Ktaadn - Part 2
Early the next morning we had mounted our packs, and prepared for a
tramp up the West Branch, my companion having turned his horse out to pasture
for a week or ten days, thinking that a bite of fresh grass, and a taste
of running water, would do him as much good as backwoods fare and new country
influences his master. Leaping over a fence, we began to follow an obscure
trail up the northern bank of the Penobscot. There was now no road further,
the river being the only highway, and but half a dozen log-huts confined
to its banks, to be met with for thirty miles. On either hand, and beyond,
was a wholly uninhabited wilderness, stretching to Canada. Neither horse
nor cow, nor vehicle of any kind, had ever passed over this ground; the
cattle, and the few bulky articles which the loggers use, being got up
in the winter on the ice, and down again before it breaks up. The evergreen
woods had a decidedly sweet and bracing fragrance; the air was a sort of
diet-drink, and we walked on buoyantly in Indian file, stretching our legs.
Occasionally there was a small opening on the bank, made for the purpose
of log-rolling, where we got a sight of the river,--always a rocky and
rippling stream. The roar of the rapids, the note of a whistler-duck on
the river, of the jay and chickadee around us, and of the pigeon-woodpecker
in the openings, were the sounds that we heard. This was what you might
call a bran-new country; the only roads were of Nature's making, and the
few houses were camps. Here, then, one could no longer accuse institutions
and society, but must front the true source of evil.
There are three classes of inhabitants who either
frequent or inhabit the country which we had now entered;--first, the loggers,
who, for a part of the year, the winter and spring, are far the most numerous,
but in the summer, except a few explorers for timber, completely desert
it; second, the few settlers I have named, the only permanent inhabitants,
who live on the verge of it, and help raise supplies for the former; third,
the hunters, mostly Indians, who range over it in their season.
At the end of three miles, we came to the Mattaseunk
stream and mill, where there was even a rude wooden railroad running down
to the Penobscot, the last railroad we were to see. We crossed one tract,
on the bank of the river, of more than a hundred acres of heavy timber,
which had just been felled and burnt over, and was still smoking. Our trail
lay through the midst of it, and was wellnigh blotted out. The trees lay
at full length, four or five feet deep, and crossing each other in all
directions, all black as charcoal, but perfectly sound within, still good
for fuel or for timber; soon they would be cut into lengths and burnt again.
Here were thousands of cords, enough to keep the poor of Boston and New
York amply warm for a winter, which only cumbered the ground and were in
the settler's way. And the whole of that solid and interminable forest
is doomed to be gradually devoured thus by fire, like shavings, and no
man be warmed by it. At Crocker's log-hut, at the mouth of Salmon River,
seven miles from the Point, one of the party commenced distributing a store
of small cent picture-books among the children, to teach them to read,
and also newspapers, more or less recent, among the parents, than which
nothing can be more acceptable to a backwoods people. It was really an
important item in our outfit, and, at times, the only currency that would
circulate. I walked through Salmon River with my shoes on, it being low
water, but not without wetting my feet. A few miles farther we came to
"Marm Howard's," at the end of an extensive clearing, where there were
two or three log-huts in sight at once, one on the opposite side of the
river, and a few graves, even surrounded by a wooden paling, where already
the rude forefathers of a hamlet lie, and a thousand years hence,
perchance, some poet will write his "Elegy in a Country Churchyard." The
"Village Hampdens," the "mute, inglorious Miltons," and Cromwells, "guiltless
of" their "country's blood," were yet unborn.
"Perchance in this wild spot there will be laid
Some heart once pregnant with celestial fire;
Hands that the rod of empire might have swayed,
Or waked to ecstasy the living lyre."
