On the afternoon of July 25, 1806, a stop was made on the south side of the Yellowstone River near a remarkable sandstone formation. It was located about 250 paces back from the river and measured some 400 paces in circumference. Clark estimated its height at 200 feet. He named it “Pompy’s Tower” after Sacajawea’s infant son, whom he had nicknamed “Pomp” or “Little Pomp,” but today it is known as Pompeys Pillar. Clark and some others climbed the only accessible side, the northeast. Near a spot on the path leading to the top where Indians had etched animal and other figures in the rock, Clark inscribed his name and the date. On the grass-covered soil of the summit, the natives had piled two heaps of stones. The surrounding countryside was visible for a distance of 40 miles.
ROBERT G. FERRIS, ed., prepared by ROY E. APPLEMAN, Lewis and Clark. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of Interior, National Park Service, 1975, p. 228.
On June 26, the expedition was back where it had stored the baggage for the retreat down the mountainside. The men had placed the packs on scaffolds in the trees. Nothing had been damaged. The snow here was seven feet deep and hard. The Nez Percé guides warned the men that they would have to hurry to reach the place where there would be grass for the horses. “Horses are again hungry,” they said.
The outfit welcomed a visitor in their camp that evening, a Chopunnish warrior who wished to accompany the white men to the Great Falls of the Missouri. Now the expedition faced the snowy mountain barrier with four guides, who they hoped could traverse this trackless region with instinctive sureness.
Later, Sacajawea asked this Chopunnish warrior if he knew of the man called Shadow, who had been captured by the Chopunnish when he was small, but by birth was a Shoshoni.
“No,” the Chopunnish said. “That man must come from a different tribe in this great Nez Percé Nation.”
The next day, the expedition stood on a high peak where some natives had built a large stone mound and put a tall tamarack pole in the center. All four guides insisted on stopping to smoke their pipe. This was a sacred spot to them.
Looking about, the captains realized both grandeur and danger in this savage country. “I doubt that we could find our way alone,” said Clark. “We are entirely surrounded by mountains and at this moment it seems impossible to escape them.”
“I am eternally grateful that those blizzards are over. Good Lord, I doubt we could have lasted another day or two in that,” said Lewis.
The fresh meat was soon exhausted, and Charbonneau was told to use a pint of bear’s oil with the boiled roots Sacajawea brought in. This was an agreeable dish.
Clark checked Pott’s healing leg at least once a day to make sure it was not breaking down. The swelling was now down, but the leg was black and blue and so stiff it was hard to walk on. Clark put pounded rootsand leaves of the wild ginger on the wound and wrapped it with a strip of wool.
“That ginger is great for pain,” said Potts. “Or the wrapping is so tight, I feel very little in my leg.”
Clark also kept an eye on Sacajawea’s child, Pomp, seeing that his head and ears were covered in the cold, driving winds. Several times he carried the boy ahead of him on his horse with blankets wrapped tightly about him. The boy remained so warm that he was sleepy much of the time as the horse jogged over the snows of the mountain pass. Pomp’s abscess was nearly healed, but there was a deep-pitting scar that would remain forever behind his left ear.
Two days later, the four guides were promising grass ahead. And, true to their word, early in the day they found rich patches of new grass scattered among the rocks. The horses needed it badly. In the afternoon, the snow’s softness made the going difficult. The air became almost mild. They camped under a rock shelter where they could all lie well away from the fire and sleep in comparative dryness.
Early in the morning, Lewis walked on the soft grass and paused to listen to the melting snow rushing into tiny streams. He was cheered to hear spring coming for certain to change places with winter. He bent to look into the water covering some dark silt and saw his own reflection.
He was startled to see in the water-mirror an unfamiliar, lean, lined face, surrounded with a scraggly beard. The nostrils were ringed in red, the brown lips cracked. The tanned cheeks were taut against the high bone, then sagged against the jaw. The blue eyes were embedded deep within their sockets and the eyebrows looked pale and brittle, like old winter grass. Tangled, overgrown whiskers hid insect bites. A bony hand scratched at the loose skin around one jaw. Sandy hair, now dark with an accumulation of oil and soot, was held away from the face by a grimy, black fur cap. The leather shirt was smeared with grease and mud and hung loose on jutting shoulder blades.
