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THE
MOUNTAIN'S FAITH
At
eventide, upon a dreary sea,
I watched a mountain rear its hoary head To look with steady gaze in the near heaven. The earth was cold and still. No sound was heard But the dream-voices of the sleeping sea. The mountain drew its gray cloud-mantle close, Like Roman senator, erect and old, Raising aloft an earnest brow and calm, With upward look intent of steadfast faith. The sky was dim; no glory-light shone forth To crown the mountain's faith; which faltered not, But, ever hopeful, waited patiently. At morn I looked again. Expectance sat Of immanent glory on the mountain's brow. And, in a moment, lo! the glory came! An angel's hand rolled back a crimson cloud. Deep, rose-red light of wondrous tone and power — A crown of matchless splendor — graced its head, Majestic, kingly, pure as Heaven, yet warm With earthward love. A motion, like a heart With rich blood beating, seemed to sway and pulse, With might of ecstasy, the granite peak. A poem grand it was of Love Divine — An anthem, sweet and strong, of praise to God — A victory-peal from barren fields of death. Its gaze was heavenward still, but earthward too — For Love seeks not her own, and joy is full, Only when freest given. The sun shone forth, And now the mountain doffed its ruby crown For one of diamonds. Still the light streamed down; No longer chill and bleak, the morning glowed With warmth and light, and clouds of fiery hue Mantled the crystal glacier's chilly stream, And all the landscape throbbed with sudden joy.
THE RESCUE Then he started
running along the ledge
like a mountain goat, working to get around the vertical cliff above us
to find
an ascent on the other side. He was soon out of sight, although I
followed as
fast as I could. I heard him shout something, but could not make out
his words.
I know now he was warning me of a dangerous place. Then I came to a
sharp-cut
fissure which lay across my path — a gash in the
rock, as if one
of the Cyclops had struck it with his axe. It sloped very steeply for
some
twelve feet below, opening on the face of the precipice above the
glacier, and
was filled to within about four feet of the surface with flat, slaty
gravel. It
was only four or five feet across, and I could easily have leaped it
had I not
been so tired. But a rock the size of my head projected from the
slippery
stream of gravel. In my haste to overtake Muir I did not stop to make
sure this
stone was part of the cliff, but stepped with springing force upon it
to cross
the fissure. Instantly the stone melted away beneath my feet, and I
shot with
it down towards the precipice. With my peril sharp upon me I cried out
as I
whirled on my face, and struck out both hands to grasp the rock on
either side. Falling forward
hard, my hands struck
the walls of the chasm, my arms were twisted behind me, and instantly
both
shoulders were dislocated. With my paralyzed arms flopping helplessly
above my
head, I slid swiftly down the narrow chasm. Instinctively I flattened
down on
the sliding gravel, digging my chin and toes into it to check my
descent; but not
until my feet hung out over the edge of the cliff did I feel that I had
stopped. Even then I dared not breathe or stir, so precarious was my
hold on
that treacherous shale. Every moment I seemed to be slipping inch by
inch to
the point when all would give way and I would go whirling down to the
glacier. After the first
wild moment of panic
when I felt myself falling, I do not remember any sense of fear. But I
know
what it is to have a thousand thoughts flash through the brain in a
single
instant — an anguished
thought of my young wife at Wrangell, with her
immanent motherhood; an indignant thought of the insurance companies
that
refused me policies on my life; a thought of wonder as to what would
become of
my poor flocks of Indians among the islands; recollections of events
far and
near in time, important and trivial; but each thought printed upon my
memory by
the instantaneous photography of deadly peril. I had no hope of escape
at all.
The gravel was rattling past me and piling up against my head. The jar
of a
little rock, and all would be over. The situation was too desperate for
actual
fear. Dull wonder as to how long I would be in the air, and the hope
that death
would be instant — that was all.
Then came the wish that Muir would come
before I fell, and take a message to my wife. Suddenly I
heard his voice right above
me. "My God!" he cried. Then he added, "Grab that rock, man,
just by your right hand." I gurgled from
my throat, not daring to
inflate my lungs, "My arms are out." There was a
pause. Then his voice rang
again, cheery, confident, unexcited, "Hold fast; I'm going to get you
out
of this. I can't get to you on this side; the rock is sheer. I'll have
to leave
you now and cross the rift high up and come down to you on the other
side by which
we came. Keep cool." It seemed like
hours, but it was really
only about ten minutes before he got back to me. By that time I hung so
far
over the edge of the precipice that it seemed impossible that I could
last
another second. Now I heard Muir's voice, low and steady, close to me,
and it
seemed a little below. "Hold steady,"
he said.
