Guides
and Hunters. -- Delawares and Shawnees. -- Khebirs. -- Black
Beaver. -- Anecdotes. -- Domestic Troubles. -- Lodges. --
Similarity of Prairie Tribes to the Arabs. -- Method of
making War. -- Tracking and pursuing Indians. -- Method
of attacking them. -- Telegraphing by Smokes.
DELAWARES
AND SHAWNEES.
IT
is highly important that parties making expeditions through
an unexplored country should secure the services of the
best guides and hunters, and I know of none who are superior
to the Delawares and Shawnee Indians. They have been with
me upon several different occasions, and I have invariably
found them intelligent, brave, reliable, and in every respect
well qualified to fill their positions. They are endowed
with those keen and wonderful powers in woodcraft which
can only be acquired by instinct, practice, and necessity,
and which are possessed by no other people that I have heard
of, unless it be the khebirs or guides who escort the caravans
across the great desert of Sahara.
General
E. Dumas, in his treatise upon the "Great Desert,"
published in Paris, 1856, in speaking of these guides, says:
"The khebir is always a man of intelligence, of tried
probity, bravery, and skill. He knows how to determine his
position from the appearance of the stars; by the experience
of other journeys he has learned all about the roads, wells,
and pastures; the dangers of certain passes, and the means
of avoiding them; all the chiefs whose territories it is
necessary to pass through; the salubrity of the different
localities; the remedies against diseases; the treatment
of fractures, and the antidotes to the venom of snakes and
scorpions.
"In
these vast solitudes, where nothing seems to indicate the
route, where the wind covers up all traces of the track
with sand, the khebir has a thousand ways of directing himself
in the right course. In the night, when there are no stars
in sight, by the simple inspection of a handful of grass,
which he examines with his fingers, which he smells and
tastes, he informs himself of his locale without ever being
lost or wandering.
"I
saw with astonishment that our conductor, although he had
but one eye, and that defective, recognized perfectly the
route; and Leon, the African, states that the conductor
of his caravan became blind upon the journey from ophthalmia,
yet by feeling the grass and sand he could tell when we
were approaching an inhabited place.
"Our
guide had all the qualities which make a good khebir. He
was young, large, and strong; he was a master of arms; his
eye commanded respect, and his speech won the heart. But
if in the tent he was affable and winning, once en route
he spoke only when it was necessary, and never smiled."
The
Delawares are but a minute remnant of the great Algonquin
family, whose early traditions declare them to be the parent
stock from which the other numerous branches of the Algonquin
tribes originated. And they are the same people whom the
first white settlers found so numerous upon the banks of
the Delaware.
When
William Penn held his council with the Delawares upon the
ground where the city of Philadelphia now stands, they were
as peaceful and unwarlike in their habits as the Quakers
themselves. They had been subjugated by the Five Nations,
forced to take the appellation of squaws, and forego the
use of arms; but after they moved west, beyond the influence
of their former masters, their naturally independent spirit
revived, they soon regained their lofty position as braves
and warriors, and the male squaws of the Iroquois soon became
formidable men and heroes, and so have continued to the
present day. Their war-path has reached the shores of the
Pacific Ocean on the west, Hudson's Bay on the north, and
into the very heart of Mexico on the south.
They
are not clannish in their dispositions like most other Indians,
nor by their habits confined to any given locality, but
are found as traders, trappers, or hunters among most of
the Indian tribes inhabiting our continent. I even saw them
living with the Mormons in Utah. They are among the Indians
as the Jews among the whites, essentially wanderers.
The
Shawnees have been associated with the Delawares 185 years.
They intermarry and live as one people. Their present places
of abode are upon the Missouri River, near Fort Leavenworth,
and in the Choctaw Territory, upon the Canadian River, near
Fort Arbuckle. They are familiar with many of the habits
and customs of their pale-faced neighbors, and some of them
speak the English language, yet many of their native characteristics
tenaciously cling to them.
Upon
one occasion I endeavored to teach a Delaware the use of
the compass. He seemed much interested in its mechanism,
and very attentively observed the oscillations of the needle.
He would move away a short distance, then return, keeping
his eyes continually fixed upon the needle and the uniform
position into which it settled. He did not, however, seem
to comprehend it in the least, but regarded the entire proceeding
as a species of necromantic performance got up for his especial
benefit, and I was about putting away the instrument when
he motioned me to stop, and came walking toward it with
a very serious but incredulous countenance, remarking, as
he pointed his finger toward it, "Maybe so he tell
lie sometime."
The
ignorance evinced by this Indian regarding the uses of the
compass is less remarkable than that of some white men who
are occasionally met upon the frontier.
While
surveying Indian lands in the wilds of Western Texas during
the summer of 1854, I encountered a deputy surveyor traveling
on foot, with his compass and chain upon his back. I saluted
him very politely, remarking that I presumed he was a surveyor,
to which he replied, "I reckon, stranger, I ar that
thar individoal."
I
had taken the magnetic variation several times, always with
nearly the same results (about 10 20') ; but, in order to
verify my observations, I was curious to learn how they
accorded with his own working, and accordingly inquired
of him what he made the variation of the compass in that
particular locality. He seemed struck with astonishment,
took his compass from his back and laid it upon a log near
by, then facing me, and pointing with his had toward it,
said,
"Straanger,
do yer see that thar instru-ment?" to which I replied
in the affirmative. He continued,
"I've
owned her well-nigh goin on twenty year. I've put her through
the perarries and through the timber, and now look yeer,
straanger, you can just bet your life on't she never var-ried
aary time, and if you'll just follow her sign you'll knock
the centre outer the north star. She never lies, she don't."
He
seemed to consider my interrogoatory as a direct insinuation
that his compass was an imperfect one, and hence his indignation.
Thinking that I should not get any very important intelligence
concerning the variation of the needle from this surveyor,
I begged his pardon for questioning the accuracy of his
instru-ment, bid him good-morning, and continued on my journey.
BLACK BEAVER.
In
1849 I met with a very interesting specimen of the Delaware
tribe whose name was Black Beaver. He had for ten years
been in the employ of the American Fur Company, and during
this time had visited nearly every point of interest within
the limits of our unsettled territory. He had set his traps
and spread his blanket upon the head waters of the Missouri
and Columbia; and his wanderings had led him south to the
Colorado and Gila, and thence to the shores of the Pacific
in Southern California. His life had been that of a veritable
cosmopolite, filled with scenes of intense and startling
interest, bold and reckless adventure. He was with me two
seasons in the capacity of guide, and I always found him
perfectly reliable, brave, and competent. His reputation
as a resolute, determined, and fearless warrior did not
admit of question, yet I have never seen a man who wore
his laurels with less vanity.
