The Young Alaskans on the Trail by Emerson Hough (the chimp paradox txt) š
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āNow about this tam some red fox heāll be lie down over those ridge anā watch Wiesacajac anā those goose. This fox heāll be hongree, too, for heāll aināt got no goose. Heāll been thief, too, all same like every fox. So heāll see Wiesacajac walk off in woods, anā heāll smell arounā anā heāll sneak down to the camp where those goose will be with his feet stick out of ashes.
āThose thief of fox heāll dig up the fat goose of Wiesacajac, anā taseā it, anā find it verā good. Heāll ron off in the woods with the goose anā eat it all up, all ācept the foots anā the leg-bones. Then the fox heāll sneak back to the fire once more, anā heāll push the dirt back in the hole, anā heāll stick up these foots anā the leg-bones just like they was before, only there donāt been no goose under those foots now, because heāll eat up the goose.
āāAh, ha!ā says Mr. Fox then, āIām so fat I must go sleep now.ā So heāll go off in woods a little way anā heāll lie down, anā heāll go to sleep.
āBimeby Wiesacajac heāll look at the sun anā the wind plenty long, anā heāll got more hongree. So heāll come back to camp anā look for his goose. Heāll take holā of those foots that stick up there, anā pull them up, but the foots come loose! So heāll dig in the sand anā ashes, anā heāll not found no goose.
āāAh, ha!ā say Wiesacajac then. Heāll put his finger on his nose anā think. Then heāll see those track of fox in the sand. āAh, ha!ā heāll say again. āIāll been rob by those fox. Well, weāll see about that.ā
āWiesacajac, heāll follow the trail to where this fox is lie fast asleep; but all fox heāll sleep with one eye open, so this fox heāll hear Wiesacajac anā see him come, anā heāll get up anā ron. But heāll be so full of goose that inside of hondred yards, maybe feefty yards, Wiesacajac heāll catch up with him anā pick him up by the tail.
āāNow I have you, thief!ā heāll say to the fox. āYouāll stole my goose. Donāt you know that is wrong? I show you now some good manners, me.ā
āSo Wiesacajac, heāll carry those fox down to the fire. Heās plenty strong, but he donāt keel those fox. Heās only going to show heem a lesson. So heāll poke up the fire anā put on some more wood, then heāll take the fox by the end of the tail anā the back of his neck, anā heāll hold heem down over the fire till the fire scorch his back anā make heem smoke. Then the fox heāll beg, anā promise not to do that no more.
āāI suppose maybe youāll not keep your promise,ā says Wiesacajac, āfor all foxes theyāll steal anā lie. But this mark will stay on you so all the people can tell you for a thief when they see you. You must carry it, anā all your children, so long as there are any foxes of your familee.ā
āThe fox heāll cry, anā heāll roll on the grounā, but those black mark sheāll stay.
āAnā sheāll stay there till now,ā repeated Moise. āAnā all the tam, those fox heāll be āshamed for look a man in the face. All the tam you find cross fox, heāll be black where Wiesacajac hold heem over the fire, with his back down, but the end of his tail will be white, because there is where Wiesacajac had hold of heem on one end, anā his front will be white, too, same reason, yes, heem. Whatever Wiesacajac did was done because he was wise anā strong. Since then all cross fox have shown the mark. I have spoken.ā
Moise now looked around at his young listeners to see how they liked the story.
āThatās what I call a pretty good story,ā said John. āIf I had one more trout I believe I could go to bed.ā
āDo you know what time it is?ā asked Alex, smiling.
āNo,ā said Rob. āWhy, itās almost midnight,ā he added, as he looked at his watch.
āWeāve made a long day of it,ā said Alex, āalmost too long. We donāt want to be in too big a hurry.ā
āHow far do you think weāve come, Alex?ā asked Jesse. āIt seemed like a long way to me.ā
āWell I donāt know exactly, Mr. Jess,ā said Alex, ābecause there are no roads in this country, you see, and we have to guess. But it must have been about noon when we got out of the last lake after we finished fishing. Weāve doubled on the portage, which made that something like a mile, and I suppose took about an hour. We fished about an hour, and it took us about an hour to clear out the little creek and go through a mile or so down to the main river. Weāve been running seven or eight hours pretty steadily. Maybe weāve come thirty or forty miles, I donāt know.ā
āWell, I know Iām tired,ā said John, āand I canāt even eat another trout.ā
VIII A HUNT FOR BIGHORNAlex allowed the boys to sleep late next morning, and the sun was shining warmly when at length they turned out of their tent and went down to the river for their morning bath. Heartily as they had eaten the night before, they seemed still hungry enough to enjoy the hearty breakfast which Moise had ready for them at the fire.
āWell, Alex, whatās the programme for to-day?ā asked Rob; āare we going on down, or shall we stop for a hunt?ā
āWhichever you like,ā answered Alex. āWeāre maybe getting into heavier water now, so I suppose we ought to be a little more careful about how we run down without prospecting a little.ā
āHow would it be for some of us to go down along the bank and do a little scouting?ā asked John.
āA very good plan,ā agreed Alex, āand Moise might do that while we others are doing something else.ā
āOh, you mean about our hunt,ā broke in Rob. āNow, we were speaking about bears and sheep. We donāt want to break the game laws, you know.ā
āLet me see your map, Mr. Rob,ā said Alex. āI told you weād talk over that after a while.ā
āWhatās the map got to do with game laws, Alex?ā
āA great deal, as Iāll show you. You see, in all this upper country the laws made down at Ottawa and Edmonton govern, just as if we lived right in that country. We keep the game laws the same as any other laws. At the same time, the government is wise, and knows that men in this far-off country have to live on what the country produces. If the people could not kill game when they found it they would all starve. So the law is that there is no restriction on killing gameāthat is, any kind of game except beaver and buffaloānorth of latitude 55Ā°.ā
āWell, whatās that got to do with our hunt?ā asked Rob.
āI was just going to explain, if you will let me see your map. As near as I can tell by looking at the lines of latitude on it, we must have been just about latitude fifty-five degrees at the place where we started yesterday. But we have been running north very strongly thirty or forty miles. While I canāt tell exactly where we are, Iām very positive that we are at this camp somewhere north of fifty-five degrees. In that case there is no law against our killing what we like, if we let the beaver alone; for of course, the buffalo are all gone from this country long ago.ā
āNow, I wouldnāt have thought of that,ā said Rob, āand Iām very glad that you have figured it out just that way. We agree with you that a fellow ought to keep the game laws even when he is away from the towns. In some of the States in the earlier days they used to have laws allowing a man to kill meat if he needed it, no matter what time of year. But people killed at all times, until there wasnāt much left to kill.ā
āIt ought to be a good hunting country here,ā went on Alex, āfor I donāt think many live here or hunt here.ā
āWell,ā said Rob, with a superior air, āwe donāt much care for black bear. Grizzlies or bighornsāā
āHave you never killed a bighorn?ā
āNo, none of us ever has. They have plenty of them up in Alaska, and very good ones, and white sheep also, and white goats sometimes, and all sorts of bears and moose and things. Weāve never hunted very much except when we were on Kadiak Island. We can all shoot, though. And weād like very much to make a hunt here. There isnāt any hurry, anyway.ā
āSāpose youāll got some of those sheep,ā ventured Moise, āheāll be best for eat of anything there isāno meat better in the world than those beeghorn.ā
āWell,ā said John, āwhy donāt we start out to get one? This looks like a good country, all right.ā
āThat suits me,ā added Rob. āJess, do you want to go along?ā
Alex looked at Jesse before he answered, and saw that while he was tall for his age, he was rather thin and not so strong as the other boys, being somewhat younger.
āI think Mr. Jess would better stay in camp,ā said he. āHe can help Moise finish drying his fish, and maybe they can go down and have a look at the rapids from the shore. We others can go over east for a hunt. Iāve a notion that the mountains that way are better.ā
āIt looks like a long way over,ā said Rob. āCan we make it out and back to camp to-day?ā
āHardly; I think weāll have to lie out at least one night, maybe more, to be sure of getting the sheep.ā
āFine!ā said John; āthat suits me. We wouldnāt need to take along any tent, just a blanket and a little something to eatāI suppose we could carry enough.ā He looked so longingly at Moiseās pots and pans that everybody laughed at him once more.
āAll right,ā said Alex, āweāll go.ā
The old hunter now busied himself making ready their scant supplies. He took a little bag of flour, with some salt, one or two of the cooked fish which remained, and a small piece of bacon. These he rolled up in a piece of canvas, which he placed on his pack-straps. He asked the boys if they thought they could get on with a single blanket, and when they agreed to this he took Robās blanket, folded it, rolled it also in canvas, and tied it all tight with a rope, the ends of his tump-strap sticking out, serving him for his way of packing, which was to put the tump-strap across his head.
āItās not a very big bundle,ā said he. āYou young gentlemen need take nothing but your rifles and your ammunition. I donāt need any blanket for a night or so. What little weāve got will seem heavy enough before we get up there in the hills.ā
āNow, Moise, listen,ā he added. āYouāre to
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