John S. C. (John Stevens Cabot) Abbott
Capitolo 48
who embraced gladly not a life subject to social laws. Some it was brave,
independent and game spirits that pleased him in the works and wild
adventures that theirs to shout has done necessary. All these men, the best with the
worse, it was subject to any wish but them really. And every experience goes
you try that a life of the perfect liberty is proper to degenerate in a life of
license.
"Also their his/her own lives and those of their companions, when depended
on their his/her own prudence, it was but it slightly considered. The constant
presence of danger did them unwise. It is to conceive effortless as, under
these circumstances, the nativeses and the foreigners started to hate each
other, in the Indian country, especially after the Americans came the
determination to 'hunting's wisecrack an Indian at sight.'
"On the other hand the employees of the Society of Bay of the Hudson they were many of
them the mean-races, or Indian of pure race of the nation of Iroquois, toward
who the tribes were almost all prepared kindly. Also French that
trapped for this Society, is liked well by the Indians on account of
their softness of way and the ease with which they adapted him
to attach with ferocity the life. They was trained to the life of a hunter of skins, it was subject
to the wish of the Society, and generally it was alone and equitable them
dealing with the Indians. The most greater part of them they also had native wives, and
children half-breed, and it was considered relatives. There was a breadth
difference."
It was the month of September when the Mr. Young and its party put out on
their return. Essentially the run of routing of return was the same what they had
it already crossed. They made a breve you visit to the Mission of Fernando of St.,
and then it pressed above to the village of flourishing Mission of Los Angelos.
This City of the Angels, as you/he/she had called, from the salubrity of the
climate and the beauty of the scenery, were approximately on a small river four
one hundred and the southeast of fifty miles from the present place in San Francisco.