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CHAPTER 2. THE RANGE
After a much-needed rest at Emmett's, we bade good-by to him and his hospitable
family, and under the guidance of his man once more took to the wind-swept trail.
We pursued a southwesterly course now, following the lead of the craggy red wall
that stretched on and on for hundreds of miles into Utah.
The desert, smoky and hot, fell away to the left, and in the foreground a dark,
irregular line marked the Grand Canyon cutting through the plateau.
The wind whipped in from the vast, open expanse, and meeting an obstacle in the red
wall, turned north and raced past us. Jones's hat blew off, stood on its rim, and
rolled.
It kept on rolling, thirty miles an hour, more or less; so fast, at least, that we
were a long time catching up to it with a team of horses.
Possibly we never would have caught it had not a stone checked its flight.
Further manifestation of the power of the desert wind surrounded us on all sides.
It had hollowed out huge stones from the cliffs, and tumbled them to the plain
below; and then, sweeping sand and gravel low across the desert floor, had cut them
deeply, until they rested on slender
pedestals, thus sculptoring grotesque and striking monuments to the marvelous
persistence of this element of nature.
Late that afternoon, as we reached the height of the plateau, Jones woke up and
shouted: "Ha! there's Buckskin!" Far southward lay a long, black mountain,
covered with patches of shining snow.
I could follow the zigzag line of the Grand Canyon splitting the desert plateau, and
saw it disappear in the haze round the end of the mountain.
From this I got my first clear impression of the topography of the country
surrounding our objective point.
Buckskin mountain ran its blunt end eastward to the Canyon--in fact, formed a
hundred miles of the north rim.
As it was nine thousand feet high it still held the snow, which had occasioned our
lengthy desert ride to get back of the mountain.
I could see the long slopes rising out of the desert to meet the timber.
As we bowled merrily down grade I noticed that we were no longer on stony ground, and
that a little scant silvery grass had made its appearance.
Then little branches of green, with a blue flower, smiled out of the clayish sand.
All of a sudden Jones stood up, and let out a wild Comanche yell.
I was more startled by the yell than by the great hand he smashed down on my shoulder,
and for the moment I was dazed. "There! look! look! the buffalo!
Hi! Hi! Hi!"
Below us, a few miles on a rising knoll, a big herd of buffalo shone black in the gold
of the evening sun.
I had not Jones's incentive, but I felt enthusiasm born of the wild and beautiful
picture, and added my yell to his.
The huge, burly leader of the herd lifted his head, and after regarding us for a few
moments calmly went on browsing.
The desert had fringed away into a grand rolling pastureland, walled in by the red
cliffs, the slopes of Buckskin, and further isolated by the Canyon.
Here was a range of twenty-four hundred square miles without a foot of barb-wire,
a pasture fenced in by natural forces, with the splendid feature that the buffalo could
browse on the plain in winter, and go up
into the cool foothills of Buckskin in summer.
From another ridge we saw a cabin dotting the rolling plain, and in half an hour we
reached it.
As we climbed down from the wagon a brown and black dog came dashing out of the
cabin, and promptly jumped at Moze.
His selection showed poor discrimination, for Moze whipped him before I could
separate them.
Hearing Jones heartily greeting some one, I turned in his direction, only to be
distracted by another dog fight. Don had tackled Moze for the seventh time.
Memory rankled in Don, and he needed a lot of whipping, some of which he was getting
when I rescued him. Next moment I was shaking hands with Frank
and Jim, Jones's ranchmen.
At a glance I liked them both. Frank was short and wiry, and had a big,
ferocious mustache, the effect of which was softened by his kindly brown eyes.
Jim was tall, a little heavier; he had a careless, tidy look; his eyes were
searching, and though he appeared a young man, his hair was white.
"I shore am glad to see you all," said Jim, in slow, soft, Southern accent.
"Get down, get down," was Frank's welcome-- a typically Western one, for we had already
gotten down; "an' come in.
You must be worked out. Sure you've come a long way."
He was quick of speech, full of nervous energy, and beamed with hospitality.
The cabin was the rudest kind of log affair, with a huge stone fireplace in one
end, deer antlers and coyote skins on the wall, saddles and cowboys' traps in a
corner, a nice, large, promising cupboard, and a table and chairs.
Jim threw wood on a smoldering fire, that soon blazed and crackled cheerily.
I sank down into a chair with a feeling of blessed relief.
Ten days of desert ride behind me! Promise of wonderful days before me, with
the last of the old plainsmen.
No wonder a sweet sense of ease stole over me, or that the fire seemed a live and
joyously welcoming thing, or that Jim's deft maneuvers in preparation of supper
roused in me a rapt admiration.
"Twenty calves this spring!" cried Jones, punching me in my sore side.
"Ten thousand dollars worth of calves!"
He was now altogether a changed man; he looked almost young; his eyes danced, and
he rubbed his big hands together while he plied Frank with questions.
In strange surroundings--that is, away from his Native Wilds, Jones had been a silent
man; it had been almost impossible to get anything out of him.
But now I saw that I should come to know the real man.
In a very few moments he had talked more than on all the desert trip, and what he
said, added to the little I had already learned, put me in possession of some
interesting information as to his buffalo.
Some years before he had conceived the idea of hybridizing buffalo with black Galloway
cattle; and with the characteristic determination and energy of the man, he at
once set about finding a suitable range.
This was difficult, and took years of searching.
At last the wild north rim of the Grand Canyon, a section unknown except to a few
Indians and mustang hunters, was settled upon.
Then the gigantic task of transporting the herd of buffalo by rail from Montana to
Salt Lake was begun.
The two hundred and ninety miles of desert lying between the home of the Mormons and
Buckskin Mountain was an obstacle almost insurmountable.
The journey was undertaken and found even more trying than had been expected.
Buffalo after buffalo died on the way.
Then Frank, Jones's right-hand man, put into execution a plan he had been thinking
of--namely, to travel by night. It succeeded.
The buffalo rested in the day and traveled by easy stages by night, with the result
that the big herd was transported to the ideal range.
Here, in an environment strange to their race, but peculiarly adaptable, they
thrived and multiplied. The hybrid of the Galloway cow and buffalo
proved a great success.
Jones called the new species "Cattalo." The cattalo took the hardiness of the
buffalo, and never required artificial food or shelter.
He would face the desert storm or blizzard and stand stock still in his tracks until
the weather cleared.
He became quite domestic, could be easily handled, and grew exceedingly fat on very
little provender.
The folds of his stomach were so numerous that they digested even the hardest and
flintiest of corn.
He had fourteen ribs on each side, while domestic cattle had only thirteen; thus he
could endure rougher work and longer journeys to water.
His fur was so dense and glossy that it equaled that of the unplucked beaver or
otter, and was fully as valuable as the buffalo robe.
And not to be overlooked by any means was the fact that his meat was delicious.
Jones had to hear every detail of all that had happened since his absence in the East,
and he was particularly inquisitive to learn all about the twenty cattalo calves.
He called different buffalo by name; and designated the calves by descriptive terms,
such as "Whiteface" and "Crosspatch." He almost forgot to eat, and kept Frank too
busy to get anything into his own mouth.
After supper he calmed down. "How about your other man--Mr. Wallace, I
think you said?" asked Frank. "We expected to meet him at Grand Canyon
Station, and then at Flagstaff.
But he didn't show up. Either he backed out or missed us.
I'm sorry; for when we get up on Buckskin, among the wild horses and cougars, we'll be
likely to need him."
"I reckon you'll need me, as well as Jim," said Frank dryly, with a twinkle in his
eye. "The buffs are in good shape an' can get
along without me for a while."
"That'll be fine. How about cougar sign on the mountain?"
"Plenty. I've got two spotted near Clark Spring.
Comin' over two weeks ago I tracked them in the snow along the trail for miles.
We'll ooze over that way, as it's goin' toward the Siwash.
