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MOONLIGHT IN GLACIER BAY
To heaven swells a mighty psalm of praise; Its music-sheets are glaciers, vast and white. Sky-piercing peaks the voiceless chorus raise, To fill with ecstasy the wond'ring night.
Complete, with every part in sweet accord, Th' adoring breezes waft it up, on wings Of beauty-incense, giving to the Lord The purest sacrifice glad Nature brings.
The list'ning stars with rapture beat and glow; The moon forgets her high, eternal calm To shout her gladness to the sea below, Whose waves are silver tongues to join the psalm.
Those everlasting snow-fields are not cold; This icy solitude no barren waste. The crystal masses burn with love untold; The glacier-table spreads a royal feast.
Fairweather! Crillon! Warders at Heaven's gate! Hoar-headed priests of Nature's inmost shrine! Strong seraph forms in robes immaculate! Draw me from earth; enlighten, change, refine;
Till I, one little note in this great song, Who seem a blot upon th' unsullied white, No discord make — a note high, pure and strong —
Set in the silent music of the night.
THE DISCOVERY
Will teach you more of man, Of moral evil and of good, Than all the sages can." "Look at that, now," he
would
say, when, on turning a point, a wonderful vista of island-studded sea
between
mountains, with one of Alaska's matchless sunsets at the end, would
wheel into
sight. "Why, it looks as if these giants of God's great army had just
now
marched into their stations; every one placed just right, just right!
What
landscape gardening! What a scheme of things! And to think that He
should plan
to bring us feckless creatures here at the right moment, and then flash
such glories
at us! Man, we're not worthy of such honor!" Thus Muir was always
discovering to me
things which I would never have seen myself and opening up to me new
avenues of
knowledge, delight and adoration. There was something so intimate in
his theism
that it purified, elevated and broadened mine, even when I could not
agree with
him. His constant exclamation when a fine landscape would burst upon
our view,
or a shaft of light would pierce the clouds and glorify a mountain,
was,
"Praise God from whom all blessings flow!" Two or three great
adventures stand out
prominently in this wonderful voyage of discovery. Two weeks from home
brought
us to Icy Straits and the homes of the Hoonah tribe. Here the knowledge
of the
way on the part of our crew ended. We put into the large Hoonah village
on
Chichagof Island. After the usual preaching and census-taking, we took
aboard a
sub-chief of the Hoonahs, who was a noted seal hunter and, therefore,
able to
guide us among the ice-floes of the mysterious Glacier Bay of which we
had
heard. Vancouver's chart gave us no intimation of any inlet whatever;
but the
natives told of vast masses of floating ice, of a constant noise of
thunder
when they crashed from the glaciers into the sea; and also of fearsome
bays and
passages full of evil spirits which made them very perilous to navigate. In one bay there was said
to be a giant
devil-fish with arms as long as a tree, lurking in malignant patience,
awaiting
the passage that way of an unwary canoe, when up would flash those
terrible arms
with their thousand suckers and, seizing their prey, would drag down
the men to
the bottom of the sea, there to be mangled and devoured by the horrid
beak.
Another deep fiord was the abode of Koosta-kah, the Otter-man, the
mischievous
Puck of Indian lore, who was waiting for voyagers to land and camp,
when he
would seize their sleeping forms and transport them a dozen miles in a
moment,
or cradle them on the tops of the highest trees. Again there was a most
rapacious and ferocious killer-whale in a piece of swift water, whose
delight
it was to take into his great, tooth-rimmed jaws whole canoes with
their crews
of men, mangling them and gulping them down as a single mouthful. Many
were
these stories of fear told us at the Hoonah village the night before we
started
to explore the icy bay, and our credulous Stickeens gave us rather
broad hints
that it was time to turn back. "There are no natives up
in that
region; there is nothing to hunt; there is no gold there; why do you
persist in
this cultus coly (aimless journey)? You are likely to meet death and
nothing
else if you go into that dangerous region." All these stories made us
the more
eager to explore the wonders beyond, and we hastened away from Hoonah
with our
guide aboard. A day's sail brought us to a little, heavily wooded
island near
the mouth of Glacier Bay. This we named Pleasant Island. As we broke camp in the
morning our
guide said: "We must take on board a supply of dry wood here, as there
is
none beyond." Leaving this last green
island we steered
northwest into the great bay, the country of ice and bare rocks. Muir's
excitement was increasing every moment, and as the majestic arena
opened before
us and the Muir, Geicke, Pacific and other great glaciers (all nameless
as yet)
began to appear, he could hardly contain himself. He was impatient of
any
delay, and was constantly calling to the crew to redouble their efforts
and get
close to these wonders. Now the marks of recent glaciation showed
plainly. Here
was a conical island of gray granite, whose rounded top and symmetrical
shoulders were worn smooth as a Scotch monument by grinding glaciers.
