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CHAPTER XIV. We set up a Military Despotism on "Isle Aktok."—"No Better than Filibusters!"—The Seizure of the Oomiak.—The Seal-Tax.—A Case of Discipline.—Wutchee and Wunchee.—The Inside of a Husky Hut.—"Eigh, Eigh!"—An Esquimau Ball.—A Funeral.—Wutchee and Wunchee's Cookery.—The Esquimau Whip.
"Raed,
will you act as leader, or captain?" Kit asked. "I
decline," was the reply. "It is hardly fair to ask me, I think. That
honor—if you look upon it as such—is clearly yours." "Very
well, then. All hands launch the boat!" It was done. "Load
in the walrus-hides." They were
rolled up and thrown in. "Ship
the spider
too." I carried it
aboard. "Now
each man spend fifteen minutes attending to his musket! Get off all
rust! See
that the locks move easily! Load them, and fix the bayonets!" This done,
we called Guard, and embarked; not forgetting to take our dipper of
salt, the
walrus-tusks, and Wade's broken bayonet. "Give
'way!" was the order. Weymouth and
Donovan dipped the oars; and we darted out from the little cove beneath
the
ledges where for seven days we had kept our camp-fire blazing. Kit took
up a
paddle, and from the stern directed our course toward the larger island. "I
can't see what better we are than any gang of desperadoes or
filibusters,"
Raed remarked. "Circumstances
alter cases, Raed," replied Kit. "Now,
for God's sake, don't shed the blood of any of the poor wretches!" Raed
said. "Never
fear: we will manage it without killing any of them, I guess." On coming up
within a quarter of a mile of the shore, we surveyed it carefully.
There were
none of the Esquimaux in sight, however, to oppose our landing; and the
boat
was rowed along to within four or five hundred yards of the place where
the oomiak
and kayaks
had been drawn up on the shore. Landing, we drew up
our boat between two large rocks, and went along to where the oomiak
lay. "What a
great scow of a craft it is!" exclaimed Weymouth. "Not
less than thirty-five or forty feet long," Raed remarked. "Seven
feet wide, certain," said Wade. "That's
walrus-hide that it is covered with, I think," said Kit; "four or
five hides sewed together. We might have our two sewed together for a
tent." "We'll
have them do it for us after we've got our dynasty
established," said Wade. "Forward,
now!" cried Kit. We followed
their trail up from their canoes; and, after crossing several ledgy
ridges, at
length espied their encampment, distant about half a mile from the
water. It
was in a hollow, surrounded by crags and rocks. The place had probably
been
chosen on account of its sheltered situation. It was doubtless an old
haunt of
theirs. "Now
form in line, boys," Kit requested, "and move on steadily!" We did so,
Guard walking soberly behind us. There were five tents of seal-skin
clustered
together near what we discovered to be a spring, or run, of water. Half
a dozen
Huskies were in sight, moving about the camp; and, the moment our
approach was
discovered, they came pouring out to the number of thirty or forty. As
we came
up, a few scattered, and ran off among the crags; but the greater part
stood
huddled together. "Now
keep cool, boys!" Kit advised. "Don't fire in any case, unless I give
the word,—except Wade. He may fire his musket in the air when we come
close to
them, by way of giving them a foretaste of what we can do." When we had
come up facing them to within three or four yards, Kit gave the order
to halt.
Wade fired his musket. The swarthy, long-haired crowd stared hard at us
in
perfect silence. Kit then advanced a little, and pointing to us, and
then to
himself, exclaimed in a loud voice,— "Cob-loo-nak!"
("Englishmen!") And, by way
of giving emphasis to the announcement, he repeated it several times.
Then,
pointing off to the east and north, he said,— "Oomiak-sook!"
("Big ship!") And, when
this had been duly repeated, he cried out,— "Chymo—aunay!"