"I'll have to swing you out over the cliff." Then I felt a
careful hand on my back,
fumbling with the waistband of my pants, my vest and shirt, gathering
all in a
firm grip. I could see only with one eye and that looked upon but a
foot or two
of gravel on the other side. "Now!" he said,
and I slid
out of the cleft with a rattling shower of stones and gravel. My head
swung
down, my impotent arms dangling, and I stared straight at the glacier,
a
thousand feet below. Then my feet came against the cliff. "Work downwards
with your
feet." I obeyed. He
drew me close to him by
crooking his arm and as my head came up past his level he caught me by
my
collar with his teeth! My feet struck the little two-inch shelf on
which he was
standing, and I could see Muir, flattened against the face of the rock
and
facing it, his right hand stretched up and clasping a little spur, his
left
holding me with an iron grip, his head bent sideways, as my weight drew
it. I
felt as alert and cool as he. "I've got to
let go of you,"
he hissed through his clenched teeth. "I need both hands here. Climb
upward with your feet." How he did it,
I know not. The miracle
grows as I ponder it. The wall was almost perpendicular and smooth. My
weight
on his jaws dragged him outwards. And yet, holding me by his teeth as a
panther
her cub and clinging like a squirrel to a tree, he climbed with me
straight up
ten or twelve feet, with only the help of my iron-shod feet scrambling
on the
rock. It was utterly impossible, yet he did it! When he landed
me on the little shelf
along which we had come, my nerve gave way and I trembled all over. I
sank down
exhausted, Muir only less tired, but supporting me. The sun had
set; the air was icy cold
and we had no coats. We would soon chill through. Muir's task of rescue
had only
begun and no time was to be lost. In a minute he was up again,
examining my
shoulders. The right one had an upward dislocation, the ball of the
humerus
resting on the process of the scapula, the rim of the cup. I told him
how, and
he soon snapped the bone into its socket. But the left was a harder
proposition. The luxation was downward and forward, and the strong,
nervous
reaction of the muscles had pulled the head of the bone deep into my
armpit.
There was no room to work on that narrow ledge. All that could be done
was to
make a rude sling with one of my suspenders and our handkerchiefs, so
as to
both support the elbow and keep the arm from swinging. Then came the
task to get down that
terrible wall to the glacier, by the only practicable way down the
mountain
that Muir, after a careful search, could find. Again I am at loss to
know how
he accomplished it. For an unencumbered man to descend it in the
deepening dusk
was a most difficult task; but to get a tottery, nerve-shaken,
pain-wracked
cripple down was a feat of positive wonder. My right arm, though in
place, was
almost helpless. I could only move my forearm; the muscles of the upper
part
simply refusing to obey my will. Muir would let himself down to a lower
shelf,
brace himself, and I would get my right hand against him, crawl my
fingers over
his shoulder until the arm hung in front of him, and falling against
him, would
be eased down to his standing ground. Sometimes he would pack me a
short
distance on his back. Again, taking me by the wrist, he would swing me
down to
a lower shelf, before descending himself. My right shoulder came out
three
times that night, and had to be reset. It was dark
when we reached the base;
there was no moon and it was very cold. The glacier provided an
operating
table, and I lay on the ice for an hour while Muir, having slit the
sleeve of
my shirt to the collar, tugged and twisted at my left arm in a vain
attempt to
set it. But the ball was too deep in its false socket, and all his
pulling only
bruised and made it swell. So he had to do up the arm again, and tie it
tight
to my body. It must have been near midnight when we left the foot of
the cliff
and started down the mountain. We had ten hard miles to go, and no
supper, for
the hardtack had disappeared ere we were half-way up the mountain. Muir
dared
not take me across the glacier in the dark; I was too weak to jump the
crevasses. So we skirted it and came, after a mile, to the head of a
great
slide of gravel, the fine moraine matter of the receding glacier. Muir
sat down
on the gravel; I sat against him with my feet on either side and my arm
over
his shoulder. Then he began to hitch and kick, and presently we were
sliding at
great speed in a cloud of dust. A full half-mile we flew, and were
almost
buried when we reached the bottom of the slide. It was the easiest part
of our
trip. Now we found
ourselves in the canyon,
down which tumbled the glacial stream, and far beneath the ridge along
which we
had ascended. The sides of the canyon were sheer cliffs. "We'll try it,"
said Muir.
