Chesuncook - Part 6
When I awoke in the morning the weather was drizzling. One of the Indians
was lying outside, rolled in his blanket, on the opposite side of the fire,
for want of room. Joe had neglected to awake my companion, and he had done
no hunting that night. Tahmunt was making a cross-bar for his canoe with
a singularly shaped knife, such as I have since seen other Indians using.
The blade was thin, about three quarters of an inch wide, and eight or
nine inches long, but curved out of its plane into a hook, which he said
made it more convenient to shave with. As the Indians very far north and
northwest use the same kind of knife, I suspect that it was made according
to an aboriginal pattern, though some white artisans may use a similar
one. The Indians baked a loaf of flour bread in a spider on its edge before
the fire for their breakfast; and while my companion was making tea, I
caught a dozen sizable fishes in the Penobscot, two kinds of sucker and
one trout. After we had breakfasted by ourselves, one of our bedfellows,
who had also breakfasted, came along, and, being invited, took a cup of
tea, and finally, taking up the common platter, licked it clean. But he
was nothing to a white fellow, a lumberer, who was continually stuffing
himself with the Indians' moose-meat, and was the butt of his companions
accordingly. He seems to have thought that it was a feast "to eat all."
It is commonly said that the white man finally surpasses the Indian on
his own ground, and it was proved true in this case. I cannot swear to
his employment during the hours of darkness, but I saw him at it again
as soon as it was light, though he came a quarter of a mile to his work.
The rain prevented our continuing any longer in the
woods; so giving some of our provisions and utensils to the Indians, we
took leave of them. This being the steamer's day, I set out for the lake
at once.
I walked over the carry alone and waited at the head
of the lake. An eagle, or some other large bird, flew screaming away from
its perch by the shore at my approach. For an hour after I reached the
shore there was not a human being to be seen, and I had all that wide prospect
to myself. I thought that I heard the sound of the steamer before she came
in sight on the open lake. I noticed at the landing, when the steamer came
in, one of our bedfellows, who had been a-moose-hunting the night before,
now very sprucely dressed in a clean white shirt and fine black pants,
a true Indian dandy, who had evidently come over the carry to show himself
to any arrivers on the north shore of Moosehead Lake, just as New York
dandies take a turn up Broadway and stand on the steps of a hotel.
Midway the lake we took on board two manly-looking
middle-aged men, with their bateau, who had been exploring for six
weeks as far as the Canada line, and had let their beards grow. They had
the skin of a beaver, which they had recently caught, stretched on an oval
hoop, though the fur was not good at that season. I talked with one of
them, telling him that I had come all this distance partly to see where
the white-pine, the Eastern stuff of which our houses are built, grew,
but that on this and a previous excursion into another part of Maine I
had found it a scarce tree; and I asked him where I must look for it. With
a smile, he answered, that he could hardly tell me. However, he said that
he had found enough to employ two teams the next winter in a place where
there was thought to be none left. What was considered a "top-top" tree
now was not looked at twenty years ago, when he first went into the business;
but they succeeded very well now with what was considered quite inferior
timber then. The explorer used to cut into a tree higher and higher up,
to see if it was false-hearted, and if there was a rotten heart as big
as his arm, he let it alone; but now they cut such a tree, and sawed it
all around the rot, and it made the very best of boards, for in such a
case they were never shaky.
One connected with lumbering operations at Bangor
told me that the largest pine belonging to his firm, cut the previous winter,
"scaled" in the woods four thousand five hundred feet, and was worth ninety
dollars in the log at the Bangor boom in Oldtown. They cut a road three
and a half miles long for this tree alone. He thought that the principal
locality for the white-pine that came down the Penobscot now was at the
head of the East Branch and the Allegash, about Webster Stream and Eagle
and Chamberlain Lakes. Much timber has been stolen from the public lands.
(Pray, what kind of forest-warden is the Public itself?) I heard of one
man who, having discovered some particularly fine trees just within the
boundaries of the public lands, and not daring to employ an accomplice,
cut them down, and by means of block and tackle, without cattle, tumbled
them into a stream, and so succeeded in getting off with them without the
least assistance. Surely, stealing pine-trees in this way is not so mean
as robbing hen-roosts.
We reached Monson that night, and the next day rode
to Bangor, all the way in the rain again, varying our route a little. Some
of the taverns on this road, which were particularly dirty, were plainly
in a transition state from the camp to the house.
