The Oregon Trail: sketches of prairie and Rocky-Mountain life eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 453 pages of information about The Oregon Trail.

The Oregon Trail: sketches of prairie and Rocky-Mountain life eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 453 pages of information about The Oregon Trail.
would face toward me; whenever he did so I fell to the ground and lay motionless.  In this manner I chased them for about two miles, until at length I heard in front a deep hoarse bellowing.  A moment after a band of about a hundred bulls, before hidden by a slight swell of the plain, came at once into view.  The fugitives ran toward them.  Instead of mingling with the band, as I expected, they passed directly through, and continued their flight.  At this I gave up the chase, and kneeling down, crawled to within gunshot of the bulls, and with panting breath and trickling brow sat down on the ground to watch them; my presence did not disturb them in the least.  They were not feeding, for, indeed, there was nothing to eat; but they seemed to have chosen the parched and scorching desert as the scene of their amusements.  Some were rolling on the ground amid a cloud of dust; others, with a hoarse rumbling bellow, were butting their large heads together, while many stood motionless, as if quite inanimate.  Except their monstrous growth of tangled grizzly mane, they had no hair; for their old coat had fallen off in the spring, and their new one had not as yet appeared.  Sometimes an old bull would step forward, and gaze at me with a grim and stupid countenance; then he would turn and butt his next neighbor; then he would lie down and roll over in the dirt, kicking his hoofs in the air.  When satisfied with this amusement he would jerk his head and shoulders upward, and resting on his forelegs stare at me in this position, half blinded by his mane, and his face covered with dirt; then up he would spring upon all-fours, and shake his dusty sides; turning half round, he would stand with his beard touching the ground, in an attitude of profound abstraction, as if reflecting on his puerile conduct.  “You are too ugly to live,” thought I; and aiming at the ugliest, I shot three of them in succession.  The rest were not at all discomposed at this; they kept on bellowing and butting and rolling on the ground as before.  Henry Chatillon always cautioned us to keep perfectly quiet in the presence of a wounded buffalo, for any movement is apt to excite him to make an attack; so I sat still upon the ground, loading and firing with as little motion as possible.  While I was thus employed, a spectator made his appearance; a little antelope came running up with remarkable gentleness to within fifty yards; and there it stood, its slender neck arched, its small horns thrown back, and its large dark eyes gazing on me with a look of eager curiosity.  By the side of the shaggy and brutish monsters before me, it seemed like some lovely young girl wandering near a den of robbers or a nest of bearded pirates.  The buffalo looked uglier than ever.  “Here goes for another of you,” thought I, feeling in my pouch for a percussion cap.  Not a percussion cap was there.  My good rifle was useless as an old iron bar.  One of the wounded bulls had not yet fallen, and I waited for some time,
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The Oregon Trail: sketches of prairie and Rocky-Mountain life from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.