<SPAN name="chap15"></SPAN>
<h2 align="center">Chapter XV</h2>
<h2 align="center">From Taku River to Taylor Bay</h2>
<p>I never saw Alaska looking better than it did when we bade farewell
to Sum Dum on August 22 and pushed on northward up the coast toward
Taku. The morning was clear, calm, bright--not a cloud in all the
purple sky, nor wind, however gentle, to shake the slender spires of
the spruces or dew-laden grass around the shores. Over the mountains
and over the broad white bosoms of the glaciers the sunbeams poured,
rosy as ever fell on fields of ripening wheat, drenching the forests
and kindling the glassy waters and icebergs into a perfect blaze of
colored light. Every living thing seemed joyful, and nature's work was
going on in glowing enthusiasm, not less appreciable in the deep
repose that brooded over every feature of the landscape, suggesting
the coming fruitfulness of the icy land and showing the advance that
has already been made from glacial winter to summer. The care-laden
commercial lives we lead close our eyes to the operations of God as a
workman, though openly carried on that all who will look may see. The
scarred rocks here and the moraines make a vivid showing of the old
winter-time of the glacial period, and mark the bounds of the
<i>mer-de-glace</i> that once filled the bay and covered the
surrounding mountains. Already that sea of ice is replaced by water,
in which multitudes of fishes are fed, while the hundred
<!-- Page 235 --> glaciers lingering about the bay and the streams
that pour from them are busy night and day bringing in sand and mud
and stones, at the rate of tons every minute, to fill it up. Then, as
the seasons grow warmer, there will be fields here for the plough.</p>
<p>Our Indians, exhilarated by the sunshine, were garrulous as the
gulls and plovers, and pulled heartily at their oars, evidently glad
to get out of the ice with a whole boat.</p>
<p>“Now for Taku,” they said, as we glided over the
shining water. “Good-bye, Ice-Mountains; good-bye, Sum
Dum.” Soon a light breeze came, and they unfurled the sail and
laid away their oars and began, as usual in such free times, to put
their goods in order, unpacking and sunning provisions, guns, ropes,
clothing, etc. Joe has an old flintlock musket suggestive of Hudson's
Bay times, which he wished to discharge and reload. So, stepping in
front of the sail, he fired at a gull that was flying past before I
could prevent him, and it fell slowly with outspread wings alongside
the canoe, with blood dripping from its bill. I asked him why he had
killed the bird, and followed the question by a severe reprimand for
his stupid cruelty, to which he could offer no other excuse than that
he had learned from the whites to be careless about taking life.
Captain Tyeen denounced the deed as likely to bring bad luck.</p>
<p>Before the whites came most of the Thlinkits held, with Agassiz,
that animals have souls, and that it was wrong and unlucky to even
speak disrespectfully of the fishes or any of the animals that
supplied them <!-- Page 236 --> with food. A case illustrating their
superstitious beliefs in this connection occurred at Fort Wrangell
while I was there the year before. One of the sub-chiefs of the
Stickeens had a little son five or six years old, to whom he was very
much attached, always taking him with him in his short canoe-trips,
and leading him by the hand while going about town. Last summer the
boy was taken sick, and gradually grew weak and thin, whereupon his
father became alarmed, and feared, as is usual in such obscure cases,
that the boy had been bewitched. He first applied in his trouble to
Dr. Carliss, one of the missionaries, who gave medicine, without
effecting the immediate cure that the fond father demanded. He was, to
some extent, a believer in the powers of missionaries, both as to
material and spiritual affairs, but in so serious an exigency it was
natural that he should go back to the faith of his fathers.
