<SPAN name="chap11"></SPAN>
<h2 align="center">Chapter XI</h2>
<h2 align="center">The Country of the Chilcats</h2>
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<p>On October 30 we visited a camp of Hoonas at the mouth of a
salmon-chuck. We had seen some of them before, and they received us
kindly. Here we learned that peace reigned in Chilcat. The reports
that we had previously heard were, as usual in such cases, wildly
exaggerated. The little camp hut of these Indians was crowded with the
food-supplies they had gathered--chiefly salmon, dried and tied in
bunches of convenient size for handling and transporting to their
villages, bags of salmon-roe, boxes of fish-oil, a lot of
mountain-goat mutton, and a few porcupines. They presented us with
some dried salmon and potatoes, for which we gave them tobacco and
rice. About 3 P.M. we reached their village, and in the best house,
that of a chief, we found the family busily engaged in making whiskey.
The still and mash were speedily removed and hidden away with apparent
shame as soon as we came in sight. When we entered and passed the
regular greetings, the usual apologies as to being unable to furnish
Boston food for us and inquiries whether we could eat Indian food were
gravely made. Toward six or seven o'clock Mr. Young explained the
object of his visit and held a short service. The chief replied with
grave deliberation, saying that he would be heartily glad to have a
teacher sent to his poor ignorant people, upon whom <!-- Page 162 -->
he now hoped the light of a better day was beginning to break.
Hereafter he would gladly do whatever the white teachers told him to
do and would have no will of his own. This under the whiskey
circumstances seemed too good to be quite true. He thanked us over and
over again for coming so far to see him, and complained that Port
Simpson Indians, sent out on a missionary tour by Mr. Crosby, after
making a good-luck board for him and nailing it over his door, now
wanted to take it away. Mr. Young promised to make him a new one,
should this threat be executed, and remarked that since he had offered
to do his bidding he hoped he would make no more whiskey. To this the
chief replied with fresh complaints concerning the threatened loss of
his precious board, saying that he thought the Port Simpson Indians
were very mean in seeking to take it away, but that now he would tell
them to take it as soon as they liked for he was going to get a better
one at Wrangell. But no effort of the missionary could bring him to
notice or discuss the whiskey business. The luck board nailed over the
door was about two feet long and had the following inscription:
“The Lord will bless those who do his will. When you rise in the
morning, and when you retire at night, give him thanks. Heccla Hockla
Popla.”</p>
<p>This chief promised to pray like a white man every morning, and to
bury the dead as the whites do. “I often wondered,” he
said, “where the dead went to. Now I am glad to know”; and
at last acknowledged the whiskey, saying he was sorry to have been
caught making the bad stuff. The behavior of all, even the
<!-- Page 163 --> little ones circled around the fire, was very good.
There was no laughter when the strange singing commenced. They only
gazed like curious, intelligent animals. A little daughter of the
chief with the glow of the firelight on her eyes made an interesting
picture, head held aslant. Another in the group, with upturned eyes,
seeming to half understand the strange words about God, might have
passed for one of Raphael's angels.</p>
<p>The chief's house was about forty feet square, of the ordinary fort
kind, but better built and cleaner than usual. The side-room doors
were neatly paneled, though all the lumber had been nibbled into shape
with a small narrow Indian adze. We had our tent pitched on a grassy
spot near the beach, being afraid of wee beasties; which greatly
offended Kadachan and old Toyatte, who said, “If this is the way
you are to do up at Chilcat, we will be ashamed of you.” We
promised them to eat Indian food and in every way behave like good
Chilcats.</p>
<p>We set out direct for Chilcat in the morning against a brisk head
wind. By keeping close inshore and working hard, we made about ten
miles by two or three o'clock, when, the tide having turned against
us, we could make scarce any headway, and therefore landed in a
sheltered cove a few miles up the west side of Lynn Canal. Here I
discovered a fine growth of yellow cedar, but none of the trees were
very large, the tallest only seventy-five to one hundred feet high.
The flat, drooping, plume-like branchlets hang edgewise, giving the
trees a thin, open, airy look. Nearly every <!-- Page 164 --> tree
that I saw in a long walk was more or less marked by the knives and
axes of the Indians, who use the bark for matting, for covering
house-roofs, and making temporary portable huts. For this last purpose
sections five or six feet long and two or three wide are pressed flat
and secured from warping or splitting by binding them with thin strips
of wood at the end. These they carry about with them in their canoes,
and in a few minutes they can be put together against slim poles and
made into a rainproof hut. Every paddle that I have seen along the
coast is made of the light, tough, handsome yellow wood of this tree.
