15816 lines
820 KiB
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15816 lines
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Project Gutenberg Etext; Life on the Mississippi, by Mark Twain
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Life on the Mississippi
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by Mark Twain
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[pseudonym of Samuel Langhorne Clemens]
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April, 1995 [Etext #245]
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Project Gutenberg Etext; Life on the Mississippi, by Mark Twain
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'Life on the Mississippi' by Mark Twain.
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------------------------------------------------------------------
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This document was scanned and edited by Graham Allan
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(gallan@cix.compulink.com.uk), who would be very grateful for any
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corrections or comments.
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------------------------------------------------------------------
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Typographical notes.
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-------------------------------------------------------------------
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LIFE ON THE MISSISSIPPI
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BY MARK TWAIN
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THE 'BODY OF THE NATION'
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BUT the basin of the Mississippi is the BODY OF THE NATION.
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All the other parts are but members, important in themselves,
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yet more important in their relations to this. Exclusive of
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the Lake basin and of 300,000 square miles in Texas and New Mexico,
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which in many aspects form a part of it, this basin contains
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about 1,250,000 square miles. In extent it is the second great
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valley of the world, being exceeded only by that of the Amazon.
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The valley of the frozen Obi approaches it in extent;
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that of La Plata comes next in space, and probably in
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habitable capacity, having about eight-ninths of its area;
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then comes that of the Yenisei, with about seven-ninths;
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the Lena, Amoor, Hoang-ho, Yang-tse-kiang, and Nile, five-ninths;
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the Ganges, less than one-half; the Indus, less than one-third;
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the Euphrates, one-fifth; the Rhine, one-fifteenth. It exceeds in
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extent the whole of Europe, exclusive of Russia, Norway, and Sweden.
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IT WOULD CONTAIN AUSTRIA FOUR TIMES, GERMANY OR SPAIN FIVE TIMES,
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FRANCE SIX TIMES, THE BRITISH ISLANDS OR ITALY TEN TIMES.
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Conceptions formed from the river-basins of Western Europe
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are rudely shocked when we consider the extent of the valley
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of the Mississippi; nor are those formed from the sterile basins
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of the great rivers of Siberia, the lofty plateaus of Central Asia,
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or the mighty sweep of the swampy Amazon more adequate.
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Latitude, elevation, and rainfall all combine to render every part
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of the Mississippi Valley capable of supporting a dense population.
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AS A DWELLING-PLACE FOR CIVILIZED MAN IT IS BY FAR THE FIRST UPON
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OUR GLOBE.
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EDITOR'S TABLE, HARPER'S MAGAZINE, FEBRUARY 1863
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Chapter 1
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The River and Its History
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THE Mississippi is well worth reading about. It is not a
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commonplace river, but on the contrary is in all ways remarkable.
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Considering the Missouri its main branch, it is the longest
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river in the world--four thousand three hundred miles.
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It seems safe to say that it is also the crookedest river in the world,
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since in one part of its journey it uses up one thousand three hundred
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miles to cover the same ground that the crow would fly over in six
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hundred and seventy-five. It discharges three times as much water
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as the St. Lawrence, twenty-five times as much as the Rhine,
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and three hundred and thirty-eight times as much as the Thames.
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No other river has so vast a drainage-basin: it draws its water
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supply from twenty-eight States and Territories; from Delaware,
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on the Atlantic seaboard, and from all the country between that and Idaho
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on the Pacific slope--a spread of forty-five degrees of longitude.
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The Mississippi receives and carries to the Gulf water from
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fifty-four subordinate rivers that are navigable by steamboats,
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and from some hundreds that are navigable by flats and keels.
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The area of its drainage-basin is as great as the combined areas
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of England, Wales, Scotland, Ireland, France, Spain, Portugal, Germany,
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Austria, Italy, and Turkey; and almost all this wide region is fertile;
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the Mississippi valley, proper, is exceptionally so.
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It is a remarkable river in this: that instead of widening toward its mouth,
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it grows narrower; grows narrower and deeper. From the junction of the Ohio
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to a point half way down to the sea, the width averages a mile in high water:
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thence to the sea the width steadily diminishes, until, at the 'Passes,' above
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the mouth, it is but little over half a mile. At the junction of the Ohio
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the Mississippi's depth is eighty-seven feet; the depth increases gradually,
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reaching one hundred and twenty-nine just above the mouth.
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The difference in rise and fall is also remarkable--not in the upper,
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but in the lower river. The rise is tolerably uniform down to Natchez
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(three hundred and sixty miles above the mouth)--about fifty feet.
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But at Bayou La Fourche the river rises only twenty-four feet;
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at New Orleans only fifteen, and just above the mouth only two
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and one half.
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An article in the New Orleans 'Times-Democrat,' based upon reports
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of able engineers, states that the river annually empties four hundred
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and six million tons of mud into the Gulf of Mexico--which brings to mind
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Captain Marryat's rude name for the Mississippi--'the Great Sewer.'
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This mud, solidified, would make a mass a mile square and two hundred
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and forty-one feet high.
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The mud deposit gradually extends the land--but only gradually;
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it has extended it not quite a third of a mile in the two hundred
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years which have elapsed since the river took its place in history.
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The belief of the scientific people is, that the mouth used to be
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at Baton Rouge, where the hills cease, and that the two hundred
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miles of land between there and the Gulf was built by the river.
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This gives us the age of that piece of country, without any
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trouble at all--one hundred and twenty thousand years.
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Yet it is much the youthfullest batch of country that lies
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around there anywhere.
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The Mississippi is remarkable in still another way--
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its disposition to make prodigious jumps by cutting through narrow
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necks of land, and thus straightening and shortening itself.
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More than once it has shortened itself thirty miles at
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a single jump! These cut-offs have had curious effects:
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they have thrown several river towns out into the rural districts,
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and built up sand bars and forests in front of them.
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The town of Delta used to be three miles below Vicksburg:
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a recent cutoff has radically changed the position, and Delta is now TWO
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MILES ABOVE Vicksburg.
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Both of these river towns have been retired to the country by that
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cut-off. A cut-off plays havoc with boundary lines and jurisdictions:
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for instance, a man is living in the State of Mississippi to-day,
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a cut-off occurs to-night, and to-morrow the man finds himself
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and his land over on the other side of the river, within the
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boundaries and subject to the laws of the State of Louisiana!
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Such a thing, happening in the upper river in the old times,
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could have transferred a slave from Missouri to Illinois and made
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a free man of him.
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The Mississippi does not alter its locality by cut-offs alone:
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it is always changing its habitat BODILY--is always moving bodily SIDEWISE.
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At Hard Times, La., the river is two miles west of the region it
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used to occupy. As a result, the original SITE of that settlement
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is not now in Louisiana at all, but on the other side of the river,
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in the State of Mississippi. NEARLY THE WHOLE OF THAT ONE THOUSAND
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THREE HUNDRED MILES OF OLD MISSISSIPPI RIVER WHICH LA SALLE FLOATED DOWN
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IN HIS CANOES, TWO HUNDRED YEARS AGO, IS GOOD SOLID DRY GROUND NOW.
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The river lies to the right of it, in places, and to the left of it
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in other places.
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Although the Mississippi's mud builds land but slowly, down at
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the mouth, where the Gulfs billows interfere with its work,
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it builds fast enough in better protected regions higher up:
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for instance, Prophet's Island contained one thousand five
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hundred acres of land thirty years ago; since then the river has
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added seven hundred acres to it.
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But enough of these examples of the mighty stream's eccentricities
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for the present--I will give a few more of them further along
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in the book.
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Let us drop the Mississippi's physical history, and say a word
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|
about its historical history--so to speak. We can glance briefly
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|
at its slumbrous first epoch in a couple of short chapters;
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|
at its second and wider-awake epoch in a couple more; at its
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flushest and widest-awake epoch in a good many succeeding chapters;
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|
and then talk about its comparatively tranquil present epoch
|
|
in what shall be left of the book.
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|
The world and the books are so accustomed to use, and over-use,
|
|
the word 'new' in connection with our country, that we early get and
|
|
permanently retain the impression that there is nothing old about it.
|
|
We do of course know that there are several comparatively old dates in
|
|
American history, but the mere figures convey to our minds no just idea,
|
|
no distinct realization, of the stretch of time which they represent.
|
|
To say that De Soto, the first white man who ever saw the Mississippi River,
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|
saw it in 1542, is a remark which states a fact without interpreting it:
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|
it is something like giving the dimensions of a sunset by astronomical
|
|
measurements, and cataloguing the colors by their scientific names;--as a
|
|
result, you get the bald fact of the sunset, but you don't see the sunset.
|
|
It would have been better to paint a picture of it.
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|
The date 1542, standing by itself, means little or nothing to us;
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|
but when one groups a few neighboring historical dates and facts
|
|
around it, he adds perspective and color, and then realizes that this
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is one of the American dates which is quite respectable for age.
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For instance, when the Mississippi was first seen by a white man, less than
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a quarter of a century had elapsed since Francis I.'s defeat at Pavia;
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the death of Raphael; the death of Bayard, SANS PEUR ET SANS REPROCHE;
|
|
the driving out of the Knights-Hospitallers from Rhodes by the Turks;
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|
and the placarding of the Ninety-Five Propositions,--the act which
|
|
began the Reformation. When De Soto took his glimpse of the river,
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|
Ignatius Loyola was an obscure name; the order of the Jesuits was not
|
|
yet a year old; Michael Angelo's paint was not yet dry on the Last
|
|
Judgment in the Sistine Chapel; Mary Queen of Scots was not yet born,
|
|
but would be before the year closed. Catherine de Medici was a child;
|
|
Elizabeth of England was not yet in her teens; Calvin, Benvenuto Cellini,
|
|
and the Emperor Charles V. were at the top of their fame,
|
|
and each was manufacturing history after his own peculiar fashion;
|
|
Margaret of Navarre was writing the 'Heptameron' and some religious books,--
|
|
the first survives, the others are forgotten, wit and indelicacy
|
|
being sometimes better literature preservers than holiness;
|
|
lax court morals and the absurd chivalry business were in full feather,
|
|
and the joust and the tournament were the frequent pastime of titled fine
|
|
gentlemen who could fight better than they could spell, while religion
|
|
was the passion of their ladies, and classifying their offspring
|
|
into children of full rank and children by brevet their pastime.
|
|
In fact, all around, religion was in a peculiarly blooming condition:
|
|
the Council of Trent was being called; the Spanish Inquisition was roasting,
|
|
and racking, and burning, with a free hand; elsewhere on the continent
|
|
the nations were being persuaded to holy living by the sword and fire;
|
|
in England, Henry VIII. had suppressed the monasteries, burnt Fisher
|
|
and another bishop or two, and was getting his English reformation
|
|
and his harem effectively started. When De Soto stood on the banks
|
|
of the Mississippi, it was still two years before Luther's death;
|
|
eleven years before the burning of Servetus; thirty years before
|
|
the St. Bartholomew slaughter; Rabelais was not yet published;
|
|
'Don Quixote' was not yet written; Shakespeare was not yet born;
|
|
a hundred long years must still elapse before Englishmen would hear the name
|
|
of Oliver Cromwell.
|
|
|
|
Unquestionably the discovery of the Mississippi is a datable
|
|
fact which considerably mellows and modifies the shiny newness
|
|
of our country, and gives her a most respectable outside-aspect
|
|
of rustiness and antiquity.
|
|
|
|
De Soto merely glimpsed the river, then died and was buried
|
|
in it by his priests and soldiers. One would expect the priests
|
|
and the soldiers to multiply the river's dimensions by ten--
|
|
the Spanish custom of the day--and thus move other adventurers
|
|
to go at once and explore it. On the contrary, their narratives
|
|
when they reached home, did not excite that amount of curiosity.
|
|
The Mississippi was left unvisited by whites during a term
|
|
of years which seems incredible in our energetic days.
|
|
One may 'sense' the interval to his mind, after a fashion,
|
|
by dividing it up in this way: After De Soto glimpsed the river,
|
|
a fraction short of a quarter of a century elapsed, and then
|
|
Shakespeare was born; lived a trifle more than half a century,
|
|
then died; and when he had been in his grave considerably more
|
|
than half a century, the SECOND white man saw the Mississippi.
|
|
In our day we don't allow a hundred and thirty years to elapse
|
|
between glimpses of a marvel. If somebody should discover
|
|
a creek in the county next to the one that the North Pole is in,
|
|
Europe and America would start fifteen costly expeditions thither:
|
|
one to explore the creek, and the other fourteen to hunt
|
|
for each other.
|
|
|
|
For more than a hundred and fifty years there had been white
|
|
settlements on our Atlantic coasts. These people were in intimate
|
|
communication with the Indians: in the south the Spaniards
|
|
were robbing, slaughtering, enslaving and converting them;
|
|
higher up, the English were trading beads and blankets to them
|
|
for a consideration, and throwing in civilization and whiskey,
|
|
'for lagniappe;' and in Canada the French were schooling them
|
|
in a rudimentary way, missionarying among them, and drawing whole
|
|
populations of them at a time to Quebec, and later to Montreal,
|
|
to buy furs of them. Necessarily, then, these various clusters
|
|
of whites must have heard of the great river of the far west;
|
|
and indeed, they did hear of it vaguely,--so vaguely and indefinitely,
|
|
that its course, proportions, and locality were hardly even guessable.
|
|
The mere mysteriousness of the matter ought to have fired
|
|
curiosity and compelled exploration; but this did not occur.
|
|
Apparently nobody happened to want such a river, nobody needed it,
|
|
nobody was curious about it; so, for a century and a half
|
|
the Mississippi remained out of the market and undisturbed.
|
|
When De Soto found it, he was not hunting for a river, and had
|
|
no present occasion for one; consequently he did not value it
|
|
or even take any particular notice of it.
|
|
|
|
But at last La Salle the Frenchman conceived the idea of
|
|
seeking out that river and exploring it. It always happens
|
|
that when a man seizes upon a neglected and important idea,
|
|
people inflamed with the same notion crop up all around.
|
|
It happened so in this instance.
|
|
|
|
Naturally the question suggests itself, Why did these people want the river
|
|
now when nobody had wanted it in the five preceding generations?
|
|
Apparently it was because at this late day they thought they
|
|
had discovered a way to make it useful; for it had come to be
|
|
believed that the Mississippi emptied into the Gulf of California,
|
|
and therefore afforded a short cut from Canada to China.
|
|
Previously the supposition had been that it emptied into the Atlantic,
|
|
or Sea of Virginia.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 2
|
|
The River and Its Explorers
|
|
|
|
LA SALLE himself sued for certain high privileges, and they
|
|
were graciously accorded him by Louis XIV of inflated memory.
|
|
Chief among them was the privilege to explore, far and wide,
|
|
and build forts, and stake out continents, and hand the same over
|
|
to the king, and pay the expenses himself; receiving, in return,
|
|
some little advantages of one sort or another; among them
|
|
the monopoly of buffalo hides. He spent several years and
|
|
about all of his money, in making perilous and painful trips
|
|
between Montreal and a fort which he had built on the Illinois,
|
|
before he at last succeeded in getting his expedition in such
|
|
a shape that he could strike for the Mississippi.
|
|
|
|
And meantime other parties had had better fortune.
|
|
In 1673 Joliet the merchant, and Marquette the priest,
|
|
crossed the country and reached the banks of the Mississippi.
|
|
They went by way of the Great Lakes; and from Green Bay,
|
|
in canoes, by way of Fox River and the Wisconsin. Marquette had
|
|
solemnly contracted, on the feast of the Immaculate Conception,
|
|
that if the Virgin would permit him to discover the great river,
|
|
he would name it Conception, in her honor. He kept his word.
|
|
In that day, all explorers traveled with an outfit of priests.
|
|
De Soto had twenty-four with him. La Salle had several, also.
|
|
The expeditions were often out of meat, and scant of clothes,
|
|
but they always had the furniture and other requisites for the mass;
|
|
they were always prepared, as one of the quaint chroniclers of the time
|
|
phrased it, to 'explain hell to the salvages.'
|
|
|
|
On the 17th of June, 1673, the canoes of Joliet and Marquette and their five
|
|
subordinates reached the junction of the Wisconsin with the Mississippi.
|
|
Mr. Parkman says: 'Before them a wide and rapid current coursed athwart
|
|
their way, by the foot of lofty heights wrapped thick in forests.'
|
|
He continues: 'Turning southward, they paddled down the stream, through a
|
|
solitude unrelieved by the faintest trace of man.'
|
|
|
|
A big cat-fish collided with Marquette's canoe, and startled him;
|
|
and reasonably enough, for he had been warned by the Indians that
|
|
he was on a foolhardy journey, and even a fatal one, for the river
|
|
contained a demon 'whose roar could be heard at a great distance,
|
|
and who would engulf them in the abyss where he dwelt.'
|
|
I have seen a Mississippi cat-fish that was more than six feet long,
|
|
and weighed two hundred and fifty pounds; and if Marquette's fish
|
|
was the fellow to that one, he had a fair right to think the river's
|
|
roaring demon was come.
|
|
|
|
'At length the buffalo began to appear, grazing in herds on the great prairies
|
|
which then bordered the river; and Marquette describes the fierce and stupid
|
|
look of the old bulls as they stared at the intruders through the tangled
|
|
mane which nearly blinded them.'
|
|
|
|
The voyagers moved cautiously: 'Landed at night and made a fire
|
|
to cook their evening meal; then extinguished it, embarked again,
|
|
paddled some way farther, and anchored in the stream, keeping a man
|
|
on the watch till morning.'
|
|
|
|
They did this day after day and night after night;
|
|
and at the end of two weeks they had not seen a human being.
|
|
The river was an awful solitude, then. And it is now, over most
|
|
of its stretch.
|
|
|
|
But at the close of the fortnight they one day came upon
|
|
the footprints of men in the mud of the western bank--a Robinson
|
|
Crusoe experience which carries an electric shiver with it yet,
|
|
when one stumbles on it in print. They had been warned that the
|
|
river Indians were as ferocious and pitiless as the river demon,
|
|
and destroyed all comers without waiting for provocation;
|
|
but no matter, Joliet and Marquette struck into the country
|
|
to hunt up the proprietors of the tracks. They found them,
|
|
by and by, and were hospitably received and well treated--
|
|
if to be received by an Indian chief who has taken off his last rag
|
|
in order to appear at his level best is to be received hospitably;
|
|
and if to be treated abundantly to fish, porridge, and other game,
|
|
including dog, and have these things forked into one's mouth
|
|
by the ungloved fingers of Indians is to be well treated.
|
|
In the morning the chief and six hundred of his tribesmen escorted
|
|
the Frenchmen to the river and bade them a friendly farewell.
|
|
|
|
On the rocks above the present city of Alton they found some
|
|
rude and fantastic Indian paintings, which they describe.
|
|
A short distance below 'a torrent of yellow mud rushed furiously
|
|
athwart the calm blue current of the Mississippi, boiling and surging
|
|
and sweeping in its course logs, branches, and uprooted trees.'
|
|
This was the mouth of the Missouri, 'that savage river,'
|
|
which 'descending from its mad career through a vast unknown
|
|
of barbarism, poured its turbid floods into the bosom of
|
|
its gentle sister.'
|
|
|
|
By and by they passed the mouth of the Ohio; they passed cane-brakes;
|
|
they fought mosquitoes; they floated along, day after day,
|
|
through the deep silence and loneliness of the river, drowsing in
|
|
the scant shade of makeshift awnings, and broiling with the heat;
|
|
they encountered and exchanged civilities with another party
|
|
of Indians; and at last they reached the mouth of the Arkansas
|
|
(about a month out from their starting-point), where a tribe
|
|
of war-whooping savages swarmed out to meet and murder them;
|
|
but they appealed to the Virgin for help; so in place of a fight
|
|
there was a feast, and plenty of pleasant palaver and fol-de-rol.
|
|
|
|
They had proved to their satisfaction, that the Mississippi did
|
|
not empty into the Gulf of California, or into the Atlantic.
|
|
They believed it emptied into the Gulf of Mexico.
|
|
They turned back, now, and carried their great news to Canada.
|
|
|
|
But belief is not proof. It was reserved for La Salle to furnish the proof.
|
|
He was provokingly delayed, by one misfortune after another, but at last
|
|
got his expedition under way at the end of the year 1681. In the dead
|
|
of winter he and Henri de Tonty, son of Lorenzo Tonty, who invented
|
|
the tontine, his lieutenant, started down the Illinois, with a following
|
|
of eighteen Indians brought from New England, and twenty-three Frenchmen.
|
|
They moved in procession down the surface of the frozen river, on foot,
|
|
and dragging their canoes after them on sledges.
|
|
|
|
At Peoria Lake they struck open water, and paddled thence
|
|
to the Mississippi and turned their prows southward.
|
|
They plowed through the fields of floating ice, past the mouth
|
|
of the Missouri; past the mouth of the Ohio, by-and-by;
|
|
'and, gliding by the wastes of bordering swamp, landed on
|
|
the 24th of February near the Third Chickasaw Bluffs,'
|
|
where they halted and built Fort Prudhomme.
|
|
|
|
'Again,' says Mr. Parkman, 'they embarked; and with every stage of their
|
|
adventurous progress, the mystery of this vast new world was more
|
|
and more unveiled. More and more they entered the realms of spring.
|
|
The hazy sunlight, the warm and drowsy air, the tender foliage,
|
|
the opening flowers, betokened the reviving life of nature.'
|
|
|
|
Day by day they floated down the great bends, in the shadow
|
|
of the dense forests, and in time arrived at the mouth
|
|
of the Arkansas. First, they were greeted by the natives
|
|
of this locality as Marquette had before been greeted by them--
|
|
with the booming of the war drum and the flourish of arms.
|
|
The Virgin composed the difficulty in Marquette's case;
|
|
the pipe of peace did the same office for La Salle. The white man
|
|
and the red man struck hands and entertained each other during
|
|
three days. Then, to the admiration of the savages, La Salle set
|
|
up a cross with the arms of France on it, and took possession
|
|
of the whole country for the king--the cool fashion of the time--
|
|
while the priest piously consecrated the robbery with a hymn.
|
|
The priest explained the mysteries of the faith 'by signs,'
|
|
for the saving of the savages; thus compensating them with
|
|
possible possessions in Heaven for the certain ones on earth
|
|
which they had just been robbed of. And also, by signs,
|
|
La Salle drew from these simple children of the forest
|
|
acknowledgments of fealty to Louis the Putrid, over the water.
|
|
Nobody smiled at these colossal ironies.
|
|
|
|
These performances took place on the site of the future town of Napoleon,
|
|
Arkansas, and there the first confiscation-cross was raised on the banks
|
|
of the great river. Marquette's and Joliet's voyage of discovery
|
|
ended at the same spot--the site of the future town of Napoleon.
|
|
When De Soto took his fleeting glimpse of the river, away back in the dim
|
|
early days, he took it from that same spot--the site of the future town
|
|
of Napoleon, Arkansas. Therefore, three out of the four memorable
|
|
events connected with the discovery and exploration of the mighty river,
|
|
occurred, by accident, in one and the same place. It is a most
|
|
curious distinction, when one comes to look at it and think about it.
|
|
France stole that vast country on that spot, the future Napoleon;
|
|
and by and by Napoleon himself was to give the country back again!--
|
|
make restitution, not to the owners, but to their white American heirs.
|
|
|
|
The voyagers journeyed on, touching here and there; 'passed the sites,
|
|
since become historic, of Vicksburg and Grand Gulf,'
|
|
and visited an imposing Indian monarch in the Teche country,
|
|
whose capital city was a substantial one of sun-baked bricks
|
|
mixed with straw--better houses than many that exist there now.
|
|
The chiefs house contained an audience room forty feet square;
|
|
and there he received Tonty in State, surrounded by sixty old
|
|
men clothed in white cloaks. There was a temple in the town,
|
|
with a mud wall about it ornamented with skulls of enemies sacrificed
|
|
to the sun.
|
|
|
|
The voyagers visited the Natchez Indians, near the site of the present
|
|
city of that name, where they found a 'religious and political despotism,
|
|
a privileged class descended from the sun, a temple and a sacred fire.'
|
|
It must have been like getting home again; it was home with an advantage,
|
|
in fact, for it lacked Louis XIV.
|
|
|
|
A few more days swept swiftly by, and La Salle stood in the shadow
|
|
of his confiscating cross, at the meeting of the waters from Delaware,
|
|
and from Itaska, and from the mountain ranges close upon the Pacific, with the
|
|
waters of the Gulf of Mexico, his task finished, his prodigy achieved.
|
|
Mr. Parkman, in closing his fascinating narrative, thus sums up:
|
|
|
|
'On that day, the realm of France received on parchment
|
|
a stupendous accession. The fertile plains of Texas;
|
|
the vast basin of the Mississippi, from its frozen northern
|
|
springs to the sultry borders of the Gulf; from the woody ridges
|
|
of the Alleghanies to the bare peaks of the Rocky Mountains--
|
|
a region of savannas and forests, sun-cracked deserts and
|
|
grassy prairies, watered by a thousand rivers, ranged by a
|
|
thousand warlike tribes, passed beneath the scepter of the Sultan
|
|
of Versailles; and all by virtue of a feeble human voice,
|
|
inaudible at half a mile.'
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 3
|
|
Frescoes from the Past
|
|
|
|
APPARENTLY the river was ready for business, now. But no,
|
|
the distribution of a population along its banks was as calm
|
|
and deliberate and time-devouring a process as the discovery
|
|
and exploration had been.
|
|
|
|
Seventy years elapsed, after the exploration, before the
|
|
river's borders had a white population worth considering;
|
|
and nearly fifty more before the river had a commerce.
|
|
Between La Salle's opening of the river and the time when it
|
|
may be said to have become the vehicle of anything like a regular
|
|
and active commerce, seven sovereigns had occupied the throne
|
|
of England, America had become an independent nation, Louis XIV.
|
|
and Louis XV. had rotted and died, the French monarchy had gone
|
|
down in the red tempest of the revolution, and Napoleon was a name
|
|
that was beginning to be talked about. Truly, there were snails
|
|
in those days.
|
|
|
|
The river's earliest commerce was in great barges--keelboats, broadhorns.
|
|
They floated and sailed from the upper rivers to New Orleans,
|
|
changed cargoes there, and were tediously warped and poled back
|
|
by hand. A voyage down and back sometimes occupied nine months.
|
|
In time this commerce increased until it gave employment to hordes
|
|
of rough and hardy men; rude, uneducated, brave, suffering terrific
|
|
hardships with sailor-like stoicism; heavy drinkers, coarse frolickers
|
|
in moral sties like the Natchez-under-the-hill of that day,
|
|
heavy fighters, reckless fellows, every one, elephantinely jolly,
|
|
foul-witted, profane; prodigal of their money, bankrupt at the end
|
|
of the trip, fond of barbaric finery, prodigious braggarts;
|
|
yet, in the main, honest, trustworthy, faithful to promises and duty,
|
|
and often picturesquely magnanimous.
|
|
|
|
By and by the steamboat intruded. Then for fifteen or twenty years,
|
|
these men continued to run their keelboats down-stream, and the steamers
|
|
did all of the upstream business, the keelboatmen selling their boats
|
|
in New Orleans, and returning home as deck passengers in the steamers.
|
|
|
|
But after a while the steamboats so increased in number and
|
|
in speed that they were able to absorb the entire commerce;
|
|
and then keelboating died a permanent death. The keelboatman
|
|
became a deck hand, or a mate, or a pilot on the steamer;
|
|
and when steamer-berths were not open to him, he took a berth
|
|
on a Pittsburgh coal-flat, or on a pine-raft constructed
|
|
in the forests up toward the sources of the Mississippi.
|
|
|
|
In the heyday of the steamboating prosperity, the river from end
|
|
to end was flaked with coal-fleets and timber rafts, all managed
|
|
by hand, and employing hosts of the rough characters whom I
|
|
have been trying to describe. I remember the annual processions
|
|
of mighty rafts that used to glide by Hannibal when I was a boy,--
|
|
an acre or so of white, sweet-smelling boards in each raft,
|
|
a crew of two dozen men or more, three or four wigwams scattered
|
|
about the raft's vast level space for storm-quarters,--and I
|
|
remember the rude ways and the tremendous talk of their big crews,
|
|
the ex-keelboatmen and their admiringly patterning successors;
|
|
for we used to swim out a quarter or third of a mile and get on
|
|
these rafts and have a ride.
|
|
|
|
By way of illustrating keelboat talk and manners, and that
|
|
now-departed and hardly-remembered raft-life, I will throw in,
|
|
in this place, a chapter from a book which I have been working at,
|
|
by fits and starts, during the past five or six years,
|
|
and may possibly finish in the course of five or six more.
|
|
The book is a story which details some passages in the life
|
|
of an ignorant village boy, Huck Finn, son of the town
|
|
drunkard of my time out west, there. He has run away from
|
|
his persecuting father, and from a persecuting good widow who
|
|
wishes to make a nice, truth-telling, respectable boy of him;
|
|
and with him a slave of the widow's has also escaped.
|
|
They have found a fragment of a lumber raft (it is high
|
|
water and dead summer time), and are floating down the river
|
|
by night, and hiding in the willows by day,--bound for Cairo,--
|
|
whence the negro will seek freedom in the heart of the free States.
|
|
But in a fog, they pass Cairo without knowing it.
|
|
By and by they begin to suspect the truth, and Huck Finn is
|
|
persuaded to end the dismal suspense by swimming down to a huge
|
|
raft which they have seen in the distance ahead of them,
|
|
creeping aboard under cover of the darkness, and gathering
|
|
the needed information by eavesdropping:--
|
|
|
|
But you know a young person can't wait very well when he is
|
|
impatient to find a thing out. We talked it over, and by and by
|
|
Jim said it was such a black night, now, that it wouldn't be no
|
|
risk to swim down to the big raft and crawl aboard and listen--
|
|
they would talk about Cairo, because they would be calculating
|
|
to go ashore there for a spree, maybe, or anyway they would
|
|
send boats ashore to buy whiskey or fresh meat or something.
|
|
Jim had a wonderful level head, for a nigger: he could most always
|
|
start a good plan when you wanted one.
|
|
|
|
I stood up and shook my rags off and jumped into the river,
|
|
and struck out for the raft's light. By and by, when I got
|
|
down nearly to her, I eased up and went slow and cautious.
|
|
But everything was all right--nobody at the sweeps.
|
|
So I swum down along the raft till I was most abreast the camp
|
|
fire in the middle, then I crawled aboard and inched along and got
|
|
in amongst some bundles of shingles on the weather side of the fire.
|
|
There was thirteen men there--they was the watch on deck of course.
|
|
And a mighty rough-looking lot, too. They had a jug, and tin cups,
|
|
and they kept the jug moving. One man was singing--roaring, you may say;
|
|
and it wasn't a nice song--for a parlor anyway. He roared through
|
|
his nose, and strung out the last word of every line very long.
|
|
When he was done they all fetched a kind of Injun war-whoop, and then
|
|
another was sung. It begun:--
|
|
|
|
'There was a woman in our towdn,
|
|
In our towdn did dwed'l (dwell,)
|
|
She loved her husband dear-i-lee,
|
|
But another man twyste as wed'l.
|
|
|
|
Singing too, riloo, riloo, riloo,
|
|
Ri-too, riloo, rilay - - - e,
|
|
She loved her husband dear-i-lee,
|
|
But another man twyste as wed'l.
|
|
|
|
And so on--fourteen verses. It was kind of poor, and when he was
|
|
going to start on the next verse one of them said it was the tune
|
|
the old cow died on; and another one said, 'Oh, give us a rest.'
|
|
And another one told him to take a walk. They made fun of him
|
|
till he got mad and jumped up and begun to cuss the crowd,
|
|
and said he could lame any thief in the lot.
|
|
|
|
They was all about to make a break for him, but the biggest man
|
|
there jumped up and says--
|
|
|
|
'Set whar you are, gentlemen. Leave him to me; he's my meat.'
|
|
|
|
Then he jumped up in the air three times and cracked his heels
|
|
together every time. He flung off a buckskin coat that was all hung
|
|
with fringes, and says, 'You lay thar tell the chawin-up's done;'
|
|
and flung his hat down, which was all over ribbons, and says,
|
|
'You lay thar tell his sufferin's is over.'
|
|
|
|
Then he jumped up in the air and cracked his heels together again
|
|
and shouted out--
|
|
|
|
'Whoo-oop! I'm the old original iron-jawed, brass-mounted,
|
|
copper-bellied corpse-maker from the wilds of Arkansaw!--Look at me!
|
|
I'm the man they call Sudden Death and General Desolation!
|
|
Sired by a hurricane, dam'd by an earthquake, half-brother to
|
|
the cholera, nearly related to the small-pox on the mother's side!
|
|
Look at me! I take nineteen alligators and a bar'l of whiskey
|
|
for breakfast when I'm in robust health, and a bushel of rattlesnakes
|
|
and a dead body when I'm ailing! I split the everlasting
|
|
rocks with my glance, and I squench the thunder when I speak!
|
|
Whoo-oop! Stand back and give me room according to my strength!
|
|
Blood's my natural drink, and the wails of the dying is music to my ear!
|
|
Cast your eye on me, gentlemen!--and lay low and hold your breath,
|
|
for I'm bout to turn myself loose!'
|
|
|
|
All the time he was getting this off, he was shaking his head
|
|
and looking fierce, and kind of swelling around in a little circle,
|
|
tucking up his wrist-bands, and now and then straightening up and
|
|
beating his breast with his fist, saying, 'Look at me, gentlemen!'
|
|
When he got through, he jumped up and cracked his heels together
|
|
three times, and let off a roaring 'Whoo-oop! I'm the bloodiest son
|
|
of a wildcat that lives!'
|
|
|
|
Then the man that had started the row tilted his old slouch
|
|
hat down over his right eye; then he bent stooping forward,
|
|
with his back sagged and his south end sticking out far,
|
|
and his fists a-shoving out and drawing in in front of him,
|
|
and so went around in a little circle about three times,
|
|
swelling himself up and breathing hard. Then he straightened,
|
|
and jumped up and cracked his heels together three times,
|
|
before he lit again (that made them cheer), and he begun to
|
|
shout like this--
|
|
|
|
'Whoo-oop! bow your neck and spread, for the kingdom of sorrow's
|
|
a-coming! Hold me down to the earth, for I feel my powers
|
|
a-working! whoo-oop! I'm a child of sin, don't let me get a start!
|
|
Smoked glass, here, for all! Don't attempt to look at me
|
|
with the naked eye, gentlemen! When I'm playful I use
|
|
the meridians of longitude and parallels of latitude for a seine,
|
|
and drag the Atlantic Ocean for whales! I scratch my head
|
|
with the lightning, and purr myself to sleep with the thunder!
|
|
When I'm cold, I bile the Gulf of Mexico and bathe in it;
|
|
when I'm hot I fan myself with an equinoctial storm;
|
|
when I'm thirsty I reach up and suck a cloud dry like a sponge;
|
|
when I range the earth hungry, famine follows in my tracks!
|
|
Whoo-oop! Bow your neck and spread! I put my hand on the sun's
|
|
face and make it night in the earth; I bite a piece out of the moon
|
|
and hurry the seasons; I shake myself and crumble the mountains!
|
|
Contemplate me through leather--don't use the naked eye!
|
|
I'm the man with a petrified heart and biler-iron bowels!
|
|
The massacre of isolated communities is the pastime of my idle moments,
|
|
the destruction of nationalities the serious business of my life!
|
|
The boundless vastness of the great American desert is my
|
|
enclosed property, and I bury my dead on my own premises!'
|
|
He jumped up and cracked his heels together three times before he lit
|
|
(they cheered him again), and as he come down he shouted out:
|
|
'Whoo-oop! bow your neck and spread, for the pet child of
|
|
calamity's a-coming! '
|
|
|
|
Then the other one went to swelling around and blowing again--the first one--
|
|
the one they called Bob; next, the Child of Calamity chipped in again,
|
|
bigger than ever; then they both got at it at the same time, swelling round
|
|
and round each other and punching their fists most into each other's faces,
|
|
and whooping and jawing like Injuns; then Bob called the Child names,
|
|
and the Child called him names back again: next, Bob called him a heap
|
|
rougher names and the Child come back at him with the very worst kind
|
|
of language; next, Bob knocked the Child's hat off, and the Child picked it
|
|
up and kicked Bob's ribbony hat about six foot; Bob went and got it and said
|
|
never mind, this warn't going to be the last of this thing, because he was
|
|
a man that never forgot and never forgive, and so the Child better look out,
|
|
for there was a time a-coming, just as sure as he was a living man,
|
|
that he would have to answer to him with the best blood in his body.
|
|
The Child said no man was willinger than he was for that time to come,
|
|
and he would give Bob fair warning, now, never to cross his path again,
|
|
for he could never rest till he had waded in his blood, for such was
|
|
his nature, though he was sparing him now on account of his family,
|
|
if he had one.
|
|
|
|
Both of them was edging away in different directions, growling and
|
|
shaking their heads and going on about what they was going to do;
|
|
but a little black-whiskered chap skipped up and says--
|
|
|
|
'Come back here, you couple of chicken-livered cowards,
|
|
and I'll thrash the two of ye!'
|
|
|
|
And he done it, too. He snatched them, he jerked them this way and that,
|
|
he booted them around, he knocked them sprawling faster than they could
|
|
get up. Why, it warn't two minutes till they begged like dogs--and how
|
|
the other lot did yell and laugh and clap their hands all the way through,
|
|
and shout 'Sail in, Corpse-Maker!' 'Hi! at him again, Child of Calamity!'
|
|
'Bully for you, little Davy!' Well, it was a perfect pow-wow for a while.
|
|
Bob and the Child had red noses and black eyes when they got through.
|
|
Little Davy made them own up that they were sneaks and cowards and not fit
|
|
to eat with a dog or drink with a nigger; then Bob and the Child shook
|
|
hands with each other, very solemn, and said they had always respected
|
|
each other and was willing to let bygones be bygones. So then they washed
|
|
their faces in the river; and just then there was a loud order to stand
|
|
by for a crossing, and some of them went forward to man the sweeps there,
|
|
and the rest went aft to handle the after-sweeps.
|
|
|
|
I laid still and waited for fifteen minutes, and had a smoke out of a pipe
|
|
that one of them left in reach; then the crossing was finished, and they
|
|
stumped back and had a drink around and went to talking and singing again.
|
|
Next they got out an old fiddle, and one played and another patted juba,
|
|
and the rest turned themselves loose on a regular old-fashioned keel-boat
|
|
break-down. They couldn't keep that up very long without getting winded,
|
|
so by and by they settled around the jug again.
|
|
|
|
They sung 'jolly, jolly raftman's the life for me,' with a
|
|
musing chorus, and then they got to talking about differences
|
|
betwixt hogs, and their different kind of habits; and next about
|
|
women and their different ways: and next about the best ways
|
|
to put out houses that was afire; and next about what ought
|
|
to be done with the Injuns; and next about what a king had to do,
|
|
and how much he got; and next about how to make cats fight;
|
|
and next about what to do when a man has fits; and next about
|
|
differences betwixt clear-water rivers and muddy-water ones.
|
|
The man they called Ed said the muddy Mississippi water
|
|
was wholesomer to drink than the clear water of the Ohio;
|
|
he said if you let a pint of this yaller Mississippi water settle,
|
|
you would have about a half to three-quarters of an inch
|
|
of mud in the bottom, according to the stage of the river,
|
|
and then it warn't no better than Ohio water--what you wanted
|
|
to do was to keep it stirred up--and when the river was low,
|
|
keep mud on hand to put in and thicken the water up the way it
|
|
ought to be.
