng people, em also on asliionablo 'imite voice ly letter of he famous which are )r. Cronan Lotel, coin- ^e dining- ;it one end e German ■ buildings and most the hotel. 1 Yon descend to the entrance by a flight of steps, about forty feet deep, at the end of which you arc handed a lamp. At first you descend gradually along a wide passage, which soon terminates suddenly in an extensive i-avcrn, so vast that its sides are scarcely visible by the faint light of the lamps with which each visitor is pro- vided. The earth is rugged and broken, and intersected by rivers, two of which are crossed in a small skiff' On our first day's excursion, we followed one range of the ramifications of caverns and passages to the end, Avlicre it terminated in solid rock, a distance of more than nine miles underground. We entered the caves after breakfast, and did not return till eight in the eveninfr, after a subterranean walk of eio;hteen or nine- teen miles, up and down hill, over shingly mountains, along torrents, and across rivers of subterranean waters ; sometimes squeezing our bodies through passages like mere fissures, then suddenly emerging into a vast cavern, similar to our Matlock Cave in Derbyshire ; sometimes through a corridor resembling the shaft of a mine ; and finally over a range of shingly hills some hundreds of feet in height. We cau2:ht some fish with a landin2;-net in these rivers, and found them, by a wonderful dispensation of nature, without eyes or any organs adapted to the recep- tion of light. The stalactites in some places present a most fantastic appearance, covering the roof and sides of the cave wdth beautiful and delicate wreaths of flowers, sparkling like alabaster and as white as the driven snow. In one cavern, about 1 20 feet in length and GO in width, they descend and connect the roof with the ground, thus forming the cave into a perfect old Gothic church ; each pair of the massive natural columns forming at their junction with the roof a complete and Ijcautiful arch. From the appearance of these stalactites, the Doctor E W^ 2" ';1 i ! f- i 50 liAMbLES AND ADVK NTUKES. •;|!, told mc that opiniunri had been formed Ly geologists as to the probable age uf the caves, and ]>criods long ante- cedent to the creation of man have been pronounced to be the date of their formation. It is said that tliey must now have been in existence 25,000 or 2(),000 year^. The columns measure, as well as I can remember, about fourteen feet in circumference on the average. I can scarcely venture an opinion upon this subject myself but certainly the manner in which the Mammoth Caves were formed appears to me to have been due to volcanic agency, by which, in the first instance, cracks or fis- sures were produced in the crust of tlie earth, and afterwards cleared and enlarged by the action of v.atei;. Among other objects of interest arc still to be seer: several remnants of mummies, indicative of a very early state of civilization, and probably of an era long anterior to that of Indian tribes, dependent altogether for subsistence on the resources of hunting. The limits of these notes will not allow of my entering into a discussion on American antiquities, but many, wlio have studied the subject with much attention, agree in believing America to have been discovered by Euro- peans centuries before the arrival of Columbus, anl testify to the evidently Koman character of remains still apparent in the state of Ohio. Little doubt exists as to the fact of these cave^ having been formerly inhabited, as hearths, evidently constructed with a view to contain fires, have been found in many of the passages ; but no conjecture can be made as to the period of their construction, savi that they exhibit no apparent traces of European con- nections. Some time after the discovery of these wonderful caves, an American gentleman of the name of Ward. who, by all accounts, must have been a very courageous and experienced explorer, undertook, with a number of MUMMY ^OU^'D. 51 (\As as If anto- IK'L'd to it tliey 2(),000 lembor. age. 1 myself, li Cavc'a volcaiiie 5 or tii- th, and ; vratei;. be sot'T; ; a very era loivi ItoGrother he limit; f into a nv, who agree ni )y Euro- ms, aii'l remuiii^ CSC caves evidently |1 lave beer. -^ cture can ion, save pean con- wonderful of Ward. ourageout lumber ot men, to trace out one or two of the numerous ramifica- tions ; and although they adopted every precaution tliat prudence could suggest to facilitate the retracing of tlieir steps, such as marking stone flags at the passages jiy which they should return, with hands pointing and arrows tivinGj towards the direction of the caves' mouth, yet they were very nearly lost, and did not cmerfre from their rambles in the '* Inferno" till long after midnight, most of their lamj)3 having burned out, wliile many were the apprehensions of their never again beholdin<: the light of day. The account of tliis exploring oxnc- dition strondy reminded me of the warning' of Glaucv /s dauQ-liter to ^ncas — o Facilis descensus Avpvno, Scd revocare gradum, superasfiue evadere ad auras, Hoc opu:^, hie labor est. So few traces of the mummies are now left at the places where they were discovered, that although my curiosity was much excited, I could not find suthcicnt data to compare them with. Egyptian ones ; splinters of ))eech bark and shreds of flax cloth were the only traces I could find ; but I read with much interest Mr. Ward's de.-cription of a mummy found, Avhicli he was allowed to carry away with him, and which I will herf^ -v. ascribe: — '' It is a female about six feet in heiu'ht, and so CD ' perfectly dried as to weigh but twenty pounds when I found it. The hair on the back pnrt of the head is rather short, and of a sandy hue , the top of the head i^ bald, and the eyes sunk into the head ; the nose, or that part which is cartilaginous, is dried down to the bones of the face ; the lips are dried away, and disco- vered a fine set of teeth, white as ivorv. The hands and feet are perfect, even to the nails, and very delicate, like those of a young person ; but the teeth are worn as much as in a person at the age of fitfty." E 2 I I Hi hi if I ji«i ii *y,J: -J 2 RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. Doctor Cronan deplored the loss of this mummy, "^^•hich was so perfect. Near her were found many curious little objects, totally dissimilar to anything Indian ; among which were a carved wooden cup and a little reed whistle. During my stay a new crevice in the rocks was observed, and, after some perseverance, was made pass- able, and found to open into a large gallery, in some places of considerable size, in others diminishing in height and width. It extended about five miles, and was terminated by a piece of subterranean water and solid rock. No species of vegetation grows in these caves, nor did I even find any kinds of moss. The temperature is always uniform, uninfluenced by that of the external air, which renders them, consequently, comfortable in winter, and delightfully cool in summer. The air inside is very pure ; so much so, that invalids have tried the experiment of remaining for weeks underground, and, notwithstanding the inevitable gloom that must have attended their sojourn in such a dreary abode, have found themselves greatly invigorated, and their appe- tites much increased. One gentleman recovered in a most wonderful manner, after a residence of several months in a cottage there, which was pointed out to me. The vouno" ladies had, the vear before, voted it too hot to dance above-ground, and had actually planned and 2:iven a subterranean ball ; choosins: a verv fine cavern, spacious enough, but not too large to admit of its being properly lighted, and having a boarded floor laid down for the occasion. I saw some vestii>;es of the arrangements still remaining ; and my fair friends assured me that as soon as their numbers were a little more augmented by the advancing watering-season, they intended to give another, and were kind enough to press IIUNTI^^G CLUB. 53 mo to stay for it. Our evenings during my visit to the caves were truly delightful, and passed away but too rapidly between music, dancing, and moonlight rambles amidst the delightful scenery of that lovely spot. 1 tore myself away with regret, and returning to Louis- ville, took boat up to St. Louis. As soon as I arrived there, I commenced preparations fur my Rocky Mountain expedition, and provided myself with everything except horses, which I learned were much better, and more easily procured in the neigh- bourhood of Independence. Having still two days to spare before the departure of a boat for the latter place, I accepted an invitation from Mr. Cohen, the president of the hunting club at St. Louis, to join their party in an early hunt next morning in the Illinois country, on the opposite side of the river. At four o'clock, therefore, next morning, and sorely against my will, I was obliged to jump out of bed, to the music of old Mr. Cohen's horn. I dressed with all speed, and on going down found a very fine horse (though rather too fiery a steed to shoot from) waiting for me in the street. 1 took my double-barrelled gun, which I had repaired and set to rights after its fall from the tree in Arkansas. The rest of the party, about six in number, came dropping in one by one ; we rode down the river for some distance, to a ferry, where we crossed, with our horses. The ferry-boat was worked by a pair of horses in the stern, pacing round and round as in a mill, and, working a kind of capstan, so impelled the boat backwards and forwards. Landing on the other side, we found ourselves in the free state of Illinois, and the dogs waiting for us. Before proceeding very far, we came to a most in- viting country for game — beautiful rich pasturage, broken by wooded glens ; affording at once feeding- ground, shelter, and water for deer. At that season of 1 1 i!.»5 54 llAMBLES AND ADVE2sTURES. 7 i h l! fir I the year, however, the grass is unfortunately so high, that, even when on horseback, it is very difficult to get a fair sight of the deer ; for, as they bound off, it closes so rapidly behind them, as merely to afford a snap shot in their direction. We put the dogs to in a beautiful glen of birch and scrub-oak, ranojinnj ourselves alono; the outside of the wood on the high grassy plain, about sixty or eiglity yards from one anotlier. Presently we heard them give tongue ; every gun was cocked, and all eyes strained to catch a glimpse of the deer, when an old buck bounded out of the cover at a grand pace ; his horns, however, were covered with velvet, for I could see the shreds hanging from them even at the distance I was stationed. Bang ! bang ! went old Cohen's double-barrelled gun, but the deer bounded on unhurt ; then, suddenly turn- ing, ran the gauntlet past two young men, escaping four shots more, and went off uninjured, leaping grace- fully into the air now and then, as if in conscious pride of the daring feat he had performed. Whilst we were drawing another cover, similar to the first, several of the party got snap shots at outlying deer ; but they likewise escaped. My horse had, unfortunately, such a fear of the gun, that once, when a doe started up near me in the long grass, the brute, anticipating the report of the gun, wheeled righ^ round on his hind-legs, turning my back to the direction in whicl) she was making off, and so lost me my shot. About three-quarters of an hour afterwards, much to my surprise, I heard, as I thought, our dogs giving tongue at a great distance off, and in a totally different direction from that where we were drawino- cover. I set off at full speed, and in this particular found my horse's performance fully equal to what his appearance pro- mised, for he took me through the long grass, which nearly switched my eyes out, to the wooded hills on the f]-, A GOOD IIUX. iJO c^et closes ) shot h and if tlie }igiity a f'ive lied to unded wever, slireds tioned. :1 gun, J tum- icaping gracG- s pride 'c were of the icewiso fear <:•£ nie in of the nig my dii\ and QUCll to giving ifferent I set horse's ice pro- ^vhich on the other side of the pLain at a clipping pace. As I nearcd, the baying of the dogs came louder and louder. " Have I a chance of cutting him off?" thought I to myself as I urged on my horse, ^Yhose bottom was wonderful. At last the course I was pursuing as most likely to effect my object (which, after all, was a complete chance), led into a wood too thick to allovr of anything of a pace on horseback ; nevertheless I dashed on, barely .slackening speed till absolutely compelled to stop by ^ome fallen trees, when, throwing myself off my horse, whom I left to his own devices, after a short run on foot I was crossed by the stag in full career. I took a snap shot, and struck him in the flank, being blown a little by riding and running. He turned and was soon lost to view. On going to the spot where I had fired at him, 1 saw some blood, which made me hope that the dogs mii:;lit still find him ; so, drawing my knife, I blazed a couple of trees, and went back to look for my horse, :vliom I fortunately found with very little trouble. I liad scarcely mounted him again before I heard the ^'ound of a horn in the rear, and to the left on the hill- side, and a shout of, " Who fired that shot V "II'' I replied ; and, on riding up, found, to my astonishment, that I had fallen in with quite another hunting party, and another pack of hounds. I immediately apologized, and hoped I had not spoiled their sport. To which the owner of the dogs and the horn replied, " You are most welcome ! your deer's here ; a very fair buck. I guess you were near missing, though. Only for that one buck-shot through the kidneys you would not have got liim. There are one or two in the paunch, but of no account. We had lost him but for you. How was you so lucky as to fix yourself there below, and all ? " I explained the whole matter in very few words ; where- upon they insisted on my staying with them and sharing ^heir corn-cake, cold boiled pork, and whiskey, on the U ill I if- ' 1 m \U 56 RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. H I ! i'' pica that I should lose myself in going back to look for my own party, but in reality to exercise that innate love of hospitality for which all the Americans are so justly celebrated. They even commenced packing the deer upon my horse ; but I would not hear of it, and insisted upon the right of its belonging to the owner of the dogs. We then sat down to a capital lunch, near a running stream, which afforded us the " cold without '' to qualify oav whiskey, one of the party good-naturedly offering to accompany me afterwards to the ferry to show me the way, as I had made such a round in the course I had taken in my pursuit of the stag ; which he not only did, but also crossed with me. I think, however, I was indebted for the society of my entertaining companion to the bright eyes of a very pretty widow, who presided at a bar on the Missouri side of the water, and to whose bar he insisted on taking me, in order, as he said, to treat me to a particularly fine whiskey cock- tail ; after which I shook hands with him, and rode back to- St. Louis, leaving him to bask in the sunsliine of the little widow's tender glances. I rejoined my hunting companions of the morning at supper, at the planter's house, which was my hotel. They were surprised to hear of my afternoon's adven- ture, as they fancied I had gone home long before. We spent a noisy evening, towards the termination of which a most singular bet was made. Old Mr. Cohen was universally considered a great talker, so much so, that he even admitted it himself ; but this evening a formid- able rival appeared against him in the person of a strange character from Kentucky, who fairly met him on his own ground, and after supper evinced such unceasing powers of conversation, that old Mr. Cohen was unable to get in a word, and was fain to claim a hearing. " Let me speak, let me speak/' he gasped several times, but with no avail ; till, at last, the fool's argument was THE AMERICAN lUR COMPANY. sr was liug at hotel, adven- We wliicli en was 0, that brmid- trange on his ceasing unable resorted to, and a bet made which should talk the longest. An umpire was chosen to determine which of the two loquacious combatants should be the winner ;. but, as might naturally be supposed, none of us had the patience to sit out the contest, so we went off to bed,, leaving a plentiful supply of brandy, sugar, and iced water. Next morning, at a quarter-past five, victory was declared for Missouri, the umpire returning at that hour and finding the Kentucky man fast asleep in his arm-chair, and old Mr. Cohen sitting up close beside him and whispering in his ear. I started next day up the Missouri river for Inde- pendence, where I arrived in less than a week, and met the party with whom I intended to travel across the prairies. Every year, at the beginning of September, the American Fur Company sends off an expedition to the different trading posts on the banks of the Missouri and Yellow Stone rivers. This caravan is composed of the traders, workmen, artificers, and hunters of the company, who go up to their forts or trading posts accordinoj to their eno-afrements with Messrs. Pierre, Chateau, and Cie-> of St. Louis, who constitute the branch establishment in that town. The goods con- veyed into the Indian territory for the purchase, or rather barter, of furs and skins, are brought up the Missouri from St. Louis in a steamboat once a vear. This vessel starts in the early part of May, at the time most fitted to take advantage of the rise in the upper Missouri, caused by the melting of the snows on the Indian plains and the Kocky Mountains ; and, after depositing the various articles and wares for barter with \vhich it supplies the trading posts, terminates its voyage at Fort Union, at the mouth of the Yellow Stone, where that river falls into the o'reat Missouri, ariivino; thither about the end of uly, at which time the Missouri feels .1 .r ; f 'I m "iiX m IP it » U i RAMBLES A^'L> ADVENTURES. i! If b\ s the maximum accession to its waters. The mouth of the Yellow Stone is upwards of 2,000 miles from St. Louis ; this distance, therefore, is accomplished by the intrepid little steamer, through a most difficult naviga- tion and against a current running six miles an hour, Avithin the space of from seven to eight weeks : the descent occupies about eight or nine days. This steamer carries up all the articles most prized by the Nortli American Indians, with the exception of ardent spirits or any intoxicating liquor. I could hardly detail all the artich'S brought up for the fur-trade ; but the principal ones are guns, powder, lead, coffee, sugar, tobacco, and white, blue, red, and green blankets ; also vermilion, and blue and white glass beads. The articles obtained from the Indians in exchange are chiefly baffalo-robes and the undressed skins of elk, deer, antelope, wolf, with a few of the grisly bear. The rarer and more valuable furs are sought for and purcliased for the continental market, by the Hudson's Bay Company, whose territories lie to the northward — the climate of which being so much colder, produces furs of still greater value. Generally speaking, the colder the climate the more valuable the fur. Even the same animal in the same region will bear a far more valuable fur if the winter reaches a greater intensity of cold than what is ordinary in the districts ; so much so, that connoisseurs in furs will talk of the winters of S\i and '46, as connoisseurs in wine do of the great vintages of '36 and '42. Indeed, my own admiration of beautiful furs is so great, that I cannot help so far participating in their feelings as to think it would be delightful if we could induce our English ladies to take a wider range, and to select from all the valuable furs found in those regions ; above all things, to exercise more discrimination in the choice of their so frequently misnamed sables ; for it is sad to sec a beautiful creature most exquisitely dressed in all other ^^ utli of )in St. by the aviga- L horn*, 3 : the teamer North spirits all the incipal 30, and m, and :oni the ind the li a few )le furs narkctj 'S lie to much more e same ■winter linary n furs isseurs ndced, that I 53 as to ice our ct from )ove all loicc of I to sec II other rt FI^^E runs. oi) respects, but bearing on her graceful shoulder a long strip of painted rubbish, imposed on her, no doubt, as a real sable boa, but to the eye of an observing admirer of handsome furs, as easily distinguishable from this as is a printed calico from a Chinese crepe shawl. Why do our ladies adopt the sable (which compara- tively is not a valuable far) to the utter exclusion of the more rare as well as beautiful kinds ; such as tlie black, 'line, and silver-grey foxes ? If these were but a little more seen and known, I am certain the taste of our countrvworaen would no lon<>;cr allow the Hudson Bav Company to send them to foreign countries in search of purchasers more capable of appreciating them. CHAPTER IV. OM Ml'. Kipp. — Preparing for the Start. — Mormons. — Camping at Xight. — Duck-shooting. — Gigantic Vegetation. — Prairie on Fire. — Fort Vermilion. — Scalp Dance. — A Dog Feast. — A Woman bought and saved. — Hint from a r)ullet. — Foi't Pierre. 1 LEFT the river steamer at Independence, and made my way over to the farm of Mr. Kipp, a member of the American Fur Company, and leader of the autumn expedition every year into the Indian country of the Tpper Missouri, which escort it was my intention to join in the first instance. ^Ir. Kipp was a hardy old veteran, who, althou2,h upwards of sixty years of age, used every year to ride from his farm, near Independence, up to the mouth of the Yellow Stone river, a distance of 1,500 or 1,GOO miles ; he had already ridden this journey upwards of twenty times in so many successive years, returning 'lown on the Fur Company's barges or mackinaw boats iA.f M i^i' X 5 - ! A! ti m m CO RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. i Bif ■■'!} every summer to St. Louis, in charge of the skins and furs obtained by the traders from the Indians. I arrived in the midst of his preparations for his journey, and obtained his assistance in purchasing horses. This delayed us for one day, so that we did not leave till the 2nd of September, a date which I remember from his observing; to me that it was the first time for many years that he had failed in getting under weigh on the first of that month. Our travelling party consisted of about seventeen or eighteen ; namely, old Kipp, the leader ; Mr. Murray, a Scotchman in the service of the company, and in charge of Fort Alexan- der, on the Yellow Stone, the trading post of the Crow Indians, who was also on his way up to that post : we were accompanied by a hardy set of Frenchmen (almost all the e7nplo?/&s of the company being French), some of Creole and some of Canadian origin — the latter techni- cally termed voyacfeurs — docile, patient, enduring fel- lows, with constitutions like iron, well practised in journeys of this kind and character. Each man was mounted, and led a second horse packed with his clothes or provisions, or whatever might be wanting on the journey : one of these men was assigned to me to mind any packhorse and carry a spare gun ; and I found old Alexandre a most amusing and useful vagabond. We had grand confusion at starting — kicking horses, obstinate mules, packs slipping off, &c., with the usual amount of oaths and maledictions ; but things fell into working order after a while, and we continued our course without much further disturbance. For the first two or three days our route lay through a very thinly-inhabited country, with farm-houses at intervals, at which we put up for the night as we went along, and at some of which we found capital quarters, both as regarded board and lodging ; of the latter, Mr. Kipp, Mr. Murray, and I availing ourselves, while the innr "as ■lili CAMPING AT NIGHT. 61 ins and for his chasing wc did rhich I ;he first g under ig party lelv, okl in the A.lexan- .10 Crow ost : we (ahnost some of techni- 'ing fel- ised in lan was clothes on the to mind )und old horses, le usual fell into r course through )uses at we went [uarters, ter, Mr. hile the men camped out. AVe passed through a good deal of country inclosed and cultivated by the Mormons. I need not here mention their peculiar tenets in religion, for they are tolerably well known to most of my readers ; nor the various enormities of whicli they are accused ; 1 such as holding a plurality of wives, &c. At all events, they are an indefatigable set of men, agricultural as well as religious enthusiasts, and the pioneers of a future civilization ; for the day is not far distant when, by tlieir means, tlie Red Man and the buffalo will be swept off the face of the earth. The last spot where we saw white faces was the Council Bluffs, the trading post and the residence of a government agent, where we remained a day supplying ourselves with coffee, sugar, and biscuit, salt pork, and beans, as we did not expect for some time yet to reach a good hunting country. I will give here a discription of our first night's camp, which will suffice for all, as each night's work was little more than a r( petition of the same operations. A little before sunset, we unsaddled and unpacked our horses, placing the packs and saddle of each rider in a separate pile, at equal distances, so as to form a circular inclosure about ten paces in diameter ; and after watering and ''hobling'' the horses, i.e, attaching the fore and hind legs on one side together by means of an iron chain, with a leathern strap round the fetlock, to prevent their stray- ing, we turned them loose to graze ; not till then con- sidering ourselves at liberty to attend to our own comforts. Our first business was, then, to cut and gather wood, and to light a fire in the centre of the circle, fetching some water in the kettles, and putting the meat on to cook, and making our beds of saddle-cloths, blankets, and buffalo-robes : this done, we roasted our coffee-berries, and having wrapped them in a piece of deer or buffalo skin, and pounded them on the stump of a tree with the back of a hatchet, put them in our coffee-pot and boiled KJ V: \ \h: I k m i? . i i\ I t, .■ ' G'l UAMliLKS AND AD VENT I' 11115. k thorn ; and tlic moat bcin!]: cooked by tlio timu tliin pro- cess was over, and the ootVee made, we fell to with uivat appetite. After supjter, we liiijhted our pipes, and then eaeh turned in when he felt inelined, and, with his feet to the fn'o, slept as only travellers in the jtrairie can sleep. Before day we were up Ji^ain, unhoMed and watered our horses, loaded the paeks, and were all in the saddle by sunrise. We rode on till about eleven o'elock, when we eamped a!j;ain for Invakfast, lettini!; the horses i^raze for a couple of hours ; at one, startin;;- <»fi iv^inn to pursue our nuireh till near dark. One day we arrived, a little after noon, at a very niee situation for eampinix, near a lake. Our salt meat wa^^ out ; we had nothinjji; ]>ut beans ; and, on account of the Indians havintj: recently scoured the country, we had n^'i met with anv heavier mime than ducks and teal ; so tin. hunters and I set off to try and get a su])ply of these : but, to my inlinite astonishment, 1 found that neither of them could shoot on the wini^. It was amusinij; to see how astounded they were at my knockini;; over a line mallard, that came whoeliuL!; over our heads ; tliev iii- sisted on its being a chance sliot, and would not be ])er- suaded of the contrary, until I brought down several successively ; and at last, with a most satisfactory right and left, silenced their S(;epticism completely. They were greatly delighted : " Mais comment diable, monsieur, faites-vons cela V said one hardy old veteran to lue. 1 offered to instruct him, but could not get him to lire rapidly enough, as he was afraid of wasting his ammuni- tion, which was very expensive. I rcmcnd)cr I had to work hard for my ducks that evening ; they all fell in the water, and I had to swim for them ; but thcv formed a great addition to the boiled beans we had lately been reduced i(). Next evening we were tliroatened with rain ; and the manner in which we protected ourselves will show how tliis pri»- itli uivat iiiul then I liis fi'ot lirio can i)lod and ro all in it cloven ttin«!: the irtin;r ofl lery nice neat wa^- it of the had not 1 ; so the f these ; t neither usinu; to cr a line they in- ; be ])er- severnl )rv riu'lit [ley A\'ore lonsieur, lue. 1 I to lire mmnni- " had t'} I fell in I formed dy been and the ow how aiUANTi<: vi:(;i;tati»>n. Q:} !•' in^-onionsly travellers in tlu; prairie^ obviate the dlllicuU tics wiiich arise. Canipin'j; near Home willows, we cnt ol' these a suiVnm'nt ([iiantity (^ enable each of lis to form a semicircular hut for himself, Ijy Itendinic and stickin'j; the extremities of each osier into the _i;Tound, sit as to form a succession of arches ; after which, Ity weavint*' in a few |>liant yallies alom;- the tof) and sides (d" this framework, \\v madi^ it sulliciently firm to sup- port si)arc skins, saddle-cloths, and ni;!l,iio-robes, under (he shelter of which we crept in and made our beds. The vci^etation in this part of the prairie was very rank, and in some jdaces <^in-antic, the ^rass <.iro\vin'j over thousands of acres from live to ei'j,'ht feet hi,^"h. For two days we travelled throui^h this, ^vithout inter- mission, occasionally meetiii<'' "with uillows and small spots of timber. i']verythin;j; around — the hu^v coars*; U^rass — weeds that 1 never saw before, rank and tanii;led in their uiudiecked 'jirowth— and the eternal illimitable sweep of the undulatinu; prairie, impressed on me a sense of vastness (|uite overwhelmini^. One afternoon, on a day when we had mad(i an early cam]), 1 started with a hunter, to sec if we coidd lind anythiniv to eat with our boiled beans. We had to wade aloui;' throu'di the LTass to aranV the old fallen timber-trees, six or seven feet in diameter, over the trunks of which we had to make our w;iy, as tliey lay about in hundreds across our path, over- thrown by ao'c and tempests. 1 know not when 1 have felt so forcibly conscious of my own insignilicance, as when struii;o:lin2; throuii'h this immense waste, and feel- miv as thoufi;h I were suddenly carried backward into some remote and long-past age, and as though 1 were encroaching" on the territories of the mammoth and the mastodon. Nor was my astonislnnent the less, when at i w- I i M ! h 04 IlAMDLl-S AND ADVENTUnrS. I |. length \vc atttiinoJ the hills, to meet ^vith a succession of deep dry Avatcrcourses, with oaks of enormous size ^-rowing along them, and so close against the stee)) sides,* that their topmost branches lay on the bank, overlapping the grassy plain. I soon, however, abandoned my reverie, and kept a sharp look out, for wc began to see signs of game ; and, after a while, were pretty well rewarded for our trouble and fatigue, by killing a deer apiece, a turkey, and a blue-winged teal ; but we were dreadfully tired, and but for a bright moon, could never have returned to the party that night. Our arrival was the signal for a second supper, all being eager enough to taste the venison, wliich, to men who liad lived so long upon beans, was a great treat. (hie night we were considerably alarmed at seeing to windward of us a lurid glare of red light, by which we soon knew that the prairie was on fire. AVe instantly started up and kindled the grass between our position and the approaching conflagration, so as to burn away the intervening material, and cut off the progress of the tlames by depriving them of food, carefully extinguish- ing our own fire at the same time, of course. It was a splendid and terrible sight ! The fire did not, in fact, I'ome within several miles of where we stood, but at night it always appears much nearer and the danger more imminent than is really the case. Conjecture was rife among my more experienced fellow-travellers as to its cause, but all agreed in arguing no good from it. *^ Ah, Monsieur!'' said one old fellow to me, "les peaux rouges sent en chemin." He meant the Indians, and the next day proved him to be right, for on reach- ing Fort Vermilion (the second trading post of the Fur Company on the Missouri) about noon, we saw, to our surprise, from the hills commanding a view of the plain skirting the river by the fort, the lodges or tents of the of cession IS size ) sides,* apj.in^^ kept a ? ; and, trouble , and a md but e party second 'enison, !, was a cing to lich we istantly ition •n away of the o'uisli- t was a lin fact, but at n danger ire was [s as to Irom it. "les pdians, reacli- Ihe Fur jto our je plain of the PRAIRIE ON riRE. 65 Sioux Indians and some wild creatures, indistinctly visililo in the distance, running to and fro on foot and on horseback. I never, in all my experience of life in the prairies, witnessed the awful wonders of a prairie on fire ; but a brother-sportsman of mine, who was very near losing both horses and mules from a frightful event of the kind, gave me the following description of his experience of one, shortly after my return, which I here tran- scribe : — *' We had seen, during the latter part of our clay's journey, a remarkable appearance in the eastern horizon ; and during supper observed a smell of burning, and a few lii>ht cinders fell about the camp, and pre- sently we remarked that the luminous appearance in tlie east had very much augmented. There being a little hill in front of us, we could not see distinctly what caused it ; but having consulted together, we agreed that it proceeded from a prairie on fire, which, however, was a long way oft*. About eight o'clock the smell of burning and the glare having materially increased, we walked up to the top of the hill, when a spectacle pre- sented itself to us the most grand that can well be con- ceived. The whole horizon, from north to south, was one wall of fire, blazing up in some places to a great licight, at others merely smouldering in the grass. It wai, however, at least, eight miles off"; but the wind seemed to set in our direction, so we instantly returned, and took measures to preserve the cjimp. We were in a corner, as it were, on the bank of the stream, with a good deal of brushwood running up on our left, and the ground sloping up gradually from the creek to the top of the hill. Our guides, on looking at the fire, said that it would not harm us — ' Ce n'est rien — le vent change.' In short, they would do nothing. In about twenty minutes, however, it approached so near, that there was no time to be lost, and all hands were immediately em- F til ^.m 1^: ■' * 66 IIAJIBLES AND ADVENTURES. I ^.^ ployed in burning a road across the face of the hill, so as to stop the fire at that part. A more picturesque scene could hardly bo imagined. The niL;ht was very dark, but as for as the eye could reach, all across the horizon, about four miles in front of us, was a broad, bright, lurid glare of fire, with a thick canopy of smoke hanging over it, whose fantastic wreaths, as they curled in tho breeze, were tinged with the red refloction of the flames. Even at that distance we could hoar the crack- ling and rushing of the fire, which, as it advanced, caused a strong wind, and every now and then a brighter flame would shoot high up inco the black cloud of smoke over the top of the hill, illuminating for an instant our tents and waggons in the dark hollow, and giving a momentary glimpse of the horses which were picketed on the side of the rise, on the crest of which the figures of the men engaged in lighting the opposition fire (which, as it became too extended, they beat down with blankets, only suffering it to burn a space about twelve feet broad, right across the line of the advancing conflagration), stood out in strong relict against the gTowing wall of light beyond them ; and as they ran about, tossing their arms, and waving the blankets and little torches of lighted grass, they looked in the distance like demons rather than men. We had no time to look at the picturesque, however, for every moment (ovving to their previous obstinacy in neglecting to take precautions in time) became more pregnant with danger, and by the time they had burned as much as would only about half cover the camp, the fire was raging in the bottom at the other side of the hill. I ran up for an instant to the top, and shall never forget the scene. Although still half a mile off, the fire seemed close to me, and the heat and smoke were almost intolerable, while the dazzling brightness of the flames made it painful to look at them ; they were in it' J TRAIRTE ON ITRE. 67 hill, so uresque as very :oss the , broad, f smoke f curled 1 of the ) crack- vanced, then a e black linating hollow, 3 which crest of ;ing the ed, they burn a line of Hg rcliei and as ng the looked N'e had )r every [fleeting regnant much tire was hill. I V forget the fire ce were 3 of the were in three lines nearly parallel, the first of which was just below me, burning with a rushing noise, and crackling as it caught the dry grass, that gave an idea of total destruction which it is impossible to convey, and stretch- ing away over hill and dale for twelve or fourteen miles on each side of me, lighting up the sides of the hills and the little groves of wood far away. The two lines in the rear were not so much connected, and seemed rather licking up any little spots of grass whicli had escaped at first. Every now and then a prairie hen would flirr past, flying in a wild uncertain manner, as if fear had almost deprived it of the use of its wings ; while all the songsters of the grove were wheeling about among the trees, uttering the most expressive cries of alarm, and the melancholy hooting of several owls, and wailing yells of the wolves, together with the shouts and cries of the men, almost drowned occasionally by the roaring of the flames, added to the savage grandeur of the scene, and one could have fancied the end of all thino's was at hand. On returnino' to the camp, I found all hands cutting the lassoes and halters of the mules, some of which galloped off instantly into the river, where they remained standing till the hurri- cane of flame had passed over ; the others, seemingly trusting themselves instinctively more to man than to their own energies in such an emergency, followed us up the space which we had burned, and remained quietly there, trembling indeed, but without an effort to escape. By the time the animals were collected in this spot, the tire was blazing on the top of the hill, and we all rushed away with blankets to arrest its progress, if possible, at the part which we had left unguarded ; all our efforts would have ^cen in vain, however, and our tents and everything else must have been consumed, but that, just at that weak point, the grass suddenly became thin and scanty, with much stony ground, and we had the satis- f2 I 11 ' 1 ■•<. la'' i ■ 'r V 't. If t M. 68 RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. faction of seeing the flames stopped there and turned off to the northward along the edge of the brushwood. It was really terrific to be, as we were, trying to break it down in the very middle of the blaze (which, after all, was so narrow that where the flames were not high, you could jump across it); we were, indeed, nearly suffocated by the smoke and heat. As soon as we perceived the fire turned off, we returned to the camp and horses, and all danger was over; but the sight of the three lines of fire stretching up the rising grounds behind the camp, just like the advance of a vast array, was mag- nificent ; and it was still more extraordinary to watch the manner in which the fire passecl itself on, as it were, over the tops of the highest trees, to the height of at least forty or fifty feet. The whole scene lasted alto- gether about two hours, and nothing could be conceived more awfully grand. The extraordinary rushing and crackling sound of the flames was one of the most terrific parts of it, and when one considers that the grass is no- where more than five or six feet high, it is difiicult to imagine how the flame blazes up to such a vast height as it did. The contrast presented, two hours afterwards, was most striking. Instead of the brilliant glare of the fire, and lurid appearance of the sky, there reigned an impenetrable darkness, earth and sky being alike shrouded in a black gloom, which could almost be felt ; not a star was to be seen, and the air retained a sut- Ibcating, sulphureous smell, as if Satan himself had passed over the earth. We could not distinguish objects at ten paces' distance, and were right glad when a fresh breeze came gently breathing over the prairie, dis- sipating the murky vapdurs still hanging in the atmosphere ; and a fine starlit sky, with a sharpish frost, at length relieved us from the close, choking feeling we liad experienced for hours before. This prairie fire had travelled at the rate of five miles an hour, bringing with THE SCALP-DANCE. G9 the lost, gwe had with it a strong gale of wind ; for, otherwise, the night was quite calm, both before and after it had passed over/' As we descended the hills, we crossed a large extent of plain approaching Fort Vermilion, which we found sur- rounded by the Indian camp. The fort itself was a very miserable little place, tenanted by a few sickly whites, servants of the American Fur Company. The surround- ing Indian camp consisted of a band of GOO Sioux, including men, women, and children. An Indiai: camp is a very striking sight, particularly in fine weather, when the warriors have returned from a successful foray, or expedition, laden with spoils and trophies. In this instance the braves had just come back after an excursion against the Ottoe Indians, a tribe living to the S.E., whom it seems they surprised, and of whom they slew a considerably number. One poor fellow, from the description they gave me through the interpreter, must have made a desperate resistance, mortally wounding one Sioux and severely injuring two others, before he was overpowered by numbers. Eclow and behind the fort were ranged the Indian lodges or tents, made of dressed skins of the buffalo, cut and sewn together in suchamanner as to form, when raised on the poles, a sort of cone, but open at the top to allow the smoke to escape. The inmates were all out, arrayed in all their finery, to celebrate the occasion, and I wit- nessed the grand scalp-dance which took place round the scalp of the poor Ottoe, elevated on a high pole in the midst. The men were dressed in full costume, with feathers and faces painted either black or red : the women in red or blue blankets, with their beads, neck- laces, and embroidered gaiters. The dance was certainly a most characteristic and novel sight. They form a circle round the pole on which the scalp is mounted aloft, standing shoulder to shoulder, and placing the feet together so as to touch at the knees and ankles : i 'I • S I % i <■• r \< ■ \ I 70 RAMBLES AND ADVIiNTUllES. they then hop round in little steps, hardly bending the knees to the measure of tlie most frantic bellowing: ; the men howling " Yd-ho, o-ho-lio/' the women, " Yfi-hfi, ri-ha-ha," in a horrible monotonous chant, which with children screaming, horses kicking, dogs growling and fighting, and drums beating, formed such a scene of con- fusion and uproar as baffled description. When the dance was over, I bought the scalp, and also the poor devil's licad-dress, made of the scalp of a black bear, for wliich 1 gave about fifteen rounds of ammunition and a striped cotton shirt. It is needless for me, liowever, to enter into a description of Indian manners and customs in this place, as they are already accurately and elabo- rately detailed in Mr. Catlin's admirable Avork on this subject. During the time we halted at the fort, Mr. Kipp, Murrav, and I, were invited bv the chief to a do2;-feast : the meat w\as really not bad, but at the time it was not pleasant, as I sat eating it, to see the skull of tlie unfor- tunate animal, boiled quite bare of fiesb, grinning at us from a conspicuous place. However, the time was, not many months afterwards, when I should have been right glad of ^^nything half so good ; and even then, it was a not unwelcome change from the dried meat we were eatino; in the fort. Our host recounted, durino- the feast, the wondrous achievements of their Avar-party, ■whose triumphant rejoicings we had just been witness- ing, telling us that among other exploits they had taken a poor woman prisoner, whom they weie going to put to deatli witli great solemnity. We were, however, I'm happy to say, fortunately able to dissuade them from their cruel purpose, and by making a subscription, Messrs. Kipp and MurrCvV on the part of the company, and I, on my own account, bought her from her enemies and set her free at night. I am sure my readers will be glad to know that, as I afterwards learnt, she got '. HORSES STOLEN. 