The next house was Fisk's, ten miles from the Point,
at the mouth of the East Branch, opposite to the island Nickatow, or the
Forks, the last of the Indian islands. I am particular to give the names
of the settlers and the distances, since every log-hut in these woods is
a public house, and such information is of no little consequence to those
who may have occasion to travel this way. Our course here crossed the Penobscot,
and followed the southern bank. One of the party, who entered the house
in search of some one to set us over, reported a very neat dwelling, with
plenty of books, and a new wife, just imported from Boston, wholly new
to the woods. We found the East Branch a large and rapid stream at its
mouth, and much deeper than it appeared. Having with some difficulty discovered
the trail again, we kept up the south side of the West Branch, or main
river, passing by some rapids called Rock-Ebeeme, the roar of which we
heard through the woods, and, shortly after, in the thickest of the wood,
some empty loggers' camps, still new, which were occupied the previous
winter. Though we saw a few more afterwards, I will make one account serve
for all. These were such houses as the lumberers of Maine spend the winter
in, in the wilderness. There were the camps and the hovels for the cattle,
hardly distinguishable, except that the latter had no chimney. These camps
were about twenty feet long by fifteen wide, built of logs,--hemlock, cedar,
spruce, or yellow birch,--one kind alone, or all together, with the bark
on; two or three large ones first, one directly above another, and notched
together at the ends, to the height of three or four feet, then of smaller
logs resting upon transverse ones at the ends, each of the last successively
shorter than the other, to form the roof. The chimney was an oblong square
hole in the middle, three or four feet in diameter, with a fence of logs
as high as the ridge. The interstices were filled with moss, and the roof
was shingled with long and handsome splints of cedar, or spruce, or pine,
rifted with a sledge and cleaver. The fire-place, the most important place
of all, was in shape and size like the chimney, and directly under it,
defined by a log fence or fender on the ground, and a heap of ashes, a
foot or two deep, within, with solid benches of split logs running round
it. Here the fire usually melts the snow, and dries the rain before it
can descend to quench it. The faded beds of arbor-vitæ leaves extended
under the eaves on either hand. There was the place for the water-pail,
pork-barrel, and wash-basin, and generally a dingy pack of cards left on
a log. Usually a good deal of whittling was expended on the latch, which
was made of wood, in the form of an iron one. These houses are made comfortable
by the huge fires, which can be afforded night and day. Usually the scenery
about them is drear and savage enough; and the loggers' camp is as completely
in the woods as a fungus at the foot of a pine in a swamp; no outlook but
to the sky overhead; no more clearing than is made by cutting down the
trees of which it is built, and those which are necessary for fuel. If
only it be well sheltered and convenient to his work, and near a spring,
he wastes no thought on the prospect. They are very
proper forest houses, the stems of the trees collected together and piled
up around a man to keep out wind and rain,--made of living green logs,
hanging with moss and lichen, and with the curls and fringes of the yellow-birch
bark, and dripping with resin, fresh and moist, and redolent of swampy
odors, with that sort of vigor and perennialness even about them that toadstools
suggest.(1) The logger's fare consists of tea,
molasses, flour, pork (sometimes beef), and beans. A great proportion of
the beans raised in Massachusetts find their market here. On expeditions
it is only hard bread and pork, often raw, slice upon slice, with tea or
water, as the case may be.
The primitive wood is always and everywhere damp
and mossy, so that I travelled constantly with the impression that I was
in a swamp; and only when it was remarked that this or that tract, judging
from the quality of the timber on it, would make a profitable clearing,
was I reminded, that if the sun were let in it would make a dry field,
like the few I had seen, at once. The best shod for the most part travel
with wet feet. If the ground was so wet and spongy at this, the dryest
part of a dry season, what must it be in the spring? The woods hereabouts
abounded in beech and yellow birch, of which last there were some very
large specimens; also spruce, cedar, fir, and hemlock; but we saw only
the stumps of the white pine here, some of them of great size, these having
been already culled out, being the only tree much sought after, even as
low down as this. Only a little spruce and hemlock beside had been logged
here. The Eastern wood which is sold for fuel in Massachusetts all comes
from below Bangor. It was the pine alone, chiefly the white pine, that
had tempted any but the hunter to precede us on this route.
Waite's farm, thirteen miles from the Point, is an
extensive and elevated clearing, from which we got a fine view of the river,
rippling and gleaming far beneath us. My companions had formerly had a
good view of Ktaadn and the other mountains here, but to-day it was so
smoky that we could see nothing of them. We could overlook an immense country
of uninterrupted forest, stretching away up the East Branch toward Canada,
on the north and northwest, and toward the Aroostook valley on the northeast;
and imagine what wild life was stirring in its midst. Here was quite a
field of corn for this region, whose peculiar dry scent we perceived a
third of a mile off, before we saw it.
