登陆注册
5009100000035

第35章 Irving’s Bonneville - Chapter 12(1)

A winter camp in the wilderness--Medley of trappers, hunters, and Indians--Scarcity ofgame--New

arrangements in the camp--Detachments sent to a distance--Carelessness of the Indians whenencamped--Sickness among the Indians--Excellent character of the Nez Perces--The Captain'seffort

as a pacificator--A Nez Perce's argument in favor of war--Robberies, by the Black feet--Longsuffering of the Nez Perces--A hunter's Elysium among the mountains--More robberies--TheCaptain preaches up a crusade--The effect upon his hearers.

FOR the greater part of the month of November Captain Bonneville remained in histemporary post

on Salmon River. He was now in the full enjoyment of his wishes; leading a hunter's life in theheart

of the wilderness, with all its wild populace around him. Beside his own people, motley incharacter

and costume--creole, Kentuckian, Indian, half-breed, hired trapper, and free trapper--he wassurrounded by encampments of Nez Perces and Flatheads, with their droves of horses coveringthe

hills and plains. It was, he declares, a wild and bustling scene. The hunting parties of white menand

red men, continually sallying forth and returning; the groups at the various encampments, somecooking, some working, some amusing themselves at different games; the neighing of horses, thebraying of asses, the resounding strokes of the axe, the sharp report of the rifle, the whoop, thehalloo, and the frequent burst of laughter, all in the midst of a region suddenly roused fromperfect

silence and loneliness by this transient hunters' sojourn, realized, he says, the idea of a "populoussolitude."

The kind and genial character of the captain had, evidently, its influence on the oppositeraces thus

fortuitously congregated together. The most perfect harmony prevailed between them. TheIndians,

he says, were friendly in their dispositions, and honest to the most scrupulous degree in theirintercourse with the white men. It is true they were somewhat importunate in their curiosity, andapt

to be continually in the way, examining everything with keen and prying eye, and watchingevery

movement of the white men. All this, however, was borne with great good-humor by the captain,and

through his example by his men. Indeed, throughout all his transactions he shows himself thefriend

of the poor Indians, and his conduct toward them is above all praise.

The Nez Perces, the Flatheads, and the Hanging-ears pride themselves upon the number oftheir

horses, of which they possess more in proportion than any other of the mountain tribes within thebuffalo range. Many of the Indian warriors and hunters encamped around Captain Bonnevillepossess from thirty to forty horses each. Their horses are stout, well-built ponies, of great wind,and

capable of enduring the severest hardship and fatigue. The swiftest of them, however, are thoseobtained from the whites while sufficiently young to become acclimated and inured to the roughservice of the mountains.

By degrees the populousness of this encampment began to produce its inconveniences. Theimmense droves of horses owned by the Indians consumed the herbage of the surrounding hills;while to drive them to any distant pasturage, in a neighborhood abounding with lurking anddeadly

enemies, would be to endanger the loss both of man and beast. Game, too, began to grow scarce.

It

was soon hunted and frightened out of the vicinity, and though the Indians made a wide circuitthrough the mountains in the hope of driving the buffalo toward the cantonment, their expeditionwas

unsuccessful. It was plain that so large a party could not subsist themselves there, nor in any oneplace throughout the winter. Captain Bonneville, therefore, altered his whole arrangements. Hedetached fifty men toward the south to winter upon Snake River, and to trap about its waters inthe

spring, with orders to rejoin him in the month of July at Horse Creek, in Green River Valley,which

he had fixed upon as the general rendezvous of his company for the ensuing year.

Of all his late party, he now retained with him merely a small number of free trappers,with

whom he intended to sojourn among the Nez Perces and Flatheads, and adopt the Indian mode ofmoving with the game and grass. Those bands, in effect, shortly afterward broke up theirencampments and set off for a less beaten neighborhood. Captain Bonneville remained behindfor

a few days, that he might secretly prepare caches, in which to deposit everything notrequired for

current use. Thus lightened of all superfluous encumbrance, he set off on the 20th of Novemberto

rejoin his Indian allies. He found them encamped in a secluded part of the country, at the head ofa

small stream. Considering themselves out of all danger in this sequestered spot from their oldenemies, the Blackfeet, their encampment manifested the most negligent security. Their lodgeswere

scattered in every direction, and their horses covered every hill for a great distance round,grazing

upon the upland bunch grass which grew in great abundance, and though dry, retained itsnutritious

properties instead of losing them like other grasses in the autumn.