71 safely home to her husband and children, ^yho had luckily escaped the massacre. She ran all night, and lay concealed during the day, and guiding her course by the stars, regained her own tribe at the end of two days and two nights, half-starved, but very happy. Next morning, on rising, we found three of our best horses stolen ; fortunately, however, they were none of mine, which was the more lucky as I had but three, and none tlierefore to spare. In the night the Indians had rooted up the pickets of the fort in front of the horses' heads behind the stable, got themselves in and the horses out. " Well, well ; goodness gracious me ! '' exclaimed poor old Mr. Kipp on seeing how an entrance had been effected. I endeavoured to console him by telling him wliat a proof it was of the uncertainty of human affairs, since on leaving the stables the previous evening he had even taken the precaution of locking the door before the steeds were stolen. We found that it was not the Indians camped around us who were the culprits, but some audacious rascals who had pursued us a long way, and had, no doubt, been unable to carry out their plan before, from our guarding the horses so carefull;, at night, while out on the prairie. Pursuit of course was useless. In the evening, however, by wonderlid good luck, the best of the three horses broke away from his captors, and returned to us of his own accord. The following day there was a great council of the chiefs, at which they determined to start on the morrow for their autumn hunt. We travelled a couple oi days in their company, as they requested us not to move on in advance for fear of frightening the game, if there should be any. Accordin.'^ly, the following day orders were given by the chiefs to get under way and take down the lodges. The whole labour of erecting the lodges or tents in s 1, |j- :i i f If If i •I ■ i'li, '9 "^1 ' ff. ii H;.T r* 7 ■ i 72 RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. the morning and taking them down at night devolved on the women. The poles which support the tents form the carriage on which they are drawn, together with pots, kettles, children, puppies, &c., by the horses and dogs ; the women being also obliged to harness the dogs and horses, uniackle them, water them, and catch them ; the men all the time sitting still and looking on. The moving of the camp was a very prttty and strildnji: scene. Behind the mounted Indians followed those who had no horses ; then, in a long row, the horses drawing the lodge poles fastened to a straddle, th? other ends trailing on the ground. On these poles is a kind of receptacle for the different cooking-kettles ii?l other property. The doc,,3 are harnessed in like ijflurnner, and horses and dogs keep an unbroken line, together with their attendant women, who have very severe tasks to perform. Our day's journey was not very long : the men rode in every direction, looking out for buffalo ; but as yet without success. Next day a halt was ordered at about ten o'clock by the chiefs, who gave strict orders that no inmate of the camp should proceed beyond a certain distance, and that all dogs straying out of bounds were to be shot. The young men went out again after buffalo. My horses were tired, having come such a long journey, and as I did not expect to meet with much game I determined to let them rest,, and set cti alone with my double-barrelled gun to look for duckfi along a little creek, near which we were camped. I had not gone above a quarter of a mile when I was suddenly startled by the report of a gun just behind me, and a bullet whizzed close past my ear. I turned quickly round, and saw aa Indian lower his gun, having fired at and missed me. I easily came up with him as he was attempting to load, and completely cowed him by holding the muzzle of my gun to his face, with both n( b( fel A VALUABLE RETRIEVER. 78 dogs were I did to let relied rhich was me, irned iving |m as him Iboth ^4 I barrels cocked, making him knock under in very quick style. An old Indian, who fortunately happened to be near, and seeing things were taking a serious turn between us, came up, and by signs explained the matter. The fact was that I had not understood the proclama- tion of the morning, and had unintentionally trans- gressed it, and this was their way of letting me know it. It all, however, terminated very well, and most fortu- nately for me, to whom the consequences might have been fatal, and I took the precaution of getting the old fellow who had acted as mediator between us to accom- pany me for the rest of the day under pretence of picking up the ducks. I found him quite invaluable as a retriever, for he recovered several birds that I should otherwise have given up for lost. One duck, in parti- cular, late in the evening, fell under a bank ; when I got tired of searching for it, the old Sioux would not give it up, and after three-quarters of an hour's wading above his knees in ■\\'ater, pulled it out, much to his own satisfaction and my surprise, from under the oppo- site side of the river. No buffalo had been seen when we arrived in camp that night. Mr. Kipp, Murray, and I, had quite a laugh at the Indians as we plucked and boiled the small game I had broi^ght in. I did not fail, however, to call my old retriever, and make him sit down and share, on which he exclaimed " How!" and seemed much delighted. On the morrow our troublesome companions the Indians took a more southerly direction, leaving us to go our own way, which we were not sorry to do. We continued travelling all that day and part of the next, when we came in sight of two or three Indian lodges. On going up we found that one of them belonged to an Indian whom old Mr. Kipp knew, and whom he had formerly seen at Fort Pierre. He invited us into his ,,-il m(v ■. i ri 74^ RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. tent to eat buffalo, saying that he had made a good hunt and had fat meat in his lodge ; and, there, for the first time in my life, I tasted buffalo meat. To say what I think of its flavour and its excellence would be but to repeat all the encomiums upon it that I have ever heard or read. It is decidedly the best meat I ever tasted, and I have eaten as great a variety as most people. The fat is peculiarly delicious, and more like that of turtle than beef, over which it has a decided superiority in delicacy of flavour, and in not surfeiting those who even feast immoderately upon it. We took leave of our hospitable Indian, and travelled onwards until we reached an island in the Missouri, where the A. F. C.^ tried to establish a farm, for which the site was thought peculiarly favourable, the river forming such a complete substitute for a fence, on all sides. The project succeeded for awhile, but the pre- datory disposition of those most incorrigible, untame- able thieves of red-skins, soon broke out. They killed the cattle, burned the hay, and stole the corn when ripe, and actually had the impudence to offer it for sale to the F. C. traders, who " tempera! mores!'' bought it back from them at a blanket or 100 rounds of ammunition a bushel. Shortly afterwards we came opposite Fort Pierre, built on the other (i. e. south) side of the river. Wo fired some shots as a signal, on which they sent boats to take us and our horses across ; and we were by no means sorry to find ourselves comfortably installed in time for breakfast in the finest of the Fur Company's Sta- tions on the Missouri. In fact, Pierre is the largest fort belonging to the F. C.'s traders. It consists of a large space ?ibout 120 yards square, inclosed by piles of timber 24 feet high, driven well into the ground. The * American Fur Company. J EFFECT OF THE ATMOSPHERE. 75 roofrf of the store and trading houses arc attached to two of tlu' sides, with the stables, straw-yards, carpenters' and blaclvsmitlis' shops, and a dairy for such cows as may escape the marauding hands of the Indians. A flagstaff', gaily rigged, stands in the centre of the square, and the whole establishment has a most inviting look to a set of weary travellers on jaded horses, and who, with the exception of the aforesaid buftiilo feast, had not fared over well for many days past. Here, therefore, wc remained a day or two to refresh the horses, which v>'crc looking miserably worn and thin, and to revel in fresh meat and new milk for the benefit of our own health. We retailed, of course, all the news from below, which, though stale enough to us, was very acceptable here. Major Drips was in command ; had been in his younger days a great leader of trapping-parties in tlie mountains, and M'as nov,- a sober, steady trader. ^ifi m 1 ,4,.il ['' 'lerre. We boats I by no lied in [s Sta- argest Is of a liles of The CHAPTER V. Clear Atmospliere. — See Buffalo. — Arrival at Fort Union. — Buffalo- lixmling, — Winter sets in. — Huntinfj Party. — Escape from a "War Party. — A Race for Life or Death. — Wanton Cruelty of the Sioux. — A heroic old Bull. — Domestic Calves and Bison Bull. We k'ft Fort Pierre on the 5th or 6th of October to pursue our journey, and generally found timber to camp in for breakfast at mid-day, and also for supper and sleeping at night, but were much inconvenienced by want of fresh water, which disagreed with old Mr. Kipp and many of the men. We had long entered the high prairies. The atmosphere in these regions is extremely healthy, and its effect upon the constitution something wonderful ;. so much so, that persons never suffer from M^ H I ■• B i I .J t'/j rf 7C RAMDLES AND ADVENTURES. I I coughs or coUls ; the complaint is quite unknown. I have frequently in the morning risen from •. sound sleep, under a down-pour of rain, and found my slioulder, on the side T had lain, in a pool of water ; have got up and ridden on, cold and shivering, till the sun rose and his genial rays thoroughly warmed and dried me ; and yet have taken no harm. So clear is the air, that the natural range of sight is greatly extended, and distant ohjects may be clearly and easily seen, which in these islands, or in the States of America, it would be impos- sible to recomiize or define. It is almost like loakinfi; through a telescope. Another peculiarity is the great difficulty a person unaccustomed to the prairie finds in ascertaining the relative distances of objects, and consequently in estimat- ing their size. I have frequently made, myself, and seen others make, the blunder of mistakiuG; a buffiilo bull for a crow, or more frequently a crow for a bntl'alo bull. My reader? may be inclined to smile at this ; but I will answer for it, that if any of them have ever stood upon the sea-shore with a sailor, and compared their estimate of distances with his, they will liave found a considerable difference, and so it is upon the prairie. The eye ranges over a sea of short waving grass without a single intervening object to afibrd it the accustomed means of estimatinii; relative size and distance. The appetite in this healthy region is also greatly increased, and I have been told by American physicians that many are the instances where consump- tion has been completely eradicated from the constitu- tions of people travelling up into these regions, even under circumstances exposing them to very great hardships. The difficulty of finding water here seemed rather on the increase, until late one day we saw^ a herd of antelope, always a iure sign of its not being very far off. 1 DUFFALOES. 77 known. I a n. soniid ly shoulder, lavc got up \n rose and d mc ; and ir, that the [ind distant ch in tlicsc 1 be impos- ike leaking .ty a person 'taining the in cstimat- ■If, and seen buffalo bull r a buflalo ,le at this ; 1 have ever 1 compared r will liave is upon the .ort '^vaving lo afford it ^e size and [ion is also American consump- le constitu- Igions, evtn k-ery great tl rather on a herd of rcry hi off. The next most important thing was to find it, as one of the party observed. " Never mind," said old Mr. Kipp ; *' leave the horses to themselves, and they will find it." We dropped the reins upon their necks as he directed : one or two of the old stagers pricked up their ears, stood still for a little while, turned aside from the course we were pursuing, and walked us straight to a beautiful spring. It ■ the only pure, fine-Havoured water we had enjo^ i since leaving Fort Pierre, and we had entirely to thank our poor suffering horses for finding it. We accordingly camped here for the night, but as there was a scarcity of timber, we were obliged to make our fire of dry buffalo- dung, of which there was abundance, and which proved a verv tolerable substitute when Ji'athered iu sufficient quantity. We were now advanced some considerable distance in the country of the buffalo, but had not as yet met with any. The next day, however, before eleven o'clock, we actually did come in sight of the long-wished-for game. At first the dark grotesque outlines of two old out -straggling bulls loomed over a rising hill ; they remained a moment to contemplate us, and then cantered off at a very leisurely pace, tossing their great heads at every stride. We allowed them to go unmolested, as few of our horses were in condition to follow them, and we were in hopes that, by waiting a little, we might come across some cows, which would prove a much greater prize to us. But we saw no more that day. On the morrow, Mr. Murrav and I observed a bull in a ravine, so we stalked and shot him ; but he proved so old, lean, and tough, that we left him to the wolves. It is almost unnecessary for me to give any descrip- tion of the buffalo, as both he and his habits must have so often come under the observation of my readers in the writings of travellers and the descriptions of n .tu- f '■I I i m r : * I ( ;■. v.y ' Mm i ' M :.• V:;i' IMAGE EVALUATION TEST TARGET (MT-3) 1.0 I.I ki§23. 12.5 1.8 1.25 II 1.4 1.6 ■• 6" > V] vl ^a / ^> ^ m. (9/f* /A Photographic Sdences Corporation 23 WEST MAIN STREET WEBSTER, N.Y. MS80 (716) 872-4503 ^; the thing of it ndian occa- ' it is to cat )ne of fits of s, and limous ! way that I best could, my companion, four times out of five, would smash their heads or cut them off altogether. Prairie-hens, although not wild, seldom allow you to approach within fifty yards. They do not mind the report of the rifle, and when a number are on the same tree you may bag most of them by commencing with the lowest, so that his fall from the tree may not alarm his companions. This bird is evidently a species of grouse, and stands as tall, but perhaps not quite so heavy ; it is beautifully speckled with two or three greys, orange, white, and brown. In the breeding season the male exhibits two large orange-coloured gills, with which he makes a strange drumming noise, audible at a great distance on the prairie. Its flavour is much affected by what it feeds on, and in this part of the country where its principal food is rosebuds, is not nearly so good as in civilised districts, where it cats Indian corn by wholesale. So completely were my horses knocked up from the effects of their long journey that they did not recover their condition at all during the winter, and were there- fore of little or no use to me at Fort Union. Frequently, however, during my stay at that post, meat was scarce, and on these occasions I obtained a reluctant consent from old Mr. Kipp to ride a very gallant little grey buffalo-runner when I wanted to hunt on horseback. He was a powerful sagacious little animal, and eventually we understood each other thoroughly. An Indian horse is almost entirely guided by the balance of his rider^s body ; when I leaned, therefore, towards the left on approaching any particular cow, he pertinaciously pursued her, and on my firing used to sheer off in the most dexterous manner, for having once had a rip from a buffalo-horn, he was far too wise to trust himself within reach again. The best hunters of buffalo are the English half-breeds on the Red River, from Lord Selkirk's settlements ; they n i g2 m Si RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. w']\\ in passing a buffalo at full speed Lit liiin mortally behind the shoulder at fifty yards, five times out of six. A violent snow-storm about Christmas-time nearly put an end to my hunting buffalo on horseback, and a strange epidemic at the same time broke out among the inhabitants of the fort, and spread like wildfire ; a sort of cold that affected the throat like mumps, inter- nally and externally. So many of the men were laid up with it that the remainder could hardly supply the fort with wood for fuel, which they cut from the neighbour- ing point. Fortunately, however, the invalids began to recover before the healthy ones were taken ill ; but at last both the hunters were affected, and the labour of procuring meat for the fort devolved on my friend Mr. Denig and myself. This for a long time we were able to do with great ease, as the buffalo were sure to be found in the timber skirting the river on both sides, so that we could easily stalk them, and, when we had killed one or two, send out people to skin, cut them up, and take them back to the fort in a dray or sledge. Finally, alas ! my friend, the physician himself, was laid low with this complaint. He had a name for it, as doctors have for every ailment, whether they know any- thing about it or not, but that did not much assist him in its cure, for he fared no better than the rest. I started off one day by myself after a large herd of buffalo, about three miles westward of the fort, adopting the novel expedient of carrying with me a white blanket in order to stalk them. I took such a course as not to give the herd my wind, and with the cover afforded by the timber on the point, succeeded in getting within a couple of hundred yards of them ; I crept forward on my liands and knees, covered by the blanket, which pre- vented them from distinguishing me amidst the sur- rounding snow, and enabled me to approach until I came within shot. I continued creeping about and around them, SKINNING AND CUTTING UP. ally ix. sarly and Liong e ; a nter- idup e fort bour- ;an to ; but onr of friend e were J to be des, so KQ had im up, sledge, f, was r it, as ,v any- st bim llierd of lopting )lanket not to rded by Ktbin a on my Icb. pre- lie sur- I came Id tliem, singling out the best and fattest of the cows for upwards of an hour, and it was not until I had laid five of their num- ber low that they smelt a rat, and bolted oflf unanimously, tossing their shaggy heads and ploughing up the snow. Being perfectly satisfied with the abundance of meat I had obtained, I proceeded to cut out the tongues, which I fastened with thongs to my belt. Then leaving my blanket on one animal, my cap stuck on my loading- stick on another, a pocket-handkerchief fluttering from the horns of a third, &c., to keep off the wolves, I ran off at full speed to the fort, which I entered just as the twelve-o'clock bell was giving the signal for dinner. We had buffalo and venison that day of my own pro- viding, but dressed with most delicious bear's grease and buffalo marrow by a capital cook. It happened to be Thursday, our pudding day, which will account to my readers for my making such haste home. Dinner over, I requested old Mr. Kipp to give mo a couple of experienced men with a dray, in order to cut up and bring home my buffalo meat, but so numerous were the sufferers from **the mumps," that not one could bo Spared, and the day was too cold to induce the women to come to my assistance ; I returned alone therefore to the ground where my bisons lay, and with two pack- horses, endeavoured to bring home as much of the meat as possible. I commenced with the finest one, the robe of which was beautiful, and proceeded to cut her up, though not without a good deal of exertion and repug- nance at first. One soon, however, gets over that sort of squeamishness. So slow and awkward, however, were my first attempts at cutting up this heavy game, that night closed around me ere I finished a second buffalo ; so that all I could carry away was the skin of the finest, with the ribs, loins, &c., of two cows, leaving three fine animals untouched, to be devoured by the wolves, which mortified me exceedingly, especially as it f 'I I'ti M hi ^1 ■-». .-]iJit. i^ 88 RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. way. He and several other trappers had been hunting for beaver on one of the tributaries of the Yellow Stone, or Platte, I forget which now, and after their day's toil had camped in supposed security, with tlie horses in their neighbourhood, and were lying by their fire after supper, soundly wrapped in that sleep from which they were to rise no more, when Williams dreamed : " God Almighty appeared to me,'' said he, slowly and solemnly, " in flames and sparkling flashes of fire, and said, 'Wil- liams, you have been a very wicked man ; I have saved your life very often, and you have not profited by it ; but I will save you once more/ " Bang, bang, bang ! went the guns of an Indian war-party, close by ; and most of his companions rolled from the sleep of time into eternity, or, on rising to flee from the danger, were im- mediately massacred. Williams, however, clubbing his rifle in one hand, and grasping his knife in the other, rushed right at the spot from which the shots were fired, and consequently broke through the enemy, and got clear off ; for those that had fired were but few ; the larger number of the savages being ranged at the oppo- site side, in order more effectually to destroy the whole party, by intercepting them as they fled from the obvious danger. *' Well, Williams,'' said Mr. Denig, after a pause, ''and is it a warning you have profited by?" " Well," replied the old fellow, " I don't know ; I've w irked very hard at my traps, and paid all my debts ; I've given up swearing, and that sort o' thing ; and ii' I knew anything else, I'd do it." Most likely the sleeping hunter was inspired with this vision in a moment of time at the instant dawn of returning con- sciousness, when awakened by the explosion of the fire- arms which had suggested the dream. Our snow-storm lasted about three days, and was suc- ceeded by cold, brilliant sunny weather. The chief of the upper camp and his brother sent an old Indian with V \ LLK-HUNTING. 89 ; and le into re im- ig his other, were and ; the )V10ll3 fter a I've lehts ; md ii* the in a con- iire- suc- lef of ^Yith t II message to mc, and an offer to accompany mo for one or two days' hunting on the Yellow Stone. Accordingly we started next day, joined by one of the hunters of the fort and two boys about sixteen or seventeen years of age, who came for the purpose of assisting us in skinning, cutting up, and packing the meat. After crossing the Missouri a little below the fort, and proceeding some way up the Yellow Stone, we came in sight of a splendid band of upwards of 100 elk. Never shall I forget the grand and imposing appearance they presented. Like a regiment of cavalry they passed along the plain, the old stags, with wide branching antlers, leading the van. We immediately left our horses with the old man and boys, and crossing the ice, the chief and the hunter took the left side of the river, and his brother and I the right. We got several shots, and succeeded, after a good deal of running and hard work, in bagging three of them. Ramsay, the hunter, and the chief, fired several shots, whereupon the elk rushed to our side of the river, find I got a shot at a noble stag, bearing a splendid pair of antlers. I struck him behind the fore-shoulder, upon which he started and rushed forward, crashing through the willows at a great pace. We pursued as fast as we could make our way through the snow, and, after a long, hard run, two more shots brought him down ; he made one final effort to escape, and fell struggling on the snow, where he soon expired. I was greatly pleased at my success, but so utterly blown, that I threw myself for- ward with my elbows on the ground, to assist my efforts to breathe ; but, by following the Indian's example, and eating a handful of snow, I was soon relieved. I now thought I had ample leisure to examine my noble elk, which measured five feet three inches in height from the top of the shoulder, and upwards of six and a half feet round the body ; but the Indian would not allow me to stay, pointing forward and savinjr, '' Cooa, coona" (come. '■i •)i ,'■ ill r IJ: i'i -r rii 'CJ 90 RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. friend). So we set off again ; and before evening closed, he shot a deer, which we skinned, cut up, and hung in a tree. Covering it with the skin, we left it till next morning, as it was rather too far for the boys to go for it that night. This done, we ran buck at a jog-trot to camp, and on our way overtook the boys with the meat of my elk, cut up and covered with its hide, all safely packed on the back of the horse they were leading. As we approached, we were cheered by the red glare of the fire flickering through the willows, and shedding warm tints on the leafless frozen trees. The snow around the fire was partly scraped away, forming a sheltering wall behind our backs as we sat. Elk-meat, spitted on short sticks, with the sharpened end stiidc in the ground, was roasting in all directions. Ramsay and the chief had killed two elks, a stag and doe, and wounded several others, which they did not get. The herd had got perfectly terrified at the firing on both sides, and kept trotting backwards and forwards, literally panic-struck ; so much so, that had they shot only tolerably well, they must have killed many more, as they actually fired eleven times between them. Indians, in general, shoot very badly, and in their pur- suit of game depend most on their skill, craft, and patience in approaching, and also on their wonderful powers of running. I found the elk good, solid, whole- some meat, very like our beef ; but the fat is disagreeable to eat : it is white and hard, getting cold, as it were, immediately in the mouth. On putting my hand in my pouch, after supper, I found that I had lost my pipe, which, when the old man understood from Ramsay, who interpreted for me, he asked, " Where?" I said I did not know, but that I supposed it must have been at the place where I dis- mounted. Upon which he said, " We will go and find INDIAN SKIRMISH. 91 >sed, ig in next for it ot to L the bide, were glare dding snow ing a •meat, [ivk in ly and 3, and The both wards, y shot more, them, ir pur- t, and derful whole- ceable were, fper, I Id man ne, he that I Idis- idfind 1 it," and to my surprise got up, took a burning piece of wood from the fire, and led the way. After poking along for about 100 yards he stopped, stooped down, and searching for a little while, pointed out to me with a modest self-satisfied chuckle, the short white clay pipe lying on the snow close to the prints of my feet, made on dismounting from my horse. The younger of the two Indians that hunted with me was the chief, although my friend, the elder one, was a far finer fellow in every way ; he sat there a perfect gen- tleman of nature, dignified in carriage, with a mild voice and graceful manner. I complimented him on his run- ning, and reminded him how completely he had stumped me up that afternoon ; to which he merely replied with the mildest gesture, *' Your gun'' (alluding to my rifle) " is very heavy, and mine is light." Next morning we lay rather late under our buffalo- robes and blankets, as it had come on to snow ; but as the flakes fell light and large, it cleared off' in two or three hours ; and when it was over we freshened up the fire, cooked and ate a little breakfast, took up our guns again, and separated, agreeing to meet at the end of the point of timber. Ramsay, the hunter, and I, took one side, and the two Indians continued along on the other. We had been hunting about two hours without any success, when, in our rear, and at the other side of the ]\Iissouri, we heard rapid heavy firing, and were not long in guessing the cause. We divined, as we after- wards found rightly, that a battle was fighting between the Assineboines and their enemies, the Sioux, and we were in the rear of the latter. Ramsay was as brave as a lion, and we agreed not to attempt to gain the fort until we found not only our Indians, but the old man and boys. We started off" to join the latter, in hopes that the chief and his brother would also adopt the Fame plan under the circumstances, instead of adhering ■ h I '■Pi 92 hambles and adventures. to our arrangement of meeting at the point. Whilst walking along the ice on the river under the right bank, looking for a spot where we could climb up, we observed two Sioux Indians running at full speed towards us. They came very close before they perceived us, clothed as we were in white blanket capotes, and walking under a snow-covered bank. *' Now," exclaimed Ramsay, in very broken English, and at the same time cocking his gun, " you take left hand one and I the right, and we will hammer them.'' I, however, protested against the absurdity of interfering in Indian quarrels, being quite content to save my own bones without breaking any of theirs. In order to join our friends we had to ascend the bank and cross a belt of wood, which we successfully did, although not without a little apprehension of lurk- ing enemies. We found, on reaching the old man and the boys, that the chief and his brother had already joined them, and the boys had brought in the horses, so we all mounted together and rode off for the river. We crossed the ice, and on arriving at the opposite side, found the enemy had taken to the timber eastward, while we had taken care to cross well to the westward of them. Their attack turned out a complete failure, for they had not succeeded in taking the Assineboines by surpnse ; and we arrived on the scene of action only in time to see the Sioux, who were all on foot, move into the timber to avoid the onset of both bands of mounted Assineboines, one from the west, and the other from the east, camp. We hastened on to the fort, where they were rejoiced to see us, thinking, from the enemy having crossed down the Yellow Stone, that they must have seen and surprised us, in which case we should most probably never have been heard of more. They must, however, have crossed considerably above us, and to this we no doubt owed our escape ; at least, so we concluded, from the account given us at the A PERILOUS SITUATION. 93 'hilst }ank, ervcd Is us. othed under [ly, in ig his nd we st the quite any of iscend ssfuUy : lurk- xn and ilready rses, so . We 3 side, tward, stward ailure, hoines n only move nds of other e fort, m the t they se we more, above e ; at at the fort, whence the whole affair was seen, the particulars of which were as follows : — The horse-guard was driving the horses out in the morning as usual, to seek what little grass or few willow- tops they could get to browse on, in order to save the liay, which was scarce, and had not gone very far over the river before his sharp eye detected one or two of the Rcouts prowling about. He very quickly drove all the horses back into the fort again. Shortly afterwards three Assineboine lads, of from seventeen to nineteen years of age, came to sell some wolf-skins at the fort. They were warned by the traders that their enemies were in the neighbourhood, and had been seen that morning ; but, Indian-like, would not believe it, taking it into their heads that Mr. Kipp had some object in detaining them. The eldest said, *' Come, let us go." And they set off, in spite of all warning and advice, for the lower camp, about thirteen miles off. They had not gone above two hundred yards, when they were seen from the timber, at the other side of the Missouri, where the main body of one hundred Sioux were con- cealed. The progress of the poor boys, whom it was now quite impossible to apprise of their danger, was vratched through a telescope from the fort. Uncon- scious of their perilous situation they at last sat down in a sheltered sunny spot, about two miles from the fort, and commenced smoking the long Indian pipe, which, according to native custom, they handed from one to another. Several of the Sioux were now seen running through the willows and timber, creeping stealthily under the bank of the frozen river. Both pursuers and pursued w^ere distinctly visible from the tort ; the powers of the telescope approximating now the cheerful, laughing faces of the unconscious boys, now the crouching forms of their enemies, and increasing to a painful degree the feeling of their inability to avert I 1 '. m Vfi 4\ 94 RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. their apparently inevitable doom. Suddenly, when the Sioux were within gun-shot of their prey, one of the lads was seen to give a slight start (an Indian is never entirely off his guard) ; all three glancing once behind them, gave a convulsive bound, and then commenced the race for life or death. Thirteen miles must have been run by these brave lads through deep snow, in an hour and a half. At last, towards the end of the race, their bloodthirsty pursuers by firing several shots alarmed the Assineboine camp, of the position of which they were ignorant, and for which the boys were making ; so that the latter had not reached it when its inmates were already on the alert. The warriors and braves assembled rapidly, and instantly despatched a messenger to the western camp with tidings of what bad occurred, and directions for mounted men to go down to their assistance, which, by passing along the brow of the hills where the snow was less deep, they speedily did. The Assineboines by this movement appeared both in front and rear of their enemies, who, having no horses, were compelled to betake themselves to the timber, with several uf their party wounded. The heavy firing which we had heard now commenced, but as the combatants kept at a very respectful distance from each other, the result of this great battle was that one of the Sioux was slain and fell into the hands of the Assineboines, who immediately scalped him, and celebrated next day a grand scalp dance, similar to one I have already de- scrHbed. We were very sorry that evening to learn that these rascally Sioux had shot a good many of our milch- cows — nearly half of them, indeed — with their arrows, and several of them fatally. The first intimation we had of it was from seeing their fine old thorough-bred bull walk across the river, tracking his course with blood, into the fort, and up to the foot of the staff from which floated the colours of his country, and there sink 4f A FURIOUS CULL-riGIIT. ^ \ the f the lever ihind Dticod have in an race, shots which ikiiig; imates braves sengcr jurred, 3 their le hills The b front were with which )atants er, the uxwas s, "who clay a dy de- ll that milch- irrows, ion we h-bred e with iff from L'c sink 95 down and expire. Poor fellow ! I often rejoice that I knew not, when Ramsay and I met the two Sioux, what barbarities they had just been practising- on our poor cattle, or I fear I should have acted on his suggestion, and have shot them both. The loss of this handsome, noble animal was univer- sally regretted in the fort, for besides his great value as their only means of continuing the breed of domestic cattle in that remote region, he proved most useful in drawing home many a heavy load of meat, and much of the wood for the fuel in the fort ; as a tribute to his memory, I must here record a single combat of his with a bison, which, according to the description of his keeper, "Black Joseph,'' must have been truly Homeric. About three months previous to my arrival at Fort Union, and in the height of the buffalo breeding season, when their bulls are sometimes very fierce, Joe was taking the Fort Union bull, with a cart, into a point on the river above the fort, in order to draw home a load of wood, which had been previously cut and piled ready for transportation the day before, when a very large old bison bull stood right in the cart track, pawing up the earth, and roaring, ready to dispute the passage with him. On a nearer approach, instead of flying at the sight of the man that accompanied the cart, the bison made a headlong charge. Joe had barely time to remove his bull's head-stall and escape up a tree, being utterly unable to assist his four-footed friend, whom he left to his own resources. Bison and bull, now in mortal combat, met midway with a shock that made the earth tremble. Our previously docile gentle animal suddenly became transformed into a furious beast, springing from side to side, whirling round as the buffalo attempted to take him in flank, alternately upsetting and righting the cart again, which he banged from side to side, and whirled about as if it had been a M '■■ 5 . ■Hi 4\ f ■. I J- tl 06 RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. band-box. Joe, safe out of harm's way, looked down from the tree at his cliampion'a proceedings, at first deploring the apparent disadvantage he laboured under, from being harnessed to a cart ; but when the fight liad lasted long and lurious, and it was evident that both combatants liad determined tliat one or other of them must fall, his eyes were opened to the value of the protection aftbrded by the harness, and especially by the thick strong shafts of the cart against the short horns of the bison, who, althougli he bore him over and over again down on his haunches, could not wound him severely. On the other hand, the long sharp horns of the brave Fort Union bull benjan to tell on the furrowed Hides of his antagonist, until the final charge brought the bison, with a furious bound, dead under our hero's feet, whose long fine-drawn horn was deep driven into Ills adversary's heart. With a cheer that made the woods ring again, down clambered Joe, and while triumphantly caressing, also carefully examined his chivalrous companion, who, although bruised, blown, and covered with foam, had escaped uninjured. It required all Joe's nigger eloquence to persuade the bull to leave the slain antagonist, over whom he long stood watching, evidently expecting him to get up again to renew the combat, Joe all the while coaxing him forward with, *' Him dear good bull, him go home now, and do no more work to-day,'' which prospect, " black Joe," in common with all his sable brethren, considered as the acme of sublunary felicity. Indians out on a war-party spare neither age nor sex, considering any murders of women or children not only as just reprisals for former injuries, but even as actions worthy of proclamation in council and at the war- dance ; formerly, however, they never waged war nor committed any depredations against the whites, on the plea of their being " medicine," or mysterious people. \'. i FEMININE ACOOMPLISIIMENTS. 07 d down at first 1 under, lie figUt nit that other of ic of the ,y by the )rt horns and over and him horns of furrowed brought ur hero's iven into :nade the nd while dned his blown, uade the he long up again dng him Dme now, " black onsidercd nor sex, not only s actions the war- war nor 3, on the I people. Catlin met even with civilities from war- parties during his wanderings. Unfortunately, however, instances have occurred, some few years ago, of white men joining in Indian encounters, the consequence of which now is that they are no longer safe from their attacks, unless in a position to make a good fight of it. I set out early one fine morning in January, and killed two fat buffaloes not far from the fort. This was at the time that the mumps had placed all spare hands on the sick-list. As the spot where the buffaloes had fallen was not more than two miles from the fort, I threw my saddle-cloth on one, and some portion of my clothing to frighten the wolves from the other, and returned to dinner, after which I invited some of the ladies of the fort to come and cut them up. The day was beautiful, the sun brilliant, and not a breath of air stirring. I put a horse to one of the sleighs, and took three of the fair ones on it, — two, wives of gentlemen, the third the '' placens uxor" of the blacksmith at the fort. It was quite a party of pleasure for them, and by the way in which they performed the cutting-up, that operation seemed to afford a considerable share of their enjoyment. They skinned and sliced slowly and deli- berately, and with evident relish, not only dabbling in the blood, but actually drinking it, the youngest laugh- ing at my aversion, and offering me some in the palms of her hands. The horse-guard saw us from a distance, and came to help ; but when he began to make the inci- sion inside instead of down the outside of the hind leg, and would so have spoiled its shape for making a robe, she effectually stopped him by smashing his hat down over his eyes, exclaiming, *'Wihcatko" (i.e. fool), and laughing heartily at the figure he cut when bon- neted : the good-natured fellow taking it in very good part. As the cold increased the wolves howled most dismally, H 5V: ,48 r'SP b i t: ilill 98 RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. ' I and the cris(.'(l at the IVii^ndly relations between (»ur doine.stio cattle and th(i huiraloes, amonj^ whom they minj^led without the slightest hesitation. This circumstance is the more remarkable from the fact that the auroch of Lithuania, which is of all the ox genus most similar in species to the bison, evinces the utmost antipathy to dom((Stic cattle, furiously attacking cither cow or bull whenever they chance to meet them. I was still more asto- nished, on attentively observing this friendly intercourse, to sec our little calves apparently preferring the com- panionship of the bison, particularly that of the most colossal bulls, to that of their own species. I took an opportunity one morning of investigating the reason of this more closely, and availing myself of some broken ground, beyond which I saw three of our poor little half-starved calves in company with two gigantic bulls, I crept up very carefully, and lay under the brow of a hill, not fifty yards from the nearest in order to observe them, and was not long in discovering that the bison has the power of removing the snow with his admirably-shaped shovel-nose, so as to obtain the grass underneath it. His little companions, unable to remove the frozen obstacle for themselves, were thankfully and fearlessly feed- ing in his wake ; the little heads of two of them visible every now and then, contesting an exposed morsel under his very beard. It was an interesting sight, and I crept softly away again, so as not to dis- turb them. Although the bison scrapes the snow with his nose, I do not think he does so with his hoofs. I have II 2 • l: Sf 100 BAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. frequently seen the snow, where buffalo have been feeding, stained with slight signs of blood, and after having shot them, found the noses of both cow and bull sore from the constant shovelling. CHAPTER VI. Tossed by a Buffalo. — Elk-shootJnjf. — Wolves.— Spoil a Cannibal Feast. — Ishmah. — Hard up for Meat. — Owou M'Konzie's Post. —The Traders. One beautiful clear cold morning in January, I started to shoot some prairie fowl. These birds were too wild to shoot with shot, especially with the very inadequate powder imported by the traders into the Indian country ; so I took my single-barrelled rifle, and shot them off the branches of the high trees where they used to sit sunning themselves, taking the lower first, that his fall might not alarm his companions. This sort of shooting is very pretty rifle practice, especially as the prairie-hen does not always fly away if you miss, but allows a second shot. Indeed, I have sometimes been amused at seeing the unconscious bird, on feeling the wind of the bullet, peck with his bill in the direction of it, giving an angry chuckle as it whizzed past him. I had not been long at this sport when an Indian overtook me, and said in Sioux, " Ho ! my friend [hotv toonak], I saw the track of your long foot in the snow.'' He wanted me to help him in stalking up three buffalo bulls that were feeding in some willows at a little distance. I accordingly started off with him, and when we came within about a third of a mile of the spot, I went care- fully round to leeward, and directed the Indian to go and give them his wind by approaching on the other was might chargi "iliock. PLEASANT PREDICAMENT. 