Accordingly, he sent for one of the shamans, or medicine-men, of his
tribe, and submitted the case to him, who, after going through the
customary incantations, declared that he had discovered the cause of
the difficulty.</p>
<p>“Your boy,” he said, “has lost his soul, and this
is the way it happened. He was playing among the stones down on the
beach when he saw a crawfish in the water, and made fun of it,
pointing his finger at it and saying, ‘Oh, you crooked legs! Oh,
you crooked legs! You can't walk straight; you go sidewise,’
which made the crab so angry that he reached out his long nippers,
seized the lad's soul, pulled it out of him and made off with it into
deep water. And,” continued <!-- Page 237 --> the medicine-man,
“unless his stolen soul is restored to him and put back in its
place he will die. Your boy is really dead already; it is only his
lonely, empty body that is living now, and though it may continue to
live in this way for a year or two, the boy will never be of any
account, not strong, nor wise, nor brave.”</p>
<p>The father then inquired whether anything could be done about it;
was the soul still in possession of the crab, and if so, could it be
recovered and re-installed in his forlorn son? Yes, the doctor rather
thought it might be charmed back and re-united, but the job would be a
difficult one, and would probably cost about fifteen blankets.</p>
<p>After we were fairly out of the bay into Stephens Passage, the wind
died away, and the Indians had to take to their oars again, which
ended our talk. On we sped over the silvery level, close alongshore.
The dark forests extending far and near, planted like a field of
wheat, might seem monotonous in general views, but the appreciative
observer, looking closely, will find no lack of interesting variety,
however far he may go. The steep slopes on which they grow allow
almost every individual tree, with its peculiarities of form and
color, to be seen like an audience on seats rising above one
another--the blue-green, sharply tapered spires of the Menzies spruce,
the warm yellow-green Mertens spruce with their finger-like tops all
pointing in the same direction, or drooping gracefully like leaves of
grass, and the airy, feathery, brownish-green Alaska cedar. The outer
<!-- Page 238 --> fringe of bushes along the shore and hanging over
the brows of the cliffs, the white mountains above, the shining water
beneath, the changing sky over all, form pictures of divine beauty in
which no healthy eye may ever grow weary.</p>
<p>Toward evening at the head of a picturesque bay we came to a
village belonging to the Taku tribe. We found it silent and deserted.
Not a single shaman or policeman had been left to keep it. These
people are so happily rich as to have but little of a perishable kind
to keep, nothing worth fretting about. They were away catching salmon,
our Indians said. All the Indian villages hereabout are thus abandoned
at regular periods every year, just as a tent is left for a day, while
they repair to fishing, berrying, and hunting stations, occupying each
in succession for a week or two at a time, coming and going from the
main, substantially built villages. Then, after their summer's work is
done, the winter supply of salmon dried and packed, fish-oil and
seal-oil stored in boxes, berries and spruce bark pressed into cakes,
their trading-trips completed, and the year's stock of quarrels with
the neighboring tribe patched up in some way, they devote themselves
to feasting, dancing, and hootchenoo drinking. The Takus, once a
powerful and warlike tribe, were at this time, like most of the
neighboring tribes, whiskied nearly out of existence. They had a
larger village on the Taku River, but, according to the census taken
that year by the missionaries, they numbered only 269 in all,--109
men, 79 women, and 81 children, figures <!-- Page 239 -->
that show the vanishing condition of the tribe at a glance.</p>
<p>Our Indians wanted to camp for the night in one of the deserted
houses, but I urged them on into the clean wilderness until dark, when
we landed on a rocky beach fringed with devil's-clubs, greatly to the
disgust of our crew. We had to make the best of it, however, as it was
too dark to seek farther. After supper was accomplished among the
boulders, they retired to the canoe, which they anchored a little way
out, beyond low tide, while Mr. Young and I at the expense of a good
deal of scrambling and panax stinging, discovered a spot on which we
managed to sleep.</p>
<p>The next morning, about two hours after leaving our thorny camp, we
rounded a great mountain rock nearly a mile in height and entered the
Taku fiord. It is about eighteen miles long and from three to five
miles wide, and extends directly back into the heart of the mountains,
draining hundreds of glaciers and streams. The ancient glacier that
formed it was far too deep and broad and too little concentrated to
erode one of those narrow cañons, usually so impressive in
sculpture and architecture, but it is all the more interesting on this
account when the grandeur of the ice work accomplished is recognized.
