The boys began at once the work on their raft, a rude structure
of a few fallen logs, fastened together with bark and brush, but
simple, strong and safe. They finished it in two days, existing
meanwhile on the deer meat, and early the morning afterwards, the
clumsy craft, bearing the two navigators, was duly intrusted to
the mercy of the unknown river. Each of the boys carried a
slender hickory pole with which to steer, and they also fastened
securely to the raft the remainder of their deer, their most
precious possession.
They pushed off with the poles, and the current catching their
craft, carried it gently along. It was a fine little river,
running in a deep channel, and Henry became more sure than ever
that it was the one that flowed by Wareville. He was certain
that the family resemblance was too strong for him to be
mistaken.
They floated on for hours, rarely using their poles to increase
the speed of the raft and by and by they began to pass between
cliffs of considerable height. The forest here was very dense.
Mighty oaks and hickories grew right at the water's edge,
throwing out their boughs so far that often the whole stream was
in the shade. Henry enjoyed it. This was one of the things that
his fancy had pictured. He was now floating down an unknown
river, through unknown lands, and, like as not, his and Paul's
were the first human eyes that had ever looked upon these hills
and splendid forests. Reposing now after work and danger he
breathed again the breath of the wilderness. He loved it-its
silence, its magnificent spaces, and its majesty. He was glad
that he had come to Kentucky, where life was so much grander than
it was back in the old Eastern regions. Here one was not fenced
in and confined and could grow to his true stature.
They ate their dinner on the raft, still floating peacefully and
tried to guess how far they had come, but neither was able to
judge the speed of the current. Paul fitted himself into a snug
place on their queer craft and after a while went to sleep.
Henry watched him, lest he turn over and fall into the river and
also kept an eye out for other things.
He was watching thus, when about the middle of the afternoon he
saw a thin dark line, lying like a thread, against the blue
skies. He studied it long and came to the conclusion that it was
smoke.
"Smoke!" said he to himself. "Maybe that means Wareville."
The raft glided gently with the current, moving so smoothly and
peacefully that it was like the floating of a bubble on a summer
sea. Paul still lay in a dreamless sleep. The water was silver
in the shade and dim gold where the sunshine fell upon it, and
the trees, a solid mass, touched already by the brown of early
autumn, dropped over the stream. Afar, a fine haze, like a misty
veil, hung over the forest. The world was full of peace and
primitive beauty.
They drifted on and the spire of smoke broadened and grew. The
look of the river became more and more familiar. Paul still
slept and Henry would not awaken him. He looked at the face of
his comrade as he slumbered and noticed for the first time that
it was thin and pale. The life in the woods had been hard upon
Paul. Henry did not realize until this moment how very hard it
had been. The sight of that smoke had not come too soon.
There was a shout from the bank followed by the crash of bodies
among the undergrowth.
"Smoke me, but here they are a-floatin' down the river in their
own boat, as comfortable as two lords!"
It was the voice of Shif'less Sol, and his face, side-by-side
with that of Ross, the guide, appeared among the trees at the
river's brink. Henry felt a great flush of joy when he saw them,
and waved his hands. Paul, awakened by the shouts, was in a daze
at first, but when he beheld old friends again his delight was
intense.
Henry thrust a pole against the bottom and shoved the raft to the
bank. Then he and Paul sprang ashore and shook hands again and
again with Ross and Sol. Ross told of the long search for the
two boys. He and Mr. Ware and Shif'less Sol and a half dozen
others had never ceased to seek them. They feared at one time
that they had been carried off by savages, but nowhere did they
find Indian traces. Then their dread was of starvation or death
by wild animals, and they had begun to lose hope.
Both Henry and Paul were deeply moved by the story of the grief
at Wareville. They knew even without the telling that this
sorrow had never been demonstrative. The mothers of the West
were too much accustomed to great tragedies to cry out and wring
their hands when a blow fell. Theirs was always a silent grief,
but none the less deep.
Then, guided by Ross and the shiftless one, they proceeded to
Wareville which was really at the bottom of the smoke spire,
where they were received, as two risen from the dead, in a
welcome that was not noisy, but deep and heartfelt. The cow, the
original cause of the trouble, had wandered back home long ago.
"How did you live in the forest?" asked Mr. Ware of Henry, after
the first joy of welcome was shown.
"It was hard at first, but we were beginning to learn," replied
the boy. "If we'd only had our rifles 'twould have been no
trouble. And father, the wilderness is splendid!"
The boy's thoughts wandered far away for a moment to the wild
woods where he again lay in the shade of mighty oaks and saw the
deer come down to drink. Mr. Ware noticed the expression on
Henry's face and took reflection. "I must not let the yoke bear
too heavy upon him," was his unspoken thought.