101 in no [io JC. IC [C- side, as soon as he thought I had reached my intended post, whither I knew they would make in order to pass through to the open plain. So accurately had the Indian calculated time and distance, that I was hardly at my place, when a huge bull thundered headlong by me, and received a shot low and close behind the shoulder as he passed. He stumbled on for about ten paces, and lay quietly down. I waited to reload, and on going up found him stone dead. The Indian then joined me, and said that the other two bulls had not gone far, but had taken different directions, so we agreed that he should pursue one, and I the other. I soon came in sight of mine. He was standing a little way off on the open plain, but the skirting willows and brushwood afforded me cover within eighty yards of him, profiting by which I crept up, and taking a deliberate aim, fired. The bull gave a convulsive start, moved off a little way, and turned his broadside again to me. I fired again, over a hundred yards this time ; he did not stir. I loaded and fired the third time, whereupon he turned and faced me, as if about to show fight. As I was loading for a fourth shot he tottered forward a step or two, and I thought he was about to fall, so I waited for a little while, but as he did not come down I determined to go up and finish him. Walking up, therefore, to within thirty paces of him, till I could actually see his eyes rolling, I fired for the fourth time directly at the region of the heart, as I thought, but to my utter amazement up went his tail and down went his head, and with a speed that I thought him little capable of, he was upon me in a twinkling. I ran hard for it, but he rapidly overhauled me, and my situation was becoming anything but pleasant. Thinking he might, like our own bulls, shut the eyes in making a charge, I swerved suddenly to one side to escape the shock, but, to my horror, I failed in dodging him, for ;|-.,, ;4U •0 m I- \' J 02 RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. he bolted round quicker than I did, and affording me barely time to protect my stomach with the stock of my rifle, and to turn myself sideways as I sustained the charge, in the hopes of getting between his horns, he came plump upon me with a shock like an earthquake. My rifle-stock was shivered to pieces by one horn, my clothes torn by the other ; I flew into mid-air, scatter- ing my prairie-hens and rabbits, which had hitherto hung dangling by leathern thongs from my belt, in all directions, till landing at last, I fell unhurt in the snow, and almost over me — fortunately not quite — rolled my infuriated antagonist, and subsided in a snow- drift. I was luckily not the least injured, the force of the blow having been perfectly deadened by the enor- mous mass of fur, wool, and hair, that clothed his shaggy head-piece. As the next day proved alike beautifully calm and sunny, I started off to the scene of my yesterday's adventure, in hopes of finding a wolf busy at the carcass of the buffalo. Nor was I disappointed, for as I came near the spot, I saw a splendid cream-coloured wolf tearing away at the remains of my late antagonist. I crept up under cover of the brushwood, till within forty yards of him, when he cantered off, affording me a delightful cross shot to the left, which brought him quickly to with a bullet through his flanks. With a slight guttural growl he turned, snapped at the wound, performed a brilliant summersault, and after rolling over twice or thrice, expired. I then proceeded to take off the finest wolf-skin I ever saw before or since, and one which to this day is much admired by many brother sportsmen. After which, fastening one end of my belt to the hind feet, I dragged the carcass to a favourable spot, and one easily approachable, in order to obtain a shot at the next fellow that might come to feast on the remains of his comrade. a mg a the 1 ELK-SIIOOTINa. 103 As this was not likely, hoTvever, to occur for some hours, I left the place determining to return thither in the evening, and started off through the timber in quest of deer. After walking carefully for about a couple of hours, I fell in with fresh elk tracks, which I noiselessly and cautiously pursued for some distance, keeping a vigilant watch on all sides for any object in motion however trivial, till as I neared the end of the point out in the willows, I saw the whole band slowly defiling, the stately old stags bearing their ponderous antlers almost on their haunches. I had been obliged to go very fast — and to do that without making a noise in a thick wood is no easy matter ; the continual stooping to avoid the rustling of branches rendering it very labo- rious, especially when running with a heavy rifle. At last I gained range near enough for a broadside shot at a very fine stag. I drew up my rifle and took a delibe- rate aim, breathless as I was. I heard the ball crack against his ribs, and knew instantly by the sound that the charge of powder had been too small. The next instant the whole herd were bounding away at full speed. I followed after them almost in despair at losing my noble wapiti."^ Beyond the edge of the willows away they went over the open plain skirting the river. Once out of the trees, without waiting to untie my snow-shoes, I drew my knife and cut the thong by which they hung from my neck, slipped my feet into them, and pressed on with redoubled speed, my hopes reviving rapidly as I saw my stag begin to fall in the rear of the band, and his pace slacken to a sling trot. By my delay with the snow-shoes I had recovered my wind, and the comparative ease I experienced as they bore me over the broad bosom of the snow, while the * Elk is the name given in the common parlance of the country to the wapiti, similarly to the term buffalo^ which is used in speak ing of the bison. *:'■ ■ m 1 -, 1 '4V' i> : -'■'j-'>f' «i ; ■ ■r^' ''A--i' i -^* m^ I'l "■ J' ■111 isl *'! ;■?>'.: 1; U;' ';■- i ^1 i-\ ■ii i:3l 104 RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. wapiti floundered almost breast deep, inspired me with fresh confidence. At last my stag fell, got up, gave a few struggling bounds, and fell again on my approach. Seeing he could not escape, I pursued the others, now hidden from my sight by the river's bank, but only reached the ice's edge in time to see them gain the willows out of shot on the opposite shore. One of the grand stags in particular excited my admiration. In rushing against the strong grey willows his ponderous branching horns received such a shock as to fling him over backwards on the frozen river ; the clatter of his antlers I could hear loudly, even at the distance where I stood ; but, nothing daunted, with nose up in the air, and his antlers lying along his flanks, he renewed the charge, and with one more desperate effort crashed through, followed by the terrified band, who, one by one, were rapidly lost to my view as the willows closed round them. Peeling that further pursuit would be useless, I retraced my steps to where the elk I had shot had fallen, and found him a magnifi- cent prize indeed, — an animal upwards of five feet high at the shoulder, and bearing ponderous antlers. I could not but think how many of my Scottish brother sports- men would have sympathised in the triumph with which I surveyed his magnificent proportions. Although there are many points in which the red deer and the wapiti, or elk-stag, assimilate, they are nevertheless totally different animals. The wapiti, in the daytime chooses the thickest cover in which to con- ceal himself, nor does he leave it except for pasture or water. A whole band will migrate at a time from one point to another, and their pace is then a splendid trot, never breaking into a gallop, unless they are alarmed. In general appearance the wapiti is not only much larger than the Scotch deer, but formed in far more massive proportions — proportions calculated for the sup- ;/// 1 red are ■con- e or one trot, led. ucb lore Isup- II ; H H u M H m Q ia O o ft ttl port ( howev his \i\ measu inches grow i forehei lap ov< the he; that pi manne long c{ of thes< of view pose SI] the tre is abou dark bi with a like th( large { encircle the run every s< red cole approac advance again u i^.vcnrij * It is tain wap shot, or : that an a n^esterr heartenin snap a tw WAPITI. 105 port of his ponderous antlers, which he does not, however, carry so majestically as the Scotch deer does his little ones. The head and horns of a large male, measuring from five feet eight inches to six feet two inches, will weigh sixty or seventy pounds ; the horns grow in a direction almost parallel with the line of the forehead ; so that when the animal is trotting, the antlers lap over his flanks and protect him from the lashing of the heavy willows ; the points, when the antlers are in that position, bending backwards and inwards, in such a manner as to remove all elastic obstacles from his head- long career. I have sometimes stood amazed to see one of these enormous animals carried at one single bound out of view in a densely thick wood, where one might sup- pose such a stack of antlers would have wedged him in the trees beyond all chance of escape. The head itself is about the size of that of a Devonshire cow, and of a dark bay colour. The neck and dewlap are furnished with a splendid black mane ; the forelegs are clean, made like those of a very large handsome mule, with hoofs as large as those of a four-year-old bull. The eye is encircled by hair of a pale buff colour, similar to that on the rump of the animal. The body changes in colour at every season of the year ; its summer coat is of a strong red colour, which again turns into a bluish hue, gradually approaching the winter grey of the willows as the season advances, nor does it begin to assume its summer tint again until spring has nearly clothed all nature in her favcnrite green. In the breeding season, the wapiti * * It is a remarkable fact, that though a tract of wood may con- tain wapiti, yet the difficulty of seeing them in time to obtain a shot, or indeed of finding them at all, requires so much practice, that an inexperienced hand might wander through the points of a western river all day and find none, or, what is much more dis- heartening, tread across a rotten stick, or otherwise accidentally snap a twig or branch, and thus afford himself the gratification of Ij % m 1 W 1 w ', ]m \l m M ;M1 if If 1 106 RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. chants the most beautiful musical sound in all the animal creation ; it is like the sound of an enormous soft flute, uttered in a most coaxing tone. I had still sufficient daylight to visit the carcass of the wolf I had shot in the morning ; so piling up a quantity of fallen timber and branches in a grotesque fashion over the elk, to preserve it from the prying voracity of the wolves, I retraced my steps, and on approaching the spot carefully, spied a brother cannibal tearing ravenously at the remains of his probably quon- dam comrade. I shot him dead without the smallest compunction, not even giving him the chance of a run, and speedily possessed myself of his magnificent skin, which I took with me, not reaching the fort till long after dark. Next day they very good-naturedly brought in the antlers of my elk along with the meat, which, thanks to my precautions, had escaped the depredations of the wolves, who, poor brutes, suffer horribly from the pangs of hunger, and will at those times dare almost anything short of an attack on man. Among the numerous dogs that used to come prowl- observing the animal's tail wave up and down as it disappears in the distance. We had an instance of this at Fort Union in the case of a Kentucky man, who, though an excellent shot with a rifle at a mark or at prairie-hens on the trees, and constantly challenging us hunters to a trial of skill, was, from being a bad rider, veiy unsuccessful at buffalo ; and when the hunters returned laden with meat after a fortunate run, used to say, " Well ! now that's mighty fine, but I'll astonish you yet at deer and elk in the woods.'' Accordingly one day he set off with Smith and Eamsay, the Fort Union hunters, ■who afterwards told me, that they had taken a good hunt of three days, camping out twice, and bagged five elk and seven deer ; but the Kentucky rifleman, accustomed to such plain clear marks as turkeys and squirrels perched on tree-top, could not get a single shot ; and even on more than one occasion lost the hunters their chance by their endeavouring to afford him a shot at game pointed out in vain to him, but which their keen practised eyes found no difOiculty in detecting. WOLVES. 107 of the Ing about Fort Union from the Indian camps was a very fine specimen of a mongrel, between a white buffalo wolf and a common Indian bitch. This fellow was quite white, like his sire, and furnished both with the hair of the dog and a fine undergrow^th of fur, which he had in common with the wolf. The skin of his nose was also like that of his sire, quite white. The Fort was his favourite resort, where, on the fine frosty moonlight nights, he used to howl in the most piteous and intoler- able manner, disturbing old Mr. Kipp's slumbers to that degree, that notwithstanding the intense cold, and much to my amusement, the old gentleman used to rush out in his shirt, roar at him and pelt him with sticks, or any other missile that came to hand, and then run back half frozen into bed again. I took a great fancy to this dog, discovered his owners, and sent a message to them by a young Indian, who came to the fort one day. Accordingly, the same evening arrived an old Indian named Peekay, and his old squaw ; they came to the door of the room where Mr. Denig and I had been smoking for some hours. First entered the old woman to negotiate the sale of the dog, but had no sooner crossed the threshold than she was seized with a violent fit of coughing ; after a few efforts to articulate, she rushed out of the room a^ain, and we were considerably entertained at hearing her receive a sound scolding from the old man outside. He, in his turn, now came in to trade the dog (as they say in Indian parlance), but had no sooner made his ap- pearance, than he too retreated in a paroxysm of cough- ing. We then heard them laughing heartily outside. Shortly afterwards old Peekay returned, and as soon as his lungs were a little accustomed to the atmosphere of the room, we entered on the negotiation, and I finally purchased the dog, with his travail and harness. I presently found, however, that was far more easily li i\ %'\ % \':''. I: 108 RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. done than the dog secured, for his fear of white men was so great, that I do believe it would have been a difficult matter to approach near enough to shoot him had I been so disposed. The moment he saw me he used to run off to the distance of about 250 yards, and in spite of all my coaxing him to allow me a nearer approach, kept most studiously at that distance, retreating slowly or rapidly, according as I advanced in my endeavours to cultivate a nearer acquaintance. At last I had to go away and obtain the old squaw's assistance, who brought him back with a rope round his neck, the drag of which he obeyed with great reluctance, and as soon as he came in sight of me made the most violent efforts to escape. I took him into the fort, however, and having fastened him up, brought him some meat, but he would not eat it. I threw it before him and retired to some distance, when, instead of taking the meat, he seized the cord iv his mouth, at the same time placing his paw upon it, drew his teeth two or three times quickly across it, severing it completely, and dashed right through the window and out of the fort ; his splendid white bushy tail carried straight out behind him like a fox's brush. ** Holy Moses ! " exclaimed Mr. Denig, " don't he streak it like a flash of greased lightning ! " Poor " Ishmah ! ''* how well I afterwards learned to guess what mischief he had been about, or what misdemeanour he intended to perpetrate, when he carried his tail, which was usually curled over his back, in that manner. Old Peekay's wife brought him back to me next day, and harnessed him to his travail, which I commenced packing, for I was on the point of starting with a couple of voyageurs on a journey to White River. My effects consisted of a dressed leather elk-skin, a buffalo-robe, two blankets., three or four pairs of mocassins ; a large * 80 named from an Indian word descriptive of his fine thick fur. i and a for d] powdc by tw mules goods, trader! boinc Thel sleii^h some 1 for oui timber. we laid basis f( onr fire In add the me country could pi the voyj about tl lengths vicinity from th( drawing vided, a charge. mules in ever, life with my In on water, w between witli a h{ liim to dj WINTER JOURNEY. 109 and a small tin mug (the former for cooking, the latter for drinking from) ; half a stone of lead for huUets ; powder, and coffee. I was accompanied for a little way by two voyageurs from the fort, in charge of a couple of mules harnessed to a sleigh, who were proceeding with goods, in order to set up in opposition to some new traders who had established themselves in an Assine- boinc camp. The snow was deep, and the difficulty of dragging the slcii^h very great. At night, or rather towards evening, some little while before sunset, we chose a suitable place for our camp, generally among willows surrounded by timber. We then cut down two good-sized trees, which we laid parallel to each other along the snow, forming a basis for building our fire on, and collected wood, lighted onr fire, and proceeded to cook as I have before described. In addition, however, to preparing their own suppers, the men had to supply the mules with food, for the country was covered with snow, and the poor animals could procure nothing for themselves. For this purpose the voyageurs cut down cotton- wood of a certain growth, about the thickness of a man's leg ; this they cut into lengths of three feet or so, and then piled them in the vicinity of the fire sufficiently near to thaw the bark from the wood, and to render it easily removable by a drawing-knife, with which these men are expressly pro- vided, and thus they supply the animals under their charge. It was amusing sometimes to observe the poor mules intently watching the operation. My dog, how- ever, like myself, depended on what I could provide with my rifle. In order to supply ourselves and the mules with water, we had to cut through the ice of the Missouri between three and four feet thick, and sometimes more, witli a hatchet. As for Ishmah, nothing would induce him to drink out of this hole, so he generally quenched ' 'slW no IIAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. hi3 thirst by eating snow. Notwithstanding the great thickness of the ice, broken spaces remain open during the whole winter all along the river, at intervals varying two, three, or four miles from one another. These breaks are termed air-holes, and frequently extend their surface of unfrozen waters over acres. Alon;? the ed^^es ot these air-holes the ice is so thin as to render an approach to the water's edge very dangerous, where like glass, it will suddenly crush under foot, precipitating man or beast into a resistless current of water, quickly forcing them under the ice's opposite edge to a fearful frozen tomb. These air-holes, on account of the weakness of their surrounding ice, cause the drowning of a great many buffalo, elk, and even some few bears, tempted probably by a fine sunny day to leave their winter retreat for an hour or two prowling on the ice. This fact im- pressed me with the idea, that those remains of our gigantic fossil fallow deer now dug out from bogs in Ire- land were perhaps thus destroyed, which would account both for the localities where they are usually discovered, and for the numbers found together in one spot. Some have fancifully supposed that they were domes- ticated, in proof of which theory they assert that the skulls of dogs have been found along with them ; but this I do not think to be the case, for all that ever were shown to me as found with the remains of these fossil deer, are the skulls of very large bears. Ishmah had a horror of approaching these air-holes, which nothing would induce him to overcome. It was some time before he became friends with me, and for the first two days of my journey from Fort Union, had to be dragged behind the sledge. By-and-by, however, he gradually overcame his aversion to white men, at first following at the distance of nearly a quarter of a mile, and then by degrees venturing of his own accord on a nearer approach, encouraged by some pieces of meat which I threw I foui buffiil Iiini, grudu: becam She and J] alone Ishma white : <'reatu] strugg] and, in I had during far froi countn day or of the n and pe plishm( pitiless bis victim small c so ea^^ materia down ni , The timber, tion, wt stood an near an if he CO say, *' i sig ISnMAII. Ill great uring irying These L their edges ler an re like g man ■orcing frozen ness of b great 3inpted retreat let im- of our in Ire- iccount overed, spot, domes- at the lut this shown 1 deer, :-holes, It was md for )n, had )ver, he I at first |ile, and nearer ?liich I threw to him from time to time. On awaking one morning I found him lying close to m side on the edge of my buff'alo-robe, but the instant I put out my hand to caress liim, ho bolted off to a respectful distance, which he gradually lessened, coming nearer and nearer till he became comparatively quite friendly towards me. Shortly afterwards my two companions parted from mo and proceeded to their destination, whilst I remained alone with my faithful dog, bound for Fort Mackenzie. Ishmah had by this time overcome all prejudices against a white master, and a more faithful, efficient, and devoted creature never breathed. From morning till night, he struggled on, drawing his travail laden with all my effects, and, in addition to their weight, meat from the last deer I had shot. I travelled generally along the ice, and during the whole of my solitary journey I never ventured fur from the river — a very necessary precaution in that country, where an unhappy voyageur, tempted by a fine day or bright sunshine, ventures on a short cut across one of the many gigantic bends of the tortuous upper Missouri, and perhaps the very moment previous to the accom- plishment of his object might be the commencement of a pitiless storm, veiling all woods and other objects from his sight in wreaths of whirling snow, causing its victim to wander generally round and round in a small circle, perhaps all the while close to the shelter so eagerly sought : in vain he endeavours to reach material wherewith to light a fire, until at last thrown down numbed, he lies wrapped up in his frozen shroud. The woods alon^ the banks of the * river afforded me timber, already fallen and in every stage of decomposi- tion, wherewith to light a fire at night ; and when I stood and looked about me to choose a convenient spot near an ice-hole, Ishmah used to gaze into my face as if he could read my thoughts, and whine as much as to say, '' I am tired too." When I trampled down the i ■■\: t^- ■.^' ; 112 RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. il I Ti snow, cut and strewtd the willows, and proceeded to collect tbe wood, he used to watch me eagerly, and prick up his ears when he saw me take the llint and steel from my pouch and the dry inner bark of the cotton-wood tree from my chest in which to kindle the spark. The fire secure and burning well, I turned my attention to him, unharnessed him, unpacked his travail, and placed it aloft against the side of a tree to protect the leather straps from the voracity of the wolves. This done I spread my bed and filled the kettles with water, took a handful of coffee-berries from my bag, which I roasted in the cover of the kettle, then wrap- ping them up in a piece of leather, I pounded them on a stump and put them in the smaller kettle to boil^ reserving the large one for the meat. These culinary proceedings Ishmah used to regard with the most in- tense interest, turning back from time to time as the eddies of pungent smoke from the damp fuel compelled him to avert his eyes. When supper was at last cooked and despatched (quickly enough on his part, poor fellow, for his share was sometimes very scanty), he sat up close beside me as I smoked my pipe and sipped my coffee ; and when at last I got into bed, he used to lie down at the edge of the robe with his back close up against my shoulders, and so we slept till morning. As soon as it was daylight we rose, Ishioah submitted patiently to be harnessed, and we resumed our march. This was our routine for several days until the meat was exhausted. I then ceased travelling at twelve o'clock, so as to allow myself time to hunt for supper and prepare camp for the night. My difficulties in foraging were considerably increased by the necessity of the dog's following me, and I had at first much diffi- culty in teaching him to keep behind, but I succeeded eventually, and was fortunate that day in stalking and knocking over an old buffalo bull. I helped myself to ■! i li I ISIIMAH S ELOPEMENT. 113 5d to , and t and f the le the 3d my :avail, )rotect v'olves. s with y ^ag, . wrap- lem on ;o boil; ulinary ost in- ! as the mpelled \ cooked fellow, sat np ped my d to lie lose np lorning. ^ ' the tongue, kidneys, two marrow-bones, and a plentiful supply of meat, and was returning well laden to the spot where I had left the dog's travail, when, to my horror, I perceived a wolf there, which started off long before I could get within shooting distance. I ran up to the spot and found that the brute had already com- menced making a meal of the harness, and had eaten the straps and a part of the collar. Fortunately, how- ever, the mischief was easily repaired, as I had spare leather and materials for sewing, and merely afforded me a little occupation after supper, ere I lay down for the night. I had now an ample supply of meat for some time, and for two days more marched on as usual, when another catastrophe, and one which might have proved very serious, occurred to me on my solitary journey. Ishmah's relationship to the Lupus family was often productive of much inconvenience to me, as he used to run off and engage in play with the young wolves, chasing and being chased by them in turn. At first I was amused at this indication of his wild origin, but became subsequently much annoyed, and on one occa- sion seriously alarmed, at the result of these gambols. One day, after a long march, I was looking out for a convenient camping-place, when a she-wolf crossed the ice at some distance from where I was standing. In spite of all my exertions and threats, Ishmah imme- diately gave chase, and they continued their gambols, until I attempted to approach them, when, of course, the wolf made off at full speed, followed by my dog, vith his travail behind him, loaded with everything I then possessed in the world. I followed, shouting after him in vain, until he entirely disappeared from my view, after which I continued running on the tracks, till darkness obliged me to abandon the pursuit, and I found myself a long way from timber, out on the broad It". M I '•Ki if ti I lU RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. prairie, alone on a vast barren waste of snow stretching around me on every side. My sensations were anything but enviable, on reflect- ing that I was about one hundred miles from any known habitation, and nearly one hundred and fifty from my destination, destitute of robe and blankets, with but very little powder in my horn, and only two bullets in my pouch. In short, I was in a pretty considerable sort of a '• fix,'' and had nothing for it but to make tracks again with all speed for the timber. Fortunately, I found my way back to the river without much difficulty. It was a beautiful moonlight night, which enabled me to collect some fallen wood, and having lighted a fire, I seated myself beside it, and began to consider the probabilities of my ever reaching a trading- post alive, in the event of Ishmah not returning, and how I should economise my ammunition and increase ray rate of travelling, so as to eff'ect this object. My prospects were dismal enough, nor did I feel cheered as the cold north breeze froze the perspiration which had run down my forehead and face, and formed icicles in my beard and whiskers, that jingled like bells as I shook my head in dismissing from my mind one project after another. At last resigning myself to my fate I took out my pipe, determined to console myself with a smoke, when, alas ! on feeling for tobacco I found that was gone too. This was the climax of my misfortunes ! I looked to the north star and calculated by the position of the Plough that it must have been about ten o'clock, the time at which in England we have our knees under the mahogany, surrounded by friends, discussing a bottle of the best, and awaiting the summons to tea in the drawing-room. I tried to see a faint similarity to the steam of the tea-urn in the smoke from the snow-covered wood on my dreary fire, and .endeavoured to trace the forms of sweet familiar faces in the embers, till I almost SCARCITY OF GAME. 115 ing ect- Dwn my very my rtof •acks W, I mlty. d me > fire, !r the alive, jliould ate of 3spects le cold down beard ok my after I took smoke, at was OS ! ^ I osition 'clock, IS tinder a bottle in the to the covered ace the almost heard the rustling of fresh white cr^pe dresses round me, when, hark ! I did hear a rustle — it approaches nearer, nearer, and I recognise the scraping of Ishmah's travail on the snow ; another moment and the panting rascal was by my side ! I never felt so relieved, and laughed out loud from sheer joy, as I noticed the con- sciousness he show^ed by his various cringing movements of having behaved very badly. I was too well pleased, however, at his reappearance to beat him, particularly when I found nothing of his harness and load either missing or injured in the slightest degree. Even the portion of meat which I had secured from the last deer I shot was untouched ; so that I had nothing to do but unpack the travail, make my bed, and cook our supper. The next day was very cold, in consequence of a northerly wind, which blew pretty hard. In these regions the cold in winter is always easily supportable in calm weather ; but the cold, when accompanied by wind, becomes so piercing, that great care and constant activity are requisite when travelling to avoid frost- bites. I therefore collected a quantity of fallen and decayed timber and bark, and built myself a comfort- able little hut, in which I weathered the storm tolerably well. Towards noon it began to snow, and continued all night, filling all the crevices between the layers of bark, willow, &c., that formed the roof and sides of my cabin, thus further contributing to my comfort, which was only disturbed, at intervals of a few hours, by my haying to go out and renew my fire. The following day I continued my journey until a little after noon, when, having no more meat, I unharnessed the dog and set off to hunt for my supper. That game was very scarce here, I soon found, as I searched fruitlessly for tracks in the recently fallen snow. I hunted long and hard, but in vain; -night was stealing on me, and I was compelled to avail myself of the small portion of i2 j ,5 ■ '\l ■ i \ '^■n l!(i RAMULKS AND ADVENTURES. I( <];iylight that remained to retrace my steps to the spot ^v]lc^c I had left my travail, ^vhere I made my camp, and Avent supperless to bed. Next morning I arose, and debated with myself for some time, whether I should begin by another hunt in this unpromising region, or pack up and resume my journey until after noon, as I had done on the previous day. After a little deliberation I adopted the latter plan, and travelled on until about noon, when I fell in with some fresh wapiti tracks. These I pursued for a, long distance, and at last came in sight of some docs, who unfortunately were so far out on the plain, as to defy every possible effort of mine to approach them. ]\Iy stalk was unsuccessful, from inability to conceal myself and my dog ; had I tied him up, I knew his frantic howling would soon put every living thing in these regions on the alert, so I was compelled to let him come too. He followed as I had trained him, never attempting to precede me, but all my efforts proved fruitless ; my game escaped without my being able even to venture a shot, and I had the mortification of seeing these stately and graceful creatures break away at a rapid trot, which they soon increased to a gallop that speedily carried them out of sight, and thus vanished my chance of supper for another night. I felt very hungry indeed, and was besides very tired. I slept feverishly, awaked at intervals from visions of the most rare and delicious dishes placed before me. I dreamed I stood before the hospitable mansion of an old friend, who led me, in spite of my incongruous cos- tume, into his brilliantly-lighted parlour, and placed mc down to a table loaded with all the delicacies of every season and climate under heaven, including two soups and a turbot ! At last, when powdered footmen re- moved the richly-chased covers off these exquisite deli- cacies, I started up wide awake, to look on naught but 'tS ons of an ht but A GOOD S]io: 117 snow, and finally I solaced myself vath a pipe. On tlio day following I hunted long and hard till considerably after noon without success. The painful sickeniuo- sensation of hunger had now quite left me, and I suffered much less on the third than on the second day. Strange to say, I had not the least apprehension for the future, but felt perfectly confident the whole time that sooner or later I should fall in with game. At last I came to some fresh tracks of deer, and soon made out that the animal had not only been walking quietly, but was in the willows close by : tliis I rightly guessed by the zigzag direction of the tracks ; for deer, before lying down, walk slowly from side to side, as if hesitating where to stop. I remained per- fectly still for some time, looking intently with an eye sharpened by hunger, and at length observed something stir in the willows : it was a deer ; evening was ad- vancing, and he was going out to feed. I waited anxiously as he came on, slowly feeding, most fortu- nately towards me, until he approached to within about 100 yards, and then stopped. I drew up my rifle, and would have fired ; but he came still nearer, feeding slowly forward till he was scarcely sixty yards off, when I took a steady deliberate shot as he turned his flank towards me. I heard the bullet crack against the shoulder ; he rushed a short distance back, and rolled over in the snow. To my great satisfaction wood was close at hand, so I made a fire and cut away a little venison, which I broiled slightly, and ate sparingly of, giving the rest to my dog. I then made a rope of the deer's skin, and fastening one end to the carcass and the other round my shoulders, dragged it to my camp of the previous night, where I cooked and ate a most enormous supper, smoked my pipe, and slept com- fortably. Two days' more travelling brought me near the end I vJ .\^ i ' 118 RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. of my journey ; on the evening after, and just as I was looking for a favourable position to camp, I saw some Indians at a distance in the direction in which I was travelling. Indians are wonderfully quick at seeing a new arrival at a camp, or post ; so that my approacn became, as I afterwards heard, a matter of great discus- sion amongst them. One or two ran off to meet me, and approached in a friendly manner. It was a great treat to hear the sound of another human voice, and even to hear my own in conversation once more ; our colloquy progressed rapidly, partly by language, but principally by signs, at which they are very expert ; and the result was that I did not camp at all, as they took me to the gentleman in charge of the post, where I arrived late at night. Here I was kindly welcomed, and joined my host at a delicious supper of buffalo- tongues, — rich cow-tongues cooked with buffalo marrow, which had been preserved in the autumn when the animals were fat, and I enjoyed it the more, as I had been living during the whole of my solitary journey on nothing but the leanest meat. The Indians at this post were then very badly off, in consequence of the dearth of buffalo in that country, and were just about migrating. They generally hang abont a trading post as long as they possibly can, in order to beg, borrow, barter, or steal anything they can get out of the traders, whose patience is sometimes severely tried. Indians, however, on the whole, are very easily managed, if their character is properly un- derstood. I have invariably found it the best way to fraternize with a great man or chief, make him some little presents, and then tell him that you depend on his good faith, and the fact of his being a great man, for the security of your property. For several days after ny arrival, I employed myself in going round the different lodges of the Indians and visiting them. The Hi i! 1 ml Till: TKALLIlS'. 119 men were always most friendly, the women very retirinoj and timid, until I came to know them well, when a good deal of their sliyness wore oK One of them observed to me, on my calling her to look through a line telescope belonging to one of the traders : *' AVell, the white men know by t/tis [here she moved her hand as if writing] what happens very far off, and with this [touch- ing the telescope] they see what is a long way off ; now have they invented anything by which they can hear what is saying a long way off?'' At the White River post, I availed myself of Owen Mackenzie's hospitable welcome, and remained in his log-house along with another trader of the American Fur Company. Besides these two gentlemen were two other white traders, who had established themselves in a log-house at little more than gun-shot distance from them. At first I found them very unfriendly towards one another ; however, I endeavoured to persuade them of the ab- surdity of allowing any hostile feelings existing between the rival companies at home to influence them in their i^ersonal intercourse with one another, endeavouring to show them what a melancholy picture it was to contem- plate discord among three or four isolated individuals, never seeing the face of a fellow-creature save occasional wandering savages, and partly by arguments, but princi- pally by ridicule, perfectly succeeded in placing them all on the most friendly terms ; so much so, that they used to laugh afterwards at the fools they had been. I since found that inciting hostile feelings among their several employes is a policy pursued by the rival com- panies, and I received many a malediction (though not in my hearing) , for the success of my efforts in making peacf*. Accord' ngly, Mackenzie and I fraternized with Martin and Frederick. The former was a Frenchman, i i iSi M m ■I i il :i: '1!!. ill ■i 120 RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. a fine, tall, handsome fellow, with splendid abilities. Many a time did he entertain us half the night through in his log-house with his anecdotes and experiences, wliile his poor Indian wife lay yawning in bed, not understanding a word that was said, but unable to sleep from liis wonderfully loud way of speaking, which was always accompanied by the most energetic gesticulation. A great many of his stories had the merit of being invented by himself, as well as collected from the beaver- trappers and hunters of these extensive regions. Frede- rick was the very opposite of Martin, which probaWy accounted for their having lived together so long on such friendly terms ; he was short, ])ursy, jolly, and matter-of-fact, and it was very amusing to hear him trip up Martin, as he frequently did, in some brilliant impromptu account, by a short, pithy proof that the narrator was wrong, both as to facts and chronology. My friend, Owen Mackenzie, was a particularly fine young follow, about twenty-one, a splendid rider, first- rate shot, and, taken on the whole, on foot and on horse- back, the best hunter I ever saw. His prowess was put to the test soon after my arrival, for meat becoming scarce in the Indian camp, a party of Indians contrived to root up, at night, the picket of the storehouse, and carry off all the meat that had been stored for the winter's consumption. In the morning we had the satisfaction of finding ourselves without anything to eat. Our party at that post then consisted of three or four labourers, one under- trader, an Indian woman, two children, Owen, and myself. As soon as we had discovered our loss on the following morning, we had nothing for it but to set out and hunt, and a long tedious day we had of it too. I returned home unsuccessful ; but Owen killed a deer, and singularly enough found the animal not far from our hut, as we were returning home in the evening despair- ing of success. Although the meat was very lean, we thei] GLUTTON FEAST. 21 had plenty of marrow fat ; and if the worst came to the worst, WG could help ourselves to the dried tongues, which, as an article of trade with the Fur Company, had been hanging from the roof of the hut we slept in, and so escaped the marauding hands of tlie Indians. M ai )rse- put ling tived and Iter's jtion )arty CHAPTER VII. Glutton Feast. — My Indian Companion. — Hunting in Snow. — Roast Loin of Wolf. — Blacktail Deer. — Rapacious Beauties. — Anotlier Journey. — A Long Shot. — Indian Voracity. — Larpenter's Post, — Start for the Minitarees. — Awful Night. — Peekay and the Bull. — Reach Fort Berthold. Mackenzie and I received one evening an invitation from the Indians to one of their Glutton Feasts. The peculiarity of the ceremony obliges the guests to cat the meat when almost boiling, and they also vie with each other to prove which of them can eat most with the greatest rapidity. When we entered the lodge we found a fire lighted in the centre, and about a dozen Indians seated cross-legged around it, holding dishes or bowls cut out of solid blocks of wood. Armed with these they impatiently awaited the onslaught. The signal was then given by two youths beating a drum, which deafening row was accompanied by the most frantic yelling ; the hashed meat was then poured out into the bowls of the guests, and in this boiling state they commenced devouring it, but notwithstanding the burning of fingers and scalding of throats, they con- trived to consume such enormous quantities as to cause their stomachs perceptibly to distend. During the whole time of this disgusting exhibition the drums continued beating, and the two lads never ceased howling. ■li I -4 : i-'Jl 122 RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. 