Ktaadn - Part 5
By six o'clock, having mounted our packs and a good blanketful of trout,
ready dressed, and swung up such baggage and provision as we wished to
leave behind, upon the tops of saplings, to be out of the reach of bears,
we started for the summit of the mountain, distant, as Uncle George said
the boatmen called it, about four miles, but as I judged, and as it proved,
nearer fourteen. He had never been any nearer the mountain than this, and
there was not the slightest trace of man to guide us farther in this direction.
At first, pushing a few rods up the Aboljacknagesic, or "open-land stream,"
we fastened our batteau to a tree, and travelled up the north side, through
burnt lands, now partially overgrown with young aspens, and other shrubbery;
but soon, recrossing this stream, where it was about fifty or sixty feet
wide, upon a jam of logs and rocks,--and you could cross it by this means
almost anywhere,--we struck at once for the highest peak, over a mile or
more of comparatively open land still, very gradually ascending the while.
Here it fell to my lot, as the oldest mountain-climber, to take the lead.
So, scanning the woody side of the mountain, which lay still at an indefinite
distance, stretched out some seven or eight miles in length before us,
we determined to steer directly for the base of the highest peak, leaving
a large slide, by which, as I have since learned, some of our predecessors
ascended, on our left. This course would lead us parallel to a dark seam
in the forest, which marked the bed of a torrent, and over a slight spur,
which extended southward from the main mountain, from whose bare summit
we could get an outlook over the country, and climb directly up the peak,
which would then be close at hand. Seen from this point, a bare ridge at
the extremity of the open land, Ktaadn presented a different aspect from
any mountain I have seen, there being a greater proportion of naked rock
rising abruptly from the forest; and we looked up at this blue barrier
as if it were some fragment of a wall which anciently bounded the earth
in that direction. Setting the compass for a northeast course, which was
the bearing of the southern base of the highest peak, we were soon buried
in the woods.
We soon began to meet with traces of bears and moose,
and those of rabbits were everywhere visible. The tracks of moose, more
or less recent, to speak literally, covered every square rod on the sides
of the mountain; and these animals are probably more numerous there now
than ever before, being driven into this wilderness, from all sides, by
the settlements. The track of a full-grown moose is like that of a cow,
or larger, and of the young, like that of a calf. Sometimes we found ourselves
travelling in faint paths, which they had made, like cow-paths in the woods,
only far more indistinct, being rather openings, affording imperfect vistas
through the dense underwood, than trodden paths; and everywhere the twigs
had been browsed by them, clipt as smoothly as if by a knife. The bark
of trees was stript up by them to the height of eight or nine feet, in
long, narrow strips, an inch wide, still showing the distinct marks of
their teeth. We expected nothing less than to meet a herd of them every
moment, and our Nimrod held his shooting-iron in readiness; but we did
not go out of our way to look for them, and, though numerous, they are
so wary that the unskilful hunter might range the forest a long time before
he could get sight of one. They are sometimes dangerous to encounter, and
will not turn out for the hunter, but furiously rush upon him and trample
him to death, unless he is lucky enough to avoid them by dodging round
a tree. The largest are nearly as large as a horse, and weigh sometimes
one thousand pounds; and it is said that they can step over a five-feet
gate in their ordinary walk. They are described as exceedingly awkward-looking
animals, with their long legs and short bodies, making a ludicrous figure
when in full run, but making great headway nevertheless. It seemed a mystery
to us how they could thread these woods, which it required all our suppleness
to accomplish,--climbing, stooping, and winding, alternately. They are
said to drop their long and branching horns, which usually spread five
or six feet, on their backs, and make their way easily by the weight of
their bodies. Our boatmen said, but I know not with how much truth, that
their horns are apt to be gnawed away by vermin while they sleep. Their
flesh, which is more like beef than venison, is common in Bangor market.
