Health and happiness return—Incidents
of the journey_—A buffalo shot—A
wild horse “creased”—Dick’s
battle with a mustang.
Dick Varley’s fears and troubles,
in the meantime, were ended. On the day following
he awoke refreshed and happy—so happy and
light at heart, as he felt the glow of returning health
coursing through his veins, that he fancied he must
have dreamed it all. In fact, he was so certain
that his muscles were strong that he endeavoured to
leap up, but was powerfully convinced of his true
condition by the miserable stagger that resulted from
the effort.
However, he knew he was recovering,
so he rose, and thanking God for his recovery, and
for the new hope that was raised in his heart, he
went down to the pool and drank deeply of its water.
Then he returned, and, sitting down beside his dog,
opened the Bible and read long—and, for
the first time, earnestly—the story
of Christ’s love for sinful man. He at
last fell asleep over the book, and when he awakened
felt so much refreshed in body and mind that he determined
to attempt to pursue his journey.
He had not proceeded far when he came
upon a colony of prairie-dogs. Upon this occasion
he was little inclined to take a humorous view of
the vagaries of these curious little creatures, but
he shot one, and, as before, ate part of it raw.
These creatures are so active that they are difficult
to shoot, and even when killed generally fall into
their holes and disappear. Crusoe, however, soon
unearthed the dead animal on this occasion. That
night the travellers came to a stream of fresh water,
and Dick killed a turkey, so that he determined to
spend a couple of days there to recruit. At the
end of that time he again set out, but was able only
to advance five miles when he broke down. In
fact, it became evident to him that he must have a
longer period of absolute repose ere he could hope
to continue his journey; but to do so without food
was impossible. Fortunately there was plenty of
water, as his course lay along the margin of a small
stream, and, as the arid piece of prairie was now
behind him, he hoped to fall in with birds, or perhaps
deer, soon.
While he was plodding heavily and
wearily along, pondering these things, he came to
the brow of a wave from which he beheld a most magnificent
view of green grassy plains decked with flowers, and
rolling out to the horizon, with a stream meandering
through it, and clumps of trees scattered everywhere
far and wide. It was a glorious sight; but the
most glorious object in it to Dick, at that time, was
a fat buffalo which stood grazing not a hundred yards
off. The wind was blowing towards him, so that
the animal did not scent him, and, as he came up very
slowly, and it was turned away, it did not see him.
Crusoe would have sprung forward in
an instant, but his master’s finger imposed
silence and caution. Trembling with eagerness,
Dick sank flat down in the grass, cocked both barrels
of his piece, and, resting it on his left hand with
his left elbow on the ground, he waited until the
animal should present its side. In a few seconds
it moved; Dick’s eye glanced along the barrel,
but it trembled—his wonted steadiness of
aim was gone. He fired, and the buffalo sprang
off in terror. With a groan of despair he fired
again—almost recklessly—and
the buffalo fell! It rose once or twice and stumbled
forward a few paces, then it fell again. Meanwhile
Dick reloaded with trembling hand, and advanced to
give it another shot; but it was not needful—the
buffalo was already dead.
“Now, Crusoe,” said Dick,
sitting down on the buffalo’s shoulder and patting
his favourite on the head, “we’re all right
at last. You and I shall have a jolly time o’t,
pup, from this time for’ard.”
Dick paused for breath, and Crusoe
wagged his tail and looked as if to say—pshaw!
“as if!”
We tell you what it is, reader, it’s
of no use at all to go on writing “as if,”
when we tell you what Crusoe said. If there is
any language in eyes whatever—if there
is language in a tail, in a cocked ear, in a mobile
eyebrow, in the point of a canine nose,—if
there is language in any terrestrial thing at all,
apart from that which flows from the tongue, then
Crusoe spoke! Do we not speak at this moment
to you? and if so, then tell me wherein lies
the difference between a written letter and
a given sign?
Yes, Crusoe spoke. He said to
Dick as plain as dog could say it, slowly and emphatically,
“That’s my opinion precisely, Dick.
You’re the dearest, most beloved, jolliest fellow
that ever walked on two legs, you are; and whatever’s
your opinion is mine, no matter how absurd
it may be.”
Dick evidently understood him perfectly,
for he laughed as he looked at him and patted him
on the head, and called him a “funny dog.”
Then he continued his discourse:—
“Yes, pup, we’ll make
our camp here for a long bit, old dog, in this beautiful
plain. We’ll make a willow wigwam to sleep
in, you and I, jist in yon clump o’ trees, not
a stone’s-throw to our right, where we’ll
have a run o’ pure water beside us, and be near
our buffalo at the same time. For, ye see, we’ll
need to watch him lest the wolves take a notion to
eat him—that’ll be your duty,
pup. Then I’ll skin him when I get strong
enough, which’ll be in a day or two, I hope,
and we’ll put one-half of the skin below us
and t’other half above us i’ the camp,
an’ sleep, an’ eat, an’ take it easy
for a week or two—won’t we, pup?”
“Hoora-a-a-y!” shouted
Crusoe, with a jovial wag of his tail, that no human
arm with hat, or cap, or kerchief ever equalled.
Poor Dick Varley! He smiled to
think how earnestly he had been talking to the dog;
but he did not cease to do it, for although he entered
into discourses the drift of which Crusoe’s limited
education did not permit him to follow, he found comfort
in hearing the sound of his own voice, and in knowing
that it fell pleasantly on another ear in that lonely
wilderness.
Our hero now set about his preparations
as vigorously as he could. He cut out the buffalo’s
tongue—a matter of great difficulty to one
in his weak state—and carried it to a pleasant
spot near to the stream where the turf was level and
green, and decked with wild flowers. Here he
resolved to make his camp.
His first care was to select a bush
whose branches were long enough to form a canopy over
his head when bent, and the ends thrust into the ground.
The completing of this exhausted him greatly, but after
a rest he resumed his labours. The next thing
was to light a fire—a comfort which he
had not enjoyed for many weary days. Not that
he required it for warmth, for the weather was extremely
warm, but he required it to cook with, and the mere
sight of a blaze in a dark place is a most
heart-cheering thing, as every one knows.
When the fire was lighted he filled
his pannikin at the brook and put it on to boil, and
cutting several slices of buffalo tongue, he thrust
short stakes through them and set them up before the
fire to roast. By this time the water was boiling,
so he took it off with difficulty, nearly burning
his fingers and singeing the tail of his coat in so
doing. Into the pannikin he put a lump of maple
sugar, and stirred it about with a stick, and tasted
it. It seemed to him even better than tea or
coffee. It was absolutely delicious!
Really one has no notion what he can
do if he makes believe very hard. The
human mind is a nicely balanced and extremely complex
machine, and when thrown a little off the balance can
be made to believe almost anything, as we see in the
case of some poor monomaniacs, who have fancied that
they were made of all sorts of things—glass
and porcelain, and such like. No wonder then that
poor Dick Varley, after so much suffering and hardship,
came to regard that pannikin of hot sirup as the most
delicious beverage he ever drank.
During all these operations Crusoe
sat on his haunches beside him and looked. And
you haven’t, no, you haven’t got the most
distant notion of the way in which that dog manoeuvred
with his head and face. He opened his eyes wide,
and cocked his ears, and turned his head first a little
to one side, then a little to the other. After
that he turned it a good deal to one side,
and then a good deal more to the other. Then
he brought it straight, and raised one eyebrow a little,
and then the other a little, and then both together
very much. Then, when Dick paused to rest and
did nothing, Crusoe looked mild for a moment, and
yawned vociferously. Presently Dick moved—up
went the ears again, and Crusoe came, in military
parlance, “to the position of attention!”
At last supper was ready and they began.
Dick had purposely kept the dog’s
supper back from him, in order that they might eat
it in company. And between every bite and sup
that Dick took, he gave a bite—but not
a sup—to Crusoe. Thus lovingly they
ate together; and when Dick lay that night under the
willow branches, looking up through them at the stars,
with his feet to the fire and Crusoe close along his
side, he thought it the best and sweetest supper he
ever ate, and the happiest evening he ever spent—so
wonderfully do circumstances modify our notions of
felicity.
Two weeks after this “Richard was himself again.”
The muscles were springy, and the
blood coursed fast and free, as was its wont.
Only a slight, and, perhaps, salutary feeling of weakness
remained, to remind him that young muscles might again
become more helpless than those of an aged man or
a child.
Dick had left his encampment a week
ago, and was now advancing by rapid stages towards
the Rocky Mountains, closely following the trail of
his lost comrades, which he had no difficulty in finding
and keeping now that Crusoe was with him. The
skin of the buffalo that he had killed was now strapped
to his shoulders, and the skin of another animal that
he had shot a few days after was cut up into a long
line and slung in a coil round his neck. Crusoe
was also laden. He had a little bundle of meat
slung on each side of him.
For some time past numerous herds
of mustangs, or wild horses, had crossed their path,
and Dick was now on the look-out for a chance to crease
one of those magnificent creatures.
On one occasion a band of mustangs
galloped close up to him before they were aware of
his presence, and stopped short with a wild snort
of surprise on beholding him; then, wheeling round,
they dashed away at full gallop, their long tails
and manes flying wildly in the air, and their hoofs
thundering on the plain. Dick did not attempt
to crease one upon this occasion, fearing that his
recent illness might have rendered his hand too unsteady
for so extremely delicate an operation.
In order to crease a wild horse the
hunter requires to be a perfect shot, and it is not
every man of the west who carries a rifle that can
do it successfully. Creasing consists in sending
a bullet through the gristle of the mustang’s
neck, just above the bone, so as to stun the animal.
If the ball enters a hair’s-breadth too low,
the horse falls dead instantly. If it hits the
exact spot, the horse falls as instantaneously, and
dead to all appearance; but, in reality, he is only
stunned, and if left for a few minutes will rise and
gallop away nearly as well as ever. When hunters
crease a horse successfully they put a rope, or halter,
round his under jaw and hobbles round his feet, so
that when he rises he is secured, and, after considerable
trouble, reduced to obedience.
The mustangs which roam in wild freedom
on the prairies of the far west are descended from
the noble Spanish steeds that were brought over by
the wealthy cavaliers who accompanied Fernando Cortez,
the conqueror of Mexico, in his expedition to the
New World in 1518. These bold, and, we may add,
lawless cavaliers were mounted on the finest horses
that could be procured from Barbary and the deserts
of the Old World. The poor Indians of the New
World were struck with amazement and terror at these
awful beings, for, never having seen horses before,
they believed that horse and rider were one animal.
During the wars that followed many of the Spaniards
were killed, and their steeds bounded into the wilds
of the new country, to enjoy a life of unrestrained
freedom. These were the forefathers of the present
race of magnificent creatures which are found in immense
droves all over the western wilderness, from the Gulf
of Mexico to the confines of the snowy regions of
the far north.
At first the Indians beheld these
horses with awe and terror, but gradually they became
accustomed to them, and finally succeeded in capturing
great numbers and reducing them to a state of servitude.
Not, however, to the service of the cultivated field,
but to the service of the chase and war. The
savages soon acquired the method of capturing wild
horses by means of the lasso—as the noose
at that end of a long line of raw hide is termed—which
they adroitly threw over the heads of the animals
and secured them, having previously run them down.
At the present day many of the savage tribes of the
west almost live upon horseback, and without these
useful creatures they could scarcely subsist, as they
are almost indispensable in the chase of the buffalo.
Mustangs are regularly taken by the
Indians to the settlements of the white men for trade,
but very poor specimens are these of the breed of
wild horses. This arises from two causes.
First, the Indian cannot overtake the finest of a
drove of wild mustangs, because his own steed is inferior
to the best among the wild ones, besides being weighted
with a rider, so that only the weak and inferior animals
are captured. And, secondly, when the Indian
does succeed in lassoing a first-rate horse he keeps
it for his own use. Thus, those who have not visited
the far-off prairies and seen the mustang in all the
glory of untrammelled freedom, can form no adequate
idea of its beauty, fleetness, and strength.
The horse, however, was not the only
creature imported by Cortez. There were priests
in his army who rode upon asses, and although we cannot
imagine that the “fathers” charged with
the cavaliers and were unhorsed, or, rather, un-assed
in battle, yet, somehow, the asses got rid of their
riders and joined the Spanish chargers in their joyous
bound into a new life of freedom. Hence wild asses
also are found in the western prairies. But think
not, reader, of those poor miserable wretches we see
at home, which seem little better than rough door-mats
sewed up and stuffed, with head, tail, and legs attached,
and just enough of life infused to make them move!
No, the wild ass of the prairie is a large powerful,
swift creature. He has the same long ears, it
is true, and the same hideous, exasperating bray, and
the same tendency to flourish his heels; but for all
that he is a very fine animal, and often wages successful
warfare with the wild horse.
But to return. The next drove
of mustangs that Dick and Crusoe saw were feeding
quietly and unsuspectingly in a rich green hollow in
the plain. Dick’s heart leaped up as his
eyes suddenly fell on them, for he had almost discovered
himself before he was aware of their presence.
“Down, pup!” he whispered,
as he sank and disappeared among the grass, which
was just long enough to cover him when lying quite
flat.
Crusoe crouched immediately, and his
master made his observations of the drove, and the
dispositions of the ground that might favour his approach,
for they were not within rifle range. Having done
so he crept slowly back until the undulation of the
prairie hid him from view; then he sprang to his feet,
and ran a considerable distance along the bottom until
he gained the extreme end of a belt of low bushes,
which would effectually conceal him while he approached
to within a hundred yards or less of the troop.
Here he made his arrangements.
Throwing down his buffalo robe, he took the coil of
line and cut off a piece of about three yards in length.
On this he made a running noose. The longer line
he also prepared with a running noose. These
he threw in a coil over his arm.
He also made a pair of hobbles, and
placed them in the breast of his coat, and then, taking
up his rifle, advanced cautiously through the bushes—Crusoe
following close behind him. In a few minutes he
was gazing in admiration at the mustangs, which were
now within easy shot, and utterly ignorant of the
presence of man, for Dick had taken care to approach
in such a way that the wind did not carry the scent
of him in their direction.
And well might he admire them.
The wild horse of these regions is not very large,
but it is exceedingly powerful, with prominent eye,
sharp nose, distended nostril, small feet, and a delicate
leg. Their beautiful manes hung at great length
down their arched necks, and their thick tails swept
the ground. One magnificent fellow in particular
attracted Dick’s attention. He was of a
rich dark-brown colour, with black mane and tail,
and seemed to be the leader of the drove.
Although not the nearest to him, he
resolved to crease this horse. It is said that
creasing generally destroys or damages the spirit of
the horse, so Dick determined to try whether his powers
of close shooting would not serve him on this occasion.
Going down on one knee he aimed at the creature’s
neck, just a hair’s-breadth above the spot where
he had been told that hunters usually hit them, and
fired. The effect upon the group was absolutely
tremendous. With wild cries and snorting terror
they tossed their proud heads in the air, uncertain
for one moment in which direction to fly; then there
was a rush as if a hurricane swept over the place,
and they were gone.
But the brown horse was down.
Dick did not wait until the others had fled.
He dropped his rifle, and with the speed of a deer
sprang towards the fallen horse, and affixed the hobbles
to his legs. His aim had been true. Although
scarcely half a minute elapsed between the shot and
the fixing of the hobbles, the animal recovered, and
with a frantic exertion rose on his haunches, just
as Dick had fastened the noose of the short line in
his under jaw. But this was not enough. If
the horse had gained his feet before the longer line
was placed round his neck, he would have escaped.
As the mustang made the second violent plunge that
placed it on its legs, Dick flung the noose hastily;
it caught on one ear, and would have fallen off, had
not the horse suddenly shaken its head, and unwittingly
sealed its own fate by bringing the noose round its
neck.
And now the struggle began. Dick
knew well enough, from hearsay, the method of “breaking
down” a wild horse. He knew that the Indians
choke them with the noose round the neck until they
fall down exhausted and covered with foam, when they
creep up, fix the hobbles, and the line in the lower
jaw, and then loosen the lasso to let the horse breathe,
and resume its plungings till it is almost subdued,
when they gradually draw near and breathe into its
nostrils. But the violence and strength of this
animal rendered this an apparently hopeless task.
We have already seen that the hobbles and noose in
the lower jaw had been fixed, so that Dick had nothing
now to do but to choke his captive, and tire him out,
while Crusoe remained a quiet though excited spectator
of the scene.
But there seemed to be no possibility
of choking this horse. Either the muscles of
his neck were too strong, or there was something wrong
with the noose which prevented it from acting, for
the furious creature dashed and bounded backwards
and sideways in its terror for nearly an hour, dragging
Dick after it, till he was almost exhausted; and yet,
at the end of that time, although flecked with foam
and panting with terror, it seemed as strong as ever.
Dick held both lines, for the short one attached to
its lower jaw gave him great power over it. At
last he thought of seeking assistance from his dog.
“Crusoe,” he cried, “lay hold, pup!”
The dog seized the long line in his
teeth and pulled with all his might. At the same
moment Dick let go the short line and threw all his
weight upon the long one. The noose tightened
suddenly under this strain, and the mustang, with
a gasp, fell choking to the ground.
Dick had often heard of the manner
in which the Mexicans “break” their horses,
so he determined to abandon the method which had already
almost worn him out, and adopt the other, as far as
the means in his power rendered it possible.
Instead, therefore, of loosening the lasso and re-commencing
the struggle, he tore a branch from a neighbouring
bush, cut the hobbles, strode with his legs across
the fallen steed, seized the end of the short line
or bridle, and then, ordering Crusoe to quit his hold,
he loosened the noose which compressed the horse’s
neck and had already well-nigh terminated its existence.
One or two deep sobs restored it,
and in a moment it leaped to its feet with Dick firmly
on its back. To say that the animal leaped and
kicked in its frantic efforts to throw this intolerable
burden would be a tame manner of expressing what took
place. Words cannot adequately describe the scene.
It reared, plunged, shrieked, vaulted into the air,
stood straight up on its hind legs, and then almost
as straight upon its fore ones; but its rider held
on like a burr. Then the mustang raced wildly
forwards a few paces, then as wildly back, and then
stood still and trembled violently. But this was
only a brief lull in the storm, so Dick saw that the
time was now come to assert the superiority of his
race.
“Stay back, Crusoe, and watch
my rifle, pup,” he cried, and raising his heavy
switch he brought it down with a sharp cut across the
horse’s flank, at the same time loosening the
rein which hitherto he had held tight.
The wild horse uttered a passionate
cry, and sprang forward like the bolt from a cross-bow.
And now commenced a race which, if
not so prolonged, was at least as furious as that
of the far-famed Mazeppa. Dick was a splendid
rider, however—at least as far as “sticking
on” goes. He might not have come up to
the precise pitch desiderated by a riding-master in
regard to carriage, etc., but he rode that wild
horse of the prairie with as much ease as he had formerly
ridden his own good steed, whose bones had been picked
by the wolves not long ago.
The pace was tremendous, for the youth’s
weight was nothing to that muscular frame, which bounded
with cat-like agility from wave to wave of the undulating
plain in ungovernable terror. In a few minutes
the clump of willows where Crusoe and his rifle lay
were out of sight behind; but it mattered not, for
Dick had looked up at the sky and noted the position
of the sun at the moment of starting. Away they
went on the wings of the wind, mile after mile over
the ocean-like waste—curving slightly aside
now and then to avoid the bluffs that occasionally
appeared on the scene for a few minutes and then swept
out of sight behind them. Then they came to a
little rivulet. It was a mere brook of a few
feet wide, and two or three yards, perhaps, from bank
to bank. Over this they flew so easily that the
spring was scarcely felt, and continued the headlong
course. And now a more barren country was around
them. Sandy ridges and scrubby grass appeared
everywhere, reminding Dick of the place where he had
been so ill. Rocks, too, were scattered about,
and at one place the horse dashed with clattering
hoofs between a couple of rocky sand-hills which,
for a few seconds, hid the prairie from view.
Here the mustang suddenly shied with such violence
that his rider was nearly thrown, while a rattlesnake
darted from the path. Soon they emerged from this
pass, and again the plains became green and verdant.
Presently a distant line of trees showed that they
were approaching water, and in a few minutes they
were close on it. For the first time Dick felt
alarm. He sought to check his steed, but no force
he could exert had the smallest influence on it.
Trees and bushes flew past in bewildering
confusion. The river was before him; what width,
he could not tell, but he was reckless now, like his
charger, which he struck with the willow rod with all
his force as they came up. One tremendous bound,
and they were across, but Dick had to lie flat on
the mustang’s back as it crashed through the
bushes to avoid being scraped off by the trees.
Again they were on the open plain, and the wild horse
began to show signs of exhaustion.
Now was its rider’s opportunity
to assert his dominion. He plied the willow rod
and urged the panting horse on, until it was white
with foam and laboured a little in its gait.
Then Dick gently drew the halter, and it broke into
a trot; still tighter, and it walked, and in another
minute stood still, trembling in every limb. Dick
now quietly rubbed its neck, and spoke to it in soothing
tones; then he wheeled it gently round, and urged
it forward. It was quite subdued and docile.
In a little time they came to the river and forded
it, after which they went through the belt of woodland
at a walk. By the time they reached the open
prairie the mustang was recovered sufficiently to
feel its spirit returning, so Dick gave it a gentle
touch with the switch, and away they went on their
return journey.
But it amazed Dick not a little to
find how long that journey was. Very different
was the pace, too, from the previous mad gallop, and
often would the poor horse have stopped had Dick allowed
him. But this might not be. The shades of
night were approaching, and the camp lay a long way
ahead.
At last it was reached, and Crusoe
came out with great demonstrations of joy, but was
sent back lest he should alarm the horse. Then
Dick jumped off his back, stroked his head, put his
cheek close to his mouth and whispered softly to him,
after which he fastened him to a tree and rubbed him
down slightly with a bunch of grass. Having done
this, he left him to graze as far as his tether would
permit; and, after supping with Crusoe, lay down to-rest,
not a little elated with his success in this first
attempt at “creasing” and “breaking”
a mustang.