Birds of the Arctic Regions. — Effect of Continuous Daylight. —
Town of Tromsoee. — The Aurora Borealis. — Love of Flowers. —
The Growth of Trees. — Butterflies. — Home Flowers. — Trees.
— Shooting Whales with Cannon. — Pre-Historic Relics. — About
Laplanders. — Eider Ducks. — A Norsk Wedding Present. —
Gypsies of the North. — Pagan Rites. — The Use of the Reindeer.
— Domestic Life of the Lapps. — Marriage Ceremony. — A Gypsy
Queen. — Lapp Babies. — Graceful Acknowledgment.
We have said nothing about the feathered
tribes of Norway, though all along this coast, which
is so eaten and corroded by the action of the sea,
the birds are nearly as numerous as the fishes.
They are far more abundant than the author has ever
seen them in any other part of the world. Many
islands, beginning at the Lofodens and reaching to
the extreme end of the peninsula, are solely occupied
by them as breeding places. Their numbers are
beyond calculation; one might as well try to get at
the aggregate number of flies in a given space in
midsummer. They consist of pétrels, swans,
geese, pelicans, grèbes, auks, gulls, and
divers; these last are more particularly of the duck
family, of which there are over thirty distinct species
in and about this immediate region. Curlews,
wandering albatrosses, ptarmigans, cormorants, and
ospreys were also observed, besides some birds of
beautiful plumage whose names were unknown to us.
Throughout all Scandinavia the many lakes, so numerous
as to be unknown by name, also abound with water-fowl
of nearly every description habitual to the North.
These inland regions afford an abundance of the white
grouse, which may be called the national bird of Norway,
where it so much abounds. The author has nowhere
seen such fine specimens of this bird except in the
mountains of Colorado, where it is however very rarely
captured. In Scandinavia it changes the color
of its plumage very curiously, from a summer to a
winter hue. In the first named season these birds
have a reddish brown tinge, quite clear and distinctive;
but in winter their plumage becomes of snowy whiteness,—a
fact from which naturalists are prone to draw some
finespun deductions.
As we advanced farther and farther
northward our experiences became more and more peculiar.
It seemed that humanity, like Nature about us, was
possessed of a certain insomnia in these regions during
the constant reign of daylight. People were wide
awake and busy at their various occupations during
all hours, while the drowsy god seemed to have departed
on a long journey to the southward. The apparent
incongruity of starting upon a fresh enterprise “in
the dead vast and middle of the night” was only
realized on consulting one’s watch.
To meet the temporary exigency caused
by continuous daylight, as to whether one meant day
or night time in giving the figure on the dial, the
passengers adopted an ingenious mode of counting the
hours. Thus after twelve o’clock midday
the count went on thirteen, fourteen, and fifteen
o’clock, until midnight, which was twenty-four
o’clock. This is a mode of designation
adopted in both China and Italy.
Tromsoee is situated in latitude
69 de’ north, upon a small but pleasant
island, though it is rather low compared with the
surrounding islands and the nearest main-land, but
clothed when we saw it, in July, to the very highest
point with exquisite verdure. It is a gay and
thrifty little place built upon a slope, studded here
and there with attractive villas amid the trees; but
the business portion of the town is quite compact,
and lies closely about the shore. It is the largest
and most important settlement in northern Norway,
being the capital of Norwegian Lapland, and having
about six thousand inhabitants. It rises to the
dignity of a cathedral, and is the seat of a bishopric.
In the Market Place is a substantial Town Hall, and
a neat though small Roman Catholic church. There
is also here an excellent Museum, principally of Arctic
curiosities and objects relating to the history of
the Lapps and Finlanders, with a fair zoological department,
also possessing a fine collection of Alpine minerals.
There are several schools, one of which is designed
to prepare teachers for their special occupation, somewhat
after the style of our Normal Schools. It must
be admitted, however, that the lower order of the
people here are both ignorant and superstitious; still,
the conclusion was that Tromsoee is one of the most
interesting spots selected as a popular centre within
the Arctic Circle. Both to the north and south
of the town snow-clad mountains shut off distant views.
