<SPAN name="chap19"></SPAN>
<h2 align="center">Chapter XIX</h2>
<h2 align="center">Auroras</h2>
<p>A few days later I set out with Professor Reid's party to visit
some of the other large glaciers that flow into the bay, to observe
what changes have taken place in them since October, 1879, when I
first visited and sketched them. We found the upper half of the bay
closely choked with bergs, through which it was exceedingly difficult
to force a way. After slowly struggling a few miles up the east side,
we dragged the whale-boat and canoe over rough rocks into a fine
garden and comfortably camped for the night.</p>
<ANTIMG src="images/tia_312.jpg" width-obs="300" height-obs="180" alt="Floating Iceberg, Taku Inlet" />
<p>The next day was spent in cautiously picking a way across to the
west side of the bay; and as the strangely scanty stock of provisions
was already about done, and the ice-jam to the northward seemed
impenetrable, the party decided to return to the main camp by a
comparatively open, roundabout way to the southward, while with the
canoe and a handful of food-scraps I pushed on northward. After a
hard, anxious struggle, I reached the mouth of the Hugh Miller fiord
about sundown, and tried to find a camp-spot on its steep,
boulder-bound shore. But no landing-place where it seemed possible to
drag the canoe above high-tide mark was discovered after examining a
mile or more of this dreary, forbidding barrier, and as night was
closing down, I decided to try to grope my way across the mouth of the
fiord in the starlight <!-- Page 313 --> to an open sandy spot on
which I had camped in October, 1879, a distance of about three or four
miles.</p>
<p>With the utmost caution I picked my way through the sparkling
bergs, and after an hour or two of this nerve-trying work, when I was
perhaps less than halfway across and dreading the loss of the frail
canoe which would include the loss of myself, I came to a pack of very
large bergs which loomed threateningly, offering no visible
thoroughfare. Paddling and pushing to right and left, I at last
discovered a sheer-walled opening about four feet wide and perhaps two
hundred feet long, formed apparently by the splitting of a huge
iceberg. I hesitated to enter this passage, fearing that the slightest
change in the tide-current might close it, but ventured nevertheless,
judging that the dangers ahead might not be greater than those I had
already passed. When I had got about a third of the way in, I suddenly
discovered that the smooth-walled ice-lane was growing narrower, and
with desperate haste backed out. Just as the bow of the canoe cleared
the sheer walls they came together with a growling crunch.
Terror-stricken, I turned back, and in an anxious hour or two gladly
reached the rock-bound shore that had at first repelled me, determined
to stay on guard all night in the canoe or find some place where with
the strength that comes in a fight for life I could drag it up the
boulder wall beyond ice danger. This at last was happily done about
midnight, and with no thought of sleep I went to bed rejoicing.</p>
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<p>My bed was two boulders, and as I lay wedged and bent on their
up-bulging sides, beguiling the hard, cold time in gazing into the
starry sky and across the sparkling bay, magnificent upright bars of
light in bright prismatic colors suddenly appeared, marching swiftly
in close succession along the northern horizon from west to east as if
in diligent haste, an auroral display very different from any I had
ever before beheld. Once long ago in Wisconsin I saw the heavens
draped in rich purple auroral clouds fringed and folded in most
magnificent forms; but in this glory of light, so pure, so bright, so
enthusiastic in motion, there was nothing in the least cloud-like. The
short color-bars, apparently about two degrees in height, though
blending, seemed to be as well defined as those of the solar
spectrum.</p>
<p>How long these glad, eager soldiers of light held on their way I
cannot tell; for sense of time was charmed out of mind and the blessed
night circled away in measureless rejoicing enthusiasm.</p>
<p>In the early morning after so inspiring a night I launched my canoe
feeling able for anything, crossed the mouth of the Hugh Miller fiord,
and forced a way three or four miles along the shore of the bay,
hoping to reach the Grand Pacific Glacier in front of Mt. Fairweather.
But the farther I went, the ice-pack, instead of showing inviting
little open streaks here and there, became so much harder jammed that
on some parts of the shore the bergs, drifting south with the tide,
were shoving one another out of the water beyond high-tide line.
