登陆注册
4477500000138

第138章

Route of Mr. Stuart- Dreary Wilds.- Thirsty Travelling.-A Grove and Streamlet.- The Blue Mountains.- A Fertile Plain With Rivulets.- Sulphur Spring- Route Along Snake River- Rumors of White Men.-The Snake and His Horse.- A Snake Guide.-A Midnight Decampment.- Unexpected Meeting With Old Comrades- Story of Trappers' Hardships- Salmon Falls- A Great Fishery.- Mode of Spearing Salmon.- Arrival at the Caldron Linn.- State of the Caches. - New Resolution of the Three Kentucky Trappers.

IN retracing the route which had proved so disastrous to Mr.

Hunt's party during the preceding winter, Mr. Stuart had trusted, in the present more favorable season, to find easy travelling and abundant supplies. On these great wastes and wilds, however, each season has its peculiar hardships. The travellers had not proceeded far, before they found themselves among naked and arid hills, with a soil composed of sand and clay, baked and brittle, that to all appearance had never been visited by the dews of heaven.

Not a spring, or pool, or running stream was to be seen; the sunburnt country was seamed and cut up by dry ravines, the beds of winter torrents, serving only to balk the hopes of man and beast with the sight of dusty channels, where water had once poured along in floods.

For a long summer day they continued onward without halting, a burning sky above their heads, a parched desert beneath their feet, with just wind enough to raise the light sand from the knolls, and envelop them in stifling clouds. The sufferings from thirst became intense; a fine young dog, their only companion of the kind, gave out, and expired. Evening drew on without any prospect of relief, and they were almost reduced to despair, when they descried something that looked like a fringe of forest along the horizon. All were inspired with new hope, for they knew that on these arid wastes, in the neighborhood of trees, there is always water.

They now quickened their pace; the horses seemed to understand their motives, and to partake of their anticipations; for, though before almost ready to give out, they now required neither whip nor spur. With all their exertions, it was late in the night before they drew near to the trees. As they approached, they heard, with transport, the rippling of a shallow stream. No sooner did the refreshing sound reach the ears of the horse, than the poor animals snuffed the air, rushed forward with ungovernable eagerness, and plunging their muzzles into the water, drank until they seemed in danger of bursting. Their riders had but little more discretion, and required repeated draughts to quench their excessive thirst. Their weary march that day had been forty-five miles, over a tract that might rival the deserts of Africa for aridity. Indeed, the sufferings of the traveller on these American deserts is frequently more severe than in the wastes of Africa or Asia, from being less habituated and prepared to cope with them.

On the banks of this blessed stream the travellers encamped for the night; and so great had been their fatigue, and so sound and sweet was their sleep, that it was a late hour the next morning before they awoke. They now recognized the little river to be the Umatilla, the same on the banks of which Mr. Hunt and his followers had arrived after their painful struggle through the Blue Mountains, and experienced such a kind relief in the friendly camp of the Sciatogas.

That range of Blue Mountains now extended in the distance before them; they were the same among which poor Michael Carriere had perished. They form the southeast boundary of the great plains along the Columbia, dividing the waters of its main stream from those of Lewis River. They are, in fact, a part of a long chain, which stretches over a great extent of country, and includes in its links the Snake River Mountains.

The day was somewhat advanced before the travellers left the shady banks of the Umatilla. Their route gradually took them among the Blue Mountains, which assumed the most rugged aspect on a near approach. They were shagged with dense and gloomy forests, and cut up by deep and precipitous ravines, extremely toilsome to the horses. Sometimes the travellers had to follow the course of some brawling stream, with a broken, rocky bed, which the shouldering cliffs and promontories on either side obliged them frequently to cross and recross. For some miles they struggled forward through these savage and darkly wooded defiles, when all at once the whole landscape changed, as if by magic. The rude mountains and rugged ravines softened into beautiful hills, and intervening meadows, with rivulets winding through fresh herbage, and sparkling and murmuring over gravelly beds, the whole forming a verdant and pastoral scene, which derived additional charms from being locked up in the bosom of such a hard-hearted region.

Emerging from the chain of Blue Mountains, they descended upon a vast plain, almost a dead level, sixty miles in circumference, Of excellent soil, with fine streams meandering through it in every direction, their courses marked out in the wide landscape by serpentine lines of cotton-wood trees, and willows, which fringed their banks, and afforded sustenance to great numbers of beavers and otters.

In traversing this plain, they passed, close to the skirts of the hills, a great pool of water, three hundred yards in circumference, fed by a sulphur spring, about ten feet in diameter, boiling up in one corner. The vapor from this pool was extremely noisome, and tainted the air for a considerable distance. The place was much frequented by elk, which were found in considerable numbers in the adjacent mountains, and their horns, shed in the spring-time, were strewed in every direction around the pond.

On the 10th of August, they reached the main body of Woodvile Creek, the same stream which Mr. Hunt had ascended in the preceding year, shortly after his separation from Mr. Crooks.