11 At this feast I met an Indian, who afterwards became a great ally of mine. As soon as the glutton feast had terminated, my new acquaintance accompanied me home to our log-house ; and wc had di long semi- telegraphic conversation over hunting matters, as we discussed an Indian pipe and a cup of coffee together. He was one of the few Indians I ever met who was a good deer and elk hunter ; for although the generality of those among them who possess horses are fine riders, and unmatched in following buffalo on horseback with bow and arrows, yet they are neither keen nor very suc- cessful in the pursuit of game on foot. To any one skilled in using a bow, the silent arrow is far the most effectual way of " getting fat meat,'' as the Indians term it. The fat cows are always the swiftest ; and the awkwardness of loading a gun, together with the alarm attending its discharge, will generally afford the toxophilite Indian the greater triumph at the termination of the run. But with a gun few of them are good shots. The fire- arms supplied by the American Fur Company are neither good nor highly prized by these Indians, most of w^hom would infinitely prefer a large green or scarlet blanket to the best gun you could offer them. Per- cussion guns they never will use, nor cov^ '', I ever dis- cover their reason for objecting to them. But my new acquaintance was a remarkable exception to this rule ; being a very keen hunter, he had purchased a fine long gun from the Hudson Bay Company's traders, in every respect superior to any he could obtain at the American Company's posts. This formidable weapon never missed fire ; its serviceable, although clumsy lock, was provided with a main-spring strong enough for a vermin-trap. The hunter himself was a fine tall handsome fellow, with mild and polished manners. I was particularly struck on the first evening of our acquaintance with the so HUNTING IN SNOW. 123 lie ad me hie an IS a lity .crs, suc- )W is 3 tllC test ; witli ifford , the fire- are most Icarlet Per- fer dis- |y i^^^^' rule ; le long every lericaii nissecl )videcl [ap. fellow, iularly til tlic gracefulness of his gestures, as he sat talking in our log- house, moving his hands and arms with the ease and dignity of the most accomplished rhetorician. Before we parted that night, we arranged to hunt in company the following day ; and next morning, accord- ing to agreement, he came and woke me very early ; for we had far to go, in order to hunt with any chance of success, as game was very scarce around the Indian camp. I was unsuccessful ; but he shot a deer, which Vie drew home over the snow before night, by attaching the hind legs to a leather band fastened round our shoulders, and so dragged it along to the post. Meat was then a valuable article among the Indians, who were very badly of, buffalo having abandoned that part of the country, and these tribes being far too improvident when meat is plenty in summer, to dry the overplus and store it in time for a winter supply. Up to this time it had been my intention to push eastward and southward back to the United States during the winter ; but finding no likelihood of obtain- ing any travelling companions, and fearing to undertake so long a journey alone during this terrible winter season, I now ga ? up the idea altogether, and deter- mined to remain ai the Indian territories until the ice broke up on the Missouri river. We generally had abundance of meat, such as it was, lean deer-meat being wretched food. One day my Indian companion and I were out for many hours, and though hunting most indefatigably, had bagged nothing. It came on to snow slightly in the afternoon, and I had turned about, and was making for our rendezvous, which was at the corner of a wood not far off, when I saw, at a little distance, something grey, lying down. I looked carefully, and saw a wolt, which, on approaching, appeared to me dead, and there- fore did not remove the gun- cover from my rifle. I II m • I '■f^ 121 T^ AMBLES AND ADVENT Jlirs. walked close to the spot, and was surprised a second time by the brute jumping up and scampering off' at full ppecd. I lost as little time as I could in tearing off my gun-cover, cocked my rifle, and made an excellent shot, rdlinci: the wolf over and over. On coming up, I found I had killed a very fine she- wolf, in prime condition. I reloaded, and put back my rifle in the gun-coverj heaved my prize on my shoulders, freshened my \ray as much as possible, and, nearing our rendezvous, had the pleasure of seeing the Indian rapidly ajToaching me. He quite surprised me by tlie delight he showed at my having secured the wolf. We made ourselves pretty comfortable in the willows, near the river, and, under a bank to windward, with a good roaring lire at our feet, and well sheltered by walls of snow, which we scraped up with slabs of drift-wood, wc sat down and cooked our wolf, the Indian assuring me all the while that it was a great deal nicer than lean deer-meat. Hungry, however, as a whole day's unsuc- cessful hunting had made me, I was still very unwilling, in spite of his assurances, to try it ; but the evident relish with which I saw him eating it, quite disarmed me of my prejudices against wolf-meat ; and, in fine, I feasted on the fat ribs, which proved most palatable, and cer- tainly very superior to lean venison. My companion laughed at observing me completely conquer my scru- ples, and detach a couple more ribs off' the savoury fore-quarter then hissing at the fire ; we certainly enjoyed our supper that night, nor was ray stomach a whit the worse for the strange food, with which it had been astonished. After supper we lighted our pipes, and smoked, dozed, and conversed alternately till sunrise, when we roasted more of the wolf, ate a good breakfast, and again con- tinued our hunting. As the weather looked threatening, we determined to Ion 1 ina ■ \ hrh ' pJac l\ We tire 1 but 1 We i us J \nth 1 "se,| ^Statl STALKING THE VVA'Al. 125 lull my iiot, und . 1 aved lie. at my vvitU a J ^vall3 -^vood, ssuring xn lean unsuc- ^villing, t relish nie of feasted ccr- paiiion y scru- savoury ertainly omacli a ih it had , dozed, roasted rain con- nd keep tonjether ; and had not been hunting* lon^ when we descried four or five deer in some scattered willows. My companion being far my superior in approaching game, I desired him to stalk them, and he presently succeeded in stealing on within about a hundred and forty yards of them. After some hesitation, and pre- senting his gun twice, he decided not to fire, but stretching his hand cautiously behind him, made a signal for me to approach : I crawled upon my hands and knees, drawing my rifle after me in its leather gun- cover, until I came to where he had waited for me, in fear of missing the deer himself, for he never liked a long shot, and considered these too far. It is always difficult to shoot with a heavy rifle when kneeling ; I made use, therefore, of my companion's shoulder for a rest, and taking a careful shot, sent my bullet through the lungs of the nearest buck ; all the deer dashed forward, but it was easy to see that mine could not go far, and a short run brought us up to where he had fallen dead. We were now such a distance from home that we deliberated for a little what course to pursue, and at last we proceeded to bury our game in the snow, heap- ing it well to keep off the wolves, and sticking up a long pole with a red handkerchief fluttering from it to mark the spot. We then set off" home, determining to bring our dogs with their travails next morning to the place and draw it home. Although it was still early, we did not hunt any more that day, as we were very tired from having sat without beds over a fire all night, but we shot one or two prairie-hens and three rabbits. We had an excellent supper that night ; M'K. treated us to choice cured buffalo-tongue and marrow-fat, with coffee ; these tongues were not provisions for our use, being articles of trade for transport to the United States, where they fetch a good price j but when we 1^ I , ;r> '■-SI 12G RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. :f •' li i were short of meat we were obliged to appropriate one or two, which Owen Mackenzie very unwillingly granted, unless on special occasions when he and I rewarded ourselves with one of them after a successful hunting excursion. Well do I remember how these tongues addressed themselves to the feelings of us hungry hunters, intently watching them as they hung in clusters from the beams of the roof which formed their rostrum, whence they sent forth an appeal more eloquent than the language of a Demosthenes ; true, the tongues were silent, but they were fat ! When well boiled they arc delicious, the rind then peels off, and they become tender, plump, and juicy. Next morning we started off for our deer which we had buried in the snow, taking Ishmah with his travail, together with another Indian dog which followed my companion. On our way to the place I got a shot at a wolf, which I killed ; we buried him after skinning him, and proceeded on our journey for some way, when at a distance my companion perceived three black-tailed deer on the his/her hills ovcrhano-insj the river. He started in pursuit, while I remained to take care of the dogs, that they should not interfere with him and spoil his stalk. I had an excellent view then of both the hunter and his game, which he approached with great skill ; at last he got a shot, on which the animals rushed oif, but one hobbled in the rear ; the bullet had broken his les:. A most excitinoj race then commenced between the Indian and his broken-legged deer, up and down the hill over the frozen snow, my companion evincing the most astonishing powers of endurance in his persevering pursuit, gradually regaining the ground he had lost in loading as he ran ; till, far in the distance I saw a pufif of smoke, and before the faint report of his i 1 :i BLACK-TAIL DEER. 127 wolf, him, at a ailed He If the spoil Ihthe great limals had sliced and ,nion ce in 'ound Itance .fhis long gun reached my ear, I had the satisfaction of descrying the deer stretched in the snow. I fastened one dog behind the sledge of the other, which I led by a string tied round his neck, and in tliis way ran along the river, keeping in sight of my companion, and joined him shortly after the fall of the black -tail deer. These are a peculiar species found only in these regions, differing from the Virginian breed in the horns, which are longer, and curve more upwards ; tlieir meat, howe\er, is not nearly so good, nor are they so difficult to approach. A black ring round the tail forms a striking characteristic, as also their very large cars ; the hair of the animal's coat is long, and very handsomely coloured ; in size they exceed the Virginian, and equal the Scotch. This deer I do not think has ever graced any of our private or public zoological collections in England. It is, however, a beautiful animal, and its skin makes the best and most serviceable light leather. Our chase after the black-tail did not take us much out of our way, so I remained behind, skinning and cutting it up, while the Indian went on with his dog and travail in order to fetch the deer I had killed the day before. The day was brilliantly fine, without any wind ; and I sat by a driftwood fire that I lighted to await the arrival of my companion, who returned in a few hours, and we went home together, my dog lugging along a whole deer to his share, while the Indian and I had to carry a hind-quarter each on our shoulders to enable the other dog to draw the rest of the meat to our post, which we reached by moonlight. Next day I witnessed a most unamiable display of feminine feeling towards a poor old woman, to whom I had given a little meat. I had resisted the importu- nities of several of the younger women, whose husbands f < 1/ 4 ^ I'J 128 GAMBLES AKD ADVENTURED. 'II;' ^ere either too timid or too indolent to hunt for them. This old creature, however, being perfectly helpless, and not having a claim on anybody, I cut her off an abundant supply for more than a hearty meal ; but as she was hobbling off in great glee, clutching the meat and drawing her robe tightly over her, she failed in escaping the keen, brilliant, black eyes of three young squaws, who immediately gave chase, and were not long in coming up with her, where (as she afterwards informed me) the following conversation took place — *' Are not you ashamed,'' exclaimed the three, " an old woman like you, to have meat to eat when three fine young women like us are starving ? What do young men care for old wretched ugly creatures like you ? It is for us that they care, therefore you are not to eat meat while we are hungry." So in accordance with the laws practised between the weak and the strong, these three young harpies forcibly dispossessed her of the meat, with which they decamped ; and the poor old woman came back to me for more, which I gave her as soon as I had heard her story confirmed by a by- stander, and desired her to go and cook it near to where I was cleaning my rifle. This old lady, I was informed by the Indians, had seen more than ninety summers ; she seemed, however, to enjoy a very good appetite, and despatched the tough meat with which I had supplied her with such ease and celerity, that curiosity induced me to undertake an investigation of the state of her teeth. After a little persuasion, she allowed me to look into her mouth, when to my utter astonishment I beheld every tooth in her head perfect, the back teeth firmly wedged together like so many blocks of the whitest ivory. The weather now became very fine, and the snow had evaporated to such an extent, that we were able to bring out horses with us ; but, so scarce wag meat, that one I - .I-^ WHITE MAN S INFLUENCE. 129 them, pless, )ff an t)ut as ! meat led in young re not rwards >lace — an old ree fine ) young e you? t to eat A-ith the these of the t)Oor old e her as a by- to where ms, had lowever, le tough jase and [take an a little (ih, when in her [together tnow had ito bring that one evening, when my Indian hunting companion and I were returning with a couple of horses well laden with venison, from an elk and two deer we had killed that day, we had considerable diflSculty in saving our precious cargo from the hungry crowd that gathered around us ; nor do I think we should have succeeded in guarding it, but for the interference of the soldiers of the post, who came up to our assistance. I ought here perhaps to explain to my readers, that the soldiers of a trading post are chosen men of the Indians, conspicuous for their honesty, fidelity to the traders, and their general readiness to uphold the white men. Their zeal i.: frequently highly commendable ; and I have witnesh;!^ > ble and disinterested acts of these gentlemen of ."'^re, which would have shamed many professing a better creed, but practising a more selfish course. Indians have a great idea of a kkid of mysterious influence attending a white man, as to safety when in his company ; and I have frequently, in my hunting excursions, been attended by Indians in districts where nothing short of forming themselves into a strong party would induce them to venture. On one of these occasions my Indian was very much influenced by this feeling, and acknowledged that he would not cross the Missouri, and hunt at that great distance from the camp, unless in my company, for fear of the war-parties. There certainly were some grounds for apprehension on that account, as war-parties, from one tribe or other, are the whole year trying to make onslaughts on the dif- ferent encampments on the borders of the Missouri, in order either to get scalps or steal horses. At one time the Sioux, at another time the Blackfeet, are down upon them. Frequently, indeed, a number of their own party form themselves into a gang:, and devise I o> K 'if'', 'Ml ISO RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. ^ ■ 3 some scheme for depredation, in ^vhich attempt they themselves perhaps get surprised and cruelly murdered. In these winter expeditions they are subject to the greatest sufferings from cold and privations ; and it sometimes happens that they are overtaken on the prairie by a snow-storm, and frozen to death. On my return to the States, I learned from Mr. Murray, the commander of the Crow trading post (whom my readers will remember I have already intro- duced to their acquaintance), that a war-party of seven- teen Crow Indians started for scalps and horses against the Blackfeet, in the very depth of winter : they were caught in, a snow-storm, and not one survived to tell the tale. Martin, and his coadjutor Frederick, were most hos- pitable fellows. Owen and I ivsed often to go over and spend the evening with them ; on wliich occasions we were entertained with coifee and Martin's amusing stories ; and I was now very glad to return the civility, by contributing some meat to their store. One evening, when we were quietly engaged over a game of eucre, one of the workmen came and told us that a large wolf was prowling outside at a little distance, attracted, no doubt, by the offal of two deer that Owen and I had killed that morning, so close to the post, that we dragged them whole along the snow, and skinned and cut them up before the door of our house. We took up our rifles all ready loaded, quietly opened the door, and, by the light of a nearly full moon, saw a splendid cream-coloured fellow busy at the offal of the deer. We both let fly at him, shattering his hind-leg ; whereupon he made off on the other three, as hard as he could go. I threw my rifle against the wall of the house, and started in pursuit, together with Owen, followed by Martin, Frederick, and several workmen. Owen and I had a fine run, all the while vociferating and imploring CARIFEL. 131 I they ered. > the id it L the Mr. post intro- seven- sjainst ^ were ell the 3t hos- er and ons wc [nusing ivility, some one of our attendants to give us a stick, stone, or anything to hammer the wolf, whom we could just barely keep up with, and knowing that if either of us once stooped for a weapon, or missile of any kind, he could never catch up to him again. At last, some one running behind me put a good strong stick into my hand ; and at the same time Owen, finding himself likewise supplied with one from another man who was following us, we hammered away at the wolfs head till we secured him. He was an amazingly fine wolf, of the largest species, of a cream-white colour ; his skin was very large, and the fur so fine, that I saved it for my collection. Next day almost all the Indians broke up camp and moved off, and among them my Indian hunting com- panion ; the loss of whose society I felt very much, for he had been a great ally of mine. Shortly after this our party was increased by the arrival of Carifel. This little fellow had been once a free trapper in the mountains, but who (in consequence of the great depression in the price of beaver) had after- wards taken service with the Fur Company. He was a jolly little French Canadian, and represented the perfect picture of a wyageur as he walked in, dressed in a blue blanket coat, ornamented mocassins, a blue sailor's cap on his head, his snow-shoes fastened round his neck, and a new brass-mounted bad Belgian carbine in his hand. He, however, prudent little man, was not at all de- pendent on the performance of this last item of his equipment, but had still a goodly store of dried buffalo- meat, which he had carefully laid in for the journey, and had strapped behind his shoulders along with his buffalo-robe and blanket, which formed his bed when he camped at night. Shortly afterwards, in about the middle of March, the weather broke again, and we had a tremendous k2 n H 132 RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. snow-storm for three days, during which our meat was completely consumed. The day after the termination of the snow-storm was very fine, and Mackenzie and I went out hunting ; nor had we gone far before we found, to our infinite satis- faction, fresh tracks of deer, evidently driven to shelter in that point by the recent snow-storm. We followed the tracks to the. edge of the point, and came in sight of two or three deer out in the open prairie, a long way off. Owen slowly drew up his rifle, singling the nearest, and made a magnificent shot, bringing the animal right down on the spot with a shot in the neck, at the short distance of 300 yards ! During this time we continued to hear shot after shot in rapid succession from Cavifel, in the direction opposite to that by which we had ourselves entered. " He will set the whole wood on fire before he stops,'' I observed ; but Mackenzie replied, " Ah, he must be in some scrape, and firing for us to come to his assistance.'' On this suggestion, we both started off in the direc- tion that this incessant firing appeared to come from ; but we had not gone very tar, when the firing ceased, and not lonoj after we met Carifel himself returnino:, quite crest-fallen. " Qu'avez-vous done, Carifel?" said I. "Oh, monsieur!" replied he, '' C etait une bande de biche ;" and he went on to describe how he got among a herd of elk, and set-to firing away, unper- ccived by them, till the poor animals got so terrified, that they kept trotting backwards and forwards, as if paralyzed by fear, until Carifel had discharged every bullet he had ; and the only result was a suspicion of having wounded a doe. That really was too much for the patience of us hungry mortals to endure. We rated and abused him ; but the little fellow took it all in good part, and joined in the laugh at his own expense. I had for some time been very apprehensively ob- ANOTHER JOURNEY. 133 ing, serving the short supply of copper caps with which I was now provided, and which, notwithstanding all ray care and economy, was rapidly decreasing. One evening that I announced this alarming intelligence to Frederick, he advised my endeavouring to obtain a supply from some fellow-traders, who also, in opposition to the American Fur Company, had established themselves about seventy miles off, on La Riviere a Couteau. For- tunately, about this time, Owen Mackenzie was sending a despatch on business to Fort Union, together with three workmen, whose services were not required at our little post, and of whom we were glad to get rid, as the additional burthen of supporting them with our rifles, in a country where game had become very scarce, was any- thing but desirable. We accordingly all started one fine morning ; each 'coyageur with his buffalo-robe and blankets strapped to his shoulders, together with three days' supply of meat, to be renewed at the post where I hoped to obtain the anti-corrosives. Ishmah followed me, attached to his travail, and relieving me from the task of having anything besides my rifle to carry ; and thus we travelled until a little after noon, when we came in sight of two Assineboyne lodges, on the bank of the Missouri ; here we sat down to cook, but of course, the Indians from the two lodges soon collected round us ; consisting of three men — one of whom was a fine old fellow, — three or four women, and about ten or twelve young people of six years and upwards ; they were very badly off for meat, and about starting to join their friends on White River ; but on seeing us, of course, came to look for what they could obtain. Having but little meat for ourselves, we could not spare them much ; however, we gave one or two of them a little, after which one of the young lads came to me, and pointing in the direction of some high rugged hills m 'A r J 134 RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. ' t at the opposite side of the rivor, told me he thought he could distinguish three animals — probably elk ; but his report was contradicted by the others, who declared " Onijah/' or *' There is nothing." However, shortly after, the young fellow came back to me, and said, "My friend, there are now four things ; and there could not be finother unless they were alive : they must be animals." I thought the boy's reasoning so cogent that I sent another Indian to reconnoitre, who soon returned, de- claring the boy to be right. This Indian then proposed that we should go in pursuit ; but the men with me were tired, and would not undertake the severe task of scaling the steep, slippery, snow-covered heights. The poor Indian appealed most imploringly to me, and, clasping his hands, said, *' My friend, I have no gun, but I will go ; " and, looking wistfully at a flint gun in the hands of one of the wyageurs of my party, he asked him to lend it to him. I requested the man to lend him the gun (which he stood in no need of for the rest of the day, being with two other friends, the one armed with my double-barrelled gun, the other with a rifle) ; he did not, however, consent until I proposed a termination of the point at issue by a trial of strength between us, when he then reluctantly resigned the M*Adamizer into the hands of the delighted Indian. At this juncture the old man leaped up, exclaiming, "And I will come, too, to bring home the meat." We then set ofiF, all three, to cross the river : arrived on the opposite bank, we found the ascent very difficult, both on account of the nature of the ground and the steepness of the wild, rugged hills, with their intervening hollows filled up with avalanches of snow. I had not much time to contemplate the extraordinary scene around me as I waited a moment to draw breath after the first two or three steeps ; but observed the wonderful peculiarity in this grand scenery, revealing every here and there, as a field of snow had *' MAUVAISE TERRE." 135 he his ired rtly My it be [lis/' sent )08ed were alitig poor sping I will hands lim to m the )f the I with ) ; }^^ ation en us, r into eture e,too, |ree, to ndthe ure of hills, nches Ite the oment but enery, w had slidden down from a towering height, pinnacles of bright red clay, formed in mounds, minarets, and tall, slender, spire-like Gothic steeples, many of them striped with blue bands. The combinations of colours in this won- derfully strange scenery was heightened by the effect of an evening sun shedding sparkling rays over crystallized patches of the snow which had fallen from their dizzy heights. However, on we pushed over the steep, slip- pery red clay, rendered still more difficult of ascent by the constant drip of water from snow, which rested on many grass-capped heights. On reaching the extensive plain of one of the hills, we saw the animals we had been in pursuit of, standing not one hundred yards from the ledge on which we had clambered. They proving to be four blacktail bucks, I drew up my rifle, but on pulling the trigger, the cap alone exploded, the noise of which alarmed the deer, who started off, leaving us in despair of ever seeing them again. I was much surprised at the result, and adopted the best remedy ; cutting a little peg of wood with my knife from my loading-stick, I hammered it into the pillar, then putting on a cap, I succeeded in discharging my rifle, loaded again, and resumed the line the deer had taken. After we had followed on the tracks for some time, we came in sight of them at a very long distance ofl", midway on the ascent of a range of hills separated from the height on which we were standing by a wide valley filled by avalanches of snow, a passage over which would have engulfed us. What the exact distance between myself and the deer may have been, I cannot exactly say ; but measuring with my eye, — which then was pretty well trained to .calculating distances, — I considered them about a quarter of an English mile from where I stood. I consulted the Indian, who assured me — as the wind was — it was almost impossible to go round all that dis- tance, which involved a detour of three miles, at the I ^ 1i 13G TAMULKS AND ADVENTURES. very least, in order to head up the valley, even if they would so long remain on a ledge of bare cliff where no feeding, or other inducement, was likely to detain them. Reluctantly I drew up my rifle and iired ; tlie Indian then seizing mc by the arm, declared he saw tlie shingle splinter in line of the deer I fired at ; and, stretching liis arms to their full length, said, ** My friend, you were that too low down." I put in as much powder as I could venture, without risking the bullets "tripping,'' and wrapping a rather thicker leather patch than usual, I thus drove the tight-fitting ball down for a second shot. The Indian lay along the ground to look under the smoke as I discharged the second shot — aiming very high. He now assured me that he saw the stone crumble one arm's length lower than the feet of the same animal. Although I thought him a good deal indebted to his imagination for these announcements, yet I nevertheless loaded again as before, and on seeing a spot on the cliff, right over about ten feet above the deer's back, I raised my rifle this time, aiming as if to strike this — which happened to be very well defined on the cliff ; I fired — the deer now made a start to spring forward, but slipped down backwards, and commenced moving for some time in a retrograde direction. The moment the others ob- served that their companion was injured, they dashed off along the ledge a little way, and out of sight over the mountain, leaving their wounded companion, who soon stood still. The Indian got greatly excited, and begged I would allow him to go alone after the wounded deer, and that I would remain for a land-mark for him while he started off to head the valley, saying, " My friend, it's your deer ; I only want to go and kill him : I am sure of him, he can't run away." I gladly consented to his plan, and soon lost sight of him. I lighted my pipe, and anxiously awaited his re-appearance on the brow of the opposite range ; at last he came in sight again, run- LAIirENTEU S TOST. 137 no over wlio and nded ir him My im; I ted to pipe, fow of run- ning all riglit for the spot ; and in about three-quarters of an hour from the time he started, he rc-appcared, and having attained the ledge of shingle, was rapidly ap- proaching the object of his pursuit. The deer fell in attempting to escape him — rose again ; but fell to rise no more, as I saw the final puff of smoke issue from my companion's gun in the distance. Following the line of the hills, I at length reached the spot, wi\en I found the Indian awaiting me, having skinned and cut up our prize. Shortly afterwards we were joined by the old man, and dividing the load of meat into three portions, we turned our faces homeward, descending with difficulty the '' Mauvaise terre,'' as these hills are termed in the parlance of the country. We re-crossed the ice, and reached camp some time after night-fall. Our arrival was the signal for a grand feasting ; a fire was lighted in ihe centre of one of the lodges, and cooking commenced ; we all then sat round the fire, and most astounding powers of consumption and digestion were exhibited that night ; for our small party not only consumed the whole blacktail deer, but even all the meat with which we had been provided for our journey by Owen previous to our departure. The greater part of the night was spent in feasting, and next morn- ing we resumed our route ; camped an hour before sunset, and, after a fruitless attempt on my part to stalk up a buffalo bull, went supperless to bed. Next morning was very fine; we rose early, and reached Mr. Larpenter's post late in the evening. This was a very miserable hut, and the supply of dry meat with which he and his companions were provided so small, that I made but one day's halt. 1 obtained a plentiful supply of caps from the opposition traders, who lived very comfortably, having had abundant opportunities of laying in a store of buffalo-meat by purchase from the Indians in the early part of the autumn. I '«' n 138 RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. > These traders were about to send a despatch back to Martin's post, so that their raessenf^er and I travelled together ; we were plentifully supplied with dry meat, and therefore were not delayed by being obliged to stop on our journey in order to hunt ; and, finally, before the termination of the week, I was re-established in my old quarters again with Owen Mackenzie, to whom my fine supply of copper caps now rendered me doubly welcome. After this the weather became so very fine, that nothing could persuade the few Indians still about us that we were not in the month of April. Frederick proposed going down with a couple of horses and an attendant to the Minitarde Fort ; Peekay, the well- known Indian, from whose squaw I had purchased Ishmah, proposed to go with him ; and a couple of Indians having previously arrived, bringing me a most kind and hospitable invitation from Mr. Chardon, who commanded at that post, I determined to accompany the party thither. We accordingly set out one fine sunny morning, and though the weather at this treacherous season of the year is never to be trusted, the day continued so very fine that Frederick was quite overcome with the heot of the sun, and walked considerably in the rear, with his coat off, puffing and blowing like a grampus. We certainly formed a strange medley ; first, Frederick and myself ; then Peekay and squaw, with their dogs and travails among which, and drawing my worldly goods, figured Ishmah conspicuously in the van ; and lastly, the man in charge of the two poor miserable horses, packed with some articles of Indian trade, such as blankets, knives, vermilion, and especially gunpowder, of wliich they were taking the Minitar^es a good supply, Laving heard that they were likely to be short of that useful article there. AWFUL NiailT. 139 ,ck to veiled meat, stop before in my Dm my doubly J, that bout us ederick and an le well- ircbascd uple of ! a most ion, who lompany We proceeded as far as Knife River, when, Frederick being very tired from his walk of ten miles in the snow, we stopped to rest for a little time, and then proceeded to walk across the Grand Ddtour. The Grand Ddtour is a sinuosity in the river, form- ing a bend of about forty miles in length ; but th^ chord, or, in popular words, the short cut, of which :,' hardly fourteen. At the commencement of this walk, I reasoned with them on the inexpediency of attempting to divide the journey, and urged the terrible position we should be in if caught in a snow-storm on the prairie ; but nothing would persuade Peekay that we were not in the month of April ; consequently the short cut was decided upon in spite of my remonstrances. We had proceeded about four miles, when we came to a narrow thread of ice, where two or three trees indicated a small frozen stream : but so steep was its bank, and so deep had the snow drifted into this can tee, that we had to cut the trees down with our axe, and bring them up on to the top of one of the numerous little hills which formed the range, and between 'Ahrh the snow had drifted to the inconvenient depth I hitio described. When we had brought up our wood and lit the fire, some cooked, some unpacked the horse^^, and the old woman superintended the dogs. At last, having arranged everything comfortably, and stowed by our sides the different articles of the tradr, including the gunpowder, we fell to at our supper. Night was then coming on, and it began to rain slightly ; but we brightened up the fire again, little knowing what was in store for us. Shortly after dark the wind veered round to the north-east, accompanied by snow, and at last it blew so hard as to oblige us to put out the fire, especially on account of the gunpowder. Owing to our exposed situation, the wind mercilessly drove gparks, I V i I' 140 RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. and even lighted brands, whirling amongst us, tarn which way we would, as the eddies of wind drove furiously down the gullies against our little encamp- ment from all points of the compass. Old Peekay and his wife collected every blanket and skin they could muster. I seized my buffalo-robe and blankets, called Ishmah to me, round whom I put my arms, and hugging him close to my breast, shivered through the night. Never shall I forget the horrible hours of suspense I passed, expecting every instant the feeling of sleep to overpower me, knowing the fatal consequences and fearing an inability to resist it. I found my faithful dog an invaluable friend, and really believe he was the means of saving my life ; for I seemed to feel the caloric, as it issued from him, preserve my body from turning into stone. Day at last dawned, and the wind abated. We contrived to move to a less-exposed situa- tion, where we lighted a roaring fire, and warmed our- selves, then renewed our journey, reaching the opposite extremity of the Grand Detour by nightfall. Our supper that night was a very scanty one of dried buffalo-meat, the last of the provision with which Martin had supplied us. As for the unfortunate dogs that accompanied the Indian Peekay and his squaw, they, poor wretches, had not eaten a morsel for weeks ; and so awful an array of starved spectres never were seen. The day after we reached the end of the Grand Detour was very fine ; but although we passed over some likely country, I was unlucky, and could not find any game for some time. At length, one of us espied an old buffalo bull in the distance, and I determined to start in pursuit of him, although he was a very great distance off. As I was adjusting my snow-shoes and girding up my 1( wavei medi( and I recoil the t addrei step c we ar my s(] shall 1 drag it bring i went a while J I had inequa! walk, c TOund t getting tunatel broken uncerta moment terrified blame n with th( well as moveme mo, wlu faint pi willows careful e J hurriec that old ^<^r man3 etour likely game ii old start 1 great ^g ^^P PEEKAY AND THE BULL. 141 my loins, old Peekay lighted his long Indian pipe, and waved it towards the four points of the compass, making medicine ; he then threw himself down on the ground, and uttered aloud the following words, as near as I can recollect Frederick's repetition of them to me ; for by the time he had smoked his pipe, or commenced addressing the Great Spirit, I was already a good step on my way. " Great Spirit, you see the state we are now in ; we have no meat, neither myself nor my squaw, and our dogs are sinking for want ; we shall lose all our property, for the dogs are too tired to drag it any longer ! Great Spirit, help us therefore, and bring us some meat." His prayer ended, the old fellow went along the edge of the timber skirting the river, while I was far ahead trying to stalk up the bull, which I had hopes of succeeding in doing, on account of the inequalities of the ground where he was lying. The walk, or run, was very severe ; but after taking a great X'ound to avoid giving the animal my wind, I succeeded in getting within 200 yards of him perhaps, when, unfor- tunately, in one of those fitful gusts of wind w^hich broken hilly ground always renders so treacherous and uncertain, the bull scented me, never stopped for a moment's look, but wheeled round and dashed off as terrified as if I had been close to him. I could not blame myself for the contingency, and consoled myself with the reflection of there being fortune in hunting as well as a fortune of war. I had watched the bull's movements for nearly a mile as he ran headlong from me, when what was my astonishment at beholding a faint puff of smoke issue from a little thicket of willows in the horizon. I heard no report ; but a careful eager look satisfied me that the bull had fallen. I hurried off to the place as fast as I could, and found that old Peekay, who had not fired a gun or killed game for many years, and who was, in fact, an infirm old t 3 ;| Iti ; .SI 'I r 142 RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. man, Lad been walking through those very willows alongside of which the bull had shaped his course, when the animal passed the old man so close, as to enable him to send his ball through the heart at a distance of not more than ten or twelve paces. This was a most extraordinary combination of chances, — if chances they may have been called, — as the buffalo had a whole hemisphere of prairie over which to escape from me, and nothing at all calculated to induce him to make for the only point where destruction awaited him. It seemed as if the poor old man's prayer had been heard, and meat had been sent him at his utmost need, f We camped, quietly cooked, ate, and saved some meat for the rest of the journey, which we were unable to continue that day, as our unfortunate dogs so gorged themselves on the carcase of the bull, that when we harnessed them they actually lay down and howled ; so on their account I was not sorry for the day's rest. On the 1st of April I reached Fort Berthold, the trading post of the Minitaree Indians, very late at night. A slight thaw having commenced that day, rendered the passage of several creeks and ravines very dangerous, particularly for the horses. However, we arrived at last. Frederick and his man betook them- selves to the wooden lodge of their fellow- traders, and I availed myself of Mr. Chardon's hospitable invitation to the fort. Mr. c brei An Har I FOl attacl very i his fri was V( Th( are m trader! brandi Fro: snow the asf the riv become to bear Apr] of the into th nate ; influenc trapping and hai compan post; 1 severe, successf stolen BOUCIIARYILT.iJ. 143 ows hen able :e of naost tliey ;liole mc, Bake him. been bmost some mablc »'orged en we ;d; so d, the ate at t day, ;s very er, we them- s, and itatioiA CHAPTER VIII. Mr. Cliardon. — Boucharville. — Geese put their heads together. — Ice bi'eaks up. — A Cold Bath. — Arrive at the Fort. — Preparations. — An Afternoon's Hunt. — Elk shows Fight. — Shot at Sundown. — Hard Work. I FOUND poor Mr. Chardon very ill, with a violent attack of rheumatism ; but my arrival cheered him very much, and what little news I could bring him of his friends at Fort Unio:i and the White River posts was very acceptable. The iVIinitarees are a noble, interesting people. They are most absurdly termed Grosventres by the French traders, there being not the slightest foundation for branding them with that epithet. From this time, with the exception of one fall of snow on the 4th of April, the weather began to wear the aspect of spring ; and the breaking up of the ice on the river was daily expected, as in some places it had become rotten, and was no longer deemed sound enough to bear horses. April 6th. — Boucharville, one of the most celebrated of the hunters and trappers of the Indian regions, came into the fort. The poor fellow had been most unfortu- nate ; he had, in an untoward hour and under the influence of his evil genius, entered into a project of trapping wolves, foxes, mink, &c., during the winter, and had established himself — together with two other companions — on a lake, about forty miles north of the post; but the winter having been more than usually severe, he lost his horses, and made by no means a successful hunt ; besides which, he had all his traps stolen by Indians, and finally had a great egcapo of fi S 1 lis ^i ^ri 14 i RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. being taken by a. war-party. I had a long conversation witli him as to the best direction to take for a hunting expedition, and found he was thoroughly acquainted with the whole country. He was one of those quiet, patient fellows, that never put themselves into a passion or get Hurried about anything ; his appearance was very much in his favour — a manly, handsome counte- nance, with large and deep-set blue eyes. He was dressed, as the hunters usually are, in elk-skin coat and mocassins, and deer-skin trousers, with a hunting-knife iastened in his belt, and in his hand he held his rifle, the sight of which he had accidentally broken off, and was deploring its loss, while endeavouring to supply its place with a small piece of lead, which he was whittling with a knife. " Ha ! Boucharville, vous avez ete malheureux, et j'en suis bien fache." *• Oui, Monsieur, j'ai eu de la misere ; mes chevaux sont morts, et mes pibges sont voles, mais me voici en- fin ! " After a long talk, I proposed that, as soon as the ice broke up in the Missouri, we should start off on foot back to Fort Union, making nearly straight across the prairie instead of following the sinuosities of the river, as I had done in my winter journey ; and wo proposed, when wc arrived at Fort Union, to take my horses and proceed on horseback up the Yellow Stone River, — intending, with the proceeds of our hunting, to descend the stream again in boats made of bull-hides. He liked the project, and so it was made a bargain. He was married to an Indian woman in the village ; so he borrowed a horse, went back to the lake for what few furs and property he still had, and returned home to the village to await the breaking up of the ice. About this time poor Mr. Chardon became worse : the rheu- matism had attacked him very severely in both legs, r4EESE rUT THEIR HEADS TOGETlIEll. U5 5 ICC foot 5S the Iriver, )OSed, ts and rer,— Iscend He He I so he i,t few le to Lbout Irheu- and he was unable to stand ; but I never saw a man more patient under sufFerinrj; or more grateful when any one relieved tlie vrearisome, dreary hours by sitting and talking v»it]i him. The snow now began rapidly to pass away, and the smaller rivers and springs were open ; ducks, geese, outardes, and swans came hovering over our heads. I had again recourse to my Trulock, but, alas ! sliot was not to be had ; so I was obliged to make it as well as I could ; first I tried pricking holes in a card, fixed in a small wooden frame, and pouring melted lead upon it — taking care to keep it perpetually in motion, by shaking it backwards and forwards. But I found the following a better plan ; i. e.^ to beat the lead quite flat, and cut it into little bars, about seven-eighths of an inch square, wh: jh we divided across, so as to form little cubes one-eighth of an inch every way. These we made as like grains of shot as we could, by putting them into a small metal boiler in the kitchen of the fort, and rolling them round and round with a smooth stone along with some ashes. With this very imperfect substitute for shot, I contrived to kill some ducks and geese. The latter were very diilicult to obtain, as they always settled in exposed situations, where their long necks enabled them to see for a great distance round, and to be aware of the least sign of danger. One very windy day, and under shelter of a bank at a spring which supplies a little unfrozen pool, I contrived to crawl along the ground so stealthily that I came within thirty yards of a fine flock of wild geese. Their heads were all close together in an admirable line for a raking sliot, as I lay on my chest in fear and trembling, chuckling with delight at my good luck ; I stole +]ie gun up cautiously to the front, and a fine raking shot I made. I did not stop to (, nmt bow many I had mowed down with the first discharge, but fired the second iy 1 . 