Killing Animals |
Killing snakes | ||||
Zion's
Camp 1834 Traveling |
Monday, May 26.A very hot day. We traveled through Paris and across a sixteen mile prairie; at noon we stopped to bait at a slough, about six miles from the timber, having no water to drink but such as was filled with living animals commonly called wigglers, and as we did not like to swallow them we strained the water before using it. This was the first prairie of any extent that we had come to on our journey, and was a great curiosity to many of the brethren. It was so very level that the deer miles off appeared but a short distance away; some of the brethren started out in pursuit before they were apprised of their mistake as to the distance. We continued our march, pulling our wagons through a small creek with ropes, and came to the house of Mr. Wayne, the only settler in the vicinity, where we found a well of water, which was one of the greatest comforts we could have received, as we were almost famished, and it was a long time before we could, or dared to satisfy our thirst. | History of the Church 2:7172. | ||
Rattlesnakes Joseph: "Men cease to destroy the animal race" |
We crossed the Embarras river and encamped on a small branch of the same about one mile west. In pitching my tent we found three massasaugas or prairie rattlesnakes, which the brethren were about to kill, but I said, "Let them alonedon't hurt them! How will the serpent ever lose his venom, while the servants of God possess the same disposition, and continue to make war upon it? Men must become harmless, before the brute creation; and when men lose their vicious dispositions and cease to destroy the animal race, the lion and the lamb can dwell together, and the sucking child can play with the serpent in safety." | massasauga: a small spotted venomous N. American rattlesnake, Sistrurus cataneatus. | ||
Except "to preserve ourselves from hunger." | The brethren took the serpents carefully on sticks and carried them across the creek. I exhorted the brethren not to kill a serpent, bird, or an animal of any kind during our journey unless it [72] became necessary in order to preserve ourselves from hunger. | |||
Joseph
shoots squirrel Orson Hyde: We will eat it |
I
had frequently spoken on this subject, when on a certain occasion I came
up to the brethren who were watching a squirrel on a tree, and to prove
them and to know if they would heed my counsel, I took one of their guns,
shot the squirrel and passed on, leaving the squirrel on the ground. Brother
Orson Hyde, who was just behind, picked
up the squirrel, and said, "We will cook this, that nothing may be
lost." I perceived that the brethren understood what I did it for,
and in their practice gave more heed to my precept than to my example, which
was right. |
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Killing deer | ||||
July 4, 1838 near Far West | On July 4, 1838, after laying the corner stones of the Far West temple and listening to Sidney Rigdon's 4th of July address, Joseph, Sidney, Hyrum, and George W. Robinson, who is keeping the Prophet's journal, | American Prophet, 187. | ||
Joseph sets his dogs after a deer, dog injured, amusing incident |
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