<h2><SPAN name="chap11"></SPAN>CHAPTER XI</h2>
<p class="poem">
So foul a sky clears not without a storm.<br/>
—King John.</p>
<p>In the mean time the industrious and irreclaimable hours continued their
labours. The sun, which had been struggling through such masses of vapour
throughout the day, fell slowly in a streak of clear sky, and thence sunk
gloriously into the gloomy wastes, as he is wont to settle into the waters of
the ocean. The vast herds which had been grazing among the wild pastures of the
prairies, gradually disappeared, and the endless flocks of aquatic birds, that
were pursuing their customary annual journey from the virgin lakes of the north
towards the gulf of Mexico, ceased to fan that air, which had now become loaded
with dew and vapour. In short, the shadows of night fell upon the rock, adding
the mantle of darkness to the other dreary accompaniments of the place.</p>
<p>As the light began to fail, Esther collected her younger children at her side,
and placing herself on a projecting point of her insulated fortress, she sat
patiently awaiting the return of the hunters. Ellen Wade was at no great
distance, seeming to keep a little aloof from the anxious circle, as if willing
to mark the distinction which existed in their characters.</p>
<p>“Your uncle is, and always will be, a dull calculator, Nell,”
observed the mother, after a long pause in a conversation that had turned on
the labours of the day; “a lazy hand at figures and foreknowledge is that
said Ishmael Bush! Here he sat lolloping about the rock from light till noon,
doing nothing but scheme—scheme—scheme—with seven as noble
boys at his elbows as woman ever gave to man; and what’s the upshot? why,
night is setting in, and his needful work not yet ended.”</p>
<p>“It is not prudent, certainly, aunt,” Ellen replied, with a vacancy
in her air, that proved how little she knew what she was saying; “and it
is setting a very bad example to his sons.”</p>
<p>“Hoity, toity, girl! who has reared you up as a judge over your elders,
ay, and your betters, too! I should like to see the man on the whole frontier,
who sets a more honest example to his children than this same Ishmael Bush!
Show me, if you can, Miss Fault-finder, but not fault-mender, a set of boys who
will, on occasion, sooner chop a piece of logging and dress it for the crop,
than my own children; though I say it myself, who, perhaps, should be silent;
or a cradler that knows better how to lead a gang of hands through a field of
wheat, leaving a cleaner stubble in his track, than my own good man! Then, as a
father, he is as generous as a lord; for his sons have only to name the spot
where they would like to pitch, and he gives ’em a deed of the
plantation, and no charge for papers is ever made!”</p>
<p>As the wife of the squatter concluded, she raised a hollow, taunting laugh,
that was echoed from the mouths of several juvenile imitators, whom she was
training to a life as shiftless and lawless as her own; but which,
notwithstanding its uncertainty, was not without its secret charms.</p>
<p>“Holloa! old Eester;” shouted the well-known voice of her husband,
from the plain beneath; “ar’ you keeping your junkets, while we are
finding you in venison and buffaloe beef? Come down—come down, old girl,
with all your young; and lend us a hand to carry up the meat;—why, what a
frolic you ar’ in, woman! Come down, come down, for the boys are at hand,
and we have work here for double your number.”</p>
<p>Ishmael might have spared his lungs more than a moiety of the effort they were
compelled to make in order that he should be heard. He had hardly uttered the
name of his wife, before the whole of the crouching circle rose in a body, and
tumbling over each other, they precipitated themselves down the dangerous
passes of the rock with ungovernable impatience. Esther followed the young fry
with a more measured gait; nor did Ellen deem it wise, or rather discreet, to
remain behind. Consequently, the whole were soon assembled at the base of the
citadel, on the open plain.</p>
<p>Here the squatter was found, staggering under the weight of a fine fat buck,
attended by one or two of his younger sons. Abiram quickly appeared, and before
many minutes had elapsed, most of the hunters dropped in, singly and in pairs,
each man bringing with him some fruits of his prowess in the field.</p>
<p>“The plain is free from red-skins, to-night at least,” said
Ishmael, after the bustle of reception had a little subsided; “for I have
scoured the prairie for many long miles, on my own feet, and I call myself a
judge of the print of an Indian moccasin. So, old woman, you can give us a few
steaks of the venison, and then we will sleep on the day’s work.”</p>
<p>“I’ll not swear there are no savages near us,” said Abiram.