When the Nez Perces, Flatheads, and Pends Oreilles are encamped in a dangerousneighborhood, says Captain Bonneville, the greatest care is taken of their horses, those primearticles

of Indian wealth, and objects of Indian depredation. Each warrior has his horse tied by one footat

night to a stake planted before his lodge. Here they remain until broad daylight; by that time theyoung men of the camp are already ranging over the surrounding hills. Each family then drivesits

horses to some eligible spot, where they are left to graze unattended. A young Indian repairsoccasionally to the pasture to give them water, and to see that all is well. So accustomed are thehorses to this management, that they keep together in the pasture where they have been left. Asthe

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 大漠荒颜·帝都赋

    大漠荒颜·帝都赋

    昆仑雪域,大光明宫,修罗场。经历了那般被人当做棋子的噩梦,九死一生地返回敦煌后,两个修罗场出身的少年最终成为主宰棋局的棋手。公子舒夜掌控着丝路咽喉,铁腕雷霆,奢侈放浪,却以铁一般的秩序积累庞大的财力;而墨香则在乱世中拥兵而起,左右时局,权倾天下。他们默契地渐渐将这个天下都收入彀中。只是……“从修罗场里逃出的那一天,我就知道,只要我扼守敦煌、抵制明教,终究有一天会再见到她。”“墨香,一切如你所料,只是她已经把我忘记……”
  • 山神水神

    山神水神

    从前有个女孩,女孩家前面有一条河后有一座山,山有山神,河有河神
  • 代鼎

    代鼎

    曹操脸白心不黑,男儿有泪不轻弹!诸葛亮运筹帷幄,机关算尽终是空!关羽忠义两肩扛,一代武圣下神坛!吕布醉卧美人膝,方天画戟落尘埃!庞统鸾回凤舞鸣,涅槃重生谋天下!典韦护主传古今,待吾古之恶来归!东汉末年,群雄并起,二十四名将,二十四谋士,纷纷登场,英雄无悔,枭雄无泪,天地转,光阴迫,百年太久,只争朝夕!一场旷古烁今的版图之争由此拉开帷幕...新人新书,暂不设QQ讨论群,小祖们可以留言加牛耳微信。低调且又高调,嘎嘎~
  • 惹火辣妻

    惹火辣妻

    "少爷,小姐跟别人跑了……"男人脸色一沉,"派直升机给我捉回来……不,三架……""是,少爷。""回来!我亲自去!""少爷,小姐要跟别人结婚了。"男人轰然起立,"准备好了吗?""啊?少爷,你要干什么?""抢婚!"
  • 称霸花果山

    称霸花果山

    重生成为花果山上一株天地孕育的仙草,为了避免被凡人践踏、被仙人采摘,李玉使出浑身解数,起初打算投靠孙猴子,发现孙猴子这厮还没出生,接着又计划投靠牛魔王,谁想牛魔王这夯货竟向他露出森森白牙,扬言要吃了它……投靠来投靠去,有一天李玉发现,貌似自己才是花果山上最强的男人——不,仙草啊!
  • 世界历史博览4

    世界历史博览4

    当人类生活在洞穴,隐藏于悬崖的时候;当人类唯一的工具是石头的时候;当每个人不得不为自己的食物而进行打猎的时候;当人类的衣服是以动物的皮做成的时候。那时没有城市,没有大型的建筑,没有现代生活中的安逸,从史前史到现代世界的跨时空旅程,世界历史的发展是曲折而神奇的,为了使青少年朋友更好地了解世界历史,我们编著了这套《世界历史博览》。
  • 劫之源

    劫之源

    洪荒宇宙,分为五界,即人界,魔界,仙界,圣界,源界。魔仙两界,互为世敌。怒天为仙界界主,花上为魔界界主。但两界均被圣界玩弄与股掌之间,一场压迫与被反制在五界展开……
  • 医暇卮言

    医暇卮言

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 猫宁

    猫宁

    这是一只名叫阿宁的小猫,与那喝不下的孟婆汤,那记得前尘往事的一生又一生中,以一只猫视角,讲述别人的故事。这里的故事,都不只是故事,而身处其中的阿宁将以怎样的姿态出现,又带来怎样的悲欢离合?
  • 重生之花开如许

    重生之花开如许

    苏叶30岁生日那天重生了,回到了高中时期,事情一点点变好,却也一点点变得奇怪,最后低调的她不得不挺身而出书写传奇