He was surprised to see this frightful scarecrow, who looked crafty and nervous as a trapped animal as it licked its dry, crusty lips. Lewis sat back on hishaunches, an easy, familiar posture by now. He pulled off his cap and his hair fell in strings against his neck. He scratched his head with short, broken fingernails, then deliberately pulled off his shirt. He stood and kicked off his moccasins and baggy leather trousers, then scrubbed the gaunt body with translucent gray, melting snow. His nose wrinkled with the foul body smell when he pulled on the filthy shirt and trousers and pushed his bare feet into the soiled moccasins. He ran a cold, wet hand through his hair and beard and sighed loudly at the tangles. Back in camp, he felt as if everyone was aware of his vanity. He felt guilty and ashamed for wanting to be clean when the others neglected a bath in ice water and waited for a warmer time.
Then he saw himself, a man who had been President Jefferson’s private secretary. A gentleman who had lived in the executive mansion in Washington, D.C., he was picking bits of horsemeat from a blackened kettle and enjoying it. In a smoke-filled skin and pine-branch leanto, he lit his pipe and passed it to half-naked natives before he took it from the savages’ mouth into his own.
Lewis sat, expressionless, and looked at the man with whom he shared the honors of this expedition. Clark seemed an equally grave and dignified scarecrow. Lewis had the sudden mad desire to shout with laughter and roll on the ground in hilarity.
The next day, they saw only patches of drifted snow as they came down the northeast side of the Rockies.1 Roots were the only food left.
As Sacajawea slogged over the soggy loam, each step seemed to drag along some of the hillside. Her thighs were numbed, and she had a sickening ache in her back. She managed to struggle down to the tree line, and then collapsed on a damp, mossy bank. Charbonneau picked her up and set her on some rotted bark. She got up and started down the hill, but again fell. A whistle from Shannon brought Clark back, and a glance showed where the trouble lay.
“You got to ride, Janey. There’s plenty of horses. If you don’t ride, you’ll be sick. There’s no camp for a sick squaw until we get into the big timber.”
Charbonneau spoke up. “Squaw walks. Her legs arestrong. Horses carry the baggage, and the hunters need to ride. So—there’s no room for a squaw on horseback.”
“Shut up!” Clark said in French. “She obeys my orders. She rides.”
She obeyed and finished the rest of the descent in a miserable half doze, her arms slung through baggage thongs to keep from falling off. Clark kept Pomp in front of him on his horse.
They found a deer carcass lying on the trail where the hunters had left it. Sacajawea began to sing a sad song in her soft Shoshoni tongue. Bratton and Whitehouse packed the venison on a horse, and she did not hear them shout their thanksgiving for the fresh meat. Her mind was buried inward, upon dying, winter-starved people. She imagined the men were in great sorrow. Clark watched her constantly.
To her he was an enveloping shield, and she felt protected merely by the sounds he made near her, so that nothing could intrude across the invisible circle. And she felt completely alone. She did not care what the others did and never looked at them. If occasionally she was separated from Clark, a restlessness began in her mind and grew steadily, like the wind in the trees moving down to move the snow into great drifts. Sweat formed on her face and hands, and she would start out after Clark. With only a glimpse of him in grease-stained leggings and shirt laden with soot, these sounds would retreat.
She refused to eat, and slept little.
“Janey needs the sweat bath,” said Bratton. “She suffers the mountain sickness.”
The next afternoon, the expedition found a luxury—a hot spring that the natives had dammed with stones and mud to make a bathing place. The men had baths, and the four guides remained in the hot spring as long as they could, then ran to plunge into the creek, which had ice at its edges.
At the campfire Clark urged Sacajawea to go bathe her child at the spring. “Do not go near while she is there,” he warned the men. “Perhaps she will go in with the child, and it will warm her bones as much as a good sweat. Maybe Bratton is right. This will do her good.”
