A very Peculiar Person appears and disappears, and
the
Castaways are filled alternately with Hope and Fear.
“How long we slept I have not
the least idea. It may have been a whole day,
or it may have been two days. It was not a twenty
years’ sleep, (how we wished it was!) like that
of Rip Van Winkle, yet it was a very long sleep; and,
indeed, neither of us cared how long it lasted, we
were so heartbroken about what seemed to be the greatest
misfortune that had yet happened to us. If we
woke up at any time, we went to sleep again as quickly
as possible, not caring at all to come back any sooner
than was necessary to the contemplation of our miserable
situation, never reflecting for a moment
that the situation had not been changed in the least
by the unknown man who had appeared and disappeared
in such a mysterious way. But the sight of him
had brought our thoughts freshly back to the world
from which we had been cut off, a world
with human beings in it like ourselves; and it was
not unnatural, therefore, that we should be made miserable
by the event. And so we slept on and on, and
thus we drowned everything but our dreams, which are
everywhere very apt to be most bright and cheering
in the most gloomy and despondent times. Such,
at least, was the case with me; and if I could have
kept dreaming and dreaming on forever, about pleasant
things to eat, and pleasant people talking to me,
I should have been quite well satisfied.
“Thus you see what a great number
of ups and downs we had, sometimes being
cheerful and fully resigned, then again buried in the
very depths of despair. Sometimes we felt real
pleasure in the life to which we had become so well
accustomed; and it seemed to us, as we chatted together
in our warm and well-lighted hut, that, since every
necessary want was well supplied, and we were entirely
free from care, we should be well satisfied to continue
in that situation all our lives. We had, in truth,
few troubles and few anxieties. Food, fuel, and
clothing we possessed in abundance, and no fears crossed
our minds that they would ever fail us.
“But this satisfactory state
of mind, so natural at times, was apt to be broken
up by a very slight occurrence, unusual
fatigue, a restless sleep, a severe storm confining
us to the hut for many days together, or by the disappointment
we so often experienced when an object which we had
confidently believed to be a ship proved to be but
an iceberg. Nor was this more unnatural than
that we should at times be perfectly happy and well
contented. Thus are we all made, and thus are
we all, at times, inconsistent; being often unhappy
when there is no assignable cause, and often experiencing
the sense of great happiness, under circumstances
apparently the most distressing.
“You will see, therefore, that
there is but one way for any of us to preserve an
even temper and uniform disposition; that is, I mean,
always to be cheerful, never despondent, ever hopeful;
and this can only be attained by always feeling the
real presence of God with us; when we meet with disappointment,
to say in our hearts, ’Well, it was not the
will of God,’ or, if we meet with what seems
great good fortune, ’It is the will of God that
we do some good work, and therefore he has thus blessed
us.’ Thus only can we be truly happy.
With this feeling there is always consolation in distress.
It begets charity, and love, and confidence, and gentleness;
it makes the heart light and the face cheerful, and
the life like a sunbeam gladdening where it goes.
That’s what the love of God does.
“These thoughts are suggested
to me by the experiences that the Dean and I were
having at the time I speak of. How much more happy
we should have been, had we felt always as I have
last described! we should then never have been cast
down, but should have been always hopeful, never
wishing to sleep on and on, and thus drown sorrow.
We should not have felt as we did now when the strange
man had come from the frozen sea and disappeared again.
“Well, to come back to the story,
we were not allowed to sleep as long as we wanted
to. Our sleep was indeed brought to an end very
suddenly. I was first startled by a great noise,
and then, springing up, much alarmed, I aroused the
Dean, who was a sounder sleeper even than myself.
“‘What’s the matter?’ cried
he.
“‘Didn’t you hear a noise?’
I asked.
“‘No!’ answered
the Dean; ’nothing more, at least, than a church-bell,
and that was in my sleep,’ which was
clear enough.
“Presently I heard the noise
again, and this time it seemed to proceed from something
not far off. It was now the Dean’s turn
to be amazed.
“‘Did you hear?’ I asked again.
“‘Yes,’ said the Dean, holding his
breath to listen.
“Again the strange sound was repeated.
“‘Is it the wind?’
“‘How can it be? the wind does not make
a noise like that!’
“‘Can it be a bear?’
“‘No! it cannot be a bear!’
