<SPAN name="chap02"></SPAN>
<h2 align="center">Chapter II</h2>
<h2 align="center">Alexander Archipelago and the Home I found in Alaska</h2>
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<p>To the lover of pure wildness Alaska is one of the most wonderful
countries in the world. No excursion that I know of may be made into
any other American wilderness where so marvelous an abundance of
noble, newborn scenery is so charmingly brought to view as on the trip
through the Alexander Archipelago to Fort Wrangell and Sitka. Gazing
from the deck of the steamer, one is borne smoothly over calm blue
waters, through the midst of countless forest-clad islands. The
ordinary discomforts of a sea voyage are not felt, for nearly all the
whole long way is on inland waters that are about as waveless as
rivers and lakes. So numerous are the islands that they seem to have
been sown broadcast; long tapering vistas between the largest of them
open in every direction.</p>
<p>Day after day in the fine weather we enjoyed, we seemed to float in
true fairyland, each succeeding view seeming more and more beautiful,
the one we chanced to have before us the most surprisingly beautiful
of all. Never before this had I been embosomed in scenery so
hopelessly beyond description. To sketch picturesque bits, definitely
bounded, is comparatively easy--a lake in the woods, a glacier
<!-- Page 14 --> meadow, or a cascade in its dell; or even a grand
master view of mountains beheld from some commanding outlook after
climbing from height to height above the forests. These may be
attempted, and more or less telling pictures made of them; but in
these coast landscapes there is such indefinite, on-leading
expansiveness, such a multitude of features without apparent
redundance, their lines graduating delicately into one another in
endless succession, while the whole is so fine, so tender, so
ethereal, that all pen-work seems hopelessly unavailing. Tracing
shining ways through fiord and sound, past forests and waterfalls,
islands and mountains and far azure headlands, it seems as if surely
we must at length reach the very paradise of the poets, the abode of
the blessed.</p>
<ANTIMG src="images/tia_014.jpg" width-obs="260" height-obs="170" alt="Hanging Valley and Waterfall, Fraser Ranch" />
<p>Some idea of the wealth of this scenery may be gained from the fact
that the coast-line of Alaska is about twenty-six thousand miles long,
more than twice as long as all the rest of the United States. The
islands of the Alexander Archipelago, with the straits, channels,
canals, sounds, passages, and fiords, form an intricate web of land
and water embroidery sixty or seventy miles wide, fringing the lofty
icy chain of coast mountains from Puget Sound to Cook Inlet; and, with
infinite variety, the general pattern is harmonious throughout its
whole extent of nearly a thousand miles. Here you glide into a narrow
channel hemmed in by mountain walls, forested down to the water's
edge, where there is no distant view, and your attention is
concentrated on the objects close about you--the crowded spires of the
spruces and <!-- Page 15 -->
hemlocks rising higher and higher on the steep green slopes; stripes
of paler green where winter avalanches have cleared away the trees,
allowing grasses and willows to spring up; zigzags of cascades
appearing and disappearing among the bushes and trees; short, steep
glens with brawling streams hidden beneath alder and dogwood, seen
only where they emerge on the brown algæ of the shore; and
retreating hollows, with lingering snow-banks marking the fountains of
ancient glaciers. The steamer is often so near the shore that you may
distinctly see the cones clustered on the tops of the trees, and the
ferns and bushes at their feet.</p>
<p>But new scenes are brought to view with magical rapidity. Rounding
some bossy cape, the eye is called away into far-reaching vistas,
bounded on either hand by headlands in charming array, one dipping
gracefully beyond another and growing fainter and more ethereal in the
distance. The tranquil channel stretching river-like between, may be
stirred here and there by the silvery plashing of upspringing salmon,
or by flocks of white gulls floating like water-lilies among the sun
spangles; while mellow, tempered sunshine is streaming over all,
blending sky, land, and water in pale, misty blue. Then, while you are
dreamily gazing into the depths of this leafy ocean lane, the little
steamer, seeming hardly larger than a duck, turning into some passage
not visible until the moment of entering it, glides into a wide
expanse--a sound filled with islands, sprinkled and clustered in forms
and compositions such as nature alone can invent; <!-- Page 16 -->
some of them so small the trees growing on them seem like single
handfuls culled from the neighboring woods and set in the water to
