<SPAN name="chap09"></SPAN>
<h2 align="center">Chapter IX</h2>
<h2 align="center">A Canoe Voyage to Northward</h2>
<!-- Page 114 -->
<p>I arrived at Wrangell in a canoe with a party of Cassiar miners in
October while the icy regions to the northward still burned in my
mind. I had met several prospectors who had been as far as Chilcat at
the head of Lynn Canal, who told wonderful stories about the great
glaciers they had seen there. All the high mountains up there, they
said, seemed to be made of ice, and if glaciers “are what you
are after, that's the place for you,” and to get there
“all you have to do is to hire a good canoe and Indians who know
the way.”</p>
<p>But it now seemed too late to set out on so long a voyage. The days
were growing short and winter was drawing nigh when all the land would
be buried in snow. On the other hand, though this wilderness was new
to me, I was familiar with storms and enjoyed them. The main channels
extending along the coast remain open all winter, and, their shores
being well forested, I knew that it would be easy to keep warm in
camp, while abundance of food could be carried. I determined,
therefore, to go ahead as far north as possible, to see and learn what
I could, especially with reference to future work. When I made known
my plans to Mr. Young, he offered to go with me, and, being acquainted
with the Indians, procured a good canoe and crew, and with a large
stock of provisions <!-- Page 115 --> and blankets, we left Wrangell
October 14, eager to welcome weather of every sort, as long as food
lasted.</p>
<p>I was anxious to make an early start, but it was half-past two in
the afternoon before I could get my Indians together--Toyatte, a grand
old Stickeen nobleman, who was made captain, not only because he owned
the canoe, but for his skill in woodcraft and seamanship; Kadachan,
the son of a Chilcat chief; John, a Stickeen, who acted as
interpreter; and Sitka Charley. Mr. Young, my companion, was an
adventurous evangelist, and it was the opportunities the trip might
afford to meet the Indians of the different tribes on our route with
reference to future missionary work, that induced him to join us.</p>
<p>When at last all were aboard and we were about to cast loose from
the wharf, Kadachan's mother, a woman of great natural dignity and
force of character, came down the steps alongside the canoe oppressed
with anxious fears for the safety of her son. Standing silent for a
few moments, she held the missionary with her dark, bodeful eyes, and
with great solemnity of speech and gesture accused him of using undue
influence in gaining her son's consent to go on a dangerous voyage
among unfriendly tribes; and like an ancient sibyl foretold a long
train of bad luck from storms and enemies, and finished by saying,
“If my son comes not back, on you will be his blood, and you
shall pay. I say it.”</p>
<p>Mr. Young tried in vain to calm her fears, promising Heaven's care
as well as his own for her precious <!-- Page 116 --> son, assuring
her that he would faithfully share every danger that he encountered,
and if need be die in his defense.</p>
<p>“We shall see whether or not you die,” she said, and
turned away.</p>
<p>Toyatte also encountered domestic difficulties. When he stepped
into the canoe I noticed a cloud of anxiety on his grand old face, as
if his doom now drawing near was already beginning to overshadow him.
When he took leave of his wife, she refused to shake hands with him,
wept bitterly, and said that his enemies, the Chilcat chiefs, would be
sure to kill him in case he reached their village. But it was not on
this trip that the old hero was to meet his fate, and when we were
fairly free in the wilderness and a gentle breeze pressed us joyfully
over the shining waters these gloomy forebodings vanished.</p>
<p>We first pursued a westerly course, through Sumner Strait, between
Kupreanof and Prince of Wales Islands, then, turning northward, sailed
up the Kiku Strait through the midst of innumerable picturesque
islets, across Prince Frederick's Sound, up Chatham Strait, thence
northwestward through Icy Strait and around the then uncharted Glacier
Bay. Thence returning through Icy Strait, we sailed up the beautiful
Lynn Canal to the Davidson Glacier and the lower village of the
Chilcat tribe and returned to Wrangell along the coast of the
mainland, visiting the icy Sum Dum Bay and the Wrangell Glacier on our
route. Thus we made a journey more than eight hundred miles long, and
though hardships and perhaps dangers <!-- Page 117 --> were
encountered, the great wonderland made compensation beyond our most
extravagant hopes. Neither rain nor snow stopped us, but when the wind
was too wild, Kadachan and the old captain stayed on guard in the camp
and John and Charley went into the woods deer-hunting, while I
examined the adjacent rocks and woods. Most of our camp-grounds were
in sheltered nooks where good firewood was abundant, and where the
precious canoe could be safely drawn up beyond reach of the waves.