同类推荐
  • 送僧二首

    送僧二首

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 祖亮启禅师语录

    祖亮启禅师语录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 力庄严三昧经

    力庄严三昧经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 挟注胜鬘经

    挟注胜鬘经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 道经

    道经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 生活系附身

    生活系附身

    叮,由于宿主观看《柯南》时情绪过度激动、紧张,获得一张【柯南附身卡】。叮,由于宿主吃到一碗很好吃的杂碎面,获得一张【食神附身卡】。生活处处有惊喜,朝朝暮暮得附身。刘明跪求:“给俺一张巴菲特附身卡吧,咱都研究股票好几天了。”
  • 图解卡耐基成功学大全集

    图解卡耐基成功学大全集

    《图解卡耐基成功学大全集》囊括了卡耐基励志著作中最经典的《人性的弱点》、《人性的优点》、《美好的人生》、《快乐的人生》和《语言的突破》五部分内容,浓缩了卡耐基成功哲学中所有的的思想精华,旨在帮助读者解决生活中面临的最大问题:如何在社会交往、商务活动中与人打交道,并有效地影响他人;如何击败人类的大敌——忧虑,创造幸福美好的人生;如何在公共场合表现突出,准确地表达自己的观点和见解,赢得听众的赞赏和尊重。
  • 无上召唤三国系统

    无上召唤三国系统

    霸天大陆,一统天下的大秦帝国已经传承了近千年岁月,现如今大秦早已经没有了往昔君临天下之威势。四大异姓王独立于皇朝,五大传承千年的世袭国公同样心思诡异,昔日的忠诚早已经荡然无存,当今秦皇昏迷不醒,三大皇子争权,八大宗门各有各的算计,整个大秦皇权已失,破灭已成定局。一代黑道大佬穿越成大秦文弱六皇子楚王秦平,刚穿越就遇到必死之局的袭杀,好在得到了三国召唤系统,逆转杀局。且看黑道大佬秦平带领着三国的名臣猛将如何在这个纷乱的大陆之上争夺那君临天下的皇座,建立无上运朝,争伐大千世界,威压万古。
  • 愿你明媚如骄阳

    愿你明媚如骄阳

    渣男劈腿还倒打一耙?黎千柔帅气说拜拜,摇身一变成为人人艳羡的陆太太。眼看着陆太太跟小鲜肉混得火热,某腹黑不满了。“帮你做了这么多,总该轮到你回报的时候了吧?”小白花眨巴着无辜的大眼睛,“你想做什么?”“你说呢?”--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 中国民间故事

    中国民间故事

    五千年中华文明,流传着无数美丽动人的民间故事。这些故事情节曲折离奇,扣人心弦,趣味盎然。这些民间故事是千百年来劳动人民智慧的结晶,表现了劳动人民的喜怒哀乐,体现了劳动人民对美好生活的追求和对生命的思索,表现了劳动人民纯洁善良的心灵。这本《中国民间故事》从趣味性、文学性出发,精心选编了我国流传已久、广受赞誉的很好民间故事。这些民间故事里有巾帼不让须眉的花木兰,她女扮男装,代父从军;有坚强勇敢的沉香,他不畏艰险,劈华山救母;有对爱情忠贞不渝的梁山伯与祝英台,他们最终化成两只翩翩起舞的蝴蝶……
  • 无限的暗黑世界

    无限的暗黑世界

    不过是偷偷用了下舍友的游戏登陆器,没想到却困在了这个完全陌生的游戏世界里,马夏表示很蛋疼。蛋疼的人生不需要理由,面对迎面而来的怪物,面对这个陌生的世界,马夏的心里只有一个想法。。不要干,就是怂!--------------------PS:设定模板为暗黑破坏神3
  • 都市之万界仙帝

    都市之万界仙帝

    苍玄之下,我为至尊!我是苍玄大帝,大帝游历经地球,下来看风景,却不成想被人带回家当女婿啦……!
  • 又见好时光

    又见好时光

    她,是神秘家族的嫡女,却流落在外受尽欺负,流落的千金不如婢!一次误闯,她惹上了高冷神秘总裁,从此他便像个无赖,缠着她要对他负责到底。她的身份逐渐继一系列的阻扰事件后浮出水面,最终获得了新生,获得了爱情。女人:这是个误会,我不介意了,你不用对我负责。男人:不用对你负责可以啊,但我已经是你的人了,你要对我负责。女人:你堂堂一个大男人要神马负责?男人:我取向正常,当然要妇责啊!女人:这哪跟哪啊……
  • 千倾缅

    千倾缅

    殷朝年间太后找寻她失踪十六年的长公主永乐。追梦的顾沁突如其来的一个转变打破了平静的生活。因酷似长公主永乐成为殷朝的公主。殷世殿下遇见顾沁......
  • Letters Upon The Aesthetic Education of Man

    Letters Upon The Aesthetic Education of Man

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。