CHAPTER I.
My brother had just been
appointed Secretary of Nevada Territory—an office of such majesty
that it concentrated in itself the duties and dignities of
Treasurer, Comptroller, Secretary of State, and Acting Governor in
the Governor's absence. A salary of eighteen hundred dollars a year
and the title of "Mr. Secretary," gave to the great position an air
of wild and imposing grandeur. I was young and ignorant, and I
envied my brother. I coveted his distinction and his financial
splendor, but particularly and especially the long, strange journey
he was going to make, and the curious new world he was going to
explore. He was going to travel! I never had been away from home,
and that word "travel" had a seductive charm for me. Pretty soon he
would be hundreds and hundreds of miles away on the great plains
and deserts, and among the mountains of the Far West, and would see
buffaloes and Indians, and prairie dogs, and antelopes, and have
all kinds of adventures, and may be get hanged or scalped, and have
ever such a fine time, and write home and tell us all about it, and
be a hero. And he would see the gold mines and the silver mines,
and maybe go about of an afternoon when his work was done, and pick
up two or three pailfuls of shining slugs, and nuggets of gold and
silver on the hillside. And by and by he would become very rich,
and return home by sea, and be able to talk as calmly about San
Francisco and the ocean, and "the isthmus" as if it was nothing of
any consequence to have seen those marvels
face to face.
What I suffered in contemplating
his happiness, pen cannot describe. And so, when he offered me, in
cold blood, the sublime position of private secretary under him, it
appeared to me that the heavens and the earth passed away, and the
firmament was rolled together as a scroll! I had nothing more to
desire. My contentment was complete.
At the end of an hour or two I
was ready for the journey. Not much packing up was necessary,
because we were going in the overland stage from the Missouri
frontier to Nevada, and passengers were only allowed a small
quantity of baggage apiece. There was no Pacific railroad in those
fine times of ten or twelve years ago—not a single rail of it. I
only proposed to stay in Nevada three months—I had no thought of
staying longer than that. I meant to see all I could that was new
and strange, and then hurry home to business. I little thought that
I would not see the end of that three-month pleasure excursion for
six or seven uncommonly long years!
I dreamed all night about
Indians, deserts, and silver bars, and in due time, next day, we
took shipping at the St. Louis wharf on board a steamboat bound up
the Missouri River.
We were six days going from St.
Louis to "St. Jo."—a trip that was so dull, and sleepy, and
eventless that it has left no more impression on my memory than if
its duration had been six minutes instead of that many days. No
record is left in my mind, now, concerning it, but a confused
jumble of savage- looking snags, which we deliberately walked over
with one wheel or the other; and of reefs which we butted and
butted, and then retired from and climbed over in some softer
place; and of sand-bars which we roosted on occasionally, and
rested, and then got out our crutches and sparred over.
In fact, the boat might almost as
well have gone to St. Jo. by land, for she was walking most of the
time, anyhow—climbing over reefs and clambering over snags
patiently and laboriously all day long. The captain said she was a
"bully" boat, and all she wanted was more "shear" and a bigger
wheel. I thought she wanted a pair of stilts, but I had the deep
sagacity not to say so.
CHAPTER II.
The first thing we did on that
glad evening that landed us at St. Joseph was to hunt up the
stage-office, and pay a hundred and fifty dollars apiece for
tickets per overland coach to Carson City, Nevada.
The next morning, bright and
early, we took a hasty breakfast, and hurried to the
starting-place. Then an inconvenience presented itself which we had
not
properly appreciated before,
namely, that one cannot make a heavy traveling trunk stand for
twenty-five pounds of baggage—because it weighs a good deal more.
But that was all we could take—twenty-five pounds each. So we had
to snatch our trunks open, and make a selection in a good deal of a
hurry. We put our lawful twenty-five pounds apiece all in one
valise, and shipped the trunks back to St. Louis again. It was a
sad parting, for now we had no swallow-tail coats and white kid
gloves to wear at Pawnee receptions in the Rocky Mountains, and no
stove-pipe hats nor patent-leather boots, nor anything else
necessary to make life calm and peaceful. We were reduced to a
war-footing. Each of us put on a rough, heavy suit of clothing,
woolen army shirt and "stogy" boots included; and into the valise
we crowded a few white shirts, some under-clothing and such things.
My brother, the Secretary, took along about four pounds of United
States statutes and six pounds of Unabridged Dictionary; for we did
not know—poor innocents—that such things could be bought in San
Francisco on one day and received in Carson City the next. I was
armed to the teeth with a pitiful little Smith & Wesson's
seven-shooter, which carried a ball like a homoeopathic pill, and
it took the whole seven to make a dose for an adult. But I thought
it was grand. It appeared to me to be a dangerous weapon. It only
had one fault—you could not hit anything with it. One of our
"conductors" practiced awhile on a cow with it, and as long as she
stood still and behaved herself she was safe; but as soon as she
went to moving about, and he got to shooting at other things, she
came to grief. The Secretary had a small-sized Colt's revolver
strapped around him for protection against the Indians, and to
guard against accidents he carried it uncapped. Mr. George Bemis
was dismally formidable. George Bemis was our fellow-
traveler.
We had never seen him before. He
wore in his belt an old original "Allen" revolver, such as
irreverent people called a "pepper-box." Simply drawing the trigger
back, cocked and fired the pistol. As the trigger came back, the
hammer would begin to rise and the barrel to turn over, and
presently down would drop the hammer, and away would speed the
ball. To aim along the turning barrel and hit the thing aimed at
was a feat which was probably never done with an "Allen" in the
world. But George's was a reliable weapon, nevertheless, because,
as one of the stage-drivers afterward said, "If she didn't get what
she went after, she would fetch something else." And so she did.
She went after a deuce of spades nailed against a tree, once, and
fetched a mule standing about thirty yards to the left of it. Bemis
did not want the mule; but the owner came out with a
double-barreled shotgun and persuaded him to buy it, anyhow. It was
a cheerful weapon—the "Allen." Sometimes all its six barrels would
go off at once, and then there was no safe place in all the region
round about, but behind it.
We took two or three blankets for
protection against frosty weather in the
mountains. In the matter of
luxuries we were modest—we took none along but some pipes and five
pounds of smoking tobacco. We had two large canteens to carry water
in, between stations on the Plains, and we also took with us a
little shot-bag of silver coin for daily expenses in the way of
breakfasts and dinners.
