Ktaadn - Part 3
The next morning, the weather proving fair enough for our purpose, we
prepared to start, and, the Indians having failed us, persuaded McCauslin,
who was not unwilling to revisit the scenes of his driving, to accompany
us in their stead, intending to engage one other boatman on the way. A
strip of cotton cloth for a tent, a couple of blankets, which would suffice
for the whole party, fifteen pounds of hard bread, ten pounds of "clear"
pork, and a little tea, made up "Uncle George's" pack. The last three articles
were calculated to be provision enough for six men for a week, with what
we might pick up. A tea-kettle, a frying-pan, and an axe, to be obtained
at the last house, would complete our outfit.
We were soon out of McCauslin's clearing, and in
the ever green woods again. The obscure trail made by the two settlers
above, which even the woodman is sometimes puzzled to discern, erelong
crossed a narrow, open strip in the woods overrun with weeds, called the
Burnt Land, where a fire had raged formerly, stretching northward nine
or ten miles, to Millinocket Lake. At the end of three miles, we reached
Shad Pond, or Noliseemack, an expansion of the river. Hodge, the Assistant
State Geologist, who passed through this on the 25th of June, 1837, says,
"We pushed our boat through an acre or more of buck-beans, which had taken
root at the bottom, and bloomed above the surface in the greatest profusion
and beauty." Thomas Fowler's house is four miles from McCauslin's, on the
shore of the pond, at the mouth of the Millinocket River, and eight miles
from the lake of the same name, on the latter stream. This lake affords
a more direct course to Ktaadn, but we preferred to follow the Penobscot
and the Pamadumcook lakes. Fowler was just completing a new log-hut, and
was sawing out a window through the logs, nearly two feet thick, when we
arrived. He had begun to paper his house with spruce-bark, turned inside
out, which had a good effect, and was in keeping with the circumstances.
Instead of water we got here a draught of beer, which, it was allowed,
would be better; clear and thin, but strong and stringent as the cedar-sap.
It was as if we sucked at the very teats of Nature's pine-clad bosom in
these parts,--the sap of all Millinocket botany commingled,--the topmost,
most fantastic, and spiciest sprays of the primitive wood, and whatever
invigorating and stringent gum or essence it afforded steeped and dissolved
in it,--a lumberer's drink, which would acclimate and naturalize a man
at once, --which would make him see green, and, if he slept, dream that
he heard the wind sough among the pines. Here was a fife, praying to be
played on, through which we breathed a few tuneful strains,--brought hither
to tame wild beasts. As we stood upon the pile of chips by the door, fish-hawks
were sailing overhead; and here, over Shad Pond, might daily be witnessed
the tyranny of the bald-eagle over that bird. Tom pointed away over the
lake to a bald-eagle's nest, which was plainly visible more than a mile
off, on a pine, high above the surrounding forest, and was frequented from
year to year by the same pair, and held sacred by him. There were these
two houses only there, his low hut and the eagles' airy cart-load of fagots.
Thomas Fowler, too, was persuaded to join us, for two men were necessary
to manage the batteau, which was soon to be our carriage, and these men
needed to be cool and skilful for the navigation of the Penobscot. Tom's
pack was soon made, for he had not far to look for his waterman's boots,
and a red-flannel shirt. This is the favorite color with lumbermen; and
red flannel is reputed to possess some mysterious virtues, to be most healthful
and convenient in respect to perspiration. In every gang there will be
a large proportion of red birds. We took here a poor and leaky batteau,
and began to pole up the Millinocket two miles, to the elder Fowler's,
in order to avoid the Grand Falls of the Penobscot, intending to exchange
our batteau there for a better. The Millinocket is a small, shallow, and
sandy stream, full of what I took to be lamprey-eels' or suckers' nests,
and lined with musquash cabins, but free from rapids, according to Fowler,
excepting at its outlet from the lake. He was at this time engaged in cutting
the native grass,--rush-grass and meadow-clover, as he called it,--on the
meadows and small, low islands of this stream. We noticed flattened places
in the grass on either side, where, he said, a moose had laid down the
night before, adding, that there were thousands in these meadows.
Old Fowler's, on the Millinocket, six miles from
McCauslin's, and twenty-four from the Point, is the last house. Gibson's,
on the Sowadnehunk, is the only clearing above, but that had proved a failure,
and was long since deserted. Fowler is the oldest inhabitant of these woods.