("The trade is far
off!") "Now
the next thing is to seize the oomiak,"
said he. "We will
make them help as bring it up here. I'll detail a party for that
purpose." He now
pointed off to the shore with the word oomiak,
and, stepping up to one of the men, laid his hand on his shoulder, and
made
signs for him to go with us. The man, a stout, short fellow, seemed
partly to
comprehend his meaning, and rather reluctantly moved out from his
fellows. "We
shall want as many as seven or eight of them," remarked Wade. "Form a
ring around this one, then, while I get out another," said Kit. But the second
one backed off as Kit approached him, gesticulating, and shouting, "Na-mick, na-mick!"
and, on Kit's
laying his hand on his shoulder, he let out a "straight left" with
considerable vim. "Donovan,"
said Kit, "take hold of him!" Don made a
rush, and, clutching one hand into his hair, shook him about, tripped
him up,
and held the point of the butcher-knife at his throat. The savage
howled and
begged. With a single effort Donovan set him on his feet, and thrust
him into
the ring. The third, fourth, and fifth man came out at a mere tap on
the
shoulder. But the sixth—a little dark fellow—jumped back when Kit
stepped up to
him, and struck with a rough dagger-shaped weapon made of a
walrus-tusk.
Indeed, it was a wonder he had not stabbed him; for the movement was
remarkably
quick and cat-like. Donovan sprang forward; but Kit caught his arm, and
dealt
him a blow with his fist that sent him reeling to the ground. Don
seized him by
the collar of his bear-skin smock, and, with a twitch and a kick, sent
him
spinning into the ring. Several of the remaining men had run to their
tents,
and now re-appeared with harpoons in their hands. Kit took his musket,
and,
walking up to one of them, struck the dart out of his hand with a tweak
of the
bayonet, and then walked him along to the ring. "I
guess seven will be enough," said Wade. "Well,
keep round them," replied Kit. "Don't let 'em get away from us.
Ready! Forward, march!" We turned to
go down to the oomiak,
and had
proceeded a few steps, when some of the savages about the huts suddenly
shouted
"Ka-ka, ka-ka!"
In an
instant their dogs, which had been growling and prowling about all the
time,
rushed after us, barking madly. Guard was a little behind us. They set
upon him
like hungry wolves. Such a barking and snarling! Kit and Wade, who
formed the
rear-guard, ran to the rescue. Wade laid on them with the butt of his
musket;
while Kit, with his bayonet, gave several of the gaunt, wolfish curs
thrusts
which speedily changed their growls to yelps of agony. The savages
cried out dismally.
Exclamations of "Mickee!"
"Arkut mickee!"
"Parut mickee!"
besought us not to
kill them. They had set them on to us, nevertheless. The dog riot
suppressed,
we moved on down to the shore. The oomiak
was then turned bottom up, and the mast which had supported their sails
thrust
under it transversely about ten feet back of the bows. This mast was a
stick of
yellow pine, from Labrador probably, about fifteen feet long. It
projected four
or five feet on each side,—far enough for them to take hold to carry
the oomiak
on it. Wade ran out to our boat and
brought one of the oars, which was thrust under, near the stern, in the
same
way. Kit then stationed six of the Huskies at the mast-pole forward,
three on
each side: the other he placed at the stern end of the scow. Weymouth
took hold
of one end of the paddle, and Donovan the other. Kit then made signs to
the
Huskies to lift at their pole. They raised it; and the sailors lifting
the
stern at the same time, and walking on, we had it fairly started. It
was pretty
heavy, however. The Esquimaux soon began to pant; seeing which, we had
them set
it down and rest every thirty or forty rods. We were near
an hour getting back to their huts. They had worked well. Their part of
the
load must have been somewhat over a hundred pounds per man, we thought. "Better
than niggers; a great deal better," Wade pronounced them. "I'm not
sure that it wouldn't be a good plan to import them into the United
States to
work on our railroads." "For
slaves, I suppose," said Raed. "No;
not for slaves. Now that slavery is fairly abolished, I am not much in
favor of
its re-establishment. Take them down to work for fair wages. Should as
lief
have them as to have the Chinese, and risk it." "That
makes me think," Kit remarked, "that I have read that some
ethnologists think the Esquimaux are a branch of the Chinese nation." "You
would send vessels like the cooly ships up here to kidnap them, I
suppose," Raed observed. "You could only carry them away by main
force. They are too much attached to their bleak home to leave it
voluntarily." "Well,
what of that," said Wade. "Don't be so dreadfully afraid to have a
little force used! If it would permanently better their condition, why
not
bring the whole nation of them farther south by force. A horde of
ignorant
savages like these don't always know what's best for them, by a long
sight. If
all these polar tribes could be brought down into a milder climate, it
would be
vastly better for them. So of the ignorant, brutish negroes of Africa:
if they
could be got out of their barbarous haunts, and brought up into the
latitude of
New York and Paris, it would be vastly better for them; and they might
