They come and go as
they happen to feel the need of food or water.”
With these stimulating directions we set forth one morning to “hunt
a herd of buffalo,” excited as a couple of boys, eager as hunters yet
with only the desire to see the wild kine.
After we left the road and turned westward our way led athwart low
hills and snake-like ravines and along deep-worn cattle paths leading
to water holes. All was magnificently primeval. No mark of plow or
spade, no planted stake or post assailed our eyes. We were deep in the
land of the bison at last.
Finally, as we topped a long, low swell, my brother shouted,
“Buffalo!” and looking where he pointed, I detected through the heated
haze of the midday plain, certain vague, unfamiliar forms which hinted
at the prehistoric past. They were not cows or horses, that was
evident. Here and there purple-black bodies loomed, while close beside
them other smaller objects gave off a singular and striking contrast.
There was no mistaking the character of these animals. They were bison.
To ride down upon them thus, in the silence and heat of that
uninhabited valley, was to realize in every detail, a phase of the
old-time life of the plains. We moved in silence. The grass-hoppers
springing with clapping buzz before our horses' feet gave out the only
sound. No other living thing uttered voice. Nothing moved save our
ponies and those distant monstrous kine whose presence filled us with
the same emotion which had burned in the hearts of our pioneer
ancestors.
As we drew nearer, clouds of dust arose like lazy smoke from
smoldering fires, curtains which concealed some mighty bull tossing the
powdery earth with giant hoof. The cows seeing our approach, began to
shift and change. The bulls did not hurry, on the contrary, they fell
to the rear and grimly halted our advance. Towers of alkali dust, hot
and white, lingering smoke-like in the air shielded us like a screen,
and so—slowly riding—we drew near enough to perceive the calves and
hear the mutter of the cows as they reënacted for us the life of the
vanished millions of their kind.
Here lay a calf beside its dam. Yonder a solitary ancient and shaggy
bull stood apart, sullen and brooding. Nearer a colossal chieftain,
glossy, black, and weighing two thousand pounds moved from group to
group, restless and combative, wrinkling his ridiculously small nose,
and uttering a deep, menacing, muttering roar. His rivals, though they
slunk away, gave utterance to similar sinister snarls, as if voicing
bitter resentment. They did not bellow, they growled, low down
in their cavernous throats, like angry lions. Nothing that I had ever
heard or read of buffaloes had given me the quality of this majestic
clamor.
Occasionally one of them, tortured by flies, dropped to earth, and
rolled and tore the sod, till a dome of dust arose and hid him. Out of
this gray curtain he suddenly reappeared, dark and savage, like a dun
rock emerging from mist. One furious giant, moving with curling
upraised tail, challenged to universal combat, whilst all his rivals
gave way, reluctant, resentful, yet afraid. The rumps of some of the
veterans were as bare of hair as the loins of lions, but their enormous
shoulders bulked into deformity by reason of a dense mane. They moved
like elephants—clumsy, enormous, distorted, yet with astonishing
celerity.
It was worth a long journey to stand thus and watch that small band
of bison, representatives of a race whose myriads once covered all
America, for though less than two hundred in number, they were feeding
and warring precisely as their ancestors had fed and warred for a
million years. Small wonder that the red men believe the white invader
must have used some evil medicine, some magic power in sweeping these
majestic creatures from the earth. Once they covered the hills like a
robe of brown, now only a few small bands are left to perpetuate the
habits and the customs of the past.
As we watched, they fed, fought, rose up and lay down in calm
disdain of our presence. It was as if, unobserved, and yet close beside
them, we were studying the denizens of a small corner of aboriginal
America, America in pre-Columbian times. Reluctantly, slowly we turned
and rode away, back to our tent, back to the railway and the present
day.
* * * * *
On our return to Missoula we found the town aflame with a report
that a steamer had just landed at Seattle, bringing from Alaska nearly
three million dollars in gold-dust, and that the miners who owned the
treasure had said, “We dug it from the valley of the Yukon, at a point
called the Klondike. A thousand miles from anywhere. The Yukon is four
thousand miles long, and flows north, so that the lower half freezes
solid early in the fall, and to cross overland from Skagway—the way we
came out—means weeks of travel. It is the greatest gold camp in the
world but no one can go in now.
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