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The Adventures of Captain Bonneville: Chapter 12

Chapter 12

12.



A winter camp in the wilderness Medley of trappers, hunters, and

Indians Scarcity of game New arrangements in the camp Detachments

sent to a distance Carelessness of the Indians when

encamped Sickness among the Indians Excellent character of the

Nez Perces The Captain's effort as a pacificator A Nez Perce's

argument in favor of war Robberies, by the Black feet Long

suffering of the Nez Perces A hunter's Elysium among the

mountains More robberies The Captain preaches up a crusade The

effect upon his hearers.



FOR the greater part of the month of November Captain Bonneville

remained in his temporary post on Salmon River. He was now in the

full enjoyment of his wishes; leading a hunter's life in the

heart of the wilderness, with all its wild populace around him.

Beside his own people, motley in character and costume--creole,

Kentuckian, Indian, half-breed, hired trapper, and free

trapper--he was surrounded by encampments of Nez Perces and

Flatheads, with their droves of horses covering the hills and

plains. It was, he declares, a wild and bustling scene. The

hunting parties of white men and red men, continually sallying

forth and returning; the groups at the various encampments, some

cooking, some working, some amusing themselves at different

games; the neighing of horses, the braying of asses, the

resounding strokes of the axe, the sharp report of the rifle, the

whoop, the halloo, and the frequent burst of laughter, all in the

midst of a region suddenly roused from perfect silence and

loneliness by this transient hunters' sojourn, realized, he says,

the idea of a "populous solitude."



The kind and genial character of the captain had, evidently, its

influence on the opposite races thus fortuitously congregated

together. The most perfect harmony prevailed between them. The

Indians, he says, were friendly in their dispositions, and honest

to the most scrupulous degree in their intercourse with the white

men. It is true they were somewhat importunate in their

curiosity, and apt to be continually in the way, examining

everything with keen and prying eye, and watching every movement

of the white men. All this, however, was borne with great

good-humor by the captain, and through his example by his men.

Indeed, throughout all his transactions he shows himself the

friend of the poor Indians, and his conduct toward them is above

all praise.



The Nez Perces, the Flatheads, and the Hanging-ears pride

themselves upon the number of their horses, of which they possess

more in proportion than any other of the mountain tribes within

the buffalo range. Many of the Indian warriors and hunters

encamped around Captain Bonneville possess from thirty to forty

horses each. Their horses are stout, well-built ponies, of great

wind, and capable of enduring the severest hardship and fatigue.

The swiftest of them, however, are those obtained from the whites

while sufficiently young to become acclimated and inured to the

rough service of the mountains.



By degrees the populousness of this encampment began to produce

its inconveniences. The immense droves of horses owned by the

Indians consumed the herbage of the surrounding hills; while to

drive them to any distant pasturage, in a neighborhood abounding

with lurking and deadly enemies, would be to endanger the loss

both of man and beast. Game, too, began to grow scarce. It was

soon hunted and frightened out of the vicinity, and though the

Indians made a wide circuit through the mountains in the hope of

driving the buffalo toward the cantonment, their expedition was

unsuccessful. It was plain that so large a party could not

subsist themselves there, nor in any one place throughout the

winter. Captain Bonneville, therefore, altered his whole

arrangements. He detached fifty men toward the south to winter

upon Snake River, and to trap about its waters in the spring,

with orders to rejoin him in the month of July at Horse Creek, in

Green River Valley, which he had fixed upon as the general

rendezvous of his company for the ensuing year.



Of all his late party, he now retained with him merely a small

number of free trappers, with whom he intended to sojourn among

the Nez Perces and Flatheads, and adopt the Indian mode of moving

with the game and grass. Those bands, in effect, shortly

afterward broke up their encampments and set off for a less

beaten neighborhood. Captain Bonneville remained behind for a few

days, that he might secretly prepare caches, in which to deposit

everything not required for current use. Thus lightened of all

superfluous encumbrance, he set off on the 20th of November to

rejoin his Indian allies. He found them encamped in a secluded

part of the country, at the head of a small stream. Considering

themselves out of all danger in this sequestered spot from their

old enemies, the Blackfeet, their encampment manifested the most

negligent security. Their lodges were scattered in every

direction, and their horses covered every hill for a great

distance round, grazing upon the upland bunch grass which grew in

great abundance, and though dry, retained its nutritious

properties instead of losing them like other grasses in the

autumn.



