<h2 id="CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI<br/> <span class="smaller">BACK TO THE SHORE</span></h2>
<p><i>Thursday, the 2nd.</i>—In the odds and ends sack
I had found an extra flannel shirt, and, fortified by
this, was not much troubled by the cold, though I
was not too warm in spite of the thick vest, two
flannel shirts, leather waistcoat, Norfolk jacket,
and macintosh, that I put on before creeping into
my blanket-bag. I had announced to the Indians
that we were going back, and their delight got
them up first for a wonder, though indeed as we
returned they were generally the first to move,
in their eagerness to escape from the detested
country. At this camp they had been chanting
the most doleful ditties, and when I inquired what
it was all about, they said, ‘Siwash sick tum-tum,
want go home.’ Among Indians the tummy is
generally regarded as the seat of the feelings.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>To get everything into one load the packs had
to be very heavy. Billy had about a hundred
pounds and Jimmy very little less, while in addition
to my own properties I had kettles, frying-pan,
and tent-poles. We left a small cache for the
others, and our last goose, but we hoped to get some
more at H, and were off by about seven o’clock.
On the Daisy Glacier we found fresh bear-tracks,
much larger than those of the two who had paid
us a visit, but we saw nothing of the beast himself.
Putting up lots of ptarmigan in the hollow of the
little stream by which we descended to cross the
ravine, we went on past H to the site of
Schwatka’s last camp, flushing more ptarmigan
by the stream there. Altogether I fired five
pistol-shots at them, and got a young one with
my last. It was well-grown and about the size of
a French partridge. We pitched camp at the
edge of the glacier, and after lunch the men went
back to fetch the things cached at H, and to try
for geese, but they only got one small one, all the
rest being able to fly. Meanwhile I took my
ptarmigan on to the glacier, to avoid the flies, and
tried to skin it. This was not very easy, as the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</SPAN></span>
bullet had smashed both shoulders, but I managed
it in a sort of a way, and then went for a bit across
the glacier towards the Chaix Hills to get some
idea of the lie of the crevasses. We had an
excellent supper, and the men displayed marvellous
appetites, eating the whole of their goose, the
legs of my bird, and two goes of rice-pudding, but
I think they were then tolerably crowded. After
this I started to climb the last little hill, which
looks like an island from the opposite side of the
glacier, but coming on more ptarmigan, fired my
last five cartridges and got an old bird. I ought
certainly to have had two more, but the pistol was
so foul that accuracy was impossible, while only
three of the chambers would work. Coming back,
I drove two or three young ones on to the moraine,
and, shouting for Billy and Jimmy, we pursued
wildly for about half-an-hour, the men barefooted
and I with only moccasins on, so that it would
have been amusing to observe our skips and
hops when we lighted on a sharper stone than
usual. At last the one we had selected was too
beat to fly any more, and Billy finally succeeded in
knocking him over with a better aimed rock than<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</SPAN></span>
usual, most of their shots being awfully wild. Just
as we were going to turn in we heard a curious
cry, something between the bleat of a sheep and
the mew of a cat. The men said, though rather
doubtfully, that it was a bear, and shouted vigorously
to frighten it away, but we heard it again
afterwards, and I fancy it may have been a lynx.</p>
<p><i>Friday, the 3rd.</i>—I again woke several times in
the night from the cold, and could hear the ptarmigan
calling quite close to the tent. We did not
get up till rather late, and got off about nine
o’clock, leaving sundry properties which I intended
Mike and Matthew, who had been luxuriating at
the beach, to have the pleasure of fetching.