It is a tree of moderately rapid growth and usually chooses ground
that is rather boggy and mossy. Whether its network of roots makes the
bog or not, I am unable as yet to say.</p>
<p>Three glaciers on the opposite side of the canal were in sight,
descending nearly to sea-level, and many smaller ones that melt a
little below timber-line. While I was sketching these, a canoe hove in
sight, coming on at a flying rate of speed before the wind. The
owners, eager for news, paid us a visit. They proved to be Hoonas, a
man, his wife, and four children, on their way home from Chilcat. The
man was sitting in the stern steering and holding a sleeping child in
his arms. Another lay asleep at his feet. He told us that Sitka Jack
had gone up to the main Chilcat village the day before he left,
intending to hold a grand feast and potlatch, and that whiskey up
there was flowing like water. The news was rather depressing to Mr.
Young and myself, for we feared the <!-- Page 165 --> effect of the
poison on Toyatte's old enemies. At 8.30 P.M. we set out again on the
turn of the tide, though the crew did not relish this night work.
Naturally enough, they liked to stay in camp when wind and tide were
against us, but didn't care to make up lost time after dark however
wooingly wind and tide might flow and blow. Kadachan, John, and
Charley rowed, and Toyatte steered and paddled, assisted now and then
by me. The wind moderated and almost died away, so that we made about
fifteen miles in six hours, when the tide turned and snow began to
fall. We ran into a bay nearly opposite Berner's Bay, where three or
four families of Chilcats were camped who shouted when they heard us
landing and demanded our names. Our men ran to the huts for news
before making camp. The Indians proved to be hunters, who said there
were plenty of wild sheep on the mountains back a few miles from the
head of the bay. This interview was held at three o'clock in the
morning, a rather early hour. But Indians never resent any such
disturbance provided there is anything worth while to be said or done.
By four o'clock we had our tents set, a fire made and some coffee,
while the snow was falling fast. Toyatte was out of humor with this
night business. He wanted to land an hour or two before we did, and
then, when the snow began to fall and we all wanted to find a
camping-ground as soon as possible, he steered out into the middle of
the canal, saying grimly that the tide was good. He turned, however,
at our orders, but read us a lecture at the first opportunity, telling
us to start early if we <!-- Page 166 --> were in a hurry, but not to
travel in the night like thieves.</p>
<p>After a few hours' sleep, we set off again, with the wind still
against us and the sea rough. We were all tired after making only
about twelve miles, and camped in a rocky nook where we found a family
of Hoonas in their bark hut beside their canoe. They presented us with
potatoes and salmon and a big bucketful of berries, salmon-roe, and
grease of some sort, probably fish-oil, which the crew consumed with
wonderful relish.</p>
<p>A fine breeze was blowing next morning from the south, which would
take us to Chilcat in a few hours, but unluckily the day was Sunday
and the good wind was refused. Sunday, it seemed to me, could be kept
as well by sitting in the canoe and letting the Lord's wind waft us
quietly on our way. The day was rainy and the clouds hung low. The
trees here are remarkably well developed, tall and straight. I
observed three or four hemlocks which had been struck by
lightning,--the first I noticed in Alaska. Some of the species on
windy outjutting rocks become very picturesque, almost as much so as
old oaks, the foliage becoming dense and the branchlets tufted in
heavy plume-shaped horizontal masses.</p>
<p>Monday was a fine clear day, but the wind was dead ahead, making
hard, dull work with paddles and oars. We passed a long stretch of
beautiful marble cliffs enlivened with small merry waterfalls, and
toward noon came in sight of the front of the famous Chilcat or
Davidson Glacier, a broad white flood <!-- Page 167 --> reaching out
two or three miles into the canal with wonderful effect. I wanted to
camp beside it but the head wind tired us out before we got within six
or eight miles of it. We camped on the west side of a small rocky
island in a narrow cove. When I was looking among the rocks and bushes
for a smooth spot for a bed, I found a human skeleton. My Indians
seemed not in the least shocked or surprised, explaining that it was
only the remains of a Chilcat slave. Indians never bury or burn the
bodies of slaves, but just cast them away anywhere. Kind Nature was
covering the poor bones with moss and leaves, and I helped in the
pitiful work.</p>
<p>The wind was fair and joyful in the morning, and away we glided to
the famous glacier. In an hour or so we were directly in front of it
and beheld it in all its crystal glory descending from its white
mountain fountains and spreading out in an immense fan three or four
miles wide against its tree-fringed terminal moraine. But, large as it
is, it long ago ceased to discharge bergs.</p>
<p>The Chilcats are the most influential of all the Thlinkit tribes.