We had proceeded on thus seven or eight miles, till
about noon, with frequent pauses to refresh the weary ones, crossing a
considerable mountain stream, which we conjectured to be Murch Brook, at
whose mouth we had camped, all the time in woods, without having once seen
the summit, and rising very gradually, when the boatmen, beginning to despair
a little, and fearing that we were leaving the mountain on one side of
us, for they had not entire faith in the compass, McCauslin climbed a tree,
from the top of which he could see the peak, when it appeared that we had
not swerved from a right line, the compass down below still ranging with
his arm, which pointed to the summit. By the side of a cool mountain rill,
amid the woods, where the water began to partake of the purity and transparency
of the air, we stopped to cook some of our fishes, which we had brought
thus far in order to save our hard bread and pork, in the use of which
we had put ourselves on short allowance. We soon had a fire blazing, and
stood around it, under the damp and sombre forest of firs and birches,
each with a sharpened stick, three or four feet in length, upon which he
had spitted his trout, or roach, previously well gashed and salted, our
sticks radiating like the spokes of a wheel from one centre, and each crowding
his particular fish into the most desirable exposure, not with the truest
regard always to his neighbor's rights. Thus we regaled ourselves, drinking
meanwhile at the spring, till one man's pack, at least, was considerably
lightened, when we again took up our line of march.
At length we reached an elevation sufficiently bare
to afford a view of the summit, still distant and blue, almost as if retreating
from us. A torrent, which proved to be the same we had crossed, was seen
tumbling down in front, literally from out of the clouds. But this glimpse
at our whereabouts was soon lost, and we were buried in the woods again.
The wood was chiefly yellow birch, spruce, fir, mountain-ash, or round-wood,
as the Maine people call it, and moose-wood. It was the worst kind of travelling;
sometimes like the densest scrub-oak patches with us. The cornel, or bunch-berries,
were very abundant, as well as Solomon's seal and moose-berries. Blueberries
were distributed along our whole route; and in one place the bushes were
drooping with the weight of the fruit, still as fresh as ever. It was the
7th of September. Such patches afforded a grateful repast, and served to
bait the tired party forward. When any lagged behind, the cry of "blue-berries"
was most effectual to bring them up. Even at this elevation we passed through
a moose-yard, formed by a large flat rock, four or five rods square, where
they tread down the snow in winter. At length, fearing that if we held
the direct course to the summit, we should not find any water near our
camping-ground, we gradually swerved to the west, till, at four o'clock,
we struck again the torrent which I have mentioned, and here, in view of
the summit, the weary party decided to camp that night.
While my companions were seeking a suitable spot
for this purpose, I improved the little daylight that was left, in climbing
the mountain alone. We were in a deep and narrow ravine, sloping up to
the clouds, at an angle of nearly forty-five degrees, and hemmed in by
walls of rock, which were at first covered with low trees, then with impenetrable
thickets of scraggy birches and spruce-trees, and with moss, but at last
bare of all vegetation but lichens, and almost continually draped in clouds.
Following up the course of the torrent which occupied this,--and I mean
to lay some emphasis on this word up,--pulling myself up by the
side of perpendicular falls of twenty or thirty feet, by the roots of firs
and birches, and then, perhaps, walking a level rod or two in the thin
stream, for it took up the whole road, ascending by huge steps, as it were,
a giant's stairway, down which a river flowed, I had soon cleared the trees,
and paused on the successive shelves, to look back over the country. The
torrent was from fifteen to thirty feet wide, without a tributary, and
seemingly not diminishing in breadth as I advanced; but still it came rushing
and roaring down, with a copious tide, over and amidst masses of bare rock,
from the very clouds, as though a waterspout had just burst over the mountain.
Leaving this at last, I began to work my way, scarcely less arduous than
Satan's anciently through Chaos, up the nearest, though not the highest
peak. At first scrambling on all fours over the tops of ancient black spruce-trees
(Abies nigra), old as the flood, from two to ten or twelve feet
in height, their tops flat and spreading, and their foliage blue, and nipt
with cold, as if for centuries they had ceased growing upward against the
bleak sky, the solid cold. I walked some good rods erect upon the tops
of these trees, which were overgrown with moss and mountain-cranberries.