Thinking, from my survey of the previous day, that
we could improve on the way we had come, I
struck right in nearly to the centre of the glacier,
and for a long way we had very good going with
hardly any crevasses; but as we approached the
two conical mounds which made such a land-mark
on the Tyndall Glacier, we got some very bad
moraine indeed, and in one place I nearly succeeded
in breaking my leg by pulling a loosely-perched
boulder on to myself. It came to an end<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</SPAN></span>
at last, and we got up to G about noon, where we
found no sign of the other men. After pitching
the tent and examining the cache, which, like
all our others, had been left untouched by four-footed
prowlers, we lunched, and I then had a
delicious bathe in the little tarn. The men slept
most of the afternoon while I skinned the ptarmigan,
a futile task, as it was found impossible to
preserve the skins by the time I got home. At
supper-time the view was unusually fine; a thin
layer of cloud hid the many crevasses of the
Guyot Glacier, as a veil conceals the wrinkles of a
faded beauty, while above this the peaks to the
west showed with unusual grandeur, especially the
long snow-clad mass which we had christened
Snowshoe Mountain. Later on the clouds thinned
off a great deal, and St. Elias, which had been
banded with mist all day, came out quite clear.
The flowers on the hills, especially the violets, were
mostly over, but I found a fine rose-coloured lupin
among the blue ones at the edge of the lake.</p>
<p><i>Saturday, the 4th.</i>—The day dawned brilliantly
fine and hot. After a bathe I mended my clothes,
and then, putting my luncheon in my pocket,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</SPAN></span>
wandered over the hills, taking a good many
bearings with the sextant. As I came leisurely
back along the edge of the glacier lake, which was
very bad walking, I flushed sundry ptarmigan, one
of which, an old one, perched in the top of a dead
fir-tree. Just as I reached the end of the lake I
heard shouts, and, hurrying to the glacier, found
H. and W. E. was behind with the men, and, as
Shorty had a bad ankle and the packs were very
heavy, we sent the Indians to help them. While
they related their adventures I got supper ready
for them.</p>
<p>After leaving Camp I, they crossed the Tyndall
Glacier for about half-an-hour, and then put on
the rope. The crevasses were very bad, and
covered with rotten snow, so that it was with
difficulty that they made their way to the foot of
Mount St. Elias, and established a camp on the
last grassy slope that was visible. The scenery
was very grand, resembling the view up the Mer
de Glace from the Montanvert, but on a far larger
scale. The double ice-fall of the Tyndall Glacier
was well seen, divided by a small island of rock;
further to the right were two very steep and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</SPAN></span>
narrow glaciers, resembling frozen waterfalls. This
camp had been reached at half-past ten (three
and a half hours’ going), and at twelve they sallied
forth to explore, and mounted round the camp
hill, keeping it on the right. Two hours up a
rather steep ascent brought them to the top of a
snow col connecting the camp hill with one of the
arêtes leading to the rim of the crater which was
then their object. The arête was of loose shale,
everything giving way directly it was touched, but,
apart from that, the climbing was not difficult, and
after reaching a height of about six thousand feet
they turned back at 4.30 <span class="smcapuc">P.M.</span>, undecided as to the
morrow. Having left the stove and kerosene
behind, they expected to have to live on cold food,
but found moss and shrubbery enough to make a
small fire.</p>
<p>Next morning they left at 8 <span class="smcapuc">A.M.</span>, with the
intention of continuing the same arête, but in
half-an-hour they changed to the next one on the
left, and in two hours reached a height slightly
greater than that of the day before. The walking
was terrible, over loose shale and steep dirt giving
no real foothold. They followed the edge of the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</SPAN></span>
arête for the rest of the day, sending down
quantities of stones. Then came a little snow,
part of which was solid ice, and H. had to cut
a hundred and fifty steps, which took the best part
of an hour and a half. At four o’clock they
reached the summit of the arête, but, though on
the brink of the crater, could see nothing, owing
to mist. The height, 7,725 feet, was at all events
better than Seton-Karr’s, and they built a cairn
and left the flag, hardly hoping to get any higher.
After a hasty lunch they descended, reaching camp
at 10 <span class="smcapuc">P.M.</span> They could see that the Tyndall
Glacier makes two long and beautiful sweeps round
the foot of St. Elias, full of tremendous crevasses,
and though, if time were no object, it might be
possible to ascend it, it could never be a practicable
route to the summit.</p>
<p>The next day they made a day of rest, which
was diversified by Shorty and Lyons slaying in
the morning with stones eight out of a covey of
ptarmigan, while in the evening they succeeded
in smoking out and killing four baby marmots.</p>
<p>On Wednesday they all came over to the Coal
Glacier Camp in an hour and a half, found me<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</SPAN></span>
absent, and carried off the stove and sundry stores,
including the rice-pudding. In the evening they
went up to a bit of moraine east of, and just
beneath, the snow col connecting the camp hill
with their first arête, and slept there, leaving at
4.40 next morning, and keeping steadily up the
arête till their arrival at the top. There was no
difficulty, it was only a sort of treadmill over the
loose shale and slate. They kept to the edge of
the arête the whole way, and at the point where it
articulates with the mountain they went first up
loose débris, and then over a little snow, whence
they diverged to climb a nice bit of sandstone,
and reached the rim of the crater at 7.10.</p>
<p>After ten minutes’ halt they continued along
the brink to the summit of the arête climbed on
the 30th of July, which was reached at 7.40.
They then steered north-west over the snow
towards the upper lip of the crater, having to
double back considerably to avoid some <i>schrunds</i>.
Once above these, they ascended a little snow and
then a tedious slope of loose shale, while on their
right was a steep snow-slope, in too dangerous a
condition for climbing. Near the top of this they<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</SPAN></span>
met with some more fine rocks of grey sandstone
which gave them their second ten minutes of real
climbing, and they then rested for lunch from 10.10
to 10.55. The aneroid gave a height of 9,500 feet,
and to reach 10,000 they had to go a considerable
distance. Just above the sandstone rocks came
the top of the snow-slope alongside of which they
had been climbing. It proved here to be ice, and
they had to cut up it, slanting to the right so as to
reach the top, where a sort of cornice was at its
best. The last part was dangerous, the ice being
loose and granular, while the last few feet were so
steep that it was necessary to kneel in the steps.
Above this they found a snow-field stretching in
waves round the brink of the crater. The snow
was very trying, being often above their knees,
while large crevasses separated the elevations from
the depressions, and wherever the grade was steep
the snow changed to ice. They kept on this till
they were about due north of the crater, when
they had their second lunch at a height of 11,375
feet, as shown on working out the boiling-point
observations, and then went on to the foot of
the highest rocks that formed part of the eastern<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</SPAN></span>
edge of the crater. These were steep and mostly
covered with snow, in which were large crevasses.
The snow mounted in sweeps and terraces to the
top of the rocks, which they estimated as about
a thousand feet above them. They would have
much liked to have ascended these, but the day
was advanced, the wind rising, and the sun spoiling
their steps, so that they thought it more prudent
to return.</p>
<p>At this point they were above the col joining
Haydon Peak to Mount St. Elias, but could not
see the col itself. They could see, however, that
the final peak, which they then estimated as being
some six thousand feet above them, would be
difficult and perhaps impossible from this col.
On the further side it would first be necessary to
climb east to avoid an overhanging glacier; then
to ascend over rocks, snow, and some green ice
which might perhaps be avoided by some steep
rocks to the left, but all the climbing up this first
thousand feet would be very severe. Afterwards
it would be easier, up a snow-slope till above what
appears as a mound from below (1,500 to 2,000
feet above the col), then north over a comparatively<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</SPAN></span>
level snow-field; then up steep snow and
rocks to the edge of the true south arête which
runs up for about four thousand feet to the
summit, chiefly consisting of snow and not steep.
The upper half is steeper, but there is no rock,
and there would be no difficulty there or on the
south-east face, unless, as is very probable, what
seems to be snow is in reality ice. Lower down
they could see distinctly that this was so, and
therefore abandoned all idea of sleeping on the col.</p>
<p>The south-west face is a mass of hanging
glaciers. The brow on which they were is seen
from below as a wall of snow fringing the top of
the crater; on the other side this snow falls away
rapidly to the glacier which winds down from the
north-east to the head of the Tyndall Glacier.
From there no route to the col could be made, as
the ice is far too broken, and should any one force
the Tyndall ice-fall his best course would be to
cross the glacier to a low rock arête, which would
take him to some snow-fields whence he might
turn west and gain the huge north-west arête of
the mountain. By this he could reach the west
shoulder and the way would be simple.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</SPAN></span>
The weather being perfect, their view was
magnificent. To the north-west the ranges were
low, but the glaciers went winding out of sight.
Mount Wrangel could not be seen, but Fairweather
was distinctly visible. On their descent they found
the snow and steps much worse. They left Mrs.
Haydon’s flag in a meat-tin under a pile of stones
at the foot of the sandstone rocks where they made
their first lunch, as above this there was no place
of security, and got back to camp about nine
o’clock.</p>
<p>Next day they crossed over to Camp I, and on
the Saturday descended to G, going, at Shorty’s
suggestion, all along the Tyndall Glacier, but came
to the conclusion that it was not an improvement.
As the other men had not turned up, Billy and
Jimmy were informed, to their great disgust, that
they would have to go next morning and fetch the
cache left at J.</p>
<p><i>Sunday, the 5th.</i>—W. woke us all up in the
night by shouting in his sleep, ‘Lyons, Lyons, a
serac is falling on the tent!’ for which he was unmercifully
chaffed. The Indians arose at some
unearthly hour and went off to J, getting back at<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</SPAN></span>
eight o’clock. At 6.30 <span class="smcapuc">A.M.</span> W. went off to try and
turn the west end of the opposite range, which we
had christened the Ptarmigan Hills. He could
persuade no one to go with him as we all believed,
first, that the hills could not be turned, owing to
the crevassed state of the Guyot Glacier, and
secondly, that if he did turn them he would only
see another point beyond. We bathed and
sketched, and at about noon Ed. and Finn turned
up, followed half-an-hour later by Matthew and
Gums, who had laudably endeavoured to find a
better way through the crevasses on the Guyot
Glacier, but had failed signally. Gums had come
up in Mike’s place, as the latter’s feet were very
sore.</p>
<p>They had had rainy weather on the beach
nearly the whole time. A lot of the Yakutats had
been there sea-otter hunting with considerable
success, and Jack Dalton had camped for one
night. He brought the news that the body of a
white man had been found at Point Manby, thrown
up with a fishing dory. The poor fellow must
have got among the breakers at night, and he had
thrown out a drag to keep the boat head on to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</SPAN></span>
them, but must have swamped as he reached the
shore. From the tracks they saw that he was able
to crawl up the beach on his hands and knees into
the bush, and whether he died there from exhaustion
or was killed by a bear no one could say, but
it is to be hoped he was dead before the bear got
him. No one recognised the boat or knew anything
which might lead to discovering his name.
They buried what was left of him there, and put
the dory over his grave.</p>
<p>Our men had had a fair time among the flesh-pots
on the shore, as, though the Indians had got
no more seals, they had shot several swans and
geese. The men came up in two days, making a
camp as before at the place where the river issues
from the ice, but succeeded in getting down in one
day of sixteen hours. The water was very high,
and they had to make a raft before they could
cross one creek. After lunch Lyons and I went
after ptarmigan with our pistols; Shorty also
started with the rifle which had been brought up
from the first cache, but his leg was too bad and he
had to go back. He looked for me to give me the
rifle, but I had vanished down a ravine. There<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</SPAN></span>
were not very many ptarmigan, while the ground
was so broken that it was almost impossible to
mark them. I only fired two shots; Lyons was
luckier, firing ten or twelve, and getting one bird,
which he nearly lost, for he fixed it in his belt by
its head, and looking down after a time found head
<i>et præterea nil</i>. Retracing his steps carefully he
managed to find the corpse. We heard W. also
popping away vigorously on the other side of the
glacier, but he returned <i>bredouille</i> without having
got round the end of the hills. After supper Finn
went out with the rifle and got two ptarmigan.
He hit a goose, but it escaped into the lake. We
decided to make an early start for the shore, so as
to avail ourselves of the continued fine weather
and get back to Yakutat as soon as possible.</p>
<p><i>Monday, the 6th.</i>—Moved by the hope of
speedily leaving the regions they so thoroughly
loathed, the Indians were astir early, and by four
o’clock the whole party was up. Finn fried the
two ptarmigan for breakfast, but as it was discovered
that the Indians had been greasing their
boots with the fat in the frying-pan, no one seemed
inclined to partake of the dish. We got off by<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</SPAN></span>
5.30, and went down to the Guyot Glacier, along
which we proceeded at a great pace as the packs
were pretty light. We got through the crevasses
without much difficulty, and, though we had some
rather muddy bits near Lake Castani, we cleared
the Chaix Hills at nine o’clock, abandoning to
their fate a few stores which had been left in the
cache made at the point where our trail from F
struck the glacier, Ed., Matthew, and Mike having
found more than they could bring up on July 26.
Keeping about half-a-mile to the west of the depression
between the glaciers, we reached the head
of the river at eleven. The water boils out finely
from under the ice, but, though it was higher than
when the men had last come up, the gravel-flat on
which they had then slept being now covered, the
volume was not as great as I had expected, being
perhaps equal to that of the Visp where it joins
the Rhone.</p>
<p>We rested a bit on the beach, and then came
on in very scattered order to the cache, the two
miles taking about two hours, as the alder-bush on
the face of the moraine was very bad, and the
stream was too high for us to get along on the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</SPAN></span>
flats by wading every now and then, as the men
had generally been able to do. H., who stopped
to photograph, went all wrong, away from the
river towards Camp C, and as he came back fell
foul of a wasp’s nest, and got stung in two or three
places. Jimmy, who was one of the first at the
cache, earned our high approval by coming back
of his own accord to help Shorty in with his load.
We were all collected by half-past two, and rested
all the afternoon. Supper was at 4.30, and we at
last got hold of the dried vegetables, which the
men had always forgotten to bring up, and made
some splendid soup. Just above the cache E.
found a white willow-herb, and I collected some
seed of the red kind to try in England.</p>
<p>While we were resting in the afternoon Matthew
told us that the Indians called the river Yahkhtze-tah-heen
(Muddy Harbour River), and Mount St.
Elias Yahkhtze-tah-shah (Muddy Harbour Mountain).
George, the second chief of Yakutat, afterwards
told us that there used to be two villages,
one on the sea and the other at the foot of St. Elias,
but that the glaciers came down and destroyed
them, according to him, in a single night. As the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</SPAN></span>
Alaska glaciers are all rapidly receding, this must
have been a very long time ago, for a hundred
years back, when the country was first visited,
there was far more ice than there is now, Vancouver
having been unable to enter Glacier Bay
for the ice, while Icy Bay, even on modern charts,
is represented as being of a V-shape from the
glaciers running out on either side, whereas it now
hardly deserves the name of a bay at all.</p>
<p>Meaning to make an early start, we turned in
at six o’clock, but were driven wild by the millions
of mosquitoes that invaded our tent. By this time
we were thoroughly inoculated against the effects
of their bites, but their continuous trumpeting
destroyed all chance of sleep; after a time we
arose and drove out and slew as many as we could,
after which we endeavoured to close up every
possible aperture. Our success was but partial,
but we managed to get a little sleep.</p>
<p><i>Tuesday, the 7th.</i>—We got up at 4 <span class="smcapuc">A.M.</span>, and
were off by 5.45; an hour’s steady going brought
us down to Camp B, and we went on by the old
route to the point where Gums declared Schwatka
had had a camp. Here we turned to the left<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</SPAN></span>
instead of keeping down the main river. At first
we had a good lot of wading, but presently reached
some flats, over which we made more satisfactory
progress. At this point some wild-geese were
discovered far ahead, and Shorty set forth to stalk
them; as, however, he was unwilling to crawl over
the wet mud, his six-foot-four frightened them
away while he was still three or four hundred
yards off. On these flats were a great many small
frogs, of which most of the Indians were much
afraid, holding some kind of superstition about
them; but Matthew and Jimmy were apparently
sceptics, and the latter, with a sly look at us, put a
frog on the back of Billy, who, though his great
friend, was perfectly furious, and for a minute I
thought we were going to have a first-class row.</p>
<p>At last we approached the deep creek where
the men had once had to make a raft. Now the
crossing appeared feasible, but it was hard to be
sure, as all the neighbouring land on our side was
under water. In the midst of this was a stranded
log, where we rested and took off our coats, fastening
them on to our packs, which we carried on our
heads. H. planted the camera in the water, and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</SPAN></span>
prepared to photograph the passage. Gums, of
course, led; and at the second attempt discovered
a place where the water was hardly over his armpits.
This was all right for the taller ones of us,
but E. went in well up to his chin, as did Finn,
who, losing his footing, vanished with his pack.
Great was the dismay till it was discovered that he
was only carrying the bacon. Jimmy also disappeared
altogether, and had eventually to be convoyed
across by Gums and Matthew. Last of all
came W. and H., the latter bearing the camera.
He chanced on a deepish place, and nearly went
under, but struggled on, quoting: ‘And nobly
Father Tiber bare up his faltering chin’—which
chin, decked with a ruddy beard, had dipped
beneath the icy wave before he emerged on the
other side.</p>
<p>Three-quarters of an hour through the trees,
and then a little wading, brought us to the mouth
of the first river at eleven o’clock, and we halted
for a little lunch and a great many strawberries,
which were not yet over in shady places or long
grass. We then pushed on along the beach to
camp, the packs being brought down the lagoon in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</SPAN></span>
the small canoe, and arrived at 1.15, hoping to
start at once for Yakutat; but the other Indians
had gone hunting, and we had to await their return,
which was not till five o’clock. After some supper
we got off at 6.20; it was perfectly calm, and we
didn’t ship a drop of water, or get wet above our
knees. There was a five-gallon can of kerosene
which we said could be left on the beach; Mike,
however, wished to take it in the small canoe, but
Gums, after a lively argument, settled the question
by driving an ice-axe into it. It was a fair squeeze
for twelve in the big canoe; I curled up just forward
of the bow oar, the other three were in the
stern, and hardly so well off. We rowed and paddled
to Cape Sitkagi (10 <span class="smcapuc">P.M.</span>), when a fresh breeze from
the west sprang up, and, towing the small canoe,
we sailed to Point Manby, which we passed at
4 <span class="smcapuc">A.M.</span></p>
<p><i>Wednesday, the 8th.</i>—The breeze then began to
die away, and vanished at five, so we had to row
again, and got to Yakutat at ten o’clock. De
Groff greeted us, and gave us four breakfast, which
included the unwonted luxuries of butter and honey;
the men, who were a little sulky after their night’s<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</SPAN></span>
exertions, cooked theirs on his stove. Then H.
paid off Ed., Finn, and the Yakutats, and arranged
to leave our Indians in the village as before, after
which we went over to the Swedish Mission on the
mainland opposite, and encamped in the yard.
Ed. came too, and Finn followed in the evening.
We bathed in the sea, which was decidedly cold;
but the lake at the back was too muddy, and also
too near George’s ranche to be pleasant. De Groff
expected the ‘Alpha’ to arrive about the 10th.</p>
<hr />
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