[The Passing of the Frontier by Emerson Hough]@TWC D-Link bookThe Passing of the Frontier CHAPTER IV 21/27
In fact the beginnings of all the herds of buffalo now in captivity in this country were the calves roped and secured by cowboys; and these few scattered individuals of a grand race of animals remain as melancholy reminders alike of a national shiftlessness and an individual skill and daring. The grizzly was at times seen by the cowboys on the range, and if it chanced that several cowboys were together it was not unusual to give him chase.
They did not always rope him, for it was rarely that the nature of the country made this possible.
Sometimes they roped him and wished they could let him go, for a grizzly bear is uncommonly active and straightforward in his habits at close quarters.
The extreme difficulty of such a combat, however, gave it its chief fascination for the cowboy.
Of course, no one horse could hold the bear after it was roped, but, as one after another came up, the bear was caught by neck and foot and body, until at last he was tangled and tripped and hauled about till he was helpless, strangled, and nearly dead.
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