By eight o'clock everything was
ready, and we were on the other side of the river. We jumped into
the stage, the driver cracked his whip, and we bowled away and left
"the States" behind us. It was a superb summer morning, and all the
landscape was brilliant with sunshine. There was a freshness and
breeziness, too, and an exhilarating sense of emancipation from all
sorts of cares and responsibilities, that almost made us feel that
the years we had spent in the close, hot city, toiling and slaving,
had been wasted and thrown away. We were spinning along through
Kansas, and in the course of an hour and a half we were fairly
abroad on the great Plains. Just here the land was rolling— a grand
sweep of regular elevations and depressions as far as the eye could
reach—like the stately heave and swell of the ocean's bosom after a
storm. And everywhere were cornfields, accenting with squares of
deeper green, this limitless expanse of grassy land. But presently
this sea upon dry ground was to lose its "rolling" character and
stretch away for seven hundred miles as level as a floor!
Our coach was a great swinging
and swaying stage, of the most sumptuous description—an imposing
cradle on wheels. It was drawn by six handsome horses, and by the
side of the driver sat the "conductor," the legitimate captain of
the craft; for it was his business to take charge and care of the
mails, baggage, express matter, and passengers. We three were the
only passengers, this trip. We sat on the back seat, inside. About
all the rest of the coach was full of mail bags—for we had three
days' delayed mails with us. Almost touching our knees, a
perpendicular wall of mail matter rose up to the roof. There was a
great pile of it strapped on top of the stage, and both the fore
and hind boots were full. We had twenty-seven hundred pounds of it
aboard, the driver said—"a little for Brigham, and Carson, and
'Frisco, but the heft of it for the Injuns, which is powerful
troublesome 'thout they get plenty of truck to read."
But as he just then got up a
fearful convulsion of his countenance which was suggestive of a
wink being swallowed by an earthquake, we guessed that his remark
was intended to be facetious, and to mean that we would unload the
most of our mail matter somewhere on the Plains and leave it to the
Indians, or whosoever wanted it.
We changed horses every ten
miles, all day long, and fairly flew over the hard, level road. We
jumped out and stretched our legs every time the coach stopped, and
so the night found us still vivacious and unfatigued.
After supper a woman got in, who
lived about fifty miles further on, and we
three had to take turns at
sitting outside with the driver and conductor. Apparently she was
not a talkative woman. She would sit there in the gathering
twilight and fasten her steadfast eyes on a mosquito rooting into
her arm, and slowly she would raise her other hand till she had got
his range, and then she would launch a slap at him that would have
jolted a cow; and after that she would sit and contemplate the
corpse with tranquil satisfaction—for she never missed her
mosquito; she was a dead shot at short range. She never removed a
carcase, but left them there for bait. I sat by this grim Sphynx
and watched her kill thirty or forty mosquitoes—watched her, and
waited for her to say something, but she never did. So I finally
opened the conversation myself. I said:
"The mosquitoes are pretty bad,
about here, madam." "You bet!"
"What did I understand you to
say, madam?" "You BET!"
Then she cheered up, and faced
around and said:
"Danged if I didn't begin to
think you fellers was deef and dumb. I did, b'gosh. Here I've sot,
and sot, and sot, a-bust'n muskeeters and wonderin' what was ailin'
ye. Fust I thot you was deef and dumb, then I thot you was sick or
crazy, or suthin', and then by and by I begin to reckon you was a
passel of sickly fools that couldn't think of nothing to say.
Wher'd ye come from?"
The Sphynx was a Sphynx no more!
The fountains of her great deep were broken up, and she rained the
nine parts of speech forty days and forty nights, metaphorically
speaking, and buried us under a desolating deluge of trivial gossip
that left not a crag or pinnacle of rejoinder projecting above the
tossing waste of dislocated grammar and decomposed
pronunciation!
How we suffered, suffered,
suffered! She went on, hour after hour, till I was sorry I ever
opened the mosquito question and gave her a start. She never did
stop again until she got to her journey's end toward daylight; and
then she stirred us up as she was leaving the stage (for we were
nodding, by that time), and said:
"Now you git out at Cottonwood,
you fellers, and lay over a couple o' days, and I'll be along some
time to-night, and if I can do ye any good by edgin' in a word now
and then, I'm right thar. Folks'll tell you't I've always ben kind
o' offish and partic'lar for a gal that's raised in the woods, and
I am, with the rag- tag and bob-tail, and a gal has to be, if she
wants to be anything, but when people comes along which is my
equals, I reckon I'm a pretty sociable heifer after all."
We resolved not to "lay by at
Cottonwood."
CHAPTER III.
About an hour and a half before
daylight we were bowling along smoothly over the road—so smoothly
that our cradle only rocked in a gentle, lulling way, that was
gradually soothing us to sleep, and dulling our consciousness— when
something gave away under us! We were dimly aware of it, but
indifferent to it. The coach stopped. We heard the driver and
conductor talking together outside, and rummaging for a lantern,
and swearing because they could not find it—but we had no interest
in whatever had happened, and it only added to our comfort to think
of those people out there at work in the murky night, and we snug
in our nest with the curtains drawn. But presently, by the sounds,
there seemed to be an examination going on, and then the driver's
voice said:
"By George, the thoroughbrace is
broke!"
This startled me broad awake—as
an undefined sense of calamity is always apt to do. I said to
myself: "Now, a thoroughbrace is probably part of a horse; and
doubtless a vital part, too, from the dismay in the driver's voice.
Leg, maybe—and yet how could he break his leg waltzing along such a
road as this? No, it can't be his leg. That is impossible, unless
he was reaching for the driver. Now, what can be the thoroughbrace
of a horse, I wonder? Well, whatever comes, I shall not air my
ignorance in this crowd, anyway."
Just then the conductor's face
appeared at a lifted curtain, and his lantern glared in on us and
our wall of mail matter. He said: "Gents, you'll have to turn out a
spell. Thoroughbrace is broke."
We climbed out into a chill
drizzle, and felt ever so homeless and dreary. When I found that
the thing they called a "thoroughbrace" was the massive combination
of belts and springs which the coach rocks itself in, I said to the
driver:
"I never saw a thoroughbrace used
up like that, before, that I can remember. How did it
happen?"
"Why, it happened by trying to
make one coach carry three days' mail—that's how it happened," said
he. "And right here is the very direction which is wrote on all the
newspaper-bags which was to be put out for the Injuns for to keep
'em quiet. It's most uncommon lucky, becuz it's so nation dark I
should 'a' gone by unbeknowns if that air thoroughbrace hadn't
broke."
I knew that he was in labor with
another of those winks of his, though I could not see his face,
because he was bent down at work; and wishing him a safe delivery,
I turned to and helped the rest get out the mail-sacks. It made a
great
pyramid by the roadside when it
was all out. When they had mended the thoroughbrace we filled the
two boots again, but put no mail on top, and only half as much
inside as there was before. The conductor bent all the seat-backs
down, and then filled the coach just half full of mail-bags from
end to end. We objected loudly to this, for it left us no seats.