It seemed that in the course of time they had filled up the intervals between
the huge rocks, and the cold wind had uniformly levelled all over. Here
the principle of vegetation was hard put to it. There was apparently a
belt of this kind running quite round the mountain, though, perhaps, nowhere
so remarkable as here. Once, slumping through, I looked down ten feet,
into a dark and cavernous region, and saw the stem of a spruce, on whose
top I stood, as on a mass of coarse basket-work, fully nine inches in diameter
at the ground. These holes were bears' dens, and the bears were even then
at home. This was the sort of garden I made my way over, for an
eighth of a mile, at the risk, it is true, of treading on some of the plants,
not seeing any path through it,--certainly the most treacherous
and porous country I ever travelled.
". . . . nigh foundered on he fares,
Treading the crude consistence, half on foot,
Half flying."
But nothing could exceed the toughness of the twigs,--not one snapped under
my weight, for they had slowly grown. Having slumped, scrambled, rolled,
bounced, and walked, by turns, over this scraggy country, I arrived upon
a side-hill, or rather side-mountain, where rocks, gray, silent rocks,
were the flocks and herds that pastured, chewing a rocky cud at sunset.
They looked at me with hard gray eyes, without a bleat or a low. This brought
me to the skirt of a cloud, and bounded my walk that night. But I had already
seen that Maine country when I turned about, waving, flowing, rippling,
down below.
When I returned to my companions, they had selected
a camping-ground on the torrent's edge, and were resting on the ground;
one was on the sick list, rolled in a blanket, on a damp shelf of rock.
It was a savage and dreary scenery enough; so wildly rough, that they looked
long to find a level and open space for the tent. We could not well camp
higher, for want of fuel; and the trees here seemed so evergreen and sappy,
that we almost doubted if they would acknowledge the influence of fire;
but fire prevailed at last, and blazed here, too, like a good citizen of
the world. Even at this height we met with frequent traces of moose, as
well as of bears. As here was no cedar, we made our bed of coarser feathered
spruce; but at any rate the feathers were plucked from the live tree. It
was, perhaps, even a more grand and desolate place for a night's lodging
than the summit would have been, being in the neighborhood of those wild
trees, and of the torrent. Some more aerial and finer-spirited winds rushed
and roared through the ravine all night, from time to time arousing our
fire, and dispersing the embers about. It was as if we lay in the very
nest of a young whirlwind. At midnight, one of my bedfellows, being startled
in his dreams by the sudden blazing up to its top of a fir-tree, whose
green boughs were dried by the heat, sprang up, with a cry, from his bed,
thinking the world on fire, and drew the whole camp after him.
In the morning, after whetting our appetite on some
raw pork, a wafer of hard bread, and a dipper of condensed cloud or waterspout,
we all together began to make our way up the falls, which I have described;
this time choosing the right hand, or highest peak, which was not the one
I had approached before. But soon my companions were lost to my sight behind
the mountain ridge in my rear, which still seemed ever retreating before
me, and I climbed alone over huge rocks, loosely poised, a mile or more,
still edging toward the clouds; for though the day was clear elsewhere,
the summit was concealed by mist. The mountain seemed a vast aggregation
of loose rocks, as if some time it had rained rocks, and they lay as they
fell on the mountain sides, nowhere fairly at rest, but leaning on each
other, all rocking-stones, with cavities between, but scarcely any soil
or smoother shelf. They were the raw materials of a planet dropped from
an unseen quarry, which the vast chemistry of nature would anon work up,
or work down, into the smiling and verdant plains and valleys of earth.
This was an undone extremity of the globe; as in lignite, we see coal in
the process of formation.