|
|
|
|
The Child of Calamity said that was so; he said there was nutritiousness
|
|
in the mud, and a man that drunk Mississippi water could grow corn in his
|
|
stomach if he wanted to. He says--
|
|
|
|
'You look at the graveyards; that tells the tale. Trees won't
|
|
grow worth chucks in a Cincinnati graveyard, but in a Sent
|
|
Louis graveyard they grow upwards of eight hundred foot high.
|
|
It's all on account of the water the people drunk before they laid up.
|
|
A Cincinnati corpse don't richen a soil any.'
|
|
|
|
And they talked about how Ohio water didn't like to mix with
|
|
Mississippi water. Ed said if you take the Mississippi on a rise
|
|
when the Ohio is low, you'll find a wide band of clear water all the way
|
|
down the east side of the Mississippi for a hundred mile or more,
|
|
and the minute you get out a quarter of a mile from shore and pass
|
|
the line, it is all thick and yaller the rest of the way across.
|
|
Then they talked about how to keep tobacco from getting moldy,
|
|
and from that they went into ghosts and told about a lot that other
|
|
folks had seen; but Ed says--
|
|
|
|
'Why don't you tell something that you've seen yourselves?
|
|
Now let me have a say. Five years ago I was on a raft as big
|
|
as this, and right along here it was a bright moonshiny night,
|
|
and I was on watch and boss of the stabboard oar forrard, and one
|
|
of my pards was a man named Dick Allbright, and he come along
|
|
to where I was sitting, forrard--gaping and stretching, he was--
|
|
and stooped down on the edge of the raft and washed his face
|
|
in the river, and come and set down by me and got out his pipe,
|
|
and had just got it filled, when he looks up and says--
|
|
|
|
' "Why looky-here," he says, "ain't that Buck Miller's place,
|
|
over yander in the bend."
|
|
|
|
' "Yes," says I, "it is--why." He laid his pipe down and leant
|
|
his head on his hand, and says--
|
|
|
|
' "I thought we'd be furder down." I says--
|
|
|
|
' "I thought it too, when I went off watch"--we was standing
|
|
six hours on and six off--"but the boys told me," I says,
|
|
"that the raft didn't seem to hardly move, for the last hour,"
|
|
says I, "though she's a slipping along all right, now," says I. He
|
|
give a kind of a groan, and says--
|
|
|
|
' "I've seed a raft act so before, along here," he says, " 'pears
|
|
to me the current has most quit above the head of this bend durin'
|
|
the last two years," he says.
|
|
|
|
'Well, he raised up two or three times, and looked away off
|
|
and around on the water. That started me at it, too. A body is
|
|
always doing what he sees somebody else doing, though there mayn't
|
|
be no sense in it. Pretty soon I see a black something floating
|
|
on the water away off to stabboard and quartering behind us.
|
|
I see he was looking at it, too. I says--
|
|
|
|
' "What's that?' He says, sort of pettish,--
|
|
|
|
' "Tain't nothing but an old empty bar'l.
|
|
|
|
' "An empty bar'l!" says I, "why," says I, "a spy-glass is a fool
|
|
to your eyes. How can you tell it's an empty bar'l?" He says--
|
|
|
|
' "I don't know; I reckon it ain't a bar'l, but I thought it
|
|
might be," says he.
|
|
|
|
' "Yes," I says, "so it might be, and it might be anything else, too; a body
|
|
can't tell nothing about it, such a distance as that," I says.
|
|
|
|
'We hadn't nothing else to do, so we kept on watching it.
|
|
By and by I says--
|
|
|
|
' "Why looky-here, Dick Allbright, that thing's a-gaining on us,
|
|
I believe."
|
|
|
|
'He never said nothing. The thing gained and gained,
|
|
and I judged it must be a dog that was about tired out.
|
|
Well, we swung down into the crossing, and the thing floated
|
|
across the bright streak of the moonshine, and, by George,
|
|
it was bar'l. Says I--
|
|
|
|
' "Dick Allbright, what made you think that thing was a bar'l,
|
|
when it was a half a mile off," says I. Says he--
|
|
|
|
' "I don't know." Says I--
|
|
|
|
' "You tell me, Dick Allbright." He says--
|
|
|
|
' "Well, I knowed it was a bar'l; I've seen it before; lots has seen it;
|
|
they says it's a haunted bar'l."
|
|
|
|
'I called the rest of the watch, and they come and stood there,
|
|
and I told them what Dick said. It floated right along abreast,
|
|
now, and didn't gain any more. It was about twenty foot off.
|
|
Some was for having it aboard, but the rest didn't want to.
|
|
Dick Allbright said rafts that had fooled with it had got bad luck
|
|
by it. The captain of the watch said he didn't believe in it.
|
|
He said he reckoned the bar'l gained on us because it was in a little
|
|
better current than what we was. He said it would leave by and by.
|
|
|
|
'So then we went to talking about other things, and we had a song,
|
|
and then a breakdown; and after that the captain of the watch called
|
|
for another song; but it was clouding up, now, and the bar'l stuck right
|
|
thar in the same place, and the song didn't seem to have much warm-up
|
|
to it, somehow, and so they didn't finish it, and there warn't any cheers,
|
|
but it sort of dropped flat, and nobody said anything for a minute.
|
|
Then everybody tried to talk at once, and one chap got off a joke,
|
|
but it warn't no use, they didn't laugh, and even the chap
|
|
that made the joke didn't laugh at it, which ain't usual.
|
|
We all just settled down glum, and watched the bar'l, and was oneasy
|
|
and oncomfortable. Well, sir, it shut down black and still,
|
|
and then the wind begin to moan around, and next the lightning begin
|
|
to play and the thunder to grumble. And pretty soon there was
|
|
a regular storm, and in the middle of it a man that was running aft
|
|
stumbled and fell and sprained his ankle so that he had to lay up.
|
|
This made the boys shake their heads. And every time the lightning come,
|
|
there was that bar'l with the blue lights winking around it.
|
|
We was always on the look-out for it. But by and by, towards dawn,
|
|
she was gone. When the day come we couldn't see her anywhere, and we
|
|
warn't sorry, neither.
|
|
|
|
'But next night about half-past nine, when there was songs and high
|
|
jinks going on, here she comes again, and took her old roost on the
|
|
stabboard side. There warn't no more high jinks. Everybody got solemn;
|
|
nobody talked; you couldn't get anybody to do anything but set
|
|
around moody and look at the bar'l. It begun to cloud up again.
|
|
When the watch changed, the off watch stayed up, 'stead of turning in.
|
|
The storm ripped and roared around all night, and in the middle of it
|
|
another man tripped and sprained his ankle, and had to knock off.
|
|
The bar'l left towards day, and nobody see it go.
|
|
|
|
'Everybody was sober and down in the mouth all day. I don't mean
|
|
the kind of sober that comes of leaving liquor alone--not that.
|
|
They was quiet, but they all drunk more than usual--not together--
|
|
but each man sidled off and took it private, by himself.
|
|
|
|
'After dark the off watch didn't turn in; nobody sung,
|
|
nobody talked; the boys didn't scatter around, neither; they sort
|
|
of huddled together, forrard; and for two hours they set there,
|
|
perfectly still, looking steady in the one direction, and heaving
|
|
a sigh once in a while. And then, here comes the bar'l again.
|
|
She took up her old place. She staid there all night;
|
|
nobody turned in. The storm come on again, after midnight.
|
|
It got awful dark; the rain poured down; hail, too; the thunder
|
|
boomed and roared and bellowed; the wind blowed a hurricane;
|
|
and the lightning spread over everything in big sheets of glare,
|
|
and showed the whole raft as plain as day; and the river
|
|
lashed up white as milk as far as you could see for miles,
|
|
and there was that bar'l jiggering along, same as ever.
|
|
The captain ordered the watch to man the after sweeps for a crossing,
|
|
and nobody would go--no more sprained ankles for them, they said.
|
|
They wouldn't even walk aft. Well then, just then the sky split
|
|
wide open, with a crash, and the lightning killed two men of the
|
|
after watch, and crippled two more. Crippled them how, says you?
|
|
Why, sprained their ankles
|
|
|
|
'The bar'l left in the dark betwixt lightnings, towards dawn.
|
|
Well, not a body eat a bite at breakfast that morning.
|
|
After that the men loafed around, in twos and threes, and talked
|
|
low together. But none of them herded with Dick Allbright.
|
|
They all give him the cold shake. If he come around
|
|
where any of the men was, they split up and sidled away.
|
|
They wouldn't man the sweeps with him. The captain had all
|
|
the skiffs hauled up on the raft, alongside of his wigwam,
|
|
and wouldn't let the dead men be took ashore to be planted;
|
|
he didn't believe a man that got ashore would come back;
|
|
and he was right.
|
|
|
|
'After night come, you could see pretty plain that there was going to be
|
|
trouble if that bar'l come again; there was such a muttering going on.
|
|
A good many wanted to kill Dick Allbright, because he'd seen the bar'l
|
|
on other trips, and that had an ugly look. Some wanted to put him ashore.
|
|
Some said, let's all go ashore in a pile, if the bar'l comes again.
|
|
|
|
'This kind of whispers was still going on, the men being bunched
|
|
together forrard watching for the bar'l, when, lo and behold you,
|
|
here she comes again. Down she comes, slow and steady,
|
|
and settles into her old tracks. You could a heard a pin drop.
|
|
Then up comes the captain, and says:--
|
|
|
|
' "Boys, don't be a pack of children and fools; I don't
|
|
want this bar'l to be dogging us all the way to Orleans,
|
|
and YOU don't; well, then, how's the best way to stop it?
|
|
Burn it up,--that's the way. I'm going to fetch it aboard," he says.
|
|
And before anybody could say a word, in he went.
|
|
|
|
'He swum to it, and as he come pushing it to the raft, the men spread
|
|
to one side. But the old man got it aboard and busted in the head,
|
|
and there was a baby in it! Yes, sir, a stark naked baby.
|
|
It was Dick Allbright's baby; he owned up and said so.
|
|
|
|
' "Yes," he says, a-leaning over it, "yes, it is my own
|
|
lamented darling, my poor lost Charles William Allbright deceased,"
|
|
says he,--for he could curl his tongue around the bulliest
|
|
words in the language when he was a mind to, and lay them
|
|
before you without a jint started, anywheres. Yes, he said
|
|
he used to live up at the head of this bend, and one night
|
|
he choked his child, which was crying, not intending to
|
|
kill it,--which was prob'ly a lie,--and then he was scared,
|
|
and buried it in a bar'l, before his wife got home, and off
|
|
he went, and struck the northern trail and went to rafting;
|
|
and this was the third year that the bar'l had chased him.
|
|
He said the bad luck always begun light, and lasted till four men
|
|
was killed, and then the bar'l didn't come any more after that.
|
|
He said if the men would stand it one more night,--
|
|
and was a-going on like that,--but the men had got enough.
|
|
They started to get out a boat to take him ashore and lynch him,
|
|
but he grabbed the little child all of a sudden and jumped
|
|
overboard with it hugged up to his breast and shedding tears,
|
|
and we never see him again in this life, poor old suffering soul,
|
|
nor Charles William neither.'
|
|
|
|
'WHO was shedding tears?' says Bob; 'was it Allbright or the baby?'
|
|
|
|
'Why, Allbright, of course; didn't I tell you the baby was dead.
|
|
Been dead three years--how could it cry?'
|
|
|
|
'Well, never mind how it could cry--how could it KEEP all that time?'
|
|
says Davy. 'You answer me that.'
|
|
|
|
'I don't know how it done it,' says Ed. 'It done it though--
|
|
that's all I know about it.'
|
|
|
|
'Say--what did they do with the bar'l?' says the Child of Calamity.
|
|
|
|
'Why, they hove it overboard, and it sunk like a chunk of lead.'
|
|
|
|
'Edward, did the child look like it was choked?' says one.
|
|
|
|
'Did it have its hair parted?' says another.
|
|
|
|
'What was the brand on that bar'l, Eddy?' says a fellow they called Bill.
|
|
|
|
'Have you got the papers for them statistics, Edmund?' says Jimmy.
|
|
|
|
'Say, Edwin, was you one of the men that was killed by the lightning.'
|
|
says Davy.
|
|
|
|
'Him? O, no, he was both of 'em,' says Bob. Then they all haw-hawed.
|
|
|
|
'Say, Edward, don't you reckon you'd better take a pill?
|
|
You look bad--don't you feel pale?' says the Child of Calamity.
|
|
|
|
'O, come, now, Eddy,' says Jimmy, 'show up; you must a kept part of that bar'l
|
|
to prove the thing by. Show us the bunghole--do--and we'll all believe you.'
|
|
|
|
'Say, boys,' says Bill, 'less divide it up. Thar's thirteen of us.
|
|
I can swaller a thirteenth of the yarn, if you can worry down the rest.'
|
|
|
|
Ed got up mad and said they could all go to some place which he ripped
|
|
out pretty savage, and then walked off aft cussing to himself,
|
|
and they yelling and jeering at him, and roaring and laughing so you
|
|
could hear them a mile.
|
|
|
|
'Boys, we'll split a watermelon on that,' says the Child of Calamity;
|
|
and he come rummaging around in the dark amongst the shingle bundles
|
|
where I was, and put his hand on me. I was warm and soft and naked;
|
|
so he says 'Ouch!' and jumped back.
|
|
|
|
'Fetch a lantern or a chunk of fire here, boys--there's a snake
|
|
here as big as a cow!'
|
|
|
|
So they run there with a lantern and crowded up and looked in on me.
|
|
|
|
'Come out of that, you beggar!' says one.
|
|
|
|
'Who are you?' says another.
|
|
|
|
'What are you after here? Speak up prompt, or overboard you go.
|
|
|
|
'Snake him out, boys. Snatch him out by the heels.'
|
|
|
|
I began to beg, and crept out amongst them trembling.
|
|
They looked me over, wondering, and the Child of Calamity says--
|
|
|
|
'A cussed thief! Lend a hand and less heave him overboard!'
|
|
|
|
'No,' says Big Bob, 'less get out the paint-pot and paint him a sky
|
|
blue all over from head to heel, and then heave him over! '
|
|
|
|
'Good, that 's it. Go for the paint, Jimmy.'
|
|
|
|
When the paint come, and Bob took the brush and was just going to begin,
|
|
the others laughing and rubbing their hands, I begun to cry, and that sort
|
|
of worked on Davy, and he says--
|
|
|
|
' 'Vast there! He 's nothing but a cub. 'I'll paint the man
|
|
that tetches him!'
|
|
|
|
So I looked around on them, and some of them grumbled and growled,
|
|
and Bob put down the paint, and the others didn't take it up.
|
|
|
|
'Come here to the fire, and less see what you're up to here,'
|
|
says Davy. 'Now set down there and give an account of yourself.
|
|
How long have you been aboard here?'
|
|
|
|
'Not over a quarter of a minute, sir,' says I.
|
|
|
|
'How did you get dry so quick?'
|
|
|
|
'I don't know, sir. I'm always that way, mostly.'
|
|
|
|
'Oh, you are, are you. What's your name?'
|
|
|
|
I warn't going to tell my name. I didn't know what to say,
|
|
so I just says--
|
|
|
|
'Charles William Allbright, sir.'
|
|
|
|
Then they roared--the whole crowd; and I was mighty glad I said that,
|
|
because maybe laughing would get them in a better humor.
|
|
|
|
When they got done laughing, Davy says--
|
|
|
|
'It won't hardly do, Charles William. You couldn't have growed this
|
|
much in five year, and you was a baby when you come out of the bar'l,
|
|
you know, and dead at that. Come, now, tell a straight story,
|
|
and nobody'll hurt you, if you ain't up to anything wrong.
|
|
What is your name.?'
|
|
|
|
'Aleck Hopkins, sir. Aleck James Hopkins.'
|
|
|
|
'Well, Aleck, where did you come from, here.?'
|
|
|
|
'From a trading scow. She lays up the bend yonder.
|
|
I was born on her. Pap has traded up and down here all his life;
|
|
and he told me to swim off here, because when you went by he said
|
|
he would like to get some of you to speak to a Mr. Jonas Turner,
|
|
in Cairo, and tell him--'
|
|
|
|
'Oh, come!'
|
|
|
|
'Yes, sir; it's as true as the world; Pap he says--'
|
|
|
|
'Oh, your grandmother!'
|
|
|
|
They all laughed, and I tried again to talk, hut they broke in on me
|
|
and stopped me.
|
|
|
|
'Now, looky-here,' says Davy; 'you're scared, and so you talk wild.
|
|
Honest, now, do you live in a scow, or is it a lie?'
|
|
|
|
'Yes, sir, in a trading scow. She lays up at the head of the bend.
|
|
But I warn't born in her. It's our first trip.'
|
|
|
|
'Now you're talking! What did you come aboard here, for? To steal?'
|
|
|
|
'No, sir, I didn't.--It was only to get a ride on the raft.
|
|
All boys does that.'
|
|
|
|
'Well, I know that. But what did you hide for?'
|
|
|
|
'Sometimes they drive the boys off.'
|
|
|
|
'So they do. They might steal. Looky-here; if we let you off this time,
|
|
will you keep out of these kind of scrapes hereafter?'
|
|
|
|
''Deed I will, boss. You try me.'
|
|
|
|
'All right, then. You ain't but little ways from shore.
|
|
Overboard with you, and don't you make a fool of yourself
|
|
another time this way.--Blast it, boy, some raftsmen would
|
|
rawhide you till you were black and blue!'
|
|
|
|
I didn't wait to kiss good-bye, but went overboard and broke for shore.
|
|
When Jim come along by and by, the big raft was away out of sight around
|
|
the point. I swum out and got aboard, and was mighty glad to see home again.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The boy did not get the information he was after, but his adventure
|
|
has furnished the glimpse of the departed raftsman and keelboatman
|
|
which I desire to offer in this place.
|
|
|
|
I now come to a phase of the Mississippi River life of the flush
|
|
times of steamboating, which seems to me to warrant full examination--
|
|
the marvelous science of piloting, as displayed there.
|
|
I believe there has been nothing like it elsewhere in the world.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 4
|
|
The Boys' Ambition
|
|
|
|
WHEN I was a boy, there was but one permanent ambition among my
|
|
comrades in our village <footnote [1. Hannibal, Missouri]> on the west
|
|
bank of the Mississippi River. That was, to be a steamboatman.
|
|
We had transient ambitions of other sorts, but they were only transient.
|
|
When a circus came and went, it left us all burning to become clowns;
|
|
the first negro minstrel show that came to our section left us
|
|
all suffering to try that kind of life; now and then we had a hope
|
|
that if we lived and were good, God would permit us to be pirates.
|
|
These ambitions faded out, each in its turn; but the ambition to be a
|
|
steamboatman always remained.
|
|
|
|
Once a day a cheap, gaudy packet arrived upward from St. Louis,
|
|
and another downward from Keokuk. Before these events, the day
|
|
was glorious with expectancy; after them, the day was a dead and
|
|
empty thing. Not only the boys, but the whole village, felt this.
|
|
After all these years I can picture that old time to myself now,
|
|
just as it was then: the white town drowsing in the sunshine
|
|
of a summer's morning; the streets empty, or pretty nearly so;
|
|
one or two clerks sitting in front of the Water Street stores,
|
|
with their splint-bottomed chairs tilted back against the wall,
|
|
chins on breasts, hats slouched over their faces, asleep--
|
|
with shingle-shavings enough around to show what broke them down;
|
|
a sow and a litter of pigs loafing along the sidewalk,
|
|
doing a good business in watermelon rinds and seeds; two or
|
|
three lonely little freight piles scattered about the 'levee;'
|
|
a pile of 'skids' on the slope of the stone-paved wharf,
|
|
and the fragrant town drunkard asleep in the shadow of them;
|
|
two or three wood flats at the head of the wharf, but nobody
|
|
to listen to the peaceful lapping of the wavelets against them;
|
|
the great Mississippi, the majestic, the magnificent Mississippi,
|
|
rolling its mile-wide tide along, shining in the sun; the dense
|
|
forest away on the other side; the 'point' above the town,
|
|
and the 'point' below, bounding the river-glimpse and turning
|
|
it into a sort of sea, and withal a very still and brilliant
|
|
and lonely one. Presently a film of dark smoke appears above
|
|
one of those remote 'points;' instantly a negro drayman,
|
|
famous for his quick eye and prodigious voice, lifts up
|
|
the cry, 'S-t-e-a-m-boat a-comin'!' and the scene changes!
|
|
The town drunkard stirs, the clerks wake up, a furious
|
|
clatter of drays follows, every house and store pours
|
|
out a human contribution, and all in a twinkling the dead
|
|
town is alive and moving. Drays, carts, men, boys, all go
|
|
hurrying from many quarters to a common center, the wharf.
|
|
Assembled there, the people fasten their eyes upon the coming
|
|
boat as upon a wonder they are seeing for the first time.
|
|
And the boat IS rather a handsome sight, too. She is long and sharp
|
|
and trim and pretty; she has two tall, fancy-topped chimneys,
|
|
with a gilded device of some kind swung between them;
|
|
a fanciful pilot-house, a glass and 'gingerbread', perched on top
|
|
of the 'texas' deck behind them; the paddle-boxes are gorgeous
|
|
with a picture or with gilded rays above the boat's name;
|
|
the boiler deck, the hurricane deck, and the texas deck
|
|
are fenced and ornamented with clean white railings;
|
|
there is a flag gallantly flying from the jack-staff;
|
|
the furnace doors are open and the fires glaring bravely;
|
|
the upper decks are black with passengers; the captain stands
|
|
by the big bell, calm, imposing, the envy of all; great volumes
|
|
of the blackest smoke are rolling and tumbling out of the chimneys--
|
|
a husbanded grandeur created with a bit of pitch pine just before
|
|
arriving at a town; the crew are grouped on the forecastle;
|
|
the broad stage is run far out over the port bow, and an envied
|
|
deckhand stands picturesquely on the end of it with a coil
|
|
of rope in his hand; the pent steam is screaming through
|
|
the gauge-cocks, the captain lifts his hand, a bell rings,
|
|
the wheels stop; then they turn back, churning the water to foam,
|
|
and the steamer is at rest. Then such a scramble as there
|
|
is to get aboard, and to get ashore, and to take in freight
|
|
and to discharge freight, all at one and the same time;
|
|
and such a yelling and cursing as the mates facilitate it all with!
|
|
Ten minutes later the steamer is under way again, with no flag
|
|
on the jack-staff and no black smoke issuing from the chimneys.
|
|
After ten more minutes the town is dead again, and the town
|
|
drunkard asleep by the skids once more.
|
|
|
|
My father was a justice of the peace, and I supposed he possessed
|
|
the power of life and death over all men and could hang anybody that
|
|
offended him. This was distinction enough for me as a general thing;
|
|
but the desire to be a steamboatman kept intruding, nevertheless.
|
|
I first wanted to be a cabin-boy, so that I could come out with a white
|
|
apron on and shake a tablecloth over the side, where all my old comrades
|
|
could see me; later I thought I would rather be the deckhand who stood
|
|
on the end of the stage-plank with the coil of rope in his hand,
|
|
because he was particularly conspicuous. But these were only day-dreams,--
|
|
they were too heavenly to be contemplated as real possibilities.
|
|
By and by one of our boys went away. He was not heard of for a long time.
|
|
At last he turned up as apprentice engineer or 'striker' on a steamboat.
|
|
This thing shook the bottom out of all my Sunday-school teachings.
|
|
That boy had been notoriously worldly, and I just the reverse;
|
|
yet he was exalted to this eminence, and I left in obscurity and misery.
|
|
There was nothing generous about this fellow in his greatness.
|
|
He would always manage to have a rusty bolt to scrub while his boat
|
|
tarried at our town, and he would sit on the inside guard and
|
|
scrub it, where we could all see him and envy him and loathe him.
|
|
And whenever his boat was laid up he would come home and swell around
|
|
the town in his blackest and greasiest clothes, so that nobody could
|
|
help remembering that he was a steamboatman; and he used all sorts
|
|
of steamboat technicalities in his talk, as if he were so used
|
|
to them that he forgot common people could not understand them.
|
|
He would speak of the 'labboard' side of a horse in an easy, natural way
|
|
that would make one wish he was dead. And he was always talking about
|
|
'St. Looy' like an old citizen; he would refer casually to occasions
|
|
when he 'was coming down Fourth Street,' or when he was 'passing
|
|
by the Planter's House,' or when there was a fire and he took a turn
|
|
on the brakes of 'the old Big Missouri;' and then he would go on and lie
|
|
about how many towns the size of ours were burned down there that day.
|
|
Two or three of the boys had long been persons of consideration among
|
|
us because they had been to St. Louis once and had a vague general
|
|
knowledge of its wonders, but the day of their glory was over now.
|
|
They lapsed into a humble silence, and learned to disappear when the ruthless
|
|
'cub'-engineer approached. This fellow had money, too, and hair oil.
|
|
Also an ignorant silver watch and a showy brass watch chain.
|
|
He wore a leather belt and used no suspenders. If ever a youth
|
|
was cordially admired and hated by his comrades, this one was.
|
|
No girl could withstand his charms. He 'cut out' every boy in the village.
|
|
When his boat blew up at last, it diffused a tranquil contentment
|
|
among us such as we had not known for months. But when he came
|
|
home the next week, alive, renowned, and appeared in church all
|
|
battered up and bandaged, a shining hero, stared at and wondered
|
|
over by everybody, it seemed to us that the partiality of Providence
|
|
for an undeserving reptile had reached a point where it was open to
|
|
criticism.
|
|
|
|
This creature's career could produce but one result, and it
|
|
speedily followed. Boy after boy managed to get on the river.
|
|
The minister's son became an engineer. The doctor's and the
|
|
post-master's sons became 'mud clerks;' the wholesale liquor
|
|
dealer's son became a barkeeper on a boat; four sons of the
|
|
chief merchant, and two sons of the county judge, became pilots.
|
|
Pilot was the grandest position of all. The pilot, even in those days
|
|
of trivial wages, had a princely salary--from a hundred and fifty
|
|
to two hundred and fifty dollars a month, and no board to pay.
|
|
Two months of his wages would pay a preacher's salary for a year.
|
|
Now some of us were left disconsolate. We could not get on the river--
|
|
at least our parents would not let us.
|
|
|
|
So by and by I ran away. I said I never would come home again till I
|
|
was a plot and could come in glory. But somehow I could not manage it.
|
|
I went meekly aboard a few of the boats that lay packed together like sardines
|
|
at the long St. Louis wharf, and very humbly inquired for the pilots,
|
|
but got only a cold shoulder and short words from mates and clerks.
|
|
I had to make the best of this sort of treatment for the time being,
|
|
but I had comforting daydreams of a future when I should be a great and
|
|
honored pilot, with plenty of money, and could kill some of these mates
|
|
and clerks and pay for them.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 5
|
|
I Want to be a Cub-pilot
|
|
|
|
MONTHS afterward the hope within me struggled to a reluctant death,
|
|
and I found myself without an ambition. But I was ashamed to go home.
|
|
I was in Cincinnati, and I set to work to map out a new career.
|
|
I had been reading about the recent exploration of the river Amazon
|
|
by an expedition sent out by our government. It was said that
|
|
the expedition, owing to difficulties, had not thoroughly explored a part
|
|
of the country lying about the head-waters, some four thousand miles
|
|
from the mouth of the river. It was only about fifteen hundred miles
|
|
from Cincinnati to New Orleans, where I could doubtless get a ship.
|
|
I had thirty dollars left; I would go and complete the exploration
|
|
of the Amazon. This was all the thought I gave to the subject.
|
|
I never was great in matters of detail. I packed my valise, and took
|
|
passage on an ancient tub called the 'Paul Jones,' for New Orleans.
|
|
For the sum of sixteen dollars I had the scarred and tarnished splendors
|
|
of 'her' main saloon principally to myself, for she was not a creature to
|
|
attract the eye of wiser travelers.
|
|
|
|
When we presently got under way and went poking down the broad Ohio,
|
|
I became a new being, and the subject of my own admiration.
|
|
I was a traveler! A word never had tasted so good in my mouth before.
|
|
I had an exultant sense of being bound for mysterious lands and distant
|
|
climes which I never have felt in so uplifting a degree since.
|
|
I was in such a glorified condition that all ignoble feelings departed
|
|
out of me, and I was able to look down and pity the untraveled
|
|
with a compassion that had hardly a trace of contempt in it.
|
|
Still, when we stopped at villages and wood-yards, I could not help
|
|
lolling carelessly upon the railings of the boiler deck to enjoy
|
|
the envy of the country boys on the bank. If they did not seem
|
|
to discover me, I presently sneezed to attract their attention,
|
|
or moved to a position where they could not help seeing me.
|
|
And as soon as I knew they saw me I gaped and stretched, and gave other
|
|
signs of being mightily bored with traveling.
|
|
|
|
I kept my hat off all the time, and stayed where the wind
|
|
and the sun could strike me, because I wanted to get
|
|
the bronzed and weather-beaten look of an old traveler.
|
|
Before the second day was half gone I experienced a joy
|
|
which filled me with the purest gratitude; for I saw that
|
|
the skin had begun to blister and peel off my face and neck.
|
|
I wished that the boys and girls at home could see me now.
|
|
|
|
We reached Louisville in time--at least the neighborhood of it.
|
|
We stuck hard and fast on the rocks in the middle of the river,
|
|
and lay there four days. I was now beginning to feel a strong
|
|
sense of being a part of the boat's family, a sort of infant
|
|
son to the captain and younger brother to the officers.
|
|
There is no estimating the pride I took in this grandeur,
|
|
or the affection that began to swell and grow in me for
|
|
those people. I could not know how the lordly steamboatman
|
|
scorns that sort of presumption in a mere landsman.
|
|
I particularly longed to acquire the least trifle of notice
|
|
from the big stormy mate, and I was on the alert for an
|
|
opportunity to do him a service to that end. It came at last.
|
|
The riotous powwow of setting a spar was going on down on
|
|
the forecastle, and I went down there and stood around in the way--
|
|
or mostly skipping out of it--till the mate suddenly roared
|
|
a general order for somebody to bring him a capstan bar.
|
|
I sprang to his side and said: 'Tell me where it is--
|
|
I'll fetch it!'
|
|
|
|
If a rag-picker had offered to do a diplomatic service for the Emperor
|
|
of Russia, the monarch could not have been more astounded than the mate was.
|
|
He even stopped swearing. He stood and stared down at me.
|
|
It took him ten seconds to scrape his disjointed remains together again.
|
|
Then he said impressively: 'Well, if this don't beat hell!'
|
|
and turned to his work with the air of a man who had been confronted
|
|
with a problem too abstruse for solution.
|
|
|
|
I crept away, and courted solitude for the rest of the day.
|
|
I did not go to dinner; I stayed away from supper until everybody else
|
|
had finished. I did not feel so much like a member of the boat's
|
|
family now as before. However, my spirits returned, in installments,
|
|
as we pursued our way down the river. I was sorry I hated the mate so,
|
|
because it was not in (young) human nature not to admire him.
|
|
He was huge and muscular, his face was bearded and whiskered all over;
|
|
he had a red woman and a blue woman tattooed on his right arm,--
|
|
one on each side of a blue anchor with a red rope to it;
|
|
and in the matter of profanity he was sublime. When he was getting
|
|
out cargo at a landing, I was always where I could see and hear.
|
|
He felt all the majesty of his great position, and made the world
|
|
feel it, too. When he gave even the simplest order, he discharged
|
|
it like a blast of lightning, and sent a long, reverberating peal
|
|
of profanity thundering after it. I could not help contrasting
|
|
the way in which the average landsman would give an order,
|
|
with the mate's way of doing it. If the landsman should wish
|
|
the gang-plank moved a foot farther forward, he would probably say:
|
|
'James, or William, one of you push that plank forward, please;' but put
|
|
the mate in his place and he would roar out: 'Here, now, start that
|
|
gang-plank for'ard! Lively, now! WHAT're you about! Snatch it!
|
|
SNATCH it! There! there! Aft again! aft again! don't you hear me.
|
|
Dash it to dash! are you going to SLEEP over it! 'VAST heaving.
|
|
'Vast heaving, I tell you! Going to heave it clear astern?
|
|
WHERE're you going with that barrel! FOR'ARD with it 'fore I make
|
|
you swallow it, you dash-dash-dash-DASHED split between a tired
|
|
mud-turtle and a crippled hearse-horse!'
|
|
|
|
I wished I could talk like that.
|
|
|
|
When the soreness of my adventure with the mate had somewhat worn off,
|
|
I began timidly to make up to the humblest official connected
|
|
with the boat--the night watchman. He snubbed my advances
|
|
at first, but I presently ventured to offer him a new chalk pipe;
|
|
and that softened him. So he allowed me to sit with him by the big
|
|
bell on the hurricane deck, and in time he melted into conversation.
|
|
He could not well have helped it, I hung with such homage on his
|
|
words and so plainly showed that I felt honored by his notice.
|
|
He told me the names of dim capes and shadowy islands as we glided
|
|
by them in the solemnity of the night, under the winking stars,
|
|
and by and by got to talking about himself. He seemed
|
|
over-sentimental for a man whose salary was six dollars a week--
|
|
or rather he might have seemed so to an older person than I. But
|
|
I drank in his words hungrily, and with a faith that might
|
|
have moved mountains if it had been applied judiciously.
|
|
What was it to me that he was soiled and seedy and fragrant with gin.
|
|
What was it to me that his grammar was bad, his construction worse,
|
|
and his profanity so void of art that it was an element of weakness
|
|
rather than strength in his conversation? He was a wronged man,
|
|
a man who had seen trouble, and that was enough for me.
|
|
As he mellowed into his plaintive history his tears dripped
|
|
upon the lantern in his lap, and I cried, too, from sympathy.
|
|
He said he was the son of an English nobleman--either an earl
|
|
or an alderman, he could not remember which, but believed was both;
|
|
his father, the nobleman, loved him, but his mother hated him
|
|
from the cradle; and so while he was still a little boy he was sent
|
|
to 'one of them old, ancient colleges'--he couldn't remember which;
|
|
and by and by his father died and his mother seized the property
|
|
and 'shook' him as he phrased it. After his mother shook him,
|
|
members of the nobility with whom he was acquainted used their
|
|
influence to get him the position of 'loblolly-boy in a ship;'
|
|
and from that point my watchman threw off all trammels of date
|
|
and locality and branched out into a narrative that bristled all
|
|
along with incredible adventures; a narrative that was so reeking
|
|
with bloodshed and so crammed with hair-breadth escapes and the most
|
|
engaging and unconscious personal villainies, that I sat speechless,
|
|
enjoying, shuddering, wondering, worshipping.
|
|
|
|
It was a sore blight to find out afterwards that he was
|
|
a low, vulgar, ignorant, sentimental, half-witted humbug,
|
|
an untraveled native of the wilds of Illinois, who had
|
|
absorbed wildcat literature and appropriated its marvels,
|
|
until in time he had woven odds and ends of the mess into
|
|
this yarn, and then gone on telling it to fledglings like me,
|
|
until he had come to believe it himself.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 6
|
|
A Cub-pilot's Experience
|
|
|
|
WHAT with lying on the rocks four days at Louisville, and some
|
|
other delays, the poor old 'Paul Jones' fooled away about two
|
|
weeks in making the voyage from Cincinnati to New Orleans.
|
|
This gave me a chance to get acquainted with one of the pilots,
|
|
and he taught me how to steer the boat, and thus made the fascination
|
|
of river life more potent than ever for me.
|
|
|
|
It also gave me a chance to get acquainted with a youth who had taken
|
|
deck passage--more's the pity; for he easily borrowed six dollars of me
|
|
on a promise to return to the boat and pay it back to me the day after
|
|
we should arrive. But he probably died or forgot, for he never came.
|
|
It was doubtless the former, since he had said his parents were wealthy,
|
|
and he only traveled deck passage because it was cooler.<footnote [1.
|
|
'Deck' Passage, i.e. steerage passage.]>
|
|
|
|
I soon discovered two things. One was that a vessel would not be
|
|
likely to sail for the mouth of the Amazon under ten or twelve years;
|
|
and the other was that the nine or ten dollars still left
|
|
in my pocket would not suffice for so imposing an exploration
|
|
as I had planned, even if I could afford to wait for a ship.
|
|
Therefore it followed that I must contrive a new career.
|
|
The 'Paul Jones' was now bound for St. Louis. I planned a siege
|
|
against my pilot, and at the end of three hard days he surrendered.
|
|
He agreed to teach me the Mississippi River from New Orleans
|
|
to St. Louis for five hundred dollars, payable out of the first
|
|
wages I should receive after graduating. I entered upon the small
|
|
enterprise of 'learning' twelve or thirteen hundred miles of the great
|
|
Mississippi River with the easy confidence of my time of life.
|
|
If I had really known what I was about to require of my faculties,
|
|
I should not have had the courage to begin. I supposed
|
|
that all a pilot had to do was to keep his boat in the river,
|
|
and I did not consider that that could be much of a trick,
|
|
since it was so wide.
|
|
|
|
The boat backed out from New Orleans at four in the afternoon,
|
|
and it was 'our watch' until eight. Mr. Bixby, my chief,
|
|
'straightened her up,' plowed her along past the sterns of the other
|
|
boats that lay at the Levee, and then said, 'Here, take her;
|
|
shave those steamships as close as you'd peel an apple.'
|
|
I took the wheel, and my heart-beat fluttered up into
|
|
the hundreds; for it seemed to me that we were about to scrape
|
|
the side off every ship in the line, we were so close.
|
|
I held my breath and began to claw the boat away from the danger;
|
|
and I had my own opinion of the pilot who had known no better
|
|
than to get us into such peril, but I was too wise to express it.
|
|
In half a minute I had a wide margin of safety intervening
|
|
between the 'Paul Jones' and the ships; and within ten seconds
|
|
more I was set aside in disgrace, and Mr. Bixby was going into
|
|
danger again and flaying me alive with abuse of my cowardice.
|
|
I was stung, but I was obliged to admire the easy confidence with
|
|
which my chief loafed from side to side of his wheel, and trimmed
|
|
the ships so closely that disaster seemed ceaselessly imminent.
|
|
When he had cooled a little he told me that the easy water
|
|
was close ashore and the current outside, and therefore we must
|
|
hug the bank, up-stream, to get the benefit of the former,
|
|
and stay well out, down-stream, to take advantage of the latter.
|
|
In my own mind I resolved to be a down-stream pilot and leave
|
|
the up-streaming to people dead to prudence.
|
|
|
|
Now and then Mr. Bixby called my attention to certain things.
|
|
Said he, 'This is Six-Mile Point.' I assented. It was pleasant
|
|
enough information, but I could not see the bearing of it.
|
|
I was not conscious that it was a matter of any interest to me.
|
|
Another time he said, 'This is Nine-Mile Point.'
|
|
Later he said, 'This is Twelve-Mile Point.' They were
|
|
all about level with the water's edge; they all looked
|
|
about alike to me; they were monotonously unpicturesque.
|
|
I hoped Mr. Bixby would change the subject. But no; he would
|
|
crowd up around a point, hugging the shore with affection,
|
|
and then say: 'The slack water ends here, abreast this bunch
|
|
of China-trees; now we cross over.' So he crossed over.
|
|
He gave me the wheel once or twice, but I had no luck.
