THE OLD SANTA FE TRAIL - COLONEL HENRY INMAN (surface ebook reader .TXT) 📗
- Author: COLONEL HENRY INMAN
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The Whole Country, It Is Claimed, Was Once Possessed by The Shos-Shones,
Or Snake Indians, Of Whom The Comanches Of The Southern Plains Are
A Branch; And, Although Many Hundred miles Divide Their Hunting-Grounds,
They Were Once, If Not The Same People, Tribes Or Bands Of That Great
And Powerful Nation. They Retain A Language In common, And There Is
Also A Striking analogy In many Of Their Religious Rites And Ceremonies,
In Their Folk-Lore, And In some Of Their Everyday Customs. These
Facts Prove, At Least, That There Was At One Time A Very Close
Alliance Which Bound The Two Tribes Together. Half A Century Ago They
Were, In point Of Numbers, The Two Most Powerful Nations In all The
Numerous Aggregations Of Indians In the West; The Comanches Ruling
Almost Supreme On The Eastern Plains, While The Shos-Shones Were The
Dominant Tribe In the Country Beyond The Rocky Mountains, And In the
Mountains Themselves. Once, Many Years Ago, Before The Problem Of The
Relative Strength Of The Various Tribes Was As Well Solved as Now,
The Shos-Shones Were Supposed to Be The Most Powerful, And Numerically
The Most Populous, Tribe Of Indians On The North American Continent.
In The Immediate Vicinity Of The Old Pueblo Fort At The Time Of Its
Greatest Business Prosperity, Game Was Scarce; The Buffalo Had For
Some Years Deserted the Neighbouring Prairies, But They Were Always
To Be Found In the Mountain-Valleys, Particularly In one Known As
"Bayou Salado," Which Forty-Five Years Ago Abounded in elk, Bear,
Deer, And Antelope.
The Fort Was Situated a Few Hundred yards Above The Mouth Of The
"Fontaine Qui Bouille" River,[47] So Called from Two Springs Of
Mineral Water Near Its Head, Under Pike'S Peak, About Sixty Miles
Above Its Mouth.
As Is The Case With All The Savage Races Of The World, The American
Indians Possess Hereditary Legends, Accounting For All The Phenomena
Of Nature, Or Any Occurrence Which Is Beyond Their Comprehension.
The Shos-Shones Had The Following Story To Account For The Presence Of
These Wonderful Springs In the Midst Of Their Favourite Hunting-Ground.
The Two Fountains, One Pouring Forth The Sweetest Water Imaginable,
The Other A Stream As Bitter As Gall, Are Intimately Connected with
The Cause Of The Separation Of The Two Tribes. Their Legend Thus Runs:
Many Hundreds Of Winters Ago, When The Cottonwoods On The Big River
Were No Higher Than Arrows, And The Prairies Were Crowded with Game,
The Red men Who Hunted the Deer In the Forests And The Buffalo On The
Plains All Spoke The Same Language, And The Pipe Of Peace Breathed its
Soothing Cloud Whenever Two Parties Of Hunters Met On The Boundless
Prairie.
It Happened one Day That Two Hunters Of Different Nations Met On The
Bank Of A Small Rivulet, To Which Both Had Resorted to Quench Their
Thirst. A Small Stream Of Water, Rising From A Spring On A Rock
Within A Few Feet Of The Bank, Trickled over It And Fell Splashing
Into The River. One Hunter Sought The Spring Itself; The Other,
Tired by His Exertions In the Chase, Threw Himself At Once To The
Ground, And Plunged his Face Into The Running Stream.
The Latter Had Been Unsuccessful In the Hunt, And Perhaps His Bad
Fortune, And The Sight Of The Fat Deer Which The Other Threw From His
Back Before He Drank At The Crystal Spring, Caused a Feeling Of
Jealousy And Ill-Humour To Take Possession Of His Mind. The Other,
On The Contrary, Before He Satisfied his Thirst, Raised in the Hollow
Of His Hand A Portion Of The Water, And, Lifting It Toward The Sun,
Reversed his Hand, And Allowed it To Fall Upon The Ground, As A
Libation To The Great Spirit, Who Had Vouch-Safed him A Successful
Hunt And The Blessing Of The Refreshing Water With Which He Was About
To Quench His Thirst.
This Reminder That He Had Neglected the Usual Offering Only Increased
The Feeling Of Envy And Annoyance Which Filled the Unsuccessful
Hunter'S Heart. The Evil Spirit At That Moment Entering His Body,
His Temper Fairly Flew Away, And He Sought Some Pretence To Provoke
A Quarrel With The Other Indian.
"Why Does A Stranger," He Asked, Rising From The Stream, "Drink At
The Spring-Head, When One To Whom The Fountain Belongs Contents
Himself With The Water That Runs From It?"