He formerly lived a few miles from here, on the south side of the West
Branch, where he built his house sixteen years ago, the first house built
above the Five Islands. Here our new batteau was to be carried over the
first portage of two miles, round the Grand Falls of the Penobscot, on
a horse-sled made of saplings, to jump the numerous rocks in the way; but
we had to wait a couple of hours for them to catch the horses, which were
pastured at a distance, amid the stumps, and had wandered still farther
off. The last of the salmon for this season had just been caught, and were
still fresh in pickle, from which enough was extracted to fill our empty
kettle, and so graduate our introduction to simpler forest fare. The week
before they had lost nine sheep here out of their first flock, by the wolves.
The surviving sheep came round the house, and seemed frightened, which
induced them to go and look for the rest, when they found seven dead and
lacerated, and two still alive. These last they carried to the house, and,
as Mrs. Fowler said, they were merely scratched in the throat, and had
no more visible wound than would be produced by the prick of a pin. She
sheared off the wool from their throats, and washed them, and put on some
salve, and turned them out, but in a few moments they were missing, and
had not been found since. In fact, they were all poisoned, and those that
were found swelled up at once, so that they saved neither skin nor wool.
This realized the old fables of the wolves and the sheep, and convinced
me that that ancient hostility still existed. Verily, the shepherd-boy
did not need to sound a false alarm this time. There were steel traps by
the door, of various sizes, for wolves, otter, and bears, with large claws
instead of teeth, to catch in their sinews. Wolves are frequently killed
with poisoned bait.
At length, after we had dined here on the usual backwoods
fare, the horses arrived, and we hauled our batteau out of the water, and
lashed it to its wicker carriage, and, throwing in our packs, walked on
before, leaving the boatmen and driver, who was Tom's brother, to manage
the concern. The route, which led through the wild pasture where the sheep
were killed, was in some places the roughest ever travelled by horses,
over rocky hills, where the sled bounced and slid along, like a vessel
pitching in a storm; and one man was as necessary to stand at the stern,
to prevent the boat from being wrecked, as a helmsman in the roughest sea.
The philosophy of our progress was something like this: when the runners
struck a rock three or four feet high, the sled bounced back and upwards
at the same time; but, as the horses never ceased pulling, it came down
on the top of the rock, and so we got over. This portage probably followed
the trail of an ancient Indian carry round these falls. By two o'clock
we, who had walked on before, reached the river above the falls, not far
from the outlet of Quakish Lake, and waited for the batteau to come up.
We had been here but a short time, when a thunder-shower was seen coming
up from the west, over the still invisible lakes, and that pleasant wilderness
which we were so eager to become acquainted with; and soon the heavy drops
began to patter on the leaves around us. I had just selected the prostrate
trunk of a huge pine, five or six feet in diameter, and was crawling under
it, when, luckily, the boat arrived. It would have amused a sheltered man
to witness the manner in which it was unlashed, and whirled over, while
the first water-spout burst upon us. It was no sooner in the hands of the
eager company than it was abandoned to the first revolutionary impulse,
and to gravity, to adjust it; and they might have been seen all stooping
to its shelter, and wriggling under like so many eels, before it was fairly
deposited on the ground. When all were under, we propped up the lee side,
and busied ourselves there whittling thole-pins for rowing, when we should
reach the lakes; and made the woods ring, between the claps of thunder,
with such boat-songs as we could remember. The horses stood sleek and shining
with the rain, all drooping and crestfallen, while deluge after deluge
washed over us; but the bottom of a boat may be relied on for a tight roof.
At length, after two hours' delay at this place, a streak of fair weather
appeared in the northwest, whither our course now lay, promising a serene
evening for our voyage; and the driver returned with his horses, while
we made haste to launch our boat, and commence our voyage in good earnest.
There were six of us, including the two
boatmen. With our packs heaped up near the bows, and ourselves disposed
as baggage to trim the boat, with instructions not to move in case we should
strike a rock, more than so many barrels of pork, we pushed out into the
first rapid, a slight specimen of the stream we had to navigate. With Uncle
George in the stern, and Tom in the bows, each using a spruce pole about
twelve feet long, pointed with iron,(2) and poling
on the same side, we shot up the rapids like a salmon, the water rushing
and roaring around, so that only a practised eye could distinguish a safe
course, or tell what was deep water and what rocks, frequently grazing
the latter on one or both sides, with a hundred as narrow escapes as ever
the Argo had in passing through the Symplegades. I, who had had some experience
in boating, had never experienced any half so exhilarating before. We were
lucky to have exchanged our Indians, whom we did not know, for these men,
who, together with Tom's brother, were reputed the best boatmen on the
river, and were at once indispensable pilots and pleasant companions. The
canoe is smaller, more easily upset, and sooner worn out; and the Indian
is said not to be so skilful in the management of the batteau. He is, for
the most part, less to be relied on, and more disposed to sulks and whims.