When
I first made his acquaintance I was puzzled to know what
to think of him. He would often, in speaking of the Prairie
Indians, say to me,
"Captain,
if you have a fight, you mustn't count much on me, for I'ze
a big coward. When the fight begins I 'spect you'll see
me run under the cannon; Injun mighty 'fraid of big gun."
I
expressed my surprise that he should, if what he told me
was true, have gained such a reputation as a warrior; whereupon
he informed me that many years previous, when he was a young
man, and before he had ever been in battle, he, with about
twenty white men and four Delawares, were at one of the
Fur Company's trading-posts upon the Upper Missouri, engaged
in trapping beaver. While there, the stockade fort was attacked
by a numerous band of Blackfeet Indians, who fought bravely,
and seemed determined to annihilate the little band that
defended it.
After
the investment had been completed, and there appeared no
probability of the attacking party's abandoning their purpose,
"One d--d fool Delaware" (as Black Beaver expressed
it) proposed to his countrymen to make a sortie, and thereby
endeavor to effect an impression upon the Blackfeet. This,
Beaver said, was the last thing he would ever have thought
of suggesting, and it startled him prodigiously, causing
him to tremble so much that it was with difficulty he could
stand.
He
had, however, started from home with the fixed purpose of
becoming a distinguished brave, and made a great effort
to stifle his emotion. He assumed an air of determination,
saying that was the very idea he was just about to propose;
and, slapping his comrades upon the back, started toward
the gate, telling them to follow. As soon as the gate was
passed, he says, he took particular care to keep in the
rear of the others, so that, in the event of a retreat,
he would be able to reach the stockade first.
They
had not proceeded far before a perfect shower of arrows
came falling around them on all sides, but, fortunately,
without doing them harm. Not fancying this hot reception,
those in front proposed an immediate retreat, to which he
most gladly acceded, and at once set off at his utmost speed,
expecting to reach the fort first. But he soon discovered
that his comrades were more fleet, and were rapidly passing
and leaving him behind. Suddenly he stopped and called out
to them, "Come back here, you cowards, you squaws;
what for you run away and leave brave man to fight alone?"
This taunting appeal to their courage turned them back,
and, with their united efforts, they succeeded in beating
off the enemy immediately around them, securing their entrance
into the fort.
Beaver
says when the gate was closed the captain in charge of the
establishment grasped him warmly by the hand, saying, "Black
Beaver, you are a brave man; you have done this day what
no other man in the fort would have the courage to do, and
I thank you from the bottom of my heart."
In
relating the circumstance to me he laughed most heartily,
thinking it a very good joke, and said after that he was
regarded as a brave warrior.
The
truth is, my friend Beaver was one of those few heroes who
never sounded his own trumpet; yet no one that knows him
ever presumed to question his courage.
At
another time, while Black Beaver remained upon the head
waters of the Missouri, he was left in charge of a "cache"
consisting of a quantity of goods buried to prevent their
being stolen by the Indians. During the time he was engaged
upon this duty he amused himself by hunting in the vicinity,
only visiting his charge once a day. As he was making one
of these periodical visits, and had arrived upon the summit
of a hill overlooking the locality, he suddenly discovered
a large number of hostile Blackfeet occupying it, and he
supposed they had appropriated all the goods. As soon as
they espied him, they beckoned for him to come down and
have a friendly chat with them.
Knowing
that their purpose was to beguile him into their power,
he replied that he did not feel in a talking humor just
at that time, and started off in another direction, whereupon
they hallooed after him, making use of the most insulting
language and gestures, and asking him if he considered himself
a man thus to run away from his friends, and intimating
that, in their opinion, he was an old woman, who had better
go home and take care of the children.
Beaver
says this roused his indignation to such a pitch that he
stopped, turned around, and replied, "Maybe so; s'pose
three or four of you Injuns come up here alone, I'll show
you if I'ze old womans." They did not, however, accept
the challenge, and Beaver rode off.
Although
the Delawares generally seem quite happy in their social
relations, yet they are not altogether exempt from some
of those minor discords which occasionally creep in and
mar the domestic harmony of their more civilized pale-faced
brethren.
I
remember, upon one occasion, I had bivouacked for the night
with Black Beaver, and he had been endeavoring to while
away the long hours of the evening by relating to me some
of the most thrilling incidents of his highly-adventurous
and erratic life, when at length a hiatus in the conversation
gave me an opportunity of asking him if he was a married
man. He hesitated for some time; then looking up and giving
his forefinger a twirl, to imitate the throwing of a lasso,
replied, "One time me catch 'um wife. I pay that woman,
his modder, one hoss-one saddle-one bridle-two plug tobacco,
and plenty goods. I take him home to my house-got plenty
meat-plenty corn-plenty every thing. One time me go take
walk, maybe so three, maybe so two hours. When I come home,
that woman he say, 'Black Beaver, what for you go way long
time?' I say, 'I not go nowhere; I just take one littel
walk.' Then that woman he get heap mad, and say, 'No, Black
Beaver, you not take no littel walk. I know what for you
go way; you go see nodder one woman.' I say, 'Maybe not.'
Then that woman she cry long time, and all e'time now she
mad. You never seen 'Merican woman that a-way?"
I
sympathized most deeply with my friend in his distress,
and told him for his consolation that, in my opinion, the
women of his nation were not peculiar in this respect; that
they were pretty much alike all over the world, and I was
under the impression that there were well-authenticated
instances even among white women where they had subjected
themselves to the same causes of complaint so feelingly
depicted by him. Whereupon he very earnestly asked, "What
you do for cure him? Whip him?" I replied, "No;
that, so far as my observation extended, I was under the
impression that this was generally regarded by those who
had suffered from its effects as one of those chronic and
vexatious complaints which would not be benefitted by the
treatment he suggested, even when administered in homeopathic
doses, and I believed it was now admitted by all sensible
men that it was better in all such cases to let nature take
its course, trusting to a merciful Providence."
At
this reply his countenance assumed a dejected expression,
but at length he brightened up again and triumphantly remarked,
"I tell you, my friend, what I do; I ketch 'um nodder
one wife when I go home."
