Probably no one leaves Juneau with
regret. Far more enjoyable was the day we spent
in Ward’s Cove, land-locked, wooded to the water’s
edge, and with forty-five fathoms of water of the
richest sea-green hue. Here lay the Pinta
and the Paterson, two characteristic representatives
of the United States Navy-as it was before
the war-the former a promoted tug-boat,
equipped at an expense of $100,000, and now looking
top-heavy and unseaworthy, but just the thing for a
matinee performance of Pinafore, if that were
not out of date.
This Pinta, terrible as a canal-boat,
armed to the teeth, drew up under our quarter to take
in coal. You see the Ancon combined business
with pleasure, and distributed coal in quantities to
suit throughout the Alaskan lagoon. Now, there
is not much fun in coaling, even when a craft as funny
as the Pinta is snuggling up under your quarter,
looking more like the Pinafore than ever, with her
skylarking sailors, midshipmite and all; so Captain
Carroll secured a jaunty little steam-launch, and
away we went on a picnic in the forest primeval.
The launch was laden to the brim; three of our biggest
boats were in tow; an abundant collation, in charge
of a corps of cabin-boys, gave assurance of success
in one line at least.
We explored. Old Vancouver did
the same thing long ago, and no doubt found these
shores exactly as we find them to-day. We entered
a shallow creek at the top of the cove; landed on
a dreary point redolent of stale fish, and the beach
literally alive and creeping with small worms above
half an inch in length. A solitary squaw was splitting
salmon for drying. She remained absorbed in her
work while we gathered about and regarded her with
impudent curiosity. Overcome by the fetid air
of the place, we re-embarked and steamed gaily miles
away over the sparkling sea.
In an undiscovered country-so
it seemed to us-we came to a smooth and
sandy strip of shore and landed there. But a few
paces from the lightly-breaking ripples was the forest-and
such a forest! There were huge trees, looking
centuries old, swathed in blankets of moss, and the
moss gray with age. Impenetrable depths of shadow
overhead, impenetrable depths of litter under foot.
Log had fallen upon log crosswise and at every conceivable
angle.
Out of the fruitful dust of these
deposed monarchs of the forest sprang a numerous progeny-lusty
claimants, every one of them,-their foliage
feathery and of the most delicate green, being fed
only by the thin sunshine that sifts through the dense
canopy, supported far aloft by the majestic columns
that clustered about us. Under foot the russet
moss was of astonishing depth and softness. One
walks with care upon it, for the foot breaks through
the thick matting that has in many cases spread from
log to log, hiding treacherous traps beneath.
The ferns luxuriate in this sylvan paradise; and many
a beautiful shrub, new to us, bore flowers that blushed
unseen until we made our unexpected and perhaps unwelcome
appearance.
Here we camped. The cloth was
spread in a temple not made with hands; how hard it
is to avoid ringing in these little old-time tags about
flowers and forests! The viands were deftly served;
the merry jest went round, and sometimes came back
the same way, “returned with thanks.”
And thus we revelled in the midst of a solitude that
may never before have been broken by the sound of
human voice. When we held our peace-which
we did at long intervals, and for a brief moment only-we
realized this solemn fact; but it didn’t seem
to impress us much on the spot. Why, even the
birds were silent. Only the sea-gulls flashed
their white wings under the boughs in the edge of
the wood, and wheeled away in dizzy circles, piping
sharp, peevish cries.
It was a delightful day we passed
together. The memory of it is one of the most
precious souvenirs of the Alaskan tour; and it was
with reluctance that we returned to the ship, after
consulting our watches with astonishment; for the
late hours gave no warning, and we might have passed
the night there in the loveliest of twilights.