But the conductor was wiser than we, and said a bed was better than
seats, and moreover, this plan would protect his thoroughbraces. We
never wanted any seats after that. The lazy bed was infinitely
preferable. I had many an exciting day, subsequently, lying on it
reading the statutes and the dictionary, and wondering how the
characters would turn out.
The conductor said he would send
back a guard from the next station to take charge of the abandoned
mail-bags, and we drove on.
It was now just dawn; and as we
stretched our cramped legs full length on the mail sacks, and gazed
out through the windows across the wide wastes of greensward clad
in cool, powdery mist, to where there was an expectant look in the
eastern horizon, our perfect enjoyment took the form of a tranquil
and contented ecstasy. The stage whirled along at a spanking gait,
the breeze flapping curtains and suspended coats in a most
exhilarating way; the cradle swayed and swung luxuriously, the
pattering of the horses' hoofs, the cracking of the driver's whip,
and his "Hi-yi! g'lang!" were music; the spinning ground and the
waltzing trees appeared to give us a mute hurrah as we went by, and
then slack up and look after us with interest, or envy, or
something; and as we lay and smoked the pipe of peace and compared
all this luxury with the years of tiresome city life that had gone
before it, we felt that there was only one complete and satisfying
happiness in the world, and we had found it.
After breakfast, at some station
whose name I have forgotten, we three climbed up on the seat behind
the driver, and let the conductor have our bed for a nap. And by
and by, when the sun made me drowsy, I lay down on my face on top
of the coach, grasping the slender iron railing, and slept for an
hour or more. That will give one an appreciable idea of those
matchless roads. Instinct will make a sleeping man grip a fast hold
of the railing when the stage jolts, but when it only swings and
sways, no grip is necessary. Overland drivers and conductors used
to sit in their places and sleep thirty or forty minutes at a time,
on good roads, while spinning along at the rate of eight or ten
miles an hour. I saw them do it, often. There was no danger about
it; a sleeping man will seize the irons in time when the coach
jolts. These men were hard worked, and it was not possible for them
to stay awake all the time.
By and by we passed through
Marysville, and over the Big Blue and Little Sandy; thence about a
mile, and entered Nebraska. About a mile further on, we came to the
Big Sandy—one hundred and eighty miles from St. Joseph.
As the sun was going down, we saw
the first specimen of an animal known
familiarly over two thousand
miles of mountain and desert—from Kansas clear to the Pacific
Ocean—as the "jackass rabbit." He is well named. He is just like
any other rabbit, except that he is from one third to twice as
large, has longer legs in proportion to his size, and has the most
preposterous ears that ever were mounted on any creature but a
jackass.
When he is sitting quiet,
thinking about his sins, or is absent-minded or unapprehensive of
danger, his majestic ears project above him conspicuously; but the
breaking of a twig will scare him nearly to death, and then he
tilts his ears back gently and starts for home. All you can see,
then, for the next minute, is his long gray form stretched out
straight and "streaking it" through the low sage-brush, head erect,
eyes right, and ears just canted a little to the rear, but showing
you where the animal is, all the time, the same as if he carried a
jib. Now and then he makes a marvelous spring with his long legs,
high over the stunted sage-brush, and scores a leap that would make
a horse envious. Presently he comes down to a long, graceful
"lope," and shortly he mysteriously disappears. He has crouched
behind a sage-bush, and will sit there and listen and tremble until
you get within six feet of him, when he will get under way again.
But one must shoot at this creature once, if he wishes to see him
throw his heart into his heels, and do the best he knows how. He is
frightened clear through, now, and he lays his long ears down on
his back, straightens himself out like a yard-stick every spring he
makes, and scatters miles behind him with an easy indifference that
is enchanting.
Our party made this specimen
"hump himself," as the conductor said. The secretary started him
with a shot from the Colt; I commenced spitting at him with my
weapon; and all in the same instant the old "Allen's" whole
broadside let go with a rattling crash, and it is not putting it
too strong to say that the rabbit was frantic! He dropped his ears,
set up his tail, and left for San Francisco at a speed which can
only be described as a flash and a vanish! Long after he was out of
sight we could hear him whiz.
I do not remember where we first
came across "sage-brush," but as I have been speaking of it I may
as well describe it.
This is easily done, for if the
reader can imagine a gnarled and venerable live oak-tree reduced to
a little shrub two feet-high, with its rough bark, its foliage, its
twisted boughs, all complete, he can picture the "sage-brush"
exactly. Often, on lazy afternoons in the mountains, I have lain on
the ground with my face under a sage-bush, and entertained myself
with fancying that the gnats among its foliage were liliputian
birds, and that the ants marching and countermarching about its
base were liliputian flocks and herds, and myself some vast loafer
from Brobdignag waiting to catch a little citizen and eat
him.
It is an imposing monarch of the
forest in exquisite miniature, is the "sage- brush." Its foliage is
a grayish green, and gives that tint to desert and
mountain. It smells like our
domestic sage, and "sage-tea" made from it taste like the sage-tea
which all boys are so well acquainted with. The sage-brush is a
singularly hardy plant, and grows right in the midst of deep sand,
and among barren rocks, where nothing else in the vegetable world
would try to grow, except "bunch-grass."—["Bunch-grass" grows on
the bleak mountain-sides of Nevada and neighboring territories, and
offers excellent feed for stock, even in the dead of winter,
wherever the snow is blown aside and exposes it; notwithstanding
its unpromising home, bunch-grass is a better and more nutritious
diet for cattle and horses than almost any other hay or grass that
is known—so stock-men say.]—The sage-bushes grow from three to six
or seven feet apart, all over the mountains and deserts of the Far
West, clear to the borders of California. There is not a tree of
any kind in the deserts, for hundreds of miles—there is no
vegetation at all in a regular desert, except the sage-brush and
its cousin the "greasewood," which is so much like the sage- brush
that the difference amounts to little. Camp-fires and hot suppers
in the deserts would be impossible but for the friendly sage-brush.
Its trunk is as large as a boy's wrist (and from that up to a man's
arm), and its crooked branches are half as large as its trunk—all
good, sound, hard wood, very like oak.
When a party camps, the first
thing to be done is to cut sage-brush; and in a few minutes there
is an opulent pile of it ready for use. A hole a foot wide, two
feet deep, and two feet long, is dug, and sage-brush chopped up and
burned in it till it is full to the brim with glowing coals. Then
the cooking begins, and there is no smoke, and consequently no
swearing. Such a fire will keep all night, with very little
replenishing; and it makes a very sociable camp-fire, and one
around which the most impossible reminiscences sound plausible,
instructive, and profoundly entertaining.
