The Prairie (Fiscle Part 3) Of 2, J Fenimore Cooper [best e reader for manga txt] 📗
- Author: J Fenimore Cooper
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Sighted, Trapper, It Is A Band Of The Accursed Siouxes! To Cover,
Lads, To Cover. A Single Cast Of An Eye This-A-Way, Would Strip Us Of
Every Rag Of Clothes, As Surely As The Lightning Scorches The Bush,
And It Might Be That Our Very Lives Would Be Far From Safe."
Middleton Had Already Turned From The Spectacle, To Seek That Which
Pleased Him Better; The Sight Of His Young And Beautiful Bride. Paul
Seized The Doctor By The Arm; And, As The Trapper Followed With The
Smallest Possible Delay, The Whole Party Was Quickly Collected Within
The Cover Of The Thicket. After A Few Short Explanations Concerning
The Character Of This New Danger, The Old Man, On Whom The Whole Duty
Of Directing Their Movements Was Devolved, In Deference To His Great
Experience, Continued His Discourse As Follows--
"This Is A Region, As You Must All Know, Where A Strong Arm Is Far
Better Than The Right, And Where The White Law Is As Little Known As
Needed. Therefore Does Every Thing, Now, Depend On Judgment And Power.
If," He Continued, Laying His Finger On His Cheek, Like One Who
Considered Deeply All Sides Of The Embarrassing Situation In Which He
Found Himself,--"If An Invention Could Be Framed, Which Would Set
Part 3 Chapter 19 Pg 19These Siouxes And The Brood Of The Squatter By The Ears, Then Might We
Come In, Like The Buzzards After A Fight Atween The Beasts, And Pick
Up The Gleanings Of The Ground--There Are Pawnees Nigh Us, Too! It Is
A Certain Matter, For Yonder Lad Is Not So Far From His Village
Without An Errand. Here Are Therefore Four Parties Within Sound Of A
Cannon, Not One Of Whom Can Trust The Other. All Which Makes Movement
A Little Difficult, In A District Where Covers Are Far From Plenty.
But We Are Three Well-Armed, And I Think I May See Three Stout-Hearted
Men--"
"Four," Interrupted Paul.
"Anan," Said The Old Man, Looking Up Simply At His Companion.
"Four," Repeated The Bee-Hunter, Pointing To The Naturalist.
"Every Army Has Its Hangers-On And Idlers," Rejoined The Blunt Border-
Man. "Friend, It Will Be Necessary To Slaughter This Ass."
"To Slay Asinus! Such A Deed Would Be An Act Of Supererogatory
Cruelty."
"I Know Nothing Of Your Words, Which Hide Their Meaning In Sound; But
That Is Cruel Which Sacrifices A Christian To A Brute. This Is What I
Call The Reason Of Mercy. It Would Be Just As Safe To Blow A Trumpet,
As To Let The Animal Raise His Voice Again, Inasmuch As It Would Prove
A Manifest Challenge To The Siouxes."
"I Will Answer For The Discretion Of Asinus, Who Seldom Speaks Without
A Reason."
"They Say A Man Can Be Known By The Company He Keeps," Retorted The
Old Man, "And Why Not A Brute? I Once Made A Forced March, And Went
Through A Great Deal Of Jeopardy, With A Companion Who Never Opened
His Mouth But To Sing; And Trouble Enough And Great Concern Of Mind
Did The Fellow Give Me. It Was In That Very Business With Your
Grand'ther, Captain. But Then He Had A Human Throat, And Well Did He
Know How To Use It, On Occasion, Though He Didn't Always Stop To
Regard The Time And Seasons Fit For Such Outcries. Ah's Me! If I Was
Now, As I Was Then, It Wouldn't Be A Band Of Thieving Siouxes That
Should Easily Drive Me From Such A Lodgment As This! But What
Signifies Boasting, When Sight And Strength Are Both Failing. The
Warrior, That The Delawares Once Saw Fit To Call After The Hawk, For
The Goodness Of His Eyes, Would Now Be Better Termed The Mole! In My
Judgment, Therefore, It Will Be Well To Slay The Brute."
"There's Argument And Good Logic In It," Said Paul; "Music Is Music,
And It's Always Noisy, Whether It Comes From A Fiddle Or A Jackass.
Therefore I Agree With The Old Man, And Say, Kill The Beast."
"Friends," Said The Naturalist, Looking With A Sorrowful Eye From One
To Another Of His Bloodily Disposed Companions, "Slay Not Asinus; He
Is A Specimen Of His Kind, Of Whom Much Good And Little Evil Can Be
Said. Hardy And Docile For His Genus; Abstemious And Patient, Even For
Part 3 Chapter 19 Pg 20His Humble Species. We Have Journeyed Much Together, And His Death
Would Grieve Me. How Would It Trouble Thy Spirit, Venerable Venator,
To Separate, In Such An Untimely Manner, From Your Faithful Hound?"
"The Animal Shall Not Die," Said The Old Man, Suddenly Clearing His
Throat, In A Manner That Proved He Felt The Force Of The Appeal; "But
His Voice Must Be Smothered. Bind His Jaws With The Halter, And Then I
Think We May Trust The Rest To Providence."
With This Double Security For The Discretion Of Asinus, For Paul
Instantly Bound The Muzzle Of The Ass In The Manner Required, The
Trapper Seemed Content. After Which He Proceeded To The Margin Of The
Thicket To Reconnoitre.
