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'The Naval War of 1812, or, The History of the United States Navy During the Last War With Great Britain: to which is appended an account of the Battle of New Orleans', by Theodore Roosevelt, together with Bestselling American history books, plus videos and DVDs on the history of the United States of America, from Books-On-History.Com

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'THE OREGON TRAIL'

by Francis Parkman, Jr.
(1823-1893)


CONTENTS


I  THE FRONTIER

II  BREAKING THE ICE

III  FORT LEAVENWORTH

IV  "JUMPING OFF"

V  "THE BIG BLUE"

VI  THE PLATTE AND THE DESERT

VII  THE BUFFALO

VIII  TAKING FRENCH LEAVE

IX  SCENES AT FORT LARAMIE

X  THE WAR PARTIES

XI  SCENES AT THE CAMP

XII  ILL LUCK

XIII  HUNTING INDIANS

XIV  THE OGALLALLA VILLAGR

XV  THE HUNTING CAMP

XVI  THE TRAPPERS

XVII  THE BLACK HILLS

XVIII  A MOUNTAIN HUNT

XIX  PASSAGE OF THE MOUNTAINS

XX  THE LONELY JOURNEY

XXI  THE PUEBLO AND BENT'S FORT

XXII  TETE ROUGE, THE VOLUNTEER

XXIII  INDIAN ALARMS

XXIV  THE CHASE

XXV  THE BUFFALO CAMP

XXVI  DOWN THE ARKANSAS

XXVII  THE SETTLEMENTS



CHAPTER I

THE FRONTIER


Last spring, 1846, was a busy season in the City of St. Louis.  Not 
only were emigrants from every part of the country preparing for the 
journey to Oregon and California, but an unusual number of traders 
were making ready their wagons and outfits for Santa Fe.  Many of the 
emigrants, especially of those bound for California, were persons of 
wealth and standing.  The hotels were crowded, and the gunsmiths and 
saddlers were kept constantly at work in providing arms and 
equipments for the different parties of travelers.  Almost every day 
steamboats were leaving the levee and passing up the Missouri, 
crowded with passengers on their way to the frontier.

In one of these, the Radnor, since snagged and lost, my friend and 
relative, Quincy A. Shaw, and myself, left St. Louis on the 28th of 
April, on a tour of curiosity and amusement to the Rocky Mountains.  
The boat was loaded until the water broke alternately over her 
guards.  Her upper deck was covered with large weapons of a peculiar 
form, for the Santa Fe trade, and her hold was crammed with goods for 
the same destination.  There were also the equipments and provisions 
of a party of Oregon emigrants, a band of mules and horses, piles of 
saddles and harness, and a multitude of nondescript articles, 
indispensable on the prairies.  Almost hidden in this medley one 
might have seen a small French cart, of the sort very appropriately 
called a "mule-killer" beyond the frontiers, and not far distant a 
tent, together with a miscellaneous assortment of boxes and barrels.  
The whole equipage was far from prepossessing in its appearance; yet, 
such as it was, it was destined to a long and arduous journey, on 
which the persevering reader will accompany it.

The passengers on board the Radnor corresponded with her freight.  In 
her cabin were Santa Fe traders, gamblers, speculators, and 
adventurers of various descriptions, and her steerage was crowded 
with Oregon emigrants, "mountain men," negroes, and a party of Kansas 
Indians, who had been on a visit to St. Louis.

Thus laden, the boat struggled upward for seven or eight days against 
the rapid current of the Missouri, grating upon snags, and hanging 
for two or three hours at a time upon sand-bars.  We entered the 
mouth of the Missouri in a drizzling rain, but the weather soon 
became clear, and showed distinctly the broad and turbid river, with 
its eddies, its sand-bars, its ragged islands, and forest-covered 
shores.  The Missouri is constantly changing its course; wearing away 
its banks on one side, while it forms new ones on the other.  Its 
channel is shifting continually.  Islands are formed, and then washed 
away; and while the old forests on one side are undermined and swept 
off, a young growth springs up from the new soil upon the other.  
With all these changes, the water is so charged with mud and sand 
that it is perfectly opaque, and in a few minutes deposits a sediment 
an inch thick in the bottom of a tumbler.  The river was now high; 
but when we descended in the autumn it was fallen very low, and all 
the secrets of its treacherous shallows were exposed to view.  It was 
frightful to see the dead and broken trees, thick-set as a military 
abatis, firmly imbedded in the sand, and all pointing down stream, 
ready to impale any unhappy steamboat that at high water should pass 
over that dangerous ground.

In five or six days we began to see signs of the great western 
movement that was then taking place.  Parties of emigrants, with 
their tents and wagons, would be encamped on open spots near the 
bank, on their way to the common rendezvous at Independence.  On a 
rainy day, near sunset, we reached the landing of this place, which 
is situated some miles from the river, on the extreme frontier of 
Missouri.  The scene was characteristic, for here were represented at 
one view the most remarkable features of this wild and enterprising 
region.  On the muddy shore stood some thirty or forty dark slavish-
looking Spaniards, gazing stupidly out from beneath their broad hats.  
They were attached to one of the Santa Fe companies, whose wagons 
were crowded together on the banks above.  In the midst of these, 
crouching over a smoldering fire, was a group of Indians, belonging 
to a remote Mexican tribe.  One or two French hunters from the 
mountains with their long hair and buckskin dresses, were looking at 
the boat; and seated on a log close at hand were three men, with 
rifles lying across their knees.  The foremost of these, a tall, 
strong figure, with a clear blue eye and an open, intelligent face, 
might very well represent that race of restless and intrepid pioneers 
whose axes and rifles have opened a path from the Alleghenies to the 
western prairies.  He was on his way to Oregon, probably a more 
congenial field to him than any that now remained on this side the 
great plains.

Early on the next morning we reached Kansas, about five hundred miles 
from the mouth of the Missouri.  Here we landed and leaving our 
equipments in charge of my good friend Colonel Chick, whose log-house 
was the substitute for a tavern, we set out in a wagon for Westport, 
where we hoped to procure mules and horses for the journey.

It was a remarkably fresh and beautiful May morning.  The rich and 
luxuriant woods through which the miserable road conducted us were 
lighted by the bright sunshine and enlivened by a multitude of birds.  
We overtook on the way our late fellow-travelers, the Kansas Indians, 
who, adorned with all their finery, were proceeding homeward at a 
round pace; and whatever they might have seemed on board the boat, 
they made a very striking and picturesque feature in the forest 
landscape.

Westport was full of Indians, whose little shaggy ponies were tied by 
dozens along the houses and fences.  Sacs and Foxes, with shaved 
heads and painted faces, Shawanoes and Delawares, fluttering in 
calico frocks, and turbans, Wyandottes dressed like white men, and a 
few wretched Kansas wrapped in old blankets, were strolling about the 
streets, or lounging in and out of the shops and houses.

As I stood at the door of the tavern, I saw a remarkable looking 
person coming up the street.  He had a ruddy face, garnished with the 
stumps of a bristly red beard and mustache; on one side of his head 
was a round cap with a knob at the top, such as Scottish laborers 
sometimes wear; his coat was of a nondescript form, and made of a 
gray Scotch plaid, with the fringes hanging all about it; he wore 
pantaloons of coarse homespun, and hob-nailed shoes; and to complete 
his equipment, a little black pipe was stuck in one corner of his 
mouth.  In this curious attire, I recognized Captain C. of the 
British army, who, with his brother, and Mr. R., an English 
gentleman, was bound on a hunting expedition across the continent.  I 
had seen the captain and his companions at St. Louis.  They had now 
been for some time at Westport, making preparations for their 
departure, and waiting for a re-enforcement, since they were too few 
in number to attempt it alone.  They might, it is true, have joined 
some of the parties of emigrants who were on the point of setting out 
for Oregon and California; but they professed great disinclination to 
have any connection with the "Kentucky fellows."

The captain now urged it upon us, that we should join forces and 
proceed to the mountains in company.  Feeling no greater partiality 
for the society of the emigrants than they did, we thought the 
arrangement an advantageous one, and consented to it.  Our future 
fellow-travelers had installed themselves in a little log-house, 
where we found them all surrounded by saddles, harness, guns, 
pistols, telescopes, knives, and in short their complete appointments 
for the prairie.  R., who professed a taste for natural history, sat 
at a table stuffing a woodpecker; the brother of the captain, who was 
an Irishman, was splicing a trail-rope on the floor, as he had been 
an amateur sailor.  The captain pointed out, with much complacency, 
the different articles of their outfit.  "You see," said he, "that we 
are all old travelers.  I am convinced that no party ever went upon 
the prairie better provided."  The hunter whom they had employed, a 
surly looking Canadian, named Sorel, and their muleteer, an American 
from St. Louis, were lounging about the building.  In a little log 
stable close at hand were their horses and mules, selected by the 
captain, who was an excellent judge.