|
|
I either came near chipping off the edge of a sugar plantation,
|
|
or I yawed too far from shore, and so dropped back into disgrace again
|
|
and got abused.
|
|
|
|
The watch was ended at last, and we took supper and went to bed.
|
|
At midnight the glare of a lantern shone in my eyes, and the
|
|
night watchman said--
|
|
|
|
'Come! turn out!'
|
|
|
|
And then he left. I could not understand this extraordinary procedure;
|
|
so I presently gave up trying to, and dozed off to sleep.
|
|
Pretty soon the watchman was back again, and this time he was gruff.
|
|
I was annoyed. I said:--
|
|
|
|
'What do you want to come bothering around here in the middle of
|
|
the night for. Now as like as not I'll not get to sleep again to-night.'
|
|
|
|
The watchman said--
|
|
|
|
'Well, if this an't good, I'm blest.'
|
|
|
|
The 'off-watch' was just turning in, and I heard some brutal
|
|
laughter from them, and such remarks as 'Hello, watchman!
|
|
an't the new cub turned out yet? He's delicate, likely.
|
|
Give him some sugar in a rag and send for the chambermaid to sing
|
|
rock-a-by-baby to him.'
|
|
|
|
About this time Mr. Bixby appeared on the scene.
|
|
Something like a minute later I was climbing the pilot-house
|
|
steps with some of my clothes on and the rest in my arms.
|
|
Mr. Bixby was close behind, commenting. Here was something fresh--
|
|
this thing of getting up in the middle of the night to go to work.
|
|
It was a detail in piloting that had never occurred to me at all.
|
|
I knew that boats ran all night, but somehow I had never happened
|
|
to reflect that somebody had to get up out of a warm bed to run them.
|
|
I began to fear that piloting was not quite so romantic as I
|
|
had imagined it was; there was something very real and work-like
|
|
about this new phase of it.
|
|
|
|
It was a rather dingy night, although a fair number of stars were out.
|
|
The big mate was at the wheel, and he had the old tub pointed at
|
|
a star and was holding her straight up the middle of the river.
|
|
The shores on either hand were not much more than half a mile apart,
|
|
but they seemed wonderfully far away and ever so vague and indistinct.
|
|
The mate said:--
|
|
|
|
'We've got to land at Jones's plantation, sir.'
|
|
|
|
The vengeful spirit in me exulted. I said to myself,
|
|
I wish you joy of your job, Mr. Bixby; you'll have a good
|
|
time finding Mr. Jones's plantation such a night as this;
|
|
and I hope you never WILL find it as long as you live.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Bixby said to the mate:--
|
|
|
|
'Upper end of the plantation, or the lower.?'
|
|
|
|
'Upper.'
|
|
|
|
'I can't do it. The stumps there are out of water at this stage:
|
|
It's no great distance to the lower, and you'll have to get
|
|
along with that.'
|
|
|
|
'All right, sir. If Jones don't like it he'll have to lump it,
|
|
I reckon.'
|
|
|
|
And then the mate left. My exultation began to cool and my wonder
|
|
to come up. Here was a man who not only proposed to find this
|
|
plantation on such a night, but to find either end of it you preferred.
|
|
I dreadfully wanted to ask a question, but I was carrying about as many
|
|
short answers as my cargo-room would admit of, so I held my peace.
|
|
All I desired to ask Mr. Bixby was the simple question whether he was
|
|
ass enough to really imagine he was going to find that plantation on
|
|
a night when all plantations were exactly alike and all the same color.
|
|
But I held in. I used to have fine inspirations of prudence
|
|
in those days.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Bixby made for the shore and soon was scraping it, just the same as if it
|
|
had been daylight. And not only that, but singing--
|
|
|
|
'Father in heaven, the day is declining,' etc."
|
|
|
|
It seemed to me that I had put my life in the keeping of a peculiarly
|
|
reckless outcast. Presently he turned on me and said:--
|
|
|
|
'What's the name of the first point above New Orleans?'
|
|
|
|
I was gratified to be able to answer promptly, and I did.
|
|
I said I didn't know.
|
|
|
|
'Don't KNOW?'
|
|
|
|
This manner jolted me. I was down at the foot again, in a moment.
|
|
But I had to say just what I had said before.
|
|
|
|
'Well, you're a smart one,' said Mr. Bixby. 'What's the name
|
|
of the NEXT point?'
|
|
|
|
Once more I didn't know.
|
|
|
|
'Well, this beats anything. Tell me the name of ANY point or place
|
|
I told you.'
|
|
|
|
I studied a while and decided that I couldn't.
|
|
|
|
'Look here! What do you start out from, above Twelve-Mile Point,
|
|
to cross over?'
|
|
|
|
'I--I-- don't know.'
|
|
|
|
'You--you--don't know?' mimicking my drawling manner of speech.
|
|
'What DO you know?'
|
|
|
|
'I--I-- nothing, for certain.'
|
|
|
|
'By the great Caesar's ghost, I believe you! You're the stupidest
|
|
dunderhead I ever saw or ever heard of, so help me Moses!
|
|
The idea of you being a pilot--you! Why, you don't know enough
|
|
to pilot a cow down a lane.'
|
|
|
|
Oh, but his wrath was up! He was a nervous man, and he shuffled
|
|
from one side of his wheel to the other as if the floor was hot.
|
|
He would boil a while to himself, and then overflow and scald me again.
|
|
|
|
'Look here! What do you suppose I told you the names of those points for?'
|
|
|
|
I tremblingly considered a moment, and then the devil of temptation
|
|
provoked me to say:--
|
|
|
|
'Well--to--to--be entertaining, I thought.'
|
|
|
|
This was a red rag to the bull. He raged and stormed so (he was
|
|
crossing the river at the time) that I judge it made him blind,
|
|
because he ran over the steering-oar of a trading-scow. Of
|
|
course the traders sent up a volley of red-hot profanity.
|
|
Never was a man so grateful as Mr. Bixby was:
|
|
because he was brim full, and here were subjects who would
|
|
TALK BACK. He threw open a window, thrust his head out,
|
|
and such an irruption followed as I never had heard before.
|
|
The fainter and farther away the scowmen's curses drifted,
|
|
the higher Mr. Bixby lifted his voice and the weightier his
|
|
adjectives grew. When he closed the window he was empty.
|
|
You could have drawn a seine through his system and not caught curses
|
|
enough to disturb your mother with. Presently he said to me in
|
|
the gentlest way--
|
|
|
|
'My boy, you must get a little memorandum book, and every time I
|
|
tell you a thing, put it down right away. There's only one way
|
|
to be a pilot, and that is to get this entire river by heart.
|
|
You have to know it just like A B C.'
|
|
|
|
That was a dismal revelation to me; for my memory was never
|
|
loaded with anything but blank cartridges. However, I did
|
|
not feel discouraged long. I judged that it was best to make
|
|
some allowances, for doubtless Mr. Bixby was 'stretching.'
|
|
Presently he pulled a rope and struck a few strokes on the big bell.
|
|
The stars were all gone now, and the night was as black as ink.
|
|
I could hear the wheels churn along the bank, but I was not entirely
|
|
certain that I could see the shore. The voice of the invisible
|
|
watchman called up from the hurricane deck--
|
|
|
|
'What's this, sir?'
|
|
|
|
'Jones's plantation.'
|
|
|
|
I said to myself, I wish I might venture to offer a small bet
|
|
that it isn't. But I did not chirp. I only waited to see.
|
|
Mr. Bixby handled the engine bells, and in due time the boat's
|
|
nose came to the land, a torch glowed from the forecastle,
|
|
a man skipped ashore, a darky's voice on the bank said,
|
|
'Gimme de k'yarpet-bag, Mars' Jones,' and the next moment we
|
|
were standing up the river again, all serene. I reflected
|
|
deeply awhile, and then said--but not aloud--'Well, the finding
|
|
of that plantation was the luckiest accident that ever happened;
|
|
but it couldn't happen again in a hundred years.' And I fully
|
|
believed it was an accident, too.
|
|
|
|
By the time we had gone seven or eight hundred miles up the river,
|
|
I had learned to be a tolerably plucky up-stream steersman,
|
|
in daylight, and before we reached St. Louis I had made
|
|
a trifle of progress in night-work, but only a trifle.
|
|
I had a note-book that fairly bristled with the names of towns,
|
|
'points,' bars, islands, bends, reaches, etc.; but the information
|
|
was to be found only in the notebook--none of it was in my head.
|
|
It made my heart ache to think I had only got half of the river
|
|
set down; for as our watch was four hours off and four hours on,
|
|
day and night, there was a long four-hour gap in my book for every
|
|
time I had slept since the voyage began.
|
|
|
|
My chief was presently hired to go on a big New Orleans boat, and I packed
|
|
my satchel and went with him. She was a grand affair. When I stood
|
|
in her pilot-house I was so far above the water that I seemed perched on
|
|
a mountain; and her decks stretched so far away, fore and aft, below me,
|
|
that I wondered how I could ever have considered the little 'Paul Jones'
|
|
a large craft. There were other differences, too. The 'Paul Jones's'
|
|
pilot-house was a cheap, dingy, battered rattle-trap, cramped for room:
|
|
but here was a sumptuous glass temple; room enough to have a dance in;
|
|
showy red and gold window-curtains; an imposing sofa; leather cushions
|
|
and a back to the high bench where visiting pilots sit, to spin yarns
|
|
and 'look at the river;' bright, fanciful 'cuspadores' instead of a
|
|
broad wooden box filled with sawdust; nice new oil-cloth on the floor;
|
|
a hospitable big stove for winter; a wheel as high as my head,
|
|
costly with inlaid work; a wire tiller-rope; bright brass knobs
|
|
for the bells; and a tidy, white-aproned, black 'texas-tender,' to
|
|
bring up tarts and ices and coffee during mid-watch, day and night.
|
|
Now this was 'something like,' and so I began to take heart once more
|
|
to believe that piloting was a romantic sort of occupation after all.
|
|
The moment we were under way I began to prowl about the great steamer
|
|
and fill myself with joy. She was as clean and as dainty as a drawing-room;
|
|
when I looked down her long, gilded saloon, it was like gazing through
|
|
a splendid tunnel; she had an oil-picture, by some gifted sign-painter,
|
|
on every stateroom door; she glittered with no end of prism-fringed
|
|
chandeliers; the clerk's office was elegant, the bar was marvelous,
|
|
and the bar-keeper had been barbered and upholstered at incredible cost.
|
|
The boiler deck (i.e. the second story of the boat, so to speak)
|
|
was as spacious as a church, it seemed to me; so with the forecastle;
|
|
and there was no pitiful handful of deckhands, firemen, and roustabouts
|
|
down there, but a whole battalion of men. The fires were fiercely glaring
|
|
from a long row of furnaces, and over them were eight huge boilers!
|
|
This was unutterable pomp. The mighty engines--but enough of this.
|
|
I had never felt so fine before. And when I found that the regiment
|
|
of natty servants respectfully 'sir'd' me, my satisfaction was complete.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 7
|
|
A Daring Deed
|
|
|
|
WHEN I returned to the pilot-house St. Louis was gone and I was lost.
|
|
Here was a piece of river which was all down in my book,
|
|
but I could make neither head nor tail of it: you understand,
|
|
it was turned around. I had seen it when coming up-stream, but I
|
|
had never faced about to see how it looked when it was behind me.
|
|
My heart broke again, for it was plain that I had got to learn this
|
|
troublesome river BOTH WAYS.
|
|
|
|
The pilot-house was full of pilots, going down to 'look at the river.'
|
|
What is called the 'upper river' (the two hundred miles between St. Louis
|
|
and Cairo, where the Ohio comes in) was low; and the Mississippi changes
|
|
its channel so constantly that the pilots used to always find it
|
|
necessary to run down to Cairo to take a fresh look, when their boats
|
|
were to lie in port a week; that is, when the water was at a low stage.
|
|
A deal of this 'looking at the river' was done by poor fellows who seldom
|
|
had a berth, and whose only hope of getting one lay in their being
|
|
always freshly posted and therefore ready to drop into the shoes
|
|
of some reputable pilot, for a single trip, on account of such pilot's
|
|
sudden illness, or some other necessity. And a good many of them
|
|
constantly ran up and down inspecting the river, not because they ever
|
|
really hoped to get a berth, but because (they being guests of the boat)
|
|
it was cheaper to 'look at the river' than stay ashore and pay board.
|
|
In time these fellows grew dainty in their tastes, and only infested
|
|
boats that had an established reputation for setting good tables.
|
|
All visiting pilots were useful, for they were always ready and willing,
|
|
winter or summer, night or day, to go out in the yawl and help buoy
|
|
the channel or assist the boat's pilots in any way they could.
|
|
They were likewise welcome because all pilots are tireless talkers,
|
|
when gathered together, and as they talk only about the river they
|
|
are always understood and are always interesting. Your true pilot
|
|
cares nothing about anything on earth but the river, and his pride
|
|
in his occupation surpasses the pride of kings.
|
|
|
|
We had a fine company of these river-inspectors along, this trip.
|
|
There were eight or ten; and there was abundance of room for them in our
|
|
great pilot-house. Two or three of them wore polished silk hats, elaborate
|
|
shirt-fronts, diamond breast-pins, kid gloves, and patent-leather boots.
|
|
They were choice in their English, and bore themselves with a dignity
|
|
proper to men of solid means and prodigious reputation as pilots.
|
|
The others were more or less loosely clad, and wore upon their heads tall
|
|
felt cones that were suggestive of the days of the Commonwealth.
|
|
|
|
I was a cipher in this august company, and felt subdued, not to say torpid.
|
|
I was not even of sufficient consequence to assist at the wheel when it
|
|
was necessary to put the tiller hard down in a hurry; the guest that stood
|
|
nearest did that when occasion required--and this was pretty much all
|
|
the time, because of the crookedness of the channel and the scant water.
|
|
I stood in a corner; and the talk I listened to took the hope all out of me.
|
|
One visitor said to another--
|
|
|
|
'Jim, how did you run Plum Point, coming up?'
|
|
|
|
'It was in the night, there, and I ran it the way one of the boys
|
|
on the "Diana" told me; started out about fifty yards above
|
|
the wood pile on the false point, and held on the cabin
|
|
under Plum Point till I raised the reef--quarter less twain--
|
|
then straightened up for the middle bar till I got well abreast
|
|
the old one-limbed cotton-wood in the bend, then got my stern
|
|
on the cotton-wood and head on the low place above the point,
|
|
and came through a-booming--nine and a half.'
|
|
|
|
'Pretty square crossing, an't it.?'
|
|
|
|
'Yes, but the upper bar 's working down fast.'
|
|
|
|
Another pilot spoke up and said--
|
|
|
|
'I had better water than that, and ran it lower down;
|
|
started out from the false point--mark twain--raised the second
|
|
reef abreast the big snag in the bend, and had quarter less twain.'
|
|
|
|
One of the gorgeous ones remarked--
|
|
|
|
'I don't want to find fault with your leadsmen, but that's a good deal
|
|
of water for Plum Point, it seems to me.'
|
|
|
|
There was an approving nod all around as this quiet snub dropped on
|
|
the boaster and 'settled' him. And so they went on talk-talk talking.
|
|
Meantime, the thing that was running in my mind was, 'Now if my ears
|
|
hear aright, I have not only to get the names of all the towns and islands
|
|
and bends, and so on, by heart, but I must even get up a warm personal
|
|
acquaintanceship with every old snag and one-limbed cotton-wood and obscure
|
|
wood pile that ornaments the banks of this river for twelve hundred miles;
|
|
and more than that, I must actually know where these things are in the dark,
|
|
unless these guests are gifted with eyes that can pierce through two miles
|
|
of solid blackness; I wish the piloting business was in Jericho and I had
|
|
never thought of it.'
|
|
|
|
At dusk Mr. Bixby tapped the big bell three times (the signal
|
|
to land), and the captain emerged from his drawing-room
|
|
in the forward end of the texas, and looked up inquiringly.
|
|
Mr. Bixby said--
|
|
|
|
'We will lay up here all night, captain.'
|
|
|
|
'Very well, sir.'
|
|
|
|
That was all. The boat came to shore and was tied up for the night.
|
|
It seemed to me a fine thing that the pilot could do as he pleased,
|
|
without asking so grand a captain's permission. I took my supper and went
|
|
immediately to bed, discouraged by my day's observations and experiences.
|
|
My late voyage's note-booking was but a confusion of meaningless names.
|
|
It had tangled me all up in a knot every time I had looked at it in
|
|
the daytime. I now hoped for respite in sleep; but no, it reveled all
|
|
through my head till sunrise again, a frantic and tireless nightmare.
|
|
|
|
Next morning I felt pretty rusty and low-spirited. We went booming along,
|
|
taking a good many chances, for we were anxious to 'get out of the river'
|
|
(as getting out to Cairo was called) before night should overtake us.
|
|
But Mr. Bixby's partner, the other pilot, presently grounded the boat,
|
|
and we lost so much time in getting her off that it was plain that
|
|
darkness would overtake us a good long way above the mouth. This was a
|
|
great misfortune, especially to certain of our visiting pilots, whose boats
|
|
would have to wait for their return, no matter how long that might be.
|
|
It sobered the pilot-house talk a good deal. Coming up-stream, pilots did
|
|
not mind low water or any kind of darkness; nothing stopped them but fog.
|
|
But down-stream work was different; a boat was too nearly helpless,
|
|
with a stiff current pushing behind her; so it was not customary to run
|
|
down-stream at night in low water.
|
|
|
|
There seemed to be one small hope, however: if we could get through
|
|
the intricate and dangerous Hat Island crossing before night, we could
|
|
venture the rest, for we would have plainer sailing and better water.
|
|
But it would be insanity to attempt Hat Island at night.
|
|
So there was a deal of looking at watches all the rest of the day,
|
|
and a constant ciphering upon the speed we were making; Hat Island
|
|
was the eternal subject; sometimes hope was high and sometimes
|
|
we were delayed in a bad crossing, and down it went again.
|
|
For hours all hands lay under the burden of this suppressed excitement;
|
|
it was even communicated to me, and I got to feeling so
|
|
solicitous about Hat Island, and under such an awful pressure
|
|
of responsibility, that I wished I might have five minutes on shore
|
|
to draw a good, full, relieving breath, and start over again.
|
|
We were standing no regular watches. Each of our pilots ran
|
|
such portions of the river as he had run when coming up-stream,
|
|
because of his greater familiarity with it; but both remained in
|
|
the pilot house constantly.
|
|
|
|
An hour before sunset, Mr. Bixby took the wheel and Mr. W----
|
|
stepped aside. For the next thirty minutes every man held
|
|
his watch in his hand and was restless, silent, and uneasy.
|
|
At last somebody said, with a doomful sigh--
|
|
|
|
'Well, yonder's Hat Island--and we can't make it.'
|
|
All the watches closed with a snap, everybody sighed
|
|
and muttered something about its being 'too bad, too bad--
|
|
ah, if we could only have got here half an hour sooner!'
|
|
and the place was thick with the atmosphere of disappointment.
|
|
Some started to go out, but loitered, hearing no bell-tap to land.
|
|
The sun dipped behind the horizon, the boat went on.
|
|
Inquiring looks passed from one guest to another;
|
|
and one who had his hand on the door-knob and had
|
|
turned it, waited, then presently took away his hand and let
|
|
the knob turn back again. We bore steadily down the bend.
|
|
More looks were exchanged, and nods of surprised admiration--
|
|
but no words. Insensibly the men drew together behind Mr. Bixby,
|
|
as the sky darkened and one or two dim stars came out.
|
|
The dead silence and sense of waiting became oppressive.
|
|
Mr. Bixby pulled the cord, and two deep, mellow notes
|
|
from the big bell floated off on the night. Then a pause,
|
|
and one more note was struck. The watchman's voice followed,
|
|
from the hurricane deck--
|
|
|
|
'Labboard lead, there! Stabboard lead!'
|
|
|
|
The cries of the leadsmen began to rise out of the distance,
|
|
and were gruffly repeated by the word-passers on the hurricane deck.
|
|
|
|
'M-a-r-k three!.... M-a-r-k three!.... Quarter-less three! .... Half
|
|
twain! .... Quarter twain! .... M-a-r-k twain! .... Quarter-less--'
|
|
|
|
Mr. Bixby pulled two bell-ropes, and was answered by faint
|
|
jinglings far below in the engine room, and our speed slackened.
|
|
The steam began to whistle through the gauge-cocks. The cries of
|
|
the leadsmen went on--and it is a weird sound, always, in the night.
|
|
Every pilot in the lot was watching now, with fixed eyes, and talking
|
|
under his breath. Nobody was calm and easy but Mr. Bixby.
|
|
He would put his wheel down and stand on a spoke, and as the steamer
|
|
swung into her (to me) utterly invisible marks--for we seemed to be in
|
|
the midst of a wide and gloomy sea--he would meet and fasten her there.
|
|
Out of the murmur of half-audible talk, one caught a coherent sentence
|
|
now and then--such as--
|
|
|
|
'There; she's over the first reef all right!'
|
|
|
|
After a pause, another subdued voice--
|
|
|
|
'Her stern's coming down just exactly right, by George!'
|
|
|
|
'Now she's in the marks; over she goes!'
|
|
|
|
Somebody else muttered--
|
|
|
|
'Oh, it was done beautiful--BEAUTIFUL!'
|
|
|
|
Now the engines were stopped altogether, and we drifted
|
|
with the current. Not that I could see the boat drift,
|
|
for I could not, the stars being all gone by this time.
|
|
This drifting was the dismalest work; it held one's heart still.
|
|
Presently I discovered a blacker gloom than that which surrounded us.
|
|
It was the head of the island. We were closing right down upon it.
|
|
We entered its deeper shadow, and so imminent seemed the peril
|
|
that I was likely to suffocate; and I had the strongest
|
|
impulse to do SOMETHING, anything, to save the vessel.
|
|
But still Mr. Bixby stood by his wheel, silent, intent as a cat,
|
|
and all the pilots stood shoulder to shoulder at his back.
|
|
|
|
'She'll not make it!' somebody whispered.
|
|
|
|
The water grew shoaler and shoaler, by the leadsman's cries,
|
|
till it was down to--
|
|
|
|
'Eight-and-a-half!.... E-i-g-h-t feet!.... E-i-g-h-t feet!.... Seven-and--'
|
|
|
|
Mr. Bixby said warningly through his speaking tube to the engineer--
|
|
|
|
'Stand by, now!'
|
|
|
|
'Aye-aye, sir!'
|
|
|
|
'Seven-and-a-half! Seven feet! Six-and--'
|
|
|
|
We touched bottom! Instantly Mr. Bixby set a lot of bells ringing,
|
|
shouted through the tube, 'NOW, let her have it--every ounce you've got!'
|
|
then to his partner, 'Put her hard down! snatch her! snatch her!'
|
|
The boat rasped and ground her way through the sand, hung upon the apex
|
|
of disaster a single tremendous instant, and then over she went!
|
|
And such a shout as went up at Mr. Bixby's back never loosened the roof of
|
|
a pilot-house before!
|
|
|
|
There was no more trouble after that. Mr. Bixby was a hero that night;
|
|
and it was some little time, too, before his exploit ceased to be talked
|
|
about by river men.
|
|
|
|
Fully to realize the marvelous precision required in laying
|
|
the great steamer in her marks in that murky waste of water,
|
|
one should know that not only must she pick her intricate
|
|
way through snags and blind reefs, and then shave the head
|
|
of the island so closely as to brush the overhanging foliage
|
|
with her stern, but at one place she must pass almost within
|
|
arm's reach of a sunken and invisible wreck that would snatch
|
|
the hull timbers from under her if she should strike it,
|
|
and destroy a quarter of a million dollars' worth of steam-boat
|
|
and cargo in five minutes, and maybe a hundred and fifty human
|
|
lives into the bargain.
|
|
|
|
The last remark I heard that night was a compliment to Mr. Bixby,
|
|
uttered in soliloquy and with unction by one of our guests. He said--
|
|
|
|
'By the Shadow of Death, but he's a lightning pilot!'
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 8
|
|
Perplexing Lessons
|
|
|
|
At the end of what seemed a tedious while, I had managed to pack my head
|
|
full of islands, towns, bars, 'points,' and bends; and a curiously
|
|
inanimate mass of lumber it was, too. However, inasmuch as I
|
|
could shut my eyes and reel off a good long string of these names
|
|
without leaving out more than ten miles of river in every fifty,
|
|
I began to feel that I could take a boat down to New Orleans if I
|
|
could make her skip those little gaps. But of course my complacency
|
|
could hardly get start enough to lift my nose a trifle into the air,
|
|
before Mr. Bixby would think of something to fetch it down again.
|
|
One day he turned on me suddenly with this settler--
|
|
|
|
'What is the shape of Walnut Bend?'
|
|
|
|
He might as well have asked me my grandmother's opinion of protoplasm.
|
|
I reflected respectfully, and then said I didn't know it had any
|
|
particular shape. My gunpowdery chief went off with a bang, of course,
|
|
and then went on loading and firing until he was out of adjectives.
|
|
|
|
I had learned long ago that he only carried just so many rounds
|
|
of ammunition, and was sure to subside into a very placable and
|
|
even remorseful old smooth-bore as soon as they were all gone.
|
|
That word 'old' is merely affectionate; he was not more than
|
|
thirty-four. I waited. By and by he said--
|
|
|
|
'My boy, you've got to know the SHAPE of the river perfectly.
|
|
It is all there is left to steer by on a very dark night.
|
|
Everything else is blotted out and gone. But mind you, it hasn't
|
|
the same shape in the night that it has in the day-time.'
|
|
|
|
'How on earth am I ever going to learn it, then?'
|
|
|
|
'How do you follow a hall at home in the dark. Because you know
|
|
the shape of it. You can't see it.'
|
|
|
|
'Do you mean to say that I've got to know all the million trifling variations
|
|
of shape in the banks of this interminable river as well as I know the shape
|
|
of the front hall at home?'
|
|
|
|
'On my honor, you've got to know them BETTER than any man ever
|
|
did know the shapes of the halls in his own house.'
|
|
|
|
'I wish I was dead!'
|
|
|
|
'Now I don't want to discourage you, but----'
|
|
|
|
'Well, pile it on me; I might as well have it now as another time.'
|
|
|
|
'You see, this has got to be learned; there isn't any getting
|
|
around it. A clear starlight night throws such heavy shadows
|
|
that if you didn't know the shape of a shore perfectly you would
|
|
claw away from every bunch of timber, because you would take
|
|
the black shadow of it for a solid cape; and you see you would
|
|
be getting scared to death every fifteen minutes by the watch.
|
|
You would be fifty yards from shore all the time when you
|
|
ought to be within fifty feet of it. You can't see a snag
|
|
in one of those shadows, but you know exactly where it is,
|
|
and the shape of the river tells you when you are coming to it.
|
|
Then there's your pitch-dark night; the river is a very different
|
|
shape on a pitch-dark night from what it is on a starlight night.
|
|
All shores seem to be straight lines, then, and mighty dim ones, too;
|
|
and you'd RUN them for straight lines only you know better.
|
|
You boldly drive your boat right into what seems to be a solid,
|
|
straight wall (you knowing very well that in reality there is
|
|
a curve there), and that wall falls back and makes way for you.
|
|
Then there's your gray mist. You take a night when there's one
|
|
of these grisly, drizzly, gray mists, and then there isn't any
|
|
particular shape to a shore. A gray mist would tangle the head
|
|
of the oldest man that ever lived. Well, then, different kinds
|
|
of MOONLIGHT change the shape of the river in different ways.
|
|
You see----'
|
|
|
|
'Oh, don't say any more, please! Have I got to learn the shape of the river
|
|
according to all these five hundred thousand different ways? If I tried
|
|
to carry all that cargo in my head it would make me stoop-shouldered.'
|
|
|
|
'NO! you only learn THE shape of the river, and you learn it with such
|
|
absolute certainty that you can always steer by the shape that's IN YOUR HEAD,
|
|
and never mind the one that's before your eyes.'
|
|
|
|
'Very well, I'll try it; but after I have learned it can I depend on it.
|
|
Will it keep the same form and not go fooling around?'
|
|
|
|
Before Mr. Bixby could answer, Mr. W---- came in to take the watch,
|
|
and he said--
|
|
|
|
'Bixby, you'll have to look out for President's Island and all
|
|
that country clear away up above he Old Hen and Chickens.
|
|
The banks are caving and the shape of the shores changing
|
|
like everything. Why, you wouldn't know the point above 40.
|
|
You can go up inside the old sycamore-snag, now.<footnote [1.
|
|
It may not be necessary, but still it can do no harm to explain
|
|
that 'inside' means between the snag and the shore.--M.T.]>
|
|
|
|
So that question was answered. Here were leagues of shore changing shape.
|
|
My spirits were down in the mud again. Two things seemed pretty apparent
|
|
to me. One was, that in order to be a pilot a man had got to learn more than
|
|
any one man ought to be allowed to know; and the other was, that he must learn
|
|
it all over again in a different way every twenty-four hours.
|
|
|
|
That night we had the watch until twelve. Now it was an ancient river
|
|
custom for the two pilots to chat a bit when the watch changed.
|
|
While the relieving pilot put on his gloves and lit his cigar,
|
|
his partner, the retiring pilot, would say something like this--
|
|
|
|
'I judge the upper bar is making down a little at Hale's Point;
|
|
had quarter twain with the lower lead and mark twain<footnote [Two fathoms.
|
|
'Quarter twain' is two-and-a-quarter fathoms, thirteen-and-a-half feet.
|
|
'Mark three' is three fathoms.]> with the other.'
|
|
|
|
'Yes, I thought it was making down a little, last trip.
|
|
Meet any boats?'
|
|
|
|
'Met one abreast the head of 21, but she was away over hugging the bar,
|
|
and I couldn't make her out entirely. I took her for the "Sunny South"--
|
|
hadn't any skylights forward of the chimneys.'
|
|
|
|
And so on. And as the relieving pilot took the wheel his
|
|
partner<footnote ['Partner' is a technical term for 'the other
|
|
pilot'.]> would mention that we were in such-and-such a bend,
|
|
and say we were abreast of such-and-such a man's wood-yard
|
|
or plantation. This was courtesy; I supposed it was necessity.
|
|
But Mr. W---- came on watch full twelve minutes late on
|
|
this particular night,--a tremendous breach of etiquette;
|
|
in fact, it is the unpardonable sin among pilots.
|
|
So Mr. Bixby gave him no greeting whatever, but simply surrendered
|
|
the wheel and marched out of the pilot-house without a word.
|
|
I was appalled; it was a villainous night for blackness,
|
|
we were in a particularly wide and blind part of the river,
|
|
where there was no shape or substance to anything, and it
|
|
seemed incredible that Mr. Bixby should have left that poor
|
|
fellow to kill the boat trying to find out where he was.
|
|
But I resolved that I would stand by him any way.
|
|
He should find that he was not wholly friendless.
|
|
So I stood around, and waited to be asked where we were.
|
|
But Mr. W---- plunged on serenely through the solid firmament of black
|
|
cats that stood for an atmosphere, and never opened his mouth.
|
|
Here is a proud devil, thought I; here is a limb of Satan that
|
|
would rather send us all to destruction than put himself under
|
|
obligations to me, because I am not yet one of the salt of the earth
|
|
and privileged to snub captains and lord it over everything dead
|
|
and alive in a steamboat. I presently climbed up on the bench;
|
|
I did not think it was safe to go to sleep while this lunatic
|
|
was on watch.
|
|
|
|
However, I must have gone to sleep in the course of time,
|
|
because the next thing I was aware of was the fact that day
|
|
was breaking, Mr. W---- gone, and Mr. Bixby at the wheel again.
|
|
So it was four o'clock and all well--but me; I felt like a skinful
|
|
of dry bones and all of them trying to ache at once.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Bixby asked me what I had stayed up there for. I confessed
|
|
that it was to do Mr. W---- a benevolence,--tell him where he was.
|
|
It took five minutes for the entire preposterousness of the thing
|
|
to filter into Mr. Bixby's system, and then I judge it filled
|
|
him nearly up to the chin; because he paid me a compliment--
|
|
and not much of a one either. He said,
|
|
|
|
'Well, taking you by-and-large, you do seem to be more
|
|
different kinds of an ass than any creature I ever saw before.
|
|
What did you suppose he wanted to know for?'
|
|
|
|
I said I thought it might be a convenience to him.
|
|
|
|
'Convenience D-nation! Didn't I tell you that a man's got to know the river
|
|
in the night the same as he'd know his own front hall?'
|
|
|
|
'Well, I can follow the front hall in the dark if I know it IS the front hall;
|
|
but suppose you set me down in the middle of it in the dark and not tell me
|
|
which hall it is; how am I to know?'
|
|
|
|
'Well you've GOT to, on the river!'
|
|
|
|
'All right. Then I'm glad I never said anything to Mr. W----'
|
|
|
|
'I should say so. Why, he'd have slammed you through the window and utterly
|
|
ruined a hundred dollars' worth of window-sash and stuff.'
|
|
|
|
I was glad this damage had been saved, for it would have made
|
|
me unpopular with the owners. They always hated anybody
|
|
who had the name of being careless, and injuring things.
|
|
|
|
I went to work now to learn the shape of the river; and of all the eluding
|
|
and ungraspable objects that ever I tried to get mind or hands on,
|
|
that was the chief. I would fasten my eyes upon a sharp, wooded point that
|
|
projected far into the river some miles ahead of me, and go to laboriously
|
|
photographing its shape upon my brain; and just as I was beginning to
|
|
succeed to my satisfaction, we would draw up toward it and the exasperating
|
|
thing would begin to melt away and fold back into the bank! If there
|
|
had been a conspicuous dead tree standing upon the very point of the cape,
|
|
I would find that tree inconspicuously merged into the general forest,
|
|
and occupying the middle of a straight shore, when I got abreast of it!
|
|
No prominent hill would stick to its shape long enough for me to make up
|
|
my mind what its form really was, but it was as dissolving and changeful
|
|
as if it had been a mountain of butter in the hottest corner of the tropics.
|
|
Nothing ever had the same shape when I was coming downstream that it had
|
|
borne when I went up. I mentioned these little difficulties to Mr. Bixby.
|
|
He said--
|
|
|
|
'That's the very main virtue of the thing. If the shapes
|
|
didn't change every three seconds they wouldn't be of any use.
|
|
Take this place where we are now, for instance.
|
|
As long as that hill over yonder is only one hill, I can boom
|
|
right along the way I'm going; but the moment it splits at
|
|
the top and forms a V, I know I've got to scratch to starboard
|
|
in a hurry, or I'll bang this boat's brains out against a rock;
|
|
and then the moment one of the prongs of the V swings behind
|
|
the other, I've got to waltz to larboard again, or I'll have
|
|
a misunderstanding with a snag that would snatch the keelson out
|
|
of this steamboat as neatly as if it were a sliver in your hand.
|
|
If that hill didn't change its shape on bad nights there
|
|
would be an awful steamboat grave-yard around here inside
|
|
of a year.'
|
|
|
|
It was plain that I had got to learn the shape of the river
|
|
in all the different ways that could be thought of,--upside down,
|
|
wrong end first, inside out, fore-and-aft, and 'thortships,'--and then
|
|
know what to do on gray nights when it hadn't any shape at all.
|
|
So I set about it. In the course of time I began to get the best of this
|
|
knotty lesson, and my self-complacency moved to the front once more.
|
|
Mr. Bixby was all fixed, and ready to start it to the rear again.
|
|
He opened on me after this fashion--
|
|
|
|
'How much water did we have in the middle crossing at Hole-in-the-Wall,
|
|
trip before last?'
|
|
|
|
I considered this an outrage. I said--
|
|
|
|
'Every trip, down and up, the leadsmen are singing through
|
|
that tangled place for three-quarters of an hour on a stretch.
|
|
How do you reckon I can remember such a mess as that?'
|
|
|
|
'My boy, you've got to remember it. You've got to remember
|
|
the exact spot and the exact marks the boat lay in when we had
|
|
the shoalest water, in everyone of the five hundred shoal places
|
|
between St. Louis and New Orleans; and you mustn't get the shoal
|
|
soundings and marks of one trip mixed up with the shoal soundings
|
|
and marks of another, either, for they're not often twice alike.
|
|
You must keep them separate.'
|
|
|
|
When I came to myself again, I said--
|
|
|
|
'When I get so that I can do that, I'll be able to raise the dead,
|
|
and then I won't have to pilot a steamboat to make a living.
|
|
I want to retire from this business. I want a slush-bucket and a brush;
|
|
I'm only fit for a roustabout. I haven't got brains enough to be a pilot;
|
|
and if I had I wouldn't have strength enough to carry them around,
|
|
unless I went on crutches.'
|
|
|
|
'Now drop that! When I say I'll learn<footnote ['Teach' is
|
|
not in the river vocabulary.]> a man the river, I mean it.
|
|
And you can depend on it, I'll learn him or kill him.'