Black
Beaver had visited St. Louis and the small towns upon the
Missouri frontier, and he prided himself not a little upon
his acquaintance with the customs of the whites, and never
seemed more happy than when an opportunity offered to display
this knowledge in presence of his Indian companions. It
so happened, upon one occasion, that I had a Comanche guide
who bivouacked at the same fire with Beaver. On visiting
them one evening according to my usual practice, I found
them engaged in a very earnest and apparently not very amicable
conversation. On inquiring the cause of this, Beaver answered,
"I've
been telling this Comanche what I seen 'mong the white folks."
I
said, "Well, Beaver, what did you tell him?"
"I
tell him 'bout the steam-boats, and the railroads, and the
heap o' houses I seen in St. Louis."
"Well,
sir, what does he think of that?"
"He
say I'ze d--d fool."
"What
else did you tell him about?"
"I
tell him the world is round, but he keep all e'time say,
Hush, you fool! do you s'pose I'ze child? Haven't I got
eyes? Can't I see the prairie? You call him round? He say,
too, maybe so I tell you something you not know before.
One time my grandfather he make long journey that way (pointing
to the west). When he get on big mountain he seen heap water
on t'other side, jest so flat he can be, and he seen the
sun go right straight down on t'other side. I then tell
him all these rivers he seen, all e'time the water he run;
s'pose the world flat the water he stand still. Maybe so
he not b'lieve me?"
I
told him it certainly looked very much like it. I then asked
him to explain to the Comanche the magnetic telegraph. He
looked at me earnestly, and said,
"What
you call that magnetic telegraph?"
I
said, "You have heard of New York and New Orleans?"
"Oh
yes," he replied.
"Very
well; we have a wire connecting these two cities, which
are about a thousand miles apart, and it would take a man
thirty days to ride it upon a good horse. Now a man stands
at one end of this wire in New York, and by touching it
a few times he inquires of his friend in New Orleans what
he had for breakfast. His friend in New Orleans touches
the other end of the wire, and in ten minutes the answer
comes back--ham and eggs. Tell him that, Beaver."
His
countenance assumed a most comical expression, but he made
no remark until I again requested him to repeat what I had
said to the Comanche, when he observed,
"No,
captain, I not tell him that, for I don't b'lieve that myself."
Upon
my assuring him that such was the fact, and that I had seen
it myself, he said,
"Injun
not very smart; sometimes he's big fool, but he holler pretty
loud; you hear him maybe half a mile; you say 'Merican man
he talk thousand miles. I 'spect you try to fool me now,
captain; maybe so you lie."
The
Indians living between the outer white settlements and the
nomadic tribes of the Plains form intermediate social links
in the chain of civilization.
The
first of these occupy permanent habitations, but the others,
although they cultivate the soil, are only resident while
their crops are growing, going out into the prairies after
harvest to spend the winter in hunting. Among the former
may be mentioned the Cherokees, Creeks, Choctaws, and Chickasaws,
and of the latter are the Delawares, Shawnees, Kickapoos,
etc., who are perfectly familiar with the use of the rifle,
and, in my judgment, would make as formidable partisan warriors
as can be found in the universe. THE WILD TRIBES OF THE
WEST.
These
are very different in their habits from the natives that
formerly occupied the country bordering upon the Atlantic
coast. The latter lived permanently in villages, where they
cultivated the soil, and never wandered very far from them.
They did not use horses, but always made their war expeditions
on foot, and never came into action unless they could screen
themselves behind the cover of trees. They inflicted the
most inhuman tortures upon their prisoners, but did not,
that I am aware, violate the chastity of women.
The
prairie tribes have no permanent abiding places; they never
plant a seed, but roam for hundreds of miles in every direction
over the Plains. They are perfect horsemen, and seldom go
to war on foot. Their attacks are made in the open prairies,
and when unhorsed they are powerless. They do not, like
the eastern Indians, inflict upon their prisoners prolonged
tortures, but invariably subject all females that have the
misfortune to fall into their merciless clutches to an ordeal
worse than death.
It
is highly important to every man passing through a country
frequented by Indians to know some of their habits, customs,
and propensities, as this will facilitate his intercourse
with friendly tribes, and enable him, when he wishes to
avoid a conflict, to take precautions against coming in
collision with those who are hostile.
Almost
every tribe has its own way of constructing its lodges,
encamping, making fires, its own style of dress, by some
of which peculiarities the experienced frontiersman can
generally distinguish them.
The
Osages, for example, make their lodges in the shape of a
wagon-top, of bent rods or willows covered with skins, blankets,
or the bark of trees.
The
Kickapoo lodges are made in an oval form, something like
a rounded hay-stack, of poles set in the ground, bent over,
and united at top; this is covered with cloths or bark.
The
Witchetaws, Wacos, Towackanies, and Tonkowas erect their
hunting lodges of sticks put up in the form of the frustum
of a cone and covered with brush.
All
these tribes leave the frame-work of their lodges standing
when they move from camp to camp, and this, of course, indicates
the particular tribe that erected them.
The
Delawares and Shawnees plant two upright forked poles, place
a stick across them, and stretch a canvas covering over
it, in the same manner as with the "tente d'abri."
The
Sioux, Arapahos, Cheyennes, Utes, Snakes, Blackfeet, and
Kioways make use of the Comanche lodge, covered with dressed
buffalo hides.
All
the Prairie Indians I have met with are the most inveterate
beggars. They will flock around strangers, and, in the most
importunate manner, ask for every thing they see, especially
tobacco and sugar; and, if allowed, they will handle, examine,
and occasionally pilfer such things as happen to take their
fancy. The proper way to treat them is to give them at once
such articles as are to be disposed of, and then, in a firm
and decided manner, let them understand that they are to
receive nothing else.
A
party of Keechis once visited my camp with their principal
chief, who said he had some important business to discuss,
and demanded a council with the capitan. After consent had
been given, he assembled his principal men, and, going through
the usual preliminary of taking a big smoke, he arose, and
with a great deal of ceremony commenced his pompous and
flowery speech, which, like all others of a similar character,
amounted to nothing, until he touched upon the real object
of his visit. He said he had traveled a long distance over
the prairies to see and have a talk with his white brothers;
that his people were very hungry and naked. He then approached
me with six small sticks, and, after shaking hands, laid
one of the sticks in my hand, which he said represented
sugar, another signified tobacco, and the other four, pork,
flour, whisky, and blankets, all of which he assured me
his people were in great need of, and must have. His talk
was then concluded, and he sat down, apparently much gratified
with the graceful and impressive manner with which he had
executed his part of the performance.
