The Peculiar People proving to be Savages, the Castaways
seize the First Opportunity to leave them, not relishing
their Company.
“I have not latterly said much
about the Dean; but you may be very sure that such
a fine fellow could not fail to be greatly delighted
with the change that had come about, as it not only
led us away from our desolate life on the desert island,
but gave us a promise at least of the rescue which
we had so earnestly prayed for. ‘We ought
to be very thankful,’ said the Dean to me one
day, ’very thankful indeed for this deliverance.’
But as I did not much relish the habits and customs
of the savages, I did not find myself of the same
thankful disposition; so I replied to the Dean, that
the change looked much like that of the fish who fell
out of the frying-pan into the fire. ‘You
should not say so,’ replied the Dean. ’I
see the hand of God in it; and he who has mercifully
preserved us through so many trials and dangers will
not desert us now.’
“The Dean said no more at that
time, but he became very thoughtful, while, as for
myself, I felt quite ashamed that I had spoken so
slightingly of the savages, and had shown so much impatience
with their rather disagreeable company; for, to tell
the truth, their ways were somewhat offensive, as
they never washed their faces, and were altogether
rather a filthy set.
“The Dean, however, did not
stop with preaching about them, but, on the contrary,
did everything he could for them. One of the hunters
had gone to catch seals, and, the ice breaking up,
he was drifted out to sea, where he took refuge on
an iceberg, upon which he managed to drag his dogs
and sledge. Here he lived through terrible storms
and cold for a whole moon (that being the way they
reckon time), and he only escaped finally by the iceberg
drifting in near the land, when the sea froze around
it. After great trouble he got ashore, with both
of his feet dreadfully frozen, which is easily accounted
for when you know that the poor fellow had no shelter
at all while on the iceberg, and had nothing to eat
but his dogs, all of which died of starvation.
This savage had no wife, and the Dean took care of
him, and dressed his frost-bites, and was so good
to him that the savages all called him ‘Paw-weit’,
which means ‘Little Good-heart.’
So the Dean got on famously; but the poor frozen savage
that he had been so kind to died at last, and was buried
in the snow.
“A child fell on the ice, and
broke its arm, and the Dean set it, and made it all
right; and to other people he did many things to show
his sympathy for them; but, when he began to tell
them about our religion, they did not understand him,
and had no mind to listen. This very much grieved
the Dean; for he wanted to convert the whole of them,
and thought, if he only knew their language better,
he could persuade them all to be Christians, which
I think very likely, for nobody could resist him.
“We remained at the snow village
three weeks, but we did not do much more hunting,
as the savages seemed to think they had enough for
their present wants; and since they are almost constantly
moving about from place to place in search of food,
they never store up much for the future. Having
enough to eat for the present, they let the future
take care of itself; and, sure of a good meal, they
amuse themselves mostly with telling stories, usually
about each other, that is, when they are
not eating or sleeping, which I must say occupies most
of their time.
“They had a singular custom
in their story-telling which I have never seen among
any other people. One person recites the story,
and the listeners break in, every now and then, with
a laughing chorus that is nothing more than a repetition
of the meaningless words, ‘amna aya’,
which are sung over and over to any extent. The
women generally enjoy it the most, and sing the loudest,
especially when a man is concerned. I will give
you a specimen of this kind of song, translated,
of course, as I have long ago forgotten how to speak
their language.
“Eatum is telling the story
of a bear-hunt, and as you will see that it is a kind
of song, I will sing it for you, and you can join in
the chorus just as well as if you were all little
savages yourselves. We will call it
“THE
SONG OF KARSUK’S BEAR-HUNT.
“A bear is seen upon
the ice,
Amna aya;
Karsuk goes out to hunt the
bear,
Amna, amna
aya,
“The dogs get quick
upon the trail,
Amna aya;
The dogs are pulling all they
can,
Amna, amna,
aya.
“The bear is running
all he can,
Amna aya;
The bear gets tired and cannot
run,
Amna, amna
aya.
“He turns around to
charge Karsuk,
Amna aya;
Karsuk jumps off and runs
away,
Amna, amna
aya,
“He runs away all full
of fright,
Amna aya;
So full of fright he tumbles
down,
Amna, amna
aya,
“Bear kills the dogs
and breaks the sledge,
Amna aya;
What girl will marry such
a man?
Amna, amna
aya.”
and so on, after that, they keep aya-ing,
aya-ing, and amna-aya-ing uproariously,
until they are entirely broken down with shouting
and laughing, in the midst of which Karsuk is pretty
sure to run away.