“‘A fox? perhaps it is a fox!’
“‘No, listen! there it is again.’
“The sound was louder now, and
nearer to the hut. Again and again it was repeated, nearer
now and more constant; then a footfall on the crusted
snow.
“‘It is a man! the bear-hunter
has come back again!’ spoke the Dean, throwing
up his hands.
“Again the noise was heard; again the footfall
creaked upon the snow.
“‘The bear-hunter, it must be!’
cried the Dean, again.
“‘O, I pray that it is so!’ I added,
earnestly.
“Again the voice was heard.
I answered it. The answer was returned, and with
the answer came a heavier and more rapid creaking of
the footfalls on the snow.
“We rushed from the hut into
the open air without another moment’s loss of
time, and without saying another word; and there, not
ten yards away, stood the very man who had passed
us on the sledge, the bear-hunter of the
frozen sea.
“And a strange-looking creature
he was, to be sure. There was not the least sign
of alarm or fear about him; but, on the contrary, he
was looking mightily pleased, and was talking very
fast in a language of which the Dean and I could neither
of us understand a single word. When he was not
talking he was laughing, and his enormous mouth was
stretched almost from ear to ear. ‘Yeh, yeh!’
he went, and I went that way too, by way of answer,
which seemed greatly to delight him. He was dressed
all over in furs, and looked very wild; but, as he
kept yeh-yeh-ing all the time, we were not
afraid. As he came up to us, we greeted him very
cordially; but he could no more understand what we
said than we could understand him. He talked
very much, and gesticulated a great deal, pointing
very often in one particular direction with his right
hand. Then he cried, ‘Mick-ee, mick-ee!’
and pointed to the beach below, towards which we followed
him. There we found a sledge and seven dogs;
and now we understood very certainly, if we had any
doubts before, that this was the man and these were
the dogs that had passed us, following the bear.
“The man tried his best to explain
to us the whole affair, talking very rapidly; but
we could not gather from what he said more than our
eyes told us already, for on the sledge we soon discovered
a large bear-skin, all bloody and folded up, and some
large pieces of bear’s meat. The dogs were
tied some distance from the sledge, and were securely
fastened by their traces to a heavy stone, which I
was very glad of, for the wolfish-looking beasts were
snarling at each other, and fighting, and howling
at us continually, seeming all the while
to wish themselves loose, that they might fly upon
us, and tear us to pieces.
“If we could not understand
the hunter’s words, we made out by his signs,
after a while, that he had seen us when he passed in
pursuit of the bear. After overtaking and capturing
the animal, he turned about upon his track to look
for us, and, finding our footmarks at last, he had
followed us to the hut, calling loudly, as he neared
us, to attract our attention, for he could not find
us easily, our hut was so buried up in
snow.
“After being fully satisfied
with the inspection of the dogs and sledge, and what
there was upon it, we all three went up to the hut.
“It would be difficult to describe
our visitor. I have said that he was wholly dressed
in furs. His pantaloons were made of bear-skins
reaching to the knees, where they met the boots, which
were made of the same materials. His underclothing
was made of birds’ skins, like our own, and
he wore a coat of fox-skins, with a heavy hood covering
up the head completely. On his hands he wore
mittens made of seal-skins, with warm dog-skin for
an inside lining, and his stockings were of the same.
So you see no part of him was exposed but his face,
which was quite dark, or, rather, copper-colored (something
darker than a North American Indian), and it was very
broad and very round. The nose was very small
and very flat, and the eyes were small and narrow.
His hair was jet black, long and tangled, and was
cut straight across the forehead. He had but
little beard, only a few black, wiry-looking
bristles growing on his upper lip and on the tip of
his chin. You would hardly suppose that such
a creature could be anything but savage and repulsive;
yet this he did not seem to be at all; on the contrary
he appeared like the most amiable fellow that ever
was seen.
“He sat down before the fire
on one of the big stones we used for stools, and the
Dean and I sat one on either side of him; and I can
never tell you how strange it seemed to be sitting
there with another human being besides ourselves,
after all that time spent without ever seeing anybody
but each other. It was like a dream. We could
hardly realize that it was true, as there we sat,
staring at the strange man in wonder and astonishment.