be made
to do something useful in the world. Millions of hands are lying idle
in
Africa, which, under proper direction, might be turned to some account,
and
made to contribute both to the world's progress and their own
happiness. But,
of course, such savage tribes will never move of their own accord: it
remains
for more enlightened nations to move them." "That's
an argument for the re-opening of the slave-trade, I presume," Raed
remarked. "Oh,
no! You judge me too severely. I meant just what I said; nothing more." "If
what Wade proposes could be done without violent usage, suffering, and
injustice, I think it would be a great and good work," said Kit. "Well,
in that I agree with you fully," replied Raed; "but the trouble would
be to find a nation or a company that would deal justly and humanely
with such
savages." We let them
rest an hour after bringing up the oomiak;
then started them back to bring up our own boat, with our spider
and walrus-skins. This took till
nearly six o'clock, evening. The walrus-skins were then unrolled, and
spread
out on the ground. "Now we
want these sewed together," said Kit: "then we can pitch them on
their oomiak-mast
for a
tent-pole." Wade spread
out the two skins so that the edges touched each other: then, beckoning
to one
of the men, he pointed first to the edges, next to the seams where the
hide had
been sewed on the oomiak,
then
off to the huts, pronouncing the word "hennelay"
("woman"). The savage understood him in a moment, and went off into
the hut. Presently two chubby faces appeared at the doorway, but shrank
back
the moment we espied them. We could hear a great talking and urging
going on
inside. After a while, when we had gone to move the oomiak
round so as to form one side of a sort of fort, they
stole out, and came reluctantly along, the man following them,
apparently to
keep them from escaping. Seeing them approaching, Kit and Wade went to
meet
them, smiling and bowing, and pointing to the walrus-skins. They knew
what was
wanted, and fell to work to sew the two hides together, occasionally
casting
shy eyes toward us. What amused us was, that each was the exact
counterpart of
the other. They were just of a size, and of the same height. Face,
features,
and expression were identical. The man, who might possibly have been
their
father, but more probably their elder brother, saw our amazed looks,
and said
"Bi-coit-suk:"
at
least, it sounded like that. The meaning of the word we could only
guess at.
But, if bi-coit-suk
does not mean
twins, I am greatly mistaken. On questioning the man, using the word kina, and
pointing to each, we learned,
after he understood us, that one was named Wutchee,
and the other Wunchee.
The
meanings of these words I have no need to translate: they were
decidedly
significant, and amused us a good deal. For sewing the hides together
they used
an awl of bone. The thread, which was of the sinew of some animal, was
thrust through
the awl-holes like a shoemaker's waxed-end, and drawn tight. When they
had
finished, Kit gave Wutchee
(or Wunchee,
for the life of me I couldn't
tell which) a half-dozen pins from a round pin-ball he cherished, and
three or
four bright nickel five-cent bits. Wade then gave Wunchee
(?) his pen-knife, and an old cuff-button he
happened to have in his pocket. They accepted these presents as modest
as you
please; but it did seem a little droll to see them immediately fall to
licking
them all over with their tongues. They did not seem to act as if they
considered the gifts fairly their own till they had licked
them. We had not observed this practice among those
who boarded us at the Middle Savage Isles; but with these the custom
seemed a
universal one among the women. Even if the gift were a rusty nail, they
would
lick it all the same. It is said that the mothers lick their young
children
over like she-bears. Wade also gave the man who had accompanied them
the point
of his broken bayonet. The fellow looked it over, and then, getting his
harpoon, unlashed the bone blade, and substituted the bayonet-point in
its
place. "He
seems to understand its use," Kit remarked. "Hope he won't experiment
with it on us unawares." The
walrus-skins were then raised on the oomiak
mast, the edges resting on the bottoms of our boat and the oomiak,
placed on both sides. Stones laid
along the edges held them in place. Not to be too near our subjects
(for they were rather noisy, and
smelled pretty strong of rancid fat), we had placed our tent about two
hundred
feet away from their huts. While the rest had been pitching the tent,
Wade and
Weymouth had constructed a rough arch of stones, and set our spider in
the top
of it as we had previously arranged it. "Ready
for the seal!" said Wade. "They've
got seal-blubber about their huts; I saw some of the young ones eating
chunks
of it," Donovan remarked. Several of
the men had come round where we were at work, and among them the little
dark
chap who had tried to stab Kit. Wade went along to him, and pointing to
his own
mouth, and then toward the mouths of the rest of us, said, "Pussay"
("Seal"). But the
fellow was still sullen, and stared defiantly. "Have
to discipline him a little, I reckon," Kit muttered. Again Wade
pronounced the word pussay,
pointing off toward their huts. "Na-mick!"
exclaimed the Esquimau
fractiously. "Na-mick!
