<h3>CHAPTER XV.</h3><br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<i>Health and happiness return</i>--<i>Incidents of the journey</i>--<i>A<br/>
buffalo shot</i>--<i>A wild horse "creased"</i>--<i>Dick's battle with<br/>
a mustang</i>.<br/>
<br/>
Dick Varley's fears and troubles, in the meantime,<br/>
were ended. On the day following he<br/>
awoke refreshed and happy--so happy and light at<br/>
heart, as he felt the glow of returning health coursing<br/>
through his veins, that he fancied he must have dreamed<br/>
it all. In fact, he was so certain that his muscles were<br/>
strong that he endeavoured to leap up, but was powerfully<br/>
convinced of his true condition by the miserable<br/>
stagger that resulted from the effort.<br/>
<br/>
However, he knew he was recovering, so he rose, and<br/>
thanking God for his recovery, and for the new hope<br/>
that was raised in his heart, he went down to the pool<br/>
and drank deeply of its water. Then he returned, and,<br/>
sitting down beside his dog, opened the Bible and read<br/>
long--and, for the first time, <i>earnestly</i>--the story of<br/>
Christ's love for sinful man. He at last fell asleep over<br/>
the book, and when he awakened felt so much refreshed<br/>
in body and mind that he determined to attempt to<br/>
pursue his journey.<br/>
<br/>
He had not proceeded far when he came upon a<br/>
colony of prairie-dogs. Upon this occasion he was little<br/>
inclined to take a humorous view of the vagaries of<br/>
these curious little creatures, but he shot one, and, as<br/>
before, ate part of it raw. These creatures are so active<br/>
that they are difficult to shoot, and even when killed<br/>
generally fall into their holes and disappear. Crusoe,<br/>
however, soon unearthed the dead animal on this occasion.<br/>
That night the travellers came to a stream of<br/>
fresh water, and Dick killed a turkey, so that he determined<br/>
to spend a couple of days there to recruit. At<br/>
the end of that time he again set out, but was able only<br/>
to advance five miles when he broke down. In fact, it<br/>
became evident to him that he must have a longer period<br/>
of absolute repose ere he could hope to continue his<br/>
journey; but to do so without food was impossible.<br/>
Fortunately there was plenty of water, as his course lay<br/>
along the margin of a small stream, and, as the arid<br/>
piece of prairie was now behind him, he hoped to fall in<br/>
with birds, or perhaps deer, soon.<br/>
<br/>
While he was plodding heavily and wearily along,<br/>
pondering these things, he came to the brow of a wave<br/>
from which he beheld a most magnificent view of green<br/>
grassy plains decked with flowers, and rolling out to<br/>
the horizon, with a stream meandering through it, and<br/>
clumps of trees scattered everywhere far and wide. It<br/>
was a glorious sight; but the most glorious object in it<br/>
to Dick, at that time, was a fat buffalo which stood<br/>
grazing not a hundred yards off. The wind was blowing<br/>
towards him, so that the animal did not scent him,<br/>
and, as he came up very slowly, and it was turned away,<br/>
it did not see him.<br/>
<br/>
Crusoe would have sprung forward in an instant, but<br/>
his master's finger imposed silence and caution. Trembling<br/>
with eagerness, Dick sank flat down in the grass,<br/>
cocked both barrels of his piece, and, resting it on his<br/>
left hand with his left elbow on the ground, he waited<br/>
until the animal should present its side. In a few<br/>
seconds it moved; Dick's eye glanced along the barrel,<br/>
but it trembled--his wonted steadiness of aim was<br/>
gone. He fired, and the buffalo sprang off in terror.<br/>
With a groan of despair he fired again---almost recklessly--and<br/>
the buffalo fell! It rose once or twice and<br/>
stumbled forward a few paces, then it fell again. Meanwhile<br/>
Dick reloaded with trembling hand, and advanced<br/>
to give it another shot; but it was not needful--the<br/>
buffalo was already dead.<br/>
<br/>
"Now, Crusoe," said Dick, sitting down on the buffalo's<br/>
shoulder and patting his favourite on the head, "we're<br/>