This fiord, more than any other I have examined, explains the
formation of the wonderful system of channels extending along the
coast from Puget Sound to about latitude 59 degrees, for it is a
marked portion of the system,--a branch of Stephens Passage. Its
trends and general sculpture are as distinctly glacial as those
<!-- Page 240 --> of the narrowest fiord, while the largest
tributaries of the great glacier that occupied it are still in
existence. I counted some forty-five altogether, big and little, in
sight from the canoe in sailing up the middle of the fiord. Three of
them, drawing their sources from magnificent groups of snowy
mountains, came down to the level of the sea and formed a glorious
spectacle. The middle one of the three belongs to the first class,
pouring its majestic flood, shattered and crevassed, directly into the
fiord, and crowding about twenty-five square miles of it with bergs.
The next below it also sends off bergs occasionally, though a narrow
strip of glacial detritus separates it from the tidewater. That
forenoon a large mass fell from it, damming its draining stream, which
at length broke the dam, and the resulting flood swept forward
thousands of small bergs across the mud-flat into the fiord. In a
short time all was quiet again; the flood-waters receded, leaving only
a large blue scar on the front of the glacier and stranded bergs on
the moraine flat to tell the tale.</p>
<p>These two glaciers are about equal in size--two miles wide--and
their fronts are only about a mile and a half apart. While I sat
sketching them from a point among the drifting icebergs where I could
see far back into the heart of their distant fountains, two Taku
seal-hunters, father and son, came gliding toward us in an extremely
small canoe. Coming alongside with a goodnatured
“Sagh-a-ya,” they inquired who we were, our objects, etc.,
and gave us information about the river, their village, and two
<!-- Page 241 --> other large glaciers that descend nearly to the
sea-level a few miles up the river cañon. Crouching in their
little shell of a boat among the great bergs, with paddle and barbed
spear, they formed a picture as arctic and remote from anything to be
found in civilization as ever was sketched for us by the explorers of
the Far North.</p>
<p>Making our way through the crowded bergs to the extreme head of the
fiord, we entered the mouth of the river, but were soon compelled to
turn back on account of the strength of the current. The Taku River is
a large stream, nearly a mile wide at the mouth, and, like the
Stickeen, Chilcat, and Chilcoot, draws its sources from far inland,
crossing the mountain-chain from the interior through a majestic
cañon, and draining a multitude of glaciers on its way.</p>
<p>The Taku Indians, like the Chilcats, with a keen appreciation of
the advantages of their position for trade, hold possession of the
river and compel the Indians of the interior to accept their services
as middle-men, instead of allowing them to trade directly with the
whites.</p>
<p>When we were baffled in our attempt to ascend the river, the day
was nearly done, and we began to seek a camp-ground. After sailing two
or three miles along the left side of the fiord, we were so fortunate
as to find a small nook described by the two Indians, where firewood
was abundant, and where we could drag our canoe up the bank beyond
reach of the berg-waves. Here we were safe, with a fine outlook across
the fiord <!-- Page 242 --> to the great glaciers and near enough to
see the birth of the icebergs and the wonderful commotion they make,
and hear their wild, roaring rejoicing. The sunset sky seemed to have
been painted for this one mountain mansion, fitting it like a ceiling.
After the fiord was in shadow the level sunbeams continued to pour
through the miles of bergs with ravishing beauty, reflecting and
refracting the purple light like cut crystal. Then all save the tips
of the highest became dead white. These, too, were speedily quenched,
the glowing points vanishing like stars sinking beneath the horizon.
And after the shadows had crept higher, submerging the glaciers and
the ridges between them, the divine alpenglow still lingered on their
highest fountain peaks as they stood transfigured in glorious array.
Now the last of the twilight purple has vanished, the stars begin to
shine, and all trace of the day is gone. Looking across the fiord the
water seems perfectly black, and the two great glaciers are seen
stretching dim and ghostly into the shadowy mountains now darkly
massed against the starry sky.</p>
<p>Next morning it was raining hard, everything looked dismal, and on
the way down the fiord a growling head wind battered the rain in our
faces, but we held doggedly on and by 10 A.M. got out of the fiord
into Stephens Passage. A breeze sprung up in our favor that swept us
bravely on across the passage and around the end of Admiralty Island
by dark. We camped in a boggy hollow on a bluff among scraggy,
usnea-bearded spruces. The rain, bitterly cold and driven by a stormy
wind, thrashed us well while we <!-- Page 243 --> floundered in the
stumpy bog trying to make a fire and supper.</p>
<p>When daylight came we found our camp-ground a very savage place.
