登陆注册
6243800000042

第42章

They also feasted on a great variety of wild berries, purple, yellow, and black currants, which were delicious and more pleasant to the palate than those grown in their Virginia home-gardens; also service-berries, popularly known to later emigrants as "sarvice-berries." These grow on small bushes, two or three feet high; and the fruit is purple-skinned, with a white pulp, resembling a ripe gooseberry.

The journal, next day, has the following entry:--"This morning early, before our departure, we saw a large herd of the big-horned animals, which were bounding among the rocks on the opposite cliff with great agility.

These inaccessible spots secure them from all their enemies, and their only danger is in wandering among these precipices, where we would suppose it scarcely possible for any animal to stand; a single false step would precipitate them at least five hundred feet into the water.

"At one and one fourth miles we passed another single cliff on the left; at the same distance beyond which is the mouth of a large river emptying from the north. It is a handsome, bold, and clear stream, eighty yards wide--that is, nearly as broad as the Missouri--with a rapid current, over a bed of small smooth stones of various figures.

The water is extremely transparent; the low grounds are narrow, but possess as much wood as those of the Missouri. The river has every appearance of being navigable, though to what distance we cannot ascertain, as the country which it waters is broken and mountainous.

In honor of the Secretary of War we called it Dearborn's River."

General Henry Dearborn, who was then Secretary of War, in Jefferson's administration, gave his name, a few years later, to a collection of camps and log-cabins on Lake Michigan; and in due time Fort Dearborn became the great city of Chicago. Continuing, the journal says:

"Being now very anxious to meet with the Shoshonees or Snake Indians, for the purpose of obtaining the necessary information of our route, as well as to procure horses, it was thought best for one of us to go forward with a small party and endeavor to discover them, before the daily discharge of our guns, which is necessary for our subsistence, should give them notice of our approach.

If by an accident they hear us, they will most probably retreat to the mountains, mistaking us for their enemies, who usually attack them on this side." . . . . . . . . .

Captain Clark was now in the lead with a small party, and he came upon the remains of several Indian camps formed of willow-brush, Traces of Indians became more plentiful.

The journal adds:--"At the same time Captain Clark observed that the pine trees had been stripped of their bark about the same season, which our Indian woman says her countrymen do in order to obtain the sap and the soft parts of the wood and bark for food.

About eleven o'clock he met a herd of elk and killed two of them; but such was the want of wood in the neighborhood that he was unable to procure enough to make a fire, and was therefore obliged to substitute the dung of the buffalo, with which he cooked his breakfast.

They then resumed their course along an old Indian road.

In the afternoon they reached a handsome valley, watered by a large creek, both of which extended a considerable distance into the mountain.

This they crossed, and during the evening travelled over a mountainous country covered with sharp fragments of flint rock; these bruised and cut their feet very much, but were scarcely less troublesome than the prickly-pear of the open plains, which have now become so abundant that it is impossible to avoid them, and the thorns are so strong that they pierce a double sole of dressed deer-skin; the best resource against them is a sole of buffalo-hide in parchment [that is, hard dried]. At night they reached the river much fatigued, having passed two mountains in the course of the day, and travelled thirty miles. Captain Clark's first employment, on lighting a fire, was to extract from his feet the thorns, which he found seventeen in number."

The dung of the buffalo, exposed for many years to the action of sun, wind, and rain, became as dry and firm as the finest compressed hay.

As "buffalo chips," in these treeless regions, it was the overland emigrants' sole dependence for fuel.

The explorers now approached a wonderful pass in the Rocky Mountains which their journal thus describes:

"A mile and a half beyond this creek [Cottonwood Creek] the rocks approach the river on both sides, forming a most sublime and extraordinary spectacle.

For five and three quarter miles these rocks rise perpendicularly from the water's edge to the height of nearly twelve hundred feet.

They are composed of a black granite near their base, but from the lighter color above, and from the fragments, we suppose the upper part to be flint of a yellowish brown and cream color.

"Nothing can be imagined more tremendous than the frowning darkness of these rocks, which project over the river and menace us with destruction.