3 m * 146 RAMBLES AND ADVENTURKS. barrel at one on the wing as he rose, knockin;>; him over by the side of his companions. I found I had floored six at the first shot, and liaving picked them up, and the victim of my left barrel also, walked home in triumph with seven geese on my back, which proved a very grateful accession to our tough and scanty supply of meat in the larder : they all agreed that the geese in this instance had put their heads together to some purpose ! The 17th of April was a memorable day. About daybreak the ice broke up on the Great Missouri river ; the explosion, as the water burst the rotten mass upwards, was like distant thunder. We rushed to the high bank on which the fort is built, and from its gate watched the various-sized packs of frozen blocks floating by, roaring with a splendid sound as mass after mass passed onward forcing aside all resistance, and sweeping everything before it. The ice continued to roll by for thirty hours, keeping up a continuous roar — it w^as a beautiful and, to me, a very novel sight. I now bethought myself of starting on my journey to Fort Union for my horses, and therefore engaged two more men to complete my party. One of these was Percy, a stout, active French Canadian ; the other was a French half-breed named Paquenode : these I re- quired in order to keep the camp, mind the horses, and cook, while Boucharville and I hunted. I also hired a horse belonging to one of these men, which enabled mo to bring kettles, blankets, buffalo-robes, and, in short, to travel very comfortably. We took with us a small supply of dry meat, some coffee, a little bag of biscuits which Mr. Chardon gave me, and a large quart-bottle full of molasses to sweeten our coffee. This hung from our pack-saddle, and — wonderful to relate — notwith- standing all the vicissitudes of the journey, and the incessant and sometimes violent oscillations to which it ^\i A COLD BATH. 147 was subjected as it swung from the saddle, the contents lasted us for the entire journey ! During our march we had frequent opportunities of procuring eg-gs from nests of the waterfowl, whicli begin to lay at this season of the year : they proved a great treat to us, particularly as the supply of dried meat wo had brought with us was very small ; so much so, that both meat and eggs failing, our rations were reduced on the fifth day of our journey to one biscuit each. Early next morning we were passing along the side of the river, very hungry, and making a short march with the intention of hunting in the afternoon. Percy carried a double-barrelled gun loaded with buck-shot, and was walking near the pack-horse, Ishmah and his travail following me, w^lien we were astonished by the sudden appearance of four antelopes climbing up the bank close at hand. Owing to the steepness of the bank, they did not come in sight of us until tliey had reached the summit ; the moment they did so they wheeled round, but not before Percy fired and shot one, which rolled down the bank into the w^ater, and was carried down the stream. Boucharville and I tugged at our gun- covers ; his he could not remove quickly- enough ; I tore away the thong of mine — which had run into a knot — with my teeth, and cocked my rifie. By this time the other three antelopes were swimming away in the broad stream ; a little eddy in the rapid current turned one of them broadside to me ; I fired, hitting the animal between wind and water, behind the shoulder, — its head drooped, as, floating dead on the surface of the water, it was carried down the stream after its companion. Perey then performed a splendid feat ; he ran down the side of the river fiir enough to enable him to undress, — which he partly did in running, — ^jumped into the half- frozen water, along which the blocks of ice were still at intervals coursing, striking ^1 M rs-'i •■ X T 9 14S hajibles and adventures. I out boldly, laid his hand on the first carcase, then with great exertion reached the second as it floated by, and brought both into the bank : tliis was the more fortu- nate, for half a minute more would have swept them past the bend into the rapids beyond where the scene ocouvrcd, and involved not only the loss of our game, but a considerable risk to this brave fellow. The two antelopes afforded us quite a sufficiency of food to last until our arrival at Fort Union, which we reached early on the ninth day after our departure from the Minitarecs. Arrived at Fort Union, I found things in a sad state ; the hunters of the fort liad been twice out for meat, and could find neither buffalo, elk, nor deer ; one of them, Smith, an excellent hunter, had wounded an elk, and in pursuing him through the timber had lost his mule, which he had brought out with him to bvins;' home the meat. The Indians, who had cono;re2;ated about the fort, of course were starving ; all being afraid to cross the river and hunt up the Yellow Stone, for fear of attacks from cither Blackfeet or Sioux. As to the points about the fort, my brother- sportsmen can well fancy how thoroughly thrashed tliey must have been by that time with the two white hunters hunting for the fort, and a bevy of Indians, all likewise eager in the pursuit, and depending upon their exertions for their very existence. The latter were in such a state that the traders had actually threatened to fire on their own Indians, to keep them from rushing into the post ! The dried meat, with which the fort is always stored in case of game failing, had been badly braved the year before, consequently was unfit to eat ; notwithstanding which, they gave one excellent meal to myseli' and men, and afterwards I went out to inspect my horses left the winter before, n,Sw only two in number, and iu very bad condition. My friend Owen had most kindly given mc I ,/ poi of ^ PrvKrARATJO^'S. Ml) o^Yn host ! id in year iding Imen, It tlic bad mc ,/ an order, allowing; mc the use of Lis splendid thorough- lired bulmlo-liorso, the finest I ever met with in America, lie was a tall, powerful animal, with clean, sound fore- legs, and grand haunches, very deep over the heart (so much so that it was difficult to prevent his saddle from slipping backwards), and on the whole, in good con- dition. So my stud now consisted of four horses, inclusive of the one I had brought up with me from the Minitarees. The first thing I set about was to find the party in saddles, bridles, and halters ; next, to lay in a store of powder, lead, and copper caps, together with three kettles and four tin mugs, besides a fair supply of coffee, sugar, and salt. A hatchet and two beaver-traps com- pleted our equipment, and having set out all these our worldly possessions in the yard in front of the post, and counted over everything carefully, we proceeded to saddle up, Mr. Denig (who was now in charge of the fort) urging us to make haste out of the way as soon as possible, not half liking the prospect of having to supply us with another meal. We divided equally amongst the four horses, by means of ingeniously-contrived thongs on the pummels and cantles of the saddles, tlie responsi- bilities of the various stores, each man carrying his own tin mug with him. The smith then brought out Boucharville's rifle, which he had properly sighted, and taking up our guns, we bade good-bye to Mr. Denig and the inmates of the fort, and rode away. We now found ourselves once more thrown upon our own resources in a country from which the game was almost driven away ; but Boucharville and I were well aware, that if we could once cross the Missouri below the mouth of the Yellow Stone, and then proceed up the left bank of that river, we should, before we had traversed ten miles of country, be in the midst of plenty. But here we were unable to cross ! the water still intensely ■m .■ A. 150 IlAMnLES AND ADVENTURES. cold, thrco of my four horses in snch wretched condition, that I dreaded the idea of transportina; tliein over with such precarious assistance as that of a raft, particuhirly when only constructed of drift-wood, and with the very insuihcient means which our skill and resources could supi)ly. However, I was determined to make the host ot it, and we rode down to tlie next point in the river, and encamped nearly opposite the mouth of the Yellow Stone. Tlic weather was so windy that we gave up all idea of taking our horses across it for at least two days more ; so, as soon as we had found good grazing-ground for tlie poor animals, Boucharville and I set out to hunt in tlie point where we were camped. We were hoth very tired ; a previous journey of eight days' marching, our disappointment of the rest a couple of days' lounge in the fort would have given us, and, above all, the dread we had of making our poor horses cross by means of any raft that we could construct, all combined to put us out of spirits. Very unexpectedly we got two shots at deer that day, notwithstanding the scarcity of game. Boucharville broke the leg of one deer ; but did not get him, and finally he went to bed, having had nothing more than a cup of coffee for supper. While we were hunting that afternoon, Paquenode and Percy had con- structed a very comfortable little hut by driving a frame- work of sticks into the ground, taking a large piece of lodge-skin for a cover, and piling up great pieces of bark for the back and sides of this notable edifice. So spreading our robes and blankets on the ground inside, with the saddles as pillows for our heads, we lighted a good fire outside at our feet, and made ourselves com- fortable for the night. Our house v. as constructed in good time, for we had fortunately anticipated a fine downfall of rain. It continued to pour all night ; but we hardly suffered any inconvenience from the rain, and on the whole, with the exception of having nothing to eat, were I 3 AN AITERNOON HUNT. 151 get i very comfortaljk". After all, wc could r.ot coniplain, even in that particular, having had at ci<^ht o'clock that morning a splendid brcakfiist of elk, fat salted l)utl'alo- tongucs, coflec, and, what is rare luxury in that country, delicious bread. Early next morning Boucharville started off to hunt ; but I remained behind, doubting very much t\"i possi- bility of procuring any meat where we were. l-)eforc lie departed, however, I charged him to return shortly after noon to camp, when I proposed saddling the horses, and setting off for a few miles together down the river to a very fine point I knew, having hunted it successfully the previous winter, before my iirst departure from Fort Union. I then lighted my pipe, and afterwards went to sleep. By-and-by the day turned out fine, and we proceeded to dry our robes and blankets, wipe the saddles, clean the bits, and the few stirrup-irons (for we had but five to four saddles) that we possessed. My own saddle I had complete, it being an excellent one that I had brought up with me in the autumn ; but the other three boasted of but one stirrup-iron apiece. I subse- quently learnt, under Boucharville's tuition, to make admi- rable wooden substitutes for these while on the prairie. Soon after two o'clock, Boucharville returned to camp without having had a single shot ; so, in accordance with my plan of the morning, we brought in and saddled the two best horses (^. e. Mackenzie's and my old mare), and rode three or four miles along the prairie down the river to my favourite point. This was a very fine wood, about nine miles long, and from four to five deep, inter- spersed with lovely glades, and beautiful feeding-grass for deer and elk. Wc continued riding alternately through these and thick willows, till, on emerging from a copse of the latter, we came in sight of a band of some fifteen or twenty wapiti feeding in a large glade. We immediately fastened up the horses, and crept noise- *' 'vj I ■ 'i • ^11 n !»■ I" ■■I J 11 v4 152 TIAMDLES AND ADVLNTURES. Icssly on foot under cover of the brushwood towards the spot. Arrived at the utmost verge of our friendly shelter, we had the mortification to find that we were too far to risk a shot, there beini,' fully 230 yards between us and them. Wc licld a council of war, and after some hesitation, determined to steal back to the horses, ride some way round, and come upon them from a direction at right angles to the one wc had just tried, where we could see a clump of rose-bushes, which we fancied con- siderably nearer to the elk, and which we intended to try and reach by approaching from an easterly instead of a northerly direction, we being then between them and the river. Accordingly we crept back on our hands and knees ; nor did we get up and run towards the horses until we were well out of sight of the wapiti. We then mounted and rode half a mile or so round to the east, when having again tied up the horses, we crawled as before upon our hands and knees, and reached the ex- tremity of the rose-bushes unperceived. Here there w^as a large tree, behind which I could stand up quite screened from view of the elk, while Boucharville knelt on one knee at the edge of the cover, a position in which he could shoot very well, for he used to make a rest for his rifle, by sticking his ramvod and loading-stick firmly into the ground across each other ; I, who never could shoot well from a rest, preferring to stand up. We wxre now about 150 yards from the nearest of the band. I chose a fine old stag, while Boucharville, with an eye to superior meat, singled out a doe. We drew up our rifles slowly, and both shots went off together. The smoke hung heavily for a second or two ; when it cleared away, we espied one of the wapiti lying down. The next instant down rolled the stag also. We agreed to advance at the same moment, lest one or other of the animals should be able to get up and escape. On coming near my stag, he struggled to rise, but, unable H O 3> 10 1 a, •< >'. CO CA o M a to th€ reg elk Spl- at ] the tion &ticJ time cang with her I dang cnfai rose j \ satisf qui 1 1 autr Let horses irane, made lieavy on the ber ^vc as my burden wake fj a ridge A'old. I saw S' wards a on the I stole ne w SHOT AT SUNDOW:iT. 153 H O a CO t b, tl /l CO to a o a u o !6 o / to gain his feet, rolled back again. I looked towards the other, when what was my surprise at witnessing a regular combat between Boucharville and his wounded elk, now transformed into a very formidable antagonist. Springing on her haunches, she vras striking furiously at him with her fore-feet : one hoof missed him, but the otlier fell on liis rifle, which he held up for his protec- tion, and smashing both his ramrod and his loading- feitick, beat him down on his knees. Rising a second time, she was about to repeat the attack, when my bullet caught her in the side of the head behind the eye, and with a splendid bound she fell lifeless on the broad of her back. I had made a quick and necessarily a rather dangerous shot, but I was in luck that day. *' Sacre enfant du diable ! '' exclaimed Boucharville, as he half- rose from the ground, but looking at nothing till he had satisfied himself that his rifle was uninjured ; "mais qui Taurait cru ? Ma foi ! '' continued he, laughing, " j'ai bien echappe, une biche a un coto ct une balle a I'autre ! " Leaving him to cut up the meat, I ran off for the horses, which I brought up. The day was beginning to wane, and we had some way to go home to camp ; so we made all haste to pack the horses, and placing the heavy hides under us and over the meat, we climbed up on the poor brutes, and jogged homewards. I still remem- ber well the beautiful sunset I gazed on that evening as my horse almost staggered along under his unmerciful burden. At length the long-drawn shadows in our ^Yake faded quite away, and the sun disappeared behind a ridge of hills to the westward in a splendid sheet of ^i^old. All at once, in strong relief against this light, I saw some deer playing auJ running sportively back- wards and forwards, appearing and vanishing by turns on the brow of the hill. I left my horse to graze, and stole nearer on foot, quite invisible to them upon the li; 11 Hi 151' RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. M m dark prairie. When I came within shot, one deer was standing nearly broadside in bold and clear relief against the amber sky ; drawing my rifle slowly up, I found I could catch a glimpse of the sight between the deer's belly and the hill, and again above his back. I repeated the movement several times, as, unconscious of danger, the animal stood perfectly still ; and having finally satisfied myself, raised my left hand once more, and on losing view of the sight against the deer's body, pulled the trigger. It was now so dark that I could see nothing more. I ran up the bluff, and soon discovered, by his frantic floundering, a jolly fine old buck with a bullet through his brain. I shouted to Boucharville, who was astonished on coming up to find me standing over my prize, skinning away as hard as I could. AVith his assistance the necessary operations were soon concluded, and dividing the meat between the two poor already overladen horses, we jogged on to camp ; I in a high state of delight, Boucharville not half relishing my having fired a shot so near camp (then not two miles distant), for fear of its attracting the notice of prowling Indians. We reached home late, and wel- comed by the plaudits of my two hungry horso -guards, who had everything in readiness for cooking dinner ; we feasted till far into the nidit, chattino; over our adventures. Before turning in for the night, we determined that early next morning we would take all our surplus meat to the fort, and exchange it for divers things we yet wanted to complete our equipment. All slept sound, with the exception of Boucharville, who never closed his eyes for fear that Indians having heard my last shot, might track out our camp and steal the horses as they were grazing about. Morning, however, dawned cheerily, revealing them to our view, all safe and sound. It was a lovely dvy ; and each, as h(^ tightened his belt, HARD WORK. 155 my lilcB :g of wcl- bner ; our tliat meat re yet lonnd, closed felt that he had much to do, and was well up to his work. We packed two horses with as much meat as we could ])ossibly spare, and, mounting the other two, Boucharville and I rode to the fort, leading our beasts of burden. Breakfast was ready when we arrived ; and we revelled on bread and fresh eggs (the hens laying very well, although fed, like the pigs, exclusively on meat). Mr. Denig after breakfast gave me, in exchange for the venison, an excellent four-oared skiff belonging to the fort, some awls, needles, strong thread, and fish- hooks. The skiff was exactly what I wanted to take the horses across the river, which in these parts was nearly half a mile wide ; and, delighted with this arrangement, I sent Boucharville and the three horses back to camp, with directions to send up men to take the skiff down the river to the fittest place for crossing. As soon as it w^as done, we commenced the arduous task. Owen's horse I took first : he was a fine, tliorough- bred fellow, and swam in gallant style ; the ma,re not so well ; and the last proved an exception to the gene- rality of horses, in refusing to swim altogether. 1 held his head, however, above water, while my companions rowed with might and main, and after considerable exertion and loss of time, during which we made great leeway down the stream, we succeeded in getting him over. I thanked my stars that we crossed in a good skiff; and am quite sure that had we attempted to take the brute across with a raft of our own construction, he would certainly have been drowned, and we might very probably have been obliged either to let him go adrift or to have shared the same fate with him. Wc were not lono; in returnino: and brina-inu: over the rest of our traps ; and that done, I immediately proceeded to bury my valuable boat under the willows on the south bank of the Yellow Stone, close to the junction of the Missouri ; for having had some experience of the appro- 156 RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. priating propensities of the yoiinivcr Indians, and rightly judging that they would soon bo in that neighbourhood on their way down the river for their spring trade with Fort Union, I thought it prudent to put my property out of their reach ; and so hid it carefully in a fine sandy deposit, where wc could recover it again without much trouble. CHAPTER IX. If I Hunt on the Yellow Stone.— Grosse-Corne Huntin^f. — A Beautiful Ciinip. — Beaver. — Good Hunting Country. — Cat Fishing. — Slcin- boat Br.ilding. — Tailoring. — Crow Indians. — Descend the Yellow Stone. — Surprise a Crow Camp. — Keturn to Fort Union. Next mornino;we commenced our hunting; excursion uo the Yellow Stone, starting at a very early hour, and found game more and more abundant as we proceeded from the mouth of the river, every now and then start- inrr a deer, or comino; in sidit of a lon^; continuous file of antelopes. These march in line, sometimes for several miles together, and, by imitating the movements of their leader, exhibit the most striking effects, re- sembling military evolutions : they simultaneously whirl round their white breasts and red flanks, like the *' Right face ! — Left face V of a regiment on parade. Obedient to the motions of their leader, when he stops, all stop : he stamps and advances a step, tlie slight similar impulse waves all down along the line ; he then gives a right wheel, and round go all their heads for one last look ; finally, he gives the right face about, and away " their ranks break up like clouds before a Biscay gale.'' Stately wapiti wandered on the plain, feeding not far from the willows, to whose friendly J «ge, fil GROSSE-CORNE IIUNTINQ. 157 th Lch ,utiful rellow on tip , and ceded start- s flic s for ments :.s, re- consly , like t on wlicn p, tUc AC ; l^c hea^ls about, efore a plain, iviendly shelter in tliey crashed the moment we presented our- selves to their view. And as we approached steep frowning cliffs, overhanging the river, I saw, for the first time, the wild sheep or grossc cornc of the Rocky Mountains, balarijing themselves, chamois-like, on the tops of most inaccessible crags, whither they had rushed on first catching sight of us. The grosse corne, or big- horn, partakes both of the sheep and the deer in its appearance, and in its habits resembles the chamois of Switzevland, being quite as watchful, possessing equal faciiit'.cs of bounding over fissures, and clambering up similar inaccessible places. This wild sheep is stoutly built, and its feet arc stronger and larger than those of the deer. The animal's light dusty-brown colour con- forms to Nature's law, and resembles those shingly rocks to Vv'hich it clings for protection ; a very slight quantity of wool grows about the ears r,nd neck, also about the knees ; the rest of its coat consists of strong coarse hair, white on the rump, and tail tipped with black. Both the female and the male carry horns ; those of the former resembling; the little horns of a o'oat . onlv flatter, CD O ' v ■' v.'liile those of the m .Ic are of a ponderous size ; out of all proportion to the apparent strength of so small an animal, they grow somewhat similarly to those of a common ram, only vastly larger. I have measured some that curved more than usual, as much as two feet eight inches in length ; the hollow part is capable of containing two quarts of water, and is twenty-three inches in circumference at the orifice. The cartilagi- nous processes on which the horns grow are very strong, and so also is the frontal bone, with which they form one mass, so solid as to enable the animal safely to fling himself on his head from very consider; J ie heights. 1 was told that when some of these rams reach a great age, frequent instances have been observed of the liorns curving in such a direction, as that their points rc-grov/ f'M ! I ( 158 RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. into tlic animal's head, and thus terminate its existence ; of this phenomenon, liowever, 1 never myself Avas a witness. Arrived at this rani^u of hills, I immediately called a halt, determining to have a hunt after big-horn ; and leaving my two men, Paquenode and Porey, to make camp and look nfter the horses, Boucharville and I started after tl;(; sheep. We foui?,u them very wary game, and almost impos- sible :(? {tpproach ; once I clambered to within fair shooti^-.g list;. nee of a ram, concealed from his view by a sb''tevu:ig crag; but the moment my head and rifle were vaiaed tv^r aiming over this ledge of rock, he was off with one bound, disappearing down a fissure in the rocks, where I thouii;ht the animal would have been dashed to pieces. Unlike the deer, who will generally stand and gaze a moment, as if trying to make yon out, the wild sheep is so shy and wary, as well as quick-sighted, that the moment he sees the slightest strange object above a bank or rock, he is instantly off. I got, after much toil and difficulty, a tolerably fair shot at a ewe, but missed her, being blown by the con- stant climbing. Tb/.'sc volcanic rocks and hills are very deceptive in thei- appearance ; and their similarity causes much dificulty in obtaining an approach to any spot from a direction different .o that from which you obtained the first view ; for, on descending and creeping round their bases, the rugged cliff's assume appearances differing widely from those which presented themselves from the preceding summits. At last, however, I suc- ceedea in circumventing a fine old ram ; and carefully and noiselessly we ascended the cliff' commanding a view of our game, unconsciously standing about sixty yards below us, close to sorae stunted cedars. I pointed my rifle downwards, and as the echo and smoke of the shot roller away, I saw that my bullet had broken his back, lighl fast old trees. Were timbci tn-o togeth Aft GROSSE-CORNE HUNTING. lo9 e; ; a d a ake d I pos- I'uir ,v by ritlc IS off ocks, ed to I and ; wild , that lOve a fair con- very lilarity ,0 any ;h you peping Iran CCS selvcB I snc- rcfully a vitw yards ed my lie sliot back, and sent him floundering below. At the report of the shot, two himls bounded off, and Boucharville instantly started in pursuit of them, answering my remonstrances by declaring them to be such excellent eating. I therefore left him to Vis own devices, and clambered down to my ram, which I had ample time to survey with great delight ; and so long wiis 1 observing his magnifi- cent proportions, that I did not commence skinning and cutting him up until I heard my companion's rifle crack ; and, shortly after, a second report conveyed to my ima- gination what had been the probable fate of the lambs : however, 1 was satisfied, as I had not been a sharer in the murder of the innocents. So, knowing that Bouchar- ville would most likely send me assistance from camp, I lighted my pipe, and, after a few puffs, lay down and went fast asleep ; from which I was awakened by the arrival of my two liorse-guards, who had come for the meat, which, together with the skin and horns, we took home to camp. On our return, we found Boucharville busy roasting two loins of lamb, and boiling more ; so, after stretching the ram's skin, I sat down beside him, and found the lambs, I must confess, much better meat than the tough old ram we had just brought in. Next day, feeling a little stiff from tlie effects of the grosse-cornc burning of the day before, v,e determined to stick to the woods and level country. Accordingly, Boucharville and I hunted up the left bank of the Yellow Stone. The scenery was splendid, the river being very circuitous and beautifully wooded ; rose- trees, willows, and numerous and beautiful rhododendra were strewn over the plain in advance of tlic heavy timber. We returned late, bringing in the skins of two wapiti, three deer, and an antelope to camp, together with a portion of the meat. After we had continued huntino; and travelling: for t<. '■'J •^ Ml ill 1 '*1 160 RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. some days up the Yellow Stone, our skins and furs, naturally enough, accumulated so fast that we found, it we went on mucli longer at the same rate, we should be forced to leave some of these behind us on the prairie. Sooner, therefore, than lose these, I determined on look- ing out for the next favourable spot for a camp, and ohose a beautiful site at the mouth of the Big Horn llivcr, one of the tributaries of the Yellow Stone, and about 100 miles from its junction with the Great Mh- souri. The scenery at this spot was splendid, and at the termination of the point the grass was excellent. The green brushwood luxuriated all around, giving the whole region an appearance of being well cared for, so utterly did that spot differ from the vast wastes on the Great Missouri's banks. The woods were thickly stocked with evergreens and shrubs now flowering ; the river rolled majestically along, and for some distance the beautiful grass which carpeted its alluvial deposit grew luxuriantly, without being rank. This plain was terminated to the south-west by high rocky, broken hills, almost inaccessible in some parts, where grosse corne abounded ; and finally, the crowning advantage in the position I had taken up was, that buftalo were to be found there also, one of my men, sent out to reconnoitre, having reported large bands feeding on the neighbour- ing prairie. The spi'ing was now making rapid strides, and bringing up the young curly grass in great abun- dance. Stretchino* an awninu; of skins to the south, to protect ourselves from the sun's rays, which w^ere now becoming a little too warm, we ranged out all our bag- gage, skins, and other trophies, and then set to work cleaning guns, mending mocassins, harness, &lc., which occupied the greater part of the day. In the evening Boucharville accompanied me for a short distance up the Big Horn River, where we were hunting, when he suddenly came to a halt, exclaiming, " Tenez, monsieur, THE BEAVER. 161 furs, Ltid, it aid be )rairie. 1 loolc- ip, and ; Horn \e, and xt Mis- and at :ccllent. /ing the I for, so .\stes on ! tliickly ing; the distance [ deposit )lain was r, broken :e grossc \ntage in ere to be ionnoitrc, jigbbonr- |d strides, ■at abun- sontli, to [were nov: our bag- to work X., wbicli le evening ,tance up T^'ben be lonsieur, ^ il y a des castors ici, voycz ! '' and he drew my attention to a couple of trees of considerable size, cut down by the industrious little beaver, forming a dam almost across the stream, and leaving me to contemplate this extra- ordinary monnmcnt of their sagacity, he rode back to camp for the traps. On his return, he set them under "water in runs, wliicli they had made by passing constantly backwards and forwards on their journeys to and from the water ; as a means of enticing them, he smeared on the plate of the trap a stuff termed " Medicine Ti Castor," consisting, I believe, of an extract from their kidneys, in approaching to smell whicli, the poor little beast springs the trap, and is victimized. These industrious little creatures form their habita- tions of trees hewn down, and cut up into logs with their teetli, cementing them together with branches and mud plastered with their broad tails, which they use as trowels. Some years ago a tame beaver was kept at Fort Union. This animal, notwithstandinG* all the com- forts of his abode in the fort, every now and then took a building mania into his head, used to cut and collect wood most indefatigably ; and on one occasion, when he could not find wood enough for his purpose, was dis- covered cutting up the legs of one of the chairs into logs. During these periods of working, he used to sharpen his teeth from time to time. The entrance into a beaver's hut is generally under water, and you will almost always observe two chambers, one constructed below, and the other high and dry above the water: bark is spread on the floor of the latter chamber, wliich is always kept scrupulously clean. In- deed the skill and intelligence displayed by the animal seems greater than that which instinct can dictate, not merely in choosing its timber, but also by cutting the tree down with its indefatigable little tusks, in such a i: 1G2 RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. way as to make it fall exactly in the direction it ^vislles, above the intended place of residence : so that, when it cuts it up into len;2;tlis, it can swim down stream, steer- ing the logs to their destination. Before breakfast next morning we went to visit the traps, and found n beaver struggling in each ; one had been taken by the foreleg, which was fractured high up, the other was caught across the jaws. My companion put them out of pain by striking them on the back of the head with a stick. When I saw the helpless strug- gles of these poor intelligent little creatures, I was seized with remorse, and determined forthwith that there should be no more beaver-trapping. Ap Boucharville and I subsequently were conversing on tne habits and wonderful intelligence of the animal, he thus strikingly expressed himself: '' Monsieur, ils sont une espbce de monde." Fortunately for these little people, silk, which is now manufactured into hats, has proved an excellent substi- tute for their fur, previously so valuable ; and now that beaver-skin has fallen from eight and nine dollars a pound to a dollar and one and a half dollar, avarice and self-interest will no longer ply the instruments of their destruction, and sweep the ingenious little population off tlxeir Western waters. After breakfast Boucharville and I went in quest of buffalo in the direction indicated by Percy, who had, as above mentioned, been out to reconnoitre. We rode, each leading a spare horse. Boucharville took his rifle to stalk them on foot, while I, anxious to test the powers of Owen's fine horse, which was now so much improved in condition, took my double-barrelled Trulock for a run on horseback, intending, if possible, to pick out a barren cow, as they afford the choicest meat at this time of year. "^.Ve approached a herd of buffalo very successfully — Oj hi VI her pass BUFFALO-CHASE. 163 ilics, }U it tccr- t tUc 3 luid hup, anion \ck of strug- scizcd should vcrsin^^ xrAmal, cur, ils L is now sabBti- ^ow that oUars a ice and of their pulation quest of had, as .'e rode, his rifle [test the 30 much Trulock I to pick meat at IssfuUy-- I' tlianks to intervening hills and the irrcpilaritics which the praii'ie airordcd — and when about 400 yards from our uaiiie, jiobbled Boucliarvillc's mare and the two 1 pack-liorsci^. I then tightened the girths of my saddle, poured some loose powder into the right-hand pocket of my liunting-:diirt, and waited quietly until Boucharville stalked up the nearest of the bulls. As soon as he reached a favourable position within shot, h ^ed his temporary rest as usual, and after a dellbe. itc aim, fired. 1 could see tliat the animal was well hit, from the convulsive start he gave, merely cantering a little way, and then sto|)ping ; the rest of the herd, on hear- I ing the shot, looked up ; but seeing nothing, went on GTazina; a^ain. I remained concealed to let Bouchar- ville have a second shot. Accordingly he loaded — on his knees all the time — and replacing his rest, selected another hull about J 00 yards off. At the instant of the report the animal lioundered forward, stumbled, recovered himself, stumbled again, and finally came thundcrinii; to the OTound. The whole herd now rushed off at full speed, the cows leading the van, and the bulls bringing up the rear, and last of all Bouchar villc's first victim, rapidly fiilling behind. It was now my turn ; so putting a couple of bullets in my mouth, I gave chase, and galloping first up to Boucharville's wounded bull, shot him down on his tracks as I passed. Tlien, load- ing as I rode, I soon outstripped the bulls, and got alongside of the cows ; but they were so thin and miserable, being most of them in calf, that I was several minutes before I could single one out. At last I spied a barren cow that seemed to promise good meat, and,, firing into her, wounded her, so that I easily separated her from the rest, and after giving her a couple of turns, passed and shot her with tlie other barrel. I was now more than a m'le from the scene of Boucharville's exploit with the bulls ; but knowing m2 V4 I- IMAGE EVALUATION TEST TARGET (MT-S) /. ^ a5^: ,vj^ '^ /. K f/. 1.0 1.25 IfilM 12.5 |io ■^" H^H ■uuu V V] Hiotographic Sdences Corporation 33 WEST MAIN STREET WEBSTJR.N.Y. 14380 (716)872-45^3 ,\ w o iS \ k '% A <^^ <^^ ^ ^^p u.. V''.-f*i, ■'''%i:*'^v;|r;- \ ^ 164 RAMDLES AND ADVENTURES. that he would soon find me, I took off my saddle, tied my horse's fore-feet together with a strong soft band of leather, and, taking off the bridle, turned him loose to graze, and set to work to cut up my cow. She was in wonderful condition, with nearly two fingers' fat on the loin, surprising for that time of year. As soon as Boucharville had skinned and cut up his two bulls, he joined me, and we brought the three skins and most of the meat to camp. The evening was beautiful, and Peekay and Paqucnodc had gone to fish ; so leaving Boucharville to unload and look after the horses, I strolled down the bank of the river to see what sport they had had. I came upon them unperceived, and never was more amused. A very large timber snag, about fourteen feet long, and very thick, lay fast a little way out in the stream : to this they had waded, and, perched one on each end of it, were intently absorbed in their occupation. Their trousers were tucked up to their knees, and as they sat squatting on their heels on the log in the most rigid silence, each eagerly grasping his miserable little rod with both hands, their long hair, which had got wet, and had been pushed back from their fiices, sticking out behind, they looked exactly like two famished cor- morants on the watch ready to pounce upon any luck- less fish that might pass up stream. I waded out, and stood behind them some time unperceived, not a syllable being exchanged between them. At last the silence was broken by my bursting into a fit of uncontrollable laughter, in which they joined most heartily, as soon as they recovered from the surprise I had given them. They had caught three very fine cat-fish, about two and a half pounds each, and before I left them they caught a fourth ; upon which we all returned to camp, and enjoyed, for the first time, fresh fish, in addition to good buflalo-meat and coffee, for supper. i CAT-FISHING. 165 tied id of sc to as in 1 the n as is, he ost of cnodc id and )f the I upon d. A g, and .in: to end of Their iiey sat st rigid tie rod t wet, ticking ed cor- ly luck- t, and yllahle silence reliable soon as them, ut two they camp, ition to I The cat-fish is one of the finest flavoured I ever ate ; firm, white, and very rich ; the men called it " barbue.'' It is a quaint little fish, like a miniature dolphin ; has double fins, besides those on its back, and a prepos- terously long beard-like excrescence from each side of its mouth. After supper I called a council of war, and determined to set about building a boat, to convey our skins and furs to the mouth of the Yellow Stone ; and accord- ingly, next morning after breakfast, we set to work. The boat was to be constructed of the skins of the two bulls stretched on a willow frame, which we accom- plished in the following way. Two long and tolerably strong pieces of willow were cut, and lashed together to form a keel, about fourteen feet long ; at about twenty niches from each extremity of this keel a notch was made half-way through the wood, so that we could bend it upwards to form a sharp stem and stern to our boat ; then, completing the skeleton of a punt, or rather of a flat-bottomed canoe, we fastened willow- knees at regular intervals, tied tight to the keel and round the frame ; and cutting the head parts of the hides of the bulls low down on the neck, sewed them together with awl and sinew at that part ; and while reeking, and before they had time to get stifl^, threw them over the wicker frame, lashing them on with elk-skin cord. While Boucharville and I were busy at this work, my two men were occu- pied cutting all the meat up in large thin pieces, and drying it in the sun. I was at this time very badly off for clothes. My large winter grey woollen shooting-coat (or capote) was completely worn out ; over and over again I had patched it with pieces of blanket, but still the rents were made worse, and at last it went utterly to pieces. I had, however, with me an elk- skin, which had been uncom- monly well dressed by one of the men while I was at ■' ! 1 166 RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. ; 'i ! Fort Union ; this I took and cut into a hnnting-shirt with loose sleeves, sewing it up partly with buffalo sinew and partly with tlircad procured at tlie fort ; the dressed skin of a small deer furnished the pockets in front, and it was subsequently ornamented for rae with porcupine-work by some Indian women, on my return to the fort. The fit was not of much consequence, as my belt confined it round me. I found this a most effective hunting-shirt, for no brushwood could tear it ; and it now hangs up among my other trophies as fit for service as ever. Although it was a simple thing in itself, to cut out and make the hunting-shirt, yet it took me three days, inasmuch as I was obliged first to smoke the leather in order to prevent its shrinking and hardening like parchment, every time it got wet ; next to cut it out without the help of scissors, and with my hunting-knife only ; and, lastly, to sew the strong, tough material together without a thimble, which was very tedious indeed. The day after my hunting-shirt was completed, I went in chase of grosse-cornes with Boucharville, and we killed a couple of ewes, in excellent condition. I was greatly pleased at coming within shot of, and unobserved by, a very fine old ram, who was standing among some stunted cedars in rough, rocky ground. Two exposed cedar-roots crossed above the surface in such a position as, from where I stood, to form a cross right against the fore-shoulder of the animal ; so, profiting by this mark, and arguing that if my bullet passed within an inch or two on either side of the point of intersection, it would be sure to strike a mortal part, I aimed right for it, — fired, and on the smoke clearing off, perceived my ram bounding unscathed from cliff to cliff. I had the curiosity to go and examine the spot, and found, to my surprise, that one root had grown into the other, and that my bullet was buried deep in the wood at that 0] ai SC' de TAILORING. 167 no' o -shirt ; the ets in } \\ith L-eturn ice, as i most 3ar it ; fit for ing in yet it first to and next dth my strong, lich was leted, 1 and we I was observed ng some exposed position ainst the tis mark, . inch or it would for it, — my ram had the a, to my ther, and at that very place, whence I cut it out with my knife and brought it home in my pocket. We lived like fighting- cocks in my little Yellow Stone camp : I used every day to sit down to several kinds of meat, besides fish. One day we actually supped on bufiialo-beef, elk -meat, venison, antclopo's-liver, and wild mutton, besides the luxuries of cat-fish and marrow-bones. Coffee and sugar were lasting very fairly, and so was the salt ; but, plenty as tlie meat was, I did not allow it to be wasted ; and, as we had more than we could carry away in our skin boat, I determined to build a second, so as to convey it all to Fort Union. My nether garments, also, were by this time in a sad state of dilapidation, although they had been sa fi\\- quently patched with leather, so that it was very di\^>.