“In the same manner I have heard
the story of Metak’s love adventure sung, or
rather recited, or amna-aya-ed as one might
say.
“They use the same amna-aya
chorus when they sing over the dead, or sing praises
of the dead, only instead of being lively, then it
is sung in a solemn tone. I will repeat one called
“THE
GRAVE-SONG OF MERAKUT.
“Merakut, Merakut, Merakut
dead!
Amna aya;
Merakut dead, her lamp is
smoking,
Amna, amna
aya.
Her children are crying, her
baby is freezing,
Amna aya;
O, her hut and our hearts
are all cold!
Amna, amna
aya.”
and after that, as in the other song,
they keep on amna-aya-ing for a long while,
but with a very doleful voice and manner. Indeed,
it is quite as distressing to hear them amna-aya
the dead as it is amusing to hear them amna-aya
the living.
“The Dean and I very much wanted
to go on another bear-hunt, but the savages said it
was too late in the season for that, as the ice had
many cracks in it, and there was no use chasing a
bear, as he would jump into the first crack he came
to, and swim over it to the other side, and there
he would be safe enough. And, indeed, when I climbed
one day to the top of a tall iceberg, and looked out
in the direction of our solitary island, I could see
several cracks from a yard to a hundred yards wide,
so that it was very fortunate we escaped from the island
when we did.
“The savages now said it was
time to be moving, or a crack might come between us
and the shore. Indeed, the season was getting
well advanced; the snow was melting a little, and
in places it was quite sloppy; so everything in and
about the snow huts was packed upon the sledges, and
we went then to the main-land, which was not more than
ten miles distant. Here we came upon a village
of three huts, built in the hillside very near the
sea, and were in many respects fitted up as our own
had been; only they had regularly constructed walls
of stones and turf, which, tapering in from either
side, joined at the top, making a space large enough
to accommodate two or three families in each hut.
Into these three huts were crowded all the men, women,
and children that had been in the snow village.
“There we lived five days, after
which we took up our march again, keeping along near
the shore, where the ice was most solid and safe.
Then we came to a deep, broad bay where the hillside,
which was exposed to the south, was quite free of
snow, the snow having melted and run down
to the sea. Here we halted, and the savages went
to some great piles of stones, and brought out from
under them a number of seal-skins, which were spread
over some narwhal horns that were just like ’Old
Crumply,’ and in a few hours they had pitched
two tents, under which we all slept soundly, being
very tired. The next day they got more seal-skins,
and pitched three more tents, and a few days afterward
other people came along, and put up two other tents,
making in all seven, quite a little seal-skin
village, and a much more comfortable looking one than
the snow village had been.
“Here it seemed to be the intention
of the savages to remain for some time, as they went
regularly to work to prepare for hunting various kinds
of game, chiefly walruses and seals, and besides these,
among others, an animal I had not seen before, a
beautiful rabbit, or hare rather, very large, and
pure white. These were quite numerous, and fed
upon the buds and bark of the willow-bushes, and were
caught by stretching a very long line across the tops
of a great number of stones, or piles of stones rather,
which were placed about six feet apart, the line itself
being about a foot from the ground. To this line
they tied a great number of loops, and then all the
people, going out, surrounded the rabbits and drove
them under the line, and several of them found themselves
noosed when they least expected it. I saw there
also a beautiful white bird called a ptarmigan, which
is a grouse, but it could not be caught.
“By this time we had become
quite domesticated among the savages. They called
me Annorak, which meant that I resembled the
wind when I talked, that is, I talked when
I liked and where I liked, and nothing could stop
me, while the Dean was much more sober. Him they
finally called Aupadleit, which means ‘Little
Red-head,’ though the Dean’s hair was
not exactly red, but very bright, and the savages admired
it very much; so the Dean, to humor them, cut off
great locks of it, and gave it to them all round.
“I took a great interest in
Eatum’s children, and this further inclined
Mr. and Mrs. Eatum to have a good opinion of me.
As they were people of much consequence in their tribe,
this was a matter of great importance; and, in truth,
the juvenile Eatums were quite an interesting pair
of savages, and were fond of play like any other children.
One was a boy and the other a girl. I cannot
remember their right names, but the Dean and I christened
the boy Mop-head, because of the great quantity
of dirty black hair he had, and the girl we called
Gimlet-eyes. Mop-head had a little sledge
made of bones, just like his father’s; and with
this the two children used to play at travelling and
other games. Gimlet-eyes had little dolls carved
out of bones, which she used to dress up in furs and
put on the sledge for Mop-head to drag when they went
on their journeys; and he had little spears, and she
had little pots and lamps, and they used to make excursions
over the snow that you could hardly throw a stone
to the end of; and then they would build little snow
houses and put the dolls in them, and, while Mop-head
went off to hunt, Gimlet-eyes would amna-aya
them to sleep. Thus you see little children are
much alike all the world over.
