The Allegash & East Branch
- Part 8
THURSDAY, July 30.
I aroused the Indian early this
morning to go in search of our companion, expecting to find him within
a mile or two, farther down the stream. The Indian wanted his breakfast
first, but I reminded him that my companion had had neither breakfast nor
supper. We were obliged first to carry our canoe and baggage over into
another stream, the main East Branch, about three fourths of a mile distant,
for Webster Stream was no farther navigable. We went twice over this carry,
and the dewy bushes wet us through like water up to the middle; I hallooed
in a high key from time to time, though I had little expectation that I
could be heard over the roar of the rapids, and moreover we were necessarily
on the opposite side of the stream to him. In going over this portage the
last time, the Indian, who was before me with the canoe on his head, stumbled
and fell heavily once, and lay for a moment silent, as if in pain. I hastily
stepped forward to help him, asking if he was much hurt, but after a moment's
pause, without replying, he sprang up and went forward. He was all the
way subject to taciturn fits, but they were harmless ones.
We had launched our canoe and gone but little way
down the East Branch, when I heard an answering shout from my companion,
and soon after saw him standing on a point where there was a clearing a
quarter of a mile below, and the smoke of his fire was rising near by.
Before I saw him I naturally shouted again and again, but the Indian curtly
remarked, "He hears you," as if once was enough. It was just below the
mouth of Webster Stream. When we arrived, he was smoking his pipe, and
said that he had passed a pretty comfortable night, though it was rather
cold, on account of the dew.
It appeared that when we stood together the previous
evening, and I was shouting to the Indian across the river, he, being near-sighted,
had not seen the Indian nor his canoe, and when I went back to the Indian's
assistance, did not see which way I went, and supposed that we were below
and not above him, and so, making haste to catch up, he ran away from us.
Having reached this clearing, a mile or more below our camp, the night
overtook him, and he made a fire in a little hollow, and lay down by it
in his blanket, still thinking that we were ahead of him. He thought it
likely that he had heard the Indian call once the evening before, but mistook
it for an owl. He had seen one botanical rarity before it was dark,--pure
white Epilobium angustifolium amidst the fields of pink ones, in
the burnt lands. He had already stuck up the remnant of a lumberer's shirt,
found on the point, on a pole by the water-side, for a signal, and attached
a note to it, to inform us that he had gone on to the lake, and that if
he did not find us there, he would be back in a couple of hours. If he
had not found us soon, he had some thoughts of going back in search of
the solitary hunter whom we had met at Telos Lake, ten miles behind, and,
if successful, hire him to take him to Bangor. But if this hunter had moved
as fast as we, he would have been twenty miles off by this time, and who
could guess in what direction? It would have been like looking for a needle
in a hay-mow, to search for him in these woods. He had been considering
how long he could live on berries alone.
We substituted for his note a card containing our
names and destination, and the date of our visit, which Polis neatly enclosed
in a piece of birch-bark to keep it dry. This has probably been read by
some hunter or explorer ere this.
We all had good appetites for the breakfast which
we made haste to cook here, and then, having partially dried our clothes,
we glided swiftly down the winding stream toward Second Lake.
As the shores became flatter with frequent gravel
and sand bars, and the stream more winding in the lower land near the lake,
elms and ash trees made their appearance; also the wild yellow lily (Lilium
Canadense), some of whose bulbs I collected for a soup. On some ridges
the burnt land extended as far as the lake.
This was a very beautiful lake, 2 or 3 miles long,
with high mountains on the southwest side, the (as our Indian said) Nerlumskeechticook,
i.e. Dead-Water Mountain. It appears to be the same called Carbuncle Mountain
on the map. According to Polis, it extends in separate elevations all along
this and the next lake, which is much larger. The lake, too, I think, is
called by the same name, or perhaps with the addition of gamoc or
mooc.
The morning was a bright one, and perfectly still and serene, the lake
as smooth as glass, we making the only ripples as we paddled into it. The
dark mountains about it were seen through a glaucous mist, and the brilliant
white stems of canoe-birches mingled with the other woods around it. The
wood-thrush sang on the distant shore, and the laugh of some loons, sporting
in a concealed western bay, as if inspired by the morning, came distinct
over the lake to us, and, what was remarkable, the echo which ran round
the lake was much louder than the original note; probably because, the
loons being in a regularly curving bay under the mountain, we were exactly
in the focus of many echoes, the sound being reflected like light from
a concave mirror. The beauty of the scene may have been enhanced to our
eyes by the fact that we had just come together again after a night of
some anxiety.
This reminded me of the Ambejijis Lake on the West
Branch, which I crossed in my first coming to Maine.