It
then devolved upon me to respond to the brilliant effort
of the prairie orator, which I did in something like the
following manner. After imitating his style for a short
time, I closed my remarks by telling him that we were poor
infantry soldiers, who were always obliged to go on foot;
that we had become very tired of walking, and would like
very much to ride. Furthermore, I had observed that they
had among them many fine horses and mules. I then took two
small sticks, and imitating as nearly as possible the manner
of the chief, placed one in his hand, which I told him was
nothing more or less than a first-rate horse, and then the
other, which signified a good large mule. I closed by saying
that I was ready to exchange presents whenever it suited
his convenience.
They
looked at each other for some time without speaking, but
finally got up and walked away, and I was not troubled with
them again. INDIAN FIGHTING.
The
military system, as taught and practiced in our army up
to the time of the Mexican war, was, without doubt, efficient
and well adapted to the art of war among civilized nations.
This system was designed for the operations of armies acting
in populated districts, furnishing ample resources, and
against an enemy who was tangible, and made use of a similar
system.
The
vast expanse of desert territory that has been annexed to
our domain within the last few years is peopled by numerous
tribes of marauding and erratic savages, who are mounted
upon fleet and hardy horses, making war the business and
pastime of their lives, and acknowledging none of the ameliorating
conventionalities of civilized warfare. Their tactics are
such as to render the old system almost wholly impotent.
To
act against an enemy who is here to-day and there to-morrow;
who at one time stampedes a herd of mules upon the head
waters of the Arkansas, and when next heard from is in the
very heart of the populated districts of Mexico, laying
waste haciendas, and carrying devastation, rapine, and murder
in his steps; who is every where without being any where;
who assembles at the moment of combat, and vanishes whenever
fortune turns against him; who leaves his women and children
far distant from the theater of hostilities, and has neither
towns or magazines to defend, nor lines of retreat to cover;
who derives his commissariat from the country he operates
in, and is not encumbered with baggage wagons or pack-trains;
who comes into action only when it suits his purposes, and
never without the advantage of numbers or position-with
such an enemy the strategic science of civilized nations
loses much of its importance, and finds but rarely, and
only in peculiar localities, an opportunity to be put in
practice.
Our
little army, scattered as it has been over the vast area
of our possessions, in small garrisons of one or two companies
each, has seldom been in a situation to act successfully
on the offensive against large numbers of these marauders,
and has often been condemned to hold itself almost exclusively
upon the defensive. The morale of the troops must thereby
necessarily be seriously impaired, and the confidence of
the savages correspondingly augmented. The system of small
garrisons has a tendency to disorganize the troops in proportion
as they are scattered, and renders them correspondingly
inefficient. The same results have been observed by the
French army in Algeria, where, in 1845, their troops were,
like ours, disseminated over a vast space, and broken up
into small detachments stationed in numerous intrenched
posts. Upon the sudden appearance of Abd el Kader in the
plain of Mitidja, they were defeated with serious losses,
and were from day to day obliged to abandon these useless
stations, with all the supplies they contained. A French
writer, in discussing this subject, says:
"We
have now abandoned the fatal idea of defending Algeria by
small intrenched posts. In studying the character of the
war, the nature of the men who are to oppose us, and of
the country in which we are to operate, we must be convinced
of the danger of admitting any other system of fortification
than that which is to receive our grand depots, our magazines,
and to serve as places to recruit and rest our troops when
exhausted by long expeditionary movements.
"These
fortifications should be established in the midst of the
centers of action, so as to command the principal routes,
and serve as pivots to expeditionary columns.
"We
owe our success to a system of war which has its proofs
in twice changing our relations with the Arabs. This system
consists altogether in the great mobility we have given
to our troops. Instead of disseminating our soldiers with
the vain hope of protecting our frontiers with a line of
small posts, we have concentrated them, to have them at
all times ready for emergencies, and since then the fortune
of the Arabs has waned, and we have marched from victory
to victory.
"This
system, which has thus far succeeded, ought to succeed always,
and to conduct us, God willing, to the peaceful possession
of the country."
In
reading a treatise upon war as it is practiced by the French
in Algeria, by Colonel A. Laure, of the 2d Algerian Tirailleurs,
published in Paris in 1858, I was struck with the remarkable
similarity between the habits of the Arabs and those of
the wandering tribes that inhabit our Western prairies.
Their manner of making war is almost precisely the same,
and a successful system of strategic operations for one
will, in my opinion, apply to the other.
As
the Turks have been more successful than the French in their
military operations against the Arab tribes, it may not
be altogether uninteresting to inquire by what means these
inferior soldiers have accomplished the best results.
The
author above mentioned, in speaking upon this subject, says:
"In
these latter days the world is occupied with the organization
of mounted infantry, according to the example of the Turks,
where, in the most successful experiments that have been
made, the mule carries the foot-soldier.
"The
Turkish soldier mounts his mule, puts his provisions upon
one side and his accoutrements upon the other, and, thus
equipped, sets out upon long marches, traveling day and
night, and only reposing occasionally in bivouac. Arrived
near the place of operations (as near the break of day as
possible), the Turks dismount in the most profound silence,
and pass in succession the bridle of one mule through that
of another in such a manner that a single man is sufficient
to hold forty or fifty of them by retaining the last bridle,
which secures all the others; they then examine their arms,
and are ready to commence their work. The chief gives his
last orders, posts his guides, and they make the attack,
surprise the enemy, generally asleep, and carry the position
without resistance. The operation terminated, they hasten
to beat a retreat, to prevent the neighboring tribes from
assembling, and thus avoid a combat.
"The
Turks had only three thousand mounted men and ten thousand
infantry in Algeria, yet these thirteen thousand men sufficed
to conquer the same obstacles which have arrested us for
twenty-six years, notwithstanding the advantage we had of
an army which was successively re-enforced until it amounted
to a hundred thousand.
"Why
not imitate the Turks, then, mount our infantry upon mules,
and reduce the strength of our army?