« cult to say of what material they had originally consistei'L I disliked very much the idea of undertaking the con- struction of a pair of trousers, as I had found the hunting-shirt such an arduous task, and therefore deferred the evil day as long as I could. One fine morning, however, I went in pursuit of a very fine wapiti stag, which, with several others, was feeding in some brushwood, about a mile and a half from camp. As I was crawling towards him on my hands and knees, a sharp stake caught me a little below the knee in one of the numerous rents which ornamented my garments, and neatly removed the entire protection of my right leg. A brother sportsman can easily suppose that I did not allow the loss of a gaiter to check my progress, but stalked up my elk, got a shot, wounding him very severely, and after a hard run, killed him ; but so far from the spot where I had lost my leg-cover, that I made no attempt to find it again ; and had no other resource but to make myself a new pair of inexpressibles with all possible despatch. By Boucharville's advice, I, determined to go in quest of black-tailed deer for my ■n ':■ fr- ies RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. ■(m material — their skins producing the leather best adapted for trousers. So next day, we mounted our two best horses and followed up the river for a few miles until we came to La Kivitre, a little tributary of the Yellow Stone. We took the traps with us, but did not see any very recent signs of beaver. I fell in with an enormous Virginian doe and got quite close to her in the wood before she saw me. She was about the size of a full- grown Scotch hind, and was nearly as large a specimen as f ? o-iant buck I killed one nig-ht in Arkansas ; but my horse was so restless that I could neither get down unobserved nor fire from his back ; and so she escaped. We continued along little watercourses, and trying the brushwood on the hills, till Boucharville got a shot at a black-tailed buck, but missed him, as I did also a doe. After a good deal of hard work, we shot a black- tailed doe each : the meat was not very good, so we did not burden the horses with it, but brought the skins to camp. On the morrow I occupied myself in dressing them, with Boucharville's assistance, and the following day finished and smoked them, and began to cut out. The celebrated Rout, of Portsmouth, who was once known to affirm that he passed sleepless nights over the cutting out of trousers, could not have taken greater pains than I did with mine ; still I wasted the cabbage to such an extent, that before the completion of my work, I had to sacrifice another deer at the shrine of the Sartorian god. In this life, I believe, it is impossible to realize half our wishes and expectations ; one cause of disappoint- ment always remained to render incomplete the enjoy- ment of the splendid sport I revelled in every day. If I wished to shoot :(rom horseback, a ride of a few miles afforded me most splendid runs ; if I wished to hunt wapiti, the points on the river contained them in just sufficient abundance to afford that amount of toil and GOOD IIUNTINQ COUNTRY. 169 best .1 we ■How any nous wood full- limen ; but down bped. trying a shot also a black- we did cins to essing lowing t out. once er tlie ^reater abbage of my of the ize half )point- enjoy- Ifl miles hunt labour without which nothing that is obtained is duly appreciated : of deer I had a considerable number ; black-tailed deer I could always obtain by going a few miles' distance to look for them ; the grosse-cornes I could sometimes see swinging, as it were, and balancing themselves on tops of the cliffs as I sat in my own camp ; antelopes, too, were constantly to be seen, and many a prowling wolf I nailed by disposing offal in places easily approachable ; or, should I feel lazy, and merely inclined to practise my rifle-shooting, in order, as they say in Ireland, "to keep my hand in/' I could always find lots of pheasants and one or two rabbits. Notwithstanding all this, one species of sport yet lacked me — I could find no grisly bear. I hunted long and carefully for them ; but, strange to say, the whole time I was on the Yellow Stone, I did not meet with a single one. I had, it is true, fallen in with their tracks, which were quite unmistakable, and these, too, frequently quite fresh ; and had often ridden or walked tracking them for long distances, but always to some watercourse where I lost the foot-prints among the shingles, or on some substance too hard for me to trace them any further. The camp was now full of meat, and my men had occupied all their leisure hours, and most of the time while I was hunting; and tailoring, in preserving it. The season was now late in May, and I determined to return down the Yellow Stone to Fort Union, there to take up the skiff that we had buried at the mouth of the river, and to row down from thence to the Minitaree Fort — about two hundred and eighty miles down the Missouri ; my grand object being, if possible, to make another hunting-trip, and try my fortunes in grisly- bear hunting before the return of the American Fur Company's steamer in July. While I lay in camp one morning, turning this scheme over in my mind, Boucharville came running in to me, 5,lr 170 RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. ,: i i and said, quietly, *' Ma foi, monsieur, vcilii les Peaux Rouges I" I immediately jumped up and discovered some Indians on the opposite side of the river. Our horses were not far off, and both they and Prrey, who was with them, were hidden from the Indians by the willows of the point on our side. The latter were evidently not endeavouring to conceal themselves, but were runnino: to and fro on foot and on horseback. They were so far off, Boucharville could not distinguish whether there were any women amongst them or not — a point I was most anxious to determine, as that would have satisfied us as to whether it was a war-party or not. I felt, however, tolerably convinced that they were Crows, and in all probability the party for the spring trade at Fort Union. They might possibly have been Blackfeet, and consequently a war-party ; in which case we should have had a fight for it, had they seen us. At this moment Boucharville and I were immensely amused by Paquenode, one of my men, rushing into camp, in a state of extreme terror, with his eyes starting out of his head : first he begged a horse in order to gallop away and escape ; then he implored for the bull-skin boat to try and get off down the river. The more we laughed at him, the more he stamped and cried, until at last the scene became so ludicrous, that I thought Boucharville — who was in general the gravest, quietest fellow in the world — would have died of laughter. Percy then came in and could not help laughing too ; he had caught sight of the Indians on their first appearance, and had cleverly taken all the horses and fastened them in the willows, and had afterwards gone out through the point on foot and reconnoitred. He pronounced them to be Crows, but he was furious with Paquenode, who, in his terror, had actually seized on Mackenzie's splendid thorough- bred horse, and, but for Percy's violent interference, would have been at that very moment galloping over the they dcsc the lan( flowl rr suiti sooi placj CROW INDIANS. 171 Peaux :)vered Our by tlie r were cs, but seback. inguisli r not — t would mrty or ley were B spring bve been licli case US. At y amused ,nip, in a )ut of his lop away kin boat laughed t last the icharville ow in the len came icrht sight d cleverly e willows, nt on foot be Crows, his terror, thorough- terference, ,0- over the prairie. However, although the probabilities were strongly in favour of their being Indians of a friendly tribe, I determined, if possible, to remain concealed, in the hope that they would pass ns by unobserved ; as they were most likely young reckless savages, very anxious to distinguish themselves by makinj; a " coup,'' and who by hanging about our trail to steal the liorses, might give me some trouble. My plan succeeded perfectly ; and notwithstanding the Argus eyes of so many Indians, we escaped unpcrceived, which I w^as glad enough of ; for, although some Indians individually may be very tractable, yet collectively they are a great bore, and the constant begging to which they subject one is anything but agreeable. Boucharville and I went out after the bulls as soon as they were well away, in order to get materials for a second boat. We killed one each, very large, old specimens, and set to work at once at our new canoe, which we completed late the following evening. Next morning I despatched Percy and Paquenode with the four horses back to Fort Union, across the prairie, a distance of not more than ninety miles, as th crow flies. This journey I rightly calculated they would p rform in three days without knocking up the horses, which, by this time, had had abundance of rest, fine pasture, and fair play. We gave them plenty of meat for the journey, a kettle to boil it in, and in fact everything they required. Boucharville and I determined to descend quietly by water ; and although this was by far the longest way, being nearly three times as long as the land route, yet the rapidity with which the Yellow Stone flows, almost made up for the difference. The first thing we had to do was to find driftwood suitable for making us each a light paddle. In this we soon succeeded, and having packed the two boats, we placed ourselves, one in the bow and the other in the .!; iT' 172 RAMBLES A5JD ADVENTUIIES. stern of tho foremost boat, having the second lashed on and towing in our wake, and commenced our descent of this noble river. The scenery on tho Yellow Stone differs slightly in its general character from that of the Missouri, the points being shorter, the river more rapid, and consequently more sinuous. Sometimes tall clifls overhung the stream where the points terminated, presenting a fine appearance as their dark forms frowned overhead, while up their summits could be discovered the grosse-corncs bounding from crag to crag ; sometimes we passed a noble wood just then in its richest green, and crowded -vith vegetation in all stages of progress and ; decomposition. Frequently did I stop my paddle to admire the magnificent landscapes presented to my view ; the foregrounds of them formed by tremendous trees torn down along with large portions of the earth which had previously borne them, at those spots where the violence of the stream had undermined the banks. The trees were all different from our European ones, but bearing in their foliage the character of ash, oak, alder, and birch ; besides those less known to us, as cocoa and rhododendrons, which were now beginning to blow, and presented a beautiful appearance. Willows were, as usual, in abundance, pushing in advance of the timber like the tirailleurs and skirmishers thrown out in the van of an advancing army ; at the end of the point they commenced like osiers thickly crowded, the switches increasing in size until they become timber, and sufficiently large to contend for air and light with the other forest trees. A strong stunted growth of rose- bushes was always to be seen as an under-cover ; and as we passed along, we could spy at a distance deer cara- coUing about, and splendid elk stupidly roving through the woods with their noses poked straight out, and now seeming to bewail the loss of their fallen antlers. The w'ork of paddling was so very light, that we continued ^v]ii( the I SURPRISE A CROW CAMP. 173 .shed on isccnt of ,v Stone it of the re rapid, ;all cliffs minated, J frowned iscovcred omctimcs 2st green, ' progress ny paddle :ed to my emendous the earth 3ots where the banks, pean ones, ash, oak, to us, as Djinning to Willows ,nce of the fhrown out !nd of the (wded, the e timber, [light with th of rose- er ; and as deer cara- Lg through t, and now llers. The continued on till late in tlic evening ; the moon, although not in the full, sufficiently revealing the snags to prevent our falling foul of them. As we were thus rapidly stealing down the river, I heard voices talking, and called Boucharvillo's attention to it ; but liis hearing not being so quick as mine, he did not perceive any sound for some time, until at last he exclaimed, "Tencz, monsieur, nous devons prendre garde ; " so wo allowed ourselves to be carried down for a minute or two whichever way tlie water listed. We presently made them out to be the voices of Indians ; but I soon quieted Boucharville's apprehensions, as I could distinguish those of women j amongst them — a proof that it was no war-party ; upon wliich we determined to pay the speakers a visit. AVe accordingly kept well in the centre of the stream, and were not long before we saw their fire upon the bank. We passed beyond the spot for upwards of a quarter of a mile, and fastening our boats, walked back along the beach to their encampment. Guided by the glare of the fire, we w^ere soon close to them, and could unpcrceived survey the whole party, which consisted of two old men, one old woman, and six young ones of between fifteen and twenty years of age : four boys of about thirteen or fourteen completed the circle. Their liorses were close into ca:^p, and we saw at a glance that they were a part of dij trading- party on their way to Fort Union, as the heavy packs of buffalo-robes ^vhicli the horses had that day borne were piled around tlic encampment. We remained for some time contem- plating the scene : they had chosen a most picturesque position at the conjunction of a little river tributary to the Yellow Stone ; three large green oaks headed the camp, at the foot of which a kind of awning of elk-skin ^Yas stretched over the old men's heads, a bright fire ^: women and s were sitting around or bustlinnj about cookino:. was burning at their feet, and both the bo3' 174 RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. I I :iM I " Allons, Boucharville," said I, and we walked boldly in. Had a shell burst among them, they could not liavc been more terrified ; the girls and boys ran away screaming ; one of the old men seized a gun, another his bow and arrows. However, we soon re-assured them, and on a further examination, one of the old men recognised an acquaintance in lioucharville, who havin<;' once been liunter at the Crow post, was known to all the principal men of that tribe ; so that in a few minutes we were seated round the fire with them. Of course 1 could not understand a word of the conversation ; but Boucharvillc spoke fluently, and Indians are so wonder- fully intelligent and quick at comprehending signs, that you can, by their help, make them \indcrstand almost an\tliing. I soon saw that they were short of meat, so I told Boucharvillc to slip out quietly (taking care that none of them followed him), and bring them some from the boats. I made use of this latter precaution, fearing that some of the boys might steal our thinirs, and was by no means inclined to trust them too far. Boucliarville soon returned with the meat, which was very welcome, and we all supped together. As soon as supper was over we returned to our boats, notwithstanding their anxiety that we should spend the night with them. Arrived, we lighted a driftwood fire, for it was very cold, made ourselves some coffee, and turned in for the night. Next morning we rose very early and got under way : about noon, however, it came on to blow so hard that we were obliged to put in to the bank of the river. At sunset, when the wind went down, we voyaged on for two or three hours ; and the following' evening, after a long day's paddling, reached the mouth of the Yellow Stone. My horses had just arrived with Paquenode and Percy. All the Crow Indians came in, including the party we had met on our descent. Kt Vory Bertli cordi] accon Boucl the s Yello 3il bolilly ould not van away , another e- assured 3 old men 10 having' )wn to all V minutes f course I tion ; but wonder- si ^ns, that nd almost , of meat, iking care them some H'ccaution, mr things, m too far. \Yhich was our boats, spend the twood fire, coffee, ami got under blow so 10 bank of down, wo c following' the mouth st arrived (W Indians >ur descent. DESCEND THE MISSOUIU. 175 They were delighted to see us, and ornamented my elk-skil\ hunting-shirt on the breast, and along the sleeves, with a most brilliant porcupine-work oilged with blue glass beads ia return for the meat I had given them. '4 CHAPTER X. Dispose of tlie meat. — Descend the Missouri. —A War-v>arf3'.~1'Iu'y (lecline the attack. — Obtain two more followers. — Kill a young Bear. — The grinly Bear. — A breakfast of Marrow. — Nearly kill two Eagles with a ball. — Chase and capture two Bison CalvoH. — Keturn to Minitarce Village. — Scaffoldings for the Dead. — Indian Games. — Death of Mr. Chardoii. I PAID a short visit at Fort Union, where I disposed of my meat, and received my supplies of powder, lead, cotl'ee, and sugar ; after which we again assembled in the camp we had occupied previous to our departure from the iMissouri to hunt up the Yellow Stone. Altliough I was visited in my camp by several Crow Indians, I was fortunate enough liot to lose au} thing, which was possibly owing to the sharp look-out we kept. At last they all came and camped round me, and I found on inquiry that they intended going down to the Minitarees on a visit, for the Crows and Grosvontrcs have always been on friendly terms, and I believe were iginally the same tribe. I thought this, therefore, a Very good opportunity to send my horses back to Fort Berthold, and descend the Missouri in my skiff. Ac- cordingly I sent off Peekay with the four horses to accompany the Crows on their land journey, while Boucharville, Paquenode, and I, proceeded to disinter the skiff which we had buried at the mouth of the Yellow Stone, and in less than two hours were flouting i. n ^Wl| ff^ I f If! :l^l ■ :l ml '■ 'I ■I . !i tl ' 1: I '! 1 ii I 176 once RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. )re along the broad waters of the Missouri. We pulled and steered alternately, relieving; cacli other of the hard work at intervals. The boat was a heavy one for three oars ; but the stream was rapid, and we descended at the rate of more than five miles an hour for two days, camping at night on the river's bank. Ishmah accompanied us ; his place being in the bow of the boat, where he used to rush with the ii;rcatest deli2:ht and lie down, keeping his head out of tlie way of being punched by the fists and oar-handles of the rowers. On tlie morning of the third day I was attracted, by some very tempting rocky -looking cliffs overhanging the left bank of the river, to try and got a shot at some grosse-cornes. We put ashore, but as there was no timber near the spot, we had all to go to some little dis- tance before we came to a suitable place for our camp. There we tied up the boat to the roots of a drifted tree, and having arranged a rendezvous, Paquenode set about making a camp-fire, while Boucharville and I started off sheep-hunting. We were not long before we came in sight of some, on the broken country at the back of the cliffs, and were creeping cautiously round to get to leeward of them, when Boucharville suddenly stopped, and bidding me lie down, put his hand up to shade his eyes, and stooping at the same time as low as possible, pointed out to me some objects at a distance, and but partly visible, on account of an intervening slope. It was with the greatest difficulty I could see them, and it was only after a long look that I became satisfied they were a band of elk. We continued our course for a little while, when Boucharville exclaimed with great earnestness, " Tenez, monsieur, 9a que nous avons vu a cette heure, ce n'est pas la biche, j'en suis sur; je pensc bien qu'ils sent les Peaux Rouges ! " I quite laughed at the idea, but Boucharville was positive now. '' Nous verrons," said he, '* wagh ! " and so strongly t \ WAR-PARTY DECLINES ATTACKING. 177 ari. Wc 1 otlier of heavy one , and we :s an hour er's bank, the bow of I est deli^Gjlit ] ^y of being )wers. tractcd, by anging the ot at some !re was no c little dis- lur camp, of a drifted ^uenode set ^dlle and I g before we ntry at the dy round to io suddenly hand up to I .e as low as I a distance, [ intervening could see ,t I became iinued our [e exclaimed ^a que nous 'ensuissur; '' I quite ositive no^v. so strongly did he suspect the existence of danger, that I agreed to go back with him to Paquenode. We had hardly reached the camp, and were detailing the suspicious appearances we had seen, when suddenly a large war-party of naked painted savages seemed to spring out of the earth and make towards us. Paquenode's terror was at its height in an instant, but fortunately, though shaking all over, and his teeth chattering like castanets, he was too frightened to run. Boucharville and I at once agreed that our only chance of safety was to stick to the timber, where, if things came to the worst, we could make a retiring fight of it ; and in this determination we were much re-assured by our acquaintance with Indian courage and warfare, knowing that, however eager they may be in the pursuit of scalps and horses, they are always most careful to avoid any loss on their own side ; whereas, from our advantageous position in the timber, any attack upon us must have cost them several lives. So each taking his post behind a tree, with a couple of bullets in his mouth, we awaited a further advance. After a good deal of seeming hesitation, the Indians appeared to have come to the unanimous decision of leaving us alone, and drew oflF ; so, skirting the timber to the point where our boat was moored, we reached it unobserved by the enemy, and were soon running down stream. Fortunately the rascals had never seen our boat, or they would have been certain to have cut off our retreat ; and so, altogether, our escape was a lucky one. As we were on our way, Boucharville exclaimed, alluding to our companion, " N'cst-ce pas une chose terrible quand un homme a peur com me ga ! " but it was constitutional with him. Boucharville related to me a characteristic anecdote of him, wliile wo were cook- ing our supper. " Souviens-tu, Paquenode, lorsque les Sioux sont venus en guerre contre les Gros ventres la-bas N fi in 1? It ''I I 'll 178 RAMBLES AND ADVENTUREJs. ^^ an Fort dc Monsieur Cliardon?'' {i.e. tlie Minitarde Fort). "All! kissc-moi done tranquillo ! '' replied poor Paquonode, wlio felt tliat he was being roasted as well as the supper. I insisted, however, on knowing the w^holo story ; whereupon Boucharville, in spite of Paquenode's numerous interruptions, informed me, that on the occasion alluded to, the Sioux had come in a war-pai*ty against the Minitaroes and an excellent battle ■was fought, — a much better one than usually takes place between hostile Indians, — in which the ^linitavees were victorious. When the period of rejoicing arrived, which invariably succeeds an Indian victory, Paquenodc, whom nobodj had noticed during the tumult of the engage- ment, was to be seen in the midst of the revellers, the gayest of the gay and tho bravest of the Ijrave, recount- ing his mighty deeds of the morning in true Indian style. It was observed as rather strange, however, that a good deal of dried mud was sticking about the collar and slioulders of his blue capote. Now the weather it seems had been wet, and it so happened that a pit had been recently dug, in which to stow some of the Mini- taree corn ; and into this pit footprints led : these, it was quite clear, did not in the least resemble Paque- node's ; no, not at all ! The interruptions to Bouchar- ville's story here became so frequent and vehement, that the rest must be left to the reader's imagination, as it W'as to mine. As we were proceeding down the river the following day, we observed two white trappers on the bank. We immediately put in to accost them, when, to our utter amazement, they both ran away, leaving their bull-skin boat, some good meat, divers excellent peltries, and a beaver-skin or two, in our hands. Boucharville, how- ever, followed them, and succeeded in persuading one of them to come back. lie told us that his name was Dauphin ; that he had been in the employ of the Fur OBTAIN TWO MORE FOLLOWERS. 179 initav(^e replied [isted as knowing spite of lie, that me in a Lit battle CCS place ees were d, which le, whom ) engage- llcrs, the recount- le Indian Dvcr, that the collar veather it a pit had the Mini- these, it |le Paque- Bouchar- Incnt, that |tion, as it following link. We our utter bull-skin tes, and a ,dlle, how- liuoc one Oi uune was k the Fur Company ; had run into debt for traps and outfit ; gambled away everything ; and when he saw us, was under the impression that my boat had been despatched in pursuit of him from some of the coiopany's posts. He was much comforted on learning who I was, as he said he was out of powder, and had no lead ; that the only weapons he and his comrade possessed were a very bad rifle, which leaked in the pan, and but seldom went off, and a pistol that stuck at half-cock ; and that they were then actually employed in making bows and arrows : he added, that they would gladly come with me, if I would accept their services ; and on my assenting, started off to find his companion, congratulating himself on his good luck in having fallen in with me. I there- fore chose a convenient place for camping ; and after an hour or so, the fugitive, Gardepee by name, was ushered into my presence. We now mustered a party of five, which promised to render the management of our skiff a much less laborious affair. Cheered by the comfort- able prospect now^ before them, these youngsters re- counted their adventures, and, indeed, seemed to have got on very well, until their fire-arms had become almost unserviceable, and their ammunition nearly exhausted. On the morrow we found two good pieces of driftwood, calculated to make a couple more oars, which we wxre not long in completing ; and then, with Ishmah in the bow, and Paquenode steering, we went along in capital style. Next day was so windy, that we could not continue our descent ; so I went out to look for blackytailed deer, in little thickets of brushwood, on the old red sandstone hills about the mouth of Knife Puvcr. I shot a fine buck, and was busy skinning it, when I heard, " Mon- sieur, venez ici !" loudly shouted. I looked up, and just saw the figure of Dauphin vanish over the brow of a hill. Of course, I followed with my loaded rifle, and, n2 ii ■-1 ii •1^ 180 BAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. 11 - 1 'III "i I' ': on reaching the summit, beheld a bear standing on his hind-lejTjs, and staring about him in every direction, while Dauphin, concealed from his view by a rock, was industriously snapping his pistol at him. On seeing me, the brute shuffled off at a great ])acc ; but when I came up with Dauphin, the latter, imitating the croak- ing of a buffalo-calf, brought him back again a little way, so that I got a shot at him, and hit him in the flank, though, blown as I was by my ascent, I could hardly hold my breath to take aim. The bear clawed at the spot where the ball struck him, and charged up to within twenty paces of us, while I was reloading ; whereupon Dauphin snapped his pistol again at him without effect. Fortunately for us, Bruin was only a two-year-old, and afraid to rush in, though large enough to have smashed both of us, defenceless as we were at the moment, and, before I could get on my percussion- cap, bolted over the brow of the hill. I was still so thoroughly blown from my run over the rocky ground, that I gave up my heavy rifle to Dauphin, who threw down the useless pistol, and started in chase, I following him. He soon got a shot at the bear, who turned round, clawed at the wound, gave a savage growl, and ran into one of those little clumps which always mark a water- course in the hilly country. I took the rifle again, loaded, and pursued the enemy right into the clump, in spite of the remonstrances of Dauphin, and, getting a sight of him first, gave him a finishing shot between eye and ear. Although he was but a young bear, only in his third year, it was with great difficulty that we could drag him out ; he measured five feet four inches from the rump to the muzzle, and his claws were three inches and three-quarters long. Had he been fully grown, and possessed of that amount of courage and ferocity with which the old grisly bears, both male and female, arc endowed, it would certainly have fared badly with us THE GRISLY BEAR. 181 ; on his rcction, ck, was secinp; when I ) croak - a little n in the I could r chiwcd irgcd np loading; ; I at him ,s only a 3 enough 3 were at rcussion- 3 still so r ground, ho threw following 3d round, ran into a water- le again, slump, in irettina; a Aveen eye ', only in we could lies from ■ee inches •own, and (city with male, are with us 1 that day. However, we skinned our prize with great |j satisfaction ; and I was exceedingly pleased with the pluck and daring of my companion, who had heen twice charged by the bear, and whose pistol had twico snapped. The grisly hear is an animal very little known in this country, the damp climate of whicli docs not agree with him. The celebrated Catlin brought over one or two specimens ; but they met with the fate that almost invariably attends pets — an untimely end. There are now some young specimens of the grisly bear at the Zoological Gardens of the Regent's Park ; but I fear they do not promise well ; they are not attaining the size to which their age entitles them. The grisly bear is poetically and justly called monarch of the Rocky Mountains — a name to which his size and ferocity fully entitle him, as he roams over these vast solitudes fearless of everything. The full-grown male measures eight feet six inches from muzzle to stern, and about that size round the body ; his feet are in shape something like those of a negro, and are about eighteen inches in length, armed with claws fully five inches long ; his arms and legs are enormously powerful ; and as he walks and trots, he moves the hind and fore foot together on the same side, and rolls his head at every step. In colour he varies a good deal, from a common brown to a beautiful steel-grey. He differs materially from the common brown bear in the size and shape of the head, which is much larger, and also in the fore- legs, which are not only much stouter, but covered with very strong wiry black hair, while his claws are much longer and stronger than those of the brown bear. Naturalists are divided in their opinion as to whether the grisly bear climbs trees or not ; but I am perfectly convinced that he does not. Men have told me of escapes they have had from them by ascending trees ; 'M\ ll il III IP'; ■ (i M ;t'i ii)!:' 182 RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. and one trapper, named Joe Uno, told me that he once liad a mocassin torn off his foot, ^vhilc in the act of escaping up a tree, by the stroke of the ponderous paw of a grisly bear, which, however, was unable to follow him, and sat for a considerable time at the foot of the tree, watching for him to come down. The evening was very wet and windy, and next morning I awoke with a terrible toothache. I felt as if all my teeth were too long ; and eating my breakfast was attended with such pain, that I was compelled to relinquish the task (though I had a fine appetite), and to solace myself with a pipe, while my companions were discussing tough buffalo and venison. As I lay in view of the river, I saw some dozen buffalo-bulls descend the opposite bank, plunge into the stream, and commence crossing the river. I ran down to the spot where I knew they would land, having observed it the day before, and reached it just in time to conceal myself as the foremost bull ascended the bank. He passed close to me, receiving, as he did so, a mortal wound ; he pawed the ground, looked about him, saw nothing upon which to vent his rage, lay down, and died. I knew that, being the foremost bull, he was most likely the one in the best order ; so I drew my knife, and soon possessed myself of the four marrow-bones ; then strip- ping off some of his strong hide, I made a cord of it, and loading myself with them, returned to camp pro- vided with a breakfast more suitable to the state of my teeth. I roasted the bones, and made a most delicious meal of the rich soft marrow. It was so good, that Boucharville and Dauphin, to whom I lent my rifle, went after the rest, and in a couple of hours returned laden with marrow-bones. I remained the rest of the day in hopes of finding a bear, but was disappointed. In the evening I went down, accompanied by Dauphin, to the spot where I had shot the bull, in hopes of finding il:,. „«4HL. NEAllLY KILL TWO EAGLES WITH A BALL. 183 s once ict of ;s paw follow of the next It as if ^alcfast [led to i), and IS were in view jnd the amence ^herc I be day ysclf as pd close id ; he 1^ upon I knew ely the id soon n strip- d of it, up pro- ; of my elicious d, that ay rifle, eturned t of the pointed, lauphin, finding a wolf there ; but as we drew near il-, a wary prowler, that liad been feastiiii^ himself, perceived our approacli, and sloped oft' before 1 could get within sliot of him. I observed a stran<2;e fluttering, however, at the carcass, and, looking carefully to discover the cause, saw, to my surprise, two eagles fighting like Bantam cocks for the possession of the carcass. At last, one of them flew up and perched on a branch of the tree oversliadowing the fallen bull ; the other immediately pursued and renewed the fight, striking fiercely with beak and claws at his adversary, who appeared to me to be parrying with his wings the strokes of his assailant's talons. I raised my rifle, while about sixty yards from the combatants ; but unfortunately, as I drew the trigger, the attacking eagle soared up a little, and thus escaped the bullet, which, passing right through the breast of the other, brought him to the ground. Had I fired the fractional part of a second sooner, I should have performed the curious feat of killing two eagles at one shot with a single ball ! The morrow was a long, hard day for my men. They had to make the whole of the Grand Detour, a distance of upwards of forty miles, while I took by myself a short cut across the prairie, agreeing to put up some obvious mark on the bank of the nyor where I should stop, and to provide supper for the party, as our meat was nearly finished. We accordingly parted company ; the men in the boat taking their circuitous route by the river, and I my straight line across the prairie for the opposite extremity of the bend, a distance of about fifteen miles ; Ishmah, sorely against his will, remaining in the boat. I reached the end of my journey long before the others, chose a point for a convenient camp- ing-place, and went out to hunt. I was fortunate enough to kill a fine four-year-old buck as he was on his way to drink at the river, and by shooting him in .1 •' I Mi H- i 184j hambles and adventures. ili ill i' f !■, 'm. Hi- I,:'. his tracks, found I had no distance to drag him, as the spot \vhcre he fell was not thirty yards from the river, and in a straight path for hringing water up and down in the kettles. I therefore skinned him at once, and fastening his hide to a stick projecting horizontally from a tree overhanging the river, as a beacon to my companions, I lit my fire, cut up the game, and sat , patiently awaiting their arrival. They came before sunset, and had no difficulty in observing the deer's skin. As the sun sank in clouds of purple and gold, betokening a windy morrow, we lashed our boat well up, took plenty of things ashore ; in short, unloaded almost all the cargo, and made ourselves comfortaljle for the night. Morning dawned, accompanied with a wind that eifectually prevented any progress that day ; so Dauphin, Boucharville, and I took a ramble to survey the prairie beyond the timber where we were encamped, leaving Paquenode and Gardepee to take care of the camp and boats. As we emerged from the point, we came in sight of a large herd of buftalo-cows l}'ing chewing the cud on a fine grassy spot. Many of them we perceived to be heavy in calf, while some were fat and barren ; and I may here take this opportunity of mentioning a conclusion at which I have arrived from careful observation of these animals, which is, that they only breed every second year ; for the cow remains with the bull as early as the end of June, or beginning of July, and does not calve until the end of May or commencement of June following, from which I infer that she carries her calf for at least ten or eleven months, two months longer than the period of gestation with §ur own cattle. On seeing the cows lying in that position, Dauphin and I crept round behind a rising gi'ound, and arranged that Boucharville should en- deavour to get within shot of one of the barren cows ; but before we separated, Dauphin, whose quick eye I:; CIIASi: or A BISON CALF. is; , as tlic le river, id down ice, and zontally 1 to my and sat 3 before e deer's nd gold, oat well inloaded •table for ii a wind day ; so survey icamped, •e of the 3oint, we ws lying of them were fat unity of ved from lat they remains eginning May or I infer r eleven gestation y in that a rising )uld en- n cows ; lick eye Ii was always on the alert, suddenly exclaimed, '' Tenez, Boucharville, voycz ! " and, pointing to one of the lean, distended cows, continued, " cctte vache va faire son veau a cctte hcure ; attendez un peu avant d'approchcr I" and hardly were the words out of his mouth, when she leaped up and calved with one very slight effort. *' Aliens, I'attrappcr ! " exclaimed I, and leaving Boucharville staring after us in utter astonishment, we started in pursuit of the little fellow. The cow, of course, went off, and at a tolerable pace, followed by the calf, at an astonishing rate for so young a beast. Dauphin wanted to shoot the mother, in order not only to shorten the race, but to increase our chance of rearing the calf, by cutting off the cow's udder when dead ; but that, of course, I would not allow, and ended the discussion by knocking up the muzzle of the rifle which he was using with the barrel of my gun. Then bidding him follow my example, I threw down my gun to lighten myself, calling on Boucharville to take care of the two ; and drawing our belts a hole tighter, we dashed off again up hill and down dale, till at last we stretched away right out along the prairie for five or six miles. By-and-by the little calf began to show symptoms of failing, and the cow, allowing her instinct of self-preservation to overcome her maternal attachment, made the best of her way off, and crossing some inequalities in the i^Tound, was lost to the sight of her offspring. The little fellow then stopped ; whereupon Dauphin, who possessed a wonderful facility for imitating the calls of animals, immediately began to grunt like a buffalo-cow, and to our great amusement the little beast turned about, cocked up his tail, and came galloping back to us. We then turned about, and to our great delight it frisked round us all the way into the camp. I was most anxious to get it to the fort as early as possible, for I knew that if I could do so in time, I might by \ rA 'I 1 I f 1 186 RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. chance be able to rear it on pounded Indian corn and lukev.arm water. Very early next morning we repacked our boats, got in our little calf, whom we dosed with strong broth for want of more congenial nourishment, and took our course down the river again, in hopes of reaching the fort that night. Wc pulled very hard, not stopping to cat at 12 o'clock ; but about that hour, and while in the act of rounding a point, we came across a whole band of buifalo in the act of crossing the river. We could pull faster than they could swim, so, cutting our sk'n-boats adrift, with a triumphant yell, we steered the skiff right among the snorting throng, and singling out a brave little calf that was swimming like a water-rat, we gave chase. Young as he was — and he could not have been more than a day or two old — he gave us a great deal of trouble, turning and dodging with wonderful quickness. At length, in endeavouring to swim against stream, the little wretch was drifted back alongside the boat and captured ; so that we had now a pair of these interesting animals on board. We pulled on in great spirits till some time after sunset, but were unable, with all our exertions, to reach the fort that night ; so we camped and cooked, drenched our little calves with strong broth, drank the last of our coffee, and after talking over our adventures, turned in for the night. I thanked my men very heartily, and gave them all praise for the immense exertions they had used to aid me in obtaining the calves and bringing them safely to the fort, as I had the greatest anxiety to • convey the bison to Europe — an object which I am happy to say I subsequently succeeded in effecting. Next morning we got under way at daybreak. When near the fort, I saw a splendid male antelope, with the largest head of horns I ever saw. I unshipped my oar, drew up my rifle, and missed him, on which he very SOAFFOLDTNOS FOR THE DEAD. 187 ^!i corn f\nd 3oats, got broth for took our ching the opping to I while in 3 a whole ver. We itting our tcered the ngling out water-rat, could not gave us a wonderful im against ngside the ir of these m in great lahle, with •ht ; so we alves with and after the night, them all ised to aid n safely to convey the 3y to say I Ilk. When lope, witli hipped my ch he very {|uietly walked on a pace or two, Boucharville then Imnded me his rifle ; I fired, but unfortunately the bullet striking just above tlic animal's eye, so shattered the skull as to make it unfit fur my collection. We pulled into the fort in time for brenlcfast, welcomed by poor Mr. Chardon, who was the bourgeois, or head manager, of Fort Berthold. He had then been for a long time ill with rheumatism, and on my return to the fort I found him worse. He seemed quite to long for ;iny one to talk to him and enliven the weary hours tliat he passed on his sofa hardly able to stir ; so I occupied myself in making some shot, while I recounted my adventures to him, or laid plans for future expedi- tions. In the evening I generally joined the Indians, and sat with the old men watching the women playing at ball, or the young men at their different games. My liorses had arrived quite safely with Percy and the party of Crow Indians ; so that on the whole my hunting expedition had turned out most prosperously. The vrcather had now become warm, and the place was decidedly unhealthy, owing to the vile habit these Indians have of not burying their dead. Instead of doing so, they place them aloft on a framework of sticks ; so that, around the camp, you see these scaffold- ings in all directions, bearing bodies in every stage of decomposition, and merely wrapped each in an old buffalo-robe. Near each is also hung his medicine, i. e. any little thing that during his lifetime he may have deemed a preservative against danger, or a charm against sickness, or miraculous agent assisting him to find buft'alo, &c. : his pipe likewise, if he had one, is also laid beside him, and a bow and arrows, which it is supposed he will hereafter need when admitted to the I hunting-grounds of the blessed. A strange anomaly seems, however, to prevail, and one inconsistent with Ithis great apparent respect for the dead ; namely, that i I I > r! :.\ I , : 11 II 188 llAMBLES AND ADVENTURKS. Ii;! i* it w an Indian will not hesitate to appropriate any part of the (lead man's paraphernalia, jjrovided he replaces it by an article of the same kind, no matter how inferior or how much previously injured ; fur instance, if an Indian has an arrow without feathers or headless, lie docs not scruple to exchange it for the best arrow in the deceased's quiver. When the skulls fell off, they used to place them in circles, together with, I believe, some :)f enemies which they inoy have taken as trophies — at least, those of such as were slain near their village. Their houses, unlike those of the Assineboines, are built of wood cut in piles and plastered with mud, and in outward shape resemble apple-dumplings ; so that, "when the boys race about the village, they run over the tops of them with the utmost ease. I was much amused one evening at witnessing a game of this nature. One young fellow, of about eighteen, was shaded along the ribs with white chalk in such a way as with his red skin to look ludicrously like an antelope. On his head they bound the horns of an old forcifer male antelope dexterously attached to a piece of the skin, the ends of which he tied under his chin, forming altoQ-ether a most entertainin"; caricature of the animal. He then stood on the top of one of the houses in the centre of the villaQ:e, and on a concerted siii'nal the pursuit commenced, the antelope being chased by half a score of other youngsters, till he was at last out- dodged by numbers and captured. Besides these, \vc had horse-races, the Indians betting sometimes very coolly, at other times with great excitement, and always paying their bets of skins, blankets, sugar, tobacco, kc, with most praiseworthy honesty. A day or two afterwards poor Mr. Chardon requested me to write his will for him, which I did. He dictated everything correctly and sensibly, and the day after signing it, died surrounded by us all, detailing to us As on lead, large that r DEATH OF MR. CIIAUDON. 