Soon afterwards the Mangivik family
received another visitor. This was the bellicose
Gartok himself, whose heart had been touched by the
fair Nootka.
Like his rival, he sat down opposite
the maiden, and stared at her impressively across
the cooking-lamp. This would seem to be the usual
mode of courtship among those children of the ice;
but the girl’s mode of receiving the attentions
of the second lover varied considerably. She
did not drop her eyes shyly under his gaze, but stared
him full in the face by way of a slight rebuff.
Neither did she prepare for him a savoury rib, so
that he was obliged to help himself-which
he did with much coolness, for the laws of hospitality
in Eskimo-land admit of such conduct.
After some desultory conversation
between Gartok and his host, the latter asked if it
was true that there was a talk of the tribe paying
a visit to Whale River.
“Yes, it is true,” answered
the young man. “I came to see you about
that very thing, and to tell you that there is to be
a meeting outside the big hut to-day. We shall
want your advice.”
“Why do the young men wish to go there?”
asked Mangivik.
“To get food, and wood for our
spear-handles and sledges, and berries, and to have
a good time. Perhaps also to fight a little with
the Fire-spouters.”
The youth glanced furtively at Mangivik as he concluded.
“To get food, and wood, and
berries is good,” observed the old man; “but
why fight with the Fire-spouters? We cannot conquer
them.”
“You can ask that at the meeting.
It is useless to ask it of me.”
“Good, I will do so. For
my part, I am too old to go on long expeditions, either
to hunt or fight-but I can give advice.
Is Cheenbuk to be at the meeting?”
“Did you not know? Cheenbuk
has already gone to the Whale River. We only
propose to follow him. He may not like our business,
but he’ll have to join us when we are there.”
Having picked his rib clean, and receiving
no encouragement from Nootka to remain, Gartok rose
and departed.
That afternoon there was a large meeting
of the heads of families in front of what was known
as the big hut. There was no formality about
the meeting. Unlike the war councils of the Indians,
it was a sort of free-and-easy, in which blubber and
other choice kinds of food did duty for the red man’s
pipe. The women, too, were allowed to sit around
and listen-but not to speak-while
the hunters discussed their plans.
Gartok, being the biggest, most forward,
and presumptuous among them all, was allowed to speak
first-though this was contrary to the wishes,
and even the custom, of the tribe. He did not
make a set speech. Indeed, no one thought of
delivering an oration. It was merely a palaver
on a large scale.
“We want spear-handles,”
said Gartok, “and wood for our kayak-frames,
and deer for food, as well as birds and rabbit-skins
for our underclothing.”
“That is true,” remarked
one of the elderly men; “we want all these things,
and a great many more things, but we don’t want
fighting. There is no use in that.”
“Ho! ho!” exclaimed several voices in
approval.
“But we do want fighting,”
retorted Gartok firmly; “we want the pretty
coloured things that the Fire-spouters sew on their
clothes and shoes; also the iron things they have
for cutting wood; and we want the spouters, which
will make us more than a match for them in war; and
we can’t get all these things without fighting.”
“Do without them, then,”
observed Mangivik sharply; “why should we want
things that we never had, and don’t need?
Listen to me, young men-for I see by your
looks that some of you would like a little fighting,-even
if we had the spouting things, we could not make them
spout.”
“That is a lie!” exclaimed
Gartok, with the simple straightforwardness peculiar
to the uncivilised. “Once I met one of
the Fire-spouters when I was out hunting at the Whale
River. He was alone, and friendly. I asked
him to show me his spouter. He did so, but told
me to be very careful, for sometimes it spouted of
its own accord. He showed me the way to make
it spout-by touching a little thing under
it. There was a little bird on a bush close
by. `Point at that,’ he said. I pointed.
`Now,’ said he, `look along the spouter with
one eye.’ I put one end of it against
my cheek and tried to look, but by accident I touched
the little thing, and it spouted too soon! I
never saw the little bird again; but I saw many stars,
though it was broad daylight at the time.”
“Ho! hoo!” exclaimed several
of the younger men, who listened to this narration
with intense eagerness.
“Yes,” continued Gartok,
who had the gift of what is called “the gab,”
and was fond of exercising it,-“yes;
it knocked me flat on my back-”
“Was it alive, then?”
asked Anteek, who mingled that day with the men as
an equal, in consequence of his having slain a walrus
single-handed.
“No, it was not quite, but it
was very nearly alive.-Well, when I fell
the man laughed. You know his people are not
used to laugh. They are very grave, but this
one laughed till I became angry, and I would have
fought with him, but-”
“Ay,” interrupted Anteek,
“but you were afraid, for he had the spouter.”
Before Gartok could reply Mangivik broke in.
“Boo!” he exclaimed contemptuously,
“it is of no use your talking so much.
I too have been to the Whale River, and have seen
the fire-spouters, and I know they are not
nearly alive. They are dead- quite
dead. Moreover, they will not spout at all, and
are quite useless, unless they are filled with a kind
of black sand which is supplied by the white men who
sell the spouters. Go to the Whale River if
you will, but don’t fight with any one-that
is my advice, and my hair is grey.”