The alliance entered into, we left them to complete their 
arrangements, while we pushed our own to all convenient speed.  The 
emigrants for whom our friends professed such contempt were encamped 
on the prairie about eight or ten miles distant, to the number of a 
thousand or more, and new parties were constantly passing out from 
Independence to join them.  They were in great confusion, holding 
meetings, passing resolutions, and drawing up regulations, but unable 
to unite in the choice of leaders to conduct them across the prairie.  
Being at leisure one day, I rode over to Independence.  The town was 
crowded.  A multitude of shops had sprung up to furnish the emigrants 
and Santa Fe traders with necessaries for their journey; and there 
was an incessant hammering and banging from a dozen blacksmiths' 
sheds, where the heavy wagons were being repaired, and the horses and 
oxen shod.  The streets were thronged with men, horses, and mules.  
While I was in the town, a train of emigrant wagons from Illinois 
passed through, to join the camp on the prairie, and stopped in the 
principal street.  A multitude of healthy children's faces were 
peeping out from under the covers of the wagons.  Here and there a 
buxom damsel was seated on horseback, holding over her sunburnt face 
an old umbrella or a parasol, once gaudy enough but now miserably 
faded.  The men, very sober-looking countrymen, stood about their 
oxen; and as I passed I noticed three old fellows, who, with their 
long whips in their hands, were zealously discussing the doctrine of 
regeneration.  The emigrants, however, are not all of this stamp.  
Among them are some of the vilest outcasts in the country.  I have 
often perplexed myself to divine the various motives that give 
impulse to this strange migration; but whatever they may be, whether 
an insane hope of a better condition in life, or a desire of shaking 
off restraints of law and society, or mere restlessness, certain it 
is that multitudes bitterly repent the journey, and after they have 
reached the land of promise are happy enough to escape from it.

In the course of seven or eight days we had brought our preparations 
near to a close.  Meanwhile our friends had completed theirs, and 
becoming tired of Westport, they told us that they would set out in 
advance and wait at the crossing of the Kansas till we should come 
up.  Accordingly R. and the muleteers went forward with the wagon and 
tent, while the captain and his brother, together with Sorel, and a 
trapper named Boisverd, who had joined them, followed with the band 
of horses.  The commencement of the journey was ominous, for the 
captain was scarcely a mile from Westport, riding along in state at 
the head of his party, leading his intended buffalo horse by a rope, 
when a tremendous thunderstorm came on, and drenched them all to the 
skin.  They hurried on to reach the place, about seven miles off, 
where R. was to have had the camp in readiness to receive them.  But 
this prudent person, when he saw the storm approaching, had selected 
a sheltered glade in the woods, where he pitched his tent, and was 
sipping a comfortable cup of coffee, while the captain galloped for 
miles beyond through the rain to look for him.  At length the storm 
cleared away, and the sharp-eyed trapper succeeded in discovering his 
tent: R. had by this time finished his coffee, and was seated on a 
buffalo robe smoking his pipe.  The captain was one of the most easy-
tempered men in existence, so he bore his ill-luck with great 
composure, shared the dregs of the coffee with his brother, and lay 
down to sleep in his wet clothes.

We ourselves had our share of the deluge.  We were leading a pair of 
mules to Kansas when the storm broke.  Such sharp and incessant 
flashes of lightning, such stunning and continuous thunder, I have 
never known before.  The woods were completely obscured by the 
diagonal sheets of rain that fell with a heavy roar, and rose in 
spray from the ground; and the streams rose so rapidly that we could 
hardly ford them.  At length, looming through the rain, we saw the 
log-house of Colonel Chick, who received us with his usual bland 
hospitality; while his wife, who, though a little soured and 
stiffened by too frequent attendance on camp-meetings, was not behind 
him in hospitable feeling, supplied us with the means of repairing 
our drenched and bedraggled condition.  The storm, clearing away at 
about sunset, opened a noble prospect from the porch of the colonel's 
house, which stands upon a high hill.  The sun streamed from the 
breaking clouds upon the swift and angry Missouri, and on the immense 
expanse of luxuriant forest that stretched from its banks back to the 
distant bluffs.

Returning on the next day to Westport, we received a message from the 
captain, who had ridden back to deliver it in person, but finding 
that we were in Kansas, had intrusted it with an acquaintance of his 
named Vogel, who kept a small grocery and liquor shop.  Whisky by the 
way circulates more freely in Westport than is altogether safe in a 
place where every man carries a loaded pistol in his pocket.  As we 
passed this establishment, we saw Vogel's broad German face and 
knavish-looking eyes thrust from his door.  He said he had something 
to tell us, and invited us to take a dram.  Neither his liquor nor 
his message was very palatable.  The captain had returned to give us 
notice that R., who assumed the direction of his party, had 
determined upon another route from that agreed upon between us; and 
instead of taking the course of the traders, to pass northward by 
Fort Leavenworth, and follow the path marked out by the dragoons in 
their expedition of last summer.  To adopt such a plan without 
consulting us, we looked upon as a very high-handed proceeding; but 
suppressing our dissatisfaction as well as we could, we made up our 
minds to join them at Fort Leavenworth, where they were to wait for 
us.

Accordingly, our preparation being now complete, we attempted one 
fine morning to commence our journey.  The first step was an 
unfortunate one.  No sooner were our animals put in harness, than the 
shaft mule reared and plunged, burst ropes and straps, and nearly 
flung the cart into the Missouri.  Finding her wholly uncontrollable, 
we exchanged her for another, with which we were furnished by our 
friend Mr. Boone of Westport, a grandson of Daniel Boone, the 
pioneer.  This foretaste of prairie experience was very soon followed 
by another.  Westport was scarcely out of sight, when we encountered 
a deep muddy gully, of a species that afterward became but too 
familiar to us; and here for the space of an hour or more the car 
stuck fast.



CHAPTER II

BREAKING THE ICE


Both Shaw and myself were tolerably inured to the vicissitudes of 
traveling.  We had experienced them under various forms, and a birch 
canoe was as familiar to us as a steamboat.  The restlessness, the 
love of wilds and hatred of cities, natural perhaps in early years to 
every unperverted son of Adam, was not our only motive for 
undertaking the present journey.  My companion hoped to shake off the 
effects of a disorder that had impaired a constitution originally 
hardy and robust; and I was anxious to pursue some inquiries relative 
to the character and usages of the remote Indian nations, being 
already familiar with many of the border tribes.

Emerging from the mud-hole where we last took leave of the reader, we 
pursued our way for some time along the narrow track, in the 
checkered sunshine and shadow of the woods, till at length, issuing 
forth into the broad light, we left behind us the farthest outskirts 
of that great forest, that once spread unbroken from the western 
plains to the shore of the Atlantic.  Looking over an intervening 
belt of shrubbery, we saw the green, oceanlike expanse of prairie, 
stretching swell over swell to the horizon.

It was a mild, calm spring day; a day when one is more disposed to 
musing and reverie than to action, and the softest part of his nature 
is apt to gain the ascendency.  I rode in advance of the party, as we 
passed through the shrubbery, and as a nook of green grass offered a 
strong temptation, I dismounted and lay down there.  All the trees 
and saplings were in flower, or budding into fresh leaf; the red 
clusters of the maple-blossoms and the rich flowers of the Indian 
apple were there in profusion; and I was half inclined to regret 
leaving behind the land of gardens for the rude and stern scenes of 
the prairie and the mountains.

Meanwhile the party came in sight from out of the bushes.  Foremost 
rode Henry Chatillon, our guide and hunter, a fine athletic figure, 
mounted on a hardy gray Wyandotte pony.  He wore a white blanket-
coat, a broad hat of felt, moccasins, and pantaloons of deerskin, 
ornamented along the seams with rows of long fringes.  His knife was 
stuck in his belt; his bullet-pouch and powder-horn hung at his side, 
and his rifle lay before him, resting against the high pommel of his 
saddle, which, like all his equipments, had seen hard service, and 
was much the worse for wear.  Shaw followed close, mounted on a 
little sorrel horse, and leading a larger animal by a rope.  His 
outfit, which resembled mine, had been provided with a view to use 
rather than ornament.  It consisted of a plain, black Spanish saddle, 
with holsters of heavy pistols, a blanket rolled up behind it, and 
the trail-rope attached to his horse's neck hanging coiled in front.  
He carried a double-barreled smooth-bore, while I boasted a rifle of 
some fifteen pounds' weight.  At that time our attire, though far 
from elegant, bore some marks of civilization, and offered a very 
favorable contrast to the inimitable shabbiness of our appearance on 
the return journey.  A red flannel shirt, belted around the waist 
like a frock, then constituted our upper garment; moccasins had 
supplanted our failing boots; and the remaining essential portion of 
our attire consisted of an extraordinary article, manufactured by a 
squaw out of smoked buckskin.  Our muleteer, Delorier, brought up the 
rear with his cart, waddling ankle-deep in the mud, alternately 
puffing at his pipe, and ejaculating in his prairie patois: 'Sacre 
enfant de garce!" as one of the mules would seem to recoil before 
some abyss of unusual profundity.  The cart was of the kind that one 
may see by scores around the market-place in Montreal, and had a 
white covering to protect the articles within.  These were our 
provisions and a tent, with ammunition, blankets, and presents for 
the Indians.