After supper we sat long around the fire, listening to the Indian's
stories about the wild animals, their hunting-adventures, wars,
traditions, religion, and customs. Every Indian party we met we
interviewed, and visited every village we came to.</p>
<p>Our first camp was made at a place called the Island of the
Standing Stone, on the shore of a shallow bay. The weather was fine.
The mountains of the mainland were unclouded, excepting one, which had
a horizontal ruff of dull slate color, but its icy summit covered with
fresh snow towered above the cloud, flushed like its neighbors in the
alpenglow. All the large islands in sight were densely forested, while
many small rock islets in front of our camp were treeless or nearly
so. Some of them were distinctly glaciated even belong the tide-line,
the effects of wave washing and general weathering being scarce
appreciable as yet. Some of the larger islets had a few trees, others
only grass. One looked in the distance like a two-masted ship flying
before the wind under press of sail.</p>
<p>Next morning the mountains were arrayed in fresh <!-- Page 118 -->
snow that had fallen during the night down to within a hundred feet of
the sea-level. We made a grand fire, and after an early breakfast
pushed merrily on all day along beautiful forested shores embroidered
with autumn-colored bushes. I noticed some pitchy trees that had been
deeply hacked for kindling-wood and torches, precious conveniences to
belated voyagers on stormy nights. Before sundown we camped in a
beautiful nook of Deer Bay, shut in from every wind by gray-bearded
trees and fringed with rose bushes, rubus, potentilla, asters, etc.
Some of the lichen tresses depending from the branches were six feet
in length.</p>
<p>A dozen rods or so from our camp we discovered a family of Kake
Indians snugly sheltered in a portable bark hut, a stout middle-aged
man with his wife, son, and daughter, and his son's wife. After our
tent was set and fire made, the head of the family paid us a visit and
presented us with a fine salmon, a pair of mallard ducks, and a mess
of potatoes. We paid a return visit with gifts of rice and tobacco,
etc. Mr. Young spoke briefly on mission affairs and inquired whether
their tribe would be likely to welcome a teacher or missionary. But
they seemed unwilling to offer an opinion on so important a subject.
The following words from the head of the family was the only
reply:--</p>
<p>“We have not much to say to you fellows. We always do to
Boston men as we have done to you, give a little of whatever we have,
treat everybody well and never quarrel. This is all we have to
say.”</p>
<!-- Page 119 -->
<p>Our Kake neighbors set out for Fort Wrangell next morning, and we
pushed gladly on toward Chilcat. We passed an island that had lost all
its trees in a storm, but a hopeful crop of young ones was springing
up to take their places. I found no trace of fire in these woods. The
ground was covered with leaves, branches, and fallen trunks perhaps a
dozen generations deep, slowly decaying, forming a grand mossy mass of
ruins, kept fresh and beautiful. All that is repulsive about death was
here hidden beneath abounding life. Some rocks along the shore were
completely covered with crimson-leafed huckleberry bushes; one species
still in fruit might well be called the winter huckleberry. In a short
walk I found vetches eight feet high leaning on raspberry bushes, and
tall ferns and <i>Smilacina unifolia</i> with leaves six inches wide
growing on yellow-green moss, producing a beautiful effect.</p>
<p>Our Indians seemed to be enjoying a quick and merry reaction from
the doleful domestic dumps in which the voyage was begun. Old and
young behaved this afternoon like a lot of truant boys on a lark. When
we came to a pond fenced off from the main channel by a moraine dam,
John went ashore to seek a shot at ducks. Creeping up behind the dam,
he killed a mallard fifty or sixty feet from the shore and attempted
to wave it within reach by throwing stones back of it. Charley and
Kadachan went to his help, enjoying the sport, especially enjoying
their own blunders in throwing in front of it and thus driving the
duck farther out. To expedite the business John then tried to throw a
rope across it, but failed after <!-- Page 120 --> repeated trials,
and so did each in turn, all laughing merrily at their awkward
bungling. Next they tied a stone to the end of the rope to carry it
further and with better aim, but the result was no better. Then
majestic old Toyatte tried his hand at the game. He tied the rope to
one of the canoe-poles, and taking aim threw it, harpoon fashion,
beyond the duck, and the general merriment was redoubled when the pole
got loose and floated out to the middle of the pond. At length John
stripped, swam to the duck, threw it ashore, and brought in the pole
in his teeth, his companions meanwhile making merry at his expense by
splashing the water in front of him and making the dead duck go
