The Maine Woods:
Ktaadn
By Henry D. Thoreau
On the 31st of
August, 1846, I left Concord in Massachusetts for Bangor and the backwoods of Maine, by
way of the railroad and steamboat, intending to accompany a relative of mine engaged in
the lumber trade in Bangor, as far as a dam on the west branch of the Penobscot, in which
property he was interested. From this place, which is about one hundred miles by the river
above Bangor, thirty miles from the Houlton military road, and five miles beyond the last
log hut, I proposed to make excursions to mount Ktaadn, the second highest mountain in New
England, about thirty miles distant, and to some of the lakes of the Penobscot, either
alone or with such company as I might pick up there. It is unusual to find a camp so far
in the woods at that season, when lumbering operations have ceased, and I was glad to
avail myself of the circumstance of a gang of men being employed there at that time in
repairing the injuries caused by the great freshet in the spring. The mountain may be
approached more easily and directly on horseback and on foot from the north-east side, by
the Aroostook road, and the Wassataquoik river; but in that case you see much less of the
wilderness, none of the glorious river and lake scenery, and have no experience of the
batteau and the boatman's life. I was fortunate also in the season of the year, for in the
summer myriads of black flies, mosquitoes, and midges, or, as the Indians call them,
"no-see-ems," make travelling in the woods almost impossible; but now their
reign was nearly over.
Ktaadn, whose name is an
Indian word signifying highest land, was first ascended by white men in 1804. It was
visited by Professor J. W. Bailey of West Point in 1836, by Dr. Charles T. Jackson, the
State Geologist, in 1837, and by two young men from Boston in 1845. All these have given
accounts of their expeditions. Since I was there, two or three other parties have made the
excursion and told their stories. Besides these, very few, even among backwoodsmen and
hunters, have ever climbed it, and it will be a long time before the tide of fashionable
travel sets that way. The mountainous region of the State of Maine stretches from near the
White Mountains, northeasterly one hundred and sixty miles, to the head of the Aroostook
river, and is about sixty miles wide. The wild or unsettled portion is far more extensive.
So that some hours only of travel in this direction will carry the curious to the verge of
a primitive forest, more interesting, perhaps, on all accounts, than they would reach by
going a thousand miles westward.
The next forenoon,
Tuesday, Sept. 1st, I started with my companion in a buggy from Bangor for "up
river," expecting to be overtaken the next day night, at Mattawamkeag Point, some
sixty miles off, by two more Bangoreans, who had decided to join us in a trip to the
mountain. We had each a knapsack or bag filled with such clothing and other articles as
were indispensable, and my companion carried his gun.
Within a dozen miles of
Bangor we passed through the villages of Stillwater and Oldtown, built at the falls of the
Penobscot, which furnish the principal power by which the Maine woods are converted into
lumber. The mills are built directly over and across the river. Here is a close jam, a
hard rub, at all seasons; and then the once green tree, long since white, I need not say
as the driven snow, but as a driven log, becomes lumber merely. Here your inch, your two
and your three inch stuff begin to be, and Mr. Sawyer marks off those spaces which decide
the destiny of so many prostrate forests. Through this steel riddle, more or less coarse,
is the arrowy Maine forest, from Ktaadn and Chesuncook, and the head waters of the St.
John, relentlessly sifted, till it comes out boards, clapboards, laths, and shingles such
as the wind can take, still perchance to be slit and slit again, till men get a size that
will suit. Think how stood the white-pine tree on the shore of Chesuncook, its branches
soughing with the four winds, and every individual needle trembling in the
sunlightthink how it stands with it nowsold, perchance to the New England
Friction-Match Company! There were in 1837, as I read, two hundred and fifty saw mills on
the Penobscot and its tributaries above Bangor, the greater part of them in this immediate
neighborhood, and they sawed two hundred millions of feet of boards annually. To this is
to be added, the lumber of the Kennebeck, Androscoggin, Saco, Passamaquoddy, and other
streams. No wonder that we hear so often of vessels which are becalmed off our coast,
being surrounded a week at a time by floating lumber from the Maine woods. The mission of
men there seems to be, like so many busy demons, to drive the forest all out of the
country, from every solitary beaver swamp, and mountain side, as soon as possible.
At Oldtown we walked into
a batteau manufactory. The making of batteaux is quite a business here for the supply of
the Penobscot river. We examined some on the stocks. They are light and shapely vessels,
calculated for rapid and rocky streams, and to be carried over long portages on men's
shoulders, from twenty to thirty feet long, and only four or four and a half wide, sharp
at both ends like a canoe, though broadest forward on the bottom, and reaching seven or
eight feet over the water, in order that they may slip over rocks as gently as possible.
They are made very slight, only two boards to a side, commonly secured to a few light
maple or other hard-wood knees, but inward are of the clearest and widest white-pine
stuff, of which there is a great waste on account of their form, for the bottom is left
perfectly flat, not only from side to side, but from end to end. Sometimes they become
"hogging" even, after long use, and the boatmen then turn them over and
straighten them by a weight at each end. They told us that one wore out in two years, or
often in a single trip, on the rocks, and sold for from fourteen to sixteen dollars. There
was something refreshing and wildly musical to my ears in the very name of the white man's
canoe, reminding me of Charlevoix and Canadian Voyageurs. The batteau is a sort of mongrel
between the canoe and the boat, a fur-trader's boat.
The ferry here took us
past the Indian island. As we left the shore, I observed a short shabby
washer-woman-looking Indian; they commonly have the woebegone look of the girl that cried
for spilt milkjust from "up river,"land on the Oldtown side near a
grocery, and drawing up his canoe, take out a bundle of skins in one hand, and an empty
keg or half-barrel in the other, and scramble up the bank with them. This picture will do
to put before the Indian's history, that is, the history of his extinction. In 1837, there
were three hundred and sixty-two souls left of this tribe. The island seemed deserted
to-day, yet I observed some new houses among the weather-stained ones, as if the tribe had
still a design upon life; but generally they have a very shabby, forlorn, and cheerless
look, being all back side and woodshed, not homesteads, even Indian homesteads, but
instead of home or abroad-steads, for their life is domi aut militiæ, at home or
at war, or now rather venatus, that is, a hunting, and most of the latter. The
church is the only trim-looking building, but that is not Abenaki, that was Rome's doings.
Good Canadian it may be, but it is poor Indian. These were once a powerful tribe. Politics
are all the rage with them now. I even thought that a row of wigwams, with a dance of
pow-wows, and a prisoner tortured at the stake, would be more respectable than this.
We landed in Milford, and
rode along on the east side of the Penobscot, having a more or less constant view of the
river, and the Indian islands in it, for they retain all the islands as far up as
Nickatow, at the mouth of the East Branch. They are generally well-timbered, and are said
to be better soil than the neighboring shores. The river seemed shallow and rocky, and
interrupted by rapids, rippling and gleaming in the sun. We paused a moment to see a
fish-hawk dive for a fish down straight as an arrow, from a great height, but he missed
his prey this time. It was the Houlton Road on which we were now travelling, over which
some troops were marched once towards Mars' Hill, though not to Mars' field, as it
proved. It is the main, almost the only, road in these parts, as straight and well made,
and kept in as good repair, as almost any you will find anywhere. Everywhere we saw signs
of the great freshetthis house standing awry, and that where it was not founded, but
where it was found, at any rate, the next day; and that other with a water-logged look, as
if it were still airing and drying its basement, and logs with everybody's marks upon
them, and sometimes the marks of their having served as bridges, strewn along the road. We
crossed the Sunkhaze, a summery Indian name, the Olemmon, Passadumkeag, and other streams,
which make a greater show on the map than they now did on the road. At Passadumkeag, we
found anything but what the name implies, earnest politicians, to witwhite ones, I
meanon the alert, to know how the election was likely to go; men who talked rapidly,
with subdued voice, and a sort of factitious earnestness, you could not help believing,
hardly waiting for an introduction, one on each side of your buggy, endeavoring to say
much in little, for they see you hold the whip impatiently, but always saying little in
much. Caucuses they have had, it seems, and caucuses they are to have againvictory
and defeat: somebody may be elected, somebody may not. One man, a total stranger, who
stood by our carriage, in the dusk, actually frightened the horse with his asseverations,
growing more solemnly positive as there was less in him to be positive about. So
Passadumkeag did not look on the map. At sundown, leaving the river-road awhile for
shortness, we went by way of Enfield, where we stopped for the night. This, like most of
the localities bearing names on this road, was a place to name, which, in the midst of the
unnamed and unincorporated wilderness, was to make a distinction without a difference, it
seemed to me. Here, however, I noticed quite an orchard of healthy and well-grown apple
trees, in a bearing state, it being the oldest settler's house in this region, but all
natural fruit, and comparatively worthless for want of a grafter. And so it is generally
lower down the river. It would be a good speculation, as well as a favor conferred on the
settlers, for a Massachusetts boy to go down there with a trunk full of choice scions, and
his grafting apparatus, in the spring.
The next morning we drove
along through a high and hilly country, in view of Cold-Stream Pond, a beautiful lake,
four or five miles long, and came into the Houlton road again, here called the Military
road, at Lincoln, forty-five miles from Bangor, where there is quite a village, for this
countrythe principal one above Oldtown. Learning that there were several wigwams
here, on one of the Indian islands, we left our horse and wagon, and walked through the
forest half a mile, to the river, to procure a guide to the mountain. It was not till
after considerable search that we discovered their habitationssmall huts, in a
retired place, where the scenery was unusually soft and beautiful, and the shore skirted
with pleasant meadows and graceful elms. We paddled ourselves across to the island-side in
a canoe, which we found on the shore. Near where we landed, sat an Indian girl, ten or
twelve years old, on a rock in the water, in the sun, washing, and humming or moaning a
song meanwhile. It was an aboriginal strain. A salmon-spear, made wholly of wood, lay on
the shore, such as they might have used before white men came. It had an elastic piece of
wood fastened to one side of its point, which slipped over and closed upon the fish,
somewhat like the contrivance for holding a bucket at the end of a well-pole. As we walked
up to the nearest house, we were met by a sally of a dozen wolfish-looking dogs, which may
have been lineal descendants from the ancient Indian dogs, which the first voyageurs
describe as "their wolves." I suppose they were. The occupant soon appeared,
with a long pole in his hand, with which he beat off the dogs, while he parleyed with us.
A stalwart, but dull and greasy-looking fellow, who told us, in his sluggish way, in
answer to our questions, as if it were the first serious business he had to do that day,
that there were Indians going "up river,"he and one
otherto-day, before noon. And who was the other? Louis Neptune, who lives in the
next house. Well, let us go over and see Louis together. The same doggish reception, and
Louis Neptune makes his appearancea small, wiry man, with puckered and wrinkled
face, yet he seemed the chief man of the two; the same, as I remembered, who had
accompanied Jackson to the mountain in '37. The same questions were put to Louis, and the
same information obtained, while the other Indian stood by. It appeared, that they were
going to start by noon, with two canoes, to go up to Chesuncook, to hunt mooseto be
gone a month. "Well, Louis, suppose you get to the Point, [to the Five Islands, just
below Mattawamkeag,] to camp, we walk on up the West Branch to-morrowfour of
usand wait for you at the dam, or this side. You overtake us to-morrow or next day,
and take us into your canoes. We stop for you, you stop for us. We pay you for your
trouble." "Ye!" replied Louis, "may be you carry some provision for
allsome porksome breadand so pay." He said, "Me sure get some
moose;" and when I asked, if he thought Pomola would let us go up, he answered that
we must plant one bottle of rum on the top, he had planted good many; and when he looked
again, the rum was all gone. He had been up two or three times: he had planted
letterEnglish, German, French, &c. These men were slightly clad in shirt and
pantaloons, like laborers with us in warm weather. They did not invite us into their
houses, but met us outside. So we left the Indians, thinking ourselves lucky to have
secured such guides and companions.
There were very few
houses along the road, yet they did not altogether fail, as if the law by which men are
dispersed over the globe were a very stringent one, and not to be resisted with impunity
or for slight reasons. There were even the germs of one or two villages just beginning to
expand. The beauty of the road itself was remarkable. The various evergreens, many of
which are rare with usdelicate and beautiful specimens of the larch, arbor-vitæ,
ball spruce, and fir-balsam, from a few inches to many feet in height, lined its sides, in
some places like a long front yard, springing up from the smooth grass-plots which
uninterruptedly border it, and are made fertile by its wash; while it was but a step on
either hand to the grim untrodden wilderness, whose tangled labyrinth of living, fallen,
and decaying trees,only the deer and moose, the bear and wolf, can easily penetrate.
More perfect specimens than any front yard plot can show, grew there to grace the passage
of the Houlton teams.
About noon we reached
the Mattawamkeag, fifty-six miles from Bangor by the way we had come, and put up at a
frequented house, still on the Houlton road, where the Houlton stage stops. Here was a
substantial covered bridge over the Mattawamkeag, built, I think they said, some seventeen
years before. We had dinnerwhere, by the way, and even at breakfast, as well as
supperat the public-houses on this road, the front rank is composed of various kinds
of "sweet cakes," in a continuous line from one end of the table to the other. I
think I may safely say that there was a row of ten or a dozen plates of this kind set
before us two here. To account for which, they say, that when the lumberers come out of
the woods, they have a craving for cakes and pies, and such sweet things, which there are
almost unknown, and this is the supply to satisfy that demandthe
supply is always equal to the demand,and these hungry men think a good deal of
getting their money's worth. No doubt, the balance of victuals is restored by the time
they reach Bangor: Mattawamkeag takes off the raw edge. Well, over this front rank, I say,
you coming from the "sweet cake" side, with a cheap philosophic indifference
though it may be, have to assault what there is behind, which I do not by any means mean
to insinuate is insufficient in quantity or quality to supply that other demand of men not
from the woods, but from the towns, for venison and strong country fare. After dinner, we
strolled down to the "Point," formed by the junction of the two rivers which is
said to be the scene of an ancient battle between the Eastern Indians and the Mohawks, and
searched there carefully for relics, though the men at the bar-room had never heard of
such things; but we found only some flakes of arrow-head stone, some points of
arrow-heads, one small leaden-bullet, and some colored beads, the last to be referred,
perhaps, to early fur-trader days. The Mattawamkeag, though wide, was a mere river's bed,
full of rocks and shallows at this time, so that you could cross it almost dry-shod in
boots; and I could hardly believe my companion, when he told me that he had been fifty or
sixty miles up it in a batteau, through distant and still uncut forests. A batteau could
hardly find a harbor now at its mouth. Deer, and caribou, or reindeer, are taken here in
the winter, in sight of the house.