Sage-brush is very fair fuel, but
as a vegetable it is a distinguished failure. Nothing can abide the
taste of it but the jackass and his illegitimate child the mule.
But their testimony to its nutritiousness is worth nothing, for
they will eat pine knots, or anthracite coal, or brass filings, or
lead pipe, or old bottles, or anything that comes handy, and then
go off looking as grateful as if they had had oysters for dinner.
Mules and donkeys and camels have appetites that anything will
relieve temporarily, but nothing satisfy.
In Syria, once, at the
head-waters of the Jordan, a camel took charge of my overcoat while
the tents were being pitched, and examined it with a critical eye,
all over, with as much interest as if he had an idea of getting one
made like it; and then, after he was done figuring on it as an
article of apparel, he began to contemplate it as an article of
diet. He put his foot on it, and lifted one of the sleeves out with
his teeth, and chewed and chewed at it, gradually taking it in, and
all the while opening and closing his eyes in a kind of
religious ecstasy, as if he had
never tasted anything as good as an overcoat before, in his life.
Then he smacked his lips once or twice, and reached after the other
sleeve. Next he tried the velvet collar, and smiled a smile of such
contentment that it was plain to see that he regarded that as the
daintiest thing about an overcoat. The tails went next, along with
some percussion caps and cough candy, and some fig-paste from
Constantinople.
And then my newspaper
correspondence dropped out, and he took a chance in that—manuscript
letters written for the home papers. But he was treading on
dangerous ground, now. He began to come across solid wisdom in
those documents that was rather weighty on his stomach; and
occasionally he would take a joke that would shake him up till it
loosened his teeth; it was getting to be perilous times with him,
but he held his grip with good courage and hopefully, till at last
he began to stumble on statements that not even a camel could
swallow with impunity. He began to gag and gasp, and his eyes to
stand out, and his forelegs to spread, and in about a quarter of a
minute he fell over as stiff as a carpenter's work-bench, and died
a death of indescribable agony. I went and pulled the manuscript
out of his mouth, and found that the sensitive creature had choked
to death on one of the mildest and gentlest statements of fact that
I ever laid before a trusting public.
I was about to say, when diverted
from my subject, that occasionally one finds sage-bushes five or
six feet high, and with a spread of branch and foliage in
proportion, but two or two and a half feet is the usual
height.
CHAPTER IV.
As the sun went down and the
evening chill came on, we made preparation for bed. We stirred up
the hard leather letter-sacks, and the knotty canvas bags of
printed matter (knotty and uneven because of projecting ends and
corners of magazines, boxes and books). We stirred them up and
redisposed them in such a way as to make our bed as level as
possible. And we did improve it, too, though after all our work it
had an upheaved and billowy look about it, like a little piece of a
stormy sea. Next we hunted up our boots from odd nooks among the
mail-bags where they had settled, and put them on. Then we got down
our coats, vests, pantaloons and heavy woolen shirts, from the
arm-loops where they had been swinging all day, and clothed
ourselves in them—for, there being no ladies either at the stations
or in the coach, and the weather being hot, we had looked to our
comfort by stripping to our underclothing, at nine o'clock in the
morning. All things being now ready, we stowed the uneasy
Dictionary where it would lie as quiet as possible, and placed the
water- canteens and pistols where we could find them in the dark.
Then we smoked a
final pipe, and swapped a final
yarn; after which, we put the pipes, tobacco and bag of coin in
snug holes and caves among the mail-bags, and then fastened down
the coach curtains all around, and made the place as "dark as the
inside of a cow," as the conductor phrased it in his picturesque
way. It was certainly as dark as any place could be—nothing was
even dimly visible in it. And finally, we rolled ourselves up like
silk- worms, each person in his own blanket, and sank peacefully to
sleep.
Whenever the stage stopped to
change horses, we would wake up, and try to recollect where we
were—and succeed—and in a minute or two the stage would be off
again, and we likewise. We began to get into country, now, threaded
here and there with little streams. These had high, steep banks on
each side, and every time we flew down one bank and scrambled up
the other, our party inside got mixed somewhat. First we would all
be down in a pile at the forward end of the stage, nearly in a
sitting posture, and in a second we would shoot to the other end,
and stand on our heads. And we would sprawl and kick, too, and ward
off ends and corners of mail- bags that came lumbering over us and
about us; and as the dust rose from the tumult, we would all sneeze
in chorus, and the majority of us would grumble, and probably say
some hasty thing, like: "Take your elbow out of my ribs!—can't you
quit crowding?"
Every time we avalanched from one
end of the stage to the other, the Unabridged Dictionary would come
too; and every time it came it damaged somebody. One trip it
"barked" the Secretary's elbow; the next trip it hurt me in the
stomach, and the third it tilted Bemis's nose up till he could look
down his nostrils—he said. The pistols and coin soon settled to the
bottom, but the pipes, pipe-stems, tobacco and canteens clattered
and floundered after the Dictionary every time it made an assault
on us, and aided and abetted the book by spilling tobacco in our
eyes, and water down our backs.
Still, all things considered, it
was a very comfortable night. It wore gradually away, and when at
last a cold gray light was visible through the puckers and chinks
in the curtains, we yawned and stretched with satisfaction, shed
our cocoons, and felt that we had slept as much as was necessary.
By and by, as the sun rose up and warmed the world, we pulled off
our clothes and got ready for breakfast. We were just pleasantly in
time, for five minutes afterward the driver sent the weird music of
his bugle winding over the grassy solitudes, and presently we
detected a low hut or two in the distance. Then the rattling of the
coach, the clatter of our six horses' hoofs, and the driver's crisp
commands, awoke to a louder and stronger emphasis, and we went
sweeping down on the station at our smartest speed. It was
fascinating—that old overland stagecoaching.
We jumped out in undress uniform.