189 ny part of •cpliicos it iw inferior ncc, if an eadless, he row in the , they used licve, some ophics — at eir vilhige. boines, arc 1 mud, and ;g ; SO that, an over the was much ne of this vhteen, was 'such away an antelope, old forcifer )iece of the lin, forming the animal, ouses in the signal the chased by at last out- is these, >yc etimes very ^ and always tobacco, &c., on requested He dictated le day after! tailing to us with his last hreatli how some years hcforc he had gone out after a buthilo with ^mother tarn, and while parsing through some willows behind his companion, his gun liad '•one off, sliootinfj; the latter dead at his leet. tin- iortunately, they were known to have quarrelled, and were never on very good terms with one another, so that .'^ )mc had unjustly accused him of having designedly shot tlie unfortunate man ; but poor Mr. Chardon's last words were, *' As I am going before my God, it ^vas an accident." Poor fellow ! I felt very much cast down at his death, and as I had over since my arrival at the fort suffered from dysentery, occasioned by the smell of all the dead bodies about the village, I went to Boucharville's lodge, and sounded him as to his feelings upon the subject of a second hunt. *' Monsieur," lie replied, " oii vous allez, moi, je suive! je partirai cc soir si vous voulez." So we finally arranged to set off next day, convey the horses across with my skiff, hunt up the Little Missouri, and try the Turtle Mountains, famous for grisly bear. i CHAPTER XI. Another Hunting Expedition. — The Turtle Mountains. — Dangerous Hunting Country. — My last Buffalo Hunt. — Hold by an Antelope. — Attacked by and kill a grisly Bear. — Her cubs hows fight. — Depart from the Turtle Mountains. — Attack a grisly Bear. — More grisly Bears. — Mr. Denig's Adventure. — Bear smashing a Buffalo. — Murray and his Mackinaw Boats. — ^The Pipe of Peace. —'Shake hands with an old enemy. — An Indian Battle. — Canni- balism. — Arrival of the Martha.— Deiith. of poor Smith. As on the former occasion, I laid in good store of powder, lead, copper caps, awls, and coffee, to which I added a large quart bottle of molasses as a substitute for sugar, that article beino: rather scarce at the fort. With sad- i ii 190 RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. t ill. :S!l £ M.!,s.i, (lies, bridles, &c., I was well provided, so that my arrangements were quickly made ; my horses crossed well, and I did not experience anythini^ like the diffi- culties attending my start from the Yellow Stone. I got well away on the opposite prairie ; and, once out of sight and smell of the fort, my spirits rose, my appetite returned, and the dysentery departed. We camped late in the evening beside a refreshing stream, which flowed through a beautiful copse, and spread our beds among the now fragrant rose-bushes. What a change from the noxious atmosphere of the fort ! We sat long talkin^v of poor Mr. Chardon as we smoked our pipes and sipped our coffee after supper, till one by one fatigue overcame us, and we slept soundly till dawn. Much refreshed, we arose, stirred the embers of our fire, ate our breakfast, brought in the horses, and were soon in the saddle and eii route. That day we shot a fiit buffalo-cow, and carried with us the hide and marrow-bones ; and two nights afterwards camped within an hour or two's rido of the Turtle Mountains, Avhich we reached early on the fourth day of our journey from Fort Berthold. Approach- ing Turtle Range from the eastward, you pass over a level grassy prairie, out of which, like an island from the sea, rises "La Montague de TortMo'' par e^vcelleuce. A light band of vapour veiled the splendid landscape from our eyes, revealing above and below its gauzcd drapery the hill-sides belted with wood, and intersected with little threads of rivers, marked by rugged lines of timber and scrub fruit-trees, the favourite resort of grisly bears in the autumn ; at which season they con- gregate, as I was told by Boucharvillo, in sucli numbers as to prevent any one from hunting through them ex- cept on horseback, and at great risk even then. To this fact, however, I am unable to bear testimony, as 1 arrived there only in the month of June, Itir to soon for ,, fruit. riik that my 5es crossed e tlie diffi- Stonc. I once out ot my appetite camped lato 'liicli flowed i)edB among ge from the .ong talkino' ; and sipped le overcame efi'cslied, \vc r breakfast, 1 saddle and ,lo-cow, and !S ; and two r two's ride early on tlic Approach- pass over a island from w excellence. d landscape- its gauzed . intersected :ged lines of to resort of >n tliey con- icli numbers rh tliem cx- len. To this DANGEROUS HUNTING COUNTRY. 19J as I mon) , to soon for As we ascended, the day grew very warm ; the sun chased away the mist, and ridges and declivities in the mountains, hitherto unperceived, showed themselves before us. We continued to ride up and down through cedars, green oak, rhododendrons, and all kinds of wild fruit-trees, till we reached a little river at a spot where a party of Minitardes had camped the year before. They liad built a triangular lodge of long wooden poles, like liop-poles, piling tJiem in the shape of a cone, and so closely as to render the hut bullet-proof — a necessary precaution, as they could never venture there save in fear of their lives, the position lying in the regular pass of the Sioux when they go to war either with them or the Crows. AVe took possession of the hut, not sorry to feel ourselves in a bullet-proof shelter, in a place where, I must admit, we ran some risk of being surprised by an Indian war-party ; but I was so anxious to hunt the grisly bear, that I could not endure the idea of leaving the country without a closer acquaintance with the monarch of these mountains. As a general rule, the more dangerous the country the greater the probability of finding abundance of game, showing in more ways than one the truth of the old sportsman's adage, " the more danger the more sport." This part of the country is so evidently tlie line of direction between the three hostile tribes, that none of them dare venture into it for hunting purposes, except when driven to despera- tion by hunger, they endeavour to snatch their game from between the jaws of Scylla and Charybdis. Much, therefore, as I enjoyed the locality for a hunting-camp, seeing buffalo on all sides, elk feeding in the distance, and fresh deer-tracks in every direction, leading to and from the inviting streams that ran down the slopes, Boucharville did not relish it at all, and began already to calculate how soon we were to go away. My hunting days I knew to be drawing to a close ; the steamer of if- 1 192 RAMBLES AND ADVENT LUIES. ' li ,t*: the American Fur Company would be due very soon, and I had not much time to spare. After breakfast I saddled Owen's horse, and descended the hill for a run at buffalo. I chose a band of cows, most of whom had calved, and whose little ones scampered at their heels : passing these easily, I detected one or two fat barren ones in the van, and gave chase. Some bulls who had caught sight of the running cows now began to run also, and bulls and cows intermingled were soon pelting along in a confused mass. I did not care to fire at the former, and was pressing on after a fat cow I had selected, when one of the bulls, a little blown by the race, stood still for a moment, and as I doubled across him after my cow, made a headlong rush at me ; I could not pull in, and to turn was destruction ; I had nothing for it but to lift my horse, and giving him a tremendous cut with the whip, he sprang into the air, and just cleared the bull when in the act of charging. I felt my horse's hind-legs carried aside as they caught the brute's shoulder, or head, or neck, I can't say which ; but we dashed on happily unhurt, and the next instant I was passing the cow, when, standing up in the stirrups, I gave her a shot that brought her rolling on the plain. I now carefully examined Owen's horse, and thanked my stars that we had escaped unscathed, resolving in my own mind that it should be the very last time I would ever run buffalo mounted on a friend's horse. Mackenzie's horse was a magnificent animal, and nearly thorough-bred, and although the gentlest creature in the world, possessed the most indomitable spirit, as a subsequent adventure will show. I brought away the hide, fleeces, the eight marrow-bones, and my favourite piece, the brochet, so that we fared sumptu- ously that day. Next morning I went out to hunt with Boucharville. Pursuing a westerly direction on leaving the camp, we made for a more rocky part of the range srery soon, reakfast I for a run ivhom had eir heels : fat barren s who had ;an to run on pelting to fire at cow I had )wn by the bled across at me ; I on ; I had ang him a ito the air, f charging, hey caught can't say id the next r up in the : rolling on en's horse, unscathed, be the very 1 a friend's nt animal, le gentlest ndomitaVie I brought es, and my ed sumptu- hunt with on leaving i the range ' it '4 'A o Cm » n a i| t il' 1,1 ■! ■pill an an: no: liii Bo ha^ as the pui bef wh: our stri tur; loo] aws fror moi by. seei afte ovei accc com vill( feet MUtt 11SU£ the, a de The ^vere cour weni ,,ik. SOLD BY AN ANTELOPE. 193 cliffs of where the frowning overhanging ciitrs gave a promise big-horn on our way. As we went, I got a long shot at an antelope (for which 1 dismounted expressly), and the animal instantly dropped ; whereupon I remounted, and, not stopping to load, rode up to the spot, and found him a fine old male with large full-grown horns. Boucharville now came up congratulating me upon my having got such a fine specimen for my collection, and as I sat quietly upon my horse discussing the length of the shot, he dismounted, and drew his knife for the purpose of skinning the apparently lifeless animal, but before doing so, began to sharpen it upon his steel, which hung at the belt of his hunting-frock, when, to our amazement, the antelope, after one or two convulsive struggles, jumped up and bounded off safe and sound, turning about when a couple of hundred yards off, to look back at us as if in ridicule, and again darting away, bade us a final adieu. As soon as we recovered from our surprise, we both burst out laughing. I dis- mounted and loaded, and we went on to the cliffs close by. We rode for some distance along the base, but seeing no sheep, crossed the ridge, leading the horses after us up the ascent, and over rocks and places over which the poor animals could hardly scramble, accomplishing this with great difficulty. We had hardly commenced our descent on the other side, when Bouchar- ville 's quick eye perceived under the cliffs, about 300 feet below, a doe elk feeding in a glade surrounded with thickets of fruit-trees and rose-bushes. With his usual deliberation, he drew out and stuck crosswise in the o-round his ramrod and loadino'-stick for a rest, and a deliberate shot brought the elk down on her tracks. The spot from which he had fired was so steep, that we were obliged to turn back and take a more circuitous course to reach her. Boucharville, who had not loaded, went at that moment to a stream about thirty paces ^ 194 RAMBLES A^'D ADVENTURES. I :-s 'i«ii.iii m . J.'l ' m it from where the Wcapiti lay, saying, ''Je vais laver ma carabine •/' and I, leaving my horse to graze, having taken off his bridle and unrolled his halter, was busy, knife in hand, removing the elk's skin, when Bouchar- ville, who by this time had his rifle-barrel in the stream, and was sponging away very diligently, suddenly shouted, '' Un ours ! un ours ! " and at the same instant a she grisly bear emerged from a cherry-thicket, charging right at him. Boucharville, dropping his rifle-barrel, sprang back into a clump of rose-bushes, when the bear, losing sight of him, stood on her hind-legs, and I then saw, she had a cub of a good size with her. I at first ran to assist my companion ; but seeing him safe and the bear at fault, I rushed back to the horse to secure him, fearing that, were he to smell the bear, he would soon speed his way over the prairie, and be lost to me for ever. Seeing me run, the bear instantly charged after me ; and when, having reached the horse, and rolled the halter a couple of times round my arm, I turned about to face her, she rose on her hind-legs. I did not like, however, to ventures so long a shot, as I had only a single-barrelled rifle in my hand, and paused a moment ; when she altered her intention, turned aside, and followed the direction taken by her cub. I then caught a glimpse of her as she ran to the left, and fired through the bushes, but only hit her far back in the flank ; on which she immediately checked her onward course ; and wheeling round and round, snapped at her side, tearing at the wound with her teeth and claws, and, fortunately for me, afforded me sufficient time to enable rae to load again ; my ball was hiiidly down, when a shout from Boucharville warned m.e that the fight was only commencing. " Gardez-vous, gardez- vous, monsieur ; elle fence encore,'' and on she furi- ously rushed at me. I had barely time to put on my copper cap, and as she rose on her hind-legs, I fired, mi.h I ii aver ma , having as busy, JoucUar- in tlie iuddenly ) instant charging ie-barrcl, the bear, ,d 1 then I at first safe and to secure he would ost to me charged orse, and ly arm, I .-legs. I shot, as I id paused 1, turned r cub. I left, and ack in the 3r omvard ed at her ,nd claws, it time to dly down, that the gardez- she furi- put on my )'s, I fired, 3 «4 "«« H n >« CO •H C4 O H H M Pi » H H < a H CO O tA U N ^ i i "i \ ai 111 w vi th st ca a se pr in in Cl! "I ar it- rif th ba ad an • 11 th SOI vei otl br an *y na no rel on an in t. KILL A GRISLY BEAR. 195 and sent ray bullet through her heart. She doubled up, iind rolled from the top to the bottom of the slope, where she expired with a choking growl. Bouchar- ville now joined me, but we did not venture to approach the enemy until I had loaded, and we ascertained that she was safe dead, by pelting sticks and stumps at the carcass. All this time my noble horse stood as firm as a rock ; had he reared or shied, I should have been in a serious scrape. I was greatly rejoiced at my good fortune. She proved a fine old bear, measuring seven and a half feet in length, with claws four and a half inches long. We immediately set to and skinned her, preserving the claws. I then brought up the horse, and laid the skin upon his back ; he, strange to say, oflfering no resist- ance, nor evincing the slightest fear or objection to carry it — a most unusual thing, for horses in general are ter- rified at the smell of a bear ; and I never saw one since that would allow me to throw a bearskin across his back. Dauphin, on our reaching camp, and relating our adventure, took a couple of coils of rope and his rifle, and started off to try and catch one of the young bears. I thought the prospect of his finding them so doubtful, that I did not accompany him, and was afterwards very sorry I did not ; for, after being some hours away, he returned, having shot one little bear, and attacked the other with a view of capturing him alive. The little brate, however, fought so fiercely as to tear his clothes, and cut him with his sharp claws. Dauphin had fortu- nately provided himself with a good thick stick ; but, notwithstanding this advantage, he was right glad to relinquish the fight, and leave it a drawn battle. At one time, he told me, his adversary had secured his leg, and very nearly succeeded in dragging it to his mouth ; in which event he would have hurt him severely, when o2 ! > 196 RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. i, H ■ u \iU a couple of hard blows on tlic nose made him lot go his' hold, but only to renew his charge again and again, not- withstanding repeated thwacks on the head from the young hunter's stick. " Et, monsieur/' continued Dauphin, ** enfin il est echappe, Ic s'cre petit enfant du diable ! " The skin he had brought home was a beau- tiful one, as indeed are the skins of all young grisly bears, whose fur is thick, of a tawny colour, with a stripe of a darker hue along the back, and so long and shaggy, that it shakes up and down as the animal shuffles aloni!?. In the evenin«; I took a ride with Dauphin, more to enjoy the exquisite landscape; than for the purpose of hunting. Our course lay through cedars and rhododendrons, and wc found regular paths in all directions made by elk and buffalo, ^vho travel through every wood. In the whole of this region here is not a thicket or point that is not rendered easy to traverse from this cause ; and it will be easHy imagined that a succession of these heavy animals following in each other's wake would soon form a very convenient riding- track. We returned about sunset with the skins of two wapiti, now valuable as being in the red. As we sat round our camp-fire at night, Boucharville remonstrated much on the danger we ran by remaining in this delightful spot, and pressed me so hard, that before going to rest I reluctantly consented that we should depart the following day, taking a northerly direction until we should fall in with the Little Missouri, which we would follow up and down to hunt for bear and big- horn. Accordingly we started on the morrow, Dauphin travelling on foot, as his horse was heavily laden with the trophies of our hunt in the Montagne de Tortue, and before noon we arrived at some very rocky, shingly hills, over and along which we rode with much diffi- culty, having frequently to dismount and lead our horses. Dauphin here descried a grisly bear lying down J^.. n, not- om the itinued t'aiit dii a bcau- g grisly with a )ng and animal le with than for h cedars lis in all through is not a traverse d that a in each riding- is of two s we sat nstrated in this t before should lirection i, which and bij^- Dauphin len with Tortue, shingly Lch diffi- ead our ng down ATTACK A GIIISLY BEAR. 197 und sunning himself on a ledge of rock high up the side of a hill, and, contrary to my directions, instead of wjiit- ing for us, ran on wliilc Boucharville and I were loosen- ing the halters of our horses so as to catch them again more easily, and, under cover of the rocks, got within forty yards of the ])car unperceived. He took deliberate aim, but missed him ; the bear instantly made off for a thicket of brushwood, while I, not a little annoyed, ran along the base of the cliffs to cut off his retreat ; but all to no purpose ; the brute passed me at some distance, giving me a snap-shot at him which did not take effect, reached the timber, and the ground being too hard for us to track him, finally got away unscathed. As may be supposed, I was in no enviable humour ; Dauphin kept out of my way, and I rode silently and sulkily forward. At last my philosophy prescribed a whiff of the pipe, which I drew out, struck a light, and my wrath soon vanished in smoke. On reaching the Little Missouri, the weather looked gloomy and threatened rain, so Boucharville engaged to build a very comfortable " cabane.'' This experienced rover of mountains, woods, and prairies, was up to a thousand little expedients to obviate difficulties and alleviate inconveniences, and was doubly anxious to render me comfortable, now that I had acceded to his wishes, and abandoned my hunting elysium, the '' Montague de Tortue." Leaving Dauphin to assist him and look after the horses, I went up the river with my double-barrelled gun to look for ducks ; but they were very wild, and I bagged none. At length I came to the putrid carcass of a bull, and on the mud all around saw the tracks of a large old bear, some of w]»ich led from the carrion along a dry watercourse, and looked very fresh. I drew my shot charges, rammed down a couple of bullets, and followed the tracks over an undu- lating prairie, till at a distance I descried a very large t'c J 98 RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. bear walking leisurely alouf;. I approached as near as I could without his perceiving me, and, lying down, tried Dauphin's plan of imitating the lowing of a buffalo-calf. On hearing the sounds, he rose up, displaying such gigantic proportions as almost made my heart ftiil me ; 1 croaked again, when, perceiving me, he came canter- ing slowly up. I felt that I was in for it, and that escape was impossible, even had I decUncd the combat ; so cocking both barrels of my Trulock, I remained kneeling until he approached very near, when I suddenly stood up, upon which the bear, with an indolent roaring grunt, raised himself once more upon his hind-legs, and just at the moment when he was balancing himself pre- viously to springing on me, I fired, aiming close under his chin : the ball passing through his throat, broke the vertebras of the neck, and down he tumbled, floundering like a great fish out of water, till at length he reluct- antly expired. I drew a long breath as I uncocked my left barrel, feeling right glad at the successful issue of the combat. I walked round and round my huge prize, surveying his proportions with great delight ; but as it came on to rain, I was obliged to lose no time in skin- ning him. I got soaked through before I succeeded in removing his tremendous hide, and then found it too heavy for me to take away ; so I was obliged to return to camp without the trophy of my conquest. It was dark when I arrived. Boucharville and Dauphin had built a most comfortable little hut of logs and bark, and having laid down the skins and spread our beds inside, with the saddles at our heads for pillows, and a good roaring fire outside at our feet, we fell heartily to our supper of elk- meat and coffee. At daybreak next morning I repaired on horseback to the scene of my conflict with the bear, and fo'ind, to my great delight, on my arrival at the spot, that Loither the skin nor the carcass of the bear had been touched MORE OIIISLY DEARS. 199 icar as I rn, tried ■alo-calf. ng such fail me ; 3 cantcr- md that combat ; remained suddenly t roaring ■legs, and nself prc- oso under broke the oundering he reluct- pocked my ul issue of ,uge prize, ; but as it lc in skin- cceeded in und it too return to t was dark lad built a md having e, with the rearing fire >per of elk- horseback d fo'-ind, to hat ivoither en touched by the wolves. This fact confirmed to mc the testimony of the hunt'TS and trappers of these parts, as to the great awe in which the grisly bear is held by the wolves and lesser animals of prey. If a bear kills an animal, or finds a dead carcass on the prairie, he appropriates it ; and though many a hungry prowler passing by may look wist- fully at the choice morsel, it is like the eastern monarch's share, ''taboo;'' and even when the mountain monarch is absent, the print of his paw is a seal sufficient for its security. It cost me considerable exertion to place the reeking hide on my saddle ; but I succeeded at last, and climbing on the top of it, lighted my pipe and rode back into camp. Riding along, towards noon we descried another bear, a lean, hungry-looking monster, prowling about searching for pommes blanches^ an I, to judge from his appearance, likely to afford us a pretty severe fight. In approaching him, we did not take any precaution to avoid giving him our wind, concluding, from my former experience, that he would not decline the combat ; but in this instance I was mistaken, for rushing away down a ravine, he was soon lost to our view. This result, although it disappointed me at the time, yet gave me a further insight into the disposition and habits of the animal, and agreed with the accounts I had heard from many hunters and trappers with whom I had previously conversed on the subject ; namely, that a grisly bear will, in most instances, run away from a man on getting his wind, unless previously wounded, or under such circumstances as to make him think that he cannot escape. Old Mr. Kipp, of Fort Union, told me that once, w4ien on one of his numerous journeys from the States, he was in the Indian country, and had gone out of camp with his double-barrelled gun to look for ducks ; he was seen from a distance by a grisly bear, who came cantering towards him. The day was fine, and the old gentleman did not know which way the ■■ 200 RAMBLES AND ADVE^TUllES. •: , i ) wind blew, but bad sufficient presence of mind to pluck off some of tbe woolly material of wliicb his blue blanket capote was composed, and throw it into the air ; and marking the direction of the current, ran a little distance round, till lie got ^n\l in the line of it, and then stood bolt upright facing Bruin, who rose on his hind-legs for a moment surveying the tough old man, and then shuffled off, shaking his head as if he considered him meat rather too savoury for his palate. The whole of that portion of territory between the Turtle Mountains and the Little Missouri is an excellent country for bear ; indeed, in the fruit season there are sometimes too many to be consistent with safety for the hunters. The pursuit of these animals is always more or less attended with damj-er, as the fri<>;ht- ful story of George Glass and La Jennesse, who, with many other hunters and trappers, have fallen victims to the ferocity of the grisly bear, abundantly testifies. Indians will not attack them unless in considerable numbers. When an Indian descries a bear, he im- mediately goes and proclaims it in the camp, whereupon all hands sally out to attack their formidable enemy ; and I do not think that an Indian would allow one to fire at a grisly bear if he could possibly prevent it ; in confirmation of which, I may here mention an anecdote of my friend Mr. Denig. He was out hunting on foot with an Indian one fine sunny day tow'ards the end of spring, when, as they passed some rocky ground, his companion directed hie attention to an object about fifty or sixty yards below them, which was nothing less than the head and fore-paws of a very large grisly bear which had crept to the front of his wintering hole, and was basking in the sun. " Hah,'' said the Indian, "now I will go and raise the camp." Mr. Denig, who was a first-rate rifle-shot, scouted the idea, telling the Indian that he w^ould phviii his rifle-bullet right in the MR. DENIQ S ADVENTURE. 201 to pluck I blanket air ; and distance en stood 1-lcgs for md then ered liim between uri is an lit season tent with mimals is he fright- who, with victims to testifies, nsidorablc r, he im- i'hcreupon B enemy ; ow one to mt it ; in anecdote ig on foot the end of •ound, his ect about )thing less msly bear hole, and ; Indian, )enig, who ;elling the o;ht in the centre of the bear's forehead (which I liave not the least doubt he would have done, and so have killed the animal on the spot), but to his astonishment the Indian cocked his gun in a threatening attitude. My friend thus find- ing himself between two enemies, one in front and the other in the rear, did not much relish his position, and moved away from the spot, beckoning to the Indian to follow him ; and when away from their common danger, called him to account for his conduct. I forget what excuse the man gave ; but it was not at all satisfactory to Denig, who made the fellow walk home before him with the pan of his gun open, prudently adopting that course in preference to a harsher mode of proceeding. The sequel of the adventure was, that the man iuformed the camp of the position of the bear ; they all turned out, fired a number of shots, and the bear got away. We now altered our line of march, and took the direction in which the last bear had gone, and after a couple of hours or so, observed either him or another of his species a short distance ahead. We approached more carefully this time and on foot, and wdien within easy range, Dauphin called him up with his admirable imitation of a buffalo-calf, and we poured the contents of two rifles and a double-barrelled gun into his breast and head, and rolled him lifeless on the prairie. This was not the one we had seen in the morning, being in much better condition. We brought home his skin for a trophy, and the paws for supper, camping again that night on the Little Missouri, We had now such con- fidence in one another that we considered no bear could escape us ; but our skins had so greatly accumulated that we determined to reach the mouth of the river as soon as possible ; this we did in two days, and once more found ourselves, by Boucharville's excellent guidance, on the banks of the Great Missouri. In camp that night, after supper, and enjoying a cup ii i Ii 202 RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. "•1 of coffee and a pipe, the conversation naturally enough turned upon grisly bears. Boucharville told us, that when encamped one night by the side of a stream in the Blackfoot country, where he was trapping beaver, three bears, attracted by the smell of their meat which was cooking, came charging into camp, driving him and his companions out in such haste, that they could take nothing with them, and there retained forcible posses- sion until they had consumed every particle of meat, and turned over the saddles and every item of their equipment in their greedy curiosity. On another occa- sion he was going round to examine his traps, and was watching a band of buffalo as they emerged from the river and slowly ascended the bank, when he saw a bear (previously concealed in a deep rut) spring up and dash the foremost bull to the ground, ploughing his sides with his monstrous claws and rending his heart and vitals by a succession of tremendous blows. Al- though, in general, the bear easily vanquishes his less formidable opponent the buffalo, 1 heard a very well authenticated instance related by old Provost at the Minitaree, in which both parties suffered so severely as mutually to resign the conflict, move off a little way iu opposite directions, and lie down and die. Next day, on stretching and counting my skins, I determined to make another bull-skin boat to convey them down the river, to Fort Berthold, and despatched Boucharville and Dauphin to kill a couple of bulls for that purpose. We divided our time between hunting and boat-buildino", and while at breakfast next morning were astonished by the unusual sight on these silent lonely waters, of two large Mackinaw boats belonging to the Fur Company. I hailed them, and found that they had come from the Crow post on the Yellow Stone, Mr. Murray, of Fort Alexander, my old travelling companion of the year before in our ride from Independ- THE PIPE OF PEACE. 203 illy enough d us, that •earn in the aver, three ^vhich was im and his could take ble posses- e of meat, m of their other ocea- ns, and was i from the L he saw a 'ing up and iU2;hinf>; his V his heart )lows. Al- ios his less X very well vest at the severely as ittle way iu ny skins, I ,t to convey despatched of bulls for en hunting (xt morning these silent s belonging found that ellow Stone. i travelling' Independ- ence, was in charge of them ; he put ashore on recog- nising me, and we discussed past times over a cup of coifee and a pipe, after which he continued his voyage. A Mackinaw boat is the conveyance for most of the skins and furs traded from the Indians, in exchange for those articles brought up by the company's steamer. They are, as well as 1 remember (for I did not examine them accurately), about twenty feet long and flat-bot- tomed, principally filled with buffalo-robes, with a very small vacant space left in the middle for the accommo- dation of any bourgeois or person in charge. The whole is covered over with lodge-skin, except where the benches for the rowers are situated, fore and aft. I believe the oars are always double-banked, and the steersman, or patron, is commander of tlie boat's crew ; he is gene- rally the strongest man of the party, of which he con- stitutes himself officer, volunteering to fight any one who offers to supersede him. At the mouth of the Little Missouri I shot my fifth and last grisly bear. The time was now rapidly ap- proaching for the arrival of the annual steamer at the Minitaree post ; so one fine morning early in July, I packed my kettles, skins, arms, &c., into my skin boat, and Boucharville and I, each with a paddle in hand, stepped in and floated down the river to the fort, leaving the horses to go by land. All reached our destination in the evening. We recrossed the horses with our Fort Union skiff that had already done me such signal service, and, welcomed by my friend, Mr. Dawson, I quietly ensconced myself in the fort to await the arrival of the American Fur Company's steamer. I found all the inmates preparing for a great Indian ceremony which was about to take place, in consequence of the Sioux having sent a message to the Minitarees, that it was their desire to form a deputation of warriors who should come up and smoke a pipe of peace. The notice having 20 1 KAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. ^ -' I!' ' ' ■ it till Ml m reached the fort some Jays previously, the party at length arrived. All sat arrayed in their greatest finery of robes, Indian porcupine-adorned shirts, head-dresses of eagles' feathers, ornamented leggings and mocassins, and with a great array of medicine-pipes. Several long speeches were made on both sides, after which a large caldron of coifee was produced and placed in the centre of the circle. It was interesting to see these fellows, hitherto always at war with each other, prac- tising, on this occasion, ceremonies meant to produce an impression of the utmost mutual amity, though indi- cating to an observant spectator little more than a hollow truce ; a haughty look, or a reserved gesture, every now and then conveying the offensive sense of an implied superiority. I was not a little surprised at being recognised by one of these hostile chiefs, who held out his hand in a most cordial manner to me, and on my asking him, with the interpreter's assistance, where he had seen me, informed me that he was the leader of the war-party which had nearly surprised us when we left the skiff on the Missouri to hunt big-horn, and from which I protected myself and my followers by a timely retreat into the timber. I asked him why he did not attack us ; to which he replied, " We could have killed you all ; but you would have killed several of us while running from us behind the trees ; for white men shoot far.'' 1 sat and smoked with him for a while, and afterwards made him a present of some tobacco, so that we parted excellent friends. Early one morning after this, when breakftisting at the fort, one of my followers, the valiant Paquenode, with whom my readers are already acquainted, ran in screaming and shouting like a maniac, rushed across the room, and would have succeeded in carrying off my double-barrelled Trulock, had I not darted to the rescue. As soon as I had succeeded in inducing the man to AN INDIAN BATTLE. 205 ,y at length t finery of -dresses of mocassins, Several ter which a iced in the 3 see these >ther, prac- produce an iouo;h indi- are than a ed gesture, sense of an lurprised at chiefs, who ' to me, and assistance, he was the lurprised us it big-horn, followers by him why he We could illed several for white for a while, 5 tobacco, so ikfasting at Paquenode, ited, ran in ished across ying off my the rescue, the man to speak coherently, I learnt that a war party of Sioux from the Teton River had been seen and reported to the viUage : they were then some miles distant. Not ^vishin2: to have anvthinfr to do with Indian battles, I yrudently excused myself from the honour of joining the Minitarc'cs, and going out witli tliem to fight the Teton Sioux, preferring to post myself on the highest ]M>int of the fort with an excellent telescope, and view the combat in safety. Far away along the plain, at a p'cat distance from the fort, the hostile parties met (if drawing up at the respectful distance of two or three l.andred yards can be called meeting), and the firing liogan on both sides. The sight Avas very picturesque. From my post I could see the strong puffs of smoke i,-3uinGr from either line — the result of the double charij^es which Indians universally use in battle, under the erro- neous impression that they give superior elhcacy to the bullets, as well as to strike terror into the hearts of their enemies, while at intervals the braves rushed backwards and forwards on horseback, appearing and disappearing by turns through the clouds of smoke. At last, in rode one of the Minitarecs with a scalp in his hand, and was instantly surrounded by a crowd of women and youngsters triumphantly screaming and yeUing. This battle, however, did not entirely termi- nate in favour of the Minitaroes, as they had one man slain on their side and carried off by the Sioux horse- men, who dragged him ignominiously along the ground by leathern thongs till they reached their own party, where they scalped him in safety. The skirmish now terminated ; the Sioux retired, and the Minitarees returned to their village in triumph, dragging the body of their unfortunate victim along with them. Then commenced a truly disgusting sight ; the boys shot I arrows into the carcass of their fallen enemy, while their hvomen with knives cut out pieces of the flesh, which m 20G KAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. li ; % they broiled and ate. I turned away chilled mih horror, and the whole scene haunted D\e for hours, and frequently afterwards. Late in July the Amerioan Fur Company's steamer Martha arrived from St. Louis at the Minitarees' post ; numbers crowding to see this ^ver-astonishing pheno- menon. The principal men, or chiefs, went foremost, evidently, by their manner and bearing, implying that this was a great display of courage on their parts ; the women and younger portion of the population gradually approaching until the escape of the steam commenced, which, occurring under water, caused a deafening roar, and drove hundreds helter-skelter flying from the bank of the river. Although the steamer annually arrives at this place, it ever affords fresh wonder and astonishment to these simple people ; and though an Indian never likes to betray emotion, and always endeavours to con- ceal any feelings of surprise, the " Mauntcshishi'' is always more than a match for his stoicism. Catlin mentions that the Mandans, who were the most in- telligent and philosophical of all the Upper Missouri Indians, used to say that " this big medicine canoe must have eyes, for how could it always choose the deepest part of the river, and keep in the channel and avoid the snags,'' an impression which remains in a great measure to this day. I myself heard the obser- vation made in almost the same words ; nor do they yet fully understand how its motions can be directed by the man at the helm, or rather by the pilot in his caboose. A few days previous to the termination of its voyage, the steamer was fired into by a w^ar-party of Rhecs, one of whose bullets took effect ; and after passing' through two or three boarded divisions below, split itself on an iron bar : one half buried itself in the woodwork, and the other striking one of the deck hand?. LEAVE THE INDIAN COUNTRY, 207 tilled ^Yitll hours, and ^'s steamer irees' post ; ing plieno- t foremost, plying that parts ; the n gradually [commenced, fening roar, .m the bank ly arrives at stonishment ndian never ■ours to con- iteshishi" is sm. Catlin he most in- per Missouri icine canoe choose the channel and emains in a rd the obscr- nor do they be directed pilot in hi3 }f its voyage, ty of Khecs, after passing below, split itself in tlie le deck hand?. named Smith, in the back of the neck, divided the spine, and killed him on the spot. The poor fellow, I was told, was the father of a large family, depending on him for support. His death was unrevenged ; for, although many an American on board grasped his rifle, any further proceedings were stayed by the agents of the Fur Company, who preferred silently submit- ting to the loss of their follower sooner than run any risk, as they themselves expressed it, " of spoiling the trade."* I- ■.;,> CHAPTER XII. Leave the Indian country. — A blasted Cannon. — Mr. Mackenzie. — Ishmah forages for himself. — The Yellow Fever. — Doctor Farrell. — General Taylor's Address. — " Beauty's " History and Adven- tures. — Marriage Feast. — My pretty Hostess. — A Musical Smash. Bruin takes care of Number One. — " Beauty " creates a Sensa- tion. — Bruin rescues the Antelope. — The Balize. I CONFESS I left the Indians and the Upper Missouri with great regret, and it was with a sigh that I embarked with all my buffalo-robes, grisly bear and wolf-skins, elk-horns, &c. &c., and steamed away down for St. Louis. The Martha was a most splendid river boat for her size, furnished with engines of more than ordinary power, on account of the rapid current she had to stem towards the far-western part of her course. Boucharville and my faithful followers accompanied me on board, and after many a hearty shake of the hand and mutual good wishes, away dashed and splashed tjie Marthay rounding the point, and concealing the Viim- * These two gentlemen were French, not Americans. m 208 RAMBLES AND ADVENTUlUiS. Sti. ■( ;■' taroo village from my view as the last cIiclt of my hunting companions foil faintly on my ear. How I enjoyed the milk, butter, bread, vegetables, pies, and puddings of civilized life, after su many months of animal food, may be imagined. The sudden clia.ig'' disagreed a good deal Avitli me at lirst ; but tliose in^a- luable remedies, brandy and cigars, soon restored me. The following day, as the boat was wooding, tlie blaclv steward (to whose care I had consigned Ishmali, with an injunction not to lose him on any account) came \\y to me and said, " Saar, your d(.>g is such a wery oiiaiuh'st dog, that if you don't take care, you will lose him ; " and on my asking for a further expla- nation of his meaning, " Why, saar, it's now two dayt> I have him tied up in my care, and his bed and lixins is as clean as when you fust chained him, and he's now cryin' from pain : ah ! he's a wery maudest dog, wery ! " The man was perfectly right. I unchained the poor fellow, and allowed him a littk' exercise on shore. Fortunately he was not afraid ot rcturninor to the boat when woodino; was over, and henceforth was at perfect liberty, being quite sagacious cnouGjh not to lose me. Before reaching St. Louis, we arrived at the point of junction between the Mississippi and Missouri rivers; tlie Mississippi's clear stream causing a ridge of back- ^vater distinctly dividing the colours of the two currents. Their united waters from this point into the Gulph of Mexico were falsely named by a mistake of the engi- neers who first surveyed the country, ]\'Iississippi ; the nature and tin<>;e of the Missouri beino; distinctly marked from far above the mouth of the Yellow Stono till it empties itself, after joining the clear blue water of the Mississippi, beloAv New Orleans, into the Gulph of ]\Iexico. On comimi; in si2,ht of St. Louis, and in order to signalize our arrival, two men of our party, toge whic chcn then bow my ( a sti disa] the fragr tiippi none on d slighl meta] %inf^ to m} mc i conde Ar a rea inanu to esc with throut tunat( St. L( find w escape startec and di dye c to stop fonfus] tions, ] sue hai A BLASTKn CANNON. 