<h2><SPAN name="chap07" id="chap07"></SPAN>CHAPTER VII<br/> <span class="chapsub">FIRST LESSONS</span></h2>
<p><span class="smcap">Walter’s</span> skill with his camera gradually
won for him the distinction of being the best
photographer in camp. When, therefore, he
somewhat diffidently told Chief Woodhull of
his ambition to secure some flashlight views
of deer the chief listened attentively to the
plans suggested for securing them, and promised
to lay them before Dr. Merriam. Imagine
Walter’s delight when on the following day
the big chief sent for him, and after close
questioning informed him that it was arranged
for him to make a two days’ trip to Lonesome
Pond with Big Jim for the purpose of trying
for the coveted photographs of wild deer in
their native haunts.</p>
<p>It was an almost unprecedented honor for a
first year boy. The privilege of making such
an expedition alone with one of the guides
was reserved for the older boys, whose experience
and training fitted them for the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>101]</SPAN></span>
“roughing” which such a trip usually involved.
Walter fairly walked on air when he left
Dr. Merriam to seek Big Jim and make the
necessary arrangements. He found the guide
tinkering with a jack-light.</p>
<p>“Dr. Merriam says——” began Walter.</p>
<p>“I know all about it, son,” interrupted the
guide. “You an’ me’ll be pardners for a
couple o’ days, and we’ll start before daylight
to-morrow morning. Rustle round now and
get your picter machine ready. I reckon Mr.
Peaked Toes will be a mighty unsartin subjec’,
a leetle mite bashful. If you don’t get him
th’ first shot, ’tain’t likely he’ll wait fer a second,
so it’s up to you t’ hev everythin’ in
workin’ order. Run over an’ tell cookie thet
I want two loaves o’ bread, a slab o’ bacon,
some butter in a wide-mouth jar, flour, salt,
cocoa an’ sugar fer a two days’ trip. We’re
goin’ light, so you won’t need t’ bring nothin’
but yer fish rod, blankets, sneaks an’ an extra
handkercher. Better turn in early, fer we
want t’ start at four o’clock sharp. Hev cookie
put up a lunch. Now skip!”</p>
<p>At quarter of four the next morning Walter
slipped out of the wigwam. The moon had
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>102]</SPAN></span>
not yet set, while in the east appeared the
first faint flush of the coming day. The forest
lay black and still. For a moment or two he
shivered in the chill of the outer air after the
warmth of the wigwam. There was a light in
the guides’ cabin, and thither he made his
way at once.</p>
<p>Just outside the door stood a pack basket,
a tightly rolled blanket lashed across it, and
the handle of a frying-pan protruding from
the top. Big Jim’s favorite paddle leaned
against it. As Walter approached, the door
opened and the guide stepped out.</p>
<p>“Hello, pard!” said he. “I was jes’ comin’
over t’ pull yer out o’ yer blankets. Come in
here an’ hev a cup o’ hot cocoa an’ stow thet
snack away; it’s easier t’ carry inside than
out.”</p>
<p>When Walter had gulped down the hot
drink and eaten the lunch put up for him by
the cook he felt ready for anything.</p>
<p>As they took their way down the trail to
the lake the hoot of a great horned owl suddenly
broke the silence and wakened startled
echoes on Old Scraggy.</p>
<p>“Whooo-hoo-hoo-hoo! Whooo-hoo-hoo!”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>103]</SPAN></span>
“Ole Fly-by-night must hev had poor
huntin’ last evenin’,” said the guide. “Do
you see him, son?”</p>
<p>Walter searched the trees near at hand, but
could make out nothing that resembled a bird,
and his chagrin was deepened by the guide’s
next remark.</p>
<p>“Them books may tell yer where t’ look,
but they don’t teach yer how t’ use th’ eyes
God give yer. Now any five-year-old born in
th’ woods would hev seen thet big swelled up
bunch o’ feathers fust thing. Look at thet
tall pine stump over thar t’ th’ right and——”</p>
<p>“Whooo-hoo-hoo-hoo! Whooo-hoo-hoo!”
rang the fierce cry again, and almost on the
instant the top of the stump resolved into a
huge, broad-winged bird, that swiftly and
noiselessly dropped behind a low hemlock.
