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authornfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-01-23 03:10:20 -0800
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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #65123 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/65123)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Gold Hunting in Alaska, by Joseph Grinnell
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Gold Hunting in Alaska
-
-Author: Joseph Grinnell
-
-Editor: Elizabeth Grinnell
-
-Release Date: April 20, 2021 [eBook #65123]
-[Last updated: July 3, 2022]
-
-Language: Englilsh
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: Tom Cosmas produced from files made available on The Internet
- Archive
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK GOLD HUNTING IN ALASKA ***
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber Note
-
-Text emphasis is denoted as _Italics_.
-
-
-
-
-Gold Hunting in Alaska
-
-
-_AS TOLD BY_
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Joseph Grinnell
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-Edited by Elizabeth Grinnell
-
- Author of "How John and I Brought Up the Child," "John and I and the
- Church," "Our Feathered Friends," "For the Sake of a Name," etc.
-
-
-Dedicated to Disappointed gold=hunters the world over
-
-
-
-David C. Cook Publishing Company
-
-ELGIN, ILL., AND
-
-36 WASHINGTON STREET, CHICAGO
-
-
-ALASKA.
-
- The New World brings her daughter out
- With fuss and bluster now;
- Adorers seek her snow-white hand,
- And at her beauty bow.
- Each strives her favor first to gain,
- And rudely steps upon her train.
-
- They court her while they call her "cold"
- And "distant" to her face;
- The heiress smiles, while quick breaths lift
- Her frills of ancient lace--
- The eyes of all her suitors rest
- On glint of gold upon her breast.--E. G.
-
-
- Copyright, 1901,
- By David C. Cook Publishing Company.
-
-
-
-
-Gold Hunting in Alaska.
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE.
-
-
-The following story was originally written in pencil on any sort of
-paper at hand, and intended merely for "the folks at home." It is
-only by a prior claim to the manuscript that the young gold-hunter's
-mother has obtained his consent to publish it. The diary has been
-changed but little, nor has much been added to make it as it stands.
-The narrative is true from beginning to end, including the proper
-names of persons and vessels and mining companies. It is offered to
-the David C. Cook Publishing Company with no further apologies for
-its sometimes boyish style of construction. It will give the reader,
-be he man or boy, a hint as to how a young fellow may spend his time
-in the long Arctic winter, or in the whole year, even though he
-be a disappointed gold-hunter. It may afford suggestion to mining
-companies continually going to Alaska as to their responsibility to
-each other and to the natives of the "frozen North." It may give "the
-folks at home" some intimation as to possible "good times" under
-trying circumstances. Blue fingers may not necessarily denote a blue
-heart.
-
-ELIZABETH GRINNELL.
-
-Pasadena, Cal., Jan. 15, 1901.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-
-We are a company of twenty men bound for Kotzebue Sound, Alaska. It
-is needless to say we are gold-hunters. In this year of our Lord
-1898, men are flying northward like geese in the springtime. That not
-more than one of us has ever set eyes on a real, live nugget passes
-for nothing; we shall naturally recognize "the yellow" when we see
-it. It is our intention to ransack Mother Nature's store-houses,
-provided we can unlock or pry open the doors without losing our
-lingers by freezing.
-
-Why we have selected Kotzebue Sound as the field of our maneuvers it
-would be difficult to give a rational reason. It may be nothing more
-nor less than the universal rush to the gold fields of Alaska, which
-rush, being infectious, attacks all grades and conditions of men.
-That all grades and conditions are represented in our company will be
-demonstrated later on, I believe.
-
-The instigator of the Long Beach and Alaska Mining and Trading
-Company is an undertaker by trade, a sometime preacher by profession
-and practice when not otherwise engaged. His character is not at all
-in keeping with his trade; he is a rollicking fellow and given to
-much mirth.
-
-We have also a doctor, as protection against contingencies. His name
-is Coffin. He and the undertaker have been bosom friends for years.
-The combined influences of these are sufficient to insure proper
-termination to our trip, if not a propitious journey. The eldest of
-our company is rising fifty, the youngest twenty-one. The oldest has
-lived long enough to be convinced that gold is the key that unlocks
-all earthly treasures; his sole object is the key hidden somewhere in
-the pockets of the great Arctic. The youngest cares little for the
-gold, being more concerned about certain rare birds which may cross
-his devious path. The most of us have never met before, but are now
-an incorporated mining company, like hundreds of ship's crews this
-year. Each intends to do his share of work and to claim his portion
-of the profits, if profits come.
-
-We have a two years' outfit of every comfort possible to store away
-on a little schooner seventy-two by eighteen feet. Her name is
-"Penelope;" you can read it in plain type half a mile away. She was
-built for Japan waters and has never set keel in Arctic seas. There
-are numerous prophecies concerning her: "She will never reach her
-destination;" "Impossible that she is built for a stormy coast;"
-"You may as well make your wills before you embark." And many other
-cheering benedictions are tossed to the deck by friends on shore who
-watch us loading the freight into her hold.
-
-We make no retort. Of what would be the use? Our hearts, our hopes,
-ourselves, are on board of her for better or for worse. We wave
-our handkerchiefs in a last "good-by." They are the only white
-handkerchiefs in our possession, brought and shaken out to the
-winds for this very purpose. From henceforth the bandana reigns
-on occasions when any is required. Old Glory floats above us; the
-"Penelope" is bright with new paint and trimmings and masts; she is
-towed out of San Pedro Harbor, and heads for San Francisco for more
-supplies.
-
-Out of San Pedro Harbor! The very same of which R. H. Dana wrote in
-1840 as a "most desolate looking place," frequented by coyotes and
-Indians, but "altogether the best harbor on all the coast."
-
-[Illustration: "Penelope" at Anchor in San Pedro Harbor.]
-
-We have a copy of his "Two Years Before the Mast" on board, and shall
-be complimented by what he says about the Englishmen and Americans
-whom he met. "If the California fever (laziness) spares the first
-generation, it always attacks the second." Did Dana mean the crew of
-the "Penelope"? We shall see.
-
-Having made a dutiful promise to my mother to "keep a faithful diary"
-of our cruise, which, in event of disaster, shall be duly corked in a
-large bottle and sent adrift, I now enter my first date since April
-8, 1898, the day on which we set sail from San Pedro. California.
-
-North Pacific Ocean, June 5.--We are seventeen days out from San
-Francisco, and have made a little over twelve hundred miles: that is,
-in a direct line on our course to Unamak Pass through the Aleutian
-Islands, for we have had many unfavorable winds against which we were
-compelled to tack. We have sailed two thousand miles, counting full
-distance. We have experienced two storms which, put together, as the
-captain says, makes "a good half a gale." While the "Penelope" rides
-the highest billows like a duck, at times she pitches and rolls in a
-terrific fashion. Her movements are short and jerky, unlike those of
-a steamer or larger vessel. When the wind blows hard on her quarter,
-the rail is often under water. This makes locomotion difficult,
-especially if the waves are rolling high, and everything is bouncing
-about on deck. It is my duty to carry "grub" from the galley to the
-cabins, and I can never handle more than one thing at a time, as I
-am obliged to keep one hand free. I wait for my opportunity, else a
-heavy sea starts at the same time and we go down together, "grub" and
-all. However, I have had few accidents. Once I landed a big platter
-of mush upside down on the deck, and at another time a gust of wind
-took all the biscuits overboard, while a big sea filled the milk
-pitcher with salt water. This was not so bad as Dana's experience
-with the "scouse," which "precious stuff" came down all over him at
-the bottom of the hatchway. "Whatever your feelings may be, you must
-make a joke of everything at sea," he wrote just after he had found
-himself lying at full length on the slippery deck with his tea-pot
-empty and sliding to the far side. We are better off than the crew
-of the "Pilgrim" in 1840, for there is plenty more, if half the
-breakfast goes to feed the fishes.
-
-Down in the cabin there is the most fun. The table is bordered by
-a deep rail, and several slats are fastened crosswise over the
-surface to hold the dishes, besides holes and racks for cups; yet
-when things are inclined at an angle of thirty-five degrees it is
-almost impossible, without somebody's hand on each separate dish,
-to keep the meal in sight. We have some trouble in cooking at times,
-but the stove has an iron frame with cross pieces on top to keep the
-kettles from sliding, which, in rough weather, can never be filled
-more than half. We usually get up very good meals; that is, for such
-of the crew as have an appetite. For breakfast, rolled oats mush,
-baking-powder biscuit, boiled eggs or potatoes, and ham. For dinner,
-light bread or milk toast, beans or canned corn, salt-horse, creamed
-potatoes, and often soup with crackers. For supper, canned fruit,
-muffins or corn bread, boiled ham and baked potatoes. Of course
-tea or coffee with each meal. The cook makes fine yeast bread, ten
-loaves a day. There are twenty-three men on board. Including the
-hired sailors who are not of the company, and even with five in the
-hospital we make way with a good deal of food.
-
-Our fare differs somewhat from that of the crew of the "Pilgrim."
-whose regular diet, Dana wrote, was "salt beef and biscuit," with "an
-occasional potato." But it must be remembered that we had several
-articles, such as eggs and ham and fresh potatoes, the first days
-of our cruise, which we never saw later on when we were confined to
-bacon and beans for staple supplies, with dessicated vegetables and
-some canned goods for extras.
-
-We left San Francisco May 10, after taking on board the parts of a
-river boat, to be put together when needed, and much more Arctic
-clothing than we can possibly use in two or even four years. The Sea
-was very rough. Our captain had not been on board ship for two years,
-and the result was that he, with every one of the party except the
-sailors, was very sea-sick. The doctor was pretty well in a couple
-of days, but the undertaker fared not so well, he stayed on deck
-and sang and jumped about and did his best to keep jolly as long as
-nature could hold out. Presently one could tell that he was feeling
-rather uneasy about something, when all of a sudden quietness reigned
-and only an ominous sound from over the rail gave indication of what
-was passing.
-
-We have some fine singing. "The Penelope Quartette" has been formed
-and practices every evening, making voluminous noise, but there is
-no fear of disturbing adjoining meetings or concerts. The quartette
-is composed of Reynolds (the undertaker). Foote, Wilson and Miller.
-There are other singers of less renown. We have a "yell." which is
-frequently to be heard, especially at getting-up time in the morning.
-It is "Penelope, Penelope, zip, boom, bah! Going up to Kotzebue! rah!
-rah! rah!"
-
-We are very much crowded and have many discomforts, as anyone can
-imagine we should have in so close quarters; but we are a congenial
-crowd. I was sea-sick for a week, but am all right now and capable
-of eating more than anyone else, a symptom which the doctor fears
-may continue, as I make it a rule to eat up all there is left at
-both tables. There are eleven men in the after cabin and twelve in
-the forward cabin, including the forecastle, and each set have meals
-served in their respective cabins. Having been chosen as "cook's
-assistant," I have ample opportunities.
-
-We have seen but few things of interest outside the boat, and that
-makes us more interesting to one another. We have sighted no vessels
-for two weeks. I saw two fur seals. They stuck their heads above
-the water just behind us, eying us curiously for a few minutes, and
-then vanished. We have seen one shark, but no whales. Petrels, or
-Mother Cary's Chickens, are almost always to be seen flitting over
-the waves. Black-footed albatrosses, or "goonies." as the sailors
-call them, are common, following the boat and eating all kinds of
-scraps thrown to them. We caught two with a fish-hook, but let them
-go, as there is now no suitable place to put the skins. One of the
-albatrosses measured seven feet three inches from tip to tip of the
-outstretched wings. We fastened upon his back a piece of canvas,
-giving the "Penelope," with the date and longitude and latitude. I
-wonder if he will ever be seen again, and, if seen, if this will be
-the only news of us the world will ever receive!
-
-There are several "goonies" which seem to follow us constantly.
-We have named them Jim. Tom and Hannah. They know when meal time
-arrives, and then come close alongside within a few feet.
-
-Tuesday, June 7.--The past two days have been stormy, but we have
-made good time and are only four hundred and sixty-seven miles from
-Unamak Pass. We saw several pieces of kelp this morning, which gives
-evidence of land not far off. This morning the sun came out several
-times, and every one is feeling quite jolly, which makes even the
-sea-sick ones better. One of the most popular songs on deck these
-cloudy days has been the familiar one. "Let a little sunshine in."
-Everyone was singing it to-day, when suddenly the clouds broke as if
-by impulse and the warm sunshine flooded the damp decks.
-
-The sun doesn't set now till nearly nine o'clock, and the whole night
-long it is scarcely dark at all. To-day Clyde took the pictures of
-the party in groups, or "unions." There is the "Sailors' Union" (six
-of the boys besides the regular sailors, who go to the watch along
-with them and take their tricks at the wheel), the "Dishwashers'
-Union," the "Doctors' Union" (Dr. Coffin, and Jett, who is a
-druggist), the "Cooks' Union" (Shafer and myself), and the "Crips'
-Union" (the cripples, or those who are sea-sick, and do no work; they
-are Fancher, Wyse. McCullough. Wilson, Reynolds and Shaul). If the
-winds are favorable we expect to rest in Dutch Harbor for a few days,
-as we are no doubt too early to get into Kotzebue. From all accounts
-we cannot hope to reach the Sound until July 14.
-
-This sort of experience is, so new to me. I thought I knew something
-of life on a schooner, during the trip to San Clemente and San
-Nicholas last year, but this is more and better. Nearly everyone
-save myself is longing for land, and they watch our course each
-day as it is traced on the chart with more interest than anything
-else. Just now I am sitting alone on a bench in the little galley,
-watching the potatoes and salt-horse boiling. The sun has come out
-and everyone is on deck, the "crips" lying against the stern rail or
-along the side of the cabin. By orders of the doctor all the bedding
-is airing on the deck and rails amidships, and some of the boys are
-taking advantage of the fair weather to do their washing. I did my
-own yesterday, although it was raining, and, as I have a "pull" with
-the cook, I dried the clothes in the galley at night. Of course all
-washing has to be done in salt water and it is scarcely satisfactory,
-to say the least. This necessary laundry work of ours is destined
-to occupy a good deal of our time and patience, and I suspect that
-before our cruise is over we shall long for a glimpse of a good,
-faithful washerwoman with her suds, and her arms akimbo, and her open
-smile.
-
-[Illustration: Cooks' Union.]
-
-[Illustration: Sailors' Union.]
-
-[Illustration: Dishwashers' Union.]
-
-[Illustration: Crips' Union.]
-
-June 12.--We are in Bering Sea and all's well. It is partly clear,
-but cold, with a sharp wind. We went through Unamak Pass in the
-night. The captain thought it dangerous as well as delaying, to stop
-at Dutch Harbor, so we gave it up with disappointment. After beating
-for several hours, we are now well on our way straight northward to
-St. Lawrence Island. There is no ice in sight, but we can smell it
-distinctly. As we went through the Pass it was raining. and we could
-see but indistinctly the precipitous shores. The Pass is not usually
-taken by sailing vessels, as it is quite narrow, but our captain
-brought us through all right in spite of fog and storm. He has not
-slept for forty-eight hours. The shortest time ever made by a sailing
-vessel from San Francisco to Unamak Pass, 2,100 miles, was eighteen
-days; and we made it with the "Penelope" in twenty-three days. Hurrah
-for the "Penelope"!
-
-This morning we passed within hailing distance of the ship "Sintram,"
-of San Francisco. She had taken a cargo to St. Michaels and was on
-her way back. Her captain promised to report us, and he also told us
-that the ice was yet packed north of St. Michaels and that several
-ships were waiting. Clyde took a snap shot of the "Sintram."
-
-There are plenty of birds to be seen now. If I had faith enough to
-warrant my walking on the water I would go shooting. Our small boats
-are all lashed to the dock of the "Penelope," but the captain says
-that in a few days we can put a skiff overboard if it is calm, and
-then ho! for murre pot-pie! Everyone is hungry for fresh meat. We try
-fishing with no luck. Saw a fur seal to-day, the first in two weeks.
-
-[Illustration: A Sunbath on Deck.]
-
-June 19. Bering Sea, latitude 63 degrees, longitude 172 degrees, 38
-minutes.--For the past few days we made good time, one hundred miles
-to the day, but on this date we are becalmed. Clyde has gone out in
-the boat to catch a snap shot of us. He need not hurry, for never was
-mouse more still than the "Penelope" at this moment. The thermometer
-registers 38 degrees on deck. We have sighted no ice yet, and hope
-the Bering Straits are open.
-
-I am sitting in the galley, as my fingers get too cold to write
-outside. We have just cleared off supper, and the boys are pacing the
-deck for exercise. Some of them are below, where an oil stove in each
-cabin takes the chill and dampness from the air. It is seldom that
-the galley is not crammed full, but just now the cook and the others
-have gone below for a game of whist, so I embrace the opportunity to
-write. My diary is always written after I have finished my daily bird
-notes, which I make as copious as possible. I have some good records
-already. We were becalmed three days in sight of the Prybiloff
-Islands, and at the time were so close to St. Paul Island that we
-could hear the barking of thousands of seals, and, by the aid of a
-field glass, could see them on the beaches. A few were seen about the
-"Penelope," and one came so near to the boat that it was touched with
-an oar. We unlashed the smallest boat and rowed out with her during
-the calmest days, so we had some much-needed exercise. Frequent fogs
-kept us near the "Penelope's" side, as we should easily become lost.
-We saw no ducks or geese, but we had murres in plenty and pot-pie for
-several days. For a change they were served up in roasts, being first
-boiled, and were finer than any duck I have tasted, though some of
-the squeamish crew composing the "Crips' Union" declared they were
-"fishy."
-
-Of course I improve every opportunity during pleasant days to
-collect, and the result is thirteen first-class bird skins. These sea
-birds are almost all fat and the grease clings to and grows into the
-skin so firmly that it is almost impossible to put them up. Among
-the good things which I have secured are the crested auklet, red
-phalarope, pallas, murre and horned puffin, but it will be difficult
-to preserve the skins in this damp climate. Dr. Coffin is becoming
-interested already, and talks of putting in his spare time collecting
-with me. He has been taking lessons in skinning, and so far has put
-up two specimens. We have rigged up a cracker-box for our bird-skins
-and try to keep it in the dryest place, though it is so crowded on
-shipboard that a convenient place for any particular thing is scarce.
-
-[Illustration: Speaking the "Sintram."]
-
-The currents in Bering Sea are quite strong, tending northward toward
-the straits, so that even when the wind fails us we are drifting
-towards our destination at the rate of fifteen to twenty miles a
-day. On board we are all happy and in good spirits, notwithstanding
-the fact that some have never before known a hardship, and their
-eight hours watch per day on deck, especially when it is stormy, is
-calculated to make them think longingly of their pleasant homes.
-Besides, many of the boys have salt water sores on their hands and
-chilblains on their feet.
-
-Yesterday the sea was choppy and several were sea-sick again. Even I
-felt that peculiar indescribable sensation, but I ate a hearty dinner
-of beans and salt pork and felt better. C. C. is suffering from what
-he declares is "indigestion" a weakness to which he has always been
-subject. He feels a reluctance to owning that he has the common
-ailment. "C. C." is our abbreviation for Reynolds, the undertaker
-and sometime preacher. He makes so much fun for other people that we
-cannot help amusing ourselves at his expense sometimes.
-
-We passed St. Matthew Island and caught a glimpse of its rugged
-shores through the thick fog. We can generally tell the proximity of
-land by the increased number of sea-birds. It is not often that the
-sun appears now, but occasionally it shows itself long enough for the
-captain to take his observations. It is light all night and seems
-like a dream of childhood to have to go to bed before the lamps are
-lighted.
-
-I must pay a compliment to our captain. Besides knowing his business
-thoroughly, he Is a jolly, agreeable man, always cutting jokes except
-during a storm. He has been created the "Penelope's" laureate, and
-has written a couple of poems that would make good his rank anywhere.
-
-There was one day when we all had an attack of the poetic fever and
-wrote verses. They will be found in the ship's log.
-
-To-day is Sunday, and as usual we all attended services, which
-consist of songs and a short talk from C. C. The rest of the day is
-like any other.
-
-Last night an exhausted sandpiper flew on board and was caught. I was
-asleep and the boys came and laid it on my breast. He Is now safely
-wrapped in cotton wadding and laid to rest in the aforementioned
-cracker-box. The boys declared they would whip me for not letting
-him go, and yet when they get a chance they shoot at birds from the
-boat for "sport," with no other purpose in view. I am doing my best
-to educate them in bird lore, but whenever I get off the long Latin
-names they give me the "ha-ha." By this time and after many lessons
-the most of them know a murre by sight, and a fork-tailed petrel,
-and a kittiwake; but when it comes to distinguishing the different
-species of anklets at a distance they think I am fooling them, and
-laugh at me until I show them the bird at close range. I never
-realized before the vastness of the sea as when a solitary little
-bird dips his wings and flies skyward.
-
-[Illustration: Becalmed in Bering Sea.]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-
-June 1.--Yesterday the fog cleared and disclosed to us the snowy
-peaks of the Siberian coast far to the northwest, and in front to the
-north of us the long coast line of St. Lawrence Island. We headed
-for the west end of the island, intending to pass up the channel
-between it and the Siberian coast. Saw two vessels in the distance
-returning from that direction. After we had beat against a bad wind
-all day we found ourselves almost surrounded by icebergs. With the
-field glass we could see the whole horizon a solid mass of ice. Our
-way was blocked. Turning eastward, we tried the passage between St.
-Lawrence Island and the Alaskan coast. The wind was blowing bitterly
-cold from the Siberian shore. Beating eastward along the south side
-of the island, we have now left the ice behind. This afternoon a
-two-masted schooner spoke us on her way to try the passage we had
-just abandoned. She turned and sailed with us. She carried a pretty
-tough-looking crowd of miners. They, like ourselves, are bound for
-Kotzebue. We gave them the "Penelope" yell, which they returned with
-three cheers. In sizing up their piratical appearance we forgot to
-look in the glass.
-
-June 25.--Seventy-five miles southeast of Bering Strait. The Alaskan
-mainland north of Norton Sound in plain view. Have spent five days
-trying to get around St. Lawrence. Are still in sight of the east
-end. It is calm. We need more wind. Entered Boring Sea two weeks
-ago, and the days have been like a yachting cruise. Everyone is
-in good spirits. Several of the boys are witty and jokes fly. And
-the singing!--we exhaust the words we know and then make up as we
-go along, like plantation negroes. Are playing several tournaments
-in games. Only one so far has been concluded--the domino game.
-Dr. Coffin and Jett were the unlucky ones, and last night they
-entertained the crowd. Captain was master of ceremonies and dressed
-in a most ludicrous manner. He made a mock speech and read a poem.
-The two unlucky victims were treated to burnt cork and wore great
-Eskimo muckluks (sealskin boots), murre-skin hats, and red calico
-decorations. Doctor beat the big tin washpan and Jett blew the
-foghorn. The captain's wand was a boat-hook with a shining red onion
-on the tip and bearing a red pasteboard banner with the motto. "On
-to Kotzebue." They were to march fifty times around the deck. Casey,
-our Irishman, was appointed policeman by the captain "to keep the
-small boys and the carriages off the street." And so, to the tune
-of the foghorn and the dish-pan, they tramped their penalty. Then
-the captain gave an exhibition of clog dancing, with a fife and
-harmonica accompaniment. So one can see there is always something
-going on to break the monotony and keep the blues away. We suffer
-little from dull times. Whales are now as common as seals. One we
-saw looked as large as the "Penelope." Clyde took its picture. I got
-out our Winchester to-day. Am on the lookout for polar bears, which
-are expected to frequent the ice packs. The cook has just yelled
-"Supper!" and everyone is singing "Beulah Land."
-
-[Illustration: Sighting a Vessel.]
-
-Arctic Ocean, July 7.--The next morning after my last date we sailed
-to within a mile of King's Island. This is a precipitous point of
-rock scarcely a mile in diameter, and yet more than two hundred
-Indians live upon it. Before we were within three miles of the island
-the natives began to come alongside of the "Penelope" in their skin
-canoes, or kyaks, wanting to trade. These were the first natives
-we had seen, and our interest in them was unbounded. Fully fifteen
-canoes, some singly, but mostly lashed together in pairs, reached us,
-and their occupants came on board with their sealskin bags full of
-articles to trade. They had a large quantity of walrus tusks, some of
-large size, weighing probably ten pounds, and very valuable. There
-were polar bear skins and fox skins beautifully tanned, also sealskin
-coats and muckluks (skin boots).
-
-They wanted in exchange clothes, flour, tobacco, knives, etc, and,
-if we had prepared ourselves, we could have obtained many valuable
-things. Most of us saved what things we had to trade with later on.
-
-[Illustration: Natives of King's Island Coming to Trade.]
-
-Beyond King's Island our way was again blocked with ice. We then
-turned east towards Port Clarence, but in a couple of hours
-encountered the ice pack extending out full twenty miles from the
-Alaskan shore. We thought our way was blocked, but the captain
-thought we could keep along the shore ice, and did so, the passage
-opening as we advanced. After skirting the ice all day we entered the
-straits at midnight June 26, and found ourselves between the Diomede
-Islands and Cape Prince of Wales. Everyone was on deck enjoying the
-scene until 2 a. m. The sun loitered along the horizon four hours and
-at midnight barely disappeared. The clouds and water were gorgeously
-tinted in the manner so often described by Arctic travelers. No words
-can do the scene justice. To the right rose the mountains of Alaska,
-extending far back from Cape Prince of Wales, the shores broken by
-their blue-tinted ice pack. Dark blue shadows stood the mountains out
-in beautiful distinctness. On our left were the precipitous Diomede
-Islands and Fairway Rock, with the snowy mountains of the Siberian
-shore rising further in the distance.
-
-Ahead, our progress would soon be stopped by the long line of
-ice extending under the Arctic horizon, where the sun was vainly
-endeavoring to set. Just at midnight a spot of blazing light
-appeared at Cape Prince of Wales, fully eight miles away. It was the
-reflection of the fiery red sun on the window of the mission which
-has been established at that point. These shores are not inviting,
-and yet we know that here on this bleak coast are living, the whole
-year through. American missionaries, whose purpose is as eternal as
-the icebergs.
-
-Everyone was happy and exerting himself to express what he felt. Some
-yelled wildly, and, taking off their shoes and stockings, threw them
-into the ocean. Others sang with might and main. "Beulah Land" and
-"Nearer, My God, to Thee" were followed by "Yankee Doodle" and "My
-Country, 'tis of Thee." with every body dancing and running about
-like a lot of Indians. "Penelope, Penelope, zip, boom, bah! Going
-up to Kotzebue, rah! rah! rah!" was yelled till all were hoarse.
-Finally, about 3 p. m., we began to quiet down for a little sleep.
-
-[Illustration: Nearing the Great Ice Pack.]
-
-In the night a small schooner like our own, the "Acret," caught up
-with us, having found the passage we had followed. We passed through
-scattering ice and sailed about fifteen miles beyond the straits,
-but here were confronted by the solid ice pack of the Arctic which
-extended on all sides. After sailing about in circles in this limited
-area of water all day, the "Acret" was seen to be heading through
-a break in the shore side of the ice, and we followed. Both boats
-dropped anchor about a mile from the Alaskan shore in shallow water,
-where the ice had left a clean anchorage. The "Acret" and "Penelope"
-were so far the first boats to pass through the straits.
-
-We were all eager to land. As soon as the dinky was overboard, five
-of the boys, with little thought for anyone else, as was quite
-natural under the circumstances, jumped in and moved for shore. And
-what was exasperating beyond description to us who were obliged to
-wait our turn, they did not bring the boat back for two hours. We
-have forgiven them, but they'll have to pay for it.
-
-At 6 p. m., Dr. Coffin and I, and others, landed and started on
-our first tramp. Our feet were for the first time on Alaskan soil.
-But we saw none of the soil. Moss everywhere, and flowers and wild
-strawberries. It was a queer sensation to set one's feet down on what
-looked like substantial ground and sink a few inches to solid ice,
-crushing the flowers beneath.
-
-I was all eyes and ears for what new birds might cross my path.
-Almost the first thing a flock of Emperor geese flew past me and
-were out of range. These are the rarest geese in North America and
-found only in Alaska. I saw but one land bird, a species of sparrow,
-but there were large numbers of water birds. I obtained some rare
-eggs, such as phalarope, western sandpiper, etc. A snowy owl was
-flushed, the first I ever saw alive, and it was at once mobbed by a
-dozen Arctic terns which had their nests near by. The land here is
-low and rolling, with little knolls and lakes. The ground in places
-Mas thawed about a foot--that is, taking the depth from the top
-of the spongy moss. On the dryer knolls several kinds of flowers
-were blooming and the grass was luxuriant in places. I searched for
-insects, but found only two bumblebees, which I could not catch,
-having no net with me.
-
-We stayed on shore until midnight, tramping over the tundra and
-collecting birds and eggs. At 1 a. m. rowed back to the schooner. A
-canoe load of Indians had come alongside, and they had one Emperor
-goose. I coveted it. Tried to trade for it, offering several
-articles, but failed to offer the right thing. Afterwards one of
-the "Acret" men obtained it for an old tin tomato can. The "Acret"
-fellows had also been on shore and succeeded in shooting another
-goose, so they now had a pair of them, which they allowed me to
-have for the skinning, provided I returned the bodies in time for
-breakfast. I was happy. I immediately went to work, having the usual
-experience in skinning sea birds with the enormous amount of fat
-which must be peeled, rubbed, scraped and picked off. It took me
-until three o'clock in the morning, and I was then glad to crawl into
-my bunk for a little sleep. By night the next day the water seemed
-almost clear of ice, so we heaved anchor and started northeast along
-the shore towards Kotzebue. Soon came to the ice again, scattered
-and in blocks. Keeping right on between the blocks, we came to a
-big, fatherly iceberg which had run aground. The water here was very
-shallow, and we had to be careful not to run aground ourselves. The
-"Penelope" draws eleven feet of water, and a mile from shore it is
-often scarcely three fathoms, and of course shallower towards shore.
-
-It was very exciting sometimes when the ice blocks became too Thick.
-And they choked and moaned and snored and heaved against each other
-in a fit of passion, and challenged one another to "come on." and
-ground their teeth in rage, and swished calmly, and chuck-a-lucked
-through the water. It was a grand sight to remember.
-
-At times several of the boys had to take poles--driftwood which we
-had taken possession of for just such an emergency--and, standing at
-the bow, push off the ice. Even then several of the larger blocks
-got the better of us and would stop our progress by a sturdy crunch
-against the "Penelope," scraping along her side and taunting her
-with piratical intention. But she was firm and answered not a word,
-giving only a few scales of her weather-beaten paint as a sort of
-peace-offering.
-
-[Illustration: Anchored to a Grounded Iceberg.]
-
-The "Acret" was all the while accompanying us, most of the time
-ahead, for she drew only eight feet, so she could sail nearer shore
-than we could, where the water was clearer of ice. We anchored two
-nights and a day, again sheltered behind a grounded iceberg.
-
-The "Acret" and "Penelope" were tied up side by side, and we
-exchanged calling courtesies. This crew was intending to prospect in
-couples, each two men having a boat. Each person was independent of
-any other man, unless they should choose to form partnership among
-themselves. That is, they were not formed into a regular company as
-we were. We are no doubt better off individually as we are, though
-this remains to be proved.
-
-After spending several days slowly making our way along the Alaskan
-coast towards Kotzebue, through the still breaking ice, on July 2 we
-found ourselves really in a dangerous position. The wind began to
-blow from out to sea, thus crowding the ice towards shore, making our
-sailing quarters more and more limited. We were already running too
-close in, from two to three fathoms, when suddenly the schooner ran
-aground, and we found ourselves stuck on a sandy bottom, with the
-ice rapidly moving down on us. An anchor was quickly towed out and
-dropped, so that by heaving in on the anchor chain the boat could
-be dragged out into deep water. This was slowly being accomplished,
-when a mass of ice too large to pole off caught against the schooner,
-causing a tremendous strain on the anchor chain.
-
-Another ice cake floated against the first, and the "Penelope" would
-have been crowded deeper and deeper aground had not, after much
-chopping and prying, a crack opened up across the ice on our port
-bow. The two pieces swung apart, leaving the "Penelope" free. Again
-we tried to heave into deeper water, and finally with all sails set
-and all hands pulling on the chain, the boat slid off in time to
-escape another big sheet of ice. Of course this was one of the few
-times we did not feel like shouting and singing. We held our breath.
-It was an unpleasant experience, but one upon which we can look
-back with a sort of quiet satisfaction. We shall-at least have one
-hair-breadth escape to narrate to our friends at home. After dodging
-and threading our way, the captain finally sailed us into an open
-tract of water outside the ice.
-
-[Illustration: Natives with Walrus-hide Canoe.]
-
-We have made little progress these last days. We have been sailing
-about in circles, at times coming within forty miles of Cape Blossom,
-but still blocked by the line of ice that closes the mouth of
-Kotzebue Sound. It is now rapidly breaking up and melting, and as
-soon as an off-shore wind sets in, the ice will be surely driven
-out to sea and our path will be clear. We are fifty days from San
-Francisco, and the majority of us are longing for land. Vessels are
-constantly coming In sight.
-
-Last night twelve vessels besides our own were seen waiting for the
-ice to open. What a mad rush this is to a land nobody knows anything
-about, and whose treasure-trove, if she holds any, is far in the
-interior! There is plenty of country, if not of gold, for us all, and
-we can take our chances.
-
-We have spoken the bark "Guardian" from Seattle with 130 on board.
-The barkentine "Northern Light" from San Francisco with 120 on
-board; the bark "Leslie D." with 58 on board, besides the "Catherine
-Sudden," and others whom we have not been near enough to speak.
-
-While we were near shore natives. Eskimos, came on board in their
-skin canoes nearly every day, and often stayed several hours with us.
-Indeed they would remain with us all the time if allowed to. They
-are very greasy and not at all desirable in their present condition,
-dressed entirely in skins, and owning few civilized implements. Some
-were on summer hunting trips from as far as the Diomede Islands and
-the opposite Siberian shore. We have made some fine trades with them.
-Rivers, one of the boys, got a good skin kyak for a pair of overalls,
-a match safe and a few other trinkets. I got some nice seal (not the
-fur seal) skins for an outing shirt, and about one hundred yards of
-strong raw-hide rope, for soiled socks, undershirts, etc.
-
-It is a good opportunity for obtaining spears, toys, implements, and
-clothing of Indian manufacture, etc., if only I could spare the stuff
-to trade. With all the hundreds of people coming to the coast this
-year, the trade will be spoiled by next year, or I would send home
-for a box of articles for trade.
-
-[Illustration: Educated Natives.]
-
-These natives really require very little outside of their own
-resources, so it is hard to tell what articles would be likely to
-strike their fancy. Load, powder, tobacco, calico and clothes would
-be the best things.
-
-The prince or chief of this tribe of Indians was an intelligent young
-man about twenty-five years old. He could not speak our language,
-but, strange to say, his wife, who accompanied him, was educated and
-refined. She had received some schooling at Port Clarence. It was she
-who interpreted for all of us during our trading hours.
-
-The natives came in families, and the children were not
-uninteresting. Not a baby was heard to cry, although in the canoe for
-hours at a time, nor would they try to move. These canoes or kyaks
-are very strange boats, and prove quite treacherous to the novice. It
-looks easy rowing in one of them. I had learned the trick during my
-hunting about Sitka two years ago, and could not be induced to try
-my hand in a hurry. Not so Casey, who went out by himself in Rivers'
-new kyak. He started out all right, shouting that it was like riding
-a bicycle, "very hard to keep balanced in." He was getting along
-finely, keeping near the vessel, when he grew over-confident, and a
-misstroke with the paddle set him out of balance, and boat and poor
-Casey went rolling over together in the water. He struggled and kept
-to the surface long enough for a rope to be thrown out to him, but
-he could not get his legs out of the hole in the kyak for several
-seconds. Seconds are hours in this blistering ice-water, and had he
-been further from home he could not have survived the chill.
-
-No one has tried kyaking since, but as soon as we reach shallow water
-I mean to practice until I have revived the lost art.
-
-We are now inside the Arctic Circle, about 67 degrees north latitude.
-That is pretty well north for Southern Californians who, at home, rub
-their ears when the frost nips the tomato plants in January.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-
-Cape Blossom, July 13, 1898.--The voyage is behind us. What is
-floating ice to a ship's crew safe on shore! We can laugh at whales,
-and unfriendly breezes that whisper tales of shipwreck on barren
-coasts. And we can walk at all hours of the day and night without
-holding on to the rail, and we don't have to cook breakfast and
-supper and dinner in an S x S galley. Oh, the charm of being on land
-again, a land without visible limit; a land where we are not crowded,
-and where we are not hindered from our work by newspaper reporters!
-
-I am sitting at the camp-table in the dining-tent near the new
-"Penelope" ship-yards, and the sounds that greet my ears are varied.
-The incessant pounding gives evidence of vigorous work on our river
-boat; the hum of the forge and the ring of the anvil where Casey
-and Stevenson are making fittings for the engine, the wash of the
-surf close at hand, and last, but not least, the low, irritating,
-depressing, measly whine of the mosquito--this last word to mean the
-race. I would not intimate that there is one mosquito, or twenty:
-there are millions! We wear bobinet masks which protect our heads
-very well. To-night the wind is blowing fresh, and the winged plagues
-are using most of their force to keep their land legs. It is very
-warm, and a little exertion brings out a copious perspiration, but
-it is less fatiguing to keep hard at work with a will than to stop
-and think about it. No ice now in sight. Within two rods of camp is
-a deep snowdrift, where we obtain nice drinking water. Ice may be
-seen anywhere in Alaska all the hot days, but it is so mixed and
-grown in with the everlasting mosses that it is not fit to melt for
-drinking save in rare cases. Our ship-yards are located on the pebbly
-beach, and it all seems so roomy and clean after our long stay on
-the little "Penelope." though on account of the mosquitoes we still
-sleep on shipboard. The boat is anchored a mile from shore on account
-of the shallow water. As I look out to sea I bethink me that in all
-probability Kotzebue, the Russian explorer, stood on this exact spot
-and looked about him as long ago as July, 1816. And the mosquitoes
-were biting him, too!
-
-I can afford to sleep only every other night these days. There will
-be time enough to sleep when the sun goes to bed. The landscape is
-beautiful--grassy meadows, green, bushy hillsides, and, over all,
-thousands of wild-flowers of a dozen kinds; dandelions, daisies,
-sweet-peas, and many other varieties. I have found a few beetles and
-have seen some butterflies, but get little time for collecting either
-insects or birds. My duty is to the company, and any time in which I
-may do what I love best to do must be taken out of my sleeping hours.
-Everyone is working with might and main, as the missionaries tell us
-that winter sets in by the last of August.
-
-By the way, we surprised these missionaries, who have been located at
-Cape Blossom some two years or more, and in that time have seen few
-fellow-countrymen. C. C. Reynolds and Clyde and Dr. Coffin were old
-acquaintances, and waked them up one day all of a sudden. The three
-were told by the natives of the best way to approach the mission
-building, and, as they did so, the first thing that met their eyes
-were little boxes of lettuce and radishes and onions set on the sunny
-side of the cabin to steal the breath and smile of Old Sol, while he
-has his eye on the place. This is a Friends' Mission, and the three
-missionaries are from Whittier, California.
-
-They are Robert Samms and wife, and a Miss Hunnicut.
-
-The boys are working on the river boat in two shifts from twelve to
-twelve. This makes time for four meals a day, the largest meals being
-at the two twelves, and I have one of these to get. I also have the
-6 p. m. and the midnight meals to get; Shafer gets the others. Of
-course we have our assistants who wait on table and wash dishes. Who
-would have thought I would become a mess cook!
-
-I have just dressed three salmon weighing about fifteen pounds each.
-We traded ten gingersnaps to an Indian for them. They will make fully
-two meals for all of us.
-
-[Illustration: First "Friends'" Mission.]
-
-July 10, 2 p. m. In the dining-tent at "Penelope"
-ship-yards.--Yesterday was a great day for us. We received our
-first mail from home. The revenue cutter "Bear" brought it, and it
-will probably be our last. It is sweltering hot. We find our most
-congenial employment in drinking ice-water and taking cold baths. And
-no one suffers from it. The river boat is nearly done and we have
-been here only a week. To-day our first prospecting party starts
-out, one of two, to go up the Kowak River in advance of the main
-party. They are taking a month's provisions, and, besides prospecting
-for gold, are to locate our winter quarters. We hope to make two
-trips with supplies up the river before it freezes. There are so
-many vessels of every description here that it looks like a seaport
-harbor. The natives are "catching on" to trading schemes, and are
-asking exorbitant prices for everything. We offered sixty dollars
-worth of flour and other things for a canoe and failed to get one. I
-doubt the things being of much use to us if we had them. The skins
-soak up water rapidly and are then easily torn or worn. The Indians
-keep them in water only a few hours at a time before taking them up
-on the beach and turning them over to dry.
-
-Shafer went with our first party as cook, and that leaves me with
-seventeen men to feed. I want to get in some collecting this fall
-and am willing to work hard now. Of course everyone of the party is
-industrious; we expected to work. The mosquitoes do not like me and
-so I have the advantage of the others. I keep a smudge burning in the
-tents so the boys may eat in peace.
-
-Penelope Ship Yards, July 17.--Oh, how hot it is to-day! And the
-mosquitoes are rushing business, as if aware time is nearly up with
-them, I slept on shore last night. We had a small tent and banked it
-up all around tight, and then made a smudge and shut ourselves in. We
-killed all the mosquitoes in sight and finally got to bed for a good
-seven hours' sleep. There is plenty of driftwood along the beaches,
-and we shall not be obliged to draw on our supply of coal for a good
-while. Several tons of it is coming on the "Mermaid." The vessel
-has not yet arrived, neither have several others whose crews warned
-us before we left San Francisco last spring that we would not reach
-Kotzebue this year. And here we are a week ahead of them, and one
-party prospecting up the river already.
-
-July 19.--This morning the "Helen," as we have named our river boat,
-was towed out to the "Penelope," where the boiler and engines were
-hoisted on. She is back again now, and all is well save Rivers, who
-had his Angers smashed.
-
-There must be a thousand people now in the Sound, and more are
-coming. These first-comers are respectable men, with few exceptions.
-A drunken white man shot an Indian up near the mission, and now there
-will be trouble. The Indian law dates far back--"An eye for an eye."
-A good many accidents are happening. Some men are lost, and so are
-whole loads of provisions. We are safe; have lost nothing. Birds are
-numerous now. I went up the slough last night and got three ducks.
-This noon I served up a hot duck pie. This is the summer home for
-many birds that spend their winters south. Every morning I hear the
-plaintive song of the Gambel's sparrows from the bushy thickets
-on the hillsides, just as we hear them from the hedges at home in
-winter. Other familiar birds now rearing their broods here are
-the barn swallow. Savannah sparrow and tree sparrow. Insects are
-common as the warm weather continues. I caught a bumblebee this
-morning and bottled him. As fast as the snowdrifts melt, grass and
-flowers spring up, crowding the snow, so to speak, into more and
-more limited quarters, and finally replacing it altogether. The
-brightest and greenest spots are where the snow has the most recently
-disappeared. This is a beautiful country. Some day when the speedy
-airship shall make distance trivial, it will be a popular summer
-resort, except that the water is too icy for the average bather.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-July 23. Penelope Ship Yards.--The "Helen" is at last ready. Three of
-the boys have cut up several cords of wood into proper lengths for
-the boiler.
-
-I cannot help mentioning the flowers again. New kinds appear every
-day without so much as sending up a leaf in advance. There are
-dandelions, and purple asters, and cream cups, and bluebells, and
-big daisies, and buttercups, and tall, blue flowers like our garden
-hyacinths. There are acres of blue-grass as smooth and green as if
-newly mown, birds and bumblebees are abundant. I should like to
-collect more of these, but still have a hungry mob to feed. The
-boys are working hard at shifting the cargo, and chopping wood and
-doing other things, and of course are hungry as bears. My work gives
-me some half-hours which I spend collecting. We have good stores.
-For supper to-night my menu is baked navy beans--Boston baked
-beans away up here at Kotzebue Sound!--corn bread, apple sauce,
-fricasseed salmon eggs, fried salmon, duck stew, tea, etc. It will be
-appreciated to the last crumb by the Arctic circle.
-
-[Illustration: Miners' Launch.]
-
-The days are growing shorter. The sun now sets before eleven at
-night, leaving only a short semi-twilight. The doctor has just come
-in from a visit to the mission. He reports ships still arriving, and
-prospectors having all sorts of luck. Flour is three dollars for
-fifty pounds. Liquor is being sold to the natives without stint. It
-is against the law, but what is law without a force to back it? Dr.
-Sheldon Jackson is expected soon, and he is the man who will not be
-afraid to hunt out the rascals who are spoiling the natives. I am so
-nearly related to the American Indians myself that I naturally take
-sides with these natives. You know I was born on the Kiowa, Comanche
-and Wichita reservation, when those Indians were savages or nearly
-so, and I learned to love them before I could speak. Here and now it
-is the old familiar story of the white man's abuse of the redskins.
-It makes me indignant. We found these people confiding, generous,
-helpful, simple-hearted, without a shadow of treachery except as they
-have learned it from the whites, who are invading their homes and
-killing them as they will, with little or no excuse. Many of these
-gold-hunters that I hear of have already done more harm in a few days
-than the missionaries can make up for in years. I could write the
-history in detail, but desist. It will never all be written or told.
-The natives are worked up to the last point of endurance and will
-surely kill the whites. Whisky is doing its share of havoc, although
-a few of the faithful mission Indians are trying to keep the others
-quiet.
-
-[Illustration: The "Helen."]
-
-Sunday. July 24.--We are now waiting for the tide to take the "Helen"
-out of the creek. Steam will soon be up.
-
-July 29, Dining Tent.--We are still here and the rains have begun.
-The "Helen" made her trial trip and works well. We have discovered
-that she cannot transport all our goods up the river, so have delayed
-in order to build a barge. It is two feet deep, ten feet wide and
-eighteen feet long, with a capacity of ten tons.
-
-August 1.--The storm washed the sand up and locked the "Helen" into
-Penelope inlet. The only thing to be done was to dig a channel and
-float her out. From ten in the morning until ten in the evening we
-worked. We had to pry her out as the tide kept failing. We could not
-have succeeded had it not been for some kind Indians who helped us.
-They are always ready to help when they see us in trouble. Of course
-we treated them to a good supper and they were happy.
-
-After steaming out to the "Penelope," we started north around the
-peninsula to the inlet, arriving about two in the morning, after
-the hardest day's work we have had yet. Here at Mission Inlet Dr.
-Coffin. Fancher and myself are left with the camp outfit and a load
-of provisions. After three hours' sleep and a hot breakfast the
-rest went back to the schooner with the "Helen" for another load,
-and to bring the barge, which by this time should be finished. Soon
-after they left, yesterday, a stiff breeze sprang up and we were
-very anxious. The "Helen" is little better than a flat-bottomed scow
-and cannot stand much of a sea. An inlet near us is, we think, deep
-enough to float the "Penelope," if we could get her in, and here she
-would be safe all winter. The missionaries tell us that no boat like
-her can stand the crushing ice in the open sea during the winter, and
-that this inlet is the only protected place for miles around.
-
-The mission and village are two miles west of us. There are four
-frame houses and a hundred tents. A Mr. Haines of San Francisco, took
-supper with us last night and gave us the shipping news. Men are left
-with nothing save the clothes on their backs; others are drowned;
-many are homesick. Rumor reaches us that gold has been found on the
-Kowak. But rumor is not to be relied upon when it is gold that sets
-it afloat.
-
-If there is gold on the Kowak we shall find it. Our present care
-is to get our supplies up there in safety, but we are going at a
-slow pace. Six of our party are already up the river, six are on
-the "Helen" en route to the "Penelope" headquarters, two are at the
-ship-yards, and four are on the schooner. Dr. Coffin. Fancher and
-myself are here at Mission Inlet. This accounts for all of us as at
-present divided. We expect the return of the "Helen" to-night.
-
-We three have been living high since the others left. For supper,
-with the help of our San Francisco visitor, we got away with three
-ptarmigan, two curlew, twelve flapjacks with syrup, stewed prunes,
-etc. After supper we went to sleep and did not awake until nine this
-morning, when we had ptarmigan broth, fried mush, ham and flapjacks.
-The other day we picked three quarts of salmon berries. They are very
-fine eating, something like a blackberry in size and shape, but are
-red like a raspberry and grow flat on the ground like a strawberry
-vine. They seem a combination of the three.
-
-Two other kinds, inferior to the salmon berries, also grow on
-the ground. We want to eat everything in sight. If there were
-rattlesnakes I believe that I should cook them. I have broiled a good
-fat rattlesnake when hunting in the Sierras, and found it a dish for
-an epicure--that is, if the epicure happened not to see it until
-served. I put up nine bird-skins this morning. They are two redpolls,
-one Siberian yellow wagtail, three ptarmigan, one tree-sparrow and
-two curlew. I have put up seventy-five skins so far. I have also
-saved quite a number of insects, but these are scarce since the rains
-set in. Last night I heard the beautiful song of the fox-sparrow from
-a hill on the opposite side of the inlet. A raven, the first I have
-seen, flew high overhead with ominous croaks. "Evil omen," say the
-natives.
-
-Mission Inlet, Aug. 5, 1898.--The "Helen" has returned after a
-perilous trip. She had the barge in tow and both were heavily loaded.
-It took ten hours to cover twelve miles, so rough was the sea. She
-ran aground twice, and the boys were indeed "tired" on their arrival,
-but were wonderfully refreshed in a short time by flapjacks and
-bacon, which I served to them piping hot, after which they slept for
-eight hours. It has taken a good deal of hard work to get ready to
-make our start, and a good storm is in order. "Indian Tom" is guide,
-and he knows everything about the river and country. He says, "Wind
-too much; bimeby all right," and we take his advice. The "Helen" and
-the barge in tow are to carry two-thirds of the year's supplies up
-the river, and the "Helen" will alone return for the rest. We cannot
-get the "Penelope" into Mission Inlet, as we hoped, hence it has been
-decided to leave the captain and two men with her all winter. The
-provisions not needed this winter are stored on the schooner, and she
-will be anchored down in Escholtz Bay, in as sheltered a place as can
-be found, where she will freeze in. It looks dangerous, but it is
-our only alternative. It would not take much ice pressure to crush
-her, and then good-by to our provisions! They will try lifting her
-by windlass and other means, and the captain shows his pluck in the
-emergency. Pluck is what is needed in these Arctic regions, besides
-plenty of flapjacks. Jett and Fancher remain with the captain on
-the "Penelope." They hope to shoot polar bear and have other winter
-sport, but I guess they will have a monotonous time. Perhaps some of
-us will take a sledge journey down to them in winter.
-
-Dr. Coffin, Wyse, Rivers and myself are to stay here until the
-"Helen" returns for us and the remainder of the stuff. I always
-volunteer to stay at camp when a person is wanted, for in this way
-I get in some collecting. The rest don't see so much fun in staying
-at camp. It may be two weeks before the boat gets back and, outside
-of my camp duties, I shall have considerable leisure for my favorite
-pastime. Doctor and I went out and got thirteen ducks, which made
-a good meal for the crowd before they started. We also had a large
-mess of stewed salmon berries which, though very tart, proved a most
-acceptable change from our dried fruit.
-
-[Illustration: "Helen" and Crew Start up the Kowak River.]
-
-Mission Inlet. Aug. 9.--The "Helen" left for the Kowak yesterday
-and the weather has been perfect, so we hope she has safely crossed
-Holtham Inlet. Until she returns we four are to keep camp and finish
-up some work for the winter. We are becoming acquainted with the
-natives. Like those I knew in Dakota and the Indian Territory, they
-are very superstitious. They make us pass in front of a tent in which
-is a sick person, and if we are towing a boat past along the beach,
-we must get into the water and row around the camp so as not to walk
-past. Many of them are ill, and they lay It to the gold hunters:
-but it is really from exposure in following the whites around. The
-doctor has treated several, and if they recover he is "all right;"
-but if they die, it is his fault. Not so very unlike other folks! The
-doctor makes the natives pay for medicine, as this, he says, "is the
-better policy." He charged a salmon for some pills last night, and in
-another case where more extended services were required, he charged
-a nickel and two salmon. He does not intend to infringe upon any
-existing fee bills in the States, but if any "medicos" thereabouts
-pine for a more profitable field, there is plenty of room at Kotzebue
-Sound.
-
-Some of the prospectors who went up the river earlier are now
-returning broken-hearted, and are going home.
-
-Mission Inlet. Aug. 11.--The "Helen" came in last night with all safe
-aboard. They got about one hundred miles up the river, and concluded
-it better to get us all up that far before going on. We expect to
-start to-night. Our folks met two of our first prospecting party,
-who reported going as far as Fort Cosmos, three hundred miles up the
-Kowak, and who announced that place to be our best winter harbor.
-They had found some "colors," but nothing definite as to gold.
-
-This will prove my last entry on the Kotzebue, but the winter's
-record will not be dull. I am thinking, by the time we thaw out in
-the spring of 1899. C. C. and the doctor, whose proclivities are well
-known to be of a semi-religious type, have a whole library of good
-books, such as "Helpful Thoughts." "The Greatest Thing in the World."
-Bible commentaries, and so on, with which we may enliven the winter
-evening that knows no cock-crowing. However, we shall have games and
-lighter reading.
-
-I have now more than one hundred bird-skins, some of them rare, such
-as Sabines' gull. Point Barrow gull, etc. I believe I am the only
-one of the party who could get the smallest satisfaction out of a
-possible disappointment as to gold.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-
-Penelope Camp, Kowak River, Aug. 28.--Here we are, one hundred and
-seventy miles from the mouth of the Kowak River and hard at work on
-our winter cabin. The "Helen" is almost a failure, else we should
-have been much farther up the river. The river is swift and has many
-rapids which we could not stem. The boat is slow. Her wheel is too
-small. She will be remodeled this winter. It took five days to come
-this far, and, as there are two more loads to bring up, we thought it
-best to halt. We have been here a week and the walls of the cabin are
-nearly done, so that we are on the eve of owning a winter residence
-on the Kowak. We are expecting the "Helen" back soon with her second
-load.
-
-The Kowak River, though scarcely indicated on good-sized maps, is as
-large as the Missouri. At our camp it is nearly a mile across, and
-very deep on this side, with sand bars in the middle. Other folks are
-having a harder time than we. Only three out of the dozen or more
-river steamers are a success. One is fast on a sand bar, and it looks
-as if she would stay there.
-
-Some of our crowd think we had a hard time, but when we compare our
-lot with that of others we see it differently. Hundreds are toiling
-up in the rain, towing their loaded skiffs mile after mile along
-muddy banks. We have not had an accident worth mentioning unless it
-be the loss of a water pail. We took the wrong channel once coming up
-and steamed twenty-four hours up a branch river. It was the Squirrel
-River, and although but a tributary to the Kowak, is as large as the
-Sacramento and San Joaquin combined. It was so very crooked that at
-one point where we stopped to wood up. I climbed a hill and could
-see its route for several miles. Our course went around the compass
-once and half way again. When we got back to the Kowak we made good
-time until we reached the first rapids, where our trouble began.
-The "Helen" would swing around and lose all she had made every few
-minutes when the current struck her broadside. Finally a squad of us
-took to the river bank with a long tow-rope, and foot by foot she was
-towed past the critical points. There were six of these rapids. When
-the wind blew there was fresh trouble; it would catch on the side of
-the "house" and blow the boat around in spite of us. She almost got
-away from us once, and we were in danger of being dragged off the
-bank, in spite of the fact that we dug our heels into the ground and
-braced with might and main. It was a tug of war. And such is gold
-hunting in the Far North!
-
-Many others had a still harder time. We passed thirty of these
-parties in one day towing their provisions, while many lost their
-boats. There must inevitably be great suffering here this winter.
-Men have not realized what a long winter it will be and are poorly
-provisioned.
-
-[Illustration: A Morning Hunt.]
-
-Our crowd is becoming a trifle disappointed as to the gold
-proposition, and of course the general discontent is infectious.
-Hundreds are going back down the river every day, spreading defeat
-and failure in their path, and yet they have done no actual
-prospecting. This is a large country and a year is none too long to
-hunt; but with many parties the result is that after panning out a
-little sand the job is thrown up.
-
-Birds are all right here, if there isn't any gold. I have been into
-the woods only twice so far, but secured another rare specimen of
-Hennicott's Willow Warbler. There is a bear in the woods back of
-camp. I have "laid" for him three times, but he is very shy.
-
-Sept. 1.--The "Helen" came with her last load yesterday, and our
-whole crowd is together again excepting the three men with the
-"Penelope."
-
-After a big pow-wow it has been decided to divide for the winter. Ten
-men are to take the "Helen." with supplies, and push up the river
-as far as possible. They think they can do some mining during the
-winter. We who are destined to live together here for eight mouths
-are Dr. Coffin, C. C. Reynolds. Harry Reynolds, Clyde Baldwin,
-Cox. Brown. Rivers, Wyse and myself. Time will prove if this is a
-congenial combination. We shall resemble California canned goods in
-our narrow limits, and the winter will show our "keeping qualities."
-Andy and Albert, our Swede sailors, leave us to-day. They were hired
-and do not belong to the company, and will return to Kotzebue, where
-they hope to ship for St. Michaels.
-
-[Illustration: Our Winter Cabin.]
-
-Camp Penelope, Kowak River, Sept. 13.--Our cabin is done. It measures
-25 × 30 feet. We moved in on the 7th. The river rose very high and
-threatened to inundate our tents. The place where they were is now
-under water. Our cabin roof was not a success. It was too flat. On
-the night we moved in it rained heavily, and about 2 a. m. we were
-roused by the water pouring in on our beds and our precious supplies.
-We got to work without delay. The roof could not be repaired without
-rebuilding it, so we spread it all over with flies and tent cloth,
-which froze stiff for the winter, and now we are dry. When the cabin
-was started it was intended for our whole party, but there is no
-room to spare even now with only nine occupants. The foundation
-was leveled on the side of the knoll, so that the top of the hill
-is nearly as high as the roof and the earth is banked the rest of
-the way over the wall. That leaves no point for the north wind to
-strike the house. We made a lean-to on the west and the door from
-the cabin opens into it. We have two windows, which we brought with
-us, fitted on the south. The interior of the cabin is a single room
-seven feet high. It has a gable a foot or two higher, which gives
-"ample breathing space." as I told the boys, but which I have my eye
-on as a storeroom for my collection. The roof above this structure
-is fearfully and wonderfully made. If it had a trifle more pitch to
-it, to make it shed water, it would be better. A heavy ridge-pole and
-stringers run lengthwise, and over these are closely laid poles, the
-butts at the eaves along the sides, and the slender tops bent over
-and clinched on the opposite side of the roof. Above the poles is
-packed a thick layer of moss. Above the moss is a layer of heavy sod
-with the dirt side up. Above all is a layer of spruce boughs like
-shingles. These boughs grow thick and flat, with needles pointing the
-same way, so they make good roofing.
-
-The logs of the walls are chinked tightly with the moss. The floor
-is the natural sand. We did not cut the timber from near the house
-on account of the protection it gives us from the north winds. Trees
-large and long enough for building purposes are not very numerous,
-and we had to carry them a good ways. A few are as large as twenty
-inches at the butt, but mostly they are from ten to fifteen inches.
-It is all that eight of us can do to struggle along with one of these
-logs, they are so heavy, and we put them on rollers sometimes. Four
-of the men can easily carry one of the twenty-four foot logs, but a
-green spruce log of any size is always heavier than it looks.
-
-[Illustration: Start for the Hunt River, Towing our Boat.]
-
-I have initiated "Brownie" into the secret mysteries of the cook
-stove, and am one of the regular laborers now, working hard ten hours
-a day. But yet it is fun; for we are working for ourselves, with but
-the clean woods all about us, and there is a fascination in chopping
-up the spruces, their delightful fragrance permeating everywhere.
-
-Sept. 19.--Six of us have just returned from a trip up the Hunt
-River--Harry Reynolds, Wyse, Cox, Rivers, Clyde and myself. I was
-culinary officer as usual. We had the eighteen-foot sealing boat, and
-It was loaded pretty heavily. The whole of us had to work for it,
-one in the stern of the boat to steer, one wading at the tow-line
-as near the boat as possible, to lift it over snags, and the other
-four tugging at the tow-line. We wore hip boots and outside of them
-oil-skin trousers tied around the ankles. Even with this outfit we
-were constantly getting into the water all over. Rivers got a soaking
-the first day. He shot a duck and jumped out of the boat in pursuit.
-The bottom is so plain through the water that it is deceptive, and
-he went in up to his waist, but he grabbed the side of the boat to
-keep from going under. He got his duck--and a ducking thrown in. We
-had to pull him in and to the shore, where we got him out of his
-wet clothes. In the afternoon Wyse also got a ducking by falling
-into a pool as he was scrambling up a steep bank. We found good
-camping-places. We had two tents, which we put up facing each other,
-with a flap left up on the side of one of them for a door. The two
-were heated by the sheet-iron camp-stove. At noon we did not put up
-the tents, but got dinner in the open--flapjacks, coffee and bacon.
-I shot two geese the first day out, which gave us a couple of meals.
-They were young and so fat I could not save their skins. But I made a
-drawing of one of them so that I could be positive of their identity.
-Looking them up when I got home where my books are, I found them to
-be the Hutchins goose. The doctor and I shot two white-fronted geese
-on the banks of the Kowak. We see a good many, but they also see us
-and we have to do a good deal of sneaking through the bushes to get
-any.
-
-We had some narrow escapes, especially Cox, who fell into a
-whirlpool. He was dragged off his feet by the rushing water, but we
-pulled him into the boat after a frightful struggle.
-
-On the fourth day out Clyde and I thought we would explore a little
-canon. Harry Reynolds had washed out several pans of sand from
-different bars on the way up, but had not found a trace of gold.
-Clyde and I hoped to have better luck, and started out in high
-spirits with spade and pick and gold-pan to do our first prospecting.
-
-We found a brook in the cañon where we panned some without success.
-Finally we found a place where the stream ran over bed-rock. The
-rock had cracks and fissures running crosswise with the stream, so
-we reasoned that if there was gold above, particles would have been
-caught in these cracks. We dammed the brook and turned the stream to
-one side, exposing the fissures in the rock. We then gathered several
-pans of sand from the niches, examining it with wistful eyes, but
-no trace of gold did we find. So we gave it up on that stream. We
-found nothing save Fool's Gold. We kept on up the cañon and, as it
-was yet early, decided to climb the mountain peak. As we went up the
-spruces grew smaller and finally disappeared. The sides were barren
-save for a thin covering of moss and lichens and patches of stunted
-huckleberry bushes. These bushes, not more than three or four inches
-high, bore hordes of luscious ripe huckleberries, and nearly every
-hundred feet in our climb we would drop on our knees on the soft moss
-and till ourselves, so often could we find room for more. Another
-little black spicy berry growing in crannies was good. Just as we
-were toiling up the last slope a flock of twenty white ptarmigan flew
-up in front of us, and circled down to another ridge. They, too, had
-been feeding on the huckleberries.
-
-As we rested ourselves, sheltered in a niche of the summit crag safe
-from the chilling wind, a little red-backed mouse ran from a crevice
-and scampered through the moss straight to a huckleberry patch, his
-own winter garden. Clouds began to gather on the highest peaks, and
-we started down, leaving them behind.
-
-The moss was slippery and we found that we could slide down the steep
-pitches easier than we could walk or jump. I remembered seeing the
-little Sioux slide down the hills of Dakota in government skillets,
-and immediately sat down on my shovel, steering with the handle just
-as I had seen the Indian boys do, and made terrific progress. I was
-soon able to pick myself up, feigning to examine a ledge of quartz
-while I rubbed my posterior, and looked back for Clyde.
-
-He tried sitting in the gold-pan and started all right, but soon
-found that he couldn't steer. He went at a frightful rate, tearing
-down the steep slide backwards, until he, too, found himself
-examining the geological strata while giving some attention to his
-anatomy. And then we had to hunt for the gold-pan which, from the
-musical sounds which grew fainter and fainter and finally died away
-altogether, must have got switched off into the bottomless abyss.
-Will it be found some day generations hence and borne off in triumph
-as proof of a prehistoric race? It was a race. Such is gold-hunting
-in far-away Alaska.
-
-At camp that evening we were joined by a native, "Charley." who told
-us by signs and by what few words he could speak, that he had come
-part way up the Hunt River behind us, but had left his birch-bark
-canoe several miles below, roaming off to hunt in the neighboring
-hills.
-
-He told us that he had shot a bear the day before and had cached it
-down the river, his boat being too small to take it. He wanted us
-to go and get it. Sure enough, a few miles down, we found the bear
-as Charley had said. It was all cut up, the skin being stretched
-on poles and fastened in a tree. The carcass was also divided and
-hidden in a pole-box raised high on a slender scaffold. Charley had
-expected to come on his sled later on and take it home. After loading
-on this prize we continued down the river, the Indian accompanying us
-in his canoe. The rapids were furious and many, and we shot them as
-if we had been behind a locomotive. It took a cool head to steer a
-boat under these conditions, and Cox did it. At one place the stream
-had washed under a bank above and trees had fallen over, making a
-complete set of rafters. The current rushed the boat under a series
-of these, like city roofs, and it kept us busy to duck our heads.
-
-[Illustration: We Receive Visitors.]
-
-We arrived home yesterday, making in seven hours a distance that
-had taken us three days to go up. Charley gave us bear meat to last
-a month. It tastes fishy, as the bears live mostly on salmon in
-summer, but it is a welcome addition to our larder. During the trip
-I obtained two hawk owls and an Alaskan three-toed wood-pecker, both
-species being new to my collection.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-
-Oct. 15. 1898.--In looking over my diary I find that I have recorded
-no "bad weather." This comes of my having inherited a tendency to
-look on the bright side of things. I hear such complaints as "bad
-weather," "disagreeable day." "awfully cold." etc. Days when some are
-grumbling about its being "too hot" or "too cold," "too wet" or "too
-windy," I find some special reason for thinking it very pleasant.
-It is no virtue of mine, as I said. It is natural. Up till to-day
-there has been warm weather mostly. Now there is a sudden drop in the
-temperature. Seven degrees above zero this morning. The north wind
-is blowing and makes one's ears tingle. All standing water is frozen
-and the Kowak has begun to show patches of ice floating down with
-the current. The great river is choking. It is being filled with ice
-which can move but slowly, grinding and crunching and piling up into
-ridges where opposing fields meet. Suddenly it is at a standstill. In
-a day or two the ice will support us, as it does now on the margin.
-
-[Illustration: The Wreck of the "John Riley'"]
-
-So quickly does the cold of winter close its grip. All these
-achievements of nature are new and interesting to me. I ran down to
-the river bank a dozen times to-day to note how the process is going
-on. It is very low now on account of the dry weather of the past
-weeks, but, as the choking goes on, a flow of water comes down from
-above over the ice, making a double fastness. The only fish that can
-survive will be those that seek the deeper places. There will be no
-more passing of boats. We hear that the steamer "John Riley" has been
-left high and dry on a sand-bar, and has broken in two in the middle
-by her own weight. Two other boats are aground on sand-bars, and must
-be taken to pieces if ever rescued.
-
-Since the Hunt River trip I have been at home mostly. I have been
-cook, of course, a part of the time. There is no special work to be
-done outside.
-
-I have collected some birds, but they are growing very scarce. I
-went into the woods to-day for a couple of hours, and saw only two
-redpolls.
-
-Redpolls look and act very much like our goldfinches in the States.
-Rivers made me a bird-table. It is strange, but everybody declared
-they would "fire" me bodily if I continued to skin birds on the
-dining-table; that is why Rivers took pity on me and made me the
-finest table I could wish for, and a chair to match.
-
-We have the saw-mill. Dr. Coffin and Harry Cox, with the aid of
-others, ran that for several days, and enough boards were ripped out
-to cover the cabin floor, besides library and cupboard shelves. They
-declare "whipping" is hard work. I didn't try it myself, as I was
-cooking at the time. I prefer to run a cross-cut saw. The saw-mill
-worked "relays," working five minutes, talking fifteen minutes,
-resting a half hour before the next took its place. Whip-sawing is an
-interesting process, especially to the man who stands below and looks
-up into the shower of sawdust. The doctor advised the plan of wearing
-snow-glasses, so that the sawdust difficulty was obviated, but the
-hard work was still there. The doctor tried his best to get me into
-the business, for he said it would surely tend to straighten my back,
-which stoops from constant skinning of birds at the table. He got
-such a "crick" in his back from whip-sawing that he could scarcely
-sleep for several nights.
-
-Besides the saw-mill, there was the furniture factory. C. C. and
-Harry Reynolds and Dr. Coffin were engaged in that enterprise. As a
-result the cabin is supplied with double bedsteads, with spring-pole
-slats and mattresses. And there are lines of wooden pegs in the
-wall for hanging clothing, and carpets for the bed-rooms made of
-gunny-sacking stuffed with dry moss.
-
-A partial partition runs lengthwise of the cabin. At the kitchen end
-this partition is composed of a tier of wood, then an entrance space,
-and then a series of shelves from top to bottom for pantry, medical
-department and library, which latter is extensive. At the farther
-end is another open space communicating with the "bed-rooms." The
-whole inside of the cabin is lined with white canvas tenting, which
-brightens us up ten times better than dark logs. On the south side of
-the partition is the "living-room," "dining-room" and "kitchen;" all
-in one apartment to be sure, but yet with their recognized limits.
-On the north side of the partition is the bed-room. There are three
-double beds and three single ones, according to the wishes of the
-occupants. A pole runs crosswise of the apartment, and on each side
-of this is a line of pegs hung full of clothes. This forms a wall
-dividing the apartment into "bed-rooms." Carpeted alleys run between
-the beds, and the walls are hung with clothing. What we are to do
-with all this clothing I do not know.
-
-[Illustration: Our Sitting-room.]
-
-Oct. 21.--Just through supper and everyone has settled down to read,
-excepting several who have gone out to "call at the neighbors'." C.
-C. Reynolds, our president, undertaker, preacher, all-around-man, has
-taken to cooking. He started in well. For supper he gave us some fine
-tarts. I am glad to be relieved from the cooking, and do not intend
-to engage in the business again. We shall see.
-
-I am skinning mice now, little red-backed fellows which swarm in the
-woods and around the houses. I set my traps every night. This morning
-I had a dozen. Wolverines and foxes are common about here, but they
-are too cute for me and decline to be caught in the steel traps
-which I keep constantly set for them. An Indian shot two deer in the
-mountains and brought them to the village. The doctor traded for some
-venison, which is better than the bear meat, though I have no craving
-for either. The boys think me a baby because I prefer "mush" to meat.
-
-Last Sunday the temperature fell to even zero. The trees were heavily
-covered with hoar frost, and the scene, as the sun rose upon it, was
-magnificent.
-
-[Illustration: Our Kitchen.]
-
-Everything is frozen solid. The river has nearly a foot of ice
-already. The natives are fishing through the ice and their methods
-are very novel to me. They select a narrow place in the river,
-and through holes cut in the Ice they stick spruce poles with the
-branches left on, so that a fence is formed across the river between
-the surface and the bed. At intervals openings are left, and across
-these openings nets are stretched. The fish are coming down the river
-at this time in the year, and when they reach one of these fences
-they swim along until they come to one of the openings, when they are
-caught in the net. An Indian woman lies on the ice face down, all
-covered over tight above with brush and tent cloth, so she can watch
-when the fish get into the net. Besides netting them this way, the
-natives have baited lines laid for the larger fish. Hooks are not
-used, but the bait, a small fish for instance, is tied to the end of
-a string, and with it a short, slender stick. A large fish swallows
-the bait and the stick with it. When the fish starts away the line
-is jerked taut, and the stick turns crosswise in his stomach, and
-holds the game secure until drawn up through the hole in the ice.
-Several of us were over watching the Indians fishing yesterday and
-were examining Some of the fish. I picked one up in my innocence, but
-was commanded to put it down. The women were very much vexed with me,
-and were careful to place the fish exactly the way it was. Clyde came
-with his camera to take some photographs, but the natives considered
-it "bad luck," and he was remonstrated with vehemently, and finally
-went away, dallying until he had taken a shot or two. These women
-will have their hands full with us boys before the winter is over, I
-fear.
-
-The natives will not dress any deer skins until the snow comes, "so
-that game will be plenty" this winter. I am at work upon a small
-vocabulary of the Eskimo language, and already have two hundred
-words. The language has many guttural sounds, and is hard to express
-with letters, but I am learning it rapidly, and getting the words
-written as accurately as possible under difficulties.
-
-One of the Indian boys, Lyabukh, is very bright, and understands what
-I want. He is learning English very fast.
-
-[Illustration: Come to Church.]
-
-Our preacher holds services regularly every Sunday, and we go out to
-gather in all the Indians of the village and the white men in the
-vicinity. Four parties of three white men each, have put up winter
-quarters within a mile of us, so we have quite a community. Besides
-these, there are some twenty prospectors six miles below us and five
-above us. All have built snug winter cabins. About a mile above us,
-back in the woods, twenty Eskimos have established their village for
-the winter, and built their dug-outs, or igloos. There is seldom
-an hour in the day when two or more natives are not in our cabin,
-and, with a little encouragement, such as C. C, with his missionary
-instincts, gives them, they have become very persistent visitors.
-
-Last Sunday services were largely attended, there being fifteen
-natives, and ten of our white neighbors. It was proposed, and
-unanimously carried, that a church be constructed by this community.
-So Monday. Tuesday and Wednesday over a dozen men were at work on the
-new chapel, which is located back in a sheltered place in the woods.
-It is now finished except the fireplace, and will serve as a church,
-school-room, and lecture-room or town hall.
-
-Several of us are going to start a school for the Eskimo children in
-the neighborhood. We have seven months before us to occupy in some
-manner, and why not this? It would be monotonous to be continuously
-biting off northern zephyrs, and pulling the threads out of a tangled
-beard, and rubbing one's ears, and eating baking-powder biscuit;
-biscuit that are none of your light, fluffy things that have no
-backbone to them, but something that will stay with you on a hunt or
-a tramp with the temperature below the counting mark. Then there are
-the nice fat sides of bacon carefully preserved--"the white man's
-buffalo meat," as the Sioux Indians used to call it. We have ordinary
-fried bacon, and hashed bacon, and pork chops. When it is dreadfully
-cold and it doesn't slice readily, we chop it up with the axe--and
-then it is we have pork chops!
-
-For variety's sake, if for nothing else, we would all vote the
-"school." Our life on the Kowak will not be a sealed book never to
-be read again when once the springtime lays it away on the shelf. We
-shall take it down and peruse it and possibly make marginal entries
-in it when we are too old to do anything else. Sitting in the chimney
-corner toothless, and feeble of gait, it will give us pleasure to
-remember the "school" in the woods, on the banks of the mighty Kowak.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-
-Oct. 30.--Returned last night from a six days' trip up Hunt River.
-Clyde and I started together with the expectation of getting far
-into the mountain ranges. As has been my custom from a small boy
-when starting on a trip. I made big preparations, much bigger than
-necessary. We had grub enough for two weeks. The boys expected great
-things on our return--bear, deer and other game, all of which was
-confidently promised. But to tell the honest truth, I wanted to get
-some chickadees and butcher birds. To carry our voluminous outfit we
-appropriated a sled belonging to a neighboring Indian who had gone
-fishing. These native sleds are very light, having birch runners,
-and slender spruce frame-work, the whole strongly lashed together
-with raw-hide thongs. Every morning before loading we poured water
-on the runners, thus forming an ice shoe. As yet there is no snow,
-so that our route necessarily lay along the frozen river, which was
-covered with a foot of ice. Our load weighed about three hundred
-pounds, and where the ice was smooth little exertion was needed to
-draw the sled as fast as we could walk. In some places sand had
-blown into the ice and such spots would give us hard work. We wore
-"creepers" on our heavy boots--that is, a kind of conical pointed
-spike, screwed into the bottoms, three into the heel and four into
-the sole of the shoe. With these we can walk anywhere up or down upon
-the ice without slipping. In traveling, one of us pulled the sled,
-with the rope over his shoulder, while the other pushed. Across the
-rear of the sled were two sticks projecting backwards and upwards,
-with a cross-piece to push against, baby-carriage fashion.
-
-The first day we made rapid progress, making twenty-five miles. We
-camped at night not far from the first foot-hills. The tent was
-raised in a grove of cottonwoods near the river, and soon a fire
-roared in the camp stove. When I had the fire well started, I went
-down to get a pail of water. I walked to the middle of the creek and
-began to chop hard where I thought the ice was thinnest. Sure enough
-I had judged correctly, for with the second stroke the ice gave way
-under me, and down I went to the arm-pits in the icy water. I had
-fallen through an air hole. Luckily the ice all around was firm, so
-that I could raise myself up and wriggle out, or else my bath might
-have been continued. As it was, before I could reach the tent my
-clothes were frozen stiff. The temperature was below zero.
-
-Fortunately for me I had a warm tent and a change of clothes to go
-to. Meanwhile Clyde had cut a big pile of wood and soon we were
-wrestling with piles of flapjacks.
-
-After supper I had another experience with the ice. Forgetting that
-I had exchanged my wet boots for a pair of shoes without creepers
-in them. I started to go across the river. After the first ice had
-formed the river had fallen, and now the ice sagged downward from
-the banks towards the middle, hammock-wise. As soon as I stepped
-on the ice my feet flew out from under me and down I slid. I got
-up, no worse for wear, but with a sudden recollection that I had no
-creepers on. I cautiously started to walk to the bank, but on account
-of the slant of the slippery ice, I could make little headway before
-slipping back. I was in a similar position to that of a mouse in a
-tin basin. Finally by walking down the river a short distance, I
-pulled myself up by an overhanging willow.
-
-Next morning at sunrise--eight o'clock--we started on up the river.
-Soon we came to long stretches of open water where the stream had
-been too swift to freeze over. In several places the icy margin was
-so narrow that it afforded room for but one runner on the ice, and we
-had to drag the sled over pebbles and sand.
-
-Owing to the fact that the stream became swifter the further we went,
-we turned about and started back with a view to making camp among the
-willows down the river, where we had seen the most birds on the way
-up.
-
-[Illustration: Native Method of Piling Winter Wood.]
-
-Clyde shot twice with his rifle at a red fox, but missed it. He got
-"rattled." as one usually does when shooting at game, and as I have
-seen good hunters do. He tried a target at the same distance as the
-fox had been and hit the bull's-eye squarely.
-
-We got down to the willows late in the evening, but in time to select
-a sheltered place for the tent before dark. While I cooked the supper
-Clyde gathered a large stack of hay for our bed. In a swale near by
-the finest kind of red-top hay, all cured, stood waist deep. Here,
-among the willows, eight miles from Camp Penelope, we remained for
-four nights. There were a good many fox and wolf tracks in the sand,
-and I had my traps set all the time, but without success. However.
-I obtained a mouse new to me--the lemming. Clyde tramped through
-the country toward the mountains, but saw nothing of importance.
-He fished and brought back three grayling. I paid my respects to
-the small birds and secured four rare chickadees, besides several
-redpolls, pine grosbeaks. Alaskan jay, grouse, ptarmigan, etc. I had
-bad luck with ptarmigan. I missed seven good shots for some reason.
-The ptarmigan are now clothed in very thick winter plumage, which may
-account for it in part.
-
-I secured five. They are pure, spotless white with black tails. They
-are very conspicuous now, until the snow comes, and they seem to
-realize it, for they are extremely shy. They remain in flocks in the
-willow thickets. In the middle of the day they may be found dusting
-themselves on the sunny side of the river banks among the willows.
-Their tracks are everywhere. Although there is no snow on the ground,
-in many places there is a thick layer of hoar frost on the sand and
-grass, and tracks of any bird or animal are easily seen.
-
-The days have grown very short now. We would have to light our candle
-by half-past hour, and soon we would begin to yawn, and by six we
-would go to sleep, not to get up again until eight the next morning;
-and even then it is with reluctance, on account of the cold. The tent
-was easy to keep comfortably warm on the inside as long as the fire
-burned in the stove, but in an hour after the fire went out it was
-as cold inside as it was outside. Clyde and I slept on the hay with
-two pairs of blankets under us, and two pairs over us, and a large
-canvas sheet outside of the blankets well tucked in. And the blankets
-were no common ones. They were made for the Arctic trade, and were
-as thick as an ordinary comforter. And then we wore all our clothes.
-Each had on three pairs of heavy wool socks, a hood and mittens.
-
-In the morning the edges of the blankets were faced with ice from our
-breath, and the inside of the tent sparkled with a beauty I cannot
-describe. It was fourteen degrees below zero the last morning, and
-the boys at home declared we got "frozen out," the reason we returned
-so soon. When they found out that we did not go even to the foot
-of the mountains, but had camped all that time in the willows just
-across the river, they ridiculed us unmercifully, especially the
-doctor. But I'll be even with him some bright Arctic day. He even
-insinuated that I went on that trip just to be able to cook as much
-mush as I wanted to eat. I will admit that mush was a very agreeable
-feature of the trip.
-
-I really obtained what I went for--the chickadees. I have tramped
-with a burro (a California donkey), a canoe, and at last with a sled,
-and I must say that the sled is preferable when one has a level
-surface to travel over.
-
-We had carried grub for two weeks, a 7 × 10 tent, camp stove and
-three lengths of pipe, four pairs of blankets, tent fly, sailor bag
-full of clothing, axe, hatchet, camera, two guns, traps, etc. I think
-I will make another trip soon if the weather remains clear.
-
-Nov. 7.--A week ago Dr. Coffin, Clyde and Rivers, with a Dr. Gleaves
-of the Hanson Camp below us, started up the Kowak to visit the other
-section of our company about one hundred and fifty miles north, and
-to find out all the news of interest along the route. They walked,
-carrying food, abundant clothing, and camping tools, on a sled.
-They hope to make the round trip in three weeks. I had intended to
-make the trip with them, but have not yet put up all the birds in
-my possession, and must work on them. We are a small family now,
-only six. C. C. still cooks, and I am willing he should continue the
-good work. He makes pies and cakes almost "as good as mother used to
-make," and fine yeast bread.
-
-A damp, raw east wind makes it bitterly cold to-day. At daylight
-this morning I went across the river to the willows for a couple of
-hours. It was six degrees below zero when I started, and I wore only
-a thin hood and mittens and a canvas jumper. By the time I got well
-across I felt nearly frozen, and as soon as possible I built a fire.
-My nose was frost-bitten before I knew it. I shot a ptarmigan and two
-redpolls before returning.
-
-Chenetto, one of our native neighbors, trapped a big gray wolf, a
-white fox and a red fox last week, I have tried to trade for them,
-but the natives say they need them for clothing; and they very
-plainly do, for these are the poorest Indians we have met. I regret
-our opportunity for trading down at Cape Prince of Wales. We expected
-the same advantage in Kotzebue, but are disappointed. One or two of
-our company keep an eye on special bargains and appropriate them.
-
-Last week a German called at every camp on the Kowak working up a
-"winter mail route." He had skated up from the mouth of the river,
-and proposed to take letters down to Cape Blossom for one dollar
-each. A reindeer team is expected there from St. Michaels in December
-which will bring in or carry back any mail. He is called "The Flying
-Dutchman."
-
-Another man from up the river came down yesterday on the same
-business, proposing further to take mail himself to St. Michaels.
-Some of our Iowa neighbors warned us of him as a possible "crook." He
-claims to have seven hundred letters promised at one dollar each. One
-meets all kinds of people in this desolate country, and even the face
-of a "crook" is not rare.
-
-[Illustration: The "Flying Dutchman."]
-
-Schemers are trying various ways to get money. The gold proposition
-here is an entire failure so far, and the stories published are
-no better than "made up on purpose." It is supposed they were
-constructed by the transportation companies, and surely these have
-reaped a harvest this year. A thousand men are in winter quarters
-in the Kotzebue region, besides the many who went back the last
-thing in the fall. Hundreds of thousands of dollars were expended
-by parties coming here, and nothing is taken out; all of that money
-going to the transportation companies and merchants of San Francisco
-and Seattle. The H---- crowd alone, who are camped five miles below
-us, paid $31,000 for their outfit, including sailing vessel and
-river steamer. Part of this company got "cold feet" and went back,
-and the remainder have tons of provisions here to dispose of. They
-cannot get it into the interior to the Klondike regions, and so they
-will have to transport it all back down the river and so on to San
-Francisco, unless they can dispose of it on the way, which is not
-likely. It is strange how many fools were started to this country
-by bogus reports in the newspapers. Each party thought itself about
-the only one coming up here, and, what is most amusing, many of them
-had a "sure thing." Several parties whom we know of paid someone for
-a "tip" as to the exact place where the gold was waiting for the
-lucky men to pick it up. When they arrived at the Sound they rushed
-as soon as their feet could carry them, to take possession of their
-promised gold, only to find that they had been duped. They returned
-with righteous indignation burning in their bosoms, and to this day
-and for all time to come, justice is in hiding for the scoundrels, if
-they are found.
-
-This country may possibly have gold in it, for I know that it has not
-been prospected as it should. Men pan out on a sand-bar of a river
-here and there and are discouraged at finding nothing. And moreover
-they will not do another stroke of work, but either return to the
-States, or camp somewhere waiting for "another man" to sink shafts
-and do what we know is real prospecting. I should not be surprised
-if three-fourths of the people on this river are idle, waiting for
-the others to dig. I know that our camp has done practically nothing,
-as may be seen from the reports which I have made, when I myself was
-supposed to be one of the prospectors. We are all equally guilty.
-It seems that people expected to find mines all ready to work, and,
-since none are visible, sit down and give it up. Our company, as well
-as many another, is something of a farce when it comes to being a
-"mining company." We are doing nothing. It seems that when the gold
-fever takes hold of a man it deprives him of a fair proportion of
-his reason. But it cannot be denied that we are getting experience.
-Who would not be a miner under such comfortable circumstances as
-ours? Meanwhile I am skinning mice and chickadees. I am doing exactly
-what I want to do, and work here is original work of which I shall
-be glad in time to come. I would be nowhere else In the world than
-right here now. One cannot take a stroll in the Arctics every day. I
-am resolved to remain as long as I can and improve my opportunities.
-If the company disbands I shall stay with the missionaries. I do
-not know what this gold-hunting expedition came up here for unless
-to accommodate me, unintentionally of course. Everything delights
-me, from the hoar frost on my somewhat scanty though growing beard,
-to the ice-locked Kowak and its border of silver-laden spruces. And
-the ptarmigans: What beautiful birds! part and parcel in color and
-endurance of this frozen world. And the winter is not half over. What
-revelations when spring knocks at the barred doors! How alert the
-awakening landscape I can as yet only partially realize.
-
-[Illustration: In the Spruce Woods.]
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-
-Nov. 12, 7 o'clock a. m.--Great excitement prevails. The "Flying
-Dutchman" returned down the Kowak last night. He is the German who
-passed on about twelve days ago to learn all the news and gather
-mail. He brings us good news, such news as makes the heart of a
-gold-hunter in the Arctics palpitate with emotion. He met a man
-above the Par River, one hundred and seventy-five miles east of us,
-who had just come over from the head waters of the Koyukuk River to
-get a sled-load of provisions. This man reported that gold in large
-quantities had been found on a branch of the Koyukuk near the head of
-this river, and that he and others had staked out rich claims. The
-"Flying Dutchman" also reported that six of our boys from the upper
-Penelope Camp had already started with sleds for that region, and
-that Dr. Coffin had reached the Penelope Camp in safety and was now
-on his way back to give us the news. We expect his party to-night.