Ik pee-o nar-kut
bok!" swinging his arms. "Ik
pee-o askut ammee pussay!" "Any
idea what he said?" Wade asked, turning to Kit. "No:
but it was a refusal; I know by his actions.—Donovan, there's another
job for
you!" Don went off
a little to one side, and, working up toward him, made a sudden lunge,
and had
him by the hair in a twinkling. Such a shaking as the poor wretch got!
Then,
with a quick trip, Donovan laid him flat on his back, and, jerking out
his big
knife, began strapping it ominously on his boot-leg. Oh, how the
terrified
savage howled! Raed turned away in disgust. After frightening him
nearly into
fits with the knife, the stalwart sailor with a twitch threw him across
his
knee, and applied the flat of the butcher-knife to the seat of his
seal-skin
trousers with reports
that must
have been distinctly audible for a quarter of a mile. All the Huskies
came
rushing up, screaming and gesticulating. The dogs barked. There was a
general
uproar. After three or four dozen of these emphatic reminders of
arbitrary
power, Donovan set the shrieking wretch on his feet, and, still holding
on to
his hair, shouted in his face the word pussay
a dozen times in a tone that might have been heard on the neighboring
islands.
Kit and Wade and Weymouth all fell to shouting the same word; catching
the
meaning of which, more than a dozen of the Huskies, men and women, ran
to their
huts, and brought pieces of seal-blubber to the amount of several
hundred-weight. The little dark chap disappeared, and we saw no more of
him for
two days. "Now we
want some eggs," said Kit. "What's the word for egg?" "Wau-ve,"
Raed replied. Wade then
called wau-ve
several times to
the crowd. They ran off again, and in a few minutes returned with
fifteen or
twenty of the razor-bill's eggs; and a party immediately set off toward
the
cliffs for more. "I
admire their promptness," Kit observed, laughing. "They
are beginning to respect us," said Wade. "But
would it not have been far better to have come over here and asked them
kindly
for what we wanted?" Raed demanded. "No,"
said Kit; "for we should not have got it." "I
don't know about that," replied Raed. "I know
we shouldn't," said Wade. "We should have got a square na-mick
to start with; and I am inclined
to believe they would have attacked us with their daggers and harpoons.
Then we
should have been obliged to kill a lot of them in self-defence. As it
is, we
haven't hurt anybody yet. A dose of spanks won't injure any of them,
I'll
warrant." "But
this whole business is revolting,—to me, at least," Raed continued. "Oh, I
guess you will stand it!" laughed Kit. "But, Raed, if I were you, I
wouldn't show quite so much of my righteous indignation. You want your
supper as
well as the rest of us." "No
doubt." "Well,
honestly, old fellow, I could not see any better way to get it for you." "Well,
I hoped never to eat a supper procured by slave-labor." "You
won't notice any great difference in the taste, I dare say," replied
Wade. Donovan was
preparing splints from the old thwart, and covering them with the
blubber in
the arch. Ten or a dozen of the Esquimaux were looking on. When he
struck a
match on his sleeve, exclamations of wonder broke out. Matches were a
novelty
with them. From their strange looks, and glances toward each other, we
concluded that they took us to be either great saints, or devils; most
likely
the latter, from the way we had previously deported ourselves. The eggs
were
fried, and eaten with a sprinkling of salt. A fire of seal-blubber was
probably
a very extravagant luxury in the eyes of our Husky subjects. They had
no fire
while we were with them, save their flickering stone lamps. Yet the use
of
cooked food seemed not to be wholly unknown among them. On several
occasions we
saw them boiling, or at least parboiling, a duck in a stone kettle over
five or
six of their lamps set together. They often gave food cooked in this
way to
their young children, and in cases where any of their number are sick.
