We were waiting the arrival of the
Alaska boat,-wandering aimlessly about
the little town, looking off upon the quiet sea, now
veiled in a dense smoke blown down from the vast forest
fires that were sweeping the interior. The sun,
shorn of his beams, was a disk of copper; the sun-track
in the sea, a trail of blood. The clang of every
ship’s bell, the scream of every whistle, gave
us new hope; but we were still waiting, waiting, waiting.
Port Townsend stands knee-deep in the edge of a sea-garden.
I sat a long time on the dock, watching for some sign
of the belated boat. Great ropes of kelp, tubes
of dark brown sea-grass, floated past me on the slow
tide. Wonderful anémones, pink, balloon-shaped,
mutable, living and breathing things,-these
panted as they drifted by. At every respiration
they expanded like the sudden blossoming of a flower;
then they closed quite as suddenly, and became mere
buds. When the round core of these sea-flowers
was exposed to the air-the palpitating
heart was just beneath the surface most of the time,-they
withered in a breath; but revived again the moment
the water glazed them over, and fairly revelled in
aqueous efflorescence.
“Bang!” It was the crash
of an unmistakable gun, that shook the town to its
foundations and brought the inhabitants to their feet
in an instant. Out of the smoke loomed a shadowy
ship, and, lo! it was the Alaska boat. A goodly
number of passengers were already on board; as many
more were now to join her; and then her prow was to
be turned to the north star and held there for some
time to come. In a moment the whole port was in
a state of excitement. New arrivals hurried on
shore to see the lions of the place. We, who
had been anxiously awaiting this hour for a couple
of long summer days, took the ship by storm, and drove
the most amiable and obliging of pursers nearly frantic
with our pressing solicitations.
Everybody was laying in private stores,
this being our last chance to supply all deficiencies.
Light literature we found scattered about at the druggist’s
and the grocer’s and the curiosity shops; also
ink, pens, note-books, tobacco, scented soap and playing-cards
were discovered in equally unexpected localities.
We all wanted volumes on the Northwest-as
many of them as we could get; but almost the only one
obtainable was Skidmore’s “Alaska, the
Sitkan Archipelago,” which is as good as any,
if not the best. A few had copies of the “Pacific
Coast Pilot. Alaska. Part I. Dixon’s
Entrance to Yakutat Bay,”-invaluable
as a practical guide, and filled with positive data.
Dall and Whimper we could not find, nor Bancroft at
that time. Who will give us a handy volume reprint
of delightful old Vancouver?
We were busy as bees all that afternoon;
yet the night and the starlight saw us satisfactorily
hived, and it was not long before the buzzing ceased,
as ship and shore slept the sleep of the just.
By and by we heard pumping, hosing, deck-washing,
the paddling of bare feet to and fro, and all the
familiar sounds of an early morning at sea. The
ship, however, was motionless: we were lying
stock-still. Doubtless everybody was wondering
at this, as I was, when there came a crash, followed
by a small avalanche of broken timber, while the ship
quaked in her watery bed. I thought of dynamite
and the Dies Irae; but almost immediately the
cabin-boy, who appeared with the matutinal coffee,
said it was only the Olympian, the fashionable
Sound steamer, that had run into us, as was her custom.
She is always running into something, and she succeeded
in carrying away a portion of our stern gear on this
occasion. Nevertheless, we were delayed only
a few hours; for the Olympian was polite enough
not to strike us below the water-line, and so by high
noon we were fairly under way.
From my log-book I take the following:
This is slow and easy sailing-a kind of
jog-trot over the smoothest possible sea, with the
paddles audibly working every foot of the way.
We run down among the San Juan Islands, where the
passages are so narrow and so intricate they make a
kind of watery monogram among the fir-lined shores.
A dense smoke still obscures the sun,-a
rich haze that softens the distance and lends a picturesqueness
that is perhaps not wholly natural to the locality,
though the San Juan Islands are unquestionably beautiful.
The Gulf of Georgia, the Straits of
Fuca, and Queen Charlotte Sound are the words upon
the lips of everybody. Shades of my schoolboy
days! How much sweeter they taste here than in
the old geography class! Before us stretches
a wilderness of islands, mostly uninhabited, which
penetrates even into the sunless winter and the shadowless
summer of Behring Sea.
As for ourselves, Old Probabilities
has got down to business. He has opened an impromptu
peripatetic school of navigation, and triumphantly
sticks a pin into every point that tallies with his
yard-square chart. The evangelist has his field-glass
to his eye in search of the unregenerated aborigines.
The swell tourists are much swollen with travel; they
loosen the belts of their Norfolks, and at intervals
affect a languid interest in this mundane sphere.
