THE OLD SANTA FE TRAIL - COLONEL HENRY INMAN (surface ebook reader .TXT) 📗
- Author: COLONEL HENRY INMAN
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Business As I Did, And If I Had Twenty Bridles They Would
Have Been Of No Use To Me, As He Understood Everything,
And All That He Expected of Me Was To Do The Shooting.
It Is A Fact That Brigham Would Stop If A Buffalo Did Not
Fall At The First Fire, So As To Give Me A Second Chance;
But If I Did Not Kill The Animal Then, He Would Go On, As
If To Say, "You Are No Good, And I Will Not Fool Away My
Time By Giving You More Than Two Shots." Brigham Was The
Best Horse I Ever Saw Or Owned for Buffalo Chasing.
At One Time An Old, Experienced buffalo Hunter Was Following at The
Heels Of A Small Herd With That Reckless Rush To Which In the
Excitement Of The Chase Men Abandon Themselves, When A Great Bull
Just In front Of Him Tumbled into A Ravine. The Rider'S Horse Fell
Also, Throwing The Old Hunter Over His Head Sprawling, But With
Strange Accuracy Right Between The Bull'S Horns! The First To
Recover From The Terrible Shock And To Regain His Legs Was The Horse,
Which Ran Off With Wonderful Alacrity Several Miles Before He Stopped.
Next The Bull Rose, And Shook Himself With An Astonished air, As If
He Would Like To Know "How That Was Done?" The Hunter Was On The
Great Brute'S Back, Who, Perhaps, Took The Affair As A Good Practical
Joke; But He Was Soon Pitched to The Ground, As The Buffalo Commenced
To Jump "Stiff-Legged," And The Latter, Giving The Hunter One
Lingering Look, Which He Long Remembered, With Remarkable Good Nature
Ran Off To Join His Companions. Had The Bull Been Wounded, The Rider
Would Have Been Killed, As The Then Enraged animal Would Have Gored
And Trampled him To Death.
An Officer Of The Old Regular Army Told Me Many Years Ago That In
Crossing The Plains A Herd Of Buffalo Were Fired at By A Twelve-Pound
Howitzer, The Ball Of Which Wounded and Stunned an Immense Bull.
Nevertheless, Heedless Of A Hundred shots That Had Been Fired at Him,
And Of A Bulldog Belonging To One Of The Officers, Which Had Fastened
Himself To His Lips, The Enraged beast Charged upon The Whole Troop
Of Dragoons, And Tossed one Of The Horses Like A Feather. Bull,
Horse, And Rider All Fell In a Heap. Before The Dust Cleared away,
The Trooper, Who Had Hung For A Moment To One Of The Bull'S Horns
By His Waistband, Crawled out Safe, While The Horse Got A Ball From
A Rifle Through His Neck While In the Air And Two Great Rips In his
Flank From The Bull.
In 1839 Kit Carson And Hobbs Were Trapping With A Party On The
Arkansas River, Not Far From Bent'S Fort. Among The Trappers Was
A Green Irishman, Named o'Neil, Who Was Quite Anxious To Become
Proficient In hunting, And It Was Not Long Before He Received his
First Lesson. Every Man Who Went Out Of Camp After Game Was Expected
To Bring In "Meat" Of Some Kind. O'Neil Said That He Would Agree
To The Terms, And Was Ready One Evening To Start Out On His First
Hunt Alone. He Picked up His Rifle And Stalked after A Small Herd
Of Buffalo In plain Sight On The Prairie Not More Than Five Or Six
Hundred yards From Camp.
All The Trappers Who Were Not Engaged in setting Their Traps Or
Cooking Supper Were Watching O'Neil. Presently They Heard The Report
Of His Rifle, And Shortly After He Came Running Into Camp, Bareheaded,
Without His Gun, And With A Buffalo Bull Close Upon His Heels;
Both Going at Full Speed, And The Irishman Shouting Like A Madman,--
"Here We Come, By Jabers. Stop Us! For The Love Of God, Stop Us!"
Just As They Came In among The Tents, With The Bull Not More Than
Six Feet In the Rear Of O'Neil, Who Was Frightened out Of His Wits
And Puffing Like A Locomotive, His Foot Caught In a Tent-Rope, And
Over He Went Into A Puddle Of Water Head Foremost, And In his Fall
Capsized several Camp-Kettles, Some Of Which Contained the Trappers'
Supper. But The Buffalo Did Not Escape So Easily; For Hobbs And
Kit Carson Jumped for Their Rifles, And Dropped the Animal Before
He Had Done Any Further Damage.