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 9
|
|
Continued Perplexities
|
|
|
|
THERE was no use in arguing with a person like this. I promptly
|
|
put such a strain on my memory that by and by even the shoal
|
|
water and the countless crossing-marks began to stay with me.
|
|
But the result was just the same. I never could more than get
|
|
one knotty thing learned before another presented itself.
|
|
Now I had often seen pilots gazing at the water and pretending to read
|
|
it as if it were a book; but it was a book that told me nothing.
|
|
A time came at last, however, when Mr. Bixby seemed to think me far
|
|
enough advanced to bear a lesson on water-reading. So he began--
|
|
|
|
'Do you see that long slanting line on the face of the water Now,
|
|
that's a reef. Moreover, it's a bluff reef. There is a solid sand-bar
|
|
under it that is nearly as straight up and down as the side of a house.
|
|
There is plenty of water close up to it, but mighty little on top of it.
|
|
If you were to hit it you would knock the boat's brains out.
|
|
Do you see where the line fringes out at the upper end and begins to
|
|
fade away '
|
|
|
|
'Yes, sir.'
|
|
|
|
'Well, that is a low place; that is the head of the reef.
|
|
You can climb over there, and not hurt anything. Cross over,
|
|
now, and follow along close under the reef--easy water there--
|
|
not much current.'
|
|
|
|
I followed the reef along till I approached the fringed end.
|
|
Then Mr. Bixby said--
|
|
|
|
'Now get ready. Wait till I give the word. She won't want to mount the reef;
|
|
a boat hates shoal water. Stand by--wait--WAIT--keep her well in hand.
|
|
NOW cramp her down! Snatch her! snatch her!'
|
|
|
|
He seized the other side of the wheel and helped to spin
|
|
it around until it was hard down, and then we held it so.
|
|
The boat resisted, and refused to answer for a while, and next she
|
|
came surging to starboard, mounted the reef, and sent a long,
|
|
angry ridge of water foaming away from her bows.
|
|
|
|
'Now watch her; watch her like a cat, or she'll get away from you.
|
|
When she fights strong and the tiller slips a little,
|
|
in a jerky, greasy sort of way, let up on her a trifle;
|
|
it is the way she tells you at night that the water is too shoal;
|
|
but keep edging her up, little by little, toward the point.
|
|
You are well up on the bar, now; there is a bar under every point,
|
|
because the water that comes down around it forms an eddy
|
|
and allows the sediment to sink. Do you see those fine lines
|
|
on the face of the water that branch out like the ribs of a fan.
|
|
Well, those are little reefs; you want to just miss the ends
|
|
of them, but run them pretty close. Now look out--look out!
|
|
Don't you crowd that slick, greasy-looking place; there ain't
|
|
nine feet there; she won't stand it. She begins to smell it;
|
|
look sharp, I tell you! Oh blazes, there you go!
|
|
Stop the starboard wheel! Quick! Ship up to back!
|
|
Set her back!
|
|
|
|
The engine bells jingled and the engines answered promptly,
|
|
shooting white columns of steam far aloft out of the 'scape pipes,
|
|
but it was too late. The boat had 'smelt' the bar in good earnest;
|
|
the foamy ridges that radiated from her bows suddenly disappeared,
|
|
a great dead swell came rolling forward and swept ahead of her,
|
|
she careened far over to larboard, and went tearing away
|
|
toward the other shore as if she were about scared to death.
|
|
We were a good mile from where we ought to have been, when we
|
|
finally got the upper hand of her again.
|
|
|
|
During the afternoon watch the next day, Mr. Bixby asked me if I
|
|
knew how to run the next few miles. I said--
|
|
|
|
'Go inside the first snag above the point, outside the next one,
|
|
start out from the lower end of Higgins's wood-yard, make
|
|
a square crossing and----'
|
|
|
|
'That's all right. I'll be back before you close up on the next point.'
|
|
|
|
But he wasn't. He was still below when I rounded it and entered upon
|
|
a piece of river which I had some misgivings about. I did not know
|
|
that he was hiding behind a chimney to see how I would perform.
|
|
I went gaily along, getting prouder and prouder, for he had never
|
|
left the boat in my sole charge such a length of time before.
|
|
I even got to 'setting' her and letting the wheel go, entirely, while I
|
|
vaingloriously turned my back and inspected the stem marks and hummed a tune,
|
|
a sort of easy indifference which I had prodigiously admired in Bixby
|
|
and other great pilots. Once I inspected rather long, and when I faced
|
|
to the front again my heart flew into my mouth so suddenly that if I hadn't
|
|
clapped my teeth together I should have lost it. One of those frightful
|
|
bluff reefs was stretching its deadly length right across our bows!
|
|
My head was gone in a moment; I did not know which end I stood on;
|
|
I gasped and could not get my breath; I spun the wheel down with such
|
|
rapidity that it wove itself together like a spider's web; the boat
|
|
answered and turned square away from the reef, but the reef followed her!
|
|
I fled, and still it followed, still it kept--right across my bows!
|
|
I never looked to see where I was going, I only fled.
|
|
The awful crash was imminent--why didn't that villain come!
|
|
If I committed the crime of ringing a bell, I might get thrown overboard.
|
|
But better that than kill the boat. So in blind desperation I started
|
|
such a rattling 'shivaree' down below as never had astounded an engineer
|
|
in this world before, I fancy. Amidst the frenzy of the bells the engines
|
|
began to back and fill in a furious way, and my reason forsook its throne--
|
|
we were about to crash into the woods on the other side of the river.
|
|
Just then Mr. Bixby stepped calmly into view on the hurricane deck.
|
|
My soul went out to him in gratitude. My distress vanished; I would have
|
|
felt safe on the brink of Niagara, with Mr. Bixby on the hurricane deck.
|
|
He blandly and sweetly took his tooth-pick out of his mouth between
|
|
his fingers, as if it were a cigar--we were just in the act of climbing
|
|
an overhanging big tree, and the passengers were scudding astern like rats--
|
|
and lifted up these commands to me ever so gently--
|
|
|
|
'Stop the starboard. Stop the larboard. Set her back on both.'
|
|
|
|
The boat hesitated, halted, pressed her nose among the boughs
|
|
a critical instant, then reluctantly began to back away.
|
|
|
|
'Stop the larboard. Come ahead on it. Stop the starboard.
|
|
Come ahead on it. Point her for the bar.'
|
|
|
|
I sailed away as serenely as a summer's morning Mr. Bixby came in and said,
|
|
with mock simplicity--
|
|
|
|
'When you have a hail, my boy, you ought to tap the big bell three times
|
|
before you land, so that the engineers can get ready.'
|
|
|
|
I blushed under the sarcasm, and said I hadn't had any hail.
|
|
|
|
'Ah! Then it was for wood, I suppose. The officer of the watch
|
|
will tell you when he wants to wood up.'
|
|
|
|
I went on consuming and said I wasn't after wood.
|
|
|
|
'Indeed? Why, what could you want over here in the bend, then?
|
|
Did you ever know of a boat following a bend up-stream at this
|
|
stage of the river?'
|
|
|
|
'No sir,--and I wasn't trying to follow it. I was getting away
|
|
from a bluff reef.'
|
|
|
|
'No, it wasn't a bluff reef; there isn't one within three miles
|
|
of where you were.'
|
|
|
|
'But I saw it. It was as bluff as that one yonder.'
|
|
|
|
'Just about. Run over it!'
|
|
|
|
'Do you give it as an order?'
|
|
|
|
'Yes. Run over it.'
|
|
|
|
'If I don't, I wish I may die.'
|
|
|
|
'All right; I am taking the responsibility.' I was just as
|
|
anxious to kill the boat, now, as I had been to save her before.
|
|
I impressed my orders upon my memory, to be used at the inquest,
|
|
and made a straight break for the reef. As it disappeared under
|
|
our bows I held my breath; but we slid over it like oil.
|
|
|
|
'Now don't you see the difference? It wasn't anything but a WIND reef.
|
|
The wind does that.'
|
|
|
|
'So I see. But it is exactly like a bluff reef.
|
|
How am I ever going to tell them apart?'
|
|
|
|
'I can't tell you. It is an instinct. By and by you will just naturally
|
|
KNOW one from the other, but you never will be able to explain why or how you
|
|
know them apart'
|
|
|
|
It turned out to be true. The face of the water, in time,
|
|
became a wonderful book--a book that was a dead language to the
|
|
uneducated passenger, but which told its mind to me without reserve,
|
|
delivering its most cherished secrets as clearly as if it uttered
|
|
them with a voice. And it was not a book to be read once
|
|
and thrown aside, for it had a new story to tell every day.
|
|
Throughout the long twelve hundred miles there was never a page
|
|
that was void of interest, never one that you could leave
|
|
unread without loss, never one that you would want to skip,
|
|
thinking you could find higher enjoyment in some other thing.
|
|
There never was so wonderful a book written by man; never one
|
|
whose interest was so absorbing, so unflagging, so sparkingly
|
|
renewed with every re-perusal. The passenger who could not read it
|
|
was charmed with a peculiar sort of faint dimple on its surface
|
|
(on the rare occasions when he did not overlook it altogether);
|
|
but to the pilot that was an ITALICIZED passage; indeed, it was
|
|
more than that, it was a legend of the largest capitals,
|
|
with a string of shouting exclamation points at the end of it;
|
|
for it meant that a wreck or a rock was buried there that could
|
|
tear the life out of the strongest vessel that ever floated.
|
|
It is the faintest and simplest expression the water ever makes,
|
|
and the most hideous to a pilot's eye. In truth, the passenger
|
|
who could not read this book saw nothing but all manner of pretty
|
|
pictures in it painted by the sun and shaded by the clouds,
|
|
whereas to the trained eye these were not pictures at all,
|
|
but the grimmest and most dead-earnest of reading-matter.
|
|
|
|
Now when I had mastered the language of this water and had come to know
|
|
every trifling feature that bordered the great river as familiarly as I
|
|
knew the letters of the alphabet, I had made a valuable acquisition.
|
|
But I had lost something, too. I had lost something which could never
|
|
be restored to me while I lived. All the grace, the beauty, the poetry
|
|
had gone out of the majestic river! I still keep in mind a certain
|
|
wonderful sunset which I witnessed when steamboating was new to me.
|
|
A broad expanse of the river was turned to blood; in the middle distance
|
|
the red hue brightened into gold, through which a solitary log came floating,
|
|
black and conspicuous; in one place a long, slanting mark lay sparkling upon
|
|
the water; in another the surface was broken by boiling, tumbling rings,
|
|
that were as many-tinted as an opal; where the ruddy flush was faintest,
|
|
was a smooth spot that was covered with graceful circles and radiating lines,
|
|
ever so delicately traced; the shore on our left was densely wooded,
|
|
and the somber shadow that fell from this forest was broken in one place
|
|
by a long, ruffled trail that shone like silver; and high above the forest
|
|
wall a clean-stemmed dead tree waved a single leafy bough that glowed
|
|
like a flame in the unobstructed splendor that was flowing from the sun.
|
|
There were graceful curves, reflected images, woody heights, soft distances;
|
|
and over the whole scene, far and near, the dissolving lights drifted
|
|
steadily, enriching it, every passing moment, with new marvels of coloring.
|
|
|
|
I stood like one bewitched. I drank it in, in a speechless rapture.
|
|
The world was new to me, and I had never seen anything like this at home.
|
|
But as I have said, a day came when I began to cease from noting the glories
|
|
and the charms which the moon and the sun and the twilight wrought upon
|
|
the river's face; another day came when I ceased altogether to note them.
|
|
Then, if that sunset scene had been repeated, I should have looked upon
|
|
it without rapture, and should have commented upon it, inwardly, after
|
|
this fashion: This sun means that we are going to have wind to-morrow;
|
|
that floating log means that the river is rising, small thanks to it;
|
|
that slanting mark on the water refers to a bluff reef which is going
|
|
to kill somebody's steamboat one of these nights, if it keeps on stretching
|
|
out like that; those tumbling 'boils' show a dissolving bar and a changing
|
|
channel there; the lines and circles in the slick water over yonder
|
|
are a warning that that troublesome place is shoaling up dangerously;
|
|
that silver streak in the shadow of the forest is the 'break' from a new snag,
|
|
and he has located himself in the very best place he could have found
|
|
to fish for steamboats; that tall dead tree, with a single living branch,
|
|
is not going to last long, and then how is a body ever going to get through
|
|
this blind place at night without the friendly old landmark.
|
|
|
|
No, the romance and the beauty were all gone from the river.
|
|
All the value any feature of it had for me now was the amount
|
|
of usefulness it could furnish toward compassing the safe piloting
|
|
of a steamboat. Since those days, I have pitied doctors from my heart.
|
|
What does the lovely flush in a beauty's cheek mean to a doctor
|
|
but a 'break' that ripples above some deadly disease.
|
|
Are not all her visible charms sown thick with what are to him
|
|
the signs and symbols of hidden decay? Does he ever see her
|
|
beauty at all, or doesn't he simply view her professionally,
|
|
and comment upon her unwholesome condition all to himself?
|
|
And doesn't he sometimes wonder whether he has gained most or lost
|
|
most by learning his trade?
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 10
|
|
Completing My Education
|
|
|
|
WHOSOEVER has done me the courtesy to read my chapters which have preceded
|
|
this may possibly wonder that I deal so minutely with piloting as a science.
|
|
It was the prime purpose of those chapters; and I am not quite done yet.
|
|
I wish to show, in the most patient and painstaking way, what a wonderful
|
|
science it is. Ship channels are buoyed and lighted, and therefore it is
|
|
a comparatively easy undertaking to learn to run them; clear-water rivers,
|
|
with gravel bottoms, change their channels very gradually, and therefore
|
|
one needs to learn them but once; but piloting becomes another matter
|
|
when you apply it to vast streams like the Mississippi and the Missouri,
|
|
whose alluvial banks cave and change constantly, whose snags are always
|
|
hunting up new quarters, whose sand-bars are never at rest, whose channels
|
|
are for ever dodging and shirking, and whose obstructions must be
|
|
confronted in all nights and all weathers without the aid of a single
|
|
light-house or a single buoy; for there is neither light nor buoy to be
|
|
found anywhere in all this three or four thousand miles of villainous
|
|
river.<footnote [True at the time referred to; not true now (1882).]> I
|
|
feel justified in enlarging upon this great science for the reason that I
|
|
feel sure no one has ever yet written a paragraph about it who had piloted
|
|
a steamboat himself, and so had a practical knowledge of the subject.
|
|
If the theme were hackneyed, I should be obliged to deal gently with
|
|
the reader; but since it is wholly new, I have felt at liberty to take up
|
|
a considerable degree of room with it.
|
|
|
|
When I had learned the name and position of every visible
|
|
feature of the river; when I had so mastered its shape that I
|
|
could shut my eyes and trace it from St. Louis to New Orleans;
|
|
when I had learned to read the face of the water as one would
|
|
cull the news from the morning paper; and finally, when I
|
|
had trained my dull memory to treasure up an endless array
|
|
of soundings and crossing-marks, and keep fast hold of them,
|
|
I judged that my education was complete: so I got to tilting
|
|
my cap to the side of my head, and wearing a tooth-pick in my
|
|
mouth at the wheel. Mr. Bixby had his eye on these airs.
|
|
One day he said--
|
|
|
|
'What is the height of that bank yonder, at Burgess's?'
|
|
|
|
'How can I tell, sir. It is three-quarters of a mile away.'
|
|
|
|
'Very poor eye--very poor. Take the glass.'
|
|
|
|
I took the glass, and presently said--'I can't tell.
|
|
I suppose that that bank is about a foot and a half high.'
|
|
|
|
'Foot and a half! That's a six-foot bank. How high was the bank
|
|
along here last trip?'
|
|
|
|
'I don't know; I never noticed.'
|
|
|
|
'You didn't? Well, you must always do it hereafter.'
|
|
|
|
'Why?'
|
|
|
|
'Because you'll have to know a good many things that it tells you.
|
|
For one thing, it tells you the stage of the river--tells you whether
|
|
there's more water or less in the river along here than there
|
|
was last trip.'
|
|
|
|
'The leads tell me that.' I rather thought I had the advantage
|
|
of him there.
|
|
|
|
'Yes, but suppose the leads lie? The bank would tell you so,
|
|
and then you'd stir those leadsmen up a bit. There was a ten-foot
|
|
bank here last trip, and there is only a six-foot bank now.
|
|
What does that signify?'
|
|
|
|
'That the river is four feet higher than it was last trip.'
|
|
|
|
'Very good. Is the river rising or falling?'
|
|
|
|
'Rising.'
|
|
|
|
'No it ain't.'
|
|
|
|
'I guess I am right, sir. Yonder is some drift-wood floating
|
|
down the stream.'
|
|
|
|
'A rise starts the drift-wood, but then it keeps on floating a while after
|
|
the river is done rising. Now the bank will tell you about this. Wait till
|
|
you come to a place where it shelves a little. Now here; do you see this
|
|
narrow belt of fine sediment That was deposited while the water was higher.
|
|
You see the driftwood begins to strand, too. The bank helps in other ways.
|
|
Do you see that stump on the false point?'
|
|
|
|
'Ay, ay, sir.'
|
|
|
|
'Well, the water is just up to the roots of it.
|
|
You must make a note of that.'
|
|
|
|
'Why?'
|
|
|
|
'Because that means that there's seven feet in the chute of 103.'
|
|
|
|
'But 103 is a long way up the river yet.'
|
|
|
|
'That's where the benefit of the bank comes in. There is water
|
|
enough in 103 NOW, yet there may not be by the time we get there;
|
|
but the bank will keep us posted all along. You don't run close
|
|
chutes on a falling river, up-stream, and there are precious few
|
|
of them that you are allowed to run at all down-stream. There's
|
|
a law of the United States against it. The river may be rising
|
|
by the time we get to 103, and in that case we'll run it.
|
|
We are drawing--how much?'
|
|
|
|
'Six feet aft,--six and a half forward.'
|
|
|
|
'Well, you do seem to know something.'
|
|
|
|
'But what I particularly want to know is, if I have got to keep up an
|
|
everlasting measuring of the banks of this river, twelve hundred miles,
|
|
month in and month out?'
|
|
|
|
'Of course!'
|
|
|
|
My emotions were too deep for words for a while.
|
|
Presently I said--'
|
|
|
|
And how about these chutes. Are there many of them?'
|
|
|
|
'I should say so. I fancy we shan't run any of the river this trip
|
|
as you've ever seen it run before--so to speak. If the river begins
|
|
to rise again, we'll go up behind bars that you've always seen
|
|
standing out of the river, high and dry like the roof of a house;
|
|
we'll cut across low places that you've never noticed at all,
|
|
right through the middle of bars that cover three hundred acres of river;
|
|
we'll creep through cracks where you've always thought was solid land;
|
|
we'll dart through the woods and leave twenty-five miles of river
|
|
off to one side; we'll see the hind-side of every island between New
|
|
Orleans and Cairo.'
|
|
|
|
'Then I've got to go to work and learn just as much more river
|
|
as I already know.'
|
|
|
|
'Just about twice as much more, as near as you can come at it.'
|
|
|
|
'Well, one lives to find out. I think I was a fool when I went
|
|
into this business.'
|
|
|
|
'Yes, that is true. And you are yet. But you'll not be
|
|
when you've learned it.'
|
|
|
|
'Ah, I never can learn it.'
|
|
|
|
'I will see that you DO.'
|
|
|
|
By and by I ventured again--
|
|
|
|
'Have I got to learn all this thing just as I know the rest of the river--
|
|
shapes and all--and so I can run it at night?'
|
|
|
|
'Yes. And you've got to have good fair marks from one end
|
|
of the river to the other, that will help the bank tell you
|
|
when there is water enough in each of these countless places--
|
|
like that stump, you know. When the river first begins
|
|
to rise, you can run half a dozen of the deepest of them;
|
|
when it rises a foot more you can run another dozen;
|
|
the next foot will add a couple of dozen, and so on:
|
|
so you see you have to know your banks and marks to a dead
|
|
moral certainty, and never get them mixed; for when you start
|
|
through one of those cracks, there's no backing out again,
|
|
as there is in the big river; you've got to go through,
|
|
or stay there six months if you get caught on a falling river.
|
|
There are about fifty of these cracks which you can't run at all
|
|
except when the river is brim full and over the banks.'
|
|
|
|
'This new lesson is a cheerful prospect.'
|
|
|
|
'Cheerful enough. And mind what I've just told you; when you
|
|
start into one of those places you've got to go through.
|
|
They are too narrow to turn around in, too crooked to back out of,
|
|
and the shoal water is always up at the head; never elsewhere.
|
|
And the head of them is always likely to be filling up, little by little,
|
|
so that the marks you reckon their depth by, this season, may not
|
|
answer for next.'
|
|
|
|
'Learn a new set, then, every year?'
|
|
|
|
'Exactly. Cramp her up to the bar! What are you standing up
|
|
through the middle of the river for?'
|
|
|
|
The next few months showed me strange things. On the same day that we held
|
|
the conversation above narrated, we met a great rise coming down the river.
|
|
The whole vast face of the stream was black with drifting dead logs,
|
|
broken boughs, and great trees that had caved in and been washed away.
|
|
It required the nicest steering to pick one's way through this
|
|
rushing raft, even in the day-time, when crossing from point to point;
|
|
and at night the difficulty was mightily increased; every now and then
|
|
a huge log, lying deep in the water, would suddenly appear right
|
|
under our bows, coming head-on; no use to try to avoid it then;
|
|
we could only stop the engines, and one wheel would walk over that log
|
|
from one end to the other, keeping up a thundering racket and careening
|
|
the boat in a way that was very uncomfortable to passengers.
|
|
Now and then we would hit one of these sunken logs a rattling bang,
|
|
dead in the center, with a full head of steam, and it would stun the boat
|
|
as if she had hit a continent. Sometimes this log would lodge, and stay
|
|
right across our nose, and back the Mississippi up before it; we would
|
|
have to do a little craw-fishing, then, to get away from the obstruction.
|
|
We often hit WHITE logs, in the dark, for we could not see them till we
|
|
were right on them; but a black log is a pretty distinct object at night.
|
|
A white snag is an ugly customer when the daylight is gone.
|
|
|
|
Of course, on the great rise, down came a swarm of prodigious
|
|
timber-rafts from the head waters of the Mississippi,
|
|
coal barges from Pittsburgh, little trading scows from everywhere,
|
|
and broad-horns from 'Posey County,' Indiana, freighted with 'fruit
|
|
and furniture'--the usual term for describing it, though in plain
|
|
English the freight thus aggrandized was hoop-poles and pumpkins.
|
|
Pilots bore a mortal hatred to these craft; and it was returned
|
|
with usury. The law required all such helpless traders to keep
|
|
a light burning, but it was a law that was often broken.
|
|
All of a sudden, on a murky night, a light would hop up,
|
|
right under our bows, almost, and an agonized voice,
|
|
with the backwoods 'whang' to it, would wail out--
|
|
|
|
'Whar'n the ---- you goin' to! Cain't you see nothin', you dash-dashed
|
|
aig-suckin', sheep-stealin', one-eyed son of a stuffed monkey!'
|
|
|
|
Then for an instant, as we whistled by, the red glare from our furnaces
|
|
would reveal the scow and the form of the gesticulating orator
|
|
as if under a lightning-flash, and in that instant our firemen and
|
|
deck-hands would send and receive a tempest of missiles and profanity,
|
|
one of our wheels would walk off with the crashing fragments
|
|
of a steering-oar, and down the dead blackness would shut again.
|
|
And that flatboatman would be sure to go into New Orleans and sue
|
|
our boat, swearing stoutly that he had a light burning all the time,
|
|
when in truth his gang had the lantern down below to sing and lie
|
|
and drink and gamble by, and no watch on deck. Once, at night, in one
|
|
of those forest-bordered crevices (behind an island) which steamboatmen
|
|
intensely describe with the phrase 'as dark as the inside of a cow,'
|
|
we should have eaten up a Posey County family, fruit, furniture, and all,
|
|
but that they happened to be fiddling down below, and we just caught
|
|
the sound of the music in time to sheer off, doing no serious damage,
|
|
unfortunately, but coming so near it that we had good hopes for a moment.
|
|
These people brought up their lantern, then, of course; and as we backed
|
|
and filled to get away, the precious family stood in the light of it--
|
|
both sexes and various ages--and cursed us till everything turned blue.
|
|
Once a coalboatman sent a bullet through our pilot-house, when we borrowed a
|
|
steering oar of him in a very narrow place.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 11
|
|
The River Rises
|
|
|
|
DURING this big rise these small-fry craft were an intolerable nuisance.
|
|
We were running chute after chute,--a new world to me,--and if there was
|
|
a particularly cramped place in a chute, we would be pretty sure to meet
|
|
a broad-horn there; and if he failed to be there, we would find him in a
|
|
still worse locality, namely, the head of the chute, on the shoal water.
|
|
And then there would be no end of profane cordialities exchanged.
|
|
|
|
Sometimes, in the big river, when we would be feeling our way
|
|
cautiously along through a fog, the deep hush would suddenly
|
|
be broken by yells and a clamor of tin pans, and all in instant
|
|
a log raft would appear vaguely through the webby veil,
|
|
close upon us; and then we did not wait to swap knives,
|
|
but snatched our engine bells out by the roots and piled
|
|
on all the steam we had, to scramble out of the way!
|
|
One doesn't hit a rock or a solid log craft with a steamboat
|
|
when he can get excused.
|
|
|
|
You will hardly believe it, but many steamboat clerks always
|
|
carried a large assortment of religious tracts with them
|
|
in those old departed steamboating days. Indeed they did.
|
|
Twenty times a day we would be cramping up around a bar,
|
|
while a string of these small-fry rascals were drifting down into
|
|
the head of the bend away above and beyond us a couple of miles.
|
|
Now a skiff would dart away from one of them, and come fighting
|
|
its laborious way across the desert of water. It would 'ease all,'
|
|
in the shadow of our forecastle, and the panting oarsmen would shout,
|
|
'Gimme a pa-a-per!' as the skiff drifted swiftly astern.
|
|
The clerk would throw over a file of New Orleans journals.
|
|
If these were picked up without comment, you might notice that now a dozen
|
|
other skiffs had been drifting down upon us without saying anything.
|
|
You understand, they had been waiting to see how No. 1 was going to fare.
|
|
No. 1 making no comment, all the rest would bend to their oars
|
|
and come on, now; and as fast as they came the clerk would
|
|
heave over neat bundles of religious tracts, tied to shingles.
|
|
The amount of hard swearing which twelve packages of religious literature
|
|
will command when impartially divided up among twelve raftsmen's crews,
|
|
who have pulled a heavy skiff two miles on a hot day to get them,
|
|
is simply incredible.
|
|
|
|
As I have said, the big rise brought a new world under my vision.
|
|
By the time the river was over its banks we had forsaken our old paths and
|
|
were hourly climbing over bars that had stood ten feet out of water before;
|
|
we were shaving stumpy shores, like that at the foot of Madrid Bend, which I
|
|
had always seen avoided before; we were clattering through chutes like that
|
|
of 82, where the opening at the foot was an unbroken wall of timber till our
|
|
nose was almost at the very spot. Some of these chutes were utter solitudes.
|
|
The dense, untouched forest overhung both banks of the crooked little crack,
|
|
and one could believe that human creatures had never intruded there before.
|
|
The swinging grape-vines, the grassy nooks and vistas glimpsed as we swept by,
|
|
the flowering creepers waving their red blossoms from the tops of dead trunks,
|
|
and all the spendthrift richness of the forest foliage, were wasted and thrown
|
|
away there. The chutes were lovely places to steer in; they were deep,
|
|
except at the head; the current was gentle; under the 'points' the water
|
|
was absolutely dead, and the invisible banks so bluff that where the tender
|
|
willow thickets projected you could bury your boat's broadside in them as you
|
|
tore along, and then you seemed fairly to fly.
|
|
|
|
Behind other islands we found wretched little farms, and wretcheder
|
|
little log-cabins; there were crazy rail fences sticking a foot
|
|
or two above the water, with one or two jeans-clad, chills-racked,
|
|
yellow-faced male miserables roosting on the top-rail, elbows
|
|
on knees, jaws in hands, grinding tobacco and discharging
|
|
the result at floating chips through crevices left by lost teeth;
|
|
while the rest of the family and the few farm-animals were huddled
|
|
together in an empty wood-flat riding at her moorings close at hand.
|
|
In this flat-boat the family would have to cook and eat
|
|
and sleep for a lesser or greater number of days (or possibly
|
|
weeks), until the river should fall two or three feet and let
|
|
them get back to their log-cabin and their chills again--
|
|
chills being a merciful provision of an all-wise Providence
|
|
to enable them to take exercise without exertion.
|
|
And this sort of watery camping out was a thing which these people
|
|
were rather liable to be treated to a couple of times a year:
|
|
by the December rise out of the Ohio, and the June rise out
|
|
of the Mississippi. And yet these were kindly dispensations,
|
|
for they at least enabled the poor things to rise from the dead
|
|
now and then, and look upon life when a steamboat went by.
|
|
They appreciated the blessing, too, for they spread their mouths
|
|
and eyes wide open and made the most of these occasions.
|
|
Now what could these banished creatures find to do to keep from dying
|
|
of the blues during the low-water season!'
|
|
|
|
Once, in one of these lovely island chutes, we found
|
|
our course completely bridged by a great fallen tree.
|
|
This will serve to show how narrow some of the chutes were.
|
|
The passengers had an hour's recreation in a virgin wilderness,
|
|
while the boat-hands chopped the bridge away; for there was no such
|
|
thing as turning back, you comprehend.
|
|
|
|
From Cairo to Baton Rouge, when the river is over its banks, you have
|
|
no particular trouble in the night, for the thousand-mile wall of dense
|
|
forest that guards the two banks all the way is only gapped with a farm
|
|
or wood-yard opening at intervals, and so you can't 'get out of the river'
|
|
much easier than you could get out of a fenced lane; but from Baton
|
|
Rouge to New Orleans it is a different matter. The river is more than
|
|
a mile wide, and very deep--as much as two hundred feet, in places.
|
|
Both banks, for a good deal over a hundred miles, are shorn of their timber
|
|
and bordered by continuous sugar plantations, with only here and there
|
|
a scattering sapling or row of ornamental China-trees. The timber is
|
|
shorn off clear to the rear of the plantations, from two to four miles.
|
|
When the first frost threatens to come, the planters snatch off
|
|
their crops in a hurry. When they have finished grinding the cane,
|
|
they form the refuse of the stalks (which they call BAGASSE)
|
|
into great piles and set fire to them, though in other sugar countries
|
|
the bagasse is used for fuel in the furnaces of the sugar mills.
|
|
Now the piles of damp bagasse burn slowly, and smoke like Satan's own kitchen.
|
|
|
|
An embankment ten or fifteen feet high guards both banks of the Mississippi
|
|
all the way down that lower end of the river, and this embankment is set
|
|
back from the edge of the shore from ten to perhaps a hundred feet,
|
|
according to circumstances; say thirty or forty feet, as a general thing.
|
|
Fill that whole region with an impenetrable gloom of smoke from a hundred
|
|
miles of burning bagasse piles, when the river is over the banks, and turn
|
|
a steamboat loose along there at midnight and see how she will feel.
|
|
And see how you will feel, too! You find yourself away out in the midst
|
|
of a vague dim sea that is shoreless, that fades out and loses itself
|
|
in the murky distances; for you cannot discern the thin rib of embankment,
|
|
and you are always imagining you see a straggling tree when you don't. The
|
|
plantations themselves are transformed by the smoke, and look like a part
|
|
of the sea. All through your watch you are tortured with the exquisite misery
|
|
of uncertainty. You hope you are keeping in the river, but you do not know.
|
|
All that you are sure about is that you are likely to be within six feet of
|
|
the bank and destruction, when you think you are a good half-mile from shore.
|
|
And you are sure, also, that if you chance suddenly to fetch up against
|
|
the embankment and topple your chimneys overboard, you will have the small
|
|
comfort of knowing that it is about what you were expecting to do.
|
|
One of the great Vicksburg packets darted out into a sugar plantation
|
|
one night, at such a time, and had to stay there a week. But there was no
|
|
novelty about it; it had often been done before.
|
|
|
|
I thought I had finished this chapter, but I wish
|
|
to add a curious thing, while it is in my mind.
|
|
It is only relevant in that it is connected with piloting.
|
|
There used to be an excellent pilot on the river, a Mr. X.,
|
|
who was a somnambulist. It was said that if his mind was
|
|
troubled about a bad piece of river, he was pretty sure
|
|
to get up and walk in his sleep and do strange things.
|
|
He was once fellow-pilot for a trip or two with George Ealer,
|
|
on a great New Orleans passenger packet. During a considerable
|
|
part of the first trip George was uneasy, but got over it
|
|
by and by, as X. seemed content to stay in his bed when asleep.
|
|
Late one night the boat was approaching Helena, Arkansas; the water
|
|
was low, and the crossing above the town in a very blind and
|
|
tangled condition. X. had seen the crossing since Ealer had,
|
|
and as the night was particularly drizzly, sullen, and dark,
|
|
Ealer was considering whether he had not better have X. called to
|
|
assist in running the place, when the door opened and X. walked in.
|
|
Now on very dark nights, light is a deadly enemy to piloting;
|
|
you are aware that if you stand in a lighted room, on such
|
|
a night, you cannot see things in the street to any purpose;
|
|
but if you put out the lights and stand in the gloom you can make
|
|
out objects in the street pretty well. So, on very dark nights,
|
|
pilots do not smoke; they allow no fire in the pilot-house
|
|
stove if there is a crack which can allow the least ray
|
|
to escape; they order the furnaces to be curtained with huge
|
|
tarpaulins and the sky-lights to be closely blinded.
|
|
Then no light whatever issues from the boat. The undefinable
|
|
shape that now entered the pilot-house had Mr. X.'s voice.
|
|
This said--
|
|
|
|
Let me take her, George; I've seen this place since you have,
|
|
and it is so crooked that I reckon I can run it myself easier
|
|
than I could tell you how to do it.'
|
|
|
|
'It is kind of you, and I swear I am willing.
|
|
I haven't got another drop of perspiration left in me.
|
|
I have been spinning around and around the wheel like a squirrel.
|
|
It is so dark I can't tell which way she is swinging till she is
|
|
coming around like a whirligig.'
|
|
|
|
So Ealer took a seat on the bench, panting and breathless.
|
|
The black phantom assumed the wheel without saying anything,
|
|
steadied the waltzing steamer with a turn or two, and then stood
|
|
at ease, coaxing her a little to this side and then to that,
|
|
as gently and as sweetly as if the time had been noonday.
|
|
When Ealer observed this marvel of steering, he wished he had
|
|
not confessed! He stared, and wondered, and finally said--'
|
|
|
|
Well, I thought I knew how to steer a steamboat, but that was
|
|
another mistake of mine.'
|
|
|
|
X. said nothing, but went serenely on with his work. He rang for the leads;
|
|
he rang to slow down the steam; he worked the boat carefully and neatly
|
|
into invisible marks, then stood at the center of the wheel and peered
|
|
blandly out into the blackness, fore and aft, to verify his position;
|
|
as the leads shoaled more and more, he stopped the engines entirely,
|
|
and the dead silence and suspense of 'drifting' followed when the shoalest
|
|
water was struck, he cracked on the steam, carried her handsomely over,
|
|
and then began to work her warily into the next system of shoal marks;
|
|
the same patient, heedful use of leads and engines followed, the boat
|
|
slipped through without touching bottom, and entered upon the third and
|
|
last intricacy of the crossing; imperceptibly she moved through the gloom,
|
|
crept by inches into her marks, drifted tediously till the shoalest water
|
|
was cried, and then, under a tremendous head of steam, went swinging over
|
|
the reef and away into deep water and safety!
|
|
|
|
Ealer let his long-pent breath pour out in a great, relieving sigh, and said--
|
|
|
|
'That's the sweetest piece of piloting that was ever done on
|
|
the Mississippi River! I wouldn't believed it could be done,
|
|
if I hadn't seen it.'
|
|
|
|
There was no reply, and he added--
|
|
|
|
'Just hold her five minutes longer, partner, and let me run down and get
|
|
a cup of coffee.'
|
|
|
|
A minute later Ealer was biting into a pie, down in the 'texas,'
|
|
and comforting himself with coffee. Just then the night watchman
|
|
happened in, and was about to happen out again, when he noticed
|
|
Ealer and exclaimed--
|
|
|
|
'Who is at the wheel, sir?'
|
|
|
|
'X.'
|
|
|
|
'Dart for the pilot-house, quicker than lightning!'
|
|
|
|
The next moment both men were flying up the pilot-house companion way,
|
|
three steps at a jump! Nobody there! The great steamer was
|
|
whistling down the middle of the river at her own sweet will!
|
|
The watchman shot out of the place again; Ealer seized the wheel,
|
|
set an engine back with power, and held his breath while the boat
|
|
reluctantly swung away from a 'towhead' which she was about to knock
|
|
into the middle of the Gulf of Mexico!
|
|
|
|
By and by the watchman came back and said--
|
|
|
|
'Didn't that lunatic tell you he was asleep, when he first came up here?'
|
|
|
|
'NO.'
|
|
|
|
'Well, he was. I found him walking along on top of the railings
|
|
just as unconcerned as another man would walk a pavement;
|
|
and I put him to bed; now just this minute there he was again,
|
|
away astern, going through that sort of tight-rope deviltry
|
|
the same as before.'
|
|
|
|
'Well, I think I'll stay by, next time he has one of those fits.
|
|
But I hope he'll have them often. You just ought to have seen him take
|
|
this boat through Helena crossing. I never saw anything so gaudy before.
|
|
And if he can do such gold-leaf, kid-glove, diamond-breastpin piloting
|
|
when he is sound asleep, what COULDN'T he do if he was dead!'