When the Nez Perces, Flatheads, and Pends Oreilles are encamped

in a dangerous neighborhood, says Captain Bonneville, the

greatest care is taken of their horses, those prime articles of

Indian wealth, and objects of Indian depredation. Each warrior

has his horse tied by one foot at night to a stake planted before

his lodge. Here they remain until broad daylight; by that time

the young men of the camp are already ranging over the

surrounding hills. Each family then drives its horses to some

eligible spot, where they are left to graze unattended. A young

Indian repairs occasionally to the pasture to give them water,

and to see that all is well. So accustomed are the horses to this

management, that they keep together in the pasture where they

have been left. As the sun sinks behind the hills, they may be

seen moving from all points toward the camp, where they surrender

themselves to be tied up for the night. Even in situations of

danger, the Indians rarely set guards over their camp at night,

intrusting that office entirely to their vigilant and

well-trained dogs.



In an encampment, however, of such fancied security as that in

which Captain Bonneville found his Indian friends, much of these

precautions with respect to their horses are omitted. They merely

drive them, at nightfall, to some sequestered little dell, and

leave them there, at perfect liberty, until the morning.



One object of Captain Bonneville in wintering among these Indians

was to procure a supply of horses against the spring. They were,

however, extremely unwilling to part with any, and it was with

great difficulty that he purchased, at the rate of twenty dollars

each, a few for the use of some of his free trappers who were on

foot and dependent on him for their equipment.



In this encampment Captain Bonneville remained from the 21st of

November to the 9th of December. During this period the

thermometer ranged from thirteen to forty-two degrees. There were

occasional falls of snow; but it generally melted away almost

immediately, and the tender blades of new grass began to shoot up

among the old. On the 7th of December, however, the thermometer

fell to seven degrees.



The reader will recollect that, on distributing his forces when

in Green River Valley, Captain Bonneville had detached a party,

headed by a leader of the name of Matthieu, with all the weak and

disabled horses, to sojourn about Bear River, meet the Shoshonie

bands, and afterward to rejoin him at his winter camp on Salmon

River.



More than sufficient time had elapsed, yet Matthieu failed to

make his appearance, and uneasiness began to be felt on his

account. Captain Bonneville sent out four men, to range the

country through which he would have to pass, and endeavor to get

some information concerning him; for his route lay across the

great Snake River plain, which spreads itself out like an Arabian

desert, and on which a cavalcade could be descried at a great

distance. The scouts soon returned, having proceeded no further

than the edge of the plain, pretending that their horses were

lame; but it was evident they had feared to venture, with so

small a force, into these exposed and dangerous regions.



A disease, which Captain Bonneville supposed to be pneumonia, now

appeared among the Indians, carrying off numbers of them after an

illness of three or four days. The worthy captain acted as

physician, prescribing profuse sweatings and copious bleedings,

and uniformly with success, if the patient were subsequently

treated with proper care. In extraordinary cases, the poor

savages called in the aid of their own doctors or conjurors, who

officiated with great noise and mummery, but with little benefit.

Those who died during this epidemic were buried in graves, after

the manner of the whites, but without any regard to the direction

of the head. It is a fact worthy of notice that, while this

malady made such ravages among the natives, not a single white

man had the slightest symptom of it.



A familiar intercourse of some standing with the Pierced-nose and

Flathead Indians had now convinced Captain Bonneville of their

amicable and inoffensive character; he began to take a strong

interest in them, and conceived the idea of becoming a

pacificator, and healing the deadly feud between them and the

Blackfeet, in which they were so deplorably the sufferers. He

proposed the matter to some of the leaders, and urged that they

should meet the Blackfeet chiefs in a grand pacific conference,

offering to send two of his men to the enemy's camp with pipe,

tobacco and flag of truce, to negotiate the proposed meeting.



The Nez Perces and Flathead sages upon this held a council of war

of two days' duration, in which there was abundance of hard

smoking and long talking, and both eloquence and tobacco were

nearly exhausted. At length they came to a decision to reject the

worthy captain's proposition, and upon pretty substantial

grounds, as the reader may judge.



"War," said the chiefs, "is a bloody business, and full of evil;

but it keeps the eyes of the chiefs always open, and makes the

limbs of the young men strong and supple. In war, every one is on

the alert. If we see a trail we know it must be an enemy; if the

Blackfeet come to us, we know it is for war, and we are ready.