How we reached it and established ourselves in the thick darkness it
would be difficult to tell. We crept along the shore a few miles
against strong head winds, then hoisted sail and steered straight
across Lynn Canal to the mainland, which we followed without great
difficulty, the wind having moderated toward evening. Near the
entrance to Icy Strait we met a Hoona who had seen us last year and
who seemed glad to see us. He gave us two salmon, and we made him
happy with tobacco and then pushed on and camped near Sitka Jack's
deserted village.</p>
<p>Though the wind was still ahead next morning, we made about twenty
miles before sundown and camped on the west end of Farewell Island. We
bumped against a hidden rock and sprung a small leak that was easily
stopped with resin. The salmon-berries were ripe. While climbing a
bluff for a view of our course, I discovered moneses, one of my
favorites, and saw many well-traveled deer-trails, though the island
is cut off from the mainland and other islands by at least five or six
miles of icy, berg-encumbered water.</p>
<p>We got under way early next day,--a gray, cloudy morning with rain
and wind. Fair and head winds were about evenly balanced throughout
the day. Tides run fast here, like great rivers. We rowed and paddled
around Point Wimbledon against both wind and tide, creeping close to
the feet of the huge, bold <!-- Page 244 --> rocks of the north wall
of Cross Sound, which here were very steep and awe-inspiring as the
heavy swells from the open sea coming in past Cape Spencer dashed
white against them, tossing our frail canoe up and down lightly as a
feather. The point reached by vegetation shows that the surf dashes up
to a height of about seventy-five or a hundred feet. We were
awe-stricken and began to fear that we might be upset should the ocean
waves rise still higher. But little Stickeen seemed to enjoy the
storm, and gazed at the foam-wreathed cliffs like a dreamy,
comfortable tourist admiring a sunset. We reached the mouth of Taylor
Bay about two or three o'clock in the afternoon, when we had a view of
the open ocean before we entered the bay. Many large bergs from
Glacier Bay were seen drifting out to sea past Cape Spencer. We
reached the head of the fiord now called Taylor Bay at five o'clock
and camped near an immense glacier with a front about three miles wide
stretching across from wall to wall. No icebergs are discharged from
it, as it is separated from the water of the fiord at high tide by a
low, smooth mass of outspread, overswept moraine material, netted with
torrents and small shallow rills from the glacier-front, with here and
there a lakelet, and patches of yellow mosses and garden spots bright
with epilobium, saxifrage, grass-tufts, sedges, and creeping willows
on the higher ground. But only the mosses were sufficiently abundant
to make conspicuous masses of color to relieve the dull slaty gray of
the glacial mud and gravel. The front of the glacier, like all those
which do not discharge <!-- Page 245 --> icebergs, is rounded like a
brow, smooth-looking in general views, but cleft and furrowed,
nevertheless, with chasms and grooves in which the light glows and
shimmers in glorious beauty. The granite walls of the fiord, though
very high, are not deeply sculptured. Only a few deep side
cañons with trees, bushes, grassy and flowery spots interrupt
their massive simplicity, leaving but few of the cliffs absolutely
sheer and bare like those of Yosemite, Sum Dum, or Taku. One of the
side cañons is on the left side of the fiord, the other on the
right, the tributaries of the former leading over by a narrow
tide-channel to the bay next to the eastward, and by a short portage
over into a lake into which pours a branch glacier from the great
glacier. Still another branch from the main glacier turns to the
right. Counting all three of these separate fronts, the width of this
great Taylor Bay Glacier must be about seven or eight miles.</p>
<p>While camp was being made, Hunter Joe climbed the eastern wall in
search of wild mutton, but found none. He fell in with a brown bear,
however, and got a shot at it, but nothing more. Mr. Young and I
crossed the moraine slope, splashing through pools and streams up to
the ice-wall, and made the interesting discovery that the glacier had
been advancing of late years, ploughing up and shoving forward moraine
soil that had been deposited long ago, and overwhelming and grinding
and carrying away the forests on the sides and front of the glacier.