all right at last. You and I shall have a jolly time o't,<br/>
pup, from this time for'ard."<br/>
<br/>
Dick paused for breath, and Crusoe wagged his tail<br/>
and looked as if to say--pshaw! "<i>as if!</i>"<br/>
<br/>
We tell you what it is, reader, it's of no use at all to<br/>
go on writing "as if," when we tell you what Crusoe<br/>
said. If there is any language in eyes whatever--if<br/>
there is language in a tail, in a cocked ear, in a mobile<br/>
eyebrow, in the point of a canine nose,--if there is<br/>
language in any terrestrial thing at all, apart from that<br/>
which flows from the tongue, then Crusoe <i>spoke!</i> Do<br/>
we not speak at this moment to <i>you?</i> and if so, then<br/>
tell me wherein lies the difference between a written<br/>
<i>letter</i> and a given <i>sign?</i><br/>
<br/>
Yes, Crusoe spoke. He said to Dick as plain as dog<br/>
could say it, slowly and emphatically, "That's my opinion<br/>
precisely, Dick. You're the dearest, most beloved, jolliest<br/>
fellow that ever walked on two legs, you are; and<br/>
whatever's your opinion is mine, no matter <i>how</i> absurd<br/>
it may be."<br/>
<br/>
Dick evidently understood him perfectly, for he<br/>
laughed as he looked at him and patted him on the<br/>
head, and called him a "funny dog." Then he continued<br/>
his discourse:--<br/>
<br/>
"Yes, pup, we'll make our camp here for a long bit,<br/>
old dog, in this beautiful plain. We'll make a willow<br/>
wigwam to sleep in, you and I, jist in yon clump o'<br/>
trees, not a stone's-throw to our right, where we'll have<br/>
a run o' pure water beside us, and be near our buffalo<br/>
at the same time. For, ye see, we'll need to watch him<br/>
lest the wolves take a notion to eat him--that'll be<br/>
<i>your</i> duty, pup. Then I'll skin him when I get strong<br/>
enough, which'll be in a day or two, I hope, and we'll<br/>
put one-half of the skin below us and t'other half above<br/>
us i' the camp, an' sleep, an' eat, an' take it easy for a<br/>
week or two--won't we, pup?"<br/>
<br/>
"Hoora-a-a-y!" shouted Crusoe, with a jovial wag of<br/>
his tail, that no human arm with hat, or cap, or kerchief<br/>
ever equalled.<br/>
<br/>
Poor Dick Varley! He smiled to think how earnestly<br/>
he had been talking to the dog; but he did not cease to<br/>
do it, for although he entered into discourses the drift<br/>
of which Crusoe's limited education did not permit him<br/>
to follow, he found comfort in hearing the sound of his<br/>
own voice, and in knowing that it fell pleasantly on<br/>
another ear in that lonely wilderness.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
Our hero now set about his preparations as vigorously<br/>
as he could. He cut out the buffalo's tongue--a matter<br/>
of great difficulty to one in his weak state--and carried<br/>
it to a pleasant spot near to the stream where the turf<br/>
was level and green, and decked with wild flowers.<br/>
Here he resolved to make his camp.<br/>
<br/>
His first care was to select a bush whose branches<br/>
were long enough to form a canopy over his head when<br/>
bent, and the ends thrust into the ground. The completing<br/>
of this exhausted him greatly, but after a rest<br/>
he resumed his labours. The next thing was to light a<br/>
fire--a comfort which he had not enjoyed for many<br/>
weary days. Not that he required it for warmth, for<br/>
the weather was extremely warm, but he required it to<br/>
cook with, and the mere <i>sight</i> of a blaze in a dark place<br/>
is a most heart-cheering thing, as every one knows.<br/>
<br/>
When the fire was lighted he filled his pannikin at<br/>
the brook and put it on to boil, and cutting several<br/>
slices of buffalo tongue, he thrust short stakes through<br/>
them and set them up before the fire to roast. By this<br/>
time the water was boiling, so he took it off with difficulty,<br/>
nearly burning his fingers and singeing the tail of<br/>
his coat in so doing. Into the pannikin he put a lump<br/>
of maple sugar, and stirred it about with a stick, and<br/>
tasted it. It seemed to him even better than tea or<br/>
coffee. It was absolutely delicious!<br/>
<br/>
Really one has no notion what he can do if he makes<br/>
