Ktaadn - Part 6
Ere long we recognized some rocks and other features
in the landscape which we had purposely impressed on our memories, and,
quickening our pace, by two o'clock we reached the batteau.(6)
Here we had expected to dine on trout, but in this glaring sunlight they
were slow to take the bait, so we were compelled to make the most of the
crumbs of our hard bread and our pork, which were both nearly exhausted.
Meanwhile we deliberated whether we should go up the river a mile farther,
to Gibson's clearing, on the Sowadnehunk, where there was a deserted log-hut,
in order to get a half-inch auger, to mend one of our spike-poles with.
There were young spruce-trees enough around us, and we had a spare spike,
but nothing to make a hole with. But as it was uncertain whether we should
find any tools left there, we patched up the broken pole, as well as we
could, for the downward voyage, in which there would be but little use
for it. Moreover, we were unwilling to lose any time in this expedition,
lest the wind should rise before we reached the larger lakes, and detain
us; for a moderate wind produces quite a sea on these waters, in which
a batteau will not live for a moment; and on one occasion McCauslin had
been delayed a week at the head of the North Twin, which is only four miles
across. We were nearly out of provisions, and ill prepared in this respect
for what might possibly prove a week's journey round by the shore, fording
innumerable streams, and threading a trackless forest, should any accident
happen to our boat.
It was with regret that we turned our backs on Chesuncook,
which McCauslin had formerly logged on, and the Allegash lakes. There were
still longer rapids and portages above; among the last the Rippogenus Portage,
which he described as the most difficult on the river, and three miles
long. The whole length of the Penobscot is two hundred and seventy-five
miles, and we are still nearly one hundred miles from its source. Hodge,
the assistant State Geologist, passed up this river in 1837, and by a portage
of only one mile and three-quarters crossed over into the Allegash, and
so went down that into the St. John, and up the Madawaska to the Grand
Portage across to the St. Lawrence. His is the only account that I know,
of an expedition through to Canada in this direction. He thus describes
his first sight of the latter river, which, to compare small things with
great, is like Balboa's first sight of the Pacific from the mountains of
the Isthmus of Darien. "When we first came in sight of the St. Lawrence,"
he says, "from the top of a high hill, the view was most striking, and
much more interesting to me from having been shut up in the woods for the
two previous months. Directly before us lay the broad river, extending
across nine or ten miles, its surface broken by a few islands and reefs,
and two ships riding at anchor near the shore. Beyond, extended ranges
of uncultivated hills, parallel with the river. The sun was just going
down behind them, and gilding the whole scene with its parting rays."
About four o'clock, the same afternoon, we commenced
our return voyage, which would require but little if any poling. In shooting
rapids the boatmen use large and broad paddles, instead of poles, to guide
the boat with. Though we glided so swiftly, and often smoothly, down, where
it had cost us no slight effort to get up, our present voyage was attended
with far more danger: for if we once fairly struck one of the thousand
rocks by which we were surrounded the boat would be swamped in an instant.
When a boat is swamped under these circumstances, the boatmen commonly
find no difficulty in keeping afloat at first, for the current keeps both
them and their cargo up for a long way down the stream; and if they can
swim, they have only to work their way gradually to the shore. The greatest
danger is of being caught in an eddy behind some larger rock, where the
water rushes up stream faster than elsewhere it does down, and being carried
round and round under the surface till they are drowned. McCauslin
pointed out some rocks which had been the scene of a fatal accident of
this kind. Sometimes the body is not thrown out for several hours. He himself
had performed such a circuit once, only his legs being visible to his companions;
but he was fortunately thrown out in season to recover his breath.(7)
In shooting the rapids, the boatman has this problem to solve: to choose
a circuitous and safe course amid a thousand sunken rocks, scattered over
a quarter or half a mile, at the same time that he is moving steadily on
at the rate of fifteen miles an hour. Stop he cannot; the only question
is, where will he go? The bow-man chooses the course with all his eyes
about him, striking broad off with his paddle, and drawing the boat by
main force into her course. The stern-man faithfully follows the bow.
We were soon at the Aboljacarmegus Falls. Anxious
to avoid the delay, as well as the labor, of the portage here, our boatmen
went forward first to reconnoitre, and concluded to let the batteau down
the falls, carrying the baggage only over the portage. Jumping from rock
to rock until nearly in the middle of the stream, we were ready to receive
the boat and let her down over the first fall, some six or seven feet perpendicular.