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 12
|
|
Sounding
|
|
|
|
WHEN the river is very low, and one's steamboat is 'drawing all the water'
|
|
there is in the channel,--or a few inches more, as was often the case
|
|
in the old times,--one must be painfully circumspect in his piloting.
|
|
We used to have to 'sound' a number of particularly bad places almost every
|
|
trip when the river was at a very low stage.
|
|
|
|
Sounding is done in this way. The boat ties up at the shore, just above
|
|
the shoal crossing; the pilot not on watch takes his 'cub' or steersman
|
|
and a picked crew of men (sometimes an officer also), and goes out
|
|
in the yawl--provided the boat has not that rare and sumptuous luxury,
|
|
a regularly-devised 'sounding-boat'--and proceeds to hunt for the best water,
|
|
the pilot on duty watching his movements through a spy-glass, meantime,
|
|
and in some instances assisting by signals of the boat's whistle,
|
|
signifying 'try higher up' or 'try lower down;' for the surface of
|
|
the water, like an oil-painting, is more expressive and intelligible
|
|
when inspected from a little distance than very close at hand.
|
|
The whistle signals are seldom necessary, however; never, perhaps, except when
|
|
the wind confuses the significant ripples upon the water's surface.
|
|
When the yawl has reached the shoal place, the speed is slackened,
|
|
the pilot begins to sound the depth with a pole ten or twelve feet long,
|
|
and the steersman at the tiller obeys the order to 'hold her up
|
|
to starboard;' or, 'let her fall off to larboard;'<footnote [The
|
|
term 'larboard' is never used at seam now, to signify the left hand;
|
|
but was always used on the river in my time]> or 'steady--steady
|
|
as you go.'
|
|
|
|
When the measurements indicate that the yawl is approaching
|
|
the shoalest part of the reef, the command is given to 'ease all!'
|
|
Then the men stop rowing and the yawl drifts with the current.
|
|
The next order is, 'Stand by with the buoy!' The moment
|
|
the shallowest point is reached, the pilot delivers the order,
|
|
'Let go the buoy!' and over she goes. If the pilot is
|
|
not satisfied, he sounds the place again; if he finds better water
|
|
higher up or lower down, he removes the buoy to that place.
|
|
Being finally satisfied, he gives the order, and all the men
|
|
stand their oars straight up in the air, in line; a blast from
|
|
the boat's whistle indicates that the signal has been seen;
|
|
then the men 'give way' on their oars and lay the yawl
|
|
alongside the buoy; the steamer comes creeping carefully down,
|
|
is pointed straight at the buoy, husbands her power for
|
|
the coming struggle, and presently, at the critical moment,
|
|
turns on all her steam and goes grinding and wallowing over
|
|
the buoy and the sand, and gains the deep water beyond.
|
|
Or maybe she doesn't; maybe she 'strikes and swings.'
|
|
Then she has to while away several hours (or days)
|
|
sparring herself off.
|
|
|
|
Sometimes a buoy is not laid at all, but the yawl goes ahead,
|
|
hunting the best water, and the steamer follows along in its wake.
|
|
Often there is a deal of fun and excitement about sounding,
|
|
especially if it is a glorious summer day, or a blustering night.
|
|
But in winter the cold and the peril take most of the fun out of it.
|
|
|
|
A buoy is nothing but a board four or five feet long,
|
|
with one end turned up; it is a reversed school-house bench,
|
|
with one of the supports left and the other removed.
|
|
It is anchored on the shoalest part of the reef by a
|
|
rope with a heavy stone made fast to the end of it.
|
|
But for the resistance of the turned-up end of the reversed bench,
|
|
the current would pull the buoy under water. At night, a paper
|
|
lantern with a candle in it is fastened on top of the buoy,
|
|
and this can be seen a mile or more, a little glimmering spark in
|
|
the waste of blackness.
|
|
|
|
Nothing delights a cub so much as an opportunity to go out sounding.
|
|
There is such an air of adventure about it; often there is danger;
|
|
it is so gaudy and man-of-war-like to sit up in the stern-sheets and steer
|
|
a swift yawl; there is something fine about the exultant spring of the boat
|
|
when an experienced old sailor crew throw their souls into the oars;
|
|
it is lovely to see the white foam stream away from the bows; there is
|
|
music in the rush of the water; it is deliciously exhilarating, in summer,
|
|
to go speeding over the breezy expanses of the river when the world
|
|
of wavelets is dancing in the sun. It is such grandeur, too, to the cub,
|
|
to get a chance to give an order; for often the pilot will simply say,
|
|
'Let her go about!' and leave the rest to the cub, who instantly cries,
|
|
in his sternest tone of command, 'Ease starboard! Strong on the larboard!
|
|
Starboard give way! With a will, men!' The cub enjoys sounding
|
|
for the further reason that the eyes of the passengers are watching all
|
|
the yawl's movements with absorbing interest if the time be daylight;
|
|
and if it be night he knows that those same wondering eyes are fastened
|
|
upon the yawl's lantern as it glides out into the gloom and dims away
|
|
in the remote distance.
|
|
|
|
One trip a pretty girl of sixteen spent her time in our pilot-house
|
|
with her uncle and aunt, every day and all day long. I fell in love
|
|
with her. So did Mr. Thornburg's cub, Tom G----. Tom and I had been
|
|
bosom friends until this time; but now a coolness began to arise.
|
|
I told the girl a good many of my river adventures, and made
|
|
myself out a good deal of a hero; Tom tried to make himself appear
|
|
to be a hero, too, and succeeded to some extent, but then he always
|
|
had a way of embroidering. However, virtue is its own reward,
|
|
so I was a barely perceptible trifle ahead in the contest.
|
|
About this time something happened which promised handsomely for me:
|
|
the pilots decided to sound the crossing at the head of 21.
|
|
This would occur about nine or ten o'clock at night, when the
|
|
passengers would be still up; it would be Mr. Thornburg's watch,
|
|
therefore my chief would have to do the sounding. We had a perfect
|
|
love of a sounding-boat--long, trim, graceful, and as fleet as
|
|
a greyhound; her thwarts were cushioned; she carried twelve oarsmen;
|
|
one of the mates was always sent in her to transmit orders to her crew,
|
|
for ours was a steamer where no end of 'style' was put on.
|
|
|
|
We tied up at the shore above 21, and got ready. It was a foul night,
|
|
and the river was so wide, there, that a landsman's uneducated
|
|
eyes could discern no opposite shore through such a gloom.
|
|
The passengers were alert and interested; everything was satisfactory.
|
|
As I hurried through the engine-room, picturesquely gotten up
|
|
in storm toggery, I met Tom, and could not forbear delivering
|
|
myself of a mean speech--
|
|
|
|
'Ain't you glad YOU don't have to go out sounding?'
|
|
|
|
Tom was passing on, but he quickly turned, and said--
|
|
|
|
'Now just for that, you can go and get the sounding-pole yourself.
|
|
I was going after it, but I'd see you in Halifax, now, before I'd do it.'
|
|
|
|
'Who wants you to get it? I don't. It's in the sounding-boat.'
|
|
|
|
'It ain't, either. It's been new-painted; and it's been up on the ladies'
|
|
cabin guards two days, drying.
|
|
|
|
I flew back, and shortly arrived among the crowd of watching
|
|
and wondering ladies just in time to hear the command:
|
|
|
|
'Give way, men!'
|
|
|
|
I looked over, and there was the gallant sounding-boat booming away,
|
|
the unprincipled Tom presiding at the tiller, and my chief sitting by him
|
|
with the sounding-pole which I had been sent on a fool's errand to fetch.
|
|
Then that young girl said to me--
|
|
|
|
'Oh, how awful to have to go out in that little boat on such a night!
|
|
Do you think there is any danger?'
|
|
|
|
I would rather have been stabbed. I went off, full of venom,
|
|
to help in the pilot-house. By and by the boat's lantern disappeared,
|
|
and after an interval a wee spark glimmered upon the face of the water
|
|
a mile away. Mr. Thornburg blew the whistle, in acknowledgment,
|
|
backed the steamer out, and made for it. We flew along for a while,
|
|
then slackened steam and went cautiously gliding toward the spark.
|
|
Presently Mr. Thornburg exclaimed--
|
|
|
|
'Hello, the buoy-lantern's out!'
|
|
|
|
He stopped the engines. A moment or two later he said--
|
|
|
|
'Why, there it is again!'
|
|
|
|
So he came ahead on the engines once more, and rang for the leads.
|
|
Gradually the water shoaled up, and then began to deepen again!
|
|
Mr. Thornburg muttered--
|
|
|
|
'Well, I don't understand this. I believe that buoy has drifted
|
|
off the reef. Seems to be a little too far to the left.
|
|
No matter, it is safest to run over it anyhow.'
|
|
|
|
So, in that solid world of darkness we went creeping down on the light.
|
|
Just as our bows were in the act of plowing over it, Mr. Thornburg seized
|
|
the bell-ropes, rang a startling peal, and exclaimed--
|
|
|
|
'My soul, it's the sounding-boat!'
|
|
|
|
A sudden chorus of wild alarms burst out far below--a pause--
|
|
and then the sound of grinding and crashing followed.
|
|
Mr. Thornburg exclaimed--
|
|
|
|
'There! the paddle-wheel has ground the sounding-boat
|
|
to lucifer matches! Run! See who is killed!'
|
|
|
|
I was on the main deck in the twinkling of an eye. My chief and the third
|
|
mate and nearly all the men were safe. They had discovered their danger
|
|
when it was too late to pull out of the way; then, when the great guards
|
|
overshadowed them a moment later, they were prepared and knew what to do;
|
|
at my chiefs order they sprang at the right instant, seized the guard,
|
|
and were hauled aboard. The next moment the sounding-yawl swept aft
|
|
to the wheel and was struck and splintered to atoms. Two of the men and
|
|
the cub Tom, were missing--a fact which spread like wildfire over the boat.
|
|
The passengers came flocking to the forward gangway, ladies and all,
|
|
anxious-eyed, white-faced, and talked in awed voices of the dreadful thing.
|
|
And often and again I heard them say, 'Poor fellows! poor boy, poor boy!'
|
|
|
|
By this time the boat's yawl was manned and away, to search
|
|
for the missing. Now a faint call was heard, off to the left.
|
|
The yawl had disappeared in the other direction. Half the people
|
|
rushed to one side to encourage the swimmer with their shouts;
|
|
the other half rushed the other way to shriek to the yawl to turn about.
|
|
By the callings, the swimmer was approaching, but some said the sound
|
|
showed failing strength. The crowd massed themselves against
|
|
the boiler-deck railings, leaning over and staring into the gloom;
|
|
and every faint and fainter cry wrung from them such words as,
|
|
'Ah, poor fellow, poor fellow! is there no way to save him?'
|
|
|
|
But still the cries held out, and drew nearer, and presently
|
|
the voice said pluckily--
|
|
|
|
'I can make it! Stand by with a rope!'
|
|
|
|
What a rousing cheer they gave him! The chief mate took his stand
|
|
in the glare of a torch-basket, a coil of rope in his hand,
|
|
and his men grouped about him. The next moment the swimmer's face
|
|
appeared in the circle of light, and in another one the owner of it
|
|
was hauled aboard, limp and drenched, while cheer on cheer went up.
|
|
It was that devil Tom.
|
|
|
|
The yawl crew searched everywhere, but found no sign of the two men.
|
|
They probably failed to catch the guard, tumbled back, and were struck
|
|
by the wheel and killed. Tom had never jumped for the guard at all,
|
|
but had plunged head-first into the river and dived under the wheel.
|
|
It was nothing; I could have done it easy enough, and I said so;
|
|
but everybody went on just the same, making a wonderful to do over that ass,
|
|
as if he had done something great. That girl couldn't seem to have
|
|
enough of that pitiful 'hero' the rest of the trip; but little I cared;
|
|
I loathed her, any way.
|
|
|
|
The way we came to mistake the sounding-boat's lantern for the
|
|
buoy-light was this. My chief said that after laying the buoy
|
|
he fell away and watched it till it seemed to be secure; then he took
|
|
up a position a hundred yards below it and a little to one side of
|
|
the steamer's course, headed the sounding-boat up-stream, and waited.
|
|
Having to wait some time, he and the officer got to talking;
|
|
he looked up when he judged that the steamer was about on the reef;
|
|
saw that the buoy was gone, but supposed that the steamer had already
|
|
run over it; he went on with his talk; he noticed that the steamer
|
|
was getting very close on him, but that was the correct thing;
|
|
it was her business to shave him closely, for convenience in taking
|
|
him aboard; he was expecting her to sheer off, until the last moment;
|
|
then it flashed upon him that she was trying to run him down,
|
|
mistaking his lantern for the buoy-light; so he sang out,
|
|
'Stand by to spring for the guard, men!' and the next instant the
|
|
jump was made.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 13
|
|
A Pilot's Needs
|
|
|
|
BUT I am wandering from what I was intending to do, that is,
|
|
make plainer than perhaps appears in the previous chapters,
|
|
some of the peculiar requirements of the science of piloting.
|
|
First of all, there is one faculty which a pilot must incessantly
|
|
cultivate until he has brought it to absolute perfection.
|
|
Nothing short of perfection will do. That faculty is memory.
|
|
He cannot stop with merely thinking a thing is so and so;
|
|
he must know it; for this is eminently one of the 'exact' sciences.
|
|
With what scorn a pilot was looked upon, in the old times,
|
|
if he ever ventured to deal in that feeble phrase 'I think,'
|
|
instead of the vigorous one 'I know!' One cannot easily realize
|
|
what a tremendous thing it is to know every trivial detail of twelve
|
|
hundred miles of river and know it with absolute exactness.
|
|
If you will take the longest street in New York, and travel up
|
|
and down it, conning its features patiently until you know every
|
|
house and window and door and lamp-post and big and little sign
|
|
by heart, and know them so accurately that you can instantly
|
|
name the one you are abreast of when you are set down at random
|
|
in that street in the middle of an inky black night, you will then
|
|
have a tolerable notion of the amount and the exactness of a
|
|
pilot's knowledge who carries the Mississippi River in his head.
|
|
And then if you will go on until you know every street crossing,
|
|
the character, size, and position of the crossing-stones,
|
|
and the varying depth of mud in each of those numberless places,
|
|
you will have some idea of what the pilot must know in order
|
|
to keep a Mississippi steamer out of trouble. Next, if you
|
|
will take half of the signs in that long street, and CHANGE THEIR
|
|
PLACES once a month, and still manage to know their new positions
|
|
accurately on dark nights, and keep up with these repeated changes
|
|
without making any mistakes, you will understand what is required
|
|
of a pilot's peerless memory by the fickle Mississippi.
|
|
|
|
I think a pilot's memory is about the most wonderful thing
|
|
in the world. To know the Old and New Testaments by heart,
|
|
and be able to recite them glibly, forward or backward,
|
|
or begin at random anywhere in the book and recite both ways
|
|
and never trip or make a mistake, is no extravagant mass
|
|
of knowledge, and no marvelous facility, compared to a pilot's
|
|
massed knowledge of the Mississippi and his marvelous facility
|
|
in the handling of it. I make this comparison deliberately,
|
|
and believe I am not expanding the truth when I do it.
|
|
Many will think my figure too strong, but pilots will not.
|
|
|
|
And how easily and comfortably the pilot's memory does its work;
|
|
how placidly effortless is its way; how UNCONSCIOUSLY it lays up
|
|
its vast stores, hour by hour, day by day, and never loses or
|
|
mislays a single valuable package of them all! Take an instance.
|
|
Let a leadsman cry, 'Half twain! half twain! half twain! half twain!
|
|
half twain!' until it become as monotonous as the ticking of a clock;
|
|
let conversation be going on all the time, and the pilot be doing
|
|
his share of the talking, and no longer consciously listening
|
|
to the leadsman; and in the midst of this endless string of half
|
|
twains let a single 'quarter twain!' be interjected, without emphasis,
|
|
and then the half twain cry go on again, just as before:
|
|
two or three weeks later that pilot can describe with precision
|
|
the boat's position in the river when that quarter twain
|
|
was uttered, and give you such a lot of head-marks, stern-marks,
|
|
and side-marks to guide you, that you ought to be able to take
|
|
the boat there and put her in that same spot again yourself!
|
|
The cry of 'quarter twain' did not really take his mind from his talk,
|
|
but his trained faculties instantly photographed the bearings,
|
|
noted the change of depth, and laid up the important details for future
|
|
reference without requiring any assistance from him in the matter.
|
|
If you were walking and talking with a friend, and another friend
|
|
at your side kept up a monotonous repetition of the vowel sound A,
|
|
for a couple of blocks, and then in the midst interjected an R,
|
|
thus, A, A, A, A, A, R, A, A, A, etc., and gave the R no emphasis,
|
|
you would not be able to state, two or three weeks afterward,
|
|
that the R had been put in, nor be able to tell what objects you
|
|
were passing at the moment it was done. But you could if your
|
|
memory had been patiently and laboriously trained to do that sort
|
|
of thing mechanically.
|
|
|
|
Give a man a tolerably fair memory to start with, and piloting
|
|
will develop it into a very colossus of capability.
|
|
But ONLY IN THE MATTERS IT IS DAILY DRILLED IN.
|
|
A time would come when the man's faculties could not help
|
|
noticing landmarks and soundings, and his memory could not
|
|
help holding on to them with the grip of a vise; but if you
|
|
asked that same man at noon what he had had for breakfast,
|
|
it would be ten chances to one that he could not tell you.
|
|
Astonishing things can be done with the human memory if you will
|
|
devote it faithfully to one particular line of business.
|
|
|
|
At the time that wages soared so high on the Missouri River, my chief,
|
|
Mr. Bixby, went up there and learned more than a thousand miles
|
|
of that stream with an ease and rapidity that were astonishing.
|
|
When he had seen each division once in the daytime and once at night,
|
|
his education was so nearly complete that he took out a 'daylight' license;
|
|
a few trips later he took out a full license, and went to piloting day
|
|
and night--and he ranked A 1, too.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Bixby placed me as steersman for a while under a pilot whose feats
|
|
of memory were a constant marvel to me. However, his memory was born
|
|
in him, I think, not built. For instance, somebody would mention a name.
|
|
Instantly Mr. Brown would break in--
|
|
|
|
'Oh, I knew HIM. Sallow-faced, red-headed fellow, with a
|
|
little scar on the side of his throat, like a splinter under
|
|
the flesh. He was only in the Southern trade six months.
|
|
That was thirteen years ago. I made a trip with him.
|
|
There was five feet in the upper river then; the "Henry Blake"
|
|
grounded at the foot of Tower Island drawing four and a half;
|
|
the "George Elliott" unshipped her rudder on the wreck
|
|
of the "Sunflower"----'
|
|
|
|
'Why, the "Sunflower" didn't sink until----'
|
|
|
|
'I know when she sunk; it was three years before that, on the 2nd of December;
|
|
Asa Hardy was captain of her, and his brother John was first clerk;
|
|
and it was his first trip in her, too; Tom Jones told me these things
|
|
a week afterward in New Orleans; he was first mate of the "Sunflower."
|
|
Captain Hardy stuck a nail in his foot the 6th of July of the next year,
|
|
and died of the lockjaw on the 15th. His brother died two years after
|
|
3rd of March,--erysipelas. I never saw either of the Hardys,--they were
|
|
Alleghany River men,--but people who knew them told me all these things.
|
|
And they said Captain Hardy wore yarn socks winter and summer just the same,
|
|
and his first wife's name was Jane Shook--she was from New England--
|
|
and his second one died in a lunatic asylum. It was in the blood.
|
|
She was from Lexington, Kentucky. Name was Horton before she was married.'
|
|
|
|
And so on, by the hour, the man's tongue would go.
|
|
He could NOT forget any thing. It was simply impossible.
|
|
The most trivial details remained as distinct and luminous in his head,
|
|
after they had lain there for years, as the most memorable events.
|
|
His was not simply a pilot's memory; its grasp was universal.
|
|
If he were talking about a trifling letter he had received seven
|
|
years before, he was pretty sure to deliver you the entire screed
|
|
from memory. And then without observing that he was departing
|
|
from the true line of his talk, he was more than likely to hurl
|
|
in a long-drawn parenthetical biography of the writer of that letter;
|
|
and you were lucky indeed if he did not take up that writer's relatives,
|
|
one by one, and give you their biographies, too.
|
|
|
|
Such a memory as that is a great misfortune. To it, all occurrences
|
|
are of the same size. Its possessor cannot distinguish an interesting
|
|
circumstance from an uninteresting one. As a talker, he is bound
|
|
to clog his narrative with tiresome details and make himself
|
|
an insufferable bore. Moreover, he cannot stick to his subject.
|
|
He picks up every little grain of memory he discerns in his way,
|
|
and so is led aside. Mr. Brown would start out with the honest
|
|
intention of telling you a vastly funny anecdote about a dog.
|
|
He would be 'so full of laugh' that he could hardly begin; then his
|
|
memory would start with the dog's breed and personal appearance;
|
|
drift into a history of his owner; of his owner's family,
|
|
with descriptions of weddings and burials that had occurred in it,
|
|
together with recitals of congratulatory verses and obituary poetry
|
|
provoked by the same: then this memory would recollect that one
|
|
of these events occurred during the celebrated 'hard winter'
|
|
of such and such a year, and a minute description of that winter
|
|
would follow, along with the names of people who were frozen to death,
|
|
and statistics showing the high figures which pork and hay went up to.
|
|
Pork and hay would suggest corn and fodder; corn and fodder would
|
|
suggest cows and horses; cows and horses would suggest the circus
|
|
and certain celebrated bare-back riders; the transition from
|
|
the circus to the menagerie was easy and natural; from the elephant
|
|
to equatorial Africa was but a step; then of course the heathen
|
|
savages would suggest religion; and at the end of three or four hours'
|
|
tedious jaw, the watch would change, and Brown would go out
|
|
of the pilot-house muttering extracts from sermons he had heard
|
|
years before about the efficacy of prayer as a means of grace.
|
|
And the original first mention would be all you had learned about that dog,
|
|
after all this waiting and hungering.
|
|
|
|
A pilot must have a memory; but there are two higher qualities
|
|
which he must also have. He must have good and quick judgment
|
|
and decision, and a cool, calm courage that no peril can shake.
|
|
Give a man the merest trifle of pluck to start with, and by the time
|
|
he has become a pilot he cannot be unmanned by any danger a steamboat
|
|
can get into; but one cannot quite say the same for judgment.
|
|
Judgment is a matter of brains, and a man must START with a good
|
|
stock of that article or he will never succeed as a pilot.
|
|
|
|
The growth of courage in the pilot-house is steady all the time,
|
|
but it does not reach a high and satisfactory condition until
|
|
some time after the young pilot has been 'standing his own watch,'
|
|
alone and under the staggering weight of all the responsibilities
|
|
connected with the position. When an apprentice has become pretty
|
|
thoroughly acquainted with the river, he goes clattering along
|
|
so fearlessly with his steamboat, night or day, that he presently
|
|
begins to imagine that it is HIS courage that animates him;
|
|
but the first time the pilot steps out and leaves him to his
|
|
own devices he finds out it was the other man's. He discovers
|
|
that the article has been left out of his own cargo altogether.
|
|
The whole river is bristling with exigencies in a moment;
|
|
he is not prepared for them; he does not know how to meet them;
|
|
all his knowledge forsakes him; and within fifteen minutes
|
|
he is as white as a sheet and scared almost to death.
|
|
Therefore pilots wisely train these cubs by various strategic
|
|
tricks to look danger in the face a little more calmly.
|
|
A favorite way of theirs is to play a friendly swindle upon
|
|
the candidate.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Bixby served me in this fashion once, and for years afterward
|
|
I used to blush even in my sleep when I thought of it.
|
|
I had become a good steersman; so good, indeed, that I had all
|
|
the work to do on our watch, night and day; Mr. Bixby seldom
|
|
made a suggestion to me; all he ever did was to take the wheel
|
|
on particularly bad nights or in particularly bad crossings,
|
|
land the boat when she needed to be landed, play gentleman
|
|
of leisure nine-tenths of the watch, and collect the wages.
|
|
The lower river was about bank-full, and if anybody had questioned
|
|
my ability to run any crossing between Cairo and New Orleans
|
|
without help or instruction, I should have felt irreparably hurt.
|
|
The idea of being afraid of any crossing in the lot,
|
|
in the DAY-TIME, was a thing too preposterous for contemplation.
|
|
Well, one matchless summer's day I was bowling down the bend
|
|
above island 66, brimful of self-conceit and carrying my nose
|
|
as high as a giraffe's, when Mr. Bixby said--
|
|
|
|
'I am going below a while. I suppose you know the next crossing?'
|
|
|
|
This was almost an affront. It was about the plainest and simplest crossing
|
|
in the whole river. One couldn't come to any harm, whether he ran it
|
|
right or not; and as for depth, there never had been any bottom there.
|
|
I knew all this, perfectly well.
|
|
|
|
'Know how to RUN it? Why, I can run it with my eyes shut.'
|
|
|
|
'How much water is there in it?'
|
|
|
|
'Well, that is an odd question. I couldn't get bottom there
|
|
with a church steeple.'
|
|
|
|
'You think so, do you?'
|
|
|
|
The very tone of the question shook my confidence.
|
|
That was what Mr. Bixby was expecting. He left, without saying
|
|
anything more. I began to imagine all sorts of things.
|
|
Mr. Bixby, unknown to me, of course, sent somebody down to
|
|
the forecastle with some mysterious instructions to the leadsmen,
|
|
another messenger was sent to whisper among the officers,
|
|
and then Mr. Bixby went into hiding behind a smoke-stack where
|
|
he could observe results. Presently the captain stepped out on
|
|
the hurricane deck; next the chief mate appeared; then a clerk.
|
|
Every moment or two a straggler was added to my audience;
|
|
and before I got to the head of the island I had fifteen
|
|
or twenty people assembled down there under my nose.
|
|
I began to wonder what the trouble was. As I started across,
|
|
the captain glanced aloft at me and said, with a sham uneasiness
|
|
in his voice--
|
|
|
|
'Where is Mr. Bixby?'
|
|
|
|
'Gone below, sir.'
|
|
|
|
But that did the business for me. My imagination began to construct
|
|
dangers out of nothing, and they multiplied faster than I could keep
|
|
the run of them. All at once I imagined I saw shoal water ahead!
|
|
The wave of coward agony that surged through me then came near dislocating
|
|
every joint in me. All my confidence in that crossing vanished.
|
|
I seized the bell-rope; dropped it, ashamed; seized it again;
|
|
dropped it once more; clutched it tremblingly one again,
|
|
and pulled it so feebly that I could hardly hear the stroke myself.
|
|
Captain and mate sang out instantly, and both together--
|
|
|
|
'Starboard lead there! and quick about it!'
|
|
|
|
This was another shock. I began to climb the wheel like a squirrel;
|
|
but I would hardly get the boat started to port before I would see new
|
|
dangers on that side, and away I would spin to the other; only to find
|
|
perils accumulating to starboard, and be crazy to get to port again.
|
|
Then came the leadsman's sepulchral cry--
|
|
|
|
'D-e-e-p four!'
|
|
|
|
Deep four in a bottomless crossing! The terror of it took my breath away.
|
|
|
|
'M-a-r-k three!... M-a-r-k three... Quarter less three!...
|
|
Half twain!'
|
|
|
|
This was frightful! I seized the bell-ropes and stopped the engines.
|
|
|
|
'Quarter twain! Quarter twain! MARK twain!'
|
|
|
|
I was helpless. I did not know what in the world to do.
|
|
I was quaking from head to foot, and I could have hung my hat on
|
|
my eyes, they stuck out so far.
|
|
|
|
'Quarter LESS twain! Nine and a HALF!'
|
|
|
|
We were DRAWING nine! My hands were in a nerveless flutter.
|
|
I could not ring a bell intelligibly with them. I flew to the
|
|
speaking-tube and shouted to the engineer--
|
|
|
|
'Oh, Ben, if you love me, BACK her! Quick, Ben! Oh, back the immortal
|
|
SOUL out of her! '
|
|
|
|
I heard the door close gently. I looked around, and there stood
|
|
Mr. Bixby, smiling a bland, sweet smile. Then the audience on
|
|
the hurricane deck sent up a thundergust of humiliating laughter.
|
|
I saw it all, now, and I felt meaner than the meanest man in
|
|
human history. I laid in the lead, set the boat in her marks,
|
|
came ahead on the engines, and said--
|
|
|
|
'It was a fine trick to play on an orphan, WASN'T it?
|
|
I suppose I'll never hear the last of how I was ass enough to heave
|
|
the lead at the head of 66.'
|
|
|
|
'Well, no, you won't, maybe. In fact I hope you won't;
|
|
for I want you to learn something by that experience.
|
|
Didn't you KNOW there was no bottom in that crossing?'
|
|
|
|
'Yes, sir, I did.'
|
|
|
|
'Very well, then. You shouldn't have allowed me or anybody else
|
|
to shake your confidence in that knowledge. Try to remember that.
|
|
And another thing: when you get into a dangerous place, don't turn coward.
|
|
That isn't going to help matters any.'
|
|
|
|
It was a good enough lesson, but pretty hardly learned.
|
|
Yet about the hardest part of it was that for months I so often had
|
|
to hear a phrase which I had conceived a particular distaste for.
|
|
It was, 'Oh, Ben, if you love me, back her!'
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 14
|
|
Rank and Dignity of Piloting
|
|
|
|
IN my preceding chapters I have tried, by going into the minutiae
|
|
of the science of piloting, to carry the reader step by step
|
|
to a comprehension of what the science consists of; and at
|
|
the same time I have tried to show him that it is a very curious
|
|
and wonderful science, too, and very worthy of his attention.
|
|
If I have seemed to love my subject, it is no surprising thing,
|
|
for I loved the profession far better than any I have followed since,
|
|
and I took a measureless pride in it. The reason is plain:
|
|
a pilot, in those days, was the only unfettered and
|
|
entirely independent human being that lived in the earth.
|
|
Kings are but the hampered servants of parliament and people;
|
|
parliaments sit in chains forged by their constituency;
|
|
the editor of a newspaper cannot be independent, but must
|
|
work with one hand tied behind him by party and patrons,
|
|
and be content to utter only half or two-thirds of his mind;
|
|
no clergyman is a free man and may speak the whole truth,
|
|
regardless of his parish's opinions; writers of all kinds are
|
|
manacled servants of the public. We write frankly and fearlessly,
|
|
but then we 'modify' before we print. In truth, every man and
|
|
woman and child has a master, and worries and frets in servitude;
|
|
but in the day I write of, the Mississippi pilot had none.
|
|
The captain could stand upon the hurricane deck, in the pomp
|
|
of a very brief authority, and give him five or six orders while
|
|
the vessel backed into the stream, and then that skipper's reign
|
|
was over. The moment that the boat was under way in the river,
|
|
she was under the sole and unquestioned control of the pilot.
|
|
He could do with her exactly as he pleased, run her when and whither
|
|
he chose, and tie her up to the bank whenever his judgment said
|
|
that that course was best. His movements were entirely free;
|
|
he consulted no one, he received commands from nobody,
|
|
he promptly resented even the merest suggestions. Indeed, the law
|
|
of the United States forbade him to listen to commands
|
|
or suggestions, rightly considering that the pilot necessarily
|
|
knew better how to handle the boat than anybody could tell him.
|
|
So here was the novelty of a king without a keeper, an absolute monarch
|
|
who was absolute in sober truth and not by a fiction of words.
|
|
I have seen a boy of eighteen taking a great steamer serenely
|
|
into what seemed almost certain destruction, and the aged captain
|
|
standing mutely by, filled with apprehension but powerless
|
|
to interfere. His interference, in that particular instance,
|
|
might have been an excellent thing, but to permit it would
|
|
have been to establish a most pernicious precedent. It will
|
|
easily be guessed, considering the pilot's boundless authority,
|
|
that he was a great personage in the old steamboating days.
|
|
He was treated with marked courtesy by the captain and with marked
|
|
deference by all the officers and servants; and this deferential
|
|
spirit was quickly communicated to the passengers, too. I think
|
|
pilots were about the only people I ever knew who failed to show,
|
|
in some degree, embarrassment in the presence of traveling
|
|
foreign princes. But then, people in one's own grade of life
|
|
are not usually embarrassing objects.
|
|
|
|
By long habit, pilots came to put all their wishes in the form of commands.
|
|
It 'gravels' me, to this day, to put my will in the weak shape of
|
|
a request, instead of launching it in the crisp language of an order.
|
|
In those old days, to load a steamboat at St. Louis, take her to New
|
|
Orleans and back, and discharge cargo, consumed about twenty-five days,
|
|
on an average. Seven or eight of these days the boat spent at the wharves
|
|
of St. Louis and New Orleans, and every soul on board was hard at work,
|
|
except the two pilots; they did nothing but play gentleman up town,
|
|
and receive the same wages for it as if they had been on duty.
|
|
The moment the boat touched the wharf at either city, they were ashore;
|
|
and they were not likely to be seen again till the last bell was ringing and
|
|
everything in readiness for another voyage.
|
|
|
|
When a captain got hold of a pilot of particularly high reputation,
|
|
he took pains to keep him. When wages were four hundred dollars
|
|
a month on the Upper Mississippi, I have known a captain
|
|
to keep such a pilot in idleness, under full pay, three months
|
|
at a time, while the river was frozen up. And one must remember
|
|
that in those cheap times four hundred dollars was a salary
|
|
of almost inconceivable splendor. Few men on shore got such pay
|
|
as that, and when they did they were mightily looked up to.
|
|
When pilots from either end of the river wandered into our small
|
|
Missouri village, they were sought by the best and the fairest,
|
|
and treated with exalted respect. Lying in port under wages
|
|
was a thing which many pilots greatly enjoyed and appreciated;
|
|
especially if they belonged in the Missouri River in the heyday
|
|
of that trade (Kansas times), and got nine hundred dollars a trip,
|
|
which was equivalent to about eighteen hundred dollars a month.
|
|
Here is a conversation of that day. A chap out of the Illinois River,
|
|
with a little stern-wheel tub, accosts a couple of ornate and gilded
|
|
Missouri River pilots--
|
|
|
|
'Gentlemen, I've got a pretty good trip for the upcountry,
|
|
and shall want you about a month. How much will it be?'
|
|
|
|
'Eighteen hundred dollars apiece.'
|
|
|
|
'Heavens and earth! You take my boat, let me have your wages,
|
|
and I'll divide!'
|
|
|
|
I will remark, in passing, that Mississippi steamboatmen were
|
|
important in landsmen's eyes (and in their own, too, in a degree)
|
|
according to the dignity of the boat they were on.
|
|
For instance, it was a proud thing to be of the crew of such
|
|
stately craft as the 'Aleck Scott' or the 'Grand Turk.'
|
|
Negro firemen, deck hands, and barbers belonging to those boats
|
|
were distinguished personages in their grade of life, and they were
|
|
well aware of that fact too. A stalwart darkey once gave offense
|
|
at a negro ball in New Orleans by putting on a good many airs.
|
|
Finally one of the managers bustled up to him and said--
|
|
|
|
'Who IS you, any way? Who is you? dat's what I
|
|
|
|
wants to know!'
|
|
|
|
The offender was not disconcerted in the least, but swelled himself up
|
|
and threw that into his voice which showed that he knew he was not putting
|
|
on all those airs on a stinted capital.
|
|
|
|
'Who IS I? Who IS I? I let you know mighty quick who I is!
|
|
I want you niggers to understan' dat I fires de middle do'<footnote
|
|
[Door]> on de "Aleck Scott! " '
|
|
|
|
That was sufficient.
|
|
|
|
The barber of the 'Grand Turk' was a spruce young negro,
|
|
who aired his importance with balmy complacency,
|
|
and was greatly courted by the circle in which he moved.
|
|
The young colored population of New Orleans were much given
|
|
to flirting, at twilight, on the banquettes of the back streets.
|
|
Somebody saw and heard something like the following,
|
|
one evening, in one of those localities. A middle-aged negro
|
|
woman projected her head through a broken pane and shouted
|
|
(very willing that the neighbors should hear and envy), 'You
|
|
Mary Ann, come in de house dis minute! Stannin' out dah foolin'
|
|
'long wid dat low trash, an' heah's de barber offn de "Gran' Turk"
|
|
wants to conwerse wid you! '
|
|
|
|
My reference, a moment ago, to the fact that a pilot's peculiar
|
|
official position placed him out of the reach of criticism or command,
|
|
brings Stephen W---- naturally to my mind. He was a gifted pilot,
|
|
a good fellow, a tireless talker, and had both wit and humor in him.
|
|
He had a most irreverent independence, too, and was deliciously
|
|
easy-going and comfortable in the presence of age, official dignity,
|
|
and even the most august wealth. He always had work, he never
|
|
saved a penny, he was a most persuasive borrower, he was in debt
|
|
to every pilot on the river, and to the majority of the captains.
|
|
He could throw a sort of splendor around a bit of harum-scarum,
|
|
devil-may-care piloting, that made it almost fascinating--
|
|
but not to everybody. He made a trip with good old Captain Y----
|
|
once, and was 'relieved' from duty when the boat got to New Orleans.
|
|
Somebody expressed surprise at the discharge. Captain Y----
|
|
shuddered at the mere mention of Stephen. Then his poor, thin old
|
|
voice piped out something like this:--
|
|
|
|
'Why, bless me! I wouldn't have such a wild creature on my boat
|
|
for the world--not for the whole world! He swears, he sings,
|
|
he whistles, he yells--I never saw such an Injun to yell.
|
|
All times of the night--it never made any difference to him.
|
|
He would just yell that way, not for anything in particular,
|
|
but merely on account of a kind of devilish comfort he got out of it.
|
|
I never could get into a sound sleep but he would fetch me
|
|
out of bed, all in a cold sweat, with one of those dreadful
|
|
war-whoops. A queer being--very queer being; no respect
|
|
for anything or anybody. Sometimes he called me "Johnny."
|
|
And he kept a fiddle, and a cat. He played execrably.
|
|
This seemed to distress the cat, and so the cat would howl.
|
|
Nobody could sleep where that man--and his family--was.
|
|
And reckless. There never was anything like it.
|
|
Now you may believe it or not, but as sure as I am sitting here,
|
|
he brought my boat a-tilting down through those awful snags
|
|
at Chicot under a rattling head of steam, and the wind a-blowing
|
|
like the very nation, at that! My officers will tell you so.
|
|
They saw it. And, sir, while he was a-tearing right down
|
|
through those snags, and I a-shaking in my shoes and praying,
|
|
I wish I may never speak again if he didn't pucker up his mouth
|
|
and go to WHISTLING! Yes, sir; whistling "Buffalo gals,
|
|
can't you come out tonight, can't you come out to-night,
|
|
can't you come out to-night;" and doing it as calmly as if we
|
|
were attending a funeral and weren't related to the corpse.
|
|
And when I remonstrated with him about it, he smiled down on me
|
|
as if I was his child, and told me to run in the house and try
|
|
to be good, and not be meddling with my superiors!"
|
|
|
|
Once a pretty mean captain caught Stephen in New Orleans out of work
|
|
and as usual out of money. He laid steady siege to Stephen, who was
|
|
in a very 'close place,' and finally persuaded him to hire with him
|
|
at one hundred and twenty-five dollars per month, just half wages,
|
|
the captain agreeing not to divulge the secret and so bring down the contempt
|
|
of all the guild upon the poor fellow. But the boat was not more than
|
|
a day out of New Orleans before Stephen discovered that the captain
|
|
was boasting of his exploit, and that all the officers had been told.
|
|
Stephen winced, but said nothing. About the middle of the afternoon
|
|
the captain stepped out on the hurricane deck, cast his eye around,
|
|
and looked a good deal surprised. He glanced inquiringly aloft at Stephen,
|
|
but Stephen was whistling placidly, and attending to business.
|
|
The captain stood around a while in evident discomfort, and once or twice
|
|
seemed about to make a suggestion; but the etiquette of the river taught
|
|
him to avoid that sort of rashness, and so he managed to hold his peace.
|
|
He chafed and puzzled a few minutes longer, then retired to his apartments.
|
|
But soon he was out again, and apparently more perplexed than ever.
|
|
Presently he ventured to remark, with deference--
|
|
|
|
'Pretty good stage of the river now, ain't it, sir?'
|
|
|
|
'Well, I should say so! Bank-full IS a pretty liberal stage.'
|
|
|
|
'Seems to be a good deal of current here.'
|
|
|
|
'Good deal don't describe it! It's worse than a mill-race.'
|
|
|
|
'Isn't it easier in toward shore than it is out here in the middle?'
|
|
|
|
'Yes, I reckon it is; but a body can't be too careful with a steamboat.
|
|
It's pretty safe out here; can't strike any bottom here, you can
|
|
depend on that.'
|
|
|
|
The captain departed, looking rueful enough. At this rate,
|
|
he would probably die of old age before his boat got to St. Louis.
|
|
Next day he appeared on deck and again found Stephen faithfully
|
|
standing up the middle of the river, fighting the whole vast
|
|
force of the Mississippi, and whistling the same placid tune.
|
|
This thing was becoming serious. In by the shore was a slower boat
|
|
clipping along in the easy water and gaining steadily; she began
|
|
to make for an island chute; Stephen stuck to the middle of the river.
|
|
Speech was WRUNG from the captain. He said--
|
|
|
|
'Mr. W----, don't that chute cut off a good deal of distance?'
|
|
|
|
'I think it does, but I don't know.'
|
|
|
|
'Don't know! Well, isn't there water enough in it now to go through?'
|
|
|
|
'I expect there is, but I am not certain.'
|
|
|
|
'Upon my word this is odd! Why, those pilots on that boat yonder are going
|
|
to try it. Do you mean to say that you don't know as much as they do?'
|
|
|
|
'THEY! Why, THEY are two-hundred-and-fifty-dollar pilots!
|
|
But don't you be uneasy; I know as much as any man can afford
|
|
to know for a hundred and twenty-five!'
|
|
|
|
The captain surrendered.
|
|
|
|
Five minutes later Stephen was bowling through the chute and showing
|
|
the rival boat a two-hundred-and-fifty-dollar pair of heels.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 15
|
|
The Pilots' Monopoly
|
|
|
|
ONE day, on board the 'Aleck Scott,' my chief, Mr. Bixby,
|
|
was crawling carefully through a close place at Cat Island,
|
|
both leads going, and everybody holding his breath. The captain,
|
|
a nervous, apprehensive man, kept still as long as he could,
|
|
but finally broke down and shouted from the hurricane deck--
|
|
|
|
'For gracious' sake, give her steam, Mr. Bixby! give her steam!
|
|
She'll never raise the reef on this headway!'
|
|
|
|
For all the effect that was produced upon Mr. Bixby, one would have supposed
|
|
that no remark had been made. But five minutes later, when the danger
|
|
was past and the leads laid in, he burst instantly into a consuming fury,
|
|
and gave the captain the most admirable cursing I ever listened to.
|
|
No bloodshed ensued; but that was because the captain's cause was weak;
|
|
for ordinarily he was not a man to take correction quietly.
|
|
|
|
Having now set forth in detail the nature of the science of piloting,
|
|
and likewise described the rank which the pilot held among the fraternity
|
|
of steamboatmen, this seems a fitting place to say a few words about an
|
|
organization which the pilots once formed for the protection of their guild.
|
|
It was curious and noteworthy in this, that it was perhaps the compactest,
|
|
the completest, and the strongest commercial organization ever
|
|
formed among men.