-This news, if true, changes the whole aspect of things. We have
-heretofore had no assurance that gold had been found in this country,
-and we believed ourselves to be the victims of "fake" stories. What
-a change of feeling in our camp! Although this report may also
-be a fake, we will enjoy these happy expectations until further
-developments. One thing is true, and that is that our boys above
-here have started a party to the head of the Koyukuk, and must have
-learned something favorable. When the doctor and the rest get back
-to-night we shall certainly know all about it.
-
-It was just a day or two ago that I was writing a discouraging entry.
-So hope follows despair, and again despair may follow on the heels of
-hope, with gold-hunters.
-
-We have two sleds now nearly finished, so that if the doctor confirms
-the news, we will be ready to start immediately for the Koyukuk in
-the teeth of an Arctic winter. Let it growl: What care gold-hunters
-for old Boreas? We are in high spirits. Last night we had what is
-denominated with us "a high old time." We yelled, and danced, and
-sang impromptu songs, such as the following, which needs the camp
-conditions to give it the true ring:
-
- The Flying Dutchman came round the bend,
- Good-by, old Kowak, good-by;
- Shouting the news to all the men,
- Good-by, old Kowak, good-by.
- Gold is found on the Koyukuk,
- The people here will be piechuck (Eskimo for "gone").
- The "Penelope" gang have made a sleigh,
- And part are now upon the way.
- If you get there before I do.
- Stake a claim there for me, too.
- We'll start right now with spade and shovel,
- And dig out gold to beat the devil.
-
-This immortal song proves that we are a lively crowd. With the banjo
-and autoharp as accompaniment, we demonstrate a "good time" while we
-feel like it.
-
-Meanwhile, until further news, we shall continue to get ready between
-the songs. Brown and I and the two Harrys are making a sled.
-
-Last Sunday we had a good-sized congregation for morning "services."
-Twenty-five white men were present, but only a few natives. We were
-wondering why the Eskimos were not coming, and Harry Reynolds went up
-to the village to see. He found them all playing poker. Harry finally
-persuaded two men to come, after they had won all the stakes. The
-rest kept on playing. Natives who cannot speak a word of English--and
-very few can--know how to play cards, and can read the numbers in
-their own language and count up faster than we. They play for lead,
-cartridges, tobacco, etc., but the stakes are never very large, owing
-to their limited means. Yesterday our cabin was full of Eskimos all
-day.
-
-A couple of young men got hold of our crokonole board, starting in at
-ten in the morning and playing without a stop until ten at night. And
-they can play well, too; better than we can. We found that they were
-playing for tobacco, am! that in the house of a half-way missionary
-outfit who have just completed a chapel for the regeneration of the
-natives! A previously-prepared quid of tobacco, which may have done
-service as the stake for other games in the past, was enjoyed by the
-winner of each game, until he in turn was defeated, when the quid
-reverted to the original winner, and so on back and forth all day.
-
-[Illustration: Native Visitors.]
-
-The Indians seldom spit out the tobacco juice, but swallow it. They
-seem to have cast-iron stomachs. When they smoke, they draw the smoke
-into their lungs and retain it several seconds before exhaling. I
-have many times watched an Indian inhale a great puff of smoke, but
-I have never seen it return again. Whether they swallow it, as they
-seem to do, or what becomes of it, I do not know. The women and even
-little children all smoke. I saw a funny sight last summer down near
-the Mission, and only regret that the camera was not along. A little
-"kid" about four years old, without a stitch of clothing on, except
-an officer's old cap, was strutting around the camp with an immense
-corn-cob pipe in his mouth, and he knew how to smoke, too. The
-question is, where did he get the pipe?
-
-At noon yesterday there were six or eight Eskimo men and one woman
-sitting around in the cabin, and as usual at meal-time C. C. gave
-them something to eat. Among the other viands were some beans and a
-bowl of gravy. This gravy had been made from the juice of fried bear
-meat, but it did not have a shred of the meat in it. C. C. passed
-around this varied mess in bowls to the natives. They began to eat
-with relish, when one of the men suddenly demanded of C. C. in a
-stern voice whether there was any bear in the "cow-cow" (food).
-
-C. C. said at first there was not, but the Indian tasted it again and
-looked suspiciously at C. C. who suddenly remembered the bear juice
-and admitted there was "a little." The woman at once threw down her
-food and the men fell to talking earnestly. They said that bear meat
-would kill a woman if she ate it, but it was perfectly safe for men.
-It is awful to think of; how we might have been held up for murder in
-that desolate land, and hung by a raw-hide rope to the dome of the
-Arctic Circle. It is a fact that this woman died two weeks afterward.
-The natives hold many superstitions as to when and what to eat. No
-Indian woman was allowed to do any sewing in the village yesterday
-because there was a man very sick in one of the igloos. Should they
-dare to sew it might cause his death.
-
-It is half-past seven now, and C. C. has got up and is starting the
-breakfast. It is beginning to be quite light outside and I will go
-out and examine my traps before breakfast.
-
-[Illustration: Entrance to Native Igloo.]
-
-Sunday. Nov. 13.--The wind has blown from the north constantly for
-two days and is increasing. The doctor and the boys are not back
-either, so they must have stopped at some camp on the way down. They
-are wise to do that. I went out on the river awhile this evening, and
-could scarcely stand up against the wind. And the sand was blowing
-in clouds across the ice from the opposite side of the river. It has
-been at even zero all day. In spite of the bad weather there was a
-large attendance at church this morning, there being thirty-two white
-men present. There were two from "Ambler City." thirty-six miles up
-the Kowak, and two or three from the Jesse Lou Camp twelve miles
-below us, while nearly all the Hanson boys came up. Those from up
-the river came down on skates yesterday and spent the night at the
-Guardian Camp, four miles above us. They had seen nothing of the
-doctor and his party. Services were held in the new chapel for the
-first time. And it was a great success; the chapel, I mean. The room
-was comfortably filled and was quite warm. A great blazing fire in
-the stone fireplace on one side made it cheerfully warm, and a great
-square opening in the roof, covered with an almost transparent walrus
-gut skin, admitted plenty of light. The service consisted mainly of
-familiar hymns, accompanied by the orchestra. The orchestra consists
-of the autoharp, played by C. C., the clarionet by Lyman of the Iowa
-Camp, the banjo by Harry Reynolds, and the violin by Normandin of the
-Hanson Camp. The music is fine, too. It alone is a big attraction
-for men up in this country, as very few thought of bringing musical
-instruments. C. C. made a short talk, and so did Mr. Dozier of the
-Hanson Camp. After the regular service a social hour was spent. This
-was the first religious meeting since leaving the States, for several
-of the men. It is very nice. I think, to have these Sunday meetings,
-if only for the social enjoyment. Rumor has come to us by way of the
-Yukon and Koyukuk that the Spanish war is at an end, and that the
-Philippines and Cuba are free. How we would like to know the details!
-But alas! by the time we do get them they will be as stale as last
-year's gingerbread.
-
-Nine men accepted our invitation for dinner, and our house might be
-said to be full. C. C. had prepared for such an emergency, and a big
-roast of bear with stuffing, fried venison and pies without limit
-made a feast that everyone enjoyed. We are all "prodigal sons," the
-only difference being that we are having our "fatted calf" all the
-way along. Two of the men declared that this was the first time they
-had eaten pie since leaving home. There is nothing like pie to bring
-a fellow to his home senses.
-
-Those who have visited all the camps on the Kowak, say that ours is
-the largest and most comfortable house on the river. I think this
-is the case but we are not the only ones who enjoy its comforts and
-hospitality.
-
-I do not expect we shall have so large an attendance again at Sunday
-services, for to-morrow ten of the Iowa boys, our nearest neighbors,
-start with heavily loaded sleds to get as far as possible toward the
-Koyukuk before the snow comes. Others are talking of starting soon,
-and if more favorable news comes we may all skip out. I would not
-hesitate a moment to go now if we could be sure as to the snowfall.
-We have no snowshoes, and it would be disastrous to be snowed in for
-several months in some desolate place with limited provisions.
-
-Yesterday I made a hood out of a canvas flour sack to be put on
-outside of my wool hood which mother knit, and it will keep out a
-good deal of wind. I also put a heavy canvas lining over my woolen
-mittens and darned several pairs of socks. That is the first time I
-have done any mending since leaving home. Perhaps there is no time in
-a fellow's life when affectionate remembrance of his human sisters so
-comes to him as when his garments need repairing. Bless them!--the
-sisters and mothers, not the garments.
-
-Last week an Indian brought in another bear, a larger one than the
-Hunt River bear, and we traded for a hind quarter, about forty
-pounds. The flesh is rather strong, but we eat it with relish. C. C.
-has the promise of the hide.
-
-Yesterday there was great activity in sled building. Brown's sled is
-nearly done. Chenetto, a young Eskimo, worked for us most of the day
-lashing the pieces together. He is an expert. Luckily I traded for a
-large quantity of walrus-hide string at Cape Prince of Wales. It is
-about the only material strong enough to lash sleds together.
-
-Last week we nearly all shaved our beards off, which greatly improves
-the looks of most of us. That was not the cause of their removal.
-The ice forms in one's moustache and beard in chunks, and is very
-disagreeable and inconvenient to carry about. C. C. had a specially
-fine beard and it became him. Mine was long on the chin with rather
-silky burnsides, and the boys then called me Si Pumpkins. I then
-shaved off my moustache and all but the long, straggling chin
-whiskers, and they called me Deacon Greentree. But now I am plain
-"Joe" again, and they tell me I shall never attempt another beard at
-risk of disgracing the camp. We have a pair of grocer's scales with
-our hundreds of other things, and weigh ourselves at times. My weight
-is 148 pounds as against 127 when I left home last April. This proves
-that a trip to the Arctics is favorable to health and avoirdupois.
-
-[Illustration: The Leaning Tree that Marked our Camp.]
-
-By the way, I saw my first nuggets to-day. "Hard-luck Jim," one of
-the men from Ambler City, had three small gold nuggets, But they were
-not taken on the Kowak, alas! They came from Cook's Inlet.
-
-The "Flying Dutchman" gave us a diagram of the Kowak River, with the
-camps and distances as he judged them when skating up the river. I
-will record them, beginning at Holtham Inlet. It may be years hence
-that some other prospecting parties will wend their way into these
-parts, and, seeing our deserted villages, pause in wonder at the
-lesson they teach. The first camp is forty miles from the mouth of
-the Kowak, the Buckeye Camp; then thirty-five miles and the Orphans'
-House; one-half mile and Sproud's Camp; nine miles. Riley Wreck; nine
-miles. Faulkenberg Camp; one mile. Lower Kotzebue Camp; twelve miles,
-Indian Camp; twenty miles, Jesse Lou Camp; twelve miles, Sunnyside;
-one-half mile. Lower Hanson Camp; three miles, Lower Penelope Camp
-(our own) and Lower Iowa Camp; four miles, Guardian Camp; thirty
-miles, Ambler City; three miles, Upper Hanson Camp; fifty miles,
-Mulkey's Landing; four miles, Camp Riley; four miles, Agnes Boyd
-Camp; ten miles, Upper Iowa Camp; two miles, Kogoluktuk River, on
-which, about six miles from the mouth, are the Upper Penelope Camp
-(our boys) and river boat "Helen"; ten miles, Stony Camp; one and
-one-half miles, Upper Kotzebue Camp and Kate Sudden gulch; three
-miles, Farnsworth Camp; three miles, Nugget Camp; eight miles,
-Upper Guardian Camp; five miles, Davenport Camp; five miles, Leslie
-D. Camp; eight miles, Ralston Camp; two miles, Par River, Captain
-Green's Camp. From this point there are camps on to the Reed River,
-seventy-five miles further up the Kowak, but the "Flying Dutchman"
-did not go farther than the Par River. He reports eight hundred men
-in winter quarters on the Kowak alone. Thus is this desolate Kowak
-country peopled with expectant gold seekers, where a year ago a white
-man's track in the snow was a thing unknown. And what will be the
-result? Time alone, with the assistance of my note-book, shall record
-it. And here come the boys, but the doctor's face is not jubilant.
-
-[Illustration: Starting for the Koyukuk.]
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-
-Nov. 15. 1898.--The boys returned last night very weary. They gave us
-the news much as the "Flying Dutchman" had. Six of our Upper Penelope
-boys have started for the Koyukuk with four months' provisions. They
-are Miller. Foote, Alec, Stevenson, Shafer and Casey. They carry
-eighteen hundred pounds on two sleds, three men to each sled. Shaul
-has gone to the Pick River, where "good indications" are reported.
-That leaves Wilson, McCullough and Farrar at the Upper Camp. Dr.
-Coffin has little faith in the news. He fears it is an unfounded
-rumor like many another. Moreover our doctor thinks it foolhardy
-and dangerous to start on such a trip, and he is anxious about the
-boys who have gone. None of them have had any experience with cold
-weather, being California boys. Casey, in fact, was never outside
-of Los Angeles county, until this trip, and none of the crowd are
-dressed for severe weather. They have but little fur clothing.
-However, timber covers most of the country they will cross, and they
-will, of course, put up a cabin if necessary. You couldn't entice
-the doctor out on such a trip for all the gold in Alaska. It ranged
-down to thirty-five degrees below zero while he and the boys were
-out, and they camped several nights, although at all the camps on the
-river hospitality reigned. The doctor had one finger frozen. He says
-he did not suspect it was nipped until he warmed his hands over the
-camp fire. It is very easy to be frozen without knowing it, even with
-the thermometer only thirty-five degrees below. But what about sixty
-below zero?
-
-News has come to us that hundreds of other men are waiting to get to
-Kotzebue at the earliest possible moment. The gold-hunters up the
-river are mostly doing nothing, waiting for spring to open so they
-can go home. A few are sinking shafts in favorable localities, but as
-yet without success, though there are some "indications," whatever
-these are. It is a great undertaking to dig a hole in frozen ground.
-Fires are built and kept burning for some time and then removed,
-and the thawed dirt and gravel taken out. This process is repeated
-again and again, and the result is dreadfully slow. Frozen ground
-is tougher than rock to dig in. McCullough. Wilson and Farrar are
-starting such a hole at their camp.
-
-Our enthusiasm about the new strike on the Koyukuk is subsiding. We
-sing no more impromptu songs. But we have six men in that direction,
-and if they are fortunate enough to get through they will send two
-men back for provisions.
-
-Meanwhile I am collecting chickadees and redpolls. A couple or three
-of our leading men, who shall be nameless in this connection, are
-homesick. Yes, blue. They will be seen in Southern California as soon
-as they can crawl out of the Kowak country on their hands and knees.
-Now, watch and see who they are.
-
-Three of our neighbors started up the river yesterday with a load
-of eleven hundred pounds on a sled. They started on the smooth ice
-all right, but five miles north the sand has covered the ice clear
-across the river. They were stuck there and, after struggling over
-the sand for a few hours, gave it up and returned. The Iowa boys have
-not started yet, but are spending more time in making good sleds
-and fixing skates on their runners. If they start at all, which I
-doubt, they will certainly have better success than others. Dr.
-Coffin declares he is going to stay by and in our good, warm cabin
-the rest of the winter. He is quite pessimistic to-night. He predicts
-much suffering this winter. He found in his recent travels that open
-fireplaces are a failure. Cabins heated by them are cold. There is
-too much draft and the temperature cools off quickly when the fire
-dies down. We have two stoves, and water never freezes over in the
-cabin.
-
-Nov. 18.--We just had a dreadful catastrophe. C. C. had set his keg
-of yeast on the rafters above the stove to keep warm and do its
-"work." Harry Reynolds had some poles near by across the rafters.
-The latter gentleman is at work on his new sled and, repairing one
-of the poles, reached for it rather hastily. As a result the yeast
-keg turned over. The doctor was sitting beneath, calmly reading some
-good book, when nearly the entire contents, a gallon of sour yeast,
-poured on to his unprotected head and down his neck, and spread
-itself out as if to shield him from any other danger. What a sight,
-it is impossible for me to portray. Not content with deluging the
-poor medico, the stuff slopped over everything in the vicinity of two
-or three yards. Several of us had a dose, but none was so seriously
-affected as the doctor, who is even now at work on his clothes with
-warm water and a sponge. The smell of sour dough permeates the
-atmosphere. Brown remarks that it reminds him of the extremely sour
-odor which filled the cabin of the "Penelope" the first night out
-from San Francisco.
-
-For my part I think it convenient to have these little
-interruptions--when they fall on another man's head. It livens things
-up.
-
-[Illustration: Scaffold Burial.]
-
-One or two other events have served to liven us up. Last night one
-of the natives at the Indian village died. It was what we expected,
-for he has been very sick for a week with pneumonia. This morning at
-daylight we noticed a smoke across the river and I walked over to
-investigate the cause. I regretted finding the obsequities closed
-and the four natives who had officiated just leaving. They had taken
-the dead man and all his personal belongings over to the bank of the
-river opposite the village, to a little knoll, where they built a
-platform on some poles leaned against each other for support. The
-body was wrapped in tent cloth and laid on this platform, which
-was about five feet above the ground--as high as the men could
-conveniently reach. After this the whole was firmly lashed together
-with walrus thong, so the winds and the dogs cannot tear it down. By
-the side of the scaffold the dead man's sled was laid upside down,
-and hung on the willows around were all the personal belongings of
-the deceased. He was "well-to-do," and these amounted to considerable
-as the Eskimos valued them. There were two nice reindeer skins, his
-clothes, mittens, muckluks, handkerchief, tin cup, etc. It seemed
-too bad to see those two deerskins left to decay in the weather,
-when the dead man's relatives are in sore need, but this is the
-invariable custom of these people. No worse than what occurs among
-Christians, when all available and unavailable funds are used to
-defray the expenses of an ostentatious funeral, leaving the family in
-destitution.
-
-Joe Jury and Jack Messing, two of the Hanson Camp boys, spent the day
-with us and we had a big dinner. This "having company" disturbs the
-monotony of so much "prospecting," as we are doing these days.
-
-Nov. 20, Sunday, 6 p. m.--To-day has been a very enjoyable one at
-this camp on the Kowak. In fact every day is. The Hanson boys were
-all up for Sunday services. There were also two men from the Jesse
-Lou Camp, fifteen miles below us, who are visiting the Hanson Camp.
-The latter have invited our whole crowd down for Thanksgiving dinner
-next Thursday. We look forward to a "big spread." for this camp is
-abundantly supplied with luxuries in the food line, as I can testify,
-having taken dinner with them twice already. They are well-to-do,
-educated men, full of spontaneous hilarity, and a great boon to the
-Penelope Camp. Solsbury is a correspondent of the San Jose "Mercury."
-He is a lawyer and of course a good talker. He tells stories by the
-hour.
-
-This afternoon he got started from some cause--a predetermined one. I
-presume--and talked for two hours. He resembles the newspaper cuts of
-Mark Twain. It is very entertaining when he tells of his experience
-in lumbering in the Sierras. His own boys say that he talks so
-incessantly that they beg him to quit before they get tired of his
-wit or confiscate it entirely. Everyone grows tiresome to his fellows
-on a trip like this; it could not be otherwise. Constant association
-for months brings out a man's faults and traits of character so
-plainly that those which are of little note glare like tiger's eyes
-in the dark, and his company becomes disagreeable, living as we do
-in a little cabin, and looking in each other's faces if we take
-a stroll, to keep watch for frost bites. It is better to be in a
-large company than in a small crowd, so one can vary his personal
-reflections.
-
-Jack Messing is a man one likes to meet. He is a German by birth and
-the most generous of men by nature. His great fault is generosity,
-a vice seldom met with in my remembrance, and the boys make him
-the butt of dozens of jokes. He would give away the last stitch of
-clothing he owns should a man ask him. He gives the Eskimos all
-sorts of things and feeds them whenever he can, which is all the
-time, for these natives know a friend and are faithful to him. He
-has previously worn a full beard, but to-day he stalked into church
-with his face shaven clean excepting a long fringe of whiskers left
-in a circle from ear to ear around under his chin. He wore a belt and
-pistol, and had a big tin star on his left coat lapel and carried a
-"she-la-ly." He looked exactly like an Irish policeman, only with
-the usual recognized attributes of the latter highly accentuated. He
-stated in Irish dialect that he was after the thief who had stolen a
-pail of water from a certain camp down the river. As this allusion
-was in reference to a well-known occurrence of a week ago, it was
-very disastrous to the serious feeling which should prevail at a
-religious meeting, and it was some time before the congregation could
-settle down to the business in hand.
-
-This afternoon we had a regular concert. The violin, autoharp and
-banjo make fine harmony in this noiseless atmosphere, and we were
-soon expressing our feelings in jumping and dancing. Two pairs of
-bones rattled to such of the music as was appropriate, and it was no
-dull time in the Penelope Camp. Clyde took the pictures of the crowd.
-I say this afternoon, but I mean to-day: it is light for only about
-six hours, and at high noon the sun scarcely peeps above the hills
-to the southward. It appears to be sundown at noon, and the colors of
-sky and landscape are beautiful.
-
-We have had our first snow, only an inch, but enough to whiten the
-landscape until the next wind, that is booked for a circus, whisks
-it all into the hollows and then covers it up with sand, giving it a
-sharp rap and bidding it "stay there."
-
-This morning we saw a very beautiful mirage. The mountains and trees
-down the river from us were reflected in the sky above, upside down.
-Then for another fine display we have the aurora. Last night it
-appeared in the form of a great bow reaching nearly to the zenith. It
-consisted of many colored scintillating rays, which brightened and
-then almost disappeared, only to reappear in different form as if
-they had left the stage to change their costume. The aurora appears
-in different form each night. And there is the beautiful moonlight.
-The moon is above the horizon always now. It reverses the order of
-the sun and shines all day in winter, scarcely appearing in summer.
-
-How the time flies, to me at least! Before we know it. Spring will
-tap at the door. The unbearable monotony of an Arctic winter, which
-some travelers dwell upon so desolately, is unknown to us so far, and
-I for one will never know it. During the past few weeks I have read.
-So far have devoured "Last Days of Pompeii." "In His Steps," "Opening
-of a Chestnut Burr," "The Honorable Peter Sterling," and "Etidorpha."
-I spent two weeks upon the latter and think it is a wonderful
-book, coming upon my thoughts here in the Arctics like a great
-semi-scientific visitor. There are more books in the neighborhood
-than I could read in two winters.
-
-I have been given a new name--"Chickadee Joe." At the Hanson Camp
-they call me "Little Joe," to distinguish me from "Big Joe." We are
-very familiar with one another and change very suddenly from a highly
-intellectual crowd to one of stirring juvenility. We had such an
-unexpected romp the other day. There was about an inch of snow out
-on the smooth ice, and it was snowing great flakes still. Three of
-our boys were playing snowball with several of the Eskimo children,
-and washing each other's faces and slipping down all over the ice.
-Two Eskimo "belles" joined us, Kalhak and Aggi-chuck, and they did
-not hesitate to give us a return snowball or a face full of the same.
-They were strong, too, and several times I found myself sprawling on
-the ice and covered with snow, to the great amusement of everyone.
-After all that may be said of this strange people, they derive a
-sort of very human satisfaction from their cold and narrow life, and
-I shall always think of them as finding some happiness in the long
-winter along with the aurora and the moonlight.
-
-[Illustration: After the Ball.]
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-
-Nov. 25.--To-day we are resting and slowly recovering from
-yesterday's "spree." It was the most gratifying Thanksgiving, as far
-as the gastronomic and social celebrations are considered, that I
-have experienced. At eleven o'clock in the morning our "Penelope"
-crowd of nine were marshaled into line out on the ice, and marched
-three miles down to the Hanson Camp. Harry Reynolds was elected
-captain, and he bore a streamer of red, white and blue. We were all
-dressed exactly alike in our brown Mackinaw suits, sealskin muckluks
-and hoods. Our appearance was picturesque, and we regretted that
-there were so few spectators to review us. We admired ourselves. When
-we reached the first of the Hanson cabins, which are built within a
-short distance of each other in a spruce forest on a hillside, we
-lined up and sang "Marching Through Georgia" and other patriotic
-airs. We have only recently heard of the defeat of Spain, so were
-necessarily in harmony with the songs we sang.
-
-After breaking ranks we were divided among the cabins for the day's
-entertainment. Cabin No. 1 is occupied by Joe Jury. Normandin,
-Jack Messing and Solsbury, and these gentlemen invited C. C.
-Reynolds, Clyde Baldwin, Rivers and myself. We felt the honor of our
-invitation, for they had been before styled the "Aristocracy of the
-Kowak."
-
-After the "Penelope" crowd was apportioned, each division became
-the guests of the cabin to which it was assigned. Until about three
-o'clock our company sat quietly engaged in conversation. Meanwhile
-one could scarcely believe that a state dinner was in process of
-preparation, and that in the same room in which we were sitting.
-Solsbury was cook, and what appeared at his touch was marvelous,
-considering that the cabin was short on culinary utensils and he must
-"potter" over a little sheet-iron stove.
-
-At three o'clock the table was ready and we sat down to it, eight
-of us. We were seated opposite our hosts--Rivers opposite Solsbury;
-C. C, Normandin: Clyde. Jack Messing: and I opposite Joe Jury (Big
-Joe and Little Joe), in the order named. At each plate was an
-"Arctictically" executed menu--a section of birch, one of the logs
-of our hosts' cabin: thus literally were we the guests of the house.
-This in itself was a very appropriate memento of Thanksgiving on the
-Kowak.
-
-On one side of the plaque was written indelibly the menu. In one
-corner was a sketch of the cabin. On the opposite we later wrote our
-names, alternately, in order as we sat at table. Here is a partial
-statement of the menu:
-
- Split pea soup. Wafers.
- Roast ptarmigan. Jelly.
- Turkey pot-pie.
- Sweet potato. Baked potato. Sweet corn.
- Sago pudding.
- Mince pie. Jelly tarts. Olives. Pickles.
- Coffee. Cocoa.
-
-This spread was one hardly to be expected in the wilds of the
-Arctics; though, as I have said, the Hanson Camp is never lacking in
-luxuries. Toward the end toasts were proposed and speeches made. My
-toast was to the ptarmigan, "The Turkey of the Kowak."
-
-[Illustration: Our Big Haul of Ptarmigan.]
-
-We were two hours and a half at the table, and I hesitate to say
-that some of us, myself included, had eaten more than was for our
-intellectual good, and we were glad to throw ourselves on the beds
-which bordered the dining-room. For the next two hours we rested and
-gradually revived. Meanwhile our hosts entertained us in original
-style. One of the jokes was as follows: A pot was set in one corner
-and in it was placed a small spruce branch. Then Joe Jury sat down
-behind this combination and picked a tune from a string which
-was stretched on a small wooden block. The translation of this
-performance, as we were informed, was, "After dinner the orchestra
-dispensed sweet music from behind potted plants." After we had
-enjoyed hours of fun, all the guests were summoned from all the
-cabins and crowded into ours. Several speeches followed, by Solsbury,
-Dr. Coffin. C. C. Reynolds. Jury. Normandin and others. Then came
-more jokes.
-
-At last the party broke up, and, after three cheers for the Hanson
-boys, we marched home in the bright Arctic moonlight, in the order
-we had come. Thus ended the first Thanksgiving ever celebrated on
-the mighty Kowak. On our return home we found the house had not
-been burglarized--another proof that we were not in the limits of
-civilization.
-
-And here we are, spending the winter in ease and luxury, while our
-friends at home are "remembering us in their prayers," and imagining
-us in all sorts of peril, with danger of overwork, amid privation
-and hardship. The fact is, we haven't done a stroke of work worth
-mentioning, when we had expected to be digging out the precious
-nuggets. In which condition are we the happier or best off? I prefer
-the situation as it is. What is gold anyway? It is the "root of all
-evil," according to a misquotation, and, conversely, I believe the
-less money a person has, the happier life he leads. Anyway it is good
-policy for us to advance this doctrine until we strike something. It
-tends to keep us content.
-
-Nov. 28.--The doctor and I have been out hunting. We directed our
-course down through the sand-dunes on this side of the river, and
-had the best luck so far with the ptarmigan. We got eighteen with
-twenty-four shots, which beats all records, as the birds are shy
-and, on account of their thick coat, extremely hard to kill. We
-stalked them among the hillocks, finding them feeding in the grass
-or in the thickets of dwarf willows which grow in the low places. We
-kept together and when we had spotted a flock we crept up behind the
-nearest dune, often getting quite close before alarming them. I got
-three at one pot-shot. They are hard to see on the snow, but where
-the sand is bare or with a background of bushes they are conspicuous.
-I had one vexatious accident. We spotted some birds on the opposite
-side of the lake and crept around the margin on the ice, hidden
-by bushes until we were within a few yards. I had two ptarmigan
-beautifully lined up and was just pushing the trigger, when my feet
-slipped from under me and my gun went off into the air. Before I
-could recover myself the ptarmigan were also up in the air. The ice
-is very slippery where the snow is blown off, as the sand driven
-over it by the north wind keeps it polished and prevents the hoar
-frost from forming on it. The doctor found a muskrat frozen to death
-near its hole. It fell to my mammal collection. I also caught a gray
-meadow mouse alive, as it was crossing a little pond. It is but my
-second. The burrows and runways of the little red-backed mouse are
-common in the woods and meadows. My steel traps have caught nothing
-but jays so far. I am sorry to catch the jays, for I do not disturb
-them near home, hoping to get their eggs next spring. I shall have
-ptarmigan to skin for several days now and so make recompense for my
-recent idleness. I can only work by daylight, which lasts but about
-three hours now,--that is, light enough for me to work at my table.
-The sun scarcely climbed above the horizon to-day. Clyde took the
-doctor's and my photos to-day with our big haul of ptarmigan.
-
-
-Yesterday there was a fair attendance at church. Services were
-held in our cabin, as the meeting-house fireplace fell in. It will
-probably not be used again soon, as it is too cold to mix clay to
-mend the breach. Twenty-nine degrees below zero, and one has to be
-careful to keep ears and hands covered.
-
-"Uncle Jimmy" (Mr. Wyse) gave me a fatherly talking to for skinning
-ptarmigan on Sunday. Hitherto I have used any time available for
-skinning birds, but yesterday, after a long argument and discussion,
-I yielded for the winter. Uncle Jimmy argued that I couldn't fill in
-all the time there is on week-days, and even if I don't see a reason
-for not working on Sunday, I should "consider the feelings of those
-who do." He is a nice old Scotchman, and I like him.
-
-I have just finished reading "Hugh Wynne." The doctor brought home
-some numbers of "Appleton's Science Monthly" from the Hanson Camp,
-also some back numbers of "Harper's," and I am reading articles in
-them.
-
-The doctor. Brownie. Uncle Jimmy and I had a hot argument to-day on
-capital punishment, also one on "how a young student should begin to
-specialize in any branch of study." I always take the side opposite
-the majority, so I can have more opportunity for argument. We have
-good and instructive times in this employment. Wednesday evening
-next is the first of a series of literary entertainments to be held
-weekly. Solsbury will lecture on "The Practical Value of Art."
-
-Dec. 3.--This morning Harry Cox and Harry Reynolds started with
-Indian Tom up the Kowak. Tom was our guide on our first steamer trip
-across Holtham Inlet last summer, and he has been camping in the
-delta until now. He is on his way to the Par River, where his winter
-igloo is located. The Harrys took advantage of company to go along
-with Tom. They took a sled and two dogs, with just enough outfit
-to supply them on the trip. Their object is to visit the various
-camps up the river and find out all the news, especially in regard
-to the strike at the head of the Koyukuk. An Indian by the name of
-Shackle-belly visited us yesterday. He has just come down from the
-Kalamute River, about one hundred and fifty miles above us, and
-brings exciting news. He speaks pretty good English for a native. He
-said that he had heard that on the Alashook white men were as thick
-as mosquitoes and digging out "plenty gold." These men had come up
-the Koyukuk last summer from the Yukon with lots of steam launches.
-They could not get further up than one hundred and fifty miles below
-the place where the gold is found on the Alashook River, on account
-of the rapids, so they had to wait and sled up. Shackle-belly also
-said that most of the men above us on the Kowak had already started
-over.
-
-[Illustration: Indian Tom and Family.]
-
-It will be very dangerous for these men now at twenty-nine degrees
-below zero, and it must grow much colder with more wind, up on those
-barren mountain passes between the heads of the Kowak and Alashook.
-The Indian said one man had already frozen to death on the trail
-this side, and one had fallen through a hole in the ice, getting out
-all right, but before he could build a fire he had frozen through.
-Several are frost-bitten. We are anxious about our six boys who
-started from the Upper Penelope Camp over three weeks ago. However,
-if they met with no accidents, they must be over into the valley of
-the Alashook by this time, where the natives tell us there is plenty
-of large timber. Tom tells us that seven Indians have died down the
-river, and that white men are very sick. Tom has his family with
-him and of course all his belongings, which seldom amount to much,
-according to our estimation of values, among these natives. He has
-two sleds and six dogs. He and his family spent the night with us. We
-spread tents for them on the floor. We have not been affected with
-vermin so far, and take precautions.
-
-[Illustration: Windings of Squirrel River.]
-
-Last Wednesday was the first evening of the proposed literary
-society. Solsbury was to have been the lecturer of the night, but was
-sick and couldn't come. However, the society elected officers--Joseph
-Grinnell as president, and Dr. Coffin secretary. Then the doctor
-conducted a question box. Some of the questions asked and written on
-slips of paper, with the name of the man who was to answer, were very
-serious; others were humorous.
-
-By the way, I must record a new pie which has fallen to the lot of
-the Penelope Camp. C. C. makes dozens of pie. We have pie every meal
-and between meals, and if a fellow gets hungry in the night when the
-rest are snoring, there is pie for his satisfaction. An old Eskimo
-woman from the village brought C. C. a pail of what she considered a
-rare delicacy, a gift expressive of her motherly consideration. It
-was a concoction of wild cranberries and seal oil.
-
-It was suggestive to the natural bent of the cook's mind, and he made
-a pie of the stuff. We ate every bit of it--that is, three of us did;
-the rest wouldn't touch it. I ate my share, and must say that if you
-overlook the strong seal flavor, it would not be considered bad. I
-learned to eat cranberry done in oil when I was near Sitka three
-years ago. It is too extravagant a dish to be eaten every day, and
-the natives keep it, American-wise, "for company."
-
-Last Tuesday the wind blew a gale at seventeen degrees below zero,
-and I thought I would see what I could stand. I wear now a union
-suit of fleece-lined underwear, a pair of blanket-lined canvas
-trousers, and a heavy wool shirt, with a pair of thin wool socks and
-a pair of lumber-man's socks inside my muckluks. I put on a leather
-corduroy coat and my heavy wool hood, with a scarf around my neck
-and across my face. I was gone, down among the sand dunes, about an
-hour and a half. The wind had an unmolested sweep there and I had
-good opportunity to test my clothes. It did not penetrate my clothing
-a particle, and I was perfectly warm all except my face. The wind
-pierced like a sword right through my scarf and wool hood. When I
-got home the lobe of my left ear was frost-bitten and also the same
-side of my nose. Both sections of my countenance are now very sore
-and are peeling off. I should have worn a canvas hood outside of my
-wool hood. Canvas keeps the wind out better than anything else. Furs
-are the best clothing in this country, but are very scarce among
-these poor Indians, and but few of our company have any. Again we
-regret not having traded for furs at Cape Prince of Wales. But we do
-not suffer by any means. We have clothing enough to last for years.
-We are not so fortunate in the provision line. However, should we
-strike it rich enough, lying around in our warm cabin, to make it pay
-another winter, it will be an easy matter to send the "Penelope" back
-to San Francisco for another load. The "Penelope"! What will be her
-fate when the ice breaks up in the spring no one can foretell. At the
-mercy of the unlimited and savage ice of Bering Sea, a frail little
-craft, no longer than the frontage of a city lot. We do not think or
-speak of the "Penelope" very often. We may be orphans in the spring.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-
-Dec. 8.--The beautiful snow has come at last and to-day it is six
-inches deep on the level. The trees are loaded and the river and
-meadows are painfully white. We must get out our snow-glasses, of
-which we have an abundance for all. Our condition seems to resemble
-that of the Swiss Family Robinson. We find everything we desire
-in our cabin, if not in our "wreck." We have no wreck. The north
-wind has been blowing a gale for days, which at last amounted to a
-blizzard. I went across the river in the teeth of the wind, just
-crawling along on the slippery ice, but the fun was in coming back. I
-had but to keep my balance and the wind did the rest.
-
-We have been having some strange experiences with the Eskimos the
-past week, which has introduced us to more of their interesting
-superstitions.
-
-Sunday evening, while we were all engaged in reading, or quiet talk,
-we were suddenly startled by a loud groaning outside. As the gruesome
-sound grew nearer we scarcely knew what to expect, but were prepared
-to give relief to sick or wounded human beings of whatever type. We
-rushed to the door, to find Charley, the Indian medicine man from the
-native village above. We thought at first that he was but practicing
-his arts, but when he was brought in groaning and sobbing we realized
-that he was really very sick, and the doctor pronounced it pneumonia.
-Soon Charley's family followed, and one of the little children was
-nearly frozen. The wind was blowing a gale, and Charley told us that
-he had come down from his igloo, four miles.
-
-A few days before one of his wives had died, she who had eaten the
-bear gravy, and, according to Indian superstition that a person
-who lives in a house after another has died in it will surely die
-himself, he had moved out of his warm dugout into a tent. Of course
-it was very cold in the tent, and Sunday morning one of his little
-girls died as the result of exposure. So Charley could no longer
-live in either the tent or the igloo, and he was thrown out into the
-pitiless storm with his other wife and three remaining children.
-They went to a neighboring igloo, but a native would as soon commit
-suicide as shelter any of the family of the deceased in his house or
-enter the house where one has died. As a last resort Charley came to
-our cabin, and no doubt the whole family would have died but for this.
-
-Of course we warmed and fed all of them, and the doctor attended
-upon Charley, who was too sick to object to another medicine man's
-treatment. Several of us then went over to the church cabin and, by
-stopping the fireplace and putting up a camp stove, we made it a
-comfortable hospital. Charley is there now. Not a single Indian has
-been inside our cabin since Charley was here.
-
-[Illustration: Indian Charley and Family.]
-
-They say if they come in they will surely "mucky" (die). We are very
-glad they have taken this course, as heretofore they have been too
-numerous altogether. It would be to our advantage to keep one sick
-man with us. We have tried to induce a couple of young men to cut
-wood for Charley, but they declare that also is dangerous. Charley's
-wife dare not touch an axe for the same reason, so we have to chop
-their wood ourselves. Wonder if we will any of us be alive in the
-spring after such dangers. None of the Indians give them any food, so
-we are attending to that matter. We are doing our best to get them
-to overcome these inhuman and exasperating superstitions. They can
-plainly see that we do not hesitate to care for the sick or the dead.
-
-[Illustration: A Funeral Cortege.]
-
-Tuesday night the patient was so sick the doctor thought he could
-not live without especial care, so we decided to watch with him.
-Rivers and I stayed with him from one to five o'clock in the early
-morning. And it was an odd experience. We had Charley bolstered up on
-two benches placed side by side near the stove. We kept a hot water
-bag on his chest and occasionally made him take ptarmigan broth with
-soaked hardtack. Poor fellow! had he been fed on such a diet while
-well and able to appreciate it, he might well have been surprised.
-But he was too near death to appreciate what we were doing. He would
-have spasms of coughing and loud groaning, catching his breath and
-rolling his eyes. Then he would fall back with his head lying limply
-over his shoulder, breathing short and with scarcely perceptible
-pulse. We thought he was about to die, but the climax passed and he
-revived. While we were taking care of him his wife slept, for she
-had probably been without rest for days. She now waits on him and
-is very attentive to his wants, and does the best she knows how,
-being generally more intelligent than most of the women. They all
-have little ingenuity in caring for the sick, and this is one reason
-why they die. Could these natives be persuaded to have a few of
-their women educated as nurses, how much less would be the winter
-mortality! Had we time we could do this, but it would take years,
-and women beside. We have no women. But here are, or will be, all
-the abandoned cabins on the Kowak by spring. What an opening for the
-mission-inclined! Free hospitals and free beds such as they are. And
-they are not mean. There are chairs, too, and carpeted floors.
-
-In the meantime Charley's dead child, as we supposed, had been
-sole tenant of the igloo which had been vacated. This fact gave a
-sudden joy to C. C, the undertaker. As if by instinct he scented
-a resurrection of his neglected business, and it was with little
-difficulty that he persuaded Charley to let him give it a Christian
-burial. C. C. and Joe Jury went up to see about it, and found that
-the ceremonies had already been performed and the corpse was resting
-on one of the usual scaffolds near the igloo. This did not matter.
-They made a coffin of boards, sawed at our mill, and brought the
-corpse down to Penelope Camp, Jury as coroner and C. C. as funeral
-director. The hearse was a sled and the black horses a couple of
-dogs. Of course Charley was too sick to attend the funeral services,
-but his woman came and watched proceedings. She objected to nothing
-in any way when told that was the way white men buried their dead.
-But she insisted on putting some dishes and half a sack of flour in
-the grave before it was filled. The flour C. C. had brought down from
-the igloo, intending it for the family to eat. But they couldn't
-think of consigning a dead child to the unknown future without
-supplying it with sufficient means of support until it should reach
-its uncertain destination. So twenty-five pounds of good flour was
-interred with the coffin. C. C. intended this burial to teach the
-natives better methods than their own superstitious ways, but I for
-one doubt the propriety of burial in the ground in this country,
-as in summer the earth is saturated and covered with water, and in
-winter it is frozen to granite. As it turned out, the funeral was
-not a very extraordinary object lesson, for not a single Eskimo
-attended, save the woman mentioned, though they were especially asked
-to come. I am not sure that the funeral director was not guilty of
-making a "grave" mistake in the closing ceremonies. He had just
-been assuring the woman mourner that the dead would need no further
-food or clothing in the "beyond" where she had now gone, when it
-occurred to him that a single demonstration of sorrowful affection
-might be appropriate. Just before filling the grave he had all the
-by-standers (gold-hunters on the Kowak) throw in each a spruce bough,
-and the woman did likewise. I suppose he chose the spruce in place of
-impossible flowers, but the solitary mourner must have considered the
-act an inconsistent one after the remarks which had been made.
-
-The doctor and I felt some uneasiness as to a special feature of the
-funeral and accordingly acted. Now I have no doubt my friend was no
-stranger to the scheme, but I was; nevertheless I went about my duty
-with the approval of my immature conscience. We went out as if to
-take a stroll, as was our frequent custom, and dug into the grave,
-removing the buried sack of flour. We very carefully filled in the
-grave and left all as it had been before. The snow which was falling
-at the time soon covered our footprints (whereupon might be written
-a poem), and no Eskimo will ever suspect our subtle deed. We put the
-flour into a new clean sack and presented it to Charley as a mutual
-gift. This was Kowak philanthropy, though, if the natives had found
-us out, we might have had to suffer. The doctor and I congratulate
-ourselves on doing a real good deed in a naughty world.
-
-Yesterday Charley's father came down from the village to pay his
-son a visit, but he evidently did not intend to enter the cabin,
-carrying on his conversation from without, very much as white folks
-do in cases of scarlet fever or other infectious disease. Some of us
-happened to be near by chopping wood, and we tried to induce him to
-go in. Finally the woman came out and built a fire, putting on green
-spruce twigs to make a dense smoke. The old man then stooped over the
-smudge, spreading a blanket over and around himself, thus confining
-the smoke about his body for several minutes. He then apparently
-considered himself immune from any evil and went into the cabin
-without further hesitation. This process of disinfection is certainly
-reasonable, only it was applied at the wrong end of affairs. He is a
-very old man and of no help about the patient, so we have an added
-charge.
-
-Dec, 12, Monday.--I shot three redpolls this morning over in the
-willows. I then tried to utilize our brief stint of daylight to skin
-them by, but was obliged to resort to the dim light of a candle after
-all. We get no more sunshine here in the valley. At noon only the
-snowy mountain peaks are illuminated by straggling rays from the
-truant sun. The landscape is often magnificent. I stood on the bank
-several minutes at noon admiring the views. The northern horizon was
-deep blue, and, contrasted with it, were the snow-covered ranges,
-which were tinged a rich pink. The sky above was slightly overcast,
-as if covered by a delicate pink veil. Dark purple shadows crossed
-the zenith, but toward the sun all was bright bellow and gold. The
-snow-covered river and meadows beyond were so white that they seemed
-to have a blue tint. Then the spruce forests with their ragged
-outlines looked dark and gloomy as they were sketched against the
-mountains or horizon. I never imagined such color effects as are
-displayed every day here. I do not think that the brightest colors on
-an artist's palette could exaggerate the brilliant hues of the sky
-during our short period of twilight. We are looking for a tenant for
-our cabin. Let some club of artists engage it for a season and they
-will be in ecstasy.
-
-A change in the weather! This morning a southeast wind sprang up and
-sent the thermometer to twenty-three degrees above zero. At this hour
-yesterday it was thirty-four degrees below. Although nine degrees
-below freezing, the air feels balmy as it strikes our faces. This is
-the first day in two months that I have taken a walk across the river
-in an ordinary hat. I could not go far, as the snow is badly drifted
-now. I saw a few redpolls and one raven. Rivers and Uncle Jimmy dug a
-new water-hole to-day. The ice is three and one-half feet thick.
-
-In the cabin all is quiet as I write. The only light is my little
-candle on the dining-table. Uncle Jimmy is asleep, with his head
-on his crossed hands, on the opposite side of the table. C. C. is
-sitting in an arm-chair at the further end of the room probably
-thinking of home. Brownie and Clyde went over to one of the Iowa
-camps a few hours ago. Some of the boys are restless and delight in
-visiting.
-
-Dr. Coffin got word from Dr Gleaves to go down to the Hanson Camp. A
-man on his way up the river from one of the lower camps has frozen
-his toes, and they are in such a condition that amputation is
-necessary. Dr. Coffin wanted me to go with him to assist, thinking:
-me cool and nervy, but I declined. If they were nice, fresh, sound
-members, nothing would delight me better than to render assistance,
-but I have a repugnance to dead, decaying flesh. For this and other
-reasons I never would skin a bird that had died of itself, though I
-saw it fly against a telegraph wire.
-
-I am studying hard. I am at work on my physiology, and also
-committing to memory a "Glossary of Scientific Terms." The boys
-ridicule me for reading the dictionary so much, saying that the
-subject is changed too often to make it profitable reading. I am
-also teaching German to Rivers and Brownie. They are a very willing
-class. Other times I am studying bacteriology with the doctor. We
-are a literary and scientific crowd. Our latest argument last night
-was "How to Dispose of the City Slums." The doctor reads portions of
-Josiah Strong's "New Era" to us and then we discuss it. The Literary
-Society of the Kowak met Wednesday evening with a good attendance.
-"The Practical Value of Art" was thoroughly expounded by Solsbury of
-the Hanson Camp, though he required two hours to do it and some of
-the art-less ones grew sleepy.
-
-[Illustration: Native Family at Home.]
-
-Indian Charley is nearly well now, and, like a white man in such
-circumstances, is appreciative of all we have done for him. He
-assures us that his woman shall sew for us, and that he himself will
-bring us fish when the spring opens. We hope he will continue in a
-thankful frame of mind. Another native died at the Hanson Camp of
-pneumonia. Dr. Gleaves kept him in his own cabin for days but failed
-to restore him, as the man was too far gone when he saw him. The
-relatives of the dead man had heard how C. C. buried Charley's little
-girl in a box, and insisted that they, too, have a "cabloona" (white
-man's burial). Again was our undertaker alert and in his "native
-element," so to speak, and superintended the making of a coffin, and
-the various other incidentals of the funeral. The friends of the
-deceased brought a large number of articles, including a new gun,
-spy-glasses, parkas, skins, etc., to be interred with the body, but
-were finally dissuaded from thus destroying everything, save the
-dead man's pipe and tobacco pouch. These they believed he could by
-no means get along without in the next world. Before the Indian died
-he begged several times of Dr. Gleaves to kill him with a knife, and
-thus aid him in parting from his own misery. We are assured that the
-native medicine men sometimes do this, and at first glance there
-seems a humane side to the argument. On second thought, however, it
-is clear that the duty of a physician is to allay suffering, while
-life is naturally prolonged, leaving it to some other One to name the
-date of release. We hear of a woman sick at the village. Surely the
-Eskimos will soon be a race of the past unless civilization comes to
-their aid.
-
-Dec. 19.--It has blown a gale for six days and we have scarcely been
-out of the house in that time. The bright, warm cabin is preferable.
-We only hear the roar of the wind outside, and occasionally from the
-corners comes a cold draught of air dumbly whistling through the
-moss-crowded chinks. The two Harrys got back Wednesday night after
-a very hard trip. They only got twenty miles beyond Ambler City
-before they were caught by the snow, which shortly was more than a
-foot in depth and they could not travel. Harry R. induced a severe
-attack of rheumatism and could walk only with difficulty. He came
-near freezing to death. He wanted to lie down and sleep, and Cox had
-all he could do to force him on until they reached a cabin. Harry
-R. must have suffered terribly, for he is as thin and pale as any
-ghost I ever met. Although they went only about fifty miles up the
-river, they heard rumors from beyond which knock all the props from
-under our recent hopes. Our boys of the upper camp who started for
-the Allashook have returned, not being able to get over the pass on
-account of the deep snow. Moreover it is rumored that the golden
-reports from the Allashook were invented by a couple of men, one of
-whom has eight hundred pounds of provisions over there to sell, and
-the other wants to be recorder of claims.
-
-There are other reports of strikes up the river, but I for one shall
-pay no heed, nor will I write about them. Several people have been
-up from camps below, trying to get loads of provisions. They are
-having a hard time. Several have returned and two are waiting for
-better weather. It is really dangerous traveling now. More than one
-man has nearly lost his life. One came to our cabin with his face
-frozen, and did not know it until we told him. It is useless to think
-of traveling in this biting cold. And here comes a pounding on our
-woodshed door. Half a dozen of us run to open it, glad that we have
-shelter for any wanderer.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-
-Dec. 20.--A man has just come up from the Orphans' Home with bad
-news. Poor Uncle S. is lost and probably frozen to death. He left the
-Orphans' Home to walk to the Mission a month ago and has not been
-seen since, although several parties have come up from the Sound. His
-tracks were seen by the "Flying Dutchman" on one of the forks of the
-Kowak in the delta. Uncle S. had our letters, so these will never
-reach their destination and the home folks will be disappointed.
-Possibly a whole year with no news from the gold-hunters of the
-Arctics. I suppose the body will be found when the snow melts in the
-spring. Uncle S. was a nice old Quaker, speaking "thee" and "thou"
-habitually. He spent the night with us on his way down and was very
-entertaining. He played a game of whist with us in the evening,
-and it was very odd and amusing to hear such expressions as, "Now,
-Joseph, play thy hand properly." "Is this my trick or thine?" "Did
-thee play thy ace?" etc. Uncle Jimmy, who doesn't believe in card
-games, tried to start an argument with Uncle S., but the latter only
-said very quietly, "One can play music with good or evil intentions;
-so I think with a simple game of whist." I never saw Mr. S. before,
-and it is a strange incident up here in the Arctics, to hear him
-tell me about my father, who, in his youth, paid some considerable
-devotion to a relative of his, giving me many pleasant reminiscences
-of both my father's and mother's families. These old-time memories,
-told in the dim candlelight of the peopled cabin, interested our
-whole company, and we all took to calling our guest "Uncle S.", as
-much out of respect to the man as to a possible relationship which
-might have existed between himself and me. But he is gone now and we
-shall look forward to paying him suitable ceremonies in the spring.
-Our undertaker is preparing to embalm the body when discovered. He
-was a Friend of Some note from Ohio, who drifted up here, like the
-rest of us "world's people," after gold.
-
-Our camp is in quite a bustle this week preparing for Christmas. We
-have invited the Hanson boys up to dinner with us, and we are getting
-ready for a big time. The Saturday before Christmas we are to have
-a tree and feed all the natives in the country. The doctor has been
-at work on scrap picture books for the children, finding no end of
-beautiful chromes on the tin cans about the respective camps, besides
-other lithographs and steel engravings from various sources. Art
-is taking on shape and form and expression under the magic of the
-doctor's touch in a way surprising to both him and us.
-
-The literary society last Wednesday was the best so far. Thies, of
-the Los Angeles Camp, read a paper on Theosophy. It was entitled,
-"The Home of Contentment," and was very reasonable from his point of
-view, and well received by all. The doctor gave a short talk on "How
-to Care for a Frost Bite." This was of great practical value to all
-present.
-
-Dec. 21.--Forty-six degrees below zero to-day, and I, for the fun of
-it, walked down to the Hanson Camp. It was not at all uncomfortable,
-nothing like what it is when the wind blows, at ten degrees below
-zero. Normandin, of the San Jose cabin, has rigged up a turning
-lathe, using a grindstone as the driving wheel. He is turning out all
-sorts of things from birch and spruce. He has sent up a quantity of
-dolls' heads and tops for the Eskimo Christmas tree. One of the Los
-Angeles boys is carving faces on the dolls' heads, to distinguish
-which is the front side of the head, the image being of the same
-proportions all around. He gives them almond eyes and flat noses just
-like the native babies.
-
-Now that the first snow has appeared, the natives are busy at
-snowshoes, and several of our boys are experimenting in the same
-line. The Eskimos are very expert in this kind of work, and their
-snowshoes are models of symmetry and neatness.
-
-[Illustration: Near-by Neighbors.]
-
-The aurora is very brilliant some nights now, but there is no reason
-visible why, on other nights just as favorable, as far as we can
-discover, there is none at all. In this extremely cold weather, and
-especially during a sudden change of temperature, the ice in the
-river cracks and groans terrifically. This morning, as I was walking
-down to the Hanson Camp, the phenomena were very much in evidence,
-so much so that it was gruesome to a lonely body. At one place when
-I stepped off from a drift of packed snow on to the bare ice, there
-came a series of thundering reports like cannon shots, and then
-a succession of sharp reports and creaks and other awful sounds,
-that finally died away into the dead silence of Arctic darkness.
-Such combination of sounds, together with a reasonable amount of
-imagination sure to accompany them, is startling, especially If it
-is quite dark and one is all alone. Sometimes a faint crack will
-start others like it all around, and these in turn will give rise to
-a rapid fusillade extending hundreds of yards up and down the river.
-And there are the crunch and crackle of the dry snow under one's
-muckluks, emitting various modulations of sound, from the sharp bark
-of a dog to the squeak of a mouse. One has company even in solitude,
-and there can be no solitude in the world like this in the Arctics.
-Oh, it is all so enjoyable and fascinating to me! It is like reading
-a book on a new subject, for one interested in Nature to visit this
-country. I fear I will be sorry to leave it when the time comes.
-However, two years may change one's views of many things.
-
-Dec. 29.--Four men from the Orphans' Home on their way up the river,
-spent last night with us, and were interesting company. One of the
-men, a Mr. Thornton, knows several people of Seattle and Sitka whom I
-know. He was at Sitka and Mt. St. Elias with the Prince Luigi party
-in 1897, and has an article in the "Overland Monthly" just out. He
-claims to have seen the Silent City, a mirage exactly resembling a
-distant view of a large city. Several have seen it, and one man,
-a photographer whom I met at Juneau two years ago, claims to have
-a photograph of it. I have heard it intimated that the photo is
-a fake. Prof. Jordan's article on the Silent City in the March,
-1898, number of "Popular Science Monthly" is to the point. Thornton
-says there is no doubt about photos and cuts of the mirage being
-unauthentic, but he affirms that he and five men of the Prince Luigi
-party saw it just as he describes it. We had a big discussion on
-mirages last night. Yesterday at the literary, my paper was on the
-familiar topic, "What Birds Eat." and, though rather lengthy, was
-well received. I think our men would be interested in almost any
-paper that discussed the subject of eating. Dr. Gleaves lectured a
-week ago on the "Cruise of the Revenue Cutter 'Bear' in 1893." He was
-surgeon on board of her during that year. He is now president of the
-Hanson crowd,--more properly speaking, "The Kotzebue Mercantile and
-Trading Company,"--just as we of the "Penelope" gang are the "Long
-Beach, Alaska, Mining and Trading Company." How bulky and pompous
-that sounds! If we do not find a bit of gold while we are here, we
-shall have the satisfaction of presuming ourselves to be one of the
-best equipped companies on the Kowak, and are looked up to very much
-as the Vanderbilts are in New York. Sense of such distinction as
-tills tends to increase the size of our heads, which are really very
-large indeed, when considered in their covering of wool hood, canvas
-hood, scarf, etc. We are advised to enjoy these sensations while it
-is feasible, as doubtless when we reach the wharf at San Francisco or
-San Pedro on our return trip we may have to foot it home just like
-common tramps, or prodigal sons who have wasted their substance and
-that of our grub-stakers in "riotous living."
-
-On Christmas, day of all days, didn't we have a "spread"! C. C.
-worked at it for a month beforehand and even stayed up all the night
-previous cooking and compounding. I suppose he will have forty pages
-about it in his diary, for although he worked until he was exhausted,
-he declares it the happiest occasion we have had. And the results of
-all our labor were really immense.
-
-[Illustration: Christmas Dinner.]
-
-The ten Hanson boys and a Mr. Van Dyke dined with us. The table was
-twenty feet long, covered with a snow-white cloth, and lighted by two
-candelabra of eight candles each.
-
-These beautiful articles of use and ornament were made by Clyde from
-a many branched birch, and the effect in lighting our large cabin was
-brilliant. The menu was gotten up by Rivers. It was a sketch of the
-landscape around our cabin artistically done in India ink on thin
-leaves of birch bark, and would have graced any table in New York.
-
-I never sat at a table in New York, but I just know they never had a
-handsomer menu card. The toasts were classic, and included a poem by
-Dr. Coffin, which was also of a classical character. I cannot refrain
-from quoting one or two stanzas of the latter, on account of their
-sentiment as well as literary merit. The verses were well received
-and delivered with startling effect.
-
- Now just a few things I would like to say
- To make us remember this Christmas Day--
- It isn't very often you dine with a Coffin,
- When the cook and baker is an undertaker.
-
- Now and again on a bill of choice fare
- You find such a dish as roasted black bear;
- But outside of the valley of the Kowak river
- You will not eat pate de poisson de liver.[A]
-
- Or white Touste bake and Ukluk roast
- Are rarely served without Antic frost.
- On these hot mince pies there have been no flies,
- For our pastry-maker is an undertaker, etc., etc.
-
- Now on your memories we would make a mark
- With a plain, simple piece of brown birch bark;
- On one side a picture of the place we are at.
- And a list of the stuff that we ate as we sat.
-
-[Footnote A: Pie of fish liver.]
-
-This is by no means the whole of the poem, but it is enough to
-intimate its character. It is Christmas and we are ice-bound. The day
-of all the days in a man's life, when he would naturally be blue,
-has been mutually cheered by those who, but for this digression,
-would have suffered under the circumstances. The feast lasted for
-two hours, and was followed by songs and instrumental music. Cox and
-I were waiters, Harry Reynolds served and C. C. cooked. After the
-banquet we four were waited on by four of the Hanson boys, who took
-everything into their own hands. Normandin established himself as
-cook and Joe Jury as head waiter, with Hays and Jack Messing under
-his charge. They made a combination so witty and droll in everything
-they did that we could scarcely eat for a time. We finally succeeded
-all too well for our subsequent comfort. Fun and frolic and candies
-and nuts occupied attention for an hour, the party at last breaking
-up with the singing of several church hymns.
-
-On Saturday before Christmas the natives were all gathered in, as
-well as the whites, and we served the former a "big feed," afterwards
-exhibiting a brilliant Christmas tree and the venerable Santa Claus.
-Everyone took part in contributing toys and so forth to the children.
-There were dolls, tops, whistles, jumping-jacks, cooky people, nuts,
-candy, etc. It would take a whole note book to describe this part of
-the Christmas festivities on the Kowak--how the old people awkwardly
-tried to use knives and forks in eating, and how Santa Claus was
-greeted, and the wooden dolls, and all the rest. Some of the dolls
-fell to our boys. I am sure they reminded us of home. After the
-tree the natives danced, the girls in a graceful manner, and the
-boys representing fights or something of the kind, all the while
-being accompanied by a beating of tin cans, stamping and monotonous
-singing. There were thirty Indians and as many white men present.
-
-[Illustration: At High Noon.]
-
-Jan. 7, 1899.--Last week we were surprised by what we took at first
-for an Arctic apparition. Uncle S., whom everyone had given up for
-dead, arrived, accompanied by the missionaries from Cape Blossom.
-Mr. and Mrs. Samms. They had come up with dog sledges. Uncle S. had
-brought mail from St. Michaels, and the load was very heavy, there
-being two hundred and fifty pounds of mail alone. He had but nine
-dogs, and left most of the mail at Kotzebue Camp, where the snow
-was too deep to travel further with it. He and Mr. and Mrs. Samms
-pushed on up here, and, as all were pretty tired, several of the
-boys volunteered to go down to the Kotzebue Camp, which is sixty
-miles below us, for the mail and other sled. I was a volunteer, along
-with several from the Hanson Camp as well as of this, as we were
-all anxious to get the delayed mail. But a few hours later, when we
-began to realize what a hard trip it would be, everyone backed down
-until only Cox and I were left. These boys stood on the burning deck,
-and made believe they didn't care, especially as that brave little
-missionary woman had just made a trip over the same road of more than
-two hundred miles and on foot.
-
-That same day Joe Cogan and Sam Colclough came along on their way to
-the Allashook. They had a team of eight dogs, but, after inquiring
-of all the natives, they found they could obtain no more dog's food,
-nor is there any along the river above here. So as they were going
-to start back down the next day. Cox and I decided to go with them.
-I did not relish the anticipation of the trip at all, and, now that
-it is over, I must say that it is the hardest journey I ever hope to
-make. We returned last night, having been on foot for seven days,
-making one hundred and twenty miles of very, very hard walking.
-
-We had five dogs from here; these, with Cogan's, made thirteen. We
-loaded our blankets and clothing on Cogan's sled and hitched up
-the thirteen dogs to it in a line. The sled was a very heavy one
-and the load resembled it. It went all right until we got on some
-sand-bars about a mile below the Hanson Camp, and there our trouble
-began. The snow was light and the heavy runners cut through to the
-gravel beneath, making hard pulling. We were trying our best to get
-over when the sled struck a rock, and, in dragging it off, two of
-the standards broke off at the runner. Of course we had to return,
-leaving the load cached on the trail. At the Hanson Camp we got some
-wire and necessary tools, and by this time it was afternoon. The San
-Jose crew of the Hanson Camp must have us stop for dinner, and it was
-a fine one, too, with the immediate future ahead of us. Had we not
-been thus refreshed. I do not think we could have made the Jesse Lou
-Camp that night. Colclough declared our bad luck was all on account
-of the dogs, thirteen in number, so we borrowed two more and also
-another sled. The dogs pull much better in small teams and we now
-made good time. They carry their bushy tails curled up gracefully
-over their backs, and trot along the trail with ears erect and
-pointed forward, the very picture of lively animation. It was three
-o'clock by the time we got our second start and darkness was soon
-upon us. Besides, it was cloudy, with no moon, and snow was falling.
-Light snow had fallen to the depth of four or five inches, obscuring
-the old trail so that we soon lost it. And then our fun began. It is
-twelve miles from the Hanson to the Jesse Lou Camp, and it was not
-until ten o'clock that we came around the bluff at the latter camp.
-The snow-covered river bed was a uniform blank whiteness, bordered by
-the dark line of willows and spruces, and whoever was in the lead had
-nothing to guide him but kept as near as he could between the banks.
-
-Occasionally the sleds would meet and grapple with snags and rocks or
-sand-bars with little snow on them, and then we would have to strike
-off at right angles. Just before we reached our destination for the
-night, we got into a large field of broken ice in which we floundered
-about for half an hour. The ice was in plates or narrow strips an
-inch or less in thickness, all up on edge, jammed thus when the river
-had first frozen over. These sharp plates mostly leaned obliquely up
-stream and stuck out of the snow as high as two feet, with gaps and
-holes between. We had a dreadful time. Our sled tipped over and the
-dogs dragged it on its side for several yards before we could stop
-them and fix the pack again. And then our shins! We could not see a
-thing, and sometimes a step would be down into a hole and the next
-step on top of a sharp edge of ice. If I fell down once I did twenty
-times. Cox had never worn muckluks before, and it was particularly
-hard on his feet. By the time we got to camp we were tired enough to
-lie down anywhere, whether we froze to death or not.
-
-We were warmly welcomed at the first of the three Jesse Lou cabins
-which we struck, and they got us a hot supper and fixed our beds in
-true Kowak hospitality. It was New Year's Eve. 1899, before we got to
-bed.
-
-By nine the next morning we were off again. The next halt was an
-Indian igloo thirty miles below. Before we had gone a third of the
-way my legs began to pain me so that I walked with difficulty. One of
-them was strained by a fall on the ice the night before, and I was in
-absolute torture all day. It was my first real suffering. Finally,
-when we had gone about fifteen miles, as it was getting dark and we
-did not care for a repetition of the previous night's experience,
-we made camp. Cogan had a tent and stove, and his companion was a
-"rustler." A patch of snow was soon scraped off and the tent put
-up. But it took a long time to heat the interior above the freezing
-point. Too much of the exterior gets into a tent.
-
-It was forty degrees below zero that night and the next day.
-After one has perspired a good deal during the day he soon chills
-when he stops, if he forgets to put on more clothes. I had a big
-reindeer parka and also a pair of huge deerskin mittens. Without the
-latter I should surely have frozen my hands. The dogs ate up Cox's
-leather-covered mittens, and I gave him one of my pairs. The pair
-I wore got soaked with sweat and then froze on my hands as hard as
-a rock. If I had not happened to have the deerskin mitts to change
-with, I might have lost a few of my extra fingers. Cox did blister
-his. Colclough got up some hot flapjacks and bacon and we were
-filled. I slept in the parka and kept pretty warm. The rest occupied
-the big deerskin sleeping bag, which is the only safe bed in an
-Arctic camp.
-
-[Illustration: The Jesse Lou Camp.]
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
-
-Our midwinter trip for the mail was a chapter in our icy history
-never to be forgotten. We made the next fifteen miles to the Indian
-Igloo in good time. Cox and I slept in the igloo, but the rest in the
-tent. The fourth day we made the last fifteen miles to the Kotzebue
-Camp, where the sled and mail had been left. Besides the mail, there
-were two pipes about twenty feet long and weighing perhaps one
-hundred pounds each. Then there were our blankets and extra clothes
-and dog food, bringing the return load up to four hundred pounds for
-our six dogs. Cogan and Colclough went on down to the Riley wreck
-with all their belongings, so we hail no stove or tent for the return
-trip, trusting to good weather in making the long stretches. There
-is only one cabin at the Kotzebue Camp, and this a very small one,
-but we managed to find room to lie down somewhere. We also made a big
-stew of canned beef, dessicated potatoes and onions, with lots of
-pepper and sage. It was good and stimulating, and upon this we based
-our courage. It was a fine base. We found the load pretty heavy for
-the dogs, one of which wasn't of much account, and our progress was
-slow. Where the snow was deep and the trail rough we had to help some
-ourselves. An animal with four feet has much advantage over a human
-with but two. We made the return trip in three days, fifteen miles
-from the Kotzebue Camp to the igloo, thirty miles from the igloo to
-the Jesse Lou, and fifteen miles from there to the Penelope Camp,
-making one hundred and twenty miles in seven days. By the third day
-out my limbs became accustomed to the hard walking and my lameness
-disappeared. The thirty-mile stretch we made in twelve hours,
-starting from the igloo before daylight. The northern lights were not
-visible during our return trip, although previously one could read by
-them. The cold was not excessive nor did we meet with any terrible
-accidents, but I will record that I have had enough of winter travel
-in the Arctics. I am of the same mind as Hard-luck Jimmy, who, after
-attempting to reach the site of the "latest strike" and getting
-caught out in a snowstorm, said in his slow, comprehensive manner of
-speech: "It would take all the men in Ambler City with a great big
-hawser to pull me away from my warm cabin and grub again this winter."
-
-[Illustration: Winter Travelers.]
-
-The thirty-mile stretch of our road was long. So change of scenery
-for entertainment. When we got around one bend in the river it was
-just to plod along until we got to the next. It took three hours for
-us to cover one straight piece of trail. We ate nothing that day but
-a little frozen bread. We had nothing to cook, and there was no time
-to cook it if we had, and no dishes or stove. But we were served to a
-fine supper at the Jesse Lou. The dogs did finely that day. We gave
-them a feed in the morning before starting. Usually dogs are fed but
-once a day, at night, and then only about one pound of frozen or
-dried fish to the animal. At night we let the dogs loose and, if at a
-village, they forage around for scraps of anything, which of course
-are extra rations. They steal any provisions left unprotected. They
-ate Cox's leather mittens, the thongs on Cogan's snowshoes, and a
-leather gun case. One night they broke into the "grub-box." and got
-away with everything in it, including a sack of oatmeal and a side
-of bacon. Owing to their preference for leather, we had to sleep on
-the harnesses and with our heads on the "grub-box." These Eskimo dogs
-look just like wolves, but are docile and often playful. They do not
-bark like civilized dogs, but snarl and growl. Some nights they would
-howl in concert for hours at a time, making a weird sensation in the
-silence of the ice.
-
-In sledding, the dogs are tied by their harness strings alternately
-to a straight lead-rope. One dog is "leader," and he is the most
-intelligent of the pack. During the trip Cox walked about a
-hundred yards ahead of the lead dog, now and then turning back and
-whistling or calling. I walked behind, keeping the sled straight,
-and untangling the team when it got mixed up. Each dog has a name,
-and his character qualities become as well known to us as those of
-a human individual. Ours were named Emik, Kubuck, Auboon, Nanuk and
-Tingle. One day Emik jumped on to the dog that was not pulling his
-share and gave him a sound whipping. The whole pack joined in and I
-had to beat them off with a club.
-
-Ordinary animals would have died of broken bones, but it took a
-"sore chastisement" to bring these dogs to their senses. Fights are
-frequent and always mean two or three minutes' delay In untangling
-the lines. The harnesses are provided with swivels or else the lines
-would soon become hopelessly twisted.
-
-The two pipes I mentioned as part of the load, stuck out behind some
-eight feet beyond the sled, and many a time when the dogs slowed up
-suddenly my shins would come in contact with the sharp iron in a
-painfully emphatic manner. The crunching of the dry snow under the
-sled runners is a combination of sounds in which one can but imagine
-he hears familiar voices, and one falls to day-dreaming as he plods
-along, until he is surprised by running against the slacking sled or
-stepping into a hole.
-
-The two nights we spent in the Eskimo igloo were interesting in
-detail. On the way down I was so tired that I paid little attention
-to anything, curling up and thankfully sleeping. On the return trip
-we made the igloo just at dusk. The trail was poor and the snow deep
-and the load heavy, so that we had made scarcely more than two miles
-to the hour. When we got within sight of the igloo the dogs pricked
-up their ears, as is their wont, and started forward at an increasing
-gait. Dogs will sometimes smell a camp long before it comes into
-view, and their quickened pace testifies to their hope of food. When
-our team rushed up to the igloo, we followed at a trot behind, and
-nearly all the inmates hurried out, curious to see us. These poor
-people are very hospitable, and at once invited us inside. We did not
-enter, however, until everything was attended to, for, after one has
-straightened out to rest before a warm fire, it is very hard to get
-up and crawl out again on stiffened limbs to attend to duties easier
-performed before one settles down. The native boys helped us to untie
-knots, and soon the dogs were loose, scurrying everywhere for bits of
-anything devourable, and frequently having a savage fight over some
-imaginary tidbit. Everything but the two iron pipes, which we trusted
-the dogs would not eat, was deposited on the scaffold for the night.
-This scaffold is a necessary feature of every igloo. It consists of a
-platform of poles and boughs raised about eight feet above the ground
-and supported on four posts. On this are stored all the fish, skins,
-nets, harnesses, sleds, kyaks, and, in fact, every article not needed
-for Immediate use in the igloo.
-
-[Illustration: Native Igloo, with Scaffold for Stores.]
-
-After the dogs were fed, we took a blanket apiece and crawled into
-the igloo. We were motioned to a vacant place on one side, where we
-stretched out as far as the limits of the room permitted. This igloo
-was built like a Sioux wick-i-up. Long, slender poles are fastened
-into the ground at one end, bent over and lashed with thongs on the
-opposite side. These are planted about a foot apart all around,
-until the whole completed frame is like an inverted hemisphere.
-Over this are fastened thicknesses of spruce bark stripped from the
-trees in sheets one or two feet wide and twice as long. At the top a
-circular opening is left, a foot in diameter, for the exit of smoke.
-The whole structure is covered and packed with six inches of snow,
-which effectually keeps out every bit of wind and incidentally every
-particle of fresh air, except what steals in through the smoke-hole
-and door when they are open. The entrance is closed by several strips
-of sail-cloth attached above and weighted, so that it always hangs
-over the opening and completely covers it. When one enters he must
-get down on his hands and knees and, lifting up a corner of this
-canvas door, crawl through the passage. The door falls back into
-its place behind. The passageway is so narrow and low that a large
-man can with difficulty crawl through. The floor inside, with the
-exception of a space around the fireplace, is carpeted with slender
-willow saplings, laid parallel and fitted closely together, forming
-a fairly good paving or heavy matting, sufficient to protect the
-occupants from direct contact with the ground. A few old deerskins
-are spread out where the elders sleep. The space on the opposite
-side of the fireplace from the door is not occupied by anyone,
-but is filled with cooking utensils, the water bucket with its
-wooden dipper, carved wooden bowls, and birch bark baskets. In this
-igloo--about twelve feet in diameter--fifteen people live almost all
-the time, only going outside when they must for wood and water. No
-books to read, no politics to discuss, no school to get ready for,
-and no visiting to do. Once in this residence, we were allotted a
-space next to the oldest man of the igloo. We were content with our
-small lot, for we were tired and hungry.
-
-[Illustration: Getting Supper Under Omiak-puk.]
-
-The light was furnished from seal oil. A plate of this, with a pinch
-of moss for a wick, furnished the light. The penetrating smell of
-burning seal oil is very stifling, and a white man can hardly stand
-it. Considering our distinguished character, these people dispensed
-with the oil and lighted candles instead, which I suppose had been
-obtained from the whites by trade. Our scanty grub-bag next claimed
-our attention and, considering it good policy under the peculiar
-circumstances, we distributed the remainder of the hardtack, which
-had been reduced to crumbs, among our hosts, who watched our every
-movement. We also had a little flour, but, as we had no means of
-cooking it, we presented that also to the woman on the far side
-of the igloo, who was apparently the mistress of ceremonies; for,
-although three other women were in the house, she carried all the
-water, chopped all the wood and prepared the meals. We made our
-supper from a can of corned beef and a loaf of bread, baked for us
-at the Kotzebue camp. Seeing our destitution, with true American
-hospitality the woman before mentioned left the igloo and shortly
-returned with a birch-bark basket about eighteen inches long by six
-inches wide full of a frozen mass of blueberries. This was evidently
-a "company dish," the best in her possession. She detached a large
-chunk of the preserves and placed it in a frying pan over the
-fire. As it melted into individual berries she stirred the mixture
-constantly. After the mess was thoroughly melted she passed the pan
-over to me, and, by the smell which arose, I was aware that the
-blueberries were put up in seal oil, as a sort of salad, I suppose.
-Cox declared his appetite lacked severity sufficient to tempt him to
-even taste the compound, but I was hungry enough to eat anything, and
-partly because I did not want to disappoint the motherly old woman,
-who had taken all that trouble to treat us to the greatest luxury
-possible, I ate with apparent relish. I did no more nor less than
-hundreds of my people do at any civilized banquet or even a meal at
-a friend's, when they pretend to like oysters or shrimps or anything
-from sheer politeness, the which they thoroughly detest. I got away
-with the entire panful, along with a slab of dried salmon given to
-me by the old man. These kind people evidently looked upon me as a
-good-natured, hungry little boy whom they enjoyed entertaining out of
-their natural hospitality of heart. I have no doubt my mother will
-long to grasp that old Eskimo woman's hand and possibly kiss her ugly
-but kind features, for the sake of her goodness to her "wandering
-boy."
-
-Truly the fish was not at all bad, and I secured a piece for my lunch
-the next day. It proved to be just the thing, as I could chew it
-while tramping along, and one does not need water to drink with it.
-The native next to me in the igloo showed me how to strip the skin
-from the piece of dried salmon and prepare it for eating. He held the
-skin side over the fire until it began to crinkle and writhe. The
-oil which it contains is thus melted and the dainty rendered more
-toothsome.
-
-After our hunger was, with these native articles of food besides our
-own bread and corned beef, sufficiently subdued, we stretched out as
-far as possible in our limited space. Cox was soon asleep. We agreed
-that in order to make the thirty miles next day it would be necessary
-to start before daylight, as there was then a waning moon to light us
-a little. Cox was especially impressed with this idea, and went to
-sleep determined to wake up the minute the moon rose, which would be
-about five in the morning. He had scarcely been asleep ten minutes,
-and I had not dozed off yet, when he started up, and I had all I
-could do to persuade him that the night had hardly begun.
-
-Later, and until we finally did start, he woke me several times and
-would go out and look for the moon, which he was sure was behind the
-schedule time. We could not see the trail until it did appear, so
-each time he would return and drop to sleep again. This crazy conduct
-on his part vexed me not a little, as I wanted to sleep, being
-prevented by other disturbances besides his own.
-
-After we had eaten our supper and got settled down, the other people
-ate theirs, which consisted entirely of dried salmon. This was eaten
-raw, each mouthful being chewed for a long time. The young men say
-that this kind of diet is what makes the Kowak-mitts (natives of the
-Kowak valley) so strong. I must confess to the apparent truth of this
-statement, for the whole house knows it when an Eskimo enters; that
-is, if there hasn't been one around long enough to have allowed an
-airing. Even the pretty girls are so fishy that a tenderfoot in this
-land can scarcely endure their remote presence. The salmon is cured
-during the summer and kept on scaffolds, being brought down only
-as it is required for use. The old men soak it up in water a while
-before eating it.
-
-Directly after their simple supper the natives began arranging
-themselves in their proper nooks in any place where there was room
-enough to lie down. The men and older women and all the children in
-the igloo wore nothing but skin pants, being entirely naked from the
-waist up. At night, however, they put on their skin parkas, as the
-temperature in the room falls quickly when the fire goes out. When
-all are ready, the woman of the household goes outside and covers
-up the smoke-hole in the top of the house with an old skin, and
-besides piles snow over it thickly so not a particle of cold can get
-in. The fire in the center of the room has meanwhile been allowed
-to burn down to a bed of coals, so there is no smoke or flame left.
-In returning the woman also tightly closes the doorway. If any air
-is getting in anywhere one can see the stream of dense vapor caused
-by the extremely cold outside air striking the warm, moist air of
-the interior. If the door is left the least bit ajar a stream of
-this vapor is seen flowing along the floor straight into the fire.
-If one's feet meet this current of cold they soon chill. After the
-coals are heaped together and all other preparations for the night
-completed, the light is extinguished and sleep reigns. For a while
-after the igloo has been closed the air seems extremely hot and
-stifling and the odors are terrific. In an hour or two the fire is
-dead and the air cools off.
-
-My night's rest might have been quite sound but for certain
-disturbances. I had just dozed off after being aroused by Coxie, when
-one of the men began to sing some Eskimo ditty in a weird monotone.
-He would drone it through and stop, and I would just be dropping off
-to sleep when he would start it up again. He continued for fully half
-an hour, and I was so thoroughly tried by it that I could have choked
-the fellow. The natives all slept soundly and probably considered
-it a lullaby. Another time I was awakened by the old man next to me
-singing in a high, jerky voice. He got up, all the time singing, and
-went over to the old woman, who was saying something to him. Then
-followed a series of the most diabolical noises--hisses, swishes,
-grunts, groans, guttural rattles and so forth. It hardly seemed
-possible that some of these sounds could originate in a human throat,
-but as they were without intermission. I suppose they did. This was
-finally interrupted by a loud, ripping swish, as if something had
-been forcibly torn up. All was then quiet, and the old man returned
-and lay down next to me. I did not know but he would practice his
-incantations upon me next, but my fears were groundless. During the
-creepy performance it was pitch dark, and I could almost imagine we
-were about to be sacrificed in some heathen rite. I asked one of the
-young men what was the matter, and he told me that the woman had a
-pain in her stomach, probably from swallowing her salmon in too much
-haste, and the old man had cured her by driving the demon out. This
-practice is like that I have heard my father say existed among the
-Comanche Indians in the Southwest.
-
-At last, after one of his frequent observations. Coxie reported that
-the moon was up. The candle was lighted and we soon had all our traps
-out of the igloo. Our mitts, scarfs, socks, etc., had been hung up to
-dry. The dryer one's clothes are, the warmer he keeps. Rain is not
-necessary to dampness either, perspiration every walking moment being
-free and persistent. We soon had the dogs hitched up, all but one,
-Nanuk, who caused us considerable delay by running off into the brush
-and hiding himself. Finally after several of the natives had helped,
-he was secured and our pack arranged.
-
-[Illustration: The Departure.]
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-
-
-Camp Penelope, Jan. 10, 1899.--Yesterday morning Uncle S. and Samms
-started on up the river with their dog sleds and mail. C. C. and Cox
-went with them. They hope to reach the Upper Penelope Camp and learn
-as much as they can of the outlook and the wish of the men as to
-segregation in the spring. They will have no easy trip of it, but C.
-C. seems to covet experience in winter traveling, and I think he will
-be the recipient of it this time.
-
-When Cox and I got in with the mail, all the neighbors crowded into
-our cabin and there was general excitement until the sacks were gone
-through and the fate of each determined. Nearly everyone got letters.
-The latest news was dated August 22, and we had full accounts as to
-the probable closing of the war. I received six letters. Down at
-Kotzebue Camp I opened only one of these, the one of the latest date,
-and found it so bright and jolly that my spirits were at the highest
-pitch all the way home. Moral: Folks at home, write cheery letters to
-absent ones wherever they may be. The snow may be deep, and the dogs
-may be mad, and the trail rough.
-
-We are beginning to talk about "going home." and of the probability
-of our cold welcome among our town's folk, who will possibly ridicule
-us as "fake gold-hunters," "prodigal sons," and all that. I was
-reading an article in one of the magazines last night, proving that
-an ambitious poor man nowadays has far more chances for success in
-any line than a rich one, and that "extreme poverty does not debar
-a man otherwise endowed, from entrance into the best society in the
-land." This in America of course. So we are saying in concert, while
-the latest news of gold fades into vapor, "Poverty is a blessing."
-It's a comfort to look at it in that light anyway. But it does not
-help some of our boys over the blues. Several put all they had into
-this venture, and on their return are destined to start all over
-again at day's work. I must own that I am myself the victim of some
-reluctance to return with empty gold-pan, and the old story of
-putting "gold into the fire and behold there came forth this calf"
-comes to me. We may have sufficient supplies to keep us in Alaska
-another year.
-
-Uncle S. is one man that is making a success. He charges fifty cents
-for each letter or package he brings up the river. My bill would have
-been six dollars at that rate, but of course my trip down more than
-met that. The doctor got twenty-four letters and many papers. Don't
-know whether he has settled his bill or not. Mrs. Samms is with us
-until the return of Mr. Samms, which will be not less than three
-weeks if the weather is good. It seems odd to have a lady in the
-cabin, but she is very agreeable and we like her company. We modify
-our usual reckless behavior and serve her in every possible way.
-
-She is teaching a class of children at the mission cabin. Mr. Samms
-is on an errand to get a census of native population and to note the
-condition of the Kowak Eskimos. There is likely to be a famine among
-them before spring, as they have spent too much time in watching the
-whites this year, neglecting to fish and hunt at the season. There
-is now little game in the country, and by next winter they will be
-destitute in clothing as well as food unless they receive help from
-outside.
-
-Jan. 11, 6 a. m.--The doctor and I have just got out of bed, hours
-before the usual time of rising. We think we can write better, or
-read, early in the morning before everybody is up and story-telling
-and making noises in the room. When we are all active it is difficult
-to think.
-
-The north wind is blowing a gale again, and its steady roar through
-the spruces outside, accompanied by the monotonous whisper or
-undertone whistling down the stovepipe, gives one a lonesome, dreary
-feeling. I almost shivered just now all on account of the sounds,
-although there is a blazing fire in the heater and the whole cabin is
-warm and comfortable.
-
-[Illustration: Some of Mrs. Samms' Pupils.]
-
-We have had no trouble in keeping warm. In the corners near the
-ground there is always plenty of frost, and if one sits or stands
-long in such a locality his feet get cold. But out in the room it is
-always pleasant. We have not put in double windows, as we expected
-to do, there being no need of them. The single large sheet of glass
-in each window is all-sufficient, though the frost collects in very
-thick layers on the inside. This is probably one reason why it is
-so warm. We took out the window panes the other day and melted off
-the ice. It was nearly two inches thick on the lower part. The panes
-are over two feet square, and the frost work on them is beautiful to
-look at. The designs are constantly changing. Sometimes great fern
-fronds extend from the bottom clear to the top, and then another time
-the pattern is small, like delicate moss. When it is thick one can
-see cities and mountain crags and almost anything besides, if his
-imagination is alert.
-
-The days are perceptibly longer now and yesterday sunlight touched
-the tops of the trees near the cabin. But it will be many weeks
-before the sun has sufficient effect to make any change in the
-temperature. Mrs. Samms says that February is our coldest month. We
-are getting along quite harmoniously in domestic affairs now. C. C.'s
-term of office as culinary chief expired at Christmas, and Rivers was
-elected to take his place, with myself as assistant. So I am back at
-my old stand again. There's one thing certain--we shall have less
-pies now. I think I shall be able to obtain a place as cook in a
-restaurant when I go back to the States if nothing better turns up.
-Our supply of some articles is getting short. We are going slow on
-mush and sugar, and the flour will not last longer than April at the
-rate we are using it now. However, our motto is to eat while we have
-the means, and go without when it is gone. Of course there is plenty
-in the "Penelope," if she is safe. We have a great deal of company at
-meals. Everyone traveling on the river stops in, either for a single
-meal or for the night. We like to be hospitable, and one has to be in
-this country. Wherever our own boys have been, up or down the river,
-they are treated royally at every camp, as I can personally testify.
-
-We do not feed the Indians any more at all, and it is better for
-them. They have become so dependent upon the whites that they do not
-work for themselves any more. When they might be fishing or trapping,
-they are hanging around our cabins. They do not visit us as often now
-as in the fall. Rivers and I send them outside whenever meal-time
-comes, and they are beginning to learn. We must do this or suffer
-ourselves from hunger in a late spring.
-
-Uncle S. reported that he found the "Penelope" in a safe place in a
-small inlet in Escholtz Bay. We received letters from the captain and
-Jett and Fancher. They have been on a sled trip up to the Buckland
-River, but with no success. However, they are in good spirits, hoping
-that something will be found before spring. Rumors reach us as to
-"finds" on the Noatak River, but we do not pay the least attention to
-them. The "Flying Dutchman" dropped in on us again yesterday. He is a
-"rustler," and will make it pay under any circumstances. He has more
-grit than all the rest of the men on the Kowak. He has a partner now
-in carrying mail, and a sled with dogs.
-
-[Illustration: Come to Church.]
-
-Jan. 15. Sunday, 6 a. m.--I am up alone. The doctor is a great fellow
-to lie in bed, excepting on rare occasions, when he is very smart. He
-even takes his afternoon nap regularly, and then sleeps ten hours at
-night. The wind is blowing at the same rate it has been going for a
-week. One day it was a fearful storm. It blew so one could scarcely
-stand up against it, and the snow and sand were driven along in
-blinding blasts.
-
-We can easily see now how the hills and dunes on the south side of
-the Kowak valley are formed. It blows with such force that all the
-snow is taken off from the sand-bars, and all the loose sand as well,
-and finally the coarse gravel is driven off on to the ice, where it
-travels until it reaches the south bank of the river, where drifts
-ten feet deep have been formed the last week. The natives tell us
-that in two moons from this the wind will blow harder than ever, and
-that it will be much colder. Yesterday we piled more sand and brush
-around the north and east side of the house. The wind had carried
-away a good deal of the original banking. The doctor was quite snowed
-into his bed one morning. We couldn't find the place of entrance, but
-it is now doubtless covered.
-
-Yesterday was washing-day for me personally. We do our washing one
-at a time for reasons of necessity. I had a large wash, as a part of
-it had been accumulating since August of last year. It is our habit
-to put off this very disagreeable duty as long as we decently can. I
-put in two faithful hours over the tub until my knuckles were sore
-and my back so lame I could only with difficulty straighten myself. I
-succeeded at last in "doing" ten pairs of socks, seven handkerchiefs,
-three towels and a suit of underwear, besides other things. I can now
-sympathize most heartily with the washerwoman of history. I have the
-clothes drying on the rafters above the stovepipe. The union suit
-is an awkward thing to handle in washing. I would rather tackle a
-blanket. A blanket has not two arms and two legs to be continually in
-the way. I could not wring it out very well, and after hanging it up
-to dry it dripped for several hours, sprinkling anyone who ventured
-under it. Uncle Jimmy sat down comfortably to read a good book, but
-he chanced to be in the line of gravity, and a splash on top of his
-bald head prompted him to address some words to me. It was only a few
-days ago that Uncle Jimmy's washing was "out," and I frequently had
-the edifying sensation of a sloppy, dripping drawers leg slapping me
-in the face as I moved about the kitchen stove in my culinary duties.
-We have to be patient and charitable when it is washing day, and
-other days. I will say that our domestic life is not often marred by
-so small a trifle as water dripping from a drawers leg. If we were
-sensitive to little things we would find frequent opportunity for
-grumbling.
-
-Jan. 23, 9 a. m.--Just got through with breakfast. Our menu is much
-the same these days--corn-meal mush, biscuit or flapjacks, hash,
-bacon, flour gravy and coffee. Kowak hash is a work of art, and is
-deserving of especial mention. It is a sort of literary review of the
-previous day's dishes. This morning it was simpler than usual, and
-consisted of only split peas, corn-meal mush, bacon, rice, toasted
-bread, salt-horse and beans, seasoned to taste. And yet the "beasts"
-claim their appetite is impaired! Needn't have eaten up all the
-luxuries the first thing.
-
-Several of the boys like to go out visiting the other camps in the
-evening, and not get home till morning "or thereabouts." I am a "good
-little boy," and go to bed at nine and get up at six. I have the
-breakfast ready shortly after eight, and then the fun begins, getting
-the boys up. They want to lie in bed till twelve, and Uncle Jimmy
-joins us in making it so uncomfortable for them they prefer rising.
-
-Harry Reynolds is washing to-day. He has just discovered that he has
-made a sad mistake. He dumped his bundle of clean socks into the tub
-instead of the soiled ones. General laughter at his expense. But H.
-wrings them out "dryly." He knows the laugh will not be on him next
-washing day.
-
-The jolly missionary's wife is singing in my ear something about
-"Darling Joe." Now, she thinks because she happens to be married that
-I must be much younger than she--in fact "quite a lad." In point of
-fact I am the older. It was my turn to shave yesterday, and I did so,
-consequently my chin is smarting. It is an unnatural process, and I
-think should be prohibited by act of congress.
-
-I have been reading "A Scientific Demonstration of the Future Life,"
-by Hudson. It interested me very much, and the doctor and I got into
-many a warm argument over it. It is a strange fact that we never
-argue upon subjects we agree upon. I always stick to my sharp point
-and he to his. Our discussions are usually on some biological topic,
-and the rest of the men do not know what we are talking about. One
-night, after a long argument in which I would not yield a single
-point when the doctor thought I ought, he wrote me the following
-
-
-ODE.
-
- Mon ami, Joe,
- A thing I know
- Is, you are Joe,
- Why this is so
- I do not know;
- But well I know
- You _will_ be Joe,
- Until you go
- From earth below.
-
- But even so,
- My young friend Joe,
- Before you go
- You'll _not_ be Joe,
- (The same _I_ know)
- For you will grow
- Both old and slow.
- And fall below
- To what you'd grow
- In things to know
- Of what is so.
-
- On things you know
- And say are _so_.
- Hard winds will blow,
- And light will grow,
- And change them so
- You will not know
- That they are so.
-
- And then, by Joe,
- You'll be more slow
- To say you know
- A thing is so.
- 'Cause then you'll know
- That what _was_ so
- When you were Joe
- May not be so
- When you're not Joe;
- And that _is_ so
- Which was not so
- When you were Joe
- Down here below.
-
- I like you, Joe,
- I'd have you know;
- And that is so.
- Because you're Joe.
- And be it so.
- Mon ami, Joe,
- As to and fro
- The world you go;
- That which you know
- Declare 'tis _so_;
- And so _be_ Joe,
- The Joe I know,
- "Chickadee Joe."
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.
-
-
-Jan. 23, 2 p. m.--I went out to look at the thermometer, when I
-heard the cackling of ptarmigan the other side of the river. Harry
-Reynolds and I armed ourselves and started out for game. We spotted
-the flock in a willow thicket where the sun, which nowadays is just
-at the horizon, had probably attracted them. Several of the birds
-were perched on top of the bushes, and were very conspicuous against
-the dark sky. We sneaked up to them and got a shot. Harry's gun got
-choked with snow and missed fire. We followed up the birds and,
-after two hours of hard tramping, I had four shots, securing three
-ptarmigan. The walking was extremely difficult. The snow from the
-tundras northward was deeply drifted along the willow thickets. It
-was packed just hard enough on top so that at about every other step
-it would sustain one's weight, but the alternate steps would break
-through nearly to one's waist. In some places we fell and floundered,
-and we considered our sport rather too well earned One of my cheeks
-was frosted, but Harry brought it out all right by a vigorous rubbing
-with snow.
-
-[Illustration: Grave Decorations.]
-
-It is too cold for hunting. I cannot shoot with gloves on, and
-my bare fingers get burned by the cold steel of the hammers and
-triggers. Harry had the doctor's Winchester repeating shot-gun
-Although a fine gun in warm weather, it seems to get out of gear now.
-My plain double-barreled Remington is the stand-by. I look at it and
-it seems to say. "Wait till spring comes, Joe, and we'll get in our
-work."
-
-The literary society is as interesting as at first. Last Wednesday
-Joe Jury talked on the "Art of Printing." He is a printer by trade
-and has quite a business in San Jose. The week before Jack Messing
-told us about the Hawaiian Islands. He was there for two mouths
-a year ago. Nearly all of us are in favor of sailing around and
-visiting our new islands on the way home. It is only about two
-thousand miles out of our way. Personally I would like to make a long
-cruise and visit the Philippines and Ladrones. Several of the boys
-are growing desperately homesick. Time drags for them, and they are
-counting the days to next July when they can get out of the Kowak
-Valley and start for home. I have overheard a couple of them planning
-how they might even now go across country to St. Michaels, so as to
-be ready for the first steamer in the spring. Enthusiasm is a myth.
-It was less than a year ago that, "No matter what happens, we will
-push on into the interior and explore the unknown mountains until we
-strike gold." Now it is. "How soon can we get home?" Such is human
-nature.
-
-Everyone is making snowshoes or getting the natives to make them.
-I must get a pair as curiosities to send home. The natives do nice
-work, and are improving their opportunities to get a good price.
-They get three to five dollars worth of food or clothes for a pair
-of muckluks. Snowshoes bring ten dollars. Indian Charley has made
-the doctor a nice miniature sled and pair of snowshoes for treating
-him when he was sick. Charley shows more gratitude and good-will
-than any other of the natives. But he has some great ideas. Last
-week he worked hard from daylight till dark in a cold wind clearing
-away the trees and brush from his little child's grave. He cut
-down everything clean between the grave and the river, saying this
-was so "the Kowak-mitts traveling up and down the river" could
-see his "mickaninie's" burial-place. He took the tree trunks and
-poles and leaned them together over the grave, tepee fashion, so
-the dogs and wolves cannot dig in. He left several of the taller
-trees immediately surrounding the grave, and climbed to their tops,
-trimming off the brandies as he came down. He then fastened flags to
-these poles until he had fourteen up, with every prospect of more.
-He used everything, such as sail-cloth, handkerchiefs and sacks. We
-thought if he kept on he might have all the clothes he possessed
-fluttering in the wind like a Monday morning wash, only the clothes
-lines were perpendicular instead of horizontal. We remonstrated with
-him, telling him the "cabloonas" never put flags over their graves;
-but he Insisted that he wanted to make this spot conspicuous so that
-everyone would notice it. The doctor thought of a scheme and Clyde
-put it into operation. He made a windmill about four feet in diameter
-and with a big fan. It was well made, and took Clyde two whole
-days to finish. Charley was very much pleased with it, and it was
-promptly lashed to the top of the tallest tree, whence resound its
-mournful creaks whenever the wind blows. Charley wanted to know if
-all cabloonas put wind-mills over the graves of their dead. Charley
-is very ambitious to do exactly like a white man and yet, like many
-another, he seems to think a disregard of native superstitions would
-be disastrous. He asked us yesterday if he would die if he should
-take some little pills the doctor gave him for some trifling ailment.
-He said that some Kowak-mitts told him so. There is an old woman
-in the middle igloo of the village who keeps these natives in such
-ideas. The sooner she goes "mucky" (dead) the better it will be for
-her people. About New Year's an old man at her igloo was very sick
-and was expected to die. For fear of having him die in her igloo, and
-thus, as she believed, render the house uninhabitable, she turned
-him out into the extreme cold. His son stayed with him and made a
-big fire. As soon as we found it out the nearest cabin took the sick
-man in, and did all they could for him, although he died in a short
-time. Women here have a harder life than can be imagined. A child is
-never born in an igloo, but, no matter how cold the weather is, the
-mother is driven out, not to return with her child until it is five
-days old. There have been three such cases so far near us. The last
-was during a ten-days' windstorm. The woman went alone back into as
-sheltered a place as she could find in the woods, and made a screen
-of spruce boughs to protect her from the storm. In front of this she
-kept a small fire burning and there she remained with but little
-clothing all the bitter days of her allotted time. An old woman
-occasionally visited her and brought her food and wood. The baby
-froze to death.
-
-[Illustration: Native Sweethearts.]
-
-[Illustration: Superstitious Old Woman.]
-
-Jan. 28.--Who should drop in on us night before last but three of our
-boys from the upper camp. Miller Casey and Alec. They report everyone
-in good health, but the gold outlook is altogether "nil." All the
-reports have been run down and there is no encouragement offered
-anywhere. The boys staked out fifteen claims in the districts which
-showed "indications." Holes have been dug, but in a few feet they
-strike water and can go no further. This report is for the late fall.
-C. C. and Mr. Samms had just arrived when the boys left. Uncle S.
-and Samms had seven out of their nine dogs killed by poison in some
-unexplained way at one of the camps. They bought five more at the
-Riley Camp for fifty dollars. Our dog Tingle was among the killed. C.
-C. and Samms intended to go twenty-five miles further to a village
-at the Par River. This party will remain with us until the return
-of C. C. They came down "just to kill time." They say it is pretty
-monotonous at the other camp. They carried a pack of about thirty
-pounds each and were very tired. Foote started with them, but gave
-up half way down. Casey and Miller, as well as Alec, are jolly good
-fellows and we hope they will stay with us a good while. Our grub
-is getting rather low. The boys up the river had the larger share.
-It will probably carry them through to July. But I think, unless we
-can borrow from neighbors, a delegation of us from this camp will
-have to go down to the "Penelope" at Escholtz Bay and bring supplies.
-I'm sure it will not be I. I shall be here when spring opens for the
-bird migrations. The boys report that two of the river steamers are
-lost. They were put into a side stream to freeze up for the winter.
-This stream is fed by warm springs which kept running after the
-stream froze over, depositing successive layers of ice around the
-boats until one of them is buried entirely out of sight, smoke-stack
-and all. The other, the "Agnes E. Boyd." belonging to the Hanson
-Company, is about half buried. If these boats had been watched at
-the start and dams put around them and then raised, they could have
-been saved. But now they are entombed in solid ice, and, unless they
-are chopped out before spring, the torrents when the thaw comes will
-smash them to pieces. The little "Helen" is so far all safe. That
-slow, ugly-looking little scow, which everybody made fun of last
-fall, may be ahead of all the big steamers next spring. Already the
-Hanson boys are talking about making arrangements with us for taking
-them down to the Mission. Thus shall the first be last and the last
-first. The general opinion of our boys now seems to be, if nothing
-is found in this country by next July, to sail down along the coast
-to Bristol Bay and way stations, inquiring as to the news from those
-sections, and finally taking in the Aleutian Islands. This suits my
-inclinations. Reports are coming directly from the Yukon region that
-there is nothing to encourage one to go there. It is safe to conclude
-that newspaper reports are as nine to ten exaggerated. There are
-thousands of disappointed people in all sections of central Alaska.
-Travel is almost impossible.
-
-Jan. 31, Tuesday.--We are having cloudy weather with a little
-snow. The thermometer stands at ten degrees below zero, and it is
-uncomfortably warm in our winter clothes. I shot four ptarmigan
-yesterday, two of which I have just finished skinning. I got three
-at one shot, standing, and the other on the wing. The doctor is out
-now hunting the birds. Whenever I get any game it excites him so
-that he immediately goes hunting. He seldom starts until I have set
-the example. I do not have success oftener than each third hunt.
-Walking through the snow is very tiresome, but one must be persistent
-in this as in other things. It seems to be only chance that I ever
-do find the ptarmigan. I usually search for fresh tracks along the
-bushy margins of lakes or sloughs and then follow them up. Mornings
-I find them mostly near their roosting-places, and they seldom fly
-far. They sleep on the ground, burrowing into the snow and clearing
-a bare wallow on the warm, soft moss. It is difficult to see them on
-the snow, and this accounts in part for my ill success. Yesterday I
-walked right into a flock without seeing them until they flew. I also
-got two pine grosbeaks and two redpolls. The days are growing rapidly
-longer. Only three months until the spring birds come.
-
-Sunday there were fifty-seven persons at church, including thirty-two
-white men. A stranger conducted the services in C. C.'s place.
-Nothing occurred of an unexpected nature excepting the fact that one
-of our boys went to sleep and snored so loud that it made us all
-think we were back in the States at church somewhere. Last night we
-had what Kowak boys call a "great blow-out." Brownie made a big wad
-of taffy and we all pulled at it. By the way, three or four of us
-were surprised at Christmas by receiving a box each, "straight from
-home." They had been packed and given into the care of different
-persons, so that the recipient of each box did not suspect that he
-was to have one. By some oversight of the party to whom my own was
-committed, I did not get my Christmas box, but am assured that it is
-"safe somewhere," and will come to light when somebody stumbles over
-it. Dr. Coffin received his on time, and the contents have yielded
-us no end of comfort. Brownie drew upon its nuts and crystallized
-fruits for his taffy. After the candy was washed off from the table
-and chairs and candle-sticks and faces and hands, we played a game
-of crokonole, which lasted far into the night. The result was that I
-did not have breakfast on time. Miller and I played the doctor and
-Rivers, the latter combine winning two out of three games after a
-very close struggle. They had the "ha-ha" on me. The game finally
-depended on the last shot, which was mine. We both had 195-200 to
-make. There were three blacks on the board and two whites. The
-whites are Miller's and mine. I had a fairly good split shot to take
-off two blacks, which would have given us the odd game by a good
-margin. Everyone was talking and the opposition was doing its best
-to "rattle" me. Anyhow, by some extraordinary roundabout, my shot
-cleared the board of every white one and put all three blacks in the
-center ring. Oh, but the howl from the enemy!
-
-Several cases of scurvy are reported along the line. One man is
-nearly dead. It is supposed to be due to a sameness of diet and two
-little exercise. Men settle down in their cabins and, not being
-obliged to go out, just sleep the time away. Dr. Coffin suspects
-another cause. A poor grade of food-stuffs has been brought up,
-probably with adulterations. Brownie is just now pounding up lumps
-of sugar on the table where I am writing. He is using the end of my
-rolling-pin with great effect and much scattering of sweetness, much
-to the delight of several Eskimo "mickaninies," who are having an
-active picnic in consequence.
-
-[Illustration: Home from the Mission.]
-
-Feb. 2.--C. C. and party have returned, whole but tired. Besides
-C. C., Cox and Mr. Samms, there are four fellows from the Upper
-Agnes Boyd Camp, so that we are pretty well crowded as to sleeping.
-I had eighteen men to feed for three meals, serving them at two
-tables. I had to "rustle" for breakfast this morning. Made two big
-pans of biscuit, a kettle of mush, a mass of salt-horse hash, bacon
-and gravy. The repast was successful, excepting that the gravy was
-somewhat salty. It is a great idea this, my cooking for eighteen men,
-after I have declared "quits" so many times. The fellows laugh now
-when I "resign."
-
-Scurvy and "black-leg" are getting common up the river. One man at
-the Jesse Lou Camp has died of the latter. The "black-leg" is what
-the doctors call phlebitis. Black patches appear on the lower limbs,
-which swell and become very painful. Many are affected and at some
-of the camps above us they have instituted regular "scurvy trails,"
-five to ten miles long, which they tramp every day. Exercise and a
-change of food seem to help and also to prevent the disease. Those
-who are suffering have been confined to their cabins so long, eating
-pork and beans and baking-powder bread, to the exclusion of fruit
-and fresh meats, that their cases are almost hopeless. C. C. reports
-nothing new above. He and Samms visited the big Indian village at
-the Par River. C. C. got a black bear skin in trade. Samms took a
-census of the native population and finds about four hundred and
-fifty on the Kowak. C. C. had rather a hard trip I guess, but he
-was anxious to get it. Nothing like having plenty of hardships to
-relate on one's return home. I expect to do some of the relating
-myself. He is a pretty heavy man and it would seem could not endure
-as much as a slender person. But he manages to make it. Last night
-and to-day we have our heaviest snowfall. Until a thaw comes to
-form a crust traveling will be difficult. Yesterday the literary
-was well attended. Mr. Young of the Iowa Camp, talked on "Butter
-Making and Creamery Methods." and I on the "Bacteria which Assist
-in the Making of Cheese and Butter." Casey sang two comic songs,
-"The Irish Jubilee." and "Put Me Off at Buffalo." Miller sang "Just
-Behind the Times" and "The Queen's Hussars." Miller has a fine voice.
-The literary is growing more popular as the season advances, and it
-may well be considered an important factor in helping many of us to
-pass the winter profitably. We try to bring in subjects which will
-interest everyone, those who are not literally inclined as well as
-the rest, and I think we have been quite successful. It seems to
-me that the mind must be employed in these long winter evenings at
-different points of Alaska, as a means of moral and physical health.
-The doctor and I agree as to this.
-
-Feb. 4.--The other day one of the boys was rummaging about among the
-stores to see what he could come across of interest piled above the
-rafters, when he accidentally knocked down a box. It fell to the door
-and one corner burst open, disclosing the contents, which were not
-"Sugar Corn," as the label on the end indicated. A very insignificant
-legend near one end read "C. C. Reynolds." and it was set aside
-as belonging to him. Yesterday it was given to C. C, who at once
-recognized it as the very Christmas box which had been entrusted to
-him for me before we left home, by my mother and sister. He turned it
-over to me with many regrets, etc. It contained everything that could
-give pleasure to a boy from two years old to twenty-one--from tooters
-and jumping-jacks to warm woolen hoods and handkerchiefs and books.
-Stockings were stuffed full of candies corked tightly in bottles and
-tin boxes, and nuts were profuse. A touch of home-thought mingled
-with the Arctic storms. I wish we had had it for Christmas on account
-of the toys and candies, which would have added greatly to the
-presents on the natives' Christmas tree. The hoods were especially
-acceptable. They are knit with a piece across the nose, openings only
-for the eyes and mouth, and are tied under the chin. They fit like
-the skin itself. The books are all new to our library, which has been
-pretty thoroughly digested by this time. I brought the three novels
-out and they were immediately pounced upon. The doctor is reading "A
-Tennessee Judge." Miller "A Kentucky Colonel." and Mrs. Samms "Oliver
-Twist." I shall get at them in course of time.
-
-I have read very little of late aside from my physiology. There is
-a growing faction in our company now favoring an expedition to the
-Philippines. We have the "Penelope" and sufficient supplies to go
-around the world, for that matter. For my part I think we ought not
-to hurry about leaving Alaska. Resolutions in regard to prospecting
-are dimly waning. Last summer it was, "We will stay in Alaska and
-push on until we find gold, if it takes three years." In the fall
-they thought "two years enough." Last month it was, "We will prospect
-all summer and start for home as late as the boat can leave the
-Sound." And now it is, "How can we the soonest reach home?" Several
-men from up the river are going to start overland for St. Michaels.
-Time, and plenty of it, seems to be an antidote for enthusiasm.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI.
-
-
-Feb. 8.--Mr. and Mrs. Samms left for the Mission yesterday. Harry
-Reynolds goes with them, and will either stay there or go down to the
-"Penelope." That lessens our number, but we will still have eleven
-in the house. C. C. talks of following them later. There will be no
-more prospecting done by this company this year, except by myself,
-and that for birds. I got a pair of muckluks in trade, and am now
-bartering for a pair of snowshoes. The snow is eighteen inches deep
-and very light and dry. I shot four redpolls near the house this
-morning. I would like to see it sixty-five degrees below zero just
-for the experience of it. I have already shot ptarmigan at forty-four
-degrees below, and could have stood it much colder without wind.
-
-Feb. 11.--It must be admitted that life is getting a little humdrum.
-There is nothing in particular to write about unless one has a poetic
-turn. Poetry doesn't come to any of us any more. The poetry is
-wearing off from the L. B. & A. M. & T. Co.
-
-If I were a Mark Twain, with humor to relate the doings of people
-about me, I could write a few pages of good reading. Resources are
-unlimited to the right person applying. The story of our "Fool's
-Errand" into this out-of-the-way country, if written by an expert,
-would be as rich a theme as one could desire. But alas! I am only a
-bird-hunter by nature, and a gold-hunter on the Kowak by grace of
-my father, and am unable to depict the fortunes of this crowd in
-an acceptable manner. There is unrest everywhere. All admit that
-they have been duped. Some are making the best of circumstances,
-but others are taking it to heart in a pitiful degree. Although for
-the most part good-natured, chagrin is the rule. There are many
-pathetic tales half hinted at. Men left families to live as best
-they might, in vain hope, in narrowed circumstances at home, selling
-or mortgaging all they possessed to outfit themselves, confidently
-expecting to return with quickly-acquired wealth. About twenty-five
-men have lost their lives so far from drowning, freezing or scurvy,
-several of whom we know to have dependent families at home. It is
-worse than war, for there is no pension. And then the ridiculousness
-of this mad rush! How a company of excited men followed an Eskimo
-three days across the tundras and over the mountains, only to be
-shown a little brook with yellow mica glistening in the sandy bed!
-How another party had a "sure thing," and several others got wind of
-it and followed, scarcely giving themselves time to sleep, until they
-all reached the same spot together in a mood to fight, but finally
-laughed at themselves as if provoked by a humorous ice demon. Several
-parties paid an old sailor at San Francisco forty dollars each for
-a "tip" as to the exact spot where gold had been dug out, "fifteen
-thousand dollars in two hours with a jack-knife"! They all met at the
-supposed place. We have had the laugh on them many times, though I
-fail to see the exact grounds. The ludicrous sometimes changes to the
-doleful even while I am laughing.
-
-"We paid $600 apiece for our tip," someone says. Several have
-owned up that they followed the "Penelope" crowd into this country
-believing that we had "a sure thing;" and the missionaries told us
-that it has been rumored that nearly live hundred men came into
-the Sound last summer following our "scent." I cannot see anything
-"funny" about it, though some do.
-
-Feb. 12.--This morning after breakfast I amused myself about an
-hour before service by paying strict attention to affairs about me
-in the cabin. It is astonishing how entertaining the meaningless,
-helter-skelter, careless conversation can be. And yet there are
-points. We are all doing something, if only yawning or looking out of
-the frosty window.
-
-C. C. is clipping Cox's whiskers and makes inaudible remarks. Rivers
-is shaving, just like any Christian of a Sunday morning. Miller,
-Alec, Clyde, Casey, Brownie and the doctor are reading. I am writing
-at the table. Uncle Jimmy is standing by the stove with his hands
-in his pockets, facing the window and whistling. A pail of water is
-set into the top of the heating stove and sizzles in varying tones.
-All is quiet for a while, when positions are changed. Ablutions are
-going on behind closed canvas. Uncle Jimmy sits down on a bench and
-pulls his beard in a slow, rhythmical motion. He is abstracted. Cox
-tills a stew-pail with water, pieces of ice striking the sides with
-a tinkling sound, and puts it on the cook stove. Uncle Jimmy gets
-his Bible and sits down at the table, spending several moments in
-wiping his spectacles. He reads a verse and pushes his specs high
-up on his forehead, rests his head on his hand and dozes off. Casey
-and Cox exchange some words about a "shirt" that has shrunken in
-washing. Rivers takes the thermometer and goes outdoors. Returns,
-saying that it is "thirty below." and bids me put that in my diary.
-Clyde brings his camera outfit to the window and explains what the
-several pictures represent. Cox asks me to "blow out the lamp if I
-don't need it," which I do. Cox gets a book and sits down near the
-window. He lights his big corn-cob and, after putting several dense
-clouds of smoke, asks, "Will I disturb you smoking. Uncle Jimmy?" The
-latter says, "Oh, no; oh, no!" Rivers gets "Hamlet" and sits down to
-the table to read. C. C. is in his bed-room humming a tune. Ceases
-humming and whistles; is again humming; whistles; sings. The doctor
-gets up, saying. "Uncle Jimmy. I didn't know I took your Bible." Goes
-into bed-room and puts on hood and mittens. Says he is "going up to
-see Bentz." And the morning passes, while I see and hear much more of
-no greater importance than what I have recorded. Half-past eleven the
-natives and "cabloonas" begin to arrive for church. C. C. speaks, and
-as usual we all listen.
-
-[Illustration: After Whitefish.]
-
-Is it monotonous, does one think who has not spent months in a cabin
-with the same faces and the same voices and the same routine of
-endless twilight? I marvel how some who have not inward resources can
-endure it.
-
-I let "Cingato" have my shot-gun yesterday, and he brought me four
-ptarmigan, two of which were the rock ptarmigan, which I have not
-before taken. I wanted to skin them to-day, but Uncle Jimmy wouldn't
-let me. If I insisted Casey said I might, from Uncle Jimmy's
-threatening look, "precipitate a rough house." I put the birds away
-to freeze until to-morrow, so there is no further danger of a "rough
-house."
-
-Last night we had the most beautiful aurora of the winter. The
-more brilliant display was south of the zenith, although there was
-scarcely a part of the sky which was not illuminated at some time.
-Broad curtains of pale blue light seemed suspended in the heavens.
-They were constantly changing in form and intensity, and waves slowly
-swept across them as if they were disturbed by a breeze. The lower
-edge was the brighter, and alternate light and shadow chased each
-other endlessly from west to east. The effect was like that of a
-stage with the curtain drawn, with a succession of persons passing
-in front of the footlights. And then there were ribbons of light
-sweeping slowly across the sky. These bands were often abruptly
-broken and continued at right angles with the other section. Little
-patches of light, like a fleecy cloud in a sunny sky, appeared for a
-few minutes, to gradually fade out again. There was no moon, and yet
-the landscape was illuminated as if by the brightest moonlight, but
-there were no shadows.
-
-[Illustration: On a Journey.]
-
-Feb. 17.--Alec, Miller and Casey started back up the river and
-Brownie went with them. The four "Agnes Boyd" boys who came down with
-C. C. also went up, and two of the Hanson boys with them. Yesterday
-Casey. Clyde and three of the Iowa people also left, and will catch
-up with the first party at Ambler City. Alec, Miller, Clyde and
-Brown will return in a month. The party had two sleds and four dogs.
-The cabin seems almost empty. We have had from eleven to eighteen
-sleeping and eating here for the past month or more, and now we are
-only six. The comparative quiet is a relief and I shall be able to do
-more studying. I want to read some more books as well. I expect we
-shall be few in numbers from now on. When Alec and Miller get back
-from the upper camp they, with C. C. and Rivers, are planning to go
-down to the vessel at Escholtz Bay. Casey, our engineer, will stick
-by the "Helen" until the river opens. I am going to stay here until
-the "Helen" picks me up on her way to the Sound. I can do more work
-in the spring collecting, with a warm cabin to dry specimens in,
-than chasing over the country prospecting, with a will-o'-the-wisp
-in view. The weather is very gloomy. The air is heavy with mist
-and full of a fine frost which falls constantly. The sun, although
-it shines for seven hours a day, doesn't get far enough above the
-horizon to get in its genial work. It was forty-five degrees below
-zero this morning and we stay in the cabin. Last week Rivers and I
-were relieved from culinary duties and Cox took our place. Coxie
-proves himself to be the best cook the Long Beach and Alaska Mining
-and Trading Company has produced. We feel our loss in not having
-discovered his talents in this line before. He has been too modest.
-His art shall no longer be in obscurity.
-
-He sits straddle of the stove all day long concocting original dishes
-and improving upon old ones. He gives us a quarter of a pie apiece
-three times a day, and as much as we want between meals. His bread
-is perfect. We had the finest kind of fried eggs for breakfast--fish
-eggs. The only impediment to his cooking, to my mind, is his
-inability to make mush. It is too thin. We have made a fortunate
-deal with the Hanson Company, who have fifty tons of provisions
-in their storehouse here, to get all the extra grub we need until
-summer. Their steamer, the "Agnes Boyd," is nearly buried in a
-"glacier creek," and it will probably fall to the "Helen" to ship
-their possessions down next summer. I was down to the San Jose cabin
-for dinner. We were served to an individual can apiece of sauerkraut
-and sausages steaming hot. I had been hunting across the tundra for
-several miles through the snow, and my appetite was as keen as C.
-C.'s razor after he has stropped it on a section of the belt which
-was made at home and fastened around his waist with the charge that
-on no account was it to be taken off unless he was found dead in the
-snow. It has his name on it for identification. Guy Solsbury has just
-come up with Dr. Coffin to stay with us for a few days' visit. We
-have plenty of room now, and are ready to receive in decent style.
-
-[Illustration: A Child in the Cabin.]
-
-Feb. 20. 12 o'clock noon.--Cox and Rivers and I are the only ones
-in the room. The rest are cutting wood. The sunshine is flooding
-the cabin with light, although the thermometer shows forty degrees
-below zero. One of our Eskimo neighbors, "Poth-luk," is visiting
-us, probably more for the benefit he derives from the stove than
-from a particularly friendly feeling. His little girl is with him,
-and is romping around the room like any white child. "Kop-puk" is
-the prettiest native child I have seen. She is "four snows old," so
-Poth-luk tells me. Her costume is typically Eskimo--a heavy deerskin
-parka with a big hood, lined with wolverine, strips of minkskin
-hanging from her shoulders and waist, and deerskin commuks. Her hood
-lies back from her head exposing her black hair, cut bang-wise in
-front. Her face is round and fat and her mouth really very pretty.
-She has shining dark brown eyes and perfectly white teeth. At this
-moment she is playing "peek-a-boo" with me from behind a chair. Her
-laughing face, surrounded by the broad fringe of wolverine fur, and
-her chubby figure, make a pretty picture. I would like to take her
-home with me. But what could I do with her? If taken from her native
-climate she would probably soon die.
-
-[Illustration: Our Artist Snowed In.]
-
-We have a new lounge, which invites indigence in an already lazy
-crowd. I have read over and over the six letters I received in the
-New Year's mail. It will be six months yet before we get any more. We
-heard from an Indian that Harry K. and Samms had reached the Orphans'
-Home safely, though they have had hard traveling. Saturday night
-Brownie, Clyde, two of the Iowa boys and one Hansonite returned,
-having given up the trip. They only went fifteen miles up the river.
-The snow is so deep they had to carry the sled in some places, and
-those who are continuing with it have to double up with the loads;
-that is, go over the road twice in order to get the entire load up.
-They will have a rough time. Brownie came near freezing to death
-and had to return. This gave the other boys who came with him an
-excuse for returning. Brownie has been around home all winter, not
-exercising much, and was not sufficiently hardened for such a trip.
-The first day, after they had been out but a few hours, he sat down
-exhausted and said he would come on as soon as he had rested a few
-minutes (the old story). The boys had presence of mind to know
-what the real matter was and tried to get him to walk on, but he
-completely collapsed and became unconscious. They quickly unloaded
-the sled and several went on ahead to prepare the tent and get a
-fire going, while the rest got Brownie on the sled and hauled him
-to camp. He was finally restored, but a few minutes more and another
-would have been added to the Kowak silent ones. It was thirty-five
-degrees below zero, not so very cold, but his feet and face were
-frozen. The boys plied the art of thawing him out so well that he
-will lose nothing but some skin. He makes a pretty picture with a
-black nose. His toes are sore, too. Nothing will induce him to leave
-the cabin again. It is no use making light of it, it is dangerous
-traveling unless one is in the best physical condition and with
-proper clothes and outfit. The rest of the party are used to it, and
-we have no fear for their safety. So many together can take care of
-each other. Brownie says that when he sat down to rest he only felt
-tired and a little numb. This numbness crept on him with little pain
-until he gradually lost perception. He says he "felt good" and didn't
-like to be disturbed. He lost all power of movement and speech until
-he was warmed up and rubbed for two or three hours. Death by freezing
-must be very easy and pleasant. Perhaps it is easier to die almost
-any death than we suspect. I must have an argument with the doctor
-about that.
-
-Saturday brought me a new experience--that of writing a sick man's
-will. B., who lives alone in a little cabin near the first Iowa
-Camp, is very sick and will probably die. He dictated his will to
-me, in the presence of Uncle Jimmy as witness. It apportions all his
-goods and possessions here, which are all he has in the world, among
-the residents of this community, naming in particular several who
-have waited upon him. Dr. Coffin is willed his dory. B. is a queer
-character. He is more or less insane, evidently from drink. The way
-he begs for hypodermic injections of cocaine and morphine indicates
-that he may have been a "dope fiend." He has been here since last
-summer. For some time previous his record was not sustaining, but
-his people thought he might be benefited by a change of climate. He
-says his folks are well off and he doesn't want any of his things
-sent home. The different camps are sharing in his care now, and he
-may live indefinitely. His legs are affected very much like the
-scurvy victim's, though the doctors do not call it that. Several of
-the people have frost-bitten cheeks, but otherwise this is a healthy
-neighborhood. What little sickness we have had tends to make the well
-ones kind and charitable and helpful. They chop wood for one another
-and in many ways give evidence of having sprung from a long line of
-Christian ancestors. I have heard that, this is the case always and
-everywhere at mining camps. And ours is a mining camp.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII.
-
-
-Feb. 24. Friday. 9 p. m.--I went hunting for the first time on
-snowshoes. I got along famously until I struck a soft snowdrift, and
-the shoes turned on edge and I fell headlong. Otherwise I received
-no casualties and got over the ground rapidly, skirting the brushy
-margins of lakes back on the tundra and following up the creeks. I
-shot three rock ptarmigan, and learned many interesting items about
-their notes and habits, which are duly set down in my special bird
-notes. The weather is calm and clear and cold, ranging from fifteen
-to fifty-one degrees in the twenty-four hours.
-
-Wednesday afternoon the literary was again well attended, as we had a
-very interesting programme. Dr. Coffin had arranged the east end of
-the room in a patriotic manner, the designs being his own. A large
-flag made of a red blanket with parallel stripes of white cheese
-cloth folded across it, and in the corner a square of blue mosquito
-netting with paper stars pinned on it, formed the background. On
-a platform in front of this were stacked three guns, one an old
-rusted muzzle-loader which C. C. found out in the woods, one an
-old-fashioned breech-loader, and the third a modern nitro-repeater,
-to represent the three great wars--the Revolutionary, the Civil,
-and the Spanish. On the wall were magazine cuts of Schley, Sampson,
-Dewey, Hobson, and other heroes, while in the center of the blanket
-flag was a large picture of George and Martha Washington.
-
-Mr. Legg, of the Jesse Lou Camp, gave a talk on Honduras, where
-he was a banana grower some years ago. Several George Washington
-speeches followed, by Solsbury, Jury, Thees, C. C. and others. Just
-at the close of the meeting Uncle S. came blustering in from up the
-river. He brought a lot of news that kept the people here until
-late in the night. Two or three more men have been frozen to death.
-Several have scurvy. Our boys were at Ambler City waiting for the
-weather to moderate before going on up. There has been absolutely
-no gold heard from. There are thousands of men in the lower Yukon
-regions, one hundred and fifty steamers and various kinds of
-launches along the Koyukuk alone, and no encouraging prospects.
-Hundreds of men haven't a cent to pay their passage back to the
-States. One good thing makes affairs better than they might be--there
-is plenty to eat in the country. It is said that a good many have
-signed a petition to the government to come and get them out of their
-trouble.
-
-We feel pretty sure of our return tickets. But the "Penelope" is at
-the mercy of Arctic demons, and if she is saved it will be marvelous.
-
-Feb. 26, Sunday.--I will confess that I did not behave well in church
-this morning. I took a seat over in the corner behind Rivers, where I
-thought my scribbling would not be noticed, and there I am writing. I
-guess no one will be harmed by it unless it be myself. 10:30 a. m.,
-and the first arrivals for meeting are Charley Lund and Beam of the
-first Iowa Camp--that is, representing the white population. Services
-are supposed to begin at eleven, but two benches of Eskimo are
-already seated. They are quite well behaved, but keep up an incessant
-jabbering. Charley Lund, Beam and the doctor are holding an animated
-conversation about the sick man B. B. is a good deal better.
-
-Guy Solsbury and Normandin of the Hanson Camp have just arrived, all
-muffled up, their masks thickly frosted. It is forty-five degrees
-below zero, but they report that their three-mile walk was "quite
-comfortable." Normandin brought me a big box nicely finished with
-cover and shallow trays, for my skins. It is in trade for a stuffed
-ptarmigan. He is quite a genius in the mechanical line. The box
-was rather too heavy to carry, so he fastened a pair of runners on
-blocks at the bottom and dragged it up by a rope tied to a handle
-on one end. Lyman comes in with his clarionet case under his arm.
-Dr. Gleaves and D. arrive, and then Young. Dougherty and Montgomery,
-from the middle Iowa cabin, and Legg of the Jesse Lou, who is staying
-with them. Several more natives come in with friendly "Halloas!" "Big
-Jones" from the further Iowa Camp arrives, and Brennan and Malcolm
-from the Sunnyside. Brennan is nicknamed "Noisy." because he is
-always very quiet and has nothing to say to anyone. Remarks as to the
-"cold weather," wooden snow-glasses and snowshoes, are numerous. The
-conversation is mainly desultory, carried on piecemeal from opposite
-sides of the room. But there is a low hum from two or three couples
-who are carrying on a more earnest conversation. Dr. Coffin and
-Dr. Gleaves, for instance. I overhear discussing Fish's condition.
-Fish is the man whose toes were amputated. One can see that Sunday
-services on the Kowak are rather of a social nature. The orchestra
-begins to tune up; general silence falls on the congregation, and
-individuals seek permanent seats. Dr. Coffin gives out the song
-books, of which C. C. brought plenty. The orchestra consists of the
-banjo by C. C, violin by Normandin, and clarionet by Lyman. There is
-some delay and more tuning of the banjo and clarionet, which do not
-seem to jibe (to use a musical term). A low buzz of conversation is
-again audible, and the leaves of the hymn books rustle. Several of
-the natives have colds and there is considerable coughing. It is very
-quiet: sort of an air of suspense. The sunshine streaming across the
-room, reflected from yellow Mackinaw suits, gives a brownish tint to
-the scene. Normandin and C. C. are discoursing "sharps" and "flats"
-in a low voice, yet audible in the room. The violin and banjo are not
-quite tuned together. Solsbury is talking aloud about "Moth balls in
-furs, back in the States." At last C. C. announces the number of the
-hymn in a loud, hurried voice, as though he were just startled out
-of a reverie, "No. 17, Jesus Saves." The clarionet sounds the pitch
-and C. C. leads in the singing. The time is awfully slow. Nearly
-everyone sings, the Eskimos following the air nearly as well as the
-whites. Although many sing out of tune, and individually would make
-a horrible discord, the aggregation is a somewhat musical droning
-of a quality that would soon put one to sleep. After four verses
-of this hymn. "No. 64" is announced. "Wait and Murmur Not." Some
-further tuning, and four verses of this hymn are gone through with.
-They always do sing all the verses of any hymn. Dr. Coffin now rises
-and reads the second chapter of Matthew. Mr. D. is in charge of the
-meeting to-day, and he calls on Mr. W. to "lead in prayer." Uncle
-Jimmy slowly rises, takes a step or two forward, clasps his hands in
-front of him, and, closing his eyes, raises his face slightly. He is
-a good man and I like to see and hear him pray. I haven't anything
-against Uncle Jimmy. When anyone prays the Eskimos always bow their
-heads low, resting their elbows on their knees. They say "Amen" in
-unison when the prayer is finished. So much is the result of Mr.
-and Mrs. Samms' missionary work. Uncle Jimmy terminates with the
-Lord's Prayer, in which all join. When the praying is over there is
-quite a hubbub of coughing and sneezing. C. C. announces "No. 49."
-and the orchestra tunes. "There shall be showers of blessing." four
-verses. The clarionet doesn't seem to know this very well and makes
-several breaks. Toward the end of the last verse the hymn-books are
-closed and there is a general settling down. D. rises and, after a
-pause, proceeds to apologize for his inability as a public speaker.
-But he tells us he will do the best he can, and we ask for nothing
-more. His subject is "The Divinity of Christ." I should like to take
-down the various points, but my continued scratching is noisy and
-attracts attention. I might get taken out of meeting by the ear and
-so suffer for being a "naughty little boy." A couple of men came in
-late during the sermon and caused some disturbance until they finally
-got seated, mopping the melting ice from their beards. D. winds up
-his discourse with a prayer. The most of his sermon was written,
-and delivered in his usual halting manner, but the substance was
-good for any location and showed that he had given a good deal of
-study to his subject. After the prayer and a chorus of "Amens" from
-the natives, who haven't understood a word of what was said, there
-is a sort of recovery, with coughing and clearing of throats and
-shuffling of feet. "No. 139" is announced. "Bringing in the sheaves."
-three verses. C. C. starts another song, which he observes "will be
-familiar to the natives," "No. 39, At the Cross." The Eskimos catch
-a tune quite readily, the women and children carrying the air very
-nicely. They try hard to imitate the words. Two verses conclude this
-song. "No. 14, Jesus, I Come." is announced. It is a new piece and is
-sung very scatteringly. Guy Solsbury calls for "Sunshine." He thinks
-it appropriate, because at this moment the sunshine is flooding the
-room with more than usual brightness. But C. C. says he hasn't the
-music, so the orchestra can't play it. C. C. asks all to rise, and he
-prays and gives the benediction. The congregation slowly disperses,
-little knots remaining to discuss various topics. Legg declares
-he will not go back to the Jesse Lou until the weather moderates.
-Thus with gossip and swapping of news the Kowak Sunday services are
-finally ended and the room is cleared in time for the 2 o'clock
-dinner.
-
-[Illustration: Church Service at Cape Blossom in July.]
-
-March 3.--I have been pretty busy to-day. Got up just in time for
-breakfast, which I don't have to get any more, for a while at least,
-and took my snowshoes up to the village to be mended. Then Rivers and
-I went ptarmigan hunting. We tramped across the tundras from eight
-till two, bagging two ptarmigan and a redpoll. It was tiresome. In
-the ravines where the wind did not strike, the snow was soft and deep
-and hard to get over even with snowshoes. Rivers wore snowshoes for
-the first time, and he got several tumbles, but always struck in a
-soft place.
-
-We got into a large flock of ptarmigan which kept flying around us,
-but, after two or three shots, our hands became too cold and we had
-to give them up. My mitts were sweaty, and froze while I had them
-off shooting, and when I put them on again my hands nearly became
-frosted. It is too cold for comfortable hunting. When we got back we
-were late for dinner, but Coxie got us a fine lunch, hot pea soup,
-biscuits, and apple cobbler. After dinner I put up two ptarmigan
-skins that I shot last Tuesday. Rivers is learning how to skin birds
-now. He expects to go down to Escholtz Bay pretty soon to be with the
-vessel when the ice breaks up, and will collect eggs and skins for me
-there. I would like to turn the whole company into an egg collecting
-concern for a month in May and June. But I guess the doctor and
-Rivers are the only ones who will take much active interest. Last
-night I had a very nice dream. The first swallows had come. There
-were barn swallows and bank swallows flying along the river and I was
-after them. Before many weeks this is just what will happen. It will
-be an exciting time for me. More exciting than gold hunting.
-
-Monday was my birthday, and there was quite a celebration in the
-cabin. The first thing in the morning, before I was fairly awake.
-I was attacked by the doctor, and we had a five-minute squabble,
-pitched high. At the close of the seance he claimed to have given
-me twenty-two spanks. They were more in the nature of bunts and
-kicks than square spanks. I made the doctor lots of hard work. We
-rolled around the floor and under the bed and on the beds, and tore
-things up generally, including Brownie, who got in the road with
-his sore leg. At breakfast Coxie served me a big bowl of oatmeal
-mush. We had been out of mush material for a long time, much to my
-personal sorrow, as all the boys and most of the neighbors well know.
-Mr. Lyman, hearing of my birthday, kindly sent me in a package of
-oatmeal. Good birthday present that!
-
-I also received a birthday box from home, smuggled like the Christmas
-box, not to be opened until the day appointed. There was everything
-in it--games, books, candies, duly bottled and boxed, etc. We all had
-a treat. At dinner a big platter of ptarmigan was set at my place
-(some I had shot), and all in all it was a very pleasant occasion.
-A birthday in the Arctics, on the banks of the mighty Kowak, is not
-often the thing that happens to a fellow.
-
-Wednesday, at the literary, C. C. talked on "Reminiscences of an
-Undertaker." It was very interesting, being his favorite and familiar
-theme. It was held at the Hanson Camp, and I remained as guest of Guy
-Solsbury, Jack Messing and Joe Jury came here and visited our boys
-at the same time. We have to visit about these cold nights and sleep
-under one cover when possible. Blankets are none too plentiful.
-
-Normandin mended my shot-gun, which had lost a rivet, for which I
-paid him the sum of a stuffed ptarmigan. Everybody wants ptarmigan
-skins now, but I have to be rather "stingy," as I am frequently
-told, or else I won't have a ghost of a "series" to take home for
-comparison. Home! When?
-
-[Illustration: Coming to Trade.]
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII.
-
-
-March 7, 1899.--I have succeeded at last in trading for two pairs
-of snowshoes, from some Eskimos who have just come up the river.
-The dickering engaged the entire afternoon, and I am completely
-exhausted. It is a stupendous undertaking to attempt to trade for
-anything. The natives want the earth, and then "some more." The
-following is an illustration of the proceedings: An Indian brings in
-a pair of snowshoes and we all rush to see them, commenting on their
-size and quality. "Mickaninny" (too small); "anganinny" (too big);
-"naguruk" (good); "caprok pechak" (string loose); "byme by fixem."
-And then "capsinic" (how much?) The native invariably replies, "You
-speak." You can never make an Indian state what he wants. You begin
-by offering him "sox." "Konga" (no). He wants "cow cow" (something
-to eat). "Flour?" "Capsinic flour?" "Neleuea" (I don't know). Being
-urged on flour, the native intimates "two sacks." "Oh, apazh,
-apazh" (too much). One sack flour all right? "No, too small." The
-Indian then proceeds to look over the sack of flour brought for his
-inspection and he finds "potoa" (hole). After this is sewed up he
-finds that it has been wet at one end and the flour is a little caked
-in advance at the bottom. He therefore states that the whole thing is
-"no good," and "dauxic pechak" (no trade). He wants bacon, "so long
-and so broad," indicating the measurements in the air with hands.
-"No, we pechak" (haven't any for him). Then I bring out a shirt to
-add to the sack of flour. He looks at the shirt and finds a torn
-place. "Stoney-house" (no good).
-
-"Stoney-house" means torn or broken, and has a queer derivation. Fort
-Cosmos is called stoney-house by the natives, because Lieutenant
-Stoney and his party wintered there in 1884. The cabin they lived in
-at Fort Cosmos (there is no fort or anything else there now) is all
-broken down. So, with an Eskimo, "All same stoney-house," or simply
-"stoney-house," means broken.
-
-After two hours of sweating and bargaining the trade is consummated,
-and the "cabloona" is satisfied. It is much to the relief of both
-parties. From the foregoing it will be plainly seen that a native
-is amply able to care for his own interests, and has learned from a
-probably bitter experience to "look a leetle out."
-
-I got a very nice pair of snowshoes to take home as curiosities for
-one sack of flour and a pair of socks, and another pair, stronger but
-not so prettily made, for every-day use, for a half sack of flour
-and half a pound of tea. This is very reasonable and some under
-winter prices. Snowshoes make nice wall decorations for halls and
-dining-rooms, with a suitable picture stuck in them where the foot
-belongs.
-
-Wednesday, March 8.--Our extremely cold weather is at an end, I hope.
-But it is more disagreeable outside. I put up a spruce grouse and two
-redpolls this afternoon. Birds are becoming noisier and, I presume,
-happier and in better spirits as the sunshine increases. An Alaskan
-three-toed wood-pecker drums taps on a dead spruce near the cabin
-every morning. The jays are quiet, but have a stealthy, sly manner
-which indicates that they are about to engage in nest-building.
-Rivers has finished up two ptarmigan skins in fair shape. He is very
-painstaking and I hope he gets some good specimens down on the coast.
-I have everyone posted as to keeping birds and eggs for me, and, with
-this generous promise of help, I ought to obtain some rare things
-this spring.
-
-The literary met this afternoon, with good attendance and a talk "On
-the Eye" by Dr. Gleaves. A week ago the other officers and myself
-thought our terms of office had about expired, so we "resigned," and
-our successors were elected; Joe Jury, president; Clyde, secretary;
-Young, vice-president. To-day, as I was retiring from the chair. Dr.
-Coffin arose and, after a most elaborate speech, presented me with a
-gavel. He spoke of its rare value on account of its associations, and
-grew quite sentimental. It was part of a birch tree, chopped down by
-Uncle Jimmy near our winter home "on the Kowak far away." Dr. Coffin
-selected the pieces and worked them down. The head was turned by
-Normandin on the famous grindstone lathe of the San Jose cabin. Joe
-Jury worked the crank, yielding "two barrels of sweat by measure."
-and Dr. Coffin turned the handle and finished up the gavel. It is a
-very valuable and beautiful souvenir to be kept "as long as memory
-lasts."
-
-Joe Jury took the chair which I had vacated to-day and made things
-lively, using a big hand-ax for a gavel and otherwise making this,
-probably our final meeting, a merry one. Several of the Kowak men
-are about to leave. Nine of the Sunny siders started up yesterday
-with their sled loads. They have lots of courage and perseverance,
-but I doubt their making the mountain passes with their supplies.
-Solsbury and Joe Jury start down to-morrow on a three weeks' trip to
-look after the condition of their barge, sixty-eight miles below us.
-Dr. Gleaves and the boys from "Quality Hill" are getting ready for
-a hunting trip across to the Naatak. Oh, I believe I have not made
-previous mention of Quality Hill. It is an interesting spot, the
-cabin being occupied by four young men of the aristocracy. They have
-been exclusive, as became men of their distinction. Few of us have
-been on intimate terms with them, but they are said to lie in their
-bunks until twelve o'clock noon, and to stay up, when once out, until
-two the following morning. They divert themselves by shooting at mice
-which run across the floor, using their six-shooters. Various boxes
-and knot-holes about the walls of their residence suggest targets.
-The walls themselves are riddled with bullet holes. They are said to
-have trained a young Eskimo as personal attendant, who does all the
-work of the cabin, building fires, bringing wood and water, and even
-cooking. He sleeps on the floor, so that he may lye handy to rekindle
-the fires of a cold night. The first man to arouse in the morning
-tosses a boot or other article at the native servant, which reminds
-him of his domestic duties. He blacks their muckluks, it is rumored,
-and serves coffee and cigars in bed. They live in style on Quality
-Hill. Thus even the remote Kowak has its aristocratic society.
-
-March 10.--I put up five more rock ptarmigan to-day. They are
-difficult to skin and it is slow work, and their being pure white
-makes it necessary to be extra nice with them. I have already used
-more than half of my supply of plaster-of-paris and the migrations
-have not begun. I use this plaster in cleaning the skins.
-
-Yesterday the doctor and I went hunting for three hours in the
-forenoon and secured eight ptarmigan. It was pleasant when we
-started, but after a while the north wind blew. We were about to
-return when we discovered a flock of ptarmigan on a hillside. The
-fine snow was driving along the ground in a continuous blinding
-stream. The birds squatted down close in the snow, facing the wind,
-evidently tired. They paid little attention to us until we were
-within easy shot, when they rose and, after a short flight, settled
-again. I felt sorry to take advantage of them, they are usually so
-wary. The doctor wore his snowshoes for the first time and on the
-whole got along pretty well. Once, however, he got mixed up in a
-snowdrift. He tripped, the pointed heel of one shoe stuck, and down
-went the toe of the other. He plunged head first into the snow, where
-he could scarcely move. During the progress of his wallowing his
-shot-gun got crammed full of snow, and he poked it out just in time
-to see four ptarmigan fly past.
-
-[Illustration: The Doctor Makes a Good Start--]
-
-[Illustration: But Finds Himself in a Changed Position.]
-
-March 15, 9 a. m.--It has been storming three days. This morning
-the wind is roaring among the trees louder than ever, and the snow
-tills the air so thickly one cannot see a hundred yards. It is
-warmer, however, as it always is with an east wind; warmer than we
-have seen it since last September. I have been on my first hunt for
-jay's nests. When it is cloudy one can see through the foliage of
-the spruces more readily than when the sun shines, throwing shadows
-everywhere. Last week several of the "Amblerites" came down. They
-report many cases of scurvy at Ambler City, and they came to our
-camps to get tomatoes, fruit and pickles. They are now stormbound,
-and two of them, Phillips and La Voy, are with us. They will have
-hard sledding back again unless it thaws enough to form a crust.
-Money is very scarce up here now and provisions and clothing are
-below par, with half the money we spent in the States one could buy
-up a good outfit. If one could only see ahead! But In that case we
-would not have been here, and I should probably never have seen the
-spring migrations on the Kowak. An ill wind that blows nobody any
-good.
-
-March 18.--The cloudy weather continues. The warmth from the room is
-penetrating the roof and the water is dripping through in several
-places. The frost and ice in the lean-to are melting, making a sloppy
-place. Icicles hang down from above, like stalactites in a cave, and
-slippery cones rise from the floor like stalagmites. The snow is
-about two feet deep on the level and is soft and damp, making walking
-even with snowshoes difficult. I went into the woods this morning a
-few hundred yards, wading in snow above my knees, which was tiring.
-I got a shot at a raven, but lost it. I heard a wood-pecker drumming
-and a couple of pine grosbeaks calling. I long for the time when the
-birds will arrive. Every moment will be precious then, but the time
-hangs a little heavy now. I am glad I have something to look forward
-to. "Looking forward to something" is about half the pleasure of
-life. I have compiled my last year's bird notes, have loaded all my
-shells, gotten boxes ready, and still must wait. I spend some of the
-time in getting as much information from the natives as possible
-about the birds. They know the natural history of the region pretty
-well, and but for their superstitions would be of practical service
-to me. I have been looking for jay's nests and watching these birds
-for several days now. I cannot induce the natives to hunt for me, or
-even to tell me of nests. They tell me that if a person looks at the
-eggs of a jay or spruce grouse he will surely "mucky" (die). They
-firmly believe what they say. Kallak told me that a man who lived
-in her father's igloo several snows ago, looked into a jay's nest
-and promptly went "mucky." Doctor Charley tells me the same thing,
-except that if the person who disturbs the nest shoots one of the
-parent birds and, holding it behind his back, extracts the entrails
-and throws them away out of his sight, he possibly may not die. I am
-afraid it will be hard for me to obtain assistance from these people
-at the time when I shall most need it, and which I had fondly hoped
-for all along.
-
-March 20.--My eyes are smarting with snow blindness while I write.
-They feel full of sand. To-day the sun shone and the glare was
-dreadful. Last evening I went down to the Hanson camp and spent
-the night with Dr. Gleaves, and to-day have been hunting jays. I
-found one nest just started and feel very much elated. It was only
-by accident that I found it, for the birds are so shy. I saw a jay
-flying in the direction of a strip of spruces, but lost sight of it
-on account of intervening timber. I did not see the birds again, but
-followed in the direction of their flight, keeping up a systematic
-search through the spruces. By chance I caught sight of a small
-aggregation of twigs in a young tree, which, by a few tell-tale
-feathers clinging around the edge, gave me the scent. The nest was
-not more than half built and I made haste to leave the vicinity so as
-not to disturb the birds. I think the full set of eggs will be ready
-in about three weeks. This, with the snow several feet deep and the
-landscape white! I returned to Dr. Gleaves' in time for dinner at two
-o'clock, and was treated to "Gleaves' Justly Celebrated," which is an
-original soup of the doctor's own concoction.
-
-After a half day's tramp on snowshoes through deep, damp snow, one
-enjoys a dinner of the "Gleaves' consomme," hash, baked sweet potato
-and sweet corn.
-
-Last night an Eskimo died at the village, and every savage neighbor
-of the deceased has moved into tents out of their warm igloos, which
-are vacated for good. They are all going to move across the river and
-put up wick-i-ups. The person who died was an old woman who went by
-the natural route of old age. She was dragged out of her igloo a few
-yards and left in the snow, for the dogs to eat up, we are told, as
-she had no especial friends. C. C.'s instinct was aroused, and he and
-Dr. Coffin went up to attend to the ceremonies. Wonderful to relate,
-the undertaker did not bury the body, but put it on a scaffold in
-true native style. He is being convinced that this is the proper form
-of burial. It is expected that he will institute the same on his
-return to California.
-
-March 24.--Guy Solsbury and Joe Jury returned from their trip to
-look after the barge. Guy has some big stories to relate about their
-"perilous trip," which is the identical one Cox and I made last New
-Year's. They have been absent two weeks, part of the time snowed
-in. We shall probably have a full account of it in the San Jose
-"Mercury" next summer. It will bring the mercury down. Colclough came
-up with them. He had been to the Mission, and brought us a letter
-from Harry Reynolds and Captain Delano, who report everything "all
-right." Several men have lately come down the Kowak. The word from
-everywhere, Naatak, Buckland, Allashook, Koyukuk, and the entire
-Kowak region, is "nothing." Men are waiting impatiently for spring
-to open up so they can "go home." C. C., Rivers and Clyde are now
-waiting for the boys to come down from the upper camp, when they
-will all go down to the "Penelope." There is little of note going on
-about the cabin these days. We have altogether too much sunshine.
-The doctor and I were hunting ptarmigan Thursday. We tramped seven
-hours and never saw a bird save a few redpolls and a small squad of
-chickadees. As a result of his tramp the doctor is laid up with snow
-blindness. I am not so far affected. I cannot hunt with snow-glasses
-on, as they dim the vision. But I have some natural advantage. My
-ancestors, who did not hunt ptarmigan on the Kowak, bequeathed to me
-a pair of rather deep-set eyes with roofing brows, which are the best
-protection.
-
-"Doctor Charley," the Eskimo who received so much kindness from
-Dr. Coffin last fall, has been anxious to return the courtesy, and
-yesterday his opportunity came.
-
-The doctor was attacked with snow blindness with great suffering.
-Dr. Charley called on him professionally, and advised him to try a
-treatment at the hands of his wife, who was a specialist in eye cases
-of this nature. The doctor was ready to submit to almost anything at
-the hands of his friends, thinking that perhaps they might possess
-some secret worthy of note. Such proved to be the case. Indian
-Charley's wife called and looked at the patient's eyes, swollen and
-inflamed and painful to a degree. She pointed to some toothpicks on
-the cabin table, and, being told to "proceed." she whittled three
-of them to a sharp point. Handing one to the suffering doctor, she
-bade him thrust it into his nostril. He did so and found to his
-astonishment that the mucous membrane was without sensation. Obeying
-his doctress, he continued to thrust in the point of this pick and
-likewise the two others, when a hemorrhage of considerable severity
-occurred. This was the thing greatly to be desired. In an hour the
-nose was inflamed and very painful, but the eyes were relieved. After
-a few hours both nose and eyes were normal, and the doctor believes
-the operation rational. He declares that he will practice it upon
-himself and others at the first opportunity. When he returns to
-California he will doubtless hang out his sign as "Specialist on Snow
-Blindness." Only there is no snow in California. I will remind him of
-this fact.
-
-We have a "scurvy trail" now, and every day it is traveled. There are
-two cases at the Los Angeles Camp. Our boys keep busy at something.
-Rivers started the idea of making rustic furniture, and several
-others followed. This resulted in a search through the woods nearly
-every day for crooked birch sticks. Piles of these awkward "crooks"
-adorn our back yard, only a select few ever coming up to all the
-requirements of a "natural crook." They might be of some use as stove
-wood, but it is impossible to get at them with a saw. The doctor
-spent days and days whittling out candle-sticks, and so must C. C.
-It is nice to have something to keep the people busy. It helps time
-to limp by. One of our "best and bravest" walks the floor as if he
-had the toothache, he is so homesick. He will not let Eskimo Charley
-treat him for nostalgia.
-
-March 30.--To-day the crowd left for the Mission. They are C. C.,
-Clyde, Cox, Rivers, Alec and a Mr. Driggs, a stranger. The most of
-them will stay on the "Penelope" at Escholtz Bay, and be on hand
-there to help when the ice breaks up. Miller, who came down from
-the upper camp, will remain here with us. That leaves us live. Dr.
-Coffin. Uncle Jimmy. Brownie. Miller and myself. It is a relief after
-the congestion. Yesterday we had seventeen for dinner. The doctor is
-trying his hand at cooking now. He is a specialist on toasted cheese
-and macaroni. We expect to have this combination served up three
-times a day, or until the material is exhausted. We each seem to have
-our culinary idiosyncrasies; Cox for light bread and pea soup; Rivers
-for beans; C. C. for pie; and I for mush and hash.
-
-This man Driggs has joined our company till we get back to the
-States. He is a sailor and navigator, with captain's papers, and may
-be of use to us later. We have also another prospective addition
-to our numbers, a Mr. Van Dyke, a preacher. He will join us in the
-spring and take passage on the "Penelope." He knows of a "sure
-thing." He says that on his way up here last year his party stopped
-on the mainland near Sledge Island, and he and another man in three
-hours panned out two dollars' worth of gold from a creek bed. He had
-the gold in a bottle last fall and some of our boys examined it.
-
-That is certainly a much better prospect than we have heard of this
-side of Circle City; that is, that we have any reason to rely on. He
-joins us under the condition that we furnish him passage back to the
-States if nothing results, but he promises to take us to this place
-within two days, towing up a stream from the coast, and he firmly
-believes himself that he has a "sure thing." We shall see. We have
-heard so many stories of this sort that even a preacher cannot arouse
-much enthusiasm. However, we have taken up his offer and will sail
-for the place indicated as soon as the "Penelope" can get away from
-her moorings. I'd give five dollars for the chance to pan out two
-dollars' worth of gold-dust.
-
-Oh, yes. Van Dyke says that he met an Indian near Sledge Island who
-had nuggets, and took him to a spot covered many feet by a snowdrift,
-which he assured him was a mother lode, or something that sounded
-very nice. Ah. I'd like to see a mother lode! She's what we are after.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-[Illustration: Ancient Indian Grave.]
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX.
-
-
-April 2. Sunday.--Evidently our Kowak church is dwindling. Only
-fifteen in attendance to-day. In C. C.'s absence Dr. Coffin and Uncle
-Jimmy conducted services. Van Dyke also took part. Miller and Van
-Dyke sang a duet. "Though Your Sins be as Scarlet." It was as fine as
-anything I remember to have heard anywhere. And this in our little
-cabin on the lonely Kowak: It snows a great deal and the north wind
-blows. Collecting is slow and birds are scarce. I got a couple of
-Siberian chickadees the other day. They are good birds to have, an
-Asiatic species which boils over into Alaska a little. This makes
-three species of chickadees I have found here--the long-tailed.
-Hudsonian and Siberian. Wood-peckers are drumming on the dead
-spruces, but I take care to keep away from them. Miller continues to
-be my partner in taxidermy. We are planning to stop at Dutch Harbor
-next winter.
-
-April 12.--Busy days are beginning to come and I have less time for
-my diary. We get more sunshine than is convenient. To-day is cooler,
-fifteen degrees below zero again. We used to think there wasn't much
-snow in this country, but are learning our mistake. It snows every
-day and is three feet deep on a level. The doctor and I spent the
-last four days at the Jesse Lou Camp. I got thirty-eight birds and a
-porcupine skin. Miller and I are hard at work upon them. The doctor
-is laid up with snow blindness again. We had a feast at Jesse Lou
-on porcupine, boiled, roasted and stewed. It is like veal and fine
-eating. An Indian shot it. Many people are traveling on the river, so
-as to get as far as the Mission before the ice breaks up. Scurvy is
-on the increase. Two more men have died of it at Ambler City. Four
-at the Iowa cabins are down with it. None of us are in the least
-affected. Brownie is cook now and we have plenty to eat. Miller and
-I have begun trading some of our bird skins for personal supplies
-for next winter at Dutch Harbor. We traded a pair of ptarmigan for
-a sack of flour and fourteen pounds of bacon to-day. We can get
-almost anything we ask in trade for bird skins, but money is scarce.
-After tramping all day have just had a magnificent dinner. Here, as
-elsewhere, something to eat is the first need. The doctor and I have
-had fine success. Got twenty-three rock ptarmigan. But we are tired
-and the poor doctor is attacked again. He is at this moment applying
-a solution of boracic acid to his eyes. I continue unaffected. We are
-sun-burned as dark as natives. For a while I burnt-corked my face,
-but no need of it now. I wear a broad-brimmed, black slouch hat,
-drawn close over my eyes, and find it better than snow-glasses.
-
-April 15.--Twenty degrees below zero. The Indians say that in the
-last thirteen years there were three summers when the ice never
-melted out of Kotzebue Sound at all. And they say this is just
-like those years, no snow until late. When the snow comes early it
-prevents the water and the ground from freezing so deep. Men are
-beginning to worry about our condition. The ice in the river is seven
-feet thick, and there isn't snow enough to float out all the ice when
-it melts, so they say. Last winter there were seven or eight feet of
-snow, and now only two or three feet. It does look dreary for those
-who are in a hurry to get out.
-
-I was out to-day on snowshoes. I like them. One acquires a long,
-sliding gait that is very easy. On the ridge back of the Guardian
-Camp I had a fine view of the country north and west. The snow is
-drifted over the west side of the ridges by the east winds, forming
-great shelving banks with protruding crests twenty to forty feet
-above their bases. We are getting almost enough sunshine to start
-a thaw. Miller has gone to Ambler City in the interests of our new
-"firm." He will look after the jays in that vicinity.
-
-I had almost forgotten to record the latest excitement. The "Flying
-Dutchman" arrived Thursday from St. Michaels. He has a dog team and
-is hurrying on up the river, expecting to return to Cape Nome before
-the thaw comes. The news he brought is of a "big strike" at Cape
-Nome on the coast near Sledge Island. "Richer than Klondike." Three
-men took out $600 in "ten hours." There may be some truth in it, as
-this is about the place Van Dyke was to take us to. But I am hard to
-convert to any gold proposition now. I shall have to see it to fully
-believe it. All are excited over this rumor, but it is useless to
-think of travel. We got a letter from the "Penelope" crew stating
-that Harry Reynolds and Jett had already started for the new gold
-fields. They took grub and a team of dogs, so our company will be
-represented at Cape Nome. I am afraid to think there is something
-in it. It excites one unduly after the disappointments of a year.
-The "Flying Dutchman" says flour is ten dollars a sack at Cape Nome
-and other things to eat as high. We heard that C. C. and party had
-reached the Kotzebue camp after a hard pull. Rivers and Clyde gave
-out and had to be hauled to camp. Several were snow blind. They had
-hired two Eskimos to draw the sled to the schooner. Such is life in
-the Arctics.
-
-April 19, Wednesday. 9 p. m.--Two men came in from Ambler City to-day
-with frozen feet. We rubbed the frost pretty well out with snow, but
-they will be laid up for a month and one of them may lose his toes.
-The nights are cold, fifteen to twenty degrees below zero. By noon it
-is thawing. A man's socks and boots become soaked with perspiration
-and, as the afternoon advances, the temperature falls and the wet
-footgear freezes. Then, too, in many places the river ice cracks and
-the water flows up through and soaks into the snow so that a traveler
-steps through into the slush and water deep enough to fill his shoes.
-Before camp is reached the feet freeze. The Cape Nome excitement is
-spreading and many are starting overland with light loads for the new
-diggings. Our neighbors of the Iowa cabin are getting ready and eight
-will start to-morrow. None of us here feel called upon to attempt the
-trip.
-
-We have received news through other channels than the one mentioned
-in regard to the Cape Nome district. It looks more hopeful. Captain
-Ingraham, who was up the Kowak last tall, is on the grounds, and
-has staked several claims. He took $158 out of three prospect pans.
-Hundreds of men are rushing into the country. There are fights over
-claims and two men are shot. Miller returned from Ambler City Monday
-with eight ptarmigan. We have put up the skins in fine shape.
-
-[Illustration: Looking Northward.]
-
-April 22. Saturday.--It is snowing heavily this morning, with a
-strong north gale. The doctor went down to the Hanson Camp yesterday,
-expecting to return to-day, but he hasn't arrived yet. I feel anxious
-about him, it is so easy to get lost. This cold will put a stop for
-a while to the Camp Nome procession. Men have been passing down the
-river every day, and we have lots of visitors for meals and to stay
-all night. John Miller, the man with the frozen feet, is still with
-us and probably will be, for he has no other place to go. His feet
-are in bad shape; great blisters run across them, and he suffers. Dr.
-Gleaves is back from his trip to the Agnes Boyd Camp, and is about
-starting for Cape Nome. It is very interesting and amusing to those
-who stay at home to note the efforts and trials of the poor people
-toiling along the trail. Most of them start out with two or three
-hundred pounds apiece, but they lighten their load each day until it
-is reduced to one hundred and fifty pounds. I am convinced myself,
-from what the Eskimos tell us, that it is useless to start for Cape
-Nome now. It will thaw before half the distance is covered. By the
-route generally traveled it is about four hundred miles from here.
-Yesterday a snow-flake came hopping about the woodpile on the sunny
-side of the cabin--the first arrival from the South. It spends the
-winter as far south as the northern tier of the United States, where
-it is the familiar snow-bird.
-
-A man up the river sent down the left hind foot of a "snowshoe
-rabbit" to be stuffed. He had the tendons pulled apart so that by
-pulling on them the toes were moved. He wants the foot preserved in
-some way so that this mechanism will remain and the toes move by
-pulling an invisible string. Don't know as I can do it.
-
-April 25.--We finished putting up our ptarmigan yesterday and have
-more on hand now. The past few days are warm, with southeast winds. I
-started out this morning but found the snow too sticky and soft. It
-clings to the snowshoes like lead weights. It is uncomfortably warm.
-
-We think the main part of the Cape Nome rush has passed us. Several
-went by this forenoon from as far up as the Riley Camp. Saturday
-night at ten o'clock two fellows got in from Ambler City. The boys
-had all retired but Miller and me, so we got them their supper. They
-had come thirty miles that day, pulling a sled, and were nearly
-ready to drop from exhaustion, when they got inside. Sunday at 2 p.
-m. eight more arrived. They came staggering into the cabin, groping
-their way to the nearest seat, almost dead. Nearly all were snow
-blind to a more or less extent. One fellow's eyes were paining him
-so that he sobbed and cried like a child. The crowd spent the night.
-Saturday night it had snowed ten inches. Unless we get a hard freeze
-to make a crust I doubt if these men can reach the Mission even.
-
-We have to entertain so many visitors that it is getting tiresome
-naturally. I judge we have fed sixty men in the past week, or at
-least have served that many meals. We call our camp the "Penelope
-Inn." or "Cape Nome Recuperating Station." John Miller is getting
-well rapidly and can stand on his feet to-day. They are sloughing.
-Several men we know are down with the mumps. We have all been exposed.
-
-April 29. Saturday.--An Indian arrived with letters from the schooner
-"Penelope." C. C.'s party arrived all right. C. C.'s letter confirms
-the Cape Nome report, and he and Cox. Fancher. Alec and Driggs are to
-start in a couple of days from date. If they reach there all right,
-it will make seven of us on the ground. That left only the captain,
-with Rivers and Clyde, on the schooner, so C. C. suggested that
-Miller and Brown from this camp make all possible haste to get there,
-that they may assist at the breaking up of the ice.
-
-It didn't take the two boys long to decide, and yesterday they
-spent in remodeling an old sled and making up as light an outfit as
-possible. They left at four o'clock this morning with a one hundred
-and fifty pound sled load, and, if the weather continues cold enough
-to keep the present crust on the snow, they ought to make the trip in
-twelve days. That leaves only Uncle Jimmy, Dr. Coffin and myself to
-take care of the stuff at this camp. If anything should happen to the
-"Helen" above, we should have some experience in raft building and
-getting down the river as best we could. It is lonesome, only three
-out of the original twenty, and after having had so many neighbors,
-too, who are mostly gone. The latest word from further up was that
-our boys are at work on the "Helen" digging her out of the ice, and
-she is so far all right. The "Agnes E. Boyd," which was buried in
-a glacier creek during the winter, stands little chance of being
-saved. So also with the "Hero." The firm of "Miller & Grinnell" have
-disassociated on account of Miller's "summons," but if the Cape Nome
-prospect fails, as I think very likely, we will join again as soon as
-we meet and prepare to spend the winter at Dutch Harbor. Miller will
-collect birds down in the Sound this spring. With Miller and Rivers
-at work there, and myself here, I ought to get a good collection by
-spring. Dr. Coffin does a good deal of shooting. Out of every five
-birds he brings in good condition. I skin one for him. That rate is
-favorable for us both. He already has a box full and by spring will
-have quite a collection. I am getting a good deal of freight on my
-hands. It is bulky. I keep the neighborhood gleaned of empty boxes
-of all sorts. I am very short of cotton, either for wrapping or
-stuffing. I use dry hay and moss for even the smaller birds now.
-
-Last week the doctor and I took a long tramp, staying out all night.
-When we started we had no idea of being away twenty-four hours and
-only had a light lunch, consisting of a little corned beef, four half
-slices of bread and butter, a dozen walnuts, a handful of raisins,
-and some malted milk tablets. And this was all we had for four meals.
-The doctor says it is good for a person's health for him to fast
-occasionally, and I am certain that this opportunity ought to fully
-demonstrate the assertion. But I do not think my health demands
-any further treatment of the same nature. We kept going farther
-from home, hunting for likely places for ptarmigan and other birds,
-until we got pretty tired; so we thought it a good time to try the
-experiment of sleeping out on the snow with no protection whatever. I
-do not say we were lost. Gold-hunters are never lost.
-
-We lived through the experiment. We did not sleep more than half an
-hour all the time put together. We had to keep "flopping" over to
-keep one side from freezing and the other from roasting. We built a
-fire against a spruce in a dense patch of woods. The snow was beaten
-down in front of it, and a mass of spruce boughs gathered and formed
-into a real comfortable-looking nest. This kept us from contact
-with the snow, but allowed of a too free circulation of fresh air.
-A number of decayed trees in the vicinity afforded fuel for the
-fire with little trouble on our part, our hunting knives being the
-only tool we had carried with us. Once during the night I had dozed
-off very reluctantly when the doctor happened to notice the smell
-of burning wool. A spark of fire had snapped out and lighted on
-the front of my jumper, where, in less time than it takes to write
-it, it had eaten through my clothes, including my sateen shirt and
-undershirt, and was progressing towards my vitals when the doctor
-rang up the fire department. I was awakened by a sudden application
-of cold on my diaphragm and the loud tones of my companion, who
-declared he did not come to the Arctics to be burnt to death. In
-spite of the sleepless night we enjoyed everything. We started again
-at three o'clock in the morning, after a breakfast consisting of two
-walnuts apiece, a dozen milk tablets and a few raisins. The doctor
-wanted to roast some of the birds we had shot the day before, but I
-would sooner starve than spoil such rare things as Alaskan three-toed
-wood-peckers, hawk owls, Alaskan jays, and white-winged crossbills.
-I should think anyone would. On a hillside where the snow had been
-nearly all blown off and the sun had thawed the rest, we found a
-large bare place. The mosses and lichens looked just as fresh and
-green as if it were midsummer, and, growing close on the ground,
-were lots of last year's berries, all the more sweet and juicy
-for their eight months' cold storage. The ptarmigan were on hand,
-too, and I shot two old roosters. The male ptarmigan are changing
-now, and specimens shot show some beautiful mixtures of the bright
-brown summer plumage and the snow-white winter plumage. The willow
-ptarmigan are all in pairs, and, though mostly shy, may be located
-by the loud cackling of the males. A very good crust on the snow
-makes snowshoeing a delight for a few hours, but, like any walking,
-it grows tiresome. One's feet get worn and blistered where the
-foot-straps work. If the snow is damp it balls on the center lacing
-and a blister is raised before one knows it.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX.
-
-
-May 6, Saturday, 8 p. m.--This is the strangest May weather I have
-ever experienced. The wind has blown a gale from the north without a
-moment's cessation for four days. It is twenty-five degrees below the
-freezing point. I was in the vicinity of the Hanson Camp yesterday,
-but got no birds. I saw only one pair of chickadees and one redpoll.
-They were never so scarce all winter as now. The natives assure me
-that a change is due shortly, and then there will be "emik apazh,"
-and the "ting emeruk" will come.
-
-The Hanson boys came near getting me into serious trouble yesterday.
-It was one of Joe Jury's jokes. When I left his cabin I started back
-into the woods. Nolan, of the Sunnyside, called in. Joe told him that
-I had reported seeing two caribou across the river on the way down.
-Joe garnished the tale with a few extra details, and Nolan left for
-Sunnyside pretty well excited. He got nearly everyone in camp out
-before noon. I happened along on their trail about four o'clock, and
-the first fellow I met was Nolan, just returning from a long tramp.
-He informed me that he had seen the caribou tracks (?) and wanted
-to know where I had last seen the animals. I was taken by surprise
-and told him that I hadn't seen a caribou in Alaska. It then dawned
-on Nolan that he had been the victim of a joke, and he was somewhat
-"beside himself." I tried to explain matters by telling him that I
-had said to Joe Jury something about having seen "ptarmigan." which
-no doubt he had taken for "caribou." The rest of the fellows took the
-joke all right, but said they would "get even" with Joe some way. One
-man fired his rifle at a target and split the barrel over two-thirds
-its length, owing to snow in the end, I suppose. The gun was ruined
-and so the joke was a costly one.
-
-There is a string telephone between two cabins at Sunnyside which is
-a real novelty. The box resonators in each cabin are fixed up with
-features like a human face with a tin mouth. It was exceedingly funny
-to see the expression on the faces of the natives when they first
-heard that box "talk." Greenberg was talking in at the other end,
-and they recognized his voice. One old woman fled in terror. She
-thought it was a "doonak" (evil spirit). It is no wonder these things
-frighten the Eskimos so. Doubtless our own ancestors would have been
-burned at the stake by their townspeople for witchcraft in the early
-days of New England had they dared to make a tin box "talk."
-
-I bought eighteen pounds of No. 8 shot for $1.20 at the Hanson Camp.
-It took me nearly three hours to bring it three miles against the
-wind. I had no snowshoes, as I had let Brownie have mine when he
-started for the schooner. The extra weight was just enough to make
-me break through the crust every five steps, and down I went to my
-knees. That eighteen pounds grew to one hundred pounds before I
-reached home.
-
-John Miller, the cripple, has moved over to one of the Iowa cabins,
-so we are alone for the first time in many weeks. Only three of us.
-We cannot use all the game we shoot now, and I am rather glad to have
-the opportunity of giving it to the hungry natives. I do not waste a
-bird body. I give some of them to Charley for his mickaninies, and
-he loans me his snowshoes whenever I want them for hunting. At first
-the boys dubbed me "the bird fiend," but they have quit that now. Too
-many scurvy victims have blessed me for the ptarmigan which, in some
-cases, have been all the fresh meat obtainable, not to mention our
-own possible suffering had it not been for the birds I shot. And now
-I do not object at all to the wordless thanks of these poor natives,
-who devour every scrap of a bird of any sort, excepting the skin,
-which only I claim. I save souls, bird skins being the only visible
-or invisible soul of which the creatures are possessed.
-
-We have just learned of a superstition which is the most cruel of any
-noted among these strange people. It has roused our civilized horror.
-A very pretty little girl about thirteen years old, who has been the
-pet of the camps all winter, and whom the boys have looked upon as a
-"little sister," has been shut up all by herself in a small snow cave
-back in the woods. There she is doomed to stay until the snow melts,
-without speaking to anyone or leaving her cramped position, with no
-fire and with only such cold food as may be brought to her. And she
-must live alone in such an igloo for one year, so their statutes
-decree. This is the law concerning all Kowak-mitt women when they are
-supposed to have reached marriageable age.
-
-This is but the beginning of the little woman's punishments, which
-will be many and varied from this date.
-
-The "cabloonas" around this vicinity are very much incensed over
-this new superstitious cruelty. To demonstrate our convictions in
-the matter, eight of us armed ourselves with guns, marched over to
-the village and demanded that old Omechuck and his wife, Atungena,
-Kalhak's parents, take the child back into their igloo. The man
-laid all the blame on the mother and grand-mother (as it was in
-the beginning), and we had a big wrangle. We informed them that if
-they did not end this and other cruelties, and liberate the girl by
-to-morrow noon, we would come over in a great body and tear down the
-cave and take her away. They were pretty well frightened. It gave
-us lots of fun, though we didn't change our austere countenances.
-We meant what we said. Uncle Jimmy headed the expedition. He had a
-great big knife belted on, and we all presented a dangerous front.
-What if the Eskimos had taken it seriously and mobbed us? Mobbing is
-not their tendency. They are gentle in spite of other things, and
-were actually in fear of our threats. We are not sure of the full
-extent of our influence, but we stirred them up and they may conclude
-that this "missionary association" of gold-hunters is not here for
-nothing. Later the girl was released.
-
-May 14, Sunday.--Spring is breaking the winter's reign at last. The
-snow has almost disappeared from the sand-dunes and is softening
-everywhere. Little pools of water are appearing in the low places. A
-gentle rain is falling, the first since last September--eight months.
-The days of slush and water are upon us, but oh, such exciting days
-for me! The first geese and gulls have arrived, very shy and very
-few, and I saw two swans. They stay about the muddy places across the
-river. I got a fairly good shot at a goose, but missed it. Everyone
-is after the poor geese and lots of rifle balls are wasted, with
-never a goose as yet. I shot a solitary glaucus-winged gull sitting
-on the ice, with a thirty-calibre Winchester rifle at 143 yards
-range. The bullet went straight through the neck, cutting a very
-clean way, and the skin made a beautiful specimen. Yesterday was my
-red-letter day. I found, almost by accident, a jay's nest and eggs,
-the thing I have been looking for so constantly for three months. I
-also found a fine set of hawk owls--six eggs, three newly-hatched
-young and both parents. The nest was in a hole in a rotten spruce
-stub about twelve feet above the snow. When I tapped on the tree the
-male, which was sitting, left the nest and flew away about a hundred
-feet, turned and made for my head as straight and swift as an arrow,
-planting himself full force, and drawing blood from three claw marks
-in my scalp. My hat was knocked about twelve feet and the crown torn
-out. All this the owl did without stopping in its swoop. I recovered
-myself just in time to receive a second charge and had to dodge clear
-to the ground. When the courageous defender of home and country
-turned for its third attack a charge of No. 10 met it, and it died
-an honorable death, deserving to be ranked among heroes. I have the
-entire set preserved.
-
-I have a flock of white-winged crossbills spotted in a spruce forest
-ten miles away, which I expect will nest in a couple of weeks, but
-I doubt if I can reach the place, now the snow is going. I wore
-snowshoes nest-hunting yesterday, but probably for the last time
-this year. It is far easier snowshoeing over the snowy tundras than
-walking through the peat and water and "nigger heads" after the snow
-is gone.
-
-[Illustration: The Prisoner We Rescued.]
-
-May 21, Sunday.--Uncle Jimmy and Dr. Coffin still keep up the Sunday
-services. Three of the Iowa men and half a dozen Eskimos have come
-in. As I have just finished a bird I thought it a good idea to desist
-until after church, on Uncle Jimmy's account. So, until singing
-begins, I will have a little time to write. I cannot afford to waste
-a second these days. Most of the snow is gone. All the ponds and
-sloughs are full of water and the river has risen fully eight feet.
-
-All the slush ice has gone, but the thick winter ice is on top and
-extends unbroken down the middle of the river. The Eskimos say that
-if the warm weather and high water continue this ice will break
-up and float away very soon. And then it would be "finis" to bird
-collecting, for the steamers would whistle and we would all have
-to pack up and start. I am just living in dread of the "Helen." I
-would not cry should she spring a leak or otherwise disable herself,
-so that she would be laid up until the last of June. This is a
-wicked thought and I repent of it. Solitary sandpipers and Baird's
-sandpipers are here, and I know they will nest by the middle of
-June. Small birds are beginning to arrive. I heard the beautiful
-song of the fox sparrow for the first time this morning, also the
-tree sparrows and varied thrush. I saw a single robin yesterday with
-its familiar call note. We have goose dinners galore, but the geese
-are lean and tough, far from such eating as they were in the fall.
-We prefer duck and ptarmigan. The doctor has made some very nice
-cranberry jelly from the berries which have been stored on the vines
-under the snow all winter. The native women and children picked over
-two gallons yesterday, which they brought to us.
-
-[Illustration: The Kowak Breaking Up.]
-
-May 24.--The Kowak is breaking up and it is a tremendous sight. The
-water has risen until it is on a level with the bank on this side,
-and on the opposite side it is spreading out over the tundras. It is
-covered completely from side to side with a crunching, grinding mass
-of ice from three to five feet thick. Yesterday there was a jam on a
-sand-bar below and the ice course was stopped. Then that from above
-came down with force, crushing and piling into great ridges of blue
-and green blocks from ten to fifteen feet in height. There must be a
-tremendous momentum in a moving field of ice. In one place a field
-many yards in diameter was forced up a steep bank until it toppled
-over on itself. The banks are plowed by the resistless stream and
-trees are broken off like threads.
-
-Indian Charley borrowed our kyak, which belongs to Rivers, three days
-ago to go up and look after a birch canoe which he wanted to carry
-out of reach of the ice. He was only going as far as the Guardian
-Camp, and there was plenty of water along the edges there. He was
-expected back the same day, but has not returned yet. We fear he
-has lost his life. His father, an old, withered man, who smoked
-himself last winter when Charley was sick, walks the river bank all
-day watching, and yesterday afternoon cried and howled a long time,
-mourning "Kayuruk" who, he said, was surely "mucky" (dead). I saw a
-birch canoe yesterday crushed and lying on a passing cake of ice.
-
-If this was Charley's he must have met with misfortune. One would
-think that a native, who has experienced many such occurrences,
-would know enough to keep out of harm's way. Night before last a
-couple of the Iowa boys spent two or three hours tramping through
-the swamp looking for ducks which they kept hearing. But they were
-not able to catch sight of the authors of the numerous "quacks,"
-which always lured them to greater distance. To-day, after telling
-everyone of the strange birds, the boys are being "joshed" in true
-camp fashion. The bullfrogs are appearing in every pond and to-day
-one has begun his warble in a pool a few feet from the door. We did
-not expect to see frogs so far north. I fail to see how they resemble
-the quacking of ducks, but some imagine the sound to be the same.
-The first mosquitoes are abroad, just a few, a sort of "foretaste,"
-according to Scripture. The birds are arriving in large numbers, like
-a stampede, and the woods are full of the songs of robins, thrushes,
-sparrows and warblers. I am working hard, too.
-
-May 31.--Oh, but spring is lovely! I am sure I never spent three
-such happy weeks, and I have been happy all my life. Yet I have
-been working hard, some days until I was tired enough to drop. Last
-week I went up to the mountains and was gone forty-three hours,
-with only about one hour's sleep. We tramped fifteen miles across
-the tundra with heavy rubber boots on, sinking into the moss and
-among the "nigger heads" every step. And then through streams, and
-snow, and tangles of brush. The second day it rained heavily and we
-started home at 7 p. m., tramping until midnight, when we reached a
-point where we had left our boat in a slough about two miles below
-on the opposite side of the Kowak. While we had been gone the river
-had fallen and the heavy boat was high and dry. We had to drag it
-through a narrow channel over mud and grass a hundred yards to the
-river. And then there was a stiff east wind and a swift current
-to cross the river against, and we finally had to tow up to the
-Landing. There were four of us, including Dr. Coffin, who has been
-my companion in many of these bird hunts, so soon, alas! to be over.
-I was so tired when I got in that I fell asleep half undressed and
-without supper. But I obtained what I went for, and it was worth the
-hardships--white-winged crossbill's nests. Young, an Iowa man who was
-with us, fell to his chest in a narrow stream of ice water, and we
-were all soaked from the rain and dripping under-brush.
-
-The river is entirely free of ice now and people are starting down.
-Many are passing every day, but they will be unable to go farther
-than the delta, for the Sound doesn't clear earlier than July 1.
-
-We have heard that the "Helen" is all right and is expected down in
-a day or two. She may get stuck on a sand-bar. If so I shall have a
-week longer for the birds. We have been packing all day. I have a
-good deal of stuff in bulk, though not heavy. I wouldn't blame the
-boys if they "kicked." We may have to make two trips from here down.
-We learned that our barge, which we left last fall on the bank of the
-Squirrel River eighty miles below us, was burned last winter, so our
-carrying capacity is limited. The steamer "Riley" has been repaired.
-She came up as far as the Hanson Camp yesterday. Indian Charley has
-turned up all safe. He has been down to a village below, gambling for
-another wife.
-
-According to the Eskimos I am to die before the snow is all melted
-off, because I robbed that jay's nest. Grass is springing up, and
-last night, while I was strolling through the woods, I found a
-patch of crocuses. The woods were beautiful, the long, deep shadows
-contrasting with the yellow sunlight. The silence was intense,
-and yet there were many sounds--the quavering song of the thrush,
-breaking out and then dying back; the chorus of frogs from a distant
-pond, and the occasional demoniacal laugh of a loon. Yet it was
-silence broken in pieces. The scene from the sand-dunes north across
-the river was most beautiful. I wish I were able to depict the scene
-as I perceived it and the indescribable sensations it awakened. I
-wonder if I were the same age as Uncle Jimmy if I would be impressed
-the same way. It is something for me to remember all my life, this
-wonderful winter on the mighty Kowak. And I must bid it "Good-by."
-
-We had a regular thunder storm to-day, with a heavy shower which
-set the roof to leaking, in spite of the tents stretched over it.
-Dr. Coffin has inaugurated a new decoration. It denotes rank of
-vice-president of the L. B. A. M. & T. Co. A double row of safety
-pins up his shirt front. There are only three of this illustrious
-company at present in the "Penelope" cabin, but all the more need of
-distinctive decorations.
-
-B., the partially demented individual who might have died of scurvy
-last winter if we hadn't drawn up his "will" for him, is the source
-of amusement to us, with his various tricks. He spends most of his
-time on the river bank watching for passing boats. He hails everyone
-with a mixed set of questions; first, "Have you any white lead for
-sale?" second. "Did you have the scurvy?" third, "Where'd you come
-from?" etc., until the boat is out of hearing. B. has a skiff he is
-very proud of, and he threatens anyone who touches it. I am on very
-good terms with him and he tells me whenever he sees a goose on the
-river (usually it is a loon). He makes a noise in his throat like a
-chicken disturbed after it has gone to roost. I do not know what will
-become of him. He is perfectly harmless.
-
-This evening I traded three pounds of raisins for a sailor bag. I
-have more clothes now than when I left San Francisco, enough to last
-me five years. Dr. Coffin is a real convert. He is himself a "bird
-fiend" now, after starting that nickname for me in the beginning,
-he thinks of stopping this summer at Dutch Harbor. If it keeps on I
-shall have the whole crew. I think we shall pull out from the company
-entirely and so escape the turmoil of the ultimate disbandment. There
-is little hope of realizing from the trip, even on the "Penelope."
-She cost us enough in the first place, but who knows where she is now?
-
-I just now thought I heard the whistle of the "Helen." There is
-nothing in sight. That "Helen" haunts me. She it is who will bear
-me away from this fascinating region. By the way, she has a fine
-whistle. A better one than any other boat on the river. Perhaps we
-can trade that whistle for something, even if nobody will accept
-the gift of the boat and engines. Oh. I forgot; there's Cape Nome.
-The boys there may have staked out rich claims for us by this time.
-However. I would be willing to trade all my stock in the L. B. A. M.
-& T. Co. for some plaster-of-paris, cotton batting and some arsenic.
-
-June 6.--My Last date on the Kowak. The "Helen" arrived on the
-evening of the 2d. She is O. K. and the eight boys well. They brought
-down with them a man who is afflicted with black-leg, too helpless to
-leave. We shall take him to the Mission, so we are now quite a large
-family. Nearly everyone above has already passed down the river in
-all sorts of boats and rafts. We have persuaded the rest to remain
-here a few days, as it will be impossible to get into the Sound
-so early. We are having a little more time for game. I have taken
-several sets of rare eggs, and have a number of nests "spotted." But
-the boys are getting restless and I fear we will have to pull out
-to-morrow or next day. We are living "high." A varied assortment
-was served up in the fricassee yesterday--ten old-squaws (ducks),
-a curlew, two ptarmigan, one loon and a blackbird. Indian Charley
-brought us twenty fish, so we have plenty of fresh meat, a welcome
-change of diet for the boys of the upper winter camp, as they have
-not been afflicted with a bird fiend in their crowd.
-
-[Illustration: Some Friends We Left Behind.]
-
-The steamer "Agnes Boyd" was saved from the ice, but is now high and
-dry on a sand-bar and the river is still falling. The Hanson boys are
-having a peck of trouble and the prospects are now that they will
-not get out until the August rains come. I was out collecting until
-one a. m. night before last, and the pink sunlight never left the
-mountain peaks. The trees are nearly full foliaged to a beautiful
-fresh green, and several varieties of flowers are in bloom. It is too
-bad to be compelled to leave here just at this season. I certainly
-can never regret leaving a place or home so much. But such is life.
-We hesitate moving always. And yet who knows but there may be better
-prospects further on? It is with something of a lump in my throat
-and heart that I turn my back on what has been the scene of such
-wonderful experiences to me. Still I must say it, "Good-by, old
-Kowak, good-by!" Good-by, mice, little redbacks; good-by, sand-dunes
-and tundras, winter, spruces, birches, cabin, all. Good-by, Eskimos,
-funny people, who have a kind heart in a little, brown, superstitious
-body. Here's the deserted village for missionary souls, houses,
-woodpiles, pictures yet pinned on the walls, echoes of Sunday
-services and literary societies--and voices of gold hunters.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI.
-
-
-June 12.--We are steaming down one of the numerous channels of the
-Kowak delta, and I am sitting on the upper deck of the "Helen." The
-channel is narrow but deep and very tortuous. Half an hour ago we
-were going in an exactly opposite direction. The banks are low and
-are lined continuously with willows whose branches have not even
-budded out, although up the river we left the trees in full foliage,
-thus indicating the season to be much later along the coast than in
-the interior. We have met no ice in the stream, but there is plenty
-stranded on the bars. Some Indians told us to-day there will be
-plenty of ice in the inlet for many sleeps yet, but our boys want
-to see for themselves. I think it a great mistake to have left the
-timber so early. We left our winter home on the 8th of June and
-traveled three days. Yesterday we tied up all day at the last timber
-and I put in the time collecting. I obtained eight sets of eggs, a
-little brown crane skin put up, greasy as a duck, besides several
-small birds. I put in every minute on shore and am getting some good
-things,--sets of varied thrush, gray-cheeked thrush, etc.
-
-We got a good deal of game yesterday. Everything that has meat on
-it goes into the pot. The fricassee to-day consisted of a crane,
-two ducks and a loon, all cut up and boiled together. Jesse Farrar
-is cook; Stevenson is fireman; Casey, engineer; Wilson and Foote,
-pilots; Shafer, Shaul, Uncle Jimmy and I, deck hands; the doctor and
-Colclough comprise the fire department.
-
-And this last is a very important organization. Sparks from the
-smoke stacks catch on sacks or anything inflammable and soon start
-a smudge. The fire department immediately "smell smoke." and
-extinguish the conflagration with a teacup of water. The usual seat
-of combustion is Casey's jumper. Then the back of the boiler gets
-almost red hot and several planks get to scorching, and even some of
-the cargo is in danger. With its other duties the department has put
-in ventilators, so we have less trouble. The crowd is in very good
-spirits. The quartette is frequently heard, and just before bed-time
-Foote gets out his banjo.
-
-This morning we passed a camp of natives. Six of their kyaks came out
-and followed us a long way. They could sail circles around the scow.
-They are very dextrous with their funny craft, just before leaving us
-they sang in chorus "There'll Be a Hot Time." Evidences of the great
-Kotzebue rush will be found among the Eskimos, in their language as
-well as in other ways, for many years to come.
-
-A cold west wind from off the sea ice blows constantly, and the
-weather is not to be compared with what we left at "home." My sorrow
-at leaving the cabin does not lessen. The "Helen" is loaded very
-heavily, but we managed to get everything on. We have great times
-keeping her on an even keel. The order. "Everyone go aft," or,
-"Everyone go forward," is frequently heard. She only stuck on a bar
-once coming down, and then there wasn't much trouble in getting her
-off. That is one thing in which our steamer excels many others. It is
-difficult to make her run aground hard enough to stick. She doesn't
-move fast enough. The wheel has been enlarged, but it makes little
-difference in her speed; the engines are not large enough. Stevenson
-keeps from 150 to 175 pounds of steam in her boiler, which is really
-more than ought to be carried for safety. It is getting cold up here
-on deck, and I am going down to the boiler-room to warm up.
-
-June 18.--This is Sunday and Uncle Jimmy thinks I ought to do
-something besides skin birds all day, so probably the most righteous
-act would be to write in my mother's diary. It is a very disagreeable
-day. It has snowed heavily all day, melting as fast as it falls and
-sticking to everything. We have the big 12 × 20 tent up among the
-spruces, and the cooking range keeps the interior quite pleasant.
-
-The crowd has been in the tent all day singing and reading, while I
-have one end of the long table for "the morgue." The Iowa party is
-camped near us, and their launch "Iowa" takes trips every other day
-to the inlet ten miles down the river, to see the state of the ice.
-Shaul went down with her yesterday, but they report the ice packed
-firmly in the inlet and as far as they could see towards Kotzebue
-Sound. We are camped in the timber at the mouth of the Kowak. A
-couple of warm days last week brought a foretaste of the mosquito
-scourge which we expect, but they do not promise to bother me much.
-Dr. Coffin is so kind to me. He hunts birds' eggs and gives me more
-than my share. Even Uncle Jimmy hunts nests in the woods, having
-located five for me in the last two days. Some of the good things
-we have taken are the little brown cranes, black-throated loon.
-Hudsonian curlew and scaup duck. We were out over the tundra all
-day yesterday and did not get back until this morning. I remembered
-that it was my little brother's birthday (the one who is so fond of
-insects), and I managed to catch two butterflies with my hat for him.
-I saw several, but they were pretty active, and it is hard running
-over the mossy hummocks and bogs after them. I shot a crane yesterday
-and the doctor got one a few days before. They are fine eating,
-better than any birds except ptarmigan. We have two seines, and
-Casey. Shafer and Foote comprise the fishery department. Dr. Coffin
-and I keep the camp in game, so we have plenty of fresh meat. We got
-three dozen duck eggs one day, and now Shafer makes fine cookies and
-doughnuts. I blow all the fresh eggs, and the contents are therefore
-all ready for "scrambles" or baking.
-
-We are a jolly crowd and no one would believe us to be disappointed
-gold-hunters. The main occupation of this branch of the L. B. A. M.
-& T. Co. at present is bird-nesting. I hope we have to stay here two
-weeks Day and night are all the same to us nowadays. I seldom get to
-bed before one a. m., and am up for breakfast at eight. The snow is
-beginning to stay this evening and the landscape is whitening. This
-is such weather as the old Arctic explorers met with all summer when
-they suffered so much from exposure, but a warm, dry tent like ours,
-with plenty of wood, keeps us comfortable and very far from martyrs
-to the "cause." The winds are very chilly, and I really suffered more
-from cold last night as we were sailing up the river to camp than I
-did all last winter. It is hard to keep one's feet dry. If I wear hip
-boots I am sure to step into some hole in a swamp and get them full.
-One time I went in to my waist by surprise when I was wading in the
-edge of a pond after a grebe's nest. For an instant I was deprived
-of speech, which was a great hardship. The ice is getting "rotten"
-rapidly, with the heavy winds breaking it up.
-
-[Illustration: Steamer on the River.]
-
-Kowak Delta, Sunday. June 25.--I am sitting on a heap of spruce
-boughs before an open fire in the woods. There is a heavy wind
-blowing and the tents and steamer at the river bank are altogether
-too airy. This is a much more sheltered and comfortable spot. We have
-been at this camp two weeks, but will probably pull out to-morrow and
-go down to the mouth of the river, and, as soon as the weather is
-favorable, go across the dreaded Holtham Inlet and on to the Mission.
-The launch "Iowa" reports the ice breaking up at the river mouth and
-moving out. For a while there was quite a large community of tents
-along the river each side of ours, but they have all started down
-now. The "Agnes Boyd" passed us, having been laid up on a bar several
-days. She brought the sad news of the death of Jack Messing, one of
-the San Jose crew of the Hanson Camp. He was found dead in his bed
-on the steamer. Five other men were sleeping with him, but noticed
-nothing unnatural until they attempted to arouse him for breakfast.
-Jack was a sociable, good-hearted fellow, and many were the pleasant
-visits exchanged between him and members of our camp last winter. It
-is reported that an Indian shot two white men over on the Selawik
-this spring. As the natives tell the story, the Indian was entirely
-justified. They forced him to mend a sled at the muzzle of a
-revolver, and scared him so that he finally tried to run away. They
-picked up rifles and started after him. But he got behind a tree with
-his own rifle and anticipated them to the number of one man. Many men
-are still crippled with the scurvy. On the Pick River fifty-two men
-out of sixty were down with black-leg. The schooner "Life" wintered
-near Selawik Lake with nine men aboard. Missionary Samms received
-word by the Eskimos that these men were sick with the scurvy and were
-helpless. So he set out to their aid. He returned a few days ago,
-reporting that five out of the nine had died and the other four were
-recovering. It is an awful disease, and many more have perished from
-that cause than from disaster or accident. It is strange that our
-company has escaped so far all such mishaps, but we are not out of
-danger yet. As we see them, the general run of people are impatient
-to get home, are cross and quarrelsome. Many are the "scraps" and
-differences among companies. It is a common thing to hear men cursing
-each other bitterly over such trivialities as loading a boat or
-setting up a tent. Sometimes partners will divide their supplies,
-even breaking a spoon or knife in two to "make it even." I am glad
-to say that our crowd is remarkably free from such things. The usual
-sounds are of singing and joviality. The doctor and I have frequent
-friendly word fights over such topics as, "Which way the wind blows
-to bring rain." whether a "light object floats down stream as fast
-as a heavy one;" or, "how close to the wind we can sail the boat."
-But if there Is one of us assailed on any point by anyone else we
-both agree at once, and bring consternation to the ranks of the
-enemy. Someone made the statement the other day that a razor becomes
-sharper if left for a while unused, and every man except the doctor
-and myself was of the same mind. Think of such a tradition in this
-enlightened age! Several maintained that for that reason they kept
-two razors, using them alternate weeks. When we especially feel the
-need of mental exercise, the doctor and I argue on physical and
-mental evolution, and on this subject the other boys let us alone for
-good reasons.
-
-Last night the doctor. Casey and I went hunting, and did not return
-before 2 a. m. this morning. We started about four and went up a
-slough until we came to open tundra. It began storming about eight
-and blew and rained heavily all night. We had agreed to be back to
-the skiff by nine, and Casey and I were on hand before that time, but
-the doctor did not appear. In spite of our oil coats we were soon wet
-and shivering. After waiting a while and hearing no shooting which
-might announce the doctor's approach, we set out and walked to where
-he was last seen by us at the edge of a lake, but could discover no
-sign. We began to be alarmed and, returning to the slough, spent a
-couple of the most miserable hours. We managed to start a fire at the
-foot of a solitary scrub spruce and were speculating gloomily as to
-what might have happened, when we heard a distant shot. The doctor
-came wearily tramping across the tundra, and was more happy than we
-to get back to the boat. He had become mixed up among some sloughs
-and lakes. He had followed around a large lake several miles, only to
-find progress stopped by a slough joining that lake with another. He
-then retraced his steps to his first starting point and began over
-again. His boots were full of water and he was of course drenched,
-for he had left his oil coat at the boat. When we got home we were
-glad to find Shafer up and a warm tent. He got us a hot supper and
-to-day we are none the worse. The doctor got an old goose with her
-four downy young. I found a set of pin-tail's eggs and shot some
-ducks and a ptarmigan.
-
-The tundra is curiously marked off in many places by ridges and
-ditches running at right angles to one another. The ditches are full
-of water, and the tundra resembles a California alfalfa field laid
-off in squares by irrigating ditches. I cannot think of a cause for
-this formation. The numerous lakes and ponds are many of them higher
-than the surrounding land, and are hemmed in by dykes three or four
-feet high. These are thrown up by the floes of ice in the lakes
-which, decreasing in size as the summer advances, are driven back and
-forth across the lakes by changing winds, and thus crowd up the mud
-and sod around the edges. The dryer parts of the tundra are covered
-with the white reindeer moss, really a lichen, and under and among
-this a thick mat of sphagnum and other mosses. This is soaked full
-of water, and it is like walking over a bed of sponges, where one
-"sloshes" in five or six inches at every step, to travel over such
-ground. Then on lower ground a sort of bunch grass grows in big,
-stout tussocks, "nigger heads," with water and loose moss between.
-This last is the worst walking.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII.
-
-
-Mission Inlet, Cape Blossom, July 1, 1898.--We came across Holtham
-Inlet in good order Tuesday. That was the only day so far that
-any steamers have come through. The weather was fine for us and a
-broad channel was open and clear of ice as far as the Mission. The
-same evening a west wind arose and the ice has been shifting back
-and forth across the inlet ever since. The "Riley," "Agnes Boyd,"
-"delight," "Mattie Farington," "Nugget," and "Iowa" came through
-the same day, and all are here in the little harbor safe from the
-ice floes. The sea ice stretches unbrokenly from a couple of miles
-below the Mission across to the north side of the Sound, and no
-one has been able to get in or out of the Sound except a couple of
-natives, who crossed from Point Hope on a sled. They report the ice
-as firm as winter, with no prospect of its breaking up, and say that
-it will be "twenty sleeps" before we can expect to get through, and
-"maybe the ice won't break up at all." The beach from here to the
-Mission is lined with tents and presents quite an animated scene.
-Everyone expects to go to Cape Nome as early as possible. We have
-no word from our good ship "Penelope" later than May 3, and she was
-all right then. She wintered seventy miles below Cape Blossom. The
-weather is very cold and disagreeable. Heavy winds bring penetrating
-fogs from off the ice, with storms of rain and sleet, and we have
-had a heavy snowstorm. We have our two 10 × 20 tents up, end to end,
-on the gravel bar separating the "goose pond" from the Sound, and
-have very comfortable quarters. In one tent is the cook stove and
-dining-table, and the other is a sort of parlor with the big heater
-in use. We loaded up heavily with wood before leaving timber on the
-Kowak, but I think we shall have to make another trip for wood before
-long. Everything in the line of driftwood is cleaned up in this
-vicinity, but there will be the usual annual crop when the ice breaks
-up.
-
-I just now heard a gull squalling and ran out with my gun in time
-to get a shot at a Pomarine jager which was in pursuit of it. I got
-the jager all right and it is a fine bird, the first I have obtained
-of this species. The long-tailed and parasitic jagers are quite
-common. I found a nest of each on the Kowak delta. Yesterday I found
-four sets of the eggs of the northern phalarope, and shot three
-golden plover, which are the first I have taken. Collecting now is
-very uncomfortable. I wear the same heavy mittens. July 1, which I
-wore all winter, and in fact heavier clothing all through than was
-worn at thirty degrees below zero. Our warm parlor tent is quite an
-attraction and we have plenty of company as usual with us. We are
-talking about mail. No news from the outside world since September 15
-of last year.
-
-July 15.--Somewhere in Bering Sea off the Alaskan Coast.--I am
-sitting on the coal-box in the galley on board the "Penelope." I am
-a fixture between the fire-box of the cooking range and the window,
-and have to flatten myself against the wall to keep from burning my
-clothes. There are four "galley slaves" in this 6 × 8 coop, but this
-is absolutely the only place possible to write in. The sea is smooth,
-with a light breeze, which is ahead. Foggy as usual and very chilly.
-The galley is the only place except in bed where one can warm up, and
-it is in pretty lively demand whenever the cook does not claim full
-possession. There are twenty-four men aboard, but all have gone to
-bed save the captain and three men on watch. The captain has scarcely
-slept a wink since we started a week ago. The strong currents,
-unfavorable winds, and thick weather are retarding us unexpectedly.
-
-We were watching on the Sound on July 3 when two schooners were
-sighted through the ice off Cape Blossom. On the 4th five of us went
-out in a small boat and were delighted to find one of them to be the
-"Penelope," all safe and in good time. Captain Delano and the four
-boys. Miller, Clyde, Brown and Rivers, must have had a very rough
-experience, being on duty twenty-four hours at a time. The ice in
-Escholtz Bay, where the schooner wintered, began breaking up and
-moving out on June 15, and from that date until she anchored off
-Cape Blossom, the "Penelope" and her little crew were at the mercy
-of the ice floes. They had very narrow escapes from being pinched
-between floes or crowded aground. Once they were forced on a bar and
-only got the ship out of her danger by breaking the ice up around
-her and "kedging" out. At one place their stint of open water was
-narrowing, as the ice pack drifted toward shore, and something had to
-be done immediately or they were lost. A strong off-shore wind was
-blowing, and the captain set all sail and headed straight for the
-ice. When the "Penelope" met it with full force she raised herself
-up, sliding gracefully on to the floe, and then her weight broke
-it down. Then she plowed through the ice until she reached a strip
-of open water beyond, where she was safe for the time being. And
-with all her battlings the "Penelope" came through with scarcely
-more than a skin scratch on her sides. Before the ice broke up the
-captain had repaired her, painting her white with blue trimmings, and
-renovating her from deck to hold. Six vessels wintered near her and
-their captains all agree that it was little less than a miracle that
-any were saved. Two, the "Ainsworth" and one other, were wrecked by
-the ice. The "General McPherson" and "Penelope" had about the best
-anchorage for the winter, in a cove behind the Chain Peninsular.
-
-July 5 and 6 were stormy and nothing could be done but straighten out
-accounts with various parties at the Mission. Many who left earlier
-in the Cape Nome rush, borrowed or bought provisions from the stores
-on the "Penelope," and left orders for us to collect from their
-representatives when we should get down in July. They thus saved the
-labor of hauling their stuff on the first part of their trip, as the
-"Penelope" was a hundred miles on the way. We have heard nothing
-of our Cape Nome contingent. On July 7 we had fine, calm weather,
-and loaded the "Penelope." making two trips out to where she was
-anchored, nine miles from the Mission on Cape Blossom. These two
-trips were our last with the "Helen." We also took on six passengers
-and their freight to Cape Nome, besides two sailors who worked their
-passage. It was decided that the poor "Helen" must be left, and, in
-case we should not return for her this summer. Missionary Samms
-could have her. She never could stand a sea, and if we took her
-machinery back to San Francisco it would not be worth much more than
-old iron. There goes $1800! Be this her epitaph: "She served her
-purpose, if she was slow."
-
-We set sail southeast from Cape Blossom on the 8th and anchored off
-Chamisso Island on the 9th for water. It was too rough to load the
-water tanks until night, and we had until midnight on the island.
-I was delighted--fairly wild! There are big rookeries of murres,
-puffins and gulls on a detached islet, and a party of us made landing
-and collected forty dozen eggs. I went over the cliffs on a rope
-and was hauled up and down their faces. There was little danger
-except from falling rocks which might be loosened above me, and we
-were always very careful about that. I had a good crew, with Dr.
-Coffin as foreman. The murres lay their eggs on little projections
-or narrow shelves of rocks on the face of the cliff, in most places
-entirely inaccessible save from above. At the last descent I had one
-scare. Whether the boys above me had an equal scare I will leave
-them to say. I was about fifty feet below the edge of a precipice
-and probably the same distance above the rocks in the surf. I had
-obtained everything within reach and had yelled to "hoist away,"
-but got no response. I was too far down to hear the voices of those
-above, neither could they hear me. The rope didn't budge and I
-continual swaying in uncertainty in mid-air, rather dubious as to
-the result. Finally I gave a successful "yank" on the rope, and was
-then jerked upward at a great rate of speed, scraping my elbows and
-shins in my frantic efforts against being thumped against the sharp
-projecting rocks. When I rose over the edge I found six men on the
-rope. Three were usually sufficient, but this last trip the three
-could not start the rope, and not until the sixth man, Casey, took
-hold, did it give an inch. We found that the rope had caught in a
-narrow chink in the rocks. Had it required one more man to start me,
-where would he have been found? I probably should have been left
-to swing for many hours. But I wasn't. Nothing happened wherewith
-to satisfy the adventure-loving and "narrow escape" craving modern
-journal, and I haven't all the eggs blown yet. Either I have become
-sea-sick or on duty. Besides, popular sentiment is against me. The
-boys don't like the idea of eating the egg after it is blown by my
-pipe from the shell. In vain I assure them that the blow-pipe is
-thoroughly disinfected according to the latest advices of science.
-They Insist upon seeing the shells cracked open, lest there might
-lurk some hidden secret within known only to Shafer and myself. This
-new lack of faith on the part of the hitherto "nice boys" is very
-disastrous to scientific investigation. I think they might trust me,
-for I eat at the same table and get away with my share of doughnuts
-and Cookies. I leave it to Shafer if I don't. Dr. Coffin and Rivers
-have taken the egg craze, so between us three I hope a good series
-will be saved out of the lot.
-
-On Chamisso Island we saw records carved on logs in a fair state of
-preservation of the visit of "H. B. M. S. Blossom, 1820." "H. B. M.
-S. Herald, 1848," and some Russian vessel 1837. Those were some of
-the old Arctic explorers.
-
-[Illustration: Iceberg.]
-
-At 2 a. m. July 10, the "Penelope" set sail westward out of Kotzebue
-Sound, and after dodging through scattering ice and close along the
-south shore, sometimes in thirteen feet of water, she got safely
-out into the open beyond Cape Espinberg. We, with one other, were
-the first boats out this year. The ice opened first this season on
-just the opposite side of the Sound to that of last year. We had a
-good gale in the Arctic and another in Bering Sea just after getting
-through the Straits. It was fearfully rough and how the "Penelope"
-did pitch and roll! Worse than any time in the Pacific last year. I
-was sea-sick and so was almost everyone.
-
-I belong to the Sailors' Union this year. Brownie is assistant cook,
-as I was last year. We sailors are divided into watches of four hours
-each, three men in each watch, giving one hour and twenty minutes at
-the wheel to each man. I, with Clyde and Rivers, am on from 12 to
-4. Eight hours a day on deck and sixteen off, doesn't read like hard
-work, but it's plenty.
-
-[Illustration: Off Cape Nome.]
-
-We have had only the worst weather. Until we got through the Straits
-we encountered frequent squalls of snow and sleet. To-day it has
-been rainy and foggy. It is difficult to keep one's hands and feet
-warm during the hour and twenty minutes at the wheel, even with our
-best clothing on. I could not report for duty during the gales. We
-have seen several vessels, and last night spoke the whaling tender
-"Bonanza." Her captain yelled at us that there is "A big strike at
-Cape Nome!" I am inclined to think that the whole world is making fun
-at the expense of these "fool gold-hunters," as we are called. I wish
-I were at Dutch Harbor collecting birds. Later, 11:30.--A breeze has
-sprung up favorably and the captain says we are within fifty miles of
-Cape Nome.
-
-Cape Nome, July 20.--Got in all safe and anchored close off shore.
-Boys have located seven claims not yet developed. Plenty of gold in
-sight. Hurrah for the Arctic gold-hunters of the "Penelope" crew!
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII.
-
-
-Cape Nome, July 20.--After an eleven days' voyage from Kotzebue
-Sound we anchored off Anvil City on the morning of the 20th. Those
-eleven days make a nightmare. A succession of head gales with
-dense fogs. We were almost within sight of our destination when
-a southeaster began to hum through the rigging and a thick fog
-set in. The "Penelope" hove to and for two days we experienced a
-most disagreeable combination of rolling and pitching, with their
-inevitable conditions. When the clouds finally lifted we were back in
-Bering Straits. The northward current is remarkably strong at this
-season and it is almost impossible to stem it unless there is a fair
-wind, which in our case did finally favor us. We found our Cape Nome
-representatives all here save Cox, who was left with some claims
-toward Fish River. All are well, but from their account they must
-have had some sorry experiences. Dr. Gleaves, Gale and party were
-lost in the overland trip and ran out of provisions, resorting to
-their seventeen dogs for food in the last pinch. They finally reached
-supplies with barely enough meat for two days longer. Close shave.
-The body of Dr. De France of the "Iowa" party, was found frozen in
-the trail in the mountains.
-
-On the 22d the "Penelope" sailed up the coast to our claims, which
-are located on the beach seven miles west of Anvil City. Here we have
-unloaded supplies and will proceed to work the claims far enough to
-see what they are good for. I have not visited "town" yet, but there
-must be two thousand inhabitants living mostly in tents or driftwood
-shacks. Several warehouses have been built and two substantial frame
-buildings are going up. They say there are ten thousand men in this
-district, mostly scattered out among the hills. Five thousand claims
-are recorded, but of these only about a dozen are known to be of
-value. Four are so far being worked, but these I know to be extremely
-rich, for anyone can look on and see the "shining" as it is separated
-from the gravel in the sluice boxes. Shafer and Stevenson were at
-these workings a day or two ago and saw two shovelfuls taken up
-indiscriminately pan out one $6 and the other $8. Those rich claims
-are in little cañons or ravines seven miles back from the coast in
-the hills. This is really a gold bearing region, for one can find
-colors almost anywhere. We can get from twenty-five to two hundred
-colors to a pan on our claims here, but they are very line, and I
-doubt their being saved in sluice boxes. The beach claims contain
-plenty of gold, but it will require improved machinery to make them
-pay.
-
-I have left my bird skins and everything except a single change of
-clothing on the "Penelope," as we all have done. But I am afraid
-my collection is liable to damage from rats or mould. There is no
-place on shore to put the stuff and no through vessels that I know
-of to ship it by. The "Penelope" left night before last to take a
-prospecting party thirty miles down the coast to examine some country
-there and then to visit the claims where Cox was left. Nine of us are
-left here, with Harry Reynolds as foreman. We are at present digging
-holes in various places to see if we can find the "pay streak." No
-success yet. The gold on the beach is not "wash" gold, but no doubt
-comes from the bluff which borders the beach about one hundred feet
-back from the surf. From this bluff the smooth tundra extends back
-some five miles to the hills. Anvil City is at the mouth of Snake
-River, which extends back through the hills and heads in the high
-mountain ranges which we can just see through the gap. Anvil Creek,
-Snow Gulch and Glacier Creek, the rich spots, are tributaries of
-Snake River. To the westward is Penny River, but this whole country,
-including thirty miles along the water front, is all staked out. The
-district is under military control, and twenty soldiers are stationed
-at Anvil City. Without them there might be trouble. It seems that
-the first men to this region, the so-called "discoverers," staked
-out as many as one hundred claims each under power of attorney.
-They then formed a mining district and passed a law that powers of
-attorney cannot hold, thus handicapping those who have come in since,
-so one man can take up but one claim. The other night a miners'
-meeting was called in town to consider the matter. A resolution he
-brought up which, if carried, would throw the whole district open
-to be restaked. The lieutenant was there and he knew that if this
-passed there would be serious trouble. He informed the meeting that
-if this resolution was brought up he would clear the house. After
-some deliberation the resolution was couched in a different form,
-disguising its intent, but the officer kept his word and ordered the
-house cleared. There was some hesitation and several toughs even
-looked resistance, but the order was given to fix bayonets. The
-meeting was thus broken up and nothing more has been done.
-
-[Illustration: Main Street, Anvil City.]
-
-The original staking was doubtless unfair, but if the district were
-now reopened it would be worse. There is little lawlessness in Anvil
-City, on account of the militia. A good many claims have been jumped
-and some of them two or three times. This will give work to the
-lawyers. Several of our own claims have been jumped, but we are on
-them now and possession is nine points of the law.
-
-July 30.--This is Sunday and a day of rest for us. We have worked
-pretty hard the past week. In fact this is the first mining the L. B.
-A. M. & T. Co. has done. Prospect holes have been dug in different
-parts of the claims. Uncle Jimmy and I were set to digging hole
-back on the tundra, and if anyone doubts the work is hard let him
-try it for himself. We worked three days and got to a depth of ten
-feet with no favorable results. The tundra is thawed barely through
-its covering of moss, seldom more than six inches. The rest of the
-way the frozen ground was as hard as rock and had to be chipped off
-bit by bit. The hole was about four by five feet, just room enough
-to wield a heavy pick. We broke the points off the pick every day. A
-strata of pure ice a foot thick was encountered, but most of the way
-we worked through a sort of frozen muck or packed mass of unrotted
-vegetation which, when it thaws, looks and smells like barnyard filth.
-
-After the first day the walls began to melt and cave in little by
-little, so that each morning and noon we would have to bale out a
-foot or more of mud and water. It was about as dirty work as one
-can imagine. The fresh clods, as we picked them out of the bottom,
-were so cold that for a time frost formed on the outside just like
-a cold piece of iron brought into a warm room in winter. Although
-as cold as a refrigerator down in the pit, the perspiration poured
-off from us from the stifling air. Only one of us at a time could
-work in the hole, so we had half hour shifts. Uncle Jimmy and I.
-The man on the outside had to haul up the bucketfuls of dirt and
-water, but he otherwise rested. After our long yachting trip this
-work was especially hard. But such labor gives one a tremendous
-appetite. Jesse Farrar is cook now. Shafer has deserted the company.
-He has obtained a position in a restaurant uptown at $1.50 per month
-and expenses, with prospects of $200 next mouth. C. C. Reynolds,
-Dr. Coffin, Clyde, Baldwin and Colclough have left on the steamer
-"Albion" for home. Yes, for home! All have made satisfactory
-arrangements with the company. As to the rest of us who "stay by the
-ship," there are none but could better his condition by leaving the
-company. But we who have a good deal of money invested, hate to leave
-everything when affairs are looking better than ever before.
-
-We are in a gold country here and none can tell what may turn up. I
-never saw a single color in the Kowak region, but here the sand is
-sprinkled with them, though not in paying quantities everywhere. I
-must admit that even I, who do not know what homesickness is, would
-like very well to be at home for a while. I am losing time now. No
-matter if I were shoveling gravel and digging holes, that isn't
-improving myself any, is it?
-
-I am still intent upon Dutch Harbor as soon as the company leaves
-Alaska. I do not suppose I will ever return to Alaska again, and I
-think a few months among the Aleutians would be time well put in, in
-the natural history line.
-
-By the way, "Uncle S.," the Quaker gold-hunter whom we had given
-up for lost last winter, came aboard the "Penelope" when we first
-anchored at Anvil City. He has bought a small steam launch and makes
-money ferrying people and their goods up and down the coast. The
-Snake River is not navigable except after heavy rains. I have also
-seen the "Flying Dutchman" here. He is gray. He had black hair and
-beard last fall. His forced journeyings over the frozen Arctic have
-left a witness to his hardships. The "Bear" came in last night from
-Kotzebue Sound, bringing eighty victims of scurvy. The sickness up
-there has been awful this spring and the death rate as high as ten
-per cent.
-
-We hear of a great many disasters. There are but few who would spend
-another winter on the Kowak for a mint of gold, unless it be myself.
-To crown it all, we have news of a strike on the Kowak! "Nuggets as
-big as hickory nuts!" This story, when we are scarcely four hundred
-miles away from there! Somebody is starting another boom. This may
-start some more "fools" up there. But it will take something new to
-get any of us back. We have bit at "the hickory nut" once, and I do
-not think we shall again. We hear that the transportation companies
-are booming this country. It is overrun now and there is sure to be
-crowding. Wages are five to eight dollars a day back at the mines,
-but only a limited number of men can get employment at that. Expenses
-are high, and a man had better stick to $1.50 per day back in
-civilization than to come here and sleep on the damp ground in a tent
-without a fire and live on salt-horse and beans.
-
-The hot weather is upon us at last and the last four days have been
-"sweaters." It is like an oven in the tent where I am writing. Dr.
-Coffin got us each a box of lemons and oranges on the "Alaska," just
-in, before he left. Jesse just brought in a big stew kettle full of
-ice-cold lemonade. Two bowls full just serve to make one want more.
-It tastes so good. We have had one mess of fresh potatoes and onions.
-We ate the latter raw with vinegar. It does a fellow good to be
-without such things a while, if not too long. He knows better how to
-appreciate them.
-
-And now I record a fact that ought to make every face blush that
-turns an upward glance at Old Glory. The United States has passed "a
-law," permitting; saloons in Cape Nome. The natives get all they want
-and are killing each other when drunk. The native girl who mends some
-of our shoes, came in drunk, and when sober she was asked where she
-obtained the liquor. She gave the name of the man. Our foreman told
-him that he would report him to the captain of our squad, and was
-offered $50 by the criminal to "keep mum."
-
-Aug. 5.--It is nothing now but "work" from 7 a. m. to 6 p. m. After
-ten hours of it one is more ready to rest than to write. I do not
-get a minute to so much as look at a bird except Sunday, which we
-have voted to observe. And then there is plenty to till in every
-minute when one comes along, including mending and washing. But I
-can scarcely help seeing the birds that fly past along the beach
-just as if to taunt me. Bands of Pacific kittiwakes pass up and down
-the surf on the lookout for herrings, and an occasional glaucus, or
-rather the Port Barrow gull, comes sailing along. A pair of Arctic
-terns feeding their full-grown young, afford almost the only bird
-notes of any kind. The young have a pleading, and yet harshly strong,
-succession of calls, and hover along the beach ever ready for the
-fish caught in the surf by the parent birds. The precision with which
-the terns can drop on a tiny fish or crustacean in the boiling surf
-is remarkable. And yet they seem so light on the wing and rise from
-the water with so little apparent exertion. Long-tailed jagers are
-common, coursing back and forth over the tundra or poising against
-the wind with fluttering wings much like a sparrow-hawk. Their long,
-pointed, streamer-like, central tail feathers distinguish them at
-almost any distance from the other jagers. They feed on meadow mice
-and caterpillars mostly, but their habit of forcing gulls to disgorge
-is of frequent notice. As there are no mud flats or marshes here the
-waders are scarce. I saw a godwit, probably the Pacific, flying back
-toward the interior. Several golden plover, which I have no doubt are
-rearing their young, are always on the back part of our claims. Their
-melodious, warbling call reminds me strongly of the robin. These
-plover show decided preference for the dryest tundra and uplands, and
-at Cape Blossom I found them on the hillsides in the interior of the
-peninsula. One day last week while I was at work in a prospect hole
-back of the bluff, three turnstones lit in the mossy hummocks within
-a few yards of me. They were very tame and remained an hour or more
-near me, feeding on insects or their larvæ. I have never taken this
-species (the common turnstone), although I saw it at Cape Prince of
-Wales and Cape Blossom, and tried hard to get some specimens. I took
-several of the black turnstones in Sitka in 1896, and also in San
-Clemente Island last year. Black-throated loons are numerous and are
-constantly seen and heard overhead as they fly back and forth from
-the lakes on the tundra to their feeding grounds out at sea. This
-is the only loon I have seen here, although I saw the red-throated
-at Kotzebue. I have kept special watch for the yellow-billed loon
-which is ascribed to this region, but have never identified it. The
-Eskimos make clothing of loon skins, and I have particularly examined
-such evidences, but have never found a scrap of yellow-billed loon
-skin. This species cannot therefore be very numerous. Land birds
-are very scarce here, probably on account of the awful barrenness
-of the region. I flushed one snowy owl back of camp one day, and
-the boys say they saw a hawk of some kind yesterday, I think from
-their description a gyrfalcon. I saw two juvenile Lapland longspurs
-yesterday feeding about the bluff, and also heard a yellow wagtail. I
-have noted a pair of juvenile redpolls several times along the bluff.
-
-This, I think, comprises our avifauna up to date, and it will be
-seen that a collector would have rather "slim picking." They tell
-me that back in the hills where the ravines are lined with willow
-scrubs, birds are more numerous and that large flocks of juvenile
-ptarmigan are appearing. I would like to go back and see if this is
-true, but it is all "business" now. The financial prospects of our
-party are brightening every day. Our beach claims may become a paying
-proposition when properly developed. Eight or ten of us are working
-on one of them in a very crude fashion, using "rockers." and are
-taking out $50 to $60 per day. With improved machinery this would be
-a rich thing, but of course considerable capital would be required
-to start. I am "cleaner-up;" taking out the previous day's clean-up,
-which consists of several pans of mixed black sand and gold dust (the
-latter in smallest proportion), and panning it down so far as I can
-without losing any colors or fine flakes of the yellow. Then I mix in
-mercury thoroughly, which takes up all the dust, forming an amalgam,
-which is finally separated and retorted, leaving the buttons of pure
-gold. We are figuring on another proposition and may not continue
-at this much longer. We have prospected these claims enough to know
-their value, and this is enough for this year. There is a good deal
-of trouble about the strip of beach between high and low tide, some
-claiming it to be public reserve and open to be worked by anyone.
-Several "squatters" are working on our claims who refuse to get off,
-but the judge will settle this next week.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV.
-
-Cape Nome, Alaska, Aug. 6, 1899.--It is Sunday evening again and I
-am reclining against my roll of blankets in the warm tent. Foote is
-playing the banjo, beautiful music, too! I never appreciated music
-until this trip. Foote's marches and familiar songs, associated as
-they are with the freedom of camp life and that feeling of rest after
-a day's work, have impressed their memory as the sweetest music I
-ever heard. We are still on our beach claims; that is, part of us.
-The "Penelope" is back at anchor, having left Jett and Wilson on the
-scent of something under guidance of an Indian. Cox has not reported.
-Our property is advancing in value and so is the stock of the L. B.
-A. M. & T. Co. The same stock which I was ready to trade a few weeks
-ago for some cotton batting, arsenic and plaster-of-paris! We own
-a lot in Anvil City 200 × 300 feet. The beach claims are proving
-better. If we can hold clear to the water line we are safe. The
-past week we have taken out $250 in gold dust. Trouble with jumpers
-continues. Over six hundred men are working with rockers on the beach
-in sight. Some are making from $50 to $150 per day. One fellow struck
-a pocket and took out $400 at one clean-up. Our claims are not as
-good as those nearer Snake River. Several jumpers are at work on them
-now and we cannot put them off except by force, and that means fight.
-None of us want to be disfigured after our successful encounter with
-the frost last winter. We appealed to the lieutenant in charge, but
-he says he can do nothing until the arrival of the district judge
-next week. Several of our boys have gone up to one of the rich
-gulches to consider a new proposition. Maybe we will get a good lay.
-A "lay" is a lease given by a claim owner to a party to work a claim
-for a certain per-centage of the outcome.
-
-Aug. 13.--Another week has passed away and very quickly, too, in
-spite of the hard work. From six to twelve of us are still working on
-one of the beach claims. Up to Friday night we had taken out $750 in
-dust. If the whole company were working at the same rate this would
-be good wages, but there are twenty to share with. The "Penelope"
-has gone down the coast again to look after the prospectors and may
-bring good news. Jesse Farrar, the cook, went to town last night, and
-I have been cooking to-day. We were troubled quite a little at first
-by our numerous Kotzebue friends dropping in for meals on their way
-up and down the beach. So we put up a sign, "Meals, $1," more to rid
-ourselves of the extra care than to go into the restaurant business.
-Really it became unbearable.
-
-The town is booming. The beach claim trouble is not settled yet, and
-everyone is working where he pleases. Claim owners up in the gulches
-are looking for men at $10 per day and board, and cannot get them. A
-$310 nugget was taken from a sluice box the other day, and one man
-cleared $20,000 for four days' work. Our boys have been up to see,
-and I ought to go. A fellow hasn't a chance every day in his life to
-see such a lot of gold in the rough, at its birth as it were, before
-it is washed or dressed or alloyed. Most of the lucky ones are Swedes
-or Laplanders, they being on the ground at the beginning of the rush
-last spring.
-
-Gold can only bring $15 per ounce at the highest, and only $14 at
-some stores. In other words, coin is at a big premium. The beach
-gold runs very high, being much purer than that from the hills. Some
-was sent to St. Michaels and assayed $18.40 per ounce. If one had
-the cash he could buy up the raw gold and sell it. That is where the
-companies make the bulk of their money. It is a great temptation for
-some of our party to desert and start into private enterprises. But
-I, and most of the boys, will stay together and I believe will come
-out better in the long run.
-
-They say Dawson is played out and that this is the next place for a
-boom. But I wouldn't advise anyone to come here if they have any way
-of making a living at home. Ten dollars a day sounds big, but when
-one pays $90 each way for transportation and then prices for things
-here, there isn't much left from the short period of three months'
-work, and one is not sure of that.
-
-We have a short fish net set out beyond the surf. This morning
-I found four salmon in it, the first we have had since leaving
-Kotzebue. Only four of us are here to-day, but I had three
-"boarders." Three dollars in "dust" was paid.
-
-I have forgotten to describe what "rocking" is. A rocker runs just
-like a baby's cradle, from side to side. At the top is a hopper with
-holes in the bottom to keep out the coarse stuff. The sand falls
-through the hopper-holes and washes over two "aprons" slanting back
-and forth to the bottom, where it runs out through a sluice-box. The
-aprons, and sometimes the sluice-box, have "riffles," or strips of
-cloth fastened in crosswise, to catch the gold. The aprons and the
-whole bottom of the box and riffles are of blanket, so that the finer
-dust catches in the nap or wool. A man stands dipping water into the
-hopper with one hand and rocking with the other, while the other man
-puts in a shovelful of the pay dirt every now and then, and keeps the
-water tub full and the tailings cleaned away. Two men run a rocker,
-though when the "Penelope" crew is ashore there are three men to each
-of our four rockers. We have to carry all our water from the surf.
-Some of the rockers have copper plates amalgamated with mercury on
-the upper sides. These are better, as the finer particles are caught
-and amalgamated. To "clean up" a rocker, the aprons and blankets are
-taken out and washed in a tub and the resulting debris panned out. I
-am amalgamator, and have nothing to do with the rockers. I pan out
-the previous day's clean-up and amalgamate the dust, squeeze "dry"
-the amalgam and weigh it. We have no retort as yet and I have on hand
-nearly ten pounds of dry amalgam. I have experimented with it and
-find that the amalgam is one-half gold by weight. Oh, the boys have
-a little joke on me. It was the result of my first experiment and I
-shall never hear the last of it. There must have been something else
-in the spoon I was using, nickel or silver, for the gold melted right
-into the spoon. I poured the stuff out on to a shovel-blade to save
-what was left. What did it do but melt right into and all over the
-shovel! The result of this is that the L. B. A. M. & T. Co. has a
-gold-plated shovel. We are a wealthy company and can afford it.
-
-[Illustration: Cape Nome.]
-
-Later. Anvil City, Cape Nome.--I came to town after supper and
-am writing in our "city cabin," which is just back of the A. C.
-Company's store. We own a very fine residence in the city 12 x 10
-feet, on a 150 x 300 foot lot. It is a good eight miles from our
-beach claims here, and as I walked it I thought it twenty. I wore
-heavy shoes, and the best walking I could select was on the wet sand
-along the surf. For the entire eight miles there is scarcely one
-hundred feet without one or more tents on it. The beach is riddled
-with ditches and holes, and hundreds of rockers of all descriptions
-gyrate in various rhythm. I spoke to many Kotzebue people whom we
-knew last winter, and all are doing well. The beach is still being
-worked by everyone, irrespective of original locators, a dozen or
-more on our own claims. The officer arrested several, but discharged
-them again. The townspeople, saloonkeepers and transportation
-companies are against claim owners, as it is to their own interest
-to keep the mob taking out money. And they're doing it, too. Anvil
-City is booming. Dozens of frame buildings are being erected. Three
-big two-story sheet-iron buildings are going up, which comprise the
-government barracks. Several steamers have gotten over the bar and
-are in the mouth of Snake River. About two dozen saloons are raking
-in the money. This is a speedy place. I wish I had my time for the
-next two months here. Ptarmigan are $1 each for eating. Wages are $1
-per hour.
-
-[Illustration: Rocking Out Gold at Cape Nome.]
-
-Cape Nome, Aug. 22.--I am quite sure that I do not aspire to the
-realm of cookery, but yet, for all that, I am in the kitchen again,
-"monarch of all I survey." I do not blame the cook for stubbornly
-declaring his intention to resign and refusing to leave his bed. No
-one heeded his warning given the day before. Pandemonium ensued. A
-dish-pan of mush finally appeared at the hands of Uncle Jimmy. No one
-consented to fill the vacancy at any wages. Three "boarders" came in
-and were turned away. The dissolution of the company was imminent,
-all because there was no one in the crowd to perform a duty which is
-considered by all to be the most disagreeable of any on the list. I
-told them so, and several other emphatic truths. "Practice what you
-preach!" was hurled at me. Then I rose up like a martyr and declared
-that I would "risk death" in the interests of the L. B. A. M. & T.
-Co., and here I am in imminent peril of being wiped off the face
-of the earth by some "beach comber" whom I charge fifty cents for
-a loaf of bread. I sold three loaves at that rate yesterday. Also
-served fifteen meals to outsiders at the rate of $1 per meal. One
-man came in for supper last night who planked down a bag of dust
-worth fully $800 for me to weigh the dollar from. I poured out a
-little too much and he grabbed the bag and went out, saying, "Keep
-the change!" Most of the money taken in is dust. Cash is scarcer
-than ever. Copper plates are not obtainable, and silver dollars and
-halves are at a premium for covering the bottoms of rockers. The
-coins are amalgamated with mercury to catch the fine gold dust. I
-saw fifty arranged in rows in one rocker. Our claims are now covered
-with beach jumpers and we cannot get them off. Mob law rules. There
-are one hundred beach combers to one claim owner, and the authorities
-will not or cannot do anything. The lieutenant in charge gave us
-some notices to "vacate," but the people pay no attention. It fell
-to me to go up to one of our claims, and I showed the notice to each
-of the workers along the beach. Some laughed at me. Some sneered.
-One "tough" consigned me and the notice to a warmer place than Cape
-Nome in August. He continued to swear at me, and when I respectfully
-asked him to "be reasonable and give me a hearing," he told me to
-get to that same place I have mentioned "and quick, too." This at
-my own claim! I never knew I had a temper before, but for a minute
-then I do not think I would have been responsible. I can easily see
-how murders are committed in the rage of anger, and if all judges
-and juries could put themselves in the place of the tempted, perhaps
-capital punishment, at least for such crimes, would be annulled. The
-man who threatened me was bigger than I, and I went on. And he is
-still working there, taking out $100 per day, so I am told. He is in
-a "pocket." Our pocket. We have discussed the advisability of using
-force, but have abandoned it. Fancher says we "might get disfigured,"
-for there are people here just awkward enough to hit a fellow in the
-face.
-
-We are hemmed in on all sides and soon our beach claims will be
-worthless. Sunday I retorted all the amalgam we had on hand, and
-eighty-five ounces of pure gold was the result. Seven pounds of the
-pretty yellow stuff! I broke the big chunks as they came from the
-retort into small pieces with a cold chisel. It was fascinating work
-to weigh out the rare metal and lift the same when it was put into
-the chamois-skin sack. I have turned it over to Treasurer Rivers, so
-it is off my hands. But what is fifteen hundred dollars divided among
-twenty men? It would certainly be better to divide up the company
-right now, for the individuals here, but we cannot lawfully do it.
-Complete desertion is the only alternative to staying with it.
-
-Anvil City, Aug. 24.--We have left the beach claims and are on our
-way to Nome River. We have leased a fifty per cent, lay on Buster
-Creek, and are going to see what is in it. It is our last chance
-for this year. It may turn out poor, but we have very good reports
-from that section. We hope to feel assured of something good to come
-back to next spring. Ice last night, and probably an early winter.
-The schooner is going up to Safety Harbor in Port Clarence to remain
-until October 1st, which is about as late as we dare stay here. I
-must go ashore now for a boat-load of lumber for sluice-boxes.
-
-Later.--The rats got into a box of my geese and entirely ruined
-them. I do not know how much else is destroyed. I have not been so
-absolutely down-hearted for many moons. All on account of those
-miserable rats. I came near taking all my collection ashore and
-quitting the company. But then I suppose "gold is to be desired above
-all things." at least this is what I am told by wiser heads than
-mine, judging by their whiteness and baldness. There is a prospect
-of getting some new potatoes ashore to-night, and these will be an
-all-sufficient antidote to low spirits. Somehow potatoes, and even
-onions, go straight to the seat of low spirits when a fellow has been
-without them a year or two. Strange to me that a man ever commits
-suicide in the midst of local markets where fresh vegetables can be
-obtained. Ah, we shall have a great supper to-night! One menu three
-times a day--beans, dessicated vegetables, rice, dried fruit and
-bacon--grows wearisome unless the appetite is awfully sharp.
-
-[Illustration: Placer Mining, Cape Nome.]
-
-Buster Creek, Sept. 3.--Here we are twelve miles up among the
-mountains back of Cape Nome. It took two days towing up Nome River,
-which is really nothing more than a creek. There were bars to drag
-the boat over every hundred yards. That brought us to the mouth of
-Buster Creek, three miles from here, and from there we had the sweet
-job of packing up all our supplies and lumber on our backs. Rain
-most of the time and nothing but green willow brush to burn. It was
-very disagreeable, hard work, but here we are now, well settled,
-with an oil stove to depend on when the willow wood fails. We have
-a fairly good looking claim here, No. 4. Have it opened up and the
-first gravel through yesterday. The riffles show coarse gold, though
-in no fabulous amount. We cannot get much out before freeze-up this
-year, but ought to do fairly well next summer from present prospects.
-Some ice and considerable frost already. We will probably return to
-the coast the last of September. The "Penelope" rode out the late
-storm safely when so many other vessels were lost. My latest news is
-that the rats have taken my goose box for a nesting den. One of the
-boys will watch from this on. I am cooking and it keeps me jumping
-sideways to feed the fourteen hungry gravel-heavers. I have to be up
-at five in the morning and am seldom through until nine at night.
-Have to bake every day, and have nothing larger than a single camp
-stove oven to do it in. Everyone is working for all there is in him.
-We hope to strike a pay streak, as they have on the claim above us,
-rich enough to take out $800 per day. I have scarcely time to breathe
-outside of the cook tent these days. But I frequently hear the notes
-of familiar birds--golden-crowned sparrows, gray-cheeked thrushes and
-ptarmigan. I shot nine ptarmigan the other evening close by. We are
-feasting on fresh venison. Yesterday morning a reindeer appeared on
-the hillside above the tents. Without malice aforethought one of the
-boys aimed and it fell--to our lot. It is now hinted that the wild
-creature was a tame reindeer, and that the Laps from over on Anvil
-Creek who have the animals in charge, will most likely come to hunt
-it up. If they get a peep into our provision tent we may have to pay
-$100, otherwise it will be finished by us with a relish such as few
-can appreciate. These Laplanders own very rich claims and, though
-they are really a lower class of people than the Indians, the latter
-cannot become citizens.
-
-Last week, while we were coming up along Nome River, birds were quite
-numerous, especially the smaller species in the willow thickets. I
-saw or heard the yellow, black-poll and Wilson's warblers; tree,
-fox, golden-crowned and intermediate sparrows, gray-cheeked thrush,
-redpoll, snowy owl, flocks of golden plover and pectoral sandpipers,
-one young Sabine's gull on a sand-bar: lots of large gulls, either
-glaucus or glaucus-winged, and perhaps both; loons, black and
-red-throated; little brown crane, pin-tails, and other ducks not
-identified. The last two or three days small birds have been very
-scarce. On August 27 and 28 the fall migrations were in progress.
-Most of the birds were heard singing, especially the warblers, as in
-spring. The ptarmigan are very nicely plumaged now in parti-colored
-costume. I wish I could save some, but the L. B. A. M. & T Co. is
-mining now. I can hardly decide in my own mind to stay another winter
-here. I will let circumstances decide. There are hundreds of Dawson
-people here who say this will be a greater gold country than the
-Klondike. Some of the creeks are turning out immensely rich. One
-Swede came down from his claim the other day with $88,000. He got rid
-of $30,000 of it in a saloon almost immediately. It will be seen that
-the saloon people are taking in most of the gold. However, I think we
-are on the right track, though it may take two more years to bring us
-material returns. In a few days now it will be:
-
- "Penelope! Penelope! zip! boom! bah!
- Going home from Kotzebue! rah! rah! rah!"
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV.
-
-
-Buster Creek, Cape Nome, Sept. 16, 1899.--A week ago Casey went to
-Anvil City, across country twelve miles, and brought a batch of mail,
-containing our first letters from home since our arrival here in
-answer to our own. I received six, which I have committed to memory,
-sitting alone in the cook tent. If people at home, the wide world
-over, would write faithfully to absent ones, there would be joy in
-many a wanderer's heart.
-
-Here we are, working like beavers, thirteen of us, including me, the
-cook. It's the last struggle of a dying company. But it isn't dead
-yet. In fact there are many good signs of reviving, possibly to a
-more prosperous condition. We have done little so far on Buster Creek
-but hunt for pay dirt. Just now we are making wages. Took out $400
-last week, including some very pretty nuggets. The claims are too
-spotted; that is, the gold runs in narrow streaks, and necessitates
-moving quantities of barren dirt to get at it. Our largest nugget
-so far is $4.13, with a good many $1 ones. Over on Anvil Creek they
-took out a twenty-seven ounce one last week. That is a better size.
-While we have done little but "prospect" on the claims here, we have
-gained a good idea of their value, and expect to work them next
-year. A cold snap struck us three days ago and threatens to put a
-stop to our mining for this season. The creek is bordered with ice,
-and icicles adorn the edges of the sluice-boxes. We shall remain as
-long as we can possibly work. It is snowing quite heavily to-day. I
-saw the last Siberian yellow wagtail on the 8th, also a gray-cheeked
-thrush. I saw a gyrfalcon and snowy owl flying along the canon
-yesterday. Scattering flocks of golden plover have been quite common
-the past few days on the hillsides feeding on blueberries. I shot one
-near the tent this morning, although the ground was white with snow.
-I can hear their clear notes every few minutes while I write. They
-are flying past along the creek or up the hills. I wish I could save
-some skins. But wishes do not count with a gold-hunter when gold
-is in sight. Yesterday immense flocks of little brown cranes passed
-south overhead.
-
-I am pretty sure this is the same species we see and hear so much of
-during the migrations in southern California, and not so often the
-sand-hill crane.
-
-This "cooking job," which has been thrust upon me by circumstances
-entirely outside my control, is something terrible. I will never,
-never get into another scrape like it. And yet "I am in the hands of
-my friends." No President of these United States ever accepted his
-office "by the will of the people" more surely than I now occupy my
-office as cook for the L. B. A. M. & T. Co. But for all that, I am
-elected by a sweeping vote. I repeat my previous oft-made declaration
-that I will never be caught running for this office again. In fact I
-never did run for it. It ran for me. An unquestionable illustration
-of the office seeking the man and not the man the office. I get up
-at five in the morning; nearly dark now at that early hour. How cold
-it is! And I never was eager to get up, under any circumstances.
-For a week nearly every night ice forms in the tent. I have an oil
-stove, without which I should never be able to prepare breakfast.
-Green willow brush is hard to burn in the little camp stove. I have
-breakfast ready at 6:30, dinner at 12, and supper at 6. It keeps me
-"hustling" to be prompt. The office is no "snap." I am given a man
-to chop wood when necessary, otherwise I must do everything alone.
-And the dish-washing three times a day! Let who will envy me. Up to
-the beginning of the cold snap I made light bread, six loaves per
-day. But since it has been freezing in the tent at night the sponge
-will not rise. And there's no way to keep it warm. Fuel too dear and
-scarce. The camp stove oven is about ten inches square, with bake
-pans to fit, two loaves to a pan, one pan at a time. Light bread went
-a good deal further than baking-powder biscuit. It takes nine slabs
-of the latter a day to satisfy us now. We are reduced to the bare
-necessities, no butter nor canned milk. For breakfast I give them
-corn-meal mush, bacon, bread, beans and coffee. For dinner bacon,
-beans, bread, pea soup, apple sauce and coffee. For supper either
-bacon gravy, made of flour and water, or stew, if we have ptarmigan
-or meat, beans, rice, apple sauce, bread, hard-tack and tea. Our
-reindeer was fine, but lasted only a few days. One unaccustomed
-to this fare of ours may think we are in luck for miners, and so
-we are, but one gets tired of the same menu for so long. And then
-the staleness of it, after being shipped and towed and packed and
-unpacked, and swapped, and crushed, and dampened, for nearly two
-years! Little freshness in it.
-
-The boys are having no easy job at shoveling. Their feet are swollen
-and sore from standing in rubber boots in ice water, and their hands
-are cracked and chapped. These every-day monotonies are the real
-hardships of a miner's life. He can tramp across the country for
-a few weeks and know that the end of his journey is at hand, and
-besides be getting some satisfaction from the thought of "glory"
-when he shall relate his perils to gaping friends at home. But this
-"peg-away" daily toil, in heat and cold and sleet and rain, after
-what may come to light in the next shovelful, and possibly never show
-up at all--this is hardship. But through it all the boys who have
-stuck to their work are in good spirits, and this in face of the fact
-that the "clean-ups" do not always show up wages even.
-
-I have plenty of time to think nowadays all by myself, for I do not
-necessarily keep all my thoughts upon the grub. I do a good deal of
-my work from sheer habit now, or mechanically. The boys are working
-on Claim No. 1, and these tents are on No. 4, so I am quite alone
-except at meal time. A regulation claim is one-fourth of a mile long
-lengthwise of a creek, and one-eighth wide.
-
-The "Penelope" is at Port Clarence, where Fancher and Jett went
-prospecting. The boat will be at Anvil City about October 1st,
-according to programme, and we will sail for home as soon after that
-date as we can get away. Yes, home! I am heartily tired of this kind
-of living. I shall be willing to take a six months' rest before
-taking another trip, I am sure. I long to get back to my father's
-house and up in those cool, high chambers of mine, where I may once
-more feel "like a Christian and a gentleman."
-
-The season is earlier than usual, and the weather much more
-disagreeable than at the same date last year on the Kowak. Every
-moment or two while I write I have to stop and stir the beans or
-apple sauce, or look at a batch of bread. The beans are boiling with
-rather a melodious gurgle, while the sizzling rice and the patter of
-sleet on the canvas overhead furnish a rather pleasing accompaniment.
-But it makes a person feel kind of lonesome-like. There! the old
-stove is smoking again! Whenever the wind shifts around the hill the
-draft is damaged, and the stinging, irritating green willow smoke
-fills the tent. My eyes smart and are very painful from this cause.
-I long for the voyage home across the water for the sake of my eyes.
-And now the snow is coming and it will but increase the mischief. I
-should hate to lose my good eyesight.
-
-A few cases of typhoid fever are reported, but none on this creek. We
-are all in good health. No one would doubt this last at meal time.
-The boys eat an immense amount of our monotonous grub and say their
-"grace" as thankfully as if it were a banquet. Little Brownie, the
-boy who was going to work eighteen hours a day if only he could "find
-the nuggets." comes dragging himself home at night completely tired
-out, sore feet and blistered hands. The work is pretty hard on the
-older men. Shaul, Wilson and Uncle Jimmy. But we have no hardships
-from other causes than voluntary hard work. Our foreman. Harry
-Reynolds, knows his business well, and we all like him.
-
-Anvil City. Sept. 20.--We were frozen out on Buster Creek, and here
-we are in town again. Winter is upon us, the landscape is white and
-the glare is very painful. The ground is frozen hard, which makes
-walking much easier than through a foot of mud and ooze. We are
-living in our cabin on our city lot just back of the A. C. Company's
-big warehouse. We made the entire trip from No. 4 on Buster Creek in
-one day, and were just in time, for next morning a snowstorm began,
-lasting until yesterday. We made the trip down Nome River in five
-hours in our boats, and then around to Anvil City outside the surf,
-which luckily was not heavy. And how, cold it was! I was one of
-three to bring a boat around, and by the time we got here I was so
-stiff I could scarcely bend my limbs. Rubber boots and damp clothing
-inside. It would have been much worse had we waited a day longer.
-However, we are all well in spite of hardship, and are patiently (?)
-waiting for the "Penelope." We heard a rumor that a white schooner
-was wrecked a short time ago on the rocks near Port Clarence. It was
-thought to be the "Penelope." Alas, my dear collection! But if it
-were the "Penelope" we would have been informed by this time. Then we
-have heard that the "Penelope" has been chartered to go back up to
-Kotzebue again for freight, and to go over to Siberia to trade for
-dog-feed. But a person must make a rule to believe nothing he hears
-in this country or he would be worrying all the time.
-
-This, for a boom town, beats anything we ever saw in the States.
-Thousands of people are now pouring in from Dawson to stay through
-the winter, and they say that this is a bigger place than ever Dawson
-was. Steamer loads of people and freight are coming in every day.
-The town is full of money. The town is incorporated, with mayor,
-councilmen and police force. Franchises have been let for electric
-lighting, sewerage, water works, and all modern improvements.
-Hundreds of houses are building, many large ones. Lumber is $150 per
-thousand.
-
-I have a job for to-morrow in the mayor's office aligning a
-calligraph. Wages are $1 per hour. I could have all I could do for
-the winter, type-writing and doing mechanical drawing in the Nome
-City Attorney's office. But I wouldn't stay here for $300 per month.
-No, nor for anything. I hate the place. There's the toughest crowd of
-people, sporting Dawsonites, everyone ready to "do" everybody else.
-It is the liveliest, speediest, swiftest mining camp ever seen in
-Alaska. And what will it be next year? All sorts of sharks are making
-fortunes.
-
-Sept. 27, 1899.--Heigh-o! The "Penelope" has just dropped anchor
-off Anvil City and we are in high glee. Higher glee than we ever
-experienced on the Kowak, for we are going home! Our hunt for gold is
-over. We shall take some passengers aboard for San Pedro. I shall go
-on ship at once and see how it fares with my precious birds. They are
-my gold. We shall start at high noon October 2d, and expect to make
-the trip in a month or six weeks. Depends upon the wind. Now for our
-good ship's yell:
-
- "Penelope! Penelope! zip I boom! bah!
- Going home from Kotzebue! rah! rah! rah!"
-
-
-THE END.
-
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-Transcriber Note
-
-Minor typos were corrected. In order to prevent splitting paragraphs,
-illustrations were repositioned.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Gold Hunting in Alaska, by Joseph Grinnell</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
-at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Gold Hunting in Alaska</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Joseph Grinnell</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Editor: Elizabeth Grinnell</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: April 20, 2021 [eBook #65123]<br />
-[Last updated: July 3, 2022]</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: Englilsh</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: Tom Cosmas produced from files made available on The Internet Archive</div>
-
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK GOLD HUNTING IN ALASKA ***</div>
-
-
-
-<div class="fig_center" id="cover" style="width: 337px;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/cover.png" width="337" height="446" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">[ 1 ]</span></p>
-
-
-<h1><span class="smcap">Gold Hunting in Alaska</span></h1>
-
-<p class="tdc"><i>AS TOLD BY</i></p>
-
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 215px;">
-<img src="images/portrait.png" width="215" height="303" alt="portrait" />
-</div>
-
-<h2><span class="smcap">Joseph Grinnell</span></h2>
-
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 37px;">
-<img src="images/logo_leaf.png" width="37" height="37" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-
-
-<p class="caption3nb smcap">Edited by Elizabeth Grinnell</p>
-
-<p class="tdc">
-Author of "How John and I Brought Up the Child," "John and I and the<br />
-Church," "Our Feathered Friends," "For the Sake of a Name," etc.<br />
-</p>
-
-
-<p class="tdc antiqua">Dedicated to Disappointed gold=hunters the world over</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="tdc smcap">David C. Cook Publishing Company</p>
-
-<p class="tdc">ELGIN, ILL., AND</p>
-
-<p class="pmb4 tdc">36 WASHINGTON STREET, CHICAGO</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">[ 2 ]</span></p>
-
-
-<div class="bbox" style="width: 20em; margin: 1.5em auto;">
-
-<p class="caption3nb">ALASKA.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">The New World brings her daughter out</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">With fuss and bluster now;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Adorers seek her snow-white hand,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And at her beauty bow.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Each strives her favor first to gain,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And rudely steps upon her train.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">They court her while they call her "cold"</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And "distant" to her face;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The heiress smiles, while quick breaths lift</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Her frills of ancient lace&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The eyes of all her suitors rest</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">On glint of gold upon her breast.&mdash;E. G.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="tdc smcap">Copyright, 1901,<br />
-By David C. Cook Publishing Company.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">[ 3 ]</span></p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h1 class="nobreak smcap">Gold Hunting in Alaska.</h1>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">PREFACE.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The following story was originally written
-in pencil on any sort of paper at hand, and
-intended merely for "the folks at home."
-It is only by a prior claim to the manuscript
-that the young gold-hunter's mother has obtained
-his consent to publish it. The diary
-has been changed but little, nor has much
-been added to make it as it stands. The narrative
-is true from beginning to end, including
-the proper names of persons and vessels
-and mining companies. It is offered to the
-David C. Cook Publishing Company with no
-further apologies for its sometimes boyish
-style of construction. It will give the reader,
-be he man or boy, a hint as to how a young
-fellow may spend his time in the long Arctic
-winter, or in the whole year, even though he
-be a disappointed gold-hunter. It may afford
-suggestion to mining companies continually
-going to Alaska as to their responsibility
-to each other and to the natives of the
-"frozen North." It may give "the folks
-at home" some intimation as to possible
-"good times" under trying circumstances.
-Blue fingers may not necessarily denote a
-blue heart.</p>
-
-<p class="tdr">ELIZABETH GRINNELL.</p>
-
-<p>Pasadena, Cal., Jan. 15, 1901.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="dropcap">W</div>
-
-<p class="p0"><span class="hidden">W</span>E ARE a company of twenty men
-bound for Kotzebue Sound, Alaska.
-It is needless to say we are gold-hunters.
-In this year of our Lord 1898, men are
-flying northward like geese in the springtime.
-That not more than one of us has
-ever set eyes on a real, live nugget passes
-for nothing; we shall naturally recognize
-"the yellow" when we see it. It is our intention
-to ransack Mother Nature's store-houses,
-provided we can unlock or pry open
-the doors without losing our lingers by
-freezing.</p>
-
-<p>Why we have selected Kotzebue Sound as
-the field of our maneuvers it would be difficult
-to give a rational reason. It may be
-nothing more nor less than the universal rush
-to the gold fields of Alaska, which rush, being
-infectious, attacks all grades and conditions
-of men. That all grades and conditions
-are represented in our company will
-be demonstrated later on, I believe.</p>
-
-<p>The instigator of the Long Beach and
-Alaska Mining and Trading Company is an
-undertaker by trade, a sometime preacher
-by profession and practice when not otherwise
-engaged. His character is not at all
-in keeping with his trade; he is a rollicking
-fellow and given to much mirth.</p>
-
-<p>We have also a doctor, as protection
-against contingencies. His name is Coffin.
-He and the undertaker have been bosom
-friends for years. The combined influences
-of these are sufficient to insure proper termination
-to our trip, if not a propitious journey.
-The eldest of our company is rising
-fifty, the youngest twenty-one. The oldest
-has lived long enough to be convinced that
-gold is the key that unlocks all earthly
-treasures; his sole object is the key hidden
-somewhere in the pockets of the great
-Arctic. The youngest cares little for the
-gold, being more concerned about certain
-rare birds which may cross his devious path.
-The most of us have never met before, but
-are now an incorporated mining company,
-like hundreds of ship's crews this year.
-Each intends to do his share of work and to
-claim his portion of the profits, if profits
-come.</p>
-
-<p>We have a two years' outfit of every comfort
-possible to store away on a little
-schooner seventy-two by eighteen feet. Her
-name is "Penelope;" you can read it in
-plain type half a mile away. She was built
-for Japan waters and has never set keel in
-Arctic seas. There are numerous prophecies
-concerning her: "She will never reach her
-destination;" "Impossible that she is built
-for a stormy coast;" "You may as well
-make your wills before you embark." And
-many other cheering benedictions are tossed
-to the deck by friends on shore who watch
-us loading the freight into her hold.</p>
-
-<p>We make no retort. Of what would be the
-use? Our hearts, our hopes, ourselves, are
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">[ 4 ]</span>
-on board of her for better or for worse. We
-wave our handkerchiefs in a last "good-by."
-They are the only white handkerchiefs in
-our possession, brought and shaken out to
-the winds for this very purpose. From
-henceforth the bandana reigns on occasions
-when any is required. Old Glory floats
-above us; the "Penelope" is bright with
-new paint and trimmings and masts; she is
-towed out of San Pedro Harbor, and heads
-for San Francisco for more supplies.</p>
-
-<p>Out of San Pedro Harbor! The very same
-of which R. H. Dana wrote in 1840 as a
-"most desolate looking place," frequented
-by coyotes and Indians, but "altogether the
-best harbor on all the coast."</p>
-
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 425px;">
-<img src="images/page4.png" width="425" height="255" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">"Penelope" at Anchor in San Pedro Harbor</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>We have a copy of his "Two Years Before
-the Mast" on board, and shall be complimented
-by what he says about the Englishmen
-and Americans whom he met. "If the
-California fever (laziness) spares the first
-generation, it always attacks the second."
-Did Dana mean the crew of the "Penelope"?
-We shall see.</p>
-
-<p>Having made a dutiful promise to my
-mother to "keep a faithful diary" of our
-cruise, which, in event of disaster, shall be
-duly corked in a large bottle and sent adrift,
-I now enter my first date since April 8,
-1898, the day on which we set sail from
-San Pedro. California.</p>
-
-<p>North Pacific Ocean, June 5.&mdash;We are seventeen
-days out from San Francisco, and
-have made a little over twelve hundred
-miles: that is, in a direct line on our course
-to Unamak Pass through the Aleutian
-Islands, for we have had many unfavorable
-winds against which we were compelled to
-tack. We have sailed two thousand miles,
-counting full distance. We have experienced
-two storms which, put together, as the captain
-says, makes "a good half a gale."
-While the "Penelope" rides the highest billows
-like a duck, at times she pitches and
-rolls in a terrific fashion. Her movements
-are short and jerky, unlike those of a
-steamer or larger vessel. When the wind
-blows hard on her quarter, the rail is often
-under water. This
-makes locomotion difficult, especially if the
-waves are rolling high,
-and everything is
-bouncing about on
-deck. It is my duty to
-carry "grub" from the
-galley to the cabins,
-and I can never handle
-more than one thing at
-a time, as I am obliged
-to keep one hand free.
-I wait for my opportunity, else a heavy sea
-starts at the same time
-and we go down together, "grub" and all.
-However, I have had
-few accidents. Once I
-landed a big platter of
-mush upside down on
-the deck, and at another time a gust of wind took all the biscuits
-overboard, while a big sea filled the
-milk pitcher with salt water. This was not
-so bad as Dana's experience with the
-"scouse," which "precious stuff" came
-down all over him at the bottom of the
-hatchway. "Whatever your feelings may
-be, you must make a joke of everything at
-sea," he wrote just after he had found
-himself lying at full length on the slippery
-deck with his tea-pot empty and sliding to
-the far side. We are better off than the
-crew of the "Pilgrim" in 1840, for there is
-plenty more, if half the breakfast goes to
-feed the fishes.</p>
-
-<p>Down in the cabin there is the most fun.
-The table is bordered by a deep rail, and
-several slats are fastened crosswise over the
-surface to hold the dishes, besides holes and
-racks for cups; yet when things are inclined
-at an angle of thirty-five degrees it is almost
-impossible, without somebody's hand on
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[ 5 ]</span>
-each separate dish, to keep the meal in sight.
-We have some trouble in cooking at times,
-but the stove has an iron frame with cross
-pieces on top to keep the kettles from sliding,
-which, in rough weather, can never be
-filled more than half. We usually get up
-very good meals; that is, for such of the
-crew as have an appetite. For breakfast,
-rolled oats mush, baking-powder biscuit,
-boiled eggs or potatoes, and ham. For dinner,
-light bread or milk toast, beans or
-canned corn, salt-horse, creamed potatoes,
-and often soup with crackers. For supper,
-canned fruit, muffins or corn bread, boiled
-ham and baked potatoes. Of course tea or
-coffee with each meal. The cook makes fine
-yeast bread, ten loaves a day. There are
-twenty-three men on board. Including the
-hired sailors who are not of the company,
-and even with five in the hospital we make
-way with a good deal of food.</p>
-
-<p>Our fare differs somewhat from that of
-the crew of the "Pilgrim." whose regular
-diet, Dana wrote, was "salt beef and biscuit,"
-with "an occasional potato." But it
-must be remembered that we had several
-articles, such as eggs and ham and fresh potatoes,
-the first days of our cruise, which we
-never saw later on when we were confined
-to bacon and beans for staple supplies, with
-dessicated vegetables and some canned
-goods for extras.</p>
-
-<p>We left San Francisco May 10, after taking
-on board the parts of a river boat, to be
-put together when needed, and much more
-Arctic clothing than we can possibly use in
-two or even four years. The Sea was very
-rough. Our captain had not been on board
-ship for two years, and the result was that
-he, with every one of the party except the
-sailors, was very sea-sick. The doctor was
-pretty well in a couple of days, but the undertaker
-fared not so well, he stayed on
-deck and sang and jumped about and did his
-best to keep jolly as long as nature could
-hold out. Presently one could tell that he
-was feeling rather uneasy about something,
-when all of a sudden quietness reigned and
-only an ominous sound from over the rail
-gave indication of what was passing.</p>
-
-<p>We have some fine singing. "The Penelope
-Quartette" has been formed and practices
-every evening, making voluminous
-noise, but there is no fear of disturbing
-adjoining meetings or concerts. The quartette
-is composed of Reynolds (the undertaker). Foote, Wilson and Miller. There are
-other singers of less renown. We have a
-"yell." which is frequently to be heard, especially
-at getting-up time in the morning.
-It is "Penelope, Penelope, zip, boom, bah!
-Going up to Kotzebue! rah! rah! rah!"</p>
-
-<p>We are very much crowded and have
-many discomforts, as anyone can imagine
-we should have in so close quarters; but we
-are a congenial crowd. I was sea-sick for a
-week, but am all right now and capable of
-eating more than anyone else, a symptom
-which the doctor fears may continue, as I
-make it a rule to eat up all there is left at
-both tables. There are eleven men in the
-after cabin and twelve in the forward cabin,
-including the forecastle, and each set have
-meals served in their respective cabins.
-Having been chosen as "cook's assistant," I
-have ample opportunities.</p>
-
-<p>We have seen but few things of interest
-outside the boat, and that makes us more
-interesting to one another. We have sighted
-no vessels for two weeks. I saw two fur
-seals. They stuck their heads above the
-water just behind us, eying us curiously for
-a few minutes, and then vanished. We have
-seen one shark, but no whales. Petrels, or
-Mother Cary's Chickens, are almost always
-to be seen flitting over the waves. Black-footed
-albatrosses, or "goonies." as the sailors
-call them, are common, following the
-boat and eating all kinds of scraps thrown
-to them. We caught two with a fish-hook,
-but let them go, as there is now no suitable
-place to put the skins. One of the albatrosses
-measured seven feet three inches
-from tip to tip of the outstretched wings.
-We fastened upon his back a piece of canvas,
-giving the "Penelope," with the date
-and longitude and latitude. I wonder if he
-will ever be seen again, and, if seen, if this
-will be the only news of us the world will
-ever receive!</p>
-
-<p>There are several "goonies" which seem
-to follow us constantly. We have named
-them Jim. Tom and Hannah. They know
-when meal time arrives, and then come close
-alongside within a few feet.</p>
-
-<p>Tuesday, June 7.&mdash;The past two days have
-been stormy, but we have made good time
-and are only four hundred and sixty-seven
-miles from Unamak Pass. We saw several
-pieces of kelp this morning, which gives evidence
-of land not far off. This morning the
-sun came out several times, and every one
-is feeling quite jolly, which makes even the
-sea-sick ones better. One of the most popular
-songs on deck these cloudy days has
-been the familiar one. "Let a little sunshine
-in." Everyone was singing it to-day, when
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[ 6 ]</span>
-suddenly the
-clouds broke as if
-by impulse and the
-warm sunshine
-flooded the damp
-decks.</p>
-
-<p>The sun doesn't
-set now till nearly
-nine o'clock, and
-the whole night
-long it is scarcely
-dark at all.
-To-day Clyde took the pictures of the
-party in groups, or "unions." There is the
-"Sailors' Union" (six of the boys besides
-the regular
-sailors, who go
-to the watch
-along with
-them and take
-their tricks at
-the wheel),
-the "Dishwashers'
-Union," the
-"Doctors'
-Union" (Dr.
-Coffin, and
-Jett, who is a druggist), the "Cooks' Union"
-(Shafer and myself), and the "Crips' Union"
-(the cripples, or those who are sea-sick, and
-do no work; they are Fancher, Wyse. McCullough.
-Wilson, Reynolds and Shaul). If
-the winds are favorable we expect to rest in
-Dutch Harbor for a few days, as we are no
-doubt too early to get into Kotzebue. From
-all accounts we cannot hope to reach the
-Sound until July 14.</p>
-
-<p>This sort of experience is, so new to me.
-I thought I knew something of life on a
-schooner, during the trip to San Clemente
-and San Nicholas last year, but this is more
-and better. Nearly everyone save myself is
-longing for land, and they watch our course
-each day as it is traced on the chart with
-more interest than anything else. Just now
-I am sitting alone on a bench in the little
-galley, watching the potatoes and salt-horse
-boiling. The sun has come out and everyone
-is on deck, the "crips" lying against
-the stern rail or along the side of the cabin.
-By orders of the doctor all the bedding is
-airing on the deck and rails amidships, and
-some of the boys are taking advantage of
-the fair weather to do their washing. I did
-my own yesterday, although it was raining,
-and, as I have a "pull" with the cook, I
-dried the clothes in the galley at night. Of
-course all washing has to be done in salt
-water and it is scarcely satisfactory, to say
-the least. This necessary laundry work of
-ours is destined to occupy a good deal of
-our time and patience, and I suspect that
-before our cruise is over we shall long for a
-glimpse of a good, faithful washerwoman
-with her suds, and her arms akimbo, and her
-open smile.</p>
-
-<table summary="Unions">
-<tr>
- <td>
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 152px;">
-<img src="images/page6a.png" width="152" height="138" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Cooks' Union.</div>
-</div>
- </td>
- <td>
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 187px;">
-<img src="images/page6b.png" width="187" height="140" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Sailors' Union.</div>
-</div>
- </td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 128px;">
-<img src="images/page6c.png" width="128" height="149" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Dishwashers' Union.</div>
-</div>
- </td>
- <td>
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 187px;">
-<img src="images/page6d.png" width="187" height="163" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Crips' Union.</div>
-</div>
- </td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>June 12.&mdash;We are in Bering Sea and all's
-well. It is partly clear, but cold, with a
-sharp wind. We went through Unamak
-Pass in the night. The captain thought it
-dangerous as well as delaying, to stop at
-Dutch Harbor, so we gave it up with disappointment.
-After beating for several hours,
-we are now well on our way straight northward
-to St. Lawrence Island. There is no
-ice in sight, but we can smell it distinctly.
-As we went through the Pass it was raining.
-and we could see but indistinctly the precipitous
-shores. The Pass is not usually
-taken by sailing vessels, as it is quite narrow,
-but our captain brought us through all
-right in spite of fog and storm. He has not
-slept for forty-eight hours. The shortest
-time ever made by a sailing vessel from San
-Francisco to Unamak Pass, 2,100 miles, was
-eighteen days; and we made it with the
-"Penelope" in twenty-three days. Hurrah
-for the "Penelope"!</p>
-
-<p>This morning we
-passed within hailing
-distance of the ship
-"Sintram," of San
-Francisco. She had
-taken a cargo to St.
-Michaels and was on
-her way back. Her
-captain promised to report
-us, and he also
-told us that the ice
-was yet packed north
-of St. Michaels and that several ships were
-waiting. Clyde took a snap shot of the
-"Sintram."</p>
-
-<p>There are
-plenty of
-birds to be
-seen now. If
-I had faith
-enough to
-warrant my
-walking on
-the water I
-would go
-shooting. Our
-small boats
-are all lashed
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[ 7 ]</span>
-to the dock of the "Penelope," but the captain
-says that in a few days we can put a
-skiff overboard if it is calm, and then ho!
-for murre pot-pie! Everyone is hungry for
-fresh meat. We try fishing with no luck.
-Saw a fur seal to-day, the first in two weeks.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_left" style="width: 288px;">
-<img src="images/page7a.png" width="288" height="263" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">A Sunbath on Deck.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>June 19. Bering Sea, latitude 63 degrees,
-longitude 172 degrees, 38 minutes.&mdash;For the
-past few days we made good time, one hundred
-miles to the day, but on this date we
-are becalmed. Clyde has gone out in the
-boat to catch a snap shot of us. He need
-not hurry, for never was mouse more still
-than the "Penelope" at this moment. The
-thermometer registers 38 degrees on deck.
-We have sighted no ice yet, and hope the
-Bering Straits are open.</p>
-
-<p>I am sitting in the galley, as my fingers get
-too cold to write outside. We have just
-cleared off supper, and the boys are pacing
-the deck for exercise. Some of them are below,
-where an oil stove in each cabin takes
-the chill and dampness from the air. It is
-seldom that the galley is not crammed full,
-but just now the cook and the others have
-gone below for a game of whist, so I embrace
-the opportunity to write. My diary is
-always written after I have finished my
-daily bird notes, which I make as copious as
-possible. I have some good records already.
-We were becalmed three days in sight of the
-Prybiloff Islands, and at the time were so
-close to St. Paul Island that we could hear
-the barking of thousands of seals, and, by
-the aid of a field glass, could see them on
-the beaches. A few were seen about the
-"Penelope," and one came so near to the
-boat that it was touched with an oar. We
-unlashed the smallest boat and rowed out
-with her during the calmest days, so we had
-some much-needed exercise. Frequent fogs
-kept us near the "Penelope's" side, as we
-should easily become lost. We saw no ducks
-or geese, but we had murres in plenty and
-pot-pie for several days. For a change they
-were served up in roasts, being first boiled,
-and were finer than any duck I have tasted,
-though some of the squeamish crew composing
-the "Crips' Union" declared they were
-"fishy."</p>
-
-<p>Of course I improve every opportunity during
-pleasant days to collect, and the result is
-thirteen first-class bird skins. These sea
-birds are almost all fat and the grease clings
-to and grows into the skin so firmly that it
-is almost impossible to put them up. Among
-the good things which I have secured are
-the crested auklet, red phalarope, pallas,
-murre and horned puffin, but it will be difficult
-to preserve the skins in this damp climate.
-Dr. Coffin is becoming interested already,
-and talks of putting in his spare
-time collecting with me. He has been taking
-lessons in skinning, and so far has put
-up two specimens. We have rigged up a
-cracker-box for our bird-skins and try to
-keep it in the dryest place, though it is so
-crowded on shipboard that a convenient
-place for any particular thing is scarce.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_right" style="width: 288px;">
-<img src="images/page7b.png" width="288" height="241" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Speaking the "Sintram."</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The currents in Bering Sea are quite
-strong, tending northward toward the
-straits, so that even when the wind fails
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[ 8 ]</span>
-us we are drifting towards our destination
-at the rate of fifteen to twenty miles a day.
-On board we are all happy and in good
-spirits, notwithstanding the fact that some
-have never before known a hardship, and
-their eight hours watch per day on deck,
-especially when it is stormy, is calculated
-to make them think longingly of their pleasant
-homes. Besides, many of the boys have
-salt water sores on their hands and chilblains
-on their feet.</p>
-
-<p>Yesterday the sea was choppy and several
-were sea-sick again. Even I felt that
-peculiar indescribable sensation, but I ate a
-hearty dinner of beans and salt pork and
-felt better. C. C. is suffering from what he
-declares is "indigestion" a
-weakness to which he has always
-been subject. He feels
-a reluctance to owning that he
-has the common ailment.
-"C. C." is our abbreviation for
-Reynolds, the undertaker and
-sometime preacher. He makes
-so much fun for other people
-that we cannot help amusing
-ourselves at his expense sometimes.</p>
-
-<p>We passed St. Matthew
-Island and caught a glimpse of
-its rugged shores through the
-thick fog. We can generally
-tell the proximity of land by
-the increased number of sea-birds. It is not
-often that the sun appears now, but occasionally
-it shows itself long enough for the
-captain to take his observations. It is light
-all night and seems like a dream of childhood
-to have to go to bed before the lamps
-are lighted.</p>
-
-<p>I must pay a compliment to our captain.
-Besides knowing his business thoroughly, he
-Is a jolly, agreeable man, always cutting
-jokes except during a storm. He has been
-created the "Penelope's" laureate, and has
-written a couple of poems that would make
-good his rank anywhere.</p>
-
-<p>There was one day when we all had an
-attack of the poetic fever and wrote
-verses. They will be found in the ship's log.</p>
-
-<p>To-day is Sunday, and as usual we all attended
-services, which consist of songs and
-a short talk from C. C. The rest of the day
-is like any other.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_right" style="width: 171px;">
-<img src="images/page8.png" width="171" height="173" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Becalmed in Bering Sea.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Last night an exhausted sandpiper flew on
-board and was caught. I was asleep and
-the boys came and laid it on my breast. He
-Is now safely wrapped in cotton wadding
-and laid to rest in the aforementioned
-cracker-box. The boys declared they would
-whip me for not letting him go, and yet
-when they get a chance they shoot at birds
-from the boat for "sport," with no other
-purpose in view. I am doing my best to
-educate them in bird lore, but whenever I
-get off the long Latin names they give me
-the "ha-ha." By this time and after many
-lessons the most of them know a murre by
-sight, and a fork-tailed petrel, and a kittiwake;
-but when it comes to distinguishing
-the different species of anklets at a distance
-they think I am fooling them, and laugh at
-me until I show them the bird at close
-range. I never realized before the vastness
-of the sea as when a solitary little bird dips
-his wings and flies skyward.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="dropcap">J</div>
-
-<p class="p0"><span class="hidden">J</span>UNE 1.&mdash;Yesterday the fog
-cleared and disclosed to
-us the snowy peaks of the
-Siberian coast far to the northwest, and in front to the north
-of us the long coast line of St.
-Lawrence Island. We headed
-for the west end of the island,
-intending to pass up the channel
-between it and the Siberian
-coast. Saw two vessels
-in the distance returning from
-that direction. After we had beat against
-a bad wind all day we found ourselves
-almost surrounded by icebergs. With the
-field glass we could see the whole horizon
-a solid mass of ice. Our way was
-blocked. Turning eastward, we tried the
-passage between St. Lawrence Island and
-the Alaskan coast. The wind was blowing
-bitterly cold from the Siberian shore. Beating
-eastward along the south side of the
-island, we have now left the ice behind.
-This afternoon a two-masted schooner spoke
-us on her way to try the passage we had
-just abandoned. She turned and sailed with
-us. She carried a pretty tough-looking
-crowd of miners. They, like ourselves, are
-bound for Kotzebue. We gave them the
-"Penelope" yell, which they returned with
-three cheers. In sizing up their piratical appearance
-we forgot to look in the glass.</p>
-
-<p>June 25.&mdash;Seventy-five miles southeast of
-Bering Strait. The Alaskan mainland north
-of Norton Sound in plain view. Have spent
-five days trying to get around St. Lawrence.
-Are still in sight of the east end. It is calm.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[ 9 ]</span>
-We need more wind. Entered Boring Sea
-two weeks ago, and the days have been like
-a yachting cruise. Everyone is in good
-spirits. Several of the boys are witty and
-jokes fly. And the singing!&mdash;we exhaust the
-words we know and then make up as we go
-along, like plantation negroes. Are playing
-several tournaments in games. Only one so
-far has been concluded&mdash;the domino game.
-Dr. Coffin and Jett were the unlucky ones,
-and last night they entertained the crowd.
-Captain was master of ceremonies and
-dressed in a most ludicrous manner. He
-made a mock speech and read a poem. The
-two unlucky victims were treated to burnt
-cork and wore great Eskimo muckluks
-(sealskin boots), murre-skin hats,
-and red calico decorations. Doctor
-beat the big tin washpan and
-Jett blew the foghorn. The captain's
-wand was a boat-hook with
-a shining red onion on the tip and
-bearing a red pasteboard banner
-with the motto. "On to Kotzebue."
-They were to march fifty
-times around the deck. Casey,
-our Irishman, was appointed policeman
-by the captain "to keep
-the small boys and the carriages
-off the street." And so, to the
-tune of the foghorn and the dish-pan,
-they tramped their penalty.
-Then the captain gave an exhibition of clog
-dancing, with a fife and harmonica accompaniment.
-So one can see there is always
-something going on to break the monotony
-and keep the blues away. We suffer little
-from dull times. Whales are now as common
-as seals. One we saw looked as large
-as the "Penelope." Clyde took its picture.
-I got out our Winchester to-day. Am on the
-lookout for polar bears, which are expected
-to frequent the ice packs. The cook has just
-yelled "Supper!" and everyone is singing
-"Beulah Land."</p>
-
-<div class="fig_left" style="width: 280px;">
-<img src="images/page9a.png" width="280" height="241" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Sighting a Vessel.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Arctic Ocean, July 7.&mdash;The next morning
-after my last date we sailed to within a
-mile of King's Island. This is a precipitous
-point of rock scarcely a mile in diameter,
-and yet more than two hundred Indians live
-upon it. Before we were within three miles
-of the island the natives began to come
-alongside of the "Penelope" in their skin
-canoes, or kyaks, wanting to trade. These
-were the first natives we had seen, and our
-interest in them was unbounded. Fully fifteen
-canoes, some singly, but mostly lashed
-together in pairs, reached us, and their occupants
-came on board with their sealskin
-bags full of articles to trade. They had a
-large quantity of walrus tusks, some of
-large size, weighing probably ten pounds,
-and very valuable. There were polar bear
-skins and fox skins beautifully tanned, also
-sealskin coats and muckluks (skin boots).</p>
-
-<p>They wanted in exchange clothes, flour,
-tobacco, knives, etc, and, if we had prepared
-ourselves, we could have obtained
-many valuable things. Most of us saved
-what things we had to trade with later on.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 369px;">
-<img src="images/page9b.png" width="369" height="164" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Natives of King's Island Coming to Trade.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Beyond King's Island our way was again
-blocked with ice. We then turned east
-towards Port Clarence, but in a couple of
-hours encountered the ice pack extending
-out full twenty miles from the Alaskan
-shore. We thought our way was blocked,
-but the captain thought we could keep along
-the shore ice, and did so, the passage opening
-as we advanced. After skirting the ice
-all day we entered the straits at midnight
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[ 10 ]</span>
-June 26, and found ourselves between the
-Diomede Islands and Cape Prince of Wales.
-Everyone was on deck enjoying the scene
-until 2 a. m. The sun loitered along the
-horizon four hours and at midnight barely
-disappeared. The clouds and water were
-gorgeously tinted in the manner so often described
-by Arctic travelers. No words can
-do the scene justice. To the right rose the
-mountains of Alaska, extending far back
-from Cape Prince of Wales, the shores
-broken by their blue-tinted ice pack. Dark
-blue shadows stood the mountains out in
-beautiful distinctness. On our left were the
-precipitous Diomede Islands and Fairway
-Rock, with the snowy mountains of the Siberian
-shore rising further in the distance.</p>
-
-<p>Ahead, our progress would soon be stopped
-by the long line of ice extending under the
-Arctic horizon,
-where the sun
-was vainly endeavoring
-to set.
-Just at midnight
-a spot of blazing
-light appeared at
-Cape Prince of
-Wales, fully eight
-miles away. It
-was the reflection
-of the fiery red
-sun on the window of the mission which has
-been established at that point. These shores
-are not inviting, and yet we know that here
-on this bleak coast are living, the whole year
-through. American missionaries, whose purpose
-is as eternal as the icebergs.</p>
-
-<p>Everyone was happy and exerting himself
-to express what he felt. Some yelled wildly,
-and, taking off their shoes and stockings,
-threw them into the ocean. Others sang
-with might and main. "Beulah Land" and
-"Nearer, My God, to Thee" were followed
-by "Yankee Doodle" and "My Country,
-'tis of Thee." with every body dancing and
-running about like a lot of Indians. "Penelope,
-Penelope, zip, boom, bah! Going up to
-Kotzebue, rah! rah! rah!" was yelled till all
-were hoarse. Finally, about 3 p. m., we began
-to quiet down for a little sleep.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 333px;">
-<img src="images/page10.png" width="333" height="103" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Nearing the Great Ice Pack.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>In the night a small schooner like our own,
-the "Acret," caught up with us, having
-found the passage we had followed. We
-passed through scattering ice and sailed
-about fifteen miles beyond the straits, but
-here were confronted by the solid ice pack
-of the Arctic which extended on all sides.
-After sailing about in circles in this limited
-area of water all day, the "Acret" was seen
-to be heading through a break in the shore
-side of the ice, and we followed. Both boats
-dropped anchor about a mile from the
-Alaskan shore in shallow water, where the
-ice had left a clean anchorage. The
-"Acret" and "Penelope" were so far the
-first boats to pass through the straits.</p>
-
-<p>We were all eager to land. As soon as the
-dinky was overboard, five of the boys, with
-little thought for anyone else, as was quite
-natural under the circumstances, jumped
-in and moved for shore. And what was exasperating
-beyond description to us who
-were obliged to wait our turn, they did not
-bring the boat back for two hours. We have
-forgiven them, but they'll have to pay for it.</p>
-
-<p>At 6 p. m., Dr. Coffin and I, and others,
-landed and started on our first tramp. Our
-feet were for the first time on Alaskan soil.
-But we saw none
-of the soil. Moss
-everywhere, and
-flowers and wild
-strawberries. It
-was a queer sensation
-to set one's
-feet down on
-what looked like
-substantial
-ground and sink
-a few inches to
-solid ice, crushing the flowers beneath.</p>
-
-<p>I was all eyes and ears for what new birds
-might cross my path. Almost the first thing
-a flock of Emperor geese flew past me and
-were out of range. These are the rarest
-geese in North America and found only in
-Alaska. I saw but one land bird, a species
-of sparrow, but there were large numbers
-of water birds. I obtained some rare eggs,
-such as phalarope, western sandpiper, etc.
-A snowy owl was flushed, the first I ever
-saw alive, and it was at once mobbed by a
-dozen Arctic terns which had their nests
-near by. The land here is low and rolling,
-with little knolls and lakes. The ground in
-places Mas thawed about a foot&mdash;that is, taking
-the depth from the top of the spongy
-moss. On the dryer knolls several kinds of
-flowers were blooming and the grass was
-luxuriant in places. I searched for insects,
-but found only two bumblebees, which I
-could not catch, having no net with me.</p>
-
-<p>We stayed on shore until midnight, tramping
-over the tundra and collecting birds and
-eggs. At 1 a. m. rowed back to the schooner.
-A canoe load of Indians had come alongside,
-and they had one Emperor goose. I coveted
-it. Tried to trade for it, offering several
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[ 11 ]</span>
-articles, but failed to offer the right thing.
-Afterwards one of the "Acret" men obtained
-it for an old tin tomato can. The
-"Acret" fellows had also been on shore and
-succeeded in shooting another goose, so they
-now had a pair of them, which they allowed
-me to have for the skinning, provided I returned
-the bodies in time for breakfast. I
-was happy. I immediately went to work,
-having the usual experience in skinning sea
-birds with the enormous amount of fat
-which must be peeled, rubbed, scraped and
-picked off. It took me until three o'clock in
-the morning, and I was then glad to crawl
-into my bunk for a little sleep. By night
-the next day the water seemed almost clear
-of ice, so we heaved anchor and started
-northeast along the shore towards Kotzebue.
-Soon came to the ice again, scattered
-and in blocks.
-Keeping right on
-between the
-blocks, we came
-to a big, fatherly
-iceberg which
-had run aground.
-The water here
-was very shallow,
-and we had to
-be careful not
-to run aground
-ourselves. The
-"Penelope"
-draws eleven feet
-of water, and a
-mile from shore
-it is often
-scarcely three fathoms, and of course shallower
-towards shore.</p>
-
-<p>It was very exciting sometimes when the
-ice blocks became too Thick. And they
-choked and moaned and snored and heaved
-against each other in a fit of passion, and
-challenged one another to "come on." and
-ground their teeth in rage, and swished
-calmly, and chuck-a-lucked through the
-water. It was a grand sight to remember.</p>
-
-<p>At times several of the boys had to take
-poles&mdash;driftwood which we had taken possession
-of for just such an emergency&mdash;and,
-standing at the bow, push off the ice. Even
-then several of the larger blocks got the better
-of us and would stop our progress by a
-sturdy crunch against the "Penelope,"
-scraping along her side and taunting her
-with piratical intention. But she was firm
-and answered not a word, giving only a few
-scales of her weather-beaten paint as a sort
-of peace-offering.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 333px;">
-<img src="images/page11.png" width="333" height="194" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Anchored to a Grounded Iceberg.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The "Acret" was all the while accompanying
-us, most of the time ahead, for she
-drew only eight feet, so she could sail nearer
-shore than we could, where the water was
-clearer of ice. We anchored two nights and
-a day, again sheltered behind a grounded
-iceberg.</p>
-
-<p>The "Acret" and "Penelope" were tied
-up side by side, and we exchanged calling
-courtesies. This crew was intending to
-prospect in couples, each two men having a
-boat. Each person was independent of any
-other man, unless they should choose to
-form partnership among themselves. That
-is, they were not formed into a regular company
-as we were. We are no doubt better
-off individually as we are, though this remains to be proved.</p>
-
-<p>After spending several days slowly making
-our way
-along the Alaskan
-coast towards
-Kotzebue,
-through the still
-breaking ice, on
-July 2 we found
-ourselves really
-in a dangerous
-position. The
-wind began to
-blow from out to
-sea, thus crowding the ice towards shore,
-making our sailing quarters more
-and more limited.
-We were already running too close in, from
-two to three fathoms, when suddenly the
-schooner ran aground, and we found ourselves
-stuck on a sandy bottom, with the
-ice rapidly moving down on us. An anchor
-was quickly towed out and dropped, so that
-by heaving in on the anchor chain the boat
-could be dragged out into deep water. This
-was slowly being accomplished, when a
-mass of ice too large to pole off caught
-against the schooner, causing a tremendous
-strain on the anchor chain.</p>
-
-<p>Another ice cake floated against the first,
-and the "Penelope" would have been
-crowded deeper and deeper aground had not,
-after much chopping and prying, a crack
-opened up across the ice on our port bow.
-The two pieces swung apart, leaving the
-"Penelope" free. Again we tried to heave
-into deeper water, and finally with all sails
-set and all hands pulling on the chain, the
-boat slid off in time to escape another big
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[ 12 ]</span>
-sheet of ice. Of course this was one of the
-few times we did not feel like shouting and
-singing. We held our breath. It was an
-unpleasant experience, but one upon which
-we can look back with a sort of quiet satisfaction.
-We shall-at least have one hair-breadth
-escape to narrate to our friends at
-home. After dodging and threading our
-way, the captain finally sailed us into an
-open tract of water outside the ice.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_left" style="width: 394px;">
-<img src="images/page12a.png" width="394" height="225" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Natives with Walrus-hide Canoe.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>We have made little progress these last
-days. We have been sailing about in circles,
-at times coming within forty miles of Cape
-Blossom, but still blocked by the line of ice
-that closes the mouth of Kotzebue Sound.
-It is now rapidly breaking up and melting,
-and as soon as an off-shore wind sets in, the
-ice will be surely driven out to sea and our
-path will be clear. We are fifty days from
-San Francisco, and the majority of us are
-longing for land. Vessels are constantly
-coming In sight.</p>
-
-<p>Last night twelve vessels besides our own
-were seen waiting for the ice to open.
-What a mad rush this is to a land nobody
-knows anything about, and whose treasure-trove,
-if she holds any, is far in the interior! There is plenty of country, if not of
-gold, for us all, and we can take our
-chances.</p>
-
-<p>We have spoken the bark "Guardian"
-from Seattle with 130 on board. The barkentine
-"Northern Light" from San Francisco
-with 120 on board; the bark "Leslie
-D." with 58 on board, besides the "Catherine
-Sudden," and others whom we have
-not been near enough to speak.</p>
-
-<p>While we were near shore natives. Eskimos,
-came on board in their skin canoes
-nearly every day, and often stayed several
-hours with us. Indeed they would remain
-with us all the time if allowed to. They are
-very greasy and not at all desirable in their
-present condition, dressed entirely in skins,
-and owning few civilized
-implements. Some were on
-summer hunting trips from
-as far as the Diomede
-Islands and the opposite
-Siberian shore. We have
-made some fine trades with
-them. Rivers, one of the
-boys, got a good skin kyak
-for a pair of overalls, a
-match safe and a few other
-trinkets. I got some nice
-seal (not the fur seal) skins
-for an outing shirt, and
-about one hundred yards of
-strong raw-hide rope, for
-soiled socks, undershirts,
-etc.</p>
-
-<p>It is a good opportunity
-for obtaining spears, toys,
-implements, and clothing of Indian manufacture,
-etc., if only I could spare the stuff
-to trade. With all the hundreds of people
-coming to the coast this year, the trade will
-be spoiled by next year, or I would send
-home for a box of articles for trade.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_right" style="width: 239px;">
-<img src="images/page12b.png" width="239" height="295" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Educated Natives.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>These natives really require very little
-outside of their own resources, so it is hard
-to tell what articles would be likely to strike
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[ 13 ]</span>
-their fancy. Load, powder, tobacco, calico
-and clothes would be the best things.</p>
-
-<p>The prince or chief of this tribe of Indians
-was an intelligent young man about
-twenty-five years old. He could not speak
-our language, but, strange to say, his wife,
-who accompanied him, was educated and
-refined. She had received some schooling at
-Port Clarence. It was she who interpreted
-for all of us during our trading hours.</p>
-
-<p>The natives came in families, and the children
-were not uninteresting. Not a baby
-was heard to cry, although in the canoe for
-hours at a time, nor would they try to move.
-These canoes or kyaks are very strange
-boats, and prove quite treacherous to the
-novice. It looks easy rowing in one of
-them. I had learned the trick during my
-hunting about Sitka two years ago, and
-could not be induced to try my hand in a
-hurry. Not so Casey, who went out by himself
-in Rivers' new kyak. He started out all
-right, shouting that it was like riding a
-bicycle, "very hard to keep balanced in."
-He was getting along finely, keeping near
-the vessel, when he grew over-confident, and
-a misstroke with the paddle set him out of
-balance, and boat and poor Casey went rolling
-over together in the water. He struggled
-and kept to the surface long enough for a
-rope to be thrown out to him, but he could
-not get his legs out of the hole in the kyak
-for several seconds. Seconds are hours in
-this blistering ice-water, and had he been
-further from home he could not have survived
-the chill.</p>
-
-<p>No one has tried kyaking since, but as soon
-as we reach shallow water I mean to practice
-until I have revived the lost art.</p>
-
-<p>We are now inside the Arctic Circle, about
-67 degrees north latitude. That is pretty
-well north for Southern Californians who,
-at home, rub their ears when the frost nips
-the tomato plants in January.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="dropcap">C</div>
-
-<p class="p0"><span class="hidden">C</span>APE BLOSSOM, July 13, 1898.&mdash;The
-voyage is behind us. What is floating
-ice to a ship's crew safe on shore! We
-can laugh at whales, and unfriendly breezes
-that whisper tales of shipwreck on barren
-coasts. And we can walk at all hours of the
-day and night without holding on to the rail,
-and we don't have to cook breakfast and
-supper and dinner in an S x S galley. Oh,
-the charm of being on land again, a land
-without visible limit; a land where we are
-not crowded, and where we are not hindered
-from our work by newspaper reporters!</p>
-
-<p>I am sitting at the camp-table in the dining-tent
-near the new "Penelope" ship-yards,
-and the sounds that greet my ears
-are varied. The incessant pounding gives
-evidence of vigorous work on our river boat;
-the hum of the forge and the ring of the
-anvil where Casey and Stevenson are making
-fittings for the engine, the wash of the
-surf close at hand, and last, but not least,
-the low, irritating, depressing, measly whine
-of the mosquito&mdash;this last word to mean the
-race. I would not intimate that there is one
-mosquito, or twenty: there are millions! We
-wear bobinet masks which protect our heads
-very well. To-night the wind is blowing
-fresh, and the winged plagues are using
-most of their force to keep their land legs.
-It is very warm, and a little exertion brings
-out a copious perspiration, but it is less
-fatiguing to keep hard at work with a will
-than to stop and think about it. No ice now
-in sight. Within two rods of camp is a deep
-snowdrift, where we obtain nice drinking
-water. Ice may be seen anywhere in Alaska
-all the hot days, but it is so mixed and
-grown in with the everlasting mosses that it
-is not fit to melt for drinking save in rare
-cases. Our ship-yards are located on the
-pebbly beach, and it all seems so roomy and
-clean after our long stay on the little
-"Penelope." though on account of the mosquitoes
-we still sleep on shipboard. The
-boat is anchored a mile from shore on account
-of the shallow water. As I look out to
-sea I bethink me that in all probability
-Kotzebue, the Russian explorer, stood on
-this exact spot and looked about him as long
-ago as July, 1816. And the mosquitoes were
-biting him, too!</p>
-
-<p>I can afford to sleep only every other night
-these days. There will be time enough to
-sleep when the sun goes to bed. The landscape
-is beautiful&mdash;grassy meadows, green,
-bushy hillsides, and, over all, thousands of
-wild-flowers of a dozen kinds; dandelions,
-daisies, sweet-peas, and many other varieties.
-I have found a few beetles and have
-seen some butterflies, but get little time for
-collecting either insects or birds. My duty
-is to the company, and any time in which I
-may do what I love best to do must be
-taken out of my sleeping hours. Everyone
-is working with might and main, as the missionaries
-tell us that winter sets in by the
-last of August.</p>
-
-<p>By the way, we surprised these missionaries,
-who been located at Cape Blossom
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[ 14 ]</span>
-some two years or more, and in that
-time have seen few fellow-countrymen. C.
-C. Reynolds and Clyde and Dr. Coffin were
-old acquaintances, and waked them up one
-day all of a sudden. The three were told by
-the natives of the best way to approach the
-mission building, and, as they did so, the
-first thing that met their eyes were little
-boxes of lettuce and radishes and onions set
-on the sunny side of the cabin to steal the
-breath and smile of Old Sol, while he has his
-eye on the place. This is a Friends' Mission,
-and the three missionaries are from Whittier, California.</p>
-
-<p>They are Robert Samms and wife, and a
-Miss Hunnicut.</p>
-
-<p>The boys are working on the river boat in
-two shifts from twelve to twelve. This
-makes time for four meals a day, the largest
-meals being at the two twelves, and I have
-one of these to get. I also have the 6 p. m.
-and the midnight meals to get; Shafer gets
-the others. Of course we have our assistants
-who wait on table and wash dishes.
-Who would have thought I would become a
-mess cook!</p>
-
-<p>I have just dressed three salmon weighing
-about fifteen pounds each. We traded ten
-gingersnaps to an Indian for them. They
-will make fully two meals for all of us.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_left" style="width: 358px;">
-<img src="images/page14.png" width="358" height="189" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">First "Friends'" Mission.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>July 10, 2 p. m. In the dining-tent at
-"Penelope" ship-yards.&mdash;Yesterday was a
-great day for us. We received our first mail
-from home. The revenue cutter "Bear"
-brought it, and it will probably be our last.
-It is sweltering hot. We find our most congenial
-employment in drinking ice-water and
-taking cold baths. And no one suffers from
-it. The river boat is nearly done and we
-have been here only a week. To-day our
-first prospecting party starts out, one of
-two, to go up the Kowak River in advance
-of the main party. They are taking a
-month's provisions, and, besides prospecting
-for gold, are to locate our winter quarters.
-We hope to make two trips with supplies up
-the river before it freezes. There are so
-many vessels of every description here that
-it looks like a seaport harbor. The natives
-are "catching on" to trading schemes, and
-are asking exorbitant prices for everything.
-We offered sixty dollars worth of flour and
-other things for a canoe and failed to get
-one. I doubt the things being of much use
-to us if we had them. The skins soak up
-water rapidly and are then easily torn or
-worn. The Indians keep them in water
-only a few hours at a time before
-taking them up on the beach and
-turning them over to dry.</p>
-
-<p>Shafer went with our first
-party as cook, and that leaves me
-with seventeen men to feed. I
-want to get in some collecting this
-fall and am willing to work hard
-now. Of course everyone of the
-party is industrious; we expected
-to work. The mosquitoes do not
-like me and so I have the advantage
-of the others. I keep a
-smudge burning in the tents so
-the boys may eat in peace.</p>
-
-<p>Penelope Ship Yards, July 17.&mdash;Oh,
-how hot it is to-day! And the
-mosquitoes are rushing business, as if aware
-time is nearly up with them, I slept on shore
-last night. We had a small tent and banked
-it up all around tight, and then made a
-smudge and shut ourselves in. We killed all
-the mosquitoes in sight and finally got to bed
-for a good seven hours' sleep. There is plenty
-of driftwood along the beaches, and we shall
-not be obliged to draw on our supply of coal
-for a good while. Several tons of it is coming
-on the "Mermaid." The vessel has not
-yet arrived, neither have several others
-whose crews warned us before we left San
-Francisco last spring that we would not
-reach Kotzebue this year. And here we are
-a week ahead of them, and one party prospecting
-up the river already.</p>
-
-<p>July 19.&mdash;This morning the "Helen," as
-we have named our river boat, was towed
-out to the "Penelope," where the boiler and
-engines were hoisted on. She is back again
-now, and all is well save Rivers, who had
-his Angers smashed.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[ 15 ]</span></p>
-
-<p>There must be a thousand people now in
-the Sound, and more are coming. These
-first-comers are respectable men, with few
-exceptions. A drunken white man shot an
-Indian up near the mission, and now there
-will be trouble. The Indian law dates far
-back&mdash;"An eye for an eye." A good many
-accidents are happening. Some men are lost,
-and so are whole loads of provisions. We
-are safe; have lost nothing. Birds are numerous
-now. I went up the slough last night
-and got three ducks. This noon I served up
-a hot duck pie. This is
-the summer home for
-many birds that spend
-their winters south.
-Every morning I hear
-the plaintive song of
-the Gambel's sparrows
-from the bushy thickets
-on the hillsides, just as
-we hear them from the
-hedges at home in winter.
-Other familiar birds now rearing their
-broods here are the
-barn swallow. Savannah
-sparrow and tree
-sparrow. Insects are
-common as the warm
-weather continues. I
-caught a bumblebee
-this morning and bottled
-him. As fast as
-the snowdrifts melt,
-grass and flowers
-spring up, crowding the
-snow, so to speak, into more and more limited
-quarters, and finally replacing it altogether.
-The brightest and greenest spots
-are where the snow has the most recently
-disappeared. This is a beautiful country.
-Some day when the speedy airship shall
-make distance trivial, it will be a popular
-summer resort, except that the water is too
-icy for the average bather.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="dropcap">J</div>
-
-<p class="p0"><span class="hidden">J</span>ULY 23. Penelope Ship Yards.&mdash;The
-"Helen" is at last ready. Three of the
-boys have cut up several cords of wood
-into proper lengths for the boiler.</p>
-
-<p>I cannot help mentioning the flowers
-again. New kinds appear every day without
-so much as sending up a leaf in advance.
-There are dandelions, and purple asters, and
-cream cups, and bluebells, and big daisies,
-and buttercups, and tall, blue flowers like
-our garden hyacinths. There are acres of
-blue-grass as smooth and green as if newly
-mown, birds and bumblebees are abundant.
-I should like to collect more of these,
-but still have a hungry mob to feed. The
-boys are working hard at shifting the cargo,
-and chopping wood and doing other things,
-and of course are hungry as bears. My
-work gives me some half-hours which I
-spend collecting. We have good stores. For
-supper to-night my menu is baked navy
-beans&mdash;Boston baked beans away up here at
-Kotzebue Sound!&mdash;corn bread, apple sauce,
-fricasseed salmon eggs, fried salmon, duck
-stew, tea, etc. It will be appreciated to the
-last crumb by the Arctic circle.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 428px;">
-<img src="images/page15.png" width="428" height="294" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Miners' Launch.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The days are growing shorter. The sun
-now sets before eleven at night, leaving only
-a short semi-twilight. The doctor has just
-come in from a visit to the mission. He reports
-ships still arriving, and prospectors
-having all sorts of luck. Flour is three dollars
-for fifty pounds. Liquor is being sold
-to the natives without stint. It is against
-the law, but what is law without a force to
-back it? Dr. Sheldon Jackson is expected
-soon, and he is the man who will not be
-afraid to hunt out the rascals who are
-spoiling the natives. I am so nearly related
-to the American Indians myself that I naturally
-take sides with these natives. You
-know I was born on the Kiowa, Comanche
-and Wichita reservation, when those Indians
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[ 16 ]</span>
-were savages or nearly so, and I learned to
-love them before I could speak. Here and
-now it is the old familiar story of the white
-man's abuse of the redskins. It makes me
-indignant. We found these people confiding,
-generous, helpful, simple-hearted, without a
-shadow of treachery except as they have
-learned it from the whites, who are invading
-their homes and killing them as they
-will, with little or no excuse. Many of these
-gold-hunters that I hear of have already
-done more harm in a few days than the missionaries
-can make up for in years. I could
-write the history in detail, but desist. It
-will never all be written or told. The natives
-are worked up to the last point of endurance
-and will surely kill the whites. Whisky
-is doing its share of havoc, although a few
-of the faithful mission Indians are trying to
-keep the others quiet.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_left" style="width: 281px;">
-<img src="images/page16.png" width="281" height="127" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">The "Helen."</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Sunday. July 24.&mdash;We are now waiting for
-the tide to take the "Helen" out of the
-creek. Steam will soon be up.</p>
-
-<p>July 29, Dining Tent.&mdash;We are still here
-and the rains have begun. The "Helen"
-made her trial trip and works well. We
-have discovered that she cannot transport
-all our goods up the river, so have delayed
-in order to build a barge. It is two feet
-deep, ten feet wide and eighteen feet long,
-with a capacity of ten tons.</p>
-
-<p>August 1.&mdash;The storm washed the sand up
-and locked the "Helen" into Penelope inlet.
-The only thing to be done was to dig
-a channel and float her out. From ten in
-the morning until ten in the evening we
-worked. We had to pry her out as the tide
-kept failing. We could not have succeeded
-had it not been for some kind Indians who
-helped us. They are always ready to help
-when they see us in trouble. Of course we
-treated them to a good supper and they were
-happy.</p>
-
-<p>After steaming out to the "Penelope," we
-started north around the peninsula to the
-inlet, arriving about two in the morning,
-after the hardest day's work we have had
-yet. Here at Mission Inlet Dr. Coffin.
-Fancher and myself are left with the camp
-outfit and a load of provisions. After three
-hours' sleep and a hot breakfast the rest
-went back to the schooner with the
-"Helen" for another load, and to bring the
-barge, which by this time should be finished.
-Soon after they left, yesterday, a stiff breeze
-sprang up and we were very anxious. The
-"Helen" is little better than a flat-bottomed
-scow and cannot stand much of a sea. An
-inlet near us is, we think, deep enough to
-float the "Penelope," if we could get her in,
-and here she would be safe all winter. The
-missionaries tell us that no boat like her
-can stand the crushing ice in the open sea
-during the winter, and that this inlet is the
-only protected place for miles around.</p>
-
-<p>The mission and village are two miles west
-of us. There are four frame houses and a
-hundred tents. A Mr. Haines of San Francisco,
-took supper with us last night and
-gave us the shipping news. Men are left
-with nothing save the clothes on their backs;
-others are drowned; many are homesick.
-Rumor reaches us that gold has been found
-on the Kowak. But rumor is not to be relied
-upon when it is gold that sets it afloat.</p>
-
-<p>If there is gold on the Kowak we shall
-find it. Our present care is to get our supplies
-up there in safety, but we are going
-at a slow pace. Six of our party are already
-up the river, six are on the "Helen" en
-route to the "Penelope" headquarters, two
-are at the ship-yards, and four are on the
-schooner. Dr. Coffin. Fancher and myself
-are here at Mission Inlet. This accounts for
-all of us as at present divided. We expect
-the return of the "Helen" to-night.</p>
-
-<p>We three have been living high since the
-others left. For supper, with the help of our
-San Francisco visitor, we got away with
-three ptarmigan, two curlew, twelve flapjacks
-with syrup, stewed prunes, etc. After
-supper we went to sleep and did not awake
-until nine this morning, when we had ptarmigan
-broth, fried mush, ham and flapjacks.
-The other day we picked three quarts of
-salmon berries. They are very fine eating,
-something like a blackberry in size and
-shape, but are red like a raspberry and grow
-flat on the ground like a strawberry vine.
-They seem a combination of the three.</p>
-
-<p>Two other kinds, inferior to the salmon
-berries, also grow on the ground. We want
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[ 17 ]</span>
-to eat everything in sight. If there were
-rattlesnakes I believe that I should cook
-them. I have broiled a good fat rattlesnake
-when hunting in the Sierras, and found it a
-dish for an epicure&mdash;that is, if the epicure
-happened not to see it until served. I put
-up nine bird-skins this morning. They are
-two redpolls, one Siberian yellow wagtail,
-three ptarmigan, one tree-sparrow and two
-curlew. I have put up seventy-five skins so
-far. I have also saved quite a number of
-insects, but these are scarce since the rains
-set in. Last night I heard the beautiful song
-of the fox-sparrow from a hill on the opposite
-side of the inlet. A raven, the
-first I have seen, flew high overhead
-with ominous croaks. "Evil omen,"
-say the natives.</p>
-
-<p>Mission Inlet, Aug. 5, 1898.&mdash;The
-"Helen" has returned after a perilous
-trip. She had the barge in tow
-and both were heavily loaded. It
-took ten hours to cover twelve miles,
-so rough was the sea. She ran
-aground twice, and the boys were indeed
-"tired" on their arrival, but
-were wonderfully refreshed in a
-short time by flapjacks and bacon,
-which I served to them piping hot,
-after which they slept for eight
-hours. It has taken a good deal of
-hard work to get ready to make our
-start, and a good storm is in order.
-"Indian Tom" is guide, and he
-knows everything about the river and
-country. He says, "Wind too much;
-bimeby all right," and we take his advice.
-The "Helen" and the barge in tow are to
-carry two-thirds of the year's supplies up
-the river, and the "Helen" will alone return
-for the rest. We cannot get the "Penelope"
-into Mission Inlet, as we hoped,
-hence it has been decided to leave the captain
-and two men with her all winter. The
-provisions not needed this winter are stored
-on the schooner, and she will be anchored
-down in Escholtz Bay, in as sheltered a
-place as can be found, where she will freeze
-in. It looks dangerous, but it is our only
-alternative. It would not take much ice
-pressure to crush her, and then good-by to
-our provisions! They will try lifting her by
-windlass and other means, and the captain
-shows his pluck in the emergency. Pluck is
-what is needed in these Arctic regions, besides
-plenty of flapjacks. Jett and Fancher
-remain with the captain on the "Penelope."
-They hope to shoot polar bear and have
-other winter sport, but I guess they will
-have a monotonous time. Perhaps some of
-us will take a sledge journey down to them
-in winter.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Coffin, Wyse, Rivers and myself are to
-stay here until the "Helen" returns for us
-and the remainder of the stuff. I always
-volunteer to stay at camp when a person is
-wanted, for in this way I get in some collecting.
-The rest don't see so much fun in staying
-at camp. It may be two weeks before
-the boat gets back and, outside of my camp
-duties, I shall have considerable leisure for
-my favorite pastime. Doctor and I went
-out and got thirteen ducks, which made a
-good meal for the crowd before they started.
-We also had a large mess of stewed salmon
-berries which, though very tart, proved a
-most acceptable change from our dried fruit.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 350px;">
-<img src="images/page17.png" width="350" height="260" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">"Helen" and Crew Start up the Kowak River.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Mission Inlet. Aug. 9.&mdash;The "Helen" left
-for the Kowak yesterday and the weather
-has been perfect, so we hope she has safely
-crossed Holtham Inlet. Until she returns
-we four are to keep camp and finish up some
-work for the winter. We are becoming acquainted
-with the natives. Like those I
-knew in Dakota and the Indian Territory,
-they are very superstitious. They make us
-pass in front of a tent in which is a sick
-person, and if we are towing a boat past
-along the beach, we must get into the water
-and row around the camp so as not to walk
-past. Many of them are ill, and they lay It
-to the gold hunters: but it is really from exposure
-in following the whites around. The
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[ 18 ]</span>
-doctor has treated several, and if they recover
-he is "all right;" but if they die, it is
-his fault. Not so very unlike other folks!
-The doctor makes the natives pay for medicine,
-as this, he says, "is the better policy."
-He charged a salmon for some pills last
-night, and in another case where more extended
-services were required, he charged a
-nickel and two salmon. He does not intend
-to infringe upon any existing fee bills in the
-States, but if any "medicos" thereabouts
-pine for a more profitable field, there is
-plenty of room at Kotzebue Sound.</p>
-
-<p>Some of the prospectors who went up the
-river earlier are now returning broken-hearted,
-and are going home.</p>
-
-<p>Mission Inlet. Aug. 11.&mdash;The "Helen"
-came in last night with all safe aboard.
-They got about one hundred miles up the
-river, and concluded it better to get us all
-up that far before going on. We expect to
-start to-night. Our folks met two of our
-first prospecting party, who reported going
-as far as Fort Cosmos, three hundred miles
-up the Kowak, and who announced that
-place to be our best winter harbor. They
-had found some "colors," but nothing
-definite as to gold.</p>
-
-<p>This will prove my last entry on the Kotzebue,
-but the winter's record will not be
-dull. I am thinking, by the time we thaw out
-in the spring of 1899. C. C. and the doctor,
-whose proclivities are well known to be of a
-semi-religious type, have a whole library of
-good books, such as "Helpful Thoughts."
-"The Greatest Thing in the World." Bible
-commentaries, and so on, with which we
-may enliven the winter evening that knows
-no cock-crowing. However, we shall have
-games and lighter reading.</p>
-
-<p>I have now more than one hundred bird-skins,
-some of them rare, such as Sabines'
-gull. Point Barrow gull, etc. I believe I am
-the only one of the party who could get the
-smallest satisfaction out of a possible disappointment
-as to gold.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="dropcap">P</div>
-
-<p class="p0"><span class="hidden">P</span>ENELOPE CAMP, Kowak River, Aug.
-28.&mdash;Here we are, one hundred and seventy
-miles from the mouth of the Kowak
-River and hard at work on our winter
-cabin. The "Helen" is almost a failure,
-else we should have been much farther up
-the river. The river is swift and has many
-rapids which we could not stem. The boat
-is slow. Her wheel is too small. She will
-be remodeled this winter. It took five days
-to come this far, and, as there are two more
-loads to bring up, we thought it best to halt.
-We have been here a week and the walls of
-the cabin are nearly done, so that we are on
-the eve of owning a winter residence on the
-Kowak. We are expecting the "Helen"
-back soon with her second load.</p>
-
-<p>The Kowak River, though scarcely indicated
-on good-sized maps, is as large as the
-Missouri. At our camp it is nearly a mile
-across, and very deep on this side, with sand
-bars in the middle. Other folks are having
-a harder time than we. Only three out of
-the dozen or more river steamers are a success.
-One is fast on a sand bar, and it
-looks as if she would stay there.</p>
-
-<p>Some of our crowd think we had a hard
-time, but when we compare our lot with
-that of others we see it differently. Hundreds
-are toiling up in the rain, towing
-their loaded skiffs mile after mile along
-muddy banks. We have not had an accident
-worth mentioning unless it be the loss of a
-water pail. We took the wrong channel
-once coming up and steamed twenty-four
-hours up a branch river. It was the Squirrel
-River, and although but a tributary to
-the Kowak, is as large as the Sacramento
-and San Joaquin combined. It was so very
-crooked that at one point where we stopped
-to wood up. I climbed a hill and could see
-its route for several miles. Our course went
-around the compass once and half way
-again. When we got back to the Kowak
-we made good time until we reached the
-first rapids, where our trouble began. The
-"Helen" would swing around and lose all
-she had made every few minutes when the
-current struck her broadside. Finally a
-squad of us took to the river bank with a
-long tow-rope, and foot by foot she was
-towed past the critical points. There were
-six of these rapids. When the wind blew
-there was fresh trouble; it would catch on
-the side of the "house" and blow the boat
-around in spite of us. She almost got away
-from us once, and we were in danger of
-being dragged off the bank, in spite of the
-fact that we dug our heels into the ground
-and braced with might and main. It was a
-tug of war. And such is gold hunting in the
-Far North!</p>
-
-<p>Many others had a still harder time. We
-passed thirty of these parties in one day
-towing their provisions, while many lost
-their boats. There must inevitably be great
-suffering here this winter. Men have not
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[ 19 ]</span>
-realized what a long winter it will be and
-are poorly provisioned.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_left" style="width: 169px;">
-<img src="images/page19a.png" width="169" height="215" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">A Morning Hunt.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Our crowd is becoming a trifle disappointed
-as to the gold proposition, and of
-course the general
-discontent
-is infectious.
-Hundreds are
-going back
-down the river
-every day,
-spreading defeat
-and failure in
-their path, and
-yet they have
-done no actual
-prospecting.
-This is a large
-country and a
-year is none too
-long to hunt;
-but with many
-parties the result is that after
-panning out a little sand the job is thrown
-up.</p>
-
-<p>Birds are all right here, if there isn't any
-gold. I have been into the woods only twice
-so far, but secured another rare specimen of
-Hennicott's Willow Warbler. There is a
-bear in the woods back of camp.
-I have "laid" for him three
-times, but he is very shy.</p>
-
-<p>Sept. 1.&mdash;The "Helen" came
-with her last load yesterday,
-and our whole crowd is together
-again excepting the three men
-with the "Penelope."</p>
-
-<p>After a big pow-wow it has
-been decided to divide for the
-winter. Ten men are to take the
-"Helen." with supplies, and
-push up the river as far as possible.
-They think they can do
-some mining during the winter.
-We who are destined to live together
-here for eight mouths are
-Dr. Coffin, C. C. Reynolds. Harry
-Reynolds, Clyde Baldwin, Cox.
-Brown. Rivers, Wyse and myself. Time will
-prove if this is a congenial combination. We
-shall resemble California canned goods in
-our narrow limits, and the winter will show
-our "keeping qualities." Andy and Albert,
-our Swede sailors, leave us to-day. They
-were hired and do not belong to the company,
-and will return to Kotzebue, where
-they hope to ship for St. Michaels.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 367px;">
-<img src="images/page19b.png" width="367" height="211" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Our Winter Cabin.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Camp Penelope, Kowak River, Sept. 13.&mdash;Our
-cabin is done. It measures 25 &times; 30 feet.
-We moved in on the 7th. The river rose very
-high and threatened to inundate our tents.
-The place where they were is now under
-water. Our cabin roof was not a success.
-It was too flat. On the night we moved in it
-rained heavily, and about 2 a. m. we were
-roused by the water pouring in on our beds
-and our precious supplies. We got to work
-without delay. The roof could not be repaired
-without rebuilding it, so we spread it
-all over with flies and tent cloth, which froze
-stiff for the winter, and now we are dry.
-When the cabin was started it was intended
-for our whole party, but there is no room
-to spare even now with only nine occupants.
-The foundation was leveled on the side of
-the knoll, so that the top of the hill is nearly
-as high as the roof and the earth is banked
-the rest of the way over the wall. That
-leaves no point for the north wind to strike
-the house. We made a lean-to on the west
-and the door from the cabin opens into it.
-We have two windows, which we brought
-with us, fitted on the south. The interior of
-the cabin is a single room seven feet high.
-It has a gable a foot or two higher, which
-gives "ample breathing space." as I told the
-boys, but which I have my eye on as a storeroom
-for my collection. The roof above this
-structure is fearfully and wonderfully
-made. If it had a trifle more pitch to it, to
-make it shed water, it would be better. A
-heavy ridge-pole and stringers run lengthwise,
-and over these are closely laid poles,
-the butts at the eaves along the sides, and
-the slender tops bent over and clinched on
-the opposite side of the roof. Above the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[ 20 ]</span>
-poles is packed a thick layer of moss. Above
-the moss is a layer of heavy sod with the
-dirt side up. Above all is a layer of spruce
-boughs like shingles. These boughs grow
-thick and flat, with needles pointing the
-same way, so they make good roofing.</p>
-
-<p>The logs of the walls are chinked tightly
-with the moss. The floor is the natural
-sand. We did not cut the timber from near
-the house on account of the protection it
-gives us from the north winds. Trees large
-and long enough for building purposes are
-not very numerous, and we had to carry
-them a good ways. A few are as large as
-twenty inches at the butt, but mostly they
-are from ten to fifteen inches. It is all that
-eight of us can do to struggle along with
-one of these logs, they are so heavy, and we
-put them on rollers sometimes. Four of the
-men can easily carry one of the twenty-four
-foot logs, but a green spruce log of any size
-is always heavier than it looks.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_right" style="width: 290px;">
-<img src="images/page20.png" width="290" height="202" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Start for the Hunt River, Towing our Boat.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>I have initiated "Brownie" into the secret
-mysteries of the cook stove, and am one of
-the regular laborers now, working hard ten
-hours a day. But yet it is fun; for we are
-working for ourselves, with but the clean
-woods all about us, and there is a fascination
-in chopping up the spruces, their delightful
-fragrance permeating everywhere.</p>
-
-<p>Sept. 19.&mdash;Six of us have just returned
-from a trip up the Hunt River&mdash;Harry Reynolds,
-Wyse, Cox, Rivers, Clyde and myself.
-I was culinary officer as usual. We had
-the eighteen-foot sealing boat, and It was
-loaded pretty heavily. The whole of us had
-to work for it, one in the stern of the boat
-to steer, one wading at the tow-line as near
-the boat as possible, to lift it over snags,
-and the other four tugging at the tow-line.
-We wore hip boots and outside of them oil-skin
-trousers tied around the ankles. Even
-with this outfit we were constantly getting
-into the water all over. Rivers got a soaking
-the first day. He shot a duck and
-jumped out of the boat in pursuit. The bottom
-is so plain through the water that it is
-deceptive, and he went in up to his waist,
-but he grabbed the side of the boat to keep
-from going under. He got his duck&mdash;and a
-ducking thrown in. We had to pull him in
-and to the shore, where we got him out of
-his wet clothes. In the afternoon Wyse also
-got a ducking by falling into a pool as he
-was scrambling up a steep bank. We found
-good camping-places. We had two tents,
-which we put up facing each other, with a
-flap left up on the side of one of them for a
-door. The two were heated by the sheet-iron
-camp-stove. At noon we did not put up
-the tents, but got dinner in the open&mdash;flapjacks,
-coffee and bacon. I shot two geese
-the first day out, which gave us a couple of
-meals. They were young and so fat I could
-not save their skins. But I made a drawing
-of one of them so that I could be positive of
-their identity. Looking them up when I got
-home where my books are, I found them to
-be the Hutchins goose. The doctor and I
-shot two white-fronted geese on the banks
-of the Kowak. We see a good many, but
-they also see us and we have to do a good
-deal of sneaking through the bushes to get
-any.</p>
-
-<p>We had some narrow escapes, especially
-Cox, who fell into a whirlpool. He was
-dragged off his feet by the rushing water,
-but we pulled him into the boat after a
-frightful struggle.</p>
-
-<p>On the fourth day out Clyde and I thought
-we would explore a little canon. Harry
-Reynolds had washed out several pans of
-sand from different bars on the way up, but
-had not found a trace of gold. Clyde and I
-hoped to have better luck, and started out in
-high spirits with spade and pick and gold-pan
-to do our first prospecting.</p>
-
-<p>We found a brook in the ca&ntilde;on where we
-panned some without success. Finally we
-found a place where the stream ran over
-bed-rock. The rock had cracks and fissures
-running crosswise with the stream, so we
-reasoned that if there was gold above, particles
-would have been caught in these
-cracks. We dammed the brook and turned
-the stream to one side, exposing the fissures
-in the rock. We then gathered several pans
-of sand from the niches, examining it with
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[ 21 ]</span>
-wistful eyes, but no trace of gold did we
-find. So we gave it up on that stream. We
-found nothing save Fool's Gold. We kept on
-up the ca&ntilde;on and, as it was yet early, decided
-to climb the mountain peak. As we
-went up the spruces grew smaller and
-finally disappeared. The sides were barren
-save for a thin covering of moss and lichens
-and patches of stunted huckleberry bushes.
-These bushes, not more than three or four
-inches high, bore hordes of luscious ripe
-huckleberries, and nearly every hundred
-feet in our climb we would drop on our
-knees on the soft moss and till ourselves, so
-often could we find room for more. Another
-little black spicy berry growing in crannies
-was good. Just as we were toiling up the
-last slope a flock of twenty white ptarmigan
-flew up in front of us, and circled down to
-another ridge. They, too, had been feeding
-on the huckleberries.</p>
-
-<p>As we rested ourselves, sheltered in a niche
-of the summit crag safe from the chilling
-wind, a little red-backed mouse ran from a
-crevice and scampered through the moss
-straight to a huckleberry patch, his own
-winter garden. Clouds began to gather on
-the highest peaks, and we started down, leaving
-them behind.</p>
-
-<p>The moss was slippery and we found that
-we could slide down the steep pitches easier
-than we could walk or jump. I remembered
-seeing the little Sioux slide down the hills
-of Dakota in government skillets, and immediately
-sat down on my shovel, steering
-with the handle just as I had seen the Indian
-boys do, and made terrific progress. I
-was soon able to pick myself up, feigning to
-examine a ledge of quartz while I rubbed
-my posterior, and looked back for Clyde.</p>
-
-<p>He tried sitting in the gold-pan and started
-all right, but soon found that he couldn't
-steer. He went at a frightful rate, tearing
-down the steep slide backwards, until he,
-too, found himself examining the geological
-strata while giving some attention to his
-anatomy. And then we had to hunt for the
-gold-pan which, from the musical sounds
-which grew fainter and fainter and finally
-died away altogether, must have got
-switched off into the bottomless abyss. Will
-it be found some day generations hence and
-borne off in triumph as proof of a prehistoric
-race? It was a race. Such is gold-hunting
-in far-away Alaska.</p>
-
-<p>At camp that evening we were joined by
-a native, "Charley." who told us by signs
-and by what few words he could speak, that
-he had come part way up the Hunt River
-behind us, but had left his birch-bark canoe
-several miles below, roaming off to hunt in
-the neighboring hills.</p>
-
-<p>He told us that he had shot a bear the
-day before and had cached it down the river,
-his boat being too small to take it. He
-wanted us to go and get it. Sure enough, a
-few miles down, we found the bear as
-Charley had said. It was all cut up, the skin
-being stretched on poles and fastened in a
-tree. The carcass was also divided and hidden
-in a pole-box raised high on a slender
-scaffold. Charley had expected to come on
-his sled later on and take it home. After loading
-on this prize we continued down the
-river, the Indian accompanying us in his
-canoe. The rapids were furious and many,
-and we shot them as if we had been behind
-a locomotive. It took a cool head to steer a
-boat under these conditions, and Cox did it.
-At one place the stream had washed under
-a bank above and trees had fallen over,
-making a complete set of rafters. The current
-rushed the boat under a series of these,
-like city roofs, and it kept us busy to duck
-our heads.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 286px;">
-<img src="images/page21.png" width="286" height="160" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">We Receive Visitors.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>We arrived home yesterday, making in
-seven hours a distance that had taken us
-three days to go up. Charley gave us bear
-meat to last a month. It tastes fishy, as the
-bears live mostly on salmon in summer, but
-it is a welcome addition to our larder. During
-the trip I obtained two hawk owls and
-an Alaskan three-toed wood-pecker, both
-species being new to my collection.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="dropcap">O</div>
-
-<p class="p0"><span class="hidden">O</span>CT. 15. 1898.&mdash;In looking over my diary
-I find that I have recorded no "bad
-weather." This comes of my having inherited
-a tendency to look on the bright side
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[ 22 ]</span>
-of things. I hear such complaints as "bad
-weather," "disagreeable day." "awfully
-cold." etc. Days when some are grumbling
-about its being "too hot" or "too cold,"
-"too wet" or "too windy," I find some
-special reason for thinking it very pleasant.
-It is no virtue of mine, as I said. It is
-natural. Up till to-day there has been warm
-weather mostly. Now there is a sudden
-drop in the temperature. Seven degrees
-above zero this morning. The north wind
-is blowing and makes one's ears tingle. All
-standing water is frozen and the Kowak has
-begun to show patches of ice floating down
-with the current. The great river is choking.
-It is being filled with ice which can
-move but slowly, grinding and crunching
-and piling up into ridges where opposing
-fields meet. Suddenly it is at a standstill.
-In a day or two the
-ice will support us,
-as it does now on
-the margin.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_right" style="width: 150px;">
-<img src="images/page22.png" width="150" height="111" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">The Wreck of the "John Riley'"</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>So quickly does
-the cold of winter
-close its grip. All
-these achievements
-of nature are new
-and interesting to
-me. I ran down to
-the river bank a
-dozen times to-day
-to note how the process is going on. It is very
-low now on account of the dry weather of
-the past weeks, but, as the choking goes on,
-a flow of water comes down from above
-over the ice, making a double fastness. The
-only fish that can survive will be those that
-seek the deeper places. There will be no
-more passing of boats. We hear that the
-steamer "John Riley" has been left high
-and dry on a sand-bar, and has broken in
-two in the middle by her own weight. Two
-other boats are aground on sand-bars, and
-must be taken to pieces if ever rescued.</p>
-
-<p>Since the Hunt River trip I have been at
-home mostly. I have been cook, of course,
-a part of the time. There is no special work
-to be done outside.</p>
-
-<p>I have collected some birds, but they are
-growing very scarce. I went into the woods
-to-day for a couple of hours, and saw only
-two redpolls.</p>
-
-<p>Redpolls look and act very much like our
-goldfinches in the States. Rivers made me a
-bird-table. It is strange, but everybody declared
-they would "fire" me bodily if I continued
-to skin birds on the dining-table; that
-is why Rivers took pity on me and made me
-the finest table I could wish for, and a chair
-to match.</p>
-
-<p>We have the saw-mill. Dr. Coffin and
-Harry Cox, with the aid of others, ran that
-for several days, and enough boards were
-ripped out to cover the cabin floor, besides
-library and cupboard shelves. They declare
-"whipping" is hard work. I didn't try it
-myself, as I was cooking at the time. I prefer
-to run a cross-cut saw. The saw-mill
-worked "relays," working five minutes,
-talking fifteen minutes, resting a half hour
-before the next took its place. Whip-sawing
-is an interesting process, especially to the
-man who stands below and looks up into the
-shower of sawdust. The doctor advised the
-plan of wearing snow-glasses, so that the
-sawdust difficulty was obviated, but the
-hard work was still there. The doctor tried
-his best to get me into the business, for he
-said it would surely tend to straighten my
-back, which stoops from constant skinning
-of birds at the table. He got such a "crick"
-in his back from whip-sawing that he could
-scarcely sleep for several nights.</p>
-
-<p>Besides the saw-mill, there was the furniture
-factory. C. C. and Harry Reynolds
-and Dr. Coffin were engaged in that enterprise.
-As a result the cabin is supplied with
-double bedsteads, with spring-pole slats and
-mattresses. And there are lines of wooden
-pegs in the wall for hanging clothing, and
-carpets for the bed-rooms made of gunny-sacking
-stuffed with dry moss.</p>
-
-<p>A partial partition runs lengthwise of the
-cabin. At the kitchen end this partition is
-composed of a tier of wood, then an entrance
-space, and then a series of shelves from top
-to bottom for pantry, medical department
-and library, which latter is extensive. At
-the farther end is another open space communicating
-with the "bed-rooms." The
-whole inside of the cabin is lined with white
-canvas tenting, which brightens us up ten
-times better than dark logs. On the south
-side of the partition is the "living-room,"
-"dining-room" and "kitchen;" all in one
-apartment to be sure, but yet with their
-recognized limits. On the north side of the
-partition is the bed-room. There are three
-double beds and three single ones, according
-to the wishes of the occupants. A pole runs
-crosswise of the apartment, and on each
-side of this is a line of pegs hung full of
-clothes. This forms a wall dividing the
-apartment into "bed-rooms." Carpeted
-alleys run between the beds, and the walls
-are hung with clothing. What we are to do
-with all this clothing I do not know.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[ 23 ]</span></p>
-
-<div class="fig_right" style="width: 286px;">
-<img src="images/page23a.png" width="286" height="294" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Our Sitting-room.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Oct. 21.&mdash;Just through supper and everyone
-has settled down to read, excepting several
-who have gone out to "call at the
-neighbors'." C. C. Reynolds, our president,
-undertaker, preacher, all-around-man, has
-taken to cooking. He started in well. For
-supper he gave us some fine tarts. I am
-glad to be relieved from the cooking, and
-do not intend to engage in the business
-again. We shall see.</p>
-
-<p>I am skinning mice now, little red-backed
-fellows which swarm in the woods and
-around the houses. I set my traps every
-night. This morning I had a dozen. Wolverines
-and foxes are common about here,
-but they are too cute for me and decline to
-be caught in the steel traps which I keep
-constantly set for them. An Indian shot two
-deer in the mountains and brought them to
-the village. The doctor traded for some
-venison, which is better than the bear meat,
-though I have no craving for either. The
-boys think me a baby because I prefer
-"mush" to meat.</p>
-
-<p>Last Sunday the temperature fell to even
-zero. The trees were heavily covered with
-hoar frost, and the scene, as the sun rose
-upon it, was magnificent.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_right" style="width: 293px;">
-<img src="images/page23b.png" width="293" height="262" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Our Kitchen.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Everything is frozen solid. The river has
-nearly a foot of ice already. The natives
-are fishing through the ice and their
-methods are very novel to me. They select
-a narrow place in the river, and through
-holes cut in the Ice they stick spruce poles
-with the branches left on, so that a fence is
-formed across the river between the surface
-and the bed. At intervals openings are left,
-and across these openings nets are stretched.
-The fish are coming down the river at this
-time in the year, and when they reach one
-of these fences they swim along until they
-come to one of the openings, when they are
-caught in the net. An Indian woman lies on
-the ice face down, all covered over tight
-above with brush and tent cloth, so she can
-watch when the fish get into the net. Besides
-netting them this way, the natives
-have baited lines laid for the larger fish.
-Hooks are not used, but the bait, a small
-fish for instance, is tied to the end of a
-string, and with it a short, slender stick.
-A large fish swallows the bait and the stick
-with it. When the fish starts away the line
-is jerked taut, and the stick turns crosswise
-in his stomach, and holds the game secure
-until drawn up through the hole in the ice.
-Several of us were over watching the Indians
-fishing yesterday and were examining
-Some of the fish. I picked one up in my
-innocence, but was commanded to put it
-down. The women were very much vexed
-with me, and were careful to place the fish
-exactly the way it was. Clyde came with
-his camera to take some photographs, but
-the natives considered it "bad luck," and
-he was remonstrated with vehemently, and
-finally went away, dallying until he had
-taken a shot or two. These women will
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[ 24 ]</span>
-have their hands full with us boys before
-the winter is over, I fear.</p>
-
-<p>The natives will not dress any deer skins
-until the snow comes, "so that game will be
-plenty" this winter. I am at work upon a
-small vocabulary of the Eskimo language,
-and already have two hundred words. The
-language has many guttural sounds, and is
-hard to express with letters, but I am learning
-it rapidly, and getting the words written
-as accurately as possible under difficulties.</p>
-
-<p>One of the Indian boys, Lyabukh, is very
-bright, and understands what I want. He
-is learning English very fast.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 354px;">
-<img src="images/page24.png" width="354" height="213" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Come to Church.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Our preacher holds services regularly
-every Sunday, and we go out to gather in all
-the Indians of the village and the white men
-in the vicinity. Four parties of three white
-men each, have put up winter quarters
-within a mile of us, so we have quite a community.
-Besides these, there are some
-twenty prospectors six miles below us and
-five above us. All have built snug winter
-cabins. About a mile above us, back in the
-woods, twenty Eskimos have established
-their village for the winter, and built their
-dug-outs, or igloos. There is seldom an hour
-in the day when two or more natives are not
-in our cabin, and, with a little encouragement,
-such as C. C, with his missionary instincts,
-gives them, they have become very
-persistent visitors.</p>
-
-<p>Last Sunday services were largely attended,
-there being fifteen natives, and ten
-of our white neighbors. It was proposed, and
-unanimously carried, that a church be constructed
-by this community. So Monday.
-Tuesday and Wednesday over a dozen men
-were at work on the new chapel, which is located
-back in a sheltered place in the woods.
-It is now finished except the fireplace, and
-will serve as a church, school-room, and lecture-room or town hall.</p>
-
-<p>Several of us are going to start a school
-for the Eskimo children in the neighborhood. We have seven months before us to
-occupy in some manner, and why not this?
-It would be monotonous to be continuously
-biting off northern zephyrs, and pulling the
-threads out of a tangled beard, and rubbing
-one's ears, and eating baking-powder biscuit;
-biscuit that are none of your light,
-fluffy things that have no backbone to them,
-but something that will stay with you on a
-hunt or a tramp with the temperature below the counting mark.
-Then there are the nice fat sides
-of bacon carefully preserved&mdash;"the
-white man's buffalo meat," as the
-Sioux Indians used to call it. We
-have ordinary fried bacon, and
-hashed bacon, and pork chops.
-When it is dreadfully cold and it
-doesn't slice readily, we chop it up
-with the axe&mdash;and then it is we
-have pork chops!</p>
-
-<p>For variety's sake, if for nothing
-else, we would all vote the
-"school." Our life on the Kowak
-will not be a sealed book never to
-be read again when once the
-springtime lays it away on the
-shelf. We shall take it down and
-peruse it and possibly make marginal
-entries in it when we are too old to do
-anything else. Sitting in the chimney corner
-toothless, and feeble of gait, it will give us
-pleasure to remember the "school" in the
-woods, on the banks of the mighty Kowak.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="dropcap">O</div>
-
-<p class="p0"><span class="hidden">O</span>CT. 30.&mdash;Returned last night from a six
-days' trip up Hunt River. Clyde and
-I started together with the expectation
-of getting far into the mountain ranges. As
-has been my custom from a small boy when
-starting on a trip. I made big preparations,
-much bigger than necessary. We had grub
-enough for two weeks. The boys expected
-great things on our return&mdash;bear, deer and
-other game, all of which was confidently
-promised. But to tell the honest truth, I
-wanted to get some chickadees and butcher
-birds. To carry our voluminous outfit we
-appropriated a sled belonging to a neighboring
-Indian who had gone fishing. These native
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[ 25 ]</span>
-sleds are very light, having birch runners,
-and slender spruce frame-work, the
-whole strongly lashed together with raw-hide
-thongs. Every morning before loading
-we poured water on the runners, thus forming
-an ice shoe. As yet there is no snow,
-so that our route necessarily lay along the
-frozen river, which was covered with a foot
-of ice. Our load weighed about three hundred
-pounds, and where the ice was smooth
-little exertion was needed to draw the sled
-as fast as we could walk. In some places
-sand had blown into the ice and such spots
-would give us hard work. We wore
-"creepers" on our heavy boots&mdash;that is, a
-kind of conical pointed spike, screwed into
-the bottoms, three into the heel and four
-into the sole of the shoe. With these we can
-walk anywhere up or down upon the ice
-without slipping. In traveling, one of us
-pulled the sled, with the rope over his shoulder,
-while the other pushed. Across the rear
-of the sled were two sticks projecting backwards
-and upwards, with a cross-piece to
-push against, baby-carriage fashion.</p>
-
-<p>The first day we made rapid progress,
-making twenty-five miles. We camped at
-night not far from the first foot-hills. The
-tent was raised in a grove of cottonwoods
-near the river, and soon a fire roared in the
-camp stove. When I had the fire well
-started, I went down to get a pail of water.
-I walked to the middle of the creek and began
-to chop hard where I thought the ice
-was thinnest. Sure enough I had judged
-correctly, for with the second stroke the ice
-gave way under me, and down I went to the
-arm-pits in the icy water. I had fallen
-through an air hole. Luckily the ice all
-around was firm, so that I could raise myself
-up and wriggle out, or else my bath might
-have been continued. As it was, before I
-could reach the tent my clothes were frozen
-stiff. The temperature was below zero.</p>
-
-<p>Fortunately for me I had a warm tent and
-a change of clothes to go to. Meanwhile
-Clyde had cut a big pile of wood and soon
-we were wrestling with piles of flapjacks.</p>
-
-<p>After supper I had another experience
-with the ice. Forgetting that I had exchanged
-my wet boots for a pair of shoes
-without creepers in them. I started to go
-across the river. After the first ice had
-formed the river had fallen, and now the ice
-sagged downward from the banks towards
-the middle, hammock-wise. As soon as I
-stepped on the ice my feet flew out from
-under me and down I slid. I got up, no
-worse for wear, but with a sudden recollection
-that I had no creepers on. I cautiously
-started to walk to the bank, but on account
-of the slant of the slippery ice, I could
-make little headway before slipping back.
-I was in a similar position to that of a
-mouse in a tin basin. Finally by walking
-down the river a short distance, I pulled
-myself up by an overhanging willow.</p>
-
-<p>Next morning at sunrise&mdash;eight o'clock&mdash;we
-started on up the river. Soon we came
-to long stretches of open water where the
-stream had been too swift to freeze over.
-In several places the icy margin was so narrow
-that it afforded room for but one runner
-on the ice, and we had to drag the sled
-over pebbles and sand.</p>
-
-<p>Owing to the fact that the stream became
-swifter the further we went, we turned
-about and started back with a view to making
-camp among the willows down the river,
-where we had seen the most birds on the
-way up.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_right" style="width: 288px;">
-<img src="images/page25.png" width="288" height="224" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Native Method of Piling Winter Wood.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Clyde shot twice with his rifle at a red fox,
-but missed it. He got "rattled." as one
-usually does when shooting at game, and
-as I have seen good hunters do. He tried a
-target at the same distance as the fox had
-been and hit the bull's-eye squarely.</p>
-
-<p>We got down to the willows late in the
-evening, but in time to select a sheltered
-place for the tent before dark. While I
-cooked the supper Clyde gathered a large
-stack of hay for our bed. In a swale near
-by the finest kind of red-top hay, all cured,
-stood waist deep. Here, among the willows,
-eight miles from Camp Penelope, we remained
-for four nights. There were a good
-many fox and wolf tracks in the sand, and
-I had my traps set all the time, but without
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[ 26 ]</span>
-success. However. I obtained a mouse new
-to me&mdash;the lemming. Clyde tramped through
-the country toward the mountains, but saw
-nothing of importance. He fished and
-brought back three grayling. I paid my respects
-to the small birds and secured four
-rare chickadees, besides several redpolls,
-pine grosbeaks. Alaskan jay, grouse, ptarmigan,
-etc. I had bad luck with ptarmigan.
-I missed seven good shots for some reason.
-The ptarmigan are now clothed in very
-thick winter plumage, which may account
-for it in part.</p>
-
-<p>I secured five. They are pure, spotless
-white with black tails. They are very conspicuous
-now, until the snow comes, and
-they seem to realize it, for they are extremely
-shy. They remain in flocks in the
-willow thickets. In the middle of the day
-they may be found dusting themselves on
-the sunny side of the river banks among the
-willows. Their tracks are everywhere. Although
-there is no snow on the ground, in
-many places there is a thick layer of hoar
-frost on the sand and grass, and tracks of
-any bird or animal are easily seen.</p>
-
-<p>The days have grown very short now. We
-would have to light our candle by half-past
-hour, and soon we would begin to yawn,
-and by six we would go to sleep, not to get
-up again until eight the next morning; and
-even then it is with reluctance, on account
-of the cold. The tent was easy to keep comfortably
-warm on the inside as long as the
-fire burned in the stove, but in an hour after
-the fire went out it was as cold inside as it
-was outside. Clyde and I slept on the hay
-with two pairs of blankets under us, and
-two pairs over us, and a large canvas sheet
-outside of the blankets well tucked in. And
-the blankets were no common ones. They
-were made for the Arctic trade, and were as
-thick as an ordinary comforter. And then
-we wore all our clothes. Each had on three
-pairs of heavy wool socks, a hood and mittens.</p>
-
-<p>In the morning the edges of the blankets
-were faced with ice from our breath, and
-the inside of the tent sparkled with a beauty
-I cannot describe. It was fourteen degrees
-below zero the last morning, and the boys
-at home declared we got "frozen out," the
-reason we returned so soon. When they
-found out that we did not go even to the foot
-of the mountains, but had camped all that
-time in the willows just across the river,
-they ridiculed us unmercifully, especially
-the doctor. But I'll be even with him some
-bright Arctic day. He even insinuated that
-I went on that trip just to be able to cook as
-much mush as I wanted to eat. I will admit
-that mush was a very agreeable feature
-of the trip.</p>
-
-<p>I really obtained what I went for&mdash;the
-chickadees. I have tramped with a burro
-(a California donkey), a canoe, and at last
-with a sled, and I must say that the sled is
-preferable when one has a level surface to
-travel over.</p>
-
-<p>We had carried grub for two weeks, a
-7 &times; 10 tent, camp stove and three lengths of
-pipe, four pairs of blankets, tent fly, sailor
-bag full of clothing, axe, hatchet, camera,
-two guns, traps, etc. I think I will make another
-trip soon if the weather remains clear.</p>
-
-<p>Nov. 7.&mdash;A week ago Dr. Coffin, Clyde and
-Rivers, with a Dr. Gleaves of the Hanson
-Camp below us, started up the Kowak to
-visit the other section of our company about
-one hundred and fifty miles north, and to
-find out all the news of interest along the
-route. They walked, carrying food, abundant
-clothing, and camping tools, on a sled.
-They hope to make the round trip in three
-weeks. I had intended to make the trip with
-them, but have not yet put up all the birds
-in my possession, and must work on them.
-We are a small family now, only six. C. C.
-still cooks, and I am willing he should continue
-the good work. He makes pies and
-cakes almost "as good as mother used to
-make," and fine yeast bread.</p>
-
-<p>A damp, raw east wind makes it bitterly
-cold to-day. At daylight this morning I
-went across the river to the willows for a
-couple of hours. It was six degrees below
-zero when I started, and I wore only a thin
-hood and mittens and a canvas jumper. By
-the time I got well across I felt nearly
-frozen, and as soon as possible I built a fire.
-My nose was frost-bitten before I knew it.
-I shot a ptarmigan and two redpolls before
-returning.</p>
-
-<p>Chenetto, one of our native neighbors,
-trapped a big gray wolf, a white fox and a
-red fox last week, I have tried to trade for
-them, but the natives say they need them
-for clothing; and they very plainly do, for
-these are the poorest Indians we have met.
-I regret our opportunity for trading down
-at Cape Prince of Wales. We expected the
-same advantage in Kotzebue, but are disappointed.
-One or two of our company keep
-an eye on special bargains and appropriate
-them.</p>
-
-<p>Last week a German called at every camp
-on the Kowak working up a "winter mail
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[ 27 ]</span>
-route." He had skated up from the mouth
-of the river, and proposed to take letters
-down to Cape Blossom for one dollar each.
-A reindeer team is expected there from St.
-Michaels in December which will bring in or
-carry back any mail. He is called "The Flying Dutchman."</p>
-
-<p>Another man from up the river came down
-yesterday on the
-same business,
-proposing further
-to take mail himself to St. Michaels. Some of
-our Iowa neighbors warned us
-of him as a possible "crook."
-He claims to
-have seven hundred letters promised
-at one dollar
-each. One meets
-all kinds of people in this desolate country, and
-even the face of
-a "crook" is not
-rare.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_left" style="width: 171px;">
-<img src="images/page27.png" width="171" height="277" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">The "Flying Dutchman."</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Schemers are
-trying various
-ways to get money. The gold proposition
-here is an entire failure so far, and the
-stories published are no better than "made
-up on purpose." It is supposed they were
-constructed by the transportation companies,
-and surely these have reaped a
-harvest this year. A thousand men are
-in winter quarters in the Kotzebue region,
-besides the many who went back the
-last thing in the fall. Hundreds of thousands
-of dollars were expended by parties
-coming here, and nothing is taken out; all
-of that money going to the transportation
-companies and merchants of San Francisco
-and Seattle. The H&mdash;&mdash; crowd alone, who
-are camped five miles below us, paid
-$31,000 for their outfit, including sailing vessel
-and river steamer. Part of this company
-got "cold feet" and went back, and the remainder
-have tons of provisions here to dispose
-of. They cannot get it into the interior
-to the Klondike regions, and so they will
-have to transport it all back down the river
-and so on to San Francisco, unless they can
-dispose of it on the way, which is not likely.
-It is strange how many fools were started
-to this country by bogus reports in the newspapers.
-Each party thought itself about the
-only one coming up here, and, what is most
-amusing, many of them had a "sure thing."
-Several parties whom we know of paid
-someone for a "tip" as to the exact place
-where the gold was waiting for the lucky
-men to pick it up. When they arrived at the
-Sound they rushed as soon as their feet
-could carry them, to take possession of their
-promised gold, only to find that they had
-been duped. They returned with righteous
-indignation burning in their bosoms, and to
-this day and for all time to come, justice is
-in hiding for the scoundrels, if they are
-found.</p>
-
-<p>This country may possibly have gold in it,
-for I know that it has not been prospected
-as it should. Men pan out on a sand-bar
-of a river here and there and are discouraged
-at finding nothing. And moreover they
-will not do another stroke of work, but
-either return to the States, or camp somewhere
-waiting for "another man" to sink
-shafts and do what we know is real prospecting.
-I should not be surprised if three-fourths
-of the people on this river are idle,
-waiting for the others to dig. I know that
-our camp has done practically nothing, as
-may be seen from the reports which I have
-made, when I myself was supposed to be
-one of the prospectors. We are all equally
-guilty. It seems that people expected to
-find mines all ready to work, and, since none
-are visible, sit down and give it up. Our
-company, as well as many another, is something
-of a farce when it comes to being a
-"mining company." We are doing nothing.
-It seems that when the gold fever takes hold
-of a man it deprives him of a fair proportion
-of his reason. But it cannot be denied
-that we are getting experience. Who would
-not be a miner under such comfortable circumstances
-as ours? Meanwhile I am skinning
-mice and chickadees. I am doing exactly
-what I want to do, and work here is
-original work of which I shall be glad in
-time to come. I would be nowhere else In
-the world than right here now. One cannot
-take a stroll in the Arctics every day. I am
-resolved to remain as long as I can and improve
-my opportunities. If the company disbands
-I shall stay with the missionaries. I
-do not know what this gold-hunting expedition
-came up here for unless to accommodate
-me, unintentionally of course. Everything
-delights me, from the hoar frost on
-my somewhat scanty though growing beard,
-to the ice-locked Kowak and its border of
-silver-laden spruces. And the ptarmigans:
-What beautiful birds! part and parcel in
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[ 28 ]</span>
-color and endurance of this frozen world.
-And the winter is not half over. What revelations
-when spring knocks at the barred
-doors! How alert the awakening landscape
-I can as yet only partially realize.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 272px;">
-<img src="images/page28.png" width="272" height="416" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">In the Spruce Woods.</div>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="dropcap">N</div>
-
-<p class="p0"><span class="hidden">N</span>OV. 12, 7 o'clock a. m.&mdash;Great excitement
-prevails. The "Flying Dutchman"
-returned down the Kowak last
-night. He is the German who passed on
-about twelve days ago to learn all the news
-and gather mail. He brings us good news,
-such news as makes the heart of a gold-hunter
-in the Arctics palpitate with emotion.
-He met a man above the Par River, one
-hundred and seventy-five miles east of us,
-who had just come over from the head
-waters of the Koyukuk River to get a sled-load
-of provisions. This man reported that
-gold in large quantities had been found on
-a branch of the Koyukuk near the head of
-this river, and that he and others had staked
-out rich claims. The "Flying Dutchman"
-also reported that six of our boys from the
-upper Penelope Camp had already started
-with sleds for that region, and that Dr.
-Coffin had reached the Penelope Camp in
-safety and was now on his way back to give
-us the news. We expect his party to-night.
-This news, if true, changes the whole aspect
-of things. We have heretofore had no assurance
-that gold had been found in this
-country, and we believed ourselves to be the
-victims of "fake" stories. What a change
-of feeling in our camp! Although this report
-may also be a fake, we will enjoy these
-happy expectations until further developments.
-One thing is true, and that is that
-our boys above here have started a party
-to the head of the Koyukuk, and must have
-learned something favorable. When the
-doctor and the rest get back to-night we
-shall certainly know all about it.</p>
-
-<p>It was just a day or two ago that I was
-writing a discouraging entry. So hope follows
-despair, and again despair may follow
-on the heels of hope, with gold-hunters.</p>
-
-<p>We have two sleds now nearly finished, so
-that if the doctor confirms the news, we
-will be ready to start immediately for the
-Koyukuk in the teeth of an Arctic winter.
-Let it growl: What care gold-hunters for
-old Boreas? We are in high spirits. Last
-night we had what is denominated with us
-"a high old time." We yelled, and danced,
-and sang impromptu songs, such as the following,
-which needs the camp conditions to
-give it the true ring:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">The Flying Dutchman came round the bend,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Good-by, old Kowak, good-by;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Shouting the news to all the men,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Good-by, old Kowak, good-by.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Gold is found on the Koyukuk,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The people here will be piechuck (Eskimo for "gone").</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The "Penelope" gang have made a sleigh,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And part are now upon the way.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">If you get there before I do.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Stake a claim there for me, too.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">We'll start right now with spade and shovel,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And dig out gold to beat the devil.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>This immortal song proves that we are a
-lively crowd. With the banjo and autoharp
-as accompaniment, we demonstrate a "good
-time" while we feel like it.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, until further news, we shall
-continue to get ready between the songs.
-Brown and I and the two Harrys are making
-a sled.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[ 29 ]</span></p>
-
-<p>Last Sunday we had a good-sized congregation
-for morning "services." Twenty-five
-white men were present, but only a few natives.
-We were wondering why the Eskimos
-were not coming, and Harry Reynolds
-went up to the village to see. He found
-them all playing poker. Harry finally persuaded
-two men to come, after they had won
-all the stakes. The rest kept on playing.
-Natives who cannot speak a word of
-English&mdash;and very few can&mdash;know how to
-play cards, and can read the numbers in
-their own language and count up faster
-than we. They play for lead, cartridges,
-tobacco, etc., but the stakes are never very
-large, owing to their limited means. Yesterday
-our cabin was full of
-Eskimos all day.</p>
-
-<p>A couple of young men
-got hold of our crokonole
-board, starting in at ten
-in the morning and playing
-without a stop until
-ten at night. And they
-can play well, too; better
-than we can. We found
-that they were playing
-for tobacco, am! that in
-the house of a half-way
-missionary outfit who
-have just completed a
-chapel for the regeneration
-of the natives! A
-previously-prepared quid
-of tobacco, which may
-have done service as the
-stake for other games in
-the past, was enjoyed by
-the winner of each game, until he in turn
-was defeated, when the quid reverted to the
-original winner, and so on back and forth
-all day.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 423px;">
-<img src="images/page29.png" width="423" height="245" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Native Visitors.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The Indians seldom spit out the tobacco
-juice, but swallow it. They seem to have
-cast-iron stomachs. When they smoke, they
-draw the smoke into their lungs and retain
-it several seconds before exhaling. I have
-many times watched an Indian inhale a
-great puff of smoke, but I have never seen it
-return again. Whether they swallow it, as
-they seem to do, or what becomes of it, I do
-not know. The women and even little children
-all smoke. I saw a funny sight last
-summer down near the Mission, and only
-regret that the camera was not along. A
-little "kid" about four years old, without a
-stitch of clothing on, except an officer's old
-cap, was strutting around the camp with an
-immense corn-cob pipe in his mouth, and he
-knew how to smoke, too. The question is,
-where did he get the pipe?</p>
-
-<p>At noon yesterday there were six or eight
-Eskimo men and one woman sitting around
-in the cabin, and as usual at meal-time C. C.
-gave them something to eat. Among the
-other viands were some beans and a bowl of
-gravy. This gravy had been made from the
-juice of fried bear meat, but it did not have
-a shred of the meat in it. C. C. passed
-around this varied mess in bowls to the natives.
-They began to eat with relish, when
-one of the men suddenly demanded of C. C.
-in a stern voice whether there was any bear
-in the "cow-cow" (food).</p>
-
-<p>C. C. said at first there was not, but the
-Indian tasted it again and looked suspiciously
-at C. C. who suddenly remembered
-the bear juice and admitted there was "a
-little." The woman at once threw down her
-food and the men fell to talking earnestly.
-They said that bear meat would kill a
-woman if she ate it, but it was perfectly
-safe for men. It is awful to think of; how
-we might have been held up for murder in
-that desolate land, and hung by a raw-hide
-rope to the dome of the Arctic Circle. It is
-a fact that this woman died two weeks afterward.
-The natives hold many superstitions
-as to when and what to eat. No Indian woman was allowed to do any sewing
-in the village yesterday because there was a
-man very sick in one of the igloos. Should
-they dare to sew it might cause his death.</p>
-
-<p>It is half-past seven now, and C. C. has
-got up and is starting the breakfast. It is
-beginning to be quite light outside and I will
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[ 30 ]</span>
-go out and examine my traps before breakfast.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 353px;">
-<img src="images/page30.png" width="353" height="230" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Entrance to Native Igloo.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Sunday. Nov. 13.&mdash;The wind has blown
-from the north constantly for two days and
-is increasing. The doctor and the boys are
-not back either, so they must have stopped
-at some camp on the way down. They are
-wise to do that. I went out on the river
-awhile this evening, and could scarcely
-stand up against the wind. And the sand
-was blowing in clouds across the ice from
-the opposite side of the river. It has been
-at even zero all day. In spite of the bad
-weather there was a large attendance at
-church this morning, there being thirty-two
-white men present. There were two from
-"Ambler City." thirty-six miles up the
-Kowak, and two or three from the Jesse
-Lou Camp twelve miles below us, while
-nearly all the Hanson boys came up. Those
-from up the river came down on skates yesterday
-and spent the night at the Guardian
-Camp, four miles above us. They had seen
-nothing of the doctor and his party. Services
-were held in the new chapel for the
-first time. And it was a great success; the
-chapel, I mean. The room was comfortably
-filled and was quite warm. A great blazing
-fire in the stone fireplace on one side made
-it cheerfully warm, and a great square
-opening in the roof, covered with an almost
-transparent walrus gut skin, admitted
-plenty of light. The service consisted
-mainly of familiar hymns, accompanied by
-the orchestra. The orchestra consists of the
-autoharp, played by C. C., the clarionet by
-Lyman of the Iowa Camp, the banjo by
-Harry Reynolds, and the violin by Normandin
-of the Hanson Camp. The music is fine,
-too. It alone is a big attraction for men up
-in this country, as very few thought of
-bringing musical instruments. C. C. made a
-short talk, and so did Mr. Dozier of the Hanson
-Camp. After the regular service a
-social hour was spent. This was the first religious
-meeting since leaving the States, for
-several of the men. It is very nice. I think,
-to have these Sunday meetings, if only for
-the social enjoyment. Rumor has come to
-us by way of the Yukon and Koyukuk that
-the Spanish war is at an end, and that the
-Philippines and Cuba are free. How we
-would like to know the details! But
-alas! by the time we do get them
-they will be as stale as last year's
-gingerbread.</p>
-
-<p>Nine men accepted our invitation
-for dinner, and our house might be
-said to be full. C. C. had prepared
-for such an emergency, and a big
-roast of bear with stuffing, fried
-venison and pies without limit made
-a feast that everyone enjoyed. We
-are all "prodigal sons," the only difference
-being that we are having
-our "fatted calf" all the way along.
-Two of the men declared that this
-was the first time they had eaten
-pie since leaving home. There is
-nothing like pie to bring a fellow to
-his home senses.</p>
-
-<p>Those who have visited all the
-camps on the Kowak, say that ours
-is the largest and most comfortable house
-on the river. I think this is the case but we
-are not the only ones who enjoy its comforts
-and hospitality.</p>
-
-<p>I do not expect we shall have so large an
-attendance again at Sunday services, for
-to-morrow ten of the Iowa boys, our nearest
-neighbors, start with heavily loaded sleds
-to get as far as possible toward the Koyukuk
-before the snow comes. Others are talking
-of starting soon, and if more favorable
-news comes we may all skip out. I would
-not hesitate a moment to go now if we could
-be sure as to the snowfall. We have no
-snowshoes, and it would be disastrous to be
-snowed in for several months in some desolate
-place with limited provisions.</p>
-
-<p>Yesterday I made a hood out of a canvas
-flour sack to be put on outside of my wool
-hood which mother knit, and it will keep
-out a good deal of wind. I also put a heavy
-canvas lining over my woolen mittens and
-darned several pairs of socks. That is the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[ 31 ]</span>
-first time I have done any mending since
-leaving home. Perhaps there is no time in
-a fellow's life when affectionate remembrance
-of his human sisters so comes to him
-as when his garments need repairing. Bless
-them!&mdash;the sisters and mothers, not the garments.</p>
-
-<p>Last week an Indian brought in another
-bear, a larger one than the Hunt River bear,
-and we traded for a hind quarter, about
-forty pounds. The flesh is rather strong,
-but we eat it with relish. C. C. has the
-promise of the hide.</p>
-
-<p>Yesterday there was great activity in sled
-building. Brown's sled is nearly
-done. Chenetto, a young Eskimo,
-worked for us most of the day lashing
-the pieces together. He is an expert.
-Luckily I traded for a large
-quantity of walrus-hide string at
-Cape Prince of Wales. It is about
-the only material strong enough to
-lash sleds together.</p>
-
-<p>Last week we nearly all shaved
-our beards off, which greatly improves
-the looks of most of us. That
-was not the cause of their removal.
-The ice forms in one's moustache
-and beard in chunks, and is very disagreeable
-and inconvenient to carry
-about. C. C. had a specially fine
-beard and it became him. Mine was
-long on the chin with rather silky
-burnsides, and the boys then called
-me Si Pumpkins. I then shaved off
-my moustache and all but the long,
-straggling chin whiskers, and they
-called me Deacon Greentree. But
-now I am plain "Joe" again, and
-they tell me I shall never attempt another
-beard at risk of disgracing the
-camp. We have a pair of grocer's
-scales with our hundreds of other things,
-and weigh ourselves at times. My weight is
-148 pounds as against 127 when I left home
-last April. This proves that a trip to the
-Arctics is favorable to health and avoirdupois.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 331px;">
-<img src="images/page31.png" width="331" height="325" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">The Leaning Tree that Marked our Camp.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>By the way, I saw my first nuggets to-day.
-"Hard-luck Jim," one of the men from
-Ambler City, had three small gold nuggets,
-But they were not taken on the Kowak, alas!
-They came from Cook's Inlet.</p>
-
-<p>The "Flying Dutchman" gave us a diagram
-of the Kowak River, with the camps
-and distances as he judged them when skating
-up the river. I will record them, beginning
-at Holtham Inlet. It may be years
-hence that some other prospecting parties
-will wend their way into these parts, and,
-seeing our deserted villages, pause in wonder
-at the lesson they teach. The first camp
-is forty miles from the mouth of the Kowak,
-the Buckeye Camp; then thirty-five miles
-and the Orphans' House; one-half mile and
-Sproud's Camp; nine miles. Riley Wreck;
-nine miles. Faulkenberg Camp; one mile.
-Lower Kotzebue Camp; twelve miles, Indian
-Camp; twenty miles, Jesse Lou Camp;
-twelve miles, Sunnyside; one-half mile.
-Lower Hanson Camp; three miles, Lower
-Penelope Camp (our own) and Lower Iowa
-Camp; four miles, Guardian Camp; thirty
-miles, Ambler City; three miles, Upper Hanson
-Camp; fifty miles, Mulkey's Landing;
-four miles, Camp Riley; four miles, Agnes
-Boyd Camp; ten miles, Upper Iowa Camp;
-two miles, Kogoluktuk River, on which,
-about six miles from the mouth, are the
-Upper Penelope Camp (our boys) and river
-boat "Helen"; ten miles, Stony Camp; one
-and one-half miles, Upper Kotzebue Camp
-and Kate Sudden gulch; three miles, Farnsworth
-Camp; three miles, Nugget Camp;
-eight miles, Upper Guardian Camp; five
-miles, Davenport Camp; five miles, Leslie D.
-Camp; eight miles, Ralston Camp; two miles,
-Par River, Captain Green's Camp. From
-this point there are camps on to the Reed
-River, seventy-five miles further up the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[ 32 ]</span>
-Kowak, but the "Flying Dutchman" did
-not go farther than the Par River. He reports
-eight hundred men in winter quarters
-on the Kowak alone. Thus is this desolate
-Kowak country peopled with expectant gold
-seekers, where a year ago a white man's
-track in the snow was a thing unknown.
-And what will be the result? Time alone,
-with the assistance of my note-book, shall
-record it. And here come the boys, but the
-doctor's face is not jubilant.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 410px;">
-<img src="images/page32.png" width="410" height="275" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Starting for the Koyukuk.</div>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="dropcap">N</div>
-
-<p class="p0"><span class="hidden">N</span>OV. 15. 1898.&mdash;The boys returned last
-night very weary. They gave us the
-news much as the "Flying Dutchman"
-had. Six of our Upper Penelope boys
-have started for the Koyukuk with four
-months' provisions. They are Miller. Foote,
-Alec, Stevenson, Shafer and Casey. They
-carry eighteen hundred pounds on two sleds,
-three men to each sled. Shaul has gone to
-the Pick River, where "good indications"
-are reported. That leaves Wilson, McCullough
-and Farrar at the Upper Camp. Dr.
-Coffin has little faith in the news. He fears
-it is an unfounded rumor like many another.
-Moreover our doctor thinks it foolhardy and
-dangerous to start on such a trip, and he is
-anxious about the boys who have gone.
-None of them have had any experience with
-cold weather, being California boys. Casey,
-in fact, was never outside of Los Angeles
-county, until this trip, and none of the crowd
-are dressed for severe weather. They have
-but little fur clothing. However, timber
-covers most of the country they will cross,
-and they will, of course, put up a cabin if
-necessary. You couldn't entice the doctor out
-on such a trip for all the gold in Alaska.
-It ranged down to thirty-five degrees below
-zero while he and the boys were out, and
-they camped several nights, although at all
-the camps on the river hospitality reigned.
-The doctor had one finger frozen. He says
-he did not suspect it was nipped until he
-warmed his hands over the camp fire. It is
-very easy to be frozen without knowing it,
-even with the thermometer only thirty-five
-degrees below. But what about sixty below
-zero?</p>
-
-<p>News has come to us that hundreds of
-other men are waiting to get to Kotzebue
-at the earliest possible
-moment. The gold-hunters
-up the river are
-mostly doing nothing,
-waiting for spring to
-open so they can go
-home. A few are sinking
-shafts in favorable
-localities, but as yet
-without success, though
-there are some "indications," whatever these
-are. It is a great undertaking to dig a hole in
-frozen ground. Fires are
-built and kept burning
-for some time and then
-removed, and the thawed
-dirt and gravel taken
-out. This process is repeated again and again,
-and the result is dreadfully slow. Frozen
-ground is tougher than
-rock to dig in. McCullough. Wilson and
-Farrar are starting such a hole at their
-camp.</p>
-
-<p>Our enthusiasm about the new strike on
-the Koyukuk is subsiding. We sing no more
-impromptu songs. But we have six men in
-that direction, and if they are fortunate
-enough to get through they will send two
-men back for provisions.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile I am collecting chickadees and
-redpolls. A couple or three of our leading
-men, who shall be nameless in this connection,
-are homesick. Yes, blue. They will be
-seen in Southern California as soon as they
-can crawl out of the Kowak country on their
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[ 33 ]</span>
-hands and knees. Now, watch and see who
-they are.</p>
-
-<p>Three of our neighbors started up the
-river yesterday with a load of eleven hundred
-pounds on a sled. They started on the
-smooth ice all right, but five miles north
-the sand has covered the ice clear across the
-river. They were stuck there and, after
-struggling over the sand for a few hours,
-gave it up and returned. The Iowa boys
-have not started yet, but are spending more
-time in making good sleds and fixing skates
-on their runners. If they start at all, which
-I doubt, they will certainly have better success
-than others. Dr. Coffin declares he is
-going to stay by and in our good, warm
-cabin the rest of the winter. He is quite
-pessimistic to-night. He predicts much suffering
-this winter. He found in his recent
-travels that open fireplaces are a failure.
-Cabins heated by them are cold. There is
-too much draft and the temperature cools
-off quickly when the fire dies down. We
-have two stoves, and water never freezes
-over in the cabin.</p>
-
-<p>Nov. 18.&mdash;We just had a dreadful catastrophe.
-C. C. had set his keg of yeast on the
-rafters above the stove to keep warm and do
-its "work." Harry Reynolds had some poles
-near by across the rafters. The latter gentleman
-is at work on his new sled and, repairing one of the poles, reached for it rather
-hastily. As a result the yeast keg turned
-over. The doctor was sitting beneath,
-calmly reading some good book, when nearly
-the entire contents, a gallon of sour yeast,
-poured on to his unprotected head and down
-his neck, and spread itself out as if to shield
-him from any other danger. What a sight,
-it is impossible for me to portray. Not content
-with deluging the poor medico, the stuff
-slopped over everything in the vicinity of
-two or three yards. Several of us had a
-dose, but none was so seriously affected as
-the doctor, who is even now at work on his
-clothes with warm water and a sponge.
-The smell of sour dough permeates the atmosphere.
-Brown remarks that it reminds
-him of the extremely sour odor which filled
-the cabin of the "Penelope" the first night
-out from San Francisco.</p>
-
-<p>For my part I think it convenient to have
-these little interruptions&mdash;when they fall on
-another man's head. It livens things up.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 291px;">
-<img src="images/page33.png" width="291" height="195" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Scaffold Burial.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>One or two other events have served to
-liven us up. Last night one of the natives
-at the Indian village died. It was what we
-expected, for he has been very sick for a
-week with pneumonia. This morning at
-daylight we noticed a smoke across the river
-and I walked over to investigate the cause.
-I regretted finding the obsequities closed and
-the four natives who had officiated just leaving.
-They had taken the dead man and all
-his personal belongings over to the bank of
-the river opposite the village, to a little knoll,
-where they built a platform on some poles
-leaned against each other for support. The
-body was wrapped in tent cloth and laid on
-this platform, which was about five feet
-above the ground&mdash;as high as the men could
-conveniently reach. After this the whole
-was firmly lashed together with walrus
-thong, so the winds and the dogs cannot tear
-it down. By the side of the scaffold the
-dead man's sled was laid upside down, and
-hung on the willows around were all the
-personal belongings of the deceased. He
-was "well-to-do," and these amounted to
-considerable as the Eskimos valued them.
-There were two nice reindeer skins, his
-clothes, mittens, muckluks, handkerchief,
-tin cup, etc. It seemed too bad to see those
-two deerskins left to decay in the weather,
-when the dead man's relatives are in sore
-need, but this is the invariable custom of
-these people. No worse than what occurs
-among Christians, when all available and
-unavailable funds are used to defray the
-expenses of an ostentatious funeral, leaving
-the family in destitution.</p>
-
-<p>Joe Jury and Jack Messing, two of the
-Hanson Camp boys, spent the day with us
-and we had a big dinner. This "having
-company" disturbs the monotony of so
-much "prospecting," as we are doing these
-days.</p>
-
-<p>Nov. 20, Sunday, 6 p. m.&mdash;To-day has been
-a very enjoyable one at this camp on the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[ 34 ]</span>
-Kowak. In fact every day is. The Hanson
-boys were all up for Sunday services. There
-were also two men from the Jesse Lou
-Camp, fifteen miles below us, who are visiting
-the Hanson Camp. The latter have invited
-our whole crowd down for Thanksgiving
-dinner next Thursday. We look forward
-to a "big spread." for this camp is abundantly
-supplied with luxuries in the food
-line, as I can testify, having taken dinner
-with them twice already. They are well-to-do,
-educated men, full of spontaneous hilarity,
-and a great boon to the Penelope Camp.
-Solsbury is a correspondent of the San Jose
-"Mercury." He is a lawyer and of course a
-good talker. He tells stories by the hour.</p>
-
-<p>This afternoon he got started from some
-cause&mdash;a predetermined one. I presume&mdash;and
-talked for two hours. He resembles the
-newspaper cuts of Mark Twain. It is very
-entertaining when he tells of his experience
-in lumbering in the Sierras. His own boys
-say that he talks so incessantly that they
-beg him to quit before they get tired of his
-wit or confiscate it entirely. Everyone grows
-tiresome to his fellows on a trip like this; it
-could not be otherwise. Constant association
-for months brings out a man's faults
-and traits of character so plainly that those
-which are of little note glare like tiger's eyes
-in the dark, and his company becomes disagreeable,
-living as we do in a little cabin,
-and looking in each other's faces if we take
-a stroll, to keep watch for frost bites. It is
-better to be in a large company than in a
-small crowd, so one can vary his personal
-reflections.</p>
-
-<p>Jack Messing is a man one likes to meet.
-He is a German by birth and the most generous
-of men by nature. His great fault is
-generosity, a vice seldom met with in my
-remembrance, and the boys make him the
-butt of dozens of jokes. He would give
-away the last stitch of clothing he owns
-should a man ask him. He gives the Eskimos
-all sorts of things and feeds them
-whenever he can, which is all the time, for
-these natives know a friend and are faithful
-to him. He has previously worn a full
-beard, but to-day he stalked into church
-with his face shaven clean excepting a long
-fringe of whiskers left in a circle from ear
-to ear around under his chin. He wore a
-belt and pistol, and had a big tin star on his
-left coat lapel and carried a "she-la-ly."
-He looked exactly like an Irish policeman,
-only with the usual recognized attributes
-of the latter highly accentuated. He stated
-in Irish dialect that he was after the thief
-who had stolen a pail of water from a certain
-camp down the river. As this allusion
-was in reference to a well-known occurrence
-of a week ago, it was very disastrous to the
-serious feeling which should prevail at a
-religious meeting, and it was some time before
-the congregation could settle down to
-the business in hand.</p>
-
-<p>This afternoon we had a regular concert.
-The violin, autoharp and banjo make fine
-harmony in this noiseless atmosphere, and
-we were soon expressing our feelings in
-jumping and dancing. Two pairs of bones
-rattled to such of the music as was appropriate,
-and it was no dull time in the Penelope
-Camp. Clyde took the pictures of the
-crowd. I say this afternoon, but I mean to-day:
-it is light for only about six hours, and
-at high noon the sun scarcely peeps above
-the hills to the southward. It appears to be
-sundown at noon, and the colors of sky and
-landscape are beautiful.</p>
-
-<p>We have had our first snow, only an inch,
-but enough to whiten the landscape until
-the next wind, that is booked for a circus,
-whisks it all into the hollows and then covers
-it up with sand, giving it a sharp rap
-and bidding it "stay there."</p>
-
-<p>This morning we saw a very beautiful
-mirage. The mountains and trees down the
-river from us were reflected in the sky
-above, upside down. Then for another fine
-display we have the aurora. Last night it
-appeared in the form of a great bow reaching
-nearly to the zenith. It consisted of
-many colored scintillating rays, which
-brightened and then almost disappeared,
-only to reappear in different form as if they
-had left the stage to change their costume.
-The aurora appears in different form each
-night. And there is the beautiful moonlight.
-The moon is above the horizon always now.
-It reverses the order of the sun and shines
-all day in winter, scarcely appearing in summer.</p>
-
-<p>How the time flies, to me at least! Before
-we know it. Spring will tap at the door.
-The unbearable monotony of an Arctic winter,
-which some travelers dwell upon so
-desolately, is unknown to us so far, and I
-for one will never know it. During the past
-few weeks I have read. So far have devoured
-"Last Days of Pompeii." "In His
-Steps," "Opening of a Chestnut Burr,"
-"The Honorable Peter Sterling," and "Etidorpha."
-I spent two weeks upon the latter
-and think it is a wonderful book, coming
-upon my thoughts here in the Arctics like a
-great semi-scientific visitor. There are more
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[ 35 ]</span>
-books in the neighborhood than I could read
-in two winters.</p>
-
-<p>I have been given a new name&mdash;"Chickadee Joe."
-At the Hanson Camp they call
-me "Little Joe," to distinguish me from
-"Big Joe." We are very familiar with one
-another and change very suddenly from a
-highly intellectual crowd to one of stirring
-juvenility. We had such an unexpected
-romp the other day. There was about an
-inch of snow out on the smooth ice, and it
-was snowing great flakes still. Three of
-our boys were playing snowball with several
-of the Eskimo children, and washing each
-other's faces and slipping down all over the
-ice. Two Eskimo "belles" joined us, Kalhak
-and Aggi-chuck, and they did not hesitate
-to give us a return snowball or a face
-full of the same. They were strong, too,
-and several times I found myself sprawling
-on the ice and covered with snow, to the
-great amusement of everyone. After all that
-may be said of this strange people, they derive
-a sort of very human satisfaction from
-their cold and narrow life, and I shall always
-think of them as finding some happiness
-in the long winter along with the
-aurora and the moonlight.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 289px;">
-<img src="images/page35.png" width="289" height="253" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">After the Ball.</div>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="dropcap">N</div>
-
-<p class="p0"><span class="hidden">N</span>OV. 25.&mdash;To-day we are resting and
-slowly recovering from yesterday's
-"spree." It was the most gratifying
-Thanksgiving, as far as the gastronomic and
-social celebrations are considered, that I
-have experienced. At eleven o'clock in the
-morning our "Penelope" crowd of nine
-were marshaled into line out on the ice, and
-marched three miles down to the Hanson
-Camp. Harry Reynolds was elected captain,
-and he bore a streamer of red, white
-and blue. We were all dressed exactly alike
-in our brown Mackinaw suits, sealskin
-muckluks and hoods. Our appearance was
-picturesque, and we regretted that there
-were so few spectators to review us. We
-admired ourselves. When we reached the
-first of the Hanson cabins, which are built
-within a short distance of each other in a
-spruce forest on a hillside, we lined up and
-sang "Marching Through Georgia" and
-other patriotic airs. We have only recently
-heard of the defeat of Spain, so were necessarily
-in harmony with the songs we sang.</p>
-
-<p>After breaking ranks we were divided
-among the cabins for the day's entertainment.
-Cabin No. 1 is occupied by Joe Jury.
-Normandin, Jack Messing and Solsbury, and
-these gentlemen invited C. C. Reynolds,
-Clyde Baldwin, Rivers and myself. We felt
-the honor of our invitation, for they had
-been before styled the "Aristocracy of the
-Kowak."</p>
-
-<p>After the "Penelope" crowd was apportioned, each division became the guests of
-the cabin to which it was assigned. Until
-about three o'clock our company sat quietly
-engaged in conversation. Meanwhile one
-could scarcely believe that a state dinner
-was in process of preparation, and that in
-the same room in which we were sitting.
-Solsbury was cook, and what appeared at
-his touch was marvelous, considering that
-the cabin was short on culinary utensils and
-he must "potter" over a little sheet-iron
-stove.</p>
-
-<p>At three o'clock the table was ready and
-we sat down to it, eight of us. We were
-seated opposite our hosts&mdash;Rivers opposite
-Solsbury; C. C, Normandin: Clyde. Jack
-Messing: and I opposite Joe Jury (Big Joe
-and Little Joe), in the order named. At each
-plate was an "Arctictically" executed
-menu&mdash;a section of birch, one of the logs of
-our hosts' cabin: thus literally were we the
-guests of the house. This in itself was a
-very appropriate memento of Thanksgiving
-on the Kowak.</p>
-
-<p>On one side of the plaque was written indelibly
-the menu. In one corner was a
-sketch of the cabin. On the opposite we
-later wrote our names, alternately, in order
-as we sat at table. Here is a partial statement
-of the menu:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[ 36 ]</span></p>
-
-<p class="tdc">
-Split pea soup. Wafers.<br />
-Roast ptarmigan. Jelly.<br />
-Turkey pot-pie.<br />
-Sweet potato. Baked potato. Sweet corn.<br />
-Sago pudding.<br />
-Mince pie. Jelly tarts. Olives. Pickles.<br />
-Coffee. Cocoa.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>This spread was one hardly to be expected
-in the wilds of the Arctics; though, as I have
-said, the Hanson Camp is never lacking
-in luxuries. Toward the end toasts were
-proposed and speeches made. My toast was
-to the ptarmigan, "The Turkey of the
-Kowak."</p>
-
-<div class="fig_right" style="width: 286px;">
-<img src="images/page36.png" width="286" height="284" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Our Big Haul of Ptarmigan.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>We were two hours and a half at the table,
-and I hesitate to say that some of us, myself
-included, had eaten more than was for
-our intellectual good, and we were glad to
-throw ourselves on the beds which bordered
-the dining-room. For the next two hours we
-rested and gradually revived. Meanwhile
-our hosts entertained us in original style.
-One of the jokes was as follows: A pot was
-set in one corner and in it was placed a
-small spruce branch. Then Joe Jury sat
-down behind this combination and picked
-a tune from a string which was stretched
-on a small wooden block. The translation
-of this performance, as we were informed,
-was, "After dinner the orchestra dispensed
-sweet music from behind potted plants."
-After we had enjoyed hours of fun, all the
-guests were summoned from all the cabins
-and crowded into ours. Several speeches
-followed, by Solsbury, Dr. Coffin. C. C. Reynolds.
-Jury. Normandin and others. Then
-came more jokes.</p>
-
-<p>At last the party broke up, and, after three
-cheers for the Hanson boys, we marched
-home in the bright Arctic moonlight, in the
-order we had come. Thus ended the first
-Thanksgiving ever celebrated on the
-mighty Kowak. On our return home we
-found the house had not been burglarized&mdash;another
-proof that we were not in the limits
-of civilization.</p>
-
-<p>And here we are, spending the winter in
-ease and luxury, while our friends at home
-are "remembering us in their prayers," and
-imagining us in all sorts of peril, with danger
-of overwork, amid privation and hardship.
-The fact is, we haven't done a stroke
-of work worth mentioning, when we had
-expected to be digging out the precious nuggets.
-In which condition are we the happier
-or best off? I prefer the situation as it is.
-What is gold anyway? It is the "root of all
-evil," according to a misquotation, and,
-conversely, I believe the less money a person
-has, the happier life he leads. Anyway
-it is good policy for us to advance this doctrine
-until we strike something. It tends to
-keep us content.</p>
-
-<p>Nov. 28.&mdash;The doctor and I have been out
-hunting. We directed our course down
-through the sand-dunes on this side of the
-river, and had the best luck so far with the
-ptarmigan. We got eighteen with twenty-four
-shots, which beats all records, as the
-birds are shy and, on account of their thick
-coat, extremely hard to kill. We stalked them
-among the hillocks, finding them feeding
-in the grass or in the thickets of dwarf
-willows which grow in the low places. We
-kept together and when we had spotted a
-flock we crept up behind the nearest dune,
-often getting quite close before alarming
-them. I got three at one pot-shot. They are
-hard to see on the snow, but where the sand
-is bare or with a background of bushes they
-are conspicuous. I had one vexatious accident.
-We spotted some birds on the opposite
-side of the lake and crept around the
-margin on the ice, hidden by bushes until
-we were within a few yards. I had two
-ptarmigan beautifully lined up and was just
-pushing the trigger, when my feet slipped
-from under me and my gun went off into
-the air. Before I could recover myself the
-ptarmigan were also up in the air. The ice
-is very slippery where the snow is blown
-off, as the sand driven over it by the north
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[ 37 ]</span>
-wind keeps it polished and prevents the hoar
-frost from forming on it. The doctor found
-a muskrat frozen to death near its hole. It
-fell to my mammal collection. I also caught
-a gray meadow mouse alive, as it was crossing
-a little pond. It is but my second. The
-burrows and runways of the little red-backed
-mouse are common in the woods and
-meadows. My steel traps have caught nothing
-but jays so far. I am sorry to catch the
-jays, for I do not disturb them near home,
-hoping to get their eggs next spring. I
-shall have ptarmigan to skin for several
-days now and so make recompense for my
-recent idleness. I can only work by daylight,
-which lasts but about three hours now,&mdash;that
-is, light enough for me to work at my
-table. The sun scarcely climbed above the
-horizon to-day. Clyde took the doctor's and
-my photos to-day with our big haul of ptarmigan.</p>
-
-
-<p>Yesterday there was a fair attendance at
-church. Services were held in our cabin, as
-the meeting-house fireplace fell in. It will
-probably not be used again soon, as it is too
-cold to mix clay to mend the breach. Twenty-nine
-degrees below zero, and one has to
-be careful to keep ears and hands covered.</p>
-
-<p>"Uncle Jimmy" (Mr. Wyse) gave me a
-fatherly talking to for skinning ptarmigan
-on Sunday. Hitherto I have used any time
-available for skinning birds, but yesterday,
-after a long argument and discussion, I
-yielded for the winter. Uncle Jimmy argued
-that I couldn't fill in all the time there is on
-week-days, and even if I don't see a reason
-for not working on Sunday, I should
-"consider the feelings of those who do." He
-is a nice old Scotchman, and I like him.</p>
-
-<p>I have just finished reading "Hugh
-Wynne." The doctor brought home some
-numbers of "Appleton's Science Monthly"
-from the Hanson Camp, also some back
-numbers of "Harper's," and I am reading
-articles in them.</p>
-
-<p>The doctor. Brownie. Uncle Jimmy and I
-had a hot argument to-day on capital punishment,
-also one on "how a young student
-should begin to specialize in any
-branch of study." I always take the side
-opposite the majority, so I can have more
-opportunity for argument. We have good
-and instructive times in this employment.
-Wednesday evening next is the first of a
-series of literary entertainments to be held
-weekly. Solsbury will lecture on "The
-Practical Value of Art."</p>
-
-<p>Dec. 3.&mdash;This morning Harry Cox and
-Harry Reynolds started with Indian Tom up
-the Kowak. Tom was our guide on our
-first steamer trip across Holtham Inlet last
-summer, and he has been camping in the
-delta until now. He is on his way to the
-Par River, where his winter igloo is located.
-The Harrys took advantage of company to
-go along with Tom. They took a sled and
-two dogs, with just enough outfit to supply
-them on the trip. Their object is to visit the
-various camps up the river and find out all
-the news, especially in regard to the strike
-at the head of the Koyukuk. An Indian by
-the name of Shackle-belly visited us yesterday.
-He has just come down from the
-Kalamute River, about one hundred and
-fifty miles above us, and brings exciting
-news. He speaks pretty good English for a
-native. He said that he had heard that on
-the Alashook white men were as thick as
-mosquitoes and digging out "plenty gold."
-These men had come up the Koyukuk last
-summer from the Yukon with lots of steam
-launches. They could not get further up
-than one hundred and fifty miles below the
-place where the gold is found on the Alashook
-River, on account of the rapids, so they
-had to wait and sled up. Shackle-belly also
-said that most of the men above us on the
-Kowak had already started over.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_right" style="width: 294px;">
-<img src="images/page37.png" width="294" height="228" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Indian Tom and Family.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>It will be very dangerous for these men
-now at twenty-nine degrees below zero, and
-it must grow much colder with more wind,
-up on those barren mountain passes between
-the heads of the Kowak and Alashook. The
-Indian said one man had already frozen to
-death on the trail this side, and one had
-fallen through a hole in the ice, getting out
-all right, but before he could build a fire he
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[ 38 ]</span>
-had frozen through. Several are frost-bitten.
-We are anxious about our six boys who
-started from the Upper Penelope Camp over
-three weeks ago. However, if they met with
-no accidents, they must be over into the
-valley of the Alashook by this time, where
-the natives tell us there is plenty of large
-timber. Tom tells us that seven Indians
-have died down the river, and that white
-men are very sick. Tom has his family
-with him and of course all his belongings,
-which seldom amount to much, according to
-our estimation of values, among these natives.
-He has two sleds and six dogs. He
-and his family spent the night with us. We
-spread tents for them on the floor. We have
-not been affected with vermin so far, and
-take precautions.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 413px;">
-<img src="images/page38.png" width="413" height="195" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Windings of Squirrel River.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Last Wednesday was the first evening of
-the proposed literary society. Solsbury was
-to have been the lecturer of the night, but
-was sick and couldn't come. However, the
-society elected officers&mdash;Joseph Grinnell as
-president, and Dr. Coffin secretary. Then
-the doctor conducted a question box. Some
-of the questions asked and written on slips
-of paper, with the name of the man who was
-to answer, were very serious; others were
-humorous.</p>
-
-<p>By the way, I must record a new pie which
-has fallen to the lot of the Penelope Camp.
-C. C. makes dozens of pie. We have pie
-every meal and between meals, and if a fellow
-gets hungry in the night when the rest
-are snoring, there is pie for his satisfaction.
-An old Eskimo woman from the village
-brought C. C. a pail of what she considered
-a rare delicacy, a gift expressive of her
-motherly consideration. It was a concoction
-of wild cranberries and seal oil.</p>
-
-<p>It was suggestive to the natural bent of
-the cook's mind, and he made a pie of the
-stuff. We ate every bit of it&mdash;that is, three
-of us did; the rest wouldn't touch it. I ate
-my share, and must say that if you overlook
-the strong seal flavor, it would not be considered
-bad. I learned to eat cranberry done
-in oil when I was near Sitka three years
-ago. It is too extravagant a dish to be eaten
-every day, and the natives keep it, American-wise, "for company."</p>
-
-<p>Last Tuesday the wind blew a gale at seventeen
-degrees below zero, and I thought I
-would see what I could stand. I wear now
-a union suit of fleece-lined underwear, a pair
-of blanket-lined canvas trousers, and a
-heavy wool shirt, with a pair of thin wool
-socks and a pair of lumber-man's
-socks inside my
-muckluks. I put on a
-leather corduroy coat and
-my heavy wool hood, with
-a scarf around my neck
-and across my face. I was
-gone, down among the
-sand dunes, about an hour
-and a half. The wind had
-an unmolested sweep there
-and I had good opportunity
-to test my clothes. It did
-not penetrate my clothing
-a particle, and I was perfectly
-warm all except my
-face. The wind pierced like
-a sword right through my
-scarf and wool hood. When I got home the
-lobe of my left ear was frost-bitten and also
-the same side of my nose. Both sections of
-my countenance are now very sore and are
-peeling off. I should have worn a canvas
-hood outside of my wool hood. Canvas
-keeps the wind out better than anything
-else. Furs are the best clothing in this
-country, but are very scarce among these
-poor Indians, and but few of our company
-have any. Again we regret not having
-traded for furs at Cape Prince of Wales.
-But we do not suffer by any means. We
-have clothing enough to last for years. We
-are not so fortunate in the provision line.
-However, should we strike it rich enough,
-lying around in our warm cabin, to make it
-pay another winter, it will be an easy matter
-to send the "Penelope" back to San
-Francisco for another load. The "Penelope"!
-What will be her fate when the ice
-breaks up in the spring no one can foretell.
-At the mercy of the unlimited and savage
-ice of Bering Sea, a frail little craft, no
-longer than the frontage of a city lot. We
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[ 39 ]</span>
-do not think or speak of the "Penelope"
-very often. We may be orphans in the
-spring.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="dropcap">D</div>
-
-<p class="p0"><span class="hidden">D</span>EC. 8.&mdash;The beautiful snow has come at
-last and to-day it is six inches deep on
-the level. The trees are loaded and
-the river and meadows are painfully white.
-We must get out our snow-glasses, of which
-we have an abundance for all. Our condition
-seems to resemble that of the Swiss
-Family Robinson. We find everything we
-desire in our cabin, if not in our "wreck."
-We have no wreck. The north wind has
-been blowing a gale for days, which at
-last amounted to a blizzard. I went
-across the river in the teeth of the wind,
-just crawling along on the slippery ice,
-but the fun was in coming back. I had
-but to keep my balance and the wind
-did the rest.</p>
-
-<p>We have been having some strange experiences
-with the Eskimos the past
-week, which has introduced us to more of
-their interesting superstitions.</p>
-
-<p>Sunday evening, while we were all engaged
-in reading, or quiet talk, we were
-suddenly startled by a loud groaning outside.
-As the gruesome sound grew nearer
-we scarcely knew what to expect, but
-were prepared to give relief to sick or
-wounded human beings of whatever type.
-We rushed to the door, to find Charley, the
-Indian medicine man from the native village
-above. We thought at first that he
-was but practicing his arts, but when he
-was brought in groaning and sobbing we
-realized that he was really very sick, and
-the doctor pronounced it pneumonia. Soon
-Charley's family followed, and one of the
-little children was nearly frozen. The
-wind was blowing a gale, and Charley
-told us that he had come down from his
-igloo, four miles.</p>
-
-<p>A few days before one of his wives had
-died, she who had eaten the bear gravy,
-and, according to Indian superstition that a
-person who lives in a house after another
-has died in it will surely die himself, he
-had moved out of his warm dugout into a
-tent. Of course it was very cold in the tent,
-and Sunday morning one of his little girls
-died as the result of exposure. So Charley
-could no longer live in either the tent or the
-igloo, and he was thrown out into the pitiless
-storm with his other wife and three remaining
-children. They went to a neighboring
-igloo, but a native would as soon commit
-suicide as shelter any of the family of the
-deceased in his house or enter the house
-where one has died. As a last resort Charley
-came to our cabin, and no doubt the
-whole family would have died but for
-this.</p>
-
-<p>Of course we warmed and fed all of them,
-and the doctor attended upon Charley, who
-was too sick to object to another medicine
-man's treatment. Several of us then went
-over to the church cabin and, by stopping
-the fireplace and putting up a camp stove,
-we made it a comfortable hospital. Charley
-is there now. Not a single Indian has been
-inside our cabin since Charley was here.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 307px;">
-<img src="images/page39.png" width="307" height="320" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Indian Charley and Family.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>They say if they come in they will surely
-"mucky" (die). We are very glad they
-have taken this course, as heretofore they
-have been too numerous altogether. It
-would be to our advantage to keep one sick
-man with us. We have tried to induce a
-couple of young men to cut wood for Charley,
-but they declare that also is dangerous.
-Charley's wife dare not touch an axe for the
-same reason, so we have to chop their wood
-ourselves. Wonder if we will any of us be
-alive in the spring after such dangers.
-None of the Indians give them any food, so
-we are attending to that matter. We are
-doing our best to get them to overcome these
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[ 40 ]</span>
-inhuman and exasperating superstitions.
-They can plainly see that we do not hesitate
-to care for the sick or the dead.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 405px;">
-<img src="images/page40.png" width="405" height="226" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">A Funeral Cortege.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Tuesday night the patient was so sick the
-doctor thought he could not live without
-especial care, so we decided to watch with
-him. Rivers and I stayed with him from
-one to five o'clock in the early morning.
-And it was an odd experience. We had
-Charley bolstered up on two benches placed
-side by side near the stove. We kept a hot
-water bag on his chest and occasionally
-made him take ptarmigan broth with soaked
-hardtack. Poor fellow! had he been fed on
-such a diet while well and able to appreciate
-it, he might well have been surprised.
-But he was too near death to appreciate
-what we were doing. He would have spasms
-of coughing and loud groaning, catching his
-breath and rolling his eyes. Then he would
-fall back with his head lying limply over
-his shoulder, breathing short and with
-scarcely perceptible pulse. We thought he
-was about to die, but the climax passed and
-he revived. While we were taking care of
-him his wife slept, for she had probably
-been without rest for days. She now waits
-on him and is very attentive to his wants,
-and does the best she knows how, being
-generally more intelligent than most of the
-women. They all have little ingenuity in
-caring for the sick, and this is one reason
-why they die. Could these natives be persuaded
-to have a few of their women educated
-as nurses, how much less would be the
-winter mortality! Had we time we could
-do this, but it would take years, and women
-beside. We have no women. But here are,
-or will be, all the abandoned cabins on the
-Kowak by spring. What an opening for the
-mission-inclined! Free hospitals and free
-beds such as they are. And they are not
-mean. There are chairs, too, and carpeted
-floors.</p>
-
-<p>In the meantime Charley's dead child, as
-we supposed, had been sole tenant of the
-igloo which had been vacated. This fact
-gave a sudden joy to C. C, the undertaker.
-As if by instinct he scented a resurrection
-of his neglected business, and it was with
-little difficulty that he persuaded Charley
-to let him give it a Christian
-burial. C. C. and Joe Jury
-went up to see about it, and
-found that the ceremonies
-had already been performed
-and the corpse was resting
-on one of the usual scaffolds
-near the igloo. This did not
-matter. They made a coffin
-of boards, sawed at our mill,
-and brought the corpse
-down to Penelope Camp,
-Jury as coroner and C. C.
-as funeral director. The
-hearse was a sled and the
-black horses a couple of
-dogs. Of course Charley
-was too sick to attend the
-funeral services, but his
-woman came and watched
-proceedings. She objected
-to nothing in any way when told that
-was the way white men buried their dead.
-But she insisted on putting some dishes and
-half a sack of flour in the grave before it
-was filled. The flour C. C. had brought down
-from the igloo, intending it for the family to
-eat. But they couldn't think of consigning
-a dead child to the unknown future without
-supplying it with sufficient means of support
-until it should reach its uncertain destination.
-So twenty-five pounds of good
-flour was interred with the coffin. C. C.
-intended this burial to teach the natives better
-methods than their own superstitious
-ways, but I for one doubt the propriety of
-burial in the ground in this country, as in
-summer the earth is saturated and covered
-with water, and in winter it is frozen to
-granite. As it turned out, the funeral was
-not a very extraordinary object lesson, for
-not a single Eskimo attended, save the
-woman mentioned, though they were especially
-asked to come. I am not sure that the
-funeral director was not guilty of making a
-"grave" mistake in the closing ceremonies.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[ 41 ]</span>
-He had just been assuring the woman
-mourner that the dead would need no
-further food or clothing in the "beyond"
-where she had now gone, when it occurred
-to him that a single demonstration of sorrowful
-affection might be appropriate. Just
-before filling the grave he had all the by-standers
-(gold-hunters on the Kowak)
-throw in each a spruce bough, and the
-woman did likewise. I suppose he chose
-the spruce in place of impossible flowers,
-but the solitary mourner must have considered
-the act an inconsistent one after the
-remarks which had been made.</p>
-
-<p>The doctor and I felt some uneasiness as
-to a special feature of the funeral and accordingly
-acted. Now I have no doubt my
-friend was no stranger to the scheme, but I
-was; nevertheless I went about my duty
-with the approval of my immature conscience.
-We went out as if to take a stroll,
-as was our frequent custom, and dug into
-the grave, removing the buried sack of flour.
-We very carefully filled in the grave and left
-all as it had been before. The snow which
-was falling at the time soon covered our
-footprints (whereupon might be written a
-poem), and no Eskimo will ever suspect our
-subtle deed. We put the flour into a new
-clean sack and presented it to Charley as a
-mutual gift. This was Kowak philanthropy,
-though, if the natives had found us
-out, we might have had to suffer. The doctor
-and I congratulate ourselves on doing a
-real good deed in a naughty world.</p>
-
-<p>Yesterday Charley's father came down
-from the village to pay his son a visit, but
-he evidently did not intend to enter the
-cabin, carrying on his conversation from
-without, very much as white folks do in
-cases of scarlet fever or other infectious disease.
-Some of us happened to be near by
-chopping wood, and we tried to induce him
-to go in. Finally the woman came out and
-built a fire, putting on green spruce twigs
-to make a dense smoke. The old man then
-stooped over the smudge, spreading a blanket
-over and around himself, thus confining
-the smoke about his body for several minutes.
-He then apparently considered himself
-immune from any evil and went into
-the cabin without further hesitation. This
-process of disinfection is certainly reasonable,
-only it was applied at the wrong end
-of affairs. He is a very old man and of no
-help about the patient, so we have an added
-charge.</p>
-
-<p>Dec, 12, Monday.&mdash;I shot three redpolls
-this morning over in the willows. I then
-tried to utilize our brief stint of daylight to
-skin them by, but was obliged to resort to
-the dim light of a candle after all. We get
-no more sunshine here in the valley. At
-noon only the snowy mountain peaks are illuminated
-by straggling rays from the truant
-sun. The landscape is often magnificent.
-I stood on the bank several minutes
-at noon admiring the views. The northern
-horizon was deep blue, and, contrasted with
-it, were the snow-covered ranges, which were
-tinged a rich pink. The sky above was
-slightly overcast, as if covered by a delicate
-pink veil. Dark purple shadows crossed the
-zenith, but toward the sun all was bright
-bellow and gold. The snow-covered river
-and meadows beyond were so white that
-they seemed to have a blue tint. Then the
-spruce forests with their ragged outlines
-looked dark and gloomy as they were
-sketched against the mountains or horizon.
-I never imagined such color effects as are
-displayed every day here. I do not think
-that the brightest colors on an artist's palette
-could exaggerate the brilliant hues of
-the sky during our short period of twilight.
-We are looking for a tenant for our cabin.
-Let some club of artists engage it for a season
-and they will be in ecstasy.</p>
-
-<p>A change in the weather! This morning a
-southeast wind sprang up and sent the thermometer
-to twenty-three degrees above zero.
-At this hour yesterday it was thirty-four
-degrees below. Although nine degrees below
-freezing, the air feels balmy as it strikes
-our faces. This is the first day in two
-months that I have taken a walk across the
-river in an ordinary hat. I could not go far,
-as the snow is badly drifted now. I saw a
-few redpolls and one raven. Rivers and
-Uncle Jimmy dug a new water-hole to-day.
-The ice is three and one-half feet thick.</p>
-
-<p>In the cabin all is quiet as I write. The
-only light is my little candle on the dining-table.
-Uncle Jimmy is asleep, with his head
-on his crossed hands, on the opposite side of
-the table. C. C. is sitting in an arm-chair at
-the further end of the room probably thinking
-of home. Brownie and Clyde went over
-to one of the Iowa camps a few hours ago.
-Some of the boys are restless and delight in
-visiting.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Coffin got word from Dr Gleaves to
-go down to the Hanson Camp. A man on
-his way up the river from one of the lower
-camps has frozen his toes, and they are in
-such a condition that amputation is necessary.
-Dr. Coffin wanted me to go with him
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[ 42 ]</span>
-to assist, thinking: me cool and nervy, but I
-declined. If they were nice, fresh, sound
-members, nothing would delight me better
-than to render assistance, but I have a repugnance
-to dead, decaying flesh. For this
-and other reasons I never would skin a bird
-that had died of itself, though I saw it fly
-against a telegraph wire.</p>
-
-<p>I am studying hard. I am at work on my
-physiology, and also committing to memory
-a "Glossary of Scientific Terms." The
-boys ridicule me for reading the dictionary
-so much, saying that the subject is changed
-too often to make it profitable reading. I
-am also teaching German to Rivers and
-Brownie. They are a very willing class.
-Other times I am studying bacteriology
-with the doctor. We are a literary and
-scientific crowd. Our latest argument last
-night was "How to Dispose of the City
-Slums." The doctor reads portions of Josiah
-Strong's "New Era" to us and then we
-discuss it. The Literary Society of the Kowak
-met Wednesday evening with a good
-attendance. "The Practical Value of Art"
-was thoroughly expounded by Solsbury of
-the Hanson Camp, though he required two
-hours to do it and some of the art-less ones
-grew sleepy.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 430px;">
-<img src="images/page42.png" width="430" height="217" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Native Family at Home.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Indian Charley is nearly well now, and,
-like a white man in such circumstances, is
-appreciative of all we have done for him.
-He assures us that his woman shall sew for
-us, and that he himself will bring us fish
-when the spring opens. We hope he will
-continue in a thankful frame of mind. Another
-native died at the Hanson Camp of
-pneumonia. Dr. Gleaves kept him in his
-own cabin for days but failed to restore
-him, as the man was too far gone when he
-saw him. The relatives of the dead man
-had heard how C. C. buried Charley's little
-girl in a box, and insisted that they, too,
-have a "cabloona" (white man's burial).
-Again was our undertaker alert and in his
-"native element," so to speak, and superintended
-the making of a coffin, and the various other incidentals of the funeral. The
-friends of the deceased brought a large
-number of articles, including a new gun,
-spy-glasses, parkas, skins, etc., to be interred
-with the body, but were finally
-dissuaded from thus destroying everything,
-save the dead man's pipe and tobacco
-pouch. These they believed he could by
-no means get along without in the next
-world. Before the Indian
-died he begged
-several times of Dr.
-Gleaves to kill him with
-a knife, and thus aid
-him in parting from
-his own misery. We
-are assured that the
-native medicine men
-sometimes do this, and
-at first glance there
-seems a humane side to
-the argument. On second
-thought, however,
-it is clear that the duty
-of a physician is to
-allay suffering, while
-life is naturally prolonged,
-leaving it to
-some other One to name
-the date of release. We hear of a woman
-sick at the village. Surely the Eskimos will
-soon be a race of the past unless civilization
-comes to their aid.</p>
-
-<p>Dec. 19.&mdash;It has blown a gale for six days
-and we have scarcely been out of the house
-in that time. The bright, warm cabin is
-preferable. We only hear the roar of the
-wind outside, and occasionally from the corners
-comes a cold draught of air dumbly
-whistling through the moss-crowded chinks.
-The two Harrys got back Wednesday night
-after a very hard trip. They only got twenty
-miles beyond Ambler City before they were
-caught by the snow, which shortly was
-more than a foot in depth and they could
-not travel. Harry R. induced a severe
-attack of rheumatism and could walk only
-with difficulty. He came near freezing to
-death. He wanted to lie down and sleep,
-and Cox had all he could do to force
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[ 43 ]</span>
-him on until they reached a cabin. Harry
-R. must have suffered terribly, for he is as
-thin and pale as any ghost I ever met. Although
-they went only about fifty miles up
-the river, they heard rumors from beyond
-which knock all the props from under our
-recent hopes. Our boys of the upper camp
-who started for the Allashook have returned,
-not being able to get over the pass
-on account of the deep snow. Moreover it
-is rumored that the golden reports from the
-Allashook were invented by a couple of
-men, one of whom has eight hundred pounds
-of provisions over there to sell, and the other
-wants to be recorder of claims.</p>
-
-<p>There are other reports of strikes up the
-river, but I for one shall pay no heed, nor
-will I write about them. Several people
-have been up from camps below, trying to
-get loads of provisions. They are having a
-hard time. Several have returned and two
-are waiting for better weather. It is really
-dangerous traveling now. More than one
-man has nearly lost his life. One came to
-our cabin with his face frozen, and did not
-know it until we told him. It is useless to
-think of traveling in this biting cold. And
-here comes a pounding on our woodshed
-door. Half a dozen of us run to open it,
-glad that we have shelter for any wanderer.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="dropcap">D</div>
-
-<p class="p0"><span class="hidden">D</span>EC. 20.&mdash;A man has just come up from
-the Orphans' Home with bad news.
-Poor Uncle S. is lost and probably
-frozen to death. He left the Orphans' Home
-to walk to the Mission a month ago and has
-not been seen since, although several parties
-have come up from the Sound. His tracks
-were seen by the "Flying Dutchman" on
-one of the forks of the Kowak in the
-delta. Uncle S. had our letters, so these will
-never reach their destination and the home
-folks will be disappointed. Possibly a whole
-year with no news from the gold-hunters of
-the Arctics. I suppose the body will be
-found when the snow melts in the spring.
-Uncle S. was a nice old Quaker, speaking
-"thee" and "thou" habitually. He spent
-the night with us on his way down and was
-very entertaining. He played a game of
-whist with us in the evening, and it was
-very odd and amusing to hear such expressions
-as, "Now, Joseph, play thy hand
-properly." "Is this my trick or thine?"
-"Did thee play thy ace?" etc. Uncle
-Jimmy, who doesn't believe in card games,
-tried to start an argument with Uncle S.,
-but the latter only said very quietly, "One
-can play music with good or evil intentions;
-so I think with a simple game of
-whist." I never saw Mr. S. before, and it
-is a strange incident up here in the Arctics,
-to hear him tell me about my father, who, in
-his youth, paid some considerable devotion
-to a relative of his, giving me many pleasant
-reminiscences of both my father's and
-mother's families. These old-time memories,
-told in the dim candlelight of the peopled
-cabin, interested our whole company, and
-we all took to calling our guest "Uncle S.",
-as much out of respect to the man as to a
-possible relationship which might have existed
-between himself and me. But he is
-gone now and we shall look forward to paying
-him suitable ceremonies in the spring.
-Our undertaker is preparing to embalm the
-body when discovered. He was a Friend of
-Some note from Ohio, who drifted up here,
-like the rest of us "world's people," after
-gold.</p>
-
-<p>Our camp is in quite a bustle this week
-preparing for Christmas. We have invited
-the Hanson boys up to dinner with us, and
-we are getting ready for a big time. The
-Saturday before Christmas we are to have a
-tree and feed all the natives in the country.
-The doctor has been at work on scrap picture
-books for the children, finding no end
-of beautiful chromes on the tin cans about
-the respective camps, besides other lithographs
-and steel engravings from various
-sources. Art is taking on shape and form
-and expression under the magic of the doctor's
-touch in a way surprising to both him
-and us.</p>
-
-<p>The literary society last Wednesday was
-the best so far. Thies, of the Los Angeles
-Camp, read a paper on Theosophy. It was
-entitled, "The Home of Contentment," and
-was very reasonable from his point of view,
-and well received by all. The doctor gave a
-short talk on "How to Care for a Frost
-Bite." This was of great practical value to
-all present.</p>
-
-<p>Dec. 21.&mdash;Forty-six degrees below zero to-day,
-and I, for the fun of it, walked down
-to the Hanson Camp. It was not at all uncomfortable,
-nothing like what it is when
-the wind blows, at ten degrees below zero.
-Normandin, of the San Jose cabin, has
-rigged up a turning lathe, using a grindstone
-as the driving wheel. He is turning out all
-sorts of things from birch and spruce. He
-has sent up a quantity of dolls' heads and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[ 44 ]</span>
-tops for the Eskimo Christmas tree. One of
-the Los Angeles boys is carving faces on the
-dolls' heads, to distinguish which is the front
-side of the head, the image being of the
-same proportions all around. He gives them
-almond eyes and flat noses just like the native
-babies.</p>
-
-<p>Now that the first snow has appeared, the
-natives are busy at snowshoes, and several
-of our boys are experimenting in the same
-line. The Eskimos are very expert in this
-kind of work, and their snowshoes are
-models of symmetry and neatness.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_left" style="width: 291px;">
-<img src="images/page44.png" width="291" height="229" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Near-by Neighbors.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The aurora is very brilliant some nights
-now, but there is no reason visible why, on
-other nights just as favorable, as far as we
-can discover, there is none at all. In this
-extremely cold weather, and especially during
-a sudden change of temperature, the ice
-in the river cracks and groans terrifically.
-This morning, as I was walking down to
-the Hanson Camp, the phenomena were very
-much in evidence, so much so that it was
-gruesome to a lonely body. At one place
-when I stepped off from a drift of packed
-snow on to the bare ice, there came a series
-of thundering reports like cannon shots, and
-then a succession of sharp reports and
-creaks and other awful sounds, that finally
-died away into the dead silence of Arctic
-darkness. Such combination of sounds, together
-with a reasonable amount of imagination sure to accompany them, is startling,
-especially If it is quite dark and one is all
-alone. Sometimes a faint crack will start
-others like it all around, and these in turn
-will give rise to a rapid fusillade extending
-hundreds of yards up and down the river.
-And there are the crunch and crackle of the
-dry snow under one's muckluks, emitting
-various modulations of sound, from the
-sharp bark of a dog to the squeak of a
-mouse. One has company even in solitude,
-and there can be no solitude in the world
-like this in the Arctics. Oh, it is all so enjoyable
-and fascinating to me! It is like
-reading a book on a new subject, for one
-interested in Nature to visit this country. I
-fear I will be sorry to leave it when the
-time comes. However, two years may
-change one's views of many things.</p>
-
-<p>Dec. 29.&mdash;Four men from the Orphans'
-Home on their way up the river, spent last
-night with us, and were interesting company.
-One of the men, a Mr. Thornton,
-knows several people of Seattle and Sitka
-whom I know. He was at Sitka and Mt. St.
-Elias with the Prince Luigi party in 1897,
-and has an article in the "Overland
-Monthly" just out. He claims to have seen
-the Silent City, a mirage exactly resembling
-a distant view of a large city. Several have
-seen it, and one man, a photographer whom
-I met at Juneau two years ago, claims to
-have a photograph of it. I have heard it intimated
-that the photo is a fake. Prof. Jordan's
-article on the Silent City in the March,
-1898, number of "Popular Science Monthly"
-is to the point. Thornton says there is no
-doubt about photos and cuts of the mirage
-being unauthentic, but he affirms that he
-and five men of the Prince Luigi party saw
-it just as he describes it. We had a big discussion
-on mirages last night. Yesterday at
-the literary, my paper was on the familiar
-topic, "What Birds Eat." and, though rather
-lengthy, was well received. I think our men
-would be interested in almost any paper that
-discussed the subject of eating. Dr. Gleaves
-lectured a week ago on the "Cruise of the
-Revenue Cutter 'Bear' in 1893." He was
-surgeon on board of her during that year.
-He is now president of the Hanson crowd,&mdash;more
-properly speaking, "The Kotzebue
-Mercantile and Trading Company,"&mdash;just as
-we of the "Penelope" gang are the "Long
-Beach, Alaska, Mining and Trading Company."
-How bulky and pompous that
-sounds! If we do not find a bit of gold
-while we are here, we shall have the satisfaction
-of presuming ourselves to be one of
-the best equipped companies on the Kowak,
-and are looked up to very much as the Vanderbilts
-are in New York. Sense of such
-distinction as tills tends to increase the size
-of our heads, which are really very large
-indeed, when considered in their covering of
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[ 45 ]</span>
-wool hood, canvas hood, scarf, etc. We are
-advised to enjoy these sensations while it is
-feasible, as doubtless when we reach the
-wharf at San Francisco or San Pedro on our
-return trip we may have to foot it home
-just like common tramps, or prodigal sons
-who have wasted their substance and that
-of our grub-stakers in "riotous living."</p>
-
-<p>On Christmas, day of all days, didn't we
-have a "spread"! C. C. worked at it for a
-month beforehand and even stayed up all
-the night previous cooking and compounding.
-I suppose he will have forty pages
-about it in his diary, for although he worked
-until he was exhausted, he declares it the
-happiest occasion we have had. And the results of all our labor were really immense.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_right" style="width: 291px;">
-<img src="images/page45.png" width="291" height="246" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Christmas Dinner.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The ten Hanson boys and a Mr. Van Dyke
-dined with us. The table was twenty feet
-long, covered with a snow-white cloth, and
-lighted by two candelabra of eight candles
-each.</p>
-
-<p>These beautiful articles of use and ornament
-were made by Clyde from a many
-branched birch, and the effect in lighting
-our large cabin was brilliant. The menu
-was gotten up by Rivers. It was a sketch
-of the landscape around our cabin artistically
-done in India ink on thin leaves of birch
-bark, and would have graced any table in
-New York.</p>
-
-<p>I never sat at a table in New York, but I
-just know they never had a handsomer
-menu card. The toasts were classic, and included
-a poem by Dr. Coffin, which was also
-of a classical character. I cannot refrain
-from quoting one or two stanzas of the latter,
-on account of their sentiment as well as
-literary merit. The verses were well received
-and delivered with startling effect.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Now just a few things I would like to say</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">To make us remember this Christmas Day&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">It isn't very often you dine with a Coffin,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">When the cook and baker is an undertaker.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Now and again on a bill of choice fare</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">You find such a dish as roasted black bear;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But outside of the valley of the Kowak river</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">You will not eat pate de poisson de liver.<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[A]</a></div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Or white Touste bake and Ukluk roast</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Are rarely served without Antic frost.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">On these hot mince pies there have been no flies,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">For our pastry-maker is an undertaker, etc., etc.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Now on your memories we would make a mark</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">With a plain, simple piece of brown birch bark;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">On one side a picture of the place we are at.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And a list of the stuff that we ate as we sat.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">[A]</a> Pie of fish liver.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>This is by no means the whole of the poem,
-but it is enough to intimate its character.
-It is Christmas and we are ice-bound. The
-day of all the days in a man's life, when he
-would naturally be blue, has been mutually
-cheered by those who, but for this digression,
-would have suffered under the circumstances.
-The feast lasted for two hours, and
-was followed by songs and instrumental
-music. Cox and I were waiters, Harry
-Reynolds served and C. C. cooked. After
-the banquet we four were waited on by four
-of the Hanson boys, who took everything
-into their own hands. Normandin established
-himself as cook and Joe Jury as head
-waiter, with Hays and Jack Messing under
-his charge. They made a combination so
-witty and droll in everything they did that
-we could scarcely eat for a time. We
-finally succeeded all too well for our subsequent
-comfort. Fun and frolic and candies
-and nuts occupied attention for an hour, the
-party at last breaking up with the singing
-of several church hymns.</p>
-
-<p>On Saturday before Christmas the natives
-were all gathered in, as well as the whites,
-and we served the former a "big feed,"
-afterwards exhibiting a brilliant Christmas
-tree and the venerable Santa Claus. Everyone
-took part in contributing toys and so
-forth to the children. There were dolls,
-tops, whistles, jumping-jacks, cooky people,
-nuts, candy, etc. It would take a whole note
-book to describe this part of the Christmas
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[ 46 ]</span>
-festivities on the Kowak&mdash;how the old people
-awkwardly tried to use knives and forks
-in eating, and how Santa Claus was greeted,
-and the wooden dolls, and all the rest. Some
-of the dolls fell to our boys. I am sure they
-reminded us of home. After the tree the
-natives danced, the girls in a graceful manner,
-and the boys representing fights or
-something of the kind, all the while being
-accompanied by a beating of tin cans,
-stamping and monotonous singing. There
-were thirty Indians and as many white men
-present.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_left" style="width: 147px;">
-<img src="images/page46.png" width="147" height="210" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">At High Noon.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Jan. 7, 1899.&mdash;Last
-week we were surprised
-by what we
-took at first for an
-Arctic apparition.
-Uncle S., whom
-everyone had given
-up for dead, arrived,
-accompanied by the
-missionaries from
-Cape Blossom. Mr.
-and Mrs. Samms.
-They had come up
-with dog sledges.
-Uncle S. had brought
-mail from St.
-Michaels, and the load was very heavy,
-there being two hundred and fifty pounds of
-mail alone. He had but nine dogs, and left
-most of the mail at Kotzebue Camp, where
-the snow was too deep to travel further with
-it. He and Mr. and Mrs. Samms pushed on
-up here, and, as all were pretty tired,
-several of the boys volunteered to go down
-to the Kotzebue Camp, which is sixty miles
-below us, for the mail and other sled. I was
-a volunteer, along with several from the
-Hanson Camp as well as of this, as we were
-all anxious to get the delayed mail. But a
-few hours later, when we began to realize
-what a hard trip it would be, everyone
-backed down until only Cox and I were left.
-These boys stood on the burning deck, and
-made believe they didn't care, especially as
-that brave little missionary woman had just
-made a trip over the same road of more than
-two hundred miles and on foot.</p>
-
-<p>That same day Joe Cogan and Sam Colclough
-came along on their way to the Allashook.
-They had a team of eight dogs, but,
-after inquiring of all the natives, they found
-they could obtain no more dog's food, nor
-is there any along the river above here. So
-as they were going to start back down the
-next day. Cox and I decided to go with
-them. I did not relish the anticipation of
-the trip at all, and, now that it is over, I
-must say that it is the hardest journey I
-ever hope to make. We returned last night,
-having been on foot for seven days, making
-one hundred and twenty miles of very, very
-hard walking.</p>
-
-<p>We had five dogs from here; these, with
-Cogan's, made thirteen. We loaded our
-blankets and clothing on Cogan's sled and
-hitched up the thirteen dogs to it in a line.
-The sled was a very heavy one and the load
-resembled it. It went all right until we got
-on some sand-bars about a mile below the
-Hanson Camp, and there our trouble began.
-The snow was light and the heavy runners
-cut through to the gravel beneath, making
-hard pulling. We were trying our best to
-get over when the sled struck a rock, and,
-in dragging it off, two of the standards
-broke off at the runner. Of course we had
-to return, leaving the load cached on the
-trail. At the Hanson Camp we got some
-wire and necessary tools, and by this time
-it was afternoon. The San Jose crew of the
-Hanson Camp must have us stop for dinner,
-and it was a fine one, too, with the immediate
-future ahead of us. Had we not been
-thus refreshed. I do not think we could have
-made the Jesse Lou Camp that night. Colclough
-declared our bad luck was all on account
-of the dogs, thirteen in number, so we
-borrowed two more and also another sled.
-The dogs pull much better in small teams
-and we now made good time. They carry
-their bushy tails curled up gracefully over
-their backs, and trot along the trail with
-ears erect and pointed forward, the very picture
-of lively animation. It was three
-o'clock by the time we got our second start
-and darkness was soon upon us. Besides,
-it was cloudy, with no moon, and snow was
-falling. Light snow had fallen to the depth
-of four or five inches, obscuring the old trail
-so that we soon lost it. And then our fun
-began. It is twelve miles from the Hanson
-to the Jesse Lou Camp, and it was not until
-ten o'clock that we came around the bluff at
-the latter camp. The snow-covered river
-bed was a uniform blank whiteness, bordered
-by the dark line of willows and
-spruces, and whoever was in the lead had
-nothing to guide him but kept as near as he
-could between the banks.</p>
-
-<p>Occasionally the sleds would meet and
-grapple with snags and rocks or sand-bars
-with little snow on them, and then we
-would have to strike off at right angles.
-Just before we reached our destination for
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[ 47 ]</span>
-the night, we got into a large field of broken
-ice in which we floundered about for half an
-hour. The ice was in plates or narrow strips
-an inch or less in thickness, all up on edge,
-jammed thus when the river had first frozen
-over. These sharp plates mostly leaned
-obliquely up stream and stuck out of the
-snow as high as two feet, with gaps and
-holes between. We had a dreadful time.
-Our sled tipped over and the dogs dragged it
-on its side for several yards before we could
-stop them and fix the pack again. And then
-our shins! We could
-not see a thing, and
-sometimes a step would
-be down into a hole
-and the next step on top
-of a sharp edge of ice. If
-I fell down once I did
-twenty times. Cox had
-never worn muckluks before, and it was particularly hard on his feet.
-By the time we got to
-camp we were tired
-enough to lie down anywhere, whether we froze
-to death or not.</p>
-
-<p>We were warmly welcomed at the first of the
-three Jesse Lou cabins
-which we struck, and
-they got us a hot supper
-and fixed our beds in true
-Kowak hospitality. It was New Year's Eve.
-1899, before we got to bed.</p>
-
-<p>By nine the next morning we were off
-again. The next halt was an Indian igloo
-thirty miles below. Before we had gone a
-third of the way my legs began to pain me
-so that I walked with difficulty. One of
-them was strained by a fall on the ice the
-night before, and I was in absolute torture
-all day. It was my first real suffering.
-Finally, when we had gone about fifteen
-miles, as it was getting dark and we did not
-care for a repetition of the previous night's
-experience, we made camp. Cogan had a
-tent and stove, and his companion was a
-"rustler." A patch of snow was soon
-scraped off and the tent put up. But it took
-a long time to heat the interior above the
-freezing point. Too much of the exterior
-gets into a tent.</p>
-
-<p>It was forty degrees below zero that night
-and the next day. After one has perspired
-a good deal during the day he soon chills
-when he stops, if he forgets to put on more
-clothes. I had a big reindeer parka and also
-a pair of huge deerskin mittens. Without
-the latter I should surely have frozen my
-hands. The dogs ate up Cox's leather-covered
-mittens, and I gave him one of my
-pairs. The pair I wore got soaked with
-sweat and then froze on my hands as hard
-as a rock. If I had not happened to have
-the deerskin mitts to change with, I might
-have lost a few of my extra fingers. Cox
-did blister his. Colclough got up some hot
-flapjacks and bacon and we were filled. I
-slept in the parka and kept pretty warm.
-The rest occupied the big deerskin sleeping
-bag, which is the only safe bed in an Arctic
-camp.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 425px;">
-<img src="images/page47.png" width="425" height="244" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">The Jesse Lou Camp.</div>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="dropcap">O</div>
-
-<p class="p0"><span class="hidden">O</span>UR midwinter trip for the mail was a
-chapter in our icy history never to be
-forgotten. We made the next fifteen
-miles to the Indian Igloo in good time. Cox
-and I slept in the igloo, but the rest in the
-tent. The fourth day we made the last fifteen
-miles to the Kotzebue Camp, where the
-sled and mail had been left. Besides the
-mail, there were two pipes about twenty
-feet long and weighing perhaps one hundred
-pounds each. Then there were our blankets
-and extra clothes and dog food, bringing
-the return load up to four hundred pounds
-for our six dogs. Cogan and Colclough went
-on down to the Riley wreck with all their
-belongings, so we hail no stove or tent for
-the return trip, trusting to good weather in
-making the long stretches. There is only
-one cabin at the Kotzebue Camp, and this a
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[ 48 ]</span>
-very small one, but we managed to find
-room to lie down somewhere. We also made
-a big stew of canned beef, dessicated potatoes
-and onions, with lots of pepper and
-sage. It was good and stimulating, and
-upon this we based our courage. It was a
-fine base. We found the load pretty heavy
-for the dogs, one of which wasn't of much
-account, and our progress was slow. Where
-the snow was deep and the trail rough we
-had to help some ourselves. An animal with
-four feet has much advantage over a human
-with but two. We made the return trip in
-three days, fifteen miles from the Kotzebue
-Camp to the igloo, thirty miles from the
-igloo to the Jesse Lou, and fifteen miles
-from there to the Penelope Camp, making
-one hundred and twenty miles in seven days.
-By the third day out my limbs became accustomed
-to the hard walking and my lameness
-disappeared. The thirty-mile stretch we
-made in twelve hours, starting from the igloo
-before daylight. The northern lights
-were not visible during our return trip, although
-previously one could read by them.
-The cold was not excessive nor did we meet
-with any terrible accidents, but I will record
-that I have had enough of winter travel in
-the Arctics. I am of the same mind as Hard-luck
-Jimmy, who, after attempting to reach
-the site of the "latest strike" and getting
-caught out in a snowstorm, said in his slow,
-comprehensive manner of speech: "It
-would take all the men in Ambler City with
-a great big hawser to pull me away from my
-warm cabin and grub again this winter."</p>
-
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 429px;">
-<img src="images/page48.png" width="429" height="217" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Winter Travelers.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The thirty-mile stretch of our road was
-long. So change of scenery for entertainment.
-When we got around one bend in the
-river it was just to plod along until we got
-to the next. It took three hours for us to
-cover one straight piece of trail. We ate
-nothing that day but a little frozen bread.
-We had nothing to cook, and there was no
-time to cook it if we had, and no dishes or
-stove. But we were served to a fine supper
-at the Jesse Lou. The dogs did finely that
-day. We gave them a feed in the morning
-before starting. Usually dogs are fed but
-once a day, at night, and then only about one
-pound of frozen or dried fish to the animal.
-At night we let the dogs loose and, if at a
-village, they forage around for scraps of
-anything, which of course are extra rations.
-They steal any provisions left unprotected.
-They ate Cox's leather mittens, the thongs
-on Cogan's snowshoes,
-and a leather gun case.
-One night they broke into
-the "grub-box." and got
-away with everything in
-it, including a sack of
-oatmeal and a side of
-bacon. Owing to their
-preference for leather,
-we had to sleep on the
-harnesses and with our
-heads on the "grub-box."
-These Eskimo dogs look
-just like wolves, but are
-docile and often playful.
-They do not bark like
-civilized dogs, but snarl
-and growl. Some nights
-they would howl in concert
-for hours at a time, making a weird
-sensation in the silence of the ice.</p>
-
-<p>In sledding, the dogs are tied by their harness
-strings alternately to a straight lead-rope.
-One dog is "leader," and he is the
-most intelligent of the pack. During the
-trip Cox walked about a hundred yards
-ahead of the lead dog, now and then turning
-back and whistling or calling. I walked behind,
-keeping the sled straight, and untangling
-the team when it got mixed up.
-Each dog has a name, and his character
-qualities become as well known to us as
-those of a human individual. Ours were
-named Emik, Kubuck, Auboon, Nanuk and
-Tingle. One day Emik jumped on to the
-dog that was not pulling his share and gave
-him a sound whipping. The whole pack
-joined in and I had to beat them off with a
-club.</p>
-
-<p>Ordinary animals would have died of
-broken bones, but it took a "sore chastisement"
-to bring these dogs to their senses.
-Fights are frequent and always mean two
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[ 49 ]</span>
-or three minutes' delay In untangling the
-lines. The harnesses are provided with
-swivels or else the lines would soon become
-hopelessly twisted.</p>
-
-<p>The two pipes I mentioned as part of the
-load, stuck out behind some eight feet beyond
-the sled, and many a time when the
-dogs slowed up suddenly my shins would
-come in contact with the sharp iron in a
-painfully emphatic manner. The crunching
-of the dry snow under the sled runners is a
-combination of sounds in which one can but
-imagine he hears familiar voices, and one
-falls to day-dreaming as he plods along, until
-he is surprised by running
-against the slacking sled or stepping
-into a hole.</p>
-
-<p>The two nights we spent in
-the Eskimo igloo were interesting
-in detail. On the way down
-I was so tired that I paid little
-attention to anything, curling
-up and thankfully sleeping. On
-the return trip we made the
-igloo just at dusk. The trail
-was poor and the snow deep and
-the load heavy, so that we had
-made scarcely more than two
-miles to the hour. When we got
-within sight of the igloo the
-dogs pricked up their ears, as is
-their wont, and started forward
-at an increasing gait. Dogs
-will sometimes smell a camp
-long before it comes into view,
-and their quickened pace testifies
-to their hope of food. When
-our team rushed up to the igloo,
-we followed at a trot behind,
-and nearly all the inmates hurried
-out, curious to see us. These poor
-people are very hospitable, and at once
-invited us inside. We did not enter,
-however, until everything was attended
-to, for, after one has straightened out
-to rest before a warm fire, it is very
-hard to get up and crawl out again on stiffened
-limbs to attend to duties easier performed
-before one settles down. The native
-boys helped us to untie knots, and soon the
-dogs were loose, scurrying everywhere for
-bits of anything devourable, and frequently
-having a savage fight over some imaginary
-tidbit. Everything but the two iron pipes,
-which we trusted the dogs would not eat,
-was deposited on the scaffold for the night.
-This scaffold is a necessary feature of every
-igloo. It consists of a platform of poles and
-boughs raised about eight feet above the
-ground and supported on four posts. On
-this are stored all the fish, skins, nets, harnesses,
-sleds, kyaks, and, in fact, every
-article not needed for Immediate use in the
-igloo.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 362px;">
-<img src="images/page49.png" width="362" height="301" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Native Igloo, with Scaffold for Stores.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>After the dogs were fed, we took a blanket
-apiece and crawled into the igloo. We were
-motioned to a vacant place on one side,
-where we stretched out as far as the limits
-of the room permitted. This igloo was built
-like a Sioux wick-i-up. Long, slender poles
-are fastened into the ground at one end,
-bent over and lashed with thongs on the opposite
-side. These are planted about a foot
-apart all around, until the whole completed
-frame is like an inverted hemisphere. Over
-this are fastened thicknesses of spruce bark
-stripped from the trees in sheets one or two
-feet wide and twice as long. At the top a
-circular opening is left, a foot in diameter,
-for the exit of smoke. The whole structure
-is covered and packed with six inches of
-snow, which effectually keeps out every bit
-of wind and incidentally every particle of
-fresh air, except what steals in through the
-smoke-hole and door when they are open.
-The entrance is closed by several strips of
-sail-cloth attached above and weighted, so
-that it always hangs over the opening and
-completely covers it. When one enters he
-must get down on his hands and knees and,
-lifting up a corner of this canvas door, crawl
-through the passage. The door falls back
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[ 50 ]</span>
-into its place behind. The passageway is so
-narrow and low that a large man can with
-difficulty crawl through. The floor inside,
-with the exception of a space around the
-fireplace, is carpeted with slender willow
-saplings, laid parallel and fitted closely together,
-forming a fairly good paving or
-heavy matting, sufficient to protect the occupants
-from direct contact with the ground.
-A few old deerskins are spread out where
-the elders sleep. The space on the opposite
-side of the fireplace from the door is not
-occupied by anyone, but is filled with cooking
-utensils, the water bucket with its
-wooden dipper, carved wooden bowls, and
-birch bark baskets. In this igloo&mdash;about
-twelve feet in diameter&mdash;fifteen people live
-almost all the time, only going outside when
-they must for wood and water. No books to
-read, no politics to discuss, no school to get
-ready for, and no visiting to do. Once in
-this residence, we were allotted a space next
-to the oldest man of the igloo. We were content
-with our small lot, for we were tired
-and hungry.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_right" style="width: 290px;">
-<img src="images/page50.png" width="290" height="188" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Getting Supper Under Omiak-puk.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The light was furnished from seal oil. A
-plate of this, with a pinch of moss for a
-wick, furnished the light. The penetrating
-smell of burning seal oil is very stifling, and
-a white man can hardly stand it. Considering
-our distinguished character, these people
-dispensed with the oil and lighted candles
-instead, which I suppose had been obtained
-from the whites by trade. Our scanty grub-bag
-next claimed our attention and, considering
-it good policy under the peculiar circumstances,
-we distributed the remainder of
-the hardtack, which had been reduced to
-crumbs, among our hosts, who watched our
-every movement. We also had a little flour,
-but, as we had no means of cooking it, we
-presented that also to the woman on the far
-side of the igloo, who was apparently the
-mistress of ceremonies; for, although three
-other women were in the house, she carried
-all the water, chopped all the wood and prepared
-the meals. We made our supper from
-a can of corned beef and a loaf of bread,
-baked for us at the Kotzebue camp. Seeing
-our destitution, with true American hospitality
-the woman before mentioned left the
-igloo and shortly returned with a birch-bark
-basket about eighteen inches long by six
-inches wide full of a frozen mass of blueberries.
-This was evidently a "company
-dish," the best in her possession. She detached
-a large chunk of the preserves and
-placed it in a frying pan over the fire. As it
-melted into individual berries she stirred the
-mixture constantly. After the mess was
-thoroughly melted she passed the pan over
-to me, and, by the smell which arose, I was
-aware that the blueberries were put up in
-seal oil, as a sort of salad, I suppose. Cox
-declared his appetite lacked severity sufficient
-to tempt him to even taste the compound,
-but I was hungry enough to eat anything,
-and partly because I did not want
-to disappoint the motherly old woman,
-who had taken all that trouble to treat
-us to the greatest luxury possible, I ate
-with apparent relish. I did no more nor
-less than hundreds of my people do at
-any civilized banquet or even a meal at
-a friend's, when they pretend to like oysters
-or shrimps or anything from sheer
-politeness, the which they thoroughly detest.
-I got away with the entire panful,
-along with a slab of dried salmon given to
-me by the old man. These kind people evidently
-looked upon me as a good-natured,
-hungry little boy whom they enjoyed entertaining
-out of their natural hospitality of
-heart. I have no doubt my mother will long
-to grasp that old Eskimo woman's hand and
-possibly kiss her ugly but kind features, for
-the sake of her goodness to her "wandering
-boy."</p>
-
-<p>Truly the fish was not at all bad, and I
-secured a piece for my lunch the next day.
-It proved to be just the thing, as I could
-chew it while tramping along, and one does
-not need water to drink with it. The native
-next to me in the igloo showed me how to
-strip the skin from the piece of dried salmon
-and prepare it for eating. He held the skin
-side over the fire until it began to crinkle
-and writhe. The oil which it contains is
-thus melted and the dainty rendered more
-toothsome.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[ 51 ]</span></p>
-
-<p>After our hunger was, with these native
-articles of food besides our own bread and
-corned beef, sufficiently subdued, we
-stretched out as far as possible in our
-limited space. Cox was soon asleep. We
-agreed that in order to make the thirty miles
-next day it would be necessary to start before
-daylight, as there was then a waning
-moon to light us a little. Cox was especially
-impressed with this idea, and went to sleep
-determined to wake up the minute the moon
-rose, which would be about five in the morning.
-He had scarcely been asleep ten minutes,
-and I had not dozed off yet, when he
-started up, and I had all I could do to persuade
-him that the night had hardly begun.</p>
-
-<p>Later, and until we finally did start, he
-woke me several times and would go out and
-look for the moon, which he was sure was
-behind the schedule time. We could not see
-the trail until it did appear, so each time he
-would return and drop to sleep again. This
-crazy conduct on his part vexed me not a
-little, as I wanted to sleep, being prevented
-by other disturbances besides his own.</p>
-
-<p>After we had eaten our supper and got
-settled down, the other people ate theirs,
-which consisted entirely of dried salmon.
-This was eaten raw, each mouthful being
-chewed for a long time. The young men say
-that this kind of diet is what makes the
-Kowak-mitts (natives of the Kowak valley)
-so strong. I must confess to the apparent
-truth of this statement, for the whole house
-knows it when an Eskimo enters; that is, if
-there hasn't been one around long enough
-to have allowed an airing. Even the pretty
-girls are so fishy that a tenderfoot in this
-land can scarcely endure their remote presence.
-The salmon is cured during the summer
-and kept on scaffolds, being brought
-down only as it is required for use. The old
-men soak it up in water a while before eating
-it.</p>
-
-<p>Directly after their simple supper the natives
-began arranging themselves in their
-proper nooks in any place where there was
-room enough to lie down. The men and older
-women and all the children in the igloo wore
-nothing but skin pants, being entirely
-naked from the waist up. At night, however,
-they put on their skin parkas, as the
-temperature in the room falls quickly when
-the fire goes out. When all are ready, the
-woman of the household goes outside and
-covers up the smoke-hole in the top of the
-house with an old skin, and besides piles
-snow over it thickly so not a particle of cold
-can get in. The fire in the center of the
-room has meanwhile been allowed to burn
-down to a bed of coals, so there is no smoke
-or flame left. In returning the woman also
-tightly closes the doorway. If any air is getting
-in anywhere one can see the stream of
-dense vapor caused by the extremely cold
-outside air striking the warm, moist air of
-the interior. If the door is left the least bit
-ajar a stream of this vapor is seen flowing
-along the floor straight into the fire. If
-one's feet meet this current of cold they
-soon chill. After the coals are heaped together
-and all other preparations for the
-night completed, the light is extinguished
-and sleep reigns. For a while after the igloo
-has been closed the air seems extremely hot
-and stifling and the odors are terrific. In
-an hour or two the fire is dead and the air
-cools off.</p>
-
-<p>My night's rest might have been quite
-sound but for certain disturbances. I had
-just dozed off after being aroused by Coxie,
-when one of the men began to sing some
-Eskimo ditty in a weird monotone. He
-would drone it through and stop, and I
-would just be dropping off to sleep when he
-would start it up again. He continued for
-fully half an hour, and I was so thoroughly
-tried by it that I could have choked the fellow.
-The natives all slept soundly and
-probably considered it a lullaby. Another
-time I was awakened by the old man next
-to me singing in a high, jerky voice. He
-got up, all the time singing, and went over
-to the old woman, who was saying something
-to him. Then followed a series of the
-most diabolical noises&mdash;hisses, swishes,
-grunts, groans, guttural rattles and so forth.
-It hardly seemed possible that some of these
-sounds could originate in a human throat,
-but as they were without intermission. I suppose
-they did. This was finally interrupted
-by a loud, ripping swish, as if something had
-been forcibly torn up. All was then quiet,
-and the old man returned and lay down
-next to me. I did not know but he would
-practice his incantations upon me next, but
-my fears were groundless. During the
-creepy performance it was pitch dark, and
-I could almost imagine we were about to be
-sacrificed in some heathen rite. I asked one
-of the young men what was the matter, and
-he told me that the woman had a pain in her
-stomach, probably from swallowing her salmon
-in too much haste, and the old man
-had cured her by driving the demon out.
-This practice is like that I have heard my
-father say existed among the Comanche
-Indians in the Southwest.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[ 52 ]</span></p>
-
-<p>At last, after one of his frequent observations.
-Coxie reported that the moon was up.
-The candle was lighted and we soon had all
-our traps out of the igloo. Our mitts, scarfs,
-socks, etc., had been hung up to dry. The
-dryer one's clothes are, the warmer he
-keeps. Rain is not necessary to dampness
-either, perspiration every walking moment
-being free and persistent. We soon had the
-dogs hitched up, all but one, Nanuk, who
-caused us considerable delay by running off
-into the brush and hiding himself. Finally
-after several of the natives had helped, he
-was secured and our pack arranged.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 442px;">
-<img src="images/page52.png" width="442" height="207" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">The Departure.</div>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="dropcap">C</div>
-
-<p class="p0"><span class="hidden">C</span>AMP PENELOPE, Jan. 10, 1899.&mdash;Yesterday
-morning Uncle S. and Samms
-started on up the river with their dog
-sleds and mail. C. C. and Cox went with
-them. They hope to reach the Upper Penelope
-Camp and learn as much as they can
-of the outlook and the wish of the men as to
-segregation in the spring. They will have
-no easy trip of it, but C. C. seems to covet
-experience in winter traveling, and I think
-he will be the recipient of it this time.</p>
-
-<p>When Cox and I got in with the mail, all
-the neighbors crowded into our cabin and
-there was general excitement until the sacks
-were gone through and the fate of each determined.
-Nearly everyone got letters. The
-latest news was dated August 22, and we
-had full accounts as to the probable closing
-of the war. I received six letters. Down at
-Kotzebue Camp I opened only one of these,
-the one of the latest date, and found it so
-bright and jolly that my spirits were at the
-highest pitch all the way home. Moral: Folks
-at home, write cheery letters to absent ones
-wherever they may be. The snow may be
-deep, and the dogs may be mad, and the
-trail rough.</p>
-
-<p>We are beginning to talk about "going
-home." and of the probability of our cold
-welcome among our town's folk, who will
-possibly ridicule us as "fake gold-hunters,"
-"prodigal sons," and all that. I was reading
-an article in one of the magazines last
-night, proving that an ambitious poor man
-nowadays has far more chances for success
-in any line than a rich one, and that "extreme
-poverty does not debar a man otherwise
-endowed, from entrance into the best
-society in the land." This in America of
-course. So we are saying in concert, while
-the latest news of gold fades into vapor,
-"Poverty is a blessing." It's a comfort to
-look at it in that light anyway. But it does
-not help some of our boys over the blues.
-Several put all they had into this venture,
-and on their return
-are destined to start
-all over again at day's
-work. I must own
-that I am myself the
-victim of some reluctance
-to return with
-empty gold-pan, and
-the old story of putting
-"gold into the
-fire and behold there
-came forth this calf"
-comes to me. We may
-have sufficient supplies
-to keep us in
-Alaska another year.</p>
-
-<p>Uncle S. is one man
-that is making a success.
-He charges fifty
-cents for each letter or package he brings up
-the river. My bill would have been six dollars
-at that rate, but of course my trip down
-more than met that. The doctor got twenty-four letters and many papers. Don't
-know whether he has settled his bill or not.
-Mrs. Samms is with us until the return of
-Mr. Samms, which will be not less than
-three weeks if the weather is good. It seems
-odd to have a lady in the cabin, but she is
-very agreeable and we like her company.
-We modify our usual reckless behavior and
-serve her in every possible way.</p>
-
-<p>She is teaching a class of children at the
-mission cabin. Mr. Samms is on an errand
-to get a census of native population and to
-note the condition of the Kowak Eskimos.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[ 53 ]</span>
-There is likely to be a famine among them
-before spring, as they have spent too much
-time in watching the whites this year, neglecting
-to fish and hunt at the season.
-There is now little game in the country, and
-by next winter they will be destitute in
-clothing as well as food unless they receive
-help from outside.</p>
-
-<p>Jan. 11, 6 a. m.&mdash;The doctor and I have
-just got out of bed, hours before the usual
-time of rising. We think we can write better,
-or read, early in the morning before
-everybody is up and story-telling and making
-noises in the room. When we are all
-active it is difficult to think.</p>
-
-<p>The north wind is blowing a
-gale again, and its steady roar
-through the spruces outside, accompanied
-by the monotonous
-whisper or undertone whistling
-down the stovepipe, gives one a
-lonesome, dreary feeling. I almost
-shivered just now all on account
-of the sounds, although there is a
-blazing fire in the heater and the
-whole cabin is warm and comfortable.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 353px;">
-<img src="images/page53.png" width="353" height="248" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Some of Mrs. Samms' Pupils.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>We have had no trouble in keeping
-warm. In the corners near
-the ground there is always plenty
-of frost, and if one sits or stands
-long in such a locality his feet get
-cold. But out in the room it is always
-pleasant. We have not put
-in double windows, as we expected to do, there being no need
-of them. The single large sheet of glass in
-each window is all-sufficient, though the
-frost collects in very thick layers on the
-inside. This is probably one reason why it
-is so warm. We took out the window panes
-the other day and melted off the ice. It was
-nearly two inches thick on the lower part.
