The Covered Wagon eBook

Emerson Hough
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 341 pages of information about The Covered Wagon.

The Covered Wagon eBook

Emerson Hough
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 341 pages of information about The Covered Wagon.

“I suppose, too, you’ve located all your doctors; also all your preachers—­you needn’t camp them all together.  Personally I believe in Sunday rest and Sunday services.  We’re taking church and state and home and law along with us, day by day, men, and we’re not just trappers and adventurers.  The fur trade’s gone.

“I even think we ought to find out our musicians—­it’s good to have a bugler, if you can.  And at night, when the people are tired and disheartened, music is good to help them pull together.”

The bearded men who listened nodded yet again.

“About schools, now—­the other trains that went out, the Applegates in 1843, the Donners of 1846, each train, I believe, had regular schools along, with hours each day.

“Do you think I’m right about all this?  I’m sure I don’t want Captain Wingate to be offended.  I’m not dividing his power.  I’m only trying to stiffen it.”

Woodhull arose, a sneer on his face, but a hand pushed him down.  A tall Missourian stood before him.

“Right ye air, Will!” said he.  “Ye’ve an old head, an’ we kin trust hit.  Ef hit wasn’t Cap’n Wingate is more older than you, an’ already done elected, I’d be for choosin’ ye fer cap’n o’ this here hull train right now.  Seein’ hit’s the way hit is, I move we vote to do what Will Banion has said is fitten.  An’ I move we-uns throw in with the big train, with Jess Wingate for cap’n.  An’ I move we allow one more day to git in supplies an’ fixin’s, an’ trade hosses an’ mules an’ oxens, an’ then we start day atter to-morrow mornin’ when the bugle blows.  Then hooray fer Oregon!”

There were cheers and a general rising, as though after finished business, which greeted this.  Jesse Wingate, somewhat crestfallen and chagrined over the forward ways of this young man, of whom he never had heard till that very morning, put a perfunctory motion or so, asked loyalty and allegiance, and so forth.

But what they remembered was that he appointed as his wagon-column captains Sam Woodhull, of Missouri; Caleb Price, an Ohio man of substance; Simon Hall, an Indiana merchant, and a farmer by name of Kelsey, from Kentucky.  To Will Banion the trainmaster assigned the most difficult and thankless task of the train, the captaincy of the cow column; that is to say, the leadership of the boys and men whose families were obliged to drive the loose stock of the train.

There were sullen mutterings over this in the Liberty column.  Men whispered they would not follow Woodhull.  As for Banion, he made no complaint, but smiled and shook hands with Wingate and all his lieutenants and declared his own loyalty and that of his men; then left for his own little adventure of a half dozen wagons which he was freighting out to Laramie—­bacon, flour and sugar, for the most part; each wagon driven by a neighbor or a neighbor’s son.  Among these already arose open murmurs of discontent over the way their own contingent had been treated.  Banion had to mend a potential split before the first wheel had rolled westward up the Kaw.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Covered Wagon from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.