The Allegash & East Branch
- Part 10
SUNDAY, August 2
Was a cloudy and unpromising morning.
One of us observed to the Indian, "You did not stretch your moose-hide
last night, did you, Mr. Polis?" Whereat he replied, in a tone of surprise,
though perhaps not of ill humor: "What you ask me that question for? Suppose
I stretch 'em, you see 'em. May be your way talking, may be all right,
no Indian way." I had observed that he did not wish to answer the same
question more than once, and was often silent when it was put again for
the sake of certainty, as if he were moody. Not that he was incommunicative,
for he frequently commenced a long-winded narrative of his own accord,--repeated
at length the tradition of some old battle, or some passage in the recent
history of his tribe in which he had acted a prominent part, from time
to time drawing a long breath, and resuming the thread of his tale, with
the true story-teller's leisureliness, perhaps after shooting a rapid,--prefacing
with "we-ll-by-by," &c., as he paddled along. Especially after the
day's work was over, and he had put himself in posture for the night, he
would be unexpectedly sociable, exhibit even the bonhommie of a
Frenchman, and we would fall asleep before he got through his periods.
Nickertow is called eleven miles from Mattawamkeag
by the river. Our camp was, therefore, about nine miles from the latter
place.
The Indian was quite sick this morning with the colic.
I thought that he was the worse for the moose-meat he had eaten.
We reached the Mattawamkeag at half past eight in
the morning, in the midst of a drizzling rain, and after buying some sugar
set out again. L2=312>
The Indian growing much worse, we stopped in the
north part of Lincoln to get some brandy for him, but failing in this,
an apothecary recommended Brandreth's pills, which he refused to take,
because he was not acquainted with them. He said to me, "Me doctor--first
study my case, find out what ail 'em--then I know what to take." We dropped
down a little farther, and stopped at mid-forenoon on an island and made
him a dipper of tea. Here too we dined and did some washing and botanizing,
while he lay on the bank. In the afternoon we went on a little farther,
though the Indian was no better. "Burntibus," as he called it, was
a long smooth lake-like reach below the Five Islands. He said that he owned
a hundred acres somewhere up this way. As a thunder-shower appeared to
be coming up, we stopped opposite a barn on the west bank, in Chester,
about a mile above Lincoln. Here at last we were obliged to spend the rest
of the day and night, on account of our patient, whose sickness did not
abate. He lay groaning under his canoe on the bank, looking very woe-begone,
yet it was only a common case of colic. You would not have thought, if
you had seen him lying about thus, that he was the proprietor of so many
acres in that neighborhood, was worth $6,000, and had been to Washington.
It seemed to me that, like the Irish, he made a greater ado about his sickness
than a Yankee does, and was more alarmed about himself. We talked somewhat
of leaving him with his people in Lincoln,--for that is one of their homes,--and
taking the stage the next day, but he objected on account of the expense,
saying, "Suppose me well in morning, you and I go Oldtown by noon."
As we were taking our tea at twilight, while he lay
groaning still under his canoe, having at length found out "what ail him,"
he asked me to get him a dipper of water. Taking the dipper in one hand,
he seized his powder-horn with the other, and pouring into it a charge
or two of powder, stirred it up with his finger, and drank it off. This
was all he took to-day after breakfast beside his tea.
To save the trouble of pitching our tent, when we
had secured our stores from wandering dogs, we camped in the solitary half-open
barn near the bank, with the permission of the owner, lying on new-mown
hay four feet deep. The fragrance of the hay, in which many ferns, &c.
were mingled, was agreeable, though it was quite alive with grasshoppers
which you could hear crawling through it. This served to graduate our approach
to houses and feather-beds. In the night some large bird, probably an owl,
flitted through over our heads, and very early in the morning we were awakened
by the twittering of swallows which had their nests there.
MONDAY, August 3
We started early before breakfast,
the Indian being considerably better, and soon glided by Lincoln, and after
another long and handsome lake-like reach, we stopped to breakfast on the
west shore, two or three miles below this town.
We frequently passed Indian Islands with their small
houses on them. The Governor, Aitteon, lives in one of them, in Lincoln.