The Siwash breaks of the Canyon--there's the place for lions.
I met a wild-horse wrangler not long back, an' he was tellin' me about Old Tom an' the
colts he'd killed this winter."
Naturally, I here expressed a desire to know more of Old Tom.
"He's the biggest cougar ever known of in these parts.
His tracks are bigger than a horse's, an' have been seen on Buckskin for twelve
years.
This wrangler--his name is Clark--said he'd turned his saddle horse out to graze near
camp, an' Old Tom sneaked in an' downed him.
The lions over there are sure a bold bunch.
Well, why shouldn't they be? No one ever hunted them.
You see, the mountain is hard to get at. But now you're here, if it's big cats you
want we sure can find them.
Only be easy, be easy. You've all the time there is.
An' any job on Buckskin will take time. We'll look the calves over, an' you must
ride the range to harden up.
Then we'll ooze over toward Oak. I expect it'll be boggy, an' I hope the
snow melts soon." "The snow hadn't melted on Greenland
point," replied Jones.
"We saw that with a glass from the El Tovar.
We wanted to cross that way, but Rust said Bright Angel Creek was breast high to a
horse, and that creek is the trail."
"There's four feet of snow on Greenland," said Frank.
"It was too early to come that way. There's only about three months in the year
the Canyon can be crossed at Greenland."
"I want to get in the snow," returned Jones.
"This bunch of long-eared canines I brought never smelled a lion track.
Hounds can't be trained quick without snow.
You've got to see what they're trailing, or you can't break them."
Frank looked dubious. "'Pears to me we'll have trouble gettin' a
lion without lion dogs.
It takes a long time to break a hound off of deer, once he's chased them.
Buckskin is full of deer, wolves, coyotes, and there's the wild horses.
We couldn't go a hundred feet without crossin' trails."
"How's the hound you and Jim fetched in las' year?
Has he got a good nose?
Here he is--I like his head. Come here, Bowser--what's his name?"
"Jim named him Sounder, because he sure has a voice.
It's great to hear him on a trail.
Sounder has a nose that can't be fooled, an' he'll trail anythin'; but I don't know
if he ever got up a lion." Sounder wagged his bushy tail and looked up
affectionately at Frank.
He had a fine head, great brown eyes, very long ears and curly brownish-black hair.
He was not demonstrative, looked rather askance at Jones, and avoided the other
dogs.
"That dog will make a great lion-chaser," said Jones, decisively, after his study of
Sounder. "He and Moze will keep us busy, once they
learn we want lions."
"I don't believe any dog-trainer could teach them short of six months," replied
Frank.
"Sounder is no spring chicken; an' that black and dirty white cross between a
cayuse an' a barb-wire fence is an old dog. You can't teach old dogs new tricks."
Jones smiled mysteriously, a smile of conscious superiority, but said nothing.
"We'll shore hev a storm to-morrow," said Jim, relinquishing his pipe long enough to
speak.
He had been silent, and now his meditative gaze was on the west, through the cabin
window, where a dull afterglow faded under the heavy laden clouds of night and left
the horizon dark.
I was very tired when I lay down, but so full of excitement that sleep did not soon
visit my eyelids.
The talk about buffalo, wild-horse hunters, lions and dogs, the prospect of hard riding
and unusual adventure; the vision of Old Tom that had already begun to haunt me,
filled my mind with pictures and fancies.
The other fellows dropped off to sleep, and quiet reigned.
Suddenly a succession of ***, sharp barks came from the plain, close to the cabin.
Coyotes were paying us a call, and judging from the chorus of yelps and howls from our
dogs, it was not a welcome visit.
Above the medley rose one big, deep, full voice that I knew at once belonged to
Sounder. Then all was quiet again.
Sleep gradually benumbed my senses.
Vague phrases dreamily drifted to and fro in my mind: "Jones's wild range--Old Tom--
Sounder--great name--great voice--Sounder! Sounder!
Sounder--"
Next morning I could hardly crawl out of my sleeping-bag.
