In a little while all interest was
taken up in stretching our necks and watching for
the “pony-rider” the fleet messenger
who sped across the continent from St. Joe to Sacramento,
carrying letters nineteen hundred miles in eight days!
Think of that for perishable horse and human flesh
and blood to do! The pony-rider was usually a
little bit of a man, brimful of spirit and endurance.
No matter what time of the day or night his watch
came on, and no matter whether it was winter or summer,
raining, snowing, hailing, or sleeting, or whether
his “beat” was a level straight road or
a crazy trail over mountain crags and precipices, or
whether it led through peaceful regions or regions
that swarmed with hostile Indians, he must be always
ready to leap into the saddle and be off like the
wind! There was no idling-time for a pony-rider
on duty. He rode fifty miles without stopping,
by daylight, moonlight, starlight, or through the
blackness of darkness just as it happened.
He rode a splendid horse that was born for a racer
and fed and lodged like a gentleman; kept him at his
utmost speed for ten miles, and then, as he came crashing
up to the station where stood two men holding fast
a fresh, impatient steed, the transfer of rider and
mail-bag was made in the twinkling of an eye, and
away flew the eager pair and were out of sight before
the spectator could get hardly the ghost of a look.
Both rider and horse went “flying light.”
The rider’s dress was thin, and fitted close;
he wore a “round-about,” and a skull-cap,
and tucked his pantaloons into his boot-tops like
a race-rider. He carried no arms he
carried nothing that was not absolutely necessary,
for even the postage on his literary freight was worth
five dollars a letter.
He got but little frivolous correspondence
to carry his bag had business letters in
it, mostly. His horse was stripped of all unnecessary
weight, too. He wore a little wafer of a racing-saddle,
and no visible blanket. He wore light shoes,
or none at all. The little flat mail-pockets
strapped under the rider’s thighs would each
hold about the bulk of a child’s primer.
They held many and many an important business chapter
and newspaper letter, but these were written on paper
as airy and thin as gold-leaf, nearly, and thus bulk
and weight were economized. The stage-coach
traveled about a hundred to a hundred and twenty-five
miles a day (twenty-four hours), the pony-rider about
two hundred and fifty. There were about eighty
pony-riders in the saddle all the time, night and
day, stretching in a long, scattering procession from
Missouri to California, forty flying eastward, and
forty toward the west, and among them making four
hundred gallant horses earn a stirring livelihood and
see a deal of scenery every single day in the year.
We had had a consuming desire, from
the beginning, to see a pony-rider, but somehow or
other all that passed us and all that met us managed
to streak by in the night, and so we heard only a
whiz and a hail, and the swift phantom of the desert
was gone before we could get our heads out of the
windows. But now we were expecting one along
every moment, and would see him in broad daylight.
Presently the driver exclaims:
“Here he comes!”
Every neck is stretched further, and
every eye strained wider. Away across the endless
dead level of the prairie a black speck appears against
the sky, and it is plain that it moves. Well,
I should think so!
In a second or two it becomes a horse
and rider, rising and falling, rising and falling sweeping
toward us nearer and nearer growing more
and more distinct, more and more sharply defined nearer
and still nearer, and the flutter of the hoofs comes
faintly to the ear another instant a whoop
and a hurrah from our upper deck, a wave of the rider’s
hand, but no reply, and man and horse burst past our
excited faces, and go winging away like a belated
fragment of a storm!
So sudden is it all, and so like a
flash of unreal fancy, that but for the flake of white
foam left quivering and perishing on a mail-sack after
the vision had flashed by and disappeared, we might
have doubted whether we had seen any actual horse
and man at all, maybe.
We rattled through Scott’s Bluffs
Pass, by and by. It was along here somewhere
that we first came across genuine and unmistakable
alkali water in the road, and we cordially hailed
it as a first-class curiosity, and a thing to be mentioned
with eclat in letters to the ignorant at home.
This water gave the road a soapy appearance, and in
many places the ground looked as if it had been whitewashed.
I think the strange alkali water excited us as much
as any wonder we had come upon yet, and I know we
felt very complacent and conceited, and better satisfied
with life after we had added it to our list of things
which we had seen and some other people had not.
In a small way we were the same sort of simpletons
as those who climb unnecessarily the perilous peaks
of Mont Blanc and the Matterhorn, and derive no pleasure
from it except the reflection that it isn’t
a common experience. But once in a while one
of those parties trips and comes darting down the
long mountain-crags in a sitting posture, making the
crusted snow smoke behind him, flitting from bench
to bench, and from terrace to terrace, jarring the
earth where he strikes, and still glancing and flitting
on again, sticking an iceberg into himself every now
and then, and tearing his clothes, snatching at things
to save himself, taking hold of trees and fetching
them along with him, roots and all, starting little
rocks now and then, then big boulders, then acres
of ice and snow and patches of forest, gathering and
still gathering as he goes, adding and still adding
to his massed and sweeping grandeur as he nears a
three thousand-foot precipice, till at last he waves
his hat magnificently and rides into eternity on the
back of a raging and tossing avalanche!
This is all very fine, but let us
not be carried away by excitement, but ask calmly,
how does this person feel about it in his cooler moments
next day, with six or seven thousand feet of snow
and stuff on top of him?
We crossed the sand hills near the
scene of the Indian mail robbery and massacre of 1856,
wherein the driver and conductor perished, and also
all the passengers but one, it was supposed; but this
must have been a mistake, for at different times afterward
on the Pacific coast I was personally acquainted with
a hundred and thirty-three or four people who were
wounded during that massacre, and barely escaped with
their lives. There was no doubt of the truth
of it I had it from their own lips.
One of these parties told me that he kept coming
across arrow-heads in his system for nearly seven
years after the massacre; and another of them told
me that he was struck so literally full of arrows that
after the Indians were gone and he could raise up
and examine himself, he could not restrain his tears,
for his clothes were completely ruined.
The most trustworthy tradition avers,
however, that only one man, a person named Babbitt,
survived the massacre, and he was desperately wounded.
He dragged himself on his hands and knee (for one
leg was broken) to a station several miles away.
He did it during portions of two nights, lying concealed
one day and part of another, and for more than forty
hours suffering unimaginable anguish from hunger, thirst
and bodily pain. The Indians robbed the coach
of everything it contained, including quite an amount
of treasure.