"Sometimes these canyons are passable." But the way
grew rougher as we
descended. The rapids became falls and we often had to retrace our
steps to
find a way around them. After we reached the timber-line, some four
miles from
the summit, the going was still harder, for we had a thicket of alders
and
willows to fight. Here Muir offered to make a fire and leave me while
he went
forward for assistance, but I refused. "No," I said, "I'm going
to make it to the boat." All that night
this man of steel and
lightning worked, never resting a minute, doing the work of three men,
helping
me along the slopes, easing me down the rocks, pulling me up cliffs,
dashing
water on me when I grew faint with the pain; and always cheery, full of
talk
and anecdote, cracking jokes with me, infusing me with his own
indomitable
spirit. He was eyes, hands, feet, and heart to me — my caretaker,
in whom I
trusted absolutely. My eyes brim with tears even now when I think of
his utter
self-abandon as he ministered to my infirmities. About four
o'clock in the morning we
came to a fall that we could not compass, sheer a hundred feet or more.
So we
had to attack the steep walls of the canyon. After a hard struggle we
were on
the mountain ridges again, traversing the flower pastures, creeping
through
openings in the brush, scrambling over the dwarf fir, then down through
the
fallen timber. It was half-past seven o'clock when we descended the
last slope
and found the path to Glenora. Here we met a straggling party of whites
and
Indians just starting out to search the mountain for us. As I was coming
wearily up the
teetering gang-plank, feeling as if I couldn't keep up another minute,
Dr.
Kendall stepped upon its end, barring my passage, bent his bushy white
brows
upon me from his six feet of height, and began to scold: "See here,
young man; give an
account of yourself. Do you know you've kept us waiting — " Just then
Captain Lane jumped forward
to help me, digging the old Doctor of Divinity with his elbow in the
stomach
and nearly knocking him off the boat. "Oh, hell!" he
roared.
"Can't you see the man's hurt?" Mrs. Kendall
was a very tall, thin,
severe-looking old lady, with face lined with grief by the loss of her
children. She never smiled. She had not gone to bed at all that night,
but walked
the deck and would not let her husband or the others sleep. Soon after
daylight
she began to lash the men with the whip of her tongue for their
"cowardice
and inhumanity" in not starting at once to search for me. "Mr. Young is
undoubtedly lying
mangled at the foot of a cliff, or else one of those terrible bears has
wounded
him; and you are lolling around here instead of starting to his rescue.
For
shame!" When they
objected that they did not
know where we had gone, she snapped: "Go everywhere until you find
him." Her fierce
energy started the men we
met. When I came on board she at once took charge and issued her
orders, which
everybody jumped to obey. She had blankets spread on the floor of the
cabin and
laid me on them. She obtained some whisky from the captain, some water,
porridge and coffee from the steward. She was sitting on the floor with
my head
in her lap, feeding me coffee with a spoon, when Dr. Kendall came in
and began
on me again: "Suppose you
had fallen down that
precipice, what would your poor wife have done? What would have become
of your
Indians and your new church?" Then Mrs.
Kendall turned and thrust her
spoon like a sword at him. "Henry Kendall," she blazed, "shut
right up and leave this room. Have you no sense? Go instantly, I say!"
And
the good Doctor went. My
recollections of that day are not
very clear. The shoulder was in a bad condition — swollen,
bruised, very
painful. I had to be strengthened with food and rest, and Muir called
from his
sleep of exhaustion, so that with four other men he could pull and
twist that
poor arm of mine for an hour. They got it into its socket, but scarcely
had
Muir got to sleep again before the strong, nervous twitching of the
shoulder
dislocated it a second time and seemingly placed it in a worse
condition than
before. Captain Lane was now summoned, and with Muir to direct, they
worked for
two or three hours. Whisky was poured down my throat to relax my
stubborn,
pain-convulsed muscles. Then they went at it with two men pulling at
the towel
knotted about my wrist, two others pulling against them, foot braced to
foot,
Muir manipulating my shoulder with his sinewy hands, and the stocky
Captain,
strong and compact as a bear, with his heel against the yarn ball in my
armpit,
takes me by the elbow and says, "I'll set it or pull the arm off!" Well, he almost
does the latter. I am
conscious of a frightful strain, a spasm of anguish in my side as his
heel
slips from the ball and kicks in two of my ribs, a snap as the head of
the bone
slips into the cup — then kindly
oblivion. I was awakened about five o'clock in the afternoon by the return of the whole party from an excursion to the Great Glacier at the Boundary Line. Muir, fresh and enthusiastic as ever, had been the pilot across the moraine and upon the great ice mountain; and I, wrapped like a mummy in linen strips, was able to join in his laughter as he told of the big D.D.'s heroics, when, in the middle of an acre of alder brush, he asked indignantly, in response to the hurry-up calls: "Do you think I'm going to leave my wife in this forest?" GLACIER — STICKEEN VALLEY Muir, fresh and enthusiastic as ever, was the pilot of the party across the moraine and upon the great ice mountain |