"The
response is very simple:
"The
Turks are Turks-that is to say, Mussulmans-and indigenous
to the country; the Turks speak the Arabic language; the
Days of Algiers had less country to guard than we, and they
care very little about retaining possession of it. They
are satisfied to receive a part of its revenues. They were
not permanent; their dominion was held by a thread. The
Arab dwells in tents; his magazines are in caves. When he
starts upon a war expedition, he folds his tent, drives
far away his beasts of burden, which transport his effects,
and only carries with him his horse and arms. Thus equipped,
he goes every where; nothing arrests him; and often, when
we believe him twenty leagues distant, he is in ambush at
precisely rifle range from the flanks of his enemy.
"It
may be thought the union of contingents might retard their
movements, but this is not so. The Arabs, whether they number
ten or a hundred thousand, move with equal facility. They
go where they wish and as they wish upon a campaign; the
place of rendezvous merely is indicated, and they arrive
there.
"What
calculations can be made against such an organization as
this?
"Strategy
evidently loses its advantages against such enemies; a general
can only make conjectures; he marches to find the Arabs,
and finds them not; then, again, when he least expects it,
he suddenly encounters them.
"When
the Arab despairs of success in battle, he places his sole
reliance upon the speed of his horse to escape destruction;
and as he is always in a country where he can make his camp
beside a little water, he travels until he has placed a
safe distance between himself and his enemy."
No
people probably on the face of the earth are more ambitious
of martial fame, or entertain a higher appreciation for
the deeds of a daring and successful warrior, than the North
American savages. The attainment of such reputation is the
paramount and absorbing object of their lives; all their
aspirations for distinction invariably take this channel
of expression. A young man is never considered worthy to
occupy a seat in council until he has encountered an enemy
in battle; and he who can count the greatest number of scalps
is the most highly honored by his tribe. This idea is inculcated
from their earliest infancy. It is not surprising, therefore,
that, with such weighty inducements before him, the young
man who, as yet, has gained no renown as a brave or warrior,
should be less discriminate in his attacks than older men
who have already acquired a name. The young braves should,
therefore, be closely watched when encountered on the Plains.
The
prairie tribes are seldom at peace with all their neighbors,
and some of the young braves of a tribe are almost always
absent upon a war excursion. These forays sometimes extend
into the heart of the northern states of Mexico, where the
Indians have carried on successful invasions for many years.
They have devastated and depopulated a great portion of
Sonora and Chihuahua. The objects of these forays are to
steal horses and mules, and to take prisoners; and if it
so happens that a war-party has been unsuccessful in the
accomplishment of these ends, or has had the misfortune
to lose some of its number in battle, they become reckless,
and will often attack a small party with whom they are not
at war, provided they hope to escape detection. The disgrace
attendant upon a return to their friends without some trophies
as an offset to the loss of their comrades is a powerful
incentive to action, and they extend but little mercy to
defenseless travelers who have the misfortune to encounter
them at such a conjuncture.
While
en route from New Mexico to Arkansas in 1849 I was encamped
near the head of the Colorado River, and wishing to know
the character of the country for a few miles in advance
of our position, I desired an officer to go out and make
the reconnaissance. I was lying sick in my bed at the time,
or I should have performed the duty myself. I expected the
officer would have taken an escort with him, but he omitted
to do so, and started off alone. After proceeding a short
distance he discovered four mounted Indians coming at full
speed directly toward him, when, instead of turning his
own horse toward camp, and endeavoring to make his escape
(he was well mounted), or of halting and assuming a defensive
attitude, he deliberately rode up to them; after which the
tracks indicated that they proceeded about three miles together,
when the Indians most brutally killed and scalped my most
unfortunate but too credulous friend, who might probably
have saved his life had he not, in the kindness of his excellent
heart, imagined that the savages would reciprocate his friendly
advances. He was most woefully mistaken, and his life paid
the forfeit of his generous and noble disposition.
I
have never been able to get any positive information as
to the persons who committed this murder, yet circumstances
render it highly probable that they were a party of young
Indians who were returning from an unsuccessful foray, and
they were unable to resist the temptation of taking the
scalp and horse of the lieutenant.
A
small number of white men, in traveling upon the Plains,
should not allow a party of strange Indians to approach
them unless able to resist an attack under the most unfavorable
circumstances. Illustration: Keep Away!
It
is a safe rule, when a man finds himself alone in the prairies,
and sees a party of Indians approaching, not to allow them
to come near him, and if they persist in so doing, to signal
them to keep away. If they do not obey, and he be mounted
upon a fleet horse, he should make for the nearest timber.
If the Indians follow and press him too closely, he should
halt, turn around, and point his gun at the foremost, which
will often have the effect of turning them back, but he
should never draw trigger unless he finds that his life
depends upon the shot; for, as soon as his shot is delivered,
his sole dependence, unless he have time to reload, must
be upon the speed of his horse.
The
Indians of the Plains, notwithstanding the encomiums that
have been heaped upon their brethren who formerly occupied
the Eastern States for their gratitude, have not, so far
as I have observed, the most distant conception of that
sentiment. You may confer numberless benefits upon them
for years, and the more that is done for them the more they
will expect. They do not seem to comprehend the motive which
dictates an act of benevolence or charity, and they invariably
attribute it to fear or the expectation of reward. When
they make a present, it is with a view of getting more than
its equivalent in return.
I
have never yet been able to discover that the Western wild
tribes possessed any of those attributes which among civilized
nations are regarded as virtues adorning the human character.
They have yet to be taught the first rudiments of civilization,
and they are at this time as far from any knowledge of Christianity,
and as worthy subjects for missionary enterprise, as the
most untutored natives of the South Sea Islands.
The
only way to make these merciless freebooters fear or respect
the authority of our government is, when they misbehave,
first of all to chastise them well by striking such a blow
as will be felt for a long time, and thus show them that
we are superior to them in war. They will then respect us
much more than when their good-will is purchased with presents.
The
opinion of a friend of mine, who has passed the last twenty-five
years of his life among the Indians of the Rocky Mountains,
corroborates the opinions I have advanced upon this head,
and although I do not endorse all of his sentiments, yet
many of them are deduced from long and matured experience
and critical observation. He says:
"They
are the most onsartainest varmints in all creation, and
I reckon tha'r not mor'n half human; for you never seed
a human, after you'd fed and treated him to the best fixins
in your lodge, jist turn round and steal all your horses,
or ary other thing he could lay his hands on. No, not adzackly.