My bones ached, my muscles protested excruciatingly, my lips burned and bled,
and the cold I had contracted on the desert clung to me.
A good brisk walk round the corrals, and then breakfast, made me feel better.
"Of course you can ride?" queried Frank. My answer was not given from an
overwhelming desire to be truthful.
Frank frowned a little, as it wondering how a man could have the nerve to start out on
a jaunt with Buffalo Jones without being a good horseman.
To be unable to stick on the back of a wild mustang, or a cayuse, was an unpardonable
sin in Arizona.
My frank admission was made relatively, with my mind on what cowboys held as a
standard of horsemanship.
The mount Frank trotted out of the corral for me was a pure white, beautiful mustang,
nervous, sensitive, quivering.
I watched Frank put on the saddle, and when he called me I did not fail to catch a
covert twinkle in his merry brown eyes.
Looking away toward Buckskin Mountain, which was coincidentally in the direction
of home, I said to myself: "This may be where you get on, but most certainly it is
where you get off!"
Jones was already riding far beyond the corral, as I could see by a cloud of dust;
and I set off after him, with the painful consciousness that I must have looked to
Frank and Jim much as Central Park equestrians had often looked to me.
Frank shouted after me that he would catch up with us out on the range.
I was not in any great hurry to overtake Jones, but evidently my horse's
inclinations differed from mine; at any rate, he made the dust fly, and jumped the
little sage bushes.
Jones, who had tarried to inspect one of the pools--formed of running water from the
corrals--greeted me as I came up with this cheerful observation.
"What in thunder did Frank give you that white nag for?
The buffalo hate white horses--anything white.
They're liable to stampede off the range, or chase you into the canyon."
I replied grimly that, as it was certain something was going to happen, the
particular circumstance might as well come off quickly.
We rode over the rolling plain with a cool, bracing breeze in our faces.
The sky was dull and mottled with a beautiful cloud effect that presaged wind.
As we trotted along Jones pointed out to me and descanted upon the nutritive value of
three different kinds of grass, one of which he called the Buffalo Pea, noteworthy
for a beautiful blue blossom.
Soon we passed out of sight of the cabin, and could see only the billowy plain, the
red tips of the stony wall, and the black- fringed crest of Buckskin.
After riding a while we made out some cattle, a few of which were on the range,
browsing in the lee of a ridge. No sooner had I marked them than Jones let
out another Comanche yell.
"Wolf!" he yelled; and spurring his big bay, he was off like the wind.
A single glance showed me several cows running as if bewildered, and near them a
big white wolf pulling down a calf.
Another white wolf stood not far off. My horse jumped as if he had been shot; and
the realization darted upon me that here was where the certain something began.
Spot--the mustang had one black spot in his pure white--snorted like I imagined a
blooded horse might, under dire insult. Jones's bay had gotten about a hundred
paces the start.
I lived to learn that Spot hated to be left behind; moreover, he would not be left
behind; he was the swiftest horse on the range, and proud of the distinction.
I cast one unmentionable word on the breeze toward the cabin and Frank, then put mind
and muscle to the sore task of remaining with Spot.
Jones was born on a saddle, and had been taking his meals in a saddle for about
sixty-three years, and the bay horse could run.
Run is not a felicitous word--he flew.
And I was rendered mentally deranged for the moment to see that hundred paces
between the bay and Spot materially lessen at every jump.
Spot lengthened out, seemed to go down near the ground, and cut the air like a high-
geared auto.
If I had not heard the fast rhythmic beat of his hoofs, and had not bounced high into
the air at every jump, I would have been sure I was riding a bird.
I tried to stop him.
As well might I have tried to pull in the Lusitania with a thread.
Spot was out to overhaul that bay, and in spite of me, he was doing it.
The wind rushed into my face and sang in my ears.
Jones seemed the nucleus of a sort of haze, and it grew larger and larger.
Presently he became clearly defined in my sight; the violent commotion under me
subsided; I once more felt the saddle, and then I realized that Spot had been content
to stop alongside of Jones, tossing his head and champing his bit.