keep them fresh, while here and there at wide intervals you may notice
bare rocks just above the water, mere dots punctuating grand,
outswelling sentences of islands.</p>
<p>The variety we find, both as to the contours and the collocation of
the islands, is due chiefly to differences in the structure and
composition of their rocks, and the unequal glacial denudation
different portions of the coast were subjected to. This influence must
have been especially heavy toward the end of the glacial period, when
the main ice-sheet began to break up into separate glaciers. Moreover,
the mountains of the larger islands nourished local glaciers, some of
them of considerable size, which sculptured their summits and sides,
forming in some cases wide cirques with cañons or valleys
leading down from them into the channels and sounds. These causes have
produced much of the bewildering variety of which nature is so fond,
but none the less will the studious observer see the underlying
harmony--the general trend of the islands in the direction of the flow
of the main ice-mantle from the mountains of the Coast Range, more or
less varied by subordinate foothill ridges and mountains. Furthermore,
all the islands, great and small, as well as the headlands and
promontories of the mainland, are seen to have a rounded, over-rubbed
appearance produced by the over-sweeping ice-flood during the period
of greatest glacial abundance.</p>
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<p>The canals, channels, straits, passages, sounds, etc., are
subordinate to the same glacial conditions in their forms, trends, and
extent as those which determined the forms, trends, and distribution
of the land-masses, their basins being the parts of the pre-glacial
margin of the continent, eroded to varying depths below sea-level, and
into which, of course, the ocean waters flowed as the ice was melted
out of them. Had the general glacial denudation been much less, these
ocean ways over which we are sailing would have been valleys and
cañons and lakes; and the islands rounded hills and ridges,
landscapes with undulating features like those found above sea-level
wherever the rocks and glacial conditions are similar. In general, the
island-bound channels are like rivers, not only in separate reaches as
seen from the deck of a vessel, but continuously so for hundreds of
miles in the case of the longest of them. The tide-currents, the fresh
driftwood, the inflowing streams, and the luxuriant foliage of the
out-leaning trees on the shores make this resemblance all the more
complete. The largest islands look like part of the mainland in any
view to be had of them from the ship, but far the greater number are
small, and appreciable as islands, scores of them being less than a
mile long. These the eye easily takes in and revels in their beauty
with ever fresh delight. In their relations to each other the
individual members of a group have evidently been derived from the
same general rock-mass, yet they never seem broken or abridged in any
way as to their contour lines, however abruptly they may dip their
sides. <!-- Page 18 --> Viewed one by one, they seem detached
beauties, like extracts from a poem, while, from the completeness of
their lines and the way that their trees are arranged, each seems a
finished stanza in itself. Contemplating the arrangement of the trees
on these small islands, a distinct impression is produced of their
having been sorted and harmonized as to size like a well-balanced
bouquet. On some of the smaller tufted islets a group of tapering
spruces is planted in the middle, and two smaller groups that
evidently correspond with each other are planted on the ends at about
equal distances from the central group; or the whole appears as one
group with marked fringing trees that match each other spreading
around the sides, like flowers leaning outward against the rim of a
vase. These harmonious tree relations are so constant that they
evidently are the result of design, as much so as the arrangement of
the feathers of birds or the scales of fishes.</p>
<p>Thus perfectly beautiful are these blessed evergreen islands, and
their beauty is the beauty of youth, for though the freshness of their
verdure must be ascribed to the bland moisture with which they are
bathed from warm ocean-currents, the very existence of the islands,
their features, finish, and peculiar distribution, are all immediately
referable to ice-action during the great glacial winter just now
drawing to a close.</p>
<ANTIMG src="images/tia_018.jpg" width-obs="270" height-obs="180" alt="Lowe Inlet, British Columbia" />
<p>We arrived at Wrangell July 14, and after a short stop of a few
hours went on to Sitka and returned on <!-- Page 19 --> the 20th to
Wrangell, the most inhospitable place at first sight I had ever seen.