The driver tossed his gathered reins out on
the ground, gaped and stretched
complacently, drew off his heavy buckskin gloves with great
deliberation and insufferable dignity—taking not the slightest
notice of a dozen solicitous inquires after his health, and humbly
facetious and flattering accostings, and obsequious tenders of
service, from five or six hairy and half-civilized station-keepers
and hostlers who were nimbly unhitching our steeds and bringing the
fresh team out of the stables— for in the eyes of the stage-driver
of that day, station-keepers and hostlers were a sort of good
enough low creatures, useful in their place, and helping to make up
a world, but not the kind of beings which a person of distinction
could afford to concern himself with; while, on the contrary, in
the eyes of the station-keeper and the hostler, the stage-driver
was a hero—a great and shining dignitary, the world's favorite son,
the envy of the people, the observed of the nations. When they
spoke to him they received his insolent silence meekly, and as
being the natural and proper conduct of so great a man; when he
opened his lips they all hung on his words with admiration (he
never honored a particular individual with a remark, but addressed
it with a broad generality to the horses, the stables, the
surrounding country and the human underlings); when he discharged a
facetious insulting personality at a hostler, that hostler was
happy for the day; when he uttered his one jest—old as the hills,
coarse, profane, witless, and inflicted on the same audience, in
the same language, every time his coach drove up there—the varlets
roared, and slapped their thighs, and swore it was the best thing
they'd ever heard in all their lives. And how they would fly around
when he wanted a basin of water, a gourd of the same, or a light
for his pipe!—but they would instantly insult a passenger if he so
far forgot himself as to crave a favor at their hands. They could
do that sort of insolence as well as the driver they copied it
from—for, let it be borne in mind, the overland driver had but
little less contempt for his passengers than he had for his
hostlers.
The hostlers and station-keepers
treated the really powerful conductor of the coach merely with the
best of what was their idea of civility, but the driver was the
only being they bowed down to and worshipped. How admiringly they
would gaze up at him in his high seat as he gloved himself with
lingering deliberation, while some happy hostler held the bunch of
reins aloft, and waited patiently for him to take it! And how they
would bombard him with glorifying ejaculations as he cracked his
long whip and went careering away.
The station buildings were long,
low huts, made of sundried, mud-colored bricks, laid up without
mortar (adobes, the Spaniards call these bricks, and Americans
shorten it to 'dobies). The roofs, which had no slant to them worth
speaking of, were thatched and then sodded or covered with a thick
layer of earth, and from this sprung a pretty rank growth of weeds
and grass. It was the first time we had ever seen a man's front
yard on top of his house. The building consisted of barns,
stable-room for twelve or fifteen horses, and a hut
for an eating-room for
passengers. This latter had bunks in it for the station- keeper and
a hostler or two. You could rest your elbow on its eaves, and you
had to bend in order to get in at the door. In place of a window
there was a square hole about large enough for a man to crawl
through, but this had no glass in it. There was no flooring, but
the ground was packed hard. There was no stove, but the fire-place
served all needful purposes. There were no shelves, no cupboards,
no closets. In a corner stood an open sack of flour, and nestling
against its base were a couple of black and venerable tin
coffee-pots, a tin teapot, a little bag of salt, and a side of
bacon.
By the door of the
station-keeper's den, outside, was a tin wash-basin, on the ground.
Near it was a pail of water and a piece of yellow bar soap, and
from the eaves hung a hoary blue woolen shirt, significantly—but
this latter was the station-keeper's private towel, and only two
persons in all the party might venture to use it—the stage-driver
and the conductor. The latter would not, from a sense of decency;
the former would not, because did not choose to encourage the
advances of a station- keeper. We had towels—in the valise; they
might as well have been in Sodom and Gomorrah. We (and the
conductor) used our handkerchiefs, and the driver his pantaloons
and sleeves. By the door, inside, was fastened a small
old-fashioned looking-glass frame, with two little fragments of the
original mirror lodged down in one corner of it. This arrangement
afforded a pleasant double-barreled portrait of you when you looked
into it, with one half of your head set up a couple of inches above
the other half. From the glass frame hung the half of a comb by a
string—but if I had to describe that patriarch or die, I believe I
would order some sample coffins.
It had come down from Esau and
Samson, and had been accumulating hair ever since—along with
certain impurities. In one corner of the room stood three or four
rifles and muskets, together with horns and pouches of ammunition.
The station-men wore pantaloons of coarse, country-woven stuff, and
into the seat and the inside of the legs were sewed ample additions
of buckskin, to do duty in place of leggings, when the man rode
horseback—so the pants were half dull blue and half yellow, and
unspeakably picturesque. The pants were stuffed into the tops of
high boots, the heels whereof were armed with great Spanish spurs,
whose little iron clogs and chains jingled with every step. The man
wore a huge beard and mustachios, an old slouch hat, a blue woolen
shirt, no suspenders, no vest, no coat—in a leathern sheath in his
belt, a great long "navy" revolver (slung on right side, hammer to
the front), and projecting from his boot a horn-handled
bowie-knife.
The furniture of the hut was
neither gorgeous nor much in the way. The rocking-chairs and sofas
were not present, and never had been, but they were represented by
two three-legged stools, a pine-board bench four feet long,
and
two empty candle-boxes. The table
was a greasy board on stilts, and the table- cloth and napkins had
not come—and they were not looking for them, either. A battered tin
platter, a knife and fork, and a tin pint cup, were at each man's
place, and the driver had a queens-ware saucer that had seen better
days. Of course this duke sat at the head of the table. There was
one isolated piece of table furniture that bore about it a touching
air of grandeur in misfortune. This was the caster. It was German
silver, and crippled and rusty, but it was so preposterously out of
place there that it was suggestive of a tattered exiled king among
barbarians, and the majesty of its native position compelled
respect even in its degradation.
There was only one cruet left,
and that was a stopperless, fly-specked, broken- necked thing, with
two inches of vinegar in it, and a dozen preserved flies with their
heels up and looking sorry they had invested there.
The station-keeper upended a disk
of last week's bread, of the shape and size of an old-time cheese,
and carved some slabs from it which were as good as Nicholson
pavement, and tenderer.
He sliced off a piece of bacon
for each man, but only the experienced old hands made out to eat
it, for it was condemned army bacon which the United States would
not feed to its soldiers in the forts, and the stage company had
bought it cheap for the sustenance of their passengers and
employees. We may have found this condemned army bacon further out
on the plains than the section I am locating it in, but we found
it—there is no gainsaying that.
Then he poured for us a beverage
which he called "Slum gullion," and it is hard to think he was not
inspired when he named it. It really pretended to be tea, but there
was too much dish-rag, and sand, and old bacon-rind in it to
deceive the intelligent traveler.
He had no sugar and no milk—not
even a spoon to stir the ingredients with.
We could not eat the bread or the
meat, nor drink the "slumgullion." And when I looked at that
melancholy vinegar-cruet, I thought of the anecdote (a very, very
old one, even at that day) of the traveler who sat down to a table
which had nothing on it but a mackerel and a pot of mustard. He
asked the landlord if this was all. The landlord said:
"All! Why, thunder and lightning,
I should think there was mackerel enough there for six."
"But I don't like
mackerel."
"Oh—then help yourself to the
mustard."
In other days I had considered it
a good, a very good, anecdote, but there was a dismal plausibility
about it, here, that took all the humor out of it.