At length I entered within the skirts of the cloud
which seemed forever drifting over the summit, and yet would never be gone,
but was generated out of that pure air as fast as it flowed away; and when,
a quarter of a mile farther, I reached the summit of the ridge, which those
who have seen in clearer weather say is about five miles long, and contains
a thousand acres of table-land, I was deep within the hostile ranks of
clouds, and all objects were obscured by them. Now the wind would blow
me out a yard of clear sunlight, wherein I stood; then a gray, dawning
light was all it could accomplish, the cloud-line ever rising and falling
with the wind's intensity. Sometimes it seemed as if the summit would be
cleared in a few moments, and smile in sunshine: but what was gained on
one side was lost on another. It was like sitting in a chimney and waiting
for the smoke to blow away. It was, in fact, a cloud-factory,--these were
the cloud-works, and the wind turned them off done from the cool, bare
rocks. Occasionally, when the windy columns broke in to me, I caught sight
of a dark, damp crag to the right or left; the mist driving ceaselessly
between it and me. It reminded me of the creations of the old epic and
dramatic poets, of Atlas, Vulcan, the Cyclops, and Prometheus. Such was
Caucasus and the rock where Prometheus was bound. Æschylus had no
doubt visited such scenery as this. It was vast, Titanic, and such as man
never inhabits. Some part of the beholder, even some vital part, seems
to escape through the loose grating of his ribs as he ascends. He is more
lone than you can imagine. There is less of substantial thought and fair
understanding in him, than in the plains where men inhabit. His reason
is dispersed and shadowy, more thin and subtile, like the air. Vast, Titanic,
inhuman Nature has got him at disadvantage, caught him alone, and pilfers
him of some of his div1ine faculty. She does not smile on him as in the
plains. She seems to say sternly, why came ye here before your time? This
ground is not prepared for you. Is it not enough that I smile in the valleys?
I have never made this soil for thy feet, this air for thy breathing, these
rocks for thy neighbors. I cannot pity nor fondle thee here, but forever
relentlessly drive thee hence to where I am kind. Why seek me where
I have not called thee, and then complain because you find me but a stepmother?
Shouldst thou freeze or starve, or shudder thy life away, here is no shrine,
nor altar, nor any access to my ear.
"Chaos and ancient Night, I come no spy
With purpose to explore or to disturb
The secrets of your realm, but . . .
. . . . .
. . as my way
Lies through your spacious empire up to light."
The tops of mountains are among the unfinished parts
of the globe, whither it is a slight insult to the gods to climb and pry
into their secrets, and try their effect on our humanity. Only daring and
insolent men, perchance, go there. Simple races, as savages, do not climb
mountains,--their tops are sacred and mysterious tracts never visited by
them. Pomola is always angry with those who climb to the summit of Ktaadn.
According to Jackson, who, in his capacity of geological
surveyor of the State, has accurately measured it,--the altitude of Ktaadn
is 5,300 feet, or a little more than one mile above the level of the sea,--and
he adds, "It is then evidently the highest point in the State of Maine,
and is the most abrupt granite mountain in New England." The peculiarities
of that spacious table-land on which I was standing, as well as the remarkable
semi-circular precipice or basin on the eastern side, were all concealed
by the mist. I had brought my whole pack to the top, not knowing but I
should have to make my descent to the river, and possibly to the settled
portion of the State alone, and by some other route, and wishing to have
a complete outfit with me. But at length, fearing that my companions would
be anxious to reach the river before night, and knowing that the clouds
might rest on the mountain for days, I was compelled to descend. Occasionally,
as I came down, the wind would blow me a vista open, through which I could
see the country eastward, boundless forests, and lakes, and streams, gleaming
in the sun, some of them emptying into the East Branch. There were also
new mountains in sight in that direction. Now and then some small bird
of the sparrow family would flit away before me, unable to command its
course, like a fragment of the gray rock blown off by the wind.
I found my companions where I had left them, on the
side of the peak, gathering the mountain cranberries, which filled every
crevice between the rocks, together with blueberries, which had a spicier
flavor the higher up they grew, but were not the less agreeable to our
palates. When the country is settled, and roads are made, these cranberries
will perhaps become an article of commerce. From this elevation, just on
the skirts of the clouds, we could overlook the country, west and south,
for a hundred miles. There it was, the State of Maine, which we had seen
on the map, but not much like that,--immeasurable forest for the sun to
shine on, that eastern stuff we hear of in Massachusetts. No clearing,
no house. It did not look as if a solitary traveller had cut so much as
a walking-stick there. Countless lakes,--Moosehead in the southwest, forty
miles long by ten wide, like a gleaming silver platter at the end of the
table; Chesuncook, eighteen long by three wide, without an island; Millinocket,
on the south, with its hundred islands; and a hundred others without a
name; and mountains also, whose names, for the most part, are known only
to the Indians. The forest looked like a firm grass sward, and the effect
of these lakes in its midst has been well compared, by one who has since
visited this same spot, to that of a "mirror broken into a thousand fragments,
and wildly scattered over the grass, reflecting the full blaze of the sun."