through the motions of fighting and biting him in the face as he
landed.</p>
<p>The morning after this delightful day was dark and threatening. A
high wind was rushing down the strait dead against us, and just as we
were about ready to start, determined to fight our way by creeping
close inshore, pelting rain began to fly. We concluded therefore to
wait for better weather. The hunters went out for deer and I to see
the forests. The rain brought out the fragrance of the drenched trees,
and the wind made wild melody in their tops, while every brown bole
was embroidered by a network of rain rills. Perhaps the most
delightful part of my ramble was along a stream that flowed through a
leafy arch beneath overleaping trees which met at the top. The water
was almost black in the deep pools and fine clear amber in the
shallows. It was the pure, rich wine of the woods with a pleasant
taste, bringing <!-- Page 121 --> spicy spruce groves and widespread
bog and beaver meadows to mind. On this amber stream I discovered an
interesting fall. It is only a few feet high, but remarkably fine in
the curve of its brow and blending shades of color, while the mossy,
bushy pool into which it plunges is inky black, but wonderfully
brightened by foam bells larger than common that drift in clusters on
the smooth water around the rim, each of them carrying a picture of
the overlooking trees leaning together at the tips like the teeth of
moss capsules before they rise.</p>
<p>I found most of the trees here fairly loaded with mosses. Some
broadly palmated branches had beds of yellow moss so wide and deep
that when wet they must weigh a hundred pounds or even more. Upon
these moss-beds ferns and grasses and even good-sized seedling trees
grow, making beautiful hanging gardens in which the curious spectacle
is presented of old trees holding hundreds of their own children in
their arms, nourished by rain and dew and the decaying leaves showered
down to them by their parents. The branches upon which these beds of
mossy soil rest become flat and irregular like weathered roots or the
antlers of deer, and at length die; and when the whole tree has thus
been killed it seems to be standing on its head with roots in the air.
A striking example of this sort stood near the camp and I called the
missionary's attention to it.</p>
<p>“Come, Mr. Young,” I shouted. “Here's something
wonderful, the most wonderful tree you ever saw; it is standing on its
head.”</p>
<!-- Page 122 -->
<p>“How in the world,” said he in astonishment,
“could that tree have been plucked up by the roots, carried high
in the air, and dropped down head foremost into the ground. It must
have been the work of a tornado.”</p>
<p>Toward evening the hunters brought in a deer. They had seen four
others, and at the camp-fire talk said that deer abounded on all the
islands of considerable size and along the shores of the mainland. But
few were to be found in the interior on account of wolves that ran
them down where they could not readily take refuge in the water. The
Indians, they said, hunted them on the islands with trained dogs which
went into the woods and drove them out, while the hunters lay in wait
in canoes at the points where they were likely to take to the water.
Beaver and black bear also abounded on this large island. I saw but
few birds there, only ravens, jays, and wrens. Ducks, gulls, bald
eagles, and jays are the commonest birds hereabouts. A flock of swans
flew past, sounding their startling human-like cry which seemed yet
more striking in this lonely wilderness. The Indians said that geese,
swans, cranes, etc., making their long journeys in regular order thus
called aloud to encourage each other and enable them to keep stroke
and time like men in rowing or marching (a sort of “Row,
brothers, row,” or “Hip, hip” of marching
soldiers).</p>
<p>October 18 was about half sunshine, half rain and wet snow, but we
paddled on through the midst of the innumerable islands in more than
half comfort, enjoying <!-- Page 123 --> the changing effects of the
weather on the dripping wilderness. Strolling a little way back into
the woods when we went ashore for luncheon, I found fine specimens of
cedar, and here and there a birch, and small thickets of wild apple. A
hemlock, felled by Indians for bread-bark, was only twenty inches
thick at the butt, a hundred and twenty feet long, and about five
hundred and forty years old at the time it was felled. The first
hundred of its rings measured only four inches, showing that for a
century it had grown in the shade of taller trees and at the age of
one hundred years was yet only a sapling in size. On the mossy trunk
of an old prostrate spruce about a hundred feet in length thousands of
seedlings were growing. I counted seven hundred on a length of eight
feet, so favorable is this climate for the development of tree seeds
and so fully do these trees obey the command to multiply and replenish
the earth. No wonder these islands are densely clothed with trees.
