Had I the wings of an eagle, they would tire before a tenth of the distance, which separates me from that sea, could be passed; and towns, and villages, farms, and highways, churches, and schools, in short, all the inventions and deviltries of man, are spread across the region.
I have known the time when a few Red-skins, shouting along the borders, could set the provinces in a fever; and men were to be armed; and troops were to be called to aid from a distant land; and prayers were said, and the women frighted, and few slept in quiet, because the Iroquois were on the war-path, or the accursed Mingo had the tomahawk in hand.
How is it now?
The country sends out her ships to foreign lands, to wage their battles; cannon are plentier than the rifle used to be, and trained soldiers are never wanting, in tens of thousands, when need calls for their services.
Such is the difference atween a province and a state, my men; and I, miserable and worn out as I seem, have lived to see it all!”
“That you must have seen many a chopper skimming the cream from the face of the earth, and many a settler getting the very honey of nature, old trapper,” said Paul, “no reasonable man can, or, for that matter, shall doubt.
But here is Ellen getting uneasy about the Siouxes, and now you have opened your mind, so freely, concerning these matters, if you will just put us on the line of our flight, the swarm will make another move.”
“Anan!”
“I say that Ellen is getting uneasy, and as the smoke is lifting from the plain, it may be prudent to take another flight.”
“The boy is reasonable.
I had forgotten we were in the midst of a raging fire, and that Siouxes were round about us, like hungry wolves watching a drove of buffaloes.
But when memory is at work in my old brain, on times long past, it is apt to overlook the matters of the day.
You say right, my children; it is time to be moving, and now comes the real nicety of our case. It is easy to outwit a furnace, for it is nothing but a raging element; and it is not always difficult to throw a grizzly bear from his scent, for the creatur’ is both enlightened and blinded by his instinct; but to shut the eyes of a waking Teton is a matter of greater judgment, inasmuch as his deviltry is backed by reason.”
Notwithstanding the old man appeared so conscious of the difficulty of the undertaking, he set about its achievement with great steadiness and alacrity.
After completing the examination, which had been interrupted by the melancholy wanderings of his mind, he gave the signal to his companions to mount.
The horses, which had continued passive and trembling amid the raging of the fire, received their burdens with a satisfaction so very evident, as to furnish a favourable augury of their future industry.
The trapper invited the Doctor to take his own steed, declaring his intention to proceed on foot.
“I am but little used to journeying with the feet of others,” he added, as a reason for the measure, “and my legs are a weary of doing nothing.
Besides, should we light suddenly on an ambushment, which is a thing far from impossible, the horse will be in a better condition for a hard run with one man on his back than with two.
As for me, what matters it whether my time is to be a day shorter or a day longer!
Let the Tetons take my scalp, if it be God’s pleasure: they will find it covered with grey hairs; and it is beyond the craft of man to cheat me of the knowledge and experience by which they have been whitened.”
As no one among the impatient listeners seemed disposed to dispute the arrangement, it was acceded to in silence.
The Doctor, though he muttered a few mourning exclamations on behalf of the lost Asinus, was by far too well pleased in finding that his speed was likely to be sustained by four legs instead of two, to be long in complying: and, consequently, in a very few moments the bee-hunter, who was never last to speak on such occasions, vociferously announced that they were ready to proceed.
“Now look off yonder to the East,” said the old man, as he began to lead the way across the murky and still smoking plain; “little fear of cold feet in journeying such a path as this: but look you off to the East, and if you see a sheet of shining white, glistening like a plate of beaten silver through the openings of the smoke, why that is water.
A noble stream is running thereaway, and I thought I got a glimpse of it a while since; but other thoughts came, and I lost it.
It is a broad and swift river, such as the Lord has made many of its fellows in this desert. For here may natur’ be seen in all its richness, trees alone excepted.
Trees, which are to the ‘arth, as fruits are to a garden; without them nothing can be pleasant, or thoroughly useful.
Now watch all of you, with open eyes, for that stripe of glittering water: we shall not be safe until it is flowing between our trail and these sharp sighted Tetons.”
The latter declaration was enough to ensure a vigilant look out for the desired stream, on the part of all the trapper’s followers.
With this object in view, the party proceeded in profound silence, the old man having admonished them of the necessity of caution, as they entered the clouds of smoke, which were rolling like masses of fog along the plain, more particularly over those spots where the fire had encountered occasional pools of stagnant water.
They travelled near a league in this manner, without obtaining the desired glimpse of the river.
The fire was still raging in the distance, and as the air swept away the first vapour of the conflagration, fresh volumes rolled along the place, limiting the view.
At length the old man, who had begun to betray some little uneasiness, which caused his followers to apprehend that even his acute faculties were beginning to be confused, in the mazes of the smoke, made a sudden pause, and dropping his rifle to the ground, he stood, apparently musing over some object at his feet.
Middleton and the rest rode up to his side, and demanded the reason of the halt.
“Look ye, here,” returned the trapper, pointing to the mutilated carcass of a horse, that lay more than half consumed in a little hollow of the ground; “here may you see the power of a prairie conflagration.
The ‘arth is moist, hereaway, and the grass has been taller than usual.
This miserable beast has been caught in his bed.
You see the bones; the crackling and scorched hide, and the grinning teeth.
A thousand winters could not wither an animal so thoroughly, as the element has done it in a minute.”
“And this might have been our fate,” said Middleton, “had the flames come upon us, in our sleep!”
“Nay, I do not say that, I do not say that.
Not but that man will burn as well as tinder; but, that being more reasoning than a horse, he would better know how to avoid the danger.”
“Perhaps this then has been but the carcass of an animal, or he too would have fled?”
“See you these marks in the damp soil?
Here have been his hoofs,—and there is a moccasin print, as I’m a sinner!
The owner of the beast has tried hard to move him from the place, but it is in the instinct of the creatur’ to be faint-hearted and obstinate in a fire.”
“It is a well-known fact.
But if the animal has had a rider, where is he?”
“Ay, therein lies the mystery,” returned the trapper, stooping to examine the signs in the ground with a closer eye. “Yes, yes, it is plain there has been a long struggle atween the two.
The master has tried hard to save his beast, and the flames must have been very greedy, or he would have had better success.”