When Captain Cook-who,
with Captain Kidd, nearly monopolizes the young ladies’
ideal romance of the seas-was in these waters,
he asked the natives what land it was that lay about
them, and they replied: “Alaska”-great
land. It is a great land, lying loosely
along the northwest coast,-great in area,
great in the magnitude and beauty of its forests and
in the fruitfulness of its many waters; great in the
splendor of its ice fields; the majesty of its rivers,
the magnificence of its snow-clad peaks; great also
in its possibilities, and greatest of all in its measureless
wealth of gold.
In the good old days of the Muscovite
reign-1811,-Governor Baranoff
sent Alexander Kuskoff to establish a settlement in
California where grain and vegetables might be raised
for the Sitka market. The ruins of Fort Ross
are all that remain to tell the tale of that enterprise.
The Sitkan of to-day manages to till a kitchen-garden
that suffices; but his wants are few, and then he
can always fall back on canned provision if his fresh
food fails.
The stagnation of life in Alaska is
all but inconceivable. The summer tourist can
hardly realize it, because he brings to the settlement
the only variety it knows; and this comes so seldom-once
or twice a month-that the population arises
as a man and rejoices so long as the steamer is in
port. Please to picture this people after the
excitement is over, quietly subsiding into a comatose
state, and remaining in it until the next boat heaves
in sight. One feeds one’s self mechanically;
takes one’s constitutional along the shore or
over one of the goat-paths that strike inland; nodding
now and again to the familiar faces that seem never
to change in expression except during tourist’s
hours; and then repairs to that bed which is the salvation
of the solitary, for sleep and oblivion are the good
angels that brood over it. In summer the brief
night-barely forty winks in length-is
so silvery and so soft that it is a delight to sit
up in it even if one is alone. Lights and shadows
play with one another, and are reflected in sea and
sky until the eye is almost dazzled with the loveliness
of the scene. I believe if I were banished to
Alaska I would sleep in the daytime-say
from 8 a. m. to 5 p. m.,-and revel in the
wakeful beauty of the other hours.
But the winter, and the endless night
of winter!-when the sun sinks to rest in
discouragement at three or four o’clock in the
afternoon, and rises with a faint heart and a pale
face at ten or eleven in the forenoon; when even high
noon is unworthy of the name-for the dull
luminary, having barely got above the fence at twelve
o’clock, backs out of it and sinks again into
the blackness of darkness one is destined to endure
for at least two thirds of the four and twenty!
Since the moon is no more obliging to the Alaskans
than the sun is, what is a poor fellow to do?
He can watch the aurora until his eyes ache; he can
sit over a game of cards and a glass of toddy-he
can always get the latter up there; he can trim his
lamp and chat with his chums and fill his pipe over
and over again. But the night thickens and the
time begins to lag; he looks at his watch, to find
it is only 9 p. m., and there are twelve hours between
him and daylight. It is a great land in which
to store one’s mind with knowledge, provided
one has the books at hand and good eyes and a lamp
that won’t flicker or smoke. Yet why should
I worry about this when there are people who live
through it and like it?-or at least they
say they do.
In my mind’s eye I see the Alaska
of the future-and the not far-distant future.
Among the most beautiful of the islands there will
be fine openings; lawns and flowers will carpet the
slopes from the dark walls of the forest to the water’s
edge. In the midst of these favored spots summer
hotels will throw wide their glorious windows upon
vistas that are like glimpses of fairy land.
Along the beach numerous skiffs await those who are
weary of towns; steam launches are there, and small
barges for the transportation of picnic parties to
undiscovered islands in the dim distance. Sloop
yachts with the more adventurous will go forth on
voyages of exploration and discovery, two or three
days in length, under the guidance of stolid, thoroughbred
Indian pilots. There may be an occasional wreck,
with narrow escapes from the watery grave-let
us hope so, for the sake of variety. There will
be fishing parties galore, and camping on foreign
shores, and eagle hunts, and the delights of the chase;
with Indian retinues and Chinese cooks, and the “swell
toggery” that is the chief, if not the only,
charm of that sort of thing. There will be circulating
libraries in each hotel, and grand pianos, and private
theatricals, and nightly hops that may last indefinitely,
or at least until sunrise, without shocking the most
prudent; for day breaks at 2 a. m.
There will be visits from one hotel
to the other, and sea-voyages to dear old Sitka, where
the Grand Hotel will be located; and there will be
the regular weekly or semi-weekly boat to the Muir
glacier, with professional guides to the top of it,
and all the necessary traps furnished on board if
desired. And this wild life can begin as early
as April and go on until the end of September without
serious injury. There will be no hay fever or
prickly-heat; neither will there be sunstrokes nor
any of the horrors of the Eastern and Southern summer.