They grow on solid rocks and logs as well as on fertile soil. The
surface is first covered with a plush of mosses in which the seeds
germinate; then the interlacing roots form a sod, fallen leaves soon
cover their feet, and the young trees, closely crowded together,
support each other, and the soil becomes deeper and richer from year
to year.</p>
<p>I greatly enjoyed the Indian's camp-fire talk this evening on their
ancient customs, how they were taught by their parents ere the whites
came among them, their religion, ideas connected with the next world,
the stars, plants, the behavior and language of <!-- Page 124 -->
animals under different circumstances, manner of getting a living,
etc. When our talk was interrupted by the howling of a wolf on the
opposite side of the strait, Kadachan puzzled the minister with the
question, “Have wolves souls?” The Indians believe that
they have, giving as foundation for their belief that they are wise
creatures who know how to catch seals and salmon by swimming slyly
upon them with their heads hidden in a mouthful of grass, hunt deer in
company, and always bring forth their young at the same and most
favorable time of the year. I inquired how it was that with enemies so
wise and powerful the deer were not all killed. Kadachan replied that
wolves knew better than to kill them all and thus cut off their most
important food-supply. He said they were numerous on all the large
islands, more so than on the mainland, that Indian hunters were afraid
of them and never ventured far into the woods alone, for these large
gray and black wolves attacked man whether they were hungry or not.
When attacked, the Indian hunter, he said, climbed a tree or stood
with his back against a tree or rock as a wolf never attacks face to
face. Wolves, and not bears, Indians regard as masters of the woods,
for they sometimes attack and kill bears, but the wolverine they never
attack, “for,” said John, “wolves and wolverines are
companions in sin and equally wicked and cunning.”</p>
<p>On one of the small islands we found a stockade, sixty by
thirty-five feet, built, our Indians said, by the Kake tribe during
one of their many warlike quarrels. Toyatte and Kadachan said these
forts <!-- Page 125 --> were common throughout the canoe waters,
showing that in this foodful, kindly wilderness, as in all the world
beside, man may be man's worst enemy.</p>
<p>We discovered small bits of cultivation here and there, patches of
potatoes and turnips, planted mostly on the cleared sites of deserted
villages. In spring the most industrious families sailed to their
little farms of perhaps a quarter of an acre or less, and ten or
fifteen miles from their villages. After preparing the ground, and
planting it, they visited it again in summer to pull the weeds and
speculate on the size of the crop they were likely to have to eat with
their fat salmon. The Kakes were then busy digging their potatoes,
which they complained were this year injured by early frosts.</p>
<p>We arrived at Klugh-Quan, one of the Kupreanof Kake villages, just
as a funeral party was breaking up. The body had been burned and gifts
were being distributed--bits of calico, handkerchiefs, blankets, etc.,
according to the rank and wealth of the deceased. The death ceremonies
of chiefs and head men, Mr. Young told me, are very weird and
imposing, with wild feasting, dancing, and singing. At this little
place there are some eight totem poles of bold and intricate design,
well executed, but smaller than those of the Stickeens. As elsewhere
throughout the archipelago, the bear, raven, eagle, salmon, and
porpoise are the chief figures. Some of the poles have square
cavities, mortised into the back, which are said to contain the ashes
of members of the family. These recesses are closed by a plug. I
noticed one <!-- Page 126 --> that was caulked with a rag where the
joint was imperfect.</p>
<p>Strolling about the village, looking at the tangled vegetation,
sketching the totems, etc., I found a lot of human bones scattered on
the surface of the ground or partly covered. In answer to my
inquiries, one of our crew said they probably belonged to Sitka
Indians, slain in war. These Kakes are shrewd, industrious, and rather
good-looking people. It was at their largest village that an American
schooner was seized and all the crew except one man murdered. A
gunboat sent to punish them burned the village. I saw the anchor of
the ill-fated vessel lying near the shore.</p>
<p>Though all the Thlinkit tribes believe in witchcraft, they are less
superstitious in some respects than many of the lower classes of
whites. Chief Yana Taowk seemed to take pleasure in kicking the Sitka
bones that lay in his way, and neither old nor young showed the
slightest trace of superstitious fear of the dead at any time.</p>
<p>It was at the northmost of the Kupreanof Kake villages that Mr.