Before our companions
arrived, we rode on up the Houlton road seven miles, to Molunkus, where the Aroostook road
comes into it, and where there is a spacious public house in the woods, called the
"Molunkus House," kept by one Libbey, which looked as if it had its hall for
dancing and for military drills. There was no other evidence of man but this huge shingle
palace in this part of the world; but sometimes even this is filled with travellers. I
looked off the piazza round the corner of the house up the Aroostook road, on which there
was no clearing in sight. There was a man just adventuring upon it this evening, in a
rude, original, what you may call Aroostook, wagona mere seat, with a wagon swung
under it, a few bags on it, and a dog asleep to watch them. He offered to carry a message
for us to anybody in that country, cheerfully. I suspect, that if you should go to the end
of the world, you would find somebody there going further, as if just starting for home at
sundown, and having a last word before he drove off. Here, too, was a small trader,
whom I did not see at first, who kept a storebut no great store, certainlyin a
small box over the way, behind the Molunkus sign-post. It looked like the balance-box of a
patent hay-scales. As for his house, we could only conjecture where that was; he may have
been a boarder in the Molunkus House. I saw him standing in his shop-doorhis shop
was so small, that, if a traveller should make demonstrations of entering in, he
would have to go out by the back way, and confer with his customer through a window, about
his goods in the cellar, or, more probably, bespoken, and yet on the way. I should have
gone in, for I felt a real impulse to trade, if I had not stopped to consider what would
become of him. The day before, we had walked into a shop, over against an inn where we
stopped, the puny beginning of trade, which would grow at last into a firm copartnership,
in the future town or cityindeed, it was already "Somebody & Co.," I
forget who. The woman came forward from the penetralia of the attached house, for
"Somebody & Co." was in the burning, and she sold us percussion-caps,
canalés and smooth; and knew their prices and qualities, and which the hunters preferred.
Here was a little of everything in a small compass to satisfy the wants and the ambition
of the woods, a stock selected with what pains and care, and brought home in the wagon
box, or a corner of the Houlton team; but there seemed to me, as usual, a preponderance of
children's toys, dogs to bark, and cats to mew, and trumpets to blow, where natives there
hardly are yet. As if a child, born into the Maine woods, among the pine cones and cedar
berries, could not do without such a sugar-man, or skipping-jack, as the young Rothschild
has.
I think that there was
not more than one house on the road to Molunkus, or for seven miles. At that place we got
over the fence into a new field, planted with potatoes, where the logs were still burning
between the hills; and, pulling up the vines, found good-sized potatoes, nearly ripe,
growing llke weeds, and turnips mixed with them. The mode of clearing and planting, is, to
fell the trees, and burn once what will burn, then cut them up into suitable lengths, roll
into heaps, and burn again; then, with a hoe, plant potatoes where you can come at the
ground between the stumps and charred logs, for a first crop, the ashes sufficing for
manure, and no hoeing being necessary the first year. In the fall, cut, roll, and burn
again, and so on, till the land is cleared; and soon it is ready for grain, and to be laid
down. Let those talk of poverty and hard times who will, in the towns and cities; cannot
the emigrant, who can pay his fare to New-York or Boston, pay five dollars more to get
here,I paid three, all told, for my passage from Boston to Bangor, 250
miles,and be as rich as he pleases, where land virtually costs nothing, and houses
only the labor of building, and he may begin life as Adam did? If he will still remember
the distinction of poor and rich, let him bespeak him a narrower house forthwith.
When we returned to the
Mattawamkeag, the Houlton stage had already put up there; and a Province man was betraying
his greenness to the Yankees by his questions.Why Province money won't pass here at
par, when States' money is good at Fredericktonthough this, perhaps, was sensible
enough. From what I saw then, it appeared that the Province man was now the only real
Jonathan, or raw country bumpkin, left so far behind by his enterprising neighbors, that
he didn't know enough to put a question to them. No people can long continue provincial in
character, who have the propensity for politics and whittling, and rapid travelling, which
the Yankees have, and who are leaving the mother country behind in the variety of their
notions and inventions. The possession and exercise of practical talent merely, are a sure
and rapid means of intellectual culture and independence.
The last edition of
Greenleaf's Map of Maine hung on the wall here, and, as we had no pocket map, we resolved
to trace a map of the lake country: so dipping a wad of tow into the lamp, we oiled a
sheet of paper on the oiled table-cloth, and, in good faith, traced what we afterwards
ascertained to be a labyrinth of errors, carefully following the outlines of the imaginary
lakes which that map contains. The Map of the Public Lands of Maine and Massachusetts is
the only one I have seen that at all deserves the name. It was while we were engaged in
this operation that our companions arrived. They had seen the Indians' fire on the Five
Islands, and so we concluded that all was right.
Early the next morning
we had mounted our packs, and prepared for a tramp up the West Branch, my companion having
turned his horse out to pasture for a week or ten days, thinking that a bite of fresh
grass, and a taste of running water, would do him as much good as backwoods fare, and new
country influences his master. Leaping over a fence, we began to follow an obscure trail
up the northern bank of the Penobscot. There was now no road further, the river being the
only highway, and but half a dozen log huts confined to its banks, to be met with for
thirty miles; on either hand, and beyond, was a wholly uninhabitated wilderness,
stretching to Canada. Neither horse, nor cow, nor vehicle of any kind, had ever passed
over this ground. The cattle, and the few bulky articles which the loggers use, being got
up in the winter on the ice, and down again before it breaks up. The evergreen woods had a
decidedly sweet and bracing fragrance; the air was a sort of diet-drink, and we walked on
buoyantly in Indian file, stretching our legs. Occasionally there was a small opening on
the bank, made for the purpose of log-rolling, where we got a sight of the
riveralways a rocky and rippling stream. The roar of the rapids, the note of a
whistler-duck on the river, of the jay and chicadee around us, and of the
pigeon-woodpecker in the openings, were the sounds that we heard. This was what you might
call a bran new country; the only roads were of Nature's making, and the few houses were
camps. Here, then, one could no longer accuse institutions and society, but must front the
true source of evil.
There are three classes
of inhabitants, who either frequent or inhabit the country which we had now entered;
first, the loggers, who, for a part of the year, the winter and spring, are far the most
numerous, but in the summer, except a few explorers for timber, completely desert it;
second, the few settlers I have named, the only permanent inhabitants, who live on the
verge of it, and help raise supplies for the former; third, the hunters, mostly Indians,
who range over it in their season.
At the end of three
miles we came to the Mattaseunk stream and mill, where there was even a rude wooden
railroad running down to the Penobscot, the last railroad we were to see. We crossed one
tract, on the bank of the river, of more than a hundred acres of heavy timber, which had
just been felled and burnt over, and was still smoking. Our trail lay through the midst of
it, and was well nigh blotted out. The trees lay at full length, four or five feet deep,
and crossing each other in all directions, all black as charcoal, but perfectly sound
within, still good for fuel or for timber; soon they would be cut into lengths and burnt
again. Here were thousands of cords, enough to keep the poor of Boston and New-York amply
warm for a winter, which only cumbered the ground, and were in the settler's way. And the
whole of that solid and interminable forest is doomed to be gradually devoured thus by
fire, like shavings, and no man be warmed by it. At Crocker's log hut, at the mouth of
Salmon River, seven miles from the Point, one of the party commenced distributing a store
of small cent picture-books among the children, to teach them to read; and also
newspapers, more or less recent, among the parents, than which nothing can be more
acceptable to a backwoods people. It was really an important item in our outfit, and, at
times, the only currency that would circulate. I walked through Salmon River with my shoes
on, it being low water, but not without wetting my feet. A few miles further we came to
"Marm Howard's," at the end of an extensive clearing, where there were two or
three log huts in sight at once, one on the opposite side of the river, and a few graves,
even surrounded by a wooden paling, where already the rude forefathers of a hamlet
lie; and a thousand years hence, perchance, some poet will write his "Elegy in a
Country Churchyard." The "Village Hampdens," the "mute, inglorious
Miltons," and Cromwells, "guiltless of" their "country's blood,"
were yet unborn.
"Perchance in this wild spot there will be laid
Some heart once pregnant with celestial fire;
Hands that the rod of empire might have swayed,
Or waked to ecstasy the living lyre."
The next house was
Fisk's, ten miles from the Point, at the mouth of the East Branch, opposite to the island
Nickatow, or the Forks, the last of the Indian islands. I am particular to give the names
of the settlers and the distances, since every log hut in these woods is a public house,
and such information is of no little consequence to those who may have occasion to travel
this way. Our course here crossed the Penobscot, and followed the southern bank. One of
the party, who entered the house in search of some one to set us over, reported a very
neat dwelling, with plenty of books, and a new wife, just imported from Boston, wholly new
to the woods. We found the East Branch a large and rapid stream at its mouth, and much
deeper than it appeared. Having with some difficulty discovered the trail again, we kept
up the south side of the West Branch, or main river, passing by some rapids called
Rock-Ebeeme, the roar of which we heard through the woods, and, shortly after, in the
thickest of the wood, some empty loggers' camps, still new, which were occupied the
previous winter. Though we saw a few more afterwards, I will make one account serve for
all. These were such houses as the lumberers of Maine spend the winter in, in the
wilderness. There were the camps and the hovel for the cattle, hardly distinguishable,
except that the latter had no chimney. These camps were about twenty feet long by fifteen
wide, built of logshemlock, cedar, spruce, or yellow birchone kind alone, or
all together, with the bark on; two or three large ones first, one directly above another,
and notched together at the ends, to the height of three or four feet, then of smaller
logs resting upon transverse ones at the ends, each of the last successively shorter than
the other, to form the roof. The chimney was an oblong square hole in the middle, three or
four feet in diameter, with a fence of logs as high as the ridge. The interstices were
filled with moss, and the roof was shingled wth long and handsome splints of cedar, or
spruce, or pine, rifted with a sledge and cleaver. The fire-place, the most important
place of all, was in shape and size like the chimney, and directly under it, defined by a
log fence or fender on the ground, and a heap of ashes a foot or two deep within, with
solid benches of split logs running round it. Here the fire usually melts the snow, and
dries the rain before it can descend to quench it. The faded beds of arbor-vitæ leaves
extended under the eaves on either hand. There was the place for the water-pail,
pork-barrel, and wash-basin, and generally a dingy pack of cards left on a log. Usually a
good deal of whittling was expended on the latch, which was made of wood, in the form of
an iron one. These houses are made comfortable by the huge fires that can be afforded
night and day. Usually the scenery about them is drear and savage enough; and the logger's
camp is as completely in the woods as a fungus at the foot of a pine in a swamp; no
outlook but to the sky overhead; no more clearing than is made by cutting down the trees
of which it is built, and those which are necessary for fuel. If only it be well sheltered
and convenient to his work, and near a spring, he wastes no thought on the prospect. They
are very proper forest houses, the stems of the trees collected together and piled up
around a man to keep out wind and rain: made of living green logs, hanging with moss and
lichen, and with the curls and fringes of the yellow-birch bark, and dripping with resin,
fresh and moist, and redolent of swampy odors, with that sort of vigor and perennialness
even about them that toad-stools suggest. [Thoreaus Note: "Springer, in his
Forest Life (1851), says that they first remove the leaves and turf from the
spot where they intend to build a camp, for fear of fire; also, that "the spruce-tree
is generally selected for camp-building, it being light, straight, and quite free from
sap"; that "the roof is finally covered with the boughs of the fir, spruce, and
hemlock, so that when the snow falls upon the whole, the warmth of the camp is preserved
in the coldest weather"; and that they make the log seat before the fire, called the
"Deacon's Seat," of a spruce or fir split in halves, with three or four stout
limbs left on one side for legs, which are not likely to get loose."] The logger's
fare consists of tea, molasses, flour, pork,
(sometimes beef), and beans. A great
proportion of the beans raised in Massachusetts find their market here. On expeditions it
is only hard bread and pork, often raw, slice upon slice, with tea or water, as the case
may be.
The primitive wood is
always and everywhere damp and mossy, so that I travelled constantly with the impression
that I was in a swamp; and only when it was remarked that this or that tract, judging from
the quality of the timber on it, would make a profitable clearing, was I reminded, that if
the sun were let in it would make a dry field, like the few I had seen, at once. The best
shod for the most part travel with wet feet. If the ground was so wet and spongy at this,
the driest part of a dry season, what must it be in the spring? The woods hereabouts
abounded in beech and yellow-birch, of which last there were some very large specimens;
also spruce, cedar, fir, and hemlock; but we saw only the stumps of the white pine here,
some of them of great size, these having been already culled out, being the only tree much
sought after, even as low down as this. Only a little spruce and hemlock beside had been
logged here. The eastern wood, which is sold for fuel in Massachusetts, all comes from
below Bangor. It was the pine alone, chiefly the white pine, that had tempted any but the
hunter to precede us on this route.
Waite's farm, thirteen
miles from the Point, is an extensive and elevated clearing, from which we got a fine view
of the river, rippling and gleaming far beneath us. My companions had formerly had a good
view of Ktaadn and the other mountains here, but to-day it was so smoky that we could see
nothing of them. We could overlook an immense country of uninterrupted forest, stretching
away up the East Branch toward Canada, on the north and northwest, and toward the
Aroostook valley on the northeast: and imagine what wild life was stirring in its midst.
Here was quite a field of corn for this region, whose peculiar dry scent we perceived a
third of a mile off before we saw it.
Eighteen miles from the
Point brought us in sight of McCauslin's, or "Uncle George's," as he was
familiarly called by my companions, to whom he was well known, where we intended to break
our long fast. His house was in the midst of an extensive clearing of intervale, at the
mouth of the Little Schoodic River, on the opposite or north bank of the Penobscot. So we
collected on a point of the shore, that we might be seen, and fired our gun as a signal,
which brought out his dogs forthwith, and thereafter their master, who in due time took us
across in his batteau. This clearing was bounded abruptly on all sides but the river, by
the naked stems of the forest, as if you were to cut only a few feet square in the midst
of a thousand acres of mowing, and set down a thimble therein. He had a whole heaven and
horizon to himself, and the sun seemed to be journeying over his clearing only, the
live-long day. Here we concluded to spend the night, and wait for the Indians, as there
was no stopping place so convenient above. He had seen no Indians pass, and this did not
often happen without his knowledge. He thought that his dogs sometimes gave notice of the
approach of Indians, half an hour before they arrived.
McCauslin was a
Kennebec man, of Scotch descent, who had been a waterman twenty-two years, and had driven
on the lakes and head waters of the Penobscot five or six springs in succession, but was
now settled here to raise supplies for the lumberers and for himself. He entertained us a
day or two with true Scotch hospitality, and would accept no recompense for it. A man of a
dry wit and shrewdness, and a general intelligence which I had not looked for in the
backwoods. In fact, the deeper you penetrate into the woods, the more intelligent, and, in
one sense, less countrified do you find the inhabitants; for always the pioneer has been a
traveller, and, to some extent, a man of the world; and, as the distances with which he is
familiar are greater, so is his information more general and far reaching than the
villager's. If I were to look for a narrow, uninformed, and countrified mind, as opposed
to the intelligence and refinement which are thought to emanate from cities, it would be
among the rusty inhabitants of an old-settled country, on farms all run out and gone to
seed with life-ever-lasting, in the towns about Boston, even on the high road in Concord,
and not in the backwoods of Maine.
