Sitka has always seemed to me the
jumping-off place. I have vaguely imagined that
somehow-I know not just how-it
had a mysterious affinity with Moscow, and was in
some way a dependence of that Muscovite municipality.
I was half willing to believe that an underground passage
connected the Kremlin with the Castle of Sitka; that
the tiny capital of Great Alaska responded, though
feebly, to every throb of the Russian heart.
Perhaps it did in the good old days now gone; but there
is little or nothing of the Russian element left,
and the place is as dead as dead can be without giving
offence to the olfactory organ.
We were picking our way through a
perfect wilderness of islands, on the lookout for
the capital, of which we had read and heard so much.
Surely the Alaskan pilot must have the eye and the
instinct of a sea bird or he could never find a port
in that labyrinth. Moreover, the air was misty:
we felt that we were approaching the sea. Lofty
mountains towered above us; sometimes the islands
swam apart-they seemed all in motion, as
if they were swinging to and fro on the tide,-and
then down a magnificent vista we saw the richly wooded
slopes of some glorious height that loomed out of
the vapor and bathed its forehead in the sunshine.
Sometimes the mist grew denser, and we could see hardly
a ship’s-length ahead of us; and the air was
so chilly that our overcoats were drawn snugly about
us, and we wondered what the temperature might be “down
south” in Dakota and New England.
In the grayest of gray days we came
to Sitka, and very likely for this reason found it
a disappointment at first sight. Certainly it
looked dreary enough as we approached it-a
little cluster of tumbledown houses scattered along
a bleak and rocky shore. We steamed slowly past
it, made a big turn in deep water, got a tolerable
view of the city from one end of it to the other,
and then crept up to the one little dock, made fast,
and were all granted the freedom of the capital for
a couple of days. It is a gray place-gray
with a greenish tinge in it-the kind of
green that looks perennial-a dark, dull
evergreen.
There was some show of color among
the costumes of the people on shore-bright
blankets and brighter calicoes,-but there
was no suspicion of gaiety or of a possible show of
enthusiasm among the few sedate individuals who came
down to see us disembark. I began to wonder if
these solemn spectators that were grouped along the
dock were ghosts materialized for the occasion; if
the place were literally dead-dead as the
ancient Russian cemetery on the hill, where the white
crosses with their double arms, the upper and shorter
one aslant, shone through the sad light of the waning
day.
We had three little Russian maids
on our passenger list, daughters of Father Mitropolski,
the Greek priest at Sitka. They were returning
from a convent school at Victoria, and were bubbling
over with delight at the prospective joys of a summer
vacation at home. But no sooner had they received
the paternal embraces upon the deck than the virtue
of happiness went out of them; and they became sedate
little Sitkans, whose dignity belied the riotous spirit
that had made them the life of the ship on the way
up.
We also brought home a little Russian
chap who had been working down at Fort Wrangell, and,
having made a fortune-it was a fortune in
his eyes,-he was returning to stay in the
land of his nativity. He was quiet enough on
shipboard-indeed, he had almost escaped
observation until we sighted Sitka; but then his heart
could contain itself no longer, and he made confidants
of several of us to whom he had spoken never a word
until this moment. How glad he was to greet its
solemn shores, to him the dearest spot in all the
earth! A few hours later we met him. He
was swinging on the gate at the homestead in the edge
of the town: a sweet, primitive place, that caught
our eye before the youngster caught our ears with
his cheerful greeting. “Oh, I so glad!”
said he, with a mist in his eye that harmonized with
everything else. “I make eighty dollar
in four month at Wrangell. My sister not know
me when I get home. I so glad to come back to
Sitka. I not go away any more.”
Of course we poured out of the ship
in short order, and spread through the town like ants.
At the top of the dock is the Northwest Trading Company’s
store-how we learned to know these establishments!