Young held his first missionary meeting, singing hymns, praying, and
preaching, and trying to learn the number of the inhabitants and their
readiness to receive instruction. Neither here nor in any of the other
villages of the different tribes that we visited was there anything
like a distinct refusal to receive school-teachers or ministers. On
the contrary, with but one or two exceptions, all with apparent good
faith declared their willingness to receive them, and many seemed
heartily delighted at <!-- Page 127 -->
the prospect of gaining light on subjects so important and so dark to
them. All had heard ere this of the wonderful work of the Reverend Mr.
Duncan at Metlakatla, and even those chiefs who were not at all
inclined to anything like piety were yet anxious to procure schools
and churches that their people should not miss the temporal advantages
of knowledge, which with their natural shrewdness they were not slow
to recognize. “We are all children,” they said,
“groping in the dark. Give us this light and we will do as you
bid us.”</p>
<p>The chief of the first Kupreanof Kake village we came to was a
venerable-looking man, perhaps seventy years old, with massive head
and strongly marked features, a bold Roman nose, deep, tranquil eyes,
shaggy eyebrows, a strong face set in a halo of long gray hair. He
seemed delighted at the prospect of receiving a teacher for his
people. “This is just what I want,” he said. “I am
ready to bid him welcome.”</p>
<p>“This,” said Yana Taowk, chief of the larger north
village, “is a good word you bring us. We will be glad to come
out of our darkness into your light. You Boston men must be favorites
of the Great Father. You know all about God, and ships and guns and
the growing of things to eat. We will sit quiet and listen to the
words of any teacher you send us.”</p>
<p>While Mr. Young was preaching, some of the congregation smoked,
talked to each other, and answered the shouts of their companions
outside, greatly to the disgust of Toyatte and Kadachan, who regarded
the Kakes as mannerless barbarians. A little girl, frightened
<!-- Page 128 --> at the strange exercises, began to cry and was
turned out of doors. She cried in a strange, low, wild tone, quite
unlike the screech crying of the children of civilization.</p>
<ANTIMG src="images/tia_128.jpg" width-obs="270" height-obs="180" alt="Admiralty Island" />
<p>The following morning we crossed Prince Frederick Sound to the west
coast of Admiralty Island. Our frail shell of a canoe was tossed like
a bubble on the swells coming in from the ocean. Still, I suppose, the
danger was not so great as it seemed. In a good canoe, skillfully
handled, you may safely sail from Victoria to Chilcat, a thousand-mile
voyage frequently made by Indians in their trading operations before
the coming of the whites. Our Indians, however, dreaded this crossing
so late in the season. They spoke of it repeatedly before we reached
it as the one great danger of our voyage.</p>
<p>John said to me just as we left the shore, “You and Mr. Young
will be scared to death on this broad water.”</p>
<p>“Never mind us, John,” we merrily replied,
“perhaps some of you brave Indian sailors may be the first to
show fear.”</p>
<p>Toyatte said he had not slept well a single night thinking of it,
and after we rounded Cape Gardner and entered the comparatively smooth
Chatham Strait, they all rejoiced, laughing and chatting like
frolicsome children.</p>
<p>We arrived at the first of the Hootsenoo villages on Admiralty
Island shortly after noon and were welcomed by everybody. Men, women,
and children made haste to the beach to meet us, the children staring
<!-- Page 129 --> as if they had never before seen a Boston man. The
chief, a remarkably good-looking and intelligent fellow, stepped
forward, shook hands with us Boston fashion, and invited us to his
house. Some of the curious children crowded in after us and stood
around the fire staring like half-frightened wild animals. Two old
women drove them out of the house, making hideous gestures, but taking
good care not to hurt them. The merry throng poured through the round
door, laughing and enjoying the harsh gestures and threats of the
women as all a joke, indicating mild parental government in general.