He would feel kinder grateful, and ask you to spread a blanket
in his lodge if you ever passed that a-way. But the Injun
he don't care shucks for you, and is ready to do you a heap
of mischief as soon as he quits your feed. No, Cap.,"
he continued, "it's not the right way to give um presents
to buy peace; but ef I war governor of these yeer United
States, I'll tell you what I'd do. I'd invite um all to
a big feast, and make b'lieve I wanted to have a big talk;
and as soon as I got um all together, I'd pitch in and sculp
about half of um, and then t'other half would be mighty
glad to make a peace that would stick. That's the way I'd
make a treaty with the dog'ond, red-bellied varmints; and
as sure as you're born, Cap., that's the only way."
I
suggested to him the idea that there would be a lack of
good faith and honor in such a proceeding, and that it would
be much more in accordance with my notions of fair dealing
to meet them openly in the field, and there endeavor to
punish them if they deserve it. To this he replied,
"Tain't
no use to talk about honor with them, Cap.; they hain't
got no such thing in um; and they won't show fair fight,
any way you can fix it. Don't they kill and scalp a white
man when-ar they get the better on him? The mean varmints,
they'll never behave themselves until you give um a clean
out and out licking. They can't onderstand white folks'
ways, and they won't learn um; and ef you treat um decently,
they think you ar afeard. You may depend on't, Cap., the
only way to treat InJuns is to thrash them well at first,
then the balance will sorter take to you and behave themselves.''
The
wealth of the Prairie Indians consists almost exclusively
in their horses, of which they possess large numbers; and
they are in the saddle from infancy to old age. Horsemanship
is with them, as with the Arab of the Sahara, a necessary
part of their education. The country they occupy is unsuited
to cultivation, and their only avocations are war, rapine,
and the chase. They have no fixed habitations, but move
from place to place with the seasons and the game. All their
worldly effects are transported in their migrations, and
wherever their lodges are pitched there is their home. They
are strangers to all cares, creating for themselves no artificial
wants, and are perfectly happy and contented so long as
the buffalo is found within the limits of their wanderings.
Every man is a soldier, and they generally exhibit great
confidence in their own military prowess. MEETING INDIANS.
On
approaching strangers these people put their horses at full
speed, and persons not familiar with their peculiarities
and habits might interpret this as an act of hostility;
but it is their custom with friends as well as enemies,
and should not occasion groundless alarm.
When
a party is discovered approaching thus, and are near enough
to distinguish signals, all that is necessary in order to
ascertain their disposition is to raise the right hand with
the palm in front, and gradually push it forward and back
several times. They all understand this to be a command
to halt, and if they are not hostile it will at once be
obeyed.
After
they have stopped the right hand is raised again as before,
and slowly moved to the right and left, which signifies
"I do not know you. Who are you?" As all the wild
tribes have their peculiar pantomimic signals by which they
are known, they will then answer the inquiry by giving their
signal. If this should not be understood, they may be asked
if they are friends by raising both hands grasped in the
manner of shaking hands, or by locking the two fore-fingers
firmly while the hands are held up. If friendly, they will
respond with the same signal; but if enemies, they will
probably disregard the command to halt, or give the signal
of anger by closing the hand, placing it against the forehead,
and turning it back and forth while in that position.
The
pantomimic vocabulary is understood by all the Prairie Indians,
and when oral communication is impracticable it constitutes
the court or general council language of the Plains. The
signs are exceedingly graceful and significant; and, what
was a fact of much astonishment to me, I discovered they
were very nearly the same as those practiced by the mutes
in our deaf and dumb schools, and were comprehended by them
with perfect facility.
The
Comanche is represented by making with the hand a waving
motion in imitation of the crawling of a snake.
The
Cheyenne, or "Cut-arm," by drawing the hand across
the arm, to imitate cutting it with a knife.
The
Arapahos, or "Smellers," by seizing the nose with
the thumb and fore-finger.
The
Sioux, or "Cut-throats," by drawing the hand across
the throat.
The
Pawnees, or "Wolves," by placing a hand on each
side of the forehead, with two fingers pointing to the front,
to represent the narrow, sharp ears of the wolf.
The
Crows, by imitating the flapping of the bird's wings with
the palms of the hands.
When
Indians meet a party of strangers, and are disposed to be
friendly, the chiefs, after the usual salutations have been
exchanged, generally ride out and accompany the commander
of the party some distance, holding a friendly talk, and,
at the same time, indulging their curiosity by learning
the news, etc. Phlegmatic and indifferent as they appear
to be, they are very inquisitive and observing, and, at
the same time, exceedingly circumspect and cautious about
disclosing their own purposes.
They
are always desirous of procuring, from whomsoever they meet,
testimonials of their good behavior, which they preserve
with great care, and exhibit upon all occasions to strangers
as a guarantee of future good conduct.
On
meeting with a chief of the Southern Comanches in 1849,
after going through the usual ceremony of embracing, and
assuring me that he was the best friend the Americans ever
had among the Indians, he exhibited numerous certificates
from the different white men he had met with, testifying
to his friendly disposition. Among these was one that he
desired me to read with special attention, as he said he
was of the opinion that perhaps it might not be so complimentary
in its character as some of the others. It was in these
words:
"The
bearer of this says he is a Comanche chief, named Senaco;
that he is the biggest Indian and best friend the whites
ever had; in fact, that he is a first-rate fellow; but I
believe he is a d--d rascal, so look out for him."
I
smiled on reading the paper, and, looking up, found the
chief's eyes intently fixed upon mine with an expression
of the most earnest inquiry. I told him the paper was not
as good as it might be, whereupon he destroyed it.
Five
years after this interview I met Senaco again near the same
place. He recognized me at once, and, much to my surprise,
pronounced my name quite distinctly.
A
circumstance which happened in my interview with this Indian
shows their character for diplomatic policy.
I
was about locating and surveying a reservation of land upon
which the government designed to establish the Comanches,
and was desirous of ascertaining whether they were disposed
voluntarily to come into the measure. In this connection,
I stated to him that their Great Father, the President,
being anxious to improve their condition, was willing to
give them a permanent location, where they could cultivate
the soil, and, if they wished it, he would send white men
to teach them the rudiments of agriculture, supply them
with farming utensils, and all other requisites for living
comfortably in their new homes. I then desired him to consult
with his people, and let me know what their views were upon
the subject.
After
talking a considerable time with his head men, he rose to
reply, and said, "He was very happy to learn that the
President remembered his poor red children in the Plains,
and he was glad to see me again, and hear from me that their
Great Father was their friend; that he was also very much
gratified to meet his agent who was present, and that he
should remember with much satisfaction the agreeable interview
we had had upon that occasion." After delivering himself
of numerous other non-committal expressions of similar import,
he closed his speech and took his seat without making the
slightest allusion to the subject in question.
