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PHIL
BLOOD'S LEAP.
by
Robert Buchanan.
There's
some think Injins poison, and others count 'em scum,
And night and day they are melting away, clean into Kingdom
Come;
But don't you go and make mistakes, like many dern'd fools
I've known,
For dirt is dirt, and snakes is snakes, but an Injin's flesh
and bone!
We were seeking gold in the Texan hold, and we'd had a blaze
of luck,
More rich and rare the stuff ran there at every foot we struck
;
Like men gone wild we tiled and tiled, and never seemed to
tire ;
The hot sun beamed, and our faces streamed with the sweat
of a mad desire.
I was Captain then of the mining men, and I had a precious
life,
For a wilder set I never met at derringer and knife;
Nigh every day there was some new fray, a bullet in some one's
brain,
And the cussedest brute to stab and to shoot was an imp of
sin from Maine.
Phil Blood. Well, he was six foot three, with a squint to
make you skeer'd,
Sour as the drink in Bitter Chink, with carroty hair and beard.
With pick and spade in sun and shade he labour'd like darnation,
But when his spell was over... well, he was fond of his recreation!
And being a crusty kind of cuss, the only sport he had,
When work was over, seemed to us a bit too rough and bad;
For to put some lead in a comrade's head was the greatest
fun in life,
And the sharpest joke he was known to poke was the point of
his precious knife.
But game to the bone was Phil, I'll own, and he always fought
most fair,
With as good a will to be killed as kill, true grit as any
there.
But his eddication, to his ruination, had not been over nice,
And his stupid skull was choking full of vulgar prejudice
;
With anything white he'd drink, or he'd fight in fair and
open fray ;
But to murder and kill was his wicked will, if an Injin came
his way!
A sarpent's hide has pison inside, and an Injin's heart's
the same,
If he seems your friend for to gain his end, look out for
the sarpent's game;
Of the snakes that crawl, the worst of all is the snake in
a skin of red,
A spotted Snake, and no mistake!' that's what he always said.
Well, we'd jest struck our bit of luck, and were wild as raving
men,
When who should stray to our camp one day, but Black Panther,
the Cheyenne;
Drest like a Christian, all agrin, the redskin joins our band,
But tho' the rest look'd black as sin, I shakes him by the
hand.
Now, the Injin's cuss was known to us, and I knew that he
was true,
I'd have trusted him with life and limb as soon as I'd trust
you;
For tho' his wit was gone a bit, and he drank like any fish,
His heart was kind, he was well-inclined, as even a white
could wish.
Food had got low, for we didn't know the run of the hunting-ground,
And our hunters were sick, when, just in the nick, the friend
in need was found;
For he knew the place like his mother's face (or better, a
heap, you'd say,
Since she was a squaw of the roaming race, and himself a castaway).
So I took the Panther into camp, and the critter was well
content,
And off with him, on the hunting-tramp, next day our hunters
went,
And I reckon that day and the next we didn't want for food,
And only one in the camp looked vext... that imp of sin, Phil
Blood.
Nothing would please his contrairy idees! an Injin made him
rile!
He didn't speak, but I saw on his cheek a kind of an ugly
smile;
And I knew his skin was hatching sin, so I kept the Panther
apart,
For the Injin he was too blind to see the depth of a white
man's heart.
Well, one fine day, we a-resting lay at noon-tide by the creek,
The red sun blazed, and we lay half-dazed, too tired to stir
or speak;
I lay and dozed with eyes half-closed, and felt like a three-year
child,
And, a plantain blade on his brow for shade, even Phil Blood
looked mild.
Well, back, jest then, came our hunting men, with the Panther
at their head,
Full of his fun was every one, and the Panther's eyes were
red,
And he skipt about with grin and shout, for he'd had a drop
that day,
And he twisted and twirled, and squeal'd and skirl'd, in the
foolish Injin way.
To the waist all bare Phil Blood lay there, with only his
knife in his belt,
And I saw his blood-shot eye-balls stare, and I knew how fierce
he felt
When the Injin dances with grinning glances around Phil as
he lies,
With his painted skin and his monkey grin... and leers into
his eyes!
