Page:Life Amongst the Modocs.djvu/407

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had a romantic and prince-like name," I said to myself, as I filled a pipe with killikinick and reclined on the panther skins in the cabin when we had entered.

"But see," I said with paternal air, to Calle, as I blew the smoke towards the thatch, and she came bounding in, filling the house, like sunshine, with cheerfulness and content, to prepare the evening meal; u see what silence, coupled with gentlemanly bearing, may do in the world. Even plain Mr. Thomas may be named a Prince."

He is indeed a Prince, none the less a Prince than before. Here we shall dwell together. Here we shall be and abide in the dark days of winter and the strong full days of the summer. Here we have pitched our tents, and here we shall rest and remain unto the end.

I have seen enough, too much to be in love with life as I find it where men are gathered together. As for civilization, it has been my fate to see it in every stage and grade, from the bottom to the top. And I am bound to say that I have found it much like my great snow peaks of the Sierras. The higher up you go the colder it becomes.

Yet a good and true man will not withhold himself utterly from society, no matter how much he may dislike it. He will go among the people there much as a missionary goes among the heathen, for the good he can do in their midst.

How it amuses me to see my friends, the men I have