"The Great Spirit Places The Cool Water At The Spring," Answered the
Other Hunter, "That His Children May Drink It Pure And Undefiled.
The Running Water Is For The Beasts Which Scour The Plains. Ausaqua
Is A Chief Of The Shos-Shones; He Drinks At The Head Water."
"The Shos-Shones Is But A Tribe Of The Comanches," Returned the Other:
"Wacomish Leads The Whole Nation. Why Does A Shos-Shone Dare To
Drink Above Him?"
"When The Manitou Made His Children, Whether Shos-Shone Or Comanche,
Arapaho, Cheyenne, Or Pawnee, He Gave Them Buffalo To Eat, And The
Pure Water Of The Fountain To Quench Their Thirst. He Said Not To
One, 'Drink Here,' And To Another, 'Drink There'; But Gave The Crystal
Spring To All, That All Might Drink."
Wacomish Almost Burst With Rage As The Other Spoke; But His Coward
Heart Prevented him From Provoking an Encounter With The Calm Shos-Shone.
The Latter, Made Thirsty By The Words He Had Spoken--For The Indian Is
Ever Sparing Of His Tongue--Again Stooped down To The Spring To Drink,
When The Subtle Warrior Of The Comanches Suddenly Threw Himself Upon
The Kneeling Hunter And, Forcing His Head Into The Bubbling Water,
Held Him Down With All His Strength Until His Victim No Longer
Struggled; His Stiffened limbs Relaxed, And He Fell Forward Over
The Spring, Drowned.
Mechanically The Comanche Dragged the Body A Few Paces From The Water,
And, As Soon As The Head Of The Dead Indian Was Withdrawn, The Spring
Was Suddenly And Strangely Disturbed. Bubbles Sprang Up From The
Bottom, And, Rising To The Surface, Escaped in hissing Gas. A Thin
Vapour Arose, And, Gradually Dissolving, Displayed to The Eyes Of The
Trembling Murderer The Figure Of An Aged indian, Whose Long, Snowy
Hair And Venerable Beard, Blown Aside From His Breast, Discovered the
Well-Known Totem Of The Great Wankanaga, The Father Of The Comanche
And Shos-Shone Nation.
Stretching Out A War-Club Toward The Comanche, The Figure Thus
Addressed him:--
"Accursed murderer! While The Blood Of The Brave Shos-Shone Cries To
The Great Spirit For Vengeance, May The Water Of Thy Tribe Be Rank
And Bitter In their Throats!" Thus Saying, And Swinging His Ponderous
War-Club Round His Head, He Dashed out The Brains Of The Comanche,
Who Fell Headlong Into The Spring, Which From That Day To This Remains
Rank And Nauseous, So That Not Even When Half Dead With Thirst, Can
One Drink From It.
The Good Wankanaga, However, To Perpetuate The Memory Of The Shos-Shone
Warrior, Who Was Renowned in his Tribe For Valour And Nobleness Of
Heart, Struck With The Same Avenging Club A Hard, Flat Rock Which
Overhung The Rivulet, And Forthwith A Round Clear Basin Opened, Which
Instantly Filled with Bubbling, Sparkling Water, Sweet And Cool.
From That Day The Two Mighty Tribes Of The Shos-Shones And Comanches
Have Remained severed and Apart, Although A Long And Bloody War
Followed the Treacherous Murder.
The Indians Regarded these Wonderful Springs With Awe. The Arapahoes,
Especially, Attributed to The Spirit Of The Springs The Power Of
Ordaining The Success Or Failure Of Their War Expeditions. As Their
Warriors Passed by The Mysterious Pools When Hunting Their Hereditary
Enemies, The Utes, They Never Failed to Bestow Their Votive Offerings
Upon The Spring, In order To Propitiate The Manitou Of The Strange
Fountain, And Insure A Fortunate Issue To Their Path Of War. As Late
As Twenty-Five Years Ago, The Visitor To The Place Could Always Find
The Basin Of The Spring Filled with Beads And Wampum, Pieces Of Red
Cloth And Knives, While The Surrounding Trees Were Hung With Strips
Of Deerskin, Cloth, And Moccasins. Signs Were Frequently Observed
In The Vicinity Of The Waters Unmistakably Indicating That A War-Dance
Had Been Executed there By The Arapahoes On Their Way To The Valley
Of Salt, Occupied by The Powerful Utes.
Never Was There Such A Paradise For Hunters As This Lone And Solitary
Spot In the Days When The Region Was Known Only To Them And The
Trappers Of The Great Fur Companies. The Shelving Prairie, At The
Bottom Of Which The Springs Are Situated, Is Entirely Surrounded by
Rugged mountains And Contained two Or Three Acres Of Excellent Grass,
Affording a Safe Pasture For Their Animals, Which Hardly Cared to
Wander From Such Feeding and The Salt They Loved to Lick.
