The “wallering” peculiarities
of buffalo bulls—The first buffalo hunt
and its consequences—Crusoe comes to the
rescue—Pawnees discovered—A
monster buffalo hunt—Joe acts the part of
ambassador.
Fortunately the day that succeeded
the dreary night described in the last chapter was
warm and magnificent. The sun rose in a blaze
of splendour, and filled the atmosphere with steam
from the moist earth.
The unfortunates in the wet camp were
not slow to avail themselves of his cheering rays.
They hung up everything on the bushes to dry, and
by dint of extreme patience and cutting out the comparatively
dry hearts of several pieces of wood, they lighted
a fire and boiled some rain-water, which was soon
converted into soup. This, and the exercise necessary
for the performance of these several duties, warmed
and partially dried them; so that when they once more
mounted their steeds and rode away, they were in a
state of comparative comfort and in excellent spirits.
The only annoyance was the clouds of mosquitoes and
large flies that assailed men and horses whenever they
checked their speed.
“I tell ye wot it is,”
said Joe Blunt, one fine morning about a week after
they had begun to cross the prairie, “it’s
my ’pinion that we’ll come on buffaloes
soon. Them tracks are fresh, an’ yonder’s
one o’ their wallers that’s bin used not
long agone.”
“I’ll go have a look at
it,” cried Dick, trotting away as he spoke.
Everything in these vast prairies
was new to Dick Varley, and he was kept in a constant
state of excitement during the first week or two of
his journey. It is true he was quite familiar
with the names and habits of all the animals that
dwelt there; for many a time and oft had he listened
to the “yarns” of the hunters and trappers
of the Mustang Valley, when they returned laden with
rich furs from their periodical hunting expeditions.
But this knowledge of his only served to whet his
curiosity and his desire to see the denizens
of the prairies with his own eyes; and now that his
wish was accomplished, it greatly increased the pleasures
of his journey.
Dick had just reached the “wallow”
referred to by Joe Blunt, and had reined up his steed
to observe it leisurely, when a faint hissing sound
reached his ear. Looking quickly back, he observed
his two companions crouching on the necks of their
horses, and slowly descending into a hollow of the
prairie in front of them, as if they wished to bring
the rising ground between them and some object in
advance. Dick instantly followed their example,
and was soon at their heels.
“Ye needn’t look at the
waller,” whispered Joe, “for a’ tother
side o’ the ridge there’s a bull wallerin’.”
“Ye don’t mean it!”
exclaimed Dick, as they all dismounted and picketed
their horses to the plain. “Oui,”
said Henri, tumbling off his horse, while a broad
grin overspread his good-natured countenance, “it
is one fact! One buffalo bull be wollerin’
like a enormerous hog. Also, dere be t’ousands
o’ buffaloes farder on.”
“Can ye trust yer dog keepin’
back?” inquired Joe, with a dubious glance at
Crusoe.
“Trust him! Ay, I wish I was as sure o’
myself.”
“Look to yer primin’,
then, an’ we’ll have tongues and marrow
bones for supper to-night, I’se warrant.
Hist! down on yer knees and go softly. We might
ha’ run them down on horseback, but it’s
bad to wind yer beasts on a trip like this, if ye
can help it; an’ it’s about as easy to
stalk them. Leastways, we’ll try. Lift
yer head slowly, Dick, an’ don’t show
more nor the half o’t above the ridge.”
Dick elevated his head as directed,
and the scene that met his view was indeed well calculated
to send an electric shock to the heart of an ardent
sportsman. The vast plain beyond was absolutely
blackened with countless herds of buffaloes, which
were browsing on the rich grass. They were still
so far distant that their bellowing, and the trampling
of their myriad hoofs, only reached the hunters like
a faint murmur on the breeze. In the immediate
foreground, however, there was a group of about half-a-dozen
buffalo cows feeding quietly, and in the midst of
them an enormous old bull was enjoying himself in his
wallow. The animals, towards which our hunters
now crept with murderous intent, are the fiercest
and the most ponderous of the ruminating inhabitants
of the western wilderness. The name of buffalo,
however, is not correct. The animal is the bison,
and bears no resemblance whatever to the buffalo proper;
but as the hunters of the far west, and, indeed, travellers
generally, have adopted the misnomer, we bow to the
authority of custom and adopt it too.
Buffaloes roam in countless thousands
all over the North American prairies, from the Hudson
Bay Territories, north of Canada, to the shores of
the Gulf of Mexico.
