IT was really a good little summer resort where
the boy
and I were pegging away at our vacation. There were the mountains
conveniently
arranged, with pleasant trails running up all of them, carefully marked
with
rustic but legible guide-posts; and there was the sea comfortably
besprinked
with islands, among which one might sail around and about, day after
day,
not to go anywhere, but just to enjoy the motion and the views; and
there
were cod and haddock swimming over the outer ledges in deep water,
waiting
to be fed with clams at any time, and on fortunate days ridiculously
accommodating in letting themselves be pulled up at the end of a long,
thick
string with a pound of lead and two hooks tied to it. There were plenty
of
places considered proper for picnics, like Jordan's Pond, and Great
Cranberry
Island, and the Russian Tea-house, and the Log Cabin Tea-house, where
you
would be sure to meet other people who also were bent on picnicking;
and
there were hotels and summer cottages, of various degrees of
elaboration,
filled with agreeable and talkable folk, most of whom were connected by
occupation or marriage with the rival colleges and universities, so
that
their ambitions for the simple life had an academic thoroughness and
regularity.
There were dinner parties, and tea parties, and garden parties, and sea
parties,
and luncheon parties, masculine and feminine, and a horse-show at Bar
Harbor,
and a gymkhana at North East, and dances at all the Harbors, where
Minerva
met Terpischore on a friendly footing while Socrates sat out on the
veranda
with Midas discussing the great automobile question over their cigars.
It was all vastly entertaining and well-ordered,
and
you would think that any person with a properly constituted mind ought
to
be able to peg through a vacation in such a place without wavering. But
when
the boy confessed to me that he felt the need of a few "days off" in
the
big woods to keep him up to his duty, I saw at once that the money
spent
upon his education had not been wasted; for here, without effort, he
announced
a great psychological fact - that
no vacation is perfect without a holiday
in it. So we packed our
camping-kit, made our peace with the family,
tied our engagements together and cut the string below the knot, and
set
out to find freedom and a little fishing in the region around Lake
Nicatous.
The south-east corner of the State of Maine is a
happy
remnant of the ancient wilderness. The railroads will carry you around
it
in a day, if you wish to go that way, making a big oval of two or three
hundred
miles along the sea and by the banks of the Penobscot, the
Mattawamkeag,
and the St. Croix. But if you wisely wish to cross the oval you must
ride,
or go afoot, or take to your canoe; probably you will have to try all
three
methods of locomotion, for the country is a mixed quantity. It reminds
me
of what I once heard in Stockholm: that the Creator, when the making of
the
rest of the world was done, had a lot of fragments of land and water,
forests
and meadows, mountains and valleys, lakes and moors, left over; and
these
He threw together to make the southern part of Sweden. I like that kind
of
a promiscuous country. The spice of life grows there. When we had
escaped
from the railroad at Enfield on the Penobscot, we slept a short night
in
a room over a country store, and took wagon the next morning for a
twenty-five
mile drive. At the somnolent little village of Burlington we found our
guides
waiting for us. They were sitting on the green at the cross-roads, with
their
paddles and axes and bundles beside them. I knew at a glance that they
were
ready and all right: Sam Dam, an old experienced, seasoned guide, and
Harry,
a good-looking young woodsman who had worked in lumber camps and on
"the
drive," but had never been "guiding" before. He was none the worse for
that,
for he belonged to the type of Maine man who has the faculty of
learning
things by doing them.
As we rattled along the road the farms grew poorer
and
sparser, until at last we came into the woods, crossed the rocky
Passadumkeag
River, and so over a succession of horseback hills to the landing-place
on
Nicatous Stream, where the canoes were hidden in the bushes. Now load
up
with the bundles and boxes, the tent, the blanket-roll, the
clothes-bag,
the provisions – all the stuff that is known as
"duffel" in New York,
and
"butins"
in French Canada, and "wangan"
in Maine – stow it
all away judiciously so that the two light craft will be well balanced;
and
then push off, bow paddles, and let us taste the joy of a new stream!
New
to the boy and me, you understand; but to the guides it was old and
familiar,
a link in a much-travelled route. The amber water rippled merrily over
the
rocky bars where the river was low, and in the still reaches it spread
out
broad and smooth, covered with white lilies and fringed with tall
grasses.
All along the pleasant way Sam entertained us with memories of the
stream.
