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Summer Weather of the Prairies
Summer Weather of the Prairies.—Purity of the
Atmosphere— Canadians on the March.—Sickness in the Camp.—Big
River.— Vulgar Nomenclature.—Suggestions About the Original Indian
Names.—Camp of Cheyennes.—Trade for Horses.—Character of the
Cheyennes.—Their Horsemanship.—Historical Anecdotes of the Tribe.
THE course taken by Mr. Hunt was at first to the
northwest, but soon turned and kept generally to the southwest, to
avoid the country infested by the Blackfeet. His route took him
across some of the tributary streams of the Missouri, and over
immense prairies, bounded only by the horizon, and destitute of
trees. It was now the height of summer, and these naked plains would
be intolerable to the traveller were it not for the breezes which
swept over them during the fervor of the day, bringing with them
tempering airs from the distant mountains. To the prevalence of
these breezes, and to the want of all leafy covert, may we also
attribute the freedom from those flies and other insects so
tormenting to man and beast during the summer months, in the lower
plains, which are bordered and interspersed with woodland.
The monotony of these immense landscapes, also, would be as
wearisome as that of the ocean, were it not relieved in some degree
by the purity and elasticity of the atmosphere, and the beauty of
the heavens. The sky has that delicious blue for which the sky of
Italy is renowned; the sun shines with a splendor unobscured by any
cloud or vapor, and a starlight night on the prairies is glorious.
This purity and elasticity of atmosphere increases as the traveller
approaches the mountains and gradually rises into more elevated
prairies.
On the second day of the journey, Mr. Hunt arranged the party into
small and convenient messes, distributing among them the camp
kettles. The encampments at night were as before; some sleeping
under tents, and others bivouacking in the open air. The Canadians
proved as patient of toll and hardship on the land as on the water;
indeed, nothing could surpass the patience and good-humor of these
men upon the march. They were the cheerful drudges of the party,
loading and unloading the horses, pitching the tents, making the
fires, cooking; in short, performing all those household and menial
offices which the Indians usually assign to the squaws; and, like
the squaws, they left all the hunting and fighting to others. A
Canadian has but little affection for the exercise of the rifle.
The progress of the party was but slow for the first few days. Some
of the men were indisposed; Mr. Crooks, especially, was so unwell
that he could not keep on his horse. A rude kind of litter was,
therefore, prepared for him, consisting of two long poles, fixed,
one on each side of two horses, with a matting between them, on
which he reclined at full length, and was protected from the sun by
a canopy of boughs.
On the evening of the 23d (July) they encamped on the banks of what
they term Big River; and here we cannot but pause to lament the
stupid, commonplace, and often ribald names entailed upon the rivers
and other features of the great West, by traders and settlers. As
the aboriginal tribes of these magnificent regions are yet in
existence, the Indian names might easily be recovered; which,
besides being in general more sonorous and musical, would remain
mementoes of the primitive lords of the soil, of whom in a little
while scarce any traces will be left. Indeed, it is to be wished
that the whole of our country could be rescued, as much as possible,
from the wretched nomenclature inflicted upon it, by ignorant and
vulgar minds; and this might be done, in a great degree, by
restoring the Indian names, wherever significant and euphonious. As
there appears to be a spirit of research abroad in respect to our
aboriginal antiquities, we would suggest, as a worthy object of
enterprise, a map, or maps, of every part of our country, giving the
Indian names wherever they could be ascertained. Whoever achieves
such an object worthily, will leave a monument to his own
reputation.
To return from this digression. As the travellers were now in a
country abounding with buffalo, they remained for several days
encamped upon the banks of Big River, to obtain a supply of
provisions, and to give the invalids time to recruit.
On the second day of their sojourn, as Ben Jones, John Day, and
others of the hunters were in pursuit of game, they came upon an
Indian camp on the open prairie, near to a small stream which ran
through a ravine. The tents or lodges were of dressed buffalo skins,
sewn together and stretched on tapering pine poles, joined at top,
but radiating at bottom, so as to form a circle capable of admitting
fifty persons. Numbers of horses were grazing in the neighborhood of
the camp, or straying at large in the prairie; a sight most
acceptable to the hunters. After reconnoitering the camp for some
time, they ascertained it to belong to a band of Cheyenne Indians,
the same that had sent a deputation to the Arickaras. They received
the hunters in the most friendly manner; invited them to their
lodges, which were more cleanly than Indian lodges are prone to be,
and set food before them with true uncivilized hospitality. Several
of them accompanied the hunters back to the camp, when a trade was
immediately opened. The Cheyennes were astonished and delighted to
find a convoy of goods and trinkets thus brought into the very heart
of the prairie; while Mr. Hunt and his companions were overjoyed to
have an opportunity of obtaining a further supply of horses from
these equestrian savages.