The advance of white men to the west
has driven them to the prairies between the Missouri
and the Rocky Mountains, and has somewhat diminished
their numbers; but even thus diminished, they are still
innumerable in the more distant plains. Their
colour is dark brown, but it varies a good deal with
the seasons. The hair or fur, from its great
length in winter and spring and exposure to the weather,
turns quite light; but when the winter coat is shed
off, the new growth is a beautiful dark brown, almost
approaching to jet-black. In form the buffalo
somewhat resembles the ox, but its head and shoulders
are much larger, and are covered with a profusion
of long shaggy hair which adds greatly to the fierce
aspect of the animal. It has a large hump on
the shoulder, and its fore-quarters are much larger,
in proportion, than the hind-quarters. The horns
are short and thick, the hoofs are cloven, and the
tail is short, with a tuft of hair at the extremity.
It is scarcely possible to conceive
a wilder or more ferocious and terrible monster than
a buffalo bull. He often grows to the enormous
weight of two thousand pounds. His lion-like mane
falls in shaggy confusion quite over his head and
shoulders, down to the ground. When he is wounded
he becomes imbued with the spirit of a tiger:
he stamps, bellows, roars, and foams forth his rage
with glaring eyes and steaming nostrils, and charges
furiously at man and horse with utter recklessness.
Fortunately, however, he is not naturally pugnacious,
and can be easily thrown into a sudden panic.
Moreover, the peculiar position of his eye renders
this creature not so terrible as he would otherwise
be to the hunter. Owing to the stiff structure
of the neck, and the sunken, downward-looking eyeball,
the buffalo cannot, without an effort, see beyond
the direct line of vision presented to the habitual
carriage of his head. When, therefore, he is wounded,
and charges, he does so in a straight line, so that
his pursuer can leap easily out of his way. The
pace of the buffalo is clumsy, and apparently
slow, yet, when chased, he dashes away over the plains
in blind blundering terror, at a rate that leaves
all but good horses far behind. He cannot keep
the pace up, however, and is usually soon overtaken.
Were the buffalo capable of the same alert and agile
motions of head and eye peculiar to the deer or wild
horse, in addition to his “bovine rage,”
he would be the most formidable brute on earth.
There is no object, perhaps, so terrible as the headlong
advance of a herd of these animals when thoroughly
aroused by terror. They care not for their necks.
All danger in front is forgotten, or not seen, in
the terror of that from which they fly. No thundering
cataract is more tremendously irresistible than the
black bellowing torrent which sometimes pours through
the narrow defiles of the Rocky Mountains, or sweeps
like a roaring flood over the trembling plains.
The wallowing, to which we have referred,
is a luxury usually indulged in during the hot months
of summer, when the buffaloes are tormented by flies,
and heat, and drought. At this season they seek
the low grounds in the prairies where there is a little
stagnant water lying amongst the grass, and the ground
underneath, being saturated, is soft. The leader
of the herd, a shaggy old bull, usually takes upon
himself to prepare the wallow.
It was a rugged monster of the largest
size that did so on the present occasion, to the intense
delight of Dick Varley, who begged Joe to lie still
and watch the operation before trying to shoot one
of the buffalo cows. Joe consented with a nod,
and the four spectators—for Crusoe was
as much taken up with the proceedings as any of them—crouched
in the grass, and looked on.
Coming up to the swampy spot, the
old bull gave a grunt of satisfaction, and going down
on one knee, plunged his short thick horns into the
mud, tore it up, and cast it aside. Having repeated
this several times, he plunged his head in, and brought
it forth saturated with dirty water and bedaubed with
lumps of mud, through which his fierce eyes gazed,
with a ludicrous expression of astonishment, straight
in the direction of the hunters, as if he meant to
say, “I’ve done it that time, and no mistake!”
The other buffaloes seemed to think so too, for they
came up and looked on with an expression that seemed
to say, “Well done, old fellow; try that again!”
The old fellow did try it again, and
again, and again, plunging, and ramming, and tearing
up the earth, until he formed an excavation large
enough to contain his huge body. In this bath
he laid himself comfortably down, and began to roll
and wallow about until he mixed up a trough full of
thin soft mud, which completely covered him. When
he came out of the hole there was scarcely an atom
of his former self visible!