We were in all four men with eight animals; for besides the spare 
horses led by Shaw and myself, an additional mule was driven along 
with us as a reserve in case of accident.

After this summing up of our forces, it may not be amiss to glance at 
the characters of the two men who accompanied us.

Delorier was a Canadian, with all the characteristics of the true 
Jean Baptiste.  Neither fatigue, exposure, nor hard labor could ever 
impair his cheerfulness and gayety, or his obsequious politeness to 
his bourgeois; and when night came he would sit down by the fire, 
smoke his pipe, and tell stories with the utmost contentment.  In 
fact, the prairie was his congenial element.  Henry Chatillon was of 
a different stamp.  When we were at St. Louis, several gentlemen of 
the Fur Company had kindly offered to procure for us a hunter and 
guide suited for our purposes, and on coming one afternoon to the 
office, we found there a tall and exceedingly well-dressed man with a 
face so open and frank that it attracted our notice at once.  We were 
surprised at being told that it was he who wished to guide us to the 
mountains.  He was born in a little French town near St. Louis, and 
from the age of fifteen years had been constantly in the neighborhood 
of the Rocky Mountains, employed for the most part by the Company to 
supply their forts with buffalo meat.  As a hunter he had but one 
rival in the whole region, a man named Cimoneau, with whom, to the 
honor of both of them, he was on terms of the closest friendship.  He 
had arrived at St. Louis the day before, from the mountains, where he 
had remained for four years; and he now only asked to go and spend a 
day with his mother before setting out on another expedition.  His 
age was about thirty; he was six feet high, and very powerfully and 
gracefully molded.  The prairies had been his school; he could 
neither read nor write, but he had a natural refinement and delicacy 
of mind such as is rarely found, even in women.  His manly face was a 
perfect mirror of uprightness, simplicity, and kindness of heart; he 
had, moreover, a keen perception of character and a tact that would 
preserve him from flagrant error in any society.  Henry had not the 
restless energy of an Anglo-American.  He was content to take things 
as he found them; and his chief fault arose from an excess of easy 
generosity, impelling him to give away too profusely ever to thrive 
in the world.  Yet it was commonly remarked of him, that whatever he 
might choose to do with what belonged to himself, the property of 
others was always safe in his hands.  His bravery was as much 
celebrated in the mountains as his skill in hunting; but it is 
characteristic of him that in a country where the rifle is the chief 
arbiter between man and man, Henry was very seldom involved in 
quarrels.  Once or twice, indeed, his quiet good-nature had been 
mistaken and presumed upon, but the consequences of the error were so 
formidable that no one was ever known to repeat it.  No better 
evidence of the intrepidity of his temper could be wished than the 
common report that he had killed more than thirty grizzly bears.  He 
was a proof of what unaided nature will sometimes do.  I have never, 
in the city or in the wilderness, met a better man than my noble and 
true-hearted friend, Henry Chatillon.

We were soon free of the woods and bushes, and fairly upon the broad 
prairie.  Now and then a Shawanoe passed us, riding his little shaggy 
pony at a "lope"; his calico shirt, his gaudy sash, and the gay 
handkerchief bound around his snaky hair fluttering in the wind.  At 
noon we stopped to rest not far from a little creek replete with 
frogs and young turtles.  There had been an Indian encampment at the 
place, and the framework of their lodges still remained, enabling us 
very easily to gain a shelter from the sun, by merely spreading one 
or two blankets over them.  Thus shaded, we sat upon our saddles, and 
Shaw for the first time lighted his favorite Indian pipe; while 
Delorier was squatted over a hot bed of coals, shading his eyes with 
one hand, and holding a little stick in the other, with which he 
regulated the hissing contents of the frying-pan.  The horses were 
turned to feed among the scattered bushes of a low oozy meadow.  A 
drowzy springlike sultriness pervaded the air, and the voices of ten 
thousand young frogs and insects, just awakened into life, rose in 
varied chorus from the creek and the meadows.

Scarcely were we seated when a visitor approached.  This was an old 
Kansas Indian; a man of distinction, if one might judge from his 
dress.  His head was shaved and painted red, and from the tuft of 
hair remaining on the crown dangled several eagles' feathers, and the 
tails of two or three rattlesnakes.  His cheeks, too, were daubed 
with vermilion; his ears were adorned with green glass pendants; a 
collar of grizzly bears' claws surrounded his neck, and several large 
necklaces of wampum hung on his breast.  Having shaken us by the hand 
with a cordial grunt of salutation, the old man, dropping his red 
blanket from his shoulders, sat down cross-legged on the ground.  In 
the absence of liquor we offered him a cup of sweetened water, at 
which he ejaculated "Good!" and was beginning to tell us how great a 
man he was, and how many Pawnees he had killed, when suddenly a 
motley concourse appeared wading across the creek toward us.  They 
filed past in rapid succession, men, women, and children; some were 
on horseback, some on foot, but all were alike squalid and wretched.  
Old squaws, mounted astride of shaggy, meager little ponies, with 
perhaps one or two snake-eyed children seated behind them, clinging 
to their tattered blankets; tall lank young men on foot, with bows 
and arrows in their hands; and girls whose native ugliness not all 
the charms of glass beads and scarlet cloth could disguise, made up 
the procession; although here and there was a man who, like our 
visitor, seemed to hold some rank in this respectable community.  
They were the dregs of the Kansas nation, who, while their betters 
were gone to hunt buffalo, had left the village on a begging 
expedition to Westport.

When this ragamuffin horde had passed, we caught our horses, saddled, 
harnessed, and resumed our journey.  Fording the creek, the low roofs 
of a number of rude buildings appeared, rising from a cluster of 
groves and woods on the left; and riding up through a long lane, amid 
a profusion of wild roses and early spring flowers, we found the log-
church and school-houses belonging to the Methodist Shawanoe Mission.  
The Indians were on the point of gathering to a religious meeting.  
Some scores of them, tall men in half-civilized dress, were seated on 
wooden benches under the trees; while their horses were tied to the 
sheds and fences.  Their chief, Parks, a remarkably large and 
athletic man, was just arrived from Westport, where he owns a trading 
establishment.  Beside this, he has a fine farm and a considerable 
number of slaves.  Indeed the Shawanoes have made greater progress in 
agriculture than any other tribe on the Missouri frontier; and both 
in appearance and in character form a marked contrast to our late 
acquaintance, the Kansas.

A few hours' ride brought us to the banks of the river Kansas.  
Traversing the woods that lined it, and plowing through the deep 
sand, we encamped not far from the bank, at the Lower Delaware 
crossing.  Our tent was erected for the first time on a meadow close 
to the woods, and the camp preparations being complete we began to 
think of supper.  An old Delaware woman, of some three hundred 
pounds' weight, sat in the porch of a little log-house close to the 
water, and a very pretty half-breed girl was engaged, under her 
superintendence, in feeding a large flock of turkeys that were 
fluttering and gobbling about the door.  But no offers of money, or 
even of tobacco, could induce her to part with one of her favorites; 
so I took my rifle, to see if the woods or the river could furnish us 
anything.  A multitude of quails were plaintively whistling in the 
woods and meadows; but nothing appropriate to the rifle was to be 
seen, except three buzzards, seated on the spectral limbs of an old 
dead sycamore, that thrust itself out over the river from the dense 
sunny wall of fresh foliage.  Their ugly heads were drawn down 
between their shoulders, and they seemed to luxuriate in the soft 
sunshine that was pouring from the west.  As they offered no 
epicurean temptations, I refrained from disturbing their enjoyment; 
but contented myself with admiring the calm beauty of the sunset, for 
the river, eddying swiftly in deep purple shadows between the 
impending woods, formed a wild but tranquillizing scene.

