<h3>CHAPTER XVI.</h3><br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<i>Dick becomes a horse tamer--Resumes his journey--Charlie's<br/>
doings--Misfortunes which lead to, but do not terminate in, the Rocky <br/>
Mountains--A grizzly bear</i>.<br/>
<br/>
There is a proverb--or a saying--or at least<br/>
somebody or book has told us, that some Irishman<br/>
once said, "Be aisy; or, if ye can't be aisy, be as<br/>
aisy as ye can."<br/>
<br/>
Now, we count that good advice, and strongly recommend<br/>
it to all and sundry. Had we been at the<br/>
side of Dick Varley on the night after his taming of<br/>
the wild horse, we would have strongly urged that<br/>
advice upon him. Whether he would have listened<br/>
to it or not is quite another question; we rather think<br/>
not. Reader, if you wish to know why, go and do<br/>
what he did, and if you feel no curious sensations<br/>
about the region of the loins after it, we will tell you<br/>
why Dick Varley wouldn't have listened to that advice.<br/>
Can a man feel as if his joints were wrenched<br/>
out of their sockets, and listen to advice--be that<br/>
advice good or bad? Can he feel as though these<br/>
joints were trying to re-set and re-dislocate themselves<br/>
perpetually, and listen to advice? Can he feel as if<br/>
he were sitting down on red-hot iron, when he's not<br/>
sitting down at all, and listen to advice? Can he--but<br/>
no! why pursue the subject. Poor Dick spent<br/>
that night in misery, and the greater part of the following<br/>
day in sleep, to make up for it.<br/>
<br/>
When he got up to breakfast in the afternoon he felt<br/>
much better, but shaky.<br/>
<br/>
"Now, pup," he said, stretching himself, "we'll go<br/>
and see our horse. <i>Ours</i>, pup; yours and mine: didn't<br/>
you help to catch him, eh, pup?"<br/>
<br/>
Crusoe acknowledged the fact with a wag and a playful<br/>
"bow-wow--wow-oo-ow!" and followed his master<br/>
to the place where the horse had been picketed. It<br/>
was standing there quite quiet, but looking a little<br/>
timid.<br/>
<br/>
Dick went boldly up to it, and patted its head and<br/>
stroked its nose, for nothing is so likely to alarm either<br/>
a tame or a wild horse as any appearance of timidity or<br/>
hesitation on the part of those who approach them.<br/>
<br/>
After treating it thus for a short time, he stroked<br/>
down its neck, and then its shoulders--the horse eying<br/>
him all the time nervously. Gradually he stroked<br/>
its back and limbs gently, and walked quietly round<br/>
and round it once or twice, sometimes approaching<br/>
and sometimes going away, but never either hesitating<br/>
or doing anything abruptly. This done, he went down<br/>
to the stream and filled his cap with water and carried<br/>
it to the horse, which snuffed suspiciously and backed<br/>
a little; so he laid the cap down, and went up and<br/>
patted him again. Presently he took up the cap and<br/>
carried it to his nose. The poor creature was almost<br/>
choking with thirst, so that, the moment he understood<br/>
what was in the cap, he buried his lips in it and sucked<br/>
it up.<br/>
<br/>
This was a great point gained: he had accepted a<br/>
benefit at the hands of his new master; he had become<br/>
a debtor to man, and no doubt he felt the obligation.<br/>
Dick filled the cap and the horse emptied it<br/>
again, and again, and again, until its burning thirst<br/>
was slaked. Then Dick went up to his shoulder, patted<br/>
him, undid the line that fastened him, and vaulted<br/>
lightly on his back!<br/>
<br/>
We say <i>lightly</i>, for it was so, but it wasn't <i>easily</i>, as<br/>
Dick could have told you! However, he was determined<br/>
not to forego the training of his steed on account<br/>
of what <i>he</i> would have called a "little bit pain."<br/>
<br/>
At this unexpected act the horse plunged and reared<br/>
a good deal, and seemed inclined to go through the performance<br/>
of the day before over again; but Dick patted<br/>
and stroked him into quiescence, and having done so,<br/>
urged him into a gallop over the plains, causing the dog<br/>