Supper was got before
our eyes, in the ample kitchen, by a fire which would have roasted an ox; many whole logs,
four feet long, were consumed to boil our tea-kettlebirch, or beech, or maple, the
same summer and winter; and the dishes were soon smoking on the table, late the arm-chair,
against the wall, from which one of the party was expelled. The arms of the chair formed
the frame on which the table rested; and, when the round top was turned up against the
wall, it formed the back of the chair, and was no more in the way than the wall itself.
This, we noticed, was the prevailing fashion in these log houses, in order to economize in
room. There were piping hot wheaten-cakes, the flour having been brought up the river in
batteaux,no Indian bread, for the upper part of Maine, it will be remembered, is a
wheat country,and ham, eggs, and potatoes, and milk and cheese, the produce of the
farm; and, also, shad and salmon, tea sweetened with molasses, and sweet cakes in
contradistinction to the hot cakes not sweetened, the one white, the other yellow, to wind
up with. Such, we found, was the prevailing fare, ordinary and extraordinary, along this
river. Mountain cranberries (Vaccinium Vitis-Idæa), stewed and sweetened, were the
common dessert. Everything here was in profusion, and the best of its kind. Butter was in
such plenty, that it was commonly used, before it was salted, to grease boots with.
In the night we were
entertained by the sound of rain-drops on the cedar splints which covered the roof, and
awaked the next morning with a drop or two in our eyes. It had set in for a storm, and we
made up our minds not to forsake such comfortable quarters with this prospect, but wait
for Indians and fair weather. It rained and drizzled, and gleamed by turns, the live-long
day. What we did there, how we killed the time, would, perhaps, be idler to tell; how many
times we buttered our boots, and how often a drowsy one was seen to sidle off to the
bedroom. When it held up, I strolled up and down the bank and gathered the harebell and
cedar berries, which grew there; or else we tried by turns the long-handled axe on the
logs before the door. The axe-helves here were made to chop standing on the loga
primitive log of courseand were, therefore, nearly a foot longer than with us. One
while we walked over the farm, and visited his well-filled barns with McCauslin. There
were one other man and two women only here. He kept horses, cows, oxen, and sheep. I think
he said that he was the first to bring a plough and a cow so far; and, he might have
added, the last, with only two exceptions. The potato rot had found him out here, too, the
previous year, and got half or two-thirds of his crop, though the seed was of his own
raising. Oats, grass, and potatoes, were his staples; but he raised, also, a few carrots
and turnips, and "a little corn for the hens," for this was all that he dared
risk, for fear that it would not ripen. Melons, squashes, sweet-corn, beans, tomatoes, and
many other vegetables, could not be ripened there.
The very few settlers
along this stream were obviously tempted by the cheapness of the land mainly. When I asked
McCauslin why more settlers did not come in, he answered, that one reason was, they could
not buy the land, it belonged to individuals or companies who were afraid that their wild
lands would be settled, and so incorporated into towns, and they be taxed for them; but to
settling on the States' land there was no such hinderance. For his own part, he wanted no
neighborshe didn't wish to see any road by his house. Neighbors, even the best, were
a trouble and expense, especially on the score of cattle and fences. They might live
across the river, perhaps, but not on the same side.
The chickens here were
protected by the dogs. As McCauslin said, "The old one took it up first, and she
taught the pup, and now they had got it into their heads that it wouldn't do to have
anything of the bird kind on the premises." A hawk hovering over was not allowed to
alight, but barked off by the dogs circling underneath; and a pigeon, or a "yellow
hammer," as they called the pigeon-woodpecker, on a dead limb or stump, was instantly
expelled. It was the main business of their day, and kept them constantly coming and
going. One would rush out of the house on the least alarm given by the other.
When it rained hardest,
we returned to the house, and took down a tract from the shelf. There was the Wandering
Jew, cheap edition, and fine print, the Criminal Calendar, and Parish's Geography, and
flash novels two or three. Under the pressure of circumstances, we read a little in these.
With such aid, the press is not so feeble an engine after all. This house, which was a
fair specimen of those on this river, was built of huge logs, which peeped out everywhere,
and were chinked with clay and moss. It contained four or five rooms. There were no sawed
boards, or shingles, or clapboards, about it; and scarcely any tool but the axe had been
used in its construction. The partitions were made of long clapboard-like splints, of
spruce or cedar, turned to a delicate salmon color by the smoke. The roof and sides were
covered with the same, instead of shingles and clapboards, and some of a much thicker and
larger size were used for the floor. These were all so straight and smooth, that they
answered the purpose admirably; and a careless observer would not have suspected that they
were not sawed and planed. The chimney and hearth were of vast size, and made of stone.
The broom was a few twigs of arbor-vitæ tied to a stick; and a pole was suspended over
the hearth, close to the ceiling, to dry stockings and clothes on. I noticed that the
floor was full of small, dingy holes, as if made with a gimlet, but which were, in fact,
made by the spikes, nearly an inch long, which the lumberers wear in their boots to
prevent their slipping on wet logs. Just above McCauslin's, there is a rocky rapid, where
logs jam in the spring; and many "drivers" are there collected, who frequent his
house for supplies: these were their tracks which I saw.
At sundown, McCauslin
pointed away over the forest, across the river, to signs of fair weather amid the
cloudssome evening redness there. For even there the points of compass held; and
there was a quarter of the heavens appropriated to sunrise and another to sunset.
The next morning, the
weather proving fair enough for our purpose, we prepared to start; and, the Indians having
failed us, persuaded McCauslin, who was not unwilling to re-visit the scenes of his
driving, to accompany us in their stead, intending to engage one other boatman on the way.
A strip of cotton-cloth for a tent, a couple of blankets, which would suffice for the
whole party, fifteen pounds of hard bread, ten pounds of "clear" pork, and a
little tea, made up "Uncle George's" pack. The last three articles were
calculated to be provision enough for six men for a week, with what we might pick up. A
tea-kettle, a frying-pan and an axe, to be obtained at the last house, would complete our
outfit.
We were soon out of
McCauslin's clearing, and in the ever-green woods again. The obscure trail made by the two
settlers above, which even the woodman is sometimes puzzled to discern, ere long crossed a
narrow open strip in the woods overrun with weeds, called the Burnt Land, where a fire had
raged formerly, stretching northward nine or ten miles, to Millinocket Lake. At the end of
three miles we reached Shad Pond, or Noliseemack, an expansion of the river. Hodge, the
Assistant State Geologist, who passed through this on the twenty-fifth of June, 1837,
says, "We pushed our boat through an acre or more of buck-beans, which had taken root
at the bottom, and bloomed above the surface in the greatest profusion and beauty."
Thomas Fowler's house is four miles from McCauslin's, on the shore of the Pond, at the
mouth of the Millinocket River, and eight miles from the lake of the same name, on the
latter stream. This lake affords a more direct course to Ktaadn, but we preferred to
follow the Penobscot and the Pamadumcook Lakes. Fowler was just completing a new log hut,
and was sawing out a window through the logs nearly two feet thick when we arrived. He had
begun to paper his house with spruce bark, turned inside out, which had a good effect, and
was in keeping with the circumstances. Instead of water we got here a draught of beer,
which, it was allowed, would be better; clear and thin, but strong and stringent as the
cedar sap. It was as if we sucked at the very teats of Nature's pine-clad bosom in these
partsthe sap of all Millinocket botany commingledthe topmost most fantastic
and spiciest sprays of the primitive wood, and whatever invigorating and stringent gum or
essence it afforded, steeped and dissolved in ita lumberer's drink, which would
acclimate and naturalize a man at oncewhich would make him see green, and, if he
slept, dream that he heard the wind sough among the pines. Here was a fife, praying to be
played on, through which we breathed a few tuneful strains, brought hither to tame
wild beasts. As we stood upon the pile of chips by the door, fish-hawks were sailing over
head; and here, over Shad Pond, might daily be witnessed, the tyranny of the bald-eagle
over that bird. Tom pointed away over the Lake to a bald-eagle's nest, which was plainly
visible more than a mile off, on a pine, high above the surrounding forest, and was
frequented from year to year by the same pair, and held sacred by him. There were these
two houses only there, his low hut, and the eagles' airy cart-load of fagots. Thomas
Fowler, too, was persuaded to join us, for two men were necessary to manage the batteau,
which was soon to be our carriage, and these men needed to be cool and skilful for the
navigation of the Penobscot. Tom's pack was soon made, for he had not far to look for his
waterman's boots, and a red flannel shirt. This is the favorite color with lumbermen; and
red flannel is reputed to possess some mysterious virtues, to be most healthful and
convenient in respect to perspiration. In every gang there will be a large proportion of
red birds. We took here a poor and leaky batteau, and began to pole up the Millinocket two
miles, to the elder Fowler's, in order to avoid the Grand Falls of the Penobscot,
intending to exchange our batteau there for a better. The Millinocket is a small, shallow
and sandy stream, full of what I took to be lamprey-eels' or suckers' nests, and lined
with musquash cabins, but free from rapids, according to Fowler, excepting at its outlet
from the Lake. He was at this time engaged in cutting the native grassrush grass and
meadow-clover, as he called iton the meadows and small, low islands, of this stream.
We noticed flattened places in the grass on either side, where, he said, a moose had lain
down the night before, adding, that there were thousands in these meadows.
Old Fowler's, on the
Millinocket, six miles from McCauslin's, and twenty-four from the Point, is the last
house. Gibson's, on the Sowadnehunk, is the only clearing above, but that had proved a
failure, and was long since deserted. Fowler is the oldest inhabitant of these woods. He
formerly lived a few miles from here, on the south side of the West Branch, where he built
his house sixteen years ago, the first house built above the Five Islands. Here our new
batteau was to be carried over the first portage of two miles, round the Grand Falls of
the Penobscot, on a horse-sled made of saplings, to jump the numerous rocks in the way,
but we had to wait a couple of hours for them to catch the horses, which were pastured at
a distance, amid the stumps, and had wandered still further off. The last of the salmon
for this season had just been caught, and were still fresh in pickle, from which enough
was extracted to fill our empty kettle, and so graduate our introduction to simpler forest
fare. The week before, they had lost nine sheep here out of their first flock, by the
wolves. The surviving sheep came round the house, and seemed frightened, which induced
them to go and look for the rest, when they found seven dead and lacerated, and two still
alive. These last they carried to the house, and, as Mrs. Fowler said, they were merely
scratched in the throat, and had no more visible wound than would be produced by the prick
of a pin. She sheared off the wool from their throats, and washed them and put on some
salve, and turned them out, but in a few moments they were missing, and had not been found
since. In fact, they were all poisoned, and those that were found swelled up at once, so
that they saved neither skin nor wool. This realized the old fables of the wolves and the
sheep, and convinced me that that ancient hostility still existed. Verily, the shepherd
boy did not need to sound a false alarm this time. There were steel traps by the door of
various sizes, for wolves, otter, and bears, with large claws instead of teeth, to catch
in their sinews. Wolves are frequently killed with poisoned bait.
At length, after we had
dined here on the usual backwoods fare, the horses arrived, and we hauled our batteau out
of the water, and lashed it to its wicker carriage, and, throwing in our packs, walked on
before, leaving the boatmen and driver, who was Tom's brother, to manage the concern. The
route, which led through the wild pasture where the sheep were killed, was in some places
the roughest ever travelled by horses, over rocky hills, where the sled bounced and slid
along, like a vessel pitching in a storm; and one man was as necessary to stand at the
stern, to prevent the boat from being wrecked, as a helmsman in the roughest sea. The
philosophy of our progress was something like this: when the runners struck a rock three
or four feet high, the sled bounced back and upwards at the same time; but, as the horses
never ceased pulling, it came down on the top of the rock, and so we got over. This
portage probably followed the trail of an ancient Indian carry round these falls. By 2
o'clock we, who had walked on before, reached the river above the falls, not far from the
outlet of Quakish Lake, and waited for the batteau to come up. We had been here but a
short time, when a thunder-shower was seen coming up from the west, over the still
invisible lakes, and that pleasant wilderness which we were so eager to become acquainted
with; and soon the heavy drops began to patter on the leaves around us. I had just
selected the prostrate trunk of a huge pine, five or six feet in diameter, and was
crawling under it, when, luckily, the boat arrived. It would have amused a sheltered man
to witness the manner in which it was unlashed, and whirled over, while the first
water-spout burst upon us. It was no sooner in the hands of the eager company than it was
abandoned to the first revolutionary impulse, and to gravity, to adjust it; and they might
have been seen all stooping to its shelter, and wriggling under like so many eels, before
it was fairly deposited on the ground. When all were under, we propped up the lee side,
and busied ourselves there, whittling thole pins for rowing, when we should reach the
lakes; and made the woods ring, between the claps of thunder, with such boat-songs as we
could remember. The horses stood sleek and shining with the rain, all drooping and
crestfallen, while deluge after deluge washed over us; but the bottom of a boat may be
relied on for a tight roof. At length, after two hours' delay at this place, a streak of
fair weather appeared in the northwest, whither our course now lay, promising a serene
evening for our voyage; and the driver returned with his horses, while we made haste to
launch our boat, and commence our voyage in good earnest.
There were six of us,
including the two boatmen. With our packs heaped up near the bows, and ourselves disposed
as baggage to trim the boat, with instructions not to move in case we should strike a
rock, more than so many barrels of pork, we pushed out into the first rapid, a slight
specimen of the stream we had to navigate. With Uncle George in the stern, and Tom in the
bows, each using a spruce pole about twelve feet long, pointed with iron, [Thoreaus
Note: "The Canadians call it picquer de fond."] and poling on the same
side, we shot up the rapids like a salmon, the water rushing and roaring around, so that
only a practised eye could distinguish a safe course, or tell what was deep water and what
rocks, frequently grazing the latter on one or both sides, with a hundred as narrow
escapes as ever the Argo had in passing through the Symplegades. I, who had had some
experience in boating, had never experienced any half so exhilarating before. We were
lucky to have exchanged our Indians, whom we did not know, for these men, who, together
with Tom's brother, were reputed the best boatmen on the river, and were at once
indispensable pilots and pleasant companions. The canoe is smaller, more easily upset, and
sooner worn out; and the Indian is said not to be so skilful in the management of the
batteau. He is, for the most part, less to be relied on, and more disposed to sulks and
whims. The utmost familiarity with dead streams, or with the ocean, would not prepare a
man for this peculiar navigation; and the most skilful boatman anywhere else would here be
obliged to take out his boat and carry round a hundred times, still with great risk, as
well as delay, where the practised batteau man poles up with comparative ease and safety.
The hardy "voyageur" pushes with incredible perseverance and success quite up to
the foot of the falls, and then only carries round some perpendicular ledge, and launches
again in
"The torrent's smoothness, ere it dash below,"
to struggle with the
boiling rapids above. The Indians say, that the river once ran both ways, one half up and
the other down, but, that since the white man came, it all runs down, and now they must
laboriously pole their canoes against the stream, and carry them over numerous portages.
