THE CREE INDIANS, OR EYTHINYUWUK. 



321 



DKIVING BISON OVER A PRECIPICE. 



In the year 1840 a bloody war broke |7 a ' ^^n^|V ) v 

 out between the Crees and the Bhack- ,\iy tes*'*)^) w^ 

 feet, arising as in general from a very ' " ' ' * *' 

 triilins: cause. Peace was at length eon- 

 eluded, but while the two nations Avere 

 celebrating this fortunate event with 

 games and races, a Cree stole a ragged 

 blanket, and a new fight immediately 

 beo-an. Returning home, the Blackfeet 

 met a Cree chieftain, with two of his 

 warriors, and killed them after a short 

 altercation. Soon after the Crees sur- 

 prised and murdered some of the Black- 

 feet, and thus the war raged more furiously than ever. Sir George Simpson, 

 who was travelling through the country at the time, visited the hut of a Cree 

 who had been wounded in the conflict at the peace meeting. As in his flight 

 he bent over his horse's neck, a ball had struck him on the right side, and re- 

 mained sticking near the ai'ticulation of the left sliouldei*. In this condition he 

 had already lain for thi-ee-and-thirty days, his left arm frightfully swollen, and 

 the rest of his body emaciated to a skeleton. Xear the dying savage, whose 

 glassy eye and contracted features spoke of the dreadful pain of which he dis- 

 dained to speak, lay his child, reduced to skin and bones, and expressing by a 

 perpetual moaning the pangs of illness and hunger, while most to be pitied 

 perhaps of this Avretched family was the Avife and mother, who seemed to 

 be sinking under the double load of care and fatisjue. Durins; the nioht the 

 "medicine-man" was busy beating his magic drum and driving away the evil 

 spirits from the hut. 



Although the Crees show great fortitude in enduring hunger and the other 

 evils incident to a hunter's life, yet any unusual accident dispirits them at once, 

 and they seldom venture to meet their enemies in open warfare, or even to sur- 

 prise them, iTuless they have a great advantage in j)ointof numbers. Instances 

 of personal bravery like that of the Esquimaux are rare indeed among them. 

 Superior in personal appearance to the Tinne, they are less honest, and though 

 perhaps not so much given to falsehood as the Tinne, ai'e more turbulent and 

 more prompt to invade the rights of their countrymen, as well as of neighbor- 

 ing nations. 



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