believe <i>very hard</i>. The human mind is a nicely balanced<br/>
and extremely complex machine, and when thrown a<br/>
little off the balance can be made to believe almost anything,<br/>
as we see in the case of some poor monomaniacs,<br/>
who have fancied that they were made of all sorts of<br/>
things--glass and porcelain, and such like. No wonder<br/>
then that poor Dick Varley, after so much suffering and<br/>
hardship, came to regard that pannikin of hot sirup as<br/>
the most delicious beverage he ever drank.<br/>
<br/>
During all these operations Crusoe sat on his haunches<br/>
beside him and looked. And you haven't, no, you<br/>
haven't got the most distant notion of the way in which<br/>
that dog manoeuvred with his head and face. He opened<br/>
his eyes wide, and cocked his ears, and turned his head<br/>
first a little to one side, then a little to the other. After<br/>
that he turned it a <i>good deal</i> to one side, and then a<br/>
good deal more to the other. Then he brought it straight,<br/>
and raised one eyebrow a little, and then the other a<br/>
little, and then both together very much. Then, when<br/>
Dick paused to rest and did nothing, Crusoe looked mild<br/>
for a moment, and yawned vociferously. Presently Dick<br/>
moved--up went the ears again, and Crusoe came, in<br/>
military parlance, "to the position of attention!" At<br/>
last supper was ready and they began.<br/>
<br/>
Dick had purposely kept the dog's supper back from<br/>
him, in order that they might eat it in company. And<br/>
between every bite and sup that Dick took, he gave a<br/>
bite--but not a sup--to Crusoe. Thus lovingly they<br/>
ate together; and when Dick lay that night under the<br/>
willow branches, looking up through them at the stars,<br/>
with his feet to the fire and Crusoe close along his side,<br/>
he thought it the best and sweetest supper he ever ate,<br/>
and the happiest evening he ever spent--so wonderfully<br/>
do circumstances modify our notions of felicity.<br/>
<br/>
Two weeks after this "Richard was himself again."<br/>
<br/>
The muscles were springy, and the blood coursed fast<br/>
and free, as was its wont. Only a slight, and, perhaps,<br/>
salutary feeling of weakness remained, to remind him<br/>
that young muscles might again become more helpless<br/>
than those of an aged man or a child.<br/>
<br/>
Dick had left his encampment a week ago, and was<br/>
now advancing by rapid stages towards the Rocky<br/>
Mountains, closely following the trail of his lost comrades,<br/>
which he had no difficulty in finding and keeping<br/>
now that Crusoe was with him. The skin of the buffalo<br/>
that he had killed was now strapped to his shoulders,<br/>
and the skin of another animal that he had shot a few<br/>
days after was cut up into a long line and slung in a<br/>
coil round his neck. Crusoe was also laden. He had a<br/>
little bundle of meat slung on each side of him.<br/>
<br/>
For some time past numerous herds of mustangs, or<br/>
wild horses, had crossed their path, and Dick was now<br/>
on the look-out for a chance to <i>crease</i> one of those magnificent<br/>
creatures.<br/>
<br/>
On one occasion a band of mustangs galloped close<br/>
up to him before they were aware of his presence, and<br/>
stopped short with a wild snort of surprise on beholding<br/>
him; then, wheeling round, they dashed away at full<br/>
gallop, their long tails and manes flying wildly in the<br/>
air, and their hoofs thundering on the plain. Dick<br/>
did not attempt to crease one upon this occasion, fearing<br/>
that his recent illness might have rendered his hand too<br/>
unsteady for so extremely delicate an operation.<br/>
<br/>
In order to crease a wild horse the hunter requires<br/>
to be a perfect shot, and it is not every man of the west<br/>
who carries a rifle that can do it successfully. Creasing<br/>
consists in sending a bullet through the gristle of the<br/>
mustang's neck, just above the bone, so as to stun the<br/>
animal. If the ball enters a hair's-breadth too low,<br/>
the horse falls dead instantly. If it hits the exact<br/>
spot, the horse falls as instantaneously, and dead to all<br/>