|
|
|
|
For a long time wages had been two hundred and fifty dollars a month;
|
|
but curiously enough, as steamboats multiplied and business increased,
|
|
the wages began to fall little by little. It was easy to discover
|
|
the reason of this. Too many pilots were being 'made.' It was nice
|
|
to have a 'cub,' a steersman, to do all the hard work for a couple
|
|
of years, gratis, while his master sat on a high bench and smoked;
|
|
all pilots and captains had sons or nephews who wanted to be pilots. By and
|
|
by it came to pass that nearly every pilot on the river had a steersman.
|
|
When a steersman had made an amount of progress that was satisfactory
|
|
to any two pilots in the trade, they could get a pilot's license for him
|
|
by signing an application directed to the United States Inspector.
|
|
Nothing further was needed; usually no questions were asked, no proofs
|
|
of capacity required.
|
|
|
|
Very well, this growing swarm of new pilots presently
|
|
began to undermine the wages, in order to get berths.
|
|
Too late--apparently--the knights of the tiller perceived
|
|
their mistake. Plainly, something had to be done, and quickly;
|
|
but what was to be the needful thing. A close organization.
|
|
Nothing else would answer. To compass this seemed an impossibility;
|
|
so it was talked, and talked, and then dropped.
|
|
It was too likely to ruin whoever ventured to move
|
|
in the matter. But at last about a dozen of the boldest--
|
|
and some of them the best--pilots on the river launched
|
|
themselves into the enterprise and took all the chances.
|
|
They got a special charter from the legislature, with large powers,
|
|
under the name of the Pilots' Benevolent Association;
|
|
elected their officers, completed their organization,
|
|
contributed capital, put 'association' wages up to two hundred
|
|
and fifty dollars at once--and then retired to their homes,
|
|
for they were promptly discharged from employment.
|
|
But there were two or three unnoticed trifles in their by-laws
|
|
which had the seeds of propagation in them. For instance,
|
|
all idle members of the association, in good standing,
|
|
were entitled to a pension of twenty-five dollars per month.
|
|
This began to bring in one straggler after another from the ranks
|
|
of the new-fledged pilots, in the dull (summer) season.
|
|
Better have twenty-five dollars than starve; the initiation
|
|
fee was only twelve dollars, and no dues required
|
|
from the unemployed.
|
|
|
|
Also, the widows of deceased members in good standing could
|
|
draw twenty-five dollars per month, and a certain sum for each
|
|
of their children. Also, the said deceased would be buried
|
|
at the association's expense. These things resurrected all
|
|
the superannuated and forgotten pilots in the Mississippi Valley.
|
|
They came from farms, they came from interior villages, they came
|
|
from everywhere. They came on crutches, on drays, in ambulances,--
|
|
any way, so they got there. They paid in their twelve dollars,
|
|
and straightway began to draw out twenty-five dollars a month,
|
|
and calculate their burial bills.
|
|
|
|
By and by, all the useless, helpless pilots, and a dozen first-class ones,
|
|
were in the association, and nine-tenths of the best pilots out of it
|
|
and laughing at it. It was the laughing-stock of the whole river.
|
|
Everybody joked about the by-law requiring members to pay ten per cent.
|
|
of their wages, every month, into the treasury for the support
|
|
of the association, whereas all the members were outcast and tabooed,
|
|
and no one would employ them. Everybody was derisively grateful
|
|
to the association for taking all the worthless pilots out of the way
|
|
and leaving the whole field to the excellent and the deserving;
|
|
and everybody was not only jocularly grateful for that, but for a
|
|
result which naturally followed, namely, the gradual advance of wages
|
|
as the busy season approached. Wages had gone up from the low figure
|
|
of one hundred dollars a month to one hundred and twenty-five, and in
|
|
some cases to one hundred and fifty; and it was great fun to enlarge
|
|
upon the fact that this charming thing had been accomplished by a body
|
|
of men not one of whom received a particle of benefit from it.
|
|
Some of the jokers used to call at the association rooms and have
|
|
a good time chaffing the members and offering them the charity
|
|
of taking them as steersmen for a trip, so that they could see what
|
|
the forgotten river looked like. However, the association was content;
|
|
or at least it gave no sign to the contrary. Now and then it
|
|
captured a pilot who was 'out of luck,' and added him to its list;
|
|
and these later additions were very valuable, for they were good pilots;
|
|
the incompetent ones had all been absorbed before. As business freshened,
|
|
wages climbed gradually up to two hundred and fifty dollars--
|
|
the association figure--and became firmly fixed there; and still
|
|
without benefiting a member of that body, for no member was hired.
|
|
The hilarity at the association's expense burst all bounds, now.
|
|
There was no end to the fun which that poor martyr had to
|
|
put up with.
|
|
|
|
However, it is a long lane that has no turning. Winter approached,
|
|
business doubled and trebled, and an avalanche of Missouri,
|
|
Illinois and Upper Mississippi River boats came pouring down
|
|
to take a chance in the New Orleans trade. All of a sudden
|
|
pilots were in great demand, and were correspondingly scarce.
|
|
The time for revenge was come. It was a bitter pill to have to
|
|
accept association pilots at last, yet captains and owners agreed
|
|
that there was no other way. But none of these outcasts offered!
|
|
So there was a still bitterer pill to be swallowed:
|
|
they must be sought out and asked for their services.
|
|
Captain ---- was the first man who found it necessary to take
|
|
the dose, and he had been the loudest derider of the organization.
|
|
He hunted up one of the best of the association pilots and said--
|
|
|
|
'Well, you boys have rather got the best of us for a
|
|
little while, so I'll give in with as good a grace as I can.
|
|
I've come to hire you; get your trunk aboard right away.
|
|
I want to leave at twelve o'clock.'
|
|
|
|
'I don't know about that. Who is your other pilot?'
|
|
|
|
'I've got I. S----. Why?'
|
|
|
|
'I can't go with him. He don't belong to the association.'
|
|
|
|
'What!'
|
|
|
|
'It's so.'
|
|
|
|
'Do you mean to tell me that you won't turn a wheel with one of the very best
|
|
and oldest pilots on the river because he don't belong to your association?'
|
|
|
|
'Yes, I do.'
|
|
|
|
'Well, if this isn't putting on airs! I supposed I was doing you
|
|
a benevolence; but I begin to think that I am the party that wants
|
|
a favor done. Are you acting under a law of the concern?'
|
|
|
|
'Yes.'
|
|
|
|
'Show it to me.'
|
|
|
|
So they stepped into the association rooms, and the secretary
|
|
soon satisfied the captain, who said--
|
|
|
|
'Well, what am I to do? I have hired Mr. S---- for the entire season.'
|
|
|
|
'I will provide for you,' said the secretary. 'I will detail a pilot
|
|
to go with you, and he shall be on board at twelve o'clock.'
|
|
|
|
'But if I discharge S----, he will come on me for the whole season's wages.'
|
|
|
|
'Of course that is a matter between you and Mr. S----, captain.
|
|
We cannot meddle in your private affairs.'
|
|
|
|
The captain stormed, but to no purpose. In the end he had to discharge
|
|
S----, pay him about a thousand dollars, and take an association pilot
|
|
in his place. The laugh was beginning to turn the other way now.
|
|
Every day, thenceforward, a new victim fell; every day some outraged
|
|
captain discharged a non-association pet, with tears and profanity,
|
|
and installed a hated association man in his berth. In a very
|
|
little while, idle non-associationists began to be pretty plenty,
|
|
brisk as business was, and much as their services were desired.
|
|
The laugh was shifting to the other side of their mouths most palpably.
|
|
These victims, together with the captains and owners, presently ceased
|
|
to laugh altogether, and began to rage about the revenge they would take
|
|
when the passing business 'spurt' was over.
|
|
|
|
Soon all the laughers that were left were the owners
|
|
and crews of boats that had two non-association pilots.
|
|
But their triumph was not very long-lived. For this reason:
|
|
It was a rigid rule of the association that its members should never,
|
|
under any circumstances whatever, give information about the channel
|
|
to any 'outsider.' By this time about half the boats had none
|
|
but association pilots, and the other half had none but outsiders.
|
|
At the first glance one would suppose that when it came
|
|
to forbidding information about the river these two parties
|
|
could play equally at that game; but this was not so.
|
|
At every good-sized town from one end of the river to the other,
|
|
there was a 'wharf-boat' to land at, instead of a wharf or a pier.
|
|
Freight was stored in it for transportation; waiting passengers slept
|
|
in its cabins. Upon each of these wharf-boats the association's
|
|
officers placed a strong box fastened with a peculiar lock which was
|
|
used in no other service but one--the United States mail service.
|
|
It was the letter-bag lock, a sacred governmental thing.
|
|
By dint of much beseeching the government had been
|
|
persuaded to allow the association to use this lock.
|
|
Every association man carried a key which would open these boxes.
|
|
That key, or rather a peculiar way of holding it in the hand
|
|
when its owner was asked for river information by a stranger--
|
|
for the success of the St. Louis and New Orleans association
|
|
had now bred tolerably thriving branches in a dozen neighboring
|
|
steamboat trades--was the association man's sign and diploma
|
|
of membership; and if the stranger did not respond by producing
|
|
a similar key and holding it in a certain manner duly prescribed,
|
|
his question was politely ignored. From the association's secretary
|
|
each member received a package of more or less gorgeous blanks,
|
|
printed like a billhead, on handsome paper, properly ruled in columns;
|
|
a bill-head worded something like this--
|
|
|
|
STEAMER GREAT REPUBLIC.
|
|
|
|
JOHN SMITH MASTER
|
|
|
|
PILOTS, JOHN JONES AND THOMAS BROWN.
|
|
|
|
+-------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
|
|
| CROSSINGS. | SOUNDINGS. | MARKS. | REMARKS. |
|
|
|
|
+-------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
|
|
These blanks were filled up, day by day, as the voyage
|
|
progressed, and deposited in the several wharf-boat boxes.
|
|
For instance, as soon as the first crossing, out from St. Louis,
|
|
was completed, the items would be entered upon the blank,
|
|
under the appropriate headings, thus--
|
|
|
|
'St. Louis. Nine and a half (feet). Stern on court-house, head
|
|
on dead cottonwood above wood-yard, until you raise the first reef,
|
|
then pull up square.' Then under head of Remarks: 'Go just outside
|
|
the wrecks; this is important. New snag just where you straighten down;
|
|
go above it.'
|
|
|
|
The pilot who deposited that blank in the Cairo box (after adding
|
|
to it the details of every crossing all the way down from St. Louis)
|
|
took out and read half a dozen fresh reports (from upward-bound steamers)
|
|
concerning the river between Cairo and Memphis, posted himself thoroughly,
|
|
returned them to the box, and went back aboard his boat again so armed
|
|
against accident that he could not possibly get his boat into trouble
|
|
without bringing the most ingenious carelessness to his aid.
|
|
|
|
Imagine the benefits of so admirable a system in a piece of river twelve
|
|
or thirteen hundred miles long, whose channel was shifting every day!
|
|
The pilot who had formerly been obliged to put up with seeing a shoal
|
|
place once or possibly twice a month, had a hundred sharp eyes to watch it
|
|
for him, now, and bushels of intelligent brains to tell him how to run it.
|
|
His information about it was seldom twenty-four hours old. If the reports
|
|
in the last box chanced to leave any misgivings on his mind concerning
|
|
a treacherous crossing, he had his remedy; he blew his steam-whistle
|
|
in a peculiar way as soon as he saw a boat approaching; the signal was
|
|
answered in a peculiar way if that boat's pilots were association men;
|
|
and then the two steamers ranged alongside and all uncertainties were swept
|
|
away by fresh information furnished to the inquirer by word of mouth and
|
|
in minute detail.
|
|
|
|
The first thing a pilot did when he reached New Orleans or St. Louis
|
|
was to take his final and elaborate report to the association parlors
|
|
and hang it up there,--after which he was free to visit his family.
|
|
In these parlors a crowd was always gathered together, discussing
|
|
changes in the channel, and the moment there was a fresh arrival,
|
|
everybody stopped talking till this witness had told the newest news
|
|
and settled the latest uncertainty. Other craftsmen can 'sink the shop,'
|
|
sometimes, and interest themselves in other matters. Not so with a pilot;
|
|
he must devote himself wholly to his profession and talk of nothing else;
|
|
for it would be small gain to be perfect one day and imperfect the next.
|
|
He has no time or words to waste if he would keep 'posted.'
|
|
|
|
But the outsiders had a hard time of it. No particular place
|
|
to meet and exchange information, no wharf-boat reports,
|
|
none but chance and unsatisfactory ways of getting news.
|
|
The consequence was that a man sometimes had to run five hundred
|
|
miles of river on information that was a week or ten days old.
|
|
At a fair stage of the river that might have answered; but when the
|
|
dead low water came it was destructive.
|
|
|
|
Now came another perfectly logical result. The outsiders began
|
|
to ground steamboats, sink them, and get into all sorts of trouble,
|
|
whereas accidents seemed to keep entirely away from the association men.
|
|
Wherefore even the owners and captains of boats furnished
|
|
exclusively with outsiders, and previously considered to be wholly
|
|
independent of the association and free to comfort themselves
|
|
with brag and laughter, began to feel pretty uncomfortable.
|
|
Still, they made a show of keeping up the brag, until one black day
|
|
when every captain of the lot was formally ordered to immediately
|
|
discharge his outsiders and take association pilots in their stead.
|
|
And who was it that had the dashing presumption to do that? Alas, it came
|
|
from a power behind the throne that was greater than the throne itself.
|
|
It was the underwriters!
|
|
|
|
It was no time to 'swap knives.' Every outsider had to take his trunk
|
|
ashore at once. Of course it was supposed that there was collusion
|
|
between the association and the underwriters, but this was not so.
|
|
The latter had come to comprehend the excellence of the 'report' system
|
|
of the association and the safety it secured, and so they had made their
|
|
decision among themselves and upon plain business principles.
|
|
|
|
There was weeping and wailing and gnashing of teeth in
|
|
the camp of the outsiders now. But no matter, there was
|
|
but one course for them to pursue, and they pursued it.
|
|
They came forward in couples and groups, and proffered their
|
|
twelve dollars and asked for membership. They were surprised
|
|
to learn that several new by-laws had been long ago added.
|
|
For instance, the initiation fee had been raised to fifty dollars;
|
|
that sum must be tendered, and also ten per cent.
|
|
of the wages which the applicant had received each and every
|
|
month since the founding of the association. In many cases this
|
|
amounted to three or four hundred dollars. Still, the association
|
|
would not entertain the application until the money was present.
|
|
Even then a single adverse vote killed the application.
|
|
Every member had to vote 'Yes' or 'No' in person and before witnesses;
|
|
so it took weeks to decide a candidacy, because many pilots
|
|
were so long absent on voyages. However, the repentant
|
|
sinners scraped their savings together, and one by one,
|
|
by our tedious voting process, they were added to the fold.
|
|
A time came, at last, when only about ten remained outside.
|
|
They said they would starve before they would apply.
|
|
They remained idle a long while, because of course nobody could venture
|
|
to employ them.
|
|
|
|
By and by the association published the fact that upon a certain
|
|
date the wages would be raised to five hundred dollars per month.
|
|
All the branch associations had grown strong, now, and the Red
|
|
River one had advanced wages to seven hundred dollars a month.
|
|
Reluctantly the ten outsiders yielded, in view of these things,
|
|
and made application. There was another new by-law, by this time,
|
|
which required them to pay dues not only on all the wages they
|
|
had received since the association was born, but also on what they
|
|
would have received if they had continued at work up to the time
|
|
of their application, instead of going off to pout in idleness.
|
|
It turned out to be a difficult matter to elect them, but it
|
|
was accomplished at last. The most virulent sinner of this
|
|
batch had stayed out and allowed 'dues' to accumulate against
|
|
him so long that he had to send in six hundred and twenty-five
|
|
dollars with his application.
|
|
|
|
The association had a good bank account now, and was very strong.
|
|
There was no longer an outsider. A by-law was added forbidding
|
|
the reception of any more cubs or apprentices for five years;
|
|
after which time a limited number would be taken, not by individuals,
|
|
but by the association, upon these terms: the applicant must
|
|
not be less than eighteen years old, and of respectable family
|
|
and good character; he must pass an examination as to education,
|
|
pay a thousand dollars in advance for the privilege of becoming
|
|
an apprentice, and must remain under the commands of the association
|
|
until a great part of the membership (more than half, I think)
|
|
should be willing to sign his application for a pilot's license.
|
|
|
|
All previously-articled apprentices were now taken away from their
|
|
masters and adopted by the association. The president and secretary
|
|
detailed them for service on one boat or another, as they chose,
|
|
and changed them from boat to boat according to certain rules.
|
|
If a pilot could show that he was in infirm health and needed assistance,
|
|
one of the cubs would be ordered to go with him.
|
|
|
|
The widow and orphan list grew, but so did the association's
|
|
financial resources. The association attended its own
|
|
funerals in state, and paid for them. When occasion demanded,
|
|
it sent members down the river upon searches for the bodies
|
|
of brethren lost by steamboat accidents; a search of this kind
|
|
sometimes cost a thousand dollars.
|
|
|
|
The association procured a charter and went into the insurance
|
|
business, also. It not only insured the lives of its members,
|
|
but took risks on steamboats.
|
|
|
|
The organization seemed indestructible. It was the tightest monopoly
|
|
in the world. By the United States law, no man could become
|
|
a pilot unless two duly licensed pilots signed his application;
|
|
and now there was nobody outside of the association competent
|
|
to sign. Consequently the making of pilots was at an end.
|
|
Every year some would die and others become incapacitated by age
|
|
and infirmity; there would be no new ones to take their places.
|
|
In time, the association could put wages up to any figure it chose;
|
|
and as long as it should be wise enough not to carry the thing
|
|
too far and provoke the national government into amending
|
|
the licensing system, steamboat owners would have to submit,
|
|
since there would be no help for it.
|
|
|
|
The owners and captains were the only obstruction that lay between
|
|
the association and absolute power; and at last this one was removed.
|
|
Incredible as it may seem, the owners and captains deliberately
|
|
did it themselves. When the pilots' association announced,
|
|
months beforehand, that on the first day of September, 1861,
|
|
wages would be advanced to five hundred dollars per month, the owners
|
|
and captains instantly put freights up a few cents, and explained
|
|
to the farmers along the river the necessity of it, by calling their
|
|
attention to the burdensome rate of wages about to be established.
|
|
It was a rather slender argument, but the farmers did not seem to detect it.
|
|
It looked reasonable to them that to add five cents freight on a bushel
|
|
of corn was justifiable under the circumstances, overlooking the fact
|
|
that this advance on a cargo of forty thousand sacks was a good deal
|
|
more than necessary to cover the new wages.
|
|
|
|
So, straightway the captains and owners got up an association
|
|
of their own, and proposed to put captains' wages up to five
|
|
hundred dollars, too, and move for another advance in freights.
|
|
It was a novel idea, but of course an effect which had been
|
|
produced once could be produced again. The new association decreed
|
|
(for this was before all the outsiders had been taken
|
|
into the pilots' association) that if any captain employed
|
|
a non-association pilot, he should be forced to discharge him,
|
|
and also pay a fine of five hundred dollars. Several of these
|
|
heavy fines were paid before the captains' organization grew
|
|
strong enough to exercise full authority over its membership;
|
|
but that all ceased, presently. The captains tried to get the pilots
|
|
to decree that no member of their corporation should serve under
|
|
a non-association captain; but this proposition was declined.
|
|
The pilots saw that they would be backed up by the captains and
|
|
the underwriters anyhow, and so they wisely refrained from entering
|
|
into entangling alliances.
|
|
|
|
As I have remarked, the pilots' association was now the compactest
|
|
monopoly in the world, perhaps, and seemed simply indestructible.
|
|
And yet the days of its glory were numbered. First, the new
|
|
railroad stretching up through Mississippi, Tennessee, and Kentucky,
|
|
to Northern railway centers, began to divert the passenger travel
|
|
from the steamers; next the war came and almost entirely annihilated
|
|
the steamboating industry during several years, leaving most of
|
|
the pilots idle, and the cost of living advancing all the time;
|
|
then the treasurer of the St. Louis association put his hand
|
|
into the till and walked off with every dollar of the ample fund;
|
|
and finally, the railroads intruding everywhere, there was little
|
|
for steamers to do, when the war was over, but carry freights;
|
|
so straightway some genius from the Atlantic coast introduced the plan
|
|
of towing a dozen steamer cargoes down to New Orleans at the tail
|
|
of a vulgar little tug-boat; and behold, in the twinkling of an eye,
|
|
as it were, the association and the noble science of piloting were
|
|
things of the dead and pathetic past!
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 16
|
|
Racing Days
|
|
|
|
IT was always the custom for the boats to leave New
|
|
Orleans between four and five o'clock in the afternoon.
|
|
From three o'clock onward they would be burning rosin and pitch pine
|
|
(the sign of preparation), and so one had the picturesque spectacle
|
|
of a rank, some two or three miles long, of tall, ascending columns
|
|
of coal-black smoke; a colonnade which supported a sable roof of
|
|
the same smoke blended together and spreading abroad over the city.
|
|
Every outward-bound boat had its flag flying at the jack-staff,
|
|
and sometimes a duplicate on the verge staff astern.
|
|
Two or three miles of mates were commanding and swearing with more
|
|
than usual emphasis; countless processions of freight barrels
|
|
and boxes were spinning athwart the levee and flying aboard
|
|
the stage-planks, belated passengers were dodging and skipping
|
|
among these frantic things, hoping to reach the forecastle
|
|
companion way alive, but having their doubts about it;
|
|
women with reticules and bandboxes were trying to keep up
|
|
with husbands freighted with carpet-sacks and crying babies,
|
|
and making a failure of it by losing their heads in the whirl
|
|
and roar and general distraction; drays and baggage-vans were
|
|
clattering hither and thither in a wild hurry, every now and
|
|
then getting blocked and jammed together, and then during ten
|
|
seconds one could not see them for the profanity, except vaguely
|
|
and dimly; every windlass connected with every forehatch,
|
|
from one end of that long array of steamboats to the other,
|
|
was keeping up a deafening whiz and whir, lowering freight
|
|
into the hold, and the half-naked crews of perspiring negroes
|
|
that worked them were roaring such songs as 'De Las' Sack!
|
|
De Las' Sack!'--inspired to unimaginable exaltation by the chaos
|
|
of turmoil and racket that was driving everybody else mad.
|
|
By this time the hurricane and boiler decks of the steamers
|
|
would be packed and black with passengers. The 'last bells'
|
|
would begin to clang, all down the line, and then the powwow
|
|
seemed to double; in a moment or two the final warning came,--
|
|
a simultaneous din of Chinese gongs, with the cry,
|
|
'All dat ain't goin', please to git asho'! '--and behold,
|
|
the powwow quadrupled! People came swarming ashore,
|
|
overturning excited stragglers that were trying to swarm aboard.
|
|
One more moment later a long array of stage-planks was being
|
|
hauled in, each with its customary latest passenger clinging
|
|
to the end of it with teeth, nails, and everything else,
|
|
and the customary latest procrastinator making a wild spring
|
|
shoreward over his head.
|
|
|
|
Now a number of the boats slide backward into the stream,
|
|
leaving wide gaps in the serried rank of steamers.
|
|
Citizens crowd the decks of boats that are not to go, in order
|
|
to see the sight. Steamer after steamer straightens herself up,
|
|
gathers all her strength, and presently comes swinging by,
|
|
under a tremendous head of steam, with flag flying,
|
|
black smoke rolling, and her entire crew of firemen and deck-hands
|
|
(usually swarthy negroes) massed together on the forecastle,
|
|
the best 'voice' in the lot towering from the midst
|
|
(being mounted on the capstan), waving his hat or a flag,
|
|
and all roaring a mighty chorus, while the parting cannons boom
|
|
and the multitudinous spectators swing their hats and huzza!
|
|
Steamer after steamer falls into line, and the stately procession goes
|
|
winging its flight up the river.
|
|
|
|
In the old times, whenever two fast boats started out on a race,
|
|
with a big crowd of people looking on, it was inspiring to hear
|
|
the crews sing, especially if the time were night-fall, and the forecastle
|
|
lit up with the red glare of the torch-baskets. Racing was royal fun.
|
|
The public always had an idea that racing was dangerous; whereas the opposite
|
|
was the case--that is, after the laws were passed which restricted
|
|
each boat to just so many pounds of steam to the square inch.
|
|
No engineer was ever sleepy or careless when his heart was in a race.
|
|
He was constantly on the alert, trying gauge-cocks and watching things.
|
|
The dangerous place was on slow, plodding boats, where the engineers drowsed
|
|
around and allowed chips to get into the 'doctor' and shut off the water
|
|
supply from the boilers.
|
|
|
|
In the 'flush times' of steamboating, a race between two notoriously
|
|
fleet steamers was an event of vast importance. The date was set
|
|
for it several weeks in advance, and from that time forward, the whole
|
|
Mississippi Valley was in a state of consuming excitement. Politics and
|
|
the weather were dropped, and people talked only of the coming race.
|
|
As the time approached, the two steamers 'stripped' and got ready.
|
|
Every encumbrance that added weight, or exposed a resisting surface
|
|
to wind or water, was removed, if the boat could possibly do without it.
|
|
The 'spars,' and sometimes even their supporting derricks, were sent ashore,
|
|
and no means left to set the boat afloat in case she got aground.
|
|
When the 'Eclipse' and the 'A. L. Shotwell' ran their great race many
|
|
years ago, it was said that pains were taken to scrape the gilding off
|
|
the fanciful device which hung between the 'Eclipse's' chimneys, and that for
|
|
that one trip the captain left off his kid gloves and had his head shaved.
|
|
But I always doubted these things.
|
|
|
|
If the boat was known to make her best speed when drawing five and a half feet
|
|
forward and five feet aft, she was carefully loaded to that exact figure--
|
|
she wouldn't enter a dose of homoeopathic pills on her manifest after that.
|
|
Hardly any passengers were taken, because they not only add weight but they
|
|
never will 'trim boat.' They always run to the side when there is anything
|
|
to see, whereas a conscientious and experienced steamboatman would stick to
|
|
the center of the boat and part his hair in the middle with a spirit level.
|
|
|
|
No way-freights and no way-passengers were allowed, for the racers would
|
|
stop only at the largest towns, and then it would be only 'touch and go.'
|
|
Coal flats and wood flats were contracted for beforehand, and these were
|
|
kept ready to hitch on to the flying steamers at a moment's warning.
|
|
Double crews were carried, so that all work could be quickly done.
|
|
|
|
The chosen date being come, and all things in readiness,
|
|
the two great steamers back into the stream, and lie there
|
|
jockeying a moment, and apparently watching each other's
|
|
slightest movement, like sentient creatures; flags drooping,
|
|
the pent steam shrieking through safety-valves, the black smoke
|
|
rolling and tumbling from the chimneys and darkening all the air.
|
|
People, people everywhere; the shores, the house-tops,
|
|
the steamboats, the ships, are packed with them, and you know
|
|
that the borders of the broad Mississippi are going to be
|
|
fringed with humanity thence northward twelve hundred miles,
|
|
to welcome these racers.
|
|
|
|
Presently tall columns of steam burst from the 'scape-pipes
|
|
of both steamers, two guns boom a good-bye, two red-shirted heroes
|
|
mounted on capstans wave their small flags above the massed crews
|
|
on the forecastles, two plaintive solos linger on the air a few
|
|
waiting seconds, two mighty choruses burst forth--and here they come!
|
|
Brass bands bray Hail Columbia, huzza after huzza thunders from
|
|
the shores, and the stately creatures go whistling by like the wind.
|
|
|
|
Those boats will never halt a moment between New Orleans and St. Louis,
|
|
except for a second or two at large towns, or to hitch thirty-cord
|
|
wood-boats alongside. You should be on board when they take a couple
|
|
of those wood-boats in tow and turn a swarm of men into each;
|
|
by the time you have wiped your glasses and put them on, you will be
|
|
wondering what has become of that wood.
|
|
|
|
Two nicely matched steamers will stay in sight of each other day after day.
|
|
They might even stay side by side, but for the fact that pilots are not
|
|
all alike, and the smartest pilots will win the race. If one of the boats has
|
|
a 'lightning' pilot, whose 'partner' is a trifle his inferior, you can tell
|
|
which one is on watch by noting whether that boat has gained ground or lost
|
|
some during each four-hour stretch. The shrewdest pilot can delay a boat
|
|
if he has not a fine genius for steering. Steering is a very high art.
|
|
One must not keep a rudder dragging across a boat's stem if he wants to get up
|
|
the river fast.
|
|
|
|
There is a great difference in boats, of course. For a long time I was on
|
|
a boat that was so slow we used to forget what year it was we left port in.
|
|
But of course this was at rare intervals. Ferryboats used to lose
|
|
valuable trips because their passengers grew old and died, waiting for us
|
|
to get by. This was at still rarer intervals. I had the documents
|
|
for these occurrences, but through carelessness they have been mislaid.
|
|
This boat, the 'John J. Roe,' was so slow that when she finally sunk
|
|
in Madrid Bend, it was five years before the owners heard of it.
|
|
That was always a confusing fact to me, but it is according to the record,
|
|
any way. She was dismally slow; still, we often had pretty
|
|
exciting times racing with islands, and rafts, and such things.
|
|
One trip, however, we did rather well. We went to St. Louis in sixteen days.
|
|
But even at this rattling gait I think we changed watches three times
|
|
in Fort Adams reach, which is five miles long. A 'reach' is a piece
|
|
of straight river, and of course the current drives through such a place
|
|
in a pretty lively way.
|
|
|
|
That trip we went to Grand Gulf, from New Orleans, in four days
|
|
(three hundred and forty miles); the 'Eclipse' and 'Shotwell'
|
|
did it in one. We were nine days out, in the chute of 63
|
|
(seven hundred miles); the 'Eclipse' and 'Shotwell' went
|
|
there in two days. Something over a generation ago,
|
|
a boat called the 'J. M. White' went from New Orleans
|
|
to Cairo in three days, six hours, and forty-four minutes.
|
|
In 1853 the 'Eclipse' made the same trip in three days,
|
|
three hours, and twenty minutes.<footnote [Time disputed.
|
|
Some authorities add 1 hour and 16 minutes to this.]> In
|
|
1870 the 'R. E. Lee' did it in three days and ONE hour.
|
|
This last is called the fastest trip on record.
|
|
I will try to show that it was not. For this reason:
|
|
the distance between New Orleans and Cairo, when the 'J. M. White'
|
|
ran it, was about eleven hundred and six miles; consequently her
|
|
average speed was a trifle over fourteen miles per hour.
|
|
In the 'Eclipse's' day the distance between the two ports had become
|
|
reduced to one thousand and eighty miles; consequently her average
|
|
speed was a shade under fourteen and three-eighths miles per hour.
|
|
In the 'R. E. Lee's' time the distance had diminished
|
|
to about one thousand and thirty miles; consequently her
|
|
average was about fourteen and one-eighth miles per hour.
|
|
Therefore the 'Eclipse's' was conspicuously the fastest time that has
|
|
ever been made.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE RECORD OF SOME FAMOUS
|
|
|
|
TRIPS
|
|
|
|
(From Commodore Rollingpin's Almanack.)
|
|
|
|
|
|
FAST TIME ON THE WESTERN WATERS
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
FROM NEW ORLEANS TO NATCHEZ--268 MILES
|
|
|
|
D. H. M.
|
|
1814 Orleans made the run in 6 6 40
|
|
1814 Comet " " 5 10
|
|
1815 Enterprise " " 4 11 20
|
|
1817 Washington " " 4
|
|
1817 Shelby " " 3 20
|
|
1818 Paragon " " 3 8
|
|
1828 Tecumseh " " 3 1 20
|
|
1834 Tuscarora " " 1 21
|
|
1838 Natchez " " 1 17
|
|
1840 Ed. Shippen " " 1 8
|
|
1842 Belle of the West " 1 18
|
|
1844 Sultana " " 19 45
|
|
1851 Magnolia " " 19 50
|
|
1853 A. L. Shotwell " " 19 49
|
|
1853 Southern Belle " " 20 3
|
|
1853 Princess (No. 4) " 20 26
|
|
1853 Eclipse " " 19 47
|
|
1855 Princess (New) " " 18 53
|
|
1855 Natchez (New) " " 17 30
|
|
1856 Princess (New) " " 17 30
|
|
1870 Natchez " " 17 17
|
|
1870 R. E. Lee " " 17 11
|
|
|
|
|
|
FROM NEW ORLEANS TO CAIRO--1,024 MILES
|
|
|
|
D. H. M.
|
|
1844 J. M. White made the run in 3 6 44
|
|
1852 Reindeer " " 3 12 45
|
|
1853 Eclipse " " 3 4 4
|
|
1853 A. L. Shotwell " " 3 3 40
|
|
1869 Dexter " " 3 6 20
|
|
1870 Natchez " " 3 4 34
|
|
1870 R. E. Lee " " 3 1
|
|
|
|
|
|
FROM NEW ORLEANS TO LOUISVILLE--1,440 MILES
|
|
|
|
D. H. M.
|
|
1815 Enterprise made the run in 25 2 40
|
|
1817 Washington " " 25
|
|
1817. Shelby " " 20 4 20
|
|
1818 Paragon " " 18 10
|
|
1828 Tecumseh " " 8 4
|
|
1834 Tuscarora " " 7 16
|
|
1837 Gen. Brown " " 6 22
|
|
1837 Randolph " " 6 22
|
|
1837 Empress " " 6 17
|
|
1837 Sultana " " 6 15
|
|
1840 Ed. Shippen " " 5 14
|
|
1842 Belle of the West " 6 14
|
|
1843 Duke of Orleans" " 5 23
|
|
1844 Sultana " " 5 12
|
|
1849 Bostona " " 5 8
|
|
1851 Belle Key " " 3 4 23
|
|
1852 Reindeer " " 4 20 45
|
|
1852 Eclipse " " 4 19
|
|
1853 A. L. Shotwell " " 4 10 20
|
|
1853 Eclipse " " 4 9 30
|
|
|
|
|
|
FROM NEW ORLEANS TO DONALDSONVILLE--78 MILES
|
|
|
|
H. M.
|
|
1852 A. L. Shotwell made the run in 5 42
|
|
1852 Eclipse " " 5 42
|
|
1854 Sultana " " 4 51
|
|
1860 Atlantic " " 5 11
|
|
1860 Gen. Quitman " " 5 6
|
|
1865 Ruth " " 4 43
|
|
1870 R. E. Lee " " 4 59
|
|
|
|
|
|
FROM NEW ORLEANS TO ST. LOUIS--1,218 MILES
|
|
|
|
D. H. M.
|
|
1844 J. M. White made the run in 3 23 9
|
|
1849 Missouri " " 4 19
|
|
1869 Dexter " " 4 9
|
|
1870 Natchez " " 3 21 58
|
|
1870 R. E. Lee " " 3 18 14
|
|
|
|
|
|
FROM LOUISVILLE TO CINCINNATI--141 MILES
|
|
|
|
D. H. M.
|
|
1819 Gen. Pike made the run in 1 16
|
|
1819 Paragon " " 1 14 20
|
|
1822 Wheeling Packet " " 1 10
|
|
1837 Moselle " " 12
|
|
1843 Duke of Orleans " " 12
|
|
1843 Congress " " 12 20
|
|
1846 Ben Franklin (No. 6) " 11 45
|
|
1852 Alleghaney " " 10 38
|
|
1852 Pittsburgh " " 10 23
|
|
1853 Telegraph No. 3 " " 9 52
|
|
|
|
|
|
FROM LOUISVILLE TO ST. LOUIS-750--MILES
|
|
|
|
D. H. M.
|
|
1843 Congress made the run in 2 1
|
|
1854 Pike " " 1 23
|
|
1854 Northerner " " 1 22 30
|
|
1855 Southemer " " 1 19
|
|
|
|
|
|
FROM CINCINNATI TO PITTSBURGH--490 MILES
|
|
|
|
D. H.
|
|
1850 Telegraph No. 2 made the run in 1 17
|
|
1851 Buckeye State " " 1 16
|
|
1852 Pittsburgh " " 1 15
|
|
|
|
|
|
FROM ST. LOUIS TO ALTON--30 MILES
|
|
|
|
D. H
|
|
1853 Altona made the run in 1 35
|
|
1876 Golden Eagle " " 1 37
|
|
1876 War Eagle " " 1 37
|
|
|
|
|
|
MISCELLANEOUS RUNS
|
|
|
|
In June, 1859, the St. Louis and Keokuk Packet, City of Louisiana,
|
|
made the run from St. Louis to Keokuk (214 miles) in 16 hours
|
|
and 20 minutes, the best time on record.
|
|
|
|
In 1868 the steamer Hawkeye State, of the Northern Packet Company,
|
|
made the run from St. Louis to St. Paul (800 miles) in 2 days and 20 hours.
|
|
Never was beaten.
|
|
|
|
In 1853 the steamer Polar Star made the run from St. Louis to St. Joseph,
|
|
on the Missouri River, in 64 hours. In July, 1856, the steamer Jas.
|
|
H. Lucas, Andy Wineland, Master, made the same run in 60 hours
|
|
and 57 minutes. The distance between the ports is 600 miles,
|
|
and when the difficulties of navigating the turbulent Missouri
|
|
are taken into consideration, the performance of the Lucas
|
|
deserves especial mention.
|
|
|
|
THE RUN OF THE ROBERT E. LEE
|
|
|
|
The time made by the R. E. Lee from New Orleans to St. Louis
|
|
in 1870, in her famous race with the Natchez, is the best
|
|
on record, and, inasmuch as the race created a national interest,
|
|
we give below her time table from port to port.
|
|
|
|
Left New Orleans, Thursday, June 30th, 1870, at 4 o'clock
|
|
and 55 minutes, p.m.; reached
|
|
|
|
D. H. M.
|
|
Carrollton 27<half>
|
|
Harry Hills 1 00<half>
|
|
Red Church 1 39
|
|
Bonnet Carre 2 38
|
|
College Point 3 50<half>
|
|
Donaldsonville 4 59
|
|
Plaquemine 7 05<half>
|
|
Baton Rouge 8 25
|
|
Bayou Sara 10 26
|
|
Red River 12 56
|
|
Stamps 13 56
|
|
Bryaro 15 51<half>
|
|
Hinderson's 16 29
|
|
Natchez 17 11
|
|
Cole's Creek 19 21
|
|
Waterproof 18 53
|
|
Rodney 20 45
|
|
St. Joseph 21 02
|
|
Grand Gulf 22 06
|
|
Hard Times 22 18
|
|
Half Mile below Warrenton 1
|
|
Vicksburg 1 38
|
|
Milliken's Bend 1 2 37
|
|
Bailey's 1 3 48
|
|
Lake Providence 1 5 47
|
|
Greenville 1 10 55
|
|
Napoleon 1 16 22
|
|
White River 1 16 56
|
|
Australia 1 19
|
|
Helena 1 23 25
|
|
Half Mile Below St. Francis 2
|
|
Memphis 2 6 9
|
|
Foot of Island 37 2 9
|
|
Foot of Island 26 2 13 30
|
|
Tow-head, Island 14 2 17 23
|
|
New Madrid 2 19 50
|
|
Dry Bar No. 10 2 20 37
|
|
Foot of Island 8 2 21 25
|
|
Upper Tow-head--Lucas Bend 3
|
|
Cairo 3 1
|
|
St. Louis 3 18 14
|
|
|
|
The Lee landed at St. Louis at 11.25 A.M., on July 4th, 1870--6 hours
|
|
and 36 minutes ahead of the Natchez. The officers of the Natchez claimed
|
|
7 hours and 1 minute stoppage on account of fog and repairing machinery.
