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    Chapter 23

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    --Save you, sir.
    --Shakspeare.

    The sleep of the fugitives lasted for several hours. The trapper was
    the first to shake off its influence, as he had been the last to court
    its refreshment. Rising, just as the grey light of day began to
    brighten that portion of the studded vault which rested on the eastern
    margin of the plain, he summoned his companions from their warm lairs,
    and pointed out the necessity of their being once more on the alert.
    While Middleton attended to the arrangements necessary to the comforts
    of Inez and Ellen, in the long and painful journey which lay before
    them, the old man and Paul prepared the meal, which the former had
    advised them to take before they proceeded to horse. These several
    dispositions were not long in making, and the little group was soon
    seated about a repast which, though it might want the elegancies to
    which the bride of Middleton had been accustomed, was not deficient in
    the more important requisites of savour and nutriment.

    "When we get lower into the hunting-grounds of the Pawnees," said the
    trapper, laying a morsel of delicate venison before Inez, on a little
    trencher neatly made of horn, and expressly for his own use, "we shall
    find the buffaloes fatter and sweeter, the deer in more abundance, and
    all the gifts of the Lord abounding to satisfy our wants. Perhaps we
    may even strike a beaver, and get a morsel from his tail[*] by way of
    a rare mouthful."

    [*] The American hunters consider the tail of the beaver the most
    nourishing of all food.

    "What course do you mean to pursue, when you have once thrown these
    bloodhounds from the chase?" demanded Middleton.

    "If I might advise," said Paul, "it would be to strike a water-course,
    and get upon its downward current, as soon as may be. Give me a
    cotton-wood, and I will turn you out a canoe that shall carry us all,
    the jackass excepted, in perhaps the work of a day and a night. Ellen,
    here, is a lively girl enough, but then she is no great race-rider;
    and it would be far more comfortable to boat six or eight hundred
    miles, than to go loping along like so many elks measuring the
    prairies; besides, water leaves no trail."

    "I will not swear to that," returned the trapper; "I have often
    thought the eyes of a Red-skin would find a trail in air."

    "See, Middleton," exclaimed Inez, in a sudden burst of youthful
    pleasure, that caused her for a moment to forget her situation, "how
    lovely is that sky; surely it contains a promise of happier times!"

    "It is glorious!" returned her husband. "Glorious and heavenly is that
    streak of vivid red, and here is a still brighter crimson; rarely have
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