“I, too, know something of the trail of a red-skin; and, unless my eyes
have lost some of their sight, I would swear, boldly, that there ar’
Indians at hand. But wait till Asa comes in. He pass’d the spot where I
found the marks, and the boy knows something of such matters too.”</p>
<p>“Ay, the boy knows too much of many things,” returned Ishmael,
gloomily. “It will be better for him when he thinks he knows less. But
what matters it, Hetty, if all the Sioux tribes, west of the big river, are
within a mile of us; they will find it no easy matter to scale this rock, in
the teeth of ten bold men.”</p>
<p>“Call ’em twelve at once, Ishmael; call ’em twelve!”
cried his termagant assistant. “For if your moth-gathering, bug-hunting
friend, can be counted a man, I beg you will set me down as two. I will not
turn my back to him, with the rifle or the shot-gun; and for courage!—the
yearling heifer, that them skulking devils the Tetons stole, was the biggest
coward among us all, and after her came your drivelling Doctor. Ah! Ishmael,
you rarely attempt a regular trade but you come out the loser; and this man, I
reckon, is the hardest bargain among them all! Would you think it, the fellow
ordered me a blister around my mouth, because I complained of a pain in the
foot?”</p>
<p>“It is a pity, Eester,” the husband coolly answered, “that
you did not take it; I reckon it would have done considerable good. But, boys,
if it should turn out as Abiram thinks, that there are Indians near us, we may
have to scamper up the rock, and lose our suppers after all; therefore we will
make sure of the game, and talk over the performances of the Doctor when we
have nothing better to do.”</p>
<p>The hint was taken; and in a few minutes, the exposed situation in which the
family was collected, was exchanged for the more secure elevation of the rock.
Here Esther busied herself, working and scolding with equal industry, until the
repast was prepared; when she summoned her husband to his meal in a voice as
sonorous as that with which the Imam reminds the Faithful of a more important
duty.</p>
<p>When each had assumed his proper and customary place around the smoking viands,
the squatter set the example by beginning to partake of a delicious venison
steak, prepared like the hump of the bison, with a skill that rather increased
than concealed its natural properties. A painter would gladly have seized the
moment, to transfer the wild and characteristic scene to the canvass.</p>
<p>The reader will remember that the citadel of Ishmael stood insulated, lofty,
ragged, and nearly inaccessible. A bright flashing fire that was burning on the
centre of its summit, and around which the busy group was clustered, lent it
the appearance of some tall Pharos placed in the centre of the deserts, to
light such adventurers as wandered through their broad wastes. The flashing
flame gleamed from one sun-burnt countenance to another, exhibiting every
variety of expression, from the juvenile simplicity of the children, mingled as
it was with a shade of the wildness peculiar to their semi-barbarous lives, to
the dull and immovable apathy that dwelt on the features of the squatter, when
unexcited. Occasionally a gust of wind would fan the embers; and, as a brighter
light shot upwards, the little solitary tent was seen as it were suspended in
the gloom of the upper air. All beyond was enveloped, as usual at that hour, in
an impenetrable body of darkness.</p>
<p>“It is unaccountable that Asa should choose to be out of the way at such
a time as this,” Esther pettishly observed. “When all is finished
and to rights, we shall have the boy coming up, grumbling for his meal, and
hungry as a bear after his winter’s nap. His stomach is as true as the
best clock in Kentucky, and seldom wants winding up to tell the time, whether
of day or night. A desperate eater is Asa, when a-hungered by a little
work!”</p>
<p>Ishmael looked sternly around the circle of his silent sons, as if to see
whether any among them would presume to say aught in favour of the absent
delinquent. But now, when no exciting causes existed to arouse their slumbering
tempers, it seemed to be too great an effort to enter on the defence of their
rebellious brother. Abiram, however, who, since the pacification, either felt,
or affected to feel, a more generous interest in his late adversary, saw fit to
express an anxiety, to which the others were strangers—</p>
<p>“It will be well if the boy has escaped the Tetons!” he muttered.