Whenever on our journey I spoke of the interesting characteristics of
other tribes we had visited, my crew would invariably say, “Oh,
yes, these are pretty good Indians, but wait till you have seen the
Chilcats.” We were now only five or six miles distant from their
lower village, and my crew requested time to prepare themselves to
meet their great rivals. Going ashore on the moraine with their boxes
that had not been opened since we left Fort <!-- Page 168 -->
Wrangell, they sat on boulders and cut each other's hair, carefully
washed and perfumed themselves and made a complete change in their
clothing, even to white shirts, new boots, new hats, and bright
neckties. Meanwhile, I scrambled across the broad, brushy, forested
moraine, and on my return scarcely recognized my crew in their dress
suits. Mr. Young also made some changes in his clothing, while I,
having nothing dressy in my bag, adorned my cap with an eagle's
feather I found on the moraine, and thus arrayed we set forth to meet
the noble Thlinkits.</p>
<p>We were discovered while we were several miles from the village,
and as we entered the mouth of the river we were hailed by a messenger
from the chief, sent to find out who we were and the objects of our
extraordinary visit.</p>
<p>“Who are you?” he shouted in a heavy, far-reaching
voice. “What are your names? What do you want? What have you
come for?”</p>
<p>On receiving replies, he shouted the information to another
messenger, who was posted on the river-bank at a distance of a quarter
of a mile or so, and he to another and another in succession, and by
this living telephone the news was delivered to the chief as he sat by
his fireside. A salute was then fired to welcome us, and a swarm of
musket-bullets, flying scarce high enough for comfort, pinged over our
heads. As soon as we reached the landing at the village, a dignified
young man stepped forward and thus addressed us:--</p>
<p>“My chief sent me to meet you, and to ask if you
<!-- Page 169 --> would do him the honor to lodge in his house during
your stay in our village?”</p>
<p>We replied, of course, that we would consider it a great honor to
be entertained by so distinguished a chief.</p>
<p>The messenger then ordered a number of slaves, who stood behind
him, to draw our canoe out of the water, carry our provisions and
bedding into the chief's house, and then carry the canoe back from the
river where it would be beyond the reach of floating ice. While we
waited, a lot of boys and girls were playing on a meadow near the
landing--running races, shooting arrows, and wading in the icy river
without showing any knowledge of our presence beyond quick stolen
glances. After all was made secure, he conducted us to the house,
where we found seats of honor prepared for us.</p>
<p>The old chief sat barefooted by the fireside, clad in a calico
shirt and blanket, looking down, and though we shook hands as we
passed him he did not look up. After we were seated, he still gazed
into the fire without taking the slightest notice of us for about ten
or fifteen minutes. The various members of the chief's family,
also,--men, women, and children,--went about their usual employment
and play as if entirely unconscious that strangers were in the house,
it being considered impolite to look at visitors or speak to them
before time had been allowed them to collect their thoughts and
prepare any message they might have to deliver.</p>
<p>At length, after the politeness period had passed,
<!-- Page 170 --> the chief slowly raised his head and glanced at his
visitors, looked down again, and at last said, through our
interpreter:--</p>
<p>“I am troubled. It is customary when strangers visit us to
offer them food in case they might be hungry, and I was about to do
so, when I remembered that the food of you honorable white chiefs is
so much better than mine that I am ashamed to offer it.”</p>
<p>We, of course, replied that we would consider it a great honor to
enjoy the hospitality of so distinguished a chief as he was.</p>
<p>Hearing this, he looked up, saying, “I feel relieved”;
or, in John the interpreter's words, “He feels good now, he says
he feels good.”</p>
<p>He then ordered one of his family to see that the visitors were
fed. The young man who was to act as steward took up his position in a
corner of the house commanding a view of all that was going on, and
ordered the slaves to make haste to prepare a good meal; one to bring
a lot of the best potatoes from the cellar and wash them well; another
to go out and pick a basketful of fresh berries; another to broil a
salmon; while others made a suitable fire, pouring oil on the wet wood
to make it blaze. Speedily the feast was prepared and passed around.