The Pinta was about to withdraw
to her anchorage as we boarded the Ancon; and
then, too late, I discovered among the officers of
that terror of the sea an old friend with whom I had
revelled in the halcyon days at Stag Racket Bungalow,
Honolulu. He was then on the U. S. man-of-war,
Alaska of jolly memory; and he, with his companions,
constituted the crack mess of the navy. But the
Alaska is a sheer hulk, and her once jovial
crew scattered hither and yon; he alone, in the solitude
of these unfreighted waters, remains to tell the tale.
I thought it a happy coincidence that, having met
him first under Old Glory, then floating in
the trade wind that blew over southern seas, I should
find him last in the lone land that gave name to the
ship that brought him over. Can the theosophists
unravel this mystery, or see aught in it that verges
upon the mystic philosophy? As we steamed out
of Wood’s Cove that night, with the echoes of
a parting salute filling the heavens to overflowing,
we saw a cluster of small, dark islets in the foreground;
shining waters beyond flowed to the foot of far-away
mountains; a silvery sky melted into gold as it neared
the horizon: this picture, as delicate in tint
as the most exquisite water-color, was framed in a
setting of gigantic pines; and it was by this fairy
portal we entered the sea of ice.
From solitude to solitude is the order
in Alaska. The solitude of the forest and the
sea, of the mountain and ravine,-with these
we had become more or less familiar when our good
ship headed for the solitude of ice and snow.
I began to feel as if we were being dragged out on
the roof of the world-as if we were swimming
in the flooded eaves of a continent. Sometimes
there came over me a sense of loneliness-of
the distance that lay between us and everybody else,
and of the helplessness of our case should any serious
accident befall us. It is this very state, perhaps,
that ages the hearts of the hardiest of the explorers
who seek vainly to unravel the polar mystery.
From time to time as we sailed, the
sea, now a brighter blue than ever, was strewn with
fragments of ice. Very lovely they looked as they
hugged the distant shore; a ghostly and fantastical
procession, borne ever southward by the slow current;
and growing more ghostly and fantastical hour by hour,
as they dwindled in the clear sunshine of the long
summer days. Anon the ice fragments increased
in number and dimensions. The whole watery expanse
was covered with brash, and we were obliged to pick
our way with considerable caution. At times we
narrowly escaped grazing small icebergs, that might
have disabled us had we come in collision with them.
As it was, many an ice-cake that looked harmless enough,
being very low in the water, struck us with a thud
that was startling; or passed under our old-fashioned
side-wheels, splintering the paddles and causing our
hearts to leap within us. A disabled wheel meant
a tedious delay in a latitude where the resources
are decidedly limited. Often we thought of the
miserable millions away down East simmering in the
sultry summer heat, while the thermometer with us stood
at 45 degrees in the sun, and the bracing salt air
was impregnated with balsamic odors.
In this delectable state we sighted
a bouncing baby iceberg, and at once made for it with
the enthusiasm of veritable discoverers. It was
pretty to see with what discretion we approached and
circled round it, searching for the most favorable
point of attack. So much of an iceberg is beneath
the surface of the water, ballasting the whole, that
it is rather ticklish business cruising in its vicinity.
We lay off and on, coquetting with the little beauty,
while one of our boats pulled up to it, and threw
a lariat over a glittering peak that flamed in the
sun like a torch. Then we drew in the slack and
made fast, while a half dozen of our men mounted the
slippery mass, armed with ropes and axes, and began
to hack off big chunks, which were in due season transferred
to our iceboxes.
Our iceberg was about fifty feet in
length and twenty or thirty feet out of the water.
It was a glittering island, with savage peaks, deep
valleys, bluffs, and promontories. The edges were
delicately frilled and resembled silver filigree.
Some of these, which were transparent and as daintily
turned as old Venetian glass, dripped continually like
rain-beaten eaves. The portion nearest the water’s
edge was honeycombed by the wavelets that dashed upon
it without ceasing, rushing in and out of the small,
luminous caverns in swift, sparkling rivulets.
Much of the surface was crusted with a fine frosting;
it was full of wells deep enough to sink a man in.