The river, one hundred and fifty yards in width, seems to have forced its channel down this solid mass; but so reluctantly has it given way, that during the whole distance the water is very deep even at the edges, and for the first three miles there is not a spot, except one of a few yards, in which a man could stand between the water and the towering perpendicular of the mountain. The convulsion of the passage must have been terrible, since at its outlet there are vast columns of rock torn from the mountain, which are strewed on both sides of the river, the trophies, as it were, of its victory. Several fine springs burst out from the chasms of the rock, and contribute to increase the river, which has a strong current, but, very fortunately, we were able to overcome it with our oars, since it would have been impossible to use either the cord or the pole.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 影响你一生的世界名人——最具影响力的思想先驱(上)

    影响你一生的世界名人——最具影响力的思想先驱(上)

    文学作品是作家根据一定的立场、观点、社会理想和审美观念,从社会生活中选取一定的材料,经过提炼加工而后创作出来的。它既包含客观的现实生活,也包含作家主观的思想感情,因此,文学作品通过相应的表现形式,具有很强的承载性,这就是作品的具体内容。文学简史主要指文学发展的历史进程,这跟各国历史发展是相辅相成的。历史的发展为文学的发展提供了时代背景,而文学的发展也形象地记录了历史发展的真实面貌。
  • 建筑的七盏明灯(谷臻小简·AI导读版)

    建筑的七盏明灯(谷臻小简·AI导读版)

    本书是罗斯金的一部有关哥特式建筑的杰作,享誉英美艺术界,为好几代人评判艺术价值提供了标准。该书阐述了建筑的七大原则:“牺牲原则”、“真理原则”、“权力原则”、“美的原则”、“生命原则”、“记忆原则”和“顺从原则”,为二十世纪的很多建筑和设计提供了灵感。此外,罗斯金认为建筑是从先辈手中继承下来的东西,并映射出先辈生活的景况。这种思想对当今的建筑保护有着深远的影响。
  • 雾刑

    雾刑

    当丑恶成为常态,善良就是错误当黑暗习以为常,光明则是罪恶当生命不再珍贵,保护则是救赎世上本无对错之分人们说它对则对人们说他错则错从不由你我而定万般皆是命,半点不由人只不过是以少服多罢了人罢了,鬼罢了,妖也罢了世界本该如此吗?
  • 永恒的宝藏

    永恒的宝藏

    一个特种兵以另一重身份与犯罪分子们血战到底,最终又在努力为祖国找回一批失落已久的宝藏...
  • 邻家少年是校草

    邻家少年是校草

    叶洛的悲惨生活就这样的开始了。被单美男吃的死死的。只不过任单美男怎样的提防,叶洛还是桃花运不断,攻进了他心里。叶洛酱紫了。
  • 苏联崛起

    苏联崛起

    “同志们,苏维埃到了最艰巨的时刻。纳粹和西方世界正在试图抹杀我们,法西斯和资本家以为我们会在战争机器之下屈服,他们以为我们会认输,会投降,失去抵抗的意志。”“但是,伟大红军永远不会屈服任何人,我们会让纳粹和西方见识到苏维埃巨熊的强悍!红色的帝国正在崛起,这一次,它将会统治世界。”“钢铁洪流踏平欧洲!”“苏维埃将惩戒世界!”————摘自1944年马拉申科在莫斯科红场演讲。
  • 天庭代理系统

    天庭代理系统

    有一天一个稀奇古怪的小飞人出现在李乐的面前。小飞人一脸正经的对他说:“拯救世界的任务就交给你了,为了爱与和平,让我们一起战斗!”李乐脸色郑重的点了点头,庄重的接过天庭代理人的职务。小飞人告诉他,只要有积分什么都可以兑换。于是李乐托着下巴,若有所思的看着传说中的蟠桃人参果,风火轮金箍棒金刚琢,嫦娥织女白素贞.“这些我真的都能得到?”“只要有积分,要多少有多少哦!”小飞人扑打着一对小翅膀,认真的点了点头。于是李乐带领着天兵天将,吃着蟠桃人参果,玩着紫金葫芦金箍棒的美好生活在一个不小的都市里快乐的生活着。哦,还有几个侍女。竟然是……仙女?【新书《穿入聊斋世界》已发,求收藏
  • 亡灵复苏时代

    亡灵复苏时代

    看着那些落在地面的人,洛南陷入了沉思。自己好像…还在树上!该怎么下去呢?我太难了!(?_?)
  • 恋爱选我我超撩

    恋爱选我我超撩

    沈跃:“晚上做贼去了吗?今天这么困。”江歆:“是啊,做贼去了。”沈跃:“那你偷了什么东西?”江歆:“当然是偷了你的心啊~”
  • 乱世情殇:风云幻

    乱世情殇:风云幻

    寂寞红尘,渡不过岁月的年轮光阴荏苒,放不下亘古的执念是谁变幻的容颜,谱出这宿世的长歌是谁千年的等待,换来这三世的姻缘、你不知,我早已在忘川河畔写下誓言你不知,我早已在黄泉路上刻下永恒“如果可以,我情愿来生不再遇到你。”“我不会让你离开我的,来生,你注定等不到了。”