The Whole Outfit Laughed heartily At O'Neil When He Got Up Out Of
The Water, For A Party Of Old Trappers Would Show No Mercy To Any
Of Their Companions Who Met With A Mishap Of That Character; But
As He Stood There With Dripping Clothes And Face Covered with Mud,
His Mother-Wit Came To His Relief And He Declared he Had Accomplished
The Hunter'S Task: "For Sure," Said He, "Haven'T I Fetched the Mate
Into Camp? And There Was No Bargain Whether It Should Be Dead Or Alive!"
Upon Kit'S Asking O'Neil Where His Gun Was,--
"Sure," Said He, "That'S More Than I Can Tell You."
Next Morning Carson And Hobbs Took Up O'Neil'S Tracks And The
Buffalo'S, And After Hunting an Hour Or So Found The Irishman'S Rifle,
Though He Had Little Use For It Afterward, As He Preferred to Cook
And Help Around Camp Rather Than Expose His Precious Life Fighting
Buffaloes.
A Great Herd Of Buffaloes On The Plains In the Early Days, When One
Could Approach Near Enough Without Disturbing It To Quietly Watch
Its Organization And The Apparent Discipline Which Its Leaders Seemed
To Exact, Was A Very Curious Sight. Among The Striking Features
Of The Spectacle Was The Apparently Uniform Manner In which The
Immense Mass Of Shaggy Animals Moved; There Was Constancy Of Action
Indicating a Degree Of Intelligence To Be Found Only In the Most
Intelligent Of The Brute Creation. Frequently The Single Herd Was
Broken Up Into Many Smaller Ones, That Travelled relatively Close
Together, Each Led by An Independent Master. Perhaps A Few Rods
Only Marked the Dividing-Line Between Them, But It Was Always
Unmistakably Plain, And Each Moved synchronously In the Direction
In Which All Were Going.
The Leadership Of A Herd Was Attained only By Hard Struggles For The
Place; Once Reached, However, The Victor Was Immediately Recognized,
And Kept His Authority Until Some New Aspirant Overcame Him, Or He
Became Superannuated and Was Driven Out Of The Herd To Meet His
Inevitable Fate, A Prey To Those Ghouls Of The Desert, The Gray Wolves.
In The Event Of A Stampede, Every Animal Of The Separate, Yet
Consolidated, Herds Rushed off Together, As If They Had All Gone Mad
At Once; For The Buffalo, Like The Texas Steer, Mule, Or Domestic
Horse, Stampedes On The Slightest Provocation; Frequently Without
Any Assignable Cause. The Simplest Affair, Sometimes, Will Start
The Whole Herd; A Prairie-Dog Barking at The Entrance To His Burrow,
A Shadow Of One Of Themselves Or That Of A Passing Cloud, Is
Sufficient To Make Them Run For Miles As If A Real And Dangerous
Enemy Were At Their Heels.
Like An Army, A Herd Of Buffaloes Put Out Vedettes To Give The Alarm
In Case Anything Beyond The Ordinary Occurred. These Sentinels Were
Always To Be Seen In groups Of Four, Five, Or Even Six, At Some
Distance From The Main Body. When They Perceived something approaching
That The Herd Should Beware Of Or Get Away From, They Started on
A Run Directly For The Centre Of The Great Mass Of Their Peacefully
Grazing Congeners. Meanwhile, The Young Bulls Were On Duty As
Sentinels On The Edge Of The Main Herd Watching The Vedettes;
The Moment The Latter Made For The Centre, The Former Raised their
Heads, And In the Peculiar Manner Of Their Species Gazed all Around
And Sniffed the Air As If They Could Smell Both The Direction And
Source Of The Impending Danger. Should There Be Something Which Their
Instinct Told Them To Guard Against, The Leader Took His Position
In Front, The Cows And Calves Crowded in the Centre, While The Rest
Of The Males Gathered on The Flanks And In the Rear, Indicating
A Gallantry That Might Be Emulated at Times By The Genus Homo.
Generally Buffalo Went To Their Drinking-Places But Once A Day, And
That Late In the Afternoon. Then They Ambled along, Following Each
Other In single File, Which Accounts For The Many Trails On The
Plains, Always Ending at Some Stream Or Lake. They Frequently
Travelled twenty Or Thirty Miles For Water, So The Trails Leading
To It Were Often Worn To The Depth Of A Foot Or More.
That Curious Depression So Frequently Seen On The Great Plains,
Called a Buffalo-Wallow, Is Caused in this Wise: The Huge Animals
Paw And Lick The Salty, Alkaline Earth, And When Once The Sod Is
Broken The Loose Dirt Drifts Away Under The Constant Action Of
The Wind. Then, Year After Year, Through More Pawing, Licking,
Rolling, And Wallowing By The Animals, The Wind Wafts More Of The
Soil Away, And Soon There Is A Considerable Hole In the Prairie.
Many An Old Trapper And Hunter'S Life Has Been Saved by Following
A Buffalo-Trail When He Was Suffering From Thirst. The Buffalo-Wallows
Retain Usually A Great Quantity Of Water, And They Have Often Saved
The Lives Of Whole Companies Of Cavalry, Both Men And Horses.
There Was, However, A Stranger And More Wonderful Spectacle To Be Seen
Every Recurring Spring During The Reign Of The Buffalo, Soon After
The Grass Had Started. There Were Circles Trodden Bare On The Plains,
Thousands, Yes, Millions Of Them, Which The Early Travellers, Who Did
Not Divine Their Cause, Called fairy-Rings. From The First Of April
Until The Middle Of May Was The Wet Season; You Could Depend Upon Its
Recurrence Almost As Certainly As On The Sun And Moon Rising at Their
Proper Time. This Was Also The Calving Period Of The Buffalo, As
They, Unlike Our Domestic Cattle, Only Rutted during a Single Month;
Consequently, The Cows All Calved during a Certain Time; This Was The
Wet Month, And As There Were A Great Many Gray Wolves That Roamed
Singly And In immense Packs Over The Whole Prairie Region, The Bulls,
In Their Regular Beats, Kept Guard Over The Cows While In the Act
Of Parturition, And Drove The Wolves Away, Walking In a Ring around
The Females At A Short Distance, And Thus Forming The Curious Circles.
In Every Herd At Each Recurring Season There Were Always Ambitious
Young Bulls That Came To Their Majority, So To Speak, And These Were
Ever Ready To Test Their Claims For The Leadership, So That It May
Be Safely Stated that A Month Rarely Passed without A Bloody Battle
Between Them For The Supremacy; Though, Strangely Enough, The Struggle
Scarcely Ever Resulted in the Death Of Either Combatant.
Perhaps There Is No Animal In which Maternal Love Is So Wonderfully
Developed as The Buffalo Cow; She Is As Dangerous With A Calf By
Her Side As A She-Grizzly With Cubs, As All Old Mountaineers Know.
The Buffalo Bull That Has Outlived his Usefulness Is One Of The Most
Pitiable Objects In the Whole Range Of Natural History. Old Age
Has Probably Been Decided in the Economy Of Buffalo Life As The
Unpardonable Sin. Abandoned to His Fate, He May Be Discovered,
In His Dreary Isolation, Near Some Stream Or Lake, Where It Does Not
Tax Him Too Severely To Find Good Grass; For He Is Now Feeble, And
Exertion An Impossibility. In this New Stage Of His Existence He
Seems To Have Completely Lost His Courage. Frightened at His Own
Shadow, Or The Rustling Of A Leaf, He Is The Very Incarnation Of
Nervousness And Suspicion. Gregarious In his Habits From Birth,
Solitude, Foreign To His Whole Nature, Has Changed him Into A New
Creature; And His Inherent Terror Of The Most Trivial Things Is
Intensified to Such A Degree That If A Man Were Compelled to Undergo
Such Constant Alarm, It Would Probably Drive Him Insane In less Than
A Week. Nobody Ever Saw One Of These Miserable And Helplessly
Forlorn Creatures Dying a Natural Death, Or Ever Heard Of Such An
Occurrence. The Cowardly Coyote And The Gray Wolf Had Already
Marked him For Their Own; And They Rarely Missed their Calculations.
Riding Suddenly To The Top Of A Divide Once With A Party Of Friends
In 1866, We Saw Standing Below Us In the Valley An Old Buffalo Bull,
The Very Picture Of Despair. Surrounding Him Were Seven Gray Wolves
In The Act Of Challenging Him To Mortal Combat. The Poor Beast,
Undoubtedly Realizing The Utter Hopelessness Of His Situation,
Had Determined to Die Game. His Great Shaggy Head, Filled with Burrs,
Was Lowered to The Ground As He Confronted his Would-Be Executioners;
His Tongue, Black And Parched, Lolled out Of His Mouth, And He Gave
Utterance At Intervals To A Suppressed roar.
The Wolves Were Sitting On Their Haunches In a Semi-Circle Immediately
In Front Of
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