But Paul's joy was unalloyed; he preferred life at Wareville to
life in the wilderness amid perpetual hardships, and when they
gave the great dinner at Mr. Ware's to celebrate the return of
the wanderers he reached the height of human bliss. Both Ross
and Shif'less Sol were present and with them too were Silas
Pennypacker who could preach upon occasion for the settlement and
did it, now and then, and John Upton, who next to Mr. Ware was
the most notable man in Wareville, and his daughter Lucy, now a
shy, pretty girl of twelve, and more than twenty others. Even
Braxton Wyatt was among the members although he still sneered at
Henry.
Theirs was in very truth a table fit for a king. In fact few
kings could duplicate it, without sending to the uttermost parts
of the earth, and perhaps not then. Meat was its staple. They
had wild duck, wild goose, wild turkey, deer, elk, beaver tail,
and a half dozen kinds of fish; but the great delicacy was
buffalo hump cooked in a peculiar way - that is, served up in the
hide of a buffalo from which the hair had been singed off, and
baked in an earthen oven. Ross, who had learned it from the
Indians, showed them how to do this, and they agreed that none of
them had ever before tasted so fine a dish. When the dinner was
over, Henry and Paul had to answer many questions about their
wanderings, and they were quite willing to do so, feeling at the
moment a due sense of their own importance.
A shade passed over the faces of some of the men at the mention
of the Indians, whom Henry and Paul had seen, but Ross agreed
with Henry go that they were surely of the South, going home from
a hunting trip, and so they were soon forgotten.
Henry's work after their return included an occasional hunting
excursion, as game was always needed. His love of the wilderness
did not decrease when thus he ranged through it and began to
understand its ways. Familiarity did not breed contempt. The
magnificent spaces and mighty silence appealed to him with
increasing force. The columns of the trees were like cathedral
aisles and the pure breath of the wind was fresh with life.
The first part of the autumn was hot and dry. The foliage died
fast, the leaves twisted and dried up and the brown grass stems
fell lifeless to the earth. A long time they were without rain,
and a dull haze of heat hung over the simmering earth. The river
shrank in its bed, and the brooks became rills.
Henry still hunted with his older comrades, though often at night
now, and he saw the forest in a new phase. Dried and burned it
appealed to him still. He learned to sleep lightly, that is, to
start up at the slightest sound, and one morning after the
wilderness had been growing hotter and dryer than ever he was
awakened by a faint liquid touch on the roof. He knew at once
that it was the rain, wished for so long and talked of so much,
and he opened the shutter window to see it fall.
The sun was just rising, but showed only a faint glow of pink
through the misty clouds, and the wind was light. The clouds
opened but a little at first and the great drops fell slowly.
The hot earth steamed at the touch, and, burning with thirst,
quickly drank in the moisture. The wind grew and the drops fell
faster. The heat fled away, driven by the waves of cool, fresh
air that came out of the west. Washed by the rain the dry grass
straightened up, and the dying leaves opened out, springing into
new life. Faster and faster came the drops and now the sound
they made was like the steady patter of musketry. Henry opened
his mouth and breathed the fresh clean air, and he felt that like
the leaves and grass he, too, was gaining new life.
When he went forth the next day in the dripping forest, the
wilderness seemed to be alive. The game swarmed everywhere and
he was a lazy man who could not take what he wished. It was like
a late touch of spring, but it did not last long, for then the
frosts came, the air grew crisp and cool and the foliage of the
forest turned to wonderful reds and yellows and browns. From the
summit of the blockhouse tower Henry saw a great blaze of varied
color, and he thought that he liked this part of the year best.
He could feel his own strength grow, and now that cold weather
was soon to come he would learn new ways to seek game and new
phases of the wilderness.
The autumn and its beauty deepened. The colors of the foliage
grew more intense and burned afar like flame. The settlers
lightened their work and most of them now spent a large part of
the time in hunting, pursuing it with the keen zest, born of a
natural taste and the relaxation from heavy labors. Mr. Ware and
a few others, anxious to test the qualities of the soil, were
plowing up newly cleared land to be sown in wheat, but Henry was
compelled to devote only a portion of his time to this work. The
remaining hours, not needed for sleep, he was usually in the
forest with Paul and the others.
The hunting was now glorious. Less than three miles from the
fort and about a mile from the river Henry and Paul found a
beaver dam across a tributary creek and they laid rude traps for
its builders, six of which they caught in the course of time.
Ross and Sol showed them how to take off the pelts which would be
of value when trade should be opened with the east, and also how
to cook beaver tail, a dish which could, with truth, be called a
rival of buffalo hump.
Now the settlers began to accumulate a great supply of game at
Wareville. Elk and deer and bear and buffalo and smaller animals
were being jerked and dried at every house, and every larder was
filled to the brim. There could be no lack of food the coming
winter, the settlers said, and they spoke with some pride of
their care and providence.
