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Authors: JAMES ALEXANDER Thom

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The only control Captain Lewis had over their choice was by withholding their reward. Frightened and sullen, they got into the canoes and prepared for the worst.

October 24th Thursday 1805
At 9 o’Clock
A.M
. I Set out. at 2 ⅕ miles the river widened into a large bason to the Stard Side on which there is five Lodges of Indians. here a tremendious black rock high and Steep appearing to choke up the river … the Current was drawn with great velocity to the Lard Side of this rock at which place I heard a great roreing. the natives went with me to the top … I could see the difficuelties we had to Pass … The whole of this
great river must pass thro’ this narrow channel of 45 yards wide as the portage of our canoes over this high rock would be impossible … I thought (as also our principal waterman Peter Crusat) by good Stearing we could pass down safe … notwithstanding the horrid appearance of this agitated gut Swelling, boiling & whorling in every direction

William Clark
, Journals

Charbonneau with his family, and all the men who could not swim, were assigned to carry the papers, instruments, ammunition, and guns overland to a likely campsite on calm water below the roaring narrows. When the natives of the vicinity got word that these strange visitors were going to get in their canoes and go through that churning chute on purpose, they hurried to gather on the heights. Drouillard looked around at the two dozen designated paddlers who were nervously securing everything in their five vessels. He went over to York, who would be in the elegant Chinook canoe with Captain Clark and his paddlers, and shook hands with him. Then he pointed at the spectators. “Ready to watch us perish, I reckon.” York swallowed and nodded. Drouillard motioned with his chin toward numbers of Indian men and women who were hurrying down the riverbank. “Those, I bet, are going down to the eddy where they reckon our pieces and remains’ll wash up. This could be a profitable day for them, eh?”

“’F you tryin’t’ scare me,” York said, “it’s too late. I already am.”

Drouillard feigned surprise. “Eh? I’d never’ve known it! You’re the only one of us not gone pale!”

York managed to laugh. Then he licked his lips and looked all around, put out his hand again and said, “Mist’ Droor, I been please t’ know ye.”

“Likewise. You and your boss man both.” He glanced over at Captain Clark, who was talking to the men, inaudible against the roar of the water, but making gestures that apparently had to do with steering. Drouillard watched the rugged, cheerful, red-haired captain and remembered all the bragging York had done about him, and considered that just about every day in nearly
two years since, that man had proven that York wasn’t so much bragging as understating. Clark had basically been running everything, and doing most of the writing as well, since the descent from the mountains. Lewis was physically recovered now but had been in a surly, melancholy state for a long time, occasionally rousing himself to study some novel plant or halfheartedly do his Jefferson ceremony in the fishing villages.

Now, Clark whooped and waved to summon York. Drouillard took a deep breath and went to his canoe, which would be the last through.

In single file, well-spaced, the canoes were paddled upstream and then curved around to aim straight down the chute. Captain Clark’s canoe, Cruzatte steering, headed down, all paddles flashing. Cruzatte had taught everyone that a canoe can be handled better in fast water if it is going a little faster than the water, instead of just being carried along with current pushing the stern. That Indian-made canoe might be the only one to make it through, Drouillard thought, if any did. It was wide, lightweight, tapered and high at both bow and stern. He watched it enter the chasm, skimming like a leaf, speeding up, then receding from sight like a toboggan going down a hill. Whooping voices were lost in the roar of water. Then the second canoe went, then the third, then the fourth, and now his own canoe was in the fast current, entering the high rock funnel, stern tending to drift to the right until he reminded his paddlers with a rude shout to dig in. Then the chasm walls were blurring by on both sides and they were racing downhill on a dimpled sheen of water, the crew howling with exhilaration. Drouillard could see the other canoes ahead, all paddles rising and dipping furiously, every canoe going arrow-straight, none sideways. His heart rose up and he couldn’t contain his voice: it trilled out of his throat like the old war cry of his people.