Though not now sending off icebergs, the front is probably
<!-- Page 246 --> far below sea-level at the bottom, thrust forward
beneath its wave-washed moraine.</p>
<p>Along the base of the mountain-wall we found abundance of
salmon-berries, the largest measuring an inch and a half in diameter.
Strawberries, too, are found hereabouts. Some which visiting Indians
brought us were as fine in size and color and flavor as any I ever saw
anywhere. After wandering and wondering an hour or two, admiring the
magnificent rock and crystal scenery about us, we returned to camp at
sundown, planning a grand excursion for the morrow.</p>
<p>I set off early the morning of August 30 before any one else in
camp had stirred, not waiting for breakfast, but only eating a piece
of bread. I had intended getting a cup of coffee, but a wild storm was
blowing and calling, and I could not wait. Running out against the
rain-laden gale and turning to catch my breath, I saw that the
minister's little dog had left his bed in the tent and was coming
boring through the storm, evidently determined to follow me. I told
him to go back, that such a day as this had nothing for him.</p>
<p>“Go back,” I shouted, “and get your
breakfast.” But he simply stood with his head down, and when I
began to urge my way again, looking around, I saw he was still
following me. So I at last told him to come on if he must and gave him
a piece of the bread I had in my pocket.</p>
<p>Instead of falling, the rain, mixed with misty shreds of clouds,
was flying in level sheets, and the wind was <!-- Page 247 -->
roaring as I had never heard wind roar before. Over the icy levels and
over the woods, on the mountains, over the jagged rocks and spires and
chasms of the glacier it boomed and moaned and roared, filling the
fiord in even, gray, structureless gloom, inspiring and awful. I first
struggled up in the face of the blast to the east end of the ice-wall,
where a patch of forest had been carried away by the glacier when it
was advancing. I noticed a few stumps well out on the moraine flat,
showing that its present bare, raw condition was not the condition of
fifty or a hundred years ago. In front of this part of the glacier
there is a small moraine lake about half a mile in length, around the
margin of which are a considerable number of trees standing knee-deep,
and of course dead. This also is a result of the recent advance of the
ice.</p>
<p>Pushing up through the ragged edge of the woods on the left margin
of the glacier, the storm seemed to increase in violence, so that it
was difficult to draw breath in facing it; therefore I took shelter
back of a tree to enjoy it and wait, hoping that it would at last
somewhat abate. Here the glacier, descending over an abrupt rock,
falls forward in grand cascades, while a stream swollen by the rain
was now a torrent,--wind, rain, ice-torrent, and water-torrent in one
grand symphony.</p>
<p>At length the storm seemed to abate somewhat, and I took off my
heavy rubber boots, with which I had waded the glacial streams on the
flat, and laid them with my overcoat on a log, where I might find them
<!-- Page 248 --> on my way back, knowing I would be drenched anyhow,
and firmly tied my mountain shoes, tightened my belt, shouldered my
ice-axe, and, thus free and ready for rough work, pushed on,
regardless as possible of mere rain. Making my way up a steep granite
slope, its projecting polished bosses encumbered here and there by
boulders and the ground and bruised ruins of the ragged edge of the
forest that had been uprooted by the glacier during its recent
advance, I traced the side of the glacier for two or three miles,
finding everywhere evidence of its having encroached on the woods,
which here run back along its edge for fifteen or twenty miles. Under
the projecting edge of this vast ice-river I could see down beneath it
to a depth of fifty feet or so in some places, where logs and branches
were being crushed to pulp, some of it almost fine enough for paper,
though most of it stringy and coarse.</p>
<p>After thus tracing the margin of the glacier for three or four
miles, I chopped steps and climbed to the top, and as far as the eye
could reach, the nearly level glacier stretched indefinitely away in
the gray cloudy sky, a prairie of ice. The wind was now almost
moderate, though rain continued to fall, which I did not mind, but a
tendency to mist in the drooping draggled clouds made me hesitate
about attempting to cross to the opposite shore. Although the distance
was only six or seven miles, no traces at this time could be seen of
the mountains on the other side, and in case the sky should grow
darker, as it seemed inclined to do, I feared that when I got out of
sight of <!-- Page 249 --> land and perhaps into a maze of crevasses I
might find difficulty in winning a way back.</p>
<p>Lingering a while and sauntering about in sight of the shore, I