Here was
a great mountain slashed sheer across its face, showing sharp edge and
flat
surface as if a slab of mountain size had been sawed from it. Yonder
again
loomed a granite range whose huge breasts were rounded and polished by
the
resistless sweep of that great ice mass which Vancouver saw filling the
bay. Soon the icebergs were
charging down
upon us with the receding tide and dressing up in compact phalanx when
the tide
arose. First would come the advance guard of smaller bergs, with here
and there
a house-like mass of cobalt blue with streaks of white and deeper
recesses of
ultra-marine; here we passed an eight-sided, solid figure of
bottle-green ice;
there towered an antlered formation like the horns of a stag. Now we
must use
all caution and give the larger icebergs a wide berth. They are
treacherous
creatures, these icebergs. You may be paddling along by a peaceful
looking
berg, sleeping on the water as mild and harmless as a lamb; when
suddenly he
will take a notion to turn over, and up under your canoe will come a
spear of
ice, impaling it and lifting it and its occupants skyward; then,
turning over,
down will go canoe and men to the depths. Our progress up the sixty
miles of
Glacier Bay was very slow. Three nights we camped on the bare granite
rock
before we reached the limit of the bay. All vegetation had disappeared;
hardly
a bunch of grass was seen. The only signs of former life were the
sodden and splintered
spruce and fir stumps that projected here and there from the bases of
huge
gravel heaps, the moraine matter of the mighty ice mass that had
engulfed them.
They told the story of great forests which had once covered this whole
region,
until the great sea of ice of the second glacial period overwhelmed and
ground
them down, and buried them deep under its moraine matter. When we
landed there
were no level spots on which to pitch our tent and no sandy beaches or
gravel
beds in which to sink our tent-poles. I learned from Muir the gentle
art of
sleeping on a rock, curled like a squirrel around a boulder. We passed by Muir Glacier
on the other
side of the bay, seeking to attain the extreme end of the great fiord.
We
estimated the distance by the tide and our rate of rowing, tracing the
shore-line and islands as we went along and getting the points of the
compass
from our little pocket instrument. Rain was falling almost
constantly
during the week we spent in Glacier Bay. Now and then the clouds would
lift,
showing the twin peaks of La Perouse and the majestic summits of Mts.
Fairweather and Crillon. These mighty summits, twelve thousand, fifteen
thousand and sixteen thousand feet high, respectively, pierced the sky
directly
above us; sometimes they seemed to be hanging over us threateningly.
Only once
did the sky completely clear; and then was preached to us the wonderful
Sermon
of Glacier Bay. Early that morning we
quitted our camp
on a barren rock, steering towards Mt. Fairweather. A night of
sleepless discomfort
had ushered in a bleak gray morning. Our Indians were sullen and
silent, their
scowling looks resenting our relentless purpose to attain to the head
of the
bay. The air was damp and raw, chilling us to the marrow. The
forbidding
granite mountains, showing here and there through the fog, seemed
suddenly to
push out threatening fists and shoulders at us. All night long the
ice-guns had
bombarded us from four or five directions, when the great masses of ice
from
living glaciers toppled into the sea, crashing and grinding with the
noise of
thunder. The granite walls hurled back the sound in reiterated peals,
multiplying its volume a hundredfold. There was no Love
apparent on that
bleak, gray morning: Power was there in appalling force. Visions of
those
evergreen forests that had once clung trustingly to these mountain
walls, but
had been swept, one and all, by the relentless forces of the ice and
buried
deep under mountains of moraine matter, but added to the present
desolation. We
could not enjoy; we could only endure. Death from overturning icebergs,
from
charging tides, from mountain avalanche, threatened us. Suddenly I heard Muir
catch his breath
with a fervent ejaculation. "God, Almighty!" he said. Following his
gaze towards Mt. Crillon, I saw the summit highest of all crowned with
glory
indeed. It was not sunlight; there was no appearance of shining; it was
as if
the Great Artist with one sweep of His brush had laid upon the
king-peak of all
a crown of the most brilliant of all colors — as if a pigment,
perfectly
made and thickly spread, too delicate for crimson, too intense for
pink, had
leaped in a moment upon the mountain top; "An awful rose of dawn."