to gambol round in order that he might get accustomed<br/>
to him. This tried his nerves a good deal, and no wonder,<br/>
for if he took Crusoe for a wolf, which no doubt he did,<br/>
he must have thought him a very giant of the pack.<br/>
<br/>
By degrees they broke into a furious gallop, and<br/>
after breathing him well, Dick returned and tied him<br/>
to the tree. Then he rubbed him down again, and<br/>
gave him another drink. This time the horse smelt<br/>
his new master all over, and Dick felt that he had<br/>
conquered him by kindness. No doubt the tremendous<br/>
run of the day before could scarcely be called<br/>
kindness, but without this subduing run he never could<br/>
have brought the offices of kindness to bear on so wild<br/>
a steed.<br/>
<br/>
During all these operations Crusoe sat looking on<br/>
with demure sagacity--drinking in wisdom and taking<br/>
notes. We know not whether any notes made by the<br/>
canine race have ever been given to the world, but<br/>
certain are we that, if the notes and observations made<br/>
by Crusoe on that journey were published, they would,<br/>
to say the least, surprise us!<br/>
<br/>
Next day Dick gave the wild horse his second lesson,<br/>
and his name. He called him "Charlie," after a much-loved<br/>
companion in the Mustang Valley. And long and<br/>
heartily did Dick Varley laugh as he told the horse his<br/>
future designation in the presence of Crusoe, for it struck<br/>
him as somewhat ludicrous that a mustang which, two<br/>
days ago, pawed the earth in all the pride of independent<br/>
freedom, should suddenly come down so low as to carry<br/>
a hunter on his back and be named Charlie.<br/>
<br/>
The next piece of instruction began by Crusoe being<br/>
led up under Charlie's nose, and while Dick patted the<br/>
dog with his right hand he patted the horse with his<br/>
left. It backed a good deal at first and snorted, but<br/>
Crusoe walked slowly and quietly in front of him<br/>
several times, each time coming nearer, until he again<br/>
stood under his nose; then the horse smelt him nervously,<br/>
and gave a sigh of relief when he found that<br/>
Crusoe paid no attention to him whatever. Dick then<br/>
ordered the dog to lie down at Charlie's feet, and went<br/>
to the camp to fetch his rifle, and buffalo robe, and<br/>
pack of meat. These and all the other things belonging<br/>
to him were presented for inspection, one by one,<br/>
to the horse, who arched his neck, and put forward his<br/>
ears, and eyed them at first, but smelt them all over,<br/>
and seemed to feel more easy in his mind.<br/>
<br/>
Next, the buffalo robe was rubbed over his nose, then<br/>
over his eyes and head, then down his neck and shoulder,<br/>
and lastly was placed on his back. Then it was taken<br/>
off and <i>flung</i> on; after that it was strapped on, and the<br/>
various little items of the camp were attached to it.<br/>
This done, Dick took up his rifle and let him smell it;<br/>
then he put his hand on Charlie's shoulder, vaulted on<br/>
to his back, and rode away.<br/>
<br/>
Charlie's education was completed. And now our<br/>
hero's journey began again in earnest, and with some<br/>
prospect of its speedy termination.<br/>
<br/>
In this course of training through which Dick put<br/>
his wild horse, he had been at much greater pains and<br/>
had taken far longer time than is usually the case among<br/>
the Indians, who will catch, and "break," and ride a<br/>
wild horse into camp in less than <i>three hours</i>. But<br/>
Dick wanted to do the thing well, which the Indians<br/>
are not careful to do; besides, it must be borne in remembrance<br/>
that this was his first attempt, and that his<br/>
horse was one of the best and most high-spirited, while<br/>
those caught by the Indians, as we have said, are generally<br/>
the poorest of a drove.<br/>
<br/>
Dick now followed the trail of his lost companions at<br/>
a rapid pace, yet not so rapidly as he might have done,<br/>
being averse to exhausting his good dog and his new<br/>