found this eastern side of the glacier remarkably free from large
crevasses. Nearly all I met were so narrow I could step across them
almost anywhere, while the few wide ones were easily avoided by going
up or down along their sides to where they narrowed. The dismal cloud
ceiling showed rifts here and there, and, thus encouraged, I struck
out for the west shore, aiming to strike it five or six miles above
the front wall, cautiously taking compass bearings at short intervals
to enable me to find my way back should the weather darken again with
mist or rain or snow. The structure lines of the glacier itself were,
however, my main guide. All went well. I came to a deeply furrowed
section about two miles in width where I had to zigzag in long,
tedious tacks and make narrow doublings, tracing the edges of wide
longitudinal furrows and chasms until I could find a bridge connecting
their sides, oftentimes making the direct distance ten times over. The
walking was good of its kind, however, and by dint of patient doubling
and axe-work on dangerous places, I gained the opposite shore in about
three hours, the width of the glacier at this point being about seven
miles. Occasionally, while making my way, the clouds lifted a little,
revealing a few bald, rough mountains sunk to the throat in the broad,
icy sea which encompassed them on all sides, sweeping on forever and
forever as we count time, wearing them away, giving them the
<!-- Page 250 --> shape they are destined to take when in the fullness
of time they shall be parts of new landscapes.</p>
<p>Ere I lost sight of the east-side mountains, those on the west came
in sight, so that holding my course was easy, and, though making
haste, I halted for a moment to gaze down into the beautiful pure blue
crevasses and to drink at the lovely blue wells, the most beautiful of
all Nature's water-basins, or at the rills and streams outspread over
the ice-land prairie, never ceasing to admire their lovely color and
music as they glided and swirled in their blue crystal channels and
potholes, and the rumbling of the moulins, or mills, where streams
poured into blue-walled pits of unknown depth, some of them as
regularly circular as if bored with augers. Interesting, too, were the
cascades over blue cliffs, where streams fell into crevasses or slid
almost noiselessly down slopes so smooth and frictionless their motion
was concealed. The round or oval wells, however, from one to ten feet
wide, and from one to twenty or thirty feet deep, were perhaps the
most beautiful of all, the water so pure as to be almost invisible. My
widest views did not probably exceed fifteen miles, the rain and mist
making distances seem greater.</p>
<p>On reaching the farther shore and tracing it a few miles to
northward, I found a large portion of the glacier-current sweeping out
westward in a bold and beautiful curve around the shoulder of a
mountain as if going direct to the open sea. Leaving the main trunk,
it breaks into a magnificent uproar of pinnacles and spires and
up-heaving, splashing wave-shaped <!-- Page 251 -->
masses, a crystal cataract incomparably greater and wilder than a
score of Niagaras.</p>
<p>Tracing its channel three or four miles, I found that it fell into
a lake, which it fills with bergs. The front of this branch of the
glacier is about three miles wide. I first took the lake to be the
head of an arm of the sea, but, going down to its shore and tasting
it, I found it fresh, and by my aneroid perhaps less than a hundred
feet above sea-level. It is probably separated from the sea only by a
moraine dam. I had not time to go around its shores, as it was now
near five o'clock and I was about fifteen miles from camp, and I had
to make haste to recross the glacier before dark, which would come on
about eight o'clock. I therefore made haste up to the main glacier,
and, shaping my course by compass and the structure lines of the ice,
set off from the land out on to the grand crystal prairie again. All
was so silent and so concentred, owing to the low dragging mist, the
beauty close about me was all the more keenly felt, though tinged with
a dim sense of danger, as if coming events were casting shadows. I was
soon out of sight of land, and the evening dusk that on cloudy days
precedes the real night gloom came stealing on and only ice was in
sight, and the only sounds, save the low rumbling of the mills and the
rattle of falling stones at long intervals, were the low, terribly
earnest moanings of the wind or distant waterfalls coming through the
thickening gloom. After two hours of hard work I came to a maze of
crevasses of appalling depth and width which could not be passed
apparently either up or <!-- Page 252 -->
down. I traced them with firm nerve developed by the danger, making
wide jumps, poising cautiously on dizzy edges after cutting footholds,
taking wide crevasses at a grand leap at once frightful and inspiring.
