<h2><SPAN name="V" id="V"></SPAN>V</h2>
<h3>MONDAY, JULY 27</h3>
<p>Having rapidly loaded the canoe, which the Indian always carefully attended to,
that it might be well trimmed, and each having taken a look, as usual, to see
that nothing was left, we set out again, descending the Caucomgomoc, and
turning northeasterly up the Umbazookskus. This name, the Indian said, meant
<i>Much Meadow River</i>. We found it now very wide on account of the rains.
The space between the woods, chiefly bare meadow, was from fifty to two hundred
rods in breadth.</p>
<p>In the water on the meadows grew sedges, wool-grass, the common blue flag
abundantly, its flower just showing itself above the high water, as if it were
a blue water-lily, and higher in the meadows a great many clumps of a peculiar
narrow-leaved willow. Here also grew the red osier, its
large fruit now whitish.</p>
<p>It was unusual for the woods to be so distant from the shore, and there was
quite an echo from them, but when I was shouting in order to awake it, the
Indian reminded me that I should scare the moose, which he was looking out for,
and which we all wanted to see.</p>
<p>Having paddled several miles up the Umbazookskus, it suddenly contracted to a
mere brook, narrow and swift, the larches and other trees approaching the bank
and leaving no open meadow. We landed to get a black spruce pole for pushing
against the stream. The one selected was quite slender, cut about ten feet
long, merely whittled to a point, and the bark shaved off.</p>
<p>While we were thus employed, two Indians in a canoe hove in sight round the
bushes, coming down stream. Our Indian knew one of them, an old man, and fell
into conversation with him. He belonged at the foot of Moosehead. The other was of another
tribe. They were returning from hunting. I asked the younger if they had seen
any moose, to which he said “No”; but I, seeing the moose-hides
sticking out from a great bundle made with their blankets in the middle of the
canoe, added, “Only their hides.”</p>
<p>As he was a foreigner, he may have wished to deceive me, for it is against the
law for white men and foreigners to kill moose in Maine at this season. But
perhaps he need not have been alarmed, for the moose-wardens are not very
particular. I heard of one who, being asked by a white man going into the woods
what he would say if he killed a moose, answered, “If you bring me a
quarter of it I guess you won’t be troubled.” His duty being, as he
said, only to prevent the “indiscriminate” slaughter of them for
their hides. I suppose that he would consider it an <i>indiscriminate</i>
slaughter when a quarter was not reserved for himself.</p>
<p>We continued along through the most extensive larch wood which I had
seen—tall and slender trees with fantastic branches. You do not find
straggling trees of this species here and there throughout the wood, but rather
a little forest of them. The same is the case with the white and red pines and
some other trees, greatly to the convenience of the lumberer. They are of a
social habit, growing in “veins,” “clumps,”
“groups,” or “communities,” as the explorers call them,
distinguishing them far away, from the top of a hill or a tree, the white pines
towering above the surrounding forest, or else they form extensive forests by
themselves. I should have liked to come across a large community of pines which
had never been invaded by the lumbering army.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <SPAN name="illus05"></SPAN> <SPAN href="images/img07.jpg"><ANTIMG src="images/img07th.jpg" width-obs="282" height-obs="400" alt="The Red Squirrel" title="" /></SPAN> <span class="caption">The Red Squirrel</span></div>
<p>We saw some fresh moose-tracks along the shore. The stream was only from one
and one half to three rods wide, quite winding, with occasional small islands,
meadows, and some very swift and shallow places. When we came to an island the
Indian never hesitated which side to take, as if the current told him which was
the shortest and deepest. It was lucky for us that the water was so high. We
had to walk but once on this stream, carrying a part of the load, at a swift
and shallow reach, while he got up with the canoe, not being obliged to take
out, though he said it was very strong water. Once or twice we passed the red
wreck of a bateau which had been stove some spring.</p>
<p>While making this portage I saw many splendid specimens of the great purple
fringed orchis, three feet high. It is remarkable that such delicate flowers
should here adorn these wilderness paths.</p>
<p>The Umbazookskus is called ten miles long. Having poled up the narrowest part
some three or four miles, the next opening in the sky was over Umbazookskus
Lake, which we suddenly entered about eleven o’clock in the forenoon. It
stretches north-westerly four or five miles. We crossed the southeast end to the carry into
Mud Pond.</p>
<p>Hodge, who went through this way to the St. Lawrence in the service of the
State, calls the portage here a mile and three quarters long. The Indian said
this was the wettest carry in the State, and as the season was a very wet one
we anticipated an unpleasant walk. As usual he made one large bundle of the
pork-keg, cooking-utensils, and other loose traps, by tying them up in his
blanket. We should be obliged to go over the carry twice, and our method was to
carry one half part way, and then go back for the rest.</p>
<p>Our path ran close by the door of a log hut in a clearing at this end of the
carry, which the Indian, who alone entered it, found to be occupied by a
Canadian and his family, and that the man had been blind for a year. This was
the first house above Chesuncook, and was built here, no doubt, because it was
the route of the lumberers in the winter and spring.</p>
<p>After a slight ascent from the lake through the springy soil of the
Canadian’s clearing, we entered on a level and very wet and rocky path
through the dense evergreen forest, a loosely paved gutter merely, where we
went leaping from rock to rock and from side to side in the vain attempt to
keep out of the water and mud. It was on this carry that the white hunter whom
I met in the stage, as he told me, had shot two bears a few months before. They
stood directly in the path and did not turn out for him. He said that at this
season bears were found on the mountains and hillsides in search of berries and
were apt to be saucy.</p>
<p>Here commences what was called, twenty years ago, the best timber land in the
State. This very spot was described as “covered with the greatest
abundance of pine,” but now this appeared to me, comparatively, an
uncommon tree there—and yet you did not see where any more could have
stood, amid the dense growth of cedar, fir, etc.</p>
<p>The Indian with his canoe soon disappeared before us, but ere long he came back
and told us to take a path which turned off westward, it being better walking,
and, at my suggestion, he agreed to leave a bough in the regular carry at that
place that we might not pass it by mistake. Thereafter, he said, we were to
keep the main path, and he added, “You see ’em my tracks.”</p>
<p>But I had not much faith that we could distinguish his tracks, since others had
passed over the carry within a few days. We turned off at the right place, but
were soon confused by numerous logging-paths coming into the one we were on.
However, we kept what we considered the main path, though it was a winding one,
and in this, at long intervals, we distinguished a faint trace of a footstep.
This, though comparatively unworn, was at first a better, or, at least, a dryer
road than the regular carry which we had left. It led through an
arbor-vitæ wilderness of the grimmest character. The great fallen and rotting
trees had been cut through and rolled aside, and their huge trunks abutted on
the path on each side, while others still lay across it two or three feet high.</p>
<p>It was impossible for us to discern the Indian’s trail in the elastic
moss, which, like a thick carpet, covered every rock and fallen tree, as well
as the earth. Nevertheless, I did occasionally detect the track of a man, and I
gave myself some credit for it. I carried my whole load at once, a heavy
knapsack, and a large rubber bag containing our bread and a blanket, swung on a
paddle, in all about sixty pounds; but my companion preferred to make two
journeys by short stages while I waited for him. We could not be sure that we
were not depositing our loads each time farther off from the true path.</p>
<p>As I sat waiting for my companion, he would seem to be gone a long time, and I
had ample opportunity to make observations on the forest. I now first began
to be
seriously molested by the black fly, a very small but perfectly formed fly of
that color, about one tenth of an inch long, which I felt, and then saw, in
swarms about me, as I sat by a wider and more than usually doubtful fork in
this dark forest path. Remembering that I had a wash in my knapsack, prepared
by a thoughtful hand in Bangor, I made haste to apply it to my face and hands,
and was glad to find it effectual, as long as it was fresh, or for twenty
minutes, not only against black flies, but all the insects that molested us.
They would not alight on the part thus defended. It was composed of sweet oil
and oil of turpentine, with a little oil of spearmint, and camphor. However, I
finally concluded that the remedy was worse than the disease, it was so
disagreeable and inconvenient to have your face and hands covered with such a
mixture.</p>
<p>Three large slate-colored birds of the jay genus, the Canada jay, came
flitting
silently and by degrees toward me, and hopped down the limbs inquisitively to
within seven or eight feet. Fish hawks from the lake uttered their sharp
whistling notes low over the top of the forest near me, as if they were anxious
about a nest there.</p>
<p>After I had sat there some time I noticed at this fork in the path a tree which
had been blazed, and the letters “Chamb. L.” written on it with red
chalk. This I knew to mean Chamberlain Lake. So I concluded that on the whole
we were on the right course.</p>
<p>My companion having returned with his bag, we set forward again. The walking
rapidly grew worse and the path more indistinct, and at length we found
ourselves in a more open and regular swamp made less passable than ordinary by
the unusual wetness of the season. We sank a foot deep in water and mud at
every step, and sometimes up to our knees. The trail was almost obliterated,
being no more than a musquash leaves in similar places when he parts the
floating sedge. In fact, it probably was a musquash trail in some places. We
concluded that if Mud Pond was as muddy as the approach to it was wet, it
certainly deserved its name. It would have been amusing to behold the dogged
and deliberate pace at which we entered that swamp, without interchanging a
word, as if determined to go through it, though it should come up to our necks.
Having penetrated a considerable distance into this and found a tussock on
which we could deposit our loads, though there was no place to sit, my
companion went back for the rest of his pack.</p>
<p>After a long while my companion came back, and the Indian with him. We had
taken the wrong road, and the Indian had lost us. He had gone back to the
Canadian’s camp and asked him which way we had probably gone, since he
could better understand the ways of white men, and he told him correctly that
we had undoubtedly taken the supply road to Chamberlain Lake. The
Indian was greatly surprised that we should have taken what he called a
“tow,” that is, tote, toting, or supply, road instead of a carry
path,—that we had not followed his tracks,—said it was
“strange,” and evidently thought little of our woodcraft.</p>
<p>Having held a consultation and eaten a mouthful of bread, we concluded that it
would perhaps be nearer for us two now to keep on to Chamberlain Lake, omitting
Mud Pond, than to go back and start anew for the last place, though the Indian
had never been through this way and knew nothing about it. In the meanwhile he
would go back and finish carrying over his canoe and bundle to Mud Pond, cross
that, and go down its outlet and up Chamberlain Lake, and trust to meet us
there before night. It was now a little after noon. He supposed that the water
in which we stood had flowed back from Mud Pond, which could not be far
off
eastward, but was unapproachable through the dense cedar swamp.</p>
<p>Keeping on, we were ere long agreeably disappointed by reaching firmer ground,
and we crossed a ridge where the path was more distinct, but there was never
any outlook over the forest. At one place I heard a very clear and piercing
note from a small hawk as he dashed through the tree-tops over my head. We also
saw and heard several times the red squirrel. This, according to the Indian, is
the only squirrel found in those woods, except a very few striped ones. It must
have a solitary time in that dark evergreen forest, where there is so little
life, seventy-five miles from a road as we had come. I wondered how he could
call any particular tree there his home, and yet he would run up the stem of
one out of the myriads, as if it were an old road to him. I fancied that he
must be glad to see us, though he did seem to chide us. One of those somber fir
and spruce woods is not complete unless you hear from out its cavernous mossy and
twiggy recesses his fine alarum—his spruce voice, like the working of the
sap through some crack in a tree. Such an impertinent fellow would occasionally
try to alarm the wood about me.</p>
<p>“Oh,” said I, “I am well acquainted with your family. I know
your cousins in Concord very well.” But my overtures were vain, for he
would withdraw by his aerial turnpikes into a more distant cedar-top, and
spring his rattle again.</p>
<p>We entered another swamp, at a necessarily slow pace, where the walking was
worse than ever, not only on account of the water, but the fallen timber, which
often obliterated the indistinct trail entirely. The fallen trees were so
numerous that for long distances the route was through a succession of small
yards, where we climbed over fences as high as our heads, down into water often
up to our knees, and then over another fence into a second yard, and so on. In
many places
the canoe would have run if it had not been for the fallen timber. Again it
would be more open, but equally wet, too wet for trees to grow. It was a mossy
swamp, which it required the long legs of a moose to traverse, and it is very
likely that we scared some of them in our transit, though we saw none. It was
ready to echo the growl of a bear, the howl of a wolf, or the scream of a
panther; but when you get fairly into the middle of one of these grim forests
you are surprised to find that the larger inhabitants are not at home commonly,
but have left only a puny red squirrel to bark at you. Generally speaking, a
howling wilderness does not howl; it is the imagination of the traveler that
does the howling. I did, however, see one dead porcupine. Perhaps he had
succumbed to the difficulties of the way. These bristly fellows are a very
suitable small fruit of such unkempt wildernesses.</p>
<p>Making a logging-road in the Maine woods is called “swamping” it,
and they who do the work are called “swampers.” I now perceived the
fitness of the term. This was the most perfectly swamped of all the roads I
ever saw. Nature must have coöperated with art here. However, I suppose they
would tell you that this name took its origin from the fact that the chief work
of roadmakers in those woods is to make the swamps passable. We came to a
stream where the bridge, which had been made of logs tied together with cedar
bark, had been broken up, and we got over as we could. Such as it was, this
ruined bridge was the chief evidence that we were on a path of any kind.</p>
<p>We then crossed another low rising ground, and I, who wore shoes, had an
opportunity to wring out my stockings, but my companion, who used boots, had
found that this was not a safe experiment for him, for he might not be able to
get his wet boots on again. He went over the whole ground, or water, three
times, for which reason our progress was very slow. Beside that, the water softened our
feet, and to some extent unfitted them for walking.</p>
<p>As I sat waiting for him it would naturally seem an unaccountable time that he
was gone. Therefore, as I could see through the woods that the sun was getting
low, and it was uncertain how far the lake might be, even if we were on the
right course, and in what part of the world we should find ourselves at
nightfall, I proposed that I should push through with what speed I could,
leaving boughs to mark my path, and find the lake and the Indian, if possible,
before night, and send the latter back to carry my companion’s bag.</p>
<p>Having gone about a mile I heard a noise like the note of an owl, which I soon
discovered to be made by the Indian, and answering him, we soon came together.
He had reached the lake after crossing Mud Pond and running some rapids below
it, and had come up about a mile and a half on our path. If he had not come back to
meet us, we probably should not have found him that night, for the path
branched once or twice before reaching this particular part of the lake. So he
went back for my companion and his bag. Having waded through another stream,
where the bridge of logs had been broken up and half floated away, we continued
on through alternate mud and water to the shores of Apmoojenegamook Lake, which
we reached in season for a late supper, instead of dining there, as we had
expected, having gone without our dinner.</p>
<p>It was at least five miles by the way we had come, and as my companion had gone
over most of it three times he had walked full a dozen miles. In the winter,
when the water is frozen and the snow is four feet deep, it is no doubt a
tolerable path to a footman. If you want an exact recipe for making such a
road, take one part Mud Pond, and dilute it with equal parts of Umbazookskus
and Apmoojenegamook; then send a family of musquash through to locate
it, look after the grades and culverts, and finish it to their minds, and let a
hurricane follow to do the fencing.</p>
<p>We had come out on a point extending into Apmoojenegamook, or Chamberlain Lake,
where there was a broad, gravelly, and rocky shore, encumbered with bleached
logs and trees. We were rejoiced to see such dry things in that part of the
world. But at first we did not attend to dryness so much as to mud and wetness.
We all three walked into the lake up to our middle to wash our clothes.</p>
<p>This was another noble lake, twelve miles long; if you add Telos Lake, which,
since the dam was built, has been connected with it by dead water, it will be
twenty; and it is apparently from a mile and a half to two miles wide. We were
about midway its length on the south side. We could see the only clearing in
these parts, called the “Chamberlain Farm,” with two or three log
buildings close together, on the opposite shore, some two and a half
miles distant. The smoke of our fire on the shore brought over two men in a
canoe from the farm, that being a common signal agreed on when one wishes to
cross. It took them about half an hour to come over, and they had their labor
for their pains this time.</p>
<p>After putting on such dry clothes as we had, and hanging the others to dry on
the pole which the Indian arranged over the fire, we ate our supper, and lay
down on the pebbly shore with our feet to the fire without pitching our tent,
making a thin bed of grass to cover the stones.</p>
<p>Here first I was molested by the little midge called the no-see-em, especially
over the sand at the water’s edge, for it is a kind of sand-fly. You
would not observe them but for their light-colored wings. They are said to get
under your clothes and produce a feverish heat, which I suppose was what I felt
that night.</p>
<p>Our insect foes in this excursion were, first, mosquitoes, only troublesome at night, or
when we sat still on shore by day; second, black flies (<i>simulium
molestum</i>), which molested us more or less on the carries by day, and
sometimes in narrower parts of the stream; third, moose-flies, stout brown
flies much like a horsefly. They can bite smartly, according to Polis, but are
easily avoided or killed. Fourth, the no-see-ems. Of all these, the mosquitoes
are the only ones that troubled me seriously, but as I was provided with a wash
and a veil, they have not made any deep impression.</p>
<p>The Indian would not use our wash to protect his face and hands, for fear that
it would hurt his skin, nor had he any veil. He, therefore, suffered from
insects throughout this journey more than either of us. He regularly tied up
his face in his handkerchief, and buried it in his blanket, and he now finally
lay down on the sand between us and the fire for the sake of the smoke, which
he tried to make enter his blanket about his face, and for the same purpose he lit
his pipe and breathed the smoke into his blanket.</p>
<p>In the middle of the night we heard the voice of the loon, loud and distinct,
from far over the lake. It is a very wild sound, quite in keeping with the
place and the circumstances of the traveler, and very unlike the voice of a
bird. I could lie awake for hours listening to it, it is so thrilling. When
camping in such a wilderness as this, you are prepared to hear sounds from some
of its inhabitants which will give voice to its wildness. Some idea of bears,
wolves, or panthers runs in your head naturally, and when this note is first
heard very far off at midnight, as you lie with your ear to the
ground,—the forest being perfectly still about you, you take it for
granted that it is the voice of a wolf or some other wild beast,—you
conclude that it is a pack of wolves baying the moon, or, perchance, cantering
after a moose. It was the unfailing and characteristic sound of those
lakes.</p>
<p>Some friends of mine, who two years ago went up the Caucomgomoc River, were
serenaded by wolves while moose-hunting by moonlight. It was a sudden burst, as
if a hundred demons had broke loose,—a startling sound enough, which, if
any, would make your hair stand on end,—and all was still again. It
lasted but a moment, and you’d have thought there were twenty of them,
when probably there were only two or three. They heard it twice only, and they
said that it gave expression to the wilderness which it lacked before. I heard
of some men, who, while skinning a moose lately in those woods, were driven off
from the carcass by a pack of wolves, which ate it up.</p>
<p>This of the loon—I do not mean its laugh, but its looning—is a
long-drawn call, as it were, sometimes singularly human to my
ear—<i>hoo-hoo-ooooo</i>, like the hallooing of a man on a very high key,
having thrown his voice into his head. I have heard a sound exactly like it
when
breathing heavily through my own nostrils, half awake at ten at night,
suggesting my affinity to the loon; as if its language were but a dialect of my
own, after all. Formerly, when lying awake at midnight in those woods, I had
listened to hear some words or syllables of their language, but it chanced that
I listened in vain until I heard the cry of the loon. I have heard it
occasionally on the ponds of my native town, but there its wildness is not
enhanced by the surrounding scenery.</p>
<p>I was awakened at midnight by some heavy, low-flying bird, probably a loon,
flapping by close over my head along the shore. So, turning the other side of
my half-clad body to the fire, I sought slumber again.</p>
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