It was a large farm for somebody, when cleared. According to the Gazetteer,
which was printed before the boundary question was settled, this single
Penobscot county, in which we were, was larger than the whole State of
Vermont, with its fourteen counties; and this was only a part of the wild
lands of Maine. We are concerned now, however, about natural, not political
limits. We were about eighty miles, as the bird flies, from Bangor, or
one hundred and fifteen, as we had rode, and walked, and paddled. We had
to console ourselves with the reflection that this view was probably as
good as that from the peak, as far as it went; and what were a mountain
without its attendant clouds and mists? Like ourselves, neither Bailey
nor Jackson had obtained a clear view from the summit.
Setting out on our return to the river, still at
an early hour in the day, we decided to follow the course of the torrent,
which we supposed to be Murch Brook, as long as it would not lead us too
far out of our way. We thus travelled about four miles in the very torrent
itself, continually crossing and recrossing it, leaping from rock to rock,
and jumping with the stream down falls of seven or eight feet, or sometimes
sliding down on our backs in a thin sheet of water. This ravine had been
the scene of an extraordinary freshet in the spring, apparently accompanied
by a slide from the mountain. It must have been filled with a stream of
stones and water, at least twenty feet above the present level of the torrent.
For a rod or two, on either side of its channel, the trees were barked
and splintered up to their tops, the birches bent over, twisted, and sometimes
finely split, like a stable-broom; some, a foot in diameter, snapped off,
and whole clumps of trees bent over with the weight of rocks piled on them.
In one place we noticed a rock, two or three feet in diameter, lodged nearly
twenty feet high in the crotch of a tree. For the whole four miles, we
saw but one rill emptying in, and the volume of water did not seem to be
increased from the first. We travelled thus very rapidly with a downward
impetus, and grew remarkably expert at leaping from rock to rock, for leap
we must, and leap we did, whether there was any rock at the right distance
or not. It was a pleasant picture when the foremost turned about and looked
up the winding ravine, walled in with rocks and the green forest, to see,
at intervals of a rod or two, a red-shirted or green-jacketed mountaineer
against the white torrent, leaping down the channel with his pack on his
back, or pausing upon a convenient rock in the midst of the torrent to
mend a rent in his clothes, or unstrap the dipper at his belt to take a
draught of the water. At one place we were startled by seeing, on a little
sandy shelf by the side of the stream, the fresh print of a man's foot,
and for a moment realized how Robinson Crusoe felt in a similar case; but
at last we remembered that we had struck this stream on our way up, though
we could not have told where, and one had descended into the ravine for
a drink. The cool air above, and the continual bathing of our bodies in
mountain water, alternate foot, sitz, douche, and plunge baths, made this
walk exceedingly refreshing, and we had travelled only a mile or two, after
leaving the torrent, before every thread of our clothes was as dry as usual,
owing perhaps to a peculiar quality in the atmosphere.