When I returned to the camp I found Shaw and an old Indian seated on 
the ground in close conference, passing the pipe between them.  The 
old man was explaining that he loved the whites, and had an especial 
partiality for tobacco.  Delorier was arranging upon the ground our 
service of tin cups and plates; and as other viands were not to be 
had, he set before us a repast of biscuit and bacon, and a large pot 
of coffee.  Unsheathing our knives, we attacked it, disposed of the 
greater part, and tossed the residue to the Indian.  Meanwhile our 
horses, now hobbled for the first time, stood among the trees, with 
their fore-legs tied together, in great disgust and astonishment.  
They seemed by no means to relish this foretaste of what was before 
them.  Mine, in particular, had conceived a moral aversion to the 
prairie life.  One of them, christened Hendrick, an animal whose 
strength and hardihood were his only merits, and who yielded to 
nothing but the cogent arguments of the whip, looked toward us with 
an indignant countenance, as if he meditated avenging his wrongs with 
a kick.  The other, Pontiac, a good horse, though of plebeian 
lineage, stood with his head drooping and his mane hanging about his 
eyes, with the grieved and sulky air of a lubberly boy sent off to 
school.  Poor Pontiac! his forebodings were but too just; for when I 
last heard from him, he was under the lash of an Ogallalla brave, on 
a war party against the Crows.

As it grew dark, and the voices of the whip-poor-wills succeeded the 
whistle of the quails, we removed our saddles to the tent, to serve 
as pillows, spread our blankets upon the ground, and prepared to 
bivouac for the first time that season.  Each man selected the place 
in the tent which he was to occupy for the journey.  To Delorier, 
however, was assigned the cart, into which he could creep in wet 
weather, and find a much better shelter than his bourgeois enjoyed in 
the tent.

The river Kansas at this point forms the boundary line between the 
country of the Shawanoes and that of the Delawares.  We crossed it on 
the following day, rafting over our horses and equipage with much 
difficulty, and unloading our cart in order to make our way up the 
steep ascent on the farther bank.  It was a Sunday moming; warm, 
tranquil and bright; and a perfect stillness reigned over the rough 
inclosures and neglected fields of the Delawares, except the 
ceaseless hum and chirruping of myriads of insects.  Now and then, an 
Indian rode past on his way to the meeting-house, or through the 
dilapidated entrance of some shattered log-house an old woman might 
be discerned, enjoying all the luxury of idleness.  There was no 
village bell, for the Delawares have none; and yet upon that forlorn 
and rude settlement was the same spirit of Sabbath repose and 
tranquillity as in some little New England village among the 
mountains of New Hampshire or the Vermont woods.

Having at present no leisure for such reflections, we pursued our 
journey.  A military road led from this point to Fort Leavenworth, 
and for many miles the farms and cabins of the Delawares were 
scattered at short intervals on either hand.  The little rude 
structures of logs, erected usually on the borders of a tract of 
woods, made a picturesque feature in the landscape.  But the scenery 
needed no foreign aid.  Nature had done enough for it; and the 
alteration of rich green prairies and groves that stood in clusters 
or lined the banks of the numerous little streams, had all the 
softened and polished beauty of a region that has been for centuries 
under the hand of man.  At that early season, too, it was in the 
height of its freshness and luxuriance.  The woods were flushed with 
the red buds of the maple; there were frequent flowering shrubs 
unknown in the east; and the green swells of the prairies were 
thickly studded with blossoms.

Encamping near a spring by the side of a hill, we resumed our journey 
in the morning, and early in the afternoon had arrived within a few 
miles of Fort Leavenworth.  The road crossed a stream densely 
bordered with trees, and running in the bottom of a deep woody 
hollow.  We were about to descend into it, when a wild and confused 
procession appeared, passing through the water below, and coming up 
the steep ascent toward us.  We stopped to let them pass.  They were 
Delawares, just returned from a hunting expedition.  All, both men 
and women, were mounted on horseback, and drove along with them a 
considerable number of pack mules, laden with the furs they had 
taken, together with the buffalo robes, kettles, and other articles 
of their traveling equipment, which as well as their clothing and 
their weapons, had a worn and dingy aspect, as if they had seen hard 
service of late.  At the rear of the party was an old man, who, as he 
came up, stopped his horse to speak to us.  He rode a little tough 
shaggy pony, with mane and tail well knotted with burrs, and a rusty 
Spanish bit in its mouth, to which, by way of reins, was attached a 
string of raw hide.  His saddle, robbed probably from a Mexican, had 
no covering, being merely a tree of the Spanish form, with a piece of 
grizzly bear's skin laid over it, a pair of rude wooden stirrups 
attached, and in the absence of girth, a thong of hide passing around 
the horse's belly.  The rider's dark features and keen snaky eyes 
were unequivocally Indian.  He wore a buckskin frock, which, like his 
fringed leggings, was well polished and blackened by grease and long 
service; and an old handkerchief was tied around his head.  Resting 
on the saddle before him lay his rifle; a weapon in the use of which 
the Delawares are skillful; though from its weight, the distant 
prairie Indians are too lazy to carry it.

"Who's your chief?" he immediately inquired.

Henry Chatillon pointed to us.  The old Delaware fixed his eyes 
intently upon us for a moment, and then sententiously remarked:

"No good!  Too young!"  With this flattering comment he left us, and 
rode after his people.

This tribe, the Delawares, once the peaceful allies of William Penn, 
the tributaries of the conquering Iroquois, are now the most 
adventurous and dreaded warriors upon the prairies.  They make war 
upon remote tribes the very names of which were unknown to their 
fathers in their ancient seats in Pennsylvania; and they push these 
new quarrels with true Indian rancor, sending out their little war 
parties as far as the Rocky Mountains, and into the Mexican 
territories.  Their neighbors and former confederates, the Shawanoes, 
who are tolerable farmers, are in a prosperous condition; but the 
Delawares dwindle every year, from the number of men lost in their 
warlike expeditions.

Soon after leaving this party, we saw, stretching on the right, the 
forests that follow the course of the Missouri, and the deep woody 
channel through which at this point it runs.  At a distance in front 
were the white barracks of Fort Leavenworth, just visible through the 
trees upon an eminence above a bend of the river.  A wide green 
meadow, as level as a lake, lay between us and the Missouri, and upon 
this, close to a line of trees that bordered a little brook, stood 
the tent of the captain and his companions, with their horses feeding 
around it, but they themselves were invisible.  Wright, their 
muleteer, was there, seated on the tongue of the wagon, repairing his 
harness.  Boisverd stood cleaning his rifle at the door of the tent, 
and Sorel lounged idly about.  On closer examination, however, we 
discovered the captain's brother, Jack, sitting in the tent, at his 
old occupation of splicing trail-ropes.  He welcomed us in his broad 
Irish brogue, and said that his brother was fishing in the river, and 
R. gone to the garrison.  They returned before sunset.  Meanwhile we 
erected our own tent not far off, and after supper a council was 
held, in which it was resolved to remain one day at Fort Leavenworth, 
and on the next to bid a final adieu to the frontier: or in the 
phraseology of the region, to "jump off."  Our deliberations were 
conducted by the ruddy light from a distant swell of the prairie, 
where the long dry grass of last summer was on fire.



CHAPTER III

FORT LEAVENWORTH


On the next morning we rode to Fort Leavenworth.  Colonel, now 
General, Kearny, to whom I had had the honor of an introduction when 
at St. Louis, was just arrived, and received us at his headquarters 
with the high-bred courtesy habitual to him.  Fort Leavenworth is in 
fact no fort, being without defensive works, except two block-houses.  
No rumors of war had as yet disturbed its tranquillity.  In the 
square grassy area, surrounded by barracks and the quarters of the 
officers, the men were passing and repassing, or lounging among the 
trees; although not many weeks afterward it presented a different 
scene; for here the very off-scourings of the frontier were 
congregated, to be marshaled for the expedition against Santa Fe.

Passing through the garrison, we rode toward the Kickapoo village, 
five or six miles beyond.  The path, a rather dubious and uncertain 
one, led us along the ridge of high bluffs that bordered the 
Missouri; and by looking to the right or to the left, we could enjoy 
a strange contrast of opposite scenery.  On the left stretched the 
prairie, rising into swells and undulations, thickly sprinkled with 
groves, or gracefully expanding into wide grassy basins of miles in 
extent; while its curvatures, swelling against the horizon, were 
often surmounted by lines of sunny woods; a scene to which the 
freshness of the season and the peculiar mellowness of the atmosphere 
gave additional softness.  Below us, on the right, was a tract of 
ragged and broken woods.  We could look down on the summits of the 
trees, some living and some dead; some erect, others leaning at every 
angle, and others still piled in masses together by the passage of a 
hurricane.  Beyond their extreme verge, the turbid waters of the 
Missouri were discernible through the boughs, rolling powerfully 
along at the foot of the woody declivities of its farther bank.