The summit nearest Heaven had caught a glimpse of its glory! It was a
rose
blooming in ice-fields, a love-song in the midst of a stern epic, a
drop from
the heart of Christ upon the icy desolation and barren affections of a
sin-frozen world. It warmed and thrilled us in an instant. We who had
been dull
and apathetic a moment before, shivering in our wet blankets, were
glowing and
exultant now. Even the Indians ceased their paddling, gazing with faces
of awe
upon the wonder. Now, as we watched that kingly peak, we saw the color
leap to
one and another and another of the snowy summits around it. The monarch
had a
whole family of royal princes about him to share his glory. Their
radiant
heads, ruby crowned, were above the clouds, which seemed to form their
silken
garments. As we looked in ecstatic
silence we saw
the light creep down the mountains. It was changing now. The glowing
crimson
was suffused with soft, creamy light. If it was less divine, it was
more warmly
human. Heaven was coming down to man. The dark recesses of the
mountains began
to lighten. They stood forth as at the word of command from the Master
of all;
and as the changing mellow light moved downward that wonderful
colosseum
appeared clearly with its battlements and peaks and columns, until the
whole
majestic landscape was revealed. Now we saw the design and
purpose of it
all. Now the text of this great sermon was emblazoned across the
landscape — "God is Love"; and
we understood that these relentless forces that had pushed the molten
mountains
heavenward, cooled them into granite peaks, covered them with snow and
ice,
dumped the moraine matter into the sea, filling up the sea, preparing
the world
for a stronger and better race of men (who knows?), were all a part of
that
great "All things" that "work together for good." Our minds cleared with
the landscape;
our courage rose; our Indians dipped their paddles silently, steering
without
fear amidst the dangerous masses of ice. But there was no profanity in
Muir's
exclamation, "We have met with God!" A lifelong devoutness of
gratitude filled us, to think that we were guided into this most
wonderful room
of God's great gallery, on perhaps the only day in the year when the
skies were
cleared and the sunrise, the atmospheric conditions and the point of
view all
prepared for the matchless spectacle. The discomforts of the voyage,
the toil,
the cold and rain of the past weeks were a small price to pay for one
glimpse
of its surpassing loveliness. Again and again Muir would break out,
after a
long silence of blissful memory, with exclamations: "We saw it; we saw it! He
sent us
to His most glorious exhibition. Praise God, from whom all blessings
flow!" Two or three inspiring
days followed.
Muir must climb the most accessible of the mountains. My weak shoulders
forbade
me to ascend more than two or three thousand feet, but Muir went more
than
twice as high. Upon two or three of the glaciers he climbed, although
the speed
of these icy streams was so great and their "frozen cataracts" were
so frequent, that it was difficult to ascend them. I began to understand
Muir's whole new
theory, which theory made Tyndall pronounce him the greatest authority
on
glacial action the world had seen. He pointed out to me the mechanical
laws
that governed those slow-moving, resistless streams; how they carved
their own
valleys; how the lower valley and glacier were often the resultant in
size and
velocity of the two or three glaciers that now formed the branches of
the main
glaciers; how the harder strata of rock resisted and turned the masses
of ice;
how the steely ploughshares were often inserted into softer leads and a
whole mountain
split apart as by a wedge. Muir would explore all
day long, often
rising hours before daylight and disappearing among the mountains, not
coming
to camp until after night had fallen. Again and again the Indians said
that he
was lost; but I had no fears for him. When he would return to camp he
was so
full of his discoveries and of the new facts garnered that he would
talk until
long into the night, almost forgetting to eat. Returning down the bay,
we passed the
largest glacier of all, which was to bear Muir's name. It was then
fully a mile
and a half in width, and the perpendicular face of it towered from four
to
seven hundred feet above the surface of the water. The ice masses were
breaking
off so fast that we were forced to put off far from the face of the
glacier.
The great waves threatened constantly to dash us against the sharp
points of
the icebergs. We wished to land and scale the glacier from the eastern
side. We
rowed our canoe about half a mile from the edge of the glacier, but,
attempting
to land, were forced hastily to put off again. A great wave, formed by
the
masses of ice breaking off into the water, threatened to dash our
loaded canoe
against the boulders on the beach. Rowing further away, we tried it
again and
again, with the same result. As soon as we neared the shore another
huge wave
would threaten destruction. We were fully a mile and a half from the
edge of
the glacier before we found it safe to land.
Returning down Glacier Bay, we visited the largest glacier of all, which was to bear Muir's name Muir spent a whole day
alone on
the glacier, walking over twenty miles across what he called the
glacial lake
between two mountains. A cold, penetrating, mist-like rain was falling,
and
dark clouds swept up the bay and clung about the shoulders of the
mountains.