Indeed, in all my travels I never saw a child, old or young, receive a
blow or even a harsh word. When our cook began to prepare luncheon our
host said through his interpreter that he was sorry we could not eat
Indian food, as he was anxious to entertain us. We thanked him, of
course, and expressed our sense of his kindness. His brother, in the
mean time, brought a dozen turnips, which he peeled and sliced and
served in a clean dish. These we ate raw as dessert, reminding me of
turnip-field feasts when I was a boy in Scotland. Then a box was
brought from some corner and opened. It seemed to be full of tallow or
butter. A sharp stick was thrust into it, and a lump of something five
or six inches long, three or four wide, and an inch thick was dug up,
which proved to be a section of the back fat of a deer, preserved in
fish oil and seasoned with boiled spruce and other spicy roots. After
stripping off the lard-like oil, it was cut into small pieces and
passed round. It seemed white and wholesome, but I was unable to
<!-- Page 130 --> taste it even for manner's sake. This disgust,
however, was not noticed, as the rest of the company did full justice
to the precious tallow and smacked their lips over it as a great
delicacy. A lot of potatoes about the size of walnuts, boiled and
peeled and added to a potful of salmon, made a savory stew that all
seemed to relish. An old, cross-looking, wrinkled crone presided at
the steaming chowder-pot, and as she peeled the potatoes with her
fingers she, at short intervals, quickly thrust one of the best into
the mouth of a little wild-eyed girl that crouched beside her, a spark
of natural love which charmed her withered face and made all the big
gloomy house shine. In honor of our visit, our host put on a genuine
white shirt. His wife also dressed in her best and put a pair of
dainty trousers on her two-year-old boy, who seemed to be the pet and
favorite of the large family and indeed of the whole village. Toward
evening messengers were sent through the village to call everybody to
a meeting. Mr. Young delivered the usual missionary sermon and I also
was called on to say something. Then the chief arose and made an
eloquent reply, thanking us for our good words and for the hopes we
had inspired of obtaining a teacher for their children. In particular,
he said, he wanted to hear all we could tell him about God.</p>
<p>This village was an offshoot of a larger one, ten miles to the
north, called Killisnoo. Under the prevailing patriarchal form of
government each tribe is divided into comparatively few families; and
because of quarrels, the chief of this branch moved his people
<!-- Page 131 --> to this little bay, where the beach offered a good
landing for canoes. A stream which enters it yields abundance of
salmon, while in the adjacent woods and mountains berries, deer, and
wild goats abound.</p>
<p>“Here,” he said, “we enjoy peace and plenty; all
we lack is a church and a school, particularly a school for the
children.” His dwelling so much with benevolent aspect on the
children of the tribe showed, I think, that he truly loved them and
had a right intelligent insight concerning their welfare. We spent the
night under his roof, the first we had ever spent with Indians, and I
never felt more at home. The loving kindness bestowed on the little
ones made the house glow.</p>
<p>Next morning, with the hearty good wishes of our Hootsenoo friends,
and encouraged by the gentle weather, we sailed gladly up the coast,
hoping soon to see the Chilcat glaciers in their glory. The rock
hereabouts is mostly a beautiful blue marble, waveworn into a
multitude of small coves and ledges. Fine sections were thus revealed
along the shore, which with their colors, brightened with showers and
late-blooming leaves and flowers, beguiled the weariness of the way.
The shingle in front of these marble cliffs is also mostly marble,
well polished and rounded and mixed with a small percentage of
glacier-borne slate and granite erratics.</p>
<p>We arrived at the upper village about half-past one o'clock. Here
we saw Hootsenoo Indians in a very different light from that which
illumined the lower village. While we were yet half a mile or more
away, we heard sounds I had never before heard--a storm
<!-- Page 132 --> of strange howls, yells, and screams rising from a
base of gasping, bellowing grunts and groans. Had I been alone, I
should have fled as from a pack of fiends, but our Indians quietly
recognized this awful sound, if such stuff could be called sound,
simply as the “whiskey howl” and pushed quietly on. As we
approached the landing, the demoniac howling so greatly increased I
tried to dissuade Mr. Young from attempting to say a single word in
the village, and as for preaching one might as well try to preach in
Tophet. The whole village was afire with bad whiskey. This was the
first time in my life that I learned the meaning of the phrase
“a howling drunk.” Even our Indians hesitated to venture
ashore, notwithstanding whiskey storms were far from novel to them.
Mr. Young, however, hoped that in this Indian Sodom at least one man
might be found so righteous as to be in his right mind and able to
give trustworthy information. Therefore I was at length prevailed on
to yield consent to land. Our canoe was drawn up on the beach and one
of the crew left to guard it. Cautiously we strolled up the hill to
the main row of houses, now a chain of alcoholic volcanoes. The
largest house, just opposite the landing, was about forty feet square,
built of immense planks, each hewn from a whole log, and, as usual,
the only opening was a mere hole about two and a half feet in
diameter, closed by a massive hinged plug like the breach of a cannon.
At the dark door-hole a few black faces appeared and were suddenly
withdrawn. Not a single person was to be seen on the street. At length
a couple of old, crouching <!-- Page 133 --> men, hideously blackened,
ventured out and stared at us, then, calling to their companions,
other black and burning heads appeared, and we began to fear that like
the Alloway Kirk witches the whole legion was about to sally forth.
But, instead, those outside suddenly crawled and tumbled in again. We
were thus allowed to take a general view of the place and return to
our canoe unmolested. But ere we could get away, three old women came
swaggering and grinning down to the beach, and Toyatte was discovered
by a man with whom he had once had a business misunderstanding, who,
burning for revenge, was now jumping and howling and threatening as
only a drunken Indian may, while our heroic old captain, in severe icy
majesty, stood erect and motionless, uttering never a word. Kadachan,
on the contrary, was well nigh smothered with the drunken caresses of
one of his father's <i>tillicums</i> (friends), who insisted on his
going back with him into the house. But reversing the words of St.
Paul in his account of his shipwreck, it came to pass that we all at
length got safe to sea and by hard rowing managed to reach a fine
harbor before dark, fifteen sweet, serene miles from the howlers.</p>
<p>Our camp this evening was made at the head of a narrow bay bordered
by spruce and hemlock woods. We made our beds beneath a grand old
Sitka spruce five feet in diameter, whose broad, winglike branches
were outspread immediately above our heads. The night picture as I
stood back to see it in the firelight was this one great tree,
relieved against the gloom of the woods back of it, the light on the
low branches <!-- Page 134 --> revealing the shining needles, the
brown, sturdy trunk grasping an outswelling mossy bank, and a fringe
of illuminated bushes within a few feet of the tree with the firelight
on the tips of the sprays.</p>
<p>Next morning, soon after we left our harbor, we were caught in a
violent gust of wind and dragged over the seething water in a
passionate hurry, though our sail was close-reefed, flying past the
gray headlands in most exhilarating style, until fear of being
capsized made us drop our sail and run into the first little nook we
came to for shelter. Captain Toyatte remarked that in this kind of
wind no Indian would dream of traveling, but since Mr. Young and I
were with him he was willing to go on, because he was sure that the
Lord loved us and would not allow us to perish.</p>
<p>We were now within a day or two of Chilcat. We had only to hold a
direct course up the beautiful Lynn Canal to reach the large Davidson
and other glaciers at its head in the cañons of the Chilcat and
Chilcoot Rivers. But rumors of trouble among the Indians there now
reached us. We found a party taking shelter from the stormy wind in a
little cove, who confirmed the bad news that the Chilcats were
drinking and fighting, that Kadachan's father had been shot, and that
it would be far from safe to venture among them until blood-money had
been paid and the quarrels settled. I decided, therefore, in the mean
time, to turn westward and go in search of the wonderful
“ice-mountains” that Sitka Charley had been telling us
about. Charley, the youngest of my crew, noticing <!-- Page 135 --> my
interest in glaciers, said that when he was a boy he had gone with his
father to hunt seals in a large bay full of ice, and that though it
was long since he had been there, he thought he could find his way to
it. Accordingly, we pushed eagerly on across Chatham Strait to the
north end of Icy Strait, toward the new and promising ice-field.</p>
<p>On the south side of Icy Strait we ran into a picturesque bay to
visit the main village of the Hoona tribe. Rounding a point on the
north shore of the bay, the charmingly located village came in sight,
with a group of the inhabitants gazing at us as we approached. They
evidently recognized us as strangers or visitors from the shape and
style of our canoe, and perhaps even determining that white men were
aboard, for these Indians have wonderful eyes. While we were yet half
a mile off, we saw a flag unfurled on a tall mast in front of the
chief's house. Toyatte hoisted his United States flag in reply, and
thus arrayed we made for the landing. Here we were met and received by
the chief, Kashoto, who stood close to the water's edge, barefooted
and bareheaded, but wearing so fine a robe and standing so grave,
erect, and serene, his dignity was complete. No white man could have
maintained sound dignity under circumstances so disadvantageous. After
the usual formal salutations, the chief, still standing as erect and
motionless as a tree, said that he was not much acquainted with our
people and feared that his house was too mean for visitors so
distinguished as we were. We hastened of course to assure him that we
were not proud of heart, <!-- Page 136 --> and would be glad to have
the honor of his hospitality and friendship. With a smile of relief he