In the summer, all stores, the grindstone and the plough of the pioneer, flour, pork, and
utensils for the explorer, must be conveyed up the river in batteaux; and many a cargo and
many a boatman is lost in these waters. In the winter, however, which is very equable and
long, the ice is the great highway, and the loggers' team penetrates to Chesuncook Lake,
and still higher up, even two hundred miles above Bangor. Imagine the solitary sled-track
running far up into the snowy and evergreen wilderness, hemmed in closely for a hundred
miles by the forest, and again stretching straight across the broad surfaces of concealed
lakes!
We were soon in the
smooth water of the Quakish Lake, and took our turns at rowing and paddling across it. It
is a small, irregular, but handsome lake, shut in on all sides by the forest, and showing
no traces of man but some low boom in a distant cove, reserved for spring use. The spruce
and cedar on its shores, hung with gray lichens, looked at a distance like the ghosts of
trees. Ducks were sailing here and there on its surface, and a solitary loon, like a more
living wave,a vital spot on the lake's surface,laughed and frolicked, and showed
its straight leg, for our amusement. Joe Merry Mountain appeared in the northwest, as if
it were looking down on this lake especially; and we had our first, but a partial view of
Ktaadn, its summit veiled in clouds, like a dark isthmus in that quarter, connecting the
heavens with the earth. After two miles of smooth rowing across this lake, we found
ourselves in the river again, which was a continuous rapid for one mile, to the dam,
requiring all the strength and skill of our boatmen to pole up it.
This dam is a quite
important and expensive work for this country, whither cattle and horses cannot penetrate
in the summer, raising the whole river ten feet, and flooding, as they said, some sixty
square miles by means of the innumerable lakes with which the river connects. It is a
lofty and solid structure, with sloping piers some distance above, made of frames of logs
filled with stones, to break the ice. [Thoreaus Note: "Even the Jesuit
missionaries, accustomed to the St. Lawrence and other rivers of Canada, in their first
expeditions to the Abnaquiois, speak of rivers ferrées de rochers, shod with
rocks. See also No. 10 Relations, for 1647, p. 185."] Here every log pays toll as it
passes through the sluices.
We filed into the rude
loggers' camp at this place, such as I have described, without ceremony, and the cook, at
that moment the sole occupant, at once set about preparing tea for his visitors. His
fire-place, which the rain had converted into a mud-puddle, was soon blazing again, and we
sat down on the log benches around it to dry us. On the well-flattened, and somewhat faded
beds of arbor-vitæ leaves, which stretched on either hand under the eaves behind us, lay
an odd leaf of the Bible, some genealogical chapter out of the Old Testament; and, half
buried by the leaves, we found Emerson's Address on West India Emancipation, which had
been left here formerly by one of our company; and had made two converts to the Liberty
party here, as I was told; also, an odd number of the Westminster Review, for 1834,
and a pamphlet entitled History of the Erection of the Monument on the Grave of Myron
Holley. This was the readable, or reading matter, in a lumberer's camp in the Maine woods,
thirty miles from a road, which would be given up to the bears in a fortnight. These
things were well thumbed and soiled. This gang was headed by one John Morrison, a good
specimen of a Yankee; and was necessarily composed of men not bred to the business of
dam-building, but who were Jacks-at-all-trades, handy with the axe, and other simple
implements, and well skilled in wood and water craft. We had hot cakes for our supper even
here, white as snow-balls, but without butter, and the never-failing sweet cakes, with
which we filled our pockets, foreseeing that we should not soon meet with the like again.
Such delicate puffballs seemed a singular diet for backwoodsmen. There was also tea
without milk, sweetened with molasses. And so, exchanging a word with John Morrison and
his gang when we had returned to the shore, and also exchanging our batteau for a better
still, we made haste to improve the little daylight that remained. This camp, exactly
twenty-nine miles from Mattawamkeag Point, by the way we had come, and about one hundred
from Bangor by the river, was the last human habitation of any kind in this direction.
Beyond, there was no trail; and the river and lakes, by batteaux and canoes, was
considered the only practicable route. We were about thirty miles by the river from the
summit of Ktaadn, which was in sight, though not more than twenty, perhaps, in a straight
line.
It being about the full
of the moon, and a warm and pleasant evening, we decided to row five miles by moonlight to
the head of the North Twin Lake, lest the wind should rise on the morrow. After one mile
of river, or what the boatmen call "thoroughfare,"for the river becomes at
length only the connecting link between the lakes,and some slight rapids which had
been mostly made smooth water by the dam, we entered the North Twin Lake just after
sundown, and steered across for the river "thoroughfare," four miles distant.
This is a noble sheet of water, where one may get the impression which a new country and a
"lake of the woods" are fitted to create. There was the smoke of no log-hut nor
camp of any kind to greet us, still less was any lover of nature or musing traveller
watching our batteau from the distant hills; not even the Indian hunter was there, for he
rarely climbs them, but hugs the river like ourselves. No face welcomed us but the fine
fantastic sprays of free and happy evergreen trees, waving one above another in their
ancient home. At first the red clouds hung over the western shore as gorgeously as if over
a city, and the lake lay open to the light with even a civilized aspect, as if expecting
trade and commerce, and towns and villas. We could distinguish the inlet to the South
Twin, which is said to be the larger, where the shore was misty and blue, and it was worth
the while to look thus through a narrow opening across the entire expanse of a concealed
lake to its own yet more dim and distant shore. The shores rose gently to ranges of low
hills covered with forests; and though in fact the most valuable white pine timber, even
about this lake, had been culled out, this would never have been suspected by the voyager.
The impression, which indeed corresponded with the fact, was as if we were upon a high
table land between the States and Canada, the northern side of which is drained by the St.
John and Chaudiere, the southern by the Penobscot and Kennebec. There was no bold
mountainous shore, as we might have expected, but only isolated hills and mountains rising
here and there from the plateau. The country is an archipelago of lakes,the
lake-country of New England. Their levels vary but a few feet, and the boatmen, by short
portages, or by none at all, pass easily from one to another. They say that at very high
water the Penobscot and the Kennebec flow into each other, or at any rate, that you may
lie with your face in the one and your toes in the other. Even the Penobscot and St. John
have been connected by a canal, so that the lumber of the Allagash, instead of going down
the St. John, comes down the Penobscot; and the Indian's tradition that the Penobscot once
ran both ways for his convenience, is, in one sense, partially realized to-day.
None of our party but
McCauslin had been above this lake, so we trusted to him to pilot us, and we could not but
confess the importance of a pilot on these waters. While it is river, you will not easily
forget which way is up stream; but when you enter a lake, the river is completely lost,
and you scan the distant shores in vain to find where it comes in. A stranger is, for the
time at least, lost, and must set about a voyage of discovery first of all to find the
river. To follow the windings of the shore when the lake is ten miles or even more in
length, and of an irregularity which will not soon be mapped, is a wearisome voyage, and
will spend his time and his provisions. They tell a story of a gang of experienced woodmen
sent to a location on this stream, who were thus lost in the wilderness of lakes. They cut
their way through thickets, and carried their baggage and their boats over from lake to
lake, sometimes several miles. They carried into Millinocket lake, which is on another
stream, and is ten miles square, and contains a hundred islands. They explored its shores
thoroughly, and then carried into another and another, and it was a week of toil and
anxiety before they found the Penobscot river again, and then their provisions were
exhausted, and they were obliged to return.
While Uncle George
steered for a small island near the head of the lake, now just visible like a speck on the
water, we rowed by turns swiftly over its surface, singing such boat-songs as we could
remember. The shores seemed at an indefinite distance in the moonlight. Occasionally we
paused in our singing and rested on our oars, while we listened to hear if the wolves
howled, for this is a common serenade, and my companions affirmed that it was the most
dismal and unearthly of sounds; but we heard none this time.If we did not hear,
however, we did listen, not without a reasonable expectation; that at least I have
to tell,only some utterly uncivilized, big-throated owl hooted loud and dismally in
the drear and boughy wilderness, plainly not nervous about his solitary life, nor afraid
to hear the echoes of his voice there. We remembered also that possibly moose were
silently watching us from the distant coves, or some surly bear, or timid caribou had been
startled by our singing. It was with new emphasis that we sang there the Canadian
boat-song,
"Row, brothers, row, the stream runs fast,
The Rapids are near and the daylight's past!"
which described precisely our own adventure, and was inspired by the experience of a
similar kind of life,for the rapids were ever near, and the daylight long past; the
woods on shore looked dim, and many an Utawas' tide here emptied into the lake.
"Why should we yet our sail unfurl?
There is not a breath the blue wave to curl!
But, when the wind blows off the shore,
O sweetly we'll rest our weary oar."
"Utawas' tide! this trembling moon,
Shall see us float o'er thy surges soon."
At last we glided past the "green isle" which had been our landmark, all
joining in the chorus; as if by the watery links of rivers and of lakes we were about to
float over unmeasured zones of earth, bound on unimaginable adventures,
"Saint of this green isle! hear our prayers,
O grant us cool heavens and favoring airs!"
About nine o'clock
we reached the river, and ran our boat into a natural haven between some rocks, and drew
her out on the sand. This camping ground McCauslin had been familiar with in his lumbering
days, and he now struck it unerringly in the moonlight, and we heard the sound of the rill
which would supply us with cool water emptying into the lake. The first business was to
make a fire, an operation which was a little delayed by the wetness of the fuel and the
ground, owing to the heavy showers of the afternoon. The fire is the main comfort of a
camp, whether in summer or winter, and is about as ample at one season as at another. It
is as well for cheerfulness, as for warmth and dryness. It forms one side of the camp; one
bright side at any rate. Some were dispersed to fetch in dead trees and boughs, while
Uncle George felled the birches and beeches which stood convenient, and soon we had a fire
some ten feet long by three or four high, which rapidly dried the sand before it. This was
calculated to burn all night. We next proceeded to pitch our tent; which operation was
performed by sticking our two spike poles into the ground in a slanting direction, about
ten feet apart, for rafters, and then drawing our cotton cloth over them, and tying it
down at the ends, leaving it open in front, shed-fashion. But this evening the wind
carried the sparks on to the tent and burned it. So we hastily drew up the batteau just
within the edge of the woods before the fire, and propping up one side three or four feet
high, spread the tent on the ground to lie on; and with the corner of a blanket, or what
more or less we could get to put over us, lay down with our heads and bodies under the
boat, and our feet and legs on the sand toward the fire. At first we lay awake, talking of
our course, and finding ourselves in so convenient a posture for studying the heavens,
with the moon and stars shining in our faces, our conversation naturally turned upon
astronomy, and we recounted by turns the most interesting discoveries in that science. But
at length we composed ourselves seriously to sleep. It was interesting, when awakened at
midnight, to watch the grotesque and fiendlike forms and motions of some one of the party,
who, not being able to sleep, had got up silently to arouse the fire, and add fresh fuel,
for a change; now stealthily lugging a dead tree from out the dark, and heaving it on, now
stirring up the embers with his fork, or tiptoeing about to observe the stars, watched,
perchance, by half the prostrate party in breathless silence; so much the more intense
because they were awake, while each supposed his neighbor sound asleep. Thus aroused, I
too brought fresh fuel to the fire, and then rambled along the sandy shore in the
moonlight, hoping to meet a moose come down to drink, or else a wolf. The little rill
tinkled the louder, and peopled all the wilderness for me; and the glassy smoothness of
the sleeping lake, laving the shores of a new world, with the dark, fantastic rocks rising
here and there from its surface, made a scene not easily described. It has left such an
impression of stern yet gentle wildness on my memory as will not soon be effaced. Not far
from midnight, we were one after another awakened by rain falling on our extremities; and
as each was made aware of the fact by cold or wet, he drew a long sigh and then drew up
his legs, until gradually we had all sidled round from lying at right angles with the
boat, till our bodies formed an acute angle with it, and were wholly protected. When next
we awoke, the moon and stars were shining again, and there were signs of dawn in the east.
I have been thus particular in order to convey some idea of a night in the woods.
We had soon launched
and loaded our boat, and, leaving our fire blazing, were off again before breakfast. The
lumberers rarely trouble themselves to put out their fires, such is the dampness of the
primitive forest; and this is one cause, no doubt, of the frequent fires in Maine, of
which we hear so much on smoky days in Massachusetts. The forests are held cheap after the
white pine has been culled out; and the explorers and hunters pray for rain only to clear
the atmosphere of smoke. The woods were so wet today, however, that there was no danger of
our fire spreading. After poling up half a mile of river, or thoroughfare, we rowed a mile
across the foot of Pamadumcook Lake, which is the name given on the map to this whole
chain of lakes, as if there was but one, though they are, in each instance, distinctly
separated by a reach of the river, with its narrow and rocky channel and its rapids. This
lake, which is one of the largest, stretched north-west ten miles, to hills and mountains
in the distance. McCauslin pointed to some distant and, as yet, inaccessible forests of
white pine, on the sides of a mountain in that direction. The Joe Merry Lakes, which lay
between us and Moosehead, on the west, were recently, if they are not still,
"surrounded by some of the best timbered land in the state." By another
thoroughfare we passed into Deep Cove, a part of the same lake, which makes up two miles,
toward the north-east, and rowing two miles across this, by another short thoroughfare,
entered Ambejijis Lake.
At the entrance to a
lake we sometimes observed what is technically called "fencing stuff," or the
unhewn timbers of which booms are formed, either secured together in the water, or laid up
on the rocks and lashed to trees, for spring use. But it was always startling to discover
so plain a trail of civilized man there. I remember that I was strangely affected when we
were returning, by the sight of a ring-bolt well drilled into a rock, and fastened with
lead, at the head of this solitary Ambejijis Lake.
