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1932 Stories

EXPERIENCES WITH WOLVES

By Charline Curtis, Dist. 65

 Mr. William Curtis, my great-granduncle, was a pioneer from New England. He came to this section of Illinois when he was nine years old. He had a great many adventures with the wolves, which lived in the country then. These are two of his experiences:

One gray, bleak morning in January, a lean, hungry timber wolf crept in through the gate of Mr. Curtis' chicken yard. Stealthily it crawled towards the roost where the chickens sat with their heads under their wings. When Mr. Curtis came out it made for the woods with a chicken between its strong jaws.

"Here, Bill! here, Tom!" he shouted to the dogs as he ran for a horse. Jumping on a horse without saddle or bridle he dashed after the dogs, which were pursuing the wolf. Tearing through the forest in the gray of dawn after a timber wolf with no rifle was nothing less than what one would call excitement. He ducked as many branches as he could without losing his balance and bravely faced the ones he could not escape. Suddenly the horse's ears went up and his nostrils began to quiver. He began slowing down, despite the blows Mr. Curtis gave him. Suddenly they came to an opening in the forest where on a sheet of ice the wolf stood snarling at the barking dogs. The frightened horse shied clear of the ice, leaving Mr. Curtis sprawling in the snow. Thinking he could help the dogs, he grabbed the wolf by the tail, but instead the dogs engaged in a fight of their own. "Now I'm in a pretty fix," Mr. Curtis thought as he pulled the growling wolf about the ice. "My only chance is to crack his head on the ice." So doing so he swung the wolf above his head and brought him down with tremendous force, letting them down into three feet of ice water. Struggling desperately he tried to get a strangle hold on the wolf but failed. Then seeing his chance he grasped the wolf's head and shoved it under the water. Two minutes later he crawled out of the cold water, leaving the dead wolf under the freezing surface of the pond.

Another incident of Mr. Curtis' was with wolves also. He was returning home after a friendly visit with neighbors who lived more than a mile away, when the faint howl of a wolf drifted to him on the cold, bracing air. He walked on, not thinking much about it until the howl grew closer. How ghostly the moon made everything look. It seemed to make everything look like an animal getting ready to jump at him. On he trudged through the cold, black forest. Suddenly, as he came out of a clearing, he felt as though something was following him. Turning, he peered into the black forest and saw many green balls glowing at him. He turned to continue on his way, but found it was blocked by more green balls. Then out of the forest emerged the lithe, gray bodies of ten or more timber wolves. Casually taking off one of his heavy leather boots he began slowly advancing at one of the wolves. Swinging the boot left and right he scattered the hungry wolves and ran back to the neighbors where he spent the remainder of the night.

CONTINUE to NEXT 1932 story

Extracted 08 Nov 2018 by Norma Hass from Stories of Pioneer Days in La Salle County, Illinois, by Grammar Grade Pupils, published in 1932, page 86.


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