The coat of mud thus put on by bulls
is usually permitted by them to dry, and is not finally
got rid of until long after, when oft-repeated rollings
on the grass and washings by rain at length clear it
away.
When the old bull vacated this delectable
bath, another bull, scarcely if at all less ferocious-looking,
stepped forward to take his turn; but he was interrupted
by a volley from the hunters, which scattered the
animals right and left, and sent the mighty herds in
the distance flying over the prairie in wild terror.
The very turmoil of their own mad flight added to
their panic, and the continuous thunder of their hoofs
was heard until the last of them disappeared on the
horizon. The family party which had been fired
at, however, did not escape so well, Joe’s rifle
wounded a fat young cow, and Dick Varley brought it
down. Henri had done his best, but as the animals
were too far distant for his limited vision, he missed
the cow he fired at, and hit the young bull whose
bath had been interrupted. The others scattered
and fled.
“Well done, Dick,” exclaimed
Joe Blunt, as they all ran up to the cow that had
fallen. “Your first shot at the buffalo
was a good un. Come, now, an’ I’ll
show ye how to cut it up an’ carry off the tit-bits.”
“Ah, mon dear ole bull!”
exclaimed Henri, gazing after the animal which he
had wounded, and which was now limping slowly away.
“You is not worth goin’ after. Farewell—adieu.”
“He’ll be tough enough,
I warrant,” said Joe; “an’ we’ve
more meat here nor we can lift.”
“But wouldn’t it be as
well to put the poor brute out o’ pain?”
suggested Dick.
“Oh, he’ll die soon enough,”
replied Joe, tucking up his sleeves and drawing his
long hunting-knife.
Dick, however, was not satisfied with
this way of looking at it. Saying that he would
be back in a few minutes, he reloaded his rifle, and
calling Crusoe to his side, walked quickly after the
wounded bull, which was now hid from view in a hollow
of the plain.
In a few minutes he came in sight
of it, and ran forward with his rifle in readiness.
“Down, Crusoe,” he whispered; “wait
for me here.”
Crusoe crouched in the grass instantly,
and Dick advanced. As he came on, the bull observed
him, and turned round bellowing with rage and pain
to receive him. The aspect of the brute on a near
view was so terrible that Dick involuntarily stopped
too, and gazed with a mingled feeling of wonder and
awe, while it bristled with passion, and blood-streaked
foam dropped from its open jaws, and its eyes glared
furiously. Seeing that Dick did not advance, the
bull charged him with a terrific roar; but the youth
had firm nerves, and although the rush of such a savage
creature at full speed was calculated to try the courage
of any man, especially one who had never seen a buffalo
bull before, Dick did not lose presence of mind.
He remembered the many stories he had listened to
of this very thing that was now happening; so, crushing
down his excitement as well as he could, he cocked
his rifle and awaited the charge. He knew that
it was of no use to fire at the head of the advancing
foe, as the thickness of the skull, together with
the matted hair on the forehead, rendered it impervious
to a bullet.
When the bull was within a yard of
him he leaped lightly to one side and it passed.
Just as it did so, Dick aimed at its heart and fired,
but his knowledge of the creature’s anatomy was
not yet correct. The ball entered the shoulder
too high, and the bull, checking himself as well as
he could in his headlong rush, turned round and made
at Dick again.
The failure, coupled with the excitement,
proved too much for Dick; he could not resist discharging
his second barrel at the brute’s head as it
came on. He might as well have fired at a brick
wall. It shook its shaggy front, and with a hideous
bellow thundered forward. Again Dick sprang to
one side, but in doing so a tuft of grass or a stone
caught his foot, and he fell heavily to the ground.
Up to this point Crusoe’s admirable
training had nailed him to the spot where he had been
left, although the twitching of every fibre in his
body and a low continuous whine showed how gladly he
would have hailed permission to join in the combat;
but the instant he saw his master down, and the buffalo
turning to charge again, he sprang forward with a
roar that would have done credit to his bovine enemy,
and seized him by the nose. So vigorous was the
rush that he well-nigh pulled the bull down on its
side. One toss of its head, however, sent Crusoe
high into the air; but it accomplished this feat at
the expense of its nose, which was torn and lacerated
by the dog’s teeth.
