第18章 CRAZY HORSE(3)
- Indian Heroes & Great Chieftains
- Charles Alexander Eastman
- 791字
- 2016-03-02 16:34:49
Early in the year 1876,his runners brought word from Sitting Bull that all the roving bands would converge upon the upper Tongue River in Montana for summer feasts and conferences.There was conflicting news from the reservation.It was rumored that the army would fight the Sioux to a finish;again,it was said that another commission would be sent out to treat with them.
The Indians came together early in June,and formed a series of encampments stretching out from three to four miles,each band keeping separate camp.On June 17,scouts came in and reported the advance of a large body of troops under General Crook.The council sent Crazy Horse with seven hundred men to meet and attack him.
These were nearly all young men,many of them under twenty,the flower of the hostile Sioux.They set out at night so as to steal a march upon the enemy,but within three or four miles of his camp they came unexpectedly upon some of his Crow scouts.There was a hurried exchange of shots;the Crows fled back to Crook's camp,pursued by the Sioux.The soldiers had their warning,and it was impossible to enter the well-protected camp.Again and again Crazy Horse charged with his bravest men,in the attempt to bring the troops into the open,but he succeeded only in drawing their fire.
Toward afternoon he withdrew,and returned to camp disappointed.
His scouts remained to watch Crook's movements,and later brought word that he had retreated to Goose Creek and seemed to have no further disposition to disturb the Sioux.It is well known to us that it is Crook rather than Reno who is to be blamed for cowardice in connection with Custer's fate.The latter had no chance to do anything,he was lucky to save himself;but if Crook had kept on his way,as ordered,to meet Terry,with his one thousand regulars and two hundred Crow and Shoshone scouts,he would inevitably have intercepted Custer in his advance and saved the day for him,and war with the Sioux would have ended right there.Instead of this,he fell back upon Fort Meade,eating his horses on the way,in a country swarming with game,for fear of Crazy Horse and his braves!
The Indians now crossed the divide between the Tongue and the Little Big Horn,where they felt safe from immediate pursuit.
Here,with all their precautions,they were caught unawares by General Custer,in the midst of their midday games and festivities,while many were out upon the daily hunt.
On this twenty-fifth of June,1876,the great camp was scattered for three miles or more along the level river bottom,back of the thin line of cottonwoods --five circular rows of teepees,ranging from half a mile to a mile and a half in circumference.Here and there stood out a large,white,solitary teepee;these were the lodges or "clubs"of the young men.Crazy Horse was a member of the "Strong Hearts"and the "Tokala"or Fox lodge.He was watching a game of ring-toss when the warning came from the southern end of the camp of the approach of troops.
The Sioux and the Cheyennes were "minute men",and although taken by surprise,they instantly responded.Meanwhile,the women and children were thrown into confusion.Dogs were howling,ponies running hither and thither,pursued by their owners,while many of the old men were singing their lodge songs to encourage the warriors,or praising the "strong heart"of Crazy Horse.
That leader had quickly saddled his favorite war pony and was starting with his young men for the south end of the camp,when a fresh alarm came from the opposite direction,and looking up,he saw Custer's force upon the top of the bluff directly across the river.As quick as a flash,he took in the situation --the enemy had planned to attack the camp at both ends at once;and knowing that Custer could not ford the river at that point,he instantly led his men northward to the ford to cut him off.The Cheyennes followed closely.Custer must have seen that wonderful dash up the sage-bush plain,and one wonders whether he realized its meaning.
In a very few minutes,this wild general of the plains had outwitted one of the most brilliant leaders of the Civil War and ended at once his military career and his life.
In this dashing charge,Crazy Horse snatched his most famous victory out of what seemed frightful peril,for the Sioux could not know how many were behind Custer.He was caught in his own trap.