Peace, on the other hand, sounds no alarm; the eyes of the chiefs

are closed in sleep, and the young men are sleek and lazy. The

horses stray into the mountains; the women and their little babes

go about alone. But the heart of a Blackfoot is a lie, and his

tongue is a trap. If he says peace it is to deceive; he comes to

us as a brother; he smokes his pipe with us; but when he sees us

weak, and off our guard, he will slay and steal. We will have no

such peace; let there be war!"



With this reasoning Captain Bonneville was fain to acquiesce;

but, since the sagacious Flatheads and their allies were content

to remain in a state of warfare, he wished them at least to

exercise the boasted vigilance which war was to produce, and to

keep their eyes open. He represented to them the impossibility

that two such considerable clans could move about the country

without leaving trails by which they might be traced. Besides,

among the Blackfeet braves were several Nez Perces, who had been

taken prisoners in early youth, adopted by their captors, and

trained up and imbued with warlike and predatory notions; these

had lost all sympathies with their native tribe, and would be

prone to lead the enemy to their secret haunts. He exhorted them,

therefore, to keep upon the alert, and never to remit their

vigilance while within the range of so crafty and cruel a foe.

All these counsels were lost upon his easy and simple-minded

hearers. A careless indifference reigned throughout their

encampments, and their horses were permitted to range the hills

at night in perfect freedom. Captain Bonneville had his own

horses brought in at night, and properly picketed and guarded.

The evil he apprehended soon took place. In a single night a

swoop was made through the neighboring pastures by the Blackfeet,

and eighty-six of the finest horses carried off. A whip and a

rope were left in a conspicuous situation by the robbers, as a

taunt to the simpletons they had unhorsed.



Long before sunrise the news of this calamity spread like

wildfire through the different encampments. Captain Bonneville,

whose own horses remained safe at their pickets, watched in

momentary expectation of an outbreak of warriors, Pierced-nose

and Flathead, in furious pursuit of the marauders; but no such

thing -- they contented themselves with searching diligently over

hill and dale, to glean up such horses as had escaped the hands

of the marauders, and then resigned themselves to their loss with

the most exemplary quiescence.



Some, it is true, who were entirely unhorsed, set out on a

begging visit to their cousins, as they called them, the Lower

Nez Perces, who inhabit the lower country about the Columbia, and

possess horses in abundance. To these they repair when in

difficulty, and seldom fail, by dint of begging and bartering, to

get themselves once more mounted on horseback.



Game had now become scarce in the neighborhood of the camp, and

it was necessary, according to Indian custom, to move off to a

less beaten ground. Captain Bonneville proposed the Horse

Prairie; but his Indian friends objected that many of the Nez

Perces had gone to visit their cousins, and that the whites were

few in number, so that their united force was not sufficient to

Venture upon the buffalo grounds, which were infested by bands of

Blackfeet.



They now spoke of a place at no great distance, which they

represented as a perfect hunter's elysium. It was on the right

branch, or head stream of the river, locked up among cliffs and

precipices where there was no danger from roving bands, and where

the Blackfeet dare not enter. Here, they said, the elk abounded,

and the mountain sheep were to be seen trooping upon the rocks

and hills. A little distance beyond it, also, herds of buffalo

were to be met with, Out of range of danger. Thither they

proposed to move their camp.



The proposition pleased the captain, who was desirous, through

the Indians, of becoming acquainted with all the secret places of

the land. Accordingly, on the 9th of December, they struck their

tents, and moved forward by short stages, as many of the Indians

were yet feeble from the late malady.



Following up the right fork of the river they came to where it

entered a deep gorge of the mountains, up which lay the secluded

region so much valued by the Indians. Captain Bonneville halted

and encamped for three days before entering the gorge. In the

meantime he detached five of his free trappers to scour the

hills, and kill as many elk as possible, before the main body

should enter, as they would then be soon frightened away by the

various Indian hunting parties.



While thus encamped, they were still liable to the marauds of the

Blackfeet, and Captain Bonneville admonished his Indian friends

to be upon their guard. The Nez Perces, however, notwithstanding

their recent loss, were still careless of their horses; merely

driving them to some secluded spot, and leaving them there for

the night, without setting any guard upon them. The consequence

was a second swoop, in which forty-one were carried off. This was

borne with equal philosophy with the first, and no effort was

made either to recover the horses, or to take vengeance on the

thieves.