Having paddled down ¾ of the lake, we came
to a stand still, while my companion let down for fish. A white (or whitish)
gull sat on a rock which rose above the surface in mid-lake not far off,
quite in harmony with the scene; and as we rested there in the warm sun,
we heard one loud crashing or crackling sound from the forest, forty or
fifty rods distant, as of a stick broken by the foot of some large animal.
Even this was an interesting incident there. In the midst of our dreams
of giant lake-trout, even then supposed to be nibbling, our fisherman drew
up a diminutive red perch, and we took up our paddles again in haste.
It was not apparent where the outlet of this lake
was, and while the Indian thought it was in one direction, I thought it
was in another. He said, "I bet you fourpence it is there," but he still
held on in my direction, which proved to be the right one. As we were approaching
the outlet, it being still early in the forenoon, he suddenly exclaimed,
"Moose! moose!" and told us to be still. He put a cap on his gun, and standing
up in the stern, rapidly pushed the canoe straight toward the shore and
the moose. It was a cow-moose, about thirty rods off, standing in the water
by the side of the outlet, partly behind some fallen timber and bushes,
and at that distance she did not look very large. She was flapping her
large ears, and from time to time poking off the flies with her nose from
some part of her body. She did not appear much alarmed by our neighborhood,
only occasionally turned her head and looked straight at us, and then gave
her attention to the flies again. As we approached nearer, she got out
of the water, stood higher and regarded us more suspiciously. Polis pushed
the canoe steadily forward in the shallow water, and I for a moment forgot
the moose in attending to some pretty rose-colored Polygonums just rising
above the surface, but the canoe soon grounded in the mud eight or ten
rods distant from the moose, and the Indian seized his gun and prepared
to fire. After standing still a moment, she turned slowly, as usual, so
as to expose her side, and he improved this moment to fire, over our heads.
She thereupon moved off eight or ten rods at a moderate pace, across a
shallow bay, to an old standing-place of hers, behind some fallen red maples,
on the opposite shore, and there she stood still again a dozen or fourteen
rods from us, while the Indian hastily loaded and fired twice at her, without
her moving. My companion, who passed him his caps and bullets, said that
Polis was as excited as a boy of fifteen, that his hand trembled, and he
once put his ramrod back upside down. This was remarkable for so experienced
a hunter. Perhaps he was anxious to make a good shot before us. The white
hunter had told me that the Indians were not good shots, because they were
excited, though he said that we had got a good hunter with us.
The Indian now pushed quickly and quietly back, and
a long distance round, in order to get into the outlet,--for he had fired
over the neck of a peninsula between it and the lake,--till we approached
the place where the moose had stood, when he exclaimed, "She is a goner,"
and was surprised that we did not see her as soon as he did. There, to
be sure, she lay perfectly dead, with her tongue hanging out, just where
she had stood to receive the last shots, looking unexpectedly large and
horse-like, and we saw where the bullets had scored the trees.
Using a tape, I found that the moose measured just
six feet from the shoulder to the tip of the hoof, and was eight feet long
as she lay. Some portions of the body, for a foot in diameter, were almost
covered with flies, apparently the common fly of our woods, with a dark
spot on the wing, and not the very large ones which occasionally pursued
us in midstream, though both are called moose-flies.
Polis, preparing to skin the moose, asked me to help
him find a stone on which to sharpen his large knife. It being all a flat
alluvial ground where the moose had fallen, covered with red maples, &c.,
this was no easy matter; we searched far and wide, a long time, till at
length I found a flat kind of slate-stone, and soon after he returned with
a similar one, on which he soon made his knife very sharp.
While he was skinning the moose, I proceeded to ascertain
what kind of fishes were to be found in the sluggish and muddy outlet.
The greatest difficulty was to find a pole. It was almost impossible to
find a slender, straight pole ten or twelve feet long in those woods. You
might search half an hour in vain. They are commonly spruce, arbor-vitæ,
fir, &c., short, stout, and branchy, and do not make good fish-poles,
even after you have patiently cut off all their tough and scraggy branches.
The fishes were red perch and chivin.
The Indian having cut off a large piece of sirloin,
the upper lip and the tongue, wrapped them in the hide, and placed them
in the bottom of the canoe, observing that there was "one man," meaning
the weight of one. Our load had previously been reduced some thirty pounds,
but a hundred pounds were now added, a serious addition, which made our
quarters still more narrow, and considerably increased the danger on the
lakes and rapids, as well as the labor of the carries. The skin was ours
according to custom, since the Indian was in our employ, but we did not
think of claiming it. He being a skilful dresser of moose-hides, would
make it worth seven or eight dollars to him, as I was told. He said that
he sometimes earned fifty or sixty dollars in a day at them; he had killed
ten moose in one day, though the skinning and all took two days. This was
the way he had got his property. There were the tracks of a calf thereabouts,
which he said would come "by, by," and he could get it if we cared to wait,
but I cast cold water on the project.