"Well, by George! I didn't know you were in the stretch,"
cried my companion.
"That was a fine little brush. We must have come several miles.
I'd have killed those wolves if I'd brought a gun.
The big one that had the calf was a bold brute.
He never let go until I was within fifty feet of him.
Then I almost rode him down.
I don't think the calf was much hurt. But those blood-thirsty devils will return,
and like as not get the calf. That's the worst of cattle raising.
Now, take the buffalo.
Do you suppose those wolves could have gotten a buffalo calf out from under the
mother? Never.
Neither could a whole band of wolves.
Buffalo stick close together, and the little ones do not stray.
When danger threatens, the herd closes in and faces it and fights.
That is what is grand about the buffalo and what made them once roam the prairies in
countless, endless droves."
From the highest elevation in that part of the range we viewed the surrounding ridges,
flats and hollows, searching for the buffalo.
At length we spied a cloud of dust rising from behind an undulating mound, then big
black dots hove in sight. "Frank has rounded up the herd, and is
driving it this way.
We'll wait," said Jones. Though the buffalo appeared to be moving
fast, a long time elapsed before they reached the foot of our outlook.
They lumbered along in a compact mass, so dense that I could not count them, but I
estimated the number at seventy-five. Frank was riding zigzag behind them,
swinging his lariat and yelling.
When he espied us he reined in his horse and waited.
Then the herd slowed down, halted and began browsing.
"Look at the cattalo calves," cried Jones, in ecstatic tones.
"See how shy they are, how close they stick to their mothers."
The little dark-brown fellows were plainly frightened.
I made several unsuccessful attempts to photograph them, and gave it up when Jones
told me not to ride too close and that it would be better to wait till we had them in
the corral.
He took my camera and instructed me to go on ahead, in the rear of the herd.
I heard the click of the instrument as he snapped a picture, and then suddenly heard
him shout in alarm: "Look out! look out! pull your horse!"
Thundering hoof-beats pounding the earth accompanied his words.
I saw a big bull, with head down, tail raised, charging my horse.
He answered Frank's yell of command with a furious grunt.
I was paralyzed at the wonderfully swift action of the shaggy brute, and I sat
helpless.
Spot wheeled as if he were on a pivot and plunged out of the way with a celerity that
was astounding. The buffalo stopped, pawed the ground, and
angrily tossed his huge head.
Frank rode up to him, yelled, and struck him with the lariat, whereupon he gave
another toss of his horns, and then returned to the herd.
"It was that darned white nag," said Jones.
"Frank, it was wrong to put an inexperienced man on Spot.
For that matter, the horse should never be allowed to go near the buffalo."
"Spot knows the buffs; they'd never get to him," replied Frank.
But the usual spirit was absent from his voice, and he glanced at me soberly.
I knew I had turned white, for I felt the peculiar cold sensation on my face.
"Now, look at that, will you?" cried Jones. "I don't like the looks of that."
He pointed to the herd.
They stopped browsing, and were uneasily shifting to and fro.
The bull lifted his head; the others slowly grouped together.
"Storm!
Sandstorm!" exclaimed Jones, pointing desert-ward.
Dark yellow clouds like smoke were rolling, sweeping, bearing down upon us.
They expanded, blossoming out like gigantic roses, and whirled and merged into one
another, all the time rolling on and blotting out the light.
"We've got to run.
That storm may last two days," yelled Frank to me.
"We've had some bad ones lately. Give your horse free rein, and cover your
face."
A roar, resembling an approaching storm at sea, came on puffs of wind, as the horses
got into their stride.
Long streaks of dust whipped up in different places; the silver-white grass
bent to the ground; round bunches of sage went rolling before us.
The puffs grew longer, steadier, harder.
Then a shrieking blast howled on our trail, seeming to swoop down on us with a yellow,
blinding pall. I shut my eyes and covered my face with a
handkerchief.
The sand blew so thick that it filled my gloves, pebbles struck me hard enough to
sting through my coat.
Fortunately, Spot kept to an easy swinging lope, which was the most comfortable motion
for me. But I began to get numb, and could hardly
stick on the saddle.
Almost before I had dared to hope, Spot stopped.
Uncovering my face, I saw Jim in the doorway of the lee side of the cabin.
The yellow, streaky, whistling clouds of sand split on the cabin and passed on,
leaving a small, dusty space of light. "Shore Spot do hate to be beat," yelled
Jim, as he helped me off.
I stumbled into the cabin and fell upon a buffalo robe and lay there absolutely
spent.
Jones and Frank came in a few minutes apart, each anathematizing the gritty,
powdery sand. All day the desert storm raged and roared.
The dust sifted through the numerous cracks in the cabin burdened our clothes, spoiled
our food and blinded our eyes.
Wind, snow, sleet and rainstorms are discomforting enough under trying
circumstances; but all combined, they are nothing to the choking stinging, blinding
sandstorm.
"Shore it'll let up by sundown," averred Jim.
And sure enough the roar died away about five o'clock, the wind abated and the sand
settled.
Just before supper, a knock sounded heavily o the cabin door.
Jim opened it to admit one of Emmett's sons and a very tall man whom none of us knew.
He was a sand-man.
All that was not sand seemed a space or two of corduroy, a big bone-handled knife, a
prominent square jaw and bronze cheek and flashing eyes.
"Get down--get down, an' come in, stranger, said Frank cordially.
"How do you do, sir," said Jones.
"Colonel Jones, I've been on your trail for twelve days," announced the stranger, with
a grim smile. The sand streamed off his coat in little
white streak.
Jones appeared to be casting about in his mind.
"I'm Grant Wallace," continued the newcomer.
"I missed you at the El Tovar, at Williams and at Flagstaff, where I was one day
behind.
Was half a day late at the Little Colorado, saw your train cross Moncaupie Wash, and
missed you because of the sandstorm there.
Saw you from the other side of the Big Colorado as you rode out from Emmett's
along the red wall. And here I am.
We've never met till now, which obviously isn't my fault."
The Colonel and I fell upon Wallace's neck.
Frank manifested his usual alert excitation, and said: "Well, I guess he
won't hang fire on a long cougar chase."
And Jim--slow, careful Jim, dropped a plate with the exclamation: "Shore it do beat
hell!" The hounds sniffed round Wallace, and
welcomed him with vigorous tails.
Supper that night, even if we did grind sand with our teeth, was a joyous occasion.
The biscuits were flaky and light; the bacon fragrant and crisp.
I produced a jar of blackberry jam, which by subtle cunning I had been able to
secrete from the Mormons on that dry desert ride, and it was greeted with acclamations
of pleasure.
Wallace, divested of his sand guise, beamed with the gratification of a hungry man once
more in the presence of friends and food.
He made large cavities in Jim's great pot of potato stew, and caused biscuits to
vanish in a way that would not have shamed a Hindoo magician.
The Grand Canyon he dug in my jar of jam, however, could not have been accomplished
by legerdemain. Talk became animated on dogs, cougars,
horses and buffalo.
Jones told of our experience out on the range, and concluded with some salient
remarks. "A tame wild animal is the most dangerous
of beasts.
My old friend, *** Rock, a great hunter and guide out of Idaho, laughed at my
advice, and got killed by one of his three- year-old bulls.
I told him they knew him just well enough to kill him, and they did.
My friend, A. H. Cole, of Oxford, Nebraska, tried to rope a Weetah that was too tame to
be safe, and the bull killed him.
Same with General Bull, a member of the Kansas Legislature, and two cowboys who
went into a corral to tie up a tame elk at the wrong time.
I pleaded with them not to undertake it.
They had not studied animals as I had. That tame elk killed all of them.
He had to be shot in order to get General Bull off his great antlers.
You see, a wild animal must learn to respect a man.
The way I used to teach the Yellowstone Park bears to be respectful and safe
neighbors was to rope them around the front paw, swing them up on a tree clear of the
ground, and whip them with a long pole.