The Uproar, Which Attended The Passage Of The Herd, Was Now Gone, Or
Rather It Was Heard Rolling Along The Prairie, At The Distance Of A
Mile. The Clouds Of Dust Were Already Blown Away By The Wind, And A
Clear Range Was Left To The Eye, In That Place Where Ten Minutes
Before There Existed A Scene Of So Much Wildness And Confusion.
The Siouxes Had Completed Their Conquest, And, Apparently Satisfied
With This Addition To The Numerous Previous Captures They Had Made,
They Now Seemed Content To Let The Remainder Of The Herd Escape. A
Dozen Remained Around The Carcass, Over Which A Few Buzzards Were
Balancing Themselves With Steady Wings And Greedy Eyes, While The Rest
Were Riding About, In Quest Of Such Further Booty As Might Come In
Their Way, On The Trail Of So Vast A Drove. The Trapper Measured The
Proportions, And Scanned The Equipments Of Such Individuals As Drew
Nearer To The Side Of The Thicket, With Careful Eyes. At Length He
Pointed Out One Among Them, To Middleton, As Weucha.
"Now, Know We Not Only Who They Are, But Their Errand," The Old Man
Continued, Deliberately Shaking His Head. "They Have Lost The Trail Of
The Squatter, And Are On Its Hunt. These Buffaloes Have Crossed Their
Path, And In Chasing The Animals, Bad Luck Has Led Them In Open Sight
Of The Hill On Which The Brood Of Ishmael Have Harboured. Do You See
Yon Birds Watching For The Offals Of The Beast They Have Killed?
Therein Is A Moral, Which Teaches The Manner Of A Prairie Life. A Band
Of Pawnees Are Outlying For These Very Siouxes, As You See The
Buzzards Looking Down For Their Food, And It Behoves Us, As Christian
Men Who Have So Much At Stake, To Look Down Upon Them Both. Ha! What
Brings Yonder Two Skirting Reptiles To A Stand? As You Live, They Have
Found The Place Where The Miserable Son Of The Squatter Met His
Death!"
The Old Man Was Not Mistaken. Weucha, And A Savage Who Accompanied
Him, Had Reached That Spot, Which Has Already Been Mentioned As
Furnishing The Frightful Evidences Of Violence And Bloodshed. There
They Sat On Their Horses, Examining The Well-Known Signs, With The
Intelligence That Distinguishes The Habits Of Indians. Their Scrutiny
Was Long, And Apparently Not Without Distrust. At Length They Raised A
Cry, That Was Scarcely Less Piteous And Startling Than That Which The
Hounds Had Before Made Over The Same Fatal Signs, And Which Did Not
Fail To Draw The Whole Band Immediately Around Them, As The Fell Bark
Of The Jackal Is Said To Gather His Comrades To The Chase.
Part 3 Chapter 20 Pg 21Welcome, Ancient Pistol.
--Shakspeare.
It Was Not Long Before The Trapper Pointed Out The Commanding Person
Of Mahtoree, As The Leader Of The Siouxes. This Chief, Who Had Been
Among The Last To Obey The Vociferous Summons Of Weucha, No Sooner
Reached The Spot Where His Whole Party Was Now Gathered, Than He Threw
Himself From His Horse, And Proceeded To Examine The Marks Of The
Extraordinary Trail, With That Degree Of Dignity And Attention Which
Became His High And Responsible Station. The Warriors, For It Was But
Too Evident That They Were To A Man Of That Fearless And Ruthless
Class, Awaited The Result Of His Investigation With Patient Reserve;
None But A Few Of The Principal Braves, Presuming Even To Speak, While
Their Leader Was Thus Gravely Occupied. It Was Several Minutes Before
Mahtoree Seemed Satisfied. He Then Directed His Eyes Along The Ground
To Those Several Places Where Ishmael Had Found The Same Revolting
Evidences Of The Passage Of Some Bloody Struggle, And Motioned To His
People To Follow.
The Whole Band Advanced In A Body Towards The Thicket, Until They Came
To A Halt, Within A Few Yards Of The Precise Spot, Where Esther Had
Stimulated Her Sluggish Sons To Break Into The Cover. The Reader Will
Readily Imagine That The Trapper And His Companions Were Not
Indifferent Observers Of So Threatening A Movement. The Old Man
Summoned All Who Were Capable Of Bearing Arms To His Side, And
Demanded, In Very Unequivocal Terms, Though In A Voice That Was
Suitably Lowered, In Order To Escape The Ears Of Their Dangerous
Neighbours, Whether They Were Disposed To Make Battle For Their
Liberty, Or Whether They Should Try The Milder Expedient Of
Conciliation. As It Was A Subject In Which All Had An Equal Interest,
He Put The Question As To A Council Of War, And Not Without Some
Slight Exhibition Of The Lingering Vestiges Of A Nearly Extinct
Military Pride. Paul And The Doctor Were Diametrically Opposed To Each
Other In Opinion; The Former Declaring For An Immediate Appeal To
Arms, And The Latter Was Warmly Espousing The Policy Of Pacific
Measures. Middleton, Who Saw That There Was Great Danger Of A Hot
Verbal Dispute Between Two Men, Who Were Governed By Feelings So
Diametrically Opposed, Saw Fit To Assume The Office Of Arbiter; Or
Rather To Decide The Question, His Situation Making Him A Sort Of
Umpire. He Also Leaned To The Side Of Peace, For He Evidently Saw
That, In Consequence Of The Vast Superiority Of Their Enemies,
Violence Would Irretrievably Lead To Their Destruction.
The Trapper Listened To The Reasons Of The Young Soldier With Great
Attention; And, As They Were Given With The Steadiness Of One Who Did
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