Our breakfast was before us, but
our teeth were idle.
I tasted and smelt, and said I
would take coffee, I believed. The station-boss stopped dead still,
and glared at me speechless. At last, when he came to, he turned
away and said, as one who communes with himself upon a matter too
vast to grasp:
"Coffee! Well, if that don't go
clean ahead of me, I'm d—-d!"
We could not eat, and there was
no conversation among the hostlers and herdsmen—we all sat at the
same board. At least there was no conversation further than a
single hurried request, now and then, from one employee to another.
It was always in the same form, and always gruffly friendly. Its
western freshness and novelty startled me, at first, and interested
me; but it presently grew monotonous, and lost its charm. It
was:
"Pass the bread, you son of a
skunk!" No, I forget—skunk was not the word; it seems to me it was
still stronger than that; I know it was, in fact, but it is gone
from my memory, apparently. However, it is no matter—probably it
was too strong for print, anyway. It is the landmark in my memory
which tells me where I first encountered the vigorous new
vernacular of the occidental plains and mountains.
We gave up the breakfast, and
paid our dollar apiece and went back to our mail-bag bed in the
coach, and found comfort in our pipes. Right here we suffered the
first diminution of our princely state. We left our six fine horses
and took six mules in their place. But they were wild Mexican
fellows, and a man had to stand at the head of each of them and
hold him fast while the driver gloved and got himself ready. And
when at last he grasped the reins and gave the word, the men sprung
suddenly away from the mules' heads and the coach shot from the
station as if it had issued from a cannon. How the frantic animals
did scamper! It was a fierce and furious gallop—and the gait never
altered for a moment till we reeled off ten or twelve miles and
swept up to the next collection of little station-huts and
stables.
So we flew along all day. At 2
P.M. the belt of timber that fringes the North Platte and marks its
windings through the vast level floor of the Plains came in sight.
At 4 P.M. we crossed a branch of the river, and at 5 P.M. we
crossed the Platte itself, and landed at Fort Kearney, fifty-six
hours out from St. Joe— THREE HUNDRED MILES!
Now that was stage-coaching on
the great overland, ten or twelve years ago, when perhaps not more
than ten men in America, all told, expected to live to see a
railroad follow that route to the Pacific. But the railroad is
there, now, and it pictures a thousand odd comparisons and
contrasts in my mind to read the following sketch, in the New York
Times, of a recent trip over almost the very ground I have been
describing. I can scarcely comprehend the new state of
things:
"ACROSS THE CONTINENT.
"At 4.20 P.M., Sunday, we rolled
out of the station at Omaha, and started westward on our long
jaunt. A couple of hours out, dinner was announced—an "event" to
those of us who had yet to experience what it is to eat in one of
Pullman's hotels on wheels; so, stepping into the car next forward
of our sleeping palace, we found ourselves in the dining-car. It
was a revelation to us, that first dinner on Sunday. And though we
continued to dine for four days, and had as many breakfasts and
suppers, our whole party never ceased to admire the perfection of
the arrangements, and the marvelous results achieved. Upon tables
covered with snowy linen, and garnished with services of solid
silver, Ethiop waiters, flitting about in spotless white, placed as
by magic a repast at which Delmonico himself could have had no
occasion to blush; and, indeed, in some respects it would be hard
for that distinguished chef to match our menu; for, in addition to
all that ordinarily makes up a first-chop dinner, had we not our
antelope steak (the gormand who has not experienced this— bah! what
does he know of the feast of fat things?) our delicious mountain-
brook trout, and choice fruits and berries, and (sauce piquant and
unpurchasable!) our sweet-scented, appetite-compelling air of the
prairies?
"You may depend upon it, we all
did justice to the good things, and as we washed them down with
bumpers of sparkling Krug, whilst we sped along at the rate of
thirty miles an hour, agreed it was the fastest living we had ever
experienced. (We beat that, however, two days afterward when we
made twenty-seven miles in twenty-seven minutes, while our
Champagne glasses filled to the brim spilled not a drop!) After
dinner we repaired to our drawing- room car, and, as it was Sabbath
eve, intoned some of the grand old hymns
—"Praise God from whom," etc.;
"Shining Shore," "Coronation," etc.—the voices of the men singers
and of the women singers blending sweetly in the evening air, while
our train, with its great, glaring Polyphemus eye, lighting up long
vistas of prairie, rushed into the night and the Wild. Then to bed
in luxurious couches, where we slept the sleep of the just and only
awoke the next morning (Monday) at eight o'clock, to find ourselves
at the crossing of the North Platte, three hundred miles from
Omaha—fifteen hours and forty minutes out."
CHAPTER V.
Another night of alternate
tranquillity and turmoil. But morning came, by and by. It was
another glad awakening to fresh breezes, vast expanses of level
greensward, bright sunlight, an impressive solitude utterly without
visible human beings or human habitations, and an atmosphere of
such amazing
magnifying properties that trees
that seemed close at hand were more than three mile away. We
resumed undress uniform, climbed a-top of the flying coach, dangled
our legs over the side, shouted occasionally at our frantic mules,
merely to see them lay their ears back and scamper faster, tied our
hats on to keep our hair from blowing away, and leveled an outlook
over the world- wide carpet about us for things new and strange to
gaze at. Even at this day it thrills me through and through to
think of the life, the gladness and the wild sense of freedom that
used to make the blood dance in my veins on those fine overland
mornings!
Along about an hour after
breakfast we saw the first prairie-dog villages, the first
antelope, and the first wolf. If I remember rightly, this latter
was the regular cayote (pronounced ky-o-te) of the farther deserts.
And if it was, he was not a pretty creature or respectable either,
for I got well acquainted with his race afterward, and can speak
with confidence. The cayote is a long, slim, sick and sorry-looking
skeleton, with a gray wolf-skin stretched over it, a tolerably
bushy tail that forever sags down with a despairing expression of
forsakenness and misery, a furtive and evil eye, and a long, sharp
face, with slightly lifted lip and exposed teeth. He has a general
slinking expression all over. The cayote is a living, breathing
allegory of Want. He is always hungry.
