The Defile Would Spread Out To Many Rods In Width; Bushes, Trees, And
Flowers Would Spring By The Side Of The Brook; The Cliffs Would Be
Feathered With Shrubbery, That Clung In Every Crevice, And Fringed
With Trees, That Grew Along Their Sunny Edges.
Then we would be
moving again in the darkness.
The passage seemed about four miles
long, and before we reached the end of it, the unshod hoofs of our
animals were lamentably broken, and their legs cut by the sharp
stones. Issuing from the mountain we found another plain. All
around it stood a circle of lofty precipices, that seemed the
impersonation of silence and solitude. Here again the Indians had
encamped, as well they might, after passing with their women,
children and horses through the gulf behind us. In one day we had
made a journey which had cost them three to accomplish.
The only outlet to this amphitheater lay over a hill some two hundred
feet high, up which we moved with difficulty. Looking from the top,
we saw that at last we were free of the mountains. The prairie
spread before us, but so wild and broken that the view was everywhere
obstructed. Far on our left one tall hill swelled up against the
sky, on the smooth, pale green surface of which four slowly moving
black specks were discernible. They were evidently buffalo, and we
hailed the sight as a good augury; for where the buffalo were, there
too the Indians would probably be found.
Enter page number
PreviousNext
Page 234 of 486
Words from 62284 to 62536
of 129303