Scarcely had Crusoe touched the ground,
which he did with a sounding thump, than he sprang
up and flew at his adversary again. This time,
however, he adopted the plan of barking furiously and
biting by rapid yet terrible snaps as he found opportunity,
thus keeping the bull entirely engrossed, and affording
Dick an opportunity of reloading his rifle, which
he was not slow to do. Dick then stepped close
up, and while the two combatants were roaring in each
other’s faces, he shot the buffalo through the
heart. It fell to the earth with a deep groan.
Crusoe’s rage instantly vanished
on beholding this, and he seemed to be filled with
tumultuous joy at his master’s escape, for he
gambolled round him, and whined and fawned upon him
in a manner that could not be misunderstood.
“Good dog; thank’ee, my
pup,” said Dick, patting Crusoe’s head
as he stooped to brush the dust from his leggings.
“I don’t know what would ha’ become
o’ me but for your help, Crusoe.”
Crusoe turned his head a little to
one side, wagged his tail, and looked at Dick with
an expression that said quite plainly, “I’d
die for you, I would—not once, or twice,
but ten times, fifty times if need be—and
that not merely to save your life, but even to please
you.”
There is no doubt whatever that Crusoe
felt something of this sort. The love of a Newfoundland
dog to its master is beyond calculation or expression.
He who once gains such love carries the dog’s
life in his hand. But let him who reads note
well, and remember that there is only one coin that
can purchase such love, and that is kindness.
The coin, too, must be genuine. Kindness merely
expressed will not do, it must be felt.
“Hallo, boy, ye’ve bin
i’ the wars!” exclaimed Joe, raising himself
from his task as Dick and Crusoe returned.
“You look more like it than
I do,” retorted Dick, laughing.
This was true, for cutting up a buffalo
carcass with no other instrument than a large knife
is no easy matter. Yet western hunters and Indians
can do it without cleaver or saw, in a way that would
surprise a civilized butcher not a little. Joe
was covered with blood up to the elbows. His
hair, happening to have a knack of getting into his
eyes, had been so often brushed off with bloody hands,
that his whole visage was speckled with gore, and
his dress was by no means immaculate.
While Dick related his adventure,
or mis-adventure, with the bull, Joe and Henri
completed the cutting out of the most delicate portions
of the buffalo—namely, the hump on its shoulder—which
is a choice piece, much finer than the best beef—and
the tongue, and a few other parts. The tongues
of buffaloes are superior to those of domestic cattle.
When all was ready the meat was slung across the back
of the pack-horse; and the party, remounting their
horses, continued their journey, having first cleansed
themselves as well as they could in the rather dirty
waters of an old wallow.
“See,” said Henri, turning
to Dick and pointing to a circular spot of green as
they rode along, “that is one old dry
waller.”
“Ay,” remarked Joe; “after
the waller dries, it becomes a ring o’ greener
grass than the rest o’ the plain, as ye see.
Tis said the first hunters used to wonder greatly
at these myster’ous circles, and they invented
all sorts o’ stories to account for ’em.
Some said they wos fairy-rings, but at last they comed
to know they wos nothin’ more nor less than
places where buffaloes wos used to waller in.
It’s often seemed to me that if we knowed the
raisons o’ things, we wouldn’t be
so much puzzled wi’ them as we are.”
The truth of this last remark was
so self-evident and incontrovertible that it elicited
no reply, and the three friends rode on for a considerable
time in silence.
It was now past noon, and they were
thinking of calling a halt for a short rest to the
horses and a pipe to themselves, when Joe was heard
to give vent to one of those peculiar hisses that always
accompanied either a surprise or a caution. In
the present case it indicated both.
“What now, Joe?”
“Injuns!” ejaculated Joe.
“Eh! fat you say? Ou is dey?”
Crusoe at this moment uttered a low
growl. Ever since the day he had been partially
roasted he had maintained a rooted antipathy to Red-men.
Joe immediately dismounted, and placing his ear to
the ground listened intently. It is a curious
fact that by placing the ear close to the ground sounds
can be heard distinctly which could not be heard at
all if the listener were to maintain an erect position.
“They’re arter the buffalo,”
said Joe, rising, “an’ I think it’s
likely they’re a band o’ Pawnees.
Listen an’ ye’ll hear their shouts quite
plain.”
Dick and Henri immediately lay down
and placed their ears to the ground.
“Now, me hear noting,”
said Henri, jumping up, “but me ear is like me
eyes—ver’ short-sighted.”
“I do hear something,”
said Dick as he got up, “but the beating o’
my own heart makes row enough to spoil my hearin’.”