The child giggled and gurgled as she held him inwater that made his brown skin pink and glowing. The pitted scar behind his ear was a vivid red. She ran her fingers lightly over it. It is a mark, like a reminder, so I will remember how precious a life can be, she thought. It is not an ugly mark. It is beautiful and sets my son apart and shows for all to see how he overcame the badness in his body. “Skookumchuck, something grand,” she said to him in Chinook, laughing with Pomp. She sat him on a blanket and slid from her greasy tunic and swam in the delightfully warm water, first looking around so that she could see Clark’s back where he sat by the fire. She took great handfuls of sand and rubbed her hair to remove the old, rancid oil. When she was finished, she sat on a stone and combed her long hair over and over with a two-pronged stick, forgetting to keep her eyes on Clark, but watching her child and hearing the low babble of the men’s voices from over the rise. She braided her hair, dipped her tunic into the water, and cleaned it with sand and hard rubbing. She squeezed it dry and smoothed it over her thin body, knowing her own heat would dry it before night. Slowly she slipped in beside Clark and Charbonneau at the fire, her eyes bright, her face glowing. She held her child and listened to the men and saw her child asleep in her lap. He is my skookumchuck, she thought again.
By low grunts and hand signs, the native guides were telling about barefoot tracks they had seen in the loam that morning. “It was a Flathead fleeing from a Blackfoot,” they said.
The four Nez Percé guides regarded the trail of the white men into the country of their hereditary enemies, the Blackfeet, as a venture to certain death. Now they were close enough to Blackfoot country. They rapped on their heads, significantly drew their knives across their throats, and pointed far ahead into the star-filled sky. They wanted to go back to their own country. The four Nez Percés quietly left the campfire that night and started back up the mountain. Lewis ran after them, begging them to direct the expedition as far as the East Branch of Clark’s River, so they would be headed in the direction of the Missouri. Lewis gave the brother of Chief Cut Nose, Yomekollick, a small seasons medal. Yomekollick gave his name, Folded White Bear Skin, to Lewis in exchange, and agreed to stay a few more days.
The day after, Sacajawea stood petrified with fright as Lewis rolled with his horse forty feet over the edge of a cliff. Ordway scrambled after him and found Lewis unhurt but shouting, “The horse, the horse! We must get him up! Put him on his feet!”
To Sacajawea’s surprise, the horse was also unhurt and stood up. With an effort she shook off her fright, shoved Pomp into Shannon’s hands, and scrambled down, heedless of briars and stones, to guide the horse back to the trail. Ordway pushed Lewis back up to the trail. The men on the top of the embankment shouted encouragement and stretched out hands to bring the three up over the edge, and at the same time, the horse scrambled to the trail with Sacajawea following, nearly breathless.
“That was a close enough call for me,” sighed Lewis, wiping his hands on his leggings.
By nightfall they were back in their old camp, “Traveler’s Rest,”2 where they had stayed early in September of the year before. By the firelight Sacajawea pulled thorns from her scratched legs and rubbed bear’s oil in the cuts. She sang in English the songs the men sang and chatted easily with them about the next day’s trial. She had overcome the mountain sickness. She looked at Lewis. “I am glad we did not have to eat your horse.”
During the winter at Fort Clatsop, the captains had decided that when the expedition returned to Traveler’s Rest they would divide. Lewis, with Yomekollick as his guide, decided now to go on to the Great Falls by the route the Nez Percés had told about, which was shorter than the one they had taken nearly a year before. His party would go up the Hellgate and Blackfoot rivers, cross the Divide, and go down to the Great Falls by way of either the Dearborn or Sun River. From there, Lewis wanted to go to the Marias River and see if it had a northern branch. Pat Gass, Drouillard, the two Fields brothers, Frazier, Werner, Thompson, Goodrich, and McNeal were going with him. The last three men would go as far as the Great Falls portage. They would make camp there, raise last year’s cache, put the equipmentin order, and wait for Clark and his party to join them along the river.
Clark said, “I want only the good swimmers with me if we are to float.”
Sacajawea’s heart sank because Charbonneau could not swim, and so she was certain she would be assigned with him to Lewis’s group.
But Clark continued, “I’ll take Janey. She is invaluable at retrieving goods from a canoe that ships water. However, we might have to tie her man to the supplies so that he’ll get pulled out in case of an accident.”
Charbonneau laughed heartily, but his face was black from an inner hatred of being teased.
Lewis and his party turned north. Clark, with the remainder of the outfit and fifty horses, went south along the Bitterroot Valley.3
The expedition found the valley pink as a rose with the delicate bloom of the bitterroot. The soft violet and pink shooting stars pointed their yellow tips toward the fair sky. Wild strawberries still bloomed, along with raspberries and thimbleberries. The outfit hiked, leading the horses, through old, bearded forests, past moist alpine gardens, alive with sparkling water and the vivid green of moss, sheltered in the heart of the mountains from wind and burning sun. They passed marmots and rock rabbits, and the smell of white serviceberry blossoms was pungent and sweet on the air.
Deer ran before Clark’s party, leaping across the clear streams. The men saw herds of bighorns on the mountains at the edge of snowbanks. When they rode horseback in the bright sunlight, the ground threw back heat. The grass became dry, the trees parched, and small stream beds dry. Once they rode the horses slowly along a stony watercourse. Clark stopped and pointed upward where none of the others had been looking. They had ridden through a gap in the stone into a kind of rocky, waterless cirque. Looking up, Sacajawea was first to see what Clark pointed at. It was hard to see exactly what it was.
She dismounted, left her horse in the dry creek, and scrambled up a short slope of broken stone to the foot of the cliff. There, worked in some red pigment, low down on the cliff face, was a small representation of atepee. Smoke rose from the smoke hole, and in the left foreground stood a dog. The whole thing looked like the work of some native child, and the men who had come to look stared wonderingly.
“What does that mean?” asked Shannon as he backed down the slope a few paces to get a better sight of the bluff.
And then, maybe twenty feet up, he saw a painting of native hunters. It was old and faded; the full glare of the sun made the figures nearly invisible. The figures of men were scattered about, some hunting buffalo, some smoking peacefully, some walking under a huge red sun.
“Just look at that!” exclaimed Clark. ‘To reach the high point on the face of that rock, those artists must have built themselves a scaffold of poles lashed together with thick thongs.”
“How old?” asked Sacajawea, looking upward.
“Fifty years. I don’t really know, maybe much older,” said Clark, who seemed struck with delight over the fact that unknown human beings had moved about in this trailless country long before he came.
“This ancient place may be the meeting ground of a buffalo hunt, and the people made pictures while waiting to pass the time,” said Sacajawea.
“Aw, these drawings are supposed to bring in the buffalo,” suggested Shannon.
“And it’s a might weighty thing to send to President Jefferson,” teased York.
The party went on across an intervening coulee. Then they had to lead the horses and try to keep ahead of them. The horses came up the steep slope with a rush. Charbonneau’s horse began running loose. He had somehow got ahead of the group in the coulee. Charbonneau ran behind his horse, leading the packhorse. All he could do was watch that monstrous rump up above him, clawing and scuffling away at the mountain and hurling down rocks, which those below had to dodge. Charbonneau urged his horse on with horrid threats and a quirt whenever he could reach him because if the horse hesitated and fell, he would sweep the whole lot with him. And there was no question of turning back. That horse could not have turned around on so steep a slope, with so poor a footing, let alone go back down it. Up went the party, hoping. It was all they could do—and fortunately at the top there was a gravelly, rocky slope. They could see where to descend into Ross’s Hole. There were some signs of recent occupation—a tire still burning and fresh sign of two horses—but no sign of the native Flatheads or anyone else.