“It is white, old man, if you
only saw it,” murmured Anteek, with native disrespect.
He was too good-natured, however, to let his thoughts
be heard.
“Come, Oolalik,” said
Mangivik, “you are a stout and a wise young man,
let us hear what you have got to say.”
“I say,” cried Oolalik,
looking round with the air of a man who had much in
his head, and meant to let it out, “I say that
the man who fights if he can avoid it is a fool!
Look back and think of the time gone away. Not
many cold times have passed since our young men became
puffed up- indeed, some of our old men
were little better-and made a raid on the
Fire-spouters of the Whale River. They met; there
was a bloody fight; six of our best youths were killed,
and numbers were wounded by the little things that
come out of the spouters. Then they came home,
and what did they bring? what had they gained?
I was a boy at the time and did not understand it
all; but I understood some of it. I saw the
fighters returning. Some were looking very big
and bold, as if they had just come from fighting and
conquering a whole tribe of bears and walruses.
Others came back limping. They went out young
and strong men; they came back too soon old, helped
along by their companions. Two were carried-they
could not walk at all. Look at them now!”
Oolalik paused and directed attention
to what may be called an object-lesson-two
men seated on his right hand. Both, although
in the prime of life, looked feeble and prematurely
old from wounds received in the fight referred to.
One had been shot in the leg; the bone was broken,
and that rendered him a cripple for life. The
other had received a bullet in the lungs; and a constitution
which was naturally magnificent had become permanently
shattered.
“What do you think?” continued
Oolalik. “Would not these men give much
to get back their old strength and health?”
He paused again, and the men referred
to nodded emphatically, as if they thought the question
a very appropriate one, while some of the peacefully
disposed in the assembly exclaimed “ho!”
and “hoo!” in tones of approval.
“Then,” continued the
speaker, “I passed by some of our huts and heard
sounds of bitter weeping. I went in and found
it was the wives and sisters of the men whose bodies
lie on the banks of the Whale River. There would
be reason in fighting, if we had to defend our huts
against the Fire-spouters. Self-defence is right;
and every one has a good word for the brave men who
defend their homes, their women, and their children.
But the Fire-spouters did not want to fight, and the
men who lost their lives at the fight I am speaking
of, threw them away for nothing. They will never
more come home to provide their families with food
and clothes, or to comfort them, or to play with the
children and tell them of fights with the walrus and
the bear when the nights are black and long.
Most of those poor women had sons or man-relations
to care for them, but there was one who had no relation
to hunt for her after her husband was killed-only
a little daughter to take care of her. I speak
of old Uleeta, who is-”
“That is a lie!” cried
Gartok, springing up and looking fierce. “Old
Uleeta is, as you all know, my mother. She had
me to hunt for her when father was killed,
and she has me still.”
“You!” exclaimed Oolalik,
with a look of scorn, “what are you? A
hunter? No, only a fool who wants to be thought
very brave, and would leave his mother and sister
to the care of old men and boys while he goes away
to fight with the Fire-spouters! No,” he
continued, turning away from the angry young man with
cool contempt, “old Uleeta has no son.”
Gartok was so taken aback with this
behaviour of Oolalik, who was recognised as one of
the gentlest and most peacefully disposed of the tribe,
that he stood gaping for a moment in surprise.
Then, observing the half-amused, half-contemptuous
looks of the men around him, he suddenly caught up
the unfinished handle of a spear that leaned against
the wall of the hut beside him, and made a desperate
blow with it at the head of Oolalik.
But that youth had expected some such
demonstration, and was prepared for it. Being
very agile, he made a step swiftly to one side, and
the handle came down on the skull of a walrus which
hung on the wall, with a violence that would have
surprised its original owner had it been within.
Before the blow could be repeated
Oolalik sprang towards his assailant.
Eskimos know nothing of a blow “straight
from the shoulder,” but they know how to cuff.
Oolalik brought his open hand down on Gartok’s
cheek with a pistol-shot crack that tumbled that fire-eater
head over heels on the ground.
The man was too strong, however, to
be knocked insensible in that way. He recovered
himself, sitting-wise, with his mouth agape and his
eyes astonied, while the whole assembly burst into
a hearty fit of laughter. High above the rest
was heard the juvenile voice of the delighted Anteek.
What the fire-eater thought we cannot
tell, but he had the wisdom to accept his punishment
in silence, and listened with apparent interest while
Oolalik concluded his remarks.
The effect of this belligerent episode
was to advance the cause of the peace-party considerably-at
least for a time-and when the meeting broke
up, most of the people returned to their various homes
with a firm determination to leave the poor Fire-spouters
alone.
But Gartok, who was still smarting
under the disgrace to which he had been subjected
at the hands of Oolalik, managed to rekindle and blow
up the war-spirit, so that, two days later, a strong
party of the more pugnacious among the young men of
the tribe set off in their kayaks for the Whale River,
taking with them a few of the women in one of their
open boats or oomiaks-chiefly for the purpose
of keeping their garments in repair.