The Nez Perces, however, grew more cautious with respect to their

remaining horses, driving them regularly to the camp every

evening, and fastening them to pickets. Captain Bonneville,

however, told them that this was not enough. It was evident they

were dogged by a daring and persevering enemy, who was encouraged

by past impunity; they should, therefore, take more than usual

precautions, and post a guard at night over their cavalry. They

could not, however, be persuaded to depart from their usual

custom. The horse once picketed, the care of the owner was over

for the night, and he slept profoundly. None waked in the camp

but the gamblers, who, absorbed in their play, were more

difficult to be roused to external circumstances than even the

sleepers.



The Blackfeet are bold enemies, and fond of hazardous exploits.

The band that were hovering about the neighborhood, finding that

they had such pacific people to deal with, redoubled their

daring. The horses being now picketed before the lodges, a number

of Blackfeet scouts penetrated in the early part of the night

into the very centre of the camp. Here they went about among the

lodges as calmly and deliberately as if at home, quietly cutting

loose the horses that stood picketed by the lodges of their

sleeping owners. One of these prowlers, more adventurous than the

rest, approached a fire round which a group of Nez Perces were

gambling with the most intense eagerness. Here he stood for some

time, muffled up in his robe, peering over the shoulders of the

players, watching the changes of their countenances and the

fluctuations of the game. So completely engrossed were they, that

the presence of this muffled eaves-dropper was unnoticed and,

having executed his bravado, he retired undiscovered.



Having cut loose as many horses as they could conveniently carry

off, the Blackfeet scouts rejoined their comrades, and all

remained patiently round the camp. By degrees the horses, finding

themselves at liberty, took their route toward their customary

grazing ground. As they emerged from the camp they were silently

taken possession of, until, having secured about thirty, the

Blackfeet sprang on their backs and scampered off. The clatter of

hoofs startled the gamblers from their game. They gave the alarm,

which soon roused the sleepers from every lodge. Still all was

quiescent; no marshalling of forces, no saddling of steeds and

dashing off in pursuit, no talk of retribution for their repeated

outrages. The patience of Captain Bonneville was at length

exhausted. He had played the part of a pacificator without

success; he now altered his tone, and resolved, if possible, to

rouse their war spirit.



Accordingly, convoking their chiefs, he inveighed against their

craven policy, and urged the necessity of vigorous and

retributive measures that would check the confidence and

presumption of their enemies, if not inspire them with awe. For

this purpose, he advised that a war party should be immediately

sent off on the trail of the marauders, to follow them, if

necessary, into the very heart of the Blackfoot country, and not

to leave them until they had taken signal vengeance. Beside this,

he recommended the organization of minor war parties, to make

reprisals to the extent of the losses sustained. "Unless you

rouse yourselves from your apathy," said he, "and strike some

bold and decisive blow, you will cease to be considered men, or

objects of manly warfare. The very squaws and children of the

Blackfeet will be set against you, while their warriors reserve

themselves for nobler antagonists."



This harangue had evidently a momentary effect upon the pride of

the hearers. After a short pause, however, one of the orators

arose. It was bad, he said, to go to war for mere revenge. The

Great Spirit had given them a heart for peace, not for war. They

had lost horses, it was true, but they could easily get others

from their cousins, the Lower Nez Perces, without incurring any

risk; whereas, in war they should lose men, who were not so

readily replaced. As to their late losses, an increased

watchfulness would prevent any more misfortunes of the kind. He

disapproved, therefore, of all hostile measures; and all the

other chiefs concurred in his opinion.



Captain Bonneville again took up the point. "It is true," said

he, "the Great Spirit has given you a heart to love your friends;

but he has also given you an arm to strike your enemies. Unless

you do something speedily to put an end to this continual

plundering, I must say farewell. As yet I have sustained no loss;

thanks to the precautions which you have slighted; but my

property is too unsafe here; my turn will come next; I and my

people will share the contempt you are bringing upon yourselves,

and will be thought, like you, poor-spirited beings, who may at

any time be plundered with impunity."



The conference broke up with some signs of excitement on the part

of the Indians. Early the next morning, a party of thirty men set

off in pursuit of the foe, and Captain Bonneville hoped to hear a

good account of the Blackfeet marauders. To his disappointment,

the war party came lagging back on the following day, leading a

few old, sorry, broken-down horses, which the free-booters had

not been able to urge to sufficient speed. This effort exhausted

the martial spirit, and satisfied the wounded pride of the Nez

Perces, and they relapsed into their usual state of passive

indifference.


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