It was easy to see,
that driving logs must be an exciting as well as arduous and dangerous business. All
winter long the logger goes on piling up the trees which he has trimmed and hauled in some
dry ravine at the head of a stream, and then in the spring he stands on the bank, and
whistles for Rain and Thaw, ready to wring the perspiration out of his shirt to swell the
tide, till suddenly, with a whoop and halloo from him, shutting his eyes, as if to bid
farewell to the existing state of things, a fair proportion of his winter's work goes
scrambling down the country, followed by his faithful dogs, Thaw, and Rain, and Freshet,
and Wind, the whole pack in full cry, toward the Orono Mills. Every log is marked with the
owner's name, cut in the sapwood with an axe, or bored with an auger, so deep as not to be
worn off in the driving, and yet not so as to injure the timber; and it requires
considerable ingenuity to invent new and simple marks where there are so many owners. They
have quite an alphabet of their own, which only the practised can read. One of my
companions read off from his memorandum book some marks of his own logs, among which there
were crosses, belts, crow's feet, girdles, &c., as Ygirdlecrow-foot and
various other devices. When the logs have run the gauntlet of innumerable rapids and
falls, each on its own account, with more or less jamming and bruising, those bearing
various owners' marks being mixed up together, since all must take advantage of the same
freshet, they are collected together at the heads of the lakes, and surrounded by a boom
fence of floating logs, to prevent their being dispersed by the wind, and are thus towed
all together, like a flock of sheep, across the lake, where there is no current, by a
windlass, or boom-head, such as we sometimes saw standing on an island or head-land, and,
if circumstances permit, with the aid of sails and oars. Sometimes, notwithstanding, the
logs are dispersed over many miles of lake surface in a few hours by winds and freshets,
and thrown up on distant shores, where the driver can pick up only one or two at a time,
and return with them to the thoroughfare; and, before he gets his flock well through
Ambejijis or Pamadumcook, he makes many a wet and uncomfortable camp on the shore. He must
be able to navigate a log as if it were a canoe, and be as indifferent to cold and wet as
a muskrat. He uses a few efficient tools,a lever commonly of rock-maple, six or
seven feet long, with a stout spike in it, strongly ferruled on, and a long spike-pole,
with a screw at the end of the spike to make it hold. The boys along shore learn to walk
on floating logs as city boys on sidewalks. Sometimes the logs are thrown up on rocks in
such positions as to be irrecoverable but by another freshet as high, or they jam together
at rapids and falls, and accumulate in vast piles, which the driver must start at the risk
of his life. Such is the lumber business, which depends on many accidents, as the early
freezing of the rivers, that the teams may get up in season, a sufficient freshet in the
spring, to fetch the logs down, and many others. [Thoreaus Note: "A
steady current or pitch of water is preferable to one either rising or diminishing; as,
when rising rapidly, the water at the middle of the river is considerably higher than at
the shores,so much so as to be distinctly perceived by the eye of a spectator on the
banks, presenting an appearance like a turnpike road. The lumber, therefore, is always
sure to incline from the centre of the channel toward either
shore.Springer."] I quote Michaux on Lumbering on the Kennebec, then the
source of the best white-pine lumber carried to England. "The persons engaged in this
branch of industry are generally emigrants from New Hampshire. . . . . In the summer they
unite in small companies, and traverse these vast solitudes in every direction, to
ascertain the places in which the pines abound. After cutting the grass and converting it
into hay for the nourishment of the cattle to be employed in their labor, they return
home. In the beginning of the winter they enter the forests again, establish themselves in
huts covered with the bark of the canoe-birch, or the arbor-vitæ, and, though the cold is
so intense that the mercury sometimes remains for several weeks from 40° to
50° [Fahr.]
below the point of congelation, they persevere, with unabated courage, in their
work." According to Springer, the company consists of choppers, swampers,who
make roads,barker and loader, teamster, and cook. "When the trees are felled,
they cut them into logs from fourteen to eighteen feet long, and, by means of their
cattle, which they employ with great dexterity, drag them to the river, and after stamping
on them a mark of property, roll them on its frozen bosom. At the breaking of the ice, in
the spring, they float down with the current. . . . . The logs that are not sawn the first
year," adds Michaux, "are attacked by large worms, which form holes about two
lines in diameter, in every direction; but, if stripped of their bark, they will remain
uninjured for thirty years."
Ambejijis, this quiet
Sunday morning, struck me as the most beautiful lake we had seen. It is said to be one of
the deepest. We had the fairest view of Joe Merry, Double Top, and Ktaadn, from its
surface. The summit of the latter had a singularly flat table-land appearance, like a
short highway, where a demigod might be let down to take a turn or two in an afternoon,
to settle his dinner. We rowed a mile and a half to near the head of the lake, and,
pushing through a field of lily pads, landed, to cook our breakfast by the side of a large
rock, known to McCauslin. Our breakfast consisted of tea, with hard bread and pork, and
fried salmon, which we ate with forks neatly whittled from alder-twigs, which grew there,
off strips of birch-bark for plates. The tea was black tea, without milk to color or sugar
to sweeten it, and two tin dippers were our tea cups. This beverage is as indispensable to
the loggers as to any gossiping old women in the land, and they, no doubt, derive great
comfort from it. Here was the site of an old loggers' camp, remembered by McCauslin, now
overgrown with weeds and bushes. In the midst of a dense underwood, we noticed a whole
brick, on a rock, in a small run, clean, and red, and square, as in a brick-yard, which
had been brought thus far formerly for tamping. Some of us afterward regretted that we had
not carried this on with us to the top of the mountain, to be left there for our mark. It
would certainly have been a simple evidence of civilized man. McCauslin said, that large
wooden crosses made of oak, still sound, were sometimes found standing in this wilderness,
which were set up by the first Catholic missionaries who came through to the Kennebec.
In the next nine miles,
which were the extent of our voyage, and which it took us the rest of the day to get over,
we rowed across several small lakes, poled up numerous rapids and thoroughfares, and
carried over four portages. I will give the names and distances, for the benefit of future
tourists. First, after leaving Ambejijis Lake, we had a quarter of a mile of rapids to the
portage, or carry of ninety rods around Ambejijis Falls; then a mile and a half through
Passamagamet Lake, which is narrow and river-like, to the falls of the same
nameAmbejijis stream coming in on the right; then two miles through Katepskonegan
Lake to the portage of ninety rods around Katepskonegan Falls, which name signifles
"carrying place"Passamagamet stream coming in on the left; then three
miles through Pockwockomus Lake, a slight expansion of the river, to the portage of forty
rods around the falls of the same nameKatepskonegan stream coming in on the left;
then three quarters of a mile through Aboljacarmegus Lake, similar to the last, to the
portage of forty rods around the falls of the same name; then half a mile of rapid water
to the Sowadnehunk dead-water, and the Aboljacknagesic stream.
This is generally the
order of names as you ascend the river:First, the lake, or, if there is no
expansion, the dead-water; then the falls; then the stream emptying into the lake or river
above, all of the same name. First we came to Passamagamet Lake, then to Passamagamet
Falls, then to Passamagamet stream, emptying in. This order and identity of names, it will
be perceived, is quite philosophical, since the dead-water or lake is always at least
partially produced by the stream emptying in above; and the first fall below, which is the
inlet of that lake, and where that tributary water makes its first plunge, also naturally
bears the same name.
At the portage around
Ambejijis Falls, I observed a pork-barrel on the shore, with a hole eight or nine inches
square cut in one side, which was set against an upright rock; but the bears, without
turning or upsetting the barrel, had gnawed a hole in the opposite side, which looked
exactly like an enormous rat hole, big enough to put their heads in; and at the bottom of
the barrel were still left a few mangled and slabbered slices of pork. It is usual for the
lumberers to leave such supplies as they cannot conveniently carry along with them at
carries or camps, to which the next comers do not scruple to help themselves, they being
the property commonly not of an individual, but a company, who can afford to deal
liberally.
I will describe
particularly how we got over some of these portages and rapids, in order that the reader
may get an idea of the boatman's life. At Ambejijis Falls, for instance, there was the
roughest path imaginable cut through the woods; at first up hill at an angle of nearly
forty-five degrees, over rocks and logs without end. This was the manner of the
portage:We first carried over our baggage, and deposited it on the shore at the
other end; then returning to the batteau, we dragged it up the hill by the painter, and
onward, with frequent pauses, over half the portage. But this was a bungling way, and
would soon have worn out the boat. Commonly, three men walk over with a batteau weighing
from three to five or six hundred pounds on their heads and shoulders, the tallest
standing under the middle of the boat, which is turned over, and one at each end, or else
there are two at the bows. More cannot well take hold at once. But this requires some
practice, as well as strength, and is in any case extremely laborious, and wearing to the
constitution, to follow. We were, on the whole, rather an invalid party, and could render
our boatmen but little assistance. Our two men at length took the batteau upon their
shoulders, and, while two of us steadied it, to prevent it from rocking and wearing into
their shoulders, on which they placed their hats folded, walked bravely over the remaining
distance, with two or three pauses. In the same manner they accomplished the other
portages. With this crushing weight they must climb and stumble along over fallen trees
and slippery rocks of all sizes, where those who walked by the sides were continually
brushed off, such was the narrowness of the path. But we were fortunate not to have to cut
our path in the first place. Before we launched our boat, we scraped the bottom smooth
again with our knives, where it had rubbed on the rocks, to save friction.
To avoid the
difficulties of the portage, our men determined to "warp up" the Passamagamet
Falls: so while the rest walked over the portage with the baggage, I remained in the
batteau, to assist in warping up. We were soon in the midst of the rapids, which were more
swift and tumultuous than any we had poled up, and had turned to the side of the stream
for the purpose of warping, when the boatmen, who felt some pride in their skill, and were
ambitious to do something more than usual, for my benefit, as I surmised, took one more
view of the rapids, or rather the falls; and in answer to one's question, whether we
couldn't get up there, the other answered that he guessed he'd try it: so we pushed again
into the midst of the stream, and began to struggle with the current. I sat in the middle
of the boat, to trim it, moving slightly to the right or left as it grazed a rock. With an
uncertain and wavering motion we wound and bolted our way up, until the bow was actually
raised two feet above the stern at the steepest pitch; and then, when everything depended
upon his exertions, the bowman's pole snapped in two; but before he had time to take the
spare one, which I reached him, he had saved himself with the fragment upon a rock; and so
we got up by a hair's breadth; and Uncle George exclaimed, that that was never done
before; and he had not tried it, if he had not known whom he had got in the bownor
he in the bow, if he had not known him in the stern. At this place there was a regular
portage cut through the woods; and our boatmen had never known a batteau to ascend the
falls. As near as I can remember, there was a perpendicular fall here, at the worst place,
of the whole Penobscot River, two or three feet at least. I could not sufficiently admire
the skill and coolness with which they performed this feat, never speaking to each other.
The bowman, not looking behind, but knowing exactly what the other is about, works as if
he worked alone; now sounding in vain for a bottom in fifteen feet of water, while the
boat falls back several rods, held straight only with the greatest skill and exertion; or,
while the sternman obstinately holds his ground, like a turtle, the bowman springs from
side to side with wonderful suppleness and dexterity, scanning the rapids and the rocks
with a thousand eyes; and now, having got a bite at last, with a lusty shove which makes
his pole bend and quiver, and the whole boat tremble, he gains a few feet upon the river.
To add to the danger, the poles are liable at any time to be caught between the rocks, and
wrenched out of their hands, leaving them at the mercy of the rapidsthe rocks, as it
were, lying in wait, like so many alligators, to catch them in their teeth, and jerk them
from your hands, before you have stolen an effectual shove against their palates. The pole
is set close to the boat, and the prow is made to overshoot, and just turn the corners of
the rocks, in the very teeth of the rapids. Nothing but the length and lightness, and the
slight draught of the batteau, enables them to make any headway. The bowman must quickly
choose his course; there is no time to deliberate. Frequently the boat is shoved between
rocks where both sides touch, and the waters on either hand are a perfect maelstrom.
Half a mile above this,
two of us tried our hands at poling up a slight rapid; and we were just surmounting the
last difficulty, when an unlucky rock confounded our calculations; and while the batteau
was sweeping round irrecoverably amid the whirlpool, we were obliged to resign the poles
to more skilful hands.
Katepskonegan is one of
the shallowest and weediest of the lakes, and looked as if it might abound in pickerel.
The falls of the same name, where we stopped to dine, are considerable and quite
picturesque. Here Uncle George had seen trout caught by the barrel-full; but they would
not rise to our bait at this hour. Half way over this carry, thus far in the Maine
wilderness on its way to the Provinces, we noticed a large flaming Oak Hall hand-bill,
about two feet long, wrapped round the trunk of a pine, from which the bark had been
stript, and to which it was fast glued by the pitch. This should be recorded among the
advantages of this mode of advertising, that so, possibly, even the bears and wolves,
moose, deer, otter, and beaver, not to mention the Indian, may learn where they can fit
themselves according to the latest fashion, or, at least, recover some of their own lost
garments. We christened this the Oak Hall carry.
The forenoon was as
serene and placid on this wild stream in the woods as we are wont to imagine that Sunday
in summer usually is in Massachusetts. We were occasionally startled by the scream of a
bald-eagle, sailing over the stream in front of our batteau; or of the fish-hawks, on whom
he levies his contributions. There were, at intervals, small meadows of a few acres on the
sides of the stream, waving with uncut grass, which attracted the attention of our
boatmen, who regretted that they were not nearer to their clearings, and calculated how
many stacks they might cut. Two or three men sometimes spend the summer by themselves,
cutting the grass in these meadows, to sell to the loggers in the winter, since it will
fetch a higher price on the spot than in any market in the state. On a small isle, covered
with this kind of rush, or cut grass, on which we landed, to consult about our further
course, we noticed the recent track of a moose, a large, roundish hole, in the soft wet
ground, evincing the great size and weight of the animal that made it. They are fond of
the water, and visit all these island-meadows, swimming as easily from island to island as
they make their way through the thickets on land. Now and then we passed what McCauslin
called a pokelogan, an Indian term for what the drivers might have reason to call a
poke-logs-in, an inlet that leads nowhere: if you get in you have got to get out again the
same way. These, and the frequent "run-rounds," which come into the river again,
would embarrass an inexperienced voyager not a little.
The carry around
Pockwockomus Falls was exceedingly rough and rocky, the batteau having to be lifted
directly from the water up four or five feet on to a rock, and launched again down a
similar bank. The rocks on this portage were covered with the dents made by the spikes in
the lumberers' boots while staggering over under the weight of their batteaux; and you
could see where the surface of some large rocks on which they had rested their batteaux
was worn quite smooth with use. As it was, we had carried over but half the usual portage
at this place for this stage of the water, and launched our boat in the smooth wave just
curving to the fall, prepared to struggle with the most violent rapid we had to encounter.
The rest of the party walked over the remainder of the portage, while I remained with the
boatmen to assist in warping up. One had to hold the boat while the others got in to
prevent it from going over the falls. When we had pushed up the rapids as far as possible,
keeping close to the shore, Tom seized the painter and leaped out upon a rock just visible
in the water, but he lost his footing notwithstanding his spiked boots, and was instantly
amid the rapids; but recovering himself by good luck, and reaching another rock, he passed
the painter to me, who had followed him, and took his place again in the bows. Leaping
from rock to rock in the shoal water close to the shore, and now and then getting a bite
with the rope round an upright one, I held the boat while one reset his pole, and then all
three forced it upward against any rapid. This was "warping up." When a part of
us walked round at such a place, we generally took the precaution to take out the most
valuable part of the baggage, for fear of being swamped.
As we poled up a swift
rapid for half a mile above Aboljacarmegus Falls, some of the party read their own marks
on the huge logs which lay piled up high and dry on the rocks on either hand, the relics
probably of a jam which had taken place here in the Great Freshet in the spring. Many of
these would have to wait for another great freshet, perchance, if they lasted so long,
before they could be got off. It was singular enough to meet with property of theirs which
they had never seen, and where they had never been before, thus detained by freshets and
rocks when on its way to them. Methinks that must be where all my property lies, cast up
on the rocks on some distant and unexplored stream, and waiting for an unheard-of freshet
to fetch it down. O make haste, ye gods, with your winds and rains, and start the jam
before it rots!
The last half mile
carried us to the Sowadnehunk dead-water, so called from the stream of the same name,
signifying "running between mountains," an important tributary which comes in a
mile above. Here we decided to camp, about twenty miles from the Dam, at the mouth of
Murch Brook and the Aboljacknagesic, mountain streams, broad off from Ktaadn, and about a
dozen miles from its summit; having made fifteen miles this day.
