Crusoe’s return, and his
private adventures among the Indians—Dick
at a very low ebb—Crusoe saves him.
The means by which Crusoe managed
to escape from his two-legged captors, and rejoin
his master, require separate and special notice.
In the struggle with the fallen horse
and Indian, which Dick had seen begun but not concluded,
he was almost crushed to death; and the instant the
Indian gained his feet, he sent an arrow at his head
with savage violence. Crusoe, however, had been
so well used to dodging the blunt-headed arrows that
were wont to be shot at him by the boys of the Mustang
Valley, that he was quite prepared, and eluded the
shaft by an active bound. Moreover, he uttered
one of his own peculiar roars, flew at the Indian’s
throat, and dragged him down. At the same moment
the other Indians came up, and one of them turned aside
to the rescue. This man happened to have an old
gun, of the cheap sort at that time exchanged for
peltries by the fur-traders. With the butt of
this he struck Crusoe a blow on the head that sent
him sprawling on the grass.
The rest of the savages, as we have
seen, continued in pursuit of Dick until he leaped
into the river; then they returned, took the saddle
and bridle off his dead horse, and rejoined their comrades.
Here they held a court-martial on Crusoe, who was
now bound foot and muzzle with cords. Some were
for killing him; others, who admired his noble appearance,
immense size, and courage, thought it would be well
to carry him to their village and keep him. There
was a pretty violent dispute on the subject, but at
length it was agreed that they should spare his life
in the meantime, and perhaps have a dog-dance round
him when they got to their wigwams.
This dance, of which Crusoe was to
be the chief though passive performer, is peculiar
to some of the tribes east of the Rocky Mountains,
and consists in killing a dog and cutting out its liver,
which is afterwards sliced into shreds or strings and
hung on a pole about the height of a man’s head.
A band of warriors then come and dance wildly round
this pole, and each one in succession goes up to the
raw liver and bites a piece off it, without, however,
putting his hands near it. Such is the dog-dance,
and to such was poor Crusoe destined by his fierce
captors, especially by the one whose throat still
bore very evident marks of his teeth.
But Crusoe was much too clever a dog
to be disposed of in so disgusting a manner.
He had privately resolved in his own mind that he
would escape; but the hopelessness of his ever carrying
that resolution into effect would have been apparent
to any one who could have seen the way in which his
muzzle was secured, and his four paws were tied together
in a bunch, as he hung suspended across the saddle
of one of the savages!
This particular party of Indians who
had followed Dick Varley determined not to wait for
the return of their comrades who were in pursuit of
the other two hunters, but to go straight home, so
for several days they galloped away over the prairie.
At nights, when they encamped, Crusoe was thrown on
the ground like a piece of old lumber, and left to
lie there with a mere scrap of food till morning, when
he was again thrown across the horse of his captor
and carried on. When the village was reached,
he was thrown again on the ground, and would certainly
have been torn to pieces in five minutes by the Indian
curs which came howling round him, had not an old
woman come to the rescue and driven them away.
With the help of her grand-son—a little
naked creature, just able to walk, or rather to stagger—she
dragged him to her tent, and, undoing the line that
fastened his mouth, offered him a bone.
Although lying in a position that
was unfavourable for eating purposes, Crusoe opened
his jaws and took it. An awful crash was followed
by two crunches—and it was gone! and Crusoe
looked up in the old squaw’s face with a look
that said plainly, “Another of the same, please,
and as quick as possible.” The old woman
gave him another, and then a lump of meat, which latter
went down with a gulp; but he coughed after it! and
it was well he didn’t choke. After this
the squaw left him, and Crusoe spent the remainder
of that night gnawing the cords that bound him.
So diligent was he that he was free before morning
and walked deliberately out of the tent. Then
he shook himself, and with a yell that one might have
fancied was intended for defiance he bounded joyfully
away, and was soon out of sight.
To a dog with a good appetite which
had been on short allowance for several days, the
mouthful given to him by the old squaw was a mere
nothing. All that day he kept bounding over the
plain from bluff to bluff in search of something to
eat, but found nothing until dusk, when he pounced
suddenly and most unexpectedly on a prairie-hen fast
asleep. In one moment its life was gone.
In less than a minute its body was gone too—feathers
and bones and all—down Crusoe’s ravenous
throat.
On the identical spot Crusoe lay down
and slept like a top for four hours. At the end
of that time he jumped up, bolted a scrap of skin
that somehow had been overlooked at supper, and flew
straight over the prairie to the spot where he had
had the scuffle with the Indian. He came to the
edge of the river, took precisely the same leap that
his master had done before him, and came out on the
other side a good deal higher up than Dick had done,
for the dog had no savages to dodge, and was, as we
have said before, a powerful swimmer.
It cost him a good deal of running
about to find the trail, and it was nearly dark before
he resumed his journey; then, putting his keen nose
to the ground, he ran step by step over Dick’s
track, and at last found him, as we have shown, on
the banks of the salt creek.
It is quite impossible to describe
the intense joy which filled Dick’s heart on
again beholding his favourite. Only those who
have lost and found such an one can know it.
Dick seized him round the neck and hugged him as well
as he could, poor fellow! in his feeble arms; then
he wept, then he laughed, and then he fainted.
This was a consummation that took
Crusoe quite aback. Never having seen his master
in such a state before he seemed to think at first
that he was playing some trick, for he bounded round
him, and barked, and wagged his tail. But as
Dick lay quite still and motionless, he went forward
with a look of alarm; snuffed him once or twice, and
whined piteously; then he raised his nose in the air
and uttered a long melancholy wail.
The cry seemed to revive Dick, for
he moved, and with some difficulty sat up, to the
dog’s evident relief. There is no doubt
whatever that Crusoe learned an erroneous lesson that
day, and was firmly convinced thenceforth that the
best cure for a fainting fit is a melancholy yell.
So easy is it for the wisest of dogs as well as men
to fall into gross error!
“Crusoe,” said Dick, in
a feeble voice, “dear good pup, come here.”
He crawled, as he spoke, down to the water’s
edge, where there was a level patch of dry sand.
“Dig,” said Dick, pointing to the sand.
Crusoe looked at him in surprise,
as well he might, for he had never heard the word
“dig” in all his life before.
Dick pondered a minute then a thought struck him.
He turned up a little of the sand
with his fingers, and, pointing to the hole, cried,
“Seek him out, pup!”
Ha! Crusoe understood that.
Many and many a time had he unhoused rabbits, and
squirrels, and other creatures at that word of command;
so, without a moment’s delay, he commenced to
dig down into the sand, every now and then stopping
for a moment and shoving in his nose, and snuffing
interrogatively, as if he fully expected to find a
buffalo at the bottom of it. Then he would resume
again, one paw after another so fast that you could
scarce see them going—“hand over hand,”
as sailors would have called it—while the
sand flew out between his hind legs in a continuous
shower. When the sand accumulated so much behind
him as to impede his motions he scraped it out of his
way, and set to work again with tenfold earnestness.
After a good while he paused and looked up at Dick
with an “it-won’t-do,-I-fear,-there’s-nothing-here”
expression on his face.
“Seek him out, pup!” repeated Dick.
“Oh! very good,” mutely
answered the dog, and went at it again, tooth and
nail, harder than ever.
In the course of a quarter of an hour
there was a deep yawning hole in the sand, into which
Dick peered with intense anxiety. The bottom
appeared slightly damp. Hope now reanimated
Dick Varley, and by various devices he succeeded in
getting the dog to scrape away a sort of tunnel from
the hole, into which he might roll himself and put
down his lips to drink when the water should rise
high enough. Impatiently and anxiously he lay
watching the moisture slowly accumulate in the bottom
of the hole, drop by drop, and while he gazed he fell
into a troubled, restless slumber, and dreamed that
Crusoe’s return was a dream, and that he was
alone again, perishing for want of water.
When he awakened the hole was half
full of clear water, and Crusoe was lapping it greedily.
“Back, pup!” he shouted,
as he crept down to the hole and put his trembling
lips to the water. It was brackish, but drinkable,
and as Dick drank deeply of it he esteemed it at that
moment better than nectar. Here he lay for half-an-hour,
alternately drinking and gazing in surprise at his
own emaciated visage as reflected in the pool.
The same afternoon Crusoe, in a private
hunting excursion of his own, discovered and caught
a prairie-hen, which he quietly proceeded to devour
on the spot, when Dick, who saw what had occurred,
whistled to him.
Obedience was engrained in every fibre
of Crusoe’s mental and corporeal being.
He did not merely answer at once to the call—he
sprang to it, leaving the prairie-hen untasted.
“Fetch it, pup,” cried Dick eagerly as
the dog came up.
In a few moments the hen was at his
feet. Dick’s circumstances could not brook
the delay of cookery; he gashed the bird with his knife
and drank the blood, and then gave the flesh to the
dog, while he crept to the pool again for another
draught. Ah! think not, reader, that although
we have treated this subject in a slight vein of pleasantry,
because it ended well, that therefore our tale is pure
fiction. Not only are Indians glad to satisfy
the urgent cravings of hunger with raw flesh, but
many civilized men and delicately nurtured have done
the same—ay, and doubtless will do the same
again, as long as enterprising and fearless men shall
go forth to dare the dangers of flood and field in
the wild places of our wonderful world!
Crusoe had finished his share of the
feast before Dick returned from the pool. Then
master and dog lay down together side by side and fell
into a long, deep, peaceful slumber.