It will remain true to its promise of sweet, warm
days, and deliciously cool evenings, in which the
young lover may woo his fair to the greatest advantage;
for there is no night there. Then everyone will
come home with a new experience, which is the best
thing one can come home with, and the rarest nowadays;
and with a pocketful of Alaskan garnets, which are
about the worst he can come home with, being as they
are utterly valueless, and unhandsome even when they
are beautifully symmetrical.
Oh, the memory of the voyage, which
is perhaps the most precious of all!-this
we bring home with us forever. The memory of all
that is half civilized and wholly unique and uncommon:
of sleepy and smoky wigwams, where the ten tribes
hold powwow in a confusion of gutturals, with a plentiful
mixture of saliva; for it is a moist language, a gurgle
that approaches a gargle, and in three weeks the unaccustomed
ear scarcely recovers from the first shock of it;
a memory of totem poles in stark array, and of the
high feast in the Indian villages, where the beauty
and chivalry of the forest gathered and squatted in
wide circles listening to some old-man-eloquent in
the very ecstasy of expectoration; the memory of a
non-committing, uncommunicative race, whose religion
is a feeble polytheism-a kind of demonolatry;
for, as good spirits do not injure one, one’s
whole time is given to the propitiation of the evil.
This is called Shamanism, and is said to have been
the religion of the Tartar race before the introduction
of Buddhism, and is still the creed of the Siberians;
a memory of solitary canoes on moonlit seas and of
spicy pine odors mingled with the tonic of moist kelp
and salt-sea air.
A memory of friends who were altogether
charming, of a festival without a flaw. O my
kind readers! when the Alaska Summer Hotel Company
has stocked the nooks and corners of the archipelago
with caravansaries, and good boats are filling them
with guests who go to spend the season in the far
Northwest, fail not to see that you are numbered among
the elect; for Alaska outrivers all rivers and out-lakes
all lakes-being itself a lake of ten thousand
islands; it out-mountains the Alps of America, and
certainly outdoes everything else everywhere else,
in the shape of a watering place. And when you
have returned from there, after two or three months’
absence from the world and its weariness, you will
begin to find that your “tum-tum is white”
for the first time since your baptismal day, and that
you have gained enough in strength and energy to topple
the totem pole of your enemy without shedding a feather.
There is hope for Alaska in the line of a summer resort.
As ghosts scent the morning air and
are dispersed, so we scented the air, which actually
seemed more familiar as we approached Washington in
the great Northwest; and the spirit of peace, of ease
and of lazy contentment that had possessed our souls
for three weeks took flight. It was now but a
day’s sail to Victoria, and yet we began to think
we would never get there.
We were hungry for news of the world
which we had well-nigh forgotten. Three weeks!
It seemed to us that in this little while cities might
have been destroyed, governments overthrown, new islands
upheaved and old ones swallowed out of sight.
Then we were all expecting to find heaps of letters
from everybody awaiting us at Victoria or Port Townsend,
and our mouths fairly watered for news.
We took a little run into the sea
and got lost in a fog; but the pilot whistled for
the landmarks, and Echo answered; so that by the time
the fog was ready to roll away, like a snowy drop-curtain,
we knew just where we were, and ran quietly into a
nook that looked as if it would fit us like a bootjack.
The atmosphere grew smoky; forest fires painted the
sky with burnt umber, and through this veil the sun
shone like a copper shield. Then a gorgeous moonlight
followed. There was blood upon that moon, and
all the shores were like veins in moss-agate and the
sea like oil. We wound in and out, in and out,
among dreamy islands; touched for a little while at
Nanaimo, where we should have taken in a cargo of
coal for Portland, whither the Ancon was bound;
but Captain Carroll kindly put us all ashore first
and then returned for his freight.
We hated to sleep that night, and
did not sleep very much. But when we awakened
it was uncommonly quiet; and upon going on deck-lo!
we were at Victoria. What a quiet, pretty spot!
What a restful and temperate climate! What jutting
shores, soft hills, fine drives, old-countrified houses
and porters’ lodges and cottages, with homely
flowers in the door-yards and homely people in the
doors!-homely I mean in the handsomest
sense, for I can not imagine the artificial long survives
in that community.
How dear to us seemed civilization
after our wanderings in the wilderness! We bought
newspapers and devoured them; ran in and out of shops
just for the fun of it and because our liberty was
so dear to us then. News? We were fairly
staggered with the abundance of it, and exchanged
it with one another in the most fraternal fashion,
sharing our joys and sorrows with the whole ship’s
company. And deaths? What a lot of these,
and how startling when they come so unexpectedly and
in such numbers! Why is it, I wonder, that so
many people die when we are away somewhere beyond
reach of communication?
But enough of this. A few jolly
hours on shore, a few drives in the suburbs and strolls
in the town, and we headed for Port Townsend and the
United States, where we parted company with the good
old ship that carried us safely to and fro. And
there we ended the Alaskan voyage gladly enough, but
not without regret; for, though uneventful, I can
truly say it was one of the pleasantest voyages of
my life; and one that-thanks to every one
who shared it with me-I shall ever remember
with unalloyed delight.