The Penobscot Indians seem to be more social, even,
than the whites. Ever and anon in the deepest wilderness of Maine you come
to the log-hut of a Yankee or Canada settler, but a Penobscot never takes
up his residence in such a solitude. They are not even scattered about
on their islands in the Penobscot, which are all within the settlements,
but gathered together on two or three,--though not always on the best soil,--evidently
for the sake of society. I saw one or two houses not now used by them,
because, as our Indian Polis said, they were too solitary.
The small river emptying in at Lincoln is the Matanawcook,
which also, we noticed, was the name of a steamer moored there. So we paddled
and floated along, looking into the mouths of rivers. When passing the
Mohawk Rips, or, as the Indian called them, "Mohog lips," four or five
miles below Lincoln, he told us at length the story of a fight between
his tribe and the Mohawks there, anciently,--how the latter were overcome
by stratagem, the Penobscots using concealed knives,--but they could not
for a long time kill the Mohawk chief, who was a very large and strong
man, though he was attacked by several canoes at once, when swimming alone
in the river.
From time to time we met Indians in their canoes,
going up river. Our man did not commonly approach them, but exchanged a
few words with them at a distance in his tongue. These were the first Indians
we had met since leaving the Umbazookskus.
At Piscataquis Falls, just above the river of that
name, we walked over the wooden railroad on the eastern shore, about one
and a half miles long, while the Indian glided down the rapids. The steamer
from Oldtown stops here, and passengers take a new boat above. Piscataquis,
whose mouth we here passed, means "branch." It is obstructed by falls at
its mouth, but can be navigated with bateaux or canoes above through a
settled country, even to the neighborhood of Moosehead Lake, and we had
thought at first of going that way. We were not obliged to get out of the
canoe after this on account of falls or rapids, nor, indeed, was it quite
necessary here. We took less notice of the scenery to-day, because we were
in quite a settled country. The river became broad and sluggish, and we
saw a blue heron winging its way slowly down the stream before us.
We passed the Passadumkeag River on our left and
saw the blue Olamon mountains at a distance in the southeast. Here-abouts
our Indian told us at length the story of their contention with the priest
respecting schools. He thought a great deal of education and had recommended
it to his tribe. His argument in its favor was, that if you had been to
college and learnt to calculate, you could "keep 'em property,--no other
way." He said that his boy was the best scholar in the school at Oldtown,
to which he went with whites. He himself is a Protestant, and goes to church
regularly in Oldtown. According to his account, a good many of his tribe
are Protestants, and many of the Catholics also are in favor of schools.
Some years ago they had a schoolmaster, a Protestant, whom they liked very
well. The priest came and said that they must send him away, and finally
he had such influence, telling them that they would go to the bad place
at last if they retained him, that they sent him away. The school party,
though numerous, were about giving up. Bishop Fenwick came from Boston
and used his influence against them. But our Indian told his side that
they must not give up, must hold on, they were the strongest. If they gave
up, then they would have no party. But they answered that it was "no use,
priest too strong, we'd better give up." At length he persuaded them to
make a stand.
The priest was going for a sign to cut down the liberty-pole.
So Polis and his party had a secret meeting about it; he got ready fifteen
or twenty stout young men, "stript 'em naked, and painted 'em like old
times," and told them that when the priest and his party went to cut down
the liberty-pole, they were to rush up, take hold of it and prevent them,
and he assured them that there would be no war, only a noise, "no war where
priest is." He kept his men concealed in a house near by, and when the
priest's party were about to cut down the liberty-pole, the fall of which
would have been a death-blow to the school party, he gave a signal, and
his young men rushed out and seized the pole. There was a great uproar,
and they were about coming to blows, but the priest interfered, saying,
"No war, no war," and so the pole stands, and the school goes on still.
We thought that it showed a good deal of tact in
him, to seize this occasion and take his stand on it; proving how well
he understood those with whom he had to deal.
The Olamon River comes in from the east in Greenbush
a few miles below the Passadumkeag. When we asked the meaning of this name,
the Indian said that there was an island opposite its mouth which was called
Olarmon.