Many a mile was thus traveled, mostly up and down the glacier, making
but little real headway, running much of the time as the danger of
having to pass the night on the ice became more and more imminent.
This I could do, though with the weather and my rain-soaked condition
it would be trying at best. In treading the mazes of this crevassed
section I had frequently to cross bridges that were only knife-edges
for twenty or thirty feet, cutting off the sharp tops and leaving them
flat so that little Stickeen could follow me. These I had to straddle,
cutting off the top as I progressed and hitching gradually ahead like
a boy riding a rail fence. All this time the little dog followed me
bravely, never hesitating on the brink of any crevasse that I had
jumped, but now that it was becoming dark and the crevasses became
more troublesome, he followed close at my heels instead of scampering
far and wide, where the ice was at all smooth, as he had in the
forenoon. No land was now in sight. The mist fell lower and darker and
snow began to fly. I could not see far enough up and down the glacier
to judge how best to work out of the bewildering labyrinth, and how
hard I tried while there was yet hope of reaching camp that night! a
hope which was fast growing dim like the sky. After dark, on such
ground, to keep from freezing, I could only jump up and down until
morning on a piece of flat <!-- Page 253 --> ice between the
crevasses, dance to the boding music of the winds and waters, and as I
was already tired and hungry I would be in bad condition for such ice
work. Many times I was put to my mettle, but with a firm-braced nerve,
all the more unflinching as the dangers thickened, I worked out of
that terrible ice-web, and with blood fairly up Stickeen and I ran
over common danger without fatigue. Our very hardest trial was in
getting across the very last of the sliver bridges. After examining
the first of the two widest crevasses, I followed its edge half a mile
or so up and down and discovered that its narrowest spot was about
eight feet wide, which was the limit of what I was able to jump.
Moreover, the side I was on--that is, the west side--was about a foot
higher than the other, and I feared that in case I should be stopped
by a still wider impassable crevasse ahead that I would hardly be able
to take back that jump from its lower side. The ice beyond, however,
as far as I could see it, looked temptingly smooth. Therefore, after
carefully making a socket for my foot on the rounded brink, I jumped,
but found that I had nothing to spare and more than ever dreaded
having to retrace my way. Little Stickeen jumped this, however,
without apparently taking a second look at it, and we ran ahead
joyfully over smooth, level ice, hoping we were now leaving all danger
behind us. But hardly had we gone a hundred or two yards when to our
dismay we found ourselves on the very widest of all the longitudinal
crevasses we had yet encountered. It was about forty feet wide. I ran
anxiously <!-- Page 254 --> up the side of it to northward, eagerly
hoping that I could get around its head, but my worst fears were
realized when at a distance of about a mile or less it ran into the
crevasse that I had just jumped. I then ran down the edge for a mile
or more below the point where I had first met it, and found that its
lower end also united with the crevasse I had jumped, showing dismally
that we were on an island two or three hundred yards wide and about
two miles long and the only way of escape from this island was by
turning back and jumping again that crevasse which I dreaded, or
venturing ahead across the giant crevasse by the very worst of the
sliver bridges I had ever seen. It was so badly weathered and melted
down that it formed a knife-edge, and extended across from side to
side in a low, drooping curve like that made by a loose rope attached
at each end at the same height. But the worst difficulty was that the
ends of the down-curving sliver were attached to the sides at a depth
of about eight or ten feet below the surface of the glacier. Getting
down to the end of the bridge, and then after crossing it getting up
the other side, seemed hardly possible. However, I decided to dare the
dangers of the fearful sliver rather than to attempt to retrace my
steps. Accordingly I dug a low groove in the rounded edge for my knees
to rest in and, leaning over, began to cut a narrow foothold on the
steep, smooth side. When I was doing this, Stickeen came up behind me,
pushed his head over my shoulder, looked into the crevasses and along