During the winter months there are only four hours
of daylight here out of each twenty-four,—that
is, from about ten o’clock A. M. until two o’clock
P. M.; but the long winter nights are made comparatively
light by the glowing and constant splendor of the
Aurora Borealis. The pride of Tromsoee is its
cathedral, which contains some really fine wood-carving;
but the structure is small and has no architectural
merit. Though regular services are held here
on the Sabbath, that is about the only apparent observation
of the day by the people. Games and out-door
sports are played in the very churchyard, and balls
and parties are given in the evening of the Lord’s
Day; evidently they do not belong to that class of
people who think Sunday is a sponge with which to
wipe out the sins of the week. The streets are
ornamented by the mountain-ash, birch-trees, and the
wild cherry, ranged uniformly on either side of the
broad thoroughfares. In one place it was noticed
that a miniature park had been begun by the planting
of numerous young trees. The birches in this
neighborhood are of a grandly developed species, the
handsomest indeed which we remember to have seen anywhere.
Just outside the town there was observed a field golden
with buttercups, making it difficult to realize that
we were in Arctic regions. A pink-blooming heather
also carpeted other small fields; and here for a moment
we were agreeably surprised at beholding a tiny cloud
of butterflies, so abundant in the warm sunshine and
presenting such transparency of color, as to suggest
the idea that some rainbow had been shattered and
was floating in myriad particles on the buoyant air.
The short-lived summer perhaps makes flowers all the
more prized and the more carefully tended. In
the rudest quarters a few pet plants were seen, whose
arrangement and nurture showed womanly care and tenderness.
Every window in the humble dwellings had its living
screen of drooping many-colored fuchsias, geraniums,
forget-me-nots, and monthly roses. The ivy is
especially prized here, and is picturesquely trained
to hang gracefully about the architraves of the
windows. The fragrant sweet-pea, with its combined
snow-white and peach-blossom hues, was often mingled
prettily with the dark green of the ivy, the climbing
propensities of each making them fitting companions.
In one or two windows was seen the brilliant flowering
bignonia (Trumpet-vine), and an abundance of soft green,
rose-scented geraniums. Surely there must be
an innate sense of refinement among the people of
these frost-imbued regions, whatever their seeming,
when they are actuated by such delicate appreciations.
“They are useless rubbish,” said a complaining
husband to his hard-working wife, referring to her
little store of flowers. “Useless!”
replied the true woman, “how dare you be wiser
than God?”
Vegetation within the Arctic Circle
is possessed of an individual vitality which seems
to be independent of atmospheric influence. Plants
seem to have thawed a little space about them before
the snow quite disappeared, and to have peeped forth
from their frost-surrounded bed in the full vigor
of life, while the grass springs up so suddenly that
its growth must have been well started under cover
of the snow. One of the most interesting subjects
of study to the traveller on the journey northward
is to mark his progress by the products of the forest.
The trees will prove, if intelligently observed, as
definite in regard to fixing his position as an astronomical
observation could do. From the region of the date
and the palm we come to that of the fig and the olive,
thence to the orange, the almond, and the myrtle.
Succeeding these we find the walnut, the poplar, and
the lime; and again there comes the region of the
elm, the oak, and the sycamore. These will be
succeeded by the larch, the fir, the pine, the birch,
and their companions. After this point we look
for no change of species, but a diminution in size
of these last enumerated. The variety of trees
is of course the result of altitude as well as of
latitude, since there are mountain regions in southern
Europe, as well as in America, where one may pass in
a few hours from the region of the olive to that of
the stunted pine or fir.
The staple commodities of Tromsoee
are Lapps, reindeer, and midnight sun. The universal
occupation is that of fishing for cod, sharks, and
whales, to which may be added the curing or drying
of the first and the “trying out” of the
latter, supplemented by the treatment of cods’
livers. From this place vessels are fitted out
for Polar expeditions, which creates a certain amount
of local business in the ship chandlery line.
French, German, English, Russian, and Danish flags
were observed floating from the shipping in the harbor,
which presented a scene of considerable activity for
so small a port. Some of these vessels were fitting
for the capture of seals and walruses among the ice-fields
of the Polar Sea, and also on the coast of Spitzbergen
and Nova Zembla. A small propeller was seen lying
in the stream fitted with a forecastle gun, from whence
to fire a lance at whales,—a species of
big fishing which is profitably pursued here.
A huge carcass of this leviathan was stranded on the
opposite side of the harbor from where we were moored,
and it is hardly necessary to add that its decaying
condition rendered the atmosphere extremely offensive.
As we lay at anchor little row-boats, with high bows
and sterns, flitted about the bay like sea-birds on
the wing, and rode as lightly on the surface of the
water. These were often “manned” by
a couple of sturdy, bronzed women, who rowed with
great precision and stout arms, their eyes and faces
glowing with animation. These boats, of the same
model as that thousand-year old Viking ship at Christiania,
seemed to set very low in the water amidship, but yet
were remarkable for their buoyancy, sharp bows and
sterns, and the ease with which they were propelled.
The tall wooden fish-packing houses which line the
wharves suggest the prevailing industry of the place.
A long, low white building upon the hill-side also
showed that the manufacture of rope and cordage is
a prominent industry of the locality.
The Lapps in their quaint and picturesque
costumes surrounded the newly arrived steamer in their
boats, offering furs, carved horn implements, moccasons,
walrus-teeth, and the like for sale. These wares
are of the rudest type, and of no possible use to civilized
people; but they are curious, and serve as mementos
of the traveller’s visit to these northern latitudes.
In the town there are several stores where goods,
manufactured by the better class of Lapps, can be
had of a finer quality than is offered by these itinerants,
who are very ready to pass off inferior articles upon
strangers. Their drinking-cups, platters, and
dishes generally are made of the wood of the birch.
Spoons and forks are formed of the horns and bones
of the reindeer. In the fancy line they make some
curious bracelets from the roots of the birch-tree.
These Lapps are very shrewd in trade, and are not
without plenty of low cunning hidden behind their
brown, withered, and expressionless faces.
On the main-land near by, as we were
told, there are some singular relics of antiquity,
such as a series of large stones uniformly arranged
in circles, and high cairns of stone containing in
their centres one or more square chambers. At
one place in this district there is a remarkable mound
of reindeer’s horns and human bones, mingled
with those of unknown species of animals. It is
believed that here, centuries ago, the Lapps sacrificed
both animals and human beings to their Pagan deities.
There are also some deep earth and rock caves found
in the same vicinity, which contain many human bones
with others of huge animals, which have excited great
interest among scientists. In the neighborhood
of Tromsoee, and especially still farther north, large
numbers of eider-duck are found, so abundant that
no reliable estimate can be made of their number.
The eggs are largely used by the natives for food,
the nests being also regularly robbed of the down,
while the birds with patient resignation continue
for a considerable period to lay eggs and to renew
the soft lining of their nests. The birds themselves
are protected by law, no one being permitted to injure
them. The male bird is white and black, the female
is brown. In size they are larger than our domestic
ducks. Landing almost anywhere in this sparsely
inhabited region along the coast, but more particularly
upon the islands, one finds the eider-ducks upon their
low accessible nests built of marine plants among
the rocks, and during incubation the birds are quite
as tame as barn-yard fowls. The down of these
birds forms a considerable source of income to many
persons who make a business of gathering it. It
has always a fixed value, and is worth, we were told,
in Tromsoee, ten dollars per pound when ready for
market. The waste in preparing it for use is
large, requiring four pounds of the crude article as
it comes from the nest to make one pound of the cleansed,
merchantable down. Each nest during the breeding
season produces about a quarter of a pound of the
uncleansed article. When thoroughly prepared,
it is so firm and yet so elastic that the quantity
which can be pressed between the two hands will suffice
to properly stuff a bed-quilt. It is customary
for a Norsk lover to present his betrothed with one
of these quilts previous to espousal, the contents
of which he is presumed to have gathered with his
own hands. A peculiarity of eider-down, as we
were informed, is that if picked by hand from the
breast of the dead bird it has no elasticity whatever.
The natural color is a pale-brown. Many of the
localities resorted to by the birds for breeding purposes
are claimed by certain parties, who erect a cross
or some other special mark thereon to signify that
such preserves are not to be poached upon. The
birds, like the people, get their living mostly by
fishing, and are attracted hither as much by the abundance
of their natural food as by the isolation of their
breeding haunts.
The Lapps are to be seen by scores
in the streets of Tromsoee. They are small in
stature, being generally under five feet, with high
cheek-bones, snub-noses, oblique Mongolian eyes, big
mouths, large ill-formed heads, faces preternaturally
aged, hair like meadow hay, and very scanty beards.
Such is a photograph of the ancient race that once
ruled the whole of Scandinavia. By taking a short
trip inland one comes upon their summer encampment,
formed of a few crude huts, outside of which they
generally live except in the winter months. A
Lapp sleeps wherever fatigue or drunkenness overcomes
him, preferring the ground, but often lying on the
snow. He rises in the morning refreshed from
an exposure by which nearly any civilized human being
would expect to incur lasting if not fatal injury.
They are the gypsies of the North, and occupy a very
low place in the social scale, certainly no higher
than that of the Penobscot Indians of Maine.
Their faculties are of a restricted order, and missionary
efforts among them have never yet yielded any satisfactory
results. Unlike our western Indians they are
of a peaceful nature, neither treacherous nor revengeful,
but yet having many of the grosser failings of civilized
life. They are greedy, avaricious, very dirty,
and passionately fond of alcoholic drinks, but we were
told that serious crimes were very rare among them.
No people could be more superstitious, as they believe
that the caves of the half-inaccessible mountains
about them are peopled by giants and evil spirits.
They still retain some of their half-pagan rites, such
as the use of magical drums and tom-toms for conjuring
purposes, and to frighten away or to propitiate supposed
devils, malicious diseases, and so on. The most
advanced of the race are those who inhabit northern
Norway. The Swedish Lapps are considered as coming
next, while those under Russian dominion are thought
to be the lowest.
An old navigator named Scrahthrift,
while making a voyage of discovery northward, more
than three centuries ago, wrote about the Lapps as
follows: “They are a wild people, which
neither know God nor yet good order; and these people
live in tents made of deerskins, and they have no
certain habitations, but continue in herds by companies
of one hundred or two hundred. They are a people
of small stature and are clothed in deerskins, and
drink nothing but water, and eat no bread, but flesh
all raw.” They may have drunk nothing but
water three hundred years ago, but they drink alcohol
enough in this nineteenth century to make up for all
former abstemiousness. Scrahthrift wrote in 1556,
and gave the first account to the English-speaking
world of this peculiar race whom modern ethnologists
class with the Samoyèdes of Siberia and the Esquimaux,
the three forming what is called the Hyperborean Race.
The word Samoyèdes signifies “swamp-dwellers,”
and Esquimau means “eater of raw flesh.”
The Lapps are natural nomads, their
wealth consisting solely in their herds of reindeer,
to procure sustenance for which necessitates frequent
changes of locality. A Laplander is rich, provided
he owns enough of these animals to support himself
and family. A herd that can afford thirty full-grown
deer for slaughter annually, and say ten more to be
sold or bartered, makes a family of a dozen persons
comfortably well off. But to sustain such a draft
upon his resources, a Lapp must own at least two hundred
and fifty head. There is also a waste account
to be considered. Not a few are destroyed annually
by wolves and bears, notwithstanding the usual precautions
against such casualties, while in very severe winters
numbers are sure to die of starvation. They live
almost entirely on the so-called reindeer moss; but
this failing them, they eat the young twigs of the
trees. When the snow covers the ground to a depth
of not more than three or four feet, these intelligent
creatures dig holes in order to reach the moss, and
guided by some strong instinct they rarely fail to
do so in just the right place. The Lapps themselves
would be entirely at a loss for any indication where
to seek the animal’s food when it is covered
by the deep snow.
What the camel is to the Arab of the
desert, the reindeer is to the Laplander. Though
found here in a wild state, they are not common, and
are very shy sometimes occupying partially inaccessible
islands near the main-land, swimming back and forth
as necessity may demand. The domestic deer is
smaller than those that remain in a state of nature,
and is said to live only half as long. When properly
broken to harness, they carry lashed to their backs
a hundred and thirty pounds, or drag upon the snow,
when harnessed to a sledge, two hundred and fifty
pounds, travelling ten miles an hour, for several
consecutive hours, without apparent fatigue. Some
of the thread prepared by the Lapp women from the
sinews of the reindeer was shown to us, being as fine
as the best sewing-silk, and much stronger than any
silk thread made by modern methods.
These diminutive people are not so
poorly off as one would at first sight think them
to be. The climate in which they live, though
terrible to us, is not so to them. They have their
games, sports, and festive hours. If their hardships
were very trying they would not be so proverbially
long-lived. Though an ill-formed race, they are
yet rugged, hardy, and self-reliant. Their limbs
are crooked and out of proportion to their bodies;
one looks in vain for a well-shaped or perfect figure
among them, and indeed it may be safely doubted whether
a straight-limbed Lapp exists. They are one and
all bow-legged. The country over which these
people roam is included within northern Norway, Sweden,
Russia, and Finland, say extending over seven thousand
square miles; but the whole race will hardly number
thirty thousand in the aggregate. Lapland in general
terms may be said to be the region lying between the
Polar Ocean and the Arctic Circle, the eastern and
western boundaries being the Atlantic Ocean and the
White Sea, two thirds of which territory belong to
Russia, and one third is about equally divided between
Norway and Sweden.
We repeat that the reindeer is to
the Lapp what the camel is to the Arab. This
small creature is the Lapp’s cow, horse, food,
clothing, tent, everything. Food is not stored
for the animals, as they are never under cover even
in the severest weather, and they must procure their
own food or starve. The females give but a small
quantity of milk, not more than the amount yielded
by a well-fed goat, but it is remarkably rich and
nourishing. Oddly enough, as it seemed to us,
they are milked but twice a week; and when this process
is performed, each animal must be lassoed and firmly
held by one person while another milks. Many
of the doe on the occasion of our visit were accompanied
by their fawns, of which they often have two at a birth.
These little creatures are able to follow their dam
twenty-four hours after birth. We were told that
the bucks are inclined to kill the fawns when they
are first born, but are fiercely attacked by the dams
and driven away. A Swiss chamois is not more expert
in climbing mountains than are these Norway deer;
and were it not for the efficient help of their dogs,
which animals are as sagacious as the Scotch sheep-dogs,
the Lapps would often find it nearly impossible to
corral their herds for milking and other purposes.
In their nature deer are really untamable, being never
brought into such complete subjection as to be quite
safe for domestic use. Even when broken to harness,
that is when attached to the snow-sledge or carrying
burdens lashed to their backs, they will sometimes
without any premonition break out into rank rebellion
and violently attack their masters. We were told
by an intelligent resident of Tromsoee that the Lapps
never abuse these animals, even when they are attacked
by them. They only throw some garment upon the
ground upon which the buck vents his rage; after which
the owner can appear and resume his former control
of the animal, as though nothing had happened out of
the common course of events.
The Lapps live in low, open tents
during the summer season, moving from place to place
as food is found for their herds, but keeping near
the sea-coast for purposes of trade, as well as to
avoid those terrible pests the gad-fly and the mosquito,
insects too obnoxious for even the endurance of a
Laplander. In the winter they retire far inland,
where they build temporary huts of the branches of
the trees, plastering them inside and out with clay,
but leaving a hole in the top to act as a chimney
and convey away the smoke, the fire being always built
upon a broad flat stone in the centre of the hut.
In these rude, and according to our estimate comfortless,
cabins they hibernate rather than live the life of
civilized beings for eight months of the year.
Hunting and fishing occupy a portion of their time;
and to kill a bear is considered a most honorable achievement,
something to boast of for life, rendering the successful
hunter quite a hero among his associates. Though
the forest, river, and sea furnish this people with
more or less food throughout the year, still the Lapp
depends upon his herd for fixed supplies of sustenance.
The milk made into cheese is his most important article
of food, and is stored for winter use. Few are
so poor as not to own forty or fifty reindeer.
The Norwegians and Swedes who live in their neighborhood
have as great a prejudice against the Lapps as our
western citizens have against the North American Indians.
This as regards the Lapps is perhaps more especially
on account of their filthiness and half-barbarous
habits. It must be admitted that a visit to their
huts near Tromsoee leads one to form an extremely
unfavorable opinion of the race. When a couple
of young Lapps desire to become married a priest is
sometimes employed, but by common acceptation among
them the bride’s father is equally qualified
to perform the ceremony, which is both original and
simple. It consists in placing the hands of the
two contracting parties in each other, and the striking
of fire with a flint and steel, when the marriage
is declared to be irrevocable. Promiscuous as
their lives seem to be in nearly all respects, we
were told that when a Lapp woman was once married the
attendant relationship was held sacred. Though
it was our fate to just miss witnessing a marriage
ceremony here, the bride and groom were pointed out
to us, appearing like two children, so diminutive
were they. The dress of the two sexes is so similar
that it is not easy for a stranger to distinguish
at a glance men from women, except that the latter
are not so tall as the former. Polygamy is common
among them. Men marry at the age of eighteen,
women at fifteen; but as a race they are not prolific,
and their numbers, as we were informed, are steadily
decreasing. The average Laplander is less than
five feet in height, and the women rarely exceed four
feet. The latter are particularly fond of coffee,
sugar, and rye flour, which the men care nothing for
so long as they can get corn brandy,—a
local distillation quite colorless but very potent.
The Norwegians have a saying of reproach concerning
one who is inclined to drink too much: “Don’t
make a Lapp of yourself.” Both men and women
are inveterate smokers, and next to money you can
give them nothing more acceptable than tobacco.
Nature is sometimes anomalous.
Among the group of Lapp men and women whom we met
in the streets of Tromsoee, there stood one, a tall
stately girl twenty-two years of age, more or less,
who presented in her really fine person a singular
contrast to her rude companions. Unmistakable
as to her race, she was yet a head and shoulders taller
than the rest, but possessing the high cheek-bones,
square face, and Mongolian cast of eyes which characterizes
them. There was an air of dignified modesty and
almost of beauty about this young woman, spite of
her leather leggins, queer moccasons, and rough
reindeer clothes. Her fingers were busily occupied,
as she stood there gracefully leaning against a rough
stone-wall in the soft sunshine, twisting the sinews
of the deer into fine thread, while she carelessly
glanced up now and again at the curious eyes of the
author who was intently regarding her. One could
not but imagine what remarkable possibilities lay
hidden in this individual; what a change education,
culture, and refined associations might create in her;
what a social world there was extant of which she
had never dreamed! It was observed that her companions
of both sexes seemed to defer to her, and we fancied
that she must be a sort of queen bee in the Lapps’
hive.
There is one thing observable and
worthy of mention as regards the domestic habits of
these rude Laplanders, and that is their apparent
consideration for their women. The hard work is
invariably assumed by the men. The women carry
the babies, but the men carry all heavy burdens, and
perform the rougher labor contingent upon their simple
domestic lives. The women milk, but the men must
drive the herds from the distant pasturage, lasso
the doe, and hold the animals by the horns during
the process. It is not possible to tame or domesticate
them so as to submit to this operation with patience
like a cow. Up to a certain age the Lapp babies
are packed constantly in dry moss, in place of other
clothing during their infancy, this being renewed
as occasion demands,—thus very materially
economizing laundry labor. The little creatures
are very quiet in their portable cradles, consisting
of a basket-frame covered with reindeer hide, into
which they are closely strapped. The cases are
sometimes swung hammock fashion between two posts,
and sometimes hung upon a peg outside the cabins in
the sunshine. It is marvellous to what a degree
of seeming neglect semi-barbarous babies will patiently
submit, and how quietly their babyhood is passed.
Probably a Japanese, Chinese, or Lapp baby can
cry upon occasion; but though many hours have been
passed by the author among these people, he never
heard a breath of complaint from the wee things.
Some of the Lapps are quite expert
with the bow and arrow, which was their ancient weapon
of defence as well as for hunting, it being the primitive
weapon of savages wherever encountered. Few of
this people possess firearms. The long sharp
knife and the steel-tipped arrow still form their
principal arms. With these under ordinary circumstances,
when he chances upon the animal, a Lapp does not hesitate
to attack the black bear, provided she has not young
ones with her, in which case she is too savage a foe
to attack single-handed. In starting out upon
a bear-hunt, several Lapps combine, and spears are
taken with the party as well as firearms if they are
fortunate enough to possess them.
As we were standing among the Lapps
in Tromsoee, with some passengers from the steamer,
a bevy of children just returning from school joined
the group. A blue-eyed, flaxen-haired girl of
ten or eleven years in advance of the rest attracted
the attention of a gentleman of the party, who presented
her with a bright silver coin. The child took
his hand in both her own, pressed it with exquisite
natural grace to her lips, courtesied and passed on.
This is the universal act of gratitude among the youth
of Norway. The child had been taken by surprise,
but she accepted the little gift with quiet and dignified
self-possession. There is no importunity or beggary
to be encountered in Scandinavia.