Eighteen miles from the Point brought us in sight
of McCauslin's, or "Uncle George's," as he was familiarly called by my
companions, to whom he was well known, where we intended to break our long
fast. His house was in the midst of an extensive clearing of intervale,
at the mouth of the Little Schoodic River, on the opposite or north bank
of the Penobscot. So we collected on a point of the shore, that we might
be seen, and fired our gun as a signal, which brought out his dogs forthwith,
and thereafter their master, who in due time took us across in his batteau.
This clearing was bounded abruptly, on all sides but the river, by the
naked stems of the forest, as if you were to cut only a few feet square
in the midst of a thousand acres of mowing, and set down a thimble therein.
He had a whole heaven and horizon to himself, and the sun seemed to be
journeying over his clearing only the livelong day. Here we concluded to
spend the night, and wait for the Indians, as there was no stopping-place
so convenient above. He had seen no Indians pass, and this did not often
happen without his knowledge. He thought that his dogs sometimes gave notice
of the approach of Indians half an hour before they arrived.
McCauslin was a Kennebec man, of Scotch descent,
who had been a waterman twenty-two years, and had driven on the lakes and
head-waters of the Penobscot five or six springs in succession, but was
now settled here to raise supplies for the lumberers and for himself. He
entertained us a day or two with true Scotch hospitality, and would accept
no recompense for it. A man of a dry wit and shrewdness, and a general
intelligence which I had not looked for in the backwoods. In fact, the
deeper you penetrate into the woods, the more intelligent, and, in one
sense, less countrified do you find the inhabitants; for always the pioneer
has been a traveller, and, to some extent, a man of the world; and, as
the distances with which he is familiar are greater, so is his information
more general and far reaching than the villager's. If I were to look for
a narrow, uninformed, and countrified mind, as opposed to the intelligence
and refinement which are thought to emanate from cities, it would be among
the rusty inhabitants of an old-settled country, on farms all run out and
gone to seed with life-everlasting, in the towns about Boston, even on
the high-road in Concord, and not in the backwoods of Maine.
Supper was got before our eyes in the ample kitchen,
by a fire which would have roasted an ox; many whole logs, four feet long,
were consumed to boil our tea-kettle,--birch, or beech, or maple, the same
summer and winter; and the dishes were soon smoking on the table, late
the arm-chair, against the wall, from which one of the party was expelled.
The arms of the chair formed the frame on which the table rested; and,
when the round top was turned up against the wall, it formed the back of
the chair, and was no more in the way than the wall itself. This, we noticed,
was the prevailing fashion in these log-houses, in order to economize in
room. There were piping-hot wheaten cakes, the flour having been brought
up the river in batteaux,--no Indian bread, for the upper part of Maine,
it will be remembered, is a wheat country,--and ham, eggs, and potatoes,
and milk and cheese, the produce of the farm; and also shad and salmon,
tea sweetened with molasses, and sweet cakes, in contradistinction to the
hot cakes not sweetened, the one white, the other yellow, to wind up with.
Such we found was the prevailing fare, ordinary and extraordinary, along
this river. Mountain cranberries (Vaccinium Vitis-Idæa), stewed
and sweetened, were the common dessert. Everything here was in profusion,
and the best of its kind. Butter was in such plenty that it was commonly
used, before it was salted, to grease boots with.
In the night we were entertained by the sound of
rain-drops on the cedar-splints which covered the roof, and awaked the
next morning with a drop or two in our eyes. It had set in for a storm,
and we made up our minds not to forsake such comfortable quarters with
this prospect, but wait for Indians and fair weather. It rained and drizzled
and gleamed by turns, the livelong day. What we did there, how we killed
the time, would perhaps be idle to tell; how many times we buttered our
boots, and how often a drowsy one was seen to sidle off to the bedroom.