companion. Each night he encamped under the shade<br/>
of a tree or a bush when he could find one, or in the<br/>
open prairie when there were none, and, picketing his<br/>
horse to a short stake or pin which he carried with him<br/>
for the purpose, lit his fire, had supper, and lay down<br/>
to rest. In a few days Charlie became so tame and so<br/>
accustomed to his master's voice that he seemed quite<br/>
reconciled to his new life. There can be no doubt whatever<br/>
that he had a great dislike to solitude; for on one<br/>
occasion, when Dick and Crusoe went off a mile or so<br/>
from the camp, where Charlie was tied, and disappeared<br/>
from his view, he was heard to neigh so loudly that<br/>
Dick ran back, thinking the wolves must have attacked<br/>
him. He was all right, however, and exhibited evident<br/>
tokens of satisfaction when they returned.<br/>
<br/>
On another occasion his fear of being left alone was<br/>
more clearly demonstrated.<br/>
<br/>
Dick had been unable to find wood or water that day,<br/>
so he was obliged to encamp upon the open plain. The<br/>
want of water was not seriously felt, however, for he<br/>
had prepared a bladder in which he always carried<br/>
enough to give him one pannikin of hot sirup, and<br/>
leave a mouthful for Crusoe and Charlie. Dried buffalo<br/>
dung formed a substitute for fuel. Spreading his buffalo<br/>
robe, he lit his fire, put on his pannikin to boil, and<br/>
stuck up a piece of meat to roast, to the great delight<br/>
of Crusoe, who sat looking on with much interest.<br/>
<br/>
Suddenly Charlie, who was picketed a few hundred<br/>
yards off in a grassy spot, broke his halter close by the<br/>
headpiece, and with a snort of delight bounded away,<br/>
prancing and kicking up his heels!<br/>
<br/>
Dick heaved a deep sigh, for he felt sure that his<br/>
horse was gone. However, in a little Charlie stopped,<br/>
and raised his nose high in the air, as if to look for<br/>
his old equine companions. But they were gone; no<br/>
answering neigh replied to his; and he felt, probably<br/>
for the first time, that he was really alone in the world.<br/>
Having no power of smell, whereby he might have<br/>
traced them out as the dog would have done, he looked<br/>
in a bewildered and excited state all round the horizon.<br/>
Then his eye fell on Dick and Crusoe sitting by their<br/>
little fire. Charlie looked hard at them, and then again<br/>
at the horizon; and then, coming to the conclusion, no<br/>
doubt, that the matter was quite beyond his comprehension,<br/>
he quietly took to feeding.<br/>
<br/>
Dick availed himself of the chance, and tried to catch<br/>
him; but he spent an hour with Crusoe in the vain<br/>
attempt, and at last they gave it up in disgust and returned<br/>
to the fire, where they finished their supper and<br/>
went to bed.<br/>
<br/>
Next morning they saw Charlie feeding close at hand,<br/>
so they took breakfast, and tried to catch him again.<br/>
But it was of no use; he was evidently coquetting with<br/>
them, and dodged about and defied their utmost efforts,<br/>
for there were only a few inches of line hanging to his<br/>
head. At last it occurred to Dick that he would try<br/>
the experiment of forsaking him. So he packed up his<br/>
things, rolled up the buffalo robe, threw it and the rifle<br/>
on his shoulder, and walked deliberately away.<br/>
<br/>
"Come along, Crusoe!" he cried, after walking a few<br/>
paces.<br/>
<br/>
But Crusoe stood by the fire with his head up, and<br/>
an expression on his face that said, "Hallo, man! what's<br/>
wrong? You've forgot Charlie! Hold on! Are you<br/>
mad?"<br/>
<br/>
"Come here, Crusoe!" cried his master in a decided<br/>
tone.<br/>
<br/>
Crusoe obeyed at once. Whatever mistake there<br/>
might be, there was evidently none in that command;<br/>
so he lowered his head and tail humbly, and trotted on<br/>
with his master, but he perpetually turned his head as<br/>
he went, first on this side and then on that, to look and<br/>
wonder at Charlie.<br/>
<br/>
When they were far away on the plain, Charlie suddenly<br/>
