John S. C. (John Stevens Cabot) Abbott
Capitolo 36
he/she knows that defeat is dead inevitable from torture. It is a thousandfold
better falling under of the arrow, the ax of the redskins or the war-baton, that to be
consumed alive among the it derides and torture to shout Indian inhaled
with demoniac instincts. It was always so with the hunter of skins or
victory or death.
These hostile warriors with a gravity were punished never for being
forgotten. The fugitives brought far and wide to the other wandering tribes the
news of their disaster. The daring hunters of skins proceeded on their way,
not meeting serious nuisance anymore. You smoke on the distant hills
it pointed out that at their March was looked. If a trap had put to some distance
from the camp of the night, it was certainly enough stolen. Or if a tired
mule had departed to enlist, a small back part, intending of trarrlo on
the morning, in front of the dawn he disappeared.
The whole party followed down slowly a tributary people of the river of Colorado,
trapping a lot with success on the principal brook and his/her branches, up to that
they arrived the head he/she sprinkles some river in San Francisco. Them then
separated, and the Mr. Young with Carson and seventeen others proceeded a lot
one hundred miles more distant west, to the valley of the Sacrament. Before
putting out for this long trip, as it was uncertain that their game
it would find by the way, two or three days were devoted to chasing. The
skins of three buck you/he/she was converted in reservoirs of water without which you/they were
difficulty brought by the mules. They was incited to this caution because
of the friendly Indians had assured that there was a great abandonment
of water by the way.
The their their March they met a tribe of Indians in all of them native
savageness. They was very friendly although they didn't evidently have ever seen a
white man before. Perhaps their friendliness was _because_ that they never had
it still satisfied any pale face, they suffered accordingly who this way
great evil. These Indians introduced notably excellent champions of the