It was a dangerous business, and looks cruel, but it is the only way I could find
to make the bears good.
You see, they eat scraps around the hotels and get so tame they will steal everything
but red-hot stoves, and will cuff the life out of those who try to shoo them off.
But after a bear mother has had a licking, she not only becomes a good bear for the
rest of her life, but she tells all her cubs about it with a good smack of her paw,
for emphasis, and teaches them to respect
peaceable citizens generation after generation.
"One of the hardest jobs I ever tackled was that of supplying the buffalo for Bronx
Park.
I rounded up a magnificent 'king' buffalo bull, belligerent enough to fight a
battleship. When I rode after him the cowmen said I was
as good as killed.
I made a lance by driving a nail into the end of a short pole and sharpening it.
After he had chased me, I wheeled my broncho, and hurled the lance into his
back, ripping a wound as long as my hand.
That put the fear of Providence into him and took the fight all out of him.
I drove him uphill and down, and across canyons at a dead run for eight miles
single handed, and loaded him on a freight car; but he came near getting me once or
twice, and only quick broncho work and lance play saved me.
"In the Yellowstone Park all our buffaloes have become docile, excepting the huge bull
which led them.
The Indians call the buffalo leader the 'Weetah,' the master of the herd.
It was sure death to go near this one.
So I shipped in another Weetah, hoping that he might whip some of the fight out of old
Manitou, the Mighty.
They came together head on, like a railway collision, and ripped up over a square mile
of landscape, fighting till night came on, and then on into the night.
"I jumped into the field with them, chasing them with my biograph, getting a series of
moving pictures of that bullfight which was sure the real thing.
It was a ticklish thing to do, though knowing that neither bull dared take his
eyes off his adversary for a second, I felt reasonably safe.
The old Weetah beat the new champion out that night, but the next morning they were
at it again, and the new buffalo finally whipped the old one into submission.
Since then his spirit has remained broken, and even a child can approach him safely--
but the new Weetah is in turn a holy terror.
"To handle buffalo, elk and bear, you must get into sympathy with their methods of
reasoning. No tenderfoot stands any show, even with
the tame animals of the Yellowstone."
The old buffalo hunter's lips were no longer locked.
One after another he told reminiscences of his eventful life, in a simple manner; yet
so vivid and gripping were the unvarnished details that I was spellbound.
"Considering what appears the impossibility of capturing a full-grown buffalo, how did
you earn the name of preserver of the American bison?" inquired Wallace.
"It took years to learn how, and ten more to capture the fifty-eight that I was able
to keep. I tried every plan under the sun.
I roped hundreds, of all sizes and ages.
They would not live in captivity. If they could not find an embankment over
which to break their necks, they would crush their skulls on stones.
Failing any means like that, they would lie down, will themselves to die, and die.
Think of a savage wild nature that could will its heart to cease beating!
But it's true.
Finally I found I could keep only calves under three months of age.
But to capture them so young entailed time and patience.
For the buffalo fight for their young, and when I say fight, I mean till they drop.
I almost always had to go alone, because I could neither coax nor hire any one to
undertake it with me.
Sometimes I would be weeks getting one calf.
One day I captured eight--eight little buffalo calves!
Never will I forget that day as long as I live!"
"Tell us about it," I suggested, in a matter of fact, round-the-campfire voice.
Had the silent plainsman ever told a complete and full story of his adventures?
I doubted it. He was not the man to eulogize himself.
A short silence ensued.
The cabin was snug and warm; the ruddy embers glowed; one of Jim's pots steamed
musically and fragrantly. The hounds lay curled in the cozy chimney
corner.
Jones began to talk again, simply and unaffectedly, of his famous exploit; and as
he went on so modestly, passing lightly over features we recognized as wonderful,
I allowed the fire of my imagination to fuse
for myself all the toil, patience, endurance, skill, herculean strength and
marvelous courage and unfathomable passion which he slighted in his narrative.