On
reminding him of this omission, and again demanding from
him a distinct and categorical answer, he, after a brief
consultation with his people, replied that his talk was
made and concluded, and he did not comprehend why it was
that I wanted to open the subject anew. But, as I continued
to press him for an answer, he at length said, "You
come into our country and select a small patch of ground,
around which you run a line, and tell us the President will
make us a present of this to live upon, when every body
knows that the whole of this entire country, from the Red
River to the Colorado, is now, and always has been, ours
from time immemorial. I suppose, however, if the President
tells us to confine ourselves to these narrow limits we
shall be forced to do so, whether we desire it or not."
He
was evidently averse to the proposed change in their mode
of life, and has been at war ever since the establishment
of the settlement.
The
mode of life of the nomadic tribes, owing to their unsettled
and warlike habits, is such as to render their condition
one of constant danger and apprehension. The security of
their numerous animals from the encroachments of their enemies
and habitual liability to attacks compels them to be at
all times upon the alert. Even during profound peace they
guard their herds both night and day, while scouts are often
patrolling upon the surrounding heights to give notice of
the approach of strangers, and enable them to secure their
animals and take a defensive attitude.
When
one of these people conceives himself injured his thirst
for revenge is insatiable. Grave and dignified in his outward
bearing, and priding himself upon never exhibiting curiosity,
joy, or anger, yet when once roused he evinces the implacable
dispositions of his race; the affront is laid up and cherished
in his breast, and nothing can efface it from his mind until
ample reparation is made. The insult must be atoned for
by presents, or be washed out with blood. WAR EXPEDITIONS.
When
a chief desires to organize a war-party, he provides himself
with a long pole, attaches a red flag to the end of it,
and trims the top with eagle feathers. He then mounts his
horse in his war-costume, and rides around through the camp
singing the war-song. Those who are disposed to join the
expedition mount their horses and fall into the procession;
after parading about for a time, all dismount, and the war-dance
is performed. This ceremony is continued from day to day
until a sufficient number of volunteers are found to accomplish
the objects desired, when they set out for the theater of
their intended exploits.
As
they proceed upon their expedition, it sometimes happens
that the chief with whom it originated, and who invariably
assumes the command, becomes discouraged at not finding
an opportunity of displaying his warlike abilities, and
abandons the enterprise; in which event, if others of the
party desire to proceed farther, they select another leader
and push on, and thus so long as any one of the party holds
out.
A
war-party is sometimes absent for a great length of time,
and for days, weeks, and months their friends at home anxiously
await their return, until, suddenly, from afar, the shrill
war-cry of an avant courier is heard proclaiming the approach
of the victorious warriors. The camp is in an instant alive
with excitement and commotion. Men, women, and children
swarm out to meet the advancing party. Their white horses
are painted and decked out in the most fantastic style,
and led in advance of the triumphal procession; and, as
they pass around through the village, the old women set
up a most unearthly howl of exultation, after which the
scalp-dance is performed with all the pomp and display their
limited resources admit of, the warriors having their faces
painted black.
When,
on the other hand, the expedition terminates disastrously
by the loss of some of the party in battle, the relatives
of the deceased cut off their own hair, and the tails and
manes of their horses, as symbols of mourning, and howl
and cry for a long time.
In
1854 I saw the widow of a former chief of the Southern Comanches,
whose husband had been dead about three years, yet she continued
her mourning tribute to his memory by crying daily for him
and refusing all offers to marry again.
The
prairie warrior is occasionally seen with the rifle in his
hand, but his favorite arm is the bow, the use of which
is taught him at an early age. By constant practice he acquires
a skill in archery that renders him no less formidable in
war than successful in the chase. Their bows are usually
made of the tough and elastic wood of the "bois d'are,"
strengthened and re-enforced with sinews of the deer wrapped
firmly around, and strung with a cord of the same material.
They are from three to four feet long. The arrows, which
are carried in a quiver upon the back, are about twenty
inches long, of flexible wood, with a triangular iron point
at one end, and at the other two feathers intersecting at
right angles.
At
short distances (about fifty yards), the bow, in the hands
of the Indian, is effective, and in close proximity with
the buffalo throws the arrow entirely through his huge carcass.
In using this weapon the warrior protects himself from the
missiles of his enemy with a shield made of two thicknesses
of undressed buffalo hide filled in with hair.
The
Comanches, Sioux, and other prairie tribes make their attacks
upon the open prairies. Trusting to their wonderful skill
in equitation and horsemanship, they ride around their enemies
with their bodies thrown upon the opposite side of the horse,
and discharge their arrows in rapid succession while at
full speed; they will not, however, often venture near an
enemy who occupies a defensive position. If, therefore,
a small party be in danger of an attack from a large force
of Indians, they should seek the cover of timber or a park
of wagons, or, in the absence of these, rocks or holes in
the prairie which afford good cover.
Attempts
to stampede animals are often made when parties first arrive
in camp, and when every one's attention is preoccupied in
the arrangements therewith connected. In a country infested
by hostile Indians, the ground in the vicinity of which
it is proposed to encamp should be cautiously examined for
tracks and other Indian signs by making a circuit around
the locality previous to unharnessing the animals.
After
Indians have succeeded in stampeding a herd of horses or
mules, and desire to drive them away, they are in the habit
of pushing them forward as rapidly as possible for the first
few days, in order to place a wide interval between themselves
and any party that may be in pursuit.
In
running off stolen animals, the Indians are generally divided
into two parties, one for driving and the other to act as
a rear guard. Before they reach a place where they propose
making a halt, they leave a vidette upon some prominent
point to water for pursuers and give the main party timely
warning, enabling them to rally their animals and push forward
again. TRACKING INDIANS.
When
an Indian sentinel intends to watch for an enemy approaching
from the rear, he selects the highest position available,
and places himself near the summit in such an attitude that
his entire body shall be concealed from the observation
of any one in the rear, his head only being exposed above
the top of the eminence. Here he awaits with great patience
so long as he thinks there is any possibility of danger,
and it will be difficult for an enemy to surprise him or
to elude his keen and scrutinizing vigilance. Meanwhile
his horse is secured under the screen of the hill, all ready
when required. Hence it will be evident that, in following
Indian depredators, the utmost vigilance and caution must
be exercised to conceal from them the movements of their
pursuers. They are the best scouts in the world, proficient
in all the artifices and stratagems available in border
warfare, and when hotly pursued by a superior force, after
exhausting all other means of evasion, they scatter in different
directions; and if, in a broken or mountainous country,
they can do no better, abandon their horses and baggage,
and take refuge in the rocks, gorges, or other hiding-places.