We had been told by
McCauslin that we should here find trout enough: so while some prepared the camp, the rest
fell to fishing. Seizing the birch poles which some party of Indians or white hunters had
left on the shore, and baiting our hooks with pork, and with trout, as soon as they were
caught, we cast our lines into the mouth of the Aboljacknagesic, a clear, swift, shallow
stream, which came in from Ktaadn. Instantly a shoal of white chivin, (Leucisci
pulchellus,) silvery roaches, cousin-trout, or what not, large and small, prowling
thereabouts, fell upon our bait, and one after another were landed amidst the bushes. Anon
their cousins, the true trout, took their turn, and alternately the speckled trout, and
the silvery roaches, swallowed the bait as fast as we could throw in; and the finest
specimens of both that I have ever seen, the largest one weighing three pounds, were
heaved upon the shore, though at first in vain, to wriggle down into the water again, for
we stood in the boat; but soon we learned to remedy this evil: for one, who had lost his
hook, stood on shore to catch them as they fell in a perfect shower around
himsometimes, wet and slippery, full in his face and bosom, as his arms were
outstretched to receive them. While yet alive, before their tints had faded, they
glistened like the fairest flowers, the product of primitive rivers; and he could hardly
trust his senses, as he stood over them, that these jewels should have swam away in that
Aboljacknagesic water for so long, so many dark ages,these bright fluviatile
flowers, seen of Indians only, made beautiful, the Lord only knows why, to swim there! I
could understand better, for this, the truth of mythology, the fables of Proteus, and all
those beautiful sea-monsters,how all history, indeed, put to a terrestrial use, is
mere history; but put to a celestial, is mythology always.
But there is the rough
voice of Uncle George, who commands at the frying-pan, to send over what you've got, and
then you may stay till morning. The pork sizzles, and cries for fish. Luckily for the
foolish race, and this particularly foolish generation of trout, the night shut down at
last, not a little deepened by the dark side of Ktaadn, which, like a permanent shadow,
reared itself from the eastern bank. Lescarbot, writing in 1609, tells us that the Sieur
Champdoré, who, with one of the people of the Sieur de Monts, ascended some fifty leagues
up the St. John in 1608, found the fish so plenty, "qu'en mettant la chaudière sur
le feu ils en avoient pris suffisamment pour eux dîsner avant que l'eau fust
chaude." Their descendants here are no less numerous. So we accompanied Tom into the
woods, to cut cedar-twigs for our bed. While he went ahead with the axe, and lopped off
the smallest twigs of the flat-leaved cedar, the arbor-vitæ of the gardens, we gathered
them up, and returned with them to the boat, until it was loaded. Our bed was made with as
much care and skill as a roof is shingled; beginning at the foot, and laying the twig end
of the cedar upward, we advanced to the head, a course at a time, thus successively
covering the stub-ends, and producing a soft and level bed. For us six it was about ten
feet long by six in breadth. This time we lay under our tent, having pitched it more
prudently with reference to the wind and the flame, and the usual huge fire blazed in
front. Supper was eaten off a large log, which some freshet had thrown up. This night we
had a dish of arbor-vitæ, or cedar tea, which the lumberer sometimes uses when other
herbs fail,
"A
quart of arbor-vitæ,
To
make him strong and mighty,"
but I had no wish to repeat the experiment. It had too medicinal a taste for my palate.
There was the skeleton of a moose here, whose bones some Indian hunters had picked on this
very spot.
In the night I dreamed
of trout-fishing; and, when at length I awoke, it seemed a fable, that this painted fish
swam there so near my couch, and rose to our hooks the last eveningand I doubted if
I had not dreamed it all. So I arose before dawn to test its truth, while my companions
were still sleeping. There stood Ktaadn with distinct and cloudless outline in the
moonlight; and the rippling of the rapids was the only sound to break the stillness.
Standing on the shore, I once more cast my line into the stream, and found the dream to be
real, and the fable true. The speckled trout and silvery roach, like flying fish, sped
swiftly through the moonlight air, describing bright arcs on the dark side of Ktaadn,
until moonlight, now fading into daylight, brought satiety to my mind, and the minds of my
companions, who had joined me.
By six o'clock, having
mounted our packs and a good blanket full of trout, ready dressed, and swung up such
baggage and provision as we wished to leave behind upon the tops of saplings, to be out of
the reach of bears, we started for the summit of the mountain, distant, as Uncle George
said the boatmen called it, about four miles, but as I judged, and as it proved, nearer
fourteen. He had never been any nearer the mountain than this, and there was not the
slightest trace of man to guide us further in this direction. At first, pushing a few rods
up the Aboljacknagesic, or "open-land stream," we fastened our batteau to a
tree, and travelled up the north side, through burnt lands, now partially overgrown with
young aspens, and other shrubbery; but soon, recrossing this stream, where it was about
fifty or sixty feet wide, upon a jam of logs and rocks, and you could cross it by this
means almost anywhere, we struck at once for the highest peak, over a mile or more of
comparatively open land still, very gradually ascending the while. Here it fell to my lot,
as the oldest mountain-climber, to take the lead: so scanning the woody side of the
mountain, which lay still at an indefinite distance, stretched out some seven or eight
miles in length before us, we determined to steer directly for the base of the highest
peak, leaving a large slide, by which, as I have since learned, some of our predecessors
ascended, on our left. This course would lead us parallel to a dark seam in the forest,
which marked the bed of a torrent, and over a slight spur, which extended southward from
the main mountain, from whose bare summit we could get an outlook over the country, and
climb directly up the peak, which would then be close at hand. Seen from this point, a
bare ridge at the extremity of the open land, Ktaadn presented a different aspect from any
mountain I have seen, there being a greater proportion of naked rock, rising abruptly from
the forest; and we looked up at this blue barrier as if it were some fragment of a wall
which anciently bounded the earth in that direction. Setting the compass for a north-east
course, which was the bearing of the southern base of the highest peak, we were soon
buried in the woods.
We soon began to
meet with traces of bears and moose, and those of rabbits were everywhere visible. The
tracks of moose, more or less recent, to speak literally covered every square rod on the
sides of the mountain; and these animals are probably more numerous there now than ever
before, being driven into this wilderness from all sides by the settlements. The track of
a full-grown moose is like that of a cow, or larger, and of the young, like that of a
calf. Sometimes we found ourselves travelling in faint paths, which they had made, like
cow-paths in the woods, only far more indistinct, being rather openings, affording
imperfect vistas through the dense underwood, than trodden paths; and everywhere the twigs
had been browsed by them, clipt as smoothly as if by a knife. The bark of trees was stript
up by them to the height of eight or nine feet, in long narrow strips, an inch wide, still
showing the distinct marks of their teeth. We expected nothing less than to meet a herd of
them every moment, and our Nimrod held his shooting-iron in readiness; but we did not go
out of our way to look for them, and, though numerous, they are so wary, that the
unskilful hunter might range the forest a long time before he could get sight of one. They
are sometimes dangerous to encounter, and will not turn out for the hunter, but furiously
rush upon him, and trample him to death, unless he is lucky enough to avoid them by
dodging round a tree. The largest are nearly as large as a horse, and weigh sometimes one
thousand pounds; and it is said that they can step over a five-foot gate in their ordinary
walk. They are described as exceedingly awkward-looking animals, with their long legs and
short bodies, making a ludicrous figure when in full run, but making great headway
nevertheless. It seemed a mystery to us how they could thread these woods, which it
required all our suppleness to accomplish, climbing, stooping, and winding, alternately.
They are said to drop their long and branching horns, which usually spread five or six
feet, on their backs, and make their way easily by the weight of their bodies. Our boatmen
said, but I know not with how much truth, that their horns are apt to be gnawed away by
vermin while they sleep. Their flesh, which is more like beef than venison, is common in
Bangor market.
We had proceeded on
thus seven or eight miles, till about noon, with frequent pauses to refresh the weary
ones, crossing a considerable mountain stream, which we conjectured to be Murch Brook, at
whose mouth we had camped, all the time in woods, without having once seen the summit, and
rising very gradually, when the boatmen, beginning to despair a little, and fearing that
we were leaving the mountain on one side of us, for they had not entire faith in the
compass, McCauslin climbed a tree, from the top of which he could see the peak, when it
appeared that we had not swerved from a right line, the compass down below still ranging
with his arm, which pointed to the summit. By the side of a cool mountain rill, amid the
woods, where the water began to partake of the purity and transparency of the air, we
stopped to cook some of our fishes, which we had brought thus far in order to save our
hard bread and pork, in the use of which we had put ourselves on short allowance. We soon
had a fire blazing, and stood around it, under the damp and sombre forest of firs and
birches, each with a sharpened stick, three or four feet in length, upon which he had
spitted his trout, or roach, previously well gashed and salted, our sticks radiating like
the spokes of a wheel from one centre, and each crowding his particular fish into the most
desirable exposure, not with the truest regard always to his neighbor's rights. Thus we
regaled ourselves, drinking meanwhile at the spring, till one man's pack, at least, was
considerably lightened, when we again took up our line of march.
At length we reached an
elevation sufficiently bare to afford a view of the summit, still distant and blue, almost
as if retreating from us. A torrent, which proved to be the same we had crossed, was seen
tumbling down in front, literally from out of the clouds. But this glimpse at our
whereabouts was soon lost, and we were buried in the woods again. The wood was chiefly
yellow birch, spruce, fir, mountain-ash, or round-wood, as the Maine people call it, and
moose-wood. It was the worst kind of travelling; sometimes like the densest scrub-oak
patches with us. The cornel, or bunch-berries, were very abundant, as well as Solomon's
seal and moose-berries. Blue-berries were distributed along our whole route; and in one
place the bushes were drooping with the weight of the fruit, still as fresh as ever. It
was the seventh of September. Such patches afforded a grateful repast, and served to bait
the tired party forward. When any lagged behind, the cry of "blue-berries" was
most effectual to bring them up. Even at this elevation we passed through a moose-yard,
formed by a large flat rock, four or five rods square, where they tread down the snow in
winter. At length, fearing that if we held the direct course to the summit, we should not
find any water near our camping-ground, we gradually swerved to the west, till, at four
o'clock, we struck again the torrent which I have mentioned, and here, in view of the
summit, the weary party decided to camp that night.
While my companions
were seeking a suitable spot for this purpose, I improved the little daylight that was
left in climbing the mountain alone. We were in a deep and narrow ravine, sloping up to
the clouds, at an angle of nearly forty-five degrees, and hemmed in by walls of rock,
which were at first covered with low trees, then with impenetrable thickets of scraggy
birches and spruce-trees, and with moss, but at last bare of all vegetation but lichens,
and almost continually draped in clouds. Following up the course of the torrent which
occupied thisand I mean to lay some emphasis on this word uppulling
myself up by the side of perpendicular falls of twenty or thirty feet, by the roots of
firs and birches, and then, perhaps, walking a level rod or two in the thin stream, for it
took up the whole road, ascending by huge steps, as it were, a giant's stairway, down
which a river flowed, I had soon cleared the trees, and paused on the successive shelves,
to look back over the country. The torrent was from fifteen to thirty feet wide, without a
tributary, and seemingly not diminishing in breadth as I advanced; but still it came
rushing and roaring down, with a copious tide, over and amidst masses of bare rock, from
the very clouds, as though a water-spout had just burst over the mountain. Leaving this at
last, I began to work my way, scarcely less arduous than Satan's anciently through Chaos,
up the nearest, though not the highest peak. At first scrambling on all fours over the
tops of ancient black spruce-trees, (Abies nigra,) old as the flood, from two to
ten or twelve feet in height, their tops flat and spreading, and their foliage blue and
nipt with cold, as if for centuries they had ceased growing upward against the bleak sky,
the solid cold. I walked some good rods erect upon the tops of these trees, which were
overgrown with moss and mountain-cranberries. It seemed that in the course of time they
had filled up the intervals between the huge rocks, and the cold wind had uniformly
levelled all over. Here the principle of vegetation was hard put to it. There was
apparently a belt of this kind running quite round the mountain, though, perhaps, nowhere
so remarkable as here. Once, slumping through, I looked down ten feet, into a dark and
cavernous region, and saw the stem of a spruce, on whose top I stood, as on a mass of
coarse basket-work, fully nine inches in diameter at the ground. These holes were bears'
dens, and the bears were even then at home. This was the sort of garden I made my way over,
for an eighth of a mile, at the risk, it is true, of treading on some of the plants, not
seeing any path through itcertainly the most treacherous and porous country I
ever travelled.
"Nigh foundered on he fares,
Treading
the crude consistence, half on foot,
Half
flying."
But nothing could
exceed the toughness of the twigs,not one snapped under my weight, for they had
slowly grown. Having slumped, scrambled, rolled, bounced, and walked, by turns, over this
scraggy country, I arrived upon a side-hill, or rather side-mountain, where rocks, gray,
silent rocks, were the flocks and herds that pastured, chewing a rocky cud at sunset. They
looked at me with hard gray eyes, without a bleat or a low. This brought me to the skirt
of a cloud, and bounded my walk that night. But I had already seen that Maine country when
I turned about, waving, flowing, rippling, down below.
When I returned to my
companions, they had selected a camping-ground on the torrent's edge, and were resting on
the ground; one was on the sick list, rolled in a blanket, on a damp shelf of rock. It was
a savage and dreary scenery enough; so wildly rough, that they looked long to find a level
and open space for the tent. We could not well camp higher, for want of fuel; and the
trees here seemed so evergreen and sappy, that we almost doubted if they would acknowledge
the influence of fire; but fire prevailed at last, and blazed here, too, like a good
citizen of the world. Even at this height we met with frequent traces of moose, as well as
of bears. As here was no cedar, we made our bed of coarser feathered spruce; but at any
rate the feathers were plucked from the live tree. It was, perhaps, even a more grand and
desolate place for a night's lodging than the summit would have been, being in the
neighborhood of those wild trees, and of the torrent. Some more aerial and finer-spirited
winds rushed and roared through the ravine all night, from time to time arousing our fire,
and dispersing the embers about. It was as if we lay in the very nest of a young
whirlwind. At midnight, one of my bedfellows, being startled in his dreams by the sudden
blazing up to its top of a fir-tree, whose green boughs were dried by the heat, sprang up,
with a cry, from his bed, thinking the world on fire, and drew the whole camp after him.
In the morning, after
whetting our appetite on some raw pork, a wafer of hard bread, and a dipper of condensed
cloud or water-spout, we all together began to make our way up the falls, which I have
described; this time choosing the right hand, or highest peak, which was not the one I had
approached before. But soon my companions were lost to my sight behind the mountain ridge
in my rear, which still seemed ever retreating before me, and I climbed alone over huge
rocks, loosely poised, a mile or more, still edging toward the cloudsfor though the
day was clear elsewhere, the summit was concealed by mist. The mountain seemed a vast
aggregation of loose rocks, as if sometime it had rained rocks, and they lay as they fell
on the mountain sides, nowhere fairly at rest, but leaning on each other, all
rocking-stones, with cavities between, but scarcely any soil or smoother shelf. They were
the raw materials of a planet dropped from an unseen quarry, which the vast chemistry of
nature would anon work up, or work down, into the smiling and verdant plains and valleys
of earth. This was an undone extremity of the globe; as in lignite we see coal in the
process of formation.