The boatmen stand upon the edge of a shelf of rock, where the fall is perhaps
nine or ten feet perpendicular, in from one to two feet of rapid water,
one on each side of the boat, and let it slide gently over, till the bow
is run out ten or twelve feet in the air; then, letting it drop squarely,
while one holds the painter, the other leaps in, and his companion following,
they are whirled down the rapids to a new fall, or to smooth water. In
a very few minutes they had accomplished a passage in safety, which would
be as foolhardy for the unskilful to attempt as the descent of Niagara
itself. It seemed as if it needed only a little familiarity, and a little
more skill, to navigate down such falls as Niagara itself with safety.
At any rate, I should not despair of such men in the rapids above table-rock,
until I saw them actually go over the falls, so cool, so collected, so
fertile in resources are they. One might have thought that these were falls,
and that falls were not to be waded through with impunity, like a mud-puddle.
There was really danger of their losing their sublimity in losing their
power to harm us. Familiarity breeds contempt. The boatman pauses, perchance,
on some shelf beneath a table-rock under the fall, standing in some cove
of back-water two feet deep, and you hear his rough voice come up through
the spray, coolly giving directions how to launch the boat this time.
Having carried round Pockwockomus Falls, our oars
soon brought us to the Katepskonegan, or Oak Hall carry, where we decided
to camp half way over, leaving our batteau to be carried over in the morning
on fresh shoulders. One shoulder of each of the boatmen showed a red spot
as large as one's hand, worn by the batteau on this expedition; and this
shoulder, as it did all the work, was perceptibly lower than its fellow,
from long service. Such toil soon wears out the strongest constitution.
The drivers are accustomed to work in the cold water in the spring, rarely
ever dry; and if one falls in all over he rarely changes his clothes till
night, if then, even. One who takes this precaution is called by a particular
nickname, or is turned off. None can lead this life who are not almost
amphibious. McCauslin said soberly, what is at any rate a good story to
tell, that he had seen where six men were wholly under water at once, at
a jam, with their shoulders to handspikes. If the log did not start, then
they had to put out their heads to breathe. The driver works as long as
he can see, from dark to dark, and at night has not time to eat his supper
and dry his clothes fairly, before he is asleep on his cedar bed. We lay
that night on the very bed made by such a party, stretching our tent over
the poles which were still standing, but reshingling the damp and faded
bed with fresh leaves.
In the morning we carried our boat over and launched
it, making haste lest the wind should rise. The boatmen ran down Passamagamet,
and, soon after, Ambejijis Falls, while we walked round with the baggage.
We made a hasty breakfast at the head of Ambejijis Lake, on the remainder
of our pork, and were soon rowing across its smooth surface again, under
a pleasant sky, the mountain being now clear of clouds, in the northeast.
Taking turns at the oars, we shot rapidly across Deep Cove, the foot of
Pamadumcook, and the North Twin, at the rate of six miles an hour, the
wind not being high enough to disturb us, and reached the Dam at noon.
The boatmen went through one of the log sluices in the batteau, where the
fall was ten feet at the bottom, and took us in below. Here was the longest
rapid in our voyage, and perhaps the running this was as dangerous and
arduous a task as any. Shooting down sometimes at the rate, as we judged,
of fifteen miles an hour, if we struck a rock we were split from end to
end in an instant. Now, like a bait bobbing for some river monster, amid
the eddies, now darting to this side of the stream, now to that, gliding
swift and smooth near to our destruction, or striking broad off with the
paddle and drawing the boat to right or left with all our might, in order
to avoid a rock. I suppose that it was like running the rapids of the Saute
de St. Marie, at the outlet of Lake Superior, and our boatmen probably
displayed no less dexterity than the Indians there do. We soon ran through
this mile, and floated in Quakish Lake.
After such a voyage, the troubled and angry waters,
which once had seemed terrible and not to be trifled with, appeared tamed
and subdued; they had been bearded and worried in their channels, pricked
and whipped into submission with the spike-pole and paddle, gone through
and through with impunity, and all their spirit and their danger taken
out of them, and the most swollen and impetuous rivers seemed but playthings
henceforth. I began, at length, to understand the boatman's familiarity
with, and contempt for, the rapids. "Those Fowler boys," said Mrs. McCauslin,
"are perfect ducks for the water." They had run down to Lincoln, according
to her, thirty or forty miles, in a batteau, in the night, for a doctor,
when it was so dark that they could not see a rod before them, and the
river was swollen so as to be almost a continuous rapid, so that the doctor
cried,
when they brought him up by daylight, "Why, Tom, how did you see to steer?"
