Oak Openings eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 630 pages of information about Oak Openings.

Oak Openings eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 630 pages of information about Oak Openings.

“If the tribeless chief will look sharply,” he said, “he will soon see the bee take flight.  It is filling itself with honey, and the moment it is loaded—­look—­look—­it is about to rise—­there, it is up—­see it circling around the stand, as if to take a look that it may know it again—­there it goes!”

There it did go, of a truth, and in a regular bee-line, or as straight as an arrow.  Of all that crowd, the bee-hunter and Margery alone saw the insect in its flight.  Most of those present lost sight of it, while circling around the stand; but the instant it darted away, to the remainder it seemed to vanish into air.  Not so with le Bourdon and Margery, however.  The former saw it from habit; the latter from a quick eye, intense attention, and the wish not to miss anything that le Bourdon saw fit to do, for her information or amusement.  The animal flew in an air-line toward a point of wood distant fully half a mile, and on the margin of the prairie.

Many low exclamations arose among the savages.  The bee was gone, but whither they knew not, or on what errand.  Could it have been sent on a message by the pale-face, or had it flown off to give the alarm to its companions, in order to adopt the means of disappointing the bee-hunter?  As for the last, he went coolly to work to choose another insect; and he soon had three at work on the comb—­all in company, and all uncovered.  Had the number anything to do with the charm, or were these three to be sent to bring back the one that had already gone away?  Such was the sort of reasoning, and such the queries put to themselves, by several of the stern children of nature who were drawn up around the stand.

In the mean time le Bourdon proceeded with his operations in the utmost simplicity.  He now called Peter and Bear’s Meat and Crowsfeather nearer to his person, where they might share with Margery the advantage of more closely seeing all that passed.  As soon as these three chiefs were near enough, Ben pointed to one bee in particular, saying in the Indian dialect: 

“My brothers see that bee in the centre—­he is about to go away.  If he go after the one that went before him, I shall soon know where to look for honey.”

“How can my brother tell which bee will first fly away?” demanded Bear’s Meat.

The bee-hunter was able to foresee this, by knowing which insect had been longest on the comb; but so practised had his eye become, that he knew with tolerable accuracy, by the movements of the creatures, those that had filled themselves with honey from those that had not.  As it did not suit his purpose, however, to let all the minutiae of his craft be known, his answer was evasive.  Just at that moment a thought occurred to him, which it might be well to carry out in full.  He had once saved his life by necromancy, or what seemed to the simple children of the woods to be necromancy, and why might he not turn the cunning of his regular art to account, and render it the means

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Oak Openings from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.