“And all this time we were speculating
about him, where he came from, where he
was going to, what relation did he hold to the world
from which we had come in the Blackbird, could
he tell us where we were, would he take us from the
island, would he rescue us from this dreary life.
“O, how much we would have given
for a few words from him that we could understand!
How rejoiced we would have been to have these questions
answered! Answering them, however, he might be
even then, for anything we knew to the contrary; for
he scarcely left off talking a single instant, but
away he rattled as lively as a magpie and just as
intelligibly. We could make nothing at all out
of what he said, any more than I could of the hieroglyphics
I have since seen on the stones of Egypt, until he
put his hand to his mouth, at the same time throwing
his head back a little, and repeating, several times,
’Me drinkum, Me drinkum.’
“This very much surprised us,
as we knew that he was asking for water, which having
been given him, he then said, ‘Me eatum’,
signifying that he was hungry. We lost no time,
therefore, in preparing him a hearty meal of ducks
and bear’s meat, which he appeared to think very
fine. Then he had a great deal to tell us about
something that he called ‘Oomeaksuak’,
the meaning of which we could not make out; but, as
he pointed in a particular direction, we thought he
meant the place where he lived. We could not
understand from him what his name was; so, as we had
to speak of him to each other constantly, we called
him at once ‘Eatum,’ as that was the word
he used most. He amused us very much with his
frequent repetition of it, and with the enormous quantities
of food he took into his stomach after he did repeat
it; for he only had to say, ‘Me eatum’
to get as much food as he wanted. It soon got
to be quite a joke with us, and when he said, ‘Me
eatum’ we all three fell, not only to feeding,
but to laughing besides.
“Finding himself in such good
quarters, Eatum manifested no disposition to leave
them; but, after he had taken a sound sleep, he had
a great deal to say about ‘mickee’,
as before; and since he made a great many motions,
as if using a whip (pointing all the while towards
the beach), we concluded that he must mean something
about his dogs, which we found to be true, for ‘mickee’
in his language means dog, as we afterwards discovered.
As soon as we had settled this, we all went out of
the hut again, and went down and brought the bear’s
meat and skin on the sledge up to the hut, and then
we fastened the dogs near by. After being fed,
they all lay down and went to sleep on the snow.
These dogs were very large and strong animals; and
the seven could draw a very heavy load, I
should think that the whole seven could draw as much
as a small horse.
“Eatum seemed to have been quite
exhausted with long hunting when he came to us, and
he did very little but eat and sleep for several days.
His nose had been a little touched by the frost, but
he scorched some oil, and rubbed it on as we would
ointment, and cured it very quickly.
“After he had eaten and slept
to his entire satisfaction, he appeared to grow more
lively, and showed a great deal of curiosity about
our hut and furniture, and hunting implements, being
highly pleased with every new thing he saw. It
was very surprising to see how nearly like his own
many of our things were, our lamp and pot
and cups, for instance, and also our clothing.
Our harpoon (the ‘Dean’s Delight’)
was almost exactly a match for his.
“It was a great drawback to
our satisfaction that we could not understand him
or he us, but little by little we got over part of
this difficulty; for, upon discovering that he used
one particular word very often, I guessed that he
must be asking a question. The word was ‘Kina’;
so once when he used it he was pointing to our lamp,
and I said ‘lamp’ at a venture, whereupon,
after repeating it several times, he appeared to be
much gratified, and then said, ‘Kolipsut’,
and this I repeated after him, which pleased him again.
Then I knew that ‘Kina?’ meant
‘What is it?’ or ‘What’s this?’
so after that we kina-ed everything, and got
on finely. We, of course, learned more rapidly
than Eatum, picking up a great many words from him;
and, having both of us good memories, we got to be
able to make him understand us a little in the course
of time; and as fast as we learned we taught him,
and he got to know some of our language, in which we
encouraged him. ’Me speakum much bad,’
he would say sometimes, which was very true; but so
long as we understood him it made little matter.
“And now it was that we got
to find out how he had picked up the few words such
as me drinkum, me eatum, and so on, that
he had used at first; for he gave us to know that
we were not a long way from where ships came every
year, and that some of his people saw the ships when
they passed, and sometimes went aboard of them.
‘Ship’ was what he meant by ‘Oomeaksuak’,
which word he had at first used so often. He had
frequently been aboard of an Oomeaksuak, he
said.
“Now this was great news for
us, and we began at once to devise means of escape
from the island. We made Eatum understand as much
of what we wanted as possible. All this time
I must not neglect to mention, however, that Eatum
was of the greatest service to us; for when the weather
was good he would fasten his dogs to the sledge, and
all three of us would go out together on the sea to
hunt, Eatum driving. It was very lively
sport; and sometimes, when the ice was very smooth
and the snow hard, we went very fast, almost as fast
as a horse would run, even with the three of us upon
the sledge. The sledge, by the way, I must tell
you, was made out of bits of bones, all cunningly lashed
together with seal-skin thongs. Once we were
caught in a severe gale a good way from home, and
had to make a little house to shelter ourselves from
it out of snow; and in this, with our furs on, we
managed to sleep quite comfortably, and remained there
about twenty-four hours before the weather would permit
us to go on again.
“While in the snow hut we had
a lamp to give us light and warmth; and this lamp
(which was Eatum’s) was made like ours, and Eatum
made a spark, and started a flame, and kept it burning
just as we had done, the tinder being the
down of the willow blossom (which he carried wrapped
up in several layers of seal-skin), with moss for wick
and the blubber for fuel. The pot in which he
melted snow for water, and cooked our supper, was
made, like ours, of soapstone.
“When the storm broke, we left
the snow hut, and set out for the island; catching
two seals by the way, and in the very same manner,
too, that the Dean and I had done long before we ever
knew there was such a person as Eatum in the world.
We were much disappointed at not discovering any bears,
and so were the dogs.
“But not many days afterward,
the weather being fine, we went out upon the sea a
great way, and were rejoiced to come across a bear’s
track, which Eatum said was very fresh. No sooner
had the dogs seen it than away they started upon it;
and over the ice and snow rough and smooth,
right upon the track they ran as fast as
they could go.
“The bear had been sleeping
behind an iceberg, and we had come upon him so suddenly
that he had not time even to get out of sight, and
we saw him almost as soon as we had discovered the
track. ’Nen-ook, nen-ook!’ cried
Eatum, pointing towards the bear; and there he was,
sure enough, running as fast as he could. But,
no matter how fast he ran, we went still faster; and
it could not have been an hour before we overtook
him. Then Eatum leaned forward and untied his
dogs, letting them run ahead while the sledge stopped.
In a few minutes the dogs had brought the bear to
bay, surrounding the huge wild beast, and
flying at his sides, and tormenting him in a very
fierce manner. But I always observed that they
took good care to keep away from his head, for if he
should get a chance at one of them, and hit him with
his huge paws, he would mash him flat enough, or knock
him all into little bits.
“While the dogs were worrying
the bear we got out our weapons, the Dean
his ‘Delight,’ I ‘Old Crumply,’
and Eatum a spear made of a narwhal horn, and looking,
for all the world, just like ‘Old Crumply’s’
twin brother. Then we rushed up to the bear,
Eatum leading; and fierce though the animal looked,
and awfully as he roared, we closed right in upon
him, and quickly made an end of him. Then we drove
off the dogs, and tied them to a hummock of ice, while
we butchered the dead animal and secured the skin
and what meat we wanted, after which we allowed the
dogs to gorge themselves. Being now too full to
haul, we had to let them lie down and sleep, while
we built a snow hut, and, crawling into it, got a
good rest. Then we returned to the island, mighty
well satisfied with ourselves.
“After this we fell again into
conversation about the Oomeaksuaks, or ships,
as I have explained before; and, having learned more
and more of the language which Eatum spoke, we got
to comprehend him better, so we fixed clearly in our
minds where the place was that the ships came to,
and were fully satisfied that Eatum told the truth
about it. We now offered to give him everything
we had if he would take us there, and stay with us
until the ships should come along and take us off his
hands. About this we had several conversations;
but just when we thought the treaty was complete,
and Eatum was going to carry out the plan we had fixed
upon, this singular savage disappeared very suddenly, dogs,
sledge, and all, without saying a single
word to us about it.
“When we made the discovery
that he was gone, we were filled with astonishment
and dismay. We hoped, at first, that he had gone
off hunting; but, finding that he did not return,
we tried to follow the tracks of his sledge, but the
wind had drifted snow over them, and we could not.