When it held up, I strolled up and down the bank, and gathered the harebell
and cedar-berries, which grew there; or else we tried by turns the long-handled
axe on the logs before the door. The axe-helves here were made to chop
standing on the log,--a primitive log of course,--and were, therefore,
nearly a foot longer than with us. One while we walked over the farm and
visited his well-filled barns with McCauslin. There were one other man
and two women only here. He kept horses, cows, oxen, and sheep. I think
he said that he was the first to bring a plough and a cow so far; and he
might have added the last, with only two exceptions. The potato-rot had
found him out here, too, the previous year, and got half or two thirds
of his crop, though the seed was of his own raising. Oats, grass, and potatoes
were his staples; but he raised, also, a few carrots and turnips, and "a
little corn for the hens," for this was all that he dared risk, for fear
that it would not ripen. Melons, squashes, sweet-corn, beans, tomatoes,
and many other vegetables, could not be ripened there.
The very few settlers along this stream were obviously
tempted by the cheapness of the land mainly. When I asked McCauslin why
more settlers did not come in, he answered, that one reason was, they could
not buy the land, it belonged to indiv1iduals or companies who were afraid
that their wild lands would be settled, and so incorporated into towns,
and they be taxed for them; but to settling on the States' land there was
no such hinderance. For his own part, he wanted no neighbors,--he didn't
wish to see any road by his house. Neighbors, even the best, were a trouble
and expense, especially on the score of cattle and fences. They might live
across the river, perhaps, but not on the same side.
The chickens here were protected by the dogs. As
McCauslin said, "The old one took it up first, and she taught the pup,
and now they had got it into their heads that it would n't do to have anything
of the bird kind on the premises." A hawk hovering over was not allowed
to alight, but barked off by the dogs circling underneath; and a pigeon,
or a "yellow-hammer," as they called the pigeon-woodpecker, on a dead limb
or stump, was instantly expelled. It was the main business of their day,
and kept them constantly coming and going. One would rush out of the house
on the least alarm given by the other.
When it rained hardest, we returned to the house,
and took down a tract from the shelf. There was the Wandering Jew, cheap
edition, and fine print, the Criminal Calendar, and Parish's Geography,
and flash novels two or three. Under the pressure of circumstances, we
read a little in these. With such aid, the press is not so feeble an engine,
after all. This house, which was a fair specimen of those on this river,
was built of huge logs, which peeped out everywhere, and were chinked with
clay and moss. It contained four or five rooms. There were no sawed boards,
or shingles, or clapboards, about it; and scarcely any tool but the axe
had been used in its construction. The partitions were made of long clapboard-like
splints, of spruce or cedar, turned to a delicate salmon color by the smoke.
The roof and sides were covered with the same, instead of shingles and
clapboards, and some of a much thicker and larger size were used for the
floor. These were all so straight and smooth, that they answered the purpose
admirably; and a careless observer would not have suspected that they were
not sawed and planed. The chimney and hearth were of vast size, and made
of stone. The broom was a few twigs of arbor-vitæ tied to a stick;
and a pole was suspended over the hearth, close to the ceiling, to dry
stockings and clothes on. I noticed that the floor was full of small, dingy
holes, as if made with a gimlet, but which were, in fact, made by the spikes,
nearly an inch long, which the lumberers wear in their boots to prevent
their slipping on wet logs. Just above McCauslin's, there is a rocky rapid,
where logs jam in the spring; and many "drivers" are there collected, who
frequent his house for supplies; these were their tracks which I saw.
At sundown McCauslin pointed away over the forest,
across the river, to signs of fair weather amid the clouds,--some evening
redness there. For even there the points of compass held; and there was
a quarter of the heavens appropriated to sunrise and another to sunset.
Thoreau's Note 1: Springer, in his "Forest
Life" (1851), says that they first remove the leaves and turf from the
spot where they intend to build a camp, for fear of fire; also, that "the
spruce-tree is generally selected for camp-building, it being light, straight,
and quite free from sap"; that "the roof is finally covered with the boughs
of the fir, spruce, and hemlock, so that when the snow falls upon the whole,
the warmth of the camp is preserved in the coldest weather"; and that they
make the log seat before the fire, called the "Deacon's Seat," of a spruce
or fir split in halves, with three or four stout limbs left on one side
for legs, which are not likely to get loose. - back
[ 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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