"Ye see that grassy p'int, jest ahead of us? Three
weeks
ago I was comin' down for the mail, and there was three deer a-stannin'
on
that p'int, a buck and a doe and a fawn. And – "
"Up in them alders there's a little spring brook
comes
in. Good fishin' there in high water. But now? Well – "
"Jest beyond that bunch o' rocks last fall there
was
three fellers comin' down in a canoe, and a big bear come out and
started
'cross river. The gun was in the case in the bottom of the canoe, and
one
o' the fellers had a pistol, and so – "
Beyond a doubt it was so, always has been so, and
always
will be so – just so, on every river travelled by
canoes, until the
end
of time. The sportsman travels through a happy interval between
memories
of failure and expectation of success. But the river and the wind in
the
trees sing to him by the way, and there are wild flowers along the
banks,
and every turn in the stream makes a new picture of beauty. Thus we
came
leisurely and peacefully to the place where the river issued from the
lake;
and here we must fish awhile, for it was reported that the land-locked
salmon
lay in the narrow channel just above the dam.
Sure enough, no sooner had the fly crossed the
current
than there was a rise; and at the second cast a pretty salmon of two
and
a half pounds was hooked, played, and landed. Three more were taken, of
which
the boy got two – and his were the biggest. Fish know
nothing of the
respect
due to age. They leaped well, those little salmon, flashing clean out
of
the water again and again with silvery gleams. But on the whole they
did
not play as strongly nor as long as their brethren (called
ouananiche,)
in the wild rapids where the Upper Saguenay breaks from
Lake St. John. The same fish are always more lively, powerful, and
enduring
when they live in swift water, battling with the current, than when
they
vegetate in the quiet depths of a lake. But if a salmon must live in a
luxurious
home of that kind, Nicatous is a good one, for the water is clear, the
shores
are clean, the islands plenty, and the bays deep and winding.
At the club-house, six miles up the lake, where we
arrived
at candle-lighting, we found such kindly welcome and good company that
we
tarried for three days in that woodland Capua, discussing the further
course
of our expedition. Everybody was willing to lend us aid and comfort.
The
sociable hermit who had summered for the last twenty years in his tiny
cabin
on the point gave us friendly counsel and excellent large blueberries.
The
matron provided us with daily bags of most delicate tea, a precaution
against
the native habit of "squatting" the leaves-that is, boiling and
squeezing
them to extract the tannin. The little lady called Katharyne (a
fearless
forest-maid who roamed the woods in leathern jacket and short blue
skirt,
followed by an enormous and admiring guide, and caught big fish
everywhere)
offered to lend us anything in her outfit, from a packbasket to a
darning-needle.
It was cheerful to meet with such general encouragement in our small
adventure.
But the trouble was to decide which way to go.
Nicatous lies near the top of a watershed about a
thousand
feet high. From the region round about it at least seven canoeable
rivers
descend to civilization. The Narraguagus and the Union on the south,
the
Passadumkeag on the west, the Sisladobsis and the St. Croix on the
north,
and the two branches of the Machias or Kowahshiscook on the east; to
say
nothing of the Westogus and the Haekmataek and the Mopaug. Here were
names
to stir the fancy and paralyze the tongue. What a joy to follow one of
these
streams clear through its course and come out of the woods in our own
craft – from Nicatous to the sea!
It was perhaps something in the name, some wild
generosity
of alphabetical expenditure, that led us to the choice of the
Kowahshiscook,
or west branch of the Machias River. Or perhaps it was because neither
of
our guides had been down that stream, and so the whole voyage would be
an
exploration, with everybody on the same level of experience. An easy
day's
journey across the lake, and up Comb's Brook, where the trout were
abundant,
and by a two-mile carry into Horseshoe Lake, and then over a narrow
hardwood
ridge, brought us to Green Lake, where we camped for the night in a new
log
shanty.
Here we were at the topmost source – fons
et origo – of our chosen river. This single
spring, crystal clear and ice-cold,
gushing
out of the hillside in a forest of spruce and yellow birch and sugar
maple,
gave us the clue that we must follow for a week through the wilderness.
But how changed was that transparent rivulet after
it
entered the lake. There the water was pale green, translucent but
semi-opaque,
for at a depth of two or three feet the bottom was hardly visible. The
lake
was filled, I believe, with some minute aquatic growth which in the
course
of a thousand years or so would transform it into a meadow. But
meantime
the mystical water was inhabited, especially around the mouth of the
spring,
by huge trout to whom tradition ascribed a singular and provoking
disposition.