The next forenoon we went to Oldtown. One slender
old Indian on the Oldtown shore, who recognized my companion, was full
of mirth and gestures, like a Frenchman. A Catholic priest crossed to the
island in the same bateau with us. The Indian houses are framed,
mostly of one story, and in rows one behind another, at the south end of
the island, with a few scattered ones. I counted about forty, not including
the church and what my companion called the council-house. The last, which
I suppose is their town-house, was regularly framed and shingled like the
rest. There were several of two stories, quite neat, with front-yards enclosed,
and one at least had green blinds. Here and there were moose-hides stretched
and drying about them. There were no cart-paths, nor tracks of horses,
but foot-paths; very little land cultivated, but an abundance of weeds,
indigenous and naturalized; more introduced weeds than useful vegetables,
as the Indian is said to cultivate the vices rather than the virtues of
the white man. Yet this village was cleaner than I expected, far cleaner
than such Irish villages as I have seen. The children were not particularly
ragged nor dirty. The little boys met us with bow in hand and arrow on
string, and cried, "Put up a cent." Verily, the Indian has but a feeble
hold on his bow now; but the curiosity of the white man is insatiable,
and from the first he has been eager to witness this forest accomplishment.
That elastic piece of wood with its feathered dart, so sure to be unstrung
by contact with civilization, will serve for the type, the coat-of-arms
of the savage. Alas for the Hunter Race! the white man has driven off their
game, and substituted a cent in its place. I saw an Indian woman washing
at the water's edge. She stood on a rock, and, after dipping the clothes
in the stream, laid them on the rock, and beat them with a short club.
In the graveyard, which was crowded with graves, and overrun with weeds,
I noticed an inscription in Indian, painted on a wooden grave-board. There
was a large wooden cross on the island.
Since my companion knew him, we called on Governor
Neptune, who lived in a little "ten-footer," one of the humblest of them
all. Personalities are allowable in speaking of public men, therefore I
will give the particulars of our visit. He was a-bed. When we entered the
room, which was one half of the house, he was sitting on the side of the
bed. There was a clock hanging in one corner. He had on a black frock-coat,
and black pants, much worn, white cotton shirt, socks, a red silk handkerchief
about his neck, and a straw hat. His black hair was only slightly grayed.
He had very broad cheeks, and his features were decidedly and refreshingly
different from those of any of the upstart Native American party whom I
have seen. He was no darker than many old white men. He told me that he
was eighty-nine; but he was going a-moose-hunting that fall, as he had
been the previous one. Probably his companions did the hunting. We saw
various squaws dodging about. One sat on the bed by his side and helped
him out with his stories. They were remarkably corpulent, with smooth,
round faces, apparently full of good-humor. Certainly our much-abused climate
had not dried up their adipose substance. While we were there,--for we
stayed a good while,--one went over to Oldtown, returned and cut out a
dress, which she had bought, on another bed in the room. The Governor said,
that "he could remember when the moose were much larger; that they did
not use to be in the woods, but came out of the water, as all deer did.
Moose was whale once. Away down Merrimack way, a whale came ashore in a
shallow bay. Sea went out and left him, and he came up on land a moose.
What made them know he was a whale was, that at first, before he began
to run in bushes, he had no bowels inside, but"------and then the squaw
who sat on the bed by his side, as the Governor's aid, and had been putting
in a word now and then and confirming the story, asked me what we called
that soft thing we find along the sea-shore. "Jelly-fish," I suggested.
"Yes," said he, "no bowels, but jelly-fish."
There may be some truth in what he said about the
moose growing larger formerly; for the quaint John Josselyn, a physician
who spent many years in this very district of Maine in the seventeenth
century, says, that the tips of their horns "are sometimes found to be
two fathoms asunder,"--and he is particular to tell us that a fathom is
six feet,--"and [they are] in height, from the toe of the fore foot to
the pitch of the shoulder, twelve foot, both which hath been taken by some
of my sceptique readers to be monstrous lies"; and he adds, "There are
certain transcendentia in every creature, w hich are the indelible characters
of God, and which discover God." This is a greater dilemma to be caught
in than is presented by the cranium of the young Bechuana ox, apparently
another of the transcendentia, in the collection of Thomas Steel,
Upper Brook Street, London, whose "entire length of horn, from tip to tip,
along the curve, is 13 ft. 5 in.; distance (straight) between the tips
of the horns, 8 ft. 8½ in." However, the size both of the moose
and the cougar, as I have found, is generally rather underrated than overrated,
and I should be inclined to add to the popular estimate a part of what
I subtracted from Josselyn's.
But we talked mostly with the Governor's son-in-law,
a very sensible Indian; and the Governor, being so old and deaf, permitted
himself to be ignored, while we asked questions about him. The former said,
that there were two political parties among them,--one in favor of schools,
and the other opposed to them, or rather they did not wish to resist the
priest, who was opposed to them. The first had just prevailed at the election
and sent their man to the legislature. Neptune and Aitteon and he himself
were in favor of schools. He said, "If Indians got learning, they would
keep their money." When we asked where Joe's father, Aitteon, was, he knew
that he must be at Lincoln, though he was about going a-moose-hunting,
for a messenger had just gone to him there to get his signature to some
papers. I asked Neptune if they had any of the old breed of dogs yet. He
answered, "Yes." "But that," said I, pointing to one that had just come
in, "is a Yankee dog." He assented. I said that he did not look like a
good one. "O yes!" he said, and he told, with much gusto, how, the year
before, he had caught and held by the throat a wolf. A very small black
puppy rushed into the room and made at the Governor's feet, as he sat in
his stockings with his legs dangling from the bedside. The Governor rubbed
his hands and dared him to come on, entering into the sport with spirit.
Nothing more that was significant transpired, to my knowledge, during this
interview. This was the first time that I ever called on a governor, but,
as I did not ask for an office, I can speak of it with the more freedom.
An Indian who was making canoes behind a house, looking
up pleasantly from his work,--for he knew my companion,--said that his
name was Old John Pennyweight. I had heard of him long before, and I inquired
after one of his contemporaries, Joe Four-pence-ha'penny; but, alas! he
no longer circulates. I made a faithful study of canoe-building, and I
thought that I should like to serve an apprenticeship at that trade for
one season, going into the woods for bark with my "boss," making the canoe
there, and returning in it at last.
While the bateau was coming over to take us
off, I picked up some fragments of arrow-heads on the shore, and one broken
stone chisel, which were greater novelties to the Indians than to me. After
this, on Old Fort Hill, at the bend of the Penobscot, three miles above
Bangor, looking for the site of an Indian town which some think stood thereabouts,
I found more arrow-heads, and two little dark and crumbling fragments of
Indian earthenware, in the ashes of their fires. The Indians on the Island
appeared to live quite happily and to be well treated by the inhabitants
of Oldtown.
We visited Veazie's mills, just below the Island,
where were sixteen sets of saws,--some gang saws, sixteen in a gang, not
to mention circular saws. On one side, they were hauling the logs up an
inclined plane by water-power; on the other, passing out the boards, planks,
and sawed timber, and forming them into rafts. The trees were literally
drawn and quartered there. In forming the rafts, they use the lower three
feet of hard-wood saplings, which have a crooked and knobbed but-end, for
bolts, passing them up through holes bored in the corners and sides of
the rafts, and keying them. In another apartment they were making fence-slats,
such as stand all over New England, out of odds and ends,--and it may be
that I saw where the picket-fence behind which I dwell at home came from.
I was surprised to find a boy collecting the long edgings of boards as
fast as cut off, and thrusting them down a hopper, where they were ground
up beneath the mill, that they might be out of the way; otherwise they
accumulate in vast piles by the side of the building, increasing the danger
from fire, or, floating off, they obstruct the river. This was not only
a saw-mill, but a grist-mill, then. The inhabitants of Oldtown, Stillwater,
and Bangor cannot suffer for want of kindling stuff, surely. Some get their
living exclusively by picking up the drift-wood and selling it by the cord
in the winter. In one place I saw where an Irishman, who keeps a team and
a man for the purpose, had covered the shore for a long distance with regular
piles, and I was told that he had sold twelve hundred dollars' worth in
a year. Another, who lived by the shore, told me that he got all the material
of his out-buildings and fences from the river; and in that neighborhood
I perceived that this refuse wood was frequently used instead of sand to
fill hollows with, being apparently cheaper than dirt.
I got my first clear view of Ktaadn, on this excursion,
from a hill about two miles northwest of Bangor, whither I went for this
purpose. After this I was ready to return to Massachusetts.
Humboldt has written an interesting chapter on the
primitive forest, but no one has yet described for me the difference between
that wild forest which once occupied our oldest townships, and the tame
one which I find there to-day. It is a difference which would be worth
attending to. The civilized man not only clears the land permanently to
a great extent, and cultivates open fields, but he tames and cultivates
to a certain extent the forest itself. By his mere presence, almost, he
changes the nature of the trees as no other creature does. The sun and
air, and perhaps fire, have been introduced, and grain raised where it
stands. It has lost its wild, damp, and shaggy look, the countless fallen
and decaying trees are gone, and consequently that thick coat of moss which
lived on them is gone too. The earth is comparatively bare and smooth and
dry. The most primitive places left with us are the swamps, where the spruce
still grows shaggy with usnea. The surface of the ground in the Maine woods
is everywhere spongy and saturated with moisture. I noticed that the plants
which cover the forest floor there are such as are commonly confined to
swamps with us,--the Clintonia borealis, orchises, creeping snowberry,
and others; and the prevailing aster there is the Aster acuminatus,
which with us grows in damp and shady woods. The asters cordifolius
and macrophyllus also are common, asters of little or no color,
and sometimes without petals. I saw no soft, spreading, second-growth white-pines,
with smooth bark, acknowledging the presence of the wood-chopper, but even
the young white-pines were all tall and slender rough-barked trees.
Those Maine woods differ essentially from ours. There
you are never reminded that the wilderness which you are threading is,
after all, some villager's familiar wood-lot, some widow's thirds, from
which her ancestors have sledded fuel for generations, minutely described
in some old deed which is recorded, of which the owner has got a plan too,
and old bound-marks may be found every forty rods, if you will search.
'T is true, the map may inform you that you stand on land granted by the
State to some academy, or on Bingham's purchase; but these names do not
impose on you, for you see nothing to remind you of the academy or of Bingham.
What were the "forests" of England to these? One writer relates of the
Isle of Wight, that in Charles the Second's time "there were woods in the
island so complete and extensive, that it is said a squirrel might have
travelled in several parts many leagues together on the top of the trees."
If it were not for the rivers, (and he might go round their heads,) a squirrel
could here travel thus the whole breadth of the country.
We have as yet had no adequate account of a primitive
pine-forest. I have noticed that in a physical atlas lately published in
Massachusetts, and used in our schools, the "wood land" of North America
is limited almost solely to the valleys of the Ohio and some of the Great
Lakes, and the great pine-forests of the globe are not represented. In
our vicinity, for instance, New Brunswick and Maine are exhibited as bare
as Greenland. It may be that the children of Greenville, at the foot of
Moosehead Lake, who surely are not likely to be scared by an owl, are referred
to the valley of the Ohio to get an idea of a forest; but they would not
know what to do with their moose, bear, caribou, beaver, etc., there. Shall
we leave it to an Englishman to inform us, that "in North America, both
in the United States and Canada, are the most extensive pine-forests in
the world"? The greater part of New Brunswick, the northern half of Maine,
and
adjacent parts of Canada, not to mention the northeastern part of New York
and other tracts farther off, are still covered with an almost unbroken
pine-forest.
But Maine, perhaps, will soon be where Massachusetts
is. A good part of her territory is already as bare and commonplace as
much of our neighborhood, and her villages generally are not so well shaded
as ours. We seem to think that the earth must go through the ordeal of
sheep-pasturage before it is habitable by man. Consider Nahant, the resort
of all the fashion of Boston,--which peninsula I saw but indistinctly in
the twilight, when I steamed by it, and thought that it was unchanged since
the discovery. John Smith described it in 1614 as "the Mattahunts, two
pleasant isles of groves, gardens, and cornfields"; and others tell us
that it was once well wooded, and even furnished timber to build the wharves
of Boston. Now it is difficult to make a tree grow there, and the visitor
comes away with a vision of Mr. Tudor's ugly fences, a rod high, designed
to protect a few pear-shrubs. And what are we coming to in our Middlesex
towns?--a bald, staring town-house, or meeting-house, and a bare liberty-pole,
as leafless as it is fruitless, for all I can see. We shall be obliged
to import the timber for the last, hereafter, or splice such sticks as
we have;--and our ideas of liberty are equally mean with these. The very
willow-rows lopped every three years for fuel or powder,--and every sizable
pine and oak, or other forest tree, cut down within the memory of man!
As if indiv1idual speculators were to be allowed to export the clouds out
of the sky, or the stars out of the firmament, one by one. We shall be
reduced to gnaw the very crust of the earth for nutriment.
They have even descended to smaller game. They have
lately, as I hear, invented a machine for chopping up huckleberry-bushes
fine, and so converting them into fuel!--bushes which, for fruit alone,
are worth all the pear-trees in the country many times over. (I can give
you a list of the three best kinds, if you want it.) At this rate, we shall
all be obliged to let our beards grow at least, if only to hide the nakedness
of the land and make a sylvan appearance. The farmer sometimes talks of
"brushing up," simply as if bare ground looked better than clothed ground,
than that which wears its natural vesture,--as if the wild hedges, which,
perhaps, are more to his children than his whole farm beside, were dirt.
I know of one who deserves to be called the Tree-hater, and, perhaps, to
leave this for a new patronymic to his children. You would think that he
had been warned by an oracle that he would be killed by the fall of a tree,
and so was resolved to anticipate them. The journalists think that they
cannot say too much in favor of such "improvements" in husbandry; it is
a safe theme, like piety; but as for the beauty of one of these "model
farms," I would as lief see a patent churn and a man turning it. They are,
commonly, places merely where somebody is making money, it may be counterfeiting.
The virtue of making two blades of grass grow where only one grew before
does not begin to be superhuman.
Nevertheless, it was a relief to get back to our
smooth, but still varied landscape. For a permanent residence, it seemed
to me that there could be no comparison between this and the wilderness,
necessary as the latter is for a resource and a background, the raw material
of all our civilization. The wilderness is simple, almost to barrenness.
The partially cultivated country it is which chiefly has inspired, and
will continue to inspire, the strains of poets, such as compose the mass
of any literature. Our woods are sylvan, and their inhabitants woodmen
and rustics,--that is, selvaggia, and the inhabitants are salvages.
A civilized man, using the word in the ordinary sense, with his ideas and
associations, must at length pine there, like a cultivated plant, which
clasps its fibres about a crude and undissolved mass of peat. At the extreme
North, the voyagers are obliged to dance and act plays for employment.
Perhaps our own woods and fields,--in the best wooded towns, where we need
not quarrel about the huckleberries,--with the primitive swamps scattered
here and there in their midst, but not prevailing over them, are the perfection
of parks and groves, gardens, arbors, paths, vistas, and landscapes. They
are the natural consequence of what art and refinement we as a people have,--the
common which each village possesses, its true paradise, in comparison with
which all elaborately and wilfully wealth-constructed parks and gardens
are paltry imitations. Or, I would rather say, such were our groves
twenty years ago. The poet's, commonly, is not a logger's path, but a woodman's.
The logger and pioneer have preceded him, like John the Baptist; eaten
the wild honey, it may be, but the locusts also; banished decaying wood
and the spongy mosses which feed on it, and built hearths and humanized
Nature for him.
But there are spirits of a yet more liberal culture,
to whom no simplicity is barren. There are not only stately pines, but
fragile flowers, like the orchises, commonly described as too delicate
for cultivation, which derive their nutriment from the crudest mass of
peat. These remind us, that, not only for strength, but for beauty, the
poet must, from time to time, travel the logger's path and the Indian's
trail, to drink at some new and more bracing fountain of the Muses, far
in the recesses of the wilderness.
The kings of England formerly had their forests "to
hold the king's game," for sport or food, sometimes destroying villages
to create or extend them; and I think that they were impelled by a true
instinct. Why should not we, who have renounced the king's authority, have
our national preserves, where no villages need be destroyed, in which the
bear and panther, and some even of the hunter race, may still exist, and
not be "civilized off the face of the earth,"--our forests, not to hold
the king's game merely, but to hold and preserve the king himself also,
the lord of creation,--not for idle sport or food, but for inspiration
and our own true re-creation? or shall we, like villains, grub them all
up, poaching on our own national domains?
[ 홈 ] [ 위로 ] [ Thoreau's Ktaadn - 1 ] [ Thoreau's Ktaadn - 2 ] [ Thoreau's Ktaadn - 3 ] [ Thoreau's Ktaadn - 4 ] [ Thoreau's Ktaadn - 5 ] [ Thoreau's Ktaadn - 6 ] [ Thoreau's Chesuncook - 1 ] [ Thoreau's Chesuncook - 2 ] [ Thoreau's Chesuncook - 3 ] [ Thoreau's Chesuncook - 4 ] [ Thoreau's Chesuncook - 5 ] [ Thoreau's Chesuncook - 6 ] [ Thoreau's Allegash & East Branch - 1 ] [ Thoreau's Allegash & East Branch - 2 ] [ Thoreau's Allegash & East Branch - 3 ] [ Thoreau's Allegash & East Branch - 4 ] [ Thoreau's Allegash & East Branch - 5 ] [ Thoreau's Allegash & East Branch - 6 ] [ Thoreau's Allegash & East Branch - 7 ] [ Thoreau's Allegash & East Branch - 8 ] [ Thoreau's Allegash & East Branch - 9 ] [ Thoreau's Allegash & East Branch - 10 ]
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