Here we went, oxen, cows, mules, horses; coaches, carriages, blue jeans, corduroys, rags, tatters, silks, satins, caps, tall hats, poverty, riches; speculators, missionaries, land-hunters, merchants; criminals escaping from justice; couples fleeing from the law; families seeking homes, the wrecks of homes seeking secrecy; gold-seekers bearing southwest to the Overland Trail; politicians looking for places in which to win fame and fortune; editors hunting opportunities for founding newspapers; adventurers on their way to everywhere; lawyers with a few books. Abolitionists going to the Border War; innocent-looking outfits carrying fugitive slaves; officers hunting escaped negroes; and most numerous of all, homeseekers "hunting country"--a nation on wheels, an empire in the commotion and pangs of birth.
Been reading, lately, a novel by an old Sioux City mayor named Herbert Quick, titled Vandemark's Folly, a story that includes some lengthy travel on the way west in the 1850s. Couldn't help but love this description, not because it's so beautiful but because it creates an image so unlike whatever imagies were in my imagination before reading; because when I think of the Oregon Trail, I can't help but imagine something akin to Ward Bond leading a mule train of, say, twenty prairie schooners all alone beneath that huge prairie sky. And that's it.
Imagine the trail full of men, women, and kids, loneliness only rarely a problem. Sometimes tens of thousands would be camping out at a place like Ash Hollow. It's no wonder that the Lakota, up atop the hillside, couldn't help believing they were being overrun by palefaces. They were.
Always, out ahead, lay a dream so real that when the train would come up on the landmarks in western Nebraska, they could almost see Oregon or California, wherever all those folks Quick counts were headed.
Weeks of what could be torturous, mind-numbing travel on an rolling sea of grass, here and there maybe a grove or trapper's cabin; and then, finally, up there on the western horizon, you spot something coming a day or more away, something that makes you think that maybe you are finally and truly getting somewhere.
No comments:
Post a Comment