Charbonneau looked uneasily at Clark and wondered fleetingly what it would be like to know that hostile bands were watching them, to feel that stalking enemies were on the lookout in that desolation—after all, hadn’t they come across the ashes of other men’s fires? Charbonneau put the thought away deliberately and laughed nervously.
They followed an indistinct trail across the Continental Divide down into the large valley of the Jefferson River.4
In that valley Charbonneau spotted a buffalo. He kicked his horse into action and primed his rifle as he rode, but he did not keep his balance as he watched the buffalo and worked with his rifle. He was thrown to the ground and remained stiff and sore for a week. George Gibson fell off his horse and landed on a sharp snag, which ran nearly two inches into his thigh. This lamed him so badly that he had to be carried in a litter made of poles lashed and woven across by rawhide thongs.
Sacajawea rubbed rancid bear’s oil on the face and arms of Pomp to keep off mosquitoes. She passed it to Gibson and Charbonneau. The mosquitoes were small and penetrated the netting covering Pomp at night. Some of the men slept facedown against the ground to keep the insects off. Pomp’s face became red and swollen like some huge puffball even with bear’s oil and protective netting.
“Deer in these parts are poor on account of these torturous insects,” Clark grumbled. “The ravenous pests have sucked away most of the animals’ blood.”
There were large and aggressive rattlesnakes that the horses had to sidestep. There was a close call when Sacajawea comforted her child and did not watch the trail carefully. Her horse stepped into a nest of small rattlers, but the horse pulled out so fast there was no time for any to strike.
The following day, they came to Shoshoni Cove, where they had buried canoes the year before. Now in the Shoshoni country, everyone kept a lookout for the Agaidükas. Sacajawea found the meadow grass waist-tall when she stopped to gather camass roots. Always she hoped to see somewhere women of the People out gathering roots. She saw no one and no marks of a recent camp. The trees were full-leaved, and the whole wide cove was spread green. The rimrocks seemed silver around it, and the sky like a sheet of blue silk.
Charbonneau looked at this valley in high summer and said, “I would call it Bayou Salade.”
At midday Sacajawea pointed to old beaver dams making a small stream wide. “Here my people have trapped.” Even the trees seemed familiar. Hours passed, and the dusk before dark came on. There was still no sign of the People.
Worn and tired, leg muscles stiff, the men made night camp.
“I have given my word that I would return to see the People,” Sacajawea said, more to herself than to anyone else in particular.
“This outfit will not wander all over these foothills looking for some people who are on the move—who have probably moved more than once since we last saw them,” scolded Charbonneau. “Femme, what you think? We could never be certain of finding them. And there is Capitaine Lewis’s party—waiting for us. The men—they want to be home before the Missouri freezes. Femme, you come with me. We will make our camp with the Minnetarees. They will be your people. Huh?’ Charbonneau scratched through the hair on his chest and cleared his throat. He noticed Sacajawea’s bowed head, but did not see the tears that touched the blanket across her knees.
“Time will work for me,” she mumbled. “I will see the People again.” Sacajawea knew that Charbonneau would rather be where he could pretend he was a big man. She knew also that he would never understand her feeling toward the People, or any one person. This was his way. She knew, too, that her own brother, Chief Black Gun, had told her she must stay with her man because that was the Shoshoni way, but he had also said that Charbonneau would never come back to the Shoshoni. At, she thought, Black Gun knew then. The foreboding she had felt when leaving her brother was due partly to the intuitive knowledge she herself had had that she would never see Black Gun again.
She sat still for a time, wondering. Finally she heard Charbonneau laugh huskily and saw him go to sit with the men around the fire.
Captain Clark found the canoes safe and the cache of supplies intact and dry. Inside the cache the men found tobacco. They acted as though that were the most important find of the day. The chewers had long ago tired of crabtree bark, and the smokers coughed on their mixture of red willow bark and bearberry leaves. Now that the cache was opened, smoke puffs and brown spit flowed freely, and the men began to feel that the hard part of the trip was behind them and now it was something to tell big stories about. They counted the milestones. They had passed Willard Creek,5 gone on to the Jefferson River, and camped in Shoshoni Cove.