During a fortnight that the travellers lingered at this place, their
encampment was continually thronged by the Cheyennes. They were a
civil, well-behaved people, cleanly in their persons, and decorous
in their habits. The men were tall, straight and vigorous, with
aquiline noses, and high cheek bones. Some were almost as naked as
ancient statues, and might have stood as models for a statuary;
others had leggins and moccasins of deer skin, and buffalo robes,
which they threw gracefully over their shoulders. In a little while,
however, they began to appear in more gorgeous array, tricked out in
the finery obtained from the white men; bright cloths, brass rings,
beads of various colors; and happy was he who could render himself
hideous with vermilion.
The travellers had frequent occasions to admire the skill and grace
with which these Indians managed their horses. Some of them made a
striking display when mounted; themselves and their steeds decorated
in gala style; for the Indians often bestow more finery upon their
horses than upon themselves. Some would hang around the necks, or
rather on the breasts of their horses, the most precious ornaments
they had obtained from the white men; others interwove feathers in
their manes and tails. The Indian horses, too, appear to have an
attachment to their wild riders, and indeed, it is said that the
horses of the prairies readily distinguish an Indian from a white
man by the smell, and give a preference to the former. Yet the
Indians, in general, are hard riders, and, however they may value
their horses, treat them with great roughness and neglect.
Occasionally the Cheyennes joined the white hunters in pursuit of
the elk and buffalo; and when in the ardor of the chase, spared
neither themselves nor their steeds, scouring the prairies at full
speed, and plunging down precipices and frightful ravines that
threatened the necks of both horse and horseman. The Indian steed,
well trained to the chase, seems as mad as the rider, and pursues
the game as eagerly as if it were his natural prey, on the flesh of
which he was to banquet.
The history of the Cheyennes is that of many of those wandering
tribes of the prairies. They were the remnant of a once powerful
people called the Shaways, inhabiting a branch of the Red River
which flows into Lake Winnipeg. Every Indian tribe has some rival
tribe with which it wages implacable hostility. The deadly enemies
of the Shaways were the Sioux, who, after a long course of warfare,
proved too powerful for them, and drove them across the Missouri.
They again took root near the Warricanne Creek, and established
themselves there in a fortified village.
The Sioux still followed with deadly animosity; dislodged them from
their village, and compelled them to take refuge in the Black Hills,
near the upper waters of the Sheyenne or Cheyenne River. Here they
lost even their name, and became known among the French colonists by
that of the river they frequented.
The heart of the tribe was now broken; its numbers were greatly
thinned by their harassing wars. They no longer attempted to
establish themselves in any permanent abode that might be an object
of attack to their cruel foes. They gave up the cultivation of the
fruits of the earth, and became a wandering tribe, subsisting by the
chase, and following the buffalo in its migrations.
Their only possessions were horses, which they caught on the
prairies, or reared, or captured on predatory incursions into the
Mexican territories, as has already been mentioned. With some of
these they repaired once a year to the Arickara villages, exchanged
them for corn, beans, pumpkins, and articles of European
merchandise, and then returned into the heart of the prairies.
Such are the fluctuating fortunes of these savage nations. War,
famine, pestilence, together or singly, bring down their strength
and thin their numbers. Whole tribes are rooted up from their native
places, wander for a time about these immense regions, become
amalgamated with other tribes, or disappear from the face of the
earth. There appears to be a tendency to extinction among all the
savage nations; and this tendency would seem to have been in
operation among the aboriginals of this country long before the
advent of the white men, if we may judge from the traces and
traditions of ancient populousness in regions which were silent and
deserted at the time of the discovery; and from the mysterious and
perplexing vestiges of unknown races, predecessors of those found in
actual possession, and who must long since have become gradually
extinguished or been destroyed. The whole history of the aboriginal
population of this country, however, is an enigma, and a grand
one—will it ever be solved?
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a particular period or place. These items are presented as part of
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Astoria; Or Anecdotes Of An Enterprise Beyond The
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