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hunting the grisly and other sketches-第4章

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the river。 They 〃jumped〃 a neighboring camp; killing one man and
wounding two more; and at the same time ran off all but three of the
horses belonging to our eight adventurers。 With the remaining three
horses and one wagon they set out homeward。 The march was hard and
tedious; they lost their way and were in jeopardy from quicksands and
cloudbursts; they suffered from thirst and cold; their shoes gave out;
and their feet were lamed by cactus spines。 At last they reached Fort
Griffen in safety; and great was their ravenous rejoicing when they
procured some breadfor during the final fortnight of the hunt they
had been without flour or vegetables of any kind; or even coffee; and
had subsisted on fresh meat 〃straight。〃 Nevertheless; it was a very
healthy; as well as a very pleasant and exciting experience; and I
doubt if any of those who took part in it will ever forget their great
buffalo…hunt on the Brazos。

My friend; Gen。 W。 H。 Walker; of Virginia; had an experience in the
early '50's with buffaloes on the upper Arkansas River; which gives
some idea of their enormous numbers at that time。 He was camped with a
scouting party on the banks of the river; and had gone out to try to
shoot some meat。 There were many buffaloes in sight; scattered;
according to their custom; in large bands。 When he was a mile or two
away from the river a dull roaring sound in the distance attracted his
attention; and he saw that a herd of buffalo far to the south; away
from the river; had been stampeded and was running his way。 He knew
that if he was caught in the open by the stampeded herd his chance for
life would be small; and at once ran for the river。 By desperate
efforts he reached the breaks in the sheer banks just as the buffaloes
reached them; and got into a position of safety on the pinnacle of a
little bluff。 From this point of vantage he could see the entire
plain。 To the very verge of the horizon the brown masses of the
buffalo bands showed through the dust clouds; coming on with a
thunderous roar like that of surf。 Camp was a mile away; and the
stampede luckily passed to one side of it。 Watching his chance he
finally dodged back to the tent; and all that afternoon watched the
immense masses of buffalo; as band after band tore to the brink of the
bluffs on one side; raced down them; rushed through the water; up the
bluffs on the other side; and again off over the plain; churning the
sandy; shallow stream into a ceaseless tumult。 When darkness fell
there was no apparent decrease in the numbers that were passing; and
all through that night the continuous roar showed that the herds were
still threshing across the river。 Towards dawn the sound at last
ceased; and General Walker arose somewhat irritated; as he had
reckoned on killing an ample supply of meat; and he supposed that
there would be now no bison left south of the river。 To his
astonishment; when he strolled up on the bluffs and looked over the
plain; it was still covered far and wide with groups of buffalo;
grazing quietly。 Apparently there were as many on that side as ever;
in spite of the many scores of thousands that must have crossed over
the river during the stampede of the afternoon and night。 The barren…
ground caribou is the only American animal which is now ever seen in
such enormous herds。

In 1862 Mr。 Clarence King; while riding along the overland trail
through western Kansas; passed through a great buffalo herd; and was
himself injured in an encounter with a bull。 The great herd was then
passing north; and Mr。 King reckoned that it must have covered an area
nearly seventy miles by thirty in extent; the figures representing his
rough guess; made after travelling through the herd crosswise; and
upon knowing how long it took to pass a given point going northward。
This great herd of course was not a solid mass of buffaloes; it
consisted of innumerable bands of every size; dotting the prairie
within the limits given。 Mr。 King was mounted on a somewhat
unmanageable horse。 On one occasion in following a band he wounded a
large bull; and became so wedged in by the maddened animals that he
was unable to avoid the charge of the bull; which was at its last
gasp。 Coming straight toward him it leaped into the air and struck the
afterpart of the saddle full with its massive forehead。 The horse was
hurled to the ground with a broken back; and King's leg was likewise
broken; while the bull turned a complete somerset over them and never
rose again。

In the recesses of the Rocky Mountains; from Colorado northward
through Alberta; and in the depths of the subarctic forest beyond the
Saskatchewan; there have always been found small numbers of the bison;
locally called the mountain buffalo and wood buffalo; often indeed the
old hunters term these animals 〃bison;〃 although they never speak of
the plains animals save as buffalo。 They form a slight variety of what
was formerly the ordinary plains bison; intergrading with it; on the
whole they are darker in color; with longer; thicker hair; and in
consequence with the appearance of being heavier…bodied and shorter…
legged。 They have been sometimes spoken of as forming a separate
species; but; judging from my own limited experience; and from a
comparison of the many hides I have seen; I think they are really the
same animal; many individuals of the two so…called varieties being
quite indistinguishable。 In fact; the only moderate…sized herd of wild
bison in existence to…day; the protected herd in the Yellowstone Park;
is composed of animals intermediate in habits and coat between the
mountain and plains varietiesas were all the herds of the Bighorn;
Big Hole; Upper Madison; and Upper Yellowstone valleys。

However; the habitat of these wood and mountain bison yielded them
shelter from hunters in a way that the plains never could; and hence
they have always been harder to kill in the one place than in the
other; for precisely the same reasons that have held good with the
elk; which have been completely exterminated from the plains; while
still abundant in many of the forest fastnesses of the Rockies。
Moreover; the bison's dull eyesight is no special harm in the woods;
while it is peculiarly hurtful to the safety of any beast on the
plains; where eyesight avails more than any other sense; the true game
of the plains being the prong…buck; the most keen…sighted of American
animals。 On the other hand the bison's hearing; of little avail on the
plains; is of much assistance in the woods; and its excellent nose
helps equally in both places。

Though it was always more difficult to kill the bison of the forests
and the mountains than the bison of the prairie; yet now that the
species is; in its wild state; hovering on the brink of extinction;
the difficulty is immeasurably increased。 A merciless and terrible
process of natural selection; in which the agents were rifle…bearing
hunters; has left as the last survivors in a hopeless struggle for
existence only the wariest of the bison and those gifted with the
sharpest senses。 That this was true of the last lingering individuals
that survived the great slaughter on the plains is well shown by Mr。
Hornaday in his graphic account of his campaign against the few
scattered buffalo which still lived in 1886 between the Missouri and
the Yellowstone; along the Big Dry。 The bison of the plains and the
prairies have now vanished; and so few of their brethren of the
mountains and the northern forests are left; that they can just barely
be reckoned among American game; but whoever is so fortunate as to
find any of these animals must work his hardest; and show all his
skill as a hunter if he wishes to get one。

In the fall of 1889 I heard that a very few bison were still left
around the head of Wisdom river。 Thither I went and hunted faithfully;
there was plenty of game of other kind; but of bison not a trace did
we see。 Nevertheless a few days later that same year I came across
these great wild cattle at a time when I had no idea of seeing them。

It was; as nearly as we could tell; in Idaho; just south of the
Montana boundary line; and some twenty…five miles west of the line of
Wyoming。 We were camped h

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