Some scoured it for a first choice, and got the pick
of the wares; but here, as elsewhere, we found the
same motley collection of semi-barbarous bric-a-brac-brilliantly
painted Indian paddles spread like a sunburst against
the farther wall; heaps of wooden masks and all the
fantastical carvings such as the aborigines delight
in, and in which they almost excel. Up the main
street of the town is another store, where a series
of large rooms, crowded with curios bewilders the purchaser
of those grotesque wares.
At the top of Katalan’s rock,
on the edge of the sea, stands the Colonial Castle.
It is a wooden structure, looking more like a barrack
than a castle. At the foot of the rock are the
barracks and Custom House. A thin sprinkling
of marines, a few foreign-looking citizens-the
full-fledged Rusk of the unmistakable type is hard
to find nowadays,-and troops of Indians
give a semblance of life to this quarter. At
the head of the street stands the Russian Orthodox
Church; and this edifice, with its quaint tower and
spire, is really the lion of the place. St. Michael’s
was dedicated in 1844 by the Venerable Ivan Venianimoff,
the metropolitan of Moscow, for years priest and Bishop
at Ounalaska and Sitka.
In his time the little chapel was
richly decorated; but as the settlement began falling
to decay, the splendid vestments and sacred vessels
and altar ornaments, and even the Bishop himself, were
transferred to San Francisco. It then became the
duty of the Bishop to visit annually the churches
at Sitka, Ounalaska and Kodiak, as the Russian Government
still allowed these dependencies an annuity of $50,000.
But the last incumbent of the office, Bishop Nestor,
was lost tragically at sea in May, 1883; and, as the
Russian priesthood seems to be less pious than particular,
the office is still a-begging-unless I
have been misinformed. Probably the mission will
be abandoned. Certainly the dilapidated chapel,
with its remnants of tarnished finery, its three surviving
families of Russian blood, its handful of Indian converts,
seems not likely to hold long together.
We witnessed a service in St. Michael’s.
The tinkling bells in the green belfry-a
bulbous, antique-looking belfry it is-rang
us in from the four quarters of the town. As
there were neither pews, chairs nor prayer carpets,
we stood in serio-comic silence while the double
mysteries of the hidden Holy of Holies were celebrated.
Not more than a dozen devotees at most were present.
These gathered modestly in the rear of the nave and
put us to shame with their reverent gravity. Strange
chants were chanted; it was a weird music, like a
litany of bumblebees. Dense clouds of incense
issued from gilded recesses that were screened from
view.
It was all very strange, very foreign,
very unintelligible to us. It was also very monotonous;
and when some of the unbelievers grew restless and
stole quietly about on voyages of exploration and discovery,
they were duly rewarded at the hands of the custodian
of the chapel, who rather encouraged the seeming sacrilege.
He left his prayers unsaid to pilot us from nook to
nook; he exhibited the old paintings of Byzantine origin,
and in broken English endeavored to interpret their
meaning. He opened antique chests that we might
examine their contents; and when a volume of prayers
printed in rustic Russian type and bound with clumsy
metal clasps, was bartered for, he seemed quite willing
to dispose of it, though it was the only one of the
kind visible on the premises. This excited our
cupidity, and, with a purse in our hand, we groped
into the sacristy seeking what we might secure.
A set of small chromos came
to light: bright visions of the Madonna, done
in three or four colors, on thin paper and fastened
to blocks of wood. They were worth about two
cents-perhaps three for five. We paid
fifty cents apiece, and were glad to get them at that
price-oh, the madness of the seeker after
souvenirs! Then all unexpectedly we came upon
a collection of half-obliterated panel paintings.
They were thrown carelessly in a deep window-seat,
and had been overlooked by many. They were Russian
to the very grain of the wood; they were quaint to
the verge of the ludicrous; they were positively black
with age; thick layers of dust and dirt and smoke
of incense coated them, so that the faint colors that
were laid upon them were sunk almost out of sight.
The very wood itself was weather-stained, and a chip
out of it left no trace of life or freshness beneath.