A moment later it reappeared, a hare struggling
in its talons, and flew heavily over
toward a swamp. Big Jim promptly seized
upon the episode to drive home a lesson in
woodcraft.</p>
<p>“Pard,” said he, “thar’s a better lesson in
the A B C o’ wood life than I could give yer
in a month o’ talkin’. If thet hare hadn’t let
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>104]</SPAN></span>
its narves go on th’ jump, and had remembered
what she ought t’ hev knowed afore she
was born, thet to sit tight an’ not move a
muscle when yer don’t want t’ be seen is th’
first law o’ th’ woods, she’d be sittin’ nice an’
snug this very minute, instead o’ stuffin’ ole
Fly-by-night’s craw. Puss was narvous. The
hoot startled her an’ she moved jest a leetle
bit. Probably she rustled a leaf. Them big
owls is all ears. Fact, son; the whole side o’
th’ head, pretty near, is an ear. He heared
thet leaf rustle, an’ he was Johnny-on-the-spot
in a jiffy. Yer saw what happened.
Never make a sudden move in th’ woods. Sit
tight if yer don’t want t’ be seen, or move so
slowly thet nothin’s goin’ t’ notice it. Don’t
never ferget it! Yer’ve jes’ seen what fergettin’
may cost. When yer go in th’ woods
leave yer narves t’ hum.”</p>
<p>The pack basket and duffle were stowed in
the middle of the canoe, Walter took the bow
seat and the guide, kneeling in the stern, for
he had never outgrown his early training
when canoes of his acquaintance had no seats,
shot the little craft out into the lake. As
they turned into the low marshy estuary
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>105]</SPAN></span>
which marked the outlet of the lake, the first
rays of the rising sun glanced over Mt. Seward.</p>
<p>Once in the main channel of the river they
felt the gentle force of the current, and under
Jim’s powerful stroke they swept swiftly on.
Walter had been doing his full share, for he
was a good paddler, but now the guide suggested
that he put up his paddle and hold his
camera ready for whatever they might surprise
along the river’s edge, or up some of the
numerous setbacks.</p>
<p>The boy put his paddle aside and, slipping
a film pack into the camera, set the focus for
one hundred feet. Then with thumb and
forefinger of his right hand on the focussing
screw, ready to shorten the focus should they
get within less than one hundred feet of a
subject, he set himself to watch the shores.</p>
<p>“Remember now, no talkin’ an’ no sudden
moves,” cautioned the guide.</p>
<p>Alas for Walter! The lesson had yet to be
driven home. Not five minutes later the
canoe shot around a bend, and without a
sound glided into a setback. Almost instantly
a low warning hiss from Big Jim put
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>106]</SPAN></span>
Walter on his guard. The canoe seemed
merely to drift, but if the boy could have seen
the guide he would have witnessed a magnificent
exhibition of the canoeman’s art as, with
paddle deep in the water and moving so
slowly as to make hardly a perceptible ripple,
he still kept the craft under perfect control.</p>
<p>Walter, every nerve tense, scanned the
shores in a vain effort to discover the cause of
the guide’s warning. Inch by inch the canoe
crept on and still the boy saw nothing but the
placid, pad-strewn surface of the water, and
the forest-lined shore. Presently his eager
ears caught a faint splash off to his right.
Like a flash he turned, swinging his camera
with him. The next instant he realized his
mistake. With a sharp whistle of surprise
and alarm a doe noisily splashed shoreward
from a point not fifty yards distant, where she
had been standing among the lily-pads.
From the instant the canoe had first caught
her attention and excited her curiosity she
had remained so motionless that Walter had
failed utterly to pick her out from the background
with which her protective coloring
blended so marvelously.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>107]</SPAN></span>
But the moment the boy moved she whirled
for the shore, sending the water flying in a
shower of silver. As the boy, in open-mouthed
astonishment, watched her she lightly
leaped a fallen log, and with a parting flirt of
her white flag disappeared in the undergrowth.</p>
<p>Walter’s chagrin was too deep for words.
Indeed, he was very near to tears as he realized
what a rare opportunity he had missed,
and how wholly his own fault it was. He
did not dare look at Big Jim, and there was no
comfort in the guide’s slow, sarcastic drawl:</p>
<p>“A clean miss, pard. Did them books
teach yer thet lightnin’ whirl? ’Pears t’ me
thet you an’ puss back thar, keepin’ company
with ole Fly-by-night, belong in th’ same
class. Now if yer mem’ry had been as good
as yer fergittery we’d most likely hev drifted
right up t’ thet thar deer. No use wastin’
more time in here. Some day when yer hev
larned a leetle more woodcraft mebbe we’ll
run down an’ try it agen.”</p>
<p>This surely was rubbing it in, and Big
Jim meant it to be so. Right down in his
big heart he was almost as disappointed for
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>108]</SPAN></span>
the boy as was the boy himself, but he felt
that this was the time to drive the lesson
home. Every word stung the chagrined
young photographer like a whip-lash, and he
could not trust himself to make reply. He
was mortified beyond expression, for he had
prided himself that he knew the value of
noiselessness and motionlessness, and that
when the test should come he would win
golden opinions from the guide for his display
of woodcraft. Now, at the very first opportunity,
he had failed miserably, acting like the
veriest tyro, and he felt himself humbled to
the last degree.</p>
<p>Had he turned he might have caught a
kindly twinkle in the blue eyes watching the
dejected droop of his figure, but he kept his
face steadily to the front, gazing fixedly ahead,
yet seeing nothing, while automatically he
swung his paddle and gloomily lived over the
bitterness of his mistake.</p>
<p>They were now once more in the current,
and in a matter-of-fact way the guide suggested
that Walter put his paddle up and be
ready for whatever else might offer. As he
adjusted the camera the boy resolved that
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>109]</SPAN></span>
this time, come what might, he would show
Big Jim that he had learned his lesson.</p>
<p>The opportunity came sooner than he had
dared hope it would. The canoe swerved
sharply toward the east bank, and presently
Walter made out a little brown bunch on the
end of a log. With a nod of the head he signaled
the guide that he saw, and then attended
strictly to his end of the matter in
hand. By this time the canoe was close in to
the bank, so deftly handled that it would approach
within twenty feet of the log before
emerging from the screen of a fallen tree
which the guide had instantly noted and
taken advantage of.</p>
<p>Jim was paddling only enough for steerage
way, allowing the current to drift them down.
They were now close to the fallen tree, and
the guide began to silently work the little
craft around the outer end. Walter had reduced
the focus to twenty-five feet. As they
drifted nearer and nearer to the subject he began
to shake with nervous excitement, so that
it was only by the exercise of all his will
power that he could hold the camera steady.
Inch by inch they crept past the tree and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>110]</SPAN></span>
Walter strained his eyes for a glimpse of the
old log with its little bunch of fur. He was
holding his breath from sheer excitement.
Ha! There was the outer end of the log, and
there, a foot or so back, sat a muskrat, wholly
oblivious to their presence.</p>
<p>Slowly, with the utmost caution, Walter
turned in his seat, so slowly that it seemed
ages to him. The guide had checked the canoe
within less than twenty feet of the log
and Walter altered his focus accordingly.
Now in his reflecting finder he clearly saw
the little fur bearer, a mussel in his paws.
With a sigh of relief Walter heard the click
of the shutter in response to the squeeze of the
bulb, held in his left hand. Then as the rat
made a frightened plunge, he remembered
that he had forgotten to withdraw the slide
before making the exposure.</p>
<p>It is an error the novice frequently makes
and that the expert is sometimes guilty of.
It was, therefore, not surprising that under
the stress of excitement Walter should suffer
this lapse of memory, but coming as it did
immediately after his other fiasco, it was almost
more than he could bear.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>111]</SPAN></span>
Big Jim was chuckling delightedly over
the supposed success. “Reckon musky never
set fer his picter afore! Did he look pleasant?
Pard, yer sure did thet trick well. Had a bit
o’ buck fever fust along, I reckon. Thought
yer seemed kind o’ shaky. Don’t yer mind
thet none. I’ve seen a feller with a clean open
shot at a standin’ deer within fifty yards wobble
his rifle round so thet th’ safest thing in thet
neighborhood was thet thar deer. Now we’ll
go on fer th’ next.”</p>
<p>Walter did not have the courage to tell the
guide then of his second blunder, but resolved
that when they got in camp that night he
would own up like a man. For the next
three miles nothing eventful occurred. Then
the boy got his third chance. It was a great
blue heron this time. It was standing on one
foot, the other drawn up until it was hidden
among the feathers of the under part of the
body. The long neck was laid back on the
shoulders, the sharp bill half buried in the
feathers of the breast. The big bird appeared
to be dozing. The light fell just right, and
as it was intensified by reflection from the
water, Walter felt sure of a good photograph.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>112]</SPAN></span>
Little by little the canoe drifted in. Forty
feet, thirty, twenty, ten—click! This time
there was no mistake. Working quickly but
cautiously, with as little motion as possible,
he pulled out and tore off the tab, set the
shutter and, as the big bird spread its wings,
a second click caught it at the very start of its
flight. The shutter was set at the two hundredth
part of a second, so that despite the
nearness of the subject, Walter felt reasonably
certain that little movement would show in
the photograph.</p>
<p>“Get him?” asked Jim.</p>
<p>“Two of him,” replied Walter, a note of
pardonable pride in his voice.</p>
<p>“Thet’s th’ stuff! Ye’re larnin’ fast,” said
the guide, once more shooting the canoe into
the current.</p>
<p>This success went far to offset the previous
failures and the boy’s spirits rose. He began
to enjoy his surroundings as he had not been
able to since the episode with the deer. Mile
after mile slipped behind them, the limpid
brown water sliding between the unbroken
wilderness on either bank. Try as he would
he could not get over the impression of sliding
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>113]</SPAN></span>
down-hill, such was the optical effect of the
swiftly-moving water.</p>
<p>At last he heard a dull roar which increased
in volume with every minute. Then they
rounded a sharp turn, and before them the
whole river became a churning, tumbling
mass of white, with here and there an ugly
black rock jutting above the surface. The
canoe felt the increased movement of the
water and the boy’s heart beat faster as the
bow of the little craft still pointed straight
down the middle of the river. Could it be
that Big Jim would try to run those tumbling,
roaring rapids!</p>
<p>“Sit tight and don’t move!” came the
guide’s sharp, terse command.</p>
<p>The canoe all but grazed a great gray
boulder. Then dead ahead, not two inches
under water, Walter saw another. Surely
they must strike this, and then—he
closed his eyes for just a second. When he
opened them the canoe was just shooting
through the churning froth on the edge of the
rock, and that immediate danger was past.
He realized then how completely the man behind
him was master of the river and their
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>114]</SPAN></span>
craft. With fascinated eyes he watched each
new danger loom up and pass almost before
he realized its ugly threat.</p>
<p>The roar of the rapids was now so loud that
it drowned all other sounds. Presently he
became aware that they were no longer in
mid-stream. With a few powerful strokes the
guide shot the canoe into a back eddy and a
second later it grounded lightly on a tiny
sand beach where Jim held it until Walter
could leap out and pull it up securely.</p>
<p>“How’d yer like thet?” shouted the guide
as he lifted his pack basket out.</p>
<p>“Great!” replied the boy, his eyes shining
with excitement, as he helped take out the
duffle.</p>
<p>Big Jim adjusted the basket to his back,
lashed the paddles across the thwarts of the
canoe so that when they rested on his shoulders,
with the canoe inverted over his head,
it balanced perfectly, and leaving Walter to
follow with the rest of the duffle plunged into
what seemed at first glance an almost impenetrable
thicket of maple, birch and moosewood.</p>
<p>Walter found, however, that there was a
well-defined trail, albeit a rough one. It
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>115]</SPAN></span>
followed the course of the river, over moss-grown
decaying tree trunks, across old skidways,
now firm to the foot and again a bed of oozy
black swamp muck in which he sank half-way
to his knees. After a mile of this they
came out on the bank of the river just at the
foot of the falls which marked the end of the
rapids. The canoe was launched at once and
in a few minutes they were again speeding
down-stream.</p>
<p>Three and a half miles below they made
another portage. This put them in a lake at
the upper end of which a shallow stream connected
with a string of three small ponds.
The last of these was known as Lonesome
Pond, and this was their destination.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>116]</SPAN></span></p>
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