They were all giddy and wishing they could have that much fun again when Captain Clark walked up from scouting below and said there was another chute much like it two miles below, but a longer funnel and not quite so narrow. Once again the nonswimmers set off overland with the valuables, and the canoes
sped through another roaring, dark chasm, with vertical cliffs high on either side. By the end of this day they all felt they were ready to take on any kind of rapid that God saw fit to put in their way. Or at least they were saying they felt that way; there were a few who waded into the shallows below and pretended they were washing fleas out of their breeches. Potts, who had been a paddler in Drouillard’s canoe, was forthright about what his breeches were full of, saying, “Hell, I was just fine, till ye give out that ’ere heathen war cry, damn ye!”

Clark had walked down to a Chinook village, where he met its principal chief and invited him to come up to the canoe camp, where the crews had unloaded the canoes to dry their cargoes.

When the Chinook headman came up with a few of his men, the initial wariness between them and the two Nez Perce chiefs was soon dispelled, and all the Indians gave the captains their pledge to be peaceable toward each other. The Chinook leader was given a medal and other gifts, which he accepted with pleasure, and then Cruzatte played on the fiddle and the men danced for the visitors. The captains smoked with the Chinooks until late at night, and did what they could to begin recording a Chinook vocabulary for the President.

While the corps paused here to mend canoes and dry cargoes, there was time for Drouillard to take some hunters up out of the river gorge and onto a mountain to hunt, up into the pines and oaks. It was a joy to hunt again. They came back with four deer, the first venison in weeks. The men drooled while it was roasting. The captains had learned from the Chinooks that more dangerous falls and rapids lay yet between there and the sea they were seeking. That below these mountains lay tree-covered mountains inhabited by deer and elk, and other animals good to eat. That more salmon were in the rivers than one could count, and more swimming birds, and swimming animals with beautiful fur. The captains presumed those would be seals or sea otters.

They learned that they would find another range of mountains below these, mountains full of fog and ferns, where streams of water fell from cliffs and rain fell from the sky most days, where
the trees were so thick and tall and dark on the mountainsides, they looked black—trees so big and straight that perfect, wide planks could be split from them.

They learned that they would meet Indian nations down there who knew the white men who came from the sea in huge boats with wings. Those Indians spoke the Chinook tongue but knew also how to talk trade with the whitemen, and had obtained many metal things from the whitemen who came every year in their big boats. The captains learned that there was a good bay in the mouth of this river where the whitemen’s boats came in, for protection from the sea storms and to trade with those Indians down there.

These Chinooks knew all about what lay below, because those people from the ocean came up here to sell whiteman things and seashells and waterproof baskets and mats they made, and a kind of cloth they made of cedar bark, and a kind of root they harvested in great quantity, called
wapato
, not the same as the quamash roots the Nez Perce brought down from the mountains to trade, but just as good. These Indians here knew the tribes from up the river very well too, because here where the upper river and the lower river were separated by the falling waters was the center of the trade, and these people who lived here controlled the trade; all had to pass through them. This was a statement of their own importance. These chiefs had skins from the mountain animals and furs from the water animals below, and they had brass buttons and ornaments and bells, and metal knives and awls, and woolen blankets, even a few muskets and swords. These people took fingers instead of scalps from dead enemies. The chief had fourteen.

Drouillard and the Nez Perce chiefs translated all this. Some things for which they knew no hand signs could just be pointed to in the Chinook houses—such as the wide planks and the
wapato
roots and the seashells. The language of these Chinooks was spoken with tongue-clicks and throat-clucks. Most of the women here were short and obese, with the worn-down teeth. Their foreheads were broad and sloped sharply back from the brow to culminate in an almost pointed crown of the skull. They
achieved that shape by compressing their babies’ skulls with an angled board attached to the cradleboard. Thus the profile of a Chinook woman at her most beautiful was a slope from the crown of the head to the end of the nose or even the upper lip, as if to imitate the shape of the head of the fish that dominated their lives.

Old Twisted Hair and Tetohoskee had served their promised role in the voyage down the Columbia. They had been fine friends and helpful comrades throughout this strenuous downstream journey of some four hundred miles. Back at their home in the mountains they still had the responsibility of keeping the whitemen’s horses for them until next year. They would all meet again and renew their great friendship then, if the soldiers returned east by the way they had come.

As the captains readied their canoes to go on down, they paid the two chiefs in goods. It was an emotional parting. The chiefs could not hide their affection or their sadness no matter how hard they clenched their jaws. They promised that their people would always be the whitemen’s friends and would always watch for them to come into sight, whether up the rivers or down the mountains.

