She waded into the pond.

She put the canoe on the water.

With her toes she pulled up the wappato from the bottom of the pond.

The woman caught it and put it in the canoe.

She was in the water many hours, summer and winter.

When her canoe was full, she put it on her head and carried it home.

She roasted the wappato on hot stones.

It tasted very good.

The soldiers said it was the best root they had tasted.

The Indian women used to put some wappato in gra.s.s baskets and sell it to the tribes up the river.

anx ious cheer ful view break ing dis tinct ly sh.o.r.es

TO THE PACIFIC OCEAN.

The party went down the Columbia River in canoes.

It was a hard trip.

It rained all the time.

Each day the men were wet to the skin.

They had to carry their goods around some rapids.

They could not be very cheerful.

One day it stopped raining for a little time.

The low clouds went away.

The party saw that the river was very wide.

They rowed on.

Then they saw the great ocean lying in the sun.

They became very happy.

They cheered and laughed and sang.

They rowed on very fast.

Captain Lewis wrote in his book: "Ocean in view! O! the joy! We are in VIEW of the Ocean, this great Pacific Ocean, which we have been so long anxious to see. The noise made by the waves breaking on the rocky sh.o.r.es may be heard distinctly."

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THE PACIFIC OCEAN.

The party saw that they had come to the end of their journey.

They had come 4,134 miles from the mouth of the Missouri River.

It had taken them a year and a half to come.

But now they forgot their troubles.

They forgot the times they had been hungry.

They forgot their cut feet and their black and blue backs.

They forgot the bears and the snakes and the mosquitoes.

They saw the Pacific Ocean before them.

They sang because they were the first white men to make this journey.

They did not care for the troubles going back.

They knew that they could go home faster than they had come.

And they sang together, "The Ocean! The Ocean! O joy! O joy!"

beach blub ber line thun der Clat sop salt whale sand

SACAJAWEA ON THE OCEAN BEACH.

The party made a winter camp at the mouth of the Columbia River.

They called it Fort Clatsop.

The Indians near-by were the Clatsop tribe.

These Indians gave the whites some whale blubber.

They said that a whale was on the ocean beach.

Captain Clark and some men got ready to go to see it.

Sacajawea came to Captain Clark and said, "May I go, too?

I have come over the mountains with you to find the Great Water and I have not been to it yet.

Now I would see the Big Animal and the Great Water, too."

Captain Clark was glad to have her go.

He wrote in his book that this was the only time she asked for anything.

She took her baby on her back and walked with Captain Clark.

When she got near the ocean, she was afraid.

The noise seemed to her like thunder.

She always had been afraid of thunder.

When she saw the waves, she was afraid they would come over the earth.

She had never before seen any big body of water.

She had seen only rivers and ponds.

The ocean looked very big.

She would not go near the waves.

Then Captain Clark showed her the high water line.

He told her that the waves would not go over that line.

She sat down on the sand with her baby in her lap.

She watched the waves a long time.

Then she was not afraid.

She walked out to the waves.

When they came to sh.o.r.e, she ran before them.

She let them come over her feet.

She took some ocean water in her hand and tasted it.

She did not like its salt taste.

But she did like to run after the waves.

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