220 
WILD SCENES AND SONG-BIEDS. 
The moment the man was beyond ear-shot, I turned to 
Yankee, and said sharply, " Look yon, my good fellow, if 
you don't beware how you use that whiskey, you may chance 
to wake up with your throat cut before you are done with it." 
The fellow only laughed out coarsely, and asserted, with 
a sly wink toward my friend — 
" That he wan't afraid of whiskey's cutting his throat, and 
wondered if /was afraid?" 
I turned from him in disgust, remarking, " I see you've 
got to learn a great deal about the West yet." 
In a moment after our host entered the door, and to our 
no little astonishment, accompanied by a train of powerful, 
ruffianly -looking fellows, which numbered, along with him- 
self, six in all, and made a by no means grateful addition to 
our company. 
A suspicion, which, as I have observed, continued to gain 
ground upon me, that we had fallen upon evil times here, 
and certainly into evil company ; for I never remembered 
chancing upon a more villainous group than this which now 
gathered about us. 
I was fully roused to the feeling of doubt and insecurity, 
as I carefully watched the movements of these fellows. I 
perceived in a moment that they were armed with knives as 
well as whiskey bottles. A look immediately passed between 
my friend and myself, and my course was determined upon 
for we were both, so far as I knew, unarmed, and I saw 
while they gathered more closely around us, with rough but 
over friendly greetings, that each man of them carried his 
knife with but a clumsy pretext of concealment underneath 
his shirt. I now felt at once what was the course proper to 
be pursued. That as we were in their ]3ower but too evi- 
dently, our only available course for the present, was in 
temporizing, and I saw too that it would be utterly useless 
for us to make any calculations upon the Yankee, who re- 
ceived them with a boisterous greeting. They immediately 
offered him the whiskey -bottle. He snatched it eagerly. 