became aware that something was wrong. He<br/>
trotted to the brow of a slope, with his head and tail<br/>
very high up indeed, and looked after them; then he<br/>
looked at the fire, and neighed; then he trotted quickly<br/>
up to it, and seeing that everything was gone he began<br/>
to neigh violently, and at last started off at full speed,<br/>
and overtook his friends, passing within a few feet of<br/>
them, and, wheeling round a few yards off, stood trembling<br/>
like an aspen leaf.<br/>
<br/>
Dick called him by his name and advanced, while<br/>
Charlie met him half-way, and allowed himself to be<br/>
saddled, bridled, and mounted forthwith.<br/>
<br/>
After this Dick had no further trouble with his wild<br/>
horse.<br/>
<br/>
At his next camping-place, which was in the midst of<br/>
a cluster of bushes close beside a creek, Dick came unexpectedly<br/>
upon a little wooden cross which marked the<br/>
head of a grave. There was no inscription on it, but the<br/>
Christian symbol told that it was the grave of a white<br/>
man. It is impossible to describe the rush of mingled<br/>
feelings that filled the soul of the young hunter as he<br/>
leaned on the muzzle of his rifle and looked at this<br/>
solitary resting-place of one who, doubtless like himself,<br/>
had been a roving hunter. Had he been young or old<br/>
when he fell? had he a mother in the distant settlement<br/>
who watched and longed and waited for the son<br/>
that was never more to gladden her eyes? had he been<br/>
murdered, or had he died there and been buried by his<br/>
sorrowing comrades? These and a thousand questions<br/>
passed rapidly through his mind as he gazed at the little<br/>
cross.<br/>
<br/>
Suddenly he started. "Could it be the grave of Joe<br/>
or Henri?" For an instant the idea sent a chill to his<br/>
heart; but it passed quickly, for a second glance showed<br/>
that the grave was old, and that the wooden cross had<br/>
stood over it for years.<br/>
<br/>
Dick turned away with a saddened heart; and that<br/>
night, as he pored over the pages of his Bible, his mind<br/>
was filled with many thoughts about eternity and the<br/>
world to come. He, too, must come to the grave one<br/>
day, and quit the beautiful prairies and his loved<br/>
rifle. It was a sad thought; but while he meditated<br/>
he thought upon his mother. "After all," he murmured,<br/>
"there must be happiness <i>without</i> the rifle, and youth,<br/>
and health, and the prairie! My mother's happy, yet<br/>
she don't shoot, or ride like wild-fire over the plains."<br/>
Then that word which had been sent so sweetly to him<br/>
through her hand came again to his mind, "My son,<br/>
give me thine heart;" and as he read God's Book, he<br/>
met with the word, "Delight thyself in the Lord, and he<br/>
shall give thee the desire of thine heart." "<i>The desire<br/>
of thine heart</i>" Dick repeated this, and pondered it<br/>
till he fell asleep.<br/>
<br/>
A misfortune soon after this befell Dick Varley which<br/>
well-nigh caused him to give way to despair. For some<br/>
time past he had been approaching the eastern slopes<br/>
of the Rocky Mountains--those ragged, jagged, mighty<br/>
hills which run through the whole continent from north<br/>
to south in a continuous chain, and form, as it were, the<br/>
backbone of America. One morning, as he threw the<br/>
buffalo robe off his shoulders and sat up, he was horrified<br/>
to find the whole earth covered with a mantle of snow.<br/>
We say he was horrified, for this rendered it absolutely<br/>
impossible any further to trace his companions either by<br/>
scent or sight.<br/>
<br/>
For some time he sat musing bitterly on his sad fate,<br/>
while his dog came and laid his head sympathizingly on<br/>
his arm.<br/>
<br/>
"Ah, pup!" he said, "I know ye'd help me if ye<br/>
could! But it's all up now; there's no chance of findin'<br/>
them--none!"<br/>
<br/>
To this Crusoe replied by a low whine. He knew<br/>
full well that something distressed his master, but he<br/>
hadn't yet ascertained what it was. As something had<br/>