If wood
were plenty, they would doubtless soon come to relish it best; since it
is
undoubtedly the scarcity of wood which has driven them to raw food. Whatever we
did,—in our cooking, eating, and in all our movements,—we were sure of
a
curious and admiring crowd. There were, in all, thirty-seven of the
Esquimaux
on the island,—nine men and eleven women, adults: the remaining
seventeen
ranged from one to eighteen years apparently. So far as we could learn,
they
kept little or no record of their ages. One man, whom they called Shug-la-wina,
seemed to exercise a sort of
authority over the rest; but whether it was from any hereditary claim
to power,
or simply from the fact that he was rather larger in stature than the
others,
was not very clear. Another, the little dark chap whom Donovan had
punished for
his snappishness, was almost continually slapping and cuffing the rest
about.
His name was Twee-gock.
Besides Wutchee
and Wunchee,
there were, of the girls, one named Coonee,—a
very laughing little
creature,—and another called Iglooee
("hut-keeper" or "house-keeper"). Neither of these was so
large nor so handsome as Wutchee
or Wunchee.
The last two were Kit
and Wade's favorites. They were
quaint little creatures, just about four feet and a half in height;
chubby, and
rather fleshy; and would have weighed rising a hundred pounds,
probably. Their
faces were rather larger in proportion than our American girls, rounder
and
flatter; noses inclined to the pug order; eyes black, and pretty well
drawn up
at the inner corners; cheek-bones rather high, though their flesh
prevented
them from appearing disagreeably prominent; mouths large, showing large
white
teeth; ears big enough to hear well; hair black, straight, and
occasionally
pugged up behind; complexion swarthy, though, in their case, tolerably
clear;
feet very small; and hands sizable. Add to this description an
ever-genial,
pleased expression of countenance, with considerable sprightliness of
manner
dashed with something like naďveté;
then picture them in trousers and jackets, with their hoods, and those
irresistibly comical "tails,"—and you have Wutchee
and Wunchee,
the belles of our island kingdom. After our
supper of eggs, of which they soon brought as many as seven or eight
dozen,
Raed proposed that we should take a look at the interior of some of
their huts.
So, leaving the two sailors with Guard on sentinel duty, we went along
to the
hut belonging to Shug-la-wina,
and by signs expressed our desire to go in. He pulled aside the flap in
front,
and we stepped under. The tent-frame was of small sticks of the yellow
pine,
with a straight ridge-pole. Over the frame was thrown a covering of
cured
seal-skin or walrus-skin. A stone lamp, suspended by seal-skin thongs,
hung at
the farther end. It was burning feebly. The wick seemed to be of long
fibers of
moss. The lamp itself was simply an open bowl hollowed out of a stone,
about
the size of a two-quart measure. The oil was the fat of seals or
walruses. On
one side there was a quantity of fox-skins and bear-skins thrown down
promiscuously.
Upon these reclined Shug-la-wina's
wife Took-la-pok
and his daughter
Iglooee.
Kit made them a present
of three pins each. On the other side of the hut there was stowed a
sledge,
with runners of bone firmly lashed together with thongs. On it was a
stone pot,
hollowed, like the lamp, out of a large stone. Several harpoons stood
in the
farther corner. A coil of thong lay on the sledge; also two whips with
short
handles of bone, but exceedingly long lashes,—not less than fifteen or
twenty
feet in length. There were lying about half a dozen tusks of the
walrus, and,
on a low stone shelf, a hundred-weight or more of seal-pork. We were
turning to
go out, when Wade pointed to the end of a bow and the heads of two
arrows
protruding from under the furs. Kit took them up; but Shug-la-wina
very gravely took them from
his hands, and returned them to their hiding-place. The bow was of some
dark
bone, I thought,—possibly whalebone; the bow-string of sinew; and the
arrows of
wood, but provided with rough iron heads. The sight of these iron heads
surprised us a little, as well as the discovery in another hut of an
English
case-knife. That knife, doubtless, had a history. On going out, Wade
took up
one of the bear-skins, and pointed off to our tent. "Abb,"
replied the Esquimau, nodding. We took it
along with us. The other huts were much the same as Shug-la-wina's.
We got a bear-skin from each. Wutchee and
Wunchee gave us two. These skins, spread over a "shake-down" of moss,
made us a very comfortable bed. By this time
it was past ten o'clock; and, after arranging for regular sentinel
duty,—two
hours in each watch,—we turned in on our bear-skins, save Weymouth, who
had the
first watch. But we were horribly disturbed by the incessant barking,
growling,
and fighting of their dogs. Such a set of vicious, snarling curs do not
exist
in any other quarter of the world, I hope. They were decidedly the most
troublesome of our new subjects. Guard could not stir out away from us
without
being assaulted tooth and nail. Fights of from two to half a dozen
combatants
were in progress all night; and not only that night, but each
succeeding night.