This plan has several times been resorted to by Indians
in Texas when surprised, and, notwithstanding their pursuers
were directly upon them, the majority made their escape,
leaving behind all their animals and other property.
For
overtaking a marauding party of Indians who have advanced
eight or ten hours before the pursuing party are in readiness
to take the trail, it is not best to push forward rapidly
at first, as this will weary and break down horses. The
Indians must be supposed to have at least fifty or sixty
miles the start; it will, therefore, be useless to think
of overtaking them without providing for a long chase. Scouts
should continually be kept out in front upon the trail to
reconnoitre and give preconcerted signals to the main party
when the Indians are espied.
In
approaching all eminences or undulations in the prairies,
the commander should be careful not to allow any considerable
number of his men to pass upon the summits until the country
around has been carefully reconnoitred by the scouts, who
will cautiously raise their eyes above the crests of the
most elevated points, making a scrutinizing examination
in all directions; and, while doing this, should an Indian
be encountered who has been left behind as a sentinel, he
must, if possible, be secured or shot, to prevent his giving
the alarm to his comrades. These precautions can not be
too rigidly enforced when the trail becomes "warm;"
and if there be a moon, it will be better to lie by in the
daytime and follow the trail at night, as the great object
is to come upon the Indians when they are not anticipating
an attack. Such surprises, if discreetly conducted, generally
prove successful.
As
soon as the Indians are discovered in their bivouac, the
pursuing party should dismount, leave their horses under
charge of a guard in some sequestered place, and, before
advancing to the attack, the men should be instructed in
signals for their different movements, such as all will
easily comprehend and remember. As, for example, a pull
upon the right arm may signify to face to the right, and
a pull upon the left arm to face to the left; a pull upon
the skirt of the coat, to halt; a gentle push on the back,
to advance in ordinary time; a slap on the back, to advance
in double quick time, etc., etc.
These
signals, having been previously well understood and practiced,
may be given by the commander to the man next to him, and
from him communicated in rapid succession throughout the
command.
I
will suppose the party formed in one rank, with the commander
on the right. He gives the signal, and the men move off
cautiously in the direction indicated. The importance of
not losing sight of his comrades on his right and left,
and of not allowing them to get out of his reach, so as
to break the chain of communication, will be apparent to
all, and great care should be taken that the men do not
mistake their brothers in arms for the enemy. This may be
prevented by having two pass-words, and when there be any
doubt as to the identity of two men who meet during the
night operations, one of these words may be repeated by
each. Above all, the men must be fully impressed with the
importance of not firing a shot until the order is given
by the commanding officer, and also that a rigorous personal
accountability will be enforced in all cases of a violation
of this rule.
If
the commander gives the signal for commencing the attack
by firing a pistol or gun, there will probably be no mistake,
unless it happens through carelessness by the accidental
discharge of firearms.
I
can conceive of nothing more appalling, or that tends more
to throw men off their guard and produce confusion, than
a sudden and unexpected night-attack. Even the Indians,
who pride themselves upon their coolness and self-possession,
are far from being exempt from its effects; and it is not
surprising that men who go to sleep with a sense of perfect
security around them, and are suddenly aroused from a sound
slumber by the terrific sounds of an onslaught from an enemy,
should lose their presence of mind. TELEGRAPHING BY SMOKES.
The
transparency of the atmosphere upon the Plains is such that
objects can be seen at great distances; a mountain, for
example, presents a distinct and bold outline at fifty or
sixty miles, and may occasionally be seen as far as a hundred
miles.
The
Indians, availing themselves of this fact, have been in
the habit of practicing a system of telegraphing by means
of smokes during the day and fires by night, and, I dare
say, there are but few travelers who have crossed the mountains
to California that ave not seen these signals made and responded
to from peak to peak in rapid succession.
The
Indians thus make known to their friends many items of information
highly important to them. If enemies or strangers make their
appearance in the country, the fact is telegraphed at once,
giving them time to secure their animals and to prepare
for attack, defense, or flight.
War
or hunting parties, after having been absent a long time
from their erratic friends at home, and not knowing where
to find them, make use of the same preconcerted signals
to indicate their presence.
Very
dense smokes may be raised by kindling a large fire with
dry wood, and piling upon it the green boughs of pine, balsam,
or hemlock. This throws off a heavy cloud of black smoke
which can be seen very far.
This
simple method of telegraphing, so useful to the savages
both in war and in peace, may, in my judgment, be used to
advantage in the movements of troops co-operating in separate
columns in the Indian country.
I
shall not attempt at this time to present a matured system
of signals, but will merely give a few suggestions tending
to illustrate the advantages to be derived from the use
of them.
For
example, when two columns are marching through a country
at such distances apart that smokes may be seen from one
to the other, their respective positions may be made known
to each other at any time by two smokes raised simultaneously
or at certain preconcerted intervals.
Should
the commander of one column desire to communicate with the
other, he raises three smokes simultaneously, which, if
seen by the other party, should be responded to in the same
manner. They would then hold themselves in readiness for
any other communications.
If
an enemy is discovered in small numbers, a smoke raised
twice at fifteen minutes' interval would indicate it; and
if in large force, three times with the same intervals might
be the signal.
Should
the commander of one party desire the other to join him,
this might be telegraphed by four smokes at ten minutes'
interval.
Should
it become necessary to change the direction of the line
of march, the commander may transmit the order by means
of two simultaneous smokes raised a certain number of times
to indicate the particular direction; for instance, twice
for north, three times for south, four times for east, and
five times for west; three smokes raised twice for northeast,
three times for northwest, etc., etc.
By
multiplying the combinations of signals a great variety
of messages might be transmitted in this manner; but, to
avoid mistakes, the signals should be written down and copies
furnished the commander of each separate party, and they
need not necessarily be made known to the other persons.
During
the day an intelligent man should be detailed to keep a
vigilant look-out in all directions for smokes, and he should
be furnished with a watch, pencil, and paper, to make a
record of the signals, with their number, and the time of
the intervals between them.