The Scalp Hunters | Page 6

Captain Mayne Reid
travelled over the
prairies without any incident of unusual interest. To me the scenery was
interest enough; and I do not remember a more striking picture than to
see the long caravan of waggons, "the prairie ships," deployed over the
plain, or crawling slowly up some gentle slope, their white tilts
contrasting beautifully with the deep green of the earth. At night, too,
the camp, with its corralled waggons, and horses picketed around, was
equally a picture. The scenery was altogether new to me, and imbued
me with impressions of a peculiar character. The streams were fringed
with tall groves of cottonwood trees, whose column-like stems
supported a thick frondage of silvery leaves. These groves meeting at
different points, walled in the view, so dividing the prairies from one
another, that we seemed to travel through vast fields fenced by colossal
hedges.
We crossed many rivers, fording some, and floating our waggons over
others that were deeper and wider. Occasionally we saw deer and

antelope, and our hunters shot a few of these; but we had not yet
reached the range of the buffalo. Once we stopped a day to recruit in a
wooded bottom, where the grass was plentiful and the water pure. Now
and then, too, we were halted to mend a broken tongue or an axle, or
help a "stalled" waggon from its miry bed.
I had very little trouble with my particular division of the caravan. My
Missourians turned out to be a pair of staunch hands, who could assist
one another without making a desperate affair of every slight accident.
The grass had sprung up, and our mules and oxen, instead of thinning
down, every day grew fatter upon it. Moro, therefore, came in for a
better share of the maize that I had brought in my waggons, and which
kept my favourite in fine travelling condition.
As we approached the Arkansas, we saw mounted Indians disappearing
over the swells. They were Pawnees; and for several days clouds of
these dusky warriors hung upon the skirts of the caravan. But they
knew our strength, and kept at a wary distance from our long rifles.
To me every day brought something new, either in the incidents of the
"voyage" or the features of the landscape.
Gode, who has been by turns a voyageur, a hunter, a trapper, and a
coureur du bois, in our private dialogues had given me an insight into
many an item of prairie-craft, thus enabling me to cut quite a
respectable figure among my new comrades. Saint Vrain, too, whose
frank, generous manner had already won my confidence, spared no
pains to make the trip agreeable to me. What with gallops by day and
the wilder tales by the night watch-fires, I became intoxicated with the
romance of my new life. I had caught the "prairie-fever!"
So my companions told me, laughing. I did not understand them then. I
knew what they meant afterwards. The prairie fever! Yes. I was just
then in process of being inoculated by that strange disease. It grew
upon me apace. The dreams of home began to die within me; and with
these the illusory ideas of many a young and foolish ambition.

My strength increased, both physically and intellectually. I experienced
a buoyancy of spirits and a vigour of body I had never known before. I
felt a pleasure in action. My blood seemed to rush warmer and swifter
through my veins, and I fancied that my eyes reached to a more distant
vision. I could look boldly upon the sun without quivering in my
glance.
Had I imbibed a portion of the divine essence that lives, and moves,
and has its being in those vast solitudes? Who can answer this?
Chapter IV.
A Ride upon a Buffalo Bull.
We had been out about two weeks when we struck the Arkansas
"bend," about six miles below the Plum Buttes. Here our waggons
corralled and camped. So far we had seen but little of the buffalo; only
a stray bull, or, at most, two or three together, and these shy. It was
now the running season, but none of the great droves, love-maddened,
had crossed us.
"Yonder!" cried Saint Vrain; "fresh hump for supper!"
We looked north-west, as indicated by our friend.
Along the escarpment of a low table, five dark objects broke the line of
the horizon. A glance was enough: they were buffaloes.
As Saint Vrain spoke, we were about slipping off our saddles. Back
went the girth buckles with a sneck, down came the stirrups, up went
we, and off in the "twinkling of a goat's eye."
Half a score or so started; some, like myself, for the sport; while others,
old hunters, had the "meat" in their eye.
We had made but a short day's
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