![]() I think it's a way to characterize and have them complement each other on the expedition. The whole characterization may be off some. He's sort of seen as a little bit rawer, more a frontiersmen type. He'd stay on the boat, liked to be with the men and worked with them more closely. Clark is seen as sort of a man of the people. ![]() Lewis is seen as this moody intellectual type who liked to get off the boat and go on some scientific excursion, try and discover a new plant species or whatever. How would you characterize Lewis and Clark? This interview was conducted in the summer of 1997 at Lost Trail Pass, on the Idaho-Montana border. When completed, it will comprise thirteen volumes. While there are many editions of the journals, The Journals of the Lewis & Clark Expedition (University of Nebraska Press) by Moulton is considered the best. Moulton of the University of Nebraska to participate in our television program, "Echoes of a Bitter Crossing: Lewis & Clark in Idaho." Moulton has been engaged in the massive undertaking of editing the complete record of the Lewis & Clark expedition. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |