Chesuncook - Part 5
Early the next morning we started on our return up the Penobscot, my
companion wishing to go about twenty-five miles above the Moosehead carry
to a camp near the junction of the two forks, and look for moose there.
Our host allowed us something for the quarter of the moose which we had
brought, and which he was glad to get. Two explorers from Chamberlain Lake
started at the same time that we did. Red-flannel shirts should be worn
in the woods, if only for the fine contrast which this color makes with
the evergreens and the water. Thus I thought when I saw the forms of the
explorers in their birch, poling up the rapids before us, far off against
the forest. It is the surveyor's color also, most distinctly seen under
all circumstances. We stopped to dine at Ragmuff, as before. My companion
it was who wandered up the stream to look for moose this time, while Joe
went to sleep on the bank, so that we felt sure of him; and I improved
the opportunity to botanize and bathe. Soon after starting again, while
Joe was gone back in the canoe for the frying-pan, which had been left,
we picked a couple of quarts of tree-cranberries for a sauce.
I was surprised by Joe's asking me how far it was
to the Moosehorn. He was pretty well acquainted with this stream, but he
had noticed that I was curious about distances, and had several maps. He,
and Indians generally, with whom I have talked, are not able to describe
dimensions or distances in our measures with any accuracy. He could tell
perhaps, at what time we should arrive, but not how far it was. We saw
a few wood-ducks, sheldrakes, and black ducks, but they were not so numerous
there at that season as on our river at home. We scared the same family
of wood-ducks before us, going and returning. We also heard the note of
one fish-hawk, somewhat like that of a pigeon-woodpecker, and soon after
saw him perched near the top of a dead white-pine against the island where
we had first camped, while a company of peetweets were twittering and teetering
about over the carcass of a moose on a low sandy spit just beneath. We
drove the fish-hawk from perch to perch, each time eliciting a scream or
whistle, for many miles before us. Our course being up-stream, we were
obliged to work much harder than before, and had frequent use for a pole.
Sometimes all three of us paddled together, standing up, small and heavily
laden as the canoe was. About six miles from Moosehead, we began to see
the mountains east of the north end of the lake, and at four o'clock we
reached the carry.
The Indians were still encamped here. There were
three, including the St. Francis Indian who had come in the steamer with
us. One of the others was called Sabattis. Joe and the St. Francis Indian
were plainly clear Indian, the other two apparently mixed Indian and white;
but the difference was confined to their features and complexions, for
all that I could see. We here cooked the tongue of the moose for supper,--having
left the nose, which is esteemed the choicest part, at Chesuncook, boiling,
it being a good deal of trouble to prepare it. We also stewed our tree-cranberries,
(Viburnum opulus,) sweetening them with sugar. The lumberers sometimes
cook them with molasses. They were used in Arnold's expedition. This sauce
was very grateful to us who had been confined to hard bread, pork, and
moose-meat, and, notwithstanding their seeds, we all three pronounced them
equal to the common cranberry; but perhaps some allowance is to be made
for our forest appetites. It would be worth the while to cultivate them,
both for beauty and for food. I afterward saw them in a garden in Bangor.
Joe said that they were called ebeemenar.
While we were getting supper, Joe commenced curing
the moose-hide, on which I had sat a good part of the voyage, he having
already cut most of the hair off with his knife at the Caucomgomoc. He
set up two stout forked poles on the bank, seven or eight feet high, and
as much asunder east and west, and having cut slits eight or ten inches
long, and the same distance apart, close to the edge, on the sides of the
hide, he threaded poles through them, and then, placing one of the poles
on the forked stakes, tied the other down tightly at the bottom. The two
ends also were tied with cedar-bark, their usual string, to the upright
poles, through small holes at short intervals. The hide, thus stretched,
and slanted a little to the north, to expose its flesh side to the sun,
measured, in the extreme, eight feet long by six high. Where any flesh
still adhered, Joe boldly scored it with his knife to lay it open to the
sun. It now appeared somewhat spotted and injured by the duck shot. You
may see the old frames on which hides have been stretched at many camping-places
in these woods.
For some reason or other, the going to the forks
of the Penobscot was given up, and we decided to stop here, my companion
intending to hunt down the stream at night. The Indians invited us to lodge
with them, but my companion inclined to go to the log-camp on the carry.
This camp was close and dirty, and had an ill smell, and I preferred to
accept the Indians' offer, if we did not make a camp for ourselves; for,
though they were dirty, too, they were more in the open air, and were much
more agreeable, and even refined company, than the lumberers. The most
interesting question entertained at the lumberers' camp was, which man
could "handle" any other on the carry; and, for the most part, they possessed
no qualities which you could not lay hands on. So we went to the Indians'
camp or wigwam.
It was rather windy, and therefore Joe concluded
to hunt after midnight, if the wind went down, which the other Indians
thought it would not do, because it was from the south. The two mixed-bloods,
however, went off up the river for moose at dark, before we arrived at
their camp. This Indian camp was a slight, patched-up affair, which had
stood there several weeks, built shed-fashion, open to the fire on the
west. If the wind changed, they could turn it round. It was formed by two
forked stakes and a cross-bar, with rafters slanted from this to the ground.
The covering was partly an old sail, partly birch-bark, quite imperfect,
but securely tied on, and coming down to the ground on the sides. A large
log was rolled up at the back side for a head-board, and two or three moose-hides
were spread on the ground with the hair up. Various articles of their wardrobe
were tucked around the sides and corners, or under the roof. They were
smoking moose-meat on just such a crate as is represented by With, in De
Bry's "Collectio Peregrinationum," published in 1588, and which the natives
of Brazil called boucan, (whence buccaneer,) on which were frequently
shown pieces of human flesh drying along with the rest. It was erected
in front of the camp over the usual large fire, in the form of an oblong
square. Two stout forked stakes, four or five feet apart and five feet
high, were driven into the ground at each end, and then two poles ten feet
long were stretched across over the fire, and smaller ones laid transversely
on these a foot apart. On the last hung large, thin slices of moose-meat
smoking and drying, a space being left open over the centre of the fire.
There was the whole heart, black as a thirty-two pound ball, hanging at
one corner. They said, that it took three or four days to cure this meat,
and it would keep a year or more. Refuse pieces lay about on the ground
in different stages of decay, and some pieces also in the fire, half buried
and sizzling in the ashes, as black and dirty as an old shoe. These last
I at first thought were thrown away, but afterwards found that they were
being cooked. Also a tremendous rib-piece was roasting before the fire,
being impaled on an upright stake forced in and out between the ribs. There
was a moose-hide stretched and curing on poles like ours, and quite a pile
of cured skins close by. They had killed twenty-two moose within two months,
but, as they could use but very little of the meat, they left the carcasses
on the ground. Altogether it was about as savage a sight as was ever witnessed,
and I was carried back at once three hundred years. There were many torches
of birch-bark, shaped like straight tin horns, lying ready for use on a
stump outside.
For fear of dirt, we spread our blankets over their
hides, so as not to touch them anywhere. The St. Francis Indian and Joe
alone were there at first, and we lay on our backs talking with them till
midnight. They were very sociable, and, when they did not talk with us,
kept up a steady chatting in their own language. We heard a small bird
just after dark, which, Joe said, sang at a certain hour in the night,--at
ten o'clock, he believed. We also heard the hylodes and tree-toads, and
the lumberers singing in their camp a quarter of a mile off. I told them
that I had seen pictured in old books pieces of human flesh drying on these
crates; whereupon they repeated some tradition about the Mohawks eating
human flesh, what parts they preferred, etc., and also of a battle with
the Mohawks near Moosehead, in which many of the latter were killed; but
I found that they knew but little of the history of their race, and could
be entertained by stories about their ancestors as readily as any way.
At first I was nearly roasted out, for I lay against one side of the camp,
and felt the heat reflected not only from the birch-bark above, but from
the side; and again I remembered the sufferings of the Jesuit missionaries,
and what extremes of heat and cold the Indians were said to endure. I struggled
long between my desire to remain and talk with them, and my impulse to
rush out and stretch myself on the cool grass; and when I was about to
take the last step, Joe, hearing my murmurs, or else being uncomfortable
himself, got up and partially dispersed the fire. I suppose that that is
Indian manners,--to defend yourself.
While lying there listening to the Indians, I amused
myself with trying to guess at their subject by their gestures, or some
proper name introduced. There can be no more startling evidence of their
being a distinct and comparatively aboriginal race, than to hear this unaltered
Indian language, which the white man cannot speak nor understand. We may
suspect change and deterioration in almost every other particular, but
the language which is so wholly unintelligible to us. It took me by surprise,
though I had found so many arrow-heads, and convinced me that the Indian
was not the invention of historians and poets. It was a purely wild and
primitive American sound, as much as the barking of a chickaree,
and I could not understand a syllable of it; but Paugus, had he been there,
would have understood it. These Abenakis gossiped, laughed, and jested,
in the language in which Eliot's Indian Bible is written, the language
which has been spoken in New England who shall say how long? These were
the sounds that issued from the wigwams of this country before Columbus
was born; they have not yet died away; and, with remarkably few exceptions,
the language of their forefathers is still copious enough for them. I felt
that I stood, or rather lay, as near to the primitive man of America, that
night, as any of its discoverers ever did.
In the midst of their conversation, Joe suddenly
appealed to me to know how long Moosehead Lake was.
Meanwhile, as we lay there, Joe was making and trying
his horn, to be ready for hunting after midnight. The St. Francis Indian
also amused himself with sounding it, or rather calling through it; for
the sound is made with the voice, and not by blowing through the horn.
The latter appeared to be a speculator in moose-hides. He bought my companion's
for two dollars and a quarter, green. Joe said that it was worth two and
a half at Oldtown. Its chief use is for moccasins. One or two of these
Indians wore them. I was told, that, by a recent law of Maine, foreigners
are not allowed to kill moose there at any season; white Americans can
kill them only at a particular season, but the Indians of Maine at all
seasons. The St. Francis Indian accordingly asked my companion for a wig-higgin,
or bill, to show, since he was a foreigner. He lived near Sorel. I found
that he could write his name very well, Tahmunt Swasen. One Ellis,
an old white man of Guilford, a town through which we passed, not far from
the south end of Moosehead, was the most celebrated moose-hunter of those
parts. Indians and whites spoke with equal respect of him. Tahmunt said,
that there were more moose here than in the Adirondack country in New York,
where he had hunted; that three years before there were a great many about,
and there were a great many now in the woods, but they did not come out
to the water. It was of no use to hunt them at midnight,--they would not
come out then. I asked Sabattis, after he came home, if the moose never
attacked him. He answered, that you must not fire many times so as to mad
him. "I fire once and hit him in the right place, and in the morning I
find him. He won't go far. But if you keep firing, you mad him. I fired
once five bullets, every one through the heart, and he did not mind 'em
at all; it only made him more mad." I asked him if they did not hunt them
with dogs. He said, that they did so in winter, but never in the summer,
for then it was of no use; they would run right off straight and swiftly
a hundred miles.
Another Indian said, that the moose, once scared,
would run all day. A dog will hang to their lips, and be carried along
till he is swung against a tree and drops off. They cannot run on a "glaze,"
though they can run in snow four feet deep; but the caribou can run on
ice. They commonly find two or three moose together. They cover themselves
with water, all but their noses, to escape flies. He had the horns of what
he called "the black moose that goes in low lands." These spread three
or four feet. The "red moose" was another kind, "running on mountains,"
and had horns which spread six feet. Such were his distinctions. Both can
move their horns. The broad flat blades are covered with hair, and are
so soft, when the animal is alive, that you can run a knife through them.
They regard it as a good or bad sign, if the horns turn this way or that.
His caribou horns had been gnawed by mice in his wigwam, but he thought
that the horns neither of the moose nor of the caribou were ever gnawed
while the creature was alive, as some have asserted. An Indian, whom I
met after this at Oldtown, who had carried about a bear and other animals
of Maine to exhibit, told me that thirty years ago there were not so many
moose in Maine as now; also, that the moose were very easily tamed, and
would come back when once fed, and so would deer, but not caribou. The
Indians of this neighborhood are about as familiar with the moose as we
are with the ox, having associated with them for so many generations. Father
Rasles, in his Dictionary of the Abenaki Language, gives not only a word
for the male moose, (aianbé,) and another for the female,
(h rar,) but for the bone which is in the middle of the heart of
the moose (!), and for his left hind-leg.
There were none of the small deer up there; they
are more common about the settlements. One ran into the city of Bangor
two years before, and jumped through a window of costly plate glass, and
then into a mirror, where it thought it recognized one of its kind, and
out again, and so on, leaping over the heads of the crowd, until it was
captured. This the inhabitants speak of as the deer that went a-shopping.
The last-mentioned Indian spoke of the lunxus or Indian devil, (which
I take to be the cougar, and not the Gulo luscus,) as the only animal
in Maine which man need fear; it would follow a man, and did not mind a
fire. He also said, that beavers were getting to be pretty numerous again,
where we went, but their skins brought so little now that it was not profitable
to hunt them.
I had put the ears of our moose, which were ten inches
long, to dry along with the moose-meat over the fire, wishing to preserve
them; but Sabattis told me that I must skin and cure them, else the hair
would all come off. He observed, that they made tobacco-pouches of the
skins of their ears, putting the two together inside to inside. I asked
him how he got fire; and he produced a little cylindrical box of friction-matches.
He also had flints and steel, and some punk, which was not dry; I think
it was from the yellow birch. "But suppose you upset, and all these and
your powder get wet." "Then," said he, "we wait till we get to where there
is some fire." I produced from my pocket a little vial, containing matches,
stoppled water-tight, and told him, that, though we were upset, we should
still have some dry matches; at which he stared without saying a word.
We lay awake thus a long while talking, and they
gave us the meaning of many Indian names of lakes and streams in the vicinity,--especially
Tahmunt. I asked the Indian name of Moosehead Lake. Joe answered, Sebamook;
Tahmunt pronounced it Sebemook. When I asked what it meant, they
answered, Moosehead Lake. At length, getting my meaning, they alternately
repeated the word over to themselves, as a philologist might,--Sebamook,--Sebamook,--now
and then comparing notes in Indian; for there was a slight difference in
their dialects; and finally Tahmunt said, "Ugh! I know,"--and he rose up
partly on the moose-hide,--"like as here is a place, and there is a place,"
pointing to different parts of the hide, "and you take water from there
and fill this, and it stays here; that is Sebamook." I understood
him to mean that it was a reservoir of water which did not run away, the
river coming in on one side and passing out again near the same place,
leaving a permanent bay. Another Indian said, that it meant Large-Bay Lake,
and that Sebago and Sebec, the names of other lakes, were
kindred words, meaning large open water. Joe said that Seboois meant
Little River. I observed their inability, often described, to convey an
abstract idea. Having got the idea, though indistinctly, they groped about
in vain for words with which to express it. Tahmunt thought that the whites
called it Moosehead Lake, because Mount Kineo, which commands it, is shaped
like a moose's head, and that Moose River was so called "because the mountain
points right across the lake to its mouth." John Josselyn, writing about
1673, says, "Twelve miles from Casco Bay, and passable for men and horses,
is a lake, called by the Indians Sebug. On the brink thereof, at one end,
is the famous rock, shaped like a moose deer or helk, diaphanous, and called
the Moose Rock." He appears to have confounded Sebamook with Sebago, which
is nearer, but has no "diaphanous" rock on its shore.
I give more of their definitions, for what they are
worth,--partly because they differ sometimes from the commonly received
ones. They never analyzed these words before. After long deliberation and
repeating of the word, for it gave much trouble, Tahmunt said that Chesuncook
meant a place where many streams emptied in (?), and he enumerated them,--Penobscot,
Umbazookskus, Cusabesex, Red Brook, etc.--"Caucomgomoc,--what does
that mean?" "What are those large white birds?" he asked. "Gulls," said
I. "Ugh! Gull Lake."--Pammadumcook, Joe thought, meant the Lake
with Gravelly Bottom or Bed.--Kenduskeag, Tahmunt concluded at last,
after asking if birches went up it, for he said that he was not much acquainted
with it, meant something like this: "You go up Penobscot till you come
to Kenduskeag, and you go by, you don't turn up there. That is Kenduskeag."
(?) Another Indian, however, who knew the river better, told us afterward
that it meant Little Eel River.--Mattawamkeag was a place where
two rivers meet. (?)--Penobscot was Rocky River. One writer says,
that this was "originally the name of only a section of the main channel,
from the head of the tide-water to a short distance above Oldtown."
A very intelligent Indian, whom we afterward met,
son-in-law of Neptune, gave us also these other definitions:--Umbazookskus,
Meadow Stream; Millinoket, Place of Islands; Aboljacarmegus,
Smooth-Ledge Falls (and Dead-Water); Aboljacarmeguscook, the stream
emptying in; (the last was the word he gave when I asked about Aboljacknagesic,
which he did not recognize;) Mattahumkeag, Sand-Creek Pond; Piscataquis,
Branch of a River.
I asked our hosts what Musketaquid, the Indian
name of Concord, Massachusetts, meant; but they changed it to Musketicook,
and repeated that, and Tahmunt said that it meant Dead Stream, which is
probably true. Cook appears to mean stream, and perhaps quid
signifies the place or ground. When I asked the meaning of the names of
two of our hills, they answered that they were another language. As Tahmunt
said that he traded at Quebec, my companion inquired the meaning of the
word Quebec, about which there has been so much question. He did
not know, but began to conjecture. He asked what those great ships were
called that carried soldiers. "Men-of-war," we answered. "Well," he said,
"when the English ships came up the river, they could not go any farther,
it was so narrow there; they must go back,--go-back,--that 's Que-bec."
I mention this to show the value of his authority in the other cases.
Late at night the other two Indians came home from
moose-hunting, not having been successful, aroused the fire again, lighted
their pipes, smoked awhile, took something strong to drink, and ate some
moose-meat, and, finding what room they could, lay down on the moose-hides;
and thus we passed the night, two white men and four Indians, side by side.
[ 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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