“Tell them,” Captain Clark told Drouillard, “that we deem them the finest Indians we have met, all across this whole land. And tell them those are words from my heart.”

It was time to get in the canoes and go on. Depending on the course of the river, it could be between a hundred and two hundred miles yet to the Pacific. It would soon be winter, and as they had learned, even downstream was not easy.

Chapter 20
The Columbia Estuary

November 7th Thursday 1805
Great Joy in camp we are in View of the Ocian, this great Pacific Octean which we been So long anxious to See. and the roreing or noise made by the waves brakeing on the rockey Shores (as I Suppose) may be heard distictly

William Clark
, Journals

Joy, disappointment, and misery. What the captains had thought was the seacoast was only a rocky point jutting into the wide mouth of the Columbia, a mouth so wide and fog-shrouded that they could not see across it, and so beaten by swells and rollers that the canoes could neither proceed to the coast nor retreat to calmer waters.

And there was no level ground on which to make camp. They could not camp on beaches at the foot of the cliffs because the waves roared in and swept over them, and the tides came in and inundated them. Huge driftwood logs, five and six feet thick and two hundred feet long, washed in and piled up, rubbing and groaning against the cliffs, threatening to smash the canoes. The soldiers found niches and crevices in the face of the cliff and hung on, cold, soaked with rain and spray. There was nothing to eat but the rancid pulp of dried, pounded salmon they had bought from natives.

The hunters couldn’t go up and hunt, because the cliffs were too steep to climb, and thick with undergrowth and fallen deadwood.
To lie down, the soldiers had to spread their mats on jumbles of stones. Their weatherworn deerskin clothes were rotting on their bodies. Rain poured down day and night, loosening stones on the cliffs, which came clattering and bouncing down among the hunkering men. The winds were gales much of the time, sending tremendous waves bursting against the rocks.

When they tried to board the canoes to find better campsites, they were nearly swamped by the surging, gray seas, and forced to take shelter in other alcoves as bad as the previous one, or worse, and by then they were seasick. Bird Woman was among those with the most violent seasickness. And several of the men had got nausea and diarrhea by drinking the brackish river water instead of collecting rain.

Their tenacious and miserable foothold was further complicated by something new to them: tides. They would make a camp on a beach or ledge, secure the canoes among the gigantic drift logs, rigging shelters there, only to have the tide rise and set them afloat, grinding and thumping with crushing force. It was an unending battle to keep the canoes from being destroyed. All the soldiers had been wet for so long that their skin was wrinkled and fish-belly white.

Even in these circumstances, the whitemen wrote. Clark looked up from his notebook one day and said, “November eleventh, Drouillard. Two years since the day we met you, at Massac fort.”

Drouillard remembered the eagle leading him. “Let’s celebrate,” he said, rain dripping from the end of his nose.

It had been raining and blowing for eleven days, varied only on one day by thunder, lightning, and hail. When the seas diminished a little, three men set out in the Indian-made canoe to scout for a cove or beach ahead, but were turned back by the force of the seas. They tried again the next day. On November 14, Colter swept around the point in the canoe with the welcome news that they had found a beach with a good canoe harbor not far around the point, and two Indian camps. He had left Willard
and Shannon at the beach to hunt and explore the river farther down, and to look for ships in a bay.

Captain Lewis decided to grab the opportunity to take a small party around the point while it was feasible. He selected Drouillard, the Field brothers, and Private Frazier, took a canoe with a crew of paddlers, and launched into the bashing waves. By the time they had struggled around the sheltering point, the canoe was half full of water and the men were soaked by spray. But they did get around and were landed on a sandy beach in the rain, and at a timely moment: Willard and Shannon ran to meet them with the news that the young Chinooks in the camp had deftly stolen both their rifles. The arrival of many soldiers so alarmed the Indians that they meekly delivered up the guns and submitted to a scolding and severe threats delivered by Drouillard in sign language. The canoe was sent back with word for Captain Clark to bring the rest around to this habitable place as soon as the seas permitted. They made a comfortable, though flea-infested, camp in one of the many abandoned Indian houses. There, Captain Lewis showed them a map and laid out his purpose.

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