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Search : sick
Source : The Way to the Western Sea
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Your search returned 7 results from all items Search Only Journals

The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark across the Continent
  • generously on fish and roots. All seven were miserably sick during the night, the result, they thought
  • sick to day," he wrote, "and puke which relive me"), he set out for Twisted Hair's river camp to double
  • . Sick and weary though he was, Clark went through the requisite ceremonies, explained the American
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • David Lavender
The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark across the Continent
  • , groups of sick and ailing crowded into the camps for treatment—ignoring, evidently, the captains
  • made them so sick. (The village, being transportable, had been carried by its occupants down into one
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • David Lavender
The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark across the Continent
  • for a sick woman attended by a lone man of no better qualifications than Charbonneau's. Besides, the captain
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • David Lavender
The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark across the Continent
  • thought he had cured, were very sick again with syphilis picked up from the Chinook women of the coast
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • David Lavender
The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark across the Continent
  • was incoherent and well soaked. Major Russell put him in whatever served the fort as sick bay and deprived him
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • David Lavender
The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark across the Continent
  • complaining about being sick for a month and eventually tried to cure himself with pills made from walnut bark
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • David Lavender