appearance; but, in reality, he is only stunned, and if<br/>
left for a few minutes will rise and gallop away nearly<br/>
as well as ever. When hunters crease a horse successfully<br/>
they put a rope, or halter, round his under jaw<br/>
and hobbles round his feet, so that when he rises he<br/>
is secured, and, after considerable trouble, reduced to<br/>
obedience.<br/>
<br/>
The mustangs which roam in wild freedom on the<br/>
prairies of the far west are descended from the noble<br/>
Spanish steeds that were brought over by the wealthy<br/>
cavaliers who accompanied Fernando Cortez, the conqueror<br/>
of Mexico, in his expedition to the New World in<br/>
1518. These bold, and, we may add, lawless cavaliers<br/>
were mounted on the finest horses that could be procured<br/>
from Barbary and the deserts of the Old World. The<br/>
poor Indians of the New World were struck with amazement<br/>
and terror at these awful beings, for, never having<br/>
seen horses before, they believed that horse and rider<br/>
were one animal. During the wars that followed many<br/>
of the Spaniards were killed, and their steeds bounded<br/>
into the wilds of the new country, to enjoy a life of<br/>
unrestrained freedom. These were the forefathers of<br/>
the present race of magnificent creatures which are<br/>
found in immense droves all over the western wilderness,<br/>
from the Gulf of Mexico to the confines of the<br/>
snowy regions of the far north.<br/>
<br/>
At first the Indians beheld these horses with awe and<br/>
terror, but gradually they became accustomed to them,<br/>
and finally succeeded in capturing great numbers and<br/>
reducing them to a state of servitude. Not, however,<br/>
to the service of the cultivated field, but to the service<br/>
of the chase and war. The savages soon acquired the<br/>
method of capturing wild horses by means of the lasso--as<br/>
the noose at that end of a long line of raw hide is<br/>
termed--which they adroitly threw over the heads of<br/>
the animals and secured them, having previously run<br/>
them down. At the present day many of the savage<br/>
tribes of the west almost live upon horseback, and<br/>
without these useful creatures they could scarcely subsist,<br/>
as they are almost indispensable in the chase of<br/>
the buffalo.<br/>
<br/>
Mustangs are regularly taken by the Indians to the<br/>
settlements of the white men for trade, but very poor<br/>
specimens are these of the breed of wild horses. This<br/>
arises from two causes. First, the Indian cannot overtake<br/>
the finest of a drove of wild mustangs, because his own<br/>
steed is inferior to the best among the wild ones, besides<br/>
being weighted with a rider, so that only the weak and<br/>
inferior animals are captured. And, secondly, when the<br/>
Indian does succeed in lassoing a first-rate horse he<br/>
keeps it for his own use. Thus, those who have not<br/>
visited the far-off prairies and seen the mustang in all<br/>
the glory of untrammelled freedom, can form no adequate<br/>
idea of its beauty, fleetness, and strength.<br/>
<br/>
The horse, however, was not the only creature imported<br/>
by Cortez. There were priests in his army who<br/>
rode upon asses, and although we cannot imagine that<br/>
the "fathers" charged with the cavaliers and were unhorsed,<br/>
or, rather, un-assed in battle, yet, somehow, the<br/>
asses got rid of their riders and joined the Spanish<br/>
chargers in their joyous bound into a new life of freedom.<br/>
Hence wild asses also are found in the western<br/>
prairies. But think not, reader, of those poor miserable<br/>
wretches we see at home, which seem little better than<br/>
rough door-mats sewed up and stuffed, with head, tail,<br/>
and legs attached, and just enough of life infused to<br/>
make them move! No, the wild ass of the prairie is a<br/>
large powerful, swift creature. He has the same long<br/>
ears, it is true, and the same hideous, exasperating bray,<br/>
and the same tendency to flourish his heels; but for all<br/>
that he is a very fine animal, and often wages <i>successful</i><br/>
warfare with the wild horse.<br/>
<br/>