They would take the bait, when the fancy moved them: but the fly they
would
always refuse, ignoring it with calm disdain, or slapping at it with
their
tails and shoving it out of their way as they played on the surface in
the
summer evenings. This was the mysterious reputation of the trout of
Green
Lake, handed down from generation to generation of anglers; and this
spell
we had come to break, by finding the particular fly that would be
irresistible
to those secret epicures and the psychological moment of the day when
they
could no longer resist temptation. We tried all the flies in our books;
at
sunset, in the twilight, by the light of the stars and the rising moon,
at
dawn and at sunrise. Not one trout did we capture with the fly in Green
Lake.
Nor could we solve the mystery of those reluctant fish. The boy made a
scientific
suggestion that they got plenty of food from the cloudy water, which
served
them as a kind of soup. My guess was that their sight was impaired so
that
they could not see the fly. But Sam said it was "jest pure cussedness."
Many
things in the world happen from that cause, and as a rule it is best
not
to fret over them.
The trail from Green Lake to Campbell Lake was
easily
found; it followed down the outlet about a mile. But it had been little
used
for many years and the undergrowth had almost obliterated it. Rain had
been
falling all the morning and the bushes were wetter than water. On such
a
carry travel is slow. We had three trips to make each way before we
could
get the stuff and the canoes over. Then a short voyage across the lake,
and
another mile of the same sort of portage, after which we came out with
the
last load, an hour before sundown, on the shore of the Big Sabeo. This
lake
was quite different from the others; wide and open, with smooth
sand-beaches
all around it. The little hills which encircled it had been burned over
years
ago; and the blueberry pickers had renewed the fire from year to year.
The
landscape was light green and yellow, beneath a low, cloudy sky; no
forest
in sight, except one big, black island far across the water.
The place where we came out was not attractive;
but nothing
is more foolish than to go on looking for a pretty camp-ground after
daylight
has begun to wane. When the sun comes within the width of two
paddle-blades
of the horizon, if you are wise you will take the first bit of level
ground
within reach of wood and water, and make haste to get the camp in order
before
dark. So we pitched our blue tent on the beach, with a screen of bushes
at
the back to shelter us from the wind; broke a double quantity of fir
branches
for our bed, to save us from the midnight misery of sand in the
blankets;
cut a generous supply of firewood from a dead pine-tree which stood
conveniently
at hand; and settled down in comfort for the night.
What could have been better than our supper,
cooked in
the open air and eaten by fire-light! True, we had no plates
– they
had
been forgotten – but we never mourned for them. We
made a shift to get
along
with the tops of some emptied tin cans and the cover of a kettle; and
from
these rude platters, (quite as serviceable as the porcelain of Limoges
or
Sevres) we consumed our toast, and our boiled potatoes with butter, and
our
trout prudently brought from Horseshoe Lake, and, best of all, our
bacon.
Do you remember what Charles Lamb says about roast
pig?
How he falls into an ecstasy of laudation, spelling the very name with
small
capitals, as if the lower case were too mean for such a delicacy, and
breaking
away from the cheap encomiums of the vulgar tongue to hail it in
sonorous
Latin as princeps obsoniorum!
There is some truth in his compliments,
no doubt; but they are wasteful, excessive, imprudent. For if all this
praise
is to be lavished on plain, fresh, immature, roast pig, what adjectives
shah
we find to do justice to that riper, richer, more subtle and sustaining
viand,
broiled bacon? On roast pig a man can not work; often he can not sleep,
if
he have partaken of it immoderately. But bacon "brings to its sweetness
no
satiety.'' It strengthens the arm while it satisfies the palate. Crisp,
juicy,
savory; delicately salt as the breeze that blows from the sea; faintly
pungent
as the blue smoke of incense wafted from a clean woodfire; aromatic,
appetizing,
nourishing, a stimulant to the hunger which it appeases, 'tis the
matured
bloom and consummation of the mild little pig, spared by foresight for
a
nobler fate than juvenile masting, and brought by art and man's device
to
a perfection surpassing nature. All the problems of woodland cookery
are
best saved by the baconian method. And when we say of one escaping
great
disaster that he has "saved his bacon," we say that the physical basis
and
the quintessential comfort of his life are still untouched and secure.
Steadily fell the rain all that night, plentiful,
persistent,
drumming on the tightened canvas over our heads, waking us now and then
to
pleasant thoughts of a rising stream and good water for the morrow.
Breaking
clouds rolled before the sunrise, and the lake was all a-glitter when
we
pushed away in dancing canoes to find the outlet. This is one of the
problems
in which the voyager learns to know something of the infinite reserve,
the
humorous subtlety, the hide-and-seek quality in nature. Where is
it –
that
mysterious outlet? Behind yonder long point? Nothing here but a narrow
arm
of the lake. At the end of this deep bay? Nothing here but a little
brook
flowing in. At the back of the island? Nothing here but a landlocked
lagoon.
Must we make the circuit of the whole shore before we find the way out?
Stop
a moment. What are those two taller clumps of bushes on the edge of
this
broad curving meadow – down there in the corner, do
you see? Turn
back,
go close to the shore, swing around the nearer clump, and here we are
in
the smooth amber stream, slipping silently, furtively, down through the
meadow,
as if it would steal away for a merry jest and leave us going round and
round
the lake till nightfall.
On
such a carry travel is slow.
Easily and swiftly the canoes slide along with the
little
river, winding and doubling through the wide, wild field, travelling
three
miles to gain one. The rushes nod and glisten around us; the bending
reeds
whisper as we push between them, cutting across a point. Follow the
stream;
we know not its course, but we know that if we go with it, though it be
a
wayward and tricksy guide, it will bring us out-but not too soon, we
hope!
Here is a lumberman's dam, broad-based, solid, and
ugly,
a work of infinite labour, standing lonely, deserted, here in the heart
of
the wilderness. Now we must carry across it. But it shall help while it
hinders
us. Pry up the creaking sluice-gates, sending a fresh head of water
down
the channel along with us, lifting us over the shallows, driving us on
through
the rocky places, buoyant, alert, and rejoicing, till we come again to
a
level meadow, and the long, calm, indolent reaches of river.
Look on the right there, under the bushes. There
is a
cold, still brook, slipping into the lazy river; and there we must try
the
truth of the tales we have heard of the plentiful trout of Machias. Let
the
flies fall light by the mouth of the brook, caressing, inviting.
Nothing
there? Then push the canoe through the interlaced alders, quietly,
slowly
up the narrow stream, till a wider pool lies open before you. Now let
the
rod swing high in the air, lifting the line above the bushes, dropping
the
flies as far away as you can on the dark-brown water. See how quickly
the
answer comes, in two swift golden flashes out of the depths of the
sleeping
pool. This is a pretty brace of trout, from thirty to forty ounces of
thoroughbred fighting pluck, and the spirit that will not surrender. If
they
only knew that their strength would be doubled by acting together, they
soon
would tangle your line in the roots or break your rod in the alders,
But
all the time they are fighting against each other, making it easy to
bring
them up to the net and land them – a pair of
beauties, evenly matched
in
weight and in splendour, gleaming with rich iridescent hues of orange
and
green and peacock-blue and crimson. A few feet beyond you find another,
a
smaller fish, and then one a little larger; and so you go on up the
stream,
threading the boat through the alders, with patience and infinite
caution,
carefully casting your flies when the stream opens out to invite them,
till
you have rounded your dozen of trout and are wisely contented. Then you
go
backward down the brook – too narrow for
turning – and join the other
canoe
that waits, floating leisurely on with the river.
There is a change now in the character of the
stream.
The low hills that have been standing far away, come close together
from
either side, as if they meant to bar any further passage; and the
dreamy
river wakes up to wrestle its way down the narrow valley. There are no
long,
sleepy reaches, no wide, easy curves, now; but sharp, quick turns from
one
rocky ledge to another; and enormous stones piled and scattered along
the
river-bed; and sudden descents from level to level as if by the broad
steps
of a ruined, winding stairway. The water pushes, and rushes, and roars,
and
foams, and frets – no, it does not fret, after all,
for there is
always
something joyous and exultant in its voice, a note of the gaudia
certaminis by which the struggle
of life is animated, a note of confident
strength, sure that it can find or make a way, through all obstacles,
to
its goal. This is what I feel in a river, especially a little river
flowing
through a rough, steep country. This is what makes me love it. It seems
to
be thoroughly alive, and glad to be alive, and determined to go on, and
certain
that it will win through.
Our canoes go with the river, but no longer easily
or
lazily. Every step of the way must be carefully chosen; now close to
the
steep bank where the bushes hang over; now in mid-stream among the huge
pointed
rocks; now by the lowest point of a broad sunken ledge where the water
sweeps
smoothly over to drop into the next pool. The boy and I, using the bow
paddles,
are in the front of the adventure, guessing at the best channel,
pushing
aside suddenly to avoid treacherous stones hidden with dark moss,
dashing
swiftly down the long dancing rapids, with the shouting of the waves in
our
ears and the sprinkle of the foam in our faces.
From side to side of the wild avenue through the
forest
we turn and dart, zigzagging among the rocks. Thick woods shut us in on
either
hand, pines and hemlocks and firs and spruces, beeches and maples and
yellow-birches, alders with their brown seedcones, and mountain-ashes
with
their scarlet berries. All four of us know the way; there can be no
doubt
about that, for down the river is the only road out. But none of us
knows
the path; for this is a new stream, you remember, and between us and
our
journey's end there lie a thousand possible difficulties, accidents,
and
escapes.
The boy had one of them. His canoe struck on a
ledge,
in passing over a little fall, swung around sidewise to the current,
and
half filled with water; he and Harry had to leap out into the stream
waist-deep.
Sam and I made merry at their plight. But Nemesis was waiting for me a
few
miles below.
All the pools were full of fine trout. While the
men
were cooking lunch in a grove of balsams I waded down-stream to get
another
brace of fish. Stepping carefully among the rocks, I stood about
thigh-deep
in my rubber boots and cast across the pool. But the best bit of water
was
a little beyond my reach. A step further! There is a yellow bit of
gravel
that will give a good footing. Intent upon the flight of my flies, I
took
the step without care. But the yellow patch under the brown water was
not
gravel; it was the face of a rock polished smoother than glass. Gently,
slowly,
irresistibly, and with deep indignation I subsided backward into the
cold
pool. The rubber boots filled with water and the immersion was
complete.
Then I stood up and got the trout. When I returned to the camp-fire,
the
others laughed at me uproariously, and the boy said: "Why did you go in
swimming
with your clothes on? Were you expecting a party of ladies to come down
the
stream?"
Our tenting-places were new every night and
forsaken
every morning. Each of them had a charm of its own. One was under a
great
yellow-birch tree, close to the bank of the river. Another was on top
of
a bare ridge in the middle of a vast blueberry patch, where the
luscious
fruit, cool and fresh with the morning dew, spread an immense
breakfast-table
to tempt us. The most beautiful of all was at the edge of a fir-wood,
with
a huge rock, covered with moss and lichen, sloping down before us in a
broad,
open descent of thirty feet to the foaming stream. The full moon
climbed
into the sky as we sat around our camp-fire, and showed her face above
the
dark, pointed tree-tops. The winding vale was flooded with silver
radiance
that rested on river and rock and tree-trunk and multidinous leafage
like
an enchantment of tranquillity. The curling currents and the floating
foam,
up and down the stream, were glistening and sparkling, ever moving, yet
never
losing their position. The shouting of the water melted to music, in
which
a thousand strange and secret voices, near and far away, blending and
alternating
from rapid to rapid and fall to fall, seemed like hidden choirs,
answering
one another from place to place. The sense of struggle, of pressure and
resistance, of perpetual change, was gone; and in its stead there was a
feeling
of infinite quietude, of perfect balance and repose, of deep accord and
amity
between the watching heavens and the waiting earth, in which the
conflicts
of existence seemed very distant and of little meaning, and the peace
of
nature prophesied
"That
one, far-off divine event
Towards which the whole creation moves."
Thus for six days and nights we kept company with
our
little river, following its guidance and enjoying all its changing
moods.
Sometimes it led us through a smooth country, across natural meadows,
alder-fringed, where the bed of the stream was of amber sand and
polished
gravel, and the water rippled gently over the shallow bars, and there
were
deep holes underneath the hanging bushes, where the trout hid from the
heat
of the noon sun. Sometimes it had carved a way for itself over huge
beds
of solid rock, where, if the slope was gentle, we could dart arrow-like
along
the channel from pool to pool; but if the descent was steep and broken,
we
must get out of the canoes and let them down with ropes. Sometimes the
course
ran for miles through evergreen forests, where the fragrance of the
fir-trees
filled the air; and again we came out into the open regions where
thousands
of acres of wild blueberries were spread around us.
I call them wild because no man's hand has planted
them.
Yet they are cultivated after a fashion. Every two or three years a
district
of these hills is set on fire, and in the burned ground, the next
spring,
the berry-bushes come up innumerable. The following fall they are
loaded
so heavily with blueberries that the harvest is gathered with rakes,
each
of which has a cup underneath it into which the berries fall as the
rake
is thrust through the bushes. The land is owned by two or three large
proprietors, who employ men and women to gather the crop, paying them a
few
cents a bushel for picking. Sometimes the proprietor leases his land to
a
factor, who pays a royalty on every bushel turned in at the factory in
some
village on the railroad or by the seashore, where the berries are
canned
or dried.
One day we came upon a camp of these berry-pickers
by
the river-side. Our first notice of their proximity was the sight of a
raft
with an arm-chair tied in the centre of it, stranded upon the rocks in
a
long, fierce rapid. Imagine how this looked to us after we had been
five
days in the wilderness! An arm-chair sitting up sedately in the middle
of
the rapids! What did it mean? Perhaps some vagrant artist had been
exploring
the river, and had fixed his seat there in order to paint a picture.
Perhaps
some lazy fisherman had found a good pool amid those boiling waters,
and
had arranged to take his ease while he whipped that fishy place with
his
flies. The mystery was solved when we rounded the next point; for there
we
found the berry-pickers taking their nooning in a cluster of little
slab-shanties. They were friendly folks, men, women, and children, but
they
knew nothing about the river; had never been up farther than the place
where
the boys had left their raft in the high water a week ago; had never
been
down at all; could not tell how many falls there were below, nor
whether
the mouth was five or fifty miles away. They had come in by the road,
which
crossed the river at this point, and by the road they would go back
when
the berries were picked. They wanted to know whether we were
prospecting
for lumber or thinking of going into the berry business. We tried to
explain
the nature of our expedition to them, but I reckon we failed.
These were the only people that we really met on
our
journey, though we saw a few others far off on some bare hill. We did
not
encounter a single boat or canoe on the river. But we saw the deer come
down
to the shore, and stand shoulder-deep among the golden-rod and purple
asters.
We saw the ruffled grouse whir through the thickets and the wild ducks
skitter
down the stream ahead of us. We saw the warblers and the cedar-birds
gathering
in flocks for their southward flight, the muskrats making their houses
ready
for the winter, and the porcupines dumbly meditating and masticating
among
the branches of the young poplar-trees. We also had a delightful
interview
with a wild-cat, and almost a thrilling adventure with a bear.
The boy and I had started out from camp for an
hour of
evening fishing. He went down the stream some distance ahead of me, as
I
supposed, (though, as I afterward found, he had made a little detour
and
turned back). I was making my way painfully through a spruce thicket
when
I heard a loud crash and crackling of dead branches. "Hallo!" I cried;
"have
you fallen down? Are you hurt?" No answer. "Hallo, Teddy!" I shouted
again;
"what's the matter?" Another tremendous crash, and then dead silence.
I dropped my rod and pushed as rapidly as possible
in
the direction from which the sound had come. There I found a circle
about
fifty feet in diameter torn and trampled as if a circus had been there.
The
ground was trodden bare. Trees three and four inches thick were broken
off.
The bark of the larger trees was stripped away. The place was a ruin. A
few
paces away, among the bushes, there was a bear trap with some claws in
it,
and an iron chain attached to the middle of a clog about four feet
long.
The log hovel in which the trap had been set, we found later, a little
way
back on an old wood road. Evidently a bear had been caught there,
perhaps
two or three days before we came. lie had dragged the trap and the
chained
clog down into the thicket. There he had stayed, tearing up things
generally
in his efforts to escape from his encumbrance, and resting quietly in
the
intervals of his fury. My approach had startled him and he had made the
first
crash that I heard. Then he lay low and listened. My second
inconsiderate
shout of "Hallo, Teddy!"
had put such an enormous fear into him that
he dashed through the trees, caught the foolishly chained clog across
two
of them, and, tearing himself loose, escaped with the loss of a couple
of
toes. Thus ended our almost adventure with a bear. How glad the old
fellow
must have been!
The moral is this: If you want a bear, you should
set
your trap with the clog chained at one end, not around the middle: then
it
will trail through the woods and not break loose. But the best way is
not
to want a bear.
Our last camp was just at the head of Holmes's
Fall,
a splendid ravine down which the river rushes in two foaming leaps.
Here
in the gray of the morning we lugged our canoes and our camp-kit around
the
cataract, and then launched away for the end of our voyage. It was full
of
variety, for the river was now cutting its course through a series of
ridges,
and every mile was broken with rapids and larger falls. There was but
one
other place, however, where we had to make a portage. I believe it was
called
Grand Falls. After that, the stream was smooth and quiet. The tall
maples
and ashes and elms stood along the banks as if they had been planted
for
a park. The first faint touch of autumn colour was beginning to
illuminate
their foliage. A few weeks later the river would be a long, winding
avenue
of gold and crimson, for every tree would redauble its splendour in the
dark,
unruffled water.
At one place, where there were a few cleared
fields bordering
on the river, we saw two or three houses and barns, and supposed we
were
near the end of our voyage. This was about nine o'clock in the morning;
and
we were glad because we calculated that we could catch the ten o'clock
train
for Bar Harbor. But that calculation was far astray. We skirted the
cleared
fields and entered the woodland again. The river flowed, broad and
leisurely,
in great curves half a mile long from point to point. As we rounded one
cape
after another we said to each other, "When we pass the next turn we
shall
see the village." But that inconsiderate village seemed to flee before
us.
Still the tall trees lined the banks in placid monotony. Still the
river
curved from cape to cape, each one like all the others. We paddled hard
and
steadily. Ten o'clock passed. Every day of our journey we had lost
something – a
frying-pan, a hatchet, a paddle, a ring. This day was no exception. We
had
lost a train. Still we pushed along against the cool wind, which always
headed
us, whether we turned north, or east, or south; wondering whether the
village
that we sought was still in the world, wondering whether the river came
out
anywhere, wondering – till at last we saw, across a
lake-like expanse
of
water, the white church and the clustering houses of the far-famed
Whitneyville.
It was a quaint old town, which had seen better
days.
The big lumber-mill that had once kept it busy was burned down, and the
business
had slipped away to the prosperous neighbouring town of Machias. There
were
nice old houses with tall pillars in front of them, now falling into
decay
and slipping out of plumb. There were shops that had evidently been
closed
for years, with not even a sign "To Let" in the windows. Our dinner was
cooked
for us in a boarding-house, by a brisk young lady of about fifteen
years,
whose mother had gone to Machias for a day in the gay world. With one
exception
that pleasant young lady was the only thing in Whitneyville that did
not
have an air of having been left behind.
The exception was the establishment of Mr.
Cornelius
D., whose "General Store" beside the bridge was still open for
business,
and whose big white house stood under the elm-trees at the corner of
the
road opposite the church, with bright windows, fresh-painted walls, and
plenty
of flowers blooming around it. He was walking in the yard, dressed in a
black
broadcloth frock-coat, with a black satin necktie and a collar with
pointed
ends, – an old-fashioned Gladstonian garb. When I
heard him speak I
knew
where he came from. It was the rich accent of Killarney, just as I had
heard
it on the Irish lakes two summers ago. But sixty years had passed since
the
young Cornelius had left the shores of the River Laune and come to
dwell
by the Kowahshiscook. He had grown up with the place; had run the
lumber-mill
and the first railroad that hauled the lumber from the mill down to
tide-water;
had become the owner of the store and the proprietor of some sixteen
miles
of timber-land along the riverfront; had built the chief house of the
village
and given his children a capital education; and there he still dwelt,
with
his wife from Killarney, and with his tall sons and daughters about
him,
contented and happy, and not at all disposed to question the beneficent
order
of the universe. We had plenty of good talk that afternoon and evening,
chiefly
about the Old Country, and I had to rub up my recollections of Ross
Castle
and Kenmare House and all the places around Lough Leane, in order to
match
the old man's memory. He was interested in our expedition, too. He had
often
been far into the woods looking after his lumber. But I doubt whether
he
quite understood what it was that drew the boy and me on our idle
voyage
from Nicatous to the sea.
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