HOW WE FARED. 196 



The task was a sad one, .and as tedious as it was Borrowful. We had 

 neither shovel nor pick-axe, and were compelled to dig it with our butcher 

 knives and hands. 



The pale-moon, new-risen, shed her sombre light over tlie dismal realms o" 

 Solitude, and an u/.ervening cloud cast its pall -like shaddow upon the 

 scene of sepulture, as we laid low the corse in mother dust. No shroud 

 covered — no useless coffin enclosed it, — a grave was the only gift witliin 

 the power of friendship to bestow ! A thin coating of eartli succeeded by 

 a layer of stones and drift-wood, and that again by another eartli-coat, was 

 its covering, — then, the mournful task was done, — a tear dropt to the mem- 

 ory of poor Prudom, and his body left to slumber m its narrow prison-house, 

 till the sound of the last trump shall wake the dead to judgment.* 



That night to us was a more painful one than any we had passed. A 

 feehng of superstitious awe, mingled with thrilling sensations of grief 

 and thoughts of our own miserable condition, occupied each mind and 

 usurped ihe soothing powers of sleep. The dolesome howlings of the 

 prairie-woif, and hootinga of the midnight owl, borne upon the listening 

 air, kept sad condolence with our musings, and gave increased momen- 

 tum to the pressure that crushed our spirits. Who could sleep, amid 

 such scenes and surrounded by such circumstances ? 



The rising sun of the morrow brought the hour of ■eparation, and ex- 

 hibited upon every face the same downcast look, prefiguring the inward- 

 workings of a mind aocurbed in the melancholy of its own thoughts. 



My party consisted of six, Pome of whom were selected from the crew 

 of our consort. We all embarked in one boat, taking with us a sraail 

 quantity of robes, (our own individual property,) and a portion of the pro- 

 visions at camp. 



Our voyage for a few days succeeding, was performed without much 

 difficulty, except in the article of food — for, from this onward, till wa 

 finally reached the settlements, (an interval of twenty-eight days,) wo 

 were without eating full one half of the time ! 



Proceeding some thirty miles, we overtook the American Fur Com- 

 pany's barges, three in number, the crews of which were struggling on 

 in vain effort to reach the States. We glided past them with a loua 

 huzza, and rallied the poor, toiling voyageurs, upon the futility of their 

 exertions. 



Five or six days subsequently, we were, in turn, overtaken by them ; — 

 they, like ourselves, abandoning all hope of accomplishing the objecta of 

 their voyage, had left their freight at Ash creek, under guard — and, from 

 that on, became our compagnons de voyage. 



The only game previous to reaching the forks of the Platte — a distance 

 of some two hundred miles — was now and then an antelope, with a few 

 •traggling deer. Our subsistence, meanwhile, was principally upon 



greens" and such roots as we had time and opportunity to gather. 



The country was pretty much of a uniform character, with that pre- 

 viously described. The rich alluvion of the river bottom reposed upon 

 a varied substratum of sand, marl, gravel, PJid clay. 



* On my return the ensuing fall, I learned that the body of the unfortunate youig 

 nan had been diidntened by wolves and devoured. 