The utmost familiarity with dead streams, or with the ocean, would not
prepare a man for this peculiar navigation; and the most skilful boatman
anywhere else would here be obliged to take out his boat and carry round
a hundred times, still with great risk, as well as delay, where the practised
batteau-man poles up with comparative ease and safety. The hardy "voyageur"
pushes with incredible perseverance and success quite up to the foot of
the falls, and then only carries round some perpendicular ledge, and launches
again
in "The torrent's smoothness, ere it dash below," to struggle with the
boiling rapids above. The Indians say that the river once ran both ways,
one half up and the other down, but that, since the white man came, it
all runs down, and now they must laboriously pole their canoes against
the stream, and carry them over numerous portages. In the summer, all stores--the
grindstone and the plough of the pioneer, flour, pork, and utensils for
the explorer --must be conveyed up the river in batteaux; and many a cargo
and many a boatman is lost in these waters. In the winter, however, which
is very equable and long, the ice is the great highway, and the loggers'
team penetrates to Chesuncook Lake, and still higher up, even two hundred
miles above Bangor. Imagine the solitary sled-track running far up into
the snowy and evergreen wilderness, hemmed in closely for a hundred miles
by the forest, and again stretching straight across the broad surfaces
of concealed lakes!
We were soon in the smooth water of the Quakish Lake,
and took our turns at rowing and paddling across it. It is a small, irregular,
but handsome lake, shut in on all sides by the forest, and showing no traces
of man but some low boom in a distant cove, reserved for spring use. The
spruce and cedar on its shores, hung with gray lichens, looked at a distance
like the ghosts of trees. Ducks were sailing here and there on its surface,
and a solitary loon, like a more living wave,--a vital spot on the lake's
surface,--laughed and frolicked, and showed its straight leg, for our amusement.
Joe Merry Mountain appeared in the northwest, as if it were looking down
on this lake especially; and we had our first, but a partial view of Ktaadn,
its summit veiled in clouds, like a dark isthmus in that quarter, connecting
the heavens with the earth. After two miles of smooth rowing across this
lake, we found ourselves in the river again, which was a continuous rapid
for one mile, to the dam, requiring all the strength and skill of our boatmen
to pole up it.
This dam is a quite important and
expensive work for this country, whither cattle and horses cannot penetrate
in the summer, raising the whole river ten feet, and flooding, as they
said, som sixty square miles by means of the innumerable lakes with which
the river connects. It is a lofty and solid structure, with sloping piers
some distance above, made of frames of logs filled with stones, to break
the ice.(3) Here every log pays toll as it passes
through the sluices.
We filed into the rude logger's camp at this place,
such as I have described, without ceremony, and the cook, at that moment
the sole occupant, at once set about preparing tea for his visitors. His
fireplace, which the rain had converted into a mud-puddle, was soon blazing
again, and we sat down on the log benches around it to dry us. On the well-flattened
and somewhat faded beds of arbor-vitæ leaves, which stretched on
either hand under the eaves behind us, lay an odd leaf of the Bible, some
genealogical chapter out of the Old Testament; and, half buried by the
leaves, we found Emerson's Address on West India Emancipation, which had
been left here formerly by one of our company, and had made two converts
to the Liberty party here, as I was told; also, an odd number of the
Westminster Review, for 1834, and a pamphlet entitled History of the Erection
of the Monument on the grave of Myron Holly. This was the readable, or
reading matter, in a lumberer's camp in the Maine woods, thirty miles from
a road, which would be given up to the bears in a fortnight. These things
were well thumbed and soiled. This gang was headed by one John Morrison,
a good specimen of a Yankee; and was ne cessarily composed of men not bred
to the business of dam-building, but who were Jacks-at-all-trades, handy
with the axe, and other simple implements, and well skilled in wood and
water craft. We had hot cakes for our supper even here, white as snow-balls,
but without butter, and the never-failing sweet cakes, with which we filled
our pockets, foreseeing that we should not soon meet with the like again.