209 icev of iviy vco-c'tuLlos, any niontlis dell cluv.iii;'' those iir^Ji- •(-stored me. j;, tlie liliiclv mil, M'itli ail t) cauie \\\ icli a ^YOl\y [•e, you ^vill •tlicr expla- ow two dayt< lis bed and hained liini- le's a ^very •foctly riglit. him a littk' ,ot afraid ot ,s over, and lite sagacious I the point of Isouri rivers; {\crQ of back- |two currents. ,he Gulph ot of the eiigi- tissippi ; the Iv^ distinctly "ellow Stono tv blue Avator the Gulph of |[)uis, and ii^ f our party, to,a;ctlicr with myself, got hold of an old mortar gun "vvliich was on board the Martha, and had been bought cheap of the U.S. artillery, having been condemned by tliem as unsafe. This we loaded and placed in the bow of the boat, I having primed it with powder from my own horn. On putting a match to the touch-hole, a stunning explosion followed, and the gun instantly disappeared, being utterly shivered to pieces : this was the last ever seen of that piece of ordnance, whose fragments sank into the waters of the miglity Missis- tiippi, " and left not a wreck behind." Providentially, none of us were seriously hurt : one fellow fell stunned on deck from the fright, the other man's leg was slightly cut, and I received two minute particles of metal scaling in the cheek, a large piece of the gun flying back and cutting an iron bar right across, close to my face, and having no further effect than to make me then and there for ever renounce meddling with condemned cannons again. Arrived at St. Louis, I lost not a moment in seeking a ready-made clothes store, there to change my sclf- inanufactured habiliments for a costume more calculated to escape observation in a civilized community, and, with Ishmah at my heels, was threading my way through the less conspicuous streets until I was unfor- tunately obliged to cross the fashionable parade of St. Louis ; and had hardly reached the corner opposite, and was congratulating myself on having effected my escape, when I ran against the parasol of a lady, who started on seeing my horrible leather costume all stained and daubed with blood and grease. " Gracious ! how d'ye do, Mr. Palliser?" she exclaimed, compelling me to stop and shake hands, and, vastly entertained at my confusion, purposely detained me by a volley of ques- tions, in order to enjoy more leisurely the discomfiture 5>ac had caused me by intercepting my headlong flight. p 210 RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. << Oh ! what dreadful creature is tliat ?" slie continued, starting back on scein^; Ishmah ; " you arc quite sure he won't tear me to pieces ? Well, go away with your wolf ; but pray come and dine with us. My husband will be delighted at your having come back safe, and will ask you a thousand questions about your adven- tures/' (I may here mention that the gentleman alluded to had been long resident in the Indian country, and, among many other distinguishing qualifications, Mr. Mackenzie, of St. Louis, still bears the palm, as having been the best rider and ablest butiaio-hunter of all the whites that ever were on the Upper Missouri.) I soon provided myself at the store with things suf- ficient for present emergencies, and proceeded to Mr. Mackenzie's, where I enjoyed the best of dinners and wines. Over the latter we sat up together, com- paring notes and impressions to a late hour, I frequently , reminding him of brilliant hunts, and many other of| his achievements and adventures, related to me by Indians and trappers of the country, but which he had for the most part himself forgotten. None can like sportsmen so thoroughly enjoy the luxury of passing the bottle, when ihey sit together retailing and listening to their mutual adventures ; for hunting, in the extended! acceptation of thr term, is one of those very few occu- pations, in the pursuit of which sportsmen good and I true are never actuated by envy, jealousy, or unwortliy| emulation. The Planters' Hotel, where I put up during my stay! at St. Louis, was very full, and among the numbers who dined at the table every day were many choic spirits from the western regions and Kocky Mountains. Some idea may be formed of the number of guests, and of the dishes provided for them, from the fact that the I first removal of the iron covers is attended with such al thundering crash as to startle a stranger, and leave liiml TIIK YELLOW FEVER. 211 continued, quite sure with your ly husband k safe, and our adven- gcntleman ian country, lalifications, he palm, as io-hunter oi f Missouri.) things suf- rocccded to jt of dinners gether, com- ,1 frequently any other of ;(]. to me by Yhich he had >ne can hke )f passing the d listening to the extended I ery few occii- len good and I or unworthy King my stay the numbers many choic' :y Mountains. 3f guests, and I fact that tlie ;d with such a and leave him in utter astonishment as to its cause ; the only similar effect, I am aware of, being that p-^rhi^'^d at Exeter Hall, when the turning of the leaf of a little book by each of the audience at the same moment resembles a hailstorm on the roof of the building. Ishmah was so terrified, that he ran right away into the town, followed by his hatless master, who had to leave his dinner for the pursuit, and only brought him back again with considerable difficulty. Here my friend Owen and I met again. It may be supposed we found the fare excellent, especially wlien our reminiscences carried us back to the period of lean deer-meat and frozen water ; and often, as one of us raised the decanter of iced Madeira or cool claret to help the other, did we accom- pany the action with some such expression as, " What wouldn t you or I have given for such stuff as this on the prairie, eh?'' Ishmah, now no longer terrified at the dish-covers, was not content with beholding his master enjoying the good things of this life, but con- trived unobserved to creep to the sideboard within reach of the dishes. In one instant his fore-paws were on it, and he had helped himself to a calf s head, with which savoury prize he decamped at racing speed, his bushy \ \\\ stretching out, like a fox's brush, behind him ; the • liters merely pointing after him and winking to one another, evidently enjoying the joke. The weather now became very warm, and as I knew it would prove still hotter further south, I left my bisons in the Missouri country, intending to return and transport them early in winter, when the weather should have become cooler, as I did not wish them to incur any danger from the heat during their passage to New Orleans, or the still more fiery ordeal oi crossing the Mexican Gulf on their passage to En^:land. Business compelled me to go to New Orleans at once, where I arrived just in time to meet some old country friends p2 212 llAMKLKS AND ADVKNTURES. I)« ])rcviou3 to their annual migration. New Orleans has the name of beinj^ a much more unhealtliy place than it really is : numbers lly away at midsummer in order to escape yellow fever. This complaint \h also repre- sented as a far more serious evil than is now the case. Formerly physicians did not properly understand its treatment ; but now the experienced medical men are so thoroughly up to it, that wlien taken in tiuie, it is more quickly and easily cured than any other fever, and possesses this great advantage, that when recovered, the patient may consider himself acclimatized, and proof from a recurrence of yellow fever or any other, save the dreaded fever and ague, otherwise called chills and fever, of which I ever had the greatest horror, but always luckily escaped. But soon after my arrival in New Orleans, I was returning home one evening, when I felt myself seized with an attack of yellow fever ; ■whereupon I made haste to bed, and sent for my countryman Dr. Farrell. He soon set me to rights again ; for, on the third morning, I was perfectly well, and before the end of the week, found myself in much better health than my doctor, who was literally worn out with attendance on twenty-seven yellow-fever patients, every one of whom, however, finally recovered. I was sitting with him after dinner, a few days subse- quently, when we received an alarm that one of his patients, in the height of yellow fever delirium, had mounted the rail of a balcony outside his bed-room window in deshabille, imagining himself on horseback, and had, as might naturally be expected, fallen into the street. The poor fellow^ on being picked up, looked wistfully in the doctor's face, and said, *' Oh ! doctor^ that was a monstrous high horse, for I never suffered so much from a fall from horseback in my life \" I am happy to say, for the gratification of my sympathizing readers, that this poor fellow, although much hurt at forr GENERAL TAILORS ADDRESS. 213 ileuns has •lace than I* ill order ilso rcprc- f the case, rdtand iti4 I inou are time, it is :her fever, recovered, , and proof r, save the chills and lorror, but arrival in niiig, when low fever ; nt for my c to rights •fectly well, ilf in much erally worn yellow-fever y recovered, days subse- onc of his lirium, had s bed-room horseback, len into the up, looked )h ! doctor, r suffered so q\" I am ympathiziiig ach hurt at the tirac, ultimately recovered yellow fever, bruises, and all. What rendered the scene at the same time ludicrous as well as painful, was Farrell's rage at the nicrger nurses, on both of wliom he wanted to operate witli the cat-o'- ninc-tails, and turning sternly round to me, told mo that he saw nothing to laugli at in such gross neglect of liirf patients. A few days afterwards I crossed the Lake Ponchar- train to Pass Clu'istian, a beautifully-situated and iavourite sununer retreat of the fashionables of New Orleans. Vigorous and extensive preparations were in pi-(jgress for a large ball, which was to be given to (general Taylor. Montgomery's hotel was the scene chosen for the festivities — a laruc buildin'j; containinc? a splendid ])all-room, where, previous to the commence- ment of the dancing, an address was presented to the general, to wliich the old gentleman read his reply. Unfortunately, however, this document had been so badly written for him, that he stuck hard and fast several times in its perusal ; but, by holding it up from time to time to the light of a chandelier, and with the help of a few suggestions from by-standers, he finally acliieved it. Of course, this very much delighted the young ladies, who evinced much greater pleasure tlian they would have shown at a more elaborate rhetorical display. Dancing succeeded, quadrilles, polkas, redowas, and waltzes, separated by intervals of delightful walks in the open air through the gardens, which were lighted with coloured lamps strewn among the laurels, so as to form words recounting the victories of the good and gallant old general whose triumphs we were celebrating. The entertainment, on the whole, was most successful, and terminated with a capital supper. In the month of October I returned again to St. Louis, in order to convey my bisons and other animals down the Mississippi, T had now quite a menagerie to ii 214 RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. take with me ; consisting of one very large old bison cow, one cow rising two years old, and the two calves, one black bear, two Virginian deer, an exquisitely beautiful little forcifer antelope, and Ishmah. Of all these ani- mals, the most remarkable one was my old bison cow, Beauty, whose history, as well as I could gather, was, that she had been some years previously attracted from the prairie by the hay which a distant Mormon farmer, beyond the outskirts of the settlements, was in the habit of providing for his milch cows during the winter, and that, from being accustomed by degrees to the society of the cows, she at length lost all apprehensions of danger from the men who attended on her domestic companions ; and, although she at first fled away on their approach, she afterwards became so perfectly tame, as to allow her- self to be driven home along with the milch-cows. In the breeding season she used to disappear from the country altogether, but invariably returned, before the severity of winter recommenced, to the society of the farmer's cows, where no one molested her. This animal., being old and very fat, they had sent down to St. Louis, with the intention of selling her to a butcher, rightly judging that purchasers would easily be found curious enough to pay a high price for bison beef, in order themselves to test its so frequently reported excellence. But, most fortunately, I was just in time to avert iier fate, and, by paying a higher sum, terminated a bargain pending between the man to whom she was consigned and the butcher in treaty for her, and finally consigned her to Ireland, where she has since become the mother of two splendid calves. She is a magnificent creature weighing thirteen and a half cwt., and far surpassing in size any specimen that has ever been obtained for a zoological collection, having attained her full growtli and strength long before the period of her acquaintance with the dairy cows. The gentleness and intelligence MY BISON- GOV/ " BEAUTY. 215 bison cow, calves, one f beautiful these ani- bison coWj ither, was, acted from on farmer, 1 the habit dnter, and ! society of of danger mpanions ; approach, allow her- ■cows. In from the before the ety of the lis animal; St. Louis, .er, rightly id curious ', in order excellence. ) avert lier , a bargain consigned consigned :he mother t creature •passing in ined for a ill grow til luaintancc titelligencc of this enormous animal was truly wonderful, rendering her transport very easy. On my embarking her for the first time, she quietly suffered herself to be led along the main-deck of the river-boat, passing fearlessly by the hissing engines on either side to the place prepared for her astern. My other bisons were not so easily managed ; but, being then young, we were able to master them. Unfortunately, in recapturing one of my calves, the animal broke its back, an accident which I regretted very much, and the more so, that I had captured him and his companion myself, and was particularly anxious to bring them both safely to England. Herr ZoUer, however, a wealthy butcher in St. Louis, happened to have one which he kept as a pet, and which was growing rather too large for the confined place where he was obliged to put her ; so, on my wanting to buy her, he, with that frankness for which Germans are so conspicu- ous, made me a present of her, on my paying the expenses which her transport from the Indian country had cost him ; and Madame Zoller (for so I named her) is now in Ireland, in daily expectation of a prosperous accouch/j- ment. The bear, antelope, and Ishmah were all on most friendly terms — an object I had taken great pains to effect ; and I used frequently to see Bruin and the antelope eating at the same head of cabbage together. My obliging friend Herr Zoller, a few days before I left, invited me to a German wedding. The bride was the daughter of one of the wealthy members of the cor- poration of butchers, all of whom, indeed, seemed very well off — a circumstance which Zoller explained to me as resulting from the law in Prussia and the Ilhenish provinces, ordaining that no one shall practise the trade of a butcher without paying to the government a sum considerable for people in their rank of life ; so that none but young citizens with good prospects are taught, and consequently many of them, when qualified, keep 21G RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. g their capital and migrate to the United States. The bridal party, and all their fijuests and friends, assembled at the German Gardens, about two miles from my hotel, in the outskirts of St. Louis. The proprietor kept most excellent German wines, and had a very large ball-room attached to his establishment, and a splendid orchestra of brass instruments in his pay. He gave the entertain- ment, and provided the capital supper, on condition that all except the bridal party should pay for the wine they drank. About nine o'clock in the evening dancing commenced, the orchestra playing Strauss's and Lan- ner's quadrilles and waltzes to perfection, besides all the best and latest polkas and galops, not excepting tlic celebrated Railway and Sturm Marsch. Urged by these, I became so exhilarated as to run down and seek the lady of the establishment, who was busy in the lower regions, superintending the culinary operations of her handmaidens. My proposal of dancing the Sturm Marsch galop with her was at first received with utter astonishment ; but after a little persuasion, her pretty features relaxed into a smile ; and she began to make excuses as numerous as the dishes she was preparing. Her husband would be angry at the work being neg- lected ; perhaps the maids would want to dance too, if she once began, and so on. A little persuasion, how- ever, soon removed these obstacles ; and at last, upon my protesting, in reply to her question, " Are you serious, or are you laughing at me ?'' that I w^ould quit the premises forthwith, if she did not comply. " Lieber herr Je !" she said, *' look at my dress.'' " Well, take off your apron," I replied. She laughed, and turning to one of the maids, bid her brinoj water, soap, and towel, " and the cap with the ribbons," adding, as she smoothed her beautiful hair, and looked coquettishly at me, " You know there is no reason for looking uglier than one really is !" At last the cap was adjusted ; but just as A MUSICAL SMASH. 217 . The lembled y hotel, pt most Lll-room rchcstra tertain- ion tliat ine tlioy dancing' id Lan- s all the ting the 'rged by and seek ;he lower IS of her ) Sturm ith utter er pretty to make Ireparing. ing ne^- |ce too, if on, how- ■st, upon [Are you luld quit Lieber ell, take irning to id towel, smoothed le, " You than one It just as a we reached the ball-room, the galop was drawing to a conclusion. This, however, I had foreseen ; and in consequence of a message previously despatched to the orchestra, the moment our hostess- and I entered, the Sturm Marsch raged with redoubled fury, and soon bore us oiT flying before the gale. A glance from her hus- band, however, caused my Cinderella to dive into the lower regions again, before the termination of the dance, exclaiming, as I caught the last glimpse of her, " Well ! perhaps after supper." I continued to wander about, and turned my attention to the bride ; but she was '^hasslich" — plain, so I consoled myself with supper, and sent a dozen of wine to the orchestra, which I afL rwards heard had been presented to them with the c*.^ i lents of the great English lord from the " Felzen Gt '..f^." After supper I regained my beautiful hostess, who, in addition to a more becoming change in her dress, had donned a pair of newer shoes, that did not come off every moment in dancing. Shortly after we reappeared, the Hockheimer was finished in the gallery, whence, in gratitude or honour to me, " God save the Queen '* rang out its thrilling harmonies from seventeen brass throats. I felt so touched by the compliment, that I think I should have sent another dozen aloft, but for the expostulations of my fair partner, who was appre- hensive of its influence on the music. I remained so late, that all che omnibuses had returned to town, except the one destined for the conveyance of the orchestra, with whom I took my place at two in the morning, to return to the planter's house. In conversa- tion with them, I happened to ask if they knew a favourite polka of mine. " Oh, ja I" and in an instant all the brass instruments were blazing aAvay in the con- fined space of the crowded omnibus. Fortunately, how- ever, before the drum of my ear gave way, the axletree did, and down we came with a jolt that put an end to in 218 RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. 11 harmony ; off rolled one of the ^vheels, and — '' chaqu'un pour soi " — each had to make his way home as well as he could. Soon afterwards I bid farewell to St. Louis. The steamboat which was to convey my menagerie had two large provision-barges in tow Lashed alongside of her, containing Indian corn, wheat, cotton, and hay, freight to New Orleans, in consequence of which she was unable to continue her voyage at night ; so allowing this to start before me with all my live lumber on board, I took passage in another, and travelling all night as well as day, stopped at Cairo (otherwise the immor- talized "city of Eden'' in "Martin Chuzzlewit '') on the mouth of the Ohio. Eden really did prove a "jolly'" place to me, though not in Mark Taplcy's acceptation of the word ; for as I arrived there very early in the morning, I immediately sallied out to hunt, rightly cal- culating that the other boat could not overtake me much before noon on the following day. I had a most suc- cessful hunt, and shot two very fine bucks, which I dragged out of the woody swamp to a waggon-track and left there, heaping wood upon the carcases to protect them from vultures, and purposing to send a horse for them on my return. I also l)agged a brace of turkeys, which I carried on my back, and reached the hotel (which was a condemned river steamboat) very late in the evening. Next morning an American farmer most kindly volunteered to find and bring home my venison, as I could not risk the loss of my passage by going in quest of it myself. About ten o'clock he returned witli the stags in a light cart just as the steamer came up, and in time to put them on board, whence they were stowed in the ice-box, and finally eaten by my friends in New Orleans, who found them excellent, and likewise the turkeys, which were very fat. One day, after a heavy shower of rain, I was sum- haqu'un 1 -well as is. The had two 3 of her, \j, freight she was allowing on board, night as e immor- )wit") on a "jolly" cceptation rly in the iglitly cal- 3 me much most suc- , which I •track and to protect I horse for )f turkeys, the hotel rery late in irmer most ly venison, 3y going in iurned with }r came up, e they were my friends ^nd likewise [ was sum- BRUIN TAKES CARE OF NUMBER 0^'E. 219 nioned on deck by the peals of laughter over the dining cabin. On going above to discover the cause of the merriment, I saw that the bear was gone, and his chain broken. The pilot, who had been relieved a few minutes before, now led me forward to inspect his caboose, which was surrounded by the passengers and deck-hands all in fits of laughter. I could not make out the cause of it at first, until one of the bystanders pulled a corner of the blanket of tlie pilot's bed, when, to my surprise, the jerk was answered by an indolent growl ! — my friend Bruin having got drenched by the shower, had broken his chain in disgust, and actually found his way to the pilot's bed, clambered into it, and rolled himself com- fortably up in the blankets. The good-humoured pilot was not in the least angry, but, on the contrary, highly amused, replying to my apologies as I kicked out his strange bed-fellow, " Oh ! never mind, mister ; why, what's the hindrance to the blankets being dried again V and " Well, well, now ! Fll be d — d if he ain't a knowin' coon." I thought to myself, whether one of my countrymen, or indeed I myself, would have taken the joke in such good part. On arriving at New Orleans, my first care was to provide an abode for my bisons and other animals, and next a ship in which to transport them. Some weeks, however, elapsed before I succeeded in engaging their passage by the ^l^^' some serious accidents. One old gentleman, wlio was riding a very fresh young horse, had just barely time to dismount and hold him, by the advice of my outrider, when he commenced trembling and snorting as he winded the cow ; and finally, on her nearer approach, broke right away from the gentleman, and rushing wildly through the town, was not retaken without considerable difficulty. I engaged a carpenter to build me a wooden house, which the captain allowed to be screwed firmly on to the deck of the vessel, affording me every assistance in his power, and the aid of his own ship's carpenter : this house was divided into compartments, and lined with canvass, well stuffed and padded, to prevent any injury to the bisons from their being knocked about, in the event of rough weather. The other animals were very easily stowed awa;/. The bear proved to be the most entertaining member of the whole ship's company ; he ate, drank, and played with the sailors, and proved such a source of amusement to them, that tlie captain, whom I since have had the pleasure of meeting, told me tliat he would gladly engage always to take a bear with him when he went to sea in future. Bruin was also great friends with the little antelope, and proved on one occasion a most valuable ally. A friend of mine, Mr. Fisher, was leading the latter through the streets to the vessel, while I was following a short distance behind with the bear, when the antelope was attacked by a large mastiff ; my friend kept the brute off with his stick as well as he could, calling loudly to me for assistance. I rushed to the rescue instantly, but soon found that the bear not only ran faster than I did, but was determined to tackle the mastiff himself; so, letting go his chain, I cheered him on at the dog, who, finding himself attacked, turned on the bear, and a splendid fight ensued. At first Bruin fought only with his THE BALIZE. 221 wlio was r time to outrider, e winded h, broke g wildly siderable m house, flly on to gtance in iter : this led with ny injury t, in the were very the most 3any ; he )ved such in, whom 1 me tliat with him also great . on one of mine, he streets distance attacked 3 off with to me for , but soon I did, but so, letting 10, findirig .1 splendid with his powerful arms, flinging the dog over and over several times, till at last the latter, cheered on by his owner to renew the fight, succeeded in giving the bear a pretty sharp pinch ; upon which Bruin, getting furious, tlirew himself on his antagonist, and hugging him in his arms, endeavoured to tear him with his teeth. I thought it was all up now with the luckless dog, and felt ither sorry for his fate, when I heard his stifled gurgling ; fortunately, however, with a last spasmodic struggle prompted by despair, the poor dog extricated himself, and ran away howling. I embarked on board the vessel with my menagerie, and proceeded down to one of the numerous mouths of the Mississippi, called the Balize ; intending, as soon as the vessel put to sea, to borrow a boat, and endeavour to obtain some duck-shooting. Ao we descended, we passed continual sngar-plantations, dotted with the residences of their owners, until w^e reached chaos again, where trees disappear, and reeds and canes mark the silent waste, — the contemplation of which is in the last degree depressing to the spirits. The village of the Balize consists of a few wooden houses built on piles, and inhabited by fishermen, and those in charge of the lighthouse there ; and so thorough a swamp is this miserable spot, that the paths to, and in front of the houses, are along planks of wood. At the request of Captain Crozier, the officer in charge of the place lent me a very fine boat, and a negro who had been in the habit of sailing her. Next morning at high water the Ahbellino passed the bar of the river, and sailed for Liverpool ; while Fisher and I, with our negro boatman, set out on a cruise after ducks, snipe, and alligators. 222 GAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. ]n CHAPTER XIII. Snipe and Duck-shooting. — Norwegian Sportsman. — A wounded Alligator proves a disagreeable Boating Companion. — Negro torn by an Alligator. — The Falcon. — Chagres. — Storming the Spanish Fort. — Tropical Thunderstorm. — Panamh,. — Santa Anna Cathedral. — The Pope inexorable. — Home by English Mail Steamer. We enjoyed tolerable sport by getting out of the boat, Tvlicre the swamp was sufficiently firm to bear us with- out sinking more than knee-deep. While beating over those places that were free from canes, we shot a few snipes, one or two ducks, and some teal ; and, after a hard day's rowing, and wading nearly up to the middle in water, we arrived at a miserable hut, tenanted by a very poor sickly couple, with a large unhealthy family. The poor people invited us with a welcome to all their miserable little hovel afforded ; but as I had brought with me plenty of biscuits, pork, cheese, a box of sardines, coffee, sugar, brandy, and cigars, besides a little money, my poor hosts were not long before they discovered that 'Hhey had entertained angels unawares.'^ The following day we repaired to a flooded swamp, the beat of several men who were in the habit of shooting wild fowl for the New Orleans market. We found a Norwegian with his canoe very hard at work, with whom I fraternized : he was at first rather disappointed at seeing us, but I soon assured him that we would not spoil his sport. First I bought one or two teal he had killed, and secondly told him, if he would take us to the passes in his canoe, I would in the evening pur- chase from him whatever we three had bagged in the day. He then proceeded to place us one after the other — as the canoe could only contain two persons at a time — in hii DISAGREEABLE BOATING COMPANION. 223 wounded n.— Negro rming the Einta Anna lisli Mail the boat, us witli- ting over tiot a few d, after a le middle nted by a .y family, all their brought box of besides a )fore they lawares.'^ amp, the shooting found a 3rk, with appointed would not al he had ;ake us to ning pur- 11 the day. other — as time— in ambush, at two passes over which the water-fowl were constantly in the habit of flying, and ensconced himself in his own retreat ; when, by means of an instrument, he imitated the cackling of water-fowl, bringing them over his head ; and, on his firing, they frequently flew towards Fisher's or my retreat, affording us fair shots ; so that in the evening we mustered a bag of nine ducks, seven teal, and threo or four snipes. Late that night, as we were silently gliding across the mouth of one of the passes of the river by the light of a splendid full moon, and before a gentle breeze, the negro pointed out what he asserted to be an aUigator, lying asleep on a large snag in the water. For some time I thought it only a second crooked stem lying against the snag, twisted in some fantastical shape : however, I drew the shot out of a heavy duck -gun that lay in the bow of the boat, and not having a bullet about me, substituted a charge of buck-shot. Seeing that the wind was favourable, I desired the negro to steer close alongside ; and we soon passed within eight or ten yards of the brute, on which I gave him a shot in the head, which I thought had done for him. We lost not a moment in securing him ; the nigger got out and fastened a rope round over the fore-part, and a hitch round the tail, and after a good haul we three heaved him into the boat, an undertaking that gave us enough to do. We had hardly completed our task, and taken a horn in honour of the event, when — even while congratulating ourselves on our success in safely stowing him along the bottom of the boat, — up rose his ponderous tail, descending in the following second with a slash that made the knees of the boat shake again. *' By golly, master,'' said our black boatman, ^' I wish him nebber had come into this boat ;" and we heartily wished our prize in his more congenial element again. 1 11 I 111 If 224 RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. as luiili after lash of his ponderous tail followed in rapid succession, oreaking up the thwarts, which one after another went flying about, either striking us or tailing into the water, accompanied by groans from blacky ; who grasped his shins with his hands, in sure indication of the utmost nigger uneasiness. I was utterly per- plexed, — not daring to fire for fear of swamping the boat, — and unable with my knife to pierce through his tremendous scales. Fortunately, however, our sound little Yankee craft stood the leviathan shocks, and at length the alligator safely expired ; when we drew a long breath again, put up our helm, and reached the squatter s hut again before the moon disappeared. Next day wc hailed a tug steamer, which picked us up, and took us back to New Orleans. A few days afterwards my friend Mr. Taylor and I crossed the river from New Orleans to the Algiers side, breakfasted with Mr. Gardere, with whom we after- wards went in two canoes alligator-shooting. We wounded one or two, which we failed in getting : however, I think the principal reason of our want of success was Taylor's comic songs, which he persevered in singing, notwith- standing all our remonstrances. While sculling among these flooded swamps, wo steered through a lovely grove of orange-trees, stretching at each side of the Bayou, along which we were gliding ; these contrasted most wonderfully with the dismal rank vegetation in this but partially explored region, and I afterwards learned how the growth of this beautiful orange-grove was to be accounted for. A party, more than twenty years previous to my visit, had been out duck-shooting there, having, among other eatables, brouglit out a quantity of oranges with them, which they had then and there eaten, and throwing away the skins into a luxuriant deposit, the seedlings had sprouted up ; and now a most beautiful orange-grove remains to THE " TALCON." 225 in rapid one after or tailing blacky ; ndication tcrly per- nping the rough his ur sound :s, and at drew a 'ached the red. Next IS up, and 'aylor and kicrs side, we after- [e wounded er, I think is Taylor's ;, notwith- amps, we stretching 'e gliding ; snial rank ion, and I beautilul arty, more been out eatables, m, which away the d sprouted emains to this day to mark the spot. On our way back to Mr. Gardere's Iiousc, and near the cultivated portion of his plantation, he pointed out a single tree on tbc bank of the Bayou, down which we were paddling and told me that the tree in question had been the means of saving a man's life. One of his negroes, a few years ago, was asleep near this watercourse after his dinner, when he was awakened by the clenching of the teetli of an alligator across the calf of his leg. The monster, in spite of the most frantic resistance of tlie negro, was rapidly dragging him down to the water, on his way to wliich he fortunately passed the tree, wliich his victim immediately grasped in his arms, and held on by the trunk, until his screams summoned the rest of the negroes to the spot : their arrival fortunately induced the alligator to let go his hold, and rush back into the water again, leaving the man's leg dreadfully lacerated. The man subsequently recovered, but remains lame for life, from the fearful manner in which the muscles of his leg had been lacerated by the alligator. Negroes have often informed me that the llesh of the alligator is very good, and eats like beef; however, I never put its tlavour to the test. The time liad now arrived for my departure from New Orleans — a period which I shall ever look back upon with regret. I had been so hospitably received, and had made so many friends, that my farewell round of visits threw me into a lit of the blue devils, from wliich I did not recover till far on my way towards the Havannah ))y the American West Indian mail steamer. We were unable to land at Havannah, owing to a perverse notion the Spanish authorities had taken into their heads, that passengers from New Orleans were contaminated ; but I had an excellent view of the har- bour. In the evening the Falcon steamer came along- 226 RAMBLES AND ADVliNTUllES. side for our Ciiliforniaii friends, and I sliiftcd my traps into her, preferring; to niter n»y route lionu', and ;;oino round hy the Istlunus of Darien, to pcrloriuin;; <|ua- rantine on a JSpanisli hulk, surrounded hy Kpani«li sentries, a victim of extortionatin^* vietuallern, ami the companion probably of sulfererd from variouri malignant fevers. Our trip to Chao-res on board the Falcon was very pleasant indeed ; the passain,c^' c Mr. King, the subject ent, Colonel istinguislied uth Pacific Icn days, ^vc (lay in siglit Ipson having boat ; being deterniinod to visit Panani;i, and see some of the weHtern coast of the isthmus. (Jliagres JJay is a most lovoly spot; there for the first time 1 beheld a tropical climate in its full irrandeur, with cver-verdant woods growing actually down to tho sea; distorted mangroves, new and strangle fruits, canes, and palms, in tlie greatest ahumlan';e and luxurruu^e, as in a scene from a fairy talo. iSug'ir-cjinc, whicii had never been the [)rey of man's cov(!tousness, giows free and wild to the extravagjint height of suvenieen feet, while the banana-leaf, shaped like a giganuc ac< of spades, expands its length of sixteen feet, and me i ^ues five feet across. A fine old Spanish fort (built, some say. by IMzarro, others by pirates) stands on a splendid bold angle of cliff, itself a strong and vory curious old ])lace. 'J^ho houses of Chagres are built of canes, lofted in the same way, and thatched with leaves : the inhiibitants are mostly very poor and miserable. A wonderful con- glomeration of races, bred between the white, red, and blacks, has taken place in this peninsula ; they are a docile, laborious set, and if only directed by any enter- ])rising leader, would soon render <^^M'ir country a fertile one, and become themselves a thri j^g community. It is a great mistake to state, as some travellers have done, that they are a set of la7,y, idle rascals, for such is really not the case ; if set io do any kind of work, no matter how laborious, they will go through with it. I ordered a canoe for Gorgona, almost the head of the navigation of the Chagres river ; and while the men were cooking and eating their dinners, preparing tho canoe, Sec, I went with an American acquaintance to visit the fort, — the easiest ascent to which, even on the land side, was very steep. On arriving near the open gate of the fort, the garrison, which consisted of five q2 228 RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. 11 lit* men, refused us admission unless we paid them, and at the same time barred the wicket. My friend then drew a most awful-looking bowie-knife, while I, applying my shoulder to the wicket, burst it open, when we both quietly marched on, and witliout noticing the garrison, continued to inspect the different objects which most interested us. The guns of the fort were long thirty- twos, of most costly-looking material, a sort of bell- metal perhaps, but certainly a composition in which silver largely entered. On these beautiful pieces of ordnance the arms of Spain were magnificently em- blazoned ; also the date when they were cast. I regret, however, that I omitted to make a note of it ; but my impression is, that the figures are a.d. 1573. The guns are in a fine state of preservation, though their carriages are in various stages of decomposition, crum- bling from age, and most of them are crushed bent-atli the weight of the superincumbent metal. On our departure we found the garrison drawn up in front of the gate by which our exit was to be effected, each armed with his rusty musket without a bayonet. A glance satisfied me that they were, even if loaded, not very likely to go off ; so my companion and I halted ; handing me his tremendous bowie-knife to flourish, he drew a five-barrelled revolver, while I threatened, in a mixture of bad Italian and worse Latin — which I in- tended for Spanish — that hostilities would instantly commence on our side if they did not immediately open the wicket- gate, which summons they at last sulkily obeyed. In the evening, at a little before sunset, I commenced my ascent of the Chagres river. The wild, tangled tropical vegetation along the banks was indescribably grand, and the air was filled with the discordant screams of macquaws, parrots, and parroquets of all sizes. Wc TROPICAL THUNDERSTORM. 2 2D 1, and at hen drew lying my we both garrison, lich most ig thirty- ; of bell- in which pieces of ently em- I regret, , ; but my 73. The 3ugh their ion, crum- }d beneath On our in front of cted, each .yonet. A loaded, not I halted ; lourish, he toned, in a vhich I in- 1 instantly lately open ast sulkily commenced ild, tangled describably int screams sizes. "VVc paddled along by tlic light of a splendid moon till very late, when we reached a small village ; the houses of which, like those of Chagres, were constructed of reeds and thatched with cocoa-leaves. The sound of a drum announced that a fandango was taking place in front of the houses on the bank. I went ashore, preceded by my boatman, who soon escaped, got drunk, and left me in the lurch ; so finding I had nothing for it but to submit to circumstances and make the best of it, I joined the dancers, and when the fandango was over, was invited into one of the houses, where I passed the night. One-half of this habitation was lofted inside with strong canes fastened together ; and the very primitive substitute for a staircase was a large log of wood quite in the rough, with one end on the ground and the other leaning against the edge of the loft, and having notches cut in it, by means of which the inmates of the house went up or down — an exercise requiring considerable practice and expertness to accomplish with safety. I rose before daylight, anxious to perform as much of the remainder of my journey as possible before the noonday heat should overtake us. I had considerable difficulty in finding my two boatmen, but at last got under way, though not before I was obliged to dissipate some of the fumes of the fore^'oins,' nidit's carouse from the senses of the elder of the two by a wholesome stern application of the flat of my paddle ; whereupon he jumped up with the utmost alacrity, rubbed the part affected, took his place in the boat, and paddled away as briskly as ever. The day became so hot at twelve o'clock, that we did not resume our journey until after four, and we had hardly started again, when a violent thunderstorm commenced. I was greatly entertained with the proceedings of my men, who 2S0 RAMBLES AND ADVENTURES. intently Thatched for the first symptoms of rain ; and as soon as they saw pretty clear indications of " agua/' undressed themselves, stripping off every single article of apparel, and, rolling them up in a piece of oiled cloth with which each was provided, quietly went on paddling in a calm which was truly awful. Nature seeming to collect her energies for the fearful burst which succeeded ; even the noisy birds feeling the influence, and hushing their discordant cries. At last the storm broke. The thunder, instead of rolling, broke overhead with a crash like ten thou- sand gongs — a stunning, maddening sound, utterly unlike the sublime, awe-inspiring roll in our latitudes ; the warm rain poured down in massive columns, almost checking my breath, as mouth and nostrils filled at each respiration. And now for the first time in my life I saw a tree struck by lightning, the flash falling on one a short distance off, riving the huge trunk, and sending the splinters flying far and wide from the spot. The storm did not last long, but suddenly, as the change of a panorama, gave way to a lovely sunset ; the little monkeys crept along to the extremities of the branches, to stroke and dry their dripping fur, and parrots and macquaws flew about and screamed as noi.sily as ever. Even before we reached Gorgona, the ascent of the Chagres river becam'^ very difiicult, the stream proving too strong for us to make any further way with our paddles, and we were consequently obliged to punt our way along with the boat-poles. I reached Gorgona early on the followina- day, whence I took a pony to Panama, where I arrived on the evening of the third day from Chagres. My ride on that day was a very easy one, for although there was no regularly-made road, the track was very clearly defined, and led through SANTA ANNA CATHEDRAL. 231 of rain ; ations of )ff every . up in a provided, was truly !S for tlie )isy birds liscordant T, instead ten tiiou- a, utterly latitudes ; ns, almost J filled at in my life falling on runk, and the spot. y, as the y sunset ; ties of the 5 fur, and reamed as ;ent of the ,m proving f with our ) punt our i Gorgona a pony to the third vas a very larly-made ed through forests, up and down hills, along valleys, and densely wooded causeways : so thick was the parasitical and orchidaceous vegetation, that to penetrate the woods in any direction but that indicated by the path would have been impossible, without the aid of the very long knife or sword used by the natives to cut through the tangled mass. Every here and there the track was strewn with dving; and dead horses, some far advanced in decomposition ; while the white bleaching skeletons could be seen dotted all along it in advance from every rising ground and crest of hill during the journey. Panama is a most curious and interesting old Spanish town, and, with the exception perhaps of a small part of New Orleans, utterly different in architecture from any town on the Atlantic coast of America. It was late and nearly dark when I arrived ; but, even before reaching the walls, I was hailed by some Americans, inquiring the news from the United States. Their numbers rapidly increased to a large assembly, and I had to rein up my tired horse and answer, I fear but very vaguely, to many anxious inquiries, giving them finally a very spurious account of the state of politics in their country since their absence, in a speech which I made to them from horseback. It seems I had, by travelling so rapidly, anticipated the mail; which did not arrive till the following day. The next day was Sunday, and I went to visit the cathedral of Santa Anna, one of the oldest European structures in America : its architecture was nothing wonderful ; and the only things calculated to attract either interest or curiosity, are the large and beautiful shells with which it is ornamented on the outside. I went to hear mass there, and was struck with the wonderful rapidity with which the old vescow got through it, and said as much to an old man with whom RAMBLES AND ADVrNTURES. I had made acquaintance the day before, and who was aGCompanyin