He is always poor, out of luck
and friendless. The meanest creatures despise him, and even the
fleas would desert him for a velocipede. He is so spiritless and
cowardly that even while his exposed teeth are pretending a threat,
the rest of his face is apologizing for it. And he is so homely!—so
scrawny, and ribby, and coarse-haired, and pitiful. When he sees
you he lifts his lip and lets a flash of his teeth out, and then
turns a little out of the course he was pursuing, depresses his
head a bit, and strikes a long, soft-footed trot through the sage-
brush, glancing over his shoulder at you, from time to time, till
he is about out of easy pistol range, and then he stops and takes a
deliberate survey of you; he will trot fifty yards and stop
again—another fifty and stop again; and finally the gray of his
gliding body blends with the gray of the sage-brush, and he
disappears. All this is when you make no demonstration against him;
but if you do, he develops a livelier interest in his journey, and
instantly electrifies his heels and puts such a deal of real estate
between himself and your weapon, that by the time you have raised
the hammer you see that you need a minie rifle, and by the time you
have got him in line you need a rifled cannon, and by the time you
have "drawn a bead" on him you see well enough that nothing but an
unusually long-winded streak of lightning could reach him where he
is now. But if you start a swift-footed dog after him, you will
enjoy it ever so much—especially if it is a dog that has a good
opinion of himself, and has been brought up to think he knows
something about speed.
The cayote will go swinging
gently off on that deceitful trot of his, and every
little while he will smile a
fraudful smile over his shoulder that will fill that dog entirely
full of encouragement and worldly ambition, and make him lay his
head still lower to the ground, and stretch his neck further to the
front, and pant more fiercely, and stick his tail out straighter
behind, and move his furious legs with a yet wilder frenzy, and
leave a broader and broader, and higher and denser cloud of desert
sand smoking behind, and marking his long wake across the level
plain! And all this time the dog is only a short twenty feet behind
the cayote, and to save the soul of him he cannot understand why it
is that he cannot get perceptibly closer; and he begins to get
aggravated, and it makes him madder and madder to see how gently
the cayote glides along and never pants or sweats or ceases to
smile; and he grows still more and more incensed to see how
shamefully he has been taken in by an entire stranger, and what an
ignoble swindle that long, calm, soft-footed trot is; and next he
notices that he is getting fagged, and that the cayote actually has
to slacken speed a little to keep from running away from him—and
then that town-dog is mad in earnest, and he begins to strain and
weep and swear, and paw the sand higher than ever, and reach for
the cayote with concentrated and desperate energy. This "spurt"
finds him six feet behind the gliding enemy, and two miles from his
friends. And then, in the instant that a wild new hope is lighting
up his face, the cayote turns and smiles blandly upon him once
more, and with a something about it which seems to say: "Well, I
shall have to tear myself away from you, bub—business is business,
and it will not do for me to be fooling along this way all day"—and
forthwith there is a rushing sound, and the sudden splitting of a
long crack through the atmosphere, and behold that dog is solitary
and alone in the midst of a vast solitude!
It makes his head swim. He stops,
and looks all around; climbs the nearest sand-mound, and gazes into
the distance; shakes his head reflectively, and then, without a
word, he turns and jogs along back to his train, and takes up a
humble position under the hindmost wagon, and feels unspeakably
mean, and looks ashamed, and hangs his tail at half- mast for a
week. And for as much as a year after that, whenever there is a
great hue and cry after a cayote, that dog will merely glance in
that direction without emotion, and apparently observe to himself,
"I believe I do not wish any of the pie."
The cayote lives chiefly in the
most desolate and forbidding desert, along with the lizard, the
jackass-rabbit and the raven, and gets an uncertain and precarious
living, and earns it. He seems to subsist almost wholly on the
carcases of oxen, mules and horses that have dropped out of
emigrant trains and died, and upon windfalls of carrion, and
occasional legacies of offal bequeathed to him by white men who
have been opulent enough to have something better to butcher than
condemned army bacon.
He will eat anything in the world
that his first cousins, the desert- frequenting
tribes of Indians will, and they
will eat anything they can bite. It is a curious fact that these
latter are the only creatures known to history who will eat nitro-
glycerine and ask for more if they survive.
The cayote of the deserts beyond
the Rocky Mountains has a peculiarly hard time of it, owing to the
fact that his relations, the Indians, are just as apt to be the
first to detect a seductive scent on the desert breeze, and follow
the fragrance to the late ox it emanated from, as he is himself;
and when this occurs he has to content himself with sitting off at
a little distance watching those people strip off and dig out
everything edible, and walk off with it. Then he and the waiting
ravens explore the skeleton and polish the bones. It is considered
that the cayote, and the obscene bird, and the Indian of the
desert, testify their blood kinship with each other in that they
live together in the waste places of the earth on terms of perfect
confidence and friendship, while hating all other creature and
yearning to assist at their funerals. He does not mind going a
hundred miles to breakfast, and a hundred and fifty to dinner,
because he is sure to have three or four days between meals, and he
can just as well be traveling and looking at the scenery as lying
around doing nothing and adding to the burdens of his
parents.
We soon learned to recognize the
sharp, vicious bark of the cayote as it came across the murky plain
at night to disturb our dreams among the mail-sacks; and
remembering his forlorn aspect and his hard fortune, made shift to
wish him the blessed novelty of a long day's good luck and a
limitless larder the morrow.
CHAPTER VI.
Our new conductor (just shipped)
had been without sleep for twenty hours. Such a thing was very
frequent. From St. Joseph, Missouri, to Sacramento, California, by
stage-coach, was nearly nineteen hundred miles, and the trip was
often made in fifteen days (the cars do it in four and a half,
now), but the time specified in the mail contracts, and required by
the schedule, was eighteen or nineteen days, if I remember rightly.
This was to make fair allowance for winter storms and snows, and
other unavoidable causes of detention. The stage company had
everything under strict discipline and good system. Over each two
hundred and fifty miles of road they placed an agent or
superintendent, and invested him with great authority. His beat or
jurisdiction of two hundred and fifty miles was called a
"division." He purchased horses, mules harness, and food for men
and beasts, and distributed these things among his stage stations,
from time to time, according to his judgment of what each station
needed. He erected station buildings and dug wells. He
attended
to the paying of the
station-keepers, hostlers, drivers and blacksmiths, and discharged
them whenever he chose. He was a very, very great man in his
"division"—a kind of Grand Mogul, a Sultan of the Indies, in whose
presence common men were modest of speech and manner, and in the
glare of whose greatness even the dazzling stage-driver dwindled to
a penny dip. There were about eight of these kings, all told, on
the overland route.
Next in rank and importance to
the division-agent came the "conductor." His beat was the same
length as the agent's—two hundred and fifty miles. He sat with the
driver, and (when necessary) rode that fearful distance, night and
day, without other rest or sleep than what he could get perched
thus on top of the flying vehicle. Think of it! He had absolute
charge of the mails, express matter, passengers and stage, coach,
until he delivered them to the next conductor, and got his receipt
for them.