The next morning, Clark left Nat Pryor in charge of six men to bring on the horses overland. The rest of the outfit climbed into the canoes. In three days the canoes covered the distance that had taken more than a week on the way upstream the year before.
Pomp dangled his hands in the river and chattered with Ben York. The mountain streams that fell into the river were full of sticks and fallen saplings where beaver built homes and the water was calmed to a placid pool. The beaver, with otter and muskrats, basked along the banks. Sometimes a beaver slapped a tail around a canoe, angry at the invasion of his security. The beaver were often eaten now and pelts saved to take back to the States.
On July 13, Clark met Pryor and his six men with the outfit’s horses at the site of their old July 27, 1805, encampment. That evening, Clark sent John Ordway and ten of the men downriver in the six canoes with a letter for Captain Lewis. Ordway’s party was to camp at the Great Falls and wait for Lewis. Clark took the rest of the party overland with the forty-nine horses and one colt. The rocks and prickly pear were hard and sharp on the hooves of the unshod horses.
Sacajawea walked with Clark and York. ‘The People put moccasins on their horses before the hooves are worn down to the quick and are as painful as this.”
“Moccasins?” asked Clark, at first unbelieving, thinking Sacajawea was making a joke, then wondering why he had not thought of so simple and logical a thing himself long ago.
“Ai, made from green buffalo hide because it is strong.”
After the last meal of the day, Sacajawea showed Clark and York how to make moccasins as best she could remember, for the horses that were most lame. York saw how the moccasins helped, and he made more as the party continued over the stony plains.
And York carved a willow whistle for Pomp as they rode past the small timber in the rain.6
Sacajawea kept looking backward, hoping to see a thin wisp of smoke—something to tell her that the People were near. She stopped frequently and breathed deeply, then took small, shallow breaths, smelling the air. She could detect no camp or horse herd or group of people nearby. To leave this land of the People was one of the hardest and loneliest steps of Sacajawea’s life.
“Don’t lollygag around here,” warned Charbonneau sharply. “Come on, femme. The outfit, she will leave you behind. Faire allons!”
Clark, coming up from the rear, sensed her desire to linger at this last edge of Shoshoni land. He wanted to ease her hurting heart.
“Janey, there is a time to plant and a time to pull up that which was planted.”
She looked at him, her eyes wide. He really knew how she felt. He knew it was hard to pull away from all her childhood memories. He knew she was aching inside and that by tomorrow this land would be something in her past. Slowly she drew herself to her full height.
“You brought me to the land of my people; now you take me away. Is that your right?” The words flashed from her, each word deliberate and each meant to reproach and sting. Her head was held high, her hands making a talk of their own.
In an instant it dawned on Clark that she careddeeply about him and wished for him to feel her hurt as she rode through her people’s land without so much as saying a farewell to them.
She knew also that the things she had submerged and made to stay sleeping in her had come awake. Then she thought how impossible even to speak of this deeper feeling between them. This feeling had roots between them, but the roots could never be nourished and kept alive when the well of feeling had to be kept buried. It had to be a river that never dried up.
Her vehemence went down like a storm wind and faded.
Clark said nothing as he watched her ride ahead. He thought that what he had heard and seen were fragments and ripples of her personal identity as an individual. It was as though a wish had been granted and he had seen inside her skull. He saw she was becoming herself and finding her purpose, no longer cowed by the shackles of Shoshoni or any other native tradition or behavior. She was behaving as a white girl, or any girl, might, given the opportunity to find herself.
On July 18, Charbonneau saw a thin line of smoke rise to the southeast in the plains. Then he became excited when he thought he saw an Indian on the highlands on the opposite side of the river. He rode back to Captain Clark, “Mon dieu, you talk with my son and make jokes, but Jésus, don’t you see that smoke and that man? There, see? He is a Prenegard, a Crow with slanting brown eyes, opened wide, and a single black crow feather in his hair.”
“How could you have seen a man’s eyes from this distance? I did see a line of smoke,” Clark said, wiping the palms of his hands on his buckskins, “but I don’t see it now.”