The Trappers Of The Rocky Mountains Belonged to A Genus That Has
Disappeared. Forty Years Ago There Was Not A Hole Or Corner In the
Vast Wilderness Of The Far West That Had Not Been Explored by These
Hardy Men. From The Mississippi To The Mouth Of The Colorado Of The
West, From The Frozen Regions Of The North To The Gila In mexico,
The Beaver Hunter Has Set His Traps In every Creek And Stream.
The Mountains And Waters, In many Instances, Still Retain The Names
Assigned them By Those Rude Hunters, Who Were Veritable Pioneers
Paving The Way For The Settlement Of The Stern Country.
A Trapper'S Camp In the Old Days Was Quite A Picture, As Were All Its
Surroundings. He Did Not Always Take The Trouble To Build A Shelter,
Unless In the Winter. A Couple Of Deerskins Stretched over A Willow
Frame Was Considered sufficient To Protect Him From The Storm.
Sometimes He Contented himself With A Mere "Breakwind," The Rocky
Wall Of A Canyon, Or Large Ravine. Near At Hand He Set Up Two Poles,
In The Crotch Of Which Another Was Laid, Where He Kept, Out Of Reach
Of The Hungry Wolf And Coyote, His Meat, Consisting Of Every Variety
Afforded by The Region In which He Had Pitched his Camp. Under Cover
Of The Skins Of The Animals He Had Killed hung His Old-Fashioned
Powder-Horn And Bullet-Pouch, While His Trusty Rifle, Carefully
Defended from The Damp, Was Always Within Reach Of His Hand. Round
His Blazing Fire At Night His Companions, If He Had Any, Were Other
Trappers On The Same Stream; And, While Engaged in cleaning Their
Arms, Making and Mending Moccasins, Or Running Bullets, They Told
Long Yarns, Until The Lateness Of The Hour Warned them To Crawl Under
Their Blankets.
Not Far From The Camp, His Animals, Well Hobbled, Fed in sight;
For Nothing Did A Hunter Dread More Than A Visit From Horse-Stealing
Indians, And To Be Afoot Was The Acme Of Misery.
Some Hunters Who Had Married squaws Carried about With Them Regular
Buffalo-Skin Lodges, Which Their Wives Took Care Of, According To
Indian Etiquette.
The Old-Time Trappers More Nearly Approximated the Primitive Savage,
Perhaps, Than Any Other Class Of Civilized men. Their Lives Being
Spent In the Remote Wilderness Of The Mountains, Frequently With No
Other Companion Than Nature Herself, Their Habits And Character Often
Assumed a Most Singular Cast Of Simplicity, Mingled with Ferocity,
That Appeared to Take Its Colouring From The Scenes And Objects Which
Surrounded them. Having No Wants Save Those Of Nature, Their Sole
Concern Was To Provide Sufficient Food To Support Life, And The
Necessary Clothing To Protect Them From The Sometimes Rigorous Climate.
The Costume Of The Average Trapper Was A Hunting-Shirt Of Dressed
Buckskin, With Long, Fringed trousers Of The Same Material, Decorated
With Porcupine Quills. A Flexible Hat And Moccasins Covered his
Extremities, And Over His Left Shoulder And Under His Right Arm Hung
His Powder-Horn And Bullet-Pouch, In which He Also Carried flint,
Steel, And Other Odds And Ends. Round His Waist He Wore A Belt,
In Which Was Stuck A Large Knife In a Sheath Of Buffalo-Hide, Made
Fast To The Belt By A Chain Or Guard Of Steel. It Also Supported
A Little Buckskin Case, Which Contained a Whetstone, A Very Necessary
Article; For In taking Off The Hides Of The Beaver A Sharp Knife Was
Required. His Pipe-Holder Hung Around His Neck, And Was Generally
A Gage D'Amour, A Triumph Of Squaw Workmanship, Wrought With Beads
And Porcupine Quills, Often Made In the Shape Of A Heart.
Necessarily Keen Observers Of Nature, They Rivalled the Beasts Of
Prey In discovering The Haunts And Habits Of Game, And In their Skill
And Cunning In capturing It Outwitted the Indian Himself. Constantly
Exposed to Perils Of All Kinds, They Became Callous To Any Feeling
Of Danger, And Were Firm Friends Or Bitter Enemies. It Was A "Word
And A Blow," The Blow Often Coming First. Strong, Active, Hardy As
Bears, Expert In the Use Of Their Weapons, They Were Just What An
Uncivilized white Man Might Be Supposed to Be Under Conditions Where
He Must Depend Upon His Instincts For The Support Of Life.
Having Determined upon The Locality Of His Trapping-Ground, The Hunter
Started off, Sometimes Alone, Sometimes Three Or Four Of Them In
Company, As Soon As The Breaking Of The Ice In the
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