<h2><SPAN name="IV" id="IV"></SPAN>IV</h2>
<h3>SUNDAY, JULY 26</h3>
<p>The note of the white-throated sparrow was the first heard in the morning, and
with this all the woods rang. Though commonly unseen, their simple <i>ah,
te-te-te, te-te-te, te-te-te</i>, so sharp and piercing, was as distinct to the
ear as the passage of a spark of fire shot into the darkest of the forest would
be to the eye. We were commonly aroused by their lively strain very early. What
a glorious time they must have in that wilderness, far from mankind!</p>
<p>I told the Indian that we would go to church to Chesuncook this morning, some
fifteen miles. It was settled weather at last. A few swallows flitted over the
water, we heard Maryland yellow-throats along the shore, the notes of the
chickadee, and, I believe, redstarts. Moose-flies of large size
pursued us in midstream.</p>
<p>The Indian thought that we should lie by on Sunday. Said he, “We come
here lookum things, look all round, but come Sunday look up all that, and then
Monday look again.”</p>
<p>He spoke of an Indian of his acquaintance who had been with some ministers to
Katahdin and had told him how they conducted. This he described in a low and
solemn voice. “They make a long prayer every morning and night, and at
every meal. Come Sunday, they stop ’em, no go at all that day—keep
still—preach all day—first one, then another, just like church. Oh,
ver’ good men. One day going along a river, they came to the body of a
man in the water, drowned good while. They go right ashore—stop there, go
no farther that day—they have meeting there, preach and pray just like
Sunday. Then they go back and carry the body with them. Oh, they ver’
good men.”</p>
<p>I judged from this account that their every camp was a camp-meeting, and that
they wanted an opportunity to preach somewhere more than to see Katahdin.</p>
<p>However, the Indian added, plying the paddle all the while, that if we would go
along he must go with us, he our man, and he suppose that if he no takum pay
for what he do Sunday then ther’s no harm, but if he takum pay then
wrong. I told him that he was stricter than white men. Nevertheless, I noticed
that he did not forget to reckon in the Sundays at last.</p>
<p>He appeared to be a very religious man, and said his prayers in a loud voice,
in Indian, kneeling before the camp, morning and evening—sometimes
scrambling up in haste when he had forgotten this, and saying them with great
rapidity. In the course of the day he remarked, “Poor man rememberum God
more than rich.”</p>
<p>We soon passed the island where I had camped four years before. The deadwater,
a mile or two below it, the Indian said was “a great place for moose.” We saw
the grass bent where a moose came out the night before, and the Indian said
that he could smell one as far as he could see him, but he added that if he
should see five or six to-day close by canoe he no shoot ’em.
Accordingly, as he was the only one of the party who had a gun, or had come
a-hunting, the moose were safe.</p>
<p>Just below this a cat owl flew heavily over the stream, and he, asking if I
knew what it was, imitated very well the common <i>hoo, hoo, hoo, hoorer,
hoo</i>, of our woods.</p>
<p>We carried a part of the baggage about Pine Stream Falls, while the Indian went
down in the canoe. A Bangor merchant had told us that two men in his employ
were drowned some time ago while passing these falls in a bateau, and a third
clung to a rock all night and was taken off in the morning. There were
magnificent great purple fringed orchises on this carry and the neighboring
shores. I measured the largest canoe birch which I saw in this journey near the
end of the carry. It was fourteen and one half feet in circumference at two
feet from the ground, but at five feet divided into three parts. The Indian cut
a small woody knob as big as a filbert from the trunk of a fir, apparently an
old balsam vesicle filled with wood, which he said was good medicine.</p>
<p>After we had embarked and gone half a mile, my companion remembered that he had
left his knife, and we paddled back to get it, against the strong and swift
current. This taught us the difference between going up and down the stream,
for while we were working our way back a quarter of a mile, we should have gone
down a mile and half at least. So we landed, and while he and the Indian were
gone back for it, I watched the motions of the foam, a kind of white waterfowl
near the shore, forty or fifty rods below. It alternately appeared and
disappeared behind the rock, being carried round by an eddy.</p>
<p>Immediately below these falls was the Chesuncook Deadwater, caused by the
flowing back of the lake. As we paddled slowly over this, the Indian told us a
story of his hunting thereabouts, and something more interesting about himself.
It appeared that he had represented his tribe at Augusta, and once at
Washington. He had a great idea of education, and would occasionally break out
into such expressions as this, “Kademy—good thing—I suppose
they usum Fifth Reader there. You been college?”</p>
<p>We steered across the northwest end of the lake. It is an agreeable change to
cross a lake after you have been shut up in the woods, not only on account of
the greater expanse of water, but also of sky. It is one of the surprises which
Nature has in store for the traveler in the forest. To look down, in this case,
over eighteen miles of water was liberating and civilizing even. The lakes also
reveal the mountains, and give ample scope and range to our thought. Already there
were half a dozen log huts about this end of the lake, though so far from a
road. In these woods the earliest settlements are clustering about the lakes,
partly, I think, for the sake of the neighborhood as the oldest clearings.
Water is a pioneer which the settler follows, taking advantage of its
improvements.</p>
<p>About noon we turned northward up a broad kind of estuary, and at its northeast
corner found the Caucomgomoc River, and after going about a mile from the lake
reached the Umbazookskus. Our course was up the Umbazookskus, but as the Indian
knew of a good camping-place, that is, a cool place where there were few
mosquitoes, about half a mile farther up the Caucomgomoc, we went thither. So
quickly we changed the civilizing sky of Chesuncook for the dark wood of the
Caucomgomoc. On reaching the Indian’s camping-ground on the south side,
where the bank was about a dozen feet high, I read on the trunk of a fir tree
blazed by
an axe an inscription in charcoal which had been left by him. It was surmounted
by a drawing of a bear paddling a canoe, which he said was the sign used by his
family always. The drawing, though rude, could not be mistaken for anything but
a bear, and he doubted my ability to copy it. The inscription ran thus. I
interline the English of his Indian as he gave it to me.</p>
<p class='center'> (The figure of a bear in a boat.)<br/>
July 26<br/>
1853</p>
<hr style="width: 15%;" />
<div class='center'>
<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="wealone">
<tr><td colspan='2'><i>niasoseb</i></td></tr>
<tr><td colspan='2'>We alone Joseph</td></tr>
<tr><td align='left'><i>Polis</i></td><td align='left'><i>elioi</i></td></tr>
<tr><td align='left'>Polis</td><td align='left'>start</td></tr>
<tr><td align='left'><i>sia</i></td><td align='left'><i>olta</i></td></tr>
<tr><td align='left'>for</td><td align='left'>Oldtown</td></tr>
<tr><td align='left'><i>onke</i></td><td align='left'><i>ni</i></td></tr>
<tr><td align='left'>right away</td><td align='left'></td></tr>
<tr><td align='left'><i>quambi</i></td><td align='left'></td></tr>
</table></div>
<hr style="width: 15%;" />
<p class='center'>July 15<br/>
1855<br/>
<i>niasoseb</i></p>
<p>He added now below:—</p>
<p class='center'>1857<br/>
July 26<br/>
Jo. Polis</p>
<p>This was one of his homes. I saw where he had sometimes stretched his
moose-hides on the sunny north side of the river where there was a narrow
meadow.</p>
<p>After we had selected a place for our camp, and kindled our fire, almost
exactly on the site of the Indian’s last camp here, he, looking up,
observed, “That tree danger.”</p>
<p>It was a dead part, more than a foot in diameter, of a large canoe birch, which
branched at the ground. This branch, rising thirty feet or more, slanted
directly over the spot which we had chosen for our bed. I told him to try it
with his axe, but he could not shake it perceptibly, and, therefore, seemed
inclined to disregard it, and my companion expressed his willingness to run the
risk. But it seemed to me that we should be fools to lie under it, for though the lower
part was firm, the top, for aught we knew, might be just ready to fall, and we
should at any rate be very uneasy if the wind arose in the night. It is a
common accident for men camping in the woods to be killed by a falling tree. So
the camp was moved to the other side of the fire.</p>
<p>The Indian said that the Umbazookskus, being a dead stream with broad meadows,
was a good place for moose, and he frequently came a-hunting here, being out
alone three weeks or more from Oldtown. He sometimes, also, went a-hunting to
the Seboois Lakes, taking the stage, with his gun and ammunition, axe and
blankets, hard-bread and pork, perhaps for a hundred miles of the way, and
jumped off at the wildest place on the road, where he was at once at home, and
every rod was a tavern-site for him. Then, after a short journey through the
woods, he would build a spruce-bark canoe in one day, putting but few ribs into
it, that it might be light, and, after doing his hunting with it on the
lakes, would return with his furs the same way he had come. Thus you have an
Indian availing himself of the advantages of civilization, without losing any
of his woodcraft, but proving himself the more successful hunter for it.</p>
<p>This man was very clever and quick to learn anything in his line. Our tent was
of a kind new to him, but when he had once seen it pitched it was surprising
how quickly he would find and prepare the pole and forked stakes to pitch it
with, cutting and placing them right the first time, though I am sure that the
majority of white men would have blundered several times.</p>
<p>Now I thought I would observe how he spent his Sunday. While I and my companion
were looking about at the trees and river he went to sleep. Indeed, he improved
every opportunity to get a nap, whatever the day.</p>
<p>Rambling about the woods at this camp, I noticed that they consisted chiefly of
firs, spruce, red maple, birch, and, along the river, the hoary alder. I could
trace the outlines of large birches that had fallen long ago, collapsed and
rotted and turned to soil, by faint yellowish-green lines of featherlike moss,
eighteen inches wide and twenty or thirty feet long, crossed by other similar
lines.</p>
<p>Wild as it was, it was hard for me to get rid of the associations of the
settlements. Any steady and monotonous sound, to which I did not distinctly
attend, passed for a sound of human industry. The waterfalls which I heard were
not without their dams and mills to my imagination; and several times I found
that I had been regarding the steady rushing sound of the wind from over the
woods beyond the rivers as that of a train of cars. Our minds anywhere, when
left to themselves, are always thus busily drawing conclusions from false
premises.</p>
<p>I asked the Indian to make us a sugar-bowl of birch bark, which he did, using the great
knife which dangled in a sheath from his belt; but the bark broke at the
corners when he bent it up, and he said it was not good—that there was a
great difference in this respect between the bark of one canoe birch and that
of another.</p>
<p>My companion, wishing to distinguish between the black and white spruce, asked
Polis to show him a twig of the latter, which he did at once, together with the
black; indeed, he could distinguish them about as far as he could see them. As
the two twigs appeared very much alike, my companion asked the Indian to point
out the difference; whereupon the latter, taking the twigs, instantly remarked,
as he passed his hand over them successively in a stroking manner, that the
white was rough, that is, the needles stood up nearly perpendicular, but the
black smooth, that is, as if bent down. This was an obvious difference, both to
sight and touch.</p>
<p>I asked him to get some black spruce root and make some thread. Whereupon, without
looking up at the trees overhead, he began to grub in the ground, instantly
distinguishing the black spruce roots, and cutting off a slender one, three or
four feet long, and as big as a pipestem, he split the end with his knife, and
taking a half between the thumb and forefinger of each hand, rapidly separated
its whole length into two equal semi-cylindrical halves. Then, giving me
another root, he said, “You try.”</p>
<p>But in my hands it immediately ran off one side, and I got only a very short
piece. Though it looked easy, I found that there was a great art in splitting
these roots. The split is skillfully humored by bending short with this hand or
that, and so kept in the middle. He then took off the bark from each half,
pressing a short piece of cedar bark against the convex side with both hands,
while he drew the root upward with his teeth. An Indian’s teeth are
strong, and
I noticed that he used his often where we should have used a hand. They
amounted to a third hand. He thus obtained in a moment a very neat, tough, and
flexible string, which he could tie into a knot, or make into a fishline even.
He said that you would be obliged to give half a dollar for spruce root enough
for a canoe, thus prepared.</p>
<p>He had discovered the day before that his canoe leaked a little, and said that
it was owing to stepping into it violently. I asked him where he would get
pitch to mend it with, for they commonly use hard pitch, obtained of the whites
at Oldtown. He said that he could make something very similar, and equally
good, of material which we had with us; and he wished me to guess what. But I
could not, and he would not tell me, though he showed me a ball of it when
made, as big as a pea and like black pitch, saying, at last, that there were
some things which a man did not tell even his wife.</p>
<p>Being curious to see what kind of fishes there were in this dark, deep,
sluggish river, I cast in my line just before night, and caught several small
sucker-like fishes, which the Indian at once rejected, saying that they were
good for nothing. Also, he would not touch a pout, which I caught, and said
that neither Indians nor whites thereabouts ever ate them. But he said that
some small silvery fishes, which I called white chivin, were the best fish in
the Penobscot waters, and if I would toss them up the bank to him, he would
cook them for me. After cleaning them, not very carefully, leaving the heads
on, he laid them on the coals and so broiled them.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <SPAN name="illus04"></SPAN> <SPAN href="images/img06.jpg"><ANTIMG src="images/img06th.jpg" width-obs="283" height-obs="400" alt="Fishing" title="" /></SPAN> <span class="caption">Fishing</span></div>
<p>Returning from a short walk, he brought a vine in his hand, saying that it made
the best tea of anything in the woods. It was the creeping snowberry, which was
quite common there, its berries just grown. So we determined to have some tea
made of this. It had a slight checkerberry flavor, and we both agreed that it was really
better than the black tea which we had brought. We thought it quite a
discovery, and that it might well be dried and sold in the shops. I for one,
however, am not an old tea-drinker and cannot speak with authority to others.
The Indian said that they also used for tea a certain herb which grew in low
ground, which he did not find there, and Labrador tea; also hemlock leaves, the
last especially in winter when the other plants were covered with snow; and
various other things. We could have had a new kind of tea every night.</p>
<p>Just before night we saw a <i>musquash</i>, the only one we saw in this voyage,
swimming downward on the opposite side of the stream. The Indian, wishing to
get one to eat, hushed us, saying, “Stop, me call ’em”; and,
sitting flat on the bank, he began to make a curious squeaking, wiry sound with
his lips, exerting himself considerably. I was greatly surprised—thought that I had at last got into
the wilderness, and that he was a wild man indeed, to be talking to a musquash!
I did not know which of the two was the strangest to me. He seemed suddenly to
have quite forsaken humanity, and gone over to the musquash side. The musquash,
however, as near as I could see, did not turn aside, and the Indian said that
he saw our fire; but it was evident that he was in the habit of calling the
musquash to him, as he said. An acquaintance of mine who was hunting moose in
these woods a month after this, tells me that his Indian in this way repeatedly
called the musquash within reach of his paddle in the moonlight, and struck at
them.</p>
<p>The Indian said a particularly long prayer this Sunday evening, as if to atone
for working in the morning.</p>
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