The little steamer that had been my home in the wonderful trip through
the archipelago, after taking the mail, departed on her return to
Portland, and as I watched her gliding out of sight in the dismal
blurring rain, I felt strangely lonesome. The friend that had
accompanied me thus far now left for his home in San Francisco, with
two other interesting travelers who had made the trip for health and
scenery, while my fellow passengers, the missionaries, went direct to
the Presbyterian home in the old fort. There was nothing like a tavern
or lodging-house in the village, nor could I find any place in the
stumpy, rocky, boggy ground about it that looked dry enough to camp on
until I could find a way into the wilderness to begin my studies.
Every place within a mile or two of the town seemed strangely
shelterless and inhospitable, for all the trees had long ago been
felled for building-timber and firewood. At the worst, I thought, I
could build a bark hut on a hill back of the village, where something
like a forest loomed dimly through the draggled clouds.</p>
<p>I had already seen some of the high glacier-bearing mountains in
distant views from the steamer, and was anxious to reach them. A few
whites of the village, with whom I entered into conversation, warned
me that the Indians were a bad lot, not to be trusted, that the woods
were well-nigh impenetrable, and that I could go nowhere without a
canoe. On the other hand, these natural difficulties made the grand
wild country all the more attractive, and I determined
<!-- Page 20 --> to get into the heart of it somehow or other with a
bag of hardtack, trusting to my usual good luck. My present difficulty
was in finding a first base camp. My only hope was on the hill. When I
was strolling past the old fort I happened to meet one of the
missionaries, who kindly asked me where I was going to take up my
quarters.</p>
<p>“I don't know,” I replied. “I have not been able
to find quarters of any sort. The top of that little hill over there
seems the only possible place.”</p>
<p>He then explained that every room in the mission house was full,
but he thought I might obtain leave to spread my blanket in a
carpenter-shop belonging to the mission. Thanking him, I ran down to
the sloppy wharf for my little bundle of baggage, laid it on the shop
floor, and felt glad and snug among the dry, sweet-smelling
shavings.</p>
<p>The carpenter was at work on a new Presbyterian mission building,
and when he came in I explained that Dr. Jackson [Dr. Sheldon Jackson,
1834-1909, became Superintendent of Presbyterian Missions in Alaska in
1877, and United States General Agent of Education in 1885. [W. F.
B.]] had suggested that I might be allowed to sleep on the floor, and
after I assured him that I would not touch his tools or be in his way,
he goodnaturedly gave me the freedom of the shop and also of his small
private side room where I would find a wash-basin.</p>
<p>I was here only one night, however, for Mr. Vanderbilt, a merchant,
who with his family occupied the best house in the fort, hearing that
one of the late <!-- Page 21 -->
arrivals, whose business none seemed to know, was compelled to sleep
in the carpenter-shop, paid me a good-Samaritan visit and after a few
explanatory words on my glacier and forest studies, with fine
hospitality offered me a room and a place at his table. Here I found a
real home, with freedom to go on all sorts of excursions as
opportunity offered. Annie Vanderbilt, a little doctor of divinity two
years old, ruled the household with love sermons and kept it warm.</p>
<p>Mr. Vanderbilt introduced me to prospectors and traders and some of
the most influential of the Indians. I visited the mission school and
the home for Indian girls kept by Mrs. MacFarland, and made short
excursions to the nearby forests and streams, and studied the rate of
growth of the different species of trees and their age, counting the
annual rings on stumps in the large clearings made by the military
when the fort was occupied, causing wondering speculation among the
Wrangell folk, as was reported by Mr. Vanderbilt.</p>
<p>“What can the fellow be up to?” they inquired.