Farther progress to northward <!-- Page 315 --> was thus rigidly
stopped, and now I had to fight for a way back to my cabin, hoping
that by good tide luck I might reach it before dark. But at sundown I
was less than half-way home, and though very hungry was glad to land
on a little rock island with a smooth beach for the canoe and a
thicket of alder bushes for fire and bed and a little sleep. But
shortly after sundown, while these arrangements were being made, lo
and behold another aurora enriching the heavens! and though it proved
to be one of the ordinary almost colorless kind, thrusting long,
quivering lances toward the zenith from a dark cloudlike base, after
last night's wonderful display one's expectations might well be
extravagant and I lay wide awake watching.</p>
<p>On the third night I reached my cabin and food. Professor Reid and
his party came in to talk over the results of our excursions, and just
as the last one of the visitors opened the door after bidding
good-night, he shouted, “Muir, come look here. Here's something
fine.”</p>
<p>I ran out in auroral excitement, and sure enough here was another
aurora, as novel and wonderful as the marching rainbow-colored
columns--a glowing silver bow spanning the Muir Inlet in a magnificent
arch right under the zenith, or a little to the south of it, the ends
resting on the top of the mountain-walls. And though colorless and
steadfast, its intense, solid, white splendor, noble proportions, and
fineness of finish excited boundless admiration. In form and
proportion it was like a rainbow, a bridge of <!-- Page 316 --> one
span five miles wide; and so brilliant, so fine and solid and
homogeneous in every part, I fancy that if all the stars were raked
together into one windrow, fused and welded and run through some
celestial rolling-mill, all would be required to make this one glowing
white colossal bridge.</p>
<p>After my last visitor went to bed, I lay down on the moraine in
front of the cabin and gazed and watched. Hour after hour the
wonderful arch stood perfectly motionless, sharply defined and
substantial-looking as if it were a permanent addition to the
furniture of the sky. At length while it yet spanned the inlet in
serene unchanging splendor, a band of fluffy, pale gray, quivering
ringlets came suddenly all in a row over the eastern mountain-top,
glided in nervous haste up and down the under side of the bow and over
the western mountain-wall. They were about one and a half times the
apparent diameter of the bow in length, maintained a vertical posture
all the way across, and slipped swiftly along as if they were
suspended like a curtain on rings. Had these lively auroral fairies
marched across the fiord on the top of the bow instead of shuffling
along the under side of it, one might have fancied they were a happy
band of spirit people on a journey making use of the splendid bow for
a bridge. There must have been hundreds of miles of them; for the time
required for each to cross from one end of the bridge to the other
seemed only a minute or less, while nearly an hour elapsed from their
first appearance until the last of the rushing throng vanished behind
the western mountain, leaving the bridge as <!-- Page 317 --> bright
and solid and steadfast as before they arrived. But later, half an
hour or so, it began to fade. Fissures or cracks crossed it diagonally
through which a few stars were seen, and gradually it became thin and
nebulous until it looked like the Milky Way, and at last vanished,
leaving no visible monument of any sort to mark its place.</p>
<p>I now returned to my cabin, replenished the fire, warmed myself,
and prepared to go to bed, though too aurorally rich and happy to go
to sleep. But just as I was about to retire, I thought I had better
take another look at the sky, to make sure that the glorious show was
over; and, contrary to all reasonable expectations, I found that the
pale foundation for another bow was being laid right overhead like the
first. Then losing all thought of sleep, I ran back to my cabin,
carried out blankets and lay down on the moraine to keep watch until
daybreak, that none of the sky wonders of the glorious night within
reach of my eyes might be lost.</p>
<p>I had seen the first bow when it stood complete in full splendor,
and its gradual fading decay. Now I was to see the building of a new
one from the beginning. Perhaps in less than half an hour the silvery
material was gathered, condensed, and welded into a glowing, evenly
proportioned arc like the first and in the same part of the sky. Then
in due time over the eastern mountain-wall came another throng of
restless electric auroral fairies, the infinitely fine pale-gray
garments of each lightly touching those of their neighbors as they
swept swiftly along the under <!-- Page 318 -->
side of the bridge and down over the western mountain like the merry
band that had gone the same way before them, all keeping quivery step
and time to music too fine for mortal ears.</p>
<p>While the gay throng was gliding swiftly along, I watched the
bridge for any change they might make upon it, but not the slightest
could I detect. They left no visible track, and after all had passed
the glowing arc stood firm and apparently immutable, but at last faded
slowly away like its glorious predecessor.</p>
<p>Excepting only the vast purple aurora mentioned above, said to have
been visible over nearly all the continent, these two silver bows in
supreme, serene, supernal beauty surpassed everything auroral I ever
beheld.</p>
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