-The panes are over two feet square, and
-the frost work on them is beautiful to look
-at. The designs are constantly changing.
-Sometimes great fern fronds extend from
-the bottom clear to the top, and then another
-time the pattern is small, like delicate moss.
-When it is thick one can see cities and
-mountain crags and almost anything besides,
-if his imagination is alert.</p>
-
-<p>The days are perceptibly longer now and
-yesterday sunlight touched the tops of the
-trees near the cabin. But it will be many
-weeks before the sun has sufficient effect to
-make any change in the temperature. Mrs.
-Samms says that February is our coldest
-month. We are getting along quite harmoniously
-in domestic affairs now. C. C.'s
-term of office as culinary chief expired at
-Christmas, and Rivers was elected to take
-his place, with myself as assistant. So I am
-back at my old stand again. There's one
-thing certain&mdash;we shall have less pies now.
-I think I shall be able to obtain a place as
-cook in a restaurant when I go back to the
-States if nothing better turns up. Our supply
-of some articles is getting short. We are
-going slow on mush and sugar, and the flour
-will not last longer than April at the rate
-we are using it now. However, our motto is
-to eat while we have the means, and go
-without when it is gone. Of course there is
-plenty in the "Penelope," if she is safe. We
-have a great deal of company at meals.
-Everyone traveling on the river stops in,
-either for a single meal or for the night.
-We like to be hospitable, and one has to be
-in this country. Wherever our own boys
-have been, up or down the river, they are
-treated royally at every camp, as I can personally testify.</p>
-
-<p>We do not feed the Indians any more at
-all, and it is better for them. They have
-become so dependent upon the whites that
-they do not work for themselves any more.
-When they might be fishing or trapping,
-they are hanging around our cabins. They
-do not visit us as often now as in the fall.
-Rivers and I send them outside whenever
-meal-time comes, and they are beginning to
-learn. We must do this or suffer ourselves
-from hunger in a late spring.</p>
-
-<p>Uncle S. reported that he found the "Penelope"
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[ 54 ]</span>
-in a safe place in a small inlet in
-Escholtz Bay. We received letters from the
-captain and Jett and Fancher. They have
-been on a sled trip up to the Buckland River,
-but with no success. However, they are in
-good spirits, hoping that something will be
-found before spring. Rumors reach us as to
-"finds" on the Noatak River, but we do not
-pay the least attention to them. The "Flying Dutchman"
-dropped in on us again
-yesterday. He is a "rustler," and will make
-it pay under any circumstances. He has
-more grit than all the rest of the men on
-the Kowak. He has a partner now in carrying
-mail, and a sled with dogs.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 431px;">
-<img src="images/page54.png" width="431" height="254" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Come to Church.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Jan. 15. Sunday, 6 a. m.&mdash;I am up alone.
-The doctor is a great fellow to lie in bed,
-excepting on rare occasions, when he is very
-smart. He even takes his afternoon nap
-regularly, and then sleeps ten hours at
-night. The wind is blowing at the same
-rate it has been going for a week. One day
-it was a fearful storm. It blew so one could
-scarcely stand up against it, and the snow
-and sand were driven along in blinding
-blasts.</p>
-
-<p>We can easily see now how the hills
-and dunes on the south side of the Kowak
-valley are formed. It blows with such force
-that all the snow is taken off from the sand-bars,
-and all the loose sand as well, and
-finally the coarse gravel is driven off on to
-the ice, where it travels until it reaches the
-south bank of the river, where drifts ten feet
-deep have been formed the last week. The
-natives tell us that in two moons from this
-the wind will blow harder than ever, and
-that it will be much colder. Yesterday we
-piled more sand and brush around the north
-and east side of the house. The wind had
-carried away a good deal of the original
-banking. The doctor was quite snowed into
-his bed one morning. We couldn't find the
-place of entrance, but it is now doubtless
-covered.</p>
-
-<p>Yesterday was washing-day for me personally.
-We do our washing one at a time for
-reasons of necessity. I had a large wash,
-as a part of it had been accumulating since
-August of last year. It is our habit to put
-off this very disagreeable duty as long as we
-decently can. I put in two faithful hours
-over the tub until my knuckles were sore
-and my back so lame I
-could only with difficulty
-straighten myself.
-I succeeded at last in
-"doing" ten pairs of
-socks, seven handkerchiefs,
-three towels and
-a suit of underwear, besides
-other things. I
-can now sympathize
-most heartily with the
-washerwoman of history.
-I have the clothes
-drying on the rafters
-above the stovepipe.
-The union suit is an
-awkward thing to
-handle in washing. I
-would rather tackle a
-blanket. A blanket has
-not two arms and two
-legs to be continually
-in the way. I could not
-wring it out very well, and after hanging it
-up to dry it dripped for several hours, sprinkling
-anyone who ventured under it. Uncle
-Jimmy sat down comfortably to read a good
-book, but he chanced to be in the line of
-gravity, and a splash on top of his bald head
-prompted him to address some words to me.
-It was only a few days ago that Uncle
-Jimmy's washing was "out," and I frequently
-had the edifying sensation of a
-sloppy, dripping drawers leg slapping me in
-the face as I moved about the kitchen stove
-in my culinary duties. We have to be patient
-and charitable when it is washing
-day, and other days. I will say that our domestic
-life is not often marred by so small a
-trifle as water dripping from a drawers leg.
-If we were sensitive to little things we
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[ 55 ]</span>
-would find frequent opportunity for grumbling.</p>
-
-<p>Jan. 23, 9 a. m.&mdash;Just got through with
-breakfast. Our menu is much the same
-these days&mdash;corn-meal mush, biscuit or
-flapjacks, hash, bacon, flour gravy and coffee.
-Kowak hash is a work of art, and is
-deserving of especial mention. It is a sort
-of literary review of the previous day's
-dishes. This morning it was simpler than
-usual, and consisted of only split peas, corn-meal
-mush, bacon, rice, toasted bread, salt-horse
-and beans, seasoned to taste. And
-yet the "beasts" claim their appetite is impaired!
-Needn't have eaten up all the luxuries
-the first thing.</p>
-
-<p>Several of the boys like to go out visiting
-the other camps in the evening, and not get
-home till morning "or thereabouts." I am
-a "good little boy," and go to bed at nine
-and get up at six. I have the breakfast
-ready shortly after eight, and then the fun
-begins, getting the boys up. They want to
-lie in bed till twelve, and Uncle Jimmy joins
-us in making it so uncomfortable for them
-they prefer rising.</p>
-
-<p>Harry Reynolds is washing to-day. He
-has just discovered that he has made a sad
-mistake. He dumped his bundle of clean
-socks into the tub instead of the soiled ones.
-General laughter at his expense. But H.
-wrings them out "dryly." He knows the
-laugh will not be on him next washing
-day.</p>
-
-<p>The jolly missionary's wife is singing in
-my ear something about "Darling Joe."
-Now, she thinks because she happens to be
-married that I must be much younger than
-she&mdash;in fact "quite a lad." In point of fact
-I am the older. It was my turn to shave
-yesterday, and I did so, consequently my
-chin is smarting. It is an unnatural process,
-and I think should be prohibited by
-act of congress.</p>
-
-<p>I have been reading "A Scientific Demonstration
-of the Future Life," by Hudson. It
-interested me very much, and the doctor
-and I got into many a warm argument over
-it. It is a strange fact that we never argue
-upon subjects we agree upon. I always
-stick to my sharp point and he to his. Our
-discussions are usually on some biological
-topic, and the rest of the men do not know
-what we are talking about. One night, after
-a long argument in which I would not yield
-a single point when the doctor thought I
-ought, he wrote me the following</p>
-
-
-<p class="caption3nb">ODE.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Mon ami, Joe,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">A thing I know</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Is, you are Joe,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Why this is so</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">I do not know;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But well I know</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">You <i>will</i> be Joe,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Until you go</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">From earth below.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">But even so,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">My young friend Joe,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Before you go</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">You'll <i>not</i> be Joe,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">(The same <i>I</i> know)</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">For you will grow</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Both old and slow.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And fall below</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">To what you'd grow</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">In things to know</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Of what is so.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">On things you know</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And say are <i>so</i>.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Hard winds will blow,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And light will grow,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And change them so</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">You will not know</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">That they are so.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">And then, by Joe,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">You'll be more slow</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">To say you know</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">A thing is so.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">'Cause then you'll know</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">That what <i>was</i> so</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">When you were Joe</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">May not be so</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">When you're not Joe;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And that <i>is</i> so</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Which was not so</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">When you were Joe</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Down here below.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">I like you, Joe,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">I'd have you know;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And that is so.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Because you're Joe.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And be it so.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Mon ami, Joe,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">As to and fro</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The world you go;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">That which you know</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Declare 'tis <i>so</i>;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And so <i>be</i> Joe,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The Joe I know,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">"Chickadee Joe."</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="dropcap">J</div>
-
-<p class="p0"><span class="hidden">J</span>AN. 23, 2 p. m.&mdash;I went out to look at the
-thermometer, when I heard the cackling
-of ptarmigan the other side of the river.
-Harry Reynolds and I armed ourselves and
-started out for game. We spotted the flock
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[ 56 ]</span>
-in a willow thicket where the sun, which
-nowadays is just at the horizon, had probably
-attracted them. Several of the birds
-were perched on top of the bushes, and were
-very conspicuous against the dark sky. We
-sneaked up to them and got a shot. Harry's
-gun got choked with snow and missed fire.
-We followed up the birds and, after two
-hours of hard tramping, I had four shots,
-securing three ptarmigan. The walking was
-extremely difficult. The snow from the
-tundras northward was deeply drifted along
-the willow thickets. It was packed just
-hard enough on top so that at about every
-other step it would sustain one's weight,
-but the alternate steps would break through
-nearly to one's waist. In some places we
-fell and floundered, and we considered our
-sport rather too well earned One of my
-cheeks was frosted, but Harry brought it
-out all right by a vigorous rubbing with
-snow.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 368px;">
-<img src="images/page56.png" width="368" height="357" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Grave Decorations.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>It is too cold for hunting. I cannot shoot
-with gloves on, and my bare fingers get
-burned by the cold steel of the hammers and
-triggers. Harry had the doctor's Winchester
-repeating shot-gun Although a fine gun in
-warm weather, it seems to get out of gear
-now. My plain double-barreled Remington
-is the stand-by. I look at it and it seems to
-say. "Wait till spring comes, Joe, and we'll
-get in our work."</p>
-
-<p>The literary society is as interesting as at
-first. Last Wednesday Joe Jury talked on
-the "Art of Printing." He is a printer by
-trade and has quite a business in San Jose.
-The week before Jack Messing told us about
-the Hawaiian Islands. He was there for
-two mouths a year ago. Nearly all of us are
-in favor of sailing around and
-visiting our new islands on the
-way home. It is only about two
-thousand miles out of our way.
-Personally I would like to make
-a long cruise and visit the Philippines
-and Ladrones. Several
-of the boys are growing desperately
-homesick. Time drags for
-them, and they are counting the
-days to next July when they can
-get out of the Kowak Valley and
-start for home. I have overheard
-a couple of them planning
-how they might even now go
-across country to St. Michaels,
-so as to be ready for the first
-steamer in the spring. Enthusiasm
-is a myth. It was less than
-a year ago that, "No matter
-what happens, we will push on
-into the interior and explore the
-unknown mountains until we
-strike gold." Now it is. "How
-soon can we get home?" Such
-is human nature.</p>
-
-<p>Everyone is making snowshoes
-or getting the natives to make
-them. I must get a pair as curiosities
-to send home. The natives
-do nice work, and are improving their opportunities
-to get a good price. They get three
-to five dollars worth of food or clothes for a
-pair of muckluks. Snowshoes bring ten dollars.
-Indian Charley has made the doctor a
-nice miniature sled and pair of snowshoes
-for treating him when he was sick. Charley
-shows more gratitude and good-will than
-any other of the natives. But he has some
-great ideas. Last week he worked hard
-from daylight till dark in a cold wind clearing
-away the trees and brush from his little
-child's grave. He cut down everything
-clean between the grave and the river, saying
-this was so "the Kowak-mitts traveling
-up and down the river" could see his "mickaninie's"
-burial-place. He took the tree
-trunks and poles and leaned them together
-over the grave, tepee fashion, so the dogs
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[ 57 ]</span>
-and wolves cannot dig in. He left several
-of the taller trees immediately surrounding
-the grave, and climbed to their tops, trimming
-off the brandies as he came down.
-He then fastened flags to these poles until
-he had fourteen up, with every prospect of
-more. He used everything, such as sail-cloth,
-handkerchiefs and sacks. We thought
-if he kept on he might have all the clothes
-he possessed fluttering in the wind like a
-Monday morning wash, only the clothes
-lines were perpendicular instead of horizontal.
-We remonstrated with him, telling him
-the "cabloonas" never put flags over their
-graves; but he Insisted that he wanted to
-make this spot conspicuous so that everyone
-would notice it. The doctor thought of a
-scheme and Clyde put it into operation. He
-made a windmill about four feet in diameter
-and with a big fan. It was well made, and
-took Clyde two whole days to finish. Charley
-was very much pleased with it, and it
-was promptly lashed to the top of the tallest
-tree, whence resound its mournful
-creaks whenever the wind blows. Charley
-wanted to know if all cabloonas put wind-mills
-over the graves of their dead. Charley
-is very ambitious to do exactly like a white
-man and yet, like many another, he seems
-to think a disregard of native superstitions
-would be disastrous. He asked us yesterday
-if he would die if he should take some little
-pills the doctor gave him for some trifling
-ailment. He said that some Kowak-mitts
-told him so. There is an old woman in the
-middle igloo of the village who keeps these
-natives in such ideas. The sooner she goes
-"mucky" (dead) the better it will be for her
-people. About New Year's an old man at
-her igloo was very sick and was expected to
-die. For fear of having him die in her igloo,
-and thus, as she believed, render the
-house uninhabitable, she turned him out into
-the extreme cold. His son stayed with him
-and made a big fire. As soon as we found
-it out the nearest cabin took the sick man in,
-and did all they could for him, although he
-died in a short time. Women here have a
-harder life than can be imagined. A child
-is never born in an igloo, but, no matter how
-cold the weather is, the mother is driven out,
-not to return with her child until it is five
-days old. There have been three such cases
-so far near us. The last was during a ten-days'
-windstorm. The woman went alone
-back into as sheltered a place as she could
-find in the woods, and made a screen of
-spruce boughs to protect her from the storm.
-In front of this she kept a small fire burning
-and there she remained with but little clothing
-all the bitter days of her allotted time.
-An old woman occasionally visited her and
-brought her food and wood. The baby froze
-to death.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_left" style="width: 140px;">
-<img src="images/page57a.png" width="140" height="254" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Native Sweethearts.</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="fig_left" style="width: 115px;">
-<img src="images/page57b.png" width="115" height="223" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Superstitious Old Woman.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Jan. 28.&mdash;Who should drop in on us night
-before last but three of our boys from the
-upper camp. Miller
-Casey and Alec. They
-report everyone in
-good health, but the
-gold outlook is altogether
-"nil." All the
-reports have been
-run down and there
-is no encouragement
-offered anywhere.
-The boys staked out
-fifteen claims in the
-districts which
-showed "indications."
-Holes have been dug,
-but in a few feet they
-strike water and can
-go no further. This
-report is for the late
-fall. C. C. and Mr.
-Samms had just arrived
-when the boys left. Uncle S. and
-Samms had seven out of their nine dogs
-killed by poison in some unexplained way
-at one of the camps. They bought five more
-at the Riley Camp for fifty dollars. Our
-dog Tingle was among
-the killed. C. C. and
-Samms intended to go
-twenty-five miles further
-to a village at the Par
-River. This party will
-remain with us until the
-return of C. C. They
-came down "just to kill
-time." They say it is
-pretty monotonous at the
-other camp. They carried
-a pack of about
-thirty pounds each and
-were very tired. Foote
-started with them, but
-gave up half way down.
-Casey and Miller, as well
-as Alec, are jolly good
-fellows and we hope
-they will stay with us a good while. Our
-grub is getting rather low. The boys up
-the river had the larger share. It will
-probably carry them through to July. But
-I think, unless we can borrow from neighbors,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[ 58 ]</span>
-a delegation of us from this camp will
-have to go down to the "Penelope" at Escholtz
-Bay and bring supplies. I'm sure it
-will not be I. I shall be here when spring
-opens for the bird migrations. The boys
-report that two of the river steamers are
-lost. They were put into a side stream to
-freeze up for the winter. This stream is fed
-by warm springs which kept running after
-the stream froze over, depositing successive
-layers of ice around the boats until one of
-them is buried entirely out of sight, smoke-stack
-and all. The other, the "Agnes E.
-Boyd." belonging to the Hanson Company,
-is about half buried. If these boats had been
-watched at the start and dams put around
-them and then raised, they could have been
-saved. But now they are entombed in solid
-ice, and, unless they are chopped out before
-spring, the torrents when the thaw comes
-will smash them to pieces. The little
-"Helen" is so far all safe. That slow,
-ugly-looking little scow, which everybody
-made fun of last fall, may be ahead of all
-the big steamers next spring. Already the
-Hanson boys are talking about making arrangements
-with us for taking them down
-to the Mission. Thus shall the first be last
-and the last first. The general opinion of
-our boys now seems to be, if nothing is
-found in this country by next July, to sail
-down along the coast to Bristol Bay and
-way stations, inquiring as to the news from
-those sections, and finally taking in the
-Aleutian Islands. This suits my inclinations.
-Reports are coming directly from the
-Yukon region that there is nothing to encourage
-one to go there. It is safe to conclude
-that newspaper reports are as nine to
-ten exaggerated. There are thousands of
-disappointed people in all sections of central
-Alaska. Travel is almost impossible.</p>
-
-<p>Jan. 31, Tuesday.&mdash;We are having cloudy
-weather with a little snow. The thermometer
-stands at ten degrees below zero, and it
-is uncomfortably warm in our winter
-clothes. I shot four ptarmigan yesterday,
-two of which I have just finished skinning.
-I got three at one shot, standing, and the
-other on the wing. The doctor is out now
-hunting the birds. Whenever I get any
-game it excites him so that he immediately
-goes hunting. He seldom starts until I have
-set the example. I do not have success
-oftener than each third hunt. Walking
-through the snow is very tiresome, but one
-must be persistent in this as in other things.
-It seems to be only chance that I ever do
-find the ptarmigan. I usually search for
-fresh tracks along the bushy margins of
-lakes or sloughs and then follow them up.
-Mornings I find them mostly near their
-roosting-places, and they seldom fly far.
-They sleep on the ground, burrowing into
-the snow and clearing a bare wallow on the
-warm, soft moss. It is difficult to see them
-on the snow, and this accounts in part for
-my ill success. Yesterday I walked right
-into a flock without seeing them until they
-flew. I also got two pine grosbeaks and two
-redpolls. The days are growing rapidly
-longer. Only three months until the spring
-birds come.</p>
-
-<p>Sunday there were fifty-seven persons at
-church, including thirty-two white men. A
-stranger conducted the services in C. C.'s
-place. Nothing occurred of an unexpected
-nature excepting the fact that one of our
-boys went to sleep and snored so loud that
-it made us all think we were back in the
-States at church somewhere. Last night we
-had what Kowak boys call a "great blow-out."
-Brownie made a big wad of taffy and
-we all pulled at it. By the way, three or
-four of us were surprised at Christmas by
-receiving a box each, "straight from home."
-They had been packed and given into the
-care of different persons, so that the recipient
-of each box did not suspect that he
-was to have one. By some oversight of the
-party to whom my own was committed, I
-did not get my Christmas box, but am assured
-that it is "safe somewhere," and will
-come to light when somebody stumbles over
-it. Dr. Coffin received his on time, and the
-contents have yielded us no end of comfort.
-Brownie drew upon its nuts and crystallized
-fruits for his taffy. After the candy was
-washed off from the table and chairs and
-candle-sticks and faces and hands, we
-played a game of crokonole, which lasted far
-into the night. The result was that I did not
-have breakfast on time. Miller and I
-played the doctor and Rivers, the latter
-combine winning two out of three games
-after a very close struggle. They had the
-"ha-ha" on me. The game finally depended
-on the last shot, which was mine. We both
-had 195-200 to make. There were three
-blacks on the board and two whites. The
-whites are Miller's and mine. I had a fairly
-good split shot to take off two blacks, which
-would have given us the odd game by a good
-margin. Everyone was talking and the opposition
-was doing its best to "rattle" me.
-Anyhow, by some extraordinary roundabout,
-my shot cleared the board of every white
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[ 59 ]</span>
-one and put all three blacks in the center
-ring. Oh, but the howl from the enemy!</p>
-
-<p>Several cases of scurvy are reported along
-the line. One man is nearly dead. It is
-supposed to be due to a sameness of diet and
-two little exercise. Men settle down in their
-cabins and, not being obliged to go out, just
-sleep the time away. Dr. Coffin suspects another
-cause. A poor grade of food-stuffs has
-been brought up, probably with adulterations.
-Brownie is just now pounding up
-lumps of sugar on the table where I am
-writing. He is using the end of my rolling-pin
-with great effect and much scattering of
-sweetness, much to the delight of several
-Eskimo "mickaninies," who are having an active picnic in consequence.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 335px;">
-<img src="images/page59.png" width="335" height="261" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Home from the Mission.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Feb. 2.&mdash;C. C. and party have returned, whole but tired. Besides
-C. C., Cox and Mr. Samms, there are
-four fellows from the Upper Agnes
-Boyd Camp, so that we are pretty
-well crowded as to sleeping. I had
-eighteen men to feed for three meals,
-serving them at two tables. I had to
-"rustle" for breakfast this morning.
-Made two big pans of biscuit, a
-kettle of mush, a mass of salt-horse
-hash, bacon and gravy. The repast
-was successful, excepting that the
-gravy was somewhat salty. It is a
-great idea this, my cooking for eighteen
-men, after I have declared
-"quits" so many times. The fellows
-laugh now when I "resign."</p>
-
-<p>Scurvy and "black-leg" are getting
-common up the river. One man
-at the Jesse Lou Camp has died of the
-latter. The "black-leg" is what the doctors
-call phlebitis. Black patches appear
-on the lower limbs, which swell and
-become very painful. Many are affected
-and at some of the camps above us
-they have instituted regular "scurvy
-trails," five to ten miles long, which they
-tramp every day. Exercise and a change of
-food seem to help and also to prevent the
-disease. Those who are suffering have been
-confined to their cabins so long, eating pork
-and beans and baking-powder bread, to the
-exclusion of fruit and fresh meats, that their
-cases are almost hopeless. C. C. reports
-nothing new above. He and Samms visited
-the big Indian village at the Par River. C. C.
-got a black bear skin in trade. Samms took
-a census of the native population and finds
-about four hundred and fifty on the Kowak.
-C. C. had rather a hard trip I guess, but he
-was anxious to get it. Nothing like having
-plenty of hardships to relate on one's return
-home. I expect to do some of the relating
-myself. He is a pretty heavy man and it
-would seem could not endure as much as a
-slender person. But he manages to make it.
-Last night and to-day we have our heaviest
-snowfall. Until a thaw comes to form a
-crust traveling will be difficult. Yesterday
-the literary was well attended. Mr. Young
-of the Iowa Camp, talked on "Butter Making
-and Creamery Methods." and I on the
-"Bacteria which Assist in the Making of
-Cheese and Butter." Casey sang two comic
-songs, "The Irish Jubilee." and "Put Me
-Off at Buffalo." Miller sang "Just Behind
-the Times" and "The Queen's Hussars."
-Miller has a fine voice. The literary is
-growing more popular as the season advances,
-and it may well be considered an
-important factor in helping many of us to
-pass the winter profitably. We try to bring
-in subjects which will interest everyone,
-those who are not literally inclined as well
-as the rest, and I think we have been quite
-successful. It seems to me that the mind
-must be employed in these long winter evenings
-at different points of Alaska, as a
-means of moral and physical health. The
-doctor and I agree as to this.</p>
-
-<p>Feb. 4.&mdash;The other day one of the boys was
-rummaging about among the stores to see
-what he could come across of interest piled
-above the rafters, when he accidentally
-knocked down a box. It fell to the door and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[ 60 ]</span>
-one corner burst open, disclosing the contents,
-which were not "Sugar Corn," as the
-label on the end indicated. A very insignificant
-legend near one end read "C. C.
-Reynolds." and it was set aside as belonging
-to him. Yesterday it was given to C. C,
-who at once recognized it as the very
-Christmas box which had been entrusted to
-him for me before we left home, by my
-mother and sister. He turned it over to me
-with many regrets, etc. It contained everything
-that could give pleasure to a boy from
-two years old to twenty-one&mdash;from tooters
-and jumping-jacks to warm woolen hoods
-and handkerchiefs and books. Stockings
-were stuffed full of candies corked tightly
-in bottles and tin boxes, and nuts were profuse.
-A touch of home-thought mingled
-with the Arctic storms. I wish we had had
-it for Christmas on account of the toys and
-candies, which would have added greatly
-to the presents on the natives' Christmas
-tree. The hoods were especially acceptable.
-They are knit with a piece across the nose,
-openings only for the eyes and mouth, and
-are tied under the chin. They fit like the
-skin itself. The books are all new to our
-library, which has been pretty thoroughly
-digested by this time. I brought the three
-novels out and they were immediately
-pounced upon. The doctor is reading "A
-Tennessee Judge." Miller "A Kentucky
-Colonel." and Mrs. Samms "Oliver Twist."
-I shall get at them in course of time.</p>
-
-<p>I have read very little of late aside from
-my physiology. There is a growing faction
-in our company now favoring an expedition
-to the Philippines. We have the "Penelope"
-and sufficient supplies to go around
-the world, for that matter. For my part I
-think we ought not to hurry about leaving
-Alaska. Resolutions in regard to prospecting
-are dimly waning. Last summer it was,
-"We will stay in Alaska and push on until
-we find gold, if it takes three years." In
-the fall they thought "two years enough."
-Last month it was, "We will prospect all
-summer and start for home as late as the
-boat can leave the Sound." And now it is,
-"How can we the soonest reach home?"
-Several men from up the river are going to
-start overland for St. Michaels. Time, and
-plenty of it, seems to be an antidote for enthusiasm.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 83px;">
-<img src="images/page60.png" width="83" height="58" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVI">CHAPTER XVI.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="dropcap">F</div>
-
-<p class="p0"><span class="hidden">F</span>EB. 8.&mdash;Mr. and Mrs. Samms left for the
-Mission yesterday. Harry Reynolds
-goes with them, and will either stay
-there or go down to the "Penelope." That
-lessens our number, but we will still have
-eleven in the house. C. C. talks of following
-them later. There will be no more prospecting
-done by this company this year, except
-by myself, and that for birds. I got a pair of
-muckluks in trade, and am now bartering
-for a pair of snowshoes. The snow is
-eighteen inches deep and very light and dry.
-I shot four redpolls near the house this
-morning. I would like to see it sixty-five
-degrees below zero just for the experience
-of it. I have already shot ptarmigan at
-forty-four degrees below, and could have
-stood it much colder without wind.</p>
-
-<p>Feb. 11.&mdash;It must be admitted that life is
-getting a little humdrum. There is nothing
-in particular to write about unless one has
-a poetic turn. Poetry doesn't come to any
-of us any more. The poetry is wearing off
-from the L. B. &amp; A. M. &amp; T. Co.</p>
-
-<p>If I were a Mark Twain, with humor to
-relate the doings of people about me, I could
-write a few pages of good reading. Resources
-are unlimited to the right person
-applying. The story of our "Fool's Errand"
-into this out-of-the-way country, if
-written by an expert, would be as rich a
-theme as one could desire. But alas! I am
-only a bird-hunter by nature, and a gold-hunter
-on the Kowak by grace of my father,
-and am unable to depict the fortunes of this
-crowd in an acceptable manner. There is
-unrest everywhere. All admit that they
-have been duped. Some are making the
-best of circumstances, but others are taking
-it to heart in a pitiful degree. Although
-for the most part good-natured, chagrin is
-the rule. There are many pathetic tales
-half hinted at. Men left families to live as
-best they might, in vain hope, in narrowed
-circumstances at home, selling or mortgaging
-all they possessed to outfit themselves,
-confidently expecting to return with quickly-acquired
-wealth. About twenty-five men
-have lost their lives so far from drowning,
-freezing or scurvy, several of whom we
-know to have dependent families at home.
-It is worse than war, for there is no pension.
-And then the ridiculousness of this mad
-rush! How a company of excited men followed
-an Eskimo three days across the
-tundras and over the mountains, only to be
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[ 61 ]</span>
-shown a little brook with yellow mica glistening
-in the sandy bed! How another party
-had a "sure thing," and several others got
-wind of it and followed, scarcely giving
-themselves time to sleep, until they all
-reached the same spot together in a mood to
-fight, but finally laughed at themselves as if
-provoked by a humorous ice demon. Several
-parties paid an old sailor at San Francisco
-forty dollars each for a "tip" as to
-the exact spot where gold had been dug out,
-"fifteen thousand dollars in two hours with
-a jack-knife"! They all met at the supposed
-place. We have had the laugh on them
-many times, though I fail to see the exact
-grounds. The ludicrous sometimes changes
-to the doleful even while I am laughing.</p>
-
-<p>"We paid $600 apiece
-for our tip," someone
-says. Several have
-owned up that they followed
-the "Penelope"
-crowd into this country
-believing that we had "a
-sure thing;" and the missionaries told us that it
-has been rumored that
-nearly live hundred men
-came into the Sound last
-summer following our
-"scent." I cannot see
-anything "funny" about
-it, though some do.</p>
-
-<p>Feb. 12.&mdash;This morning after breakfast I
-amused myself about an hour before service by paying strict attention to affairs
-about me in the cabin. It is astonishing
-how entertaining the meaningless, helter-skelter, careless conversation can be. And
-yet there are points. We are all doing something, if only yawning or looking out of the
-frosty window.</p>
-
-<p>C. C. is clipping Cox's whiskers and makes
-inaudible remarks. Rivers is shaving, just
-like any Christian of a Sunday morning.
-Miller, Alec, Clyde, Casey, Brownie and the
-doctor are reading. I am writing at the
-table. Uncle Jimmy is standing by the stove
-with his hands in his pockets, facing the window and whistling. A pail of water is set
-into the top of the heating stove and sizzles
-in varying tones. All is quiet for a while,
-when positions are changed. Ablutions are
-going on behind closed canvas. Uncle Jimmy
-sits down on a bench and pulls his beard in
-a slow, rhythmical motion. He is abstracted.
-Cox tills a stew-pail with water, pieces of
-ice striking the sides with a tinkling sound,
-and puts it on the cook stove. Uncle Jimmy
-gets his Bible and sits down at the table,
-spending several moments in wiping his
-spectacles. He reads a verse and pushes his
-specs high up on his forehead, rests his head
-on his hand and dozes off. Casey and Cox
-exchange some words about a "shirt" that
-has shrunken in washing. Rivers takes the
-thermometer and goes outdoors. Returns,
-saying that it is "thirty below." and bids me
-put that in my diary. Clyde brings his
-camera outfit to the window and explains
-what the several pictures represent. Cox
-asks me to "blow out the lamp if I don't
-need it," which I do. Cox gets a book and
-sits down near the window. He lights his
-big corn-cob and, after putting several dense
-clouds of smoke, asks, "Will I disturb you
-smoking. Uncle Jimmy?" The latter says,
-"Oh, no; oh, no!" Rivers gets "Hamlet"
-and sits down to the table to read. C. C. is
-in his bed-room humming a tune. Ceases
-humming and whistles; is again humming;
-whistles; sings. The doctor gets up, saying.
-"Uncle Jimmy. I didn't know I took your
-Bible." Goes into bed-room and puts on hood
-and mittens. Says he is "going up to see
-Bentz." And the morning passes, while I
-see and hear much more of no greater importance
-than what I have recorded. Half-past
-eleven the natives and "cabloonas"
-begin to arrive for church. C. C. speaks,
-and as usual we all listen.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 426px;">
-<img src="images/page61.png" width="426" height="212" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">After Whitefish.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Is it monotonous, does one think who has
-not spent months in a cabin with the same
-faces and the same voices and the same routine
-of endless twilight? I marvel how
-some who have not inward resources can
-endure it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[ 62 ]</span></p>
-
-<p>I let "Cingato" have my shot-gun yesterday,
-and he brought me four ptarmigan,
-two of which were the rock ptarmigan, which
-I have not before taken. I wanted to skin
-them to-day, but Uncle Jimmy wouldn't let
-me. If I insisted Casey said I might, from
-Uncle Jimmy's threatening look, "precipitate
-a rough house." I put the birds away
-to freeze until to-morrow, so there is no
-further danger of a "rough house."</p>
-
-<p>Last night we had the most beautiful
-aurora of the winter. The more brilliant
-display was south of the zenith, although
-there was scarcely a part of the sky which
-was not illuminated at some time. Broad
-curtains of pale blue light seemed suspended
-in the heavens. They were constantly
-changing in form and intensity, and waves
-slowly swept across them as if they were
-disturbed by a breeze. The lower edge was
-the brighter, and alternate light and shadow
-chased each other endlessly from west to
-east. The effect was like that of a stage
-with the curtain drawn, with a succession of
-persons passing in front of the footlights.
-And then there were ribbons of light sweeping
-slowly across the sky. These bands
-were often abruptly broken and continued
-at right angles with the other section. Little
-patches of light, like a fleecy cloud in a
-sunny sky, appeared for a few minutes, to
-gradually fade out again. There was no
-moon, and yet the landscape was illuminated
-as if by the brightest moonlight, but
-there were no shadows.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 363px;">
-<img src="images/page62.png" width="363" height="218" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">On a Journey.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Feb. 17.&mdash;Alec, Miller and Casey started
-back up the river and Brownie went with
-them. The four "Agnes Boyd" boys who
-came down with C. C. also went up, and two
-of the Hanson boys with them. Yesterday
-Casey. Clyde and three of the Iowa people
-also left, and will catch up with the first
-party at Ambler City. Alec, Miller, Clyde
-and Brown will return in a month. The
-party had two sleds and four dogs. The
-cabin seems almost empty. We have had
-from eleven to eighteen sleeping and eating
-here for the past month or more, and now we
-are only six. The comparative quiet is a
-relief and I shall be able to do more studying.
-I want to read some more books as
-well. I expect we shall be few in numbers
-from now on. When Alec and Miller get
-back from the upper camp they, with C. C.
-and Rivers, are planning to go
-down to the vessel at Escholtz
-Bay. Casey, our engineer, will
-stick by the "Helen" until the
-river opens. I am going to stay
-here until the "Helen" picks me
-up on her way to the Sound. I
-can do more work in the spring
-collecting, with a warm cabin to
-dry specimens in, than chasing
-over the country prospecting, with
-a will-o'-the-wisp in view. The
-weather is very gloomy. The air
-is heavy with mist and full of a
-fine frost which falls constantly.
-The sun, although it shines for
-seven hours a day, doesn't get far
-enough above the horizon to get
-in its genial work. It was forty-five
-degrees below zero this
-morning and we stay in the cabin. Last
-week Rivers and I were relieved from culinary
-duties and Cox took our place. Coxie
-proves himself to be the best cook the Long
-Beach and Alaska Mining and Trading Company
-has produced. We feel our loss in not
-having discovered his talents in this line before.
-He has been too modest. His art
-shall no longer be in obscurity.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_right" style="width: 125px;">
-<img src="images/page63a.png" width="125" height="235" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">A Child in the Cabin.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>He sits straddle of the stove all day long
-concocting original dishes and improving
-upon old ones. He gives us a quarter of a
-pie apiece three times a day, and as much as
-we want between meals. His bread is perfect.
-We had the finest kind of fried eggs
-for breakfast&mdash;fish eggs. The only impediment
-to his cooking, to my mind, is his inability
-to make mush. It is too thin. We
-have made a fortunate deal with the Hanson
-Company, who have fifty tons of provisions
-in their storehouse here, to get all
-the extra grub we need until summer. Their
-steamer, the "Agnes Boyd," is nearly
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[ 63 ]</span>
-buried in a "glacier creek," and it will probably
-fall to the "Helen" to ship their possessions
-down next summer. I was down to
-the San Jose cabin for dinner. We were
-served to an individual
-can apiece of sauerkraut
-and sausages
-steaming hot. I had
-been hunting across the
-tundra for several
-miles through the snow,
-and my appetite was as
-keen as C. C.'s razor
-after he has stropped it
-on a section of the belt
-which was made at
-home and fastened
-around his waist with
-the charge that on no
-account was it to be
-taken off unless he was
-found dead in the snow.
-It has his name on it for
-identification. Guy Solsbury has just come up with Dr. Coffin to
-stay with us for a few days' visit. We have
-plenty of room now, and are ready to receive in decent style.</p>
-
-<p>Feb. 20. 12 o'clock noon.&mdash;Cox and Rivers
-and I are the only ones in the room. The
-rest are cutting wood. The sunshine is
-flooding the cabin with light, although the
-thermometer shows forty degrees below
-zero. One of our Eskimo neighbors, "Poth-luk,"
-is visiting us, probably more for the
-benefit he derives from the stove than from
-a particularly friendly feeling. His little
-girl is with him, and is romping around the
-room like any white child. "Kop-puk" is
-the prettiest native child I have seen. She
-is "four snows old," so Poth-luk tells me.
-Her costume is typically Eskimo&mdash;a heavy
-deerskin parka with a big hood, lined with
-wolverine, strips of minkskin hanging from
-her shoulders and waist, and deerskin commuks.
-Her hood lies back from her head
-exposing her black hair, cut bang-wise in
-front. Her face is round and fat and her
-mouth really very pretty. She has shining
-dark brown eyes and perfectly white teeth.
-At this moment she is playing "peek-a-boo"
-with me from behind a chair. Her laughing
-face, surrounded by the broad fringe of
-wolverine fur, and her chubby figure, make
-a pretty picture. I would like to take her
-home with me. But what could I do with
-her? If taken from her native climate she
-would probably soon die.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_right" style="width: 296px;">
-<img src="images/page63b.png" width="296" height="303" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Our Artist Snowed In.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>We have a new lounge, which invites indigence
-in an already lazy crowd. I have read
-over and over the six letters I received in
-the New Year's mail. It will be six months
-yet before we get any more. We heard from
-an Indian that Harry K. and Samms had
-reached the Orphans' Home safely, though
-they have had hard traveling. Saturday
-night Brownie, Clyde, two of the Iowa boys
-and one Hansonite returned, having given
-up the trip. They only went fifteen miles
-up the river. The snow is so deep they had
-to carry the sled in some places, and those
-who are continuing with it have to double
-up with the loads; that is, go over the road
-twice in order to get the entire load up.
-They will have a rough time. Brownie came
-near freezing to death and had to return.
-This gave the other boys who came with
-him an excuse for returning. Brownie has
-been around home all winter, not exercising
-much, and was not sufficiently hardened for
-such a trip. The first day, after they had
-been out but a few hours, he sat down exhausted
-and said he would come on as soon
-as he had rested a few minutes (the old
-story). The boys had presence of mind to
-know what the real matter was and tried
-to get him to walk on, but he completely
-collapsed and became unconscious. They
-quickly unloaded the sled and several went
-on ahead to prepare the tent and get a fire
-going, while the rest got Brownie on the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[ 64 ]</span>
-sled and hauled him to camp. He was
-finally restored, but a few minutes more
-and another would have been added to the
-Kowak silent ones. It was thirty-five degrees
-below zero, not so very cold, but his
-feet and face were frozen. The boys plied
-the art of thawing him out so well that he
-will lose nothing but some skin. He makes
-a pretty picture with a black nose. His toes
-are sore, too. Nothing will induce him to
-leave the cabin again. It is no use making
-light of it, it is dangerous traveling unless
-one is in the best physical condition and
-with proper clothes and outfit. The rest of
-the party are used to it, and we have no fear
-for their safety. So many together can take
-care of each other. Brownie says that when
-he sat down to rest he only felt tired and a
-little numb. This numbness crept on him
-with little pain until he gradually lost perception.
-He says he "felt good" and didn't
-like to be disturbed. He lost all power of
-movement and speech until he was warmed
-up and rubbed for two or three hours.
-Death by freezing must be very easy and
-pleasant. Perhaps it is easier to die almost
-any death than we suspect. I must have an
-argument with the doctor about that.</p>
-
-<p>Saturday brought me a new experience&mdash;that
-of writing a sick man's will. B., who
-lives alone in a little cabin near the first
-Iowa Camp, is very sick and will probably
-die. He dictated his will to me, in the presence
-of Uncle Jimmy as witness. It apportions
-all his goods and possessions here,
-which are all he has in the world, among the
-residents of this community, naming in particular
-several who have waited upon him.
-Dr. Coffin is willed his dory. B. is a queer
-character. He is more or less insane, evidently
-from drink. The way he begs for
-hypodermic injections of cocaine and morphine
-indicates that he may have been a
-"dope fiend." He has been here since last
-summer. For some time previous his record
-was not sustaining, but his people thought
-he might be benefited by a change of climate.
-He says his folks are well off and he
-doesn't want any of his things sent home.
-The different camps are sharing in his care
-now, and he may live indefinitely. His legs
-are affected very much like the scurvy victim's,
-though the doctors do not call it that.
-Several of the people have frost-bitten
-cheeks, but otherwise this is a healthy neighborhood.
-What little sickness we have had
-tends to make the well ones kind and charitable
-and helpful. They chop wood for one
-another and in many ways give evidence
-of having sprung from a long line of Christian
-ancestors. I have heard that, this is
-the case always and everywhere at mining
-camps. And ours is a mining camp.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVII">CHAPTER XVII.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="dropcap">F</div>
-
-<p class="p0"><span class="hidden">F</span>EB. 24. Friday. 9 p. m.&mdash;I went hunting
-for the first time on snowshoes. I got
-along famously until I struck a soft
-snowdrift, and the shoes turned on edge and
-I fell headlong. Otherwise I received no
-casualties and got over the ground rapidly,
-skirting the brushy margins of lakes back
-on the tundra and following up the creeks.
-I shot three rock ptarmigan, and learned
-many interesting items about their notes
-and habits, which are duly set down in my
-special bird notes. The weather is calm and
-clear and cold, ranging from fifteen to fifty-one
-degrees in the twenty-four hours.</p>
-
-<p>Wednesday afternoon the literary was
-again well attended, as we had a very interesting
-programme. Dr. Coffin had arranged
-the east end of the room in a patriotic manner,
-the designs being his own. A large flag
-made of a red blanket with parallel stripes
-of white cheese cloth folded across it, and in
-the corner a square of blue mosquito netting
-with paper stars pinned on it, formed the
-background. On a platform in front of this
-were stacked three guns, one an old rusted
-muzzle-loader which C. C. found out in the
-woods, one an old-fashioned breech-loader,
-and the third a modern nitro-repeater, to
-represent the three great wars&mdash;the Revolutionary,
-the Civil, and the Spanish. On
-the wall were magazine cuts of Schley,
-Sampson, Dewey, Hobson, and other heroes,
-while in the center of the blanket flag was
-a large picture of George and Martha Washington.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Legg, of the Jesse Lou Camp, gave a
-talk on Honduras, where he was a banana
-grower some years ago. Several George
-Washington speeches followed, by Solsbury,
-Jury, Thees, C. C. and others. Just at the
-close of the meeting Uncle S. came blustering
-in from up the river. He brought a lot
-of news that kept the people here until late
-in the night. Two or three more men have
-been frozen to death. Several have scurvy.
-Our boys were at Ambler City waiting for
-the weather to moderate before going on up.
-There has been absolutely no gold heard
-from. There are thousands of men in the
-lower Yukon regions, one hundred and fifty
-steamers and various kinds of launches
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[ 65 ]</span>
-along the Koyukuk alone, and no encouraging
-prospects. Hundreds of men haven't a
-cent to pay their passage back to the States.
-One good thing makes affairs better than
-they might be&mdash;there is plenty to eat in the
-country. It is said that a good many have
-signed a petition to the government to come
-and get them out of their trouble.</p>
-
-<p>We feel pretty sure of our return tickets.
-But the "Penelope" is at the mercy of
-Arctic demons, and if she is saved it will be
-marvelous.</p>
-
-<p>Feb. 26, Sunday.&mdash;I will confess that I did
-not behave well in church this morning. I
-took a seat over in the corner behind Rivers,
-where I thought my scribbling would not be
-noticed, and there I am writing. I guess no
-one will be harmed by it unless it be myself.
-10:30 a. m., and the first arrivals for meeting
-are Charley Lund and Beam of the first
-Iowa Camp&mdash;that is, representing the white
-population. Services are supposed to begin
-at eleven, but two benches of Eskimo are
-already seated. They are quite well behaved,
-but keep up an incessant jabbering. Charley
-Lund, Beam and the doctor are holding
-an animated conversation about the sick
-man B. B. is a good deal better.</p>
-
-<p>Guy Solsbury and Normandin of the Hanson
-Camp have just arrived, all muffled up,
-their masks thickly frosted. It is forty-five
-degrees below zero, but they report that
-their three-mile walk was "quite comfortable."
-Normandin brought me a big box
-nicely finished with cover and shallow trays,
-for my skins. It is in trade for a stuffed
-ptarmigan. He is quite a genius in the mechanical
-line. The box was rather too heavy
-to carry, so he fastened a pair of runners
-on blocks at the bottom and dragged it up
-by a rope tied to a handle on one end. Lyman
-comes in with his clarionet case under
-his arm. Dr. Gleaves and D. arrive, and
-then Young. Dougherty and Montgomery,
-from the middle Iowa cabin, and Legg of the
-Jesse Lou, who is staying with them. Several
-more natives come in with friendly
-"Halloas!" "Big Jones" from the further
-Iowa Camp arrives, and Brennan and Malcolm
-from the Sunnyside. Brennan is nicknamed
-"Noisy." because he is always very
-quiet and has nothing to say to anyone.
-Remarks as to the "cold weather," wooden
-snow-glasses and snowshoes, are numerous.
-The conversation is mainly desultory, carried
-on piecemeal from opposite sides of the
-room. But there is a low hum from two or
-three couples who are carrying on a more
-earnest conversation. Dr. Coffin and Dr.
-Gleaves, for instance. I overhear discussing
-Fish's condition. Fish is the man whose
-toes were amputated. One can see that
-Sunday services on the Kowak are rather of
-a social nature. The orchestra begins to
-tune up; general silence falls on the congregation,
-and individuals seek permanent
-seats. Dr. Coffin gives out the song books,
-of which C. C. brought plenty. The
-orchestra consists of the banjo by C. C, violin
-by Normandin, and clarionet by Lyman.
-There is some delay and more tuning of the
-banjo and clarionet, which do not seem to
-jibe (to use a musical term). A low buzz of
-conversation is again audible, and the leaves
-of the hymn books rustle. Several of the
-natives have colds and there is considerable
-coughing. It is very quiet: sort of an air of
-suspense. The sunshine streaming across the
-room, reflected from yellow Mackinaw suits,
-gives a brownish tint to the scene. Normandin
-and C. C. are discoursing "sharps"
-and "flats" in a low voice, yet audible in the
-room. The violin and banjo are not quite
-tuned together. Solsbury is talking aloud
-about "Moth balls in furs, back in the
-States." At last C. C. announces the number
-of the hymn in a loud, hurried voice, as
-though he were just startled out of a
-reverie, "No. 17, Jesus Saves." The clarionet
-sounds the pitch and C. C. leads in
-the singing. The time is awfully slow.
-Nearly everyone sings, the Eskimos following
-the air nearly as well as the whites. Although
-many sing out of tune, and individually
-would make a horrible discord, the
-aggregation is a somewhat musical droning
-of a quality that would soon put one to
-sleep. After four verses of this hymn. "No.
-64" is announced. "Wait and Murmur Not."
-Some further tuning, and four verses of this
-hymn are gone through with. They always
-do sing all the verses of any hymn. Dr.
-Coffin now rises and reads the second chapter
-of Matthew. Mr. D. is in charge of the
-meeting to-day, and he calls on Mr. W. to
-"lead in prayer." Uncle Jimmy slowly
-rises, takes a step or two forward, clasps his
-hands in front of him, and, closing his eyes,
-raises his face slightly. He is a good man
-and I like to see and hear him pray. I
-haven't anything against Uncle Jimmy.
-When anyone prays the Eskimos always
-bow their heads low, resting their elbows on
-their knees. They say "Amen" in unison
-when the prayer is finished. So much is the
-result of Mr. and Mrs. Samms' missionary
-work. Uncle Jimmy terminates with the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[ 66 ]</span>
-Lord's Prayer, in which all join. When the
-praying is over there is quite a hubbub of
-coughing and sneezing. C. C. announces
-"No. 49." and the orchestra tunes. "There
-shall be showers of blessing." four verses.
-The clarionet doesn't seem to know this very
-well and makes several breaks. Toward
-the end of the last verse the hymn-books are
-closed and there is a general settling down.
-D. rises and, after a pause, proceeds to apologize
-for his inability as a public speaker.
-But he tells us he will do the best he can,
-and we ask for nothing more. His subject
-is "The Divinity of Christ." I should like
-to take down the various points, but my continued
-scratching is noisy and attracts attention.
-I might get taken out of meeting by
-the ear and so suffer for being a "naughty
-little boy." A couple of men came in late
-during the sermon and caused some disturbance
-until they finally got seated, mopping
-the melting ice from their beards. D. winds
-up his discourse with a prayer. The most of
-his sermon was written, and delivered in his
-usual halting manner, but the substance was
-good for any location and showed that he
-had given a good deal of study to his subject.
-After the prayer and a chorus of
-"Amens" from the natives, who haven't
-understood a word of what was said, there
-is a sort of recovery, with coughing and
-clearing of throats and shuffling of feet.
-"No. 139" is announced. "Bringing in the
-sheaves." three verses. C. C. starts another
-song, which he observes "will be familiar
-to the natives," "No. 39, At the Cross."
-The Eskimos catch a tune quite readily, the
-women and children carrying the air very
-nicely. They try hard to imitate the words.
-Two verses conclude this song. "No. 14,
-Jesus, I Come." is announced. It is a new
-piece and is sung very scatteringly. Guy
-Solsbury calls for "Sunshine." He thinks it
-appropriate, because at this moment the
-sunshine is flooding the room with more
-than usual brightness. But C. C. says he
-hasn't the music, so the orchestra can't play
-it. C. C. asks all to rise, and he prays and
-gives the benediction. The congregation
-slowly disperses, little knots remaining to
-discuss various topics. Legg declares he
-will not go back to the Jesse Lou until the
-weather moderates. Thus with gossip and
-swapping of news the Kowak Sunday services
-are finally
-ended and the room
-is cleared in time for
-the 2 o'clock dinner.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 454px;">
-<img src="images/page66.png" width="454" height="219" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Church Service at Cape Blossom in July.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>March 3.&mdash;I have
-been pretty busy to-day.
-Got up just in
-time for breakfast,
-which I don't have
-to get any more, for
-a while at least, and
-took my snowshoes
-up to the village to
-be mended. Then
-Rivers and I went
-ptarmigan hunting.
-We tramped across
-the tundras from
-eight till two, bagging
-two ptarmigan and a redpoll. It was
-tiresome. In the ravines where the wind did
-not strike, the snow was soft and deep and
-hard to get over even with snowshoes.
-Rivers wore snowshoes for the first time,
-and he got several tumbles, but always
-struck in a soft place.</p>
-
-<p>We got into a large flock of ptarmigan
-which kept flying around us, but, after two
-or three shots, our hands became too cold
-and we had to give them up. My mitts were
-sweaty, and froze while I had them off
-shooting, and when I put them on again my
-hands nearly became frosted. It is too cold
-for comfortable hunting. When we got back
-we were late for dinner, but Coxie got us a
-fine lunch, hot pea soup, biscuits, and apple
-cobbler. After dinner I put up two ptarmigan
-skins that I shot last Tuesday. Rivers is
-learning how to skin birds now. He expects
-to go down to Escholtz Bay pretty soon to
-be with the vessel when the ice breaks up,
-and will collect eggs and skins for me there.
-I would like to turn the whole company
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[ 67 ]</span>
-into an egg collecting concern for a month
-in May and June. But I guess the doctor
-and Rivers are the only ones who will take
-much active interest. Last night I had a
-very nice dream. The first swallows had
-come. There were barn swallows and bank
-swallows flying along the river and I was
-after them. Before many weeks this is just
-what will happen. It will be an exciting
-time for me. More exciting than gold hunting.</p>
-
-<p>Monday was my birthday, and there was
-quite a celebration in the cabin. The first
-thing in the morning, before I was fairly
-awake. I was attacked by the doctor, and
-we had a five-minute squabble, pitched high.
-At the close of the seance he claimed to have
-given me twenty-two spanks. They were
-more in the nature of bunts and kicks than
-square spanks. I made the doctor lots of
-hard work. We rolled around the floor and
-under the bed and on the beds, and tore
-things up generally, including Brownie, who
-got in the road with his sore leg. At breakfast
-Coxie served me a big bowl of oatmeal
-mush. We had been out of mush material
-for a long time, much to my personal sorrow,
-as all the boys and most of the neighbors
-well know. Mr. Lyman, hearing of my
-birthday, kindly sent me in a package of
-oatmeal. Good birthday present that!</p>
-
-<p>I also received a birthday box from home,
-smuggled like the Christmas box, not to be
-opened until the day appointed. There
-was everything in it&mdash;games, books, candies,
-duly bottled and boxed, etc. We all had a
-treat. At dinner a big platter of ptarmigan
-was set at my place (some I had shot), and
-all in all it was a very pleasant occasion.
-A birthday in the Arctics, on the banks of
-the mighty Kowak, is not often the thing
-that happens to a fellow.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_right" style="width: 125px;">
-<img src="images/page67.png" width="125" height="173" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Coming to Trade.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Wednesday, at the literary, C. C. talked
-on "Reminiscences of an Undertaker." It
-was very interesting, being his favorite and
-familiar theme. It was held at the Hanson
-Camp, and I remained as guest of Guy Solsbury,
-Jack Messing and Joe Jury came here
-and visited our boys at the same time. We
-have to visit about these cold nights and
-sleep under one cover when possible.
-Blankets are none too plentiful.</p>
-
-<p>Normandin mended my shot-gun, which
-had lost a rivet, for which I paid him the
-sum of a stuffed ptarmigan. Everybody
-wants ptarmigan skins now, but I have to
-be rather "stingy," as I am frequently told,
-or else I won't have a ghost of a "series"
-to take home for comparison. Home! When?</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVIII">CHAPTER XVIII.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="dropcap">M</div>
-
-<p class="p0"><span class="hidden">M</span>ARCH 7, 1899.&mdash;I have succeeded at
-last in trading for two pairs of snowshoes,
-from some Eskimos who have
-just come up the river. The dickering engaged
-the entire afternoon, and I am completely
-exhausted. It is a stupendous
-undertaking to attempt to trade for anything.
-The natives want the earth, and then
-"some more." The following is an illustration
-of the proceedings: An Indian brings
-in a pair of snowshoes and we all rush to
-see them, commenting
-on their size and quality. "Mickaninny" (too
-small); "anganinny"
-(too big); "naguruk"
-(good); "caprok pechak" (string loose);
-"byme by fixem."
-And then "capsinic"
-(how much?) The native invariably replies,
-"You speak." You can
-never make an Indian
-state what he wants.
-You begin by offering
-him "sox." "Konga"
-(no). He wants "cow cow" (something
-to eat). "Flour?" "Capsinic flour?" "Neleuea"
-(I don't know). Being urged on
-flour, the native intimates "two sacks."
-"Oh, apazh, apazh" (too much). One
-sack flour all right? "No, too small." The
-Indian then proceeds to look over the
-sack of flour brought for his inspection and
-he finds "potoa" (hole). After this is sewed
-up he finds that it has been wet at one end
-and the flour is a little caked in advance at
-the bottom. He therefore states that the
-whole thing is "no good," and "dauxic
-pechak" (no trade). He wants bacon, "so
-long and so broad," indicating the measurements
-in the air with hands. "No, we
-pechak" (haven't any for him). Then I
-bring out a shirt to add to the sack of flour.
-He looks at the shirt and finds a torn place.
-"Stoney-house" (no good).</p>
-
-<p>"Stoney-house" means torn or broken,
-and has a queer derivation. Fort Cosmos is
-called stoney-house by the natives, because
-Lieutenant Stoney and his party wintered
-there in 1884. The cabin they lived in at
-Fort Cosmos (there is no fort or anything
-else there now) is all broken down. So, with
-an Eskimo, "All same stoney-house," or
-simply "stoney-house," means broken.</p>
-
-<p>After two hours of sweating and bargaining
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[ 68 ]</span>
-the trade is consummated, and the "cabloona"
-is satisfied. It is much to the relief
-of both parties. From the foregoing it will
-be plainly seen that a native is amply able
-to care for his own interests, and has
-learned from a probably bitter experience
-to "look a leetle out."</p>
-
-<p>I got a very nice pair of snowshoes to take
-home as curiosities for one sack of flour and
-a pair of socks, and another pair, stronger
-but not so prettily made, for every-day use,
-for a half sack of flour and half a pound of
-tea. This is very reasonable and some under
-winter prices. Snowshoes make nice
-wall decorations for halls and dining-rooms,
-with a suitable picture stuck in them where
-the foot belongs.</p>
-
-<p>Wednesday, March 8.&mdash;Our extremely cold
-weather is at an end, I hope. But it is more
-disagreeable outside. I put up a spruce
-grouse and two redpolls this afternoon.
-Birds are becoming noisier and, I presume,
-happier and in better spirits as the sunshine
-increases. An Alaskan three-toed wood-pecker
-drums taps on a dead spruce near the
-cabin every morning. The jays are quiet,
-but have a stealthy, sly manner which indicates
-that they are about to engage in nest-building.
-Rivers has finished up two ptarmigan
-skins in fair shape. He is very painstaking
-and I hope he gets some good specimens
-down on the coast. I have everyone
-posted as to keeping birds and eggs for me,
-and, with this generous promise of help, I
-ought to obtain some rare things this spring.</p>
-
-<p>The literary met this afternoon, with good
-attendance and a talk "On the Eye" by Dr.
-Gleaves. A week ago the other officers and
-myself thought our terms of office had about
-expired, so we "resigned," and our successors
-were elected; Joe Jury, president; Clyde, secretary;
-Young, vice-president. To-day, as I
-was retiring from the chair. Dr. Coffin arose
-and, after a most elaborate speech, presented
-me with a gavel. He spoke of its
-rare value on account of its associations,
-and grew quite sentimental. It was part of a
-birch tree, chopped down by Uncle Jimmy
-near our winter home "on the Kowak far
-away." Dr. Coffin selected the pieces and
-worked them down. The head was turned
-by Normandin on the famous grindstone
-lathe of the San Jose cabin. Joe Jury
-worked the crank, yielding "two barrels of
-sweat by measure." and Dr. Coffin turned
-the handle and finished up the gavel. It is
-a very valuable and beautiful souvenir to be
-kept "as long as memory lasts."</p>
-
-<p>Joe Jury took the chair which I had vacated
-to-day and made things lively, using a
-big hand-ax for a gavel and otherwise making
-this, probably our final meeting, a merry
-one. Several of the Kowak men are about
-to leave. Nine of the Sunny siders started
-up yesterday with their sled loads. They
-have lots of courage and perseverance, but
-I doubt their making the mountain passes
-with their supplies. Solsbury and Joe Jury
-start down to-morrow on a three weeks'
-trip to look after the condition of their
-barge, sixty-eight miles below us. Dr.
-Gleaves and the boys from "Quality Hill"
-are getting ready for a hunting trip across
-to the Naatak. Oh, I believe I have not
-made previous mention of Quality Hill. It
-is an interesting spot, the cabin being occupied
-by four young men of the aristocracy.
-They have been exclusive, as became men of
-their distinction. Few of us have been on
-intimate terms with them, but they are said
-to lie in their bunks until twelve o'clock
-noon, and to stay up, when once out, until
-two the following morning. They divert
-themselves by shooting at mice which run
-across the floor, using their six-shooters.
-Various boxes and knot-holes about the
-walls of their residence suggest targets.
-The walls themselves are riddled with bullet
-holes. They are said to have trained a
-young Eskimo as personal attendant, who
-does all the work of the cabin, building
-fires, bringing wood and water, and even
-cooking. He sleeps on the floor, so that he
-may lye handy to rekindle the fires of a
-cold night. The first man to arouse in the
-morning tosses a boot or other article at the
-native servant, which reminds him of his
-domestic duties. He blacks their muckluks,
-it is rumored, and serves coffee and cigars
-in bed. They live in style on Quality Hill.
-Thus even the remote Kowak has its aristocratic
-society.</p>
-
-<p>March 10.&mdash;I put up five more rock ptarmigan
-to-day. They are difficult to skin and
-it is slow work, and their being pure white
-makes it necessary to be extra nice with
-them. I have already used more than half
-of my supply of plaster-of-paris and the
-migrations have not begun. I use this plaster
-in cleaning the skins.</p>
-
-<p>Yesterday the doctor and I went hunting
-for three hours in the forenoon and secured
-eight ptarmigan. It was pleasant when we
-started, but after a while the north wind
-blew. We were about to return when we
-discovered a flock of ptarmigan on a hillside.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[ 69 ]</span>
-The fine snow was driving along the ground
-in a continuous blinding stream. The birds
-squatted down close in the snow, facing the
-wind, evidently tired. They paid little attention
-to us until we were within easy
-shot, when they rose and, after a short
-flight, settled again. I felt sorry to take advantage
-of them, they are usually so wary.
-The doctor wore his snowshoes for the first
-time and on the whole got along pretty well.
-Once, however, he got mixed up in a snowdrift.
-He tripped, the pointed heel of one
-shoe stuck, and down went the toe of the
-other. He plunged head first into the snow,
-where he could scarcely move. During the
-progress of his wallowing his shot-gun got
-crammed full of snow, and he poked it
-out just in time to see four ptarmigan fly
-past.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 295px;">
-<img src="images/page69a.png" width="295" height="277" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">The Doctor Makes a Good Start&mdash;</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 290px;">
-<img src="images/page69ba.png" width="290" height="278" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">But Finds Himself in a Changed Position.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>March 15, 9 a. m.&mdash;It has been storming
-three days. This morning the wind is roaring
-among the trees louder than ever, and
-the snow tills the air so thickly one cannot
-see a hundred yards. It is warmer, however,
-as it always is with an east wind;
-warmer than we have seen it since last September.
-I have been on my first hunt for
-jay's nests. When it is cloudy one can see
-through the foliage of the spruces more
-readily than when the sun shines, throwing
-shadows everywhere. Last week several of
-the "Amblerites" came down. They report
-many cases of scurvy at Ambler City, and
-they came to our camps to get tomatoes,
-fruit and pickles. They are now stormbound,
-and two of them, Phillips and La Voy, are
-with us. They will have hard sledding back
-again unless it thaws enough to form a
-crust. Money is very scarce up here now
-and provisions and clothing are below par,
-with half the money we spent in the States
-one could buy up a good outfit. If one could
-only see ahead! But In that case we would
-not have been here, and I should probably
-never have seen the spring migrations on the
-Kowak. An ill wind that blows nobody any
-good.</p>
-
-<p>March 18.&mdash;The cloudy weather continues.
-The warmth from the room is penetrating
-the roof and the water is dripping
-through in several places. The frost and ice
-in the lean-to are melting, making a sloppy
-place. Icicles hang down from above, like
-stalactites in a cave, and slippery cones rise
-from the floor like stalagmites. The snow is
-about two feet deep on the level and is soft
-and damp, making walking even with snowshoes
-difficult. I went into the woods this
-morning a few hundred yards, wading in
-snow above my knees, which was tiring. I
-got a shot at a raven, but lost it. I heard a
-wood-pecker drumming and a couple of pine
-grosbeaks calling. I long for the time when
-the birds will arrive. Every moment will be
-precious then, but the time hangs a little
-heavy now. I am glad I have something to
-look forward to. "Looking forward to
-something" is about half the pleasure of
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[ 70 ]</span>
-life. I have compiled my last year's bird
-notes, have loaded all my shells, gotten
-boxes ready, and still must wait. I spend
-some of the time in getting as much information
-from the natives as possible about
-the birds. They know the natural history of
-the region pretty well, and but for their superstitions
-would be of practical service to
-me. I have been looking for jay's nests and
-watching these birds for several days now.
-I cannot induce the natives to hunt for me,
-or even to tell me of nests. They tell me
-that if a person looks at the eggs of a jay or
-spruce grouse he will surely "mucky" (die).
-They firmly believe what they say. Kallak
-told me that a man who lived in her father's
-igloo several snows ago, looked into a jay's
-nest and promptly went "mucky." Doctor
-Charley tells me the same thing, except that
-if the person who disturbs the nest shoots
-one of the parent birds and, holding it behind
-his back, extracts the entrails and
-throws them away out of his sight, he possibly
-may not die. I am afraid it will be
-hard for me to obtain assistance from
-these people at the time when I shall most
-need it, and which I had fondly hoped for
-all along.</p>
-
-<p>March 20.&mdash;My eyes are smarting with
-snow blindness while I write. They feel full
-of sand. To-day the sun shone and the glare
-was dreadful. Last evening I went down to
-the Hanson camp and spent the night with
-Dr. Gleaves, and to-day have been hunting
-jays. I found one nest just started and feel
-very much elated. It was only by accident
-that I found it, for the birds are so shy. I
-saw a jay flying in the direction of a strip
-of spruces, but lost sight of it on account
-of intervening timber. I did not see the
-birds again, but followed in the direction of
-their flight, keeping up a systematic search
-through the spruces. By chance I caught
-sight of a small aggregation of twigs in a
-young tree, which, by a few tell-tale feathers
-clinging around the edge, gave me the scent.
-The nest was not more than half built and
-I made haste to leave the vicinity so as not
-to disturb the birds. I think the full set of
-eggs will be ready in about three weeks.
-This, with the snow several feet deep and
-the landscape white! I returned to Dr.
-Gleaves' in time for dinner at two o'clock,
-and was treated to "Gleaves' Justly Celebrated,"
-which is an original soup of the
-doctor's own concoction.</p>
-
-<p>After a half day's tramp on snowshoes
-through deep, damp snow, one enjoys a dinner
-of the "Gleaves' consomme," hash,
-baked sweet potato and sweet corn.</p>
-
-<p>Last night an Eskimo died at the village,
-and every savage neighbor of the deceased
-has moved into tents out of their warm
-igloos, which are vacated for good. They
-are all going to move across the river and
-put up wick-i-ups. The person who died was
-an old woman who went by the natural
-route of old age. She was dragged out of
-her igloo a few yards and left in the snow,
-for the dogs to eat up, we are told, as she
-had no especial friends. C. C.'s instinct was
-aroused, and he and Dr. Coffin went up to
-attend to the ceremonies. Wonderful to relate,
-the undertaker did not bury the body,
-but put it on a scaffold in true native style.
-He is being convinced that this is the proper
-form of burial. It is expected that he will
-institute the same on his return to California.</p>
-
-<p>March 24.&mdash;Guy Solsbury and Joe Jury returned
-from their trip to look after the
-barge. Guy has some big stories to relate
-about their "perilous trip," which is the
-identical one Cox and I made last New
-Year's. They have been absent two weeks,
-part of the time snowed in. We shall probably
-have a full account of it in the San Jose
-"Mercury" next summer. It will bring the
-mercury down. Colclough came up with
-them. He had been to the Mission, and
-brought us a letter from Harry Reynolds
-and Captain Delano, who report everything
-"all right." Several men have lately come
-down the Kowak. The word from everywhere,
-Naatak, Buckland, Allashook, Koyukuk,
-and the entire Kowak region, is "nothing."
-Men are waiting impatiently for
-spring to open up so they can "go home."
-C. C., Rivers and Clyde are now waiting for
-the boys to come down from the upper
-camp, when they will all go down to the
-"Penelope." There is little of note going
-on about the cabin these days. We have altogether
-too much sunshine. The doctor and
-I were hunting ptarmigan Thursday. We
-tramped seven hours and never saw a bird
-save a few redpolls and a small squad of
-chickadees. As a result of his tramp the
-doctor is laid up with snow blindness. I am
-not so far affected. I cannot hunt with
-snow-glasses on, as they dim the vision.
-But I have some natural advantage. My
-ancestors, who did not hunt ptarmigan on
-the Kowak, bequeathed to me a pair of
-rather deep-set eyes with roofing brows,
-which are the best protection.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[ 71 ]</span></p>
-
-<p>"Doctor Charley," the Eskimo who received
-so much kindness from Dr. Coffin last
-fall, has been anxious to return the courtesy,
-and yesterday his opportunity came.</p>
-
-<p>The doctor was attacked with snow blindness
-with great suffering. Dr. Charley called
-on him professionally, and advised him to
-try a treatment at the hands of his wife,
-who was a specialist in eye cases of this
-nature. The doctor was ready to submit to
-almost anything at the hands of his friends,
-thinking that perhaps they might possess
-some secret worthy of note. Such proved
-to be the case. Indian Charley's wife called
-and looked at the patient's eyes, swollen and
-inflamed and painful to a degree. She
-pointed to some toothpicks on the cabin
-table, and, being told to "proceed." she
-whittled three of them to a sharp point.
-Handing one to the suffering doctor, she bade
-him thrust it into his nostril. He did so and
-found to his astonishment that the mucous
-membrane was without sensation. Obeying
-his doctress, he continued to thrust in the
-point of this pick and likewise the two
-others, when a hemorrhage of considerable
-severity occurred. This was the thing
-greatly to be desired. In an hour the nose
-was inflamed and very painful, but the eyes
-were relieved. After a few hours both nose
-and eyes were normal, and the doctor believes
-the operation rational. He declares
-that he will practice it upon himself and
-others at the first opportunity. When he returns
-to California he will doubtless hang
-out his sign as "Specialist on Snow Blindness."
-Only there is no snow in California.
-I will remind him of this fact.</p>
-
-<p>We have a "scurvy trail" now, and every
-day it is traveled. There are two cases at
-the Los Angeles Camp. Our boys keep busy
-at something. Rivers started the idea of
-making rustic furniture, and several others
-followed. This resulted in a search through
-the woods nearly every day for crooked
-birch sticks. Piles of these awkward
-"crooks" adorn our back yard, only a select
-few ever coming up to all the requirements
-of a "natural crook." They might be of
-some use as stove wood, but it is impossible
-to get at them with a saw. The doctor
-spent days and days whittling out candle-sticks,
-and so must C. C. It is nice to
-have something to keep the people busy. It
-helps time to limp by. One of our
-"best and bravest" walks the floor as if
-he had the toothache, he is so homesick.
-He will not let Eskimo Charley treat him for
-nostalgia.</p>
-
-<p>March 30.&mdash;To-day the crowd left for the
-Mission. They are C. C., Clyde, Cox, Rivers,
-Alec and a Mr. Driggs, a stranger. The
-most of them will stay on the "Penelope"
-at Escholtz Bay, and be on hand there to
-help when the ice breaks up. Miller, who
-came down from the upper camp, will remain
-here with us. That leaves us live. Dr. Coffin.
-Uncle Jimmy. Brownie. Miller and myself.
-It is a relief after the congestion. Yesterday
-we had seventeen for dinner. The doctor
-is trying his hand at cooking now. He is a
-specialist on toasted cheese and macaroni.
-We expect to have this combination served
-up three times a day, or until the material
-is exhausted. We each seem to have our
-culinary idiosyncrasies; Cox for light bread
-and pea soup; Rivers for beans; C. C. for
-pie; and I for mush and hash.</p>
-
-<p>This man Driggs has joined our company
-till we get back to the States. He is a sailor
-and navigator, with captain's papers, and
-may be of use to us later. We have also
-another prospective addition to our numbers,
-a Mr. Van Dyke, a preacher. He will join
-us in the spring and take passage on the
-"Penelope." He knows of a "sure thing."
-He says that on his way up here last year
-his party stopped on the mainland near
-Sledge Island, and he and another man in
-three hours panned out two dollars' worth of
-gold from a creek bed. He had the gold in
-a bottle last fall and some of our boys examined
-it.</p>
-
-<p>That is certainly a much better prospect
-than we have heard of this side of Circle
-City; that is, that we have any reason to
-rely on. He joins us under the condition
-that we furnish him passage back to the
-States if nothing results, but he promises
-to take us to this place within two days,
-towing up a stream from the coast, and he
-firmly believes himself that he has a "sure
-thing." We shall see. We have heard so
-many stories of this sort that even a
-preacher cannot arouse much enthusiasm.
-However, we have taken up his offer and
-will sail for the place indicated as soon as
-the "Penelope" can get away from her
-moorings. I'd give five dollars for the
-chance to pan out two dollars' worth of gold-dust.</p>
-
-<p>Oh, yes. Van Dyke says that he met an
-Indian near Sledge Island who had nuggets,
-and took him to a spot covered many feet
-by a snowdrift, which he assured him was
-a mother lode, or something that sounded
-very nice. Ah. I'd like to see a mother lode!
-She's what we are after.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[ 72 ]</span></p>
-
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 280px;">
-<img src="images/page72.png" width="280" height="281" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Ancient Indian Grave.</div>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIX">CHAPTER XIX.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="dropcap">A</div>
-
-<p class="p0"><span class="hidden">A</span>PRIL 2. Sunday.&mdash;Evidently our Kowak
-church is dwindling. Only fifteen in
-attendance to-day. In C. C.'s absence
-Dr. Coffin and Uncle Jimmy conducted services.
-Van Dyke also took part. Miller
-and Van Dyke sang a duet. "Though Your
-Sins be as Scarlet." It was as fine as anything
-I remember to have heard anywhere.
-And this in our little cabin on the lonely
-Kowak: It snows a great deal and the north
-wind blows. Collecting is slow and birds
-are scarce. I got a couple of Siberian
-chickadees the other day. They are good
-birds to have, an Asiatic species which boils
-over into Alaska a little. This makes three
-species of chickadees I have found here&mdash;the
-long-tailed. Hudsonian and Siberian. Wood-peckers
-are drumming on the dead spruces,
-but I take care to keep away from them.
-Miller continues to be my partner in taxidermy.
-We are planning to stop at Dutch
-Harbor next winter.</p>
-
-<p>April 12.&mdash;Busy days are beginning to
-come and I have less time for my diary. We
-get more sunshine than is convenient. To-day
-is cooler, fifteen degrees below zero
-again. We used to think there wasn't much
-snow in this country, but are learning our
-mistake. It snows every day and is three
-feet deep on a level. The doctor and I spent
-the last four days at the Jesse Lou Camp.
-I got thirty-eight birds and a porcupine skin.
-Miller and I are hard at work upon them.
-The doctor is laid up with snow blindness
-again. We had a feast at Jesse Lou on porcupine,
-boiled, roasted and stewed. It is
-like veal and fine eating. An Indian shot it.
-Many people are traveling on the river, so
-as to get as far as the Mission before the
-ice breaks up. Scurvy is on the increase.
-Two more men have died of it at Ambler
-City. Four at the Iowa cabins are down
-with it. None of us are in the least affected.
-Brownie is cook now and we have plenty to
-eat. Miller and I have begun trading some
-of our bird skins for personal supplies for
-next winter at Dutch Harbor. We traded a
-pair of ptarmigan for a sack of flour and
-fourteen pounds of bacon to-day. We can
-get almost anything we ask in trade for
-bird skins, but money is scarce. After tramping
-all day have just had a magnificent dinner.
-Here, as elsewhere, something to eat
-is the first need. The doctor and I have had
-fine success. Got twenty-three rock ptarmigan.
-But we are tired and the poor doctor
-is attacked again. He is at this moment
-applying a solution of boracic acid to his
-eyes. I continue unaffected. We are sun-burned
-as dark as natives. For a while I
-burnt-corked my face, but no need of it
-now. I wear a broad-brimmed, black slouch
-hat, drawn close over my eyes, and find it
-better than snow-glasses.</p>
-
-<p>April 15.&mdash;Twenty degrees below zero.
-The Indians say that in the last thirteen
-years there were three summers when the
-ice never melted out of Kotzebue Sound at
-all. And they say this is just like those
-years, no snow until late. When the snow
-comes early it prevents the water and the
-ground from freezing so deep. Men are beginning
-to worry about our condition. The
-ice in the river is seven feet thick, and there
-isn't snow enough to float out all the ice
-when it melts, so they say. Last winter
-there were seven or eight feet of snow, and
-now only two or three feet. It does look
-dreary for those who are in a hurry to get
-out.</p>
-
-<p>I was out to-day on snowshoes. I like
-them. One acquires a long, sliding gait that
-is very easy. On the ridge back of the
-Guardian Camp I had a fine view of the
-country north and west. The snow is drifted
-over the west side of the ridges by the east
-winds, forming great shelving banks with
-protruding crests twenty to forty feet above
-their bases. We are getting almost enough
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[ 73 ]</span>
-sunshine to start a thaw. Miller has gone to
-Ambler City in the interests of our new
-"firm." He will look after the jays in that
-vicinity.</p>
-
-<p>I had almost forgotten to record the
-latest excitement. The "Flying Dutchman"
-arrived Thursday from St. Michaels.
-He has a dog team and is hurrying on up the
-river, expecting to return to Cape Nome before
-the thaw comes. The news he brought
-is of a "big strike" at Cape Nome on the
-coast near Sledge Island. "Richer than
-Klondike." Three men took out $600 in
-"ten hours." There may be some truth in it,
-as this is about the place Van Dyke was to
-take us to. But I am hard to convert to any
-gold proposition now. I shall
-have to see it to fully believe
-it. All are excited over this
-rumor, but it is useless to
-think of travel. We got a letter
-from the "Penelope"
-crew stating that Harry Reynolds and Jett had already
-started for the new gold
-fields. They took grub and a
-team of dogs, so our company
-will be represented at Cape
-Nome. I am afraid to think
-there is something in it. It
-excites one unduly after the
-disappointments of a year.
-The "Flying Dutchman" says
-flour is ten dollars a sack at
-Cape Nome and other things
-to eat as high. We heard that
-C. C. and party had reached
-the Kotzebue camp after a hard pull. Rivers
-and Clyde gave out and had to be hauled to
-camp. Several were snow blind. They
-had hired two Eskimos to draw the sled to
-the schooner. Such is life in the Arctics.</p>
-
-<p>April 19, Wednesday. 9 p. m.&mdash;Two men
-came in from Ambler City to-day with
-frozen feet. We rubbed the frost pretty well
-out with snow, but they will be laid up for
-a month and one of them may lose his toes.
-The nights are cold, fifteen to twenty degrees
-below zero. By noon it is thawing.
-A man's socks and boots become soaked
-with perspiration and, as the afternoon advances,
-the temperature falls and the wet
-footgear freezes. Then, too, in many places
-the river ice cracks and the water flows up
-through and soaks into the snow so that a
-traveler steps through into the slush and
-water deep enough to fill his shoes. Before
-camp is reached the feet freeze. The Cape
-Nome excitement is spreading and many are
-starting overland with light loads for the
-new diggings. Our neighbors of the Iowa
-cabin are getting ready and eight will start
-to-morrow. None of us here feel called upon
-to attempt the trip.</p>
-
-<p>We have received news through other
-channels than the one mentioned in regard
-to the Cape Nome district. It looks more
-hopeful. Captain Ingraham, who was up
-the Kowak last tall, is on the grounds, and
-has staked several claims. He took $158
-out of three prospect pans. Hundreds of
-men are rushing into the country. There
-are fights over claims and two men are shot.
-Miller returned from Ambler City Monday
-with eight ptarmigan. We have put up the
-skins in fine shape.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 388px;">
-<img src="images/page73.png" width="388" height="232" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Looking Northward.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>April 22. Saturday.&mdash;It is snowing heavily
-<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">morning, with a strong north gale. The</span><br />
-doctor went down to the Hanson Camp yesterday,
-expecting to return to-day, but he
-hasn't arrived yet. I feel anxious about
-him, it is so easy to get lost. This cold will
-put a stop for a while to the Camp Nome
-procession. Men have been passing down
-the river every day, and we have lots of
-visitors for meals and to stay all night.
-John Miller, the man with the frozen feet,
-is still with us and probably will be, for he
-has no other place to go. His feet are in
-bad shape; great blisters run across them,
-and he suffers. Dr. Gleaves is back from his
-trip to the Agnes Boyd Camp, and is about
-starting for Cape Nome. It is very interesting
-and amusing to those who stay at home
-to note the efforts and trials of the poor people
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[ 74 ]</span>
-toiling along the trail. Most of them
-start out with two or three hundred pounds
-apiece, but they lighten their load each day
-until it is reduced to one hundred and fifty
-pounds. I am convinced myself, from what
-the Eskimos tell us, that it is useless to
-start for Cape Nome now. It will thaw before
-half the distance is covered. By the
-route generally traveled it is about four hundred
-miles from here. Yesterday a snow-flake
-came hopping about the woodpile on
-the sunny side of the cabin&mdash;the first
-arrival from the South. It spends the winter
-as far south as the northern tier of the
-United States, where it is the familiar snow-bird.</p>
-
-<p>A man up the river sent down the left
-hind foot of a "snowshoe rabbit" to be
-stuffed. He had the tendons pulled apart
-so that by pulling on them the toes were
-moved. He wants the foot preserved in
-some way so that this mechanism will remain
-and the toes move by pulling an invisible
-string. Don't know as I can do it.</p>
-
-<p>April 25.&mdash;We finished putting up our ptarmigan
-yesterday and have more on hand
-now. The past few days are warm, with
-southeast winds. I started out this morning
-but found the snow too sticky and soft.
-It clings to the snowshoes like lead weights.
-It is uncomfortably warm.</p>
-
-<p>We think the main part of the Cape Nome
-rush has passed us. Several went by this
-forenoon from as far up as the Riley Camp.
-Saturday night at ten o'clock two fellows
-got in from Ambler City. The boys had all
-retired but Miller and me, so we got them
-their supper. They had come thirty miles
-that day, pulling a sled, and were nearly
-ready to drop from exhaustion, when they
-got inside. Sunday at 2 p. m. eight more
-arrived. They came staggering into the
-cabin, groping their way to the nearest seat,
-almost dead. Nearly all were snow blind
-to a more or less extent. One fellow's eyes
-were paining him so that he sobbed and
-cried like a child. The crowd spent the
-night. Saturday night it had snowed ten
-inches. Unless we get a hard freeze to make
-a crust I doubt if these men can reach the
-Mission even.</p>
-
-<p>We have to entertain so many visitors
-that it is getting tiresome naturally. I
-judge we have fed sixty men in the past
-week, or at least have served that many
-meals. We call our camp the "Penelope
-Inn." or "Cape Nome Recuperating Station."
-John Miller is getting well rapidly
-and can stand on his feet to-day. They are
-sloughing. Several men we know are down
-with the mumps. We have all been exposed.</p>
-
-<p>April 29. Saturday.&mdash;An Indian arrived
-with letters from the schooner "Penelope."
-C. C.'s party arrived all right. C. C.'s letter
-confirms the Cape Nome report, and he and
-Cox. Fancher. Alec and Driggs are to start
-in a couple of days from date. If they reach
-there all right, it will make seven of us on
-the ground. That left only the captain, with
-Rivers and Clyde, on the schooner, so C. C.
-suggested that Miller and Brown from this
-camp make all possible haste to get there,
-that they may assist at the breaking up of
-the ice.</p>
-
-<p>It didn't take the two boys long to decide,
-and yesterday they spent in remodeling an
-old sled and making up as light an outfit as
-possible. They left at four o'clock this
-morning with a one hundred and fifty pound
-sled load, and, if the weather continues cold
-enough to keep the present crust on the
-snow, they ought to make the trip in twelve
-days. That leaves only Uncle Jimmy, Dr.
-Coffin and myself to take care of the stuff at
-this camp. If anything should happen to the
-"Helen" above, we should have some experience
-in raft building and getting down
-the river as best we could. It is lonesome,
-only three out of the original twenty, and
-after having had so many neighbors, too,
-who are mostly gone. The latest word from
-further up was that our boys are at work
-on the "Helen" digging her out of the ice,
-and she is so far all right. The "Agnes E.
-Boyd," which was buried in a glacier creek
-during the winter, stands little chance of
-being saved. So also with the "Hero." The
-firm of "Miller &amp; Grinnell" have disassociated
-on account of Miller's "summons,"
-but if the Cape Nome prospect fails, as I
-think very likely, we will join again as soon
-as we meet and prepare to spend the winter
-at Dutch Harbor. Miller will collect birds
-down in the Sound this spring. With Miller
-and Rivers at work there, and myself here,
-I ought to get a good collection by spring.
-Dr. Coffin does a good deal of shooting. Out
-of every five birds he brings in good condition.
-I skin one for him. That rate is favorable
-for us both. He already has a box
-full and by spring will have quite a collection.
-I am getting a good deal of freight on
-my hands. It is bulky. I keep the neighborhood
-gleaned of empty boxes of all sorts.
-I am very short of cotton, either for wrapping
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[ 75 ]</span>
-or stuffing. I use dry hay and moss for
-even the smaller birds now.</p>
-
-<p>Last week the doctor and I took a long
-tramp, staying out all night. When we
-started we had no idea of being away twenty-four
-hours and only had a light lunch,
-consisting of a little corned beef, four half
-slices of bread and butter, a dozen walnuts,
-a handful of raisins, and some malted milk
-tablets. And this was all we had for four
-meals. The doctor says it is good for a person's
-health for him to fast occasionally,
-and I am certain that this opportunity ought
-to fully demonstrate the assertion. But I
-do not think my health demands any further
-treatment of the same nature. We kept going
-farther from home, hunting for likely
-places for ptarmigan and other birds, until
-we got pretty tired; so we thought it a good
-time to try the experiment of sleeping out on
-the snow with no protection whatever. I do
-not say we were lost. Gold-hunters are
-never lost.</p>
-
-<p>We lived through the experiment. We did
-not sleep more than half an hour all the time
-put together. We had to keep "flopping"
-over to keep one side from freezing and the
-other from roasting. We built a fire against
-a spruce in a dense patch of woods. The
-snow was beaten down in front of it, and a
-mass of spruce boughs gathered and formed
-into a real comfortable-looking nest. This
-kept us from contact with the snow, but allowed
-of a too free circulation of fresh air.
-A number of decayed trees in the vicinity
-afforded fuel for the fire with little trouble
-on our part, our hunting knives being the
-only tool we had carried with us. Once
-during the night I had dozed off very reluctantly
-when the doctor happened to
-notice the smell of burning wool. A spark
-of fire had snapped out and lighted on the
-front of my jumper, where, in less time than
-it takes to write it, it had eaten through my
-clothes, including my sateen shirt and undershirt,
-and was progressing towards my
-vitals when the doctor rang up the fire department.