“In these playful exercises
we used to amuse ourselves with the children; and
when we were travelling about in earnest, the Dean
and I sometimes pulled Mop-head’s little sledge
for him, when we were going slow: and he thought
it great fun to have the white-faced strangers drag
his sister’s lamps and pots and dolls along.
“And now the summer was fairly
come. The snow was melting very rapidly, and
first in small and then in large streams the water
came rushing and roaring down into the sea. The
birds soon afterward came back from the south, the
eider-ducks and the little auks, which we had caught
in the summer time when upon the island; and then,
as soon as the snow was all gone, the moss and stunted
grass grew green, and plants sprouted up here and
there, and the butterflies with bright yellow wings
went gathering the honey from flower to flower, and
you cannot imagine how glad we were once more to come
out of the dreary winter into this bright sunshine
and this pleasant summer.
“It was apparent now why the
savages had gone to this place. The little auks
came in great numbers, and these birds I was told formed
their principal subsistence in the summer season;
indeed sometimes this is their only kind of food.
There must have been millions on millions of them,
swarming there like bees, and they made their nests
among the stones on the hillside. The savages
caught them as we had done, in nets. There were
some reindeer, but these were not often caught.
The reindeer here run wild, and are not as in Lapland
tamed and taught to draw sledges. When the savages
went on this kind of hunting, two always went together,
walking so close, one behind the other, as to appear
like one man. As soon as the deer saw the hunters,
the latter would turn round and go back the other
way, and the deer, being very curious, would follow
them. Thus a deer may sometimes be enticed a long
distance, and if through a narrow defile, there is
then a chance of catching him; for one of the hunters
drops down suddenly behind a rock, while the other
goes on as if nothing had happened. The deer,
thus cheated, keeps following the single hunter, where
he had before followed a double one all unknown to
himself, and at length approaches very near to the
hunter lying behind the rock. As soon as the
deer comes within a few yards of him, this concealed
hunter rises, and throws his harpoon, the line of
which he has previously made fast to a heavy stone.
If fortunate enough to hit the deer, and the harpoon
to hold, the animal is easily killed by the two hunters,
who attack it with their spears.
“Besides the birds that I have
told you of, there came a great many snipes, and different
varieties of sea-gulls, and ducks of various species,
and gerfalcons, and ravens, also some little
sparrows.
“I was very desirous to know
how they managed to make their harpoon and spear heads,
as I observed that they were all tipped with iron.
So one day they took us over to a place they call
Savisavick, which means ’The Iron Place,’ the
name being derived from a large block of meteoric
iron, from which the savages chipped small scales;
and these were set in the edges and tips of their
harpoon and spear heads, just as I had done with my
brass buttons. They also made knives in the same
way. Many of their spear-handles were nothing
more than narwhal horns, just like ’Old Crumply’;
and so you see how the Lord provides for all his creatures,
endowing them all, whether white or black or copper-colored,
with the same instinct of self-preservation, which
leads them to seek and obtain for the security of
their lives the materials that He places within their
reach. How beautiful are all His works! and how
constantly He watches over the rich and the poor,
the savage and the Christian, the just and the unjust
alike!
“Thus occupied, we drifted on
into the final week of July. There was scarcely
any snow left on the hillsides by this time; the air
was filled with the incessant cry of birds and the
constant plash of falling waters. We could sleep
well enough once more on the green grass in the open
air; and another period of watching now began, for
here it was that the vessels passed every year, as
the savages told us. Sometimes, however, they
did not stop; but, when the ships appeared, the savages
always went to a valley facing the sea, from one side
of which the snow never melted, and, running to and
fro over the white snow, endeavored to attract the
attention of the people on the ships.
“We were much alarmed to find
the ice holding firmly along the shore; and, as far
away as the eye could reach, there was not much water
to be seen. At last, however, a strong wind came,
and started the ice. Some cracks were soon opened,
and then a long lead or lane of water was seen stretching
away to the south, and running close in by the land.
“The savages said that the Oomeaksuaks
(big ships) would come very soon now, if at all; so
we watched very carefully for them. The Dean and
I did not hunt any more, as the savages, seeing how
anxious we were, and how our hearts yearned for our
own homes and kindred, provided us with food in abundance;
and, besides this, they sent some of their women and
young lads to aid us in looking out for the ships.
