Page:Don Coronado through Kansas.djvu/368

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.
351
351

AN OSAGE BOY HERO 351 awful flames are leaping with fearful rapidity toward tiiem; although he has not succeeded in pulling as much grass as he would Jike, yet he now, desperately in earnest, takes up the little ten-year old boy and lays him in the cleared space and orders the others to lay as close as ijpssible by, his side until all are in a heap with their feet toward;thfe fire, and, they are ly- ing on their faces three thick; and to cap the climax, this young leader, after all are down, takes the rab- bits, qiiail and prairie chicken which they have killed aiid puts them at the feet of the prostrate forms, and their quiver holders are also used to protect them; but now he is compelled to take care of himself, and like a hero he throws his body at right angles across the legs -of the prostrate heap; and just then, with a inighty leap the fire passes the boys. Our young In- dian's hair was on fire and his body singed, but the other boys soon smothered the fire in his hair ^ and rubbed him all over with rabbit fat to oounter- act the burns. ... This episode of saving about oweiity ^ys caused quite a flurry, and he being the only one injured, which showed the pUght the boys were in. Of course to a plainsman this yarn will be laughed at, and if the boys could have started a fire there would have been no fuss. But the party had no matches , those days and it was not as easy to get a light then , as now. A resident of the prairie knows how easy it is to protect one's self when a prairie fire is coming toward you, which is, to set fire to the grass and let the wind take it from you; then the burnt space can be gotten into so as to keep from b.eing burned by the on-coming flames. .