But to return. The next drove of mustangs that<br/>
Dick and Crusoe saw were feeding quietly and unsuspectingly<br/>
in a rich green hollow in the plain. Dick's<br/>
heart leaped up as his eyes suddenly fell on them, for<br/>
he had almost discovered himself before he was aware<br/>
of their presence.<br/>
<br/>
"Down, pup!" he whispered, as he sank and disappeared<br/>
among the grass, which was just long enough<br/>
to cover him when lying quite flat.<br/>
<br/>
Crusoe crouched immediately, and his master made<br/>
his observations of the drove, and the dispositions of<br/>
the ground that might favour his approach, for they<br/>
were not within rifle range. Having done so he crept<br/>
slowly back until the undulation of the prairie hid him<br/>
from view; then he sprang to his feet, and ran a considerable<br/>
distance along the bottom until he gained the<br/>
extreme end of a belt of low bushes, which would effectually<br/>
conceal him while he approached to within a<br/>
hundred yards or less of the troop.<br/>
<br/>
Here he made his arrangements. Throwing down<br/>
his buffalo robe, he took the coil of line and cut off a<br/>
piece of about three yards in length. On this he made<br/>
a running noose. The longer line he also prepared<br/>
with a running noose. These he threw in a coil over<br/>
his arm.<br/>
<br/>
He also made a pair of hobbles, and placed them in<br/>
the breast of his coat, and then, taking up his rifle,<br/>
advanced cautiously through the bushes--Crusoe following<br/>
close behind him. In a few minutes he was gazing<br/>
in admiration at the mustangs, which were now within<br/>
easy shot, and utterly ignorant of the presence of man,<br/>
for Dick had taken care to approach in such a way<br/>
that the wind did not carry the scent of him in their<br/>
direction.<br/>
<br/>
And well might he admire them. The wild horse of<br/>
these regions is not very large, but it is exceedingly<br/>
powerful, with prominent eye, sharp nose, distended<br/>
nostril, small feet, and a delicate leg. Their beautiful<br/>
manes hung at great length down their arched necks,<br/>
and their thick tails swept the ground. One magnificent<br/>
fellow in particular attracted Dick's attention.<br/>
He was of a rich dark-brown colour, with black mane<br/>
and tail, and seemed to be the leader of the drove.<br/>
<br/>
Although not the nearest to him, he resolved to crease<br/>
this horse. It is said that creasing generally destroys<br/>
or damages the spirit of the horse, so Dick determined<br/>
to try whether his powers of close shooting would not serve him on<br/>
this<br/>
occasion. Going down on one knee he aimed at the creature's neck, just<br/>
a<br/>
hair's-breadth<br/>
above the spot where he had been told that hunters<br/>
usually hit them, and fired. The effect upon the group<br/>
was absolutely tremendous. With wild cries and snorting<br/>
terror they tossed their proud heads in the air,<br/>
uncertain for one moment in which direction to fly;<br/>
then there was a rush as if a hurricane swept over the<br/>
place, and they were gone.<br/>
<br/>
But the brown horse was down. Dick did not wait<br/>
until the others had fled. He dropped his rifle, and<br/>
with the speed of a deer sprang towards the fallen<br/>
horse, and affixed the hobbles to his legs. His aim had<br/>
been true. Although scarcely half a minute elapsed<br/>
between the shot and the fixing of the hobbles, the<br/>
animal recovered, and with a frantic exertion rose on<br/>
his haunches, just as Dick had fastened the noose of<br/>
the short line in his under jaw. But this was not<br/>
enough. If the horse had gained his feet before the<br/>
longer line was placed round his neck, he would have<br/>
escaped. As the mustang made the second violent<br/>
plunge that placed it on its legs, Dick flung the noose<br/>
hastily; it caught on one ear, and would have fallen<br/>
off, had not the horse suddenly shaken its head, and<br/>
unwittingly sealed its own fate by bringing the noose<br/>
round its neck.<br/>
<br/>
And now the struggle began. Dick knew well<br/>
enough, from hearsay, the method of "breaking down"<br/>
a wild horse. He knew that the Indians choke them<br/>