Centuries old they seemed, these small panels, sacred
Ikons. In far-away Russia they may have
been venerated before this continent had verified
the dream of Columbus. As we were breaking nearly
all the laws of propriety, I thought it safe to inquire
the price of these. I did so. Would I had
been the sole one within hearing that I might have
glutted my gorge on the spot! They were fifteen
cents apiece, and they were divided among us as ruthlessly
as if they were the seamless shirt of blessed memory.
Meanwhile the ceremonies at the high
altar had come to an end. The amiable assistant
of Father Mitropolski was displaying the treasures
of the sanctuary with pardonable pride,-jewelled
crosiers, golden chalices, robes resplendent with
rubies, amethysts and pearls, paintings upon ivory,
and images clothed in silver and precious stones.
The little chapel, cruciform, is decorated in white
and gold; the altar screens are of bronze set with
images of silver. Soft carpets of the Orient were
spread upon the steps of the altar.
How pretty it all seemed as we turned
to leave the place and saw everything dimly in the
blue vapor that still sweetened and hallowed it!
And when the six bells in the belfry all fell to ringing
riotously, and the sun let slip a few stray beams
that painted the spire a richer green, and the grassy
street that stretches from the church porch to the
shore was dotted with groups of strollers, St Michael’s
at Sitka, in spite of its dingy and unsymmetrical
exterior, seemed to us one of the prettiest spots
it had ever been our lot to see.
It is a grassy and a mossy town that
gathers about the Russian chapel. All the old
houses were built to last (as they are likely to do)
for many generations to come. They are log-houses-the
public buildings, the once fashionable officers’
club, and many of the residences,-formed
of solid square brown logs laid one upon another until
you come to the roof. At times the logs are clapboarded
without, and are all lathed and plastered within.
The floors are solid and the stairs also. The
wonder is how the town can ever go to ruin-save
by fire; for wood doesn’t rot in Alaska, but
will lie in logs exposed to the changes of the season
for an indefinite period.
I saw in a wood back of the town an
immense log. It was in the primeval forest, and
below it were layers of other logs lying crosswise
and in confusion. I know not how far below me
was the solid earth, for mats of thick moss and deep
beds of dead leaves filled the hollows between the
logs; but this log, nearly three feet in diameter,
was above them all; and out of it-from
a seed no doubt imbedded in the bark-had
sprung a tree that is to-day as great in girth as
the log that lies prostrate beneath its roots.
These mighty roots have clasped that log in an everlasting
embrace and struck down into the soil below. You
can conjecture how long the log has been lying there
in that tangle of mighty roots-yet the
log is to-day as sound a bit of timber as one is likely
to find anywhere.
Alaska is buried under forests like
these-I mean that part of it which is not
still cased in ice and snow. A late official gave
me out of his cabinet a relic of the past. It
is a stone pestle, rudely but symmetrically hewn,-evidently
the work of the aborigines. This pestle, with
several stone implements of domestic utility, was discovered
by a party of prospectors who had dug under the roots
of a giant tree. Eleven feet beneath the surface,
directly under the tree and surrounded by gigantic
roots, this pestle, and some others of a similar character,
together with mortars and various utensils, were scattered
through the soil. Most of the collection went
to the Smithsonian Institute, and perhaps their origin
and history may be some day conjectured. How many
ages more, I wonder, will be required to develop the
resources of this vast out-of-door country?
When the tardy darkness fell upon
Sitka-toward midnight-the town
was hardly more silent than it had been throughout
the day. A few lights were twinkling in distant
windows; a few Indians were prowling about; the water
rippled along the winding shore; and from time to time
as the fresh gusts blew in from the sea, some sleepless
bird sailed over us on shadowy wings, and uttered
a half-smothered cry that startled the listener.
Then, indeed, old Sitka, which was once called New
Archangel, seemed but a relic of the past, whose vague,
romantic history will probably never be fully known.