There are delightful people on board-many
of them-and not a few others. There
are bevies of girls-all young, all pretty;
and all, or nearly all, bubbling over with hearty
and wholesome laughter.
What richness! A good, clean
deck running the whole length of the ship; a cosy
and cheerful social hall, with a first-class upright
piano of delicious tone, and at least a half dozen
creditable performers to awaken the soul of it; a
good table, good weather, good luck, and positively
nothing to do but have a good time for three solid
weeks in the wilderness. The pestiferous telephone
can not play the earwig on board this ship; the telegraph,
with metallic tick, can not once startle us by precipitating
town tattle; the postal service is cut off; wars and
rumors of wars, the annihilation of a nation, even
the swallowing up of a whole continent, are now of
less consequence to us than the possibility of a rain-shower
this afternoon, or the solution of the vexed question,
“Will the aurora dazzle us before dawn?”
We do not propose to wait upon the aurora: for
days and days and days we are going to climb up the
globe due North, getting nearer and nearer to it all
the while. Now, inasmuch as everything is new
to us, we can easily content ourselves for hours by
lounging in the easy-chairs, and looking off upon
the placid sea, and at the perennial verdure that springs
out of it and mantles a lovely but lonely land.
Only think of it for a moment!
Here on the northwest coast there are islands sown
so thickly that many of the sea-passages, though deep
enough for a three-decker to swim in, are so narrow
that one might easily skim his hat across them.
There are thousands of these islands-yea,
tens of thousands,-I don’t know just
how many, and perhaps no man does. They are of
all shapes and sizes, and the majority of them are
handsomely wooded. The sombre green of the woods,
stretching between the sombre blue-green of the water
and the opaline sheen of the sky, forms a picture-a
momentary picture,-the chief features of
which change almost as suddenly and quite as completely
as the transformations in a kaleidoscope. We
are forever turning corners; and no sooner are we
around one corner than three others elbow us just ahead.
Now, toward which of the three are we bound, and will
our good ship run to larboard or to starboard?
This is a turn one might bet on all day long-and
lose nearly every time.
A bewildering cruise! Vastly
finer than river sailing is this Alaskan expedition.
Here is a whole tangle of rivers full of strange tides,
mysterious currents, and sweet surprises. Moreover,
we can get lost if we want to-no one can
get lost in a river. We can rush in where pilots
fear to tread, strike sunken rocks, toss among dismal
eddies, or plunge into whirlpools. We can rake
overhanging boughs with our yard-arms if we want to-but
we don’t want to. In 1875 the United States
steamer Saranac went down in Seymour Narrows,
and her fate was sudden death. The United States
steamer Suwanee met with a like misfortune on
entering Queen Charlotte Sound. It is rather jolly
to think of these things, and to realize that we were
in more or less danger; though the shores are as silent
as the grave, the sea sleeps like a mill-pond, and
the sun sinks to rest with great dignity and precision,
nightly bathing the lonely North in sensuous splendor.
It is getting late. Most of us
are indulging in a constitutional. We rush up
and down the long flush decks like mad; we take fiendish
delight in upsetting the pious dignity of the evangelist;
we flutter the smokers in the smoking-room-because,
forsooth, we are chasing the girls from one end of
the ship to the other; and consequently the denizens
of the masculine cabin can give their undivided attention
to neither cards nor tobacco. What fun it all
is-when one is not obliged to do it for
a living, and when it is the only healthy exercise
one is able to take!
By and by the girls fly to their little
nests. As we still stroll in the ever-so-late
twilight, at 10 p. m., we hear them piping sleepily,
one to another, their heads under their wings no doubt.
They are early birds-but that is all right.
They are the life of the ship; but for their mirth
and music the twilight would be longer and less delightful.
Far into the night I linger over a final cigarette.
An inexpressible calm steals over me,-a
feeling as of deliverance, for the time being at least,
from all the cares of this world. We are steaming
toward a mass of shadows that, like iron gates, seem
shut against us. A group of fellow-voyagers gathers
on the forward deck, resolved to sit up and ascertain
whether we really manage to squeeze through some crevice,
or back out at last and go around the block.
I grow drowsy and think fondly of my little bunk.
What a night! Everything has
grown vague and mysterious. Not a voice is heard-only
the throb of the engine down below and the articulated
pulsation of the paddles, every stroke of which brings
forth a hollow sound from the sea, as clear and as
well defined as a blow upon a drumhead; but these
are softened by the swish of waters foaming under
the wheel. Echoes multiply; myriads of them, faint
and far, play peek-a-boo with the solemn pilot, who
silently paces the deck when all the ship is wrapped
in a deep sleep.