Joe Blunt smiled. “Ah!
lad, ye’re young, an’ yer blood’s
too hot yet; but bide a bit—you’ll
cool down soon. I wos like you once. Now,
lads, what think ye we should do?”
“You know best, Joe.”
“Oui, nodoubtedly.’
“Then wot I advise is that we
gallop to the broken sand hillocks ye see yonder,
get behind them, an’ take a peep at the Redskins.
If they are Pawnees, we’ll go up to them at
once; if not, we’ll hold a council o’
war on the spot.”
Having arranged this, they mounted
and hastened towards the hillocks in question, which
they reached after ten minutes’ gallop at full
stretch. The sandy mounds afforded them concealment,
and enabled them to watch the proceedings of the savages
in the plain below. The scene was the most curious
and exciting that can be conceived. The centre
of the plain before them was crowded with hundreds
of buffaloes, which were dashing about in the most
frantic state of alarm. To whatever point they
galloped they were met by yelling savages on horseback,
who could not have been fewer in numbers than a thousand,
all being armed with lance, bow, and quiver, and mounted
on active little horses. The Indians had completely
surrounded the herd of buffaloes, and were now advancing
steadily towards them, gradually narrowing the circle,
and whenever the terrified animals endeavoured to
break through the line, they rushed to that particular
spot in a body, and scared them back again into the
centre.
Thus they advanced until they closed
in on their prey and formed an unbroken circle round
them, whilst the poor brutes kept eddying and surging
to and fro in a confused mass, hooking and climbing
upon each other, and bellowing furiously. Suddenly
the horsemen made a rush, and the work of destruction
began. The tremendous turmoil raised a cloud
of dust that obscured the field in some places, and
hid it from our hunters’ view. Some of
the Indians galloped round and round the circle, sending
their arrows whizzing up to the feathers in the sides
of the fattest cows. Others dashed fearlessly
into the midst of the black heaving mass, and, with
their long lances, pierced dozens of them to the heart.
In many instances the buffaloes, infuriated by wounds,
turned fiercely on their assailants and gored the horses
to death, in which cases the men had to trust to their
nimble legs for safety. Sometimes a horse got
jammed in the centre of the swaying mass, and could
neither advance nor retreat. Then the savage rider
leaped upon the buffaloes’ backs, and springing
from one to another, like an acrobat, gained the outer
edge of the circle; not failing, however, in his strange
flight, to pierce with his lance several of the fattest
of his stepping-stones as he sped along.
A few of the herd succeeded in escaping
from the blood and dust of this desperate battle,
and made off over the plains; but they were quickly
overtaken, and the lance or the arrow brought them
down on the green turf. Many of the dismounted
riders were chased by bulls; but they stepped lightly
to one side, and, as the animals passed, drove their
arrows deep into their sides. Thus the tumultuous
war went on, amid thundering tread, and yell, and
bellow, till the green plain was transformed into
a sea of blood and mire, and every buffalo of the
herd was laid low.
It is not to be supposed that such
reckless warfare is invariably waged without damage
to the savages. Many were the wounds and bruises
received that day, and not a few bones were broken,
but happily no lives were lost.
“Now, lads, now’s our
time. A bold and fearless look’s the best
at all times. Don’t look as if ye doubted
their friendship; and mind, wotever ye do, don’t
use yer arms. Follow me.”
Saying this, Joe Blunt leaped on his
horse, and, bounding over the ridge at full speed,
galloped headlong across the plain.
The savages observed the strangers
instantly, and a loud yell announced the fact as they
assembled from all parts of the field brandishing
their bows and spears. Joe’s quick eye soon
distinguished their chief, towards whom he galloped,
still at full speed, till within a yard or two of
his horse’s head; then he reined up suddenly.
So rapidly did Joe and his comrades approach, and so
instantaneously did they pull up, that their steeds
were thrown almost on their haunches.
The Indian chief did not move a muscle.
He was a tall, powerful savage, almost naked, and
mounted on a coal-black charger, which he sat with
the ease of a man accustomed to ride from infancy.
He was, indeed, a splendid-looking savage, but his
face wore a dark frown, for, although he and his band
had visited the settlements and trafficked with the
fur-traders on the Missouri, he did not love the “Pale-faces,”
whom he regarded as intruders on the hunting-grounds
of his fathers, and the peace that existed between
them at that time was of a very fragile character.