Consequently he had to be a man
of intelligence, decision and considerable executive ability. He
was usually a quiet, pleasant man, who attended closely to his
duties, and was a good deal of a gentleman. It was not absolutely
necessary that the division-agent should be a gentleman, and
occasionally he wasn't. But he was always a general in
administrative ability, and a bull-dog in courage and
determination—otherwise the chieftainship over the lawless
underlings of the overland service would never in any instance have
been to him anything but an equivalent for a month of insolence and
distress and a bullet and a coffin at the end of it. There were
about sixteen or eighteen conductors on the overland, for there was
a daily stage each way, and a conductor on every stage.
Next in real and official rank
and importance, after the conductor, came my delight, the
driver—next in real but not in apparent importance—for we have seen
that in the eyes of the common herd the driver was to the conductor
as an admiral is to the captain of the flag-ship. The driver's beat
was pretty long, and his sleeping-time at the stations pretty
short, sometimes; and so, but for the grandeur of his position his
would have been a sorry life, as well as a hard and a wearing one.
We took a new driver every day or every night (for they drove
backward and forward over the same piece of road all the time), and
therefore we never got as well acquainted with them as we did with
the conductors; and besides, they would have been above being
familiar with such rubbish as passengers, anyhow, as a general
thing. Still, we were always eager to get a sight of each and every
new driver as soon as the watch changed, for each and every day we
were either anxious to get rid of an unpleasant one, or loath to
part with a driver we had learned to like and had come to be
sociable and friendly with. And so the first question we asked the
conductor whenever we got to where we were to exchange drivers, was
always, "Which is him?" The grammar was faulty, maybe, but we could
not know, then, that it would go into
a book some day. As long as
everything went smoothly, the overland driver was well enough
situated, but if a fellow driver got sick suddenly it made trouble,
for the coach must go on, and so the potentate who was about to
climb down and take a luxurious rest after his long night's siege
in the midst of wind and rain and darkness, had to stay where he
was and do the sick man's work. Once, in the Rocky Mountains, when
I found a driver sound asleep on the box, and the mules going at
the usual break-neck pace, the conductor said never mind him, there
was no danger, and he was doing double duty—had driven seventy-five
miles on one coach, and was now going back over it on this without
rest or sleep. A hundred and fifty miles of holding back of six
vindictive mules and keeping them from climbing the trees! It
sounds incredible, but I remember the statement well enough.
The station-keepers, hostlers,
etc., were low, rough characters, as already described; and from
western Nebraska to Nevada a considerable sprinkling of them might
be fairly set down as outlaws—fugitives from justice, criminals
whose best security was a section of country which was without law
and without even the pretence of it. When the "division- agent"
issued an order to one of these parties he did it with the full
understanding that he might have to enforce it with a navy
six-shooter, and so he always went "fixed" to make things go along
smoothly.
Now and then a division-agent was
really obliged to shoot a hostler through the head to teach him
some simple matter that he could have taught him with a club if his
circumstances and surroundings had been different. But they were
snappy, able men, those division-agents, and when they tried to
teach a subordinate anything, that subordinate generally "got it
through his head."
A great portion of this vast
machinery—these hundreds of men and coaches, and thousands of mules
and horses—was in the hands of Mr. Ben Holliday. All the western
half of the business was in his hands. This reminds me of an
incident of Palestine travel which is pertinent here, so I will
transfer it just in the language in which I find it set down in my
Holy Land note-book:
No doubt everybody has heard of
Ben Holliday—a man of prodigious energy, who used to send mails and
passengers flying across the continent in his overland
stage-coaches like a very whirlwind—two thousand long miles in
fifteen days and a half, by the watch! But this fragment of history
is not about Ben Holliday, but about a young New York boy by the
name of Jack, who traveled with our small party of pilgrims in the
Holy Land (and who had traveled to California in Mr. Holliday's
overland coaches three years before, and had by no means forgotten
it or lost his gushing admiration of Mr. H.) Aged nineteen. Jack
was a good boy—a good-hearted and always well- meaning boy, who had
been reared in the city of New York, and although he was bright and
knew a great many useful things, his Scriptural education had
been a good deal neglected—to
such a degree, indeed, that all Holy Land history was fresh and new
to him, and all Bible names mysteries that had never disturbed his
virgin ear.
Also in our party was an elderly
pilgrim who was the reverse of Jack, in that he was learned in the
Scriptures and an enthusiast concerning them. He was our
encyclopedia, and we were never tired of listening to his speeches,
nor he of making them. He never passed a celebrated locality, from
Bashan to Bethlehem, without illuminating it with an oration. One
day, when camped near the ruins of Jericho, he burst forth with
something like this:
"Jack, do you see that range of
mountains over yonder that bounds the Jordan valley? The mountains
of Moab, Jack! Think of it, my boy—the actual mountains of
Moab—renowned in Scripture history! We are actually standing face
to face with those illustrious crags and peaks—and for all we know"
[dropping his voice impressively], "our eyes may be resting at this
very moment upon the spot WHERE LIES THE MYSTERIOUS GRAVE OF MOSES!
Think of it, Jack!"
"Moses who?" (falling
inflection).
"Moses who! Jack, you ought to be
ashamed of yourself—you ought to be ashamed of such criminal
ignorance. Why, Moses, the great guide, soldier, poet, lawgiver of
ancient Israel! Jack, from this spot where we stand, to Egypt,
stretches a fearful desert three hundred miles in extent—and across
that desert that wonderful man brought the children of
Israel!—guiding them with unfailing sagacity for forty years over
the sandy desolation and among the obstructing rocks and hills, and
landed them at last, safe and sound, within sight of this very
spot; and where we now stand they entered the Promised Land with
anthems of rejoicing! It was a wonderful, wonderful thing to do,
Jack! Think of it!"
"Forty years? Only three hundred
miles? Humph! Ben Holliday would have fetched them through in
thirty-six hours!"
The boy meant no harm. He did not
know that he had said anything that was wrong or irreverent. And so
no one scolded him or felt offended with him— and nobody could but
some ungenerous spirit incapable of excusing the heedless blunders
of a boy.
At noon on the fifth day out, we
arrived at the "Crossing of the South Platte," alias "Julesburg,"
alias "Overland City," four hundred and seventy miles from St.
Joseph—the strangest, quaintest, funniest frontier town that our
untraveled eyes had ever stared at and been astonished with.
CHAPTER VII.
It did seem strange enough to see
a town again after what appeared to us such a long acquaintance
with deep, still, almost lifeless and houseless solitude! We
tumbled out into the busy street feeling like meteoric people
crumbled off the corner of some other world, and wakened up
suddenly in this. For an hour we took as much interest in Overland
City as if we had never seen a town before. The reason we had an
hour to spare was because we had to change our stage (for a less
sumptuous affair, called a "mud-wagon") and transfer our freight of
mails.