When night approached and Muir had not returned, I set the Indians to
digging
out from the bases of the gravel hills the frazzled stumps and logs
that
remained of the buried forests. These were full of resin and burned
brightly. I
made a great fire and cooked a good supper of venison, beans, biscuit
and
coffee. When pitchy darkness gathered, and still Muir did not come,
Tow-a-att
made some torches of fat spruce, and taking with him Charley, laden
with more
wood, he went up the beach a mile and a half, climbed the base of the
mountain
and kindled a beacon which flashed its cheering rays far over the
glacier. Muir came stumbling into
camp with
these two Indians a little before midnight, very tired but very happy.
"Ah!" he sighed, "I'm glad to be in camp. The glacier almost got
me this time. If it had not been for the beacon and old Tow-a-att, I
might have
had to spend the night on the ice. The crevasses were so many and so
bewildering in their mazy, crisscross windings that I was actually
going
farther into the glacier when I caught the flash of light." I brought him to the tent
and placed
the hot viands before him. He attacked them ravenously, but presently
was
talking again: "Man, man; you ought to
have been
with me. You'll never make up what you have lost to-day. I've been
wandering
through a thousand rooms of God's crystal temple. I've been a thousand
feet
down in the crevasses, with matchless domes and sculptured figures and
carved
ice-work all about me. Solomon's marble and ivory palaces were nothing
to it.
Such purity, such color, such delicate beauty! I was tempted to stay
there and
feast my soul, and softly freeze, until I would become part of the
glacier.
What a great death that would be!" Again and again I would
have to remind
Muir that he was eating his supper, but it was more than an hour before
I could
get him to finish the meal, and two or three hours longer before he
stopped
talking and went to sleep. I wish I had taken down his descriptions.
What
splendid reading they would make! But scurries of snow
warned us that
winter was coming, and, much to the relief of our natives, we turned
the prow
of our canoe towards Chatham Strait again. Landing our Hoonah guide at
his
village, we took our route northward again up Lynn Canal. The beautiful
Davison
Glacier with its great snowy fan drew our gaze and excited our
admiration for
two days; then the visit to the Chilcats and the return trip commenced.
Bowling
down the canal before a strong north wind, we entered Stevens Passage,
and
visited the two villages of the Auk Indians, a squalid, miserable
tribe. We
camped at the site of what is now Juneau, the capital of Alaska, and no
dream
of the millions of gold that were to be taken from those mountains
disturbed
us. If we had known, I do not think that we would have halted a day or
staked a
claim. Our treasures were richer than gold and securely laid up in the
vaults
of our memories. An excursion into Taku
Bay, that
miniature of Glacier Bay, with its then three living glaciers; a visit
to two
villages of the Taku Indians; past Ft. Snettisham, up whose arms we
pushed,
mapping them; then to Sumdum. Here the two arms of Holkham Bay, filled
with
ice, enticed us to exploration, but the constant rains of the fall had
made the
ice of the glaciers more viscid and the glacier streams more rapid;
hence the
vast array of icebergs charging down upon us like an army, spreading
out in
loose formation and then gathering into a barrier when the tide turned,
made
exploration to the end of the bay impossible. Muir would not give up
his quest
of the mother glacier until the Indians frankly refused to go any
further; and
old Tow-a-att called our interpreter, Johnny, as for a counsel of
state, and
carefully set forth to Muir that if he persisted in his purpose of
pushing
forward up the bay he would have the blood of the whole party on his
hands. Said the old chief: "My
life is of
no account, and it does not matter whether I live or die; but you shall
not
sacrifice the life of my minister." I laughed at Muir's
discomfiture and
gave the word to retreat. This one defeat of a victorious expedition so
weighed
upon Muir's mind that it brought him back from the California coast
next year
and from the arms of his bride to discover and climb upon that glacier. On down now through
Prince Frederick
Sound, past the beautiful Norris Glacier, then into Le Conte Bay with
its
living glacier and icebergs, across the Stickeen flats, and so joyfully
home
again, Muir to take the November steamboat back to his sunland. I have made many voyages
in that great
Alexandrian Archipelago since, traveling by canoe over fifteen thousand
miles — not one of them a dull
one — through its intricate
passages; but none compared, in the number and intensity of its
thrills, in the
variety and excitement of its incidents and in its lasting impressions
of
beauty and grandeur, with this first voyage when we groped our way
northward
with only Vancouver's old chart as our guide. |