The Young Alaskans on the Missouri by Emerson Hough (world best books to read .TXT) đ
- Author: Emerson Hough
- Performer: -
Book online «The Young Alaskans on the Missouri by Emerson Hough (world best books to read .TXT) đ». Author Emerson Hough
âNo one seems to have valued the written record of that wonderful trip. When the young men got to St. Louis on their return, they did try to make a connected book of it all, but no one valued that book, and they couldnât get a publisherâthink of that! But at last they did get an editor, Mr. Nicholas Biddle, he was, of Philadelphia.
âThat poor man waded through over one million words of copy in the ânotesâ he got hold of at last! But by then President Jefferson was getting anxious about it. By then, too, poor Lewis was dead, and Clark was busy at St. Louis as Indian agent. And Will Clark never was a writer. So, slip by slip, the material faded and scattered.
âBiddle saved the most of it, boiling it down quite a lot. Then he gave it over to Paul Allen, a newspaper man, also of Philadelphia, who did more things to it, getting it ready for the press. This book did not get published until February, 1814, five years after Lewis died and eight years after they got back. By that time a lot of people had had a hack at it. A lot more have had a hack since then; but Biddle is the man who really saved the day, and Allen helped him very much.
âOf late, inside of the last twenty or thirty years, many editions of that great Journal have been issued. The best is the one that holds closest to Clarkâs spelling. Thatâs the best. And Iâll tell you it took genius, sometimes, to tell what he meant, for that redhead spelled by ear.
âLook hereâand here. âCatholicâ he spells âCarthlickâ; âLoupsââthe Indiansâhe calls âLoos.â He spells âgnatâ âknat,â or spells âmosquitoâ âmusquitr,â and calls the âtow ropeâ the âtoe ropeââas indeed Lewis did also. He spells âsquawâ as âsquarâ always; and âSiouxâ he wrote down as âCuouexââwhich makes one guess a bitâand the âOsagesâ are âOsarges,â the Iowas, âAyauways.â His men got âdeesantaryâ and âtumers,â which were âdificcelt to cure.â He gives a dog âsom meet,â and speaks of a storm which âseased Instancetaniously.â He does a lot of odd things with big words and little ones, as spelling âcedarâ âseederââat least the simplest way! As to jerked meat, I suppose it was as good if spelled âjurked,â or even âjirked,â and a âtirkeyâ is as good as turkey, perhaps.
âPlain and matter-of-fact, he was, that Redhead Chief, as the Indians called him; yet very little escaped him or his friend, and both could note the beauty of nature. See here, where Clark writes on June 20th (his capitals are odd as his spelling): âat Sunset the atmesphier presented every appearance of wind, Blue and White Streeks centiring at the Sun as she disappeared and the Clouds Situated to the S. W. Guilded in the most butiful manner.â
âCanât you see the sunset? And canât you see Will Clark, his tongue on one side, frowning as he wrote by the firelight?
âAnd Lewis wasnât so much better. For instance, he spelled squirrel as âsquirril,â where Clark spells it âsquarl,â and he spells hawk âhalk,â and hangs a âMeadleâ on a chiefâs neck. Oh, this old Journal certainly is a curious thing!â
Jesse threw himself down on the sand in a fit of laughter. âI could do betterân that my own self,â said he, at last. âWhy, what sort of people were they, couldnât spell any better than that?â
âMaybe you could,â said Uncle Dick, âbut you are not to laugh at William Clark, who was a great man. He did all that writing after a hard dayâs work, in a wild and strange country. I suppose it was hard for him to write, but he did it, and here it is.
âOddly enough, Clark wrote a very fine, clear handâa gentlemanâs handwriting. The Journals are always done in pen and ink. Clark did most of the work in the Journal, but Lewis at times took a hand. Between them they kept what might be called the log of the voyage.
âThey worked, all of that party. The oarsmen had to work under a taskmaster all day. Some one had to hunt, for they only had about a ton of cargo, all told, and they only had $2,500 to spend for the whole trip out and back, and to feed forty people two years. And at night the commanders made Gass and Ordway and Floyd and Whitehouse keep journals, too; and Pryor and Frazier did a bit of the same, like enough. They had to cover everything they saw.
âSo that is how we got this wonderful Journal, boysâone of the simplest and most manly books ever written. As I said, it was long forgotten and came near being ruined.
âThe book of Patrick Gass got out first, and it had many publishers on both sides the oceanâthough, of course, it had to be rewritten a great deal. Up to 1851 there had been fifteen real and fake Lewis and Clark books printed, in English, French, and German; and there are about a dozen books with Sergeant Patrick Gass as the âauthor.â
âThey had no cameras in those days, but those men brought out exact word pictures of that land and its creature inhabitants. The spelling we must forgetâthat day was different and schools were rare. But good minds and bodies they surely had. They were not traders or trappersâthey were explorers and adventurers in every sense of the word, and gentlemen as well.
âBut now,â concluded Uncle Dick, âthatâll do for the story of the Journal. Weâve got it with us, and will use it right along. Weâre all ready, now? Well, letâs be off, for now I see the wind is with us, and itâs even more than William Clark started with when his three boats left the Wood River and started up the Missouri. He said they had a âjentle brease.â
âOff we goâon the greatest waterway in all the world, and on the trail of the greatest explorers the world has ever known.â
âNow then,â commanded Rob, laying hold of the rail. âHeaveâo!â The others also pushed. The good ship Adventurer swung free of the sand and lay afloat. They sprang in. Uncle Dick steadied her with the oars. Jesse and John went ahead to trim ship. Rob gave a couple of turns to the flywheels of the two outboard motors and adjusted his feet to the special steering gear. The doubled motors began their busy sput-sput-sput! Like a thing of life the long craft, Adventurer, of America, turned into the current of the great Missouri, the echoes of the energetic little engines echoing far and wide.
CHAPTER V OFF UP THE RIVERâ
Sheâs riding fine, sir,â called Rob to Uncle Dick, over the noise of the two little propellers that kept the gunwales trembling. âI can head her square into the mid current and buck her through!â
Uncle Dick smiled and nodded. âItâs going to be all right! She rides like a duck. Spread that foresail, Frank, you and Jesse. Weâll do our six miles an hour, sure as shooting! Haul that foresail squarer, Jesse, so she wonât spill the wind. Now, Rob, keep her dead ahead.â
âHow far did they go each day?â demanded Jesse, âand how often did they eat?â
They all broke out in a roar of laughter over Jesseâs appetite.
âThey ate when they could,â answered Uncle Dick, âfor they had their hands full, working that big scow upstream. She was loaded heavy, and they often had to drag her on the line. When the line broke, as it did several times, sheâd swing into the current and thereâd be trouble to pay.
âHow far did they go? Well, thatâs really hard to say. They usually set down the courses and distances on the bends. For instance, here is the first record of that sort, May 15th. âStâ means starboard, right-hand side going up, and âLbdâ means larboard, to the left.
ââCourse and Distance assending the Missourie Tuesday May 15.
âWeâll not try to keep our own courses, and weâll have to guess at our distances except as we can estimate it from average speed, which is what they also did. I suppose it seemed a long way. Patrick Gass says it was three thousand and ninety-six miles to the head of the river. Anyhow, they didnât make it as soon as we shall.â
They ran on steadily, both motors firing perfectly and the sun bright overhead, while the fresh breeze back of them still held fair for most of the bends. They made St. Charles by noon, as had been predicted, but did not pause, eating their lunch aboard as they traveled.
âOur captains didnât do this,â said Rob. âAs near as I can learn, they camped and cooked on shore. And they certainly got plenty of game.â
âI know!â said Jesse, his mouth full of bread and marmalade. âDeer and turkey all along in here, then.â
âSure!â added John. âThirty deer, four bear, and two wolves in the first six weeks.â
Uncle Dick sighed. âWell, weâll have to live on rolls and marmalade, and if Jesseâs appetite holds weâll have to make a good many towns for supplies. Moreâs the pity, thereâs a good town now about every ten miles or soâtwo dozen towns in the first two hundred and fifty miles.â
âAw now!â said Jesse. âAw now! I guess a fellow canât help getting hungry. Maybe we can catch some fish, anyhow.â
âGass said they did,â nodded John. âThey got a lot of fine catfish, and I think Patrick Gass must have liked them, way he talks. He says, âWe are generally well supplied with catfish, the best I have ever seen.ââ
âWhat kind of a grub list did they have?â inquired Jesse; and John was able to answer, for he found the page in the Journal, which was close at hand on a box top, so it could be consulted at any time.
âThey didnât have any marmalade or preserves, or fruit or acid of any kind, and they must have relied on the hunt. They had four bags of âparchmeal,â which I suppose was parched corn groundâthe old frontier ration, you know. That was about twenty-eight bushels in all, with some eighteen bushels of âcommonâ and twenty-two bushels of hominy. Then they had thirty half barrels of flour, and a dozen barrels of biscuit, a barrel of meal, fifty bushels of meal, twenty-four bushels of Natchez hulled corn, four barrels of other hulled corn, and one of meal. That was their cereal list.
âThey only had one bag of coffee, and one each of âBeens & pees,â as Clark spells them, and only two bags of sugar, though eight hundred and seventy pounds of salt.â
âNot much sweets,â grumbled Jesse. âHow about the grease list?â Jesse was rather wise about making up a good, well-balanced grub list for a camping trip.
âWell,â answered John, âthey had forty-five hundred pounds of pork, a keg of lard, and six hundred pounds of âgrees,â as he calls it. Not so much; and they ran out of salt in a year, and out of flour, too, so they didnât have any bread for months. They had some stuff spoiled by getting wet.
âThey had some trade stuff for the Indians, and tools of all sorts, and other weapons and ammunition. They had sun glasses and an air gun and instruments for latitude and longitude. They
Comments (0)