The first course was potatoes, the second fish-oil and salmon, next
berries and rose-hips; then the steward shouted the important news, in
a loud voice like a herald addressing an army, “That's
all!” and left his post.</p>
<p>Then followed all sorts of questions from the old <!-- Page 171 -->
chief. He wanted to know what Professor Davidson had been trying to do
a year or two ago on a mountain-top back of the village, with many
strange things looking at the sun when it grew dark in the daytime;
and we had to try to explain eclipses. He asked us if we could tell
him what made the water rise and fall twice a day, and we tried to
explain that the sun and moon attracted the sea by showing how a
magnet attracted iron.</p>
<p>Mr. Young, as usual, explained the object of his visit and
requested that the people might be called together in the evening to
hear his message. Accordingly all were told to wash, put on their best
clothing, and come at a certain hour. There was an audience of about
two hundred and fifty, to whom Mr. Young I preached. Toyatte led in
prayer, while Kadachan and John joined in the singing of several
hymns. At the conclusion of the religious exercises the chief made a
short address of thanks, and finished with a request for the message
of the other chief. I again tried in vain to avoid a speech by telling
the interpreter to explain that I was only traveling to see the
country, the glaciers, and mountains and forests, etc., but these
subjects, strange to say, seemed to be about as interesting as the
gospel, and I had to delivery sort of lecture on the fine foodful
country God had given them and the brotherhood of man, along the same
general lines I had followed at other villages. Some five similar
meetings were held here, two of them in the daytime, and we began to
feel quite at home in the big block-house with our hospitable and
warlike friends.</p>
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<p>At the last meeting an old white-haired shaman of grave and
venerable aspect, with a high wrinkled forehead, big, strong Roman
nose and light-colored skin, slowly and with great dignity arose and
spoke for the first time.</p>
<p>“I am an old man,” he said, “but I am glad to
listen to those strange things you tell, and they may well be true,
for what is more wonderful than the flight of birds in the air? I
remember the first white man I ever saw. Since that long, long-ago
time I have seen many, but never until now have I ever truly known and
felt a white man's heart. All the white men I have heretofore met
wanted to get something from us. They wanted furs and they wished to
pay for them as small a price as possible. They all seemed to be
seeking their own good--not our good. I might say that through all my
long life I have never until now heard a white man speak. It has
always seemed to me while trying to speak to traders and those seeking
gold-mines that it was like speaking to a person across a broad stream
that was running fast over stones and making so loud a noise that
scarce a single word could be heard. But now, for the first time, the
Indian and the white man are on the same side of the river, eye to
eye, heart to heart. I have always loved my people. I have taught them
and ministered to them as well as I could. Hereafter, I will keep
silent and listen to the good words of the missionaries, who know God
and the places we go to when we die so much better than I
do.”</p>
<p>At the close of the exercises, after the last sermon
<!-- Page 173 --> had been preached and the last speech of the Indian
chief and headmen had been made, a number of the sub-chiefs were
talking informally together. Mr. Young, anxious to know what
impression he had made on the tribe with reference to mission work,
requested John to listen and tell him what was being said.</p>
<p>“They are talking about Mr. Muir's speech,” he
reported. “They say he knows how to talk and beats the preacher
far.” Toyatte also, with a teasing smile, said: “Mr.
Young, mika tillicum hi yu tola wawa” (your friend leads you far
in speaking).</p>
<p>Later, when the sending of a missionary and teacher was being
considered, the chief said they wanted me, and, as an inducement,
promised that if I would come to them they would always do as I
directed, follow my councils, give me as many wives as I liked, build
a church and school, and pick all the stones out of the paths and make
them smooth for my feet.</p>
<p>They were about to set out on an expedition to the Hootsenoos to
collect blankets as indemnity or blood-money for the death of a
Chilcat woman from drinking whiskey furnished by one of the Hootsenoo
tribe. In case of their refusal to pay, there would be fighting, and
one of the chiefs begged that we would pray them good luck, so that no
one would be killed. This he asked as a favor, after begging that we
would grant permission to go on this expedition, promising that they
would avoid bloodshed if possible. He spoke in a very natural and easy
tone and manner always serene and so much of a polished diplomat that
<!-- Page 174 --> all polish was hidden. The younger chief stood while
speaking, the elder sat on the floor. None of the congregation had a
word to say, though they gave approving nods and shrugs.</p>
<p>The house was packed at every meeting, two a day. Some climbed on
the roof to listen around the smoke opening. I tried in vain to avoid
speechmaking, but, as usual, I had to say something at every meeting.