We continued along the outlet toward Grand Lake,
through a swampy region, by a long, winding, and narrow dead water, very
much choked up by wood, where we were obliged to land sometimes in order
to get the canoe over a log. It was hard to find any channel, and we did
not know but we should be lost in the swamp. It abounded in ducks, as usual.
At length we reached Grand Lake, which the Indian called Matungamook.
At the head of this we saw, coming in from the southwest,
with a sweep apparently from a gorge in the mountains, Trout Stream, or
Uncardnerheese,
which name, the Indian said, had something to do with mountains.
We stopped to dine on an interesting high rocky island,
soon after entering Matungamook Lake, securing our canoe to the cliffy
shore. It is always pleasant to step from a boat on to a large rock or
cliff. Here was a good opportunity to dry our dewy blankets on the open
sunny rock. Indians had recently camped here, and accidentally burned over
the western end of the island, and Polis picked up a gun-case of blue broadcloth,
and said that he knew the Indian it belonged to, and would carry it to
him. His tribe is not so large but he may know all its effects. We proceeded
to make a fire and cook our dinner amid some pines, where our predecessors
had done the same, while the Indian busied himself about his moose-hide
on the shore, for he said that he thought it a good plan for one to do
all the cooking, i.e. I suppose if that one were not himself. A peculiar
evergreen overhung our fire, which at first glance looked like a pitch
pine (P. rigida), with leaves little more than an inch long, spruce-like,
but we found it to be the Pinus Banksiana,--"Banks's, or the Labrador
Pine," also called Scrub Pine, Gray Pine, &c., a new tree to us. These
must have been good specimens, for several were thirty or thirty-five feet
high, which is 2 or 3 times the height commonly assigned them. Michaux
says that it grows further north than any of our pines, but he did not
find it any where more than 10 feet high. Richardson found it forty feet
high and upward, and states that the porcupine feeds on its bark. Here
also grew the Red Pine (Pinus resinosa).
I saw where the Indians had made canoes in a little
secluded hollow in the woods, on the top of the rock, where they were out
of the wind, and large piles of whittlings remained. This must have been
a favorite resort for their ancestors, and, indeed, we found here the point
of an arrow-head, such as they have not used for two centuries and now
know not how to make. The Indian, picking up a stone, remarked to me, "That
very strange lock (rock)." It was a piece of horn-stone, which I told him
his tribe had probably brought here centuries before to make arrow-heads
of. He also picked up a yellowish curved bone by the side of our fireplace
and asked me to guess what it was. It was one of the upper incisors of
a beaver, on which some party had feasted within a year or two. I found
also most of the teeth, and the skull, &c. We here dined on fried moose-meat.
One who was my companion in my two previous excursions
to these woods, tells me that when hunting up the Caucomgomoc, about two
years ago, he found himself dining one day on moose-meat, mud-turtle, trout,
and beaver, and he thought that there were few places in the world where
these dishes could easily be brought together on one table.
After the almost incessant rapids and falls of the
Madunkehunk (Height-of-Land, or Webster Stream), we had just passed through
the dead-water of Second Lake, and were now in the much larger dead-water
of Grand Lake, and I thought the Indian was entitled to take an extra nap
here. Ktaadn, near which we were to pass the next day, is said to mean
"Highest Land." So much geography is there in their names. The Indian navigator
naturally distinguishes by a name those parts of a stream where he has
encountered quick water and falls, and again, the lakes and smooth water
where he can rest his weary arms, since those are the most interesting
and memorable parts to him. The very sight of the Nerlumskeechticook,
or Dead-Water Mountains, a day's journey off over the forest, as we first
saw them, must awaken in him pleasing memories. And not less interesting
is it to the white traveller, when he is crossing a placid lake in these
out-of-the-way woods, perhaps thinking that he is in some sense one of
the earlier discoverers of it, to be reminded that it was thus well known
and suitably named by Indian hunters perhaps a thousand years ago.
Ascending the precipitous rock which formed this
long narrow island, I was surprised to find that its summit was a narrow
ridge, with a precipice on one side, and that its axis of elevation extended
from northwest to southeast, exactly like that of the great rocky ridges
at the commencement of the Burnt Ground, ten miles northwesterly. The same
arrangement prevailed here, and we could plainly see that the mountain
ridges on the west of the lake trended the same way. Splendid large harebells
nodded over the edge and in the clefts of the cliff, and the blueberries
(Vaccinium Canadense) were for the first time really abundant in
the thin soil on its top. There was no lack of them henceforward on the
East Branch. There was a fine view hence over the sparkling lake, which
looked pure and deep, and had two or three, in all, rocky islands in it.
Our blankets being dry, we set out again, the Indian as usual having left
his gazette on a tree. This time it was we three in a canoe, my companion
smoking. We paddled southward down this handsome lake, which appeared to
extend nearly as far east as south, keeping near the western shore, just
outside a small island, under the dark Nerlumskeechticook mountain.
For I had observed on my map that this was the course. It was three or
four miles across it. It struck me that the outline of this mountain on
the southwest of the lake, and of another beyond it, was not only like
that of the huge rock waves of Webster Stream, but in the main like Kineo,
on Moosehead Lake, having a similar but less abrupt precipice at the southeast
end; in short, that all the prominent hills and ridges hereabouts were
larger or smaller Kineos, and that possibly there was such a relation between
Kineo and the rocks of Webster Stream.
The Indian did not know exactly where the outlet
was, whether at the extreme southwest angle or more easterly, and had asked
to see my plan at the last stopping-place, but I had forgotten to show
it to him. As usual, he went feeling his way by a middle course between
two probable points, from which he could div1erge either way at last without
losing much distance. In approaching the south shore, as the clouds looked
gusty, and the waves ran pretty high, we so steered as to get partly under
the lee of an island, though at a great distance from it.
I could not distinguish the outlet till we were almost
in it, and heard the water falling over the dam there.
Here was a considerable fall, and a very substantial
dam, but no sign of a cabin or camp. The hunter whom we met at Telos Lake
had told us that there were plenty of trout here, but at this hour they
did not rise to the bait, only cousin trout, from the very midst of the
rushing waters. There are not so many fishes in these rivers as in the
Concord.
While we loitered here, Polis took occasion to cut
with his big knife some of the hair from his moose-hide, and so lightened
and prepared it for drying. I noticed at several old Indian camps in the
woods the pile of hair which they had cut from their hides.
Having carried over the dam, he darted down the rapids,
leaving us to walk for a mile or more, where for the most part there was
no path, but very thick and difficult travelling near the stream. At length
he would call to let us know where he was waiting for us with his canoe,
when, on account of the windings of the stream, we did not know where the
shore was, but he did not call often enough, forgetting that we were not
Indians. He seemed to be very saving of his breath,--yet he would be surprised
if we went by, or did not strike the right spot. This was not because he
was unaccommodating, but a proof of superior manners. Indians like to get
along with the least possible communication and ado. He was really paying
us a great compliment all the while, thinking that we preferred a hint
to a kick.
At length, climbing over the willows and fallen trees,
when this was easier than to go round or under them, we overtook the canoe,
and glided down the stream in smooth but swift water for several miles.
I here observed again, as at Webster Stream, and on a still larger scale
the next day, that the river was a smooth and regularly inclined plane
down which we coasted. As we thus glided along we started the first black
ducks which we had distinguished.
We decided to camp early to-night, that we might
have ample time before dark; so we stopped at the first favorable shore,
where there was a narrow gravelly beach on the western side, some five
miles below the outlet of the lake. It was an interesting spot, where the
river began to make a great bend to the east, and the last of the peculiar
moose-faced Nerlumskeechticook mountains not far southwest of Grand
Lake rose dark in the northwest a short distance behind, displaying its
gray precipitous southeast side, but we could not see this without coming
out upon the shore.
Two steps from the water on either side, and you
come to the abrupt bushy and rooty if not turfy edge of the bank, four
or five feet high, where the interminable forest begins, as if the stream
had but just cut its way through it.
It is surprising on stepping ashore anywhere into
this unbroken wilderness to see so often, at least within a few rods of
the river, the marks of the axe, made by lumberers who have either camped
here, or driven logs past in previous springs. You will see perchance where,
going on the same errand that you do, they have cut large chips from a
tall white-pine stump for their fire. While we were pitching the camp and
getting supper, the Indian cut the rest of the hair from his moose-hide,
and proceeded to extend it vertically on a temporary frame between two
small trees, half a dozen feet from the opposite side of the fire, lashing
and stretching it with arbor-vitæ bark, which was always at hand,
and in this case was stripped from one of the trees it was tied to. Asking
for a new kind of tea, he made us some, pretty good, of the checkerberry
(Gaultheria procumbens), which covered the ground, dropping a little
bunch of it tied up with cedar bark into the kettle; but it was not quite
equal to the Chiogenes. We called this therefore Checkerberry-tea
Camp.