The path soon after led inland; and as we crossed an open meadow we 
saw a cluster of buildings on a rising ground before us, with a crowd 
of people surrounding them.  They were the storehouse, cottage, and 
stables of the Kickapoo trader's establishment.  Just at that moment, 
as it chanced, he was beset with half the Indians of the settlement.  
They had tied their wretched, neglected little ponies by dozens along 
the fences and outhouses, and were either lounging about the place, 
or crowding into the trading house.  Here were faces of various 
colors; red, green, white, and black, curiously intermingled and 
disposed over the visage in a variety of patterns.  Calico shirts, 
red and blue blankets, brass ear-rings, wampum necklaces, appeared in 
profusion.  The trader was a blue-eyed open-faced man who neither in 
his manners nor his appearance betrayed any of the roughness of the 
frontier; though just at present he was obliged to keep a lynx eye on 
his suspicious customers, who, men and women, were climbing on his 
counter and seating themselves among his boxes and bales.

The village itself was not far off, and sufficiently illustrated the 
condition of its unfortunate and self-abandoned occupants.  Fancy to 
yourself a little swift stream, working its devious way down a woody 
valley; sometimes wholly hidden under logs and fallen trees, 
sometimes issuing forth and spreading into a broad, clear pool; and 
on its banks in little nooks cleared away among the trees, miniature 
log-houses in utter ruin and neglect.  A labyrinth of narrow, 
obstructed paths connected these habitations one with another.  
Sometimes we met a stray calf, a pig or a pony, belonging to some of 
the villagers, who usually lay in the sun in front of their 
dwellings, and looked on us with cold, suspicious eyes as we 
approached.  Farther on, in place of the log-huts of the Kickapoos, 
we found the pukwi lodges of their neighbors, the Pottawattamies, 
whose condition seemed no better than theirs.

Growing tired at last, and exhausted by the excessive heat and 
sultriness of the day, we returned to our friend, the trader.  By 
this time the crowd around him had dispersed, and left him at 
leisure.  He invited us to his cottage, a little white-and-green 
building, in the style of the old French settlements; and ushered us 
into a neat, well-furnished room.  The blinds were closed, and the 
heat and glare of the sun excluded; the room was as cool as a cavern.  
It was neatly carpeted too and furnished in a manner that we hardly 
expected on the frontier.  The sofas, chairs, tables, and a well-
filled bookcase would not have disgraced an Eastern city; though 
there were one or two little tokens that indicated the rather 
questionable civilization of the region.  A pistol, loaded and 
capped, lay on the mantelpiece; and through the glass of the 
bookcase, peeping above the works of John Milton glittered the handle 
of a very mischievous-looking knife.

Our host went out, and returned with iced water, glasses, and a 
bottle of excellent claret; a refreshment most welcome in the extreme 
heat of the day; and soon after appeared a merry, laughing woman, who 
must have been, a year of two before, a very rich and luxuriant 
specimen of Creole beauty.  She came to say that lunch was ready in 
the next room.  Our hostess evidently lived on the sunny side of 
life, and troubled herself with none of its cares.  She sat down and 
entertained us while we were at table with anecdotes of fishing 
parties, frolics, and the officers at the fort.  Taking leave at 
length of the hospitable trader and his friend, we rode back to the 
garrison.

Shaw passed on to the camp, while I remained to call upon Colonel 
Kearny.  I found him still at table.  There sat our friend the 
captain, in the same remarkable habiliments in which we saw him at 
Westport; the black pipe, however, being for the present laid aside.  
He dangled his little cap in his hand and talked of steeple-chases, 
touching occasionally upon his anticipated exploits in buffalo-
hunting.  There, too, was R., somewhat more elegantly attired.  For 
the last time we tasted the luxuries of civilization, and drank 
adieus to it in wine good enough to make us almost regret the leave-
taking.  Then, mounting, we rode together to the camp, where 
everything was in readiness for departure on the morrow.



CHAPTER IV

"JUMPING OFF"


The reader need not be told that John Bull never leaves home without 
encumbering himself with the greatest possible load of luggage.  Our 
companions were no exception to the rule.  They had a wagon drawn by 
six mules and crammed with provisions for six months, besides 
ammunition enough for a regiment; spare rifles and fowling-pieces, 
ropes and harness; personal baggage, and a miscellaneous assortment 
of articles, which produced infinite embarrassment on the journey.  
They had also decorated their persons with telescopes and portable 
compasses, and carried English double-barreled rifles of sixteen to 
the pound caliber, slung to their saddles in dragoon fashion.

By sunrise on the 23d of May we had breakfasted; the tents were 
leveled, the animals saddled and harnessed, and all was prepared.  
"Avance donc! get up!" cried Delorier from his seat in front of the 
cart.  Wright, our friend's muleteer, after some swearing and 
lashing, got his insubordinate train in motion, and then the whole 
party filed from the ground.  Thus we bade a long adieu to bed and 
board, and the principles of Blackstone's Commentaries.  The day was 
a most auspicious one; and yet Shaw and I felt certain misgivings, 
which in the sequel proved but too well founded.  We had just learned 
that though R. had taken it upon him to adopt this course without 
consulting us, not a single man in the party was acquainted with it; 
and the absurdity of our friend's high-handed measure very soon 
became manifest.  His plan was to strike the trail of several 
companies of dragoons, who last summer had made an expedition under 
Colonel Kearny to Fort Laramie, and by this means to reach the grand 
trail of the Oregon emigrants up the Platte.

We rode for an hour or two when a familiar cluster of buildings 
appeared on a little hill.  "Hallo!" shouted the Kickapoo trader from 
over his fence.  "Where are you going?"  A few rather emphatic 
exclamations might have been heard among us, when we found that we 
had gone miles out of our way, and were not advanced an inch toward 
the Rocky Mountains.  So we turned in the direction the trader 
indicated, and with the sun for a guide, began to trace a "bee line" 
across the prairies.  We struggled through copses and lines of wood; 
we waded brooks and pools of water; we traversed prairies as green as 
an emerald, expanding before us for mile after mile; wider and more 
wild than the wastes Mazeppa rode over:


    "Man nor brute,
     Nor dint of hoof, nor print of foot,
     Lay in the wild luxuriant soil;
     No sign of travel; none of toil;
     The very air was mute."


Riding in advance, we passed over one of these great plains; we 
looked back and saw the line of scattered horsemen stretching for a 
mile or more; and far in the rear against the horizon, the white 
wagons creeping slowly along.  "Here we are at last!" shouted the 
captain.  And in truth we had struck upon the traces of a large body 
of horse.  We turned joyfully and followed this new course, with 
tempers somewhat improved; and toward sunset encamped on a high swell 
of the prairie, at the foot of which a lazy stream soaked along 
through clumps of rank grass.  It was getting dark.  We turned the 
horses loose to feed.  "Drive down the tent-pickets hard," said Henry 
Chatillon, "it is going to blow."  We did so, and secured the tent as 
well as we could; for the sky had changed totally, and a fresh damp 
smell in the wind warned us that a stormy night was likely to succeed 
the hot clear day.  The prairie also wore a new aspect, and its vast 
swells had grown black and somber under the shadow of the clouds.  
The thunder soon began to growl at a distance.  Picketing and 
hobbling the horses among the rich grass at the foot of the slope, 
where we encamped, we gained a shelter just as the rain began to 
fall; and sat at the opening of the tent, watching the proceedings of 
the captain.  In defiance of the rain he was stalking among the 
horses, wrapped in an old Scotch plaid.  An extreme solicitude 
tormented him, lest some of his favorites should escape, or some 
accident should befall them; and he cast an anxious eye toward three 
wolves who were sneaking along over the dreary surface of the plain, 
as if he dreaded some hostile demonstration on their part.

On the next morning we had gone but a mile or two, when we came to an 
extensive belt of woods, through the midst of which ran a stream, 
wide, deep, and of an appearance particularly muddy and treacherous.  
Delorier was in advance with his cart; he jerked his pipe from his 
mouth, lashed his mules, and poured forth a volley of Canadian 
ejaculations.  In plunged the cart, but midway it stuck fast.  
Delorier leaped out knee-deep in water, and by dint of sacres and a 
vigorous application of the whip, he urged the mules out of the 
slough.  Then approached the long team and heavy wagon of our 
friends; but it paused on the brink.

"Now my advice is--" began the captain, who had been anxiously 
contemplating the muddy gulf.

"Drive on!" cried R.

But Wright, the muleteer, apparently had not as yet decided the point 
in his own mind; and he sat still in his seat on one of the shaft-
mules, whistling in a low contemplative strain to himself.

"My advice is," resumed the captain, "that we unload; for I'll bet 
any man five pounds that if we try to go through, we shall stick 
fast."

"By the powers, we shall stick fast!" echoed Jack, the captain's 
brother, shaking his large head with an air of firm conviction.

"Drive on! drive on!" cried R. petulantly.

"Well," observed the captain, turning to us as we sat looking on, 
much edified by this by-play among our confederates, "I can only give 
my advice and if people won't be reasonable, why, they won't; that's 
all!"

Meanwhile Wright had apparently made up his mind; for he suddenly 
began to shout forth a volley of oaths and curses, that, compared 
with the French imprecations of Delorier, sounded like the roaring of 
heavy cannon after the popping and sputtering of a bunch of Chinese 
crackers.  At the same time he discharged a shower of blows upon his 
mules, who hastily dived into the mud and drew the wagon lumbering 
after them.  For a moment the issue was dubious.  Wright writhed 
about in his saddle, and swore and lashed like a madman; but who can 
count on a team of half-broken mules?  At the most critical point, 
when all should have been harmony and combined effort, the perverse 
brutes fell into lamentable disorder, and huddled together in 
confusion on the farther bank.  There was the wagon up to the hub in 
mud, and visibly settling every instant.  There was nothing for it 
but to unload; then to dig away the mud from before the wheels with a 
spade, and lay a causeway of bushes and branches.  This agreeable 
labor accomplished, the wagon at last emerged; but if I mention that 
some interruption of this sort occurred at least four or five times a 
day for a fortnight, the reader will understand that our progress 
toward the Platte was not without its obstacles.

We traveled six or seven miles farther, and "nooned" near a brook.  
On the point of resuming our journey, when the horses were all driven 
down to water, my homesick charger, Pontiac, made a sudden leap 
across, and set off at a round trot for the settlements.  I mounted 
my remaining horse, and started in pursuit.  Making a circuit, I 
headed the runaway, hoping to drive him back to camp; but he 
instantly broke into a gallop, made a wide tour on the prairie, and 
got past me again.  I tried this plan repeatedly, with the same 
result; Pontiac was evidently disgusted with the prairie; so I 
abandoned it, and tried another, trotting along gently behind him, in 
hopes that I might quietly get near enough to seize the trail-rope 
which was fastened to his neck, and dragged about a dozen feet behind 
him.  The chase grew interesting.  For mile after mile I followed the 
rascal, with the utmost care not to alarm him, and gradually got 
nearer, until at length old Hendrick's nose was fairly brushed by the 
whisking tail of the unsuspecting Pontiac.  Without drawing rein, I 
slid softly to the ground; but my long heavy rifle encumbered me, and 
the low sound it made in striking the horn of the saddle startled 
him; he pricked up his ears, and sprang off at a run.  "My friend," 
thought I, remounting, "do that again, and I will shoot you!"

Fort Leavenworth was about forty miles distant, and thither I 
determined to follow him.  I made up my mind to spend a solitary and 
supperless night, and then set out again in the morning.  One hope, 
however, remained.  The creek where the wagon had stuck was just 
before us; Pontiac might be thirsty with his run, and stop there to 
drink.  I kept as near to him as possible, taking every precaution 
not to alarm him again; and the result proved as I had hoped: for he 
walked deliberately among the trees, and stooped down to the water.  
I alighted, dragged old Hendrick through the mud, and with a feeling 
of infinite satisfaction picked up the slimy trail-rope and twisted 
it three times round my hand.  "Now let me see you get away again!" I 
thought, as I remounted.  But Pontiac was exceedingly reluctant to 
turn back; Hendrick, too, who had evidently flattered himself with 
vain hopes, showed the utmost repugnance, and grumbled in a manner 
peculiar to himself at being compelled to face about.  A smart cut of 
the whip restored his cheerfulness; and dragging the recovered truant 
behind, I set out in search of the camp.  An hour or two elapsed, 
when, near sunset, I saw the tents, standing on a rich swell of the 
prairie, beyond a line of woods, while the bands of horses were 
feeding in a low meadow close at hand.  There sat Jack C., cross-
legged, in the sun, splicing a trail-rope, and the rest were lying on 
the grass, smoking and telling stories.  That night we enjoyed a 
serenade from the wolves, more lively than any with which they had 
yet favored us; and in the morning one of the musicians appeared, not 
many rods from the tents, quietly seated among the horses, looking at 
us with a pair of large gray eyes; but perceiving a rifle leveled at 
him, he leaped up and made off in hot haste.

I pass by the following day or two of our journey, for nothing 
occurred worthy of record.  Should any one of my readers ever be 
impelled to visit the prairies, and should he choose the route of the 
Platte (the best, perhaps, that can be adopted), I can assure him 
that he need not think to enter at once upon the paradise of his 
imagination.  A dreary preliminary, protracted crossing of the 
threshold awaits him before he finds himself fairly upon the verge of 
the "great American desert," those barren wastes, the haunts of the 
buffalo and the Indian, where the very shadow of civilization lies a 
hundred leagues behind him.  The intervening country, the wide and 
fertile belt that extends for several hundred miles beyond the 
extreme frontier, will probably answer tolerably well to his 
preconceived ideas of the prairie; for this it is from which 
picturesque tourists, painters, poets, and novelists, who have seldom 
penetrated farther, have derived their conceptions of the whole 
region.  If he has a painter's eye, he may find his period of 
probation not wholly void of interest.  The scenery, though tame, is 
graceful and pleasing.  Here are level plains, too wide for the eye 
to measure green undulations, like motionless swells of the ocean; 
abundance of streams, followed through all their windings by lines of 
woods and scattered groves.  But let him be as enthusiastic as he 
may, he will find enough to damp his ardor.  His wagons will stick in 
the mud; his horses will break loose; harness will give way, and 
axle-trees prove unsound.  His bed will be a soft one, consisting 
often of black mud, of the richest consistency.  As for food, he must 
content himself with biscuit and salt provisions; for strange as it 
may seem, this tract of country produces very little game.  As he 
advances, indeed, he will see, moldering in the grass by his path, 
the vast antlers of the elk, and farther on, the whitened skulls of 
the buffalo, once swarming over this now deserted region.  Perhaps, 
like us, he may journey for a fortnight, and see not so much as the 
hoof-print of a deer; in the spring, not even a prairie hen is to be 
had.

Yet, to compensate him for this unlooked-for deficiency of game, he 
will find himself beset with "varmints" innumerable.  The wolves will 
entertain him with a concerto at night, and skulk around him by day, 
just beyond rifle shot; his horse will step into badger-holes; from 
every marsh and mud puddle will arise the bellowing, croaking, and 
trilling of legions of frogs, infinitely various in color, shape and 
dimensions.  A profusion of snakes will glide away from under his 
horse's feet, or quietly visit him in his tent at night; while the 
pertinacious humming of unnumbered mosquitoes will banish sleep from 
his eyelids.  When thirsty with a long ride in the scorching sun over 
some boundless reach of prairie, he comes at length to a pool of 
water, and alights to drink, he discovers a troop of young tadpoles 
sporting in the bottom of his cup.  Add to this, that all the morning 
the hot sun beats upon him with sultry, penetrating heat, and that, 
with provoking regularity, at about four o'clock in the afternoon, a 
thunderstorm rises and drenches him to the skin.  Such being the 
charms of this favored region, the reader will easily conceive the 
extent of our gratification at learning that for a week we had been 
journeying on the wrong track!  How this agreeable discovery was made 
I will presently explain.

One day, after a protracted morning's ride, we stopped to rest at 
noon upon the open prairie.  No trees were in sight; but close at 
hand, a little dribbling brook was twisting from side to side through 
a hollow; now forming holes of stagnant water, and now gliding over 
the mud in a scarcely perceptible current, among a growth of sickly 
bushes, and great clumps of tall rank grass.  The day was excessively 
hot and oppressive.  The horses and mules were rolling on the prairie 
to refresh themselves, or feeding among the bushes in the hollow.  We 
had dined; and Delorier, puffing at his pipe, knelt on the grass, 
scrubbing our service of tin plate.  Shaw lay in the shade, under the 
cart, to rest for a while, before the word should be given to "catch 
up."  Henry Chatillon, before lying down, was looking about for signs 
of snakes, the only living things that he feared, and uttering 
various ejaculations of disgust, at finding several suspicious-
looking holes close to the cart.  I sat leaning against the wheel in 
a scanty strip of shade, making a pair of hobbles to replace those 
which my contumacious steed Pontiac had broken the night before.  The 
camp of our friends, a rod or two distant, presented the same scene 
of lazy tranquillity.