“We now made up our minds that
Eatum was nothing more than a treacherous savage;
and we were afraid that he would come back with more
savages and murder us, in order that he might get
the furs and other things that we had; so for a while
we were much alarmed, and were more heartbroken I
believe, than ever before, for our hopes of rescue
had been raised very high by hearing of Eatum’s
people and the ships. The suddenness with which
all our expectations were thus dashed to the ground
quite overcame us, and we passed the next five days
very miserably, hardly stirring out of the hut during
all that time. But at length we saw the folly
of giving way to despair.
“One thing we quickly determined
upon, and that was to leave the island, one way or
another; for now we were so afraid of the savages coming
to murder us, that we would suffer any risk and hardship
rather than remain there longer. So once more
we began to devise means for our safety.
“It was no longer what we should
do for food and fuel, or clothing, but how we should
escape. The ships we had given up long ago, and
with the ships had vanished every hope of rescue.
But now a wild man had come to us out of the ice-desert,
and had told us that ships came in the summer not
far from where we were, and through this intelligence
we had obtained a glimpse of home and our native country,
as it were; and this too at the very time when we
had become most reconciled to our condition, and had
made up our minds to live as best we could on the
Rock of Good Hope for the remainder of our days.
“But now our minds were wholly
changed. ‘We are worse off than ever,’
said the Dean, ’for this little hope the savage
gave us, and the fear, besides, that he has put into
us,’ which was true enough.
“Stimulated now by the memory
of that hope and the presence of that fear, we prepared
to undertake the bold task of rescuing ourselves.
The savage had pointed out to us the direction of
the place where the ships passed, ‘And now,’
we thought, ’if we can only reach the land there
before the summer comes we shall be all right.’
But if we should not get to the proper place, or if
the ships did not come along, then the chances were
that we might starve or freeze to death. Nothing
daunted, however, by the contemplation of that gloomy
side of the picture, we went earnestly to work, and
very soon had contrived a plan.
“Of course we must have a sledge,
as we were obliged to travel a long distance, and
must carry not only food to eat by the way, but blubber
for a lamp with which to melt water from the snow,
and furs to keep us warm while we slept. Eatum
had taught us how to construct a snow hut, so that
we felt sure of being able to shelter ourselves from
the storms.
“But the sledge was the great
difficulty. How should we make a sledge? was
the question which most occupied our thoughts, and
taxed our ingenuity. Apparently we had nothing
to make it of, nor tools to make it with. To
fasten together pieces of bone in the manner that Eatum
had done, and thus construct a runner, was not possible,
as we had no drill to make holes with, and
besides, if we had, the work would have required too
long a time for our present necessities. Our purpose
was to get away from the island with all possible
haste.
“We made a sledge, however,
at last, and in a very ingenious way as we thought,
though not a particularly good way as we afterwards
discovered. First we cut two strips of seal-skin,
and sewed them into tubes. Then we filled the
tubes with hair, and pieces of meat chopped very fine,
and also bits of moss. Then we poured water into
the tubes, and flattened them down by stamping upon
them. Very soon the whole froze together, solid
as a board, and these we soon fashioned into the proper
shape for runners. We found no difficulty in
fastening the two together with cross-ties of bone,
which we lashed firmly to the runners. Thus, in
seven days from the time of beginning to work upon
it, our sledge was complete.
“Very much rejoiced over this
triumph, we put a load on the sledge, and set out
to give it a trial. But one runner gave way before
we had gone a dozen fathoms, and we were in a state
of great perplexity. We resolved now to bundle
up everything we needed in a bear-skin, and drag that
over the snow after us, so great was our haste to
get away. We would drag the bear-skin head-foremost,
so that the fur would slip more easily over the snow.
But when we had done this, we discovered that, to say
nothing of dragging the load, we could not even start
it. Our united efforts were wholly unequal to
the task of moving it even so much as an inch; and,
like Robinson Crusoe with his boat, we had wholly miscalculated
the means, thinking only of the end. And so it
is sometimes, even with wiser heads than ours.
“We were now in even greater
trouble than ever; but being at length fully satisfied
of the utter hopelessness of proceeding in this manner,
we went back next day to the sledge, and began to work
upon it again; all the while looking out for the savages,
and expecting them every minute to come and murder
us.”