Indeed, it was deemed by the traders impossible to
travel through the Indian country at that period except
in strong force, and it was the very boldness of the
present attempt that secured to our hunters anything
like a civil reception.
Joe, who could speak the Pawnee tongue
fluently, began by explaining the object of his visit,
and spoke of the presents which he had brought for
the great chief; but it was evident that his words
made little impression. As he discoursed to them
the savages crowded round the little party, and began
to handle and examine their dresses and weapons with
a degree of rudeness that caused Joe considerable
anxiety.
“Mahtawa believes that the heart
of the Pale-face is true,” said the savage,
when Joe paused, “but he does not choose to make
peace. The Pale-faces are grasping. They
never rest. They turn their eyes to the great
mountains and say, ‘There we will stop.’
But even there they will not stop. They are never
satisfied; Mahtawa knows them well.”
This speech sank like a death-knell
into the hearts of the hunters, for they knew that
if the savages refused to make peace, they would scalp
them all and appropriate their goods. To make
things worse, a dark-visaged Indian suddenly caught
hold of Henri’s rifle, and, ere he was aware,
had plucked it from his hand. The blood rushed
to the gigantic hunter’s forehead, and he was
on the point of springing at the man, when Joe said
in a deep quiet voice,—
“Be still, Henri. You will but hasten death.”
At this moment there was a movement
in the outskirts of the circle of horsemen, and another
chief rode into the midst of them. He was evidently
higher in rank than Mahtawa, for he spoke authoritatively
to the crowd, and stepped in before him. The
hunters drew little comfort from the appearance of
his face, however, for it scowled upon them.
He was not so powerful a man as Mahtawa, but he was
more gracefully formed, and had a more noble and commanding
countenance.
“Have the Pale-faces no wigwams
on the great river that they should come to spy out
the lands of the Pawnee?” he demanded.
“We have not come to spy your
country,” answered Joe, raising himself proudly
as he spoke, and taking off his cap. “We
have come with a message from the great chief of the
Pale-faces, who lives in the village far beyond the
great river where the sun rises. He says, Why
should the Pale-face and the Red-man fight? They
are brothers. The same Manitou[*] watches over
both. The Pale-faces have more beads, and guns,
and blankets, and knives, and vermilion than they require;
they wish to give some of these things for the skins
and furs which the Red-man does not know what to do
with. The great chief of the Pale-faces has sent
me to say, Why should we fight? let us smoke the pipe
of peace.”
[Footnote *: The Indian name for God.]
At the mention of beads and blankets
the face of the wily chief brightened for a moment.
Then he said sternly,—
“The heart of the Pale-face
is not true. He has come here to trade for himself.
San-it-sa-rish has eyes that can see; they are not
shut. Are not these your goods?” The chief
pointed to the pack-horse as he spoke.
“Trappers do not take their
goods into the heart of an enemy’s camp,”
returned Joe. “San-it-sa-rish is wise, and
will understand this. These are gifts to the
chief of the Pawnees. There are more awaiting
him when the pipe of peace is smoked. I have
said. What message shall we take back to the
great chief of the Pale-faces?”
San-it-sa-rish was evidently mollified.
“The hunting-field is not the
council tent,” he said. “The Pale-faces
will go with us to our village.”
Of course Joe was too glad to agree
to this proposal, but he now deemed it politic to
display a little firmness.
“We cannot go till our rifle
is restored. It will not do to go back and tell
the great chief of the Pale-faces that the Pawnees
are thieves.”
The chief frowned angrily.
“The Pawnees are true; they
are not thieves. They choose to look at
the rifle of the Pale-face. It shall be returned.”
The rifle was instantly restored,
and then our hunters rode off with the Indians towards
their camp. On the way they met hundreds of women
and children going to the scene of the great hunt,
for it was their special duty to cut up the meat and
carry it into camp. The men, considering that
they had done quite enough in killing it, returned
to smoke and eat away the fatigues of the chase.
As they rode along, Dick Varley observed
that some of the “braves,” as Indian warriors
are styled, were eating pieces of the bloody livers
of the buffaloes in a raw state, at which he expressed
not a little disgust.
“Ah, boy! you’re green
yet,” remarked Joe Blunt in an undertone.
“Mayhap ye’ll be thankful to do that same
yerself some day.”
“Well, I’ll not refuse
to try when it is needful,” said Dick with a
laugh; “meanwhile I’m content to see the
Redskins do it, Joe Blunt.”