I was struck with the abundance of the Linnæa
borealis, checkerberry, and Chiogenes hispidula, almost everywhere
in the Maine woods. The wintergreen (Chimaphila umbellata) was still
in bloom here, and Clintonia berries were abundant and ripe. This
handsome plant is one of the most common in that forest. We here first
noticed the moose-wood in fruit on the banks. The prevailing trees were
spruce (commonly black), arbor-vitæ, canoe-birch, (black ash and
elms beginning to appear,) yellow birch, red maple, and a little hemlock
skulking in the forest. The Indian said that the white-maple punk was the
best for tinder, that yellow-birch punk was pretty good, but hard. After
supper he put on the moose tongue and lips to boil, cutting out the septum.
He showed me how to write on the under side of birch bark, with a black
spruce twig, which is hard and tough and can be brought to a point.
The Indian wandered off into the woods a short distance
just before night, and, coming back, said, "Me found great treasure--fifty,
sixty dollars worth." "What 's that?" we asked. "Steel traps, under a log,
thirty or forty, I didn't count 'em. I guess Indian work--worth three dollars
apiece." It was a singular coincidence that he should have chanced to walk
to and look under that particular log, in that trackless forest.
I saw chivin and chub in the stream when washing
my hands, but my companion tried in vain to catch them. I also heard the
sound of bull-frogs from a swamp on the opposite side, thinking at first
that they were moose; a duck paddled swiftly by; and sitting in that dusky
wilderness, under that dark mountain, by the bright river which was full
of reflected light, still I heard the wood-thrush sing, as if no higher
civilization could be attained. By this time the night was upon us.
You commonly make your camp just at sundown, and
are collecting wood, getting your supper, or pitching your tent while the
shades of night are gathering around and adding to the already dense gloom
of the forest. You have no time to explore or look around you before it
is dark. You may penetrate half a dozen rods farther into that twilight
wilderness, after some dry bark to kindle your fire with, and wonder what
mysteries lie hidden still deeper in it, say at the end of a long day's
walk; or you may run down to the shore for a dipper of water, and get a
clearer view for a short distance up or down the stream, and while you
stand there, see a fish leap, or duck alight in the river, or hear a wood-thrush
or robin sing in the woods. That is as if you had been to town or civilized
parts. But there is no sauntering off to see the country, and ten or fifteen
rods seems a great way from your companions, and you come back with the
air of a much travelled man, as from a long journey, with adventures to
relate, though you may have heard the crackling of the fire all the while,--and
at a hundred rods you might be lost past recovery, and have to camp out.
It is all mossy and moosey. In some of those dense fir and spruce
woods there is hardly room for the smoke to go up. The trees are a standing
night, and every fir and spruce which you fell is a plume plucked from
night's raven wing. Then at night the general stillness is more impressive
than any sound, but occasionally you hear the note of an owl farther or
nearer in the woods, and if near a lake, the semi-human cry of the loons
at their unearthly revels.
To-night the Indian lay between the fire and his
stretched moose-hide, to avoid the mosquitoes. Indeed, he also made a small
smoky fire of damp leaves at his head and his feet, and then as usual rolled
up his head in his blanket. We with our veils and our wash were tolerably
comfortable, but it would be difficult to pursue any sedentary occupation
in the woods at this season: you cannot see to read much by the light of
a fire through a veil in the evening, nor handle pencil and paper well
with gloves or anointed fingers.
[ 홈 ] [ 위로 ] [ Thoreau's Ktaadn - 1 ] [ Thoreau's Ktaadn - 2 ] [ Thoreau's Ktaadn - 3 ] [ Thoreau's Ktaadn - 4 ] [ Thoreau's Ktaadn - 5 ] [ Thoreau's Ktaadn - 6 ] [ Thoreau's Chesuncook - 1 ] [ Thoreau's Chesuncook - 2 ] [ Thoreau's Chesuncook - 3 ] [ Thoreau's Chesuncook - 4 ] [ Thoreau's Chesuncook - 5 ] [ Thoreau's Chesuncook - 6 ] [ Thoreau's Allegash & East Branch - 1 ] [ Thoreau's Allegash & East Branch - 2 ] [ Thoreau's Allegash & East Branch - 3 ] [ Thoreau's Allegash & East Branch - 4 ] [ Thoreau's Allegash & East Branch - 5 ] [ Thoreau's Allegash & East Branch - 6 ] [ Thoreau's Allegash & East Branch - 7 ] [ Thoreau's Allegash & East Branch - 8 ] [ Thoreau's Allegash & East Branch - 9 ] [ Thoreau's Allegash & East Branch - 10 ]
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