“He seems to spend most of his time among stumps and weeds. I
saw him the other day on his knees, looking at a stump as if he
expected to find gold in it. He seems to have no serious object
whatever.”</p>
<p>One night when a heavy rainstorm was blowing I unwittingly caused a
lot of wondering excitement among the whites as well as the
superstitious Indians. Being anxious to see how the Alaska trees
behave in storms and hear the songs they sing, I stole quietly
<!-- Page 22 --> away through the gray drenching blast to the hill
back of the town, without being observed. Night was falling when I set
out and it was pitch dark when I reached the top. The glad, rejoicing
storm in glorious voice was singing through the woods, noble
compensation for mere body discomfort. But I wanted a fire, a big one,
to see as well as hear how the storm and trees were behaving. After
long, patient groping I found a little dry punk in a hollow trunk and
carefully stored it beside my matchbox and an inch or two of candle in
an inside pocket that the rain had not yet reached; then, wiping some
dead twigs and whittling them into thin shavings, stored them with the
punk. I then made a little conical bark hut about a foot high, and,
carefully leaning over it and sheltering it as much as possible from
the driving rain, I wiped and stored a lot of dead twigs, lighted the
candle, and set it in the hut, carefully added pinches of punk and
shavings, and at length got a little blaze, by the light of which I
gradually added larger shavings, then twigs all set on end astride the
inner flame, making the little hut higher and wider. Soon I had light
enough to enable me to select the best dead branches and large
sections of bark, which were set on end, gradually increasing the
height and corresponding light of the hut fire. A considerable area
was thus well lighted, from which I gathered abundance of wood, and
kept adding to the fire until it had a strong, hot heart and sent up a
pillar of flame thirty or forty feet high, illuminating a wide circle
in spite of the rain, and casting a red glare into the flying clouds.
Of <!-- Page 23 -->
all the thousands of camp-fires I have elsewhere built none was just
like this one, rejoicing in triumphant strength and beauty in the
heart of the rain-laden gale. It was wonderful,--the illumined rain
and clouds mingled together and the trees glowing against the jet
background, the colors of the mossy, lichened trunks with sparkling
streams pouring down the furrows of the bark, and the gray-bearded old
patriarchs bowing low and chanting in passionate worship!</p>
<p>My fire was in all its glory about midnight, and, having made a
bark shed to shelter me from the rain and partially dry my clothing, I
had nothing to do but look and listen and join the trees in their
hymns and prayers.</p>
<p>Neither the great white heart of the fire nor the quivering
enthusiastic flames shooting aloft like auroral lances could be seen
from the village on account of the trees in front of it and its being
back a little way over the brow of the hill; but the light in the
clouds made a great show, a portentous sign in the stormy heavens
unlike anything ever before seen or heard of in Wrangell. Some wakeful
Indians, happening to see it about midnight, in great alarm aroused
the Collector of Customs and begged him to go to the missionaries and
get them to pray away the frightful omen, and inquired anxiously
whether white men had ever seen anything like that sky-fire, which
instead of being quenched by the rain was burning brighter and
brighter. The Collector said he had heard of such strange fires, and
this one he thought might perhaps be what the white man called a
“volcano, or an <i>ignis fatuus</i>.” <!-- Page 24 -->
When Mr. Young was called from his bed to pray, he, too, confoundedly
astonished and at a loss for any sort of explanation, confessed that
he had never seen anything like it in the sky or anywhere else in such
cold wet weather, but that it was probably some sort of spontaneous
combustion “that the white man called St. Elmo's fire, or
Will-of-the-wisp.” These explanations, though not convincingly
clear, perhaps served to veil their own astonishment and in some
measure to diminish the superstitious fears of the natives; but from
what I heard, the few whites who happened to see the strange light
wondered about as wildly as the Indians.</p>
<p>I have enjoyed thousands of camp-fires in all sorts of weather and
places, warm-hearted, short-flamed, friendly little beauties glowing
in the dark on open spots in high Sierra gardens, daisies and lilies
circled about them, gazing like enchanted children; and large fires in
silver fir forests, with spires of flame towering like the trees about
them, and sending up multitudes of starry sparks to enrich the sky;
and still greater fires on the mountains in winter, changing camp
climate to summer, and making the frosty snow look like beds of white
flowers, and oftentimes mingling their swarms of swift-flying sparks
with falling snow-crystals when the clouds were in bloom. But this
Wrangell camp-fire, my first in Alaska, I shall always remember for
its triumphant storm-defying grandeur, and the wondrous beauty of the
psalm-singing, lichen-painted trees which it brought to light.</p>
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