The village was gaining in both comfort and picturesqueness.
Tanned skins of the deer, elk, buffalo, bear, wolf, panther and
wild cat hung on the walls of every house, and were spread on
every floor. The women contrived fans and ornaments of the
beautiful mottled plumage of the wild-turkey. Cloth was hard to
obtain in the wilderness, as it might be a year before a pack
train would come over the mountains from the east, and so the
women made clothing of the softest and lightest of the dressed
deer skin. There were hunting shirts for the men and boys,
fastened at the waist by a belt, and with a fringe three or four
inches long, the bottom of which fell to the knees. The men and
boys also made themselves caps of raccoon skin with the tail
sewed on behind as a decoration. Henry and Paul were very proud
of theirs.
The finest robes of buffalo skin were saved for the beds, and
Ross gave warning that they should have full need of them.
Winters in Kentucky, he said, were often cold enough to freeze
the very marrow in one's bones, when even the wildest of men
would be glad enough to leave the woods and hover over a big
fire. But the settlers provided for this also by building great
stacks of firewood beside each house. They were as well equipped
with axes-keen, heavy weapons-as they were with rifles and
ammunition, and these were as necessary. The forest around
Wareville already gave great proof of their prowess with the ax.
Now the autumn was waning. Every morning the wilderness gleamed
and sparkled beneath a beautiful covering of white frost. The
brown in the leaves began to usurp the yellows and the reds. The
air, crisp and cold, had a strange nectar in it and its very
breath was life. The sun lay in the heavens a ball of gold, and
a fine haze, like a misty golden veil, hung over the forest. It
was Indian summer.
Then Indian summer passed and winter, which was very early that
year, came roaring down on Wareville. The autumn broke up in a
cold rain which soon turned to snow. The wind swept out of the
northwest, bitter and chill, and the desolate forest, every bough
stripped of its leaves, moaned before the blast.
But it was cheerful, when the sleet beat upon the roof and the
cold wind rattled the rude shutters, to sit before the big fires
and watch them sparkle and blaze.
There was another reason why Henry should now begin to spend much
of his time indoors. The Rev. Silas Pennypacker opened his
school for the winter, and it was necessary for Henry to attend.
Many of the pioneers who crossed the mountains from the Eastern
States and founded the great Western outpost of the nation in
Kentucky were men of education and cultivation, with a knowledge
of books and the world. They did not intend that their children
should grow up mere ignorant borderers, but they wished their
daughters to have grace and manners and their sons to become men
of affairs, fit to lead the vanguard of a mighty race. So a
first duty in the wilderness was to found schools, and this they
did.
The Reverend Silas was no lean and thin body, no hanger-on upon
stronger men, but of fine girth and stature with a red face as
round as the full moon, a glorious laugh and the mellowest voice
in the colony. He was by repute a famous scholar who could at
once give the chapter and text of any verse in the Bible and had
twice read through the ponderous history of the French gentleman,
M. Rollin. It was said, too, that he had nearly twenty volummes
of some famous romances by a French lady, one Mademoiselle de
Scudery, brought over the mountains in a box, but of this Henry
and Paul could not speak with certainty, as a certain wooden
cupboard in Mr. Pennypacker's house was always securely locked.
But the teacher was a favorite in the settlement with both men
and women. A sight of his cheerful face was considered good
enough to cure chills and fever, and for the matter of that he
was an expert hand with both ax and rifle. His uses in Wareville
were not merely mental and spiritual. He was at all times able
and willing to earn his own bread with his own strong hands,
though the others seldom permitted him to do so.
Henry entered school with some reluctance. Being nearly sixteen
now, with an unusually powerful frame developed by a forest life,
he was as large as an ordinary man and quite as strong. He
thought he ought to have done with schools, and set up in man's
estate but his father insisted upon another winter under Mr.
Pennypacker's care and Henry yielded.
There were perhaps thirty boys and girls who sat on the rough
wooden benches in the school and received tuition. Mr.
Pennypacker did not undertake to guide them through many branches
of learning, but what he taught he taught well. He, too, had the
feeling that these boys and girls were to be the men and women
who would hold the future of the West in their hands, and he
intended that they should be fit. There were statesmen and
generals among those red-faced boys on the benches, and the wives
and mothers of others among the red-faced girls who sat near
them, and he tried to teach them their duty as the heirs of a
wilderness, soon to be the home of a great race.
Among his favorite pupils was Paul who had not Henry's eye and
hand in the forest, but who loved books and the knowledge of men.
He could follow the devious lines of history when Henry would
much rather have been following the devious trail of a deer.
Nevertheless, Henry persisted, borne up by the emulation of his
comrade, and the knowledge that it was his last winter in school.