Such delicate puff-balls seemed a singular diet for back-woodsmen. There
was also tea without milk, sweetened with molasses. And so, exchanging
a word with John Morrison and his gang when we had returned to the shore,
and also exchanging our batteau for a better still, we made haste to improve
the little daylight that remained. This camp, exactly twenty-nine miles
from Mattawamkeag Point, by the way we had come, and about one hundred
from Bangor by the river, was the last human habitation of any kind in
this direction. Beyond, there was no trail; and the river and lakes, by
batteaux and canoes, was considered the only practicable route. We were
about thirty miles by the river from the summit of Ktaadn, which was in
sight, though not more than twenty, perhaps, in a straight line.
It being about the full of the moon, and a warm and
pleasant evening, we decided to row five miles by moonlight to the head
of the North Twin Lake, lest the wind should rise on the morrow. After
one mile of river, or what the boatmen call "thoroughfare,"--for the river
becomes at length only the connecting link between the lakes,--and some
slight rapid which had been mostly made smooth water by the dam, we entered
the North Twin Lake just after sundown, and steered across for the river
"thoroughfare," four miles distant. This is a noble sheet of water, where
one may get the impression which a new country and a "lake of the woods"
are fitted to create. There was the smoke of no log-hut nor camp of any
kind to greet us, still less was any lover of nature or musing traveller
watching our batteau from the distant hills; not even the Indian hunter
was there, for he rarely climbs them, but hugs the river like ourselves.
No face welcomed us but the fine fantastic sprays of free and happy evergreen
trees, waving one above another in their ancient home. At first the red
clouds hung over the western shore as gorgeously as if over a city, and
the lake lay open to the light with even a civilized aspect, as if expecting
trade and commerce, and towns and villas. We could distinguish the inlet
to the South Twin, which is said to be the larger, where the shore was
misty and blue, and it was worth the while to look thus through a narrow
opening across the entire expanse of a concealed lake to its own yet more
dim and distant shore. The shores rose gently to ranges of low hills covered
with forests; and though, in fact, the most valuable white pine timber,
even about this lake, had been culled out, this would never have been suspected
by the voyager. The impression, which indeed corresponded with the fact,
was, as if we were upon a high table-land between the States and Canada,
the northern side of which is drained by the St. John and Chaudiere, the
southern by the Penobscot and Kennebec. There was no bold mountainous shore,
as we might have expected, but only isolated hills and mountains rising
here and there from the plateau. The country is an archipelago of lakes,--the
lake-country of New England. Their levels vary but a few feet, and the
boatmen, by short portages, or by none at all, pass easily from one to
another. They say that at very high water the Penobscot and the Kennebec
flow into each other, or at any rate, that you may lie with your face in
the one and your toes in the other. Even the Penobscot and St. John have
been connected by a canal, so that the lumber of the Allegash, instead
of going down the St. John, comes down the Penobscot; and the Indian's
tradition, that the Penobscot once ran both ways for his convenience, is,
in one sense, partially realized to-day.
None of our party but McCauslin had been above this
lake, so we trusted to him to pilot us, and we could not but confess the
importance of a pilot on these waters. While it is river, you will not
easily
forget which way is up stream; but when you enter a lake, the river is
completely lost, and you scan the distant shores in vain to find where
it comes in. A stranger is, for the time at least, lost, and must set about
a voyage of discovery first of all to find the river. To follow the windings
of the shore when the lake is ten miles, or even more, in length, and of
an irregularity which will not soon be mapped, is a wearisome voyage, and
will spend his time and his provisions. They tell a story of a gang of
experienced woodmen sent to a location on this stream, who were thus lost
in the wilderness of lakes. They cut their way through thickets, and carried
their baggage and their boats over from lake to lake, sometimes several
miles. They carried into Millinocket Lake, which is on another stream,
and is ten miles square, and contains a hundred islands. They explored
its shores thoroughly, and then carried into another, and another, and
it was a week of toil and anxiety before they found the Penobscot River
again, and then their provisions were exhausted, and they were obliged
to return.
While Uncle George steered for a small island near
the head of the lake, now just visible, like a speck on the water, we rowed
by turns swiftly over its surface, singing such boat-songs as we could
remember. The shores seemed at an indefinite distance in the moonlight.
Occasionally we paused in our singing and rested on our oars, while we
listened to hear if the wolves howled, for this is a common serenade, and
my companions affirmed that it was the most dismal and unearthly of sounds;
but we heard none this time. If we did not hear, however, we did
listen,
not without a reasonable expectation; that at least I have to tell,--only
some utterly uncivilized, big-throated owl hooted loud and dismally in
the drear and boughy wilderness, plainly not nervous about his solitary
life, nor afraid to hear the echoes of his voice there. We remembered also
that possibly moose were silently watching us from the distant coves, or
some surly bear or timid caribou had been startled by our singing. It was
with new emphasis that we sang there the Canadian boat-song,--
"Row, brothers, row, the stream runs fast,
The Rapids are near and the daylight 's past!"--
which describes precisely our own adventure, and was inspired by the experience
of a similar kind of life,--for the rapids were ever near, and the daylight
long past; the woods on shore looked dim, and many an Utawas' tide here
emptied into the lake.
"Why should we yet our sail unfurl?
There is not a breath the blue wave to curl!
But, when the wind blows off the shore,
O sweetly we 'll rest our weary oar."
"Utawas' tide! this trembling moon,
Shall see us float o'er thy surges soon."
At last we glided past the "green isle" which had been
our landmark, all joining in the chorus; as if by the watery links of rivers
and of lakes we were about to float over unmeasured zones of earth, bound
on unimaginable adventures,--
"Saint of this green isle! hear our prayers,
O grant us cool heavens and favoring airs!"
About nine o'clock we reached the river, and ran our
boat into a natural haven between some rocks, and drew her out on the sand.
This camping-ground McCauslin had been familiar with in his lumbering days,
and he now struck it unerringly in the moonlight, and we heard the sound
of the rill which would supply us with cool water emptying into the lake.
The first business was to make a fire, an operation which was a little
delayed by the wetness of the fuel and the ground, owing to the heavy showers
of the afternoon. The fire is the main comfort of the camp, whether in
summer or winter, and is about as ample at one season as at another. It
is as well for cheerfulness as for warmth and dryness. It forms one side
of the camp; one bright side at any rate. Some were dispersed to fetch
in dead trees and boughs, while Uncle George felled the birches and beeches
which stood convenient, and soon we had a fire some ten feet long by three
or four high, which rapidly dried the sand before it. This was calculated
to burn all night. We next proceeded to pitch our tent; which operation
was performed by sticking our two spike-poles into the ground in a slanting
direction, about ten feet apart, for rafters, and then drawing our cotton
cloth over them, and tying it down at the ends, leaving it open in front,
shed-fashion. But this evening the wind carried the sparks on to the tent
and burned it. So we hastily drew up the batteau just within the edge of
the woods before the fire, and propping up one side three or four feet
high, spread the tent on the ground to lie on; and with the corner of a
blanket, or what more or less we could get to put over us, lay down with
our heads and bodies under the boat, and our feet and legs on the sand
toward the fire. At first we lay awake, talking of our course, and finding
ourselves in so convenient a posture for studying the heavens, with the
moon and stars shining in our faces, our conversation naturally turned
upon astronomy, and we recounted by turns the most interesting discoveries
in that science. But at length we composed ourselves seriously to sleep.
It was interesting, when awakened at midnight, to watch the grotesque and
fiend-like forms and motions of some one of the party, who, not being able
to sleep, had got up silently to arouse the fire, and add fresh fuel, for
a change; now stealthily lugging a dead tree from out the dark, and heaving
it on, now stirring up the embers with his fork, or tiptoeing about to
observe the stars, watched, perchance, by half the prostrate party in breathless
silence; so much the more intense because they were awake, while each supposed
his neighbor sound asleep. Thus aroused, I too brought fresh fuel to the
fire, and then rambled along the sandy shore in the moonlight, hoping to
meet a moose, come down to drink, or else a wolf. The little rill tinkled
the louder, and peopled all the wilderness for me; and the glassy smoothness
of the sleeping lake, laving the shores of a new world, with the dark,
fantastic rocks rising here and there from its surface, made a scene not
easily described. It has left such an impression of stern, yet gentle,
wildness on my memory as will not soon be effaced. Not far from midnight
we were one after another awakened by rain falling on our extremities;
and as each was made aware of the fact by cold or wet, he drew a long sigh
and then drew up his legs, until gradually we had all sidled round from
lying at right angles with the boat, till our bodies formed an acute angle
with it, and were wholly protected. When next we awoke, the moon and stars
were shining again, and there were signs of dawn in the east. I have been
thus particular in order to convey some idea of a night in the woods.
Thoreau's Note 2: The Canadians call it picquer
de fond. - back
Thoreau's Note 3: Even the Jesuit missionaries, accustomed to
the St. Lawrence and other rivers of Canada, in their first expeditions
to the Abenaquinois, speak of rivers ferrées de rochers,
shod with rocks. - 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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