At length I entered
within the skirts of the cloud which seemed forever drifting over the summit, and yet
would never be gone, but was generated out of that pure air as fast as it flowed away; and
when, a quarter of a mile further, I reached the summit of the ridge, which those who have
seen in clearer weather say is about five miles long, and contains a thousand acres of
table-land, I was deep within the hostile ranks of clouds, and all objects were obscured
by them. Now the wind would blow me out a yard of clear sunlight, wherein I stood; then a
gray, dawning light was all it could accomplish, the cloud-line ever rising and falling
with the wind's intensity. Sometimes it seemed as if the summit would be cleared in a few
moments and smile in sunshine: but what was gained on one side was lost on another. It was
like sitting in a chimney and waiting for the smoke to blow away. It was, in fact, a
cloud-factory,these were the cloud-works, and the wind turned them off done from the
cool, bare rocks. Occasionally, when the windy columns broke in to me, I caught sight of a
dark, damp crag to the right or left; the mist driving ceaselessly between it and me. It
reminded me of the creations of the old epic and dramatic poets, of Atlas, Vulcan, the
Cyclops, and Prometheus. Such was Caucasus and the rock where Prometheus was bound.
Æschylus had no doubt visited such scenery as this. It was vast, Titanic, and such as man
never inhabits. Some part of the beholder, even some vital part, seems to escape through
the loose grating of his ribs as he ascends. He is more lone than you can imagine. There
is less of substantial thought and fair understanding in him, than in the plains where men
inhabit. His reason is dispersed and shadowy, more thin and subtile like the air. Vast,
Titanic, inhuman Nature has got him at disadvantage, caught him alone, and pilfers him of
some of his divine faculty. She does not smile on him as in the plains. She seems to say
sternly, why came ye here before your time? This ground is not prepared for you. Is it not
enough that I smile in the valleys? I have never made this soil for thy feet, this air for
thy breathing, these rocks for thy neighbors. I cannot pity nor fondle thee here, but
forever relentlessly drive thee hence to where I am kind. Why seek me where I have
not called thee, and then complain because you find me but a stepmother? Shouldst thou
freeze or starve, or shudder thy life away, here is no shrine, nor altar, nor any access
to my ear.
"Chaos
and ancient Night, I come no spy
With
purpose to explore or to disturb
The
secrets of your realm, but . . .
. . . . . . as my way
Lies
through your spacious empire up to light."
The tops of
mountains are among the unfinished parts of the globe, whither it is a slight insult to
the gods to climb and pry into their secrets, and try their effect on our humanity. Only
daring and insolent men, perchance, go there. Simple races, as savages, do not climb
mountainstheir tops are sacred and mysterious tracts never visited by them. Pomola
is always angry with those who climb to the summit of Ktaadn.
According to Jackson,
who in his capacity of geological surveyor of the state, has accurately measured
itthe altitude of Ktaadn is 5,300 feet, or a little more than one mile above the
level of the seaand he adds: "It is then evidently the highest point in the
State of Maine, and is the most abrupt granite mountain in New England." The
peculiarities of that spacious table-land on which I was standing, as well as the
remarkable semicircular precipice or basin on the eastern side, were all concealed by the
mist. I had brought my whole pack to the top, not knowing but I should have to make my
descent to the river, and possibly to the settled portion of the state alone and by some
other route, and wishing to have a complete outfit with me. But at length, fearing that my
companions would be anxious to reach the river before night, and knowing that the clouds
might rest on the mountain for days, I was compelled to descend. Occasionally, as I came
down, the wind would blow me a vista open through which I could see the country eastward,
boundless forests, and lakes, and streams, gleaming in the sun, some of them emptying into
the East Branch. There were also new mountains in sight in that direction. Now and then
some small bird of the sparrow family would flit away before me, unable to command its
course, like a fragment of the gray rock blown off by the wind.
I found my companions
where I had left them, on the side of the peak, gathering the mountain cranberries, which
filled every crevice between the rocks, together with blue berries, which had a spicier
flavor the higher up they grew, but were not the less agreeable to our palates. When the
country is settled and roads are made, these cranberries will perhaps become an article of
commerce. From this elevation, just on the skirts of the clouds, we could overlook the
country west and south for a hundred miles. There it was, the State of Maine, which we had
seen on the map, but not much like that. Immeasurable forest for the sun to shine on, that
eastern stuff we hear of in Massachusetts. No clearing, no house. It did not look
as if a solitary traveller had cut so much as a walking-stick there. Countless
lakes,Moosehead in the southwest, forty miles long by ten wide, like a gleaming
silver platter at the end of the table, Chesuncook, eighteen long by three wide, without
an island; Millinocket, on the south, with its hundred islands; and a hundred others
without a name; and mountains also, whose names, for the most part, are known only to the
Indians. The forest looked like a firm grass sward, and the effect of these lakes in its
midst has been well compared by one who has since visited this same spot, to that of a
"mirror broken into a thousand fragments, and wildly scattered over the grass,
reflecting the full blaze of the sun." It was a large farm for somebody, when
cleared. According to the Gazetteer, which was printed before the boundary question was
settled, this single Penobscot county in which we were, was larger than the whole State of
Vermont, with its fourteen counties; and this was only a part of the wild lands of Maine.
We are concerned now, however, about natural, not political limits. We were about eighty
miles as the bird flies from Bangor, or one hundred and fifteen as we had ridden, and
walked, and paddled. We had to console ourselves with the reflection that this view was
probably as good as that from the peak, as far as it went, and what were a mountain
without its attendant clouds and mists? Like ourselves, neither Bailey nor Jackson had
obtained a clear view from the summit.
Setting out on our
return to the river, still at an early hour in the day, we decided to follow the course of
the torrent, which we supposed to be Murch Brook, as long as it would not lead us too far
out of our way. We thus travelled about four miles in the very torrent itself, continually
crossing and recrossing it, leaping from rock to rock, and jumping with the stream down
falls of seven or eight feet, or sometimes sliding down on our backs in a thin sheet of
water. This ravine had been the scene of an extraordinary freshet in the spring,
apparently accompanied by a slide from the mountain. It must have been filled with a
stream of stones and water, at least twenty feet above the present level of the torrent.
For a rod or two on either side of its channel, the trees were barked and splintered up to
their tops, the birches bent over, twisted, and sometimes finely split like a
stable-broom; some a foot in diameter snapped off, and whole clumps of trees bent over
with the weight of rocks piled on them. In one place we noticed a rock two or three feet
in diameter, lodged nearly twenty feet high in the crotch of a tree. For the whole four
miles, we saw but one rill emptying in, and the volume of water did not seem to be
increased from the first. We travelled thus very rapidly with a downward impetus, and grew
remarkably expert at leaping from rock to rock, for leap we must, and leap we did, whether
there was any rock at the right distance or not. It was a pleasant picture when the
foremost turned about and looked up the winding ravine, walled in with rocks and the green
forest, to see at intervals of a rod or two, a red-shirted or green-jacketed mountaineer
against the white torrent, leaping down the channel with his pack on his back, or pausing
upon a convenient rock in the midst of the torrent to mend a rent in his clothes, or
unstrap the dipper at his belt to take a draught of the water. At one place we were
startled by seeing, on a little sandy shelf by the side of the stream, the fresh print of
a man's foot, and for a moment realized how Robinson Crusoe felt in a similar case; but at
last we remembered that we had struck this stream on our way up, though we could not have
told where, and one had descended into the ravine for a drink. The cool air above, and the
continual bathing of our bodies in mountain water, alternate foot, sitz, douche, and
plunge baths, made this walk exceedingly refreshing, and we had travelled only a mile or
two after leaving the torrent, before every thread of our clothes was as dry as usual,
owing perhaps to a peculiar quality in the atmosphere.
After leaving the
torrent, being in doubt about our course, Tom threw down his pack at the foot of the
loftiest spruce tree at hand, and shinned up the bare trunk some twenty feet, and then
climbed through the green tower, lost to our sight, until he held the top-most spray in
his hand. [Thoreaus Note: "The spruce-tree, says Springer in
51, is generally selected, principally for the superior facilities which its
numerous limbs afford the climber. To gain the first limbs of this tree, which are from
twenty to forty feet from the ground, a smaller tree is undercut and lodged against it,
clambering up which the top of the spruce is reached. In some cases, when a very elevated
position is desired, the spruce-tree is lodged against the trunk of some lofty pine, up
which we ascend to a height twice that of the surrounding forest. To indicate the
direction of pines, he throws down a branch, and a man at the ground takes the
bearing."] McCauslin, in his younger days, had marched through the wilderness with a
body of troops, under General Somebody, and with one other man did all the scouting and
spying service. The General's word was: "Throw down the top of that tree," and
there was no tree in the Maine woods so high that it did not lose its top in such a case.
I have heard a story of two men being lost once in these woods, nearer to the settlements
than this, who climbed the loftiest pine they could find, some six feet in diameter at the
ground, from whose top they discovered a solitary clearing and its smoke. When at this
height, some two hundred feet from the ground, one of them became dizzy, and fainted in
his companion's arms, and the latter had to accomplish the descent with him, alternately
fainting and reviving, as best he could. To Tom we cried, where away does the summit bear?
where the burnt lands? The last he could only conjecture; he descried, however, a little
meadow and pond, lying probably in our course, which we concluded to steer for. On
reaching this secluded meadow, we found fresh tracks of moose on the shore of the pond,
and the water was still unsettled as if they had fled before us. A little further, in a
dense thicket, we seemed to be still on their trail. It was a small meadow, of a few
acres, on the mountain side, concealed by the forest, and perhaps never seen by a white
man before, where one would think that the moose might browse and bathe, and rest in
peace. Pursuing this course, we soon reached the open land, which went sloping down some
miles toward the Penobscot.
Perhaps I most fully
realized that this was primeval, untamed, and forever untameable Nature, or
whatever else men call it, while coming down this part of the mountain. We were passing
over "Burnt Lands," burnt by lightning, perchance, though they showed no recent
marks of fire, hardly so much as a charred stump, but looked rather like a natural pasture
for the moose and deer, exceedingly wild and desolate, with occasional strips of timber
crossing them, and low poplars springing up, and patches of blueberries here and there. I
found myself traversing them familiarly, like some pasture run to waste, or partially
reclaimed by man; but when I reflected what man, what brother or sister or kinsman of our
race made it and claimed it, I expected the proprietor to rise up and dispute my passage.
It is difficult to conceive of a region uninhabited by man. We habitually presume his
presence and influence everywhere. And yet we have not seen pure Nature, unless we have
seen her thus vast, and drear, and inhuman, though in the midst of cities. Nature was here
something savage and awful, though beautiful. I looked with awe at the ground I trod on,
to see what the Powers had made there, the form and fashion and material of their work.
This was that Earth of which we have heard, made out of Chaos and Old Night. Here was no
man's garden, but the unhandselled globe. It was not lawn, nor pasture, nor mead, nor
woodland, nor lea, nor arable, nor waste-land. It was the fresh and natural surface of the
planet Earth, as it was made forever and ever,to be the dwelling of man, we
say,so Nature made it, and man may use it if he can. Man was not to be associated
with it. It was Matter, vast, terrific,not his Mother Earth that we have heard of,
not for him to tread on, or be buried in,no, it were being too familiar even to let
his bones lie therethe home this of Necessity and Fate. There was there felt the
presence of a force not bound to be kind to man. It was a place for heathenism and
superstitious rites,to be inhabited by men nearer of kin to the rocks and to wild
animals than we. We walked over it with a certain awe, stopping from time to time to pick
the blueberries which grew there, and had a smart and spicy taste. Perchance where our
wild pines stand, and leaves lie on their forest floor in Concord, there were once
reapers, and husbandmen planted grain; but here not even the surface had been scarred by
man, but it was a specimen of what God saw fit to make this world. What is it to be
admitted to a museum, to see a myriad of particular things, compared with being shown some
star's surface, some hard matter in its home! I stand in awe of my body, this matter to
which I am bound has become so strange to me. I fear not spirits, ghosts, of which I am
one,that my body might,but I fear bodies, I tremble to meet them. What
is this Titan that has possession of me? Talk of mysteries!Think of our life in
nature,daily to be shown matter, to come in contact with it, rocks, trees,
wind on our cheeks! the solid earth! the actual world! the common sense!
Contact! Contact! Who are we? where are we?
Ere long we recognized
some rocks and other features in the landscape which we had purposely impressed on our
memories, and quickening our pace, by two o'clock we reached the batteau. [Thoreaus
Note: "The bears had not touched things on our possessions. They sometimes tear a
batteau to pieces for the sake of the tar with which it is besmeared."] Here we had
expected to dine on trout, but in this glaring sunlight they were slow to take the bait,
so we were compelled to make the most of the crumbs of our hard bread and our pork, which
were both nearly exhausted. Meanwhile we deliberated whether we should go up the river a
mile farther to Gibson's clearing on the Sowadnehunk, where there was a deserted log hut,
in order to get a half-inch auger, to mend one of our spike-poles with. There were young
spruce trees enough around us, and we had a spare spike, but nothing to make a hole with.
But as it was uncertain whether we should find any tools left there, we patched up the
broken pole as well as we could for the downward voyage, in which there would be but
little use for it. Moreover, we were unwilling to lose any time in this expedition, lest
the wind should rise before we reached the larger lakes, and detain us, for a moderate
wind produces quite a sea on these waters, in which a batteau will not live for a moment;
and on one occasion McCauslin had been delayed a week at the head of the North Twin, which
is only four miles across. We were nearly out of provisions, and ill prepared in this
respect for what might possibly prove a week's journey round by the shore, fording
innumerable streams, and threading a trackless forest, should any accident happen to our
boat.
It was with regret that
we turned our backs on Chesuncook, which McCauslin had formerly logged on, and the
Allagash lakes. There were still longer rapids and portages above; among the last the
Rippogenus Portage, which he described as the most difficult on the river, and three miles
long. The whole length of the Penobscot is two hundred and seventy-five miles, and we are
still nearly one hundred miles from its source. Hodge, the assistant State Geologist,
passed up this river in 1837, and by a portage of only one mile and three-quarters,
crossed over into the Allagash, and so went down that into the St. John, and up the
Madawaska to the Grand Portage across to the St. Lawrence. His is the only account that I
know, of an expedition through to Canada in this direction. He thus describes his first
sight of the latter river, which, to compare small things with great, is like Balboa's
first sight of the Pacific from the mountains of the Isthmus of Darien. "When we
first came in sight of the St. Lawrence," he says, "from the top of a high hill,
the view was most striking, and much more interesting to me from having been shut up in
the woods for the two previous months. Directly before us lay the broad river, extending
across nine or ten miles, its surface broken by a few islands and reefs; and two ships
riding at anchor near the shore. Beyond, extended ranges of uncultivated hills, parallel
with the river. The sun was just going down behind them, and gilding the whole scene with
its parting rays."