Several times some one or other of the Huskies would rush out from
their huts,
and lay about them with their long whips, shouting "Eigh, eigh, eigh!"
We could hear the
whips snap, followed by piteous yelps and long-drawn howls. Then there
would be
silence for perhaps ten minutes: by that time another fight would be in
full
blast. "What,
for thunder sake, do they keep so many dogs for?" growled Donovan. "To
draw their sledges in winter," I heard Raed explaining to him.... [Seventeen
pages, containing, as appears from the chapter-head, an account of an
Esquimau
ball, a funeral, also of Wutchee's
and Wunchee's
cookery, are here
missing from the manuscript. The young author is now absent with the
party in
Brazil.—Ed.] Strange how
these people can live without salt! They make no use of it with their
food; eat
fresh seal-blubber, mainly, all their lives. No wonder they look
flabby! And
yet they are a happy set; always laughing, joking, and badgering each
other.
Very likely their joys are not of a very high order: but I doubt
whether
civilization would make them much happier; though, according to the
theory of
us civilized folks, it ought to. They lead an easy life,—easy, in a
savage way;
though breaking up dog-fights does keep them pretty tolerably busy.
To-day
(Aug. 7) we had a perfect dog-war. Three or four of the ravening,
howling curs
assaulted Guard under the very flap of our tent. Donovan caught up a
musket,
and, running out, pinned one of them down with the bayonet, and held
him for
some seconds. On letting him up, the dog ran off howling, with the
blood
streaming out of him. Instantly all the rest set after him, barking
like
furies. Round and round the huts they went, all snarling and snapping
at the
wounded one. Presently out rushed old Shug-la-wina
and Twee-gock
with their whips,
shouting "Eigh,
eigh!"
and laying about them. The ends of the thongs cracked like
pistol-shots. The
hair and hide flew up from the dogs' backs. As fast as one got a crack, he
would leap up and run off,
licking at the spot. How the boys laughed! "That's
a savage weapon!" exclaimed Wade. "I should about as lief take a shot
from a revolver as one of those 'cracks' on my bare skin. Moses, how it
would
sting!" "I
don't believe it would hurt through anybody's thick coat," Donovan
remarked. "Humph!
it would cut right through to a fellow's hide!" exclaimed Kit. "Nonsense!" "Bet
you don't dare to let one of them crack at you!" "I
wouldn't let one of them snap at my back, for fear he would hit my ears
or
hands instead; but I had just as lief let him crack at my leg below my
knee,
under my boot-leg, as not." "Agreed!" Kit ran to
get old Shug-la-wina
with his
whip. "Bet my
musket against yours that you can't stand three cracks on your
boot-leg!"
laughed Wade. "I take
it!" cried Donovan. In a few
minutes Kit came back with the old Esquimau and his whip. Signs were
made; and
Donovan raised his foot on a rock, exposing his boot-leg. The veteran
Husky
began to yeh-yeh!
He understood.
Standing off about twenty-five feet, he gathered the lash up; then,
swinging
the handle around his head, let the long thong go circling around him
like a
black snake. Faster and faster revolved the black gyres,—twenty times,
I have
no doubt. Presently he fetched a snap. The black thong shot out like
lightning.
Thut!
A bit of the leather flew
up, spinning in the air. Donovan caught away his leg with a profane
exclamation. We crowded round. There was a hole in the boot-leg! "Gracious!"
exclaimed Weymouth. Don jerked
off his boot. On the calf of his leg there was a mark about half an
inch wide,
and an inch or more in length, red as blood, and rapidly puffing up. "Have
another?" demanded Wade. "Not
much! One will do for me!" We naturally picked up a good many words of their language; though of its structure—if it have any—we learned little. Other anxieties occupied our minds so fully, that we were not very attentive scholars. Like the Indians of our Territories, the Esquimaux seemed much addicted to running a whole sentence into a single word, or what sounded like it, of immense length. These sentence-words we could make very little of. But of their detached words, standing for familiar things, I add a vocabulary from such as I can now call to mind:—
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