then led us into his large fort house to the seat of honor prepared
for us. After we had been allowed to rest unnoticed and unquestioned
for fifteen minutes or so, in accordance with good Indian manners in
case we should be weary or embarrassed, our cook began to prepare
luncheon; and the chief expressed great concern at his not being able
to entertain us in Boston fashion.</p>
<p>Luncheon over, Mr. Young as usual requested him to call his people
to a meeting. Most of them were away at outlying camps gathering
winter stores. Some ten or twelve men, however, about the same number
of women, and a crowd of wondering boys and girls were gathered in, to
whom Mr. Young preached the usual gospel sermon. Toyatte prayed in
Thlinkit, and the other members of the crew joined in the
hymn-singing. At the close of the mission exercises the chief arose
and said that he would now like to hear what the other white chief had
to say. I directed John to reply that I was not a missionary, that I
came only to pay a friendly visit and see the forests and mountains of
their beautiful country. To this he replied, as others had done in the
same circumstances, that he would like to hear me on the subject of
their country and themselves; so I had to get on my feet and make some
sort of a speech, dwelling principally on the brotherhood of all races
of people, assuring them that God loved them and that some of their
white brethren were beginning to know them and become interested in
their welfare; that I seemed this <!-- Page 137 --> evening to be
among old friends with whom I had long been acquainted, though I had
never been here before; that I would always remember them and the kind
reception they had given us; advised them to heed the instructions of
sincere self-denying mission men who wished only to do them good and
desired nothing but their friendship and welfare in return. I told
them that in some far-off countries, instead of receiving the
missionaries with glad and thankful hearts, the Indians killed and ate
them; but I hoped, and indeed felt sure, that his people would find a
better use for missionaries than putting them, like salmon, in pots
for food. They seemed greatly interested, looking into each other's
faces with emphatic nods and a-ahs and smiles.</p>
<p>The chief then slowly arose and, after standing silent a minute or
two, told us how glad he was to see us; that he felt as if his heart
had enjoyed a good meal; that we were the first to come humbly to his
little out-of-the-way village to tell his people about God; that they
were all like children groping in darkness, but eager for light; that
they would gladly welcome a missionary and teacher and use them well;
that he could easily believe that whites and Indians were the children
of one Father just as I had told them in my speech; that they differed
little and resembled each other a great deal, calling attention to the
similarity of hands, eyes, legs, etc., making telling gestures in the
most natural style of eloquence and dignified composure.
“Oftentimes,” he said, “when I was on the high
mountains in the fall, hunting wild <!-- Page 138 --> sheep for meat,
and for wool to make blankets, I have been caught in snowstorms and
held in camp until there was nothing to eat, but when I reached my
home and got warm, and had a good meal, then my body felt good. For a
long time my heart has been hungry and cold, but to-night your words
have warmed my heart, and given it a good meal, and now my heart feels
good.”</p>
<p>The most striking characteristic of these people is their serene
dignity in circumstances that to us would be novel and embarrassing.
Even the little children behave with natural dignity, come to the
white men when called, and restrain their wonder at the strange
prayers, hymn-singing, etc. This evening an old woman fell asleep in
the meeting and began to snore; and though both old and young were
shaken with suppressed mirth, they evidently took great pains to
conceal it. It seems wonderful to me that these so-called savages can
make one feel at home in their families. In good breeding,
intelligence, and skill in accomplishing whatever they try to do with
tools they seem to me to rank above most of our uneducated white
laborers. I have never yet seen a child ill-used, even to the extent
of an angry word. Scolding, so common a curse in civilization, is not
known here at all. On the contrary the young are fondly indulged
without being spoiled. Crying is very rarely heard.</p>
<p>In the house of this Hoona chief a pet marmot (Parry's) was a great
favorite with old and young. It was therefore delightfully confiding
and playful and human. Cats were petted, and the confidence with
<!-- Page 139 --> which these cautious, thoughtful animals met
strangers showed that they were kindly treated.</p>
<p>There were some ten or a dozen houses, all told, in the village.
The count made by the chief for Mr. Young showed some seven hundred
and twenty-five persons in the tribe.</p>
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