"We did n't steer much,--only kept her straight." And yet they met with
no accident. It is true, the more difficult rapids are higher up than this.
When we reached the Millinocket opposite to Tom's
house, and were waiting for his folks to set us over, for we had left our
batteau above the Grand Falls, we discovered two canoes, with two men in
each, turning up this stream from Shad Pond, one keeping the opposite side
of a small island before us, while the other approached the side where
we were standing, examining the banks carefully for muskrats as they came
along. The last proved to be Louis Neptune and his companion, now, at last,
on their way up to Chesuncook after moose; but they were so disguised that
we hardly knew them. At a little distance they might have been taken for
Quakers, with their broad-brimmed hats, and overcoats with broad capes,
the spoils of Bangor, seeking a settlement in this Sylvania,--or, nearer
at hand, for fashionable gentlemen the morning after a spree. Met face
to face, these Indians in their native woods looked like the sinister and
slouching fellows whom you meet picking up strings and paper in the streets
of a city. There is, in fact, a remarkable and unexpected resemblance between
the degraded savage and the lowest classes in a great city. The one is
no more a child of nature than the other. In the progress of degradation
the distinction of races is soon lost. Neptune at first was only anxious
to know what we "kill," seeing some partridges in the hands of one of the
party, but we had assumed too much anger to permit of a reply. We thought
Indians had some honor before. But--"Me been sick. O, me unwell now. You
make bargain, then me go." They had in fact been delayed so long by a drunken
frolic at the Five Islands, and they had not yet recovered from its effects.
They had some young musquash in their canoes, which they dug out of the
banks with a hoe, for food, not for their skins, for musquash are their
principal food on these expeditions. So they went on up the Millinocket,
and we kept down the bank of the Penobscot, after recruiting ourselves
with a draught of Tom's beer, leaving Tom at his home.
Thus a man shall lead his life away here on the edge
of the wilderness, on Indian Millinocket stream, in a new world, far in
the dark of a continent, and have a flute to play at evening here, while
his strains echo to the stars, amid the howling of wolves; shall live,
as it were, in the primitive age of the world, a primitive man. Yet he
shall spend a sunny day, and in this century be my contemporary; perchance
shall read some scattered leaves of literature, and sometimes talk with
me. Why read history, then, if the ages and the generations are now? He
lives three thousand years deep into time, an age not yet described by
poets. Can you well go further back in history than this? Ay! ay!--for
there turns up but now into the mouth of Millinocket stream a still more
ancient and primitive man, whose history is not brought down even to the
former. In a bark vessel sewn with the roots of the spruce, with hornbeam
paddles, he dips his way along. He is but dim and misty to me, obscured
by the æons that lie between the bark-canoe and the batteau. He builds
no house of logs, but a wigwam of skins. He eats no hot bread and sweet
cake, but musquash and moose-meat and the fat of bears. He glides up the
Millinocket and is lost to my sight, as a more distant and misty cloud
is seen flitting by behind a nearer, and is lost in space. So he goes about
his destiny, the red face of man.
After having passed the night, and buttered our boots
for the last time, at Uncle George's, whose dogs almost devoured him for
joy at his return, we kept on down the river the next day, about eight
miles on foot, and then took a batteau, with a man to pole it, to Mattawamkeag,
ten more. At the middle of that very night, to make a swift conclusion
to a long story, we dropped our buggy over the half-finished bridge at
Oldtown, where we heard the confused din and clink of a hundred saws, which
never rest, and at six o'clock the next morning one of the party was steaming
his way to Massachusetts.
What is most striking in the Maine wilderness is
the continuousness of the forest, with fewer open intervals or glades than
you had imagined. Except the few burnt-lands, the narrow intervals on the
rivers, the bare tops of the high mountains, and the lakes and streams,
the forest is uninterrupted. It is even more grim and wild than you had
anticipated, a damp and intricate wilderness, in the spring everywhere
wet and miry. The aspect of the country, indeed, is universally stern and
savage, excepting the distant views of the forest from hills, and the lake
prospects, which are mild and civilizing in a degree. The lakes are something
which you are unprepared for; they lie up so high, exposed to the light,
and the forest is diminished to a fine fringe on their edges, with here
and there a blue mountain, like amethyst jewels set around some jewel of
the first water,--so anterior, so superior, to all the changes that are
to take place on their shores, even now civil and refined, and fair as
they can ever be. These are not the artificial forests of an English king,--a
royal preserve merely. Here prevail no forest laws but those of nature.
The aborigines have never been dispossessed, nor nature disforested.
It is a country full of evergreen trees, of mossy
silver birches and watery maples, the ground dotted with insipid, small,
red berries, and strewn with damp and moss-grown rocks,--a country div1ersified
with innumerable lakes and rapid streams, peopled with trout and various
species of leucisci, with salmon, shad, and pickerel, and other
fishes; the forest resounding at rare intervals with the note of the chicadee,
the blue-jay, and the woodpecker, the scream of the fish-hawk and the eagle,
the laugh of the loon, and the whistle of ducks along the solitary streams;
at night, with the hooting of owls and howling of wolves; in summer, swarming
with myriads of black flies and mosquitoes, more formidable than wolves
to the white man. Such is the home of the moose, the bear, the caribou,
the wolf, the beaver, and the Indian. Who shall describe the inexpressible
tenderness and immortal life of the grim forest, where Nature, though it
be mid-winter, is ever in her spring, where the moss-grown and decaying
trees are not old, but seem to enjoy a perpetual youth; and blissful, innocent
Nature, like a serene infant, is too happy to make a noise, except by a
few tinkling, lisping birds and trickling rills?
What a place to live, what a place to die and be
buried in! There certainly men would live forever, and laugh at death and
the grave. There they could have no such thoughts as are associated with
the village graveyard,--that make a grave out of one of those moist evergreen
hummocks!
Die and be buried who will,
I mean to live here still;
My nature grows ever more young
The primitive pines among.
I am reminded by my journey how exceedingly new this
country still is. You have only to travel for a few days into the interior
and back parts even of many of the old States, to come to that very America
which the Northmen, and Cabot, and Gosnold, and Smith, and Raleigh visited.
If Columbus was the first to discover the islands, Americus Vespucius and
Cabot, and the Puritans, and we their descendants, have discovered only
the shores of America. While the republic has already acquired a history
world-wide, America is still unsettled and unexplored. Like the English
in New Holland, we live only on the shores of a continent even yet, and
hardly know where the rivers come from which float our navy. The very timber
and boards and shingles of which our houses are made, grew but yesterday
in a wilderness where the Indian still hunts and the moose runs wild. New
York has her wilderness within her own borders; and though the sailors
of Europe are familiar with the soundings of her Hudson, and Fulton long
since invented the steamboat on its waters, an Indian is still necessary
to guide her scientific men to its head-waters in the Adirondac country.
Have we even so much as discovered and settled the
shores? Let a man travel on foot along the coast, from the Passamaquoddy
to the Sabine, or to the Rio Bravo, or to wherever the end is now, if he
is swift enough to overtake it, faithfully following the windings of every
inlet and of every cape, and stepping to the music of the surf,--with a
desolate fishing-town once a week, and a city's port once a month to cheer
him, and putting up at the light-houses, when there are any,--and tell
me if it looks like a discovered and settled country, and not rather, for
the most part, like a desolate island, and No-man's Land.
We have advanced by leaps to the Pacific, and left
many a lesser Oregon and California unexplored behind us. Though the railroad
and the telegraph have been established on the shores of Maine, the Indian
still looks out from her interior mountains over all these to the sea.
There stands the city of Bangor, fifty miles up the Penobscot, at the head
of navigation for vessels of the largest class, the principal lumber depot
on this continent, with a population of twelve thousand, like a star on
the edge of night, still hewing at the forests of which it is built, already
overflowing with the luxuries and refinement of Europe, and sending its
vessels to Spain, to England, and to the West Indies for its groceries,--and
yet only a few axe-men have gone "up river," into the howling wilderness
which feeds it. The bear and deer are still found within its limits; and
the moose, as he swims the Penobscot, is entangled amid its shipping, and
taken by foreign sailors in its harbor. Twelve miles in the rear, twelve
miles of railroad, are Orono and the Indian Island, the home of the Penobscot
tribe, and then commence the batteau and the canoe, and the military road;
and sixty miles above, the country is virtually unmapped and unexplored,
and there still waves the virgin forest of the New World.
Thoreau's note 6: The bears had not touched
things on our possessions. They sometimes tear a batteau to pieces for
the sake of the tar with which it is besmeared. - back
Thoreau's note 7: I cut this from a newspaper. "On the 11th (instant?)
[May, '49], on Rappogenes Falls, Mr. John Delantee, of Orono, Me., was
drowned while running logs. He was a citizen of Orono, and was twenty-six
years of age. His companions found his body, enclosed it in bark, and buried
it in the solemn woods. - 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 ]
|