Stories of American Life and Adventure eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 163 pages of information about Stories of American Life and Adventure.

Stories of American Life and Adventure eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 163 pages of information about Stories of American Life and Adventure.

Meanwhile the French passed down Lake Ontario through many dangers.  They went down the River St. Lawrence, working their way over rapids and waterfalls.  At last they reached Montreal, where the people looked on them as men that had come up from the grave.

GRANDMOTHER BEAR.

Mr. Alexander Henry was made prisoner by the Indians on Lake Superior when Fort Mackinaw was taken by Indians.  This was in the time of the Indian war which is called Pontiac’s War, because the great chief Pontiac started it.

Nearly all the white men in Fort Mackinaw were killed, but Mr. Henry was saved.  He had an Indian friend named Wawatam, who paid for his life.  He went to live with Wawatam.  He had his head shaved, and put on the dress of an Indian.  He lived and hunted as the Indians did.

One day Mr. Henry saw a very large pine tree.  Its trunk was six feet in diameter.  The bark had been scratched by a bear’s claws.  Far up on the tree there was a large hole.  All about this hole the small branches were broken.

Mr. Henry looked at the snow.  There were no bear tracks in it.  So he thought that an old bear had climbed up into the tree before the snow fell.  Bears sleep nearly all winter.  They do not even come out to get anything to eat.

Mr. Henry told the Indians about the tree.  There was no way of getting up to the bear’s hole.  They could not get the bear out except by cutting down the tree.  But the Indian women did not believe that the Indians could do it.  Their axes were too small to chop down so big a tree.

However, the Indians wanted the bear’s oil, which is of great use to them.  It serves them for lard, and butter, and many other things.  So at the tree they went with their little axes.  As many as could stand about the tree worked at a time, and when one rested, another chopper took his place.  They all worked, men and women, and they chopped all day.  When the sun went down, they had chopped about halfway through the tree.

The next morning they began again.  They chopped away until about two o’clock.  Then the top of the great pine tree began to tremble.  Slowly it leaned a little.  Then the tree began to fall.  Everybody got far out of the way.  It fell down among the other trees with a crash that made the woods roar, and lay at last upon the ground.

[Illustration]

But no bear came out of the big tree.  Mr. Henry began to be afraid that there was no bear there.  He thought such a crash was enough to wake up the sleepiest bear in the world.  At last the nose of a bear was poked out of the hole.  Then came the head.  Then came out the great brown body of one of the largest bears in the woods.  Mr. Henry shot the bear dead.

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Stories of American Life and Adventure from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.