I made five speeches here, all of which seemed to be gladly heard,
particularly what I said on the different kinds of white men and their
motives, and their own kindness and good manners in making strangers
feel at home in their houses.</p>
<p>The chief had a slave, a young and good-looking girl, who waited on
him, cooked his food, lighted his pipe for him, etc. Her servitude
seemed by no means galling. In the morning, just before we left on the
return trip, interpreter John overheard him telling her that after the
teacher came from Wrangell, he was going to dress her well and send
her to school and use her in every way as if she were his own
daughter. Slaves are still owned by the richest of the Thlinkits.
Formerly, many of them were sacrificed on great occasions, such as the
opening of a new house or the erection of a totem pole. Kadachan
ordered John to take a pair of white blankets out of his trunk and
wrap them about the chief's shoulders, as he sat by the fire. This
gift was presented without ceremony or saying a single word. The chief
scarcely noticed the blankets, only taking a corner in his hand, as if
testing the quality of the wool. Toyatte had been an <!-- Page 175 -->
inveterate enemy and fighter of the Chilcats, but now, having joined
the church, he wished to forget the past and bury all the hard feuds
and be universally friendly and peaceful. It was evident, however,
that he mistrusted the proud and warlike Chilcats and doubted the
acceptance of his friendly advances, and as we approached their
village became more and more thoughtful.</p>
<p>“My wife said that my old enemies would be sure to kill me.
Well, never mind. I am an old man and may as well die as not.”
He was troubled with palpitation, and oftentimes, while he suffered,
he put his hand over his heart and said, “I hope the Chilcats
will shoot me here.”</p>
<p>Before venturing up the river to the principal village, located
some ten miles up the river, we sent Sitka Charley and one of the
young Chilcats as messengers to announce our arrival and inquire
whether we would be welcome to visit them, informing the chief that
both Kadachan and Toyatte were Mr. Young's friends and mine, that we
were “all one meat” and any harm done them would also be
done to us.</p>
<p>While our messengers were away, I climbed a pure-white,
dome-crowned mountain about fifty-five hundred feet high and gained
noble telling views to the northward of the main Chilcat glaciers and
the multitude of mighty peaks from which they draw their sources. At a
height of three thousand feet I found a mountain hemlock, considerably
dwarfed, in company with Sitka spruce and the common hemlock,
<!-- Page 176 --> the tallest about twenty feet high, sixteen inches
in diameter. A few stragglers grew considerably higher, say at about
four thousand feet. Birch and two-leaf pine were common.</p>
<p>The messengers returned next day, bringing back word that we would
all be heartily welcomed excepting Toyatte; that the guns were loaded
and ready to be fired to welcome us, but that Toyatte, having insulted
a Chilcat chief not long ago in Wrangell, must not come. They also
informed us in their message that they were very busy merrymaking with
other visitors, Sitka Jack and his friends, but that if we could get
up to the village through the running ice on the river, they would all
be glad to see us; they had been drinking and Kadachan's father, one
of the principal chiefs, said plainly that he had just waked up out of
a ten days' sleep. We were anxious to make this visit, but, taking the
difficulties and untoward circumstances into account, the danger of
being frozen in at so late a time, while Kadachan would not be able to
walk back on account of a shot in his foot, the danger also from
whiskey, the awakening of old feuds on account of Toyatte's presence,
etc., we reluctantly concluded to start back on the home journey at
once. This was on Friday and a fair wind was blowing, but our crew,
who loved dearly to rest and eat in these big hospitable houses, all
said that Monday would be <i>hyas klosh</i> for the starting-day. I
insisted, however, on starting Saturday morning, and succeeded in
getting away from our friends at ten o'clock. Just as we were leaving,
the chief who had <!-- Page 177 --> entertained us so handsomely
requested a written document to show that he had not killed us, so in
case we were lost on the way home he could not be held accountable in
any way for our death.</p>
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