“I should be sorry to have Asa, who is one of the stoutest of our party,
both in heart and hand, fall into the power of the red devils.”</p>
<p>“Look to yourself, Abiram; and spare your breath, if you can use it only
to frighten the woman and her huddling girls. You have whitened the face of
Ellen Wade, already; who looks as pale as if she was staring to-day at the very
Indians you name, when I was forced to speak to her through the rifle, because
I couldn’t reach her ears with my tongue. How was it, Nell! you have
never given the reason of your deafness?”</p>
<p>The colour of Ellen’s cheek changed as suddenly as the squatter’s
piece had flashed on the occasion to which he alluded, the burning glow
suffusing her features, until it even mantled her throat with its fine
healthful tinge. She hung her head abashed, but did not seem to think it
necessary to reply.</p>
<p>Ishmael, too sluggish to pursue the subject, or content with the pointed
allusion he had just made, rose from his seat on the rock, and stretching his
heavy frame, like a well-fed and fattened ox, he announced his intention to
sleep. Among a race who lived chiefly for the indulgence of the natural wants,
such a declaration could not fail of meeting with sympathetic dispositions. One
after another disappeared, each seeking his or her rude dormitory; and, before
many minutes, Esther, who by this time had scolded the younger fry to sleep,
found herself, if we except the usual watchman below, in solitary possession of
the naked rock.</p>
<p>Whatever less valuable fruits had been produced in this uneducated woman by her
migratory habits, the great principle of female nature was too deeply rooted
ever to be entirely eradicated. Of a powerful, not to say fierce temperament,
her passions were violent and difficult to be smothered. But, however she might
and did abuse the accidental prerogatives of her situation, love for her
offspring, while it often slumbered, could never be said to become extinct. She
liked not the protracted absence of Asa. Too fearless herself to have hesitated
an instant on her own account about crossing the dark abyss, into which she now
sat looking with longing eyes, her busy imagination, in obedience to this
inextinguishable sentiment, began to conjure nameless evils on account of her
son. It might be true, as Abiram had hinted, that he had become a captive to
some of the tribes who were hunting the buffaloe in that vicinity, or even a
still more dreadful calamity might have befallen. So thought the mother, while
silence and darkness lent their aid to the secret impulses of nature.</p>
<p>Agitated by these reflections, which put sleep at defiance, Esther continued at
her post, listening with that sort of acuteness which is termed instinct in the
animals a few degrees below her in the scale of intelligence, for any of those
noises which might indicate the approach of footsteps. At length, her wishes
had an appearance of being realised, for the long desired sounds were
distinctly audible, and presently she distinguished the dim form of a man at
the base of the rock.</p>
<p>“Now, Asa, richly do you deserve to be left with an earthen bed this
blessed night!” the woman began to mutter, with a revolution in her
feelings, that will not be surprising to those who have made the contradictions
that give variety to the human character a study. “And a hard one
I’ve a mind it shall be! Why Abner; Abner; you Abner, do you sleep? Let
me not see you dare to open the hole, till I get down. I will know who it is
that wishes to disturb a peaceable, ay, and an honest family too, at such a
time in the night as this!”</p>
<p>“Woman!” exclaimed a voice, that intended to bluster, while the
speaker was manifestly a little apprehensive of the consequences; “Woman,
I forbid you on pain of the law to project any of your infernal missiles. I am
a citizen, and a freeholder, and a graduate of two universities; and I stand
upon my rights! Beware of malice prepense, of chance-medley, and of
manslaughter. It is I—your amicus; a friend and inmate. I—Dr. Obed
Battius.”</p>
<p>“Who?” demanded Esther, in a voice that nearly refused to convey
her words to the ears of the anxious listener beneath. “Did you say it
was not Asa?”</p>
<p>“Nay, I am neither Asa, nor Absalom, nor any of the Hebrew princes, but
Obed, the root and stock of them all. Have I not said, woman, that you keep one
in attendance who is entitled to a peaceable as well as an honourable
admission? Do you take me for an animal of the class amphibia, and that I can
play with my lungs as a blacksmith does with his bellows?”</p>
<p>The naturalist might have expended his breath much longer, without producing
any desirable result, had Esther been his only auditor. Disappointed and
alarmed, the woman had already sought her pallet, and was preparing, with a
sort of desperate indifference, to compose herself to sleep. Abner, the
sentinel below, however, had been aroused from an exceedingly equivocal
situation by the outcry; and as he had now regained sufficient consciousness to
recognise the voice of the physician, the latter was admitted with the least
possible delay. Dr. Battius bustled through the narrow entrance, with an air of
singular impatience, and was already beginning to mount the difficult ascent,
when catching a view of the porter, he paused, to observe with an air that he
intended should be impressively admonitory—</p>
<p>“Abner, there are dangerous symptoms of somnolency about thee! It is
sufficiently exhibited in the tendency to hiation, and may prove dangerous not
only to yourself, but to all thy father’s family.”</p>
<p>“You never made a greater mistake, Doctor,” returned the youth,
gaping like an indolent lion; “I haven’t a symptom, as you call it,
about any part of me; and as to father and the children, I reckon the small-pox
and the measles have been thoroughly through the breed these many months
ago.”</p>
<p>Content with his brief admonition, the naturalist had surmounted half the
difficulties of the ascent before the deliberate Abner ended his justification.
On the summit, Obed fully expected to encounter Esther, of whose linguacious
powers he had too often been furnished with the most sinister reproofs, and of
which he stood in an awe too salutary to covet a repetition of the attacks. The
reader can foresee that he was to be agreeably disappointed. Treading lightly,
and looking timidly over his shoulder, as if he apprehended a shower of
something, even more formidable than words, the Doctor proceeded to the place
which had been allotted to himself in the general disposition of the
dormitories.</p>
<p>Instead of sleeping, the worthy naturalist sat ruminating over what he had both
seen and heard that day, until the tossing and mutterings which proceeded from
the cabin of Esther, who was his nearest neighbour, advertised him of the
wakeful situation of its inmate. Perceiving the necessity of doing something to
disarm this female Cerberus, before his own purpose could be accomplished, the
Doctor, reluctant as he was to encounter her tongue, found himself compelled to
invite a colloquial communication.</p>
<p>“You appear not to sleep, my very kind and worthy Mrs. Bush,” he
said, determined to commence his applications with a plaster that was usually
found to adhere; “you appear to rest badly, my excellent hostess; can I
administer to your ailings?”</p>
<p>“What would you give me, man?” grumbled Esther; “a blister to
make me sleep?”</p>
<p>“Say rather a cataplasm. But if you are in pain, here are some cordial
drops, which, taken in a glass of my own cogniac, will give you rest, if I know
aught of the materia medica.”</p>
<p>The Doctor, as he very well knew, had assailed Esther on her weak side; and, as
he doubted not of the acceptable quality of his prescription, he sat himself at
work, without unnecessary delay, to prepare it. When he made his offering, it
was received in a snappish and threatening manner, but swallowed with a
facility that sufficiently proclaimed how much it was relished. The woman
muttered her thanks, and her leech reseated himself in silence, to await the
operation of the dose. In less than half an hour the breathing of Esther became
so profound, and, as the Doctor himself might have termed it, so very
abstracted, that had he not known how easy it was to ascribe this new instance
of somnolency to the powerful dose of opium with which he had garnished the
brandy, he might have seen reason to distrust his own prescription. With the
sleep of the restless woman, the stillness became profound and general.</p>
<p>Then Dr. Battius saw fit to arise, with the silence and caution of the midnight
robber, and to steal out of his own cabin, or rather kennel, for it deserved no
better name, towards the adjoining dormitories. Here he took time to assure
himself that all his neighbours were buried in deep sleep. Once advised of this
important fact, he hesitated no longer, but commenced the difficult ascent
which led to the upper pinnacle of the rock. His advance, though abundantly
guarded, was not entirely noiseless; but while he was felicitating himself on
having successfully effected his object, and he was in the very act of placing
his foot on the highest ledge a hand was laid upon the skirts of his coat,
which as effectually put an end to his advance, as if the gigantic strength of
Ishmael himself had pinned him to the earth.</p>
<p>“Is there sickness in the tent,” whispered a soft voice in his very
ear, “that Dr. Battius is called to visit it at such an hour?”</p>
<p>So soon as the heart of the naturalist had returned from its hasty expedition
into his throat, as one less skilled than Dr. Battius in the formation of the
animal would have been apt to have accounted for the extraordinary sensation
with which he received this unlooked-for interruption, he found resolution to
reply; using, as much in terror as in prudence, the same precaution in the
indulgence of his voice.</p>
<p>“My worthy Nelly! I am greatly rejoiced to find it is no other than thee.