|
|
The R. E. Lee was commanded by Captain John W. Cannon, and the Natchez was in
|
|
charge of that veteran Southern boatman, Captain Thomas P. Leathers.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 17
|
|
Cut-offs and Stephen
|
|
|
|
THESE dry details are of importance in one particular.
|
|
They give me an opportunity of introducing one of the Mississippi's
|
|
oddest peculiarities,--that of shortening its length from time to time.
|
|
If you will throw a long, pliant apple-paring over your shoulder,
|
|
it will pretty fairly shape itself into an average section
|
|
of the Mississippi River; that is, the nine or ten hundred miles
|
|
stretching from Cairo, Illinois, southward to New Orleans,
|
|
the same being wonderfully crooked, with a brief straight bit
|
|
here and there at wide intervals. The two hundred-mile stretch
|
|
from Cairo northward to St. Louis is by no means so crooked,
|
|
that being a rocky country which the river cannot cut much.
|
|
|
|
The water cuts the alluvial banks of the 'lower' river into deep
|
|
horseshoe curves; so deep, indeed, that in some places if you were to get
|
|
ashore at one extremity of the horseshoe and walk across the neck,
|
|
half or three quarters of a mile, you could sit down and rest a couple
|
|
of hours while your steamer was coming around the long elbow,
|
|
at a speed of ten miles an hour, to take you aboard again.
|
|
When the river is rising fast, some scoundrel whose plantation
|
|
is back in the country, and therefore of inferior value,
|
|
has only to watch his chance, cut a little gutter across the narrow
|
|
neck of land some dark night, and turn the water into it,
|
|
and in a wonderfully short time a miracle has happened: to wit,
|
|
the whole Mississippi has taken possession of that little ditch,
|
|
and placed the countryman's plantation on its bank (quadrupling its
|
|
value), and that other party's formerly valuable plantation finds
|
|
itself away out yonder on a big island; the old watercourse around
|
|
it will soon shoal up, boats cannot approach within ten miles
|
|
of it, and down goes its value to a fourth of its former worth.
|
|
Watches are kept on those narrow necks, at needful times,
|
|
and if a man happens to be caught cutting a ditch across them,
|
|
the chances are all against his ever having another opportunity to
|
|
cut a ditch.
|
|
|
|
Pray observe some of the effects of this ditching business.
|
|
Once there was a neck opposite Port Hudson, Louisiana, which was only
|
|
half a mile across, in its narrowest place. You could walk across
|
|
there in fifteen minutes; but if you made the journey around the cape
|
|
on a raft, you traveled thirty-five miles to accomplish the same thing.
|
|
In 1722 the river darted through that neck, deserted its old bed,
|
|
and thus shortened itself thirty-five miles. In the same way it
|
|
shortened itself twenty-five miles at Black Hawk Point in 1699.
|
|
Below Red River Landing, Raccourci cut-off was made (forty or fifty
|
|
years ago, I think). This shortened the river twenty-eight miles.
|
|
In our day, if you travel by river from the southernmost of these
|
|
three cut-offs to the northernmost, you go only seventy miles.
|
|
To do the same thing a hundred and seventy-six years ago, one had
|
|
to go a hundred and fifty-eight miles!--shortening of eighty-eight
|
|
miles in that trifling distance. At some forgotten time in the past,
|
|
cut-offs were made above Vidalia, Louisiana; at island 92; at island 84;
|
|
and at Hale's Point. These shortened the river, in the aggregate,
|
|
seventy-seven miles.
|
|
|
|
Since my own day on the Mississippi, cut-offs have been made at
|
|
Hurricane Island; at island 100; at Napoleon, Arkansas; at Walnut Bend;
|
|
and at Council Bend. These shortened the river, in the aggregate,
|
|
sixty-seven miles. In my own time a cut-off was made at American Bend,
|
|
which shortened the river ten miles or more.
|
|
|
|
Therefore, the Mississippi between Cairo and New Orleans was twelve
|
|
hundred and fifteen miles long one hundred and seventy-six years ago.
|
|
It was eleven hundred and eighty after the cut-off of 1722.
|
|
It was one thousand and forty after the American Bend cut-off. It has
|
|
lost sixty-seven miles since. Consequently its length is only nine
|
|
hundred and seventy-three miles at present.
|
|
|
|
Now, if I wanted to be one of those ponderous scientific people, and 'let on'
|
|
to prove what had occurred in the remote past by what had occurred
|
|
in a given time in the recent past, or what will occur in the far future
|
|
by what has occurred in late years, what an opportunity is here!
|
|
Geology never had such a chance, nor such exact data to argue from!
|
|
Nor 'development of species,' either! Glacial epochs are great things,
|
|
but they are vague--vague. Please observe:--
|
|
|
|
In the space of one hundred and seventy-six years the Lower
|
|
Mississippi has shortened itself two hundred and forty-two miles.
|
|
That is an average of a trifle over one mile and a third per year.
|
|
Therefore, any calm person, who is not blind or idiotic,
|
|
can see that in the Old Oolitic Silurian Period,' just a million
|
|
years ago next November, the Lower Mississippi River was upwards
|
|
of one million three hundred thousand miles long, and stuck out
|
|
over the Gulf of Mexico like a fishing-rod. And by the same token
|
|
any person can see that seven hundred and forty-two years from now
|
|
the Lower Mississippi will be only a mile and three-quarters long,
|
|
and Cairo and New Orleans will have joined their streets together,
|
|
and be plodding comfortably along under a single mayor and a mutual
|
|
board of aldermen. There is something fascinating about science.
|
|
One gets such wholesale returns of conjecture out of such a trifling
|
|
investment of fact.
|
|
|
|
When the water begins to flow through one of those ditches I
|
|
have been speaking of, it is time for the people thereabouts
|
|
to move. The water cleaves the banks away like a knife.
|
|
By the time the ditch has become twelve or fifteen feet wide,
|
|
the calamity is as good as accomplished, for no power on earth
|
|
can stop it now. When the width has reached a hundred yards,
|
|
the banks begin to peel off in slices half an acre wide.
|
|
The current flowing around the bend traveled formerly
|
|
only five miles an hour; now it is tremendously increased
|
|
by the shortening of the distance. I was on board the first
|
|
boat that tried to go through the cut-off at American Bend,
|
|
but we did not get through. It was toward midnight, and a wild
|
|
night it was--thunder, lightning, and torrents of rain.
|
|
It was estimated that the current in the cut-off was making
|
|
about fifteen or twenty miles an hour; twelve or thirteen
|
|
was the best our boat could do, even in tolerably slack water,
|
|
therefore perhaps we were foolish to try the cut-off. However,
|
|
Mr. Brown was ambitious, and he kept on trying.
|
|
The eddy running up the bank, under the 'point,' was about
|
|
as swift as the current out in the middle; so we would
|
|
go flying up the shore like a lightning express train,
|
|
get on a big head of steam, and 'stand by for a surge'
|
|
when we struck the current that was whirling by the point.
|
|
But all our preparations were useless. The instant the current hit
|
|
us it spun us around like a top, the water deluged the forecastle,
|
|
and the boat careened so far over that one could hardly keep
|
|
his feet. The next instant we were away down the river,
|
|
clawing with might and main to keep out of the woods.
|
|
We tried the experiment four times. I stood on the forecastle
|
|
companion way to see. It was astonishing to observe how
|
|
suddenly the boat would spin around and turn tail the moment
|
|
she emerged from the eddy and the current struck her nose.
|
|
The sounding concussion and the quivering would have been
|
|
about the same if she had come full speed against a sand-bank.
|
|
Under the lightning flashes one could see the plantation cabins
|
|
and the goodly acres tumble into the river; and the crash they
|
|
made was not a bad effort at thunder. Once, when we spun around,
|
|
we only missed a house about twenty feet, that had a light burning
|
|
in the window; and in the same instant that house went overboard.
|
|
Nobody could stay on our forecastle; the water swept across
|
|
it in a torrent every time we plunged athwart the current.
|
|
At the end of our fourth effort we brought up in the woods two miles
|
|
below the cut-off; all the country there was overflowed, of course.
|
|
A day or two later the cut-off was three-quarters of a mile wide,
|
|
and boats passed up through it without much difficulty, and so
|
|
saved ten miles.
|
|
|
|
The old Raccourci cut-off reduced the river's length twenty-eight miles.
|
|
There used to be a tradition connected with it. It was said that a boat
|
|
came along there in the night and went around the enormous elbow
|
|
the usual way, the pilots not knowing that the cut-off had been made.
|
|
It was a grisly, hideous night, and all shapes were vague and distorted.
|
|
The old bend had already begun to fill up, and the boat got to
|
|
running away from mysterious reefs, and occasionally hitting one.
|
|
The perplexed pilots fell to swearing, and finally uttered the entirely
|
|
unnecessary wish that they might never get out of that place.
|
|
As always happens in such cases, that particular prayer was answered,
|
|
and the others neglected. So to this day that phantom steamer is still
|
|
butting around in that deserted river, trying to find her way out.
|
|
More than one grave watchman has sworn to me that on drizzly,
|
|
dismal nights, he has glanced fearfully down that forgotten river
|
|
as he passed the head of the island, and seen the faint glow
|
|
of the specter steamer's lights drifting through the distant gloom,
|
|
and heard the muffled cough of her 'scape-pipes and the plaintive cry
|
|
of her leadsmen.
|
|
|
|
In the absence of further statistics, I beg to close this chapter
|
|
with one more reminiscence of 'Stephen.'
|
|
|
|
Most of the captains and pilots held Stephen's note for
|
|
borrowed sums, ranging from two hundred and fifty dollars upward.
|
|
Stephen never paid one of these notes, but he was very prompt
|
|
and very zealous about renewing them every twelve months.
|
|
|
|
Of course there came a time, at last, when Stephen could
|
|
no longer borrow of his ancient creditors; so he was
|
|
obliged to lie in wait for new men who did not know him.
|
|
Such a victim was good-hearted, simple natured young Yates
|
|
(I use a fictitious name, but the real name began, as this
|
|
one does, with a Y). Young Yates graduated as a pilot,
|
|
got a berth, and when the month was ended and he stepped
|
|
up to the clerk's office and received his two hundred
|
|
and fifty dollars in crisp new bills, Stephen was there!
|
|
His silvery tongue began to wag, and in a very little while
|
|
Yates's two hundred and fifty dollars had changed hands.
|
|
The fact was soon known at pilot headquarters, and the amusement
|
|
and satisfaction of the old creditors were large and generous.
|
|
But innocent Yates never suspected that Stephen's promise
|
|
to pay promptly at the end of the week was a worthless one.
|
|
Yates called for his money at the stipulated time;
|
|
Stephen sweetened him up and put him off a week. He called then,
|
|
according to agreement, and came away sugar-coated again,
|
|
but suffering under another postponement. So the thing went on.
|
|
Yates haunted Stephen week after week, to no purpose, and at last
|
|
gave it up. And then straightway Stephen began to haunt Yates!
|
|
Wherever Yates appeared, there was the inevitable Stephen.
|
|
And not only there, but beaming with affection and gushing
|
|
with apologies for not being able to pay. By and by,
|
|
whenever poor Yates saw him coming, he would turn and fly,
|
|
and drag his company with him, if he had company; but it
|
|
was of no use; his debtor would run him down and corner him.
|
|
Panting and red-faced, Stephen would come, with outstretched hands
|
|
and eager eyes, invade the conversation, shake both of Yates's
|
|
arms loose in their sockets, and begin--
|
|
|
|
'My, what a race I've had! I saw you didn't see me,
|
|
and so I clapped on all steam for fear I'd miss you entirely.
|
|
And here you are! there, just stand so, and let me
|
|
look at you! just the same old noble countenance.'
|
|
[To Yates's friend:] 'Just look at him! LOOK at him!
|
|
Ain't it just GOOD to look at him! AIN'T it now? Ain't he just
|
|
a picture! SOME call him a picture; I call him a panorama!
|
|
That's what he is--an entire panorama. And now I'm reminded!
|
|
How I do wish I could have seen you an hour earlier!
|
|
For twenty-four hours I've been saving up that two hundred
|
|
and fifty dollars for you; been looking for you everywhere.
|
|
I waited at the Planter's from six yesterday evening till two o'clock
|
|
this morning, without rest or food; my wife says, "Where have you
|
|
been all night?" I said, "This debt lies heavy on my mind."
|
|
She says, "In all my days I never saw a man take a debt to heart
|
|
the way you do." I said, "It's my nature; how can I change it?"
|
|
She says, "Well, do go to bed and get some rest." I said,
|
|
"Not till that poor, noble young man has got his money."
|
|
So I set up all night, and this morning out I shot, and the first
|
|
man I struck told me you had shipped on the "Grand Turk"
|
|
and gone to New Orleans. Well, sir, I had to lean up against
|
|
a building and cry. So help me goodness, I couldn't help it.
|
|
The man that owned the place come out cleaning up with a rag,
|
|
and said he didn't like to have people cry against his building,
|
|
and then it seemed to me that the whole world had turned
|
|
against me, and it wasn't any use to live any more; and coming
|
|
along an hour ago, suffering no man knows what agony, I met Jim
|
|
Wilson and paid him the two hundred and fifty dollars on account;
|
|
and to think that here you are, now, and I haven't got a cent!
|
|
But as sure as I am standing here on this ground on this
|
|
particular brick,--there, I've scratched a mark on the brick
|
|
to remember it by,--I'll borrow that money and pay it over
|
|
to you at twelve o'clock sharp, tomorrow! Now, stand so;
|
|
let me look at you just once more.'
|
|
|
|
And so on. Yates's life became a burden to him. He could not escape his
|
|
debtor and his debtor's awful sufferings on account of not being able to pay.
|
|
He dreaded to show himself in the street, lest he should find Stephen lying
|
|
in wait for him at the comer.
|
|
|
|
Bogart's billiard saloon was a great resort for pilots in those days.
|
|
They met there about as much to exchange river news as to play.
|
|
One morning Yates was there; Stephen was there, too, but kept out
|
|
of sight. But by and by, when about all the pilots had arrived
|
|
who were in town, Stephen suddenly appeared in the midst, and rushed
|
|
for Yates as for a long-lost brother.
|
|
|
|
'OH, I am so glad to see you! Oh my soul, the sight of you is
|
|
such a comfort to my eyes! Gentlemen, I owe all of you money;
|
|
among you I owe probably forty thousand dollars. I want to pay it;
|
|
I intend to pay it every last cent of it. You all know,
|
|
without my telling you, what sorrow it has cost me to remain so long
|
|
under such deep obligations to such patient and generous friends;
|
|
but the sharpest pang I suffer--by far the sharpest--is from
|
|
the debt I owe to this noble young man here; and I have come to this
|
|
place this morning especially to make the announcement that I
|
|
have at last found a method whereby I can pay off all my debts!
|
|
And most especially I wanted HIM to be here when I announced it.
|
|
Yes, my faithful friend,--my benefactor, I've found the method!
|
|
I've found the method to pay off all my debts, and you'll get your money!'
|
|
Hope dawned in Yates's eye; then Stephen, beaming benignantly,
|
|
and placing his hand upon Yates's head, added, 'I am going to pay them
|
|
off in alphabetical order!'
|
|
|
|
Then he turned and disappeared. The full significance of Stephen's 'method'
|
|
did not dawn upon the perplexed and musing crowd for some two minutes;
|
|
and then Yates murmured with a sigh--
|
|
|
|
'Well, the Y's stand a gaudy chance. He won't get any further than the C's
|
|
in THIS world, and I reckon that after a good deal of eternity has wasted
|
|
away in the next one, I'll still be referred to up there as "that poor,
|
|
ragged pilot that came here from St. Louis in the early days!"
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 18
|
|
I Take a Few Extra Lessons
|
|
|
|
DURING the two or two and a half years of my apprenticeship,
|
|
I served under many pilots, and had experience of many
|
|
kinds of steamboatmen and many varieties of steamboats;
|
|
for it was not always convenient for Mr. Bixby to have me
|
|
with him, and in such cases he sent me with somebody else.
|
|
I am to this day profiting somewhat by that experience;
|
|
for in that brief, sharp schooling, I got personally and familiarly
|
|
acquainted with about all the different types of human nature
|
|
that are to be found in fiction, biography, or history.
|
|
The fact is daily borne in upon me, that the average shore-employment
|
|
requires as much as forty years to equip a man with this sort
|
|
of an education. When I say I am still profiting by this thing,
|
|
I do not mean that it has constituted me a judge of men--
|
|
no, it has not done that; for judges of men are born, not made.
|
|
My profit is various in kind and degree; but the feature of it
|
|
which I value most is the zest which that early experience has
|
|
given to my later reading. When I find a well-drawn character
|
|
in fiction or biography, I generally take a warm personal
|
|
interest in him, for the reason that I have known him before--
|
|
met him on the river.
|
|
|
|
The figure that comes before me oftenest, out of the shadows of that
|
|
vanished time, is that of Brown, of the steamer 'Pennsylvania'--the man
|
|
referred to in a former chapter, whose memory was so good and tiresome.
|
|
He was a middle-aged, long, slim, bony, smooth-shaven, horse-faced, ignorant,
|
|
stingy, malicious, snarling, fault hunting, mote-magnifying tyrant.
|
|
I early got the habit of coming on watch with dread at my heart.
|
|
No matter how good a time I might have been having with the off-watch below,
|
|
and no matter how high my spirits might be when I started aloft, my soul
|
|
became lead in my body the moment I approached the pilot-house.
|
|
|
|
I still remember the first time I ever entered the presence of that man.
|
|
The boat had backed out from St. Louis and was 'straightening down;'
|
|
I ascended to the pilot-house in high feather, and very proud
|
|
to be semi-officially a member of the executive family of so fast
|
|
and famous a boat. Brown was at the wheel. I paused in the middle
|
|
of the room, all fixed to make my bow, but Brown did not look around.
|
|
I thought he took a furtive glance at me out of the corner of his eye,
|
|
but as not even this notice was repeated, I judged I had been mistaken.
|
|
By this time he was picking his way among some dangerous 'breaks' abreast
|
|
the woodyards; therefore it would not be proper to interrupt him; so I
|
|
stepped softly to the high bench and took a seat.
|
|
|
|
There was silence for ten minutes; then my new boss turned
|
|
and inspected me deliberately and painstakingly from head
|
|
to heel for about--as it seemed to me--a quarter of an hour.
|
|
After which he removed his countenance and I saw it no more
|
|
for some seconds; then it came around once more, and this
|
|
question greeted me--
|
|
|
|
'Are you Horace Bigsby's cub?'
|
|
|
|
'Yes, sir.'
|
|
|
|
After this there was a pause and another inspection. Then--
|
|
|
|
'What's your name?'
|
|
|
|
I told him. He repeated it after me. It was probably the only
|
|
thing he ever forgot; for although I was with him many months
|
|
he never addressed himself to me in any other way than 'Here!'
|
|
and then his command followed.
|
|
|
|
'Where was you born?'
|
|
|
|
'In Florida, Missouri.'
|
|
|
|
A pause. Then--
|
|
|
|
'Dern sight better staid there!'
|
|
|
|
By means of a dozen or so of pretty direct questions, he pumped
|
|
my family history out of me.
|
|
|
|
The leads were going now, in the first crossing. This interrupted
|
|
the inquest. When the leads had been laid in, he resumed--
|
|
|
|
'How long you been on the river?'
|
|
|
|
I told him. After a pause--
|
|
|
|
'Where'd you get them shoes?'
|
|
|
|
I gave him the information.
|
|
|
|
'Hold up your foot!'
|
|
|
|
I did so. He stepped back, examined the shoe minutely and contemptuously,
|
|
scratching his head thoughtfully, tilting his high sugar-loaf hat well forward
|
|
to facilitate the operation, then ejaculated, 'Well, I'll be dod derned!'
|
|
and returned to his wheel.
|
|
|
|
What occasion there was to be dod derned about it is a thing
|
|
which is still as much of a mystery to me now as it was then.
|
|
It must have been all of fifteen minutes--fifteen minutes
|
|
of dull, homesick silence--before that long horse-face
|
|
swung round upon me again--and then, what a change!
|
|
It was as red as fire, and every muscle in it was working.
|
|
Now came this shriek--
|
|
|
|
'Here!--You going to set there all day?'
|
|
|
|
I lit in the middle of the floor, shot there by the electric
|
|
suddenness of the surprise. As soon as I could get my voice I said,
|
|
apologetically:--'I have had no orders, sir.'
|
|
|
|
'You've had no ORDERS! My, what a fine bird we are! We must have ORDERS!
|
|
Our father was a GENTLEMAN--owned slaves--and we've been to SCHOOL.
|
|
Yes, WE are a gentleman, TOO, and got to have ORDERS! ORDERS, is it?
|
|
ORDERS is what you want! Dod dern my skin, I'LL learn you to swell yourself
|
|
up and blow around here about your dod-derned ORDERS! G'way from the wheel!
|
|
(I had approached it without knowing it.)
|
|
|
|
I moved back a step or two, and stood as in a dream, all my senses
|
|
stupefied by this frantic assault.
|
|
|
|
'What you standing there for? Take that ice-pitcher down to
|
|
the texas-tender-come, move along, and don't you be all day about it!'
|
|
|
|
The moment I got back to the pilot-house, Brown said--
|
|
|
|
'Here! What was you doing down there all this time?'
|
|
|
|
'I couldn't find the texas-tender; I had to go all the way to the pantry.'
|
|
|
|
'Derned likely story! Fill up the stove.'
|
|
|
|
I proceeded to do so. He watched me like a cat.
|
|
Presently he shouted--
|
|
|
|
'Put down that shovel? Deadest numskull I ever saw--
|
|
ain't even got sense enough to load up a stove.
|
|
|
|
All through the watch this sort of thing went on. Yes, and the
|
|
subsequent watches were much like it, during a stretch of months.
|
|
As I have said, I soon got the habit of coming on duty with dread.
|
|
The moment I was in the presence, even in the darkest night,
|
|
I could feel those yellow eyes upon me, and knew their owner
|
|
was watching for a pretext to spit out some venom on me.
|
|
Preliminarily he would say-
|
|
|
|
'Here! Take the wheel.'
|
|
|
|
Two minutes later--
|
|
|
|
'WHERE in the nation you going to? Pull her down! pull her down!'
|
|
|
|
After another moment--
|
|
|
|
'Say! You going to hold her all day? Let her go--meet her! meet her!'
|
|
|
|
Then he would jump from the bench, snatch the wheel from me,
|
|
and meet her himself, pouring out wrath upon me all the time.
|
|
|
|
George Ritchie was the other pilot's cub. He was having
|
|
good times now; for his boss, George Ealer, was as kindhearted
|
|
as Brown wasn't. Ritchie had steeled for Brown the season before;
|
|
consequently he knew exactly how to entertain himself and plague me,
|
|
all by the one operation. Whenever I took the wheel for a moment
|
|
on Ealer's watch, Ritchie would sit back on the bench and play Brown,
|
|
with continual ejaculations of 'Snatch her! snatch her!
|
|
Derndest mud-cat I ever saw!' 'Here! Where you going NOW?
|
|
Going to run over that snag?' 'Pull her DOWN ! Don't you hear me?
|
|
Pull her DOWN!' 'There she goes! JUST as I expected!
|
|
I TOLD you not to cramp that reef G'way from the wheel!'
|
|
|
|
So I always had a rough time of it, no matter whose watch it was;
|
|
and sometimes it seemed to me that Ritchie's good-natured badgering
|
|
was pretty nearly as aggravating as Brown's dead-earnest nagging.
|
|
|
|
I often wanted to kill Brown, but this would not answer.
|
|
A cub had to take everything his boss gave, in the way of
|
|
vigorous comment and criticism; and we all believed that there
|
|
was a United States law making it a penitentiary offense to
|
|
strike or threaten a pilot who was on duty. However, I could
|
|
IMAGINE myself killing Brown; there was no law against that;
|
|
and that was the thing I used always to do the moment I was abed.
|
|
Instead of going over my river in my mind as was my duty,
|
|
I threw business aside for pleasure, and killed Brown.
|
|
I killed Brown every night for months; not in old, stale,
|
|
commonplace ways, but in new and picturesque ones;--ways that were
|
|
sometimes surprising for freshness of design and ghastliness of
|
|
situation and environment.
|
|
|
|
Brown was ALWAYS watching for a pretext to find fault;
|
|
and if he could find no plausible pretext, he would invent one.
|
|
He would scold you for shaving a shore, and for not shaving it;
|
|
for hugging a bar, and for not hugging it; for 'pulling down'
|
|
when not invited, and for not pulling down when not invited;
|
|
for firing up without orders, and for waiting FOR orders. In a word,
|
|
it was his invariable rule to find fault with EVERYTHING you did;
|
|
and another invariable rule of his was to throw all his remarks
|
|
(to you) into the form of an insult.
|
|
|
|
One day we were approaching New Madrid, bound down and heavily laden.
|
|
Brown was at one side of the wheel, steering; I was at the other,
|
|
standing by to 'pull down' or 'shove up.' He cast a furtive glance at me
|
|
every now and then. I had long ago learned what that meant; viz., he was
|
|
trying to invent a trap for me. I wondered what shape it was going to take.
|
|
By and by he stepped back from the wheel and said in his usual snarly way--
|
|
|
|
'Here!--See if you've got gumption enough to round her to.'
|
|
|
|
This was simply BOUND to be a success; nothing could prevent it;
|
|
for he had never allowed me to round the boat to before;
|
|
consequently, no matter how I might do the thing, he could
|
|
find free fault with it. He stood back there with his greedy
|
|
eye on me, and the result was what might have been foreseen:
|
|
I lost my head in a quarter of a minute, and didn't know what I
|
|
was about; I started too early to bring the boat around,
|
|
but detected a green gleam of joy in Brown's eye, and corrected
|
|
my mistake; I started around once more while too high up,
|
|
but corrected myself again in time; I made other false moves,
|
|
and still managed to save myself; but at last I grew so confused
|
|
and anxious that I tumbled into the very worst blunder of all--
|
|
I got too far down before beginning to fetch the boat around.
|
|
Brown's chance was come.
|
|
|
|
His face turned red with passion; he made one bound,
|
|
hurled me across the house with a sweep of his arm,
|
|
spun the wheel down, and began to pour out a stream of
|
|
vituperation upon me which lasted till he was out of breath.
|
|
In the course of this speech he called me all the different
|
|
kinds of hard names he could think of, and once or twice I
|
|
thought he was even going to swear--but he didn't this time.
|
|
'Dod dern' was the nearest he ventured to the luxury of swearing,
|
|
for he had been brought up with a wholesome respect for future
|
|
fire and brimstone.
|
|
|
|
That was an uncomfortable hour; for there was a big audience
|
|
on the hurricane deck. When I went to bed that night,
|
|
I killed Brown in seventeen different ways-all of them new.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 19
|
|
Brown and I Exchange Compliments
|
|
|
|
Two trips later, I got into serious trouble. Brown was steering;
|
|
I was 'pulling down.' My younger brother appeared on the hurricane deck,
|
|
and shouted to Brown to stop at some landing or other a mile or so below.
|
|
Brown gave no intimation that he had heard anything. But that was
|
|
his way: he never condescended to take notice of an under clerk.
|
|
The wind was blowing; Brown was deaf (although he always pretended
|
|
he wasn't), and I very much doubted if he had heard the order.
|
|
If I had two heads, I would have spoken; but as I had only one, it seemed
|
|
judicious to take care of it; so I kept still.
|
|
|
|
Presently, sure enough, we went sailing by that plantation.
|
|
Captain Klinefelter appeared on the deck, and said--
|
|
|
|
'Let her come around, sir, let her come around.
|
|
Didn't Henry tell you to land here?'
|
|
|
|
'NO, sir!'
|
|
|
|
'I sent him up to do, it.'
|
|
|
|
'He did come up; and that's all the good it done, the dod-derned fool.
|
|
He never said anything.'
|
|
|
|
'Didn't YOU hear him?' asked the captain of me.
|
|
|
|
Of course I didn't want to be mixed up in this business,
|
|
but there was no way to avoid it; so I said--
|
|
|
|
'Yes, sir.'
|
|
|
|
I knew what Brown's next remark would be, before he uttered it; it was--
|
|
|
|
'Shut your mouth! you never heard anything of the kind.'
|
|
|
|
I closed my mouth according to instructions. An hour later,
|
|
Henry entered the pilot-house, unaware of what had been going on.
|
|
He was a thoroughly inoffensive boy, and I was sorry to see
|
|
him come, for I knew Brown would have no pity on him.
|
|
Brown began, straightway--
|
|
|
|
'Here! why didn't you tell me we'd got to land at that plantation?'
|
|
|
|
'I did tell you, Mr. Brown.'
|
|
|
|
'It's a lie!'
|
|
|
|
I said--
|
|
|
|
'You lie, yourself. He did tell you.'
|
|
|
|
Brown glared at me in unaffected surprise; and for as much as a moment
|
|
he was entirely speechless; then he shouted to me--
|
|
|
|
'I'll attend to your case in half a minute!' then to Henry,
|
|
'And you leave the pilot-house; out with you!'
|
|
|
|
It was pilot law, and must be obeyed. The boy started out,
|
|
and even had his foot on the upper step outside the door, when Brown,
|
|
with a sudden access of fury, picked up a ten-pound lump of coal
|
|
and sprang after him; but I was between, with a heavy stool,
|
|
and I hit Brown a good honest blow which stretched-him out.
|
|
|
|
I had committed the crime of crimes--I had lifted my hand against
|
|
a pilot on duty! I supposed I was booked for the penitentiary sure,
|
|
and couldn't be booked any surer if I went on and squared my long account
|
|
with this person while I had the chance; consequently I stuck to him
|
|
and pounded him with my fists a considerable time--I do not know how long,
|
|
the pleasure of it probably made it seem longer than it really was;--
|
|
but in the end he struggled free and jumped up and sprang to the wheel:
|
|
a very natural solicitude, for, all this time, here was this steamboat
|
|
tearing down the river at the rate of fifteen miles an hour and nobody at
|
|
the helm! However, Eagle Bend was two miles wide at this bank-full stage,
|
|
and correspondingly long and deep; and the boat was steering herself
|
|
straight down the middle and taking no chances. Still, that was only luck--
|
|
a body MIGHT have found her charging into the woods.
|
|
|
|
Perceiving, at a glance, that the 'Pennsylvania' was in no danger,
|
|
Brown gathered up the big spy-glass, war-club fashion, and ordered
|
|
me out of the pilot-house with more than Comanche bluster.
|
|
But I was not afraid of him now; so, instead of going, I tarried,
|
|
and criticized his grammar; I reformed his ferocious speeches for him,
|
|
and put them into good English, calling his attention to the advantage
|
|
of pure English over the bastard dialect of the Pennsylvanian
|
|
collieries whence he was extracted. He could have done his part
|
|
to admiration in a cross-fire of mere vituperation, of course;
|
|
but he was not equipped for this species of controversy;
|
|
so he presently laid aside his glass and took the wheel,
|
|
muttering and shaking his head; and I retired to the bench.
|
|
The racket had brought everybody to the hurricane deck, and I trembled
|
|
when I saw the old captain looking up from the midst of the crowd.
|
|
I said to myself, 'Now I AM done for!'--For although, as a rule,
|
|
he was so fatherly and indulgent toward the boat's family,
|
|
and so patient of minor shortcomings, he could be stern enough when
|
|
the fault was worth it.
|
|
|
|
I tried to imagine what he WOULD do to a cub pilot who had been guilty
|
|
of such a crime as mine, committed on a boat guard-deep with costly freight
|
|
and alive with passengers. Our watch was nearly ended. I thought I would
|
|
go and hide somewhere till I got a chance to slide ashore. So I slipped
|
|
out of the pilot-house, and down the steps, and around to the texas door--
|
|
and was in the act of gliding within, when the captain confronted me!
|
|
I dropped my head, and he stood over me in silence a moment or two,
|
|
then said impressively--
|
|
|
|
'Follow me.'
|
|
|
|
I dropped into his wake; he led the way to his parlor in the forward
|
|
end of the texas. We were alone, now. He closed the after door;
|
|
then moved slowly to the forward one and closed that. He sat down;
|
|
I stood before him. He looked at me some little time, then said--
|
|
|
|
'So you have been fighting, Mr. Brown?'
|
|
|
|
I answered meekly--
|
|
|
|
'Yes, sir.'
|
|
|
|
'Do you know that that is a very serious matter?'
|
|
|
|
'Yes, sir.'
|
|
|
|
'Are you aware that this boat was plowing down the river fully
|
|
five minutes with no one at the wheel?'
|
|
|
|
'Yes, sir.'
|
|
|
|
'Did you strike him first?'
|
|
|
|
'Yes, sir.'
|
|
|
|
'What with?'
|
|
|
|
'A stool, sir.'
|
|
|
|
'Hard?'
|
|
|
|
'Middling, sir.'
|
|
|
|
'Did it knock him down?'
|
|
|
|
'He--he fell, sir.'
|
|
|
|
'Did you follow it up? Did you do anything further?'
|
|
|
|
'Yes, sir.'
|
|
|
|
'What did you do?'
|
|
|
|
'Pounded him, sir.'
|
|
|
|
'Pounded him?'
|
|
|
|
'Yes, sir.'
|
|
|
|
'Did you pound him much?--that is, severely?'
|
|
|
|
'One might call it that, sir, maybe.'
|
|
|
|
'I'm deuced glad of it! Hark ye, never mention that I said that.
|
|
You have been guilty of a great crime; and don't you ever be
|
|
guilty of it again, on this boat. BUT--lay for him ashore!
|
|
Give him a good sound thrashing, do you hear? I'll pay the expenses.
|
|
Now go--and mind you, not a word of this to anybody. Clear out with you!--
|
|
you've been guilty of a great crime, you whelp!'
|
|
|
|
I slid out, happy with the sense of a close shave and a mighty deliverance;
|
|
and I heard him laughing to himself and slapping his fat thighs after I had
|
|
closed his door.
|
|
|
|
When Brown came off watch he went straight to the captain,
|
|
who was talking with some passengers on the boiler deck,
|
|
and demanded that I be put ashore in New Orleans--and added--
|
|
|
|
'I'll never turn a wheel on this boat again while that cub stays.'
|
|
|
|
The captain said--
|
|
|
|
'But he needn't come round when you are on watch, Mr. Brown.
|
|
|
|
'I won't even stay on the same boat with him. One of us has
|
|
got to go ashore.'
|
|
|
|
'Very well,' said the captain, 'let it be yourself;'
|
|
and resumed his talk with the passengers.
|
|
|
|
During the brief remainder of the trip, I knew how an emancipated slave feels;
|
|
for I was an emancipated slave myself. While we lay at landings,
|
|
I listened to George Ealer's flute; or to his readings from his two bibles,
|
|
that is to say, Goldsmith and Shakespeare; or I played chess with him--
|
|
and would have beaten him sometimes, only he always took back his last move
|
|
and ran the game out differently.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 20
|
|
A Catastrophe
|
|
|
|
WE lay three days in New Orleans, but the captain did not succeed
|
|
in finding another pilot; so he proposed that I should stand
|
|
a daylight watch, and leave the night watches to George Ealer.
|
|
But I was afraid; I had never stood a watch of any sort by myself,
|
|
and I believed I should be sure to get into trouble in the head of
|
|
some chute, or ground the boat in a near cut through some bar or other.
|
|
Brown remained in his place; but he would not travel with me.
|
|
So the captain gave me an order on the captain of the 'A. T. Lacey,'
|
|
for a passage to St. Louis, and said he would find a new
|
|
pilot there and my steersman's berth could then be resumed.
|
|
The 'Lacey' was to leave a couple of days after the 'Pennsylvania.'
|
|
|
|
The night before the 'Pennsylvania' left, Henry and I sat
|
|
chatting on a freight pile on the levee till midnight.
|
|
The subject of the chat, mainly, was one which I think we
|
|
had not exploited before--steamboat disasters. One was then
|
|
on its way to us, little as we suspected it; the water which
|
|
was to make the steam which should cause it, was washing past
|
|
some point fifteen hundred miles up the river while we talked;--
|
|
but it would arrive at the right time and the right place.
|
|
We doubted if persons not clothed with authority were of much
|
|
use in cases of disaster and attendant panic; still, they might
|
|
be of SOME use; so we decided that if a disaster ever fell
|
|
within our experience we would at least stick to the boat,
|
|
and give such minor service as chance might throw in the way.
|
|
Henry remembered this, afterward, when the disaster came,
|
|
and acted accordingly.
|
|
|
|
The 'Lacey' started up the river two days behind the 'Pennsylvania.'
|
|
We touched at Greenville, Mississippi, a couple of days out,
|
|
and somebody shouted--
|
|
|
|
'The "Pennsylvania" is blown up at Ship Island, and a hundred
|
|
and fifty lives lost!'
|
|
|
|
At Napoleon, Arkansas, the same evening, we got an extra,
|
|
issued by a Memphis paper, which gave some particulars.
|
|
It mentioned my brother, and said he was not hurt.
|
|
|
|
Further up the river we got a later extra. My brother was
|
|
again mentioned; but this time as being hurt beyond help.
|
|
We did not get full details of the catastrophe until we reached Memphis.
|
|
This is the sorrowful story--
|
|
|
|
It was six o'clock on a hot summer morning. The 'Pennsylvania'
|
|
was creeping along, north of Ship Island, about sixty miles below
|
|
Memphis on a half-head of steam, towing a wood-flat which was fast
|
|
being emptied. George Ealer was in the pilot-house-alone, I think;
|
|
the second engineer and a striker had the watch in the engine room;
|
|
the second mate had the watch on deck; George Black, Mr. Wood,
|
|
and my brother, clerks, were asleep, as were also Brown and
|
|
the head engineer, the carpenter, the chief mate, and one striker;
|
|
Captain Klinefelter was in the barber's chair, and the barber was
|
|
preparing to shave him. There were a good many cabin passengers aboard,
|
|
and three or four hundred deck passengers--so it was said at the time--
|
|
and not very many of them were astir. The wood being nearly all out
|
|
of the flat now, Ealer rang to 'come ahead' full steam, and the next
|
|
moment four of the eight boilers exploded with a thunderous crash,
|
|
and the whole forward third of the boat was hoisted toward the sky!
|
|
The main part of the mass, with the chimneys, dropped upon the boat again,
|
|
a mountain of riddled and chaotic rubbish--and then, after a little,
|
|
fire broke out.
|
|
|
|
Many people were flung to considerable distances, and fell in the river;
|
|
among these were Mr. Wood and my brother, and the carpenter.
|
|
The carpenter was still stretched upon his mattress when he struck
|
|
the water seventy-five feet from the boat. Brown, the pilot,
|
|
and George Black, chief clerk, were never seen or heard of after
|
|
the explosion. The barber's chair, with Captain Klinefelter
|
|
in it and unhurt, was left with its back overhanging vacancy--
|
|
everything forward of it, floor and all, had disappeared;
|
|
and the stupefied barber, who was also unhurt, stood with one toe
|
|
projecting over space, still stirring his lather unconsciously,
|
|
and saying, not a word.
|
|
|
|
When George Ealer saw the chimneys plunging aloft in front of him,
|
|
he knew what the matter was; so he muffled his face in the lapels of
|
|
his coat, and pressed both hands there tightly to keep this protection
|
|
in its place so that no steam could get to his nose or mouth.