the narrow knife-edge, then turned and looked in my face, muttering
<!-- Page 255 --> and whining as if trying to say, “Surely you
are not going down there.” I said, “Yes, Stickeen, this is
the only way.” He then began to cry and ran wildly along the rim
of the crevasse, searching for a better way, then, returning baffled,
of course, he came behind me and lay down and cried louder and
louder.</p>
<p>After getting down one step I cautiously stooped and cut another
and another in succession until I reached the point where the sliver
was attached to the wall. There, cautiously balancing, I chipped down
the upcurved end of the bridge until I had formed a small level
platform about a foot wide, then, bending forward, got astride of the
end of the sliver, steadied myself with my knees, then cut off the top
of the sliver, hitching myself forward an inch or two at a time,
leaving it about four inches wide for Stickeen. Arrived at the farther
end of the sliver, which was about seventy-five feet long, I chipped
another little platform on its upcurved end, cautiously rose to my
feet, and with infinite pains cut narrow notch steps and finger-holds
in the wall and finally got safely across. All this dreadful time poor
little Stickeen was crying as if his heart was broken, and when I
called to him in as reassuring a voice as I could muster, he only
cried the louder, as if trying to say that he never, never could get
down there--the only time that the brave little fellow appeared to
know what danger was. After going away as if I was leaving him, he
still howled and cried without venturing to try to follow me.
Returning to the edge of the crevasse, I told him that I must go, that
he could come if he only tried, <!-- Page 256 --> and finally in
despair he hushed his cries, slid his little feet slowly down into my
footsteps out on the big sliver, walked slowly and cautiously along
the sliver as if holding his breath, while the snow was falling and
the wind was moaning and threatening to blow him off. When he arrived
at the foot of the slope below me, I was kneeling on the brink ready
to assist him in case he should be unable to reach the top. He looked
up along the row of notched steps I had made, as if fixing them in his
mind, then with a nervous spring he whizzed up and passed me out on to
the level ice, and ran and cried and barked and rolled about fairly
hysterical in the sudden revulsion from the depth of despair to
triumphant joy. I tried to catch him and pet him and tell him how good
and brave he was, but he would not be caught. He ran round and round,
swirling like autumn leaves in an eddy, lay down and rolled head over
heels. I told him we still had far to go and that we must now stop all
nonsense and get off the ice before dark. I knew by the ice-lines that
every step was now taking me nearer the shore and soon it came in
sight. The head-land four or five miles back from the front, covered
with spruce trees, loomed faintly but surely through the mist and
light fall of snow not more than two miles away. The ice now proved
good all the way across, and we reached the lateral moraine just at
dusk, then with trembling limbs, now that the danger was over, we
staggered and stumbled down the bouldery edge of the glacier and got
over the dangerous rocks by the cascades while yet a faint light
lingered. <!-- Page 257 --> We were safe, and then, too, came limp
weariness such as no ordinary work ever produces, however hard it may
be. Wearily we stumbled down through the woods, over logs and brush
and roots, devil's-clubs pricking us at every faint blundering tumble.
At last we got out on the smooth mud slope with only a mile of slow
but sure dragging of weary limbs to camp. The Indians had been firing
guns to guide me and had a fine supper and fire ready, though fearing
they would be compelled to seek us in the morning, a care not often
applied to me. Stickeen and I were too tired to eat much, and, strange
to say, too tired to sleep. Both of us, springing up in the night
again and again, fancied we were still on that dreadful ice bridge in
the shadow of death.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, we arose next morning in newness of life. Never
before had rocks and ice and trees seemed so beautiful and wonderful,
even the cold, biting rainstorm that was blowing seemed full of
loving-kindness, wonderful compensation for all that we had endured,
and we sailed down the bay through the gray, driving rain
rejoicing.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />