John S. C. (John Stevens Cabot) Abbott
Capitolo 35
Twenty-five of theirs that he has hidden in hidden. With the other fifteen him cautiously
advanced, and for a long time, as if alarmed, he arrested. The eminences all before
of them, seemed full with the decked out warriors. The preceding conflict had
taught them the powers of the pellet of deadly rifle. They held to a
respectful distance, never advancing unless it protected from of the tree or
stone.
But there was in hundreds of it almost attaches with ferocity surrounding the small ribbon,
and making the hills and plans echo with the horrendous war-cry. When
the hunters of skins arrested him and they slowly started to draw again, a deafening they shout it rose
from the triumphant enemy, and in a simultaneous position they advanced, but
he/she cautiously anchors, not risking himself/herself/itself near enough to discharge their arrows.
They was drawn so long in the trap. When fairly inside series of rifle,
twenty-five infallible shots from their hideaway, almost to the same
instant, opened a discharge of death-distribution on the surprise and bewildered
warlike. The butchery was terrible over anything that them they ever had, in
their native battles, testified before. Twenty-five of them braver
warlike, for the bravest it was in the advance, you fall dead or severely
wounded. The Indians were thrown in an absolute panic.
The thunder, the lightning, and the death-arrows had come from them he/she knew
not where. With almost the rapidity of thought the rifles were again
loaded and the united and whole ribbon dressed again wicker in before on the Indians that were
wildly now flying in all the directions. Instinct taught them to complete everybody
son-in-laws of rotations to avoid the pellets that undertook them. They did anybody
you try to reunion, although many of their proud warriors had gone away behind
lifeless, or in struggle in the convulsions of death.
The power of the rifle was such that, in those days, forty or fifty men
it ever hesitated to hock whole tribe, although it is probable that numbers one or two
thousand warriors. A man will fight with terrible persistence when him