“You saw the smoke, and that means Indians somewhere,” Charbonneau said, standing up to him.
Some of the other men became jumpy when Charbonneau told about the thieving Crows who were watching the camp constantly. The men became especially uneasy when horses actually began to disappear, one or two at a time, always at night. Only the besthorses were missing. When half the horses vanished one night, doubt was no longer possible.
“Sacre! Now you believe me,” said Charbonneau. “I saw a Crow Indian, a damned, thieving Crow.”
The remaining horses were so nervous that they stampeded one morning when Pryor approached them. He took a search party out and failed to find a single horse, but he brought back a length of Indian rope and a moccasin, still wet around the sole, which seemed to indicate it had been worn a few hours earlier near the water. Shannon found the tracks of the stolen herd, being driven at full speed down the valley. So—perhaps the Crows were around, though no one ever saw them—except old Charbonneau.
Clark ordered Pryor to take Windsor and Shannon and go directly to the Mandan villages. From there they were to go north to the Assiniboin, find Hugh Heney, the Canadian trader they had met in 1804, and give Heney a letter asking him to persuade Sioux chiefs to visit the President of the United States in Washington, D.C. Clark made it clear that he would pick up the three men and the chiefs with his canoes on the way down the Missouri.
These three men were trailed by the Indians, which kept them in a constant state of excitement. One night a wolf came into their camp and bit Pryor’s hand while he slept and was about to attack Windsor when Shannon shot it. “We have two hopes,” said Shannon. “One is that we find Clark again, and the other is that the Indians will not find it necessary to take our scalps.” They shouldered their packs and headed for the river.
Unaware of the three men’s trouble, Clark ran his canoes swiftly down the Yellowstone River, enjoying the scenery. The days were hot, but the nights were cool. Now and again, buffalo dotted the landscape, under the shade of trees, or standing in water, like cattle, or browsing on the soft green hills. Deer and elk were shot from the canoes. Sometimes they heard the booming subterranean geysers hidden in the hollows of the mountains.
On July 25, Clark ordered the dugouts to land. He wanted to examine an unusual rock. Its tall sides werecovered with animal figures; the top was flat except that it had two rock cairns built at the summit that seemed to mesh together because there were Vs in the rim aligned like Vs in a rifle sight. Clark examined the top of this unusual rock, which rose almost sheer above the broad, flat plain of the Yellowstone Valley. There were no loose stones on the top. Clark surmised that some people had to carry the stones for the cairns up the steep, accessible northeast side, a hundred and fifty to two hundred feet from the valley. Inside the cairns were bird bones, together with several small clay bowls painted black and several others painted white.
“Too bad we did not find this earlier,” sighed Clark. “It might be some kind of structure to measure the solstice. We could have tested it with spring stars. I wonder who made use of it.”
Clark was busy examining the carvings, then pointed out some interesting markings to Sacajawea. She ran her hands over the rock and found more carvings of deer grazing. As she bent close to the rock, Pomp, in a blanket on her back, reached out and touched one primitive animal representation.
“Bear,” he said plainly.
Clark reached for the child’s hand. “I name this pillar Pompy’s Tower,” he said ceremoniously.
York laughed and said, “Some folks’ll think this rock was named for a little pickaninny instead of Janey’s firstborn.”
Looking down to the base of the pillar, Clark saw a creek flowing close by and announced, “I dedicate the creek below to my little dancing boy, Pomp, and name it by his given name, Jean Baptiste’s Creek.”7 Before climbing all the way down the rock, Clark paused to chip his name and the date in the side. “Pryor and his men will know we’ve been here if they pass this way,” he said.
“I could chip a buffalo in the rock,” quipped Charbonneau, “but I could not spell my name. Maybe someone would do that for me?”
“Aw, come on down carefully. It would be better if you roasted us some fresh buffalo hump. I saw lots of those big beasts below us just waiting for some hunter to shoot,” said Clark, grabbing for the small brush to steady his downward path.