The Young Alaskans on the Missouri by Emerson Hough (world best books to read .TXT) đ
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âGet some boughs to put inside,â suggested their leader. âGet out that little forced-draught oil stove and letâs see if we can dry out. Itâs going to be hard to get a fire on this island in this rain, for thereâs nothing but willows. Theyâre wet. Get the little stove going and pull shut the flaps. When it gets a little warmer weâll open the bags and change our clothes. And as John would say, thatâll be that! But itâs only by mercy that weâre here. You are right, Rob, this is the most serious accident we have ever had together.â
âLetâs open a can of soup, and issue an extra gill of tea,â said Rob.
They broke into a roar of laughter. Inside of half an hour the little hut was steaming and they all were sitting on boxes eating their evening meal. The storm, which had culminated in a fierce thunder gust, now was muttering itself away.
Jesse went out and brought in the Flag from its staff on the boat. âWeâll have to dry her,â he said. âSheâs silk, and fast colors.â
âAnd I think my expeditionary force is all true blue!â added Uncle Dick, quietly.
In the night Jesse waked them all by suddenly crying out in a nightmare. Rob shook him awake.
âWhatâs wrong, old top?â he asked.
âI guess I was scared,â admitted Jesse, frankly, and pulled the covers over his head.
CHAPTER X AT THE PLATTEOn the morning following the storm the sun broke through the clouds with promise of a clear, warm day. Our voyageurs were astir early.
âTake it easy, fellows,â counseled the leader. âWeâve got to âsun our powder,â as our Journal would say. John, when you set down the dayâs doings in your own journal, make it simple as William Clark would. Itâs more manly. Well, here we are.â
Rob looked ruefully at the wet willow thicket in which their camp was pitched. âWe can get a few dead limbs,â he said, âbut, wet as things are now, weâd only smoke the stuff and not dry it much.â
âWait for the sun,â advised John. And this they found it wise to do, not leaving the island until nearly noon.
âMorale pretty good!â said Uncle Dick. âJohn, set down, âMen in verry high sperrits.â And off we go!â
They chugged up directly to the point, as nearly as they could determine, where they had met the disaster of the previous day. âKeep leading a horse up to a newspaper and heâll quit shying at it,â said Uncle Dick. âFind the very spot where we struck.â
âThere she is!â exclaimed Rob, presently. The boat stuck again and began to swing. But this time the setting pole held her bow firm, and, since there was no wind, a strong shove pushed her free without anyone getting overboard. They went on after that with greater confidence than ever, and Jesse began to sing the old canoe song of the voyagers, âEn roulant ma boule, roulant!â
They paused at none of the cities and towns now, and only set down the rivers and main features, as they continued their steady journey day after day for all of a week. At the end of that time the increasing shallowness of the river, the many sand bars and the nature of the discolored, rolling waters, made them sure they were approaching the mouth of the great Platte River, which, as they knew, rose far to the west in the Rocky Mountains.
Here they went into a camp and rested for almost a day, bringing up their field notes and maps and getting a good idea of the country by comparing their records with the old journals of the great expedition.
âBear in mind that, after all, they were not the first,â said Uncle Dick. âThey had picked up old Dorion, their interpreter, from a canoe away down in Missouri, and brought him back up to help them with the Sioux, where he had lived. Their bowman Cruzatte and several other Frenchmen had spent two years up in here, at the mouth of the Loup. There were a lot of cabins, Indian trading camps, one of them fifty years old, along this part of the river.
âBut when they got up this far, they were coming into the Plains. New animals now, before so very long. They really were explorers, for there were no records to help them.â
âYou say they found new animals now,â Rob began. âYou mean elk, buffalo?â
âYes. No antelope yet.â
âThey made the Loup by July 9th, above the Nodaway,â said John, his finger in the Journal. âTwo days later they got into game all right, for Drewyer killed six deer that day himself, and another killed one, so they had meat in camp.
âThey made the Nemaha by July 14th, and I think that was almost the first time they got sight of elk. Clark fired at one that day, but didnât get him. That was where he first wrote his name and date on a rockâhe says the rock âjucted out over the water.â I think that was near the mouth, on the banks of the Nishnabotna River, but I donât suppose a fellow could find it now, do you?â
âNo. It never has been reported, like the two Boone signatures in Kentucky,â replied Uncle Dick. âHe only wrote his name twiceâonce up in Montana. But now, think how this new sort of country struck them. Patrick Gass says, âThis is the most open country I ever saw, almost one continued prairie.â What are you writing down, Jesse?â
ââMusquitors verry troublesome,ââ grinned Jesse, watching a big one on his wrist. âIâll bet they were awful.â
âAnd the men all had âtumers and boils,â in spite of their âverry high sperrits,ââ broke in John, from the Journal. âAnd they gave Alexander Willard a hundred lashes and expelled him from the enlisted roll, for sleeping on sentinel postâwhich he had coming to him. But all the same, the Journal says that this party was healthier than any party of like size âin any other Situation.â His main worry was these pesky âmusquitors.â He killed a deer, but they were so bad he found it âPainfull to continue a Moment Stillâ!