About four o'clock the
same afternoon, we commenced our return voyage, which would require but little if any
poling. In shooting rapids, the boatmen use large and broad paddles, instead of poles, to
guide the boat with. Though we glided so swiftly and often smoothly down, where it had
cost us no slight effort to get up, our present voyage was attended with far more danger:
for if we once fairly struck one of the thousand rocks by which we were surrounded, the
boat would be swamped in an instant. When a boat is swamped under these circumstances, the
boatmen commonly find no difficulty in keeping afloat at first, for the current keeps both
them and their cargo up for a long way down the stream; and if they can swim, they have
only to work their way gradually to the shore. The greatest danger is of being caught in
an eddy behind some larger rock, where the water rushes up stream faster than elsewhere it
does down, and being carried round and round under the surface till they are drowned.
McCauslin pointed out some rocks which had been the scene of a fatal accident of this
kind. Sometimes the body is not thrown out for several hours. He himself had performed
such a circuit once, only his legs being visible to his companions; but he was fortunately
thrown out in season to recover his breath. [Thoreaus Note: "I cut this from a
newspaper. On the 11th (instant?) [May, 49], on Rappogenes Falls, Mr. John
Delantee, of Orono, Me., was drowned while running logs. He was a citizen of Orono, and
was twenty-six years of age. His companions found his body, enclosed it in bark, and
buried it in the solemn woods."] In shooting the rapids, the boatman has this
problem to solve: to choose a circuitous and safe course amid a thousand sunken rocks,
scattered over a quarter or half a mile, at the same time that he is moving steadily on at
the rate of fifteen miles an hour. Stop he cannot; the only question is, where will he go?
The bow-man chooses the course with all his eyes about him, striking broad off with his
paddle, and drawing the boat by main force into her course. The stern-man faithfully
follows the bow.
We were soon at the
Aboljacarmegus Falls. Anxious to avoid the delay as well as the labor of the portage here,
our boatmen went forward first to reconnoitre, and concluded to let the batteau down the
falls, carrying the baggage only over the portage. Jumping from rock to rock until nearly
in the middle of the stream, we were ready to receive the boat and let her down over the
first fall, some six or seven feet perpendicular. The boatmen stand upon the edge of a
shelf of rock where the fall is perhaps nine or ten feet perpendicular, in from one to two
feet of rapid water, one on each side of the boat, and let it slide gently over, till the
bow is run out ten or twelve feet in the air; then letting it drop squarely, while one
holds the painter, the other leaps in, and his companion following, they are whirled down
the rapids to a new fall, or to smooth water. In a very few minutes they had accomplished
a passage in safety, which would be as fool-hardy for the unskilful to attempt as the
descent of Niagara itself. It seemed as if it needed only a little familiarity, and a
little more skill, to navigate down such falls as Niagara itself with safety. At any rate,
I should not despair of such men in the rapids above Table-Rock, until I saw them actually
go over the falls, so cool, so collected, so fertile in resources are they. One might have
thought that these were falls, and that falls were not to be waded through with impunity
like a mud-puddle. There was really danger of their losing their sublimity in losing their
power to harm us. Familiarity breeds contempt. The boatman pauses, perchance, on some
shelf beneath a table-rock under the fall, standing in some cove of back-water two feet
deep, and you hear his rough voice come up through the spray, coolly giving directions how
to launch the boat this time.
Having carried round
Pockwockomus Falls, our oars soon brought us to the Katepskonegan, or Oak Hall carry,
where we decided to camp half way over, leaving our batteau to be carried over in the
morning on fresh shoulders. One shoulder of each of the boatmen showed a red spot as large
as one's hand, worn by the batteau on this expedition; and this shoulder, as it did all
the work, was perceptibly lower than its fellow, from long service. Such toil soon wears
out the strongest constitution. The drivers are accustomed to work in the cold water in
the spring, rarely ever dry; and if one falls in all over, he rarely changes his clothes
till night, if then, even. One who takes this precaution is called by a particular
nickname, or is turned off. None can lead this life who are not almost amphibious,
McCauslin said soberly, what is at any rate a good story to tell, that he had seen where
six men were wholly under water at once, at a jam, with their shoulders to handspikes. If
the log did not start, then they had to put out their heads to breathe. The driver works
as long as he can see, from dark to dark, and at night has not time to eat his supper and
dry his clothes fairly, before he is asleep on his cedar bed. We lay that night on the
very bed made by such a party, stretching our tent over the poles which were still
standing, but reshingling the damp and faded bed with fresh leaves.
In the morning, we
carried our boat over and launched it, making haste lest the wind should rise. The boatmen
ran down Passamagamet, and, soon after, Ambejijis Falls, while we walked round with the
baggage. We made a hasty breakfast at the head of Ambejijis lake, on the remainder of our
pork, and were soon rowing across its smooth surface again, under a pleasant sky, the
mountain being now clear of clouds in the northeast. Taking turns at the oars, we shot
rapidly across Deep Cove, the Foot of Pamadumcook, and the North Twin, at the rate of six
miles an hour, the wind not being high enough to disturb us, and reached the Dam at noon.
The boatmen went through one of the log sluices in the batteau, where the fall was ten
feet at the bottom, and took us in below. Here was the longest rapid in our voyage, and
perhaps the running this was as dangerous and arduous a task as any. Shooting down
sometimes at the rate, as we judged, of fifteen miles an hour, if we struck a rock, we
were split from end to end in an instant. Now like a bait bobbing for some river monster
amid the eddies, now darting to this side of the stream, now to that, gliding swift and
smooth near to our destruction, or striking broad off with the paddle and drawing the boat
to right or left with all our might, in order to avoid a rock. I suppose that it was like
running the rapids of the Sault de Ste. Marie, at the outlet of Lake Superior, and our
boatmen probably displayed no less dexterity than the Indians there do. We soon ran
through this mile, and floated in Quakish lake.
After such a voyage,
the troubled and angry waters, which once had seemed terrible and not to be trified with,
appeared tamed and subdued; they had been bearded and worried in their channels, pricked
and whipped into submission with the spike-pole and paddle, gone through and through with
impunity, and all their spirit and their danger taken out of them, and the most swollen
and impetuous rivers seemed but playthings henceforth. I began, at length, to understand
the boatman's familiarity with and contempt for the rapids. "Those Fowler boys,"
said Mrs. McCauslin, "are perfect ducks for the water." They had run down to
Lincoln, according to her, thirty or forty miles, in a batteau, in the night, for a
doctor, when it was so dark that they could not see a rod before them, and the river was
swollen so as to be almost a continuous rapid, so that the doctor cried, when they
brought him up by daylight, "Why, Tom, how did you see to steer?" "We
didn't steer much,only kept her straight." And yet they met with no accident.
It is true, the more difficult rapids are higher up than this.
When we reached the
Millinocket opposite to Tom's house, and were waiting for his folks to set us over, for we
had left our batteau above the Grand Falls, we discovered two canoes with two men in each,
turning up this stream from Shad Pond, one keeping the opposite side of a small island
before us, while the other approached the side where we were standing, examining the banks
carefully for muskrats as they came along. The last proved to be Louis Neptune and his
companion, now at last on their way up to Chesuncook after moose; but they were so
disguised that we hardly knew them. At a little distance, they might have been taken for
Quakers, with their broad-brimmed hats, and overcoats with broad capes, the spoils of
Bangor, seeking a settlement in this Sylvania,or, nearer at hand, for fashionable
gentlemen, the morning after a spree. Met face to face, these Indians in their native
woods looked like the sinister and slouching fellows whom you meet picking up strings and
paper in the streets of a city. There is, in fact, a remarkable and unexpected resemblance
between the degraded savage and the lowest classes in a great city. The one is no more a
child of nature than the other. In the progress of degradation, the distinction of races
is soon lost. Neptune at first was only anxious to know what we "kill," seeing
some partridges in the hands of one of the party, but we had assumed too much anger to
permit of a reply. We thought Indians had some honor before. But"Me been sick.
O, me unwell now. You make bargain, then me go." They had in fact been delayed so
long by a drunken frolic at the Five Islands, and they had not yet recovered from its
effects. They had some young musquash in their canoes, which they dug out of the banks
with a hoe for food, not for their skins, for musquash are their principal food on these
expeditions. So they went on up the Millinocket, and we kept down the bank of the
Penobscot, after recruiting ourselves with a draught of Tom's beer, leaving Tom at his
home.
Thus a man shall lead
his life away here on the edge of the wilderness, on Indian Millinocket stream, in a new
world, far in the dark of a continent, and have a flute to play at evening here, while his
strains echo to the stars, amid the howling of wolves; shall live, as it were, in the
primitive age of the world, a primitive man. Yet he shall spend a sunny day, and in this
century be my contemporary; perchance shall read some scattered leaves of literature, and
sometimes talk with me. Why read history then if the ages and the generations are now? He
lives three thousand years deep into time, an age not yet described by poets. Can you well
go further back in history than this? Ay! ay!for there turns up but now into the
mouth of Millinocket stream a still more ancient and primitive man, whose history is not
brought down even to the former. In a bark vessel sewn with the roots of the spruce, with
horn-beam paddles he dips his way along. He is but dim and misty to me, obscured by the
æons that lie between the bark canoe and the batteau. He builds no house of logs, but a
wigwam of skins. He eats no hot-bread and sweet-cake, but musquash and moose-meat and the
fat of bears. He glides up the Millinocket and is lost to my sight, as a more distant and
misty cloud is seen flitting by behind a nearer, and is lost in space. So he goes about
his destiny, the red face of man.
After having passed the
night and buttered our boots for the last time at Uncle George's, whose dogs almost
devoured him for joy at his return, we kept on down the river the next day about eight
miles on foot, and then took a batteau with a man to pole it to Mattawamkeag, ten more. At
the middle of that very night, to make a swift conclusion to a long story, we dropped our
buggy over the half-finished bridge at Oldtown, where we heard the confused din and clink
of a hundred saws which never rest, and at six o'clock the next morning one of the party
was steaming his way to Massachusetts.
What is most striking
in the Maine wilderness is, the continuousness of the forest, with fewer open intervals or
glades than you had imagined. Except the few burnt lands, the narrow intervals on the
rivers, the bare tops of the high mountains, and the lakes and streams, the forest is
uninterrupted. It is even more grim and wild than you had anticipated, a damp and
intricate wilderness, in the spring everywhere wet and miry. The aspect of the country
indeed is universally stern and savage, excepting the distant views of the forest from
hills, and the lake prospects, which are mild and civilizing in a degree. The lakes are
something which you are unprepared for: they lie up so high exposed to the light, and the
forest is diminished to a fine fringe on their edges, with here and there a blue mountain,
like amethyst jewels set around some jewel of the first water,so anterior, so
superior to all the changes that are to take place on their shores, even now civil and
refined, and fair, as they can ever be. These are not the artificial forests of an English
kinga royal preserve merely. Here prevail no forest laws, but those of nature. The
aborigines have never been dispossessed, nor nature disforested.
It is a country full of
evergreen trees, of mossy silver birches and watery maples, the ground dotted with
insipid, small red berries, and strewn with damp and moss-grown rocksa country
diversified with innumerable lakes and rapid streams, peopled with trout and various
species of leucisci, with salmon, shad and pickerel, and other fishes; the forest
resounding at rare intervals with the note of the chicadee, the blue-jay, and the
woodpecker, the scream of the fish-hawk and the eagle, the laugh of the loon, and the
whistle of ducks along the solitary streams; and at night, with the hooting of owls and
howling of wolves; in summer, swarming with myriads of black flies and mosquitoes, more
formidable than wolves to the white man. Such is the home of the moose, the bear, the
caribou, the wolf, the beaver, and the Indian. Who shall describe the inexpressible
tenderness and immortal life of the grim forest, where Nature, though it be mid-winter, is
ever in her spring, where the moss-grown and decaying trees are not old, but seem to enjoy
a perpetual youth; and blissful, innocent Nature, like a serene infant, is too happy to
make a noise, except by a few tinkling, lisping birds and trickling rills?
What a place to live,
what a place to die and be buried in! There certainly men would live forever, and laugh at
death and the grave. There they could have no such thoughts as are associated with the
village graveyard,that make a grave out of one of those moist evergreen hummocks!
Die and be buried who will,
I mean to live here still;
My nature grows ever more young
The primitive pines among.
I am reminded by my
journey how exceedingly new this country still is. You have only to travel for a few days
into the interior and back parts even of many of the old states, to come to that very
America which the Northmen, and Cabot, and Gosnold, and Smith and Raleigh visited. If
Columbus was the first to discover the islands, Americus Vespucius, and Cabot, and the
Puritans, and we their descendants, have discovered only the shores of America. While the
republic has already acquired a history worldwide, America is still unsettled and
unexplored. Like the English in New Holland, we live only on the shores of a continent
even yet, and hardly know where the rivers come from which float our navy. The very timber
and boards, and shingles, of which our houses are made, grew but yesterday in a wilderness
where the Indian still hunts and the moose runs wild. New-York has her wilderness within
her own borders; and though the sailors of Europe are familiar with the soundings of her
Hudson, and Fulton long since invented the steamboat on its waters, an Indian is still
necessary to guide her scientific men to its head-waters in the Adirondac country.
Have we even so much as
discovered and settled the shores? Let a man travel on foot along the coast, from the
Passamaquoddy to the Sabine, or to the Rio Bravo, or to wherever the end is now, if he is
swift enough to overtake it, faithfully following the windings of every inlet and of every
cape, and stepping to the music of the surfwith a desolate fishing-town once a week,
and a city's port once a month to cheer him, and putting up at the light-houses, when
there are any, and tell me if it looks like a discovered and settled country, and not
rather, for the most part, like a desolate island, and No-man's Land.
We have advanced by
leaps to the Pacific, and left many a lesser Oregon and California unexplored behind us.
Though the railroad and the telegraph have been established on the shores of Maine, the
Indian still looks out from her interior mountains over all these to the sea. There stands
the city of Bangor, fifty miles up the Penobscot, at the head of navigation for vessels of
the largest class, the principal lumber depot on this continent, with a population of
twelve thousand, like a star on the edge of night, still hewing at the forests of which it
is built, already overflowing with the luxuries and refinement of Europe, and sending its
vessels to Spain, to England, and to the West Indies for its groceries,and yet only
a few axe-men have gone "up river" into the howling wilderness which feeds it.
The bear and deer are still found within its limits; and the moose, as he swims the
Penobscot, is entangled amid its shipping and taken by foreign sailors in its harbor.
Twelve miles in the rear, twelve miles of railroad, are Orono and the Indian Island, the
home of the Penobscot tribe, and then commence the batteau and the canoe, and the military
road; and, sixty miles above, the country is virtually unmapped and unexplored, and there
still waves the virgin forest of the New World.
Next
chapter: Chesuncook
Return to Henry D. Thoreau: Works: The Maine Woods
Return to Henry D. Thoreau: Works
A
Note on the Text:
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Source:
The Maine Woods [The Writings of Henry David Thoreau (Boston:
Houghton Mifflin, 1906) p. [3]-92.
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