That in old times, when visitors were coming to Oldtown, they used to stop
there to dress and fix up or paint themselves. "What is that which ladies
used?" he asked. Rouge? Red vermilion? "Yer," he said, "that is larmon,
a kind of clay or red paint, which they used to get here."
We decided that we too would stop at this island,
and fix up our inner man, at least, by dining.
It was a large island with an abundance of hemp-nettle,
but I did not notice any kind of red paint there. The Olarmon River, at
its mouth at least, is a dead stream. There was another large island in
that neighborhood, which the Indian called "Soogle" (i.e. Sugar)
Island.
About a dozen miles before reaching Oldtown he inquired,
"How you like 'em your pilot?" But we postponed an answer till we had got
quite back again.
The Sunkhaze, another short dead stream, comes
in from the east two miles above Oldtown. There is said to be some of the
best deer ground in Maine on this stream. Asking the meaning of this name,
the Indian said, "Suppose you are going down Penobscot, just like we, and
you see a canoe come out of bank and go along before you, but you no see
'em stream. That is Sunkhaze."
He had previously complimented me on my paddling,
saying that I paddled "just like anybody," giving me an Indian name which
meant "great paddler." When off this stream he said to me, who sat in the
bows, "Me teach you paddle." So turning toward the shore he got out, came
forward and placed my hands as he wished. He placed one of them quite outside
the boat, and the other parallel with the first, grasping the paddle near
the end, not over the flat extremity, and told me to slide it back and
forth on the side of the canoe. This, I found, was a great improvement
which I had not thought of, saving me the labor of lifting the paddle each
time, and I wondered that he had not suggested it before. It is true, before
our baggage was reduced we had been obliged to sit with our legs drawn
up, and our knees above the side of the canoe, which would have prevented
our paddling thus, or perhaps he was afraid of wearing out his canoe, by
constant friction on the side.
I told him that I had been accustomed to sit in the
stern, and lifting my paddle at each stroke, getting a pry on the side
each time, and I still paddled partly as if in the stern. He then wanted
to see me paddle in the stern. So, changing paddles, for he had the longer
and better one, and turning end for end, he sitting flat on the bottom
and I on the crossbar, he began to paddle very hard, trying to turn the
canoe, looking over his shoulder and laughing, but finding it in vain he
relaxed his efforts, though we still sped along a mile or two very swiftly.
He said that he had no fault to find with my paddling in the stern, but
I complained that he did not paddle according to his own directions in
the bows.
Opposite the Sunkhaze is the main boom of the Penobscot,
where the logs from far up the river are collected and assorted.
As we drew near to Oldtown I asked Polis if he was
not glad to get home again; but there was no relenting to his wildness,
and he said, "It makes no difference to me where I am." Such is the Indian's
pretence always.
We approached the Indian Island through the narrow
strait called "Cook." He said, "I 'xpect we take in some water there, river
so high,--never see it so high at this season. Very rough water there,
but short; swamp steamboat once. Don't you paddle till I tell you, then
you paddle right along." It was a very short rapid. When we were in the
midst of it he shouted "paddle," and we shot through without taking in
a drop.
Soon after the Indian houses came in sight, but I
could not at first tell my companion which of two or three large white
ones was our guide's. He said it was the one with blinds.
We landed opposite his door at about four in the
afternoon, having come some forty miles this day. From the Piscataquis
we had come remarkably and unaccountably quick, probably as fast as the
stage on the bank, though the last dozen miles was dead water.
Polis wanted to sell us his canoe, said it would
last seven or eight years, or with care, perhaps ten; but we were not ready
to buy it.
We stopped for an hour at his house, where my companion
shaved with his razor, which he pronounced in very good condition. Mrs.
P. wore a hat and had a silver brooch on her breast, but she was not introduced
to us. The house was roomy and neat. A large new map of Oldtown and the
Indian Island hung on the wall, and a clock opposite to it. Wishing to
know when the cars left Oldtown, Polis's son brought one of the last Bangor
papers, which I saw was directed to "Joseph Polis," from the office.
This was the last that I saw of Joe Polis. We took
the last train, and reached Bangor that night.
[ 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 ]
|