"Hallo!" cried Henry, looking up from his inspection of the snake-
holes, "here comes the old captain!"

The captain approached, and stood for a moment contemplating us in 
silence.

"I say, Parkman," he began, "look at Shaw there, asleep under the 
cart, with the tar dripping off the hub of the wheel on his 
shoulder!"

At this Shaw got up, with his eyes half opened, and feeling the part 
indicated, he found his hand glued fast to his red flannel shirt.

"He'll look well when he gets among the squaws, won't he?" observed 
the captain, with a grin.

He then crawled under the cart, and began to tell stories of which 
his stock was inexhaustible.  Yet every moment he would glance 
nervously at the horses.  At last he jumped up in great excitement.  
"See that horse!  There--that fellow just walking over the hill!  By 
Jove; he's off.  It's your big horse, Shaw; no it isn't, it's Jack's!  
Jack!  Jack! hallo, Jack!"  Jack thus invoked, jumped up and stared 
vacantly at us.

"Go and catch your horse, if you don't want to lose him!" roared the 
captain.

Jack instantly set off at a run through the grass, his broad 
pantaloons flapping about his feet.  The captain gazed anxiously till 
he saw that the horse was caught; then he sat down, with a 
countenance of thoughtfulness and care.

"I tell you what it is," he said, "this will never do at all.  We 
shall lose every horse in the band someday or other, and then a 
pretty plight we should be in!  Now I am convinced that the only way 
for us is to have every man in the camp stand horse-guard in rotation 
whenever we stop.  Supposing a hundred Pawnees should jump up out of 
that ravine, all yelling and flapping their buffalo robes, in the way 
they do?  Why, in two minutes not a hoof would be in sight."  We 
reminded the captain that a hundred Pawnees would probably demolish 
the horse-guard, if he were to resist their depredations.

"At any rate," pursued the captain, evading the point, "our whole 
system is wrong; I'm convinced of it; it is totally unmilitary.  Why, 
the way we travel, strung out over the prairie for a mile, an enemy 
might attack the foremost men, and cut them off before the rest could 
come up."

"We are not in an enemy's country, yet," said Shaw; "when we are, 
we'll travel together."

"Then," said the captain, "we might be attacked in camp.  We've no 
sentinels; we camp in disorder; no precautions at all to guard 
against surprise.  My own convictions are that we ought to camp in a 
hollow square, with the fires in the center; and have sentinels, and 
a regular password appointed for every night.  Besides, there should 
be vedettes, riding in advance, to find a place for the camp and give 
warning of an enemy.  These are my convictions.  I don't want to 
dictate to any man.  I give advice to the best of my judgment, that's 
all; and then let people do as they please."

We intimated that perhaps it would be as well to postpone such 
burdensome precautions until there should be some actual need of 
them; but he shook his head dubiously.  The captain's sense of 
military propriety had been severely shocked by what he considered 
the irregular proceedings of the party; and this was not the first 
time he had expressed himself upon the subject.  But his convictions 
seldom produced any practical results.  In the present case, he 
contented himself, as usual, with enlarging on the importance of his 
suggestions, and wondering that they were not adopted.  But his plan 
of sending out vedettes seemed particularly dear to him; and as no 
one else was disposed to second his views on this point, he took it 
into his head to ride forward that afternoon, himself.

"Come, Parkman," said he, "will you go with me?"

We set out together, and rode a mile or two in advance.  The captain, 
in the course of twenty years' service in the British army, had seen 
something of life; one extensive side of it, at least, he had enjoyed 
the best opportunities for studying; and being naturally a pleasant 
fellow, he was a very entertaining companion.  He cracked jokes and 
told stories for an hour or two; until, looking back, we saw the 
prairie behind us stretching away to the horizon, without a horseman 
or a wagon in sight.

"Now," said the captain, "I think the vedettes had better stop till 
the main body comes up."

I was of the same opinion.  There was a thick growth of woods just 
before us, with a stream running through them.  Having crossed this, 
we found on the other side a fine level meadow, half encircled by the 
trees; and fastening our horses to some bushes, we sat down on the 
grass; while, with an old stump of a tree for a target, I began to 
display the superiority of the renowned rifle of the back woods over 
the foreign innovation borne by the captain.  At length voices could 
be heard in the distance behind the trees.

"There they come!" said the captain: "let's go and see how they get 
through the creek."

We mounted and rode to the bank of the stream, where the trail 
crossed it.  It ran in a deep hollow, full of trees; as we looked 
down, we saw a confused crowd of horsemen riding through the water; 
and among the dingy habiliment of our party glittered the uniforms of 
four dragoons.

Shaw came whipping his horse up the back, in advance of the rest, 
with a somewhat indignant countenance.  The first word he spoke was a 
blessing fervently invoked on the head of R., who was riding, with a 
crest-fallen air, in the rear.  Thanks to the ingenious devices of 
the gentleman, we had missed the track entirely, and wandered, not 
toward the Platte, but to the village of the Iowa Indians.  This we 
learned from the dragoons, who had lately deserted from Fort 
Leavenworth.  They told us that our best plan now was to keep to the 
northward until we should strike the trail formed by several parties 
of Oregon emigrants, who had that season set out from St. Joseph's in 
Missouri.

In extremely bad temper, we encamped on this ill-starred spot; while 
the deserters, whose case admitted of no delay rode rapidly forward.  
On the day following, striking the St. Joseph's trail, we turned our 
horses' heads toward Fort Laramie, then about seven hundred miles to 
the westward.



CHAPTER V

"THE BIG BLUE"


The great medley of Oregon and California emigrants, at their camps 
around Independence, had heard reports that several additional 
parties were on the point of setting out from St. Joseph's farther to 
the northward.  The prevailing impression was that these were 
Mormons, twenty-three hundred in number; and a great alarm was 
excited in consequence.  The people of Illinois and Missouri, who 
composed by far the greater part of the emigrants, have never been on 
the best terms with the "Latter Day Saints"; and it is notorious 
throughout the country how much blood has been spilt in their feuds, 
even far within the limits of the settlements.  No one could predict 
what would be the result, when large armed bodies of these fanatics 
should encounter the most impetuous and reckless of their old enemies 
on the broad prairie, far beyond the reach of law or military force.  
The women and children at Independence raised a great outcry; the men 
themselves were seriously alarmed; and, as I learned, they sent to 
Colonel Kearny, requesting an escort of dragoons as far as the 
Platte.  This was refused; and as the sequel proved, there was no 
occasion for it.  The St. Joseph's emigrants were as good Christians 
and as zealous Mormon-haters as the rest; and the very few families 
of the "Saints" who passed out this season by the route of the Platte 
remained behind until the great tide of emigration had gone by; 
standing in quite as much awe of the "gentiles" as the latter did of 
them.

We were now, as I before mentioned, upon this St. Joseph's trail.  It 
was evident, by the traces, that large parties were a few days in 
advance of us; and as we too supposed them to be Mormons, we had some 
apprehension of interruption.

The journey was somewhat monotonous.  One day we rode on for hours, 
without seeing a tree or a bush; before, behind, and on either side, 
stretched the vast expanse, rolling in a succession of graceful 
swells, covered with the unbroken carpet of fresh green grass.  Here 
and there a crow, or a raven, or a turkey-buzzard, relieved the 
uniformity.

"What shall we do to-night for wood and water?" we began to ask of 
each other; for the sun was within an hour of setting.  At length a 
dark green speck appeared, far off on the right; it was the top of a 
tree, peering over a swell of the prairie; and leaving the trail, we 
made all haste toward it.  It proved to be the vanguard of a cluster 
of bushes and low trees, that surrounded some pools of water in an 
extensive hollow; so we encamped on the rising ground near it.

Shaw and I were sitting in the tent, when Delorier thrust his brown 
face and old felt hat into the opening, and dilating his eyes to 
their utmost extent, announced supper.  There were the tin cups and 
the iron spoons, arranged in military order on the grass, and the 
coffee-pot predominant in the midst.  The meal was soon dispatched; 
but Henry Chatillon still sat cross-legged, dallying with the remnant 
of his coffee, the beverage in universal use upon the prairie, and an 
especial favorite with him.  He preferred it in its virgin flavor, 
unimpaired by sugar or cream; and on the present occasion it met his 
entire approval, being exceedingly strong, or, as he expressed it, 
"right black."

It was a rich and gorgeous sunset--an American sunset; and the ruddy 
glow of the sky was reflected from some extensive pools of water 
among the shadowy copses in the meadow below.