Hist! child, hist! Should Ishmael gain a knowledge of our plans, he would not
hesitate to cast us both from this rock, upon the plain beneath. Hist! Nelly,
hist!”</p>
<p>As the Doctor delivered his injunctions between the intervals of his ascent, by
the time they were concluded, both he and his auditor had gained the upper
level.</p>
<p>“And now, Dr. Battius,” the girl gravely demanded, “may I
know the reason why you have run so great a risk of flying from this place,
without wings, and at the certain expense of your neck?”</p>
<p>“Nothing shall be concealed from thee, worthy and trusty Nelly—but
are you certain that Ishmael will not awake?”</p>
<p>“No fear of him; he will sleep until the sun scorches his eyelids. The
danger is from my aunt.”</p>
<p>“Esther sleepeth!” the Doctor sententiously replied. “Ellen,
you have been watching on this rock, to-day?”</p>
<p>“I was ordered to do so.”</p>
<p>“And you have seen the bison, and the antelope, and the wolf, and the
deer, as usual; animals of the orders, pecora, belluae, and ferae.”</p>
<p>“I have seen the creatures you named in English, but I know nothing of
the Indian languages.”</p>
<p>“There is still an order that I have not named, which you have also seen.
The primates—is it not true?”</p>
<p>“I cannot say. I know no animal by that name.”</p>
<p>“Nay, Ellen, you confer with a friend. Of the genus, homo, child?”</p>
<p>“Whatever else I may have had in view, I have not seen the vespertilio
horribi—”</p>
<p>“Hush, Nelly, thy vivacity will betray us! Tell me, girl, have you not
seen certain bipeds, called men, wandering about the prairies?”</p>
<p>“Surely. My uncle and his sons have been hunting the buffaloe, since the
sun began to fall.”</p>
<p>“I must speak in the vernacular, to be comprehended. Ellen, I would say
of the species, Kentucky.”</p>
<p>Though Ellen reddened like the rose, her blushes were concealed by the
darkness. She hesitated an instant, and then summoned sufficient spirit to say,
decidedly—</p>
<p>“If you wish to speak in parables, Doctor Battius, you must find another
listener. Put your questions plainly in English, and I will answer them
honestly in the same tongue.”</p>
<p>“I have been journeying in this desert, as thou knowest, Nelly, in quest
of animals that have been hidden from the eyes of science, until now. Among
others, I have discovered a primates, of the genus, homo; species, Kentucky;
which I term, Paul—”</p>
<p>“Hist, for the sake of mercy!” said Ellen; “speak lower,
Doctor, or we shall be ruined.”</p>
<p>“Hover; by profession a collector of the apes, or bee,” continued
the other. “Do I use the vernacular now,—am I understood?”</p>
<p>“Perfectly, perfectly,” returned the girl, breathing with
difficulty, in her surprise. “But what of him? did he tell you to mount
this rock?—he knows nothing, himself; for the oath I gave my uncle has
shut my mouth.”</p>
<p>“Ay, but there is one that has taken no oath, who has revealed all. I
would that the mantle which is wrapped around the mysteries of nature, were as
effectually withdrawn from its hidden treasures! Ellen! Ellen! the man with
whom I have unwittingly formed a compactum, or agreement, is sadly forgetful of
the obligations of honesty! Thy uncle, child.”</p>
<p>“You mean Ishmael Bush, my father’s brother’s widow’s
husband,” returned the offended girl, a little
proudly.—“Indeed, indeed, it is cruel to reproach me with a tie
that chance has formed, and which I would rejoice so much to break for
ever!”</p>
<p>The humbled Ellen could utter no more, but sinking on a projection of the rock,
she began to sob in a manner that rendered their situation doubly critical. The
Doctor muttered a few words, which he intended as an apologetic explanation,
but before he had time to complete his laboured vindication, she arose and said
with decision—</p>
<p>“I did not come here to pass my time in foolish tears, nor you to try to
stop them. What then has brought you hither?”</p>
<p>“I must see the inmate of that tent.”</p>
<p>“You know what it contains?”</p>
<p>“I am taught to believe I do; and I bear a letter, which I must deliver
with my own hands. If the animal prove a quadruped, Ishmael is a true
man—if a biped, fledged or unfledged, I care not, he is false, and our
compactum at an end!”</p>
<p>Ellen made a sign for the Doctor to remain where he was, and to be silent. She
then glided into the tent, where she continued many minutes, that proved
exceedingly weary and anxious to the expectant without, but the instant she
returned, she took him by the arm, and together they entered beneath the folds
of the mysterious cloth.</p>
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