âHereâs something for you, Jesse!â he added, laughing. âOne day in a âfiew minits Cought 3 verry large Cat fish, one nearly white, a quort of Oile came out of the Surpolous fat of one of those fish.â And all the time they are mentioning turkeys and geese and beaverâisnât it funny that all those creatures then lived in the same place? On August 2d, Drewyer and Colter, two of the hunters, brought in the horses loaded with elk meat. But that was just above the Platte, nearer Council Bluffs.â
âOne thing donât forget,â said Uncle Dick at this time. âAll that hunting was incidental to those men. About the biggest part of their business was to get in touch with the Indian tribes and make friends with them. Youâll see, they stuck around the mouth of the Platte quite a while, sending out word, to get the Indians in. The same day Drewyer and Colter got the elk the men brought in a âMr. Fairfong,â an interpreter, who had some Otoes and Missouri Indians. Then there were presents and speeches, and they hung some D.S.O. medals on a half dozen of the chiefs and told them to be good, or the Great Father at Washington would get them.
âWell, thatâs all right. But what I want you to notice is the camp at Council Bluffs. That wasnât where the city of Council Bluffs, Iowa, is, but on the opposite side of the river, about twenty-five miles above Omahaânot far from Fort Calhoun. There was no Omaha then. I can remember my own self when Omaha was young. I used to shoot quail on the Elkhorn and the Papilion Creek, just above Omaha, and grand sport there was for quail and grouse and ducks all through that country then.
âBut Lewis and Clark had a wide eye. They knew natural points of advantage, and they must have foreseen what the Platte Valley was going to mean before long. They say that Council Bluffs was âa verry proper place for a Tradeing Establishment and fortification.â Trust them to know the âverry proper placesâ! Only, what I canât understand is the note that it is âtwenty-five days from this to Santafee.â Thatâs a puzzler. The natural place of departure for Santa Fe was where Kansas City is, not Omaha. But, surely, they had heard of it, somehow.â
âWell,â said Rob, âweâre doing pretty well, pretty well. In spite of delays, weâre at the mouth of the Platte, sixteen days out, and they didnât get there till July 21st. I figure three hundred and sixty-six miles to Kansas City, and two hundred and sixty-six miles to here, say six hundred and thirty-two miles for sixteen daysâthe river chart says six hundred and thirty-five miles. That keeps us pretty close to our average we setâover forty miles a day. Weâve got to boost that, though.
âAre we going to stop at Omaha, sir?â he added, rather anxiously.
âNot on anybodyâs life!â rejoined Uncle Dick. âNice place, but weâre a day late. No, sir, weâll skip through without even a salute to the tribes from our bow piece. Weâve got to get up among the Sioux. Dorion has been talking all the time about the Sioux. So good-by for the present to the Platte tribes, the Pawnees, Missouris, and Otoes.â
âGee! Iâd like to shoot something,â said Jesse, wistfully. âJust reading about things, now!â
âForget it for a while, Jess,â smiled his uncle. âJust remember that weâre under the eaves of two great cities, here at Plattsmouth. Take comfort in the elk and beaver sign you can imagine in the sand, here at the mouth of this river. It still is six hundred yards wide, with its current âverry rapid roleing over Sands.â
âTwo voyagers of the Lewis and Clark expedition had wintered here before that time, trappingâthe beaver were so thick. Imagine yourself not far up the river and shooting at an elk four times, as Will Clark didâthen not getting him. Imagine yourself along with that summer fishing party along this little old river, and getting upward of eight hundred fish, seventy-nine pike, and four hundred and ninety cats; and again three hundred and eighteen âsilver fishââI wonder, now, if that really could have been the croppy? Lord! boyâwhat a time they had, strolling, hunting, fishing, exploring new lands, visiting Indians, having the time of their lives!â
âLetâs be off,â suggested Rob. And soon they were plugging along up the great river, threading their way among the countless bars and shoals.
âI can see the full boats coming down the Platte!â said Jesse, shading his eyes, âhide canoes, full of beaver bales, that float light! And there are the voyageurs, all with whiskers and long rifles and knives.â
âYes,â said Uncle Dick, gravely. âAnd here are our men, tall, in uniform coats and buckskin leggings. See nowââand he reached for Johnâs volumeââthey let off the deserter, Moses Reed, very light. He only had to run the gantlet of the entire party four timesâeach man with nine switchesâand get dropped from the rolls of the Volunteers!
âAnd
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