with the noose round the neck until they fall down<br/>
exhausted and covered with foam, when they creep up,<br/>
fix the hobbles, and the line in the lower jaw, and then<br/>
loosen the lasso to let the horse breathe, and resume its<br/>
plungings till it is almost subdued, when they gradually<br/>
draw near and breathe into its nostrils. But the violence<br/>
and strength of this animal rendered this an<br/>
apparently hopeless task. We have already seen that<br/>
the hobbles and noose in the lower jaw had been fixed,<br/>
so that Dick had nothing now to do but to choke his<br/>
captive, and tire him out, while Crusoe remained a quiet<br/>
though excited spectator of the scene.<br/>
<br/>
But there seemed to be no possibility of choking this<br/>
horse. Either the muscles of his neck were too strong,<br/>
or there was something wrong with the noose which<br/>
prevented it from acting, for the furious creature dashed<br/>
and bounded backwards and sideways in its terror for<br/>
nearly an hour, dragging Dick after it, till he was<br/>
almost exhausted; and yet, at the end of that time,<br/>
although flecked with foam and panting with terror,<br/>
it seemed as strong as ever. Dick held both lines, for<br/>
the short one attached to its lower jaw gave him great<br/>
power over it. At last he thought of seeking assistance<br/>
from his dog.<br/>
<br/>
"Crusoe," he cried, "lay hold, pup!"<br/>
<br/>
The dog seized the long line in his teeth and pulled<br/>
with all his might. At the same moment Dick let go<br/>
the short line and threw all his weight upon the long<br/>
one. The noose tightened suddenly under this strain,<br/>
and the mustang, with a gasp, fell choking to the<br/>
ground.<br/>
<br/>
Dick had often heard of the manner in which the<br/>
Mexicans "break" their horses, so he determined to<br/>
abandon the method which had already almost worn<br/>
him out, and adopt the other, as far as the means in<br/>
his power rendered it possible. Instead, therefore, of<br/>
loosening the lasso and re-commencing the struggle, he<br/>
tore a branch from a neighbouring bush, cut the hobbles,<br/>
strode with his legs across the fallen steed, seized the<br/>
end of the short line or bridle, and then, ordering Crusoe<br/>
to quit his hold, he loosened the noose which compressed<br/>
the horse's neck and had already well-nigh terminated<br/>
its existence.<br/>
<br/>
One or two deep sobs restored it, and in a moment<br/>
it leaped to its feet with Dick firmly on its back. To<br/>
say that the animal leaped and kicked in its frantic<br/>
efforts to throw this intolerable burden would be a tame<br/>
manner of expressing what took place. Words cannot<br/>
adequately describe the scene. It reared, plunged,<br/>
shrieked, vaulted into the air, stood straight up<br/>
on its hind legs, and then almost as straight upon its fore<br/>
ones; but its rider held on like a burr. Then the<br/>
mustang raced wildly forwards a few paces, then as<br/>
wildly back, and then stood still and trembled violently.<br/>
But this was only a brief lull in the storm, so Dick saw<br/>
that the time was now come to assert the superiority of<br/>
his race.<br/>
<br/>
"Stay back, Crusoe, and watch my rifle, pup," he<br/>
cried, and raising his heavy switch he brought it down<br/>
with a sharp cut across the horse's flank, at the same<br/>
time loosening the rein which hitherto he had held<br/>
tight.<br/>
<br/>
The wild horse uttered a passionate cry, and sprang<br/>
forward like the bolt from a cross-bow.<br/>
<br/>
And now commenced a race which, if not so prolonged,<br/>
was at least as furious as that of the far-famed<br/>
Mazeppa. Dick was a splendid rider, however--at<br/>
least as far as "sticking on" goes. He might not<br/>
have come up to the precise pitch desiderated by a<br/>
riding-master in regard to carriage, etc., but he rode<br/>
that wild horse of the prairie with as much ease as he<br/>
had formerly ridden his own good steed, whose bones<br/>
had been picked by the wolves not long ago.<br/>
<br/>
The pace was tremendous, for the youth's weight<br/>
was nothing to that muscular frame, which bounded<br/>