“Thus the time wore on, and
we were becoming very fearful that the ships would
not come at all. This was a dreadful thought to
us, for, although the savages were very obliging,
yet we looked forward with great dread to living long
with them. Besides this and our longing to get
home, we had had quite enough of this cold, desolate
part of the world, where the sun never sets in summer
nor rises in winter.
“While reflecting in this way,
we heard one of the savages cry out ‘Oomeaksuak,
Oomeaksuak!’ several times; and, running
a little higher up the hillside whence the cry proceeded,
our eyes were gladdened by seeing far off, with the
hull yet hidden below the horizon, a ship under full
sail, steering northward. At first the Dean, who
had been so often cheated, thought it might be an
iceberg; but it was clearly a ship that we saw this
time. From fear that it might be an iceberg, we
passed now to fear that it might hold off from the
land, and not discover us, which would be even harder
to bear.
“By and by the hull of the ship
was plainly to be seen, and after a while we discovered
that the ship was not alone, but that another was
following only a few miles behind it; and directly
two more were seen, making four, and then a fifth
hove in sight some hours afterward. We knew this
must be part of a whaling fleet that annually visits
the Arctic seas, and we rejoiced greatly at the prospect
of our deliverance.
“You will see how fortunate
it was for us that there were so many of these ships;
for, as we had feared, the first ship held so far away
from the land that it was hopeless to think of being
seen from her. But the lead through which this
first ship had sailed off from the land was closed
up before the others could enter it; and now these
other ships were forced to come nearer to us.
Seeing this, we hastened to the white hillside I have
spoken of before, all the savages accompanying us,
and we all began running up and down; but the next
ship was still too far away to discover us. And
the same with another and still another. Thus
had four ships gone by without any soul on board being
aware that two poor shipwrecked boys were so near,
calling to them, and praying with all their might
that they might see or hear.
“But there was yet a fifth ship,
a long way behind all the others, and we still had
hope. If this failed us, all was over, and we
must be content to live with the savages. We
had observed one thing which gave us great encouragement.
Each ship that had passed us came a little nearer
to the land; and this we saw was in consequence of
the ice drifting steadily in before the wind.
Indeed, by the time the last ship came along, the
ice had pushed in ahead of her, and had touched the
land, while the other ships had run through just in
time.
“When the people on board saw
what was ahead of them, and that they could not pass,
they tacked ship, and stood away from us; but we saw
clearly enough, from our elevated position on the hill,
that they were not likely to get through in that direction, which
was, no doubt, a much more pleasant thing for us than
for the people on board. This proved true; for
presently they tacked again, and stood straight in
towards where we were standing. Coming very near
the shore, we did everything we could to attract their
attention. We shouted as loud as we could, we
threw up our caps and waved them round our heads, and
we ran to and fro, all the savages doing the same.
“O how excited we became! almost
frantic, indeed. A ship so near and yet so far
away! Four ships gone by and out of sight!
Those on board the fifth and last unconscious of our
presence on the desolate shore; and how could we make
the people see us? I cannot tell you what anxious
moments these were during which we watched the ship
as she came nearer and nearer to where we stood.
“At length she is so near that
we can see the people on the deck; why can they not
see us?
“The sails are shivering; the
ship is coming to the wind! Have they seen us?
are they heaving the vessel to? will they send a boat
ashore to fetch us off?
“We hear the creaking of the
blocks; the yards are swinging round; the braces are
hauled taut; the other tack is aboard; they are not
heaving to!
“The vessel fills away again;
the sails are bulging out; the vessel drives ahead;
they have not seen us!
“Shout again! Up and down,
up and down, once more across the snow, shout!
shout all in chorus! but it is of no use.
“The bows fall off; the vessel
turns back upon her course. Where is she going
now? is she homeward bound?
“O no! she steers for the land;
she nears it; she passes beyond a point below us,
and is out of sight! Where has she gone?
“We follow after her, hurrying
all we can. Miles of rough travelling over rocks
and through deep gorges, climbing down one
side and up the other. The savages are with us.
“What is our hope? It is
that the vessel, failing to get through the ice, has
sought the land for shelter, and will find an anchorage
and there remain until the ice opens ahead, and gives
the ship once more a chance to go upon her course.
“Soon we round a lofty cliff
that rises almost squarely from the sea, with only
a narrow, rugged track between it and the water, and
we come upon a narrow bay. A little farther,
and there the vessel lies before us, quietly
at anchor, with her sails all furled.
“Again we see the men upon the
deck, faintly, but still we see them.
“Again we shout.
“We see a man halting by the
bulwarks; something glitters in his hand. Is
it a spyglass?
“No; he moves away.
“Is that a man mounting to the mizen cross-trees?
“Yes, it is a man.
“Is that a spyglass glittering in his hand?
Yes, surely it must be.
“He waves his cap; he shouts
to the people on deck; he descends; all is bustle
in the ship; a boat is lowered to the water; men spring
into it; the oars are dipped; the men give way; the
boat heads for the spot where we are standing; we
are discovered! O, God be praised! at last, at
last!
“The boat cuts through the water
quickly; it nears us; again we see white human faces;
again we hear human speech in a familiar tongue.
“’In oars!’ the
boat touches the rocks, and we are there to take the
painter, and to make her fast.
“Two of the men spring out;
a man rises in the stern; he shades his eyes with
his hands, as if to protect them from the glaring sun,
and stares at us, and then at the savages, who of
both sexes, and of every age and size surround
us. Then he calls out, ’Is there a white
man in that crowd?’
“‘Yes, sir; two of them.’
“‘I thought so from the
motions,’ says the man. Then he stared at
me again, and cried: ‘Is that the lubber
Hardy, of the Blackbird?’
“‘Yes, sir; it is,’ I answered.
“‘Is that other chap the cabin-boy? him
they called the Dean?’
“‘Yes, sir,’ spoke up the Dean.
“In an instant the man was out
upon the rocks, and he grasped us warmly by the hands.
He had recognized us, now we recognized him.
He was the master of a ship that lay alongside the
Blackbird when we first went among the ice,
catching seals. His ship was the Rob Roy,
of Aberdeen.
“This much he said to quiet
us, for he saw the state of agitation we were in.
Then he went on to tell us that the Blackbird,
not having been heard from in all this time, it was
thought that she must have gone down somewhere among
the ice, with all on board; and he told us further,
that he was on a whaling voyage now, and then he said,
’The Rob Roy will give you a bonny welcome,
lads.’
“Afterward he told us that the
vessels were, as we had supposed, a part of the whaling
fleet, and he said it was fortunate that he had discovered
us, as this was our only chance, for all the other
vessels that were following him would be very likely,
on account of the state of the ice, to hold to the
westward, and not come near the land.
“All this time the savages were
yeh-yeh-ing round us, greatly to the amusement
of the captain of the Rob Roy and his boat’s
crew. Then, when I told the captain how good
they had been to us, he sent his boat back to the
ship, and had fetched for them wood and knives and
iron and needles, in such great abundance that they
set up a yeh, yeh, in consequence, which, for
anything I know to the contrary, may be going on even
to this present time.
“But what was the happiness
of the savages compared to ours? Our feelings
cannot be described. It seemed almost as if we
had come from death to life. We could hardly
believe our eyes, that this was the ship
we had so long hoped for, this the rescue we had so
often despaired of. We cried with very joy, and
behaved like two crazy people. The captain of
the Rob Roy laughed good-naturedly at us, and
proposed at once to hurry us off aboard his ship.
“We kept our promise to give
Eatum all our property; but the captain of the Rob
Roy wanted ‘Old Crumply’ and ‘The
Dean’s Delight,’ and our pot and lamp,
and some other things; so he gave Eatum other valuables
in place of them. Then we took leave of our savage
friends, which we of course did not do without some
feelings of sorrow and regret at parting from them,
remembering as we did how kind they had been to us,
and how they had rescued us from our unhappy situation;
and the savages seemed a little sorry too. First
came Eatum and Mrs. Eatum, and then the two little
Eatums (Mop-head and Gimlet-eyes) that I had so often
played with; then Old Grim and Big-toes and Little-nose;
and Awak, the walrus, and Kossuit; and the two young
ladies who might have been our wives: and then
all the rest of them, big and little, old and young.
“Then off we went to the Rob
Roy; and a fair wind coming soon, the ice began
to move away from the land, the Rob Roy’s sails
were unfurled to the fresh breeze, and now, with hearts
turned thankfully to Heaven for our deliverance, we
were again afloat upon the blue water, whither
bound we did not know, but homeward in the end.”
“O, how glad you must have been!” said
Fred.
“How splendidly the rescue and
all that comes round,” said William; “just
like it does in all the printed books. Why, Captain
Hardy, it couldn’t have been better if you’d
made the story up, it looks so real!”
While, as for little Alice, she never
said a word, but only looked upon the old man wonderingly.