After leaving the torrent, being
in doubt about our course, Tom threw down his pack at the foot of the loftiest
spruce tree at hand, and shinned up the bare trunk, some twenty feet, and
then climbed through the green tower, lost to our sight, until he held
the topmost spray in his hand.(5) McCauslin, in his
younger days, had marched through the wilderness with a body of troops,
under General Somebody, and with one other man did all the scouting and
spying service. The General's word was, "Throw down the top of that tree,"
and there was no tree in the Maine woods so high that it did not lose its
top in such a case. I have heard a story of two men being lost once in
these woods, nearer to the settlements than this, who climbed the loftiest
pine they could find, some six feet in diameter at the ground, from whose
top they discovered a solitary clearing and its smoke. When at this height,
some two hundred feet from the ground, one of them became dizzy, and fainted
in his companion's arms, and the latter had to accomplish the descent with
him, alternately fainting and reviving, as best he could. To Tom we cried,
Where away does the summit bear? where the burnt lands? The last he could
only conjecture; he descried, however, a little meadow and pond, lying
probably in our course, which we concluded to steer for. On reaching this
secluded meadow, we found fresh tracks of moose on the shore of the pond,
and the water was still unsettled as if they had fled before us. A little
farther, in a dense thicket, we seemed to be still on their trail. It was
a small meadow, of a few acres, on the mountain side, concealed by the
forest, and perhaps never seen by a white man before, where one would think
that the moose might browse and bathe, and rest in peace. Pursuing this
course, we soon reached the open land, which went sloping down some miles
toward the Penobscot.
Perhaps I most fully realized that this was primeval,
untamed, and forever untameable Nature, or whatever else men call
it, while coming down this part of the mountain. We were passing over "Burnt
Lands," burnt by lightning, perchance, though they showed no recent marks
of fire, hardly so much as a charred stump, but looked rather like a natural
pasture for the moose and deer, exceedingly wild and desolate, with occasional
strips of timber crossing them, and low poplars springing up, and patches
of blueberries here and there. I found myself traversing them familiarly,
like some pasture run to waste, or partially reclaimed by man; but when
I reflected what man, what brother or sister or kinsman of our race made
it and claimed it, I expected the proprietor to rise up and dispute my
passage. It is difficult to conceive of a region
uninhabited by man. We habitually presume his presence and influence everywhere.
And yet we have not seen pure Nature, unless we have seen her thus vast
and dread and inhuman, though in the midst of cities. Nature was here something
savage and awful, though beautiful. I looked with awe at the ground I trod
on, to see what the Powers had made there, the form and fashion and material
of their work. This was that Earth of which we have heard, made out of
Chaos and Old Night. Here was no man's garden, but the unhandselled globe.
It was not lawn, nor pasture, nor mead, nor woodland, nor lea, nor arable,
nor waste-land. It was the fresh and natural surface of the planet Earth,
as it was made for ever and ever,--to be the dwelling of man, we say,--so
Nature made it, and man may use it if he can. Man was not to be associated
with it. It was Matter, vast, terrific,--not his Mother Earth that we have
heard of, not for him to tread on, or be buried in,--no, it were being
too familiar even to let his bones lie there,--the home, this, of Necessity
and Fate. There was there felt the presence of a force not bound to be
kind to man. It was a place for heathenism and superstitious rites,--to
be inhabited by men nearer of kin to the rocks and to wild animals than
we. We walked over it with a certain awe, stopping, from time to time,
to pick the blueberries which grew there, and had a smart and spicy taste.
Perchance where our wild pines stand, and leaves lie on their forest
floor, in Concord, there were once reapers, and husbandmen planted grain;
but here not even the surface had been scarred by man, but it was a specimen
of what God saw fit to make this world. What is it to be admitted to a
museum, to see a myriad of particular things, compared with being shown
some star's surface, some hard matter in its home! I stand in awe of my
body, this matter to which I am bound has become so strange to me. I fear
not spirits, ghosts, of which I am one,--that my body might,--but
I fear bodies, I tremble to meet them. What is this Titan that has possession
of me? Talk of mysteries!--Think of our life in nature,--daily to be shown
matter, to come in contact with it,--rocks, trees, wind on our cheeks!
The solid earth! the actual world! the common sense! Contact!
Contact! Who are we? where are we?
Thoreau's note 5: "The spruce-tree," says
Springer in '51, "is generally selected, principally for the superior facilities
which its numerous limbs afford the climber. To gain the first limbs of
this tree, which are from twenty to forty feet from the ground, a smaller
tree is undercut and lodged against it, clambering up which the top of
the spruce is reached. In some cases, when a very elevated position is
desired, the spruce-tree is lodged against the trunk of some lofty pine,
up which we ascend to a height twice that of the surrounding forest."
To indicate the direction of pines, he throws down a branch, and a man
at the ground takes the bearing - 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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