with cat-like agility from wave to wave of the undulating<br/>
plain in ungovernable terror. In a few minutes<br/>
the clump of willows where Crusoe and his rifle lay<br/>
were out of sight behind; but it mattered not, for Dick<br/>
had looked up at the sky and noted the position of the<br/>
sun at the moment of starting. Away they went on<br/>
the wings of the wind, mile after mile over the ocean-like<br/>
waste--curving slightly aside now and then to<br/>
avoid the bluffs that occasionally appeared on the<br/>
scene for a few minutes and then swept out of sight<br/>
behind them. Then they came to a little rivulet. It<br/>
was a mere brook of a few feet wide, and two or three<br/>
yards, perhaps, from bank to bank. Over this they<br/>
flew so easily that the spring was scarcely felt, and<br/>
continued the headlong course. And now a more<br/>
barren country was around them. Sandy ridges and<br/>
scrubby grass appeared everywhere, reminding Dick of<br/>
the place where he had been so ill. Rocks, too, were<br/>
scattered about, and at one place the horse dashed<br/>
with clattering hoofs between a couple of rocky sand-hills which, for<br/>
a few<br/>
seconds, hid the prairie from<br/>
view. Here the mustang suddenly shied with such<br/>
violence that his rider was nearly thrown, while a<br/>
rattlesnake darted from the path. Soon they emerged<br/>
from this pass, and again the plains became green and<br/>
verdant. Presently a distant line of trees showed that<br/>
they were approaching water, and in a few minutes<br/>
they were close on it. For the first time Dick felt<br/>
alarm. He sought to check his steed, but no force he<br/>
could exert had the smallest influence on it.<br/>
<br/>
Trees and bushes flew past in bewildering confusion.<br/>
The river was before him; what width, he could not<br/>
tell, but he was reckless now, like his charger, which he<br/>
struck with the willow rod with all his force as they<br/>
came up. One tremendous bound, and they were<br/>
across, but Dick had to lie flat on the mustang's back<br/>
as it crashed through the bushes to avoid being scraped<br/>
off by the trees. Again they were on the open plain,<br/>
and the wild horse began to show signs of exhaustion.<br/>
<br/>
Now was its rider's opportunity to assert his dominion.<br/>
He plied the willow rod and urged the panting<br/>
horse on, until it was white with foam and laboured<br/>
a little in its gait. Then Dick gently drew the halter,<br/>
and it broke into a trot; still tighter, and it walked,<br/>
and in another minute stood still, trembling in every<br/>
limb. Dick now quietly rubbed its neck, and spoke<br/>
to it in soothing tones; then he wheeled it gently<br/>
round, and urged it forward. It was quite subdued<br/>
and docile. In a little time they came to the river<br/>
and forded it, after which they went through the belt<br/>
of woodland at a walk. By the time they reached the<br/>
open prairie the mustang was recovered sufficiently to<br/>
feel its spirit returning, so Dick gave it a gentle touch<br/>
with the switch, and away they went on their return<br/>
journey.<br/>
<br/>
But it amazed Dick not a little to find how long<br/>
that journey was. Very different was the pace, too,<br/>
from the previous mad gallop, and often would the poor<br/>
horse have stopped had Dick allowed him. But this<br/>
might not be. The shades of night were approaching,<br/>
and the camp lay a long way ahead.<br/>
<br/>
At last it was reached, and Crusoe came out with<br/>
great demonstrations of joy, but was sent back lest he<br/>
should alarm the horse. Then Dick jumped off his<br/>
back, stroked his head, put his cheek close to his<br/>
mouth and whispered softly to him, after which he<br/>
fastened him to a tree and rubbed him down slightly<br/>
with a bunch of grass. Having done this, he left him<br/>
to graze as far as his tether would permit; and, after<br/>
supping with Crusoe, lay down to-rest, not a little<br/>
elated with his success in this first attempt at "creasing"<br/>
and "breaking" a mustang.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
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