Nellie F. Kingsley
Published: 2012-02
Total Pages: 0
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Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: THE START On Monday, the I4th of May, 1804, at four o'clock of a rainy afternoon, an odd-looking craft slowly entered the current of the Missouri River at the point where it pours its yellow, tumbling tide into the Mississippi. This strange vessel was fifty- five feet long, and was propelled by twenty-two oars. It had also a square sail, which was hoisted when the wind was favorable. In the bow and stern of the boat were little ten-foot decks with cabins beneath. The space between the decks was filled with lockers or boxes, which could be lifted up for a breastwork in case an enemy should attack the boat. Great boxes and bales of goods had been carefully packed below. If we could have looked into these boxes, we should have seen clothes and tools, household goods and utensils, and great quantities of guns and ammunition. There were laced coats, cocked hats, bright feathers, medals, flags, knives, tomahawks, beads, looking-glasses, bright handkerchiefs, paints, gimlets, axes, kettles, mills, and various other things that were supposed to be pleasing to the Indians. At the side of the large boat were two small rowboats. In these and in the larger vessel were woods- men, hunters, guides, servants, and soldiers ? forty-five men in all. One young man was in command. Along the shore two men were leading the hunters' horses. Slowly the boats made their way against the strong current; but to those who watched them from the shore, they were soon out of sight in the mist and rain. A rainy night set in, and the party landed and went into camp only four miles above their starting-place. The river's yellow, sullen flood rolled THE START by them, carrying with it masses of shifting sands and tumbling tree-trunks. There was danger that these tree-trunks might come in contact...