Then before I knew what I should do Phil Blood was on his
feet,
And the Injin could trace the hate in his face, and his heart
began to beat,
And, 'Git out o' the way,' he heard them say, ' for he means
to hey your life!'
But before he could fly at the warning cry, he saw the flash
of the knife.
'Run, Panther, run!' cried every one, and the Panther turned
his back;
With a wicked glare, like a wounded bear, Phil Blood sprang
on his track.
Up the side so steep of the canon deep the frighted Injin
sped,
And after him ran the devil's limb, till they faded over head.
Now, the spot of ground where our luck was found was a queerish
place, you'll mark,
Just under the jags of the mountain crags and the precipices
dark ;
Far up on high, close to the sky, the two crags leant together,
Leaving a gap, like an open trap, with a gleam of golden weather.
If a man should pop in at that trap on the top he'd never
rest arm or leg,
Till neck and crop to the bottom he'd drop, and smash on the
stones like an egg.
A pathway led from the beck's dark bed up to the crags on
high,
And along that path the Injin fled, fast as a man could fly.
Some shots were fired, for I desired to keep the white cuss
back;
But I missed my man, and away he ran on the flying Injin's
track.
'Come back, you cuss! come back to us! and let the Injin be!'
I called aloud, while the men in a crowd stood gazing at them
and me...
But up they went, and my shots were spent, and at last they
disappeared
One minute more, and we gave a roar, for the Iniin had leapt...
and cleared
A leap for a deer, not a man, to clear... and the bloodiest
grave below
But the Injin was smart and mad with fear, and he went like
a bolt from a bow!
Close after him came the devil's limb, with his eyes as dark
as death,
But when he came to the gulch's brim, I reckon he paused for
breath.
For breath at the brink! but-a white man shrink, when a red
had passed so neat?
I knew Phil Blood too well to think he'd turn his back dead
beat!
He takes one run, leaps up in the sun, and bounds from the
slippery ledge,
And he clears the hole, but Heaven help his soul! just touches
the tother edge!
The edge he touches, then sinks, and clutches the rock...
our eyes grow dim
I turn away... what's that they say?... he's hanging on to
the brim!
On the very brink of the fatal clink a ragged shrub there
grew,
And to that he clung, and in silence swung betwixt us and
the blue,
And as soon as a man could run, I ran the way I'd seen them
flee,
And I came mad-eyed to the chasm's side, and what do you think
I see?
All up?... Not quite. Still hanging? Right!... But he'd torn
away the shrub;
With lolling tongue he clutch'd and swung-to what? ay, that's
the rub!
I saw him glare and dangle in air... for the empty hole he
trod
Held by a pair of hands up there!... The Injin's! Yes, by
God!
Now, boys, look here! for many a year I've roam'd in this
here land,
And many a sight both day and night I've seen that I think
grand;
Over the whole wide world I've been, and I know both things
and men,
But the biggest sight I've ever seen was the sight I saw jest
then.
I held my breath... so nigh to death Phil Blood swung hand
and limb,
And it seem'd to us all that down he'll fall, with the Panther
after him,
But the Injin at length put out his strength and another minute
past,
Then safe and sound to the solid ground he drew Phil Blood,
at last!
Saved? True for you! By an Injin, too!... and the man he meant
to kill!
There all alone, on the brink of stone, I see them standing
still ;
Phil Blood gone white, with the struggle and fright, like
a great mad bull at bay,
And the Injin meanwhile, with a half-skeer'd smile, ready
to spring away.
"What did Phil do? Well, I watched the two, and I saw Phil
Blood turn back,
Bend over the brink, and take a blink right down the chasm
black,
Then stooping low for a moment or so, he drew his bowie bright,
And chucked it down the gulf with a frown; then whistled,
and slunk from sight!
And after that day Phil changed his play, and kept a civiller
tongue,
And whenever an Injin came that way, his contrairy head he
hung;
But whenever he heard the lying word, "It's a LIE!" Phil Blood
would groan,
"A Snake is a Snake, make no mistake! but an Injin's flesh
and bone!"
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