"I must have a bath to-night," said Shaw.  "How is it, Delorier?  Any 
chance for a swim down here?"

"Ah! I cannot tell; just as you please, monsieur," replied Delorier, 
shrugging his shoulders, perplexed by his ignorance of English, and 
extremely anxious to conform in all respects to the opinion and 
wishes of his bourgeois.

"Look at his moccasion," said I.  "It has evidently been lately 
immersed in a profound abyss of black mud."

"Come," said Shaw; "at any rate we can see for ourselves."

We set out together; and as we approached the bushes, which were at 
some distance, we found the ground becoming rather treacherous.  We 
could only get along by stepping upon large clumps of tall rank 
grass, with fathomless gulfs between, like innumerable little quaking 
islands in an ocean of mud, where a false step would have involved 
our boots in a catastrophe like that which had befallen Delorier's 
moccasins.  The thing looked desperate; we separated, so as to search 
in different directions, Shaw going off to the right, while I kept 
straight forward.  At last I came to the edge of the bushes: they 
were young waterwillows, covered with their caterpillar-like 
blossoms, but intervening between them and the last grass clump was a 
black and deep slough, over which, by a vigorous exertion, I 
contrived to jump.  Then I shouldered my way through the willows, 
tramping them down by main force, till I came to a wide stream of 
water, three inches deep, languidly creeping along over a bottom of 
sleek mud.  My arrival produced a great commotion.  A huge green 
bull-frog uttered an indignant croak, and jumped off the bank with a 
loud splash: his webbed feet twinkled above the surface, as he jerked 
them energetically upward, and I could see him ensconcing himself in 
the unresisting slime at the bottom, whence several large air bubbles 
struggled lazily to the top.  Some little spotted frogs instantly 
followed the patriarch's example; and then three turtles, not larger 
than a dollar, tumbled themselves off a broad "lily pad," where they 
had been reposing.  At the same time a snake, gayly striped with 
black and yellow, glided out from the bank, and writhed across to the 
other side; and a small stagnant pool into which my foot had 
inadvertently pushed a stone was instantly alive with a congregation 
of black tadpoles.

"Any chance for a bath, where you are?" called out Shaw, from a 
distance.

The answer was not encouraging.  I retreated through the willows, and 
rejoining my companion, we proceeded to push our researches in 
company.  Not far on the right, a rising ground, covered with trees 
and bushes, seemed to sink down abruptly to the water, and give hope 
of better success; so toward this we directed our steps.  When we 
reached the place we found it no easy matter to get along between the 
hill and the water, impeded as we were by a growth of stiff, 
obstinate young birch-trees, laced together by grapevines.  In the 
twilight, we now and then, to support ourselves, snatched at the 
touch-me-not stem of some ancient sweet-brier.  Shaw, who was in 
advance, suddenly uttered a somewhat emphatic monosyllable; and 
looking up I saw him with one hand grasping a sapling, and one foot 
immersed in the water, from which he had forgotten to withdraw it, 
his whole attention being engaged in contemplating the movements of a 
water-snake, about five feet long, curiously checkered with black and 
green, who was deliberately swimming across the pool.  There being no 
stick or stone at hand to pelt him with, we looked at him for a time 
in silent disgust; and then pushed forward.  Our perseverence was at 
last rewarded; for several rods farther on, we emerged upon a little 
level grassy nook among the brushwood, and by an extraordinary 
dispensation of fortune, the weeds and floating sticks, which 
elsewhere covered the pool, seemed to have drawn apart, and left a 
few yards of clear water just in front of this favored spot.  We 
sounded it with a stick; it was four feet deep; we lifted a specimen 
in our cupped hands; it seemed reasonably transparent, so we decided 
that the time for action was arrived.  But our ablutions were 
suddenly interrupted by ten thousand punctures, like poisoned 
needles, and the humming of myriads of over-grown mosquitoes, rising 
in all directions from their native mud and slime and swarming to the 
feast.  We were fain to beat a retreat with all possible speed.

We made toward the tents, much refreshed by the bath which the heat 
of the weather, joined to our prejudices, had rendered very 
desirable.

"What's the matter with the captain? look at him!" said Shaw.  The 
captain stood alone on the prairie, swinging his hat violently around 
his head, and lifting first one foot and then the other, without 
moving from the spot.  First he looked down to the ground with an air 
of supreme abhorrence; then he gazed upward with a perplexed and 
indignant countenance, as if trying to trace the flight of an unseen 
enemy.  We called to know what was the matter; but he replied only by 
execrations directed against some unknown object.  We approached, 
when our ears were saluted by a droning sound, as if twenty bee-hives 
had been overturned at once.  The air above was full of large black 
insects, in a state of great commotion, and multitudes were flying 
about just above the tops of the grass blades.

"Don't be afraid," called the captain, observing us recoil.  "The 
brutes won't sting."

At this I knocked one down with my hat, and discovered him to be no 
other than a "dorbug"; and looking closer, we found the ground 
thickly perforated with their holes.

We took a hasty leave of this flourishing colony, and walking up the 
rising ground to the tents, found Delorier's fire still glowing 
brightly.  We sat down around it, and Shaw began to expatiate on the 
admirable facilities for bathing that we had discovered, and 
recommended the captain by all means to go down there before 
breakfast in the morning.  The captain was in the act of remarking 
that he couldn't have believed it possible, when he suddenly 
interrupted himself, and clapped his hand to his cheek, exclaiming 
that "those infernal humbugs were at him again."  In fact, we began 
to hear sounds as if bullets were humming over our heads.  In a 
moment something rapped me sharply on the forehead, then upon the 
neck, and immediately I felt an indefinite number of sharp wiry claws 
in active motion, as if their owner were bent on pushing his 
explorations farther.  I seized him, and dropped him into the fire.  
Our party speedily broke up, and we adjourned to our respective 
tents, where, closing the opening fast, we hoped to be exempt from 
invasion.  But all precaution was fruitless.  The dorbugs hummed 
through the tent, and marched over our faces until day-light; when, 
opening our blankets, we found several dozen clinging there with the 
utmost tenacity.  The first object that met our eyes in the morning 
was Delorier, who seemed to be apostrophizing his frying-pan, which 
he held by the handle at arm's length.  It appeared that he had left 
it at night by the fire; and the bottom was now covered with dorbugs, 
firmly imbedded.  Multitudes beside, curiously parched and shriveled, 
lay scattered among the ashes.

The horses and mules were turned loose to feed.  We had just taken 
our seats at breakfast, or rather reclined in the classic mode, when 
an exclamation from Henry Chatillon, and a shout of alarm from the 
captain, gave warning of some casualty, and looking up, we saw the 
whole band of animals, twenty-three in number, filing off for the 
settlements, the incorrigible Pontiac at their head, jumping along 
with hobbled feet, at a gait much more rapid than graceful.  Three or 
four of us ran to cut them off, dashing as best we might through the 
tall grass, which was glittering with myriads of dewdrops.  After a 
race of a mile or more, Shaw caught a horse.  Tying the trail-rope by 
way of bridle round the animal's jaw, and leaping upon his back, he 
got in advance of the remaining fugitives, while we, soon bringing 
them together, drove them in a crowd up to the tents, where each man 
caught and saddled his own.  Then we heard lamentations and curses; 
for half the horses had broke their hobbles, and many were seriously 
galled by attempting to run in fetters.

It was late that morning before we were on the march; and early in 
the afternoon we were compelled to encamp, for a thunder-gust came up 
and suddenly enveloped us in whirling sheets of rain.  With much ado, 
we pitched our tents amid the tempest, and all night long the thunder 
bellowed and growled over our heads.  In the morning, light peaceful 
showers succeeded the cataracts of rain, that had been drenching us 
through the canvas of our tents.  About noon, when there were some 
treacherous indications of fair weather, we got in motion again.

Not a breath of air stirred over the free and open prairie; the 
clouds were like light piles of cotton; and where the blue sky was 
visible, it wore a hazy and languid aspect.  The sun beat down upon 
us with a sultry penetrating heat almost insupportable, and as our 
party crept slowly along over the interminable level, the horses hung 
their heads as they waded fetlock deep through the mud, and the men 
slouched into the easiest position upon the saddle.  At last, toward 
evening, the old familiar black heads of thunderclouds rose fast 
above the horizon, and the same deep muttering of distant thunder 
that had become the ordinary accompaniment of our afternoon's journey 
began to roll hoarsely over the prairie.  Only a few minutes elapsed 
before the whole sky was densely shrouded, and the prairie and some 
clusters of woods in front assumed a purple hue beneath the inky 
shadows.  Suddenly from the densest fold of the cloud the flash 
leaped