to be done, Dick put the buffalo robe on his steed, and<br/>
mounting said, as he was in the habit of doing each<br/>
morning, "Lead on, pup."<br/>
<br/>
Crusoe put his nose to the ground and ran forward a<br/>
few paces, then he returned and ran about snuffing and<br/>
scraping up the snow. At last he looked up and uttered<br/>
a long melancholy howl.<br/>
<br/>
"Ah! I knowed it," said Dick, pushing forward.<br/>
"Come on, pup; you'll have to <i>follow</i> now. Any way<br/>
we must go on."<br/>
<br/>
The snow that had fallen was not deep enough to<br/>
offer the slightest obstruction to their advance. It was,<br/>
indeed, only one of those occasional showers common to<br/>
that part of the country in the late autumn, which<br/>
season had now crept upon Dick almost before he was<br/>
aware of it, and he fully expected that it would melt<br/>
away in a few days. In this hope he kept steadily<br/>
advancing, until he found himself in the midst of those<br/>
rocky fastnesses which divide the waters that flow into<br/>
the Atlantic from those that flow into the Pacific Ocean.<br/>
Still the slight crust of snow lay on the ground, and he<br/>
had no means of knowing whether he was going in the<br/>
right direction or not.<br/>
<br/>
Game was abundant, and there was no lack of wood<br/>
now, so that his night bivouac was not so cold or dreary<br/>
as might have been expected.<br/>
<br/>
Travelling, however, had become difficult, and even<br/>
dangerous, owing to the rugged nature of the ground<br/>
over which he proceeded. The scenery had completely<br/>
changed in its character. Dick no longer coursed over<br/>
the free, open plains, but he passed through beautiful<br/>
valleys filled with luxuriant trees, and hemmed in by<br/>
stupendous mountains, whose rugged sides rose upward<br/>
until the snow-clad peaks pierced the clouds.<br/>
<br/>
There was something awful in these dark solitudes,<br/>
quite overwhelming to a youth of Dick's temperament.<br/>
His heart began to sink lower and lower every day, and<br/>
the utter impossibility of making up his mind what to<br/>
do became at length agonizing. To have turned and<br/>
gone back the hundreds of miles over which he had<br/>
travelled would have caused him some anxiety under<br/>
any circumstances, but to do so while Joe and Henri<br/>
were either wandering about there or in the power of<br/>
the savages was, he felt, out of the question. Yet in<br/>
which way should he go? Whatever course he took<br/>
might lead him farther and farther away from them.<br/>
<br/>
In this dilemma he came to the determination of<br/>
remaining where he was, at least until the snow should<br/>
leave the ground.<br/>
<br/>
He felt great relief even when this hopeless course<br/>
was decided upon, and set about making himself an encampment<br/>
with some degree of cheerfulness. When he<br/>
had completed this task, he took his rifle, and leaving<br/>
Charlie picketed in the centre of a dell, where the long,<br/>
rich grass rose high above the snow, went off to hunt.<br/>
<br/>
On turning a rocky point his heart suddenly bounded<br/>
into his throat, for there, not thirty yards distant, stood<br/>
a huge grizzly bear!<br/>
<br/>
Yes, there he was at last, the monster to meet which<br/>
the young hunter had so often longed--the terrible size<br/>
and fierceness of which he had heard so often spoken<br/>
about by the old hunters. There it stood at last; but<br/>
little did Dick Varley think that the first time he should<br/>
meet with his foe should be when alone in the dark recesses<br/>
of the Rocky Mountains, and with none to succour<br/>
him in the event of the battle going against him. Yes,<br/>
there was one. The faithful Crusoe stood by his side,<br/>
with his hair bristling, all his formidable teeth exposed,<br/>
and his eyes glaring in their sockets. Alas for poor<br/>
Crusoe had he gone into that combat alone! One stroke<br/>
of that monster's paw would have hurled him dead upon<br/>
the ground.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
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