-I was awakened by a sudden application
-of cold on my diaphragm and the
-loud tones of my companion, who declared
-he did not come to the Arctics to be burnt
-to death. In spite of the sleepless night we
-enjoyed everything. We started again at
-three o'clock in the morning, after a breakfast
-consisting of two walnuts apiece, a
-dozen milk tablets and a few raisins. The
-doctor wanted to roast some of the birds we
-had shot the day before, but I would sooner
-starve than spoil such rare things as
-Alaskan three-toed wood-peckers, hawk
-owls, Alaskan jays, and white-winged crossbills.
-I should think anyone would. On a
-hillside where the snow had been nearly all
-blown off and the sun had thawed the rest,
-we found a large bare place. The mosses
-and lichens looked just as fresh and green
-as if it were midsummer, and, growing close
-on the ground, were lots of last year's berries,
-all the more sweet and juicy for
-their eight months' cold storage. The ptarmigan
-were on hand, too, and I shot two old
-roosters. The male ptarmigan are changing
-now, and specimens shot show some beautiful
-mixtures of the bright brown summer
-plumage and the snow-white winter plumage.
-The willow ptarmigan are all in pairs,
-and, though mostly shy, may be located by
-the loud cackling of the males. A very good
-crust on the snow makes snowshoeing a delight
-for a few hours, but, like any walking,
-it grows tiresome. One's feet get worn and
-blistered where the foot-straps work. If the
-snow is damp it balls on the center lacing
-and a blister is raised before one knows it.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XX">CHAPTER XX.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="dropcap">M</div>
-
-<p class="p0"><span class="hidden">M</span>AY 6. Saturday, 8 p. m.&mdash;This is the
-strangest May weather I have ever
-experienced. The wind has blown a
-gale from the north without a moment's
-cessation for four days. It is twenty-five degrees
-below the freezing point. I was in the
-vicinity of the Hanson Camp yesterday, but
-got no birds. I saw only one pair of chickadees
-and one redpoll. They were never so
-scarce all winter as now. The natives assure
-me that a change is due shortly, and
-then there will be "emik apazh," and the
-"ting emeruk" will come.</p>
-
-<p>The Hanson boys came near getting me
-into serious trouble yesterday. It was one
-of Joe Jury's jokes. When I left his cabin
-I started back into the woods. Nolan, of the
-Sunnyside, called in. Joe told him that I
-had reported seeing two caribou across the
-river on the way down. Joe garnished the
-tale with a few extra details, and Nolan left
-for Sunnyside pretty well excited. He got
-nearly everyone in camp out before noon. I
-happened along on their trail about four
-o'clock, and the first fellow I met was Nolan,
-just returning from a long tramp. He informed
-me that he had seen the caribou
-tracks (?) and wanted to know where I had
-last seen the animals. I was taken by surprise
-and told him that I hadn't seen a
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[ 76 ]</span>
-caribou in Alaska. It then dawned on Nolan
-that he had been the victim of a joke, and
-he was somewhat "beside himself." I tried
-to explain matters by telling him that I had
-said to Joe Jury something about having
-seen "ptarmigan." which no doubt he had
-taken for "caribou." The rest of the fellows
-took the joke all right, but said they would
-"get even" with Joe some way. One man
-fired his rifle at a target and split the barrel
-over two-thirds its length, owing to snow
-in the end, I suppose. The gun was ruined
-and so the joke was a costly one.</p>
-
-<p>There is a string telephone between two
-cabins at Sunnyside which is a real novelty.
-The box resonators in each cabin are fixed
-up with features like a human face with a
-tin mouth. It was exceedingly funny to see
-the expression on the faces of the natives
-when they first heard that box "talk."
-Greenberg was talking in at the other end,
-and they recognized his voice. One old woman
-fled in terror. She thought it was a "doonak"
-(evil spirit). It is no wonder these
-things frighten the Eskimos so. Doubtless
-our own ancestors would have been burned
-at the stake by their townspeople for witchcraft
-in the early days of New England had
-they dared to make a tin box "talk."</p>
-
-<p>I bought eighteen pounds of No. 8 shot for
-$1.20 at the Hanson Camp. It took me
-nearly three hours to bring it three miles
-against the wind. I had no snowshoes, as
-I had let Brownie have mine when he
-started for the schooner. The extra weight
-was just enough to make me break through
-the crust every five steps, and down I went
-to my knees. That eighteen pounds grew
-to one hundred pounds before I reached
-home.</p>
-
-<p>John Miller, the cripple, has moved over to
-one of the Iowa cabins, so we are alone for
-the first time in many weeks. Only three of
-us. We cannot use all the game we shoot
-now, and I am rather glad to have the opportunity
-of giving it to the hungry natives.
-I do not waste a bird body. I give some of
-them to Charley for his mickaninies, and he
-loans me his snowshoes whenever I want
-them for hunting. At first the boys
-dubbed me "the bird fiend," but they have
-quit that now. Too many scurvy victims
-have blessed me for the ptarmigan which, in
-some cases, have been all the fresh meat obtainable,
-not to mention our own possible
-suffering had it not been for the birds I
-shot. And now I do not object at all to the
-wordless thanks of these poor natives, who
-devour every scrap of a bird of any sort,
-excepting the skin, which only I claim. I
-save souls, bird skins being the only visible
-or invisible soul of which the creatures are
-possessed.</p>
-
-<p>We have just learned of a superstition
-which is the most cruel of any noted among
-these strange people. It has roused our civilized
-horror. A very pretty little girl about
-thirteen years old, who has been the pet of
-the camps all winter, and whom the boys
-have looked upon as a "little sister," has
-been shut up all by herself in a small snow
-cave back in the woods. There she is
-doomed to stay until the snow melts, without
-speaking to anyone or leaving her
-cramped position, with no fire and with only
-such cold food as may be brought to her.
-And she must live alone in such an igloo for
-one year, so their statutes decree. This is
-the law concerning all Kowak-mitt women
-when they are supposed to have reached
-marriageable age.</p>
-
-<p>This is but the beginning of the little
-woman's punishments, which will be many
-and varied from this date.</p>
-
-<p>The "cabloonas" around this vicinity are
-very much incensed over this new superstitious
-cruelty. To demonstrate our convictions
-in the matter, eight of us armed ourselves
-with guns, marched over to the village
-and demanded that old Omechuck and
-his wife, Atungena, Kalhak's parents, take
-the child back into their igloo. The man laid
-all the blame on the mother and grand-mother
-(as it was in the beginning), and we
-had a big wrangle. We informed them that
-if they did not end this and other cruelties,
-and liberate the girl by to-morrow noon, we
-would come over in a great body and tear
-down the cave and take her away. They
-were pretty well frightened. It gave us lots
-of fun, though we didn't change our austere
-countenances. We meant what we said.
-Uncle Jimmy headed the expedition. He
-had a great big knife belted on, and we all
-presented a dangerous front. What if the
-Eskimos had taken it seriously and mobbed
-us? Mobbing is not their tendency. They
-are gentle in spite of other things, and were
-actually in fear of our threats. We are not
-sure of the full extent of our influence, but
-we stirred them up and they may conclude
-that this "missionary association" of gold-hunters
-is not here for nothing. Later the
-girl was released.</p>
-
-<p>May 14, Sunday.&mdash;Spring is breaking
-the winter's reign at last. The snow has almost
-disappeared from the sand-dunes and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[ 77 ]</span>
-is softening everywhere. Little pools of
-water are appearing in the low places. A
-gentle rain is falling, the first since last September&mdash;eight
-months. The days of slush
-and water are upon us, but oh, such exciting
-days for me! The first geese and gulls have
-arrived, very shy and very few, and I saw
-two swans. They stay about the muddy
-places across the river. I got a fairly good
-shot at a goose, but missed it. Everyone is
-after the poor geese and lots of rifle balls
-are wasted, with never a goose as yet. I
-shot a solitary glaucus-winged gull sitting
-on the ice, with a thirty-calibre Winchester
-rifle at 143 yards range. The bullet
-went straight through the neck, cutting
-a very clean way, and the skin
-made a beautiful specimen. Yesterday
-was my red-letter day. I found,
-almost by accident, a jay's nest and
-eggs, the thing I have been looking
-for so constantly for three months.
-I also found a fine set of hawk owls&mdash;six
-eggs, three newly-hatched
-young and both parents. The nest
-was in a hole in a rotten spruce stub
-about twelve feet above the snow.
-When I tapped on the tree the male,
-which was sitting, left the nest and
-flew away about a hundred feet,
-turned and made for my head as
-straight and swift as an arrow,
-planting himself full force, and drawing
-blood from three claw marks in
-my scalp. My hat was knocked
-about twelve feet and the crown
-torn out. All this the owl did without
-stopping in its swoop. I recovered
-myself just in time to receive a second
-charge and had to dodge clear to the ground.
-When the courageous defender of home and
-country turned for its third attack a charge
-of No. 10 met it, and it died an honorable
-death, deserving to be ranked among heroes.
-I have the entire set preserved.</p>
-
-<p>I have a flock of white-winged crossbills
-spotted in a spruce forest ten miles away,
-which I expect will nest in a couple of
-weeks, but I doubt if I can reach the place,
-now the snow is going. I wore snowshoes
-nest-hunting yesterday, but probably for the
-last time this year. It is far easier snowshoeing
-over the snowy tundras than walking
-through the peat and water and "nigger
-heads" after the snow is gone.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 337px;">
-<img src="images/page77.png" width="337" height="279" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">The Prisoner We Rescued.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>May 21, Sunday.&mdash;Uncle Jimmy and Dr.
-Coffin still keep up the Sunday services.
-Three of the Iowa men and half a dozen
-Eskimos have come in. As I have just finished
-a bird I thought it a good idea to
-desist until after church, on Uncle Jimmy's
-account. So, until singing begins, I will
-have a little time to write. I cannot afford
-to waste a second these days. Most of the
-snow is gone. All the ponds and sloughs are
-full of water and the river has risen fully
-eight feet.</p>
-
-<p>All the slush ice has gone, but the thick
-winter ice is on top and extends unbroken
-down the middle of the river. The Eskimos
-say that if the warm weather and high
-water continue this ice will break up and
-float away very soon. And then it would be
-"finis" to bird collecting, for the steamers
-would whistle and we would all have to
-pack up and start. I am just living in dread
-of the "Helen." I would not cry should she
-spring a leak or otherwise disable herself, so
-that she would be laid up until the last of
-June. This is a wicked thought and I repent
-of it. Solitary sandpipers and Baird's sandpipers
-are here, and I know they will nest
-by the middle of June. Small birds are beginning
-to arrive. I heard the beautiful song
-of the fox sparrow for the first time this
-morning, also the tree sparrows and varied
-thrush. I saw a single robin yesterday with
-its familiar call note. We have goose dinners
-galore, but the geese are lean and
-tough, far from such eating as they were in
-the fall. We prefer duck and ptarmigan.
-The doctor has made some very nice cranberry
-jelly from the berries which have been
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[ 78 ]</span>
-stored on the vines under the snow all winter.
-The native women and children picked
-over two gallons yesterday, which they
-brought to us.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 367px;">
-<img src="images/page78.png" width="367" height="199" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">The Kowak Breaking Up.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>May 24.&mdash;The Kowak is breaking up and it
-is a tremendous sight. The water has risen
-until it is on a level with the bank on this
-side, and on the opposite side it is spreading
-out over the tundras. It is covered completely
-from side to side with a crunching,
-grinding mass of ice from three to five feet
-thick. Yesterday there was a jam on a
-sand-bar below and the ice course was
-stopped. Then that from above came down
-with force, crushing and piling into great
-ridges of blue and green blocks from ten to
-fifteen feet in height. There must be a tremendous
-momentum in a moving field of
-ice. In one place a field many yards in
-diameter was forced up a steep bank until it
-toppled over on itself. The banks are
-plowed by the resistless stream and trees
-are broken off like threads.</p>
-
-<p>Indian Charley borrowed our kyak, which
-belongs to Rivers, three days ago to go up
-and look after a birch canoe which he
-wanted to carry out of reach of the ice. He
-was only going as far as the Guardian
-Camp, and there was plenty of water along
-the edges there. He was expected back the
-same day, but has not returned yet. We
-fear he has lost his life. His father, an old,
-withered man, who smoked himself last
-winter when Charley was sick, walks the
-river bank all day watching, and yesterday
-afternoon cried and howled a long time,
-mourning "Kayuruk" who, he said, was
-surely "mucky" (dead). I saw a birch
-canoe yesterday crushed and lying on a
-passing cake of ice.</p>
-
-<p>If this was Charley's he must have met
-with misfortune. One would think that a
-native, who has experienced many such occurrences,
-would know enough to keep out
-of harm's way. Night before last a couple
-of the Iowa boys spent two or three hours
-tramping through the swamp looking for
-ducks which they kept hearing. But they
-were not able to catch sight of the authors
-of the numerous "quacks," which always
-lured them to greater distance. To-day,
-after telling everyone of the strange birds,
-the boys are being "joshed" in true camp
-fashion. The bullfrogs are appearing in
-every pond and to-day one has begun his
-warble in a pool a few feet from
-the door. We did not expect to
-see frogs so far north. I fail to
-see how they resemble the quacking
-of ducks, but some imagine
-the sound to be the same. The
-first mosquitoes are abroad, just
-a few, a sort of "foretaste," according
-to Scripture. The birds
-are arriving in large numbers, like
-a stampede, and the woods are
-full of the songs of robins,
-thrushes, sparrows and warblers.
-I am working hard, too.</p>
-
-<p>May 31.&mdash;Oh, but spring is
-lovely! I am sure I never spent
-three such happy weeks, and
-I have been happy all my life. Yet I have
-been working hard, some days until I
-was tired enough to drop. Last week I went
-up to the mountains and was gone forty-three
-hours, with only about one hour's
-sleep. We tramped fifteen miles across the
-tundra with heavy rubber boots on, sinking
-into the moss and among the "nigger
-heads" every step. And then through
-streams, and snow, and tangles of brush.
-The second day it rained heavily and we
-started home at 7 p. m., tramping until midnight,
-when we reached a point where we
-had left our boat in a slough about two
-miles below on the opposite side of the Kowak.
-While we had been gone the river had
-fallen and the heavy boat was high and dry.
-We had to drag it through a narrow channel
-over mud and grass a hundred yards to the
-river. And then there was a stiff east wind
-and a swift current to cross the river
-against, and we finally had to tow up to the
-Landing. There were four of us, including
-Dr. Coffin, who has been my companion in
-many of these bird hunts, so soon, alas! to
-be over. I was so tired when I got in that
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[ 79 ]</span>
-I fell asleep half undressed and without
-supper. But I obtained what I went for,
-and it was worth the hardships&mdash;white-winged
-crossbill's nests. Young, an Iowa
-man who was with us, fell to his chest in a
-narrow stream of ice water, and we were
-all soaked from the rain and dripping under-brush.</p>
-
-<p>The river is entirely free of ice now and
-people are starting down. Many are passing
-every day, but they will be unable to go
-farther than the delta, for the Sound doesn't
-clear earlier than July 1.</p>
-
-<p>We have heard that the "Helen" is all
-right and is expected down in a day or two.
-She may get stuck on a sand-bar. If so I
-shall have a week longer for the birds. We
-have been packing all day. I have a good
-deal of stuff in bulk, though not heavy. I
-wouldn't blame the boys if they "kicked."
-We may have to make two trips from here
-down. We learned that our barge, which
-we left last fall on the bank of the Squirrel
-River eighty miles below us, was burned
-last winter, so our carrying capacity is
-limited. The steamer "Riley" has been repaired.
-She came up as far as the Hanson
-Camp yesterday. Indian Charley has turned
-up all safe. He has been down to a village
-below, gambling for another wife.</p>
-
-<p>According to the Eskimos I am to die before
-the snow is all melted off, because I
-robbed that jay's nest. Grass is springing
-up, and last night, while I was strolling
-through the woods, I found a patch of crocuses.
-The woods were beautiful, the long,
-deep shadows contrasting with the yellow
-sunlight. The silence was intense, and yet
-there were many sounds&mdash;the quavering song
-of the thrush, breaking out and then dying
-back; the chorus of frogs from a distant
-pond, and the occasional demoniacal laugh
-of a loon. Yet it was silence broken in
-pieces. The scene from the sand-dunes
-north across the river was most beautiful.
-I wish I were able to depict the scene as I
-perceived it and the indescribable sensations
-it awakened. I wonder if I were the
-same age as Uncle Jimmy if I would be impressed
-the same way. It is something for
-me to remember all my life, this wonderful
-winter on the mighty Kowak. And I must
-bid it "Good-by."</p>
-
-<p>We had a regular thunder storm to-day,
-with a heavy shower which set the roof to
-leaking, in spite of the tents stretched over
-it. Dr. Coffin has inaugurated a new decoration.
-It denotes rank of vice-president of
-the L. B. A. M. &amp; T. Co. A double row of
-safety pins up his shirt front. There are
-only three of illustrious company at
-present in the "Penelope" cabin, but all the
-more need of distinctive decorations.</p>
-
-<p>B., the partially demented individual who
-might have died of scurvy last winter if we
-hadn't drawn up his "will" for him, is the
-source of amusement to us, with his various
-tricks. He spends most of his time on the
-river bank watching for passing boats. He
-hails everyone with a mixed set of questions;
-first, "Have you any white lead for
-sale?" second. "Did you have the scurvy?"
-third, "Where'd you come from?" etc., until
-the boat is out of hearing. B. has a skiff he
-is very proud of, and he threatens anyone
-who touches it. I am on very good terms
-with him and he tells me whenever he sees
-a goose on the river (usually it is a loon).
-He makes a noise in his throat like a
-chicken disturbed after it has gone to roost.
-I do not know what will become of him. He
-is perfectly harmless.</p>
-
-<p>This evening I traded three pounds of
-raisins for a sailor bag. I have more clothes
-now than when I left San Francisco, enough
-to last me five years. Dr. Coffin is a real
-convert. He is himself a "bird fiend" now,
-after starting that nickname for me in the
-beginning, he thinks of stopping this summer
-at Dutch Harbor. If it keeps on I shall
-have the whole crew. I think we shall pull
-out from the company entirely and so escape
-the turmoil of the ultimate disbandment.
-There is little hope of realizing from
-the trip, even on the "Penelope." She cost
-us enough in the first place, but who knows
-where she is now?</p>
-
-<p>I just now thought I heard the whistle of
-the "Helen." There is nothing in sight.
-That "Helen" haunts me. She it is who
-will bear me away from this fascinating
-region. By the way, she has a fine whistle.
-A better one than any other boat on the
-river. Perhaps we can trade that whistle
-for something, even if nobody will accept
-the gift of the boat and engines. Oh. I forgot;
-there's Cape Nome. The boys there
-may have staked out rich claims for us by
-this time. However. I would be willing to
-trade all my stock in the L. B. A. M. &amp; T.
-Co. for some plaster-of-paris, cotton batting
-and some arsenic.</p>
-
-<p>June 6.&mdash;My Last date on the Kowak. The
-"Helen" arrived on the evening of the 2d.
-She is O. K. and the eight boys well. They
-brought down with them a man who is
-afflicted with black-leg, too helpless to leave.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[ 80 ]</span>
-We shall take him to the Mission, so we are
-now quite a large family. Nearly everyone
-above has already passed down the
-river in all sorts of boats and rafts. We
-have persuaded the rest to remain here a
-few days, as it will be impossible to get into
-the Sound so early. We are having a little
-more time for game. I have taken several
-sets of rare eggs, and have a number of
-nests "spotted." But the boys are getting
-restless and I fear we will have to pull out
-to-morrow or next day. We are living
-"high." A varied assortment was served
-up in the fricassee yesterday&mdash;ten old-squaws
-(ducks), a curlew, two ptarmigan,
-one loon and a blackbird. Indian Charley
-brought us twenty fish, so we have plenty
-of fresh meat, a welcome change of diet for
-the boys of the upper winter camp, as they
-have not been afflicted with a bird fiend in
-their crowd.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 326px;">
-<img src="images/page80.png" width="326" height="269" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Some Friends We Left Behind.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The steamer "Agnes Boyd" was saved
-from the ice, but is now high and dry on a
-sand-bar and the river is still falling. The
-Hanson boys are having a peck of
-trouble and the prospects are now that
-they will not get out until the August rains
-come. I was out collecting until one a. m.
-night before last, and the pink sunlight
-never left the mountain peaks. The trees
-are nearly full foliaged to a beautiful fresh
-green, and several varieties of flowers are
-in bloom. It is too bad to be compelled to
-leave here just at this season. I certainly
-can never regret leaving a place or home so
-much. But such is life. We hesitate moving
-always. And yet who knows but there may
-be better prospects further on? It is with
-something of a lump in my throat and heart
-that I turn my back on what has been the
-scene of such wonderful experiences to me.
-Still I must say it, "Good-by, old Kowak,
-good-by!" Good-by, mice, little redbacks;
-good-by, sand-dunes and tundras, winter,
-spruces, birches, cabin, all. Good-by, Eskimos,
-funny people, who have a kind heart
-in a little, brown, superstitious body. Here's
-the deserted village for missionary souls,
-houses, woodpiles, pictures yet pinned
-on the walls, echoes of Sunday services
-and literary societies&mdash;and voices of
-gold hunters.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXI">CHAPTER XXI.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="dropcap">J</div>
-
-<p class="p0"><span class="hidden">J</span>UNE 12.&mdash;We are steaming down
-one of the numerous channels of
-the Kowak delta, and I am sitting
-on the upper deck of the "Helen."
-The channel is narrow but deep and
-very tortuous. Half an hour ago we
-were going in an exactly opposite direction.
-The banks are low and are
-lined continuously with willows whose
-branches have not even budded out, although
-up the river we left the trees
-in full foliage, thus indicating the season
-to be much later along the coast
-than in the interior. We have met no
-ice in the stream, but there is plenty
-stranded on the bars. Some Indians
-told us to-day there will be plenty
-of ice in the inlet for many sleeps yet,
-but our boys want to see for themselves.
-I think it a great mistake to have left the
-timber so early. We left our winter home
-on the 8th of June and traveled three days.
-Yesterday we tied up all day at the last
-timber and I put in the time collecting. I
-obtained eight sets of eggs, a little brown
-crane skin put up, greasy as a duck, besides
-several small birds. I put in every minute
-on shore and am getting some good things,&mdash;sets
-of varied thrush, gray-cheeked thrush,
-etc.</p>
-
-<p>We got a good deal of game yesterday.
-Everything that has meat on it goes into the
-pot. The fricassee to-day consisted of a
-crane, two ducks and a loon, all cut up and
-boiled together. Jesse Farrar is cook;
-Stevenson is fireman; Casey, engineer; Wilson
-and Foote, pilots; Shafer, Shaul, Uncle
-Jimmy and I, deck hands; the doctor and
-Colclough comprise the fire department.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[ 81 ]</span></p>
-
-<p>And this last is a very important organization.
-Sparks from the smoke stacks catch
-on sacks or anything inflammable and soon
-start a smudge. The fire department immediately
-"smell smoke." and extinguish the
-conflagration with a teacup of water. The
-usual seat of combustion is Casey's jumper.
-Then the back of the boiler gets almost red
-hot and several planks get to scorching, and
-even some of the cargo is in danger. With
-its other duties the department has put in
-ventilators, so we have less trouble. The
-crowd is in very good spirits. The quartette
-is frequently heard, and just before bed-time
-Foote gets out his banjo.</p>
-
-<p>This morning we passed a camp of natives.
-Six of their kyaks came out and followed
-us a long way. They could sail circles
-around the scow. They are very dextrous
-with their funny craft, just before leaving
-us they sang in chorus "There'll Be a Hot
-Time." Evidences of the great Kotzebue
-rush will be found among the Eskimos, in
-their language as well as in other ways, for
-many years to come.</p>
-
-<p>A cold west wind from off the sea ice
-blows constantly, and the weather is not to
-be compared with what we left at "home."
-My sorrow at leaving the cabin does not
-lessen. The "Helen" is loaded very heavily,
-but we managed to get everything on. We
-have great times keeping her on an even
-keel. The order. "Everyone go aft," or,
-"Everyone go forward," is frequently heard.
-She only stuck on a bar once coming down,
-and then there wasn't much trouble in getting
-her off. That is one thing in which our
-steamer excels many others. It is difficult
-to make her run aground hard enough to
-stick. She doesn't move fast enough. The
-wheel has been enlarged, but it makes little
-difference in her speed; the engines are not
-large enough. Stevenson keeps from 150 to
-175 pounds of steam in her boiler, which is
-really more than ought to be carried for
-safety. It is getting cold up here on deck,
-and I am going down to the boiler-room to
-warm up.</p>
-
-<p>June 18.&mdash;This is Sunday and Uncle Jimmy
-thinks I ought to do something besides skin
-birds all day, so probably the most righteous
-act would be to write in my mother's diary.
-It is a very disagreeable day. It has snowed
-heavily all day, melting as fast as it falls
-and sticking to everything. We have the
-big 12 &times; 20 tent up among the spruces, and
-the cooking range keeps the interior quite
-pleasant.</p>
-
-<p>The crowd has been in the tent all day
-singing and reading, while I have one end
-of the long table for "the morgue." The
-Iowa party is camped near us, and their
-launch "Iowa" takes trips every other day
-to the inlet ten miles down the river, to see
-the state of the ice. Shaul went down with
-her yesterday, but they report the ice packed
-firmly in the inlet and as far as they could
-see towards Kotzebue Sound. We are
-camped in the timber at the mouth of the
-Kowak. A couple of warm days last week
-brought a foretaste of the mosquito scourge
-which we expect, but they do not promise
-to bother me much. Dr. Coffin is so kind to
-me. He hunts birds' eggs and gives me
-more than my share. Even Uncle Jimmy
-hunts nests in the woods, having located
-five for me in the last two days. Some of
-the good things we have taken are the little
-brown cranes, black-throated loon. Hudsonian
-curlew and scaup duck. We were out
-over the tundra all day yesterday and did
-not get back until this morning. I remembered
-that it was my little brother's birthday
-(the one who is so fond of insects), and
-I managed to catch two butterflies with my
-hat for him. I saw several, but they were
-pretty active, and it is hard running over
-the mossy hummocks and bogs after them.
-I shot a crane yesterday and the doctor got
-one a few days before. They are fine eating,
-better than any birds except ptarmigan.
-We have two seines, and Casey. Shafer and
-Foote comprise the fishery department. Dr.
-Coffin and I keep the camp in game, so we
-have plenty of fresh meat. We got three
-dozen duck eggs one day, and now Shafer
-makes fine cookies and doughnuts. I
-blow all the fresh eggs, and the contents are
-therefore all ready for "scrambles" or baking.</p>
-
-<p>We are a jolly crowd and no one would
-believe us to be disappointed gold-hunters.
-The main occupation of this branch of the
-L. B. A. M. &amp; T. Co. at present is bird-nesting.
-I hope we have to stay here two weeks
-Day and night are all the same to us
-nowadays. I seldom get to bed before one
-a. m., and am up for breakfast at eight. The
-snow is beginning to stay this evening and
-the landscape is whitening. This is such
-weather as the old Arctic explorers met with
-all summer when they suffered so much
-from exposure, but a warm, dry tent like
-ours, with plenty of wood, keeps us comfortable
-and very far from martyrs to the
-"cause." The winds are very chilly, and I
-really suffered more from cold last night as
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[ 82 ]</span>
-we were sailing up the river to camp than I
-did all last winter. It is hard to keep one's
-feet dry. If I wear hip boots I am sure to
-step into some hole in a swamp and get
-them full. One time I went in to my waist
-by surprise when I was wading in the edge
-of a pond after a grebe's nest. For an instant
-I was deprived of speech, which was a
-great hardship. The ice is getting "rotten"
-rapidly, with the heavy winds breaking it
-up.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 398px;">
-<img src="images/page82.png" width="398" height="293" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Steamer on the River.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Kowak Delta, Sunday. June 25.&mdash;I am sitting
-on a heap of spruce boughs before an
-open fire in the woods. There is a heavy
-wind blowing and the tents and steamer at
-the river bank are altogether too airy. This
-is a much more sheltered and comfortable
-spot. We have been at this camp two weeks,
-but will probably pull out to-morrow and go
-down to the mouth of the river, and, as soon
-as the weather is favorable, go across the
-dreaded Holtham Inlet and on to the Mission.
-The launch "Iowa" reports the ice
-breaking up at the river mouth and moving
-out. For a while there was quite a large
-community of tents along the river each side
-of ours, but they have all started down now.
-The "Agnes Boyd" passed us, having been
-laid up on a bar several days. She brought
-the sad news of the death of Jack Messing,
-one of the San Jose crew of the Hanson
-Camp. He was found dead in his bed on the
-steamer. Five other men were sleeping
-with him, but noticed nothing unnatural until
-they attempted to arouse him for breakfast.
-Jack was a sociable, good-hearted
-fellow, and many were the pleasant visits
-exchanged between him and members of our
-camp last winter. It is reported that an Indian
-shot two white men over on the Selawik
-this spring. As the natives tell the story,
-the Indian was entirely justified. They
-forced him to mend a sled at the muzzle of a
-revolver, and scared him so that he finally
-tried to run away. They picked up rifles
-and started after him. But he got behind a
-tree with his own rifle and anticipated them
-to the number of one man.
-Many men are still crippled
-with the scurvy. On the
-Pick River fifty-two men
-out of sixty were down with
-black-leg. The schooner
-"Life" wintered near Selawik
-Lake with nine men
-aboard. Missionary Samms
-received word by the Eskimos
-that these men were
-sick with the scurvy and
-were helpless. So he set out
-to their aid. He returned a
-few days ago, reporting that
-five out of the nine had died
-and the other four were recovering.
-It is an awful
-disease, and many more
-have perished from that
-cause than from disaster or
-accident. It is strange that
-our company has escaped
-so far all such mishaps, but
-we are not out of danger yet.
-As we see them, the general run of people
-are impatient to get home, are cross and
-quarrelsome. Many are the "scraps" and
-differences among companies. It is a common
-thing to hear men cursing each other
-bitterly over such trivialities as loading a
-boat or setting up a tent. Sometimes partners
-will divide their supplies, even breaking
-a spoon or knife in two to "make it
-even." I am glad to say that our crowd is
-remarkably free from such things. The
-usual sounds are of singing and joviality.
-The doctor and I have frequent friendly
-word fights over such topics as, "Which
-way the wind blows to bring rain." whether
-a "light object floats down stream as fast
-as a heavy one;" or, "how close to the wind
-we can sail the boat." But if there Is one
-of us assailed on any point by anyone else
-we both agree at once, and bring consternation
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[ 83 ]</span>
-to the ranks of the enemy. Someone
-made the statement the other day that a
-razor becomes sharper if left for a while
-unused, and every man except the doctor
-and myself was of the same mind. Think
-of such a tradition in this enlightened age!
-Several maintained that for that reason they
-kept two razors, using them alternate weeks.
-When we especially feel the need of mental
-exercise, the doctor and I argue on physical
-and mental evolution, and on this subject
-the other boys let us alone for good reasons.</p>
-
-<p>Last night the doctor. Casey and I went
-hunting, and did not return before 2 a. m.
-this morning. We started about four and
-went up a slough until we came to open
-tundra. It began storming about eight and
-blew and rained heavily all night. We had
-agreed to be back to the skiff by nine, and
-Casey and I were on hand before that time,
-but the doctor did not appear. In spite of
-our oil coats we were soon wet and shivering.
-After waiting a while and hearing no
-shooting which might announce the doctor's
-approach, we set out and walked to where
-he was last seen by us at the edge of a lake,
-but could discover no sign. We began to be
-alarmed and, returning to the slough, spent
-a couple of the most miserable hours. We
-managed to start a fire at the foot of a solitary
-scrub spruce and were speculating
-gloomily as to what might have happened,
-when we heard a distant shot. The doctor
-came wearily tramping across the tundra,
-and was more happy than we to get back to
-the boat. He had become mixed up among
-some sloughs and lakes. He had followed
-around a large lake several miles, only to
-find progress stopped by a slough joining
-that lake with another. He then retraced
-his steps to his first starting point and began
-over again. His boots were full of
-water and he was of course drenched, for
-he had left his oil coat at the boat. When
-we got home we were glad to find Shafer up
-and a warm tent. He got us a hot supper
-and to-day we are none the worse. The doctor
-got an old goose with her four downy
-young. I found a set of pin-tail's eggs and
-shot some ducks and a ptarmigan.</p>
-
-<p>The tundra is curiously marked off in
-many places by ridges and ditches running
-at right angles to one another. The ditches
-are full of water, and the tundra resembles
-a California alfalfa field laid off in squares
-by irrigating ditches. I cannot think of a
-cause for this formation. The numerous
-lakes and ponds are many of them higher
-than the surrounding land, and are hemmed
-in by dykes three or four feet high. These
-are thrown up by the floes of ice in the
-lakes which, decreasing in size as the summer
-advances, are driven back and forth
-across the lakes by changing winds, and
-thus crowd up the mud and sod around the
-edges. The dryer parts of the tundra are
-covered with the white reindeer moss, really
-a lichen, and under and among this a thick
-mat of sphagnum and other mosses. This
-is soaked full of water, and it is like walking
-over a bed of sponges, where one "sloshes"
-in five or six inches at every step, to travel
-over such ground. Then on lower ground
-a sort of bunch grass grows in big, stout
-tussocks, "nigger heads," with water and
-loose moss between. This last is the worst
-walking.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXII">CHAPTER XXII.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="dropcap">M</div>
-
-<p class="p0"><span class="hidden">M</span>ISSION INLET, Cape Blossom, July 1,
-1898.&mdash;We came across Holtham Inlet
-in good order Tuesday. That was the
-only day so far that any steamers have come
-through. The weather was fine for us and
-a broad channel was open and clear of ice
-as far as the Mission. The same evening a
-west wind arose and the ice has been shifting
-back and forth across the inlet ever
-since. The "Riley," "Agnes Boyd," "delight,"
-"Mattie Farington," "Nugget," and
-"Iowa" came through the same day, and
-all are here in the little harbor safe from the
-ice floes. The sea ice stretches unbrokenly
-from a couple of miles below the Mission
-across to the north side of the Sound, and
-no one has been able to get in or out of the
-Sound except a couple of natives, who
-crossed from Point Hope on a sled. They
-report the ice as firm as winter, with no
-prospect of its breaking up, and say that it
-will be "twenty sleeps" before we can expect
-to get through, and "maybe the ice
-won't break up at all." The beach from
-here to the Mission is lined with tents and
-presents quite an animated scene. Everyone
-expects to go to Cape Nome as early as
-possible. We have no word from our good
-ship "Penelope" later than May 3, and she
-was all right then. She wintered seventy
-miles below Cape Blossom. The weather is
-very cold and disagreeable. Heavy winds
-bring penetrating fogs from off the ice, with
-storms of rain and sleet, and we have had a
-heavy snowstorm. We have our two 10 &times; 20
-tents up, end to end, on the gravel bar separating
-the "goose pond" from the Sound,
-and have very comfortable quarters. In one
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[ 84 ]</span>
-tent is the cook stove and dining-table, and
-the other is a sort of parlor with the big
-heater in use. We loaded up heavily with
-wood before leaving timber on the Kowak,
-but I think we shall have to make another
-trip for wood before long. Everything in
-the line of driftwood is cleaned up in this
-vicinity, but there will be the usual annual
-crop when the ice breaks up.</p>
-
-<p>I just now heard a gull squalling and ran
-out with my gun in time to get a shot at a
-Pomarine jager which was in pursuit of it.
-I got the jager all right and it is a fine bird,
-the first I have obtained of this species. The
-long-tailed and parasitic jagers are quite
-common. I found a nest of each on the
-Kowak delta. Yesterday I found four sets
-of the eggs of the northern phalarope, and
-shot three golden plover, which are the first
-I have taken. Collecting now is very uncomfortable.
-I wear the same heavy mittens.
-July 1, which I wore all winter, and
-in fact heavier clothing all through than was
-worn at thirty degrees below zero. Our
-warm parlor tent is quite an attraction and
-we have plenty of company as usual with
-us. We are talking about mail. No news
-from the outside world since September 15
-of last year.</p>
-
-<p>July 15.&mdash;Somewhere in Bering Sea off the
-Alaskan Coast.&mdash;I am sitting on the coal-box
-in the galley on board the "Penelope." I
-am a fixture between the fire-box of the
-cooking range and the window, and have to
-flatten myself against the wall to keep from
-burning my clothes. There are four "galley slaves"
-in this 6 &times; 8 coop, but this is
-absolutely the only place possible to write
-in. The sea is smooth, with a light breeze,
-which is ahead. Foggy as usual and very
-chilly. The galley is the only place except
-in bed where one can warm up, and it is in
-pretty lively demand whenever the cook
-does not claim full possession. There are
-twenty-four men aboard, but all have gone
-to bed save the captain and three men on
-watch. The captain has scarcely slept a
-wink since we started a week ago. The
-strong currents, unfavorable winds, and
-thick weather are retarding us unexpectedly.</p>
-
-<p>We were watching on the Sound on July 3
-when two schooners were sighted through
-the ice off Cape Blossom. On the 4th five of
-us went out in a small boat and were delighted
-to find one of them to be the "Penelope,"
-all safe and in good time. Captain
-Delano and the four boys. Miller, Clyde,
-Brown and Rivers, must have had a very
-rough experience, being on duty twenty-four
-hours at a time. The ice in Escholtz Bay,
-where the schooner wintered, began breaking
-up and moving out on June 15, and from
-that date until she anchored off Cape Blossom,
-the "Penelope" and her little crew
-were at the mercy of the ice floes. They
-had very narrow escapes from being pinched
-between floes or crowded aground. Once
-they were forced on a bar and only got the
-ship out of her danger by breaking the ice
-up around her and "kedging" out. At one
-place their stint of open water was narrowing,
-as the ice pack drifted toward shore,
-and something had to be done immediately
-or they were lost. A strong off-shore wind
-was blowing, and the captain set all sail
-and headed straight for the ice. When the
-"Penelope" met it with full force she raised
-herself up, sliding gracefully on to the floe,
-and then her weight broke it down. Then
-she plowed through the ice until she
-reached a strip of open water beyond, where
-she was safe for the time being. And with
-all her battlings the "Penelope" came
-through with scarcely more than a skin
-scratch on her sides. Before the ice broke
-up the captain had repaired her, painting
-her white with blue trimmings, and renovating
-her from deck to hold. Six vessels wintered
-near her and their captains all agree
-that it was little less than a miracle that
-any were saved. Two, the "Ainsworth"
-and one other, were wrecked by the ice.
-The "General McPherson" and "Penelope"
-had about the best anchorage for the winter,
-in a cove behind the Chain Peninsular.</p>
-
-<p>July 5 and 6 were stormy and nothing
-could be done but straighten out accounts
-with various parties at the Mission. Many
-who left earlier in the Cape Nome rush, borrowed
-or bought provisions from the stores
-on the "Penelope," and left orders for us to
-collect from their representatives when we
-should get down in July. They thus saved
-the labor of hauling their stuff on the first
-part of their trip, as the "Penelope" was a
-hundred miles on the way. We have heard
-nothing of our Cape Nome contingent. On
-July 7 we had fine, calm weather, and
-loaded the "Penelope." making two trips
-out to where she was anchored, nine miles
-from the Mission on Cape Blossom. These
-two trips were our last with the "Helen."
-We also took on six passengers and their
-freight to Cape Nome, besides two sailors
-who worked their passage. It was decided
-that the poor "Helen" must be left, and, in
-case we should not return for her this summer.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[ 85 ]</span>
-Missionary Samms could have her.
-She never could stand a sea, and if we took
-her machinery back to San Francisco it
-would not be worth much more than old
-iron. There goes $1800! Be this her epitaph:
-"She served her purpose, if she was slow."</p>
-
-<p>We set sail southeast from Cape Blossom
-on the 8th and anchored off Chamisso Island
-on the 9th for water. It was too rough to
-load the water tanks until night, and we had
-until midnight on the island. I was delighted&mdash;fairly
-wild! There are big rookeries
-of murres, puffins and gulls on a detached
-islet, and a party of us made landing and
-collected forty dozen eggs. I went over the
-cliffs on a rope and was hauled up and down
-their faces. There was little danger except
-from falling rocks which might be loosened
-above me, and we were always very careful
-about that. I had a good crew, with Dr.
-Coffin as foreman. The murres lay their
-eggs on little projections or narrow shelves
-of rocks on the face of the cliff, in most
-places entirely inaccessible save from above.
-At the last descent I had one scare.
-Whether the boys above me had an equal
-scare I will leave them to say. I was about
-fifty feet below the edge of a precipice and
-probably the same distance above the rocks
-in the surf. I had obtained everything
-within reach and had yelled to "hoist
-away," but got no response. I was too far
-down to hear the voices of those above,
-neither could they hear me. The rope didn't
-budge and I continual swaying in uncertainty
-in mid-air, rather dubious as to the
-result. Finally I gave a successful "yank"
-on the rope, and was then jerked upward at
-a great rate of speed, scraping my elbows
-and shins in my frantic efforts against being
-thumped against the sharp projecting rocks.
-When I rose over the edge I found six men
-on the rope. Three were usually sufficient,
-but this last trip the three could not start
-the rope, and not until the sixth man, Casey,
-took hold, did it give an inch. We found
-that the rope had caught in a narrow chink
-in the rocks. Had it required one more man
-to start me, where would he have been
-found? I probably should have been left to
-swing for many hours. But I wasn't. Nothing
-happened wherewith to satisfy the adventure-loving
-and "narrow escape" craving
-modern journal, and I haven't all the
-eggs blown yet. Either I have become sea-sick
-or on duty. Besides, popular sentiment is
-against me. The boys don't like the idea of
-eating the egg after it is blown by my pipe
-from the shell. In vain I assure them that
-the blow-pipe is thoroughly disinfected according
-to the latest advices of science.
-They Insist upon seeing the shells cracked
-open, lest there might lurk some hidden
-secret within known only to Shafer and myself.
-This new lack of faith on the part of
-the hitherto "nice boys" is very disastrous
-to scientific investigation. I think they
-might trust me, for I eat at the same table
-and get away with my share of doughnuts
-and Cookies. I leave it to Shafer if I don't.
-Dr. Coffin and Rivers have taken the egg
-craze, so between us three I hope a good
-series will be saved out of the lot.</p>
-
-<p>On Chamisso Island we saw records
-carved on logs in a fair state of preservation
-of the visit of "H. B. M. S. Blossom, 1820."
-"H. B. M. S. Herald, 1848," and some Russian
-vessel 1837. Those were some of the
-old Arctic explorers.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 291px;">
-<img src="images/page85.png" width="291" height="184" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Iceberg.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>At 2 a. m. July 10, the "Penelope" set sail
-westward out of Kotzebue Sound, and after
-dodging through scattering ice and close
-along the south shore, sometimes in thirteen
-feet of water, she got safely out into the
-open beyond Cape Espinberg. We, with one
-other, were the first boats out this year.
-The ice opened first this season on just the
-opposite side of the Sound to that of last
-year. We had a good gale in the Arctic and
-another in Bering Sea just after getting
-through the Straits. It was fearfully rough
-and how the "Penelope" did pitch and roll!
-Worse than any time in the Pacific last year.
-I was sea-sick and so was almost everyone.</p>
-
-<p>I belong to the Sailors' Union this year.
-Brownie is assistant cook, as I was last
-year. We sailors are divided into watches
-of four hours each, three men in each watch,
-giving one hour and twenty minutes at the
-wheel to each man. I, with Clyde and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[ 86 ]</span>
-Rivers, am on from 12 to 4. Eight hours a
-day on deck and sixteen off, doesn't read like
-hard work, but it's plenty.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 460px;">
-<img src="images/page86.png" width="460" height="230" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Off Cape Nome.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>We have had only the worst weather.
-Until we got through the Straits we encountered
-frequent squalls of snow and sleet.
-To-day it has been rainy and foggy. It is
-difficult to keep one's hands and feet warm
-during the hour and twenty minutes at the
-wheel, even with our best clothing on. I
-could not report for duty during the gales.
-We have seen several vessels, and last night
-spoke the whaling tender "Bonanza." Her
-captain yelled at us that there is "A big
-strike at Cape Nome!" I am inclined to
-think that the whole world is making fun at
-the expense of these "fool gold-hunters," as
-we are called. I wish I were at Dutch Harbor
-collecting birds. Later, 11:30.&mdash;A breeze
-has sprung up favorably and the captain
-says we are within fifty miles of Cape
-Nome.</p>
-
-<p>Cape Nome, July 20.&mdash;Got in all safe and
-anchored close off shore. Boys have located
-seven claims not yet developed. Plenty of
-gold in sight. Hurrah for the Arctic gold-hunters
-of the "Penelope" crew!</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXIII">CHAPTER XXIII.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="dropcap">C</div>
-
-<p class="p0"><span class="hidden">C</span>APE NOME, July 20.&mdash;After an eleven
-days' voyage from Kotzebue Sound
-we anchored off Anvil City on the
-morning of the 20th. Those eleven days
-make a nightmare. A succession of head
-gales with dense fogs. We were almost
-within sight of our destination when a
-southeaster began to hum through the rigging
-and a thick fog set in. The "Penelope"
-hove to and for two days we experienced
-a most disagreeable combination
-of rolling and pitching, with their inevitable
-conditions. When the clouds finally lifted
-we were back in Bering Straits. The northward
-current is remarkably strong at this
-season and it is almost impossible to stem
-it unless there is a fair wind, which in our
-case did finally favor us. We found our
-Cape Nome representatives all here save
-Cox, who was left with some claims toward
-Fish River. All are well, but from their
-account they must have had some sorry experiences.
-Dr. Gleaves, Gale and party were
-lost in the overland
-trip and ran out of
-provisions, resorting
-to their seventeen
-dogs for food
-in the last pinch.
-They finally
-reached supplies
-with barely enough
-meat for two days
-longer. Close
-shave. The body of
-Dr. De France of
-the "Iowa" party,
-was found frozen
-in the trail in the
-mountains.</p>
-
-<p>On the 22d the
-"Penelope" sailed
-up the coast to our
-claims, which are
-located on the beach seven miles west of
-Anvil City. Here we have unloaded supplies
-and will proceed to work the claims
-far enough to see what they are good
-for. I have not visited "town" yet,
-but there must be two thousand inhabitants
-living mostly in tents or driftwood
-shacks. Several warehouses have
-been built and two substantial frame buildings
-are going up. They say there are ten
-thousand men in this district, mostly scattered
-out among the hills. Five thousand
-claims are recorded, but of these only about
-a dozen are known to be of value. Four
-are so far being worked, but these I know
-to be extremely rich, for anyone can look on
-and see the "shining" as it is separated
-from the gravel in the sluice boxes. Shafer
-and Stevenson were at these workings a day
-or two ago and saw two shovelfuls taken
-up indiscriminately pan out one $6 and the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[ 87 ]</span>
-other $8. Those rich claims are in little
-ca&ntilde;ons or ravines seven miles back from the
-coast in the hills. This is really a gold bearing
-region, for one can find colors almost
-anywhere. We can get from twenty-five to
-two hundred colors to a pan on our claims
-here, but they are very line, and I doubt
-their being saved in sluice boxes. The
-beach claims contain plenty of gold, but it
-will require improved machinery to make
-them pay.</p>
-
-<p>I have left my bird skins and everything
-except a single change of clothing on the
-"Penelope," as we all have done. But I am
-afraid my collection is liable to damage from
-rats or mould. There is no place on shore
-to put the stuff and no through vessels that
-I know of to ship
-it by. The "Penelope" left night
-before last to take
-a prospecting party
-thirty miles down
-the coast to examine
-some country
-there and then to
-visit the claims
-where Cox was
-left. Nine of us
-are left here, with
-Harry Reynolds as
-foreman. We are
-at present digging
-holes in various
-places to see if we
-can find the "pay
-streak." No success yet. The
-gold on the beach
-is not "wash" gold, but no doubt comes
-from the bluff which borders the beach
-about one hundred feet back from the
-surf. From this bluff the smooth tundra extends
-back some five miles to the hills. Anvil
-City is at the mouth of Snake River,
-which extends back through the hills and
-heads in the high mountain ranges which
-we can just see through the gap. Anvil
-Creek, Snow Gulch and Glacier Creek, the
-rich spots, are tributaries of Snake River.
-To the westward is Penny River, but this
-whole country, including thirty miles along
-the water front, is all staked out. The district
-is under military control, and twenty
-soldiers are stationed at Anvil City. Without
-them there might be trouble. It seems
-that the first men to this region, the so-called
-"discoverers," staked out as many as one
-hundred claims each under power of attorney.
-They then formed a mining district
-and passed a law that powers of attorney
-cannot hold, thus handicapping those who
-have come in since, so one man can take up
-but one claim. The other night a miners'
-meeting was called in town to consider the
-matter. A resolution he brought up which,
-if carried, would throw the whole district
-open to be restaked. The lieutenant was
-there and he knew that if this passed there
-would be serious trouble. He informed the
-meeting that if this resolution was brought
-up he would clear the house. After some
-deliberation the resolution was couched in
-a different form, disguising its intent, but
-the officer kept his word and ordered the
-house cleared. There was some hesitation
-and several toughs even looked resistance,
-but the order was given to fix bayonets.
-The meeting was thus broken up and nothing
-more has been done.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 456px;">
-<img src="images/page87.png" width="456" height="245" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Main Street, Anvil City.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The original staking was doubtless unfair,
-but if the district were now reopened it
-would be worse. There is little lawlessness
-in Anvil City, on account of the militia. A
-good many claims have been jumped and
-some of them two or three times. This will
-give work to the lawyers. Several of our
-own claims have been jumped, but we are
-on them now and possession is nine points
-of the law.</p>
-
-<p>July 30.&mdash;This is Sunday and a day of rest
-for us. We have worked pretty hard the
-past week. In fact this is the first mining
-the L. B. A. M. &amp; T. Co. has done. Prospect
-holes have been dug in different parts of the
-claims. Uncle Jimmy and I were set to digging
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[ 88 ]</span>
-hole back on the tundra, and if anyone
-doubts the work is hard let him try it
-for himself. We worked three days and got
-to a depth of ten feet with no favorable results.
-The tundra is thawed barely through
-its covering of moss, seldom more than six
-inches. The rest of the way the frozen
-ground was as hard as rock and had to be
-chipped off bit by bit. The hole was about
-four by five feet, just room enough to wield
-a heavy pick. We broke the points off the
-pick every day. A strata of pure ice a foot
-thick was encountered, but most of the way
-we worked through a sort of frozen muck or
-packed mass of unrotted vegetation which,
-when it thaws, looks and smells like barnyard
-filth.</p>
-
-<p>After the first day the walls began to melt
-and cave in little by little, so that each morning
-and noon we would have to bale out a
-foot or more of mud and water. It was
-about as dirty work as one can imagine.
-The fresh clods, as we picked them out of
-the bottom, were so cold that for a time
-frost formed on the outside just like a cold
-piece of iron brought into a warm room in
-winter. Although as cold as a refrigerator
-down in the pit, the perspiration poured off
-from us from the stifling air. Only one of
-us at a time could work in the hole, so we
-had half hour shifts. Uncle Jimmy and I.
-The man on the outside had to haul up the
-bucketfuls of dirt and water, but he otherwise
-rested. After our long yachting trip
-this work was especially hard. But such
-labor gives one a tremendous appetite. Jesse
-Farrar is cook now. Shafer has deserted
-the company. He has obtained a position in
-a restaurant uptown at $1.50 per month and
-expenses, with prospects of $200 next mouth.
-C. C. Reynolds, Dr. Coffin, Clyde, Baldwin
-and Colclough have left on the steamer
-"Albion" for home. Yes, for home! All
-have made satisfactory arrangements with
-the company. As to the rest of us who
-"stay by the ship," there are none but could
-better his condition by leaving the company.
-But we who have a good deal of money invested,
-hate to leave everything when affairs
-are looking better than ever before.</p>
-
-<p>We are in a gold country here and none
-can tell what may turn up. I never saw a
-single color in the Kowak region, but here
-the sand is sprinkled with them, though not
-in paying quantities everywhere. I must
-admit that even I, who do not know what
-homesickness is, would like very well to be
-at home for a while. I am losing time now.
-No matter if I were shoveling gravel and
-digging holes, that isn't improving myself
-any, is it?</p>
-
-<p>I am still intent upon Dutch Harbor as
-soon as the company leaves Alaska. I do
-not suppose I will ever return to Alaska
-again, and I think a few months among the
-Aleutians would be time well put in, in
-the natural history line.</p>
-
-<p>By the way, "Uncle S.," the Quaker gold-hunter
-whom we had given up for lost last
-winter, came aboard the "Penelope" when
-we first anchored at Anvil City. He has
-bought a small steam launch and makes
-money ferrying people and their goods up
-and down the coast. The Snake River is not
-navigable except after heavy rains. I have
-also seen the "Flying Dutchman" here. He
-is gray. He had black hair and beard last
-fall. His forced journeyings over the frozen
-Arctic have left a witness to his hardships.
-The "Bear" came in last night from
-Kotzebue Sound, bringing eighty victims of
-scurvy. The sickness up there has been
-awful this spring and the death rate as
-high as ten per cent.</p>
-
-<p>We hear of a great many disasters. There
-are but few who would spend another winter
-on the Kowak for a mint of gold, unless
-it be myself. To crown it all, we have news
-of a strike on the Kowak! "Nuggets as big
-as hickory nuts!" This story, when we are
-scarcely four hundred miles away from
-there! Somebody is starting another boom.
-This may start some more "fools" up there.
-But it will take something new to get any of
-us back. We have bit at "the hickory nut"
-once, and I do not think we shall again. We
-hear that the transportation companies are
-booming this country. It is overrun now
-and there is sure to be crowding. Wages are
-five to eight dollars a day back at the mines,
-but only a limited number of men can get
-employment at that. Expenses are high,
-and a man had better stick to $1.50 per day
-back in civilization than to come here and
-sleep on the damp ground in a tent without
-a fire and live on salt-horse and beans.</p>
-
-<p>The hot weather is upon us at last and the
-last four days have been "sweaters." It is
-like an oven in the tent where I am writing.
-Dr. Coffin got us each a box of lemons and
-oranges on the "Alaska," just in, before he
-left. Jesse just brought in a big stew kettle
-full of ice-cold lemonade. Two bowls full
-just serve to make one want more. It tastes
-so good. We have had one mess of fresh
-potatoes and onions. We ate the latter raw
-with vinegar. It does a fellow good to be
-without such things a while, if not too
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[ 89 ]</span>
-long. He knows better how to appreciate
-them.</p>
-
-<p>And now I record a fact that ought to
-make every face blush that turns an upward
-glance at Old Glory. The United States has
-passed "a law," permitting; saloons in Cape
-Nome. The natives get all they want and
-are killing each other when drunk. The native
-girl who mends some of our shoes, came
-in drunk, and when sober she was asked
-where she obtained the liquor. She gave the
-name of the man. Our foreman told him
-that he would report him to the captain of
-our squad, and was offered $50 by the criminal to "keep mum."</p>
-
-<p>Aug. 5.&mdash;It is nothing now but "work"
-from 7 a. m. to 6 p. m. After ten hours of it
-one is more ready to rest than to write. I
-do not get a minute to so much as look at a
-bird except Sunday, which we have voted to
-observe. And then there is plenty to till in
-every minute when one comes along, including
-mending and washing. But I can
-scarcely help seeing the birds that fly past
-along the beach just as if to taunt me.
-Bands of Pacific kittiwakes pass up and
-down the surf on the lookout for herrings,
-and an occasional glaucus, or rather the
-Port Barrow gull, comes sailing along. A
-pair of Arctic terns feeding their full-grown
-young, afford almost the only bird notes of
-any kind. The young have a pleading, and
-yet harshly strong, succession of calls, and
-hover along the beach ever ready for the
-fish caught in the surf by the parent birds.
-The precision with which the terns can drop
-on a tiny fish or crustacean in the boiling
-surf is remarkable. And yet they seem so
-light on the wing and rise from the water
-with so little apparent exertion. Long-tailed
-jagers are common, coursing back
-and forth over the tundra or poising against
-the wind with fluttering wings much like a
-sparrow-hawk. Their long, pointed, streamer-like,
-central tail feathers distinguish them
-at almost any distance from the other
-jagers. They feed on meadow mice and
-caterpillars mostly, but their habit of forcing
-gulls to disgorge is of frequent notice.
-As there are no mud flats or marshes here
-the waders are scarce. I saw a godwit,
-probably the Pacific, flying back toward the
-interior. Several golden plover, which I
-have no doubt are rearing their young, are
-always on the back part of our claims.
-Their melodious, warbling call reminds me
-strongly of the robin. These plover show
-decided preference for the dryest tundra and
-uplands, and at Cape Blossom I found them
-on the hillsides in the interior of the peninsula.
-One day last week while I was at
-work in a prospect hole back of the bluff,
-three turnstones lit in the mossy hummocks
-within a few yards of me. They were very
-tame and remained an hour or more near
-me, feeding on insects or their larv&aelig;. I have
-never taken this species (the common turnstone),
-although I saw it at Cape Prince of
-Wales and Cape Blossom, and tried hard to
-get some specimens. I took several of the
-black turnstones in Sitka in 1896, and also in
-San Clemente Island last year. Black-throated
-loons are numerous and are constantly seen and heard overhead as they fly
-back and forth from the lakes on the
-tundra to their feeding grounds out at sea.
-This is the only loon I have seen here,
-although I saw the red-throated at Kotzebue.
-I kept special watch for the yellow-billed
-loon which is ascribed to this region,
-but have never identified it. The Eskimos
-make clothing of loon skins, and I have particularly
-examined such evidences, but have
-never found a scrap of yellow-billed loon
-skin. This species cannot therefore be very
-numerous. Land birds are very scarce here,
-probably on account of the awful barrenness
-of the region. I flushed one snowy owl
-back of camp one day, and the boys say they
-saw a hawk of some kind yesterday, I think
-from their description a gyrfalcon. I saw
-two juvenile Lapland longspurs yesterday
-feeding about the bluff, and also heard a yellow
-wagtail. I have noted a pair of juvenile
-redpolls several times along the bluff.</p>
-
-<p>This, I think, comprises our avifauna up to
-date, and it will be seen that a collector
-would have rather "slim picking." They
-tell me that back in the hills where the ravines
-are lined with willow scrubs, birds
-are more numerous and that large flocks of
-juvenile ptarmigan are appearing. I would
-like to go back and see if this is true, but it
-is all "business" now. The financial prospects
-of our party are brightening every day.
-Our beach claims may become a paying
-proposition when properly developed. Eight
-or ten of us are working on one of them in
-a very crude fashion, using "rockers." and
-are taking out $50 to $60 per day. With improved
-machinery this would be a rich thing,
-but of course considerable capital would be
-required to start. I am "cleaner-up;" taking
-out the previous day's clean-up, which
-consists of several pans of mixed black sand
-and gold dust (the latter in smallest proportion),
-and panning it down so far as I can
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[ 90 ]</span>
-without losing any colors or fine flakes of
-the yellow. Then I mix in mercury thoroughly,
-which takes up all the dust, forming
-an amalgam, which is finally separated and
-retorted, leaving the buttons of pure gold.
-We are figuring on another proposition and
-may not continue at this much longer. We
-have prospected these claims enough to
-know their value, and this is enough for this
-year. There is a good deal of trouble about
-the strip of beach between high and low
-tide, some claiming it to be public reserve
-and open to be worked by anyone. Several
-"squatters" are working on our claims who
-refuse to get off, but the judge will settle
-this next week.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXIV">CHAPTER XXIV.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="dropcap">C</div>
-
-<p class="p0"><span class="hidden">C</span>APE NOME, Alaska, Aug. 6, 1899.&mdash;It is
-Sunday evening again and I am reclining
-against my roll of blankets in the
-warm tent. Foote is playing the banjo,
-beautiful music, too! I never appreciated
-music until this trip. Foote's marches and
-familiar songs, associated as they are with
-the freedom of camp life and that feeling of
-rest after a day's work, have impressed their
-memory as the sweetest music I ever heard.
-We are still on our beach claims; that is,
-part of us. The "Penelope" is back at
-anchor, having left Jett and Wilson on the
-scent of something under guidance of an Indian.
-Cox has not reported. Our property
-is advancing in value and so is the stock of
-the L. B. A. M. &amp; T. Co. The same stock
-which I was ready to trade a few weeks ago
-for some cotton batting, arsenic and plaster-of-paris!
-We own a lot in Anvil City 200 &times;
-300 feet. The beach claims are proving better.
-If we can hold clear to the water line
-we are safe. The past week we have taken
-out $250 in gold dust. Trouble with jumpers
-continues. Over six hundred men are working
-with rockers on the beach in sight. Some
-are making from $50 to $150 per day. One
-fellow struck a pocket and took out $400 at
-one clean-up. Our claims are not as good
-as those nearer Snake River. Several jumpers
-are at work on them now and we cannot
-put them off except by force, and that means
-fight. None of us want to be disfigured
-after our successful encounter with the frost
-last winter. We appealed to the lieutenant
-in charge, but he says he can do nothing
-until the arrival of the district judge next
-week. Several of our boys have gone up to
-one of the rich gulches to consider a new
-proposition. Maybe we will get a good lay.
-A "lay" is a lease given by a claim owner
-to a party to work a claim for a certain per-centage
-of the outcome.</p>
-
-<p>Aug. 13.&mdash;Another week has passed away
-and very quickly, too, in spite of the hard
-work. From six to twelve of us are still
-working on one of the beach claims. Up to
-Friday night we had taken out $750 in dust.
-If the whole company were working at the
-same rate this would be good wages, but
-there are twenty to share with. The "Penelope"
-has gone down the coast again to
-look after the prospectors and may bring
-good news. Jesse Farrar, the cook, went to
-town last night, and I have been cooking to-day.
-We were troubled quite a little at first
-by our numerous Kotzebue friends dropping
-in for meals on their way up and down the
-beach. So we put up a sign, "Meals, $1,"
-more to rid ourselves of the extra care than
-to go into the restaurant business. Really
-it became unbearable.</p>
-
-<p>The town is booming. The beach claim
-trouble is not settled yet, and everyone is
-working where he pleases. Claim owners up
-in the gulches are looking for men at $10 per
-day and board, and cannot get them. A
-$310 nugget was taken from a sluice box
-the other day, and one man cleared $20,000
-for four days' work. Our boys have been up
-to see, and I ought to go. A fellow hasn't a
-chance every day in his life to see such a
-lot of gold in the rough, at its birth as it
-were, before it is washed or dressed or alloyed.
-Most of the lucky ones are Swedes
-or Laplanders, they being on the ground at
-the beginning of the rush last spring.</p>
-
-<p>Gold can only bring $15 per ounce at the
-highest, and only $14 at some stores. In
-other words, coin is at a big premium. The
-beach gold runs very high, being much purer
-than that from the hills. Some was sent to
-St. Michaels and assayed $18.40 per ounce.
-If one had the cash he could buy up the
-raw gold and sell it. That is where the companies
-make the bulk of their money. It
-is a great temptation for some of our
-party to desert and start into private enterprises.
-But I, and most of the boys, will
-stay together and I believe will come out
-better in the long run.</p>
-
-<p>They say Dawson is played out and that
-this is the next place for a boom. But I
-wouldn't advise anyone to come here if they
-have any way of making a living at home.
-Ten dollars a day sounds big, but when one
-pays $90 each way for transportation and
-then prices for things here, there isn't much
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[ 91 ]</span>
-left from the short period of three months'
-work, and one is not sure of that.</p>
-
-<p>We have a short fish net set out beyond
-the surf. This morning I found four salmon
-in it, the first we have had since leaving
-Kotzebue. Only four of us are here to-day,
-but I had three "boarders." Three dollars
-in "dust" was paid.</p>
-
-<p>I have forgotten to describe what "rocking"
-is. A rocker runs just like a baby's
-cradle, from side to side. At the top is a
-hopper with holes in the bottom to keep out
-the coarse stuff. The sand falls through the
-hopper-holes and washes over two "aprons"
-slanting back and forth to the bottom,
-where it runs out through a sluice-box. The
-aprons, and sometimes the sluice-box, have
-"riffles," or strips of cloth fastened in
-crosswise, to catch
-the gold. The
-aprons and the
-whole bottom of the
-box and riffles are
-of blanket, so that
-the finer dust
-catches in the nap
-or wool. A man
-stands dipping
-water into the hopper
-with one hand
-and rocking with
-the other, while the
-other man puts
-in a shovelful of the pay dirt every now
-and then, and keeps the water tub full
-and the tailings cleaned away. Two men
-run a rocker, though when the "Penelope"
-crew is ashore there are three men to each
-of our four rockers. We have to carry all
-our water from the surf. Some of the rockers
-have copper plates amalgamated with mercury
-on the upper sides. These are better,
-as the finer particles are caught and amalgamated.
-To "clean up" a rocker, the aprons
-and blankets are taken out and washed in
-a tub and the resulting debris panned out.
-I am amalgamator, and have nothing to do
-with the rockers. I pan out the previous
-day's clean-up and amalgamate the dust,
-squeeze "dry" the amalgam and weigh it.
-We have no retort as yet and I have on
-hand nearly ten pounds of dry amalgam. I
-have experimented with it and find that the
-amalgam is one-half gold by weight. Oh,
-the boys have a little joke on me. It was
-the result of my first experiment and I shall
-never hear the last of it. There must have
-been something else in the spoon I was using,
-nickel or silver, for the gold melted
-right into the spoon. I poured the stuff out
-on to a shovel-blade to save what was left.
-What did it do but melt right into and all
-over the shovel! The result of this is that
-the L. B. A. M. &amp; T. Co. has a gold-plated
-shovel. We are a wealthy company and can
-afford it.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 453px;">
-<img src="images/page91.png" width="453" height="153" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Cape Nome.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Later. Anvil City, Cape Nome.&mdash;I came to
-town after supper and am writing in our
-"city cabin," which is just back of the A. C.
-Company's store. We own a very fine residence
-in the city 12 x 10 feet, on a 150 x 300
-foot lot. It is a good eight miles from our
-beach claims here, and as I walked it I
-thought it twenty. I wore heavy shoes, and
-the best walking I could select was on the
-wet sand along the surf. For the entire
-eight miles there is scarcely one hundred
-feet without one or more tents on it. The
-beach is riddled with ditches and holes, and
-hundreds of rockers of all descriptions
-gyrate in various rhythm. I spoke to many
-Kotzebue people whom we knew last winter,
-and all are doing well. The beach is still
-being worked by everyone, irrespective of
-original locators, a dozen or more on our
-own claims. The officer arrested several,
-but discharged them again. The townspeople,
-saloonkeepers and transportation companies
-are against claim owners, as it is to
-their own interest to keep the mob taking
-out money. And they're doing it, too.
-Anvil City is booming. Dozens of frame
-buildings are being erected. Three big two-story
-sheet-iron buildings are going up,
-which comprise the government barracks.
-Several steamers have gotten over the bar
-and are in the mouth of Snake River. About
-two dozen saloons are raking in the money.
-This is a speedy place. I wish I had my
-time for the next two months here. Ptarmigan
-are $1 each for eating. Wages are
-$1 per hour.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[ 92 ]</span></p>
-
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 429px;">
-<img src="images/page92.png" width="429" height="360" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Rocking Out Gold at Cape Nome.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Cape Nome, Aug. 22.&mdash;I am quite sure that
-I do not aspire to the realm of cookery, but
-yet, for all that, I am in the kitchen again,
-"monarch of all I survey." I do not blame
-the cook for stubbornly declaring his intention
-to resign and refusing to leave his
-bed. No one heeded his warning given the
-day before. Pandemonium ensued. A dish-pan
-of mush finally appeared at the hands
-of Uncle Jimmy. No one consented to fill
-the vacancy at any wages. Three "boarders"
-came in and were turned away. The
-dissolution of the company was imminent,
-all because there was no one in the crowd
-to perform a duty which is considered by
-all to be the most disagreeable of any on the
-list. I told them so, and several other emphatic
-truths. "Practice what you preach!"
-was hurled at me. Then I rose up like a
-martyr and declared that I would "risk
-death" in the interests of the L. B. A. M. &amp;
-T. Co., and here I am in imminent peril of
-being wiped off the face of the earth by
-some "beach comber" whom I charge fifty
-cents for a loaf of bread. I sold three loaves
-at that rate yesterday. Also served fifteen
-meals to outsiders at the rate of $1 per meal.
-One man came in for supper last night who
-planked down a bag of dust worth fully
-$800 for me to weigh the dollar from. I
-poured out a little too much and he grabbed
-the bag and went out, saying, "Keep the
-change!" Most of the money taken in is
-dust. Cash is scarcer than ever. Copper
-plates are not obtainable, and silver dollars
-and halves are at a premium for covering
-the bottoms of rockers. The coins are amalgamated
-with mercury to catch the fine gold
-dust. I saw fifty arranged in rows in one
-rocker. Our claims are now covered with
-beach jumpers and we
-cannot get them off.
-Mob law rules. There
-are one hundred beach
-combers to one claim
-owner, and the authorities
-will not or cannot
-do anything. The lieutenant
-in charge gave
-us some notices to "vacate," but the people
-pay no attention. It
-fell to me to go up to
-one of our claims, and
-I showed the notice to
-each of the workers
-along the beach. Some
-laughed at me. Some
-sneered. One "tough"
-consigned me and the
-notice to a warmer
-place than Cape Nome
-in August. He continued
-to swear at me,
-and when I respectfully
-asked him to "be reasonable
-and give me a
-hearing," he told me to
-get to that same place I
-have mentioned "and
-quick, too." This at my own claim! I never
-knew I had a temper before, but for a minute
-then I do not think I would have been responsible.
-I can easily see how murders are
-committed in the rage of anger, and if all
-judges and juries could put themselves in
-the place of the tempted, perhaps capital
-punishment, at least for such crimes, would
-be annulled. The man who threatened me
-was bigger than I, and I went on. And he
-is still working there, taking out $100 per
-day, so I am told. He is in a "pocket." Our
-pocket. We have discussed the advisability
-of using force, but have abandoned it.
-Fancher says we "might get disfigured,"
-for there are people here just awkward
-enough to hit a fellow in the face.</p>
-
-<p>We are hemmed in on all sides and soon
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[ 93 ]</span>
-our beach claims will be worthless. Sunday
-I retorted all the amalgam we had on
-hand, and eighty-five ounces of pure gold
-was the result. Seven pounds of the pretty
-yellow stuff! I broke the big chunks as they
-came from the retort into small pieces with
-a cold chisel. It was fascinating work to
-weigh out the rare metal and lift the same
-when it was put into the chamois-skin sack.
-I have turned it over to Treasurer Rivers, so
-it is off my hands. But what is fifteen hundred
-dollars divided among twenty men? It
-would certainly be better to divide up the
-company right now, for the individuals here,
-but we cannot lawfully
-do it. Complete desertion is the only alternative to staying with it.</p>
-
-<p>Anvil City, Aug. 24.&mdash;We have left the beach
-claims and are on our
-way to Nome River.
-We have leased a fifty
-per cent, lay on Buster
-Creek, and are going to
-see what is in it. It is
-our last chance for this
-year. It may turn out
-poor, but we have very
-good reports from that
-section. We hope to
-feel assured of something
-good to come
-back to next spring.
-Ice last night, and probably
-an early winter.
-The schooner is going
-up to Safety Harbor in
-Port Clarence to remain
-until October 1st,
-which is about as late
-as we dare stay here. I must go ashore now
-for a boat-load of lumber for sluice-boxes.</p>
-
-<p>Later.&mdash;The rats got into a box of my
-geese and entirely ruined them. I do not
-know how much else is destroyed. I have
-not been so absolutely down-hearted for
-many moons. All on account of those miserable
-rats. I came near taking all my collection
-ashore and quitting the company.
-But then I suppose "gold is to be desired
-above all things." at least this is what I am
-told by wiser heads than mine, judging by
-their whiteness and baldness. There is a
-prospect of getting some new potatoes
-ashore to-night, and these will be an all-sufficient
-antidote to low spirits. Somehow
-potatoes, and even onions, go straight to the
-seat of low spirits when a fellow has been
-without them a year or two. Strange to me
-that a man ever commits suicide in the
-midst of local markets where fresh vegetables
-can be obtained. Ah, we shall have
-a great supper to-night! One menu three
-times a day&mdash;beans, dessicated vegetables,
-rice, dried fruit and bacon&mdash;grows wearisome
-unless the appetite is awfully sharp.</p>
-
-<div class="fig_center" style="width: 425px;">
-<img src="images/page93.png" width="425" height="322" alt="" />
-<div class="fig_caption">Placer Mining, Cape Nome.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Buster Creek, Sept. 3.&mdash;Here we are twelve
-miles up among the mountains back of Cape
-Nome. It took two days towing up Nome
-River, which is really nothing more than a
-creek. There were bars to drag the boat over
-every hundred yards. That brought us to
-the mouth of Buster Creek, three miles from
-here, and from there we had the sweet job
-of packing up all our supplies and lumber
-on our backs. Rain most of the time and
-nothing but green willow brush to burn.
-It was very disagreeable, hard work, but
-here we are now, well settled, with an oil
-stove to depend on when the willow wood
-fails. We have a fairly good looking claim
-here, No. 4. Have it opened up and the first
-gravel through yesterday. The riffles show
-coarse gold, though in no fabulous amount.
-We cannot get much out before freeze-up
-this year, but ought to do fairly well next
-summer from present prospects. Some ice
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[ 94 ]</span>
-and considerable frost already. We will
-probably return to the coast the last of September.
-The "Penelope" rode out the late
-storm safely when so many other vessels
-were lost. My latest news is that the rats
-have taken my goose box for a nesting den.
-One of the boys will watch from this on.
-I am cooking and it keeps me jumping sideways
-to feed the fourteen hungry gravel-heavers.
-I have to be up at five in the
-morning and am seldom through until nine
-at night. Have to bake every day, and have
-nothing larger than a single camp stove
-oven to do it in. Everyone is working for
-all there is in him. We hope to strike a pay
-streak, as they have on the claim above us,
-rich enough to take out $800 per day. I
-have scarcely time to breathe outside of the
-cook tent these days. But I frequently hear
-the notes of familiar birds&mdash;golden-crowned
-sparrows, gray-cheeked thrushes and ptarmigan.
-I shot nine ptarmigan the other
-evening close by. We are feasting on fresh
-venison. Yesterday morning a reindeer appeared
-on the hillside above the tents.
-Without malice aforethought one of the boys
-aimed and it fell&mdash;to our lot. It is now
-hinted that the wild creature was a tame
-reindeer, and that the Laps from over on
-Anvil Creek who have the animals in charge,
-will most likely come to hunt it up. If they
-get a peep into our provision tent we may
-have to pay $100, otherwise it will be finished
-by us with a relish such as few can
-appreciate. These Laplanders own very rich
-claims and, though they are really a lower
-class of people than the Indians, the latter
-cannot become citizens.</p>
-
-<p>Last week, while we were coming up
-along Nome River, birds were quite numerous,
-especially the smaller species in the
-willow thickets. I saw or heard the yellow,
-black-poll and Wilson's warblers; tree, fox,
-golden-crowned and intermediate sparrows,
-gray-cheeked thrush, redpoll, snowy owl,
-flocks of golden plover and pectoral sandpipers,
-one young Sabine's gull on a sand-bar:
-lots of large gulls, either glaucus or
-glaucus-winged, and perhaps both; loons,
-black and red-throated; little brown crane,
-pin-tails, and other ducks not identified. The
-last two or three days small birds have been
-very scarce. On August 27 and 28 the fall
-migrations were in progress. Most of the
-birds were heard singing, especially the
-warblers, as in spring. The ptarmigan are
-very nicely plumaged now in parti-colored
-costume. I wish I could save some, but the
-L. B. A. M. &amp; T Co. is mining now. I can
-hardly decide in my own mind to stay another
-winter here. I will let circumstances
-decide. There are hundreds of Dawson people
-here who say this will be a greater gold
-country than the Klondike. Some of the
-creeks are turning out immensely rich.
-One Swede came down from his claim the
-other day with $88,000. He got rid of $30,000
-of it in a saloon almost immediately. It
-will be seen that the saloon people are taking
-in most of the gold. However, I think
-we are on the right track, though it may
-take two more years to bring us material
-returns. In a few days now it will be:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">"Penelope! Penelope! zip! boom! bah!</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Going home from Kotzebue! rah! rah! rah!"</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXV">CHAPTER XXV.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="dropcap">B</div>
-
-<p class="p0"><span class="hidden">B</span>USTER CREEK, Cape Nome, Sept. 16,
-1899.&mdash;A week ago Casey went to Anvil
-City, across country twelve miles, and
-brought a batch of mail, containing our first
-letters from home since our arrival here in
-answer to our own. I received six, which I
-have committed to memory, sitting alone in
-the cook tent. If people at home, the wide
-world over, would write faithfully to absent
-ones, there would be joy in many a wanderer's
-heart.</p>
-
-<p>Here we are, working like beavers, thirteen
-of us, including me, the cook. It's the
-last struggle of a dying company. But it
-isn't dead yet. In fact there are many good
-signs of reviving, possibly to a more prosperous
-condition. We have done little so far
-on Buster Creek but hunt for pay dirt. Just
-now we are making wages. Took out $400
-last week, including some very pretty nuggets.
-The claims are too spotted; that is,
-the gold runs in narrow streaks, and necessitates
-moving quantities of barren dirt to
-get at it. Our largest nugget so far is $4.13,
-with a good many $1 ones. Over on Anvil
-Creek they took out a twenty-seven ounce
-one last week. That is a better size. While
-we have done little but "prospect" on the
-claims here, we have gained a good idea of
-their value, and expect to work them next
-year. A cold snap struck us three days ago
-and threatens to put a stop to our mining for
-this season. The creek is bordered with ice,
-and icicles adorn the edges of the sluice-boxes.
-We shall remain as long as we can
-possibly work. It is snowing quite heavily
-to-day. I saw the last Siberian yellow wagtail
-on the 8th, also a gray-cheeked thrush.
-I saw a gyrfalcon and snowy owl flying
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[ 95 ]</span>
-along the canon yesterday. Scattering
-flocks of golden plover have been quite common
-the past few days on the hillsides feeding
-on blueberries. I shot one near the tent
-this morning, although the ground was
-white with snow. I can hear their clear
-notes every few minutes while I write.
-They are flying past along the creek or up
-the hills. I wish I could save some skins.
-But wishes do not count with a gold-hunter
-when gold is in sight. Yesterday immense
-flocks of little brown cranes passed south
-overhead.</p>
-
-<p>I am pretty sure this is the same species
-we see and hear so much of during the migrations
-in southern California, and not so
-often the sand-hill crane.</p>
-
-<p>This "cooking job," which has been thrust
-upon me by circumstances entirely outside
-my control, is something terrible. I will
-never, never get into another scrape like it.
-And yet "I am in the hands of my friends."
-No President of these United States ever
-accepted his office "by the will of the people"
-more surely than I now occupy my
-office as cook for the L. B. A. M. &amp; T. Co.
-But for all that, I am elected by a sweeping
-vote. I repeat my previous oft-made declaration
-that I will never be caught running
-for this office again. In fact I never did
-run for it. It ran for me. An unquestionable
-illustration of the office seeking the
-man and not the man the office. I get up at
-five in the morning; nearly dark now at that
-early hour. How cold it is! And I never
-was eager to get up, under any circumstances.
-For a week nearly every night ice
-forms in the tent. I have an oil stove, without
-which I should never be able to prepare
-breakfast. Green willow brush is hard to
-burn in the little camp stove. I have breakfast
-ready at 6:30, dinner at 12, and supper
-at 6. It keeps me "hustling" to be prompt.
-The office is no "snap." I am given a man
-to chop wood when necessary, otherwise I
-must do everything alone. And the dish-washing
-three times a day! Let who will
-envy me. Up to the beginning of the cold
-snap I made light bread, six loaves per day.
-But since it has been freezing in the tent at
-night the sponge will not rise. And there's
-no way to keep it warm. Fuel too dear and
-scarce. The camp stove oven is about ten
-inches square, with bake pans to fit, two
-loaves to a pan, one pan at a time. Light
-bread went a good deal further than baking-powder
-biscuit. It takes nine slabs of the
-latter a day to satisfy us now. We are reduced
-to the bare necessities, no butter nor
-canned milk. For breakfast I give them
-corn-meal mush, bacon, bread, beans and
-coffee. For dinner bacon, beans, bread, pea
-soup, apple sauce and coffee. For supper
-either bacon gravy, made of flour and water,
-or stew, if we have ptarmigan or meat,
-beans, rice, apple sauce, bread, hard-tack
-and tea. Our reindeer was fine, but lasted
-only a few days. One unaccustomed to this
-fare of ours may think we are in luck for
-miners, and so we are, but one gets tired of
-the same menu for so long. And then the
-staleness of it, after being shipped and
-towed and packed and unpacked, and
-swapped, and crushed, and dampened, for
-nearly two years! Little freshness in it.</p>
-
-<p>The boys are having no easy job at shoveling.
-Their feet are swollen and sore from
-standing in rubber boots in ice water, and
-their hands are cracked and chapped. These
-every-day monotonies are the real hardships
-of a miner's life. He can tramp across the
-country for a few weeks and know that the
-end of his journey is at hand, and besides
-be getting some satisfaction from the
-thought of "glory" when he shall relate his
-perils to gaping friends at home. But this
-"peg-away" daily toil, in heat and cold and
-sleet and rain, after what may come to light
-in the next shovelful, and possibly never
-show up at all&mdash;this is hardship. But through
-it all the boys who have stuck to their work
-are in good spirits, and this in face of the
-fact that the "clean-ups" do not always
-show up wages even.</p>
-
-<p>I have plenty of time to think nowadays
-all by myself, for I do not necessarily keep
-all my thoughts upon the grub. I do a
-good deal of my work from sheer habit now,
-or mechanically. The boys are working on
-Claim No. 1, and these tents are on No. 4,
-so I am quite alone except at meal time. A
-regulation claim is one-fourth of a mile long
-lengthwise of a creek, and one-eighth wide.</p>
-
-<p>The "Penelope" is at Port Clarence,
-where Fancher and Jett went prospecting.
-The boat will be at Anvil City about October
-1st, according to programme, and we
-will sail for home as soon after that date as
-we can get away. Yes, home! I am heartily
-tired of this kind of living. I shall be willing
-to take a six months' rest before taking
-another trip, I am sure. I long to get back
-to my father's house and up in those cool,
-high chambers of mine, where I may once
-more feel "like a Christian and a gentleman."</p>
-
-<p>The season is earlier than usual, and the
-weather much more disagreeable than at the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[ 96 ]</span>
-same date last year on the Kowak. Every
-moment or two while I write I have to stop
-and stir the beans or apple sauce, or look at
-a batch of bread. The beans are boiling
-with rather a melodious gurgle, while the
-sizzling rice and the patter of sleet on the
-canvas overhead furnish a rather pleasing
-accompaniment. But it makes a person feel
-kind of lonesome-like. There! the old stove
-is smoking again! Whenever the wind shifts
-around the hill the draft is damaged, and the
-stinging, irritating green willow smoke fills
-the tent. My eyes smart and are very painful
-from this cause. I long for the voyage
-home across the water for the sake of my
-eyes. And now the snow is coming and it
-will but increase the mischief. I should hate
-to lose my good eyesight.</p>
-
-<p>A few cases of typhoid fever are reported,
-but none on this creek. We are all in good
-health. No one would doubt this last at
-meal time. The boys eat an immense
-amount of our monotonous grub and say
-their "grace" as thankfully as if it were a
-banquet. Little Brownie, the boy who was
-going to work eighteen hours a day if only
-he could "find the nuggets." comes dragging
-himself home at night completely tired out,
-sore feet and blistered hands. The work is
-pretty hard on the older men. Shaul, Wilson
-and Uncle Jimmy. But we have no hardships from other causes than voluntary hard
-work. Our foreman. Harry Reynolds, knows
-his business well, and we all like him.</p>
-
-<p>Anvil City. Sept. 20.&mdash;We were frozen out
-on Buster Creek, and here we are in town
-again. Winter is upon us, the landscape is
-white and the glare is very painful. The
-ground is frozen hard, which makes walking
-much easier than through a foot of mud
-and ooze. We are living in our cabin on
-our city lot just back of the A. C. Company's
-big warehouse. We made the entire trip
-from No. 4 on Buster Creek in one day, and
-were just in time, for next morning a snowstorm
-began, lasting until yesterday. We
-made the trip down Nome River in five
-hours in our boats, and then around to Anvil
-City outside the surf, which luckily was not
-heavy. And how, cold it was! I was one of
-three to bring a boat around, and by the
-time we got here I was so stiff I could
-scarcely bend my limbs. Rubber boots and
-damp clothing inside. It would have been
-much worse had we waited a day longer.
-However, we are all well in spite of hardship,
-and are patiently (?) waiting for the
-"Penelope." We heard a rumor that a white
-schooner was wrecked a short time ago on
-the rocks near Port Clarence. It was
-thought to be the "Penelope." Alas, my
-dear collection! But if it were the "Penelope"
-we would have been informed by
-this time. Then we have heard that the
-"Penelope" has been chartered to go back
-up to Kotzebue again for freight, and to go
-over to Siberia to trade for dog-feed. But
-a person must make a rule to believe nothing
-he hears in this country or he would be
-worrying all the time.</p>
-
-<p>This, for a boom town, beats anything we
-ever saw in the States. Thousands of people
-are now pouring in from Dawson to stay
-through the winter, and they say that this
-is a bigger place than ever Dawson was.
-Steamer loads of people and freight are coming
-in every day. The town is full of money.
-The town is incorporated, with mayor,
-councilmen and police force. Franchises
-have been let for electric lighting, sewerage,
-water works, and all modern improvements.
-Hundreds of houses are building,
-many large ones. Lumber is $150 per
-thousand.</p>
-
-<p>I have a job for to-morrow in the mayor's
-office aligning a calligraph. Wages are $1
-per hour. I could have all I could do for the
-winter, type-writing and doing mechanical
-drawing in the Nome City Attorney's office.
-But I wouldn't stay here for $300 per month.
-No, nor for anything. I hate the place.
-There's the toughest crowd of people, sporting
-Dawsonites, everyone ready to "do"
-everybody else. It is the liveliest, speediest,
-swiftest mining camp ever seen in Alaska.
-And what will it be next year? All sorts of
-sharks are making fortunes.</p>
-
-<p>Sept. 27, 1899.&mdash;Heigh-o! The "Penelope"
-has just dropped anchor off Anvil City and
-we are in high glee. Higher glee than we
-ever experienced on the Kowak, for we are
-going home! Our hunt for gold is over. We
-shall take some passengers aboard for San
-Pedro. I shall go on ship at once and see
-how it fares with my precious birds. They
-are my gold. We shall start at high noon
-October 2d, and expect to make the trip in a
-month or six weeks. Depends upon the
-wind. Now for our good ship's yell:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">"Penelope! Penelope! zip I boom! bah!</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Going home from Kotzebue! rah! rah! rah!"</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="caption3nb">THE END.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="transnote">
-
-<p class="caption3nb">Transcriber Note</p>
-
-<p>Minor typos were corrected. In order to prevent splitting paragraphs,
-illustrations were repositioned.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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