These wells were filled with water, and with a blue
light, celestial in its loveliness,-a light
ethereal and pellucid. It was as if the whole
iceberg were saturated with transfused moonbeams,
that gave forth a mellow radiance, which flashed at
times like brilliants, and burst into flame and played
like lightning along the almost invisible rims and
ridges. The unspeakable, the incomprehensible
light throbbed through and through; and was sometimes
bluish green and sometimes greenish blue; but oftenest
with the one was the other, both at once, and with
a perfectly bewildering tint added,-in a
word, it was frozen moonlight and no mistake.
O my friend, I assure you there are many famous sports
with not half the fun in them that there is in lassoing
an iceberg!
Once more I turn to my note-books.
I find that the morning had been foggy; that we could
see scarcely a ship’s length ahead of us; that
the water was like oil beneath and the mists like
snow above and about, while we groped blindly.
Of course we could not press forward under the circumstances;
for we were surrounded by islands great and small,
and any one of these might silently materialize at
a moment’s notice; but we were not idle.
Now and again our paddles beat the water impetuously,
and they hung dripping, while the sea stretched around
us as we leisurely drifted on like a larger bubble
in danger of bursting upon an unexpected rock.
We sounded frequently. There was an abundance
of water-there nearly always is throughout
the Alaskan archipelago; enough and to spare; but
the abrupt shore might be but a stone’s-throw
from us on the one hand or the other.
What was to be done? In the vast
stillness we blew a blast on our shrill whistle, and
listened for the echo. Sometimes it returned to
us almost on the instant and we cried, “Halt!”
When we halted or veered off, creeping as it were
on the surface of the oily sea, sometimes a faint or
far-off whisper-“the horns of elf-land”-gave
us assurance of plenty of space and the sea-room we
were sorely in need of just then. Once we saw
looming right under our prow a little islet with a
tuft of fir-trees crowning it-the whole
worthy to be made the head-piece or tail-piece to
some poem on solitude. It was very picturesque;
but it seemed to be crouching there, lying in wait
for us, ready to arch its back the moment we came
within reach. The rapidity with which we backed
out of that predicament left us no time for apologies.
Again we got some distance up the
wrong channel. When the fog lifted for a moment,
we discovered the error, put about without more ado,
and went around the block in a hurry. Meanwhile
we had schooled our ears to detect the most delicate
shades of sound; to measure or weigh each individual
echo with an accuracy that gave us the utmost self-satisfaction.
Perhaps Captain Carroll or Captain George, who was
spying out the land with his ears, would not have trusted
the ship in our keeping for five minutes-but
no matter.
Presently the opaque atmosphere began
to dissolve away; and as the sun brushed the webs
from his face, and darted sharp beams upon the water
all at once in a shower, the fog-banks went to pieces
and rolled away in sections out of sight, like the
transformation scene in a Christmas pantomime.
And there we were in the very centre of the smiling
island world, with splendid snow peaks towering all
about us; and such a flood of blue sky and bluer water,
golden sunshine and gilded fields of snow, of jutting
shores clad in perennial verdure, and eagles and sea-birds
wheeling round about us, as can be seen nowhere else
in the wide world to the same advantage.
We were entering a region of desolation.
The ice was increasing, and the water took that ghastly
hue, even a glimpse of which is enough to chill the
marrow in one’s bones. Vegetation was dying
out. A canoe-full of shivering Indians were stemming
the icy flood in search of some chosen fishery,-all
of them blanketed, and all-squaw as well
as papooses-taking a turn at the paddle.
These were the children of Nature, whose song-birds
are the screaming eagle, the croaking raven, and the
crying sea-doves blown inland by the wild westerly
gales.
We were now nearly within sound of
the booming glaciers; and as we drew nearer and nearer
I could but brood over the oft imagined picture of
that vast territory-our Alaska,-where,
beyond that mountain range, the almost interminable
winter is scarcely habitable, and the summers so brief
it takes about six of them to make a swallow.