|
|
He had ample time to attend to these details while he was going up
|
|
and returning. He presently landed on top of the unexploded boilers,
|
|
forty feet below the former pilot-house, accompanied by his wheel
|
|
and a rain of other stuff, and enveloped in a cloud of scalding steam.
|
|
All of the many who breathed that steam, died; none escaped.
|
|
But Ealer breathed none of it. He made his way to the free air
|
|
as quickly as he could; and when the steam cleared away he returned
|
|
and climbed up on the boilers again, and patiently hunted
|
|
out each and every one of his chessmen and the several joints
|
|
of his flute.
|
|
|
|
By this time the fire was beginning to threaten. Shrieks and
|
|
groans filled the air. A great many persons had been scalded,
|
|
a great many crippled; the explosion had driven an iron crowbar
|
|
through one man's body--I think they said he was a priest.
|
|
He did not die at once, and his sufferings were very dreadful.
|
|
A young French naval cadet, of fifteen, son of a French admiral,
|
|
was fearfully scalded, but bore his tortures manfully.
|
|
Both mates were badly scalded, but they stood to their
|
|
posts, nevertheless. They drew the wood-boat aft, and they
|
|
and the captain fought back the frantic herd of frightened
|
|
immigrants till the wounded could be brought there and placed
|
|
in safety first.
|
|
|
|
When Mr. Wood and Henry fell in the water, they struck out for shore,
|
|
which was only a few hundred yards away; but Henry presently said
|
|
he believed he was not hurt (what an unaccountable error!), and
|
|
therefore would swim back to the boat and help save the wounded.
|
|
So they parted, and Henry returned.
|
|
|
|
By this time the fire was making fierce headway, and several
|
|
persons who were imprisoned under the ruins were begging piteously
|
|
for help. All efforts to conquer the fire proved fruitless;
|
|
so the buckets were presently thrown aside and the officers
|
|
fell-to with axes and tried to cut the prisoners out.
|
|
A striker was one of the captives; he said he was not injured,
|
|
but could not free himself; and when he saw that the fire was
|
|
likely to drive away the workers, he begged that some one would
|
|
shoot him, and thus save him from the more dreadful death.
|
|
The fire did drive the axmen away, and they had to listen,
|
|
helpless, to this poor fellow's supplications till the flames
|
|
ended his miseries.
|
|
|
|
The fire drove all into the wood-flat that could be accommodated there;
|
|
it was cut adrift, then, and it and the burning steamer floated
|
|
down the river toward Ship Island. They moored the flat at the head
|
|
of the island, and there, unsheltered from the blazing sun,
|
|
the half-naked occupants had to remain, without food or stimulants,
|
|
or help for their hurts, during the rest of the day. A steamer
|
|
came along, finally, and carried the unfortunates to Memphis,
|
|
and there the most lavish assistance was at once forthcoming.
|
|
By this time Henry was insensible. The physicians examined his
|
|
injuries and saw that they were fatal, and naturally turned their
|
|
main attention to patients who could be saved.
|
|
|
|
Forty of the wounded were placed upon pallets on the floor of a great
|
|
public hall, and among these was Henry. There the ladies of Memphis
|
|
came every day, with flowers, fruits, and dainties and delicacies
|
|
of all kinds, and there they remained and nursed the wounded.
|
|
All the physicians stood watches there, and all the medical students;
|
|
and the rest of the town furnished money, or whatever else was wanted.
|
|
And Memphis knew how to do all these things well; for many a
|
|
disaster like the 'Pennsylvania's' had happened near her doors,
|
|
and she was experienced, above all other cities on the river,
|
|
in the gracious office of the Good Samaritan'
|
|
|
|
The sight I saw when I entered that large hall was new and strange to me.
|
|
Two long rows of prostrate forms--more than forty, in all--and every face
|
|
and head a shapeless wad of loose raw cotton. It was a gruesome spectacle.
|
|
I watched there six days and nights, and a very melancholy experience it was.
|
|
There was one daily incident which was peculiarly depressing:
|
|
this was the removal of the doomed to a chamber apart. It was done
|
|
in order that the MORALE of the other patients might not be injuriously
|
|
affected by seeing one of their number in the death-agony. The fated one
|
|
was always carried out with as little stir as possible, and the stretcher
|
|
was always hidden from sight by a wall of assistants; but no matter:
|
|
everybody knew what that cluster of bent forms, with its muffled
|
|
step and its slow movement meant; and all eyes watched it wistfully,
|
|
and a shudder went abreast of it like a wave.
|
|
|
|
I saw many poor fellows removed to the 'death-room,' and saw them no
|
|
more afterward. But I saw our chief mate carried thither more than once.
|
|
His hurts were frightful, especially his scalds. He was clothed in
|
|
linseed oil and raw cotton to his waist, and resembled nothing human.
|
|
He was often out of his mind; and then his pains would make him rave
|
|
and shout and sometimes shriek. Then, after a period of dumb exhaustion,
|
|
his disordered imagination would suddenly transform the great apartment
|
|
into a forecastle, and the hurrying throng of nurses into the crew;
|
|
and he would come to a sitting posture and shout, 'Hump yourselves,
|
|
HUMP yourselves, you petrifactions, snail-bellies, pall-bearers! going
|
|
to be all DAY getting that hatful of freight out?' and supplement
|
|
this explosion with a firmament-obliterating irruption or profanity
|
|
which nothing could stay or stop till his crater was empty. And now
|
|
and then while these frenzies possessed him, he would tear off handfuls
|
|
of the cotton and expose his cooked flesh to view. It was horrible.
|
|
It was bad for the others, of course--this noise and these exhibitions;
|
|
so the doctors tried to give him morphine to quiet him. But, in his mind
|
|
or out of it, he would not take it. He said his wife had been killed
|
|
by that treacherous drug, and he would die before he would take it.
|
|
He suspected that the doctors were concealing it in his ordinary medicines
|
|
and in his water--so he ceased from putting either to his lips.
|
|
Once, when he had been without water during two sweltering days,
|
|
he took the dipper in his hand, and the sight of the limpid fluid,
|
|
and the misery of his thirst, tempted him almost beyond his strength;
|
|
but he mastered himself and threw it away, and after that he allowed
|
|
no more to be brought near him. Three times I saw him carried
|
|
to the death-room, insensible and supposed to be dying; but each time
|
|
he revived, cursed his attendants, and demanded to be taken back.
|
|
He lived to be mate of a steamboat again.
|
|
|
|
But he was the only one who went to the death-room and returned alive.
|
|
Dr. Peyton, a principal physician, and rich in all the attributes
|
|
that go to constitute high and flawless character, did all that
|
|
educated judgment and trained skill could do for Henry; but, as the
|
|
newspapers had said in the beginning, his hurts were past help.
|
|
On the evening of the sixth day his wandering mind busied itself with
|
|
matters far away, and his nerveless fingers 'picked at his coverlet.'
|
|
His hour had struck; we bore him to the death-room, poor boy.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 2I
|
|
A Section in My Biography
|
|
|
|
IN due course I got my license. I was a pilot now, full fledged.
|
|
I dropped into casual employments; no misfortunes resulting,
|
|
intermittent work gave place to steady and protracted engagements.
|
|
Time drifted smoothly and prosperously on, and I supposed--and hoped--
|
|
that I was going to follow the river the rest of my days, and die
|
|
at the wheel when my mission was ended. But by and by the war came,
|
|
commerce was suspended, my occupation was gone.
|
|
|
|
I had to seek another livelihood. So I became a silver miner
|
|
in Nevada; next, a newspaper reporter; next, a gold miner,
|
|
in California; next, a reporter in San Francisco; next, a special
|
|
correspondent in the Sandwich Islands; next, a roving correspondent
|
|
in Europe and the East; next, an instructional torch-bearer on
|
|
the lecture platform; and, finally, I became a scribbler of books,
|
|
and an immovable fixture among the other rocks of New England.
|
|
|
|
In so few words have I disposed of the twenty-one slow-drifting
|
|
years that have come and gone since I last looked from the windows
|
|
of a pilot-house.
|
|
|
|
Let us resume, now.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 22
|
|
I Return to My Muttons
|
|
|
|
AFTER twenty-one years' absence, I felt a very strong desire
|
|
to see the river again, and the steamboats, and such of
|
|
the boys as might be left; so I resolved to go out there.
|
|
I enlisted a poet for company, and a stenographer to 'take him down,'
|
|
and started westward about the middle of April.
|
|
|
|
As I proposed to make notes, with a view to printing,
|
|
I took some thought as to methods of procedure.
|
|
I reflected that if I were recognized, on the river, I should
|
|
not be as free to go and come, talk, inquire, and spy around,
|
|
as I should be if unknown; I remembered that it was the custom
|
|
of steamboatmen in the old times to load up the confiding
|
|
stranger with the most picturesque and admirable lies, and put
|
|
the sophisticated friend off with dull and ineffectual facts:
|
|
so I concluded, that, from a business point of view, it would
|
|
be an advantage to disguise our party with fictitious names.
|
|
The idea was certainly good, but it bred infinite bother;
|
|
for although Smith, Jones, and Johnson are easy names
|
|
to remember when there is no occasion to remember them,
|
|
it is next to impossible to recollect them when they are wanted.
|
|
How do criminals manage to keep a brand-new ALIAS in mind?
|
|
This is a great mystery. I was innocent; and yet was seldom
|
|
able to lay my hand on my new name when it was needed;
|
|
and it seemed to me that if I had had a crime on my conscience
|
|
to further confuse me, I could never have kept the name by me
|
|
at all.
|
|
|
|
We left per Pennsylvania Railroad, at 8 A.M. April 18.
|
|
|
|
'EVENING. Speaking of dress. Grace and picturesqueness drop
|
|
gradually out of it as one travels away from New York.'
|
|
|
|
I find that among my notes. It makes no difference
|
|
which direction you take, the fact remains the same.
|
|
Whether you move north, south, east, or west, no matter:
|
|
you can get up in the morning and guess how far you have come,
|
|
by noting what degree of grace and picturesqueness is by
|
|
that time lacking in the costumes of the new passengers,--
|
|
I do not mean of the women alone, but of both sexes.
|
|
It may be that CARRIAGE is at the bottom of this thing;
|
|
and I think it is; for there are plenty of ladies and gentlemen
|
|
in the provincial cities whose garments are all made by the best
|
|
tailors and dressmakers of New York; yet this has no perceptible
|
|
effect upon the grand fact: the educated eye never mistakes
|
|
those people for New-Yorkers. No, there is a godless grace,
|
|
and snap, and style about a born and bred New-Yorker which mere
|
|
clothing cannot effect.
|
|
|
|
'APRIL 19. This morning, struck into the region of full goatees-sometimes
|
|
accompanied by a mustache, but only occasionally.'
|
|
|
|
It was odd to come upon this thick crop of an obsolete and
|
|
uncomely fashion; it was like running suddenly across a forgotten
|
|
acquaintance whom you had supposed dead for a generation.
|
|
The goatee extends over a wide extent of country; and is accompanied
|
|
by an iron-clad belief in Adam and the biblical history of creation,
|
|
which has not suffered from the assaults of the scientists.
|
|
|
|
'AFTERNOON. At the railway stations the loafers carry BOTH
|
|
hands in their breeches pockets; it was observable, heretofore,
|
|
that one hand was sometimes out of doors,--here, never.
|
|
This is an important fact in geography.'
|
|
|
|
If the loafers determined the character of a country, it would
|
|
be still more important, of course.
|
|
|
|
'Heretofore, all along, the station-loafer has been often observed to scratch
|
|
one shin with the other foot; here, these remains of activity are wanting.
|
|
This has an ominous look.'
|
|
|
|
By and by, we entered the tobacco-chewing region.
|
|
Fifty years ago, the tobacco-chewing region covered the Union.
|
|
It is greatly restricted now.
|
|
|
|
Next, boots began to appear. Not in strong force, however.
|
|
Later--away down the Mississippi--they became the rule.
|
|
They disappeared from other sections of the Union with the mud;
|
|
no doubt they will disappear from the river villages, also,
|
|
when proper pavements come in.
|
|
|
|
We reached St. Louis at ten o'clock at night. At the counter
|
|
of the hotel I tendered a hurriedly-invented fictitious name,
|
|
with a miserable attempt at careless ease. The clerk paused,
|
|
and inspected me in the compassionate way in which one inspects
|
|
a respectable person who is found in doubtful circumstances;
|
|
then he said--
|
|
|
|
'It's all right; I know what sort of a room you want.
|
|
Used to clerk at the St. James, in New York.'
|
|
|
|
An unpromising beginning for a fraudulent career. We started to
|
|
the supper room, and met two other men whom I had known elsewhere.
|
|
How odd and unfair it is: wicked impostors go around lecturing under
|
|
my NOM DE GUERRE and nobody suspects them; but when an honest man
|
|
attempts an imposture, he is exposed at once.
|
|
|
|
One thing seemed plain: we must start down the river the next day,
|
|
if people who could not be deceived were going to crop up at this rate:
|
|
an unpalatable disappointment, for we had hoped to have a week in St. Louis.
|
|
The Southern was a good hotel, and we could have had a comfortable
|
|
time there. It is large, and well conducted, and its decorations do
|
|
not make one cry, as do those of the vast Palmer House, in Chicago.
|
|
True, the billiard-tables were of the Old Silurian Period, and the cues and
|
|
balls of the Post-Pliocene; but there was refreshment in this, not discomfort;
|
|
for there is rest and healing in the contemplation of antiquities.
|
|
|
|
The most notable absence observable in the billiard-room, was the
|
|
absence of the river man. If he was there he had taken in his sign,
|
|
he was in disguise. I saw there none of the swell airs and graces,
|
|
and ostentatious displays of money, and pompous squanderings of it,
|
|
which used to distinguish the steamboat crowd from the dry-land crowd
|
|
in the bygone days, in the thronged billiard-rooms of St. Louis.
|
|
In those times, the principal saloons were always populous with river men;
|
|
given fifty players present, thirty or thirty-five were likely
|
|
to be from the river. But I suspected that the ranks were thin now,
|
|
and the steamboatmen no longer an aristocracy. Why, in my time they
|
|
used to call the 'barkeep' Bill, or Joe, or Tom, and slap him on
|
|
the shoulder; I watched for that. But none of these people did it.
|
|
Manifestly a glory that once was had dissolved and vanished away in
|
|
these twenty-one years.
|
|
|
|
When I went up to my room, I found there the young man called Rogers, crying.
|
|
Rogers was not his name; neither was Jones, Brown, Dexter, Ferguson, Bascom,
|
|
nor Thompson; but he answered to either of these that a body found handy
|
|
in an emergency; or to any other name, in fact, if he perceived that you
|
|
meant him. He said--
|
|
|
|
'What is a person to do here when he wants a drink of water?--
|
|
drink this slush?'
|
|
|
|
'Can't you drink it?'
|
|
|
|
'I could if I had some other water to wash it with.'
|
|
|
|
Here was a thing which had not changed; a score of years had not affected
|
|
this water's mulatto complexion in the least; a score of centuries
|
|
would succeed no better, perhaps. It comes out of the turbulent,
|
|
bank-caving Missouri, and every tumblerful of it holds nearly an acre
|
|
of land in solution. I got this fact from the bishop of the diocese.
|
|
If you will let your glass stand half an hour, you can separate
|
|
the land from the water as easy as Genesis; and then you will find
|
|
them both good: the one good to eat, the other good to drink.
|
|
The land is very nourishing, the water is thoroughly wholesome.
|
|
The one appeases hunger; the other, thirst. But the natives
|
|
do not take them separately, but together, as nature mixed them.
|
|
When they find an inch of mud in the bottom of a glass,
|
|
they stir it up, and then take the draught as they would gruel.
|
|
It is difficult for a stranger to get used to this batter, but once
|
|
used to it he will prefer it to water. This is really the case.
|
|
It is good for steamboating, and good to drink; but it is worthless
|
|
for all other purposes, except baptizing.
|
|
|
|
Next morning, we drove around town in the rain.
|
|
The city seemed but little changed. It WAS greatly changed,
|
|
but it did not seem so; because in St. Louis, as in London
|
|
and Pittsburgh, you can't persuade a new thing to look new;
|
|
the coal smoke turns it into an antiquity the moment you take
|
|
your hand off it. The place had just about doubled its size,
|
|
since I was a resident of it, and was now become a city
|
|
of 400,000 inhabitants; still, in the solid business parts,
|
|
it looked about as it had looked formerly. Yet I am sure there
|
|
is not as much smoke in St. Louis now as there used to be.
|
|
The smoke used to bank itself in a dense billowy black canopy over
|
|
the town, and hide the sky from view. This shelter is very much
|
|
thinner now; still, there is a sufficiency of smoke there, I think.
|
|
I heard no complaint.
|
|
|
|
However, on the outskirts changes were apparent enough; notably in
|
|
dwelling-house architecture. The fine new homes are noble and beautiful
|
|
and modern. They stand by themselves, too, with green lawns around them;
|
|
whereas the dwellings of a former day are packed together in blocks,
|
|
and are all of one pattern, with windows all alike, set in an arched
|
|
frame-work of twisted stone; a sort of house which was handsome enough
|
|
when it was rarer.
|
|
|
|
There was another change--the Forest Park. This was new to me.
|
|
It is beautiful and very extensive, and has the excellent merit
|
|
of having been made mainly by nature. There are other parks,
|
|
and fine ones, notably Tower Grove and the Botanical Gardens;
|
|
for St. Louis interested herself in such improvements at an earlier
|
|
day than did the most of our cities.
|
|
|
|
The first time I ever saw St. Louis, I could have bought it for six
|
|
million dollars, and it was the mistake of my life that I did not do it.
|
|
It was bitter now to look abroad over this domed and steepled metropolis,
|
|
this solid expanse of bricks and mortar stretching away on every hand
|
|
into dim, measure-defying distances, and remember that I had allowed
|
|
that opportunity to go by. Why I should have allowed it to go by seems,
|
|
of course, foolish and inexplicable to-day, at a first glance; yet there
|
|
were reasons at the time to justify this course.
|
|
|
|
A Scotchman, Hon. Charles Augustus Murray, writing some forty-five or fifty
|
|
years ago, said--'The streets are narrow, ill paved and ill lighted.'
|
|
Those streets are narrow still, of course; many of them are ill paved yet;
|
|
but the reproach of ill lighting cannot be repeated, now. The 'Catholic
|
|
New Church' was the only notable building then, and Mr. Murray was confidently
|
|
called upon to admire it, with its 'species of Grecian portico, surmounted by
|
|
a kind of steeple, much too diminutive in its proportions, and surmounted
|
|
by sundry ornaments' which the unimaginative Scotchman found himself 'quite
|
|
unable to describe;' and therefore was grateful when a German tourist helped
|
|
him out with the exclamation--'By ----, they look exactly like bed-posts!'
|
|
St. Louis is well equipped with stately and noble public buildings now,
|
|
and the little church, which the people used to be so proud of, lost its
|
|
importance a long time ago. Still, this would not surprise Mr. Murray,
|
|
if he could come back; for he prophesied the coming greatness of St. Louis
|
|
with strong confidence.
|
|
|
|
The further we drove in our inspection-tour, the more sensibly I
|
|
realized how the city had grown since I had seen it last; changes in
|
|
detail became steadily more apparent and frequent than at first, too:
|
|
changes uniformly evidencing progress, energy, prosperity.
|
|
|
|
But the change of changes was on the 'levee.' This time,
|
|
a departure from the rule. Half a dozen sound-asleep steamboats
|
|
where I used to see a solid mile of wide-awake ones!
|
|
This was melancholy, this was woeful. The absence of the pervading
|
|
and jocund steamboatman from the billiard-saloon was explained.
|
|
He was absent because he is no more. His occupation is gone,
|
|
his power has passed away, he is absorbed into the common herd,
|
|
he grinds at the mill, a shorn Samson and inconspicuous.
|
|
Half a dozen lifeless steamboats, a mile of empty wharves,
|
|
a negro fatigued with whiskey stretched asleep, in a wide and
|
|
soundless vacancy, where the serried hosts of commerce used to
|
|
contend!<footnote [Capt. Marryat, writing forty-five years ago says:
|
|
'St. Louis has 20,000 inhabitants. THE RIVER ABREAST OF THE TOWN
|
|
IS CROWDED WITH STEAMBOATS, LYING IN TWO OR THREE TIERS.']> Here
|
|
was desolation, indeed.
|
|
|
|
'The old, old sea, as one in tears,
|
|
Comes murmuring, with foamy lips,
|
|
And knocking at the vacant piers,
|
|
Calls for his long-lost multitude of ships.'
|
|
|
|
The towboat and the railroad had done their work, and done it
|
|
well and completely. The mighty bridge, stretching along over
|
|
our heads, had done its share in the slaughter and spoliation.
|
|
Remains of former steamboatmen told me, with wan satisfaction,
|
|
that the bridge doesn't pay. Still, it can be no sufficient
|
|
compensation to a corpse, to know that the dynamite that laid him
|
|
out was not of as good quality as it had been supposed to be.
|
|
|
|
The pavements along the river front were bad: the sidewalks
|
|
were rather out of repair; there was a rich abundance of mud.
|
|
All this was familiar and satisfying; but the ancient armies of drays,
|
|
and struggling throngs of men, and mountains of freight, were gone;
|
|
and Sabbath reigned in their stead. The immemorial mile of cheap
|
|
foul doggeries remained, but business was dull with them;
|
|
the multitudes of poison-swilling Irishmen had departed, and in
|
|
their places were a few scattering handfuls of ragged negroes,
|
|
some drinking, some drunk, some nodding, others asleep.
|
|
St. Louis is a great and prosperous and advancing city;
|
|
but the river-edge of it seems dead past resurrection.
|
|
|
|
Mississippi steamboating was born about 1812; at the end of thirty years,
|
|
it had grown to mighty proportions; and in less than thirty more,
|
|
it was dead! A strangely short life for so majestic a creature.
|
|
Of course it is not absolutely dead, neither is a crippled octogenarian
|
|
who could once jump twenty-two feet on level ground; but as contrasted
|
|
with what it was in its prime vigor, Mississippi steamboating may
|
|
be called dead.
|
|
|
|
It killed the old-fashioned keel-boating, by reducing
|
|
the freight-trip to New Orleans to less than a week.
|
|
The railroads have killed the steamboat passenger traffic by doing
|
|
in two or three days what the steamboats consumed a week in doing;
|
|
and the towing-fleets have killed the through-freight traffic
|
|
by dragging six or seven steamer-loads of stuff down the river
|
|
at a time, at an expense so trivial that steamboat competition
|
|
was out of the question.
|
|
|
|
Freight and passenger way-traffic remains to the steamers.
|
|
This is in the hands--along the two thousand miles of river between
|
|
St. Paul and New Orleans---of two or three close corporations well
|
|
fortified with capital; and by able and thoroughly business-like
|
|
management and system, these make a sufficiency of money out
|
|
of what is left of the once prodigious steamboating industry.
|
|
I suppose that St. Louis and New Orleans have not suffered materially
|
|
by the change, but alas for the wood-yard man!
|
|
|
|
He used to fringe the river all the way; his close-ranked merchandise
|
|
stretched from the one city to the other, along the banks,
|
|
and he sold uncountable cords of it every year for cash on the nail;
|
|
but all the scattering boats that are left burn coal now,
|
|
and the seldomest spectacle on the Mississippi to-day is a wood-pile.
|
|
Where now is the once wood-yard man?
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 23
|
|
Traveling Incognito
|
|
|
|
MY idea was, to tarry a while in every town between St. Louis
|
|
and New Orleans. To do this, it would be necessary to go from place
|
|
to place by the short packet lines. It was an easy plan to make,
|
|
and would have been an easy one to follow, twenty years ago-but not now.
|
|
There are wide intervals between boats, these days.
|
|
|
|
I wanted to begin with the interesting old French settlements
|
|
of St. Genevieve and Kaskaskia, sixty miles below St. Louis.
|
|
There was only one boat advertised for that section--
|
|
a Grand Tower packet. Still, one boat was enough; so we went
|
|
down to look at her. She was a venerable rack-heap, and a fraud
|
|
to boot; for she was playing herself for personal property,
|
|
whereas the good honest dirt was so thickly caked all over
|
|
her that she was righteously taxable as real estate.
|
|
There are places in New England where her hurricane deck
|
|
would be worth a hundred and fifty dollars an acre.
|
|
The soil on her forecastle was quite good--the new crop of wheat
|
|
was already springing from the cracks in protected places.
|
|
The companionway was of a dry sandy character, and would
|
|
have been well suited for grapes, with a southern exposure
|
|
and a little subsoiling. The soil of the boiler deck
|
|
was thin and rocky, but good enough for grazing purposes.
|
|
A colored boy was on watch here--nobody else visible.
|
|
We gathered from him that this calm craft would go, as advertised,
|
|
'if she got her trip;' if she didn't get it, she would wait
|
|
for it.
|
|
|
|
'Has she got any of her trip?'
|
|
|
|
'Bless you, no, boss. She ain't unloadened, yit. She only come
|
|
in dis mawnin'.'
|
|
|
|
He was uncertain as to when she might get her trip, but thought it
|
|
might be to-morrow or maybe next day. This would not answer at all;
|
|
so we had to give up the novelty of sailing down the river on a farm.
|
|
We had one more arrow in our quiver: a Vicksburg packet, the 'Gold Dust,'
|
|
was to leave at 5 P.M. We took passage in her for Memphis, and gave
|
|
up the idea of stopping off here and there, as being impracticable.
|
|
She was neat, clean, and comfortable. We camped on the boiler deck,
|
|
and bought some cheap literature to kill time with. The vender was a
|
|
venerable Irishman with a benevolent face and a tongue that worked easily
|
|
in the socket, and from him we learned that he had lived in St. Louis
|
|
thirty-four years and had never been across the river during that period.
|
|
Then he wandered into a very flowing lecture, filled with classic names
|
|
and allusions, which was quite wonderful for fluency until the fact became
|
|
rather apparent that this was not the first time, nor perhaps the fiftieth,
|
|
that the speech had been delivered. He was a good deal of a character,
|
|
and much better company than the sappy literature he was selling.
|
|
A random remark, connecting Irishmen and beer, brought this nugget of
|
|
information out of him--
|
|
|
|
They don't drink it, sir. They can't drink it, sir.
|
|
Give an Irishman lager for a month, and he's a dead man.
|
|
An Irishman is lined with copper, and the beer corrodes it.
|
|
But whiskey polishes the copper and is the saving of him, sir.'
|
|
|
|
At eight o'clock, promptly, we backed out and crossed the river.
|
|
As we crept toward the shore, in the thick darkness, a blinding
|
|
glory of white electric light burst suddenly from our forecastle,
|
|
and lit up the water and the warehouses as with a noon-day glare.
|
|
Another big change, this--no more flickering, smoky, pitch-dripping,
|
|
ineffectual torch-baskets, now: their day is past. Next, instead of
|
|
calling out a score of hands to man the stage, a couple of men and a
|
|
hatful of steam lowered it from the derrick where it was suspended,
|
|
launched it, deposited it in just the right spot, and the whole thing
|
|
was over and done with before a mate in the olden time could have
|
|
got his profanity-mill adjusted to begin the preparatory services.
|
|
Why this new and simple method of handling the stages was not thought
|
|
of when the first steamboat was built, is a mystery which helps one to
|
|
realize what a dull-witted slug the average human being is.
|
|
|
|
We finally got away at two in the morning, and when I turned out
|
|
at six, we were rounding to at a rocky point where there was an old
|
|
stone warehouse--at any rate, the ruins of it; two or three decayed
|
|
dwelling-houses were near by, in the shelter of the leafy hills;
|
|
but there were no evidences of human or other animal life to be seen.
|
|
I wondered if I had forgotten the river; for I had no recollection whatever
|
|
of this place; the shape of the river, too, was unfamiliar; there was
|
|
nothing in sight, anywhere, that I could remember ever having seen before.
|
|
I was surprised, disappointed, and annoyed.
|
|
|
|
We put ashore a well-dressed lady and gentleman, and two well-dressed,
|
|
lady-like young girls, together with sundry Russia-leather bags.
|
|
A strange place for such folk! No carriage was waiting.
|
|
The party moved off as if they had not expected any, and struck
|
|
down a winding country road afoot.
|
|
|
|
But the mystery was explained when we got under way again;
|
|
for these people were evidently bound for a large town which lay
|
|
shut in behind a tow-head (i.e., new island) a couple of miles
|
|
below this landing. I couldn't remember that town; I couldn't
|
|
place it, couldn't call its name. So I lost part of my temper.
|
|
I suspected that it might be St. Genevieve--and so it proved
|
|
to be. Observe what this eccentric river had been about:
|
|
it had built up this huge useless tow-head directly
|
|
in front of this town, cut off its river communications,
|
|
fenced it away completely, and made a 'country' town of it.
|
|
It is a fine old place, too, and deserved a better fate.
|
|
It was settled by the French, and is a relic of a time when one
|
|
could travel from the mouths of the Mississippi to Quebec and be
|
|
on French territory and under French rule all the way.
|
|
|
|
Presently I ascended to the hurricane deck and cast a longing
|
|
glance toward the pilot-house.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 24
|
|
My Incognito is Exploded
|
|
|
|
AFTER a close study of the face of the pilot on watch, I was satisfied that I
|
|
had never seen him before; so I went up there. The pilot inspected me;
|
|
I re-inspected the pilot. These customary preliminaries over, I sat
|
|
down on the high bench, and he faced about and went on with his work.
|
|
Every detail of the pilot-house was familiar to me, with one exception,--
|
|
a large-mouthed tube under the breast-board. I puzzled over that thing a
|
|
considerable time; then gave up and asked what it was for.
|
|
|
|
'To hear the engine-bells through.'
|
|
|
|
It was another good contrivance which ought to have been invented
|
|
half a century sooner. So I was thinking, when the pilot asked--
|
|
|
|
'Do you know what this rope is for?'
|
|
|
|
I managed to get around this question, without committing myself.
|
|
|
|
'Is this the first time you were ever in a pilot-house?'
|
|
|
|
I crept under that one.
|
|
|
|
'Where are you from?'
|
|
|
|
'New England.'
|
|
|
|
'First time you have ever been West?'
|
|
|
|
I climbed over this one.
|
|
|
|
'If you take an interest in such things, I can tell you what all
|
|
these things are for.'
|
|
|
|
I said I should like it.
|
|
|
|
'This,' putting his hand on a backing-bell rope, 'is to sound the fire-alarm;
|
|
this,' putting his hand on a go-ahead bell, 'is to call the texas-tender;
|
|
this one,' indicating the whistle-lever, 'is to call the captain'--
|
|
and so he went on, touching one object after another, and reeling off
|
|
his tranquil spool of lies.
|
|
|
|
I had never felt so like a passenger before.
|
|
I thanked him, with emotion, for each new fact, and wrote it
|
|
down in my note-book. The pilot warmed to his opportunity,
|
|
and proceeded to load me up in the good old-fashioned way.
|
|
At times I was afraid he was going to rupture his invention;
|
|
but it always stood the strain, and he pulled through all right.
|
|
He drifted, by easy stages, into revealments of the river's
|
|
marvelous eccentricities of one sort and another,
|
|
and backed them up with some pretty gigantic illustrations.
|
|
For instance-
|
|
|
|
'Do you see that little boulder sticking out of the water yonder? well,
|
|
when I first came on the river, that was a solid ridge of rock,
|
|
over sixty feet high and two miles long. All washed away but that.'
|
|
[This with a sigh.)
|
|
|
|
I had a mighty impulse to destroy him, but it seemed to me that killing,
|
|
in any ordinary way, would be too good for him.
|
|
|
|
Once, when an odd-looking craft, with a vast coal-scuttle slanting
|
|
aloft on the end of a beam, was steaming by in the distance,
|
|
he indifferently drew attention to it, as one might to an object
|
|
grown wearisome through familiarity, and observed that it was
|
|
an 'alligator boat.'
|
|
|
|
'An alligator boat? What's it for?'
|
|
|
|
'To dredge out alligators with.'
|
|
|
|
'Are they so thick as to be troublesome?'
|
|
|
|
'Well, not now, because the Government keeps them down.
|
|
But they used to be. Not everywhere; but in favorite places,
|
|
here and there, where the river is wide and shoal-like Plum Point,
|
|
and Stack Island, and so on--places they call alligator beds.'
|
|
|
|
'Did they actually impede navigation?'
|
|
|
|
'Years ago, yes, in very low water; there was hardly a trip, then, that we
|
|
didn't get aground on alligators.'
|
|
|
|
It seemed to me that I should certainly have to get out my tomahawk.
|
|
However, I restrained myself and said--
|
|
|
|
'It must have been dreadful.'
|
|
|
|
'Yes, it was one of the main difficulties about piloting.
|
|
It was so hard to tell anything about the water; the damned
|
|
things shift around so--never lie still five minutes at a time.
|
|
You can tell a wind-reef, straight off, by the look of it;
|
|
you can tell a break; you can tell a sand-reef--that's all easy;
|
|
but an alligator reef doesn't show up, worth anything.
|
|
Nine times in ten you can't tell where the water is;
|
|
and when you do see where it is, like as not it ain't there
|
|
when YOU get there, the devils have swapped around so, meantime.
|
|
Of course there were some few pilots that could judge of
|
|
alligator water nearly as well as they could of any other kind,
|
|
but they had to have natural talent for it; it wasn't a thing
|
|
a body could learn, you had to be born with it. Let me see:
|
|
there was Ben Thornburg, and Beck Jolly, and Squire Bell,
|
|
and Horace Bixby, and Major Downing, and John Stevenson,
|
|
and Billy Gordon, and Jim Brady, and George Ealer,
|
|
and Billy Youngblood--all A 1 alligator pilots. THEY could tell
|
|
alligator water as far as another Christian could tell whiskey.
|
|
Read it?--Ah, COULDN'T they, though! I only wish I had as many
|
|
dollars as they could read alligator water a mile and a half off.
|
|
Yes, and it paid them to do it, too. A good alligator pilot could
|
|
always get fifteen hundred dollars a month. Nights, other people
|
|
had to lay up for alligators, but those fellows never laid
|
|
up for alligators; they never laid up for anything but fog.
|
|
They could SMELL the best alligator water it was said;
|
|
I don't know whether it was so or not, and I think a body's got
|
|
his hands full enough if he sticks to just what he knows himself,
|
|
without going around backing up other people's say-so's,
|
|
though there's a plenty that ain't backward about doing it,
|
|
as long as they can roust out something wonderful to tell.
|
|
Which is not the style of Robert Styles, by as much as
|
|
three fathom--maybe quarter-LESS.'
|
|
|
|
[My! Was this Rob Styles?--This mustached and stately figure?-A slim
|
|
enough cub, in my time. How he has improved in comeliness in five-and-twenty
|
|
year and in the noble art of inflating his facts.] After these musings,
|
|
I said aloud-
|
|
|
|
'I should think that dredging out the alligators wouldn't have done much good,
|
|
because they could come back again right away.'
|
|
|
|
'If you had had as much experience of alligators as I have, you wouldn't
|
|
talk like that. You dredge an alligator once and he's CONVINCED.
|
|
It's the last you hear of HIM. He wouldn't come back for pie.
|
|
If there's one thing that an alligator is more down on than another,
|
|
it's being dredged. Besides, they were not simply shoved
|
|
out of the way; the most of the scoopful were scooped aboard;
|
|
they emptied them into the hold; and when they had got a trip,
|
|
they took them to Orleans to the Government works.'
|
|
|
|
'What for?'
|
|
|
|
'Why, to make soldier-shoes out of their hides.
|
|
All the Government shoes are made of alligator hide.
|
|
It makes the best shoes in the world. They last five years,
|
|
and they won't absorb water. The alligator fishery is a
|
|
Government monopoly. All the alligators are Government property--
|
|
just like the live-oaks. You cut down a live-oak, and
|
|
Government fines you fifty dollars; you kill an alligator,
|
|
and up you go for misprision of treason--lucky duck if they
|
|
don't hang you, too. And they will, if you're a Democrat.
|
|
The buzzard is the sacred bird of the South, and you can't
|
|
touch him; the alligator is the sacred bird of the Government,
|
|
and you've got to let him alone.'
|
|
|
|
'Do you ever get aground on the alligators now?'
|
|
|
|
'Oh, no! it hasn't happened for years.'
|
|
|
|
'Well, then, why do they still keep the alligator boats in service?'
|
|
|
|
'Just for police duty--nothing more. They merely go up and down
|
|
now and then. The present generation of alligators know them
|
|
as easy as a burglar knows a roundsman; when they see one coming,
|
|
they break camp and go for the woods.'
|
|
|
|
After rounding-out and finishing-up and polishing-off the alligator business,
|
|
he dropped easily and comfortably into the historical vein, and told of some
|
|
tremendous feats of half-a-dozen old-time steamboats of his acquaintance,
|
|
dwelling at special length upon a certain extraordinary performance of his
|
|
chief favorite among this distinguished fleet--and then adding--
|
|
|
|
'That boat was the "Cyclone,"--last trip she ever made--she sunk,
|
|
that very trip--captain was Tom Ballou, the most immortal liar that ever
|
|
I struck. He couldn't ever seem to tell the truth, in any kind of weather.
|
|
Why, he would make you fairly shudder. He WAS the most scandalous liar!
|
|
I left him, finally; I couldn't stand it. The proverb says, "like master,
|
|
like man;" and if you stay with that kind of a man, you'll come under
|
|
suspicion by and by, just as sure as you live. He paid first-class wages;
|
|
but said I, What's wages when your reputation's in danger? So I let
|
|
the wages go, and froze to my reputation. And I've never regretted it.
|
|
Reputation's worth everything, ain't it? That's the way I look at it.
|
|
He had more selfish organs than any seven men in the world--all packed
|
|
in the stern-sheets of his skull, of course, where they belonged.
|
|
They weighed down the back of his head so that it made his nose tilt up
|
|
in the air. People thought it was vanity, but it wasn't, it was malice.
|
|
If you only saw his foot, you'd take him to be nineteen feet high,
|
|
but he wasn't; it was because his foot was out of drawing.
|
|
He was intended to be nineteen feet high, no doubt, if his foot
|
|
was made first, but he didn't get there; he was only five feet ten.
|
|
That's what he was, and that's what he is. You take the lies out of him,
|
|
and he'll shrink to the size of your hat; you take the malice out of him,
|
|
and he'll disappear. That "Cyclone" was a rattler to go, and the sweetest
|
|
thing to steer that ever walked the waters. Set her amidships,
|
|
in a big river, and just let her go; it was all you had to do.
|
|
She would hold herself on a star all night, if you let her alone.
|
|
You couldn't ever feel her rudder. It wasn't any more labor to steer
|
|
her than it is to count the Republican vote in a South Carolina election.
|
|
One morning, just at daybreak, the last trip she ever made, they took
|
|
her rudder aboard to mend it; I didn't know anything about it; I backed
|
|
her out from the wood-yard and went a-weaving down the river all serene.
|
|
When I had gone about twenty-three miles, and made four horribly crooked
|
|
crossings----'
|
|
|
|
'Without any rudder?'
|
|
|
|
'Yes--old Capt. Tom appeared on the roof and began to find fault
|
|
with me for running such a dark night--'
|
|
|
|
'Such a DARK NIGHT ?--Why, you said----'
|
|
|
|
'Never mind what I said,--'twas as dark as Egypt now, though pretty
|
|
soon the moon began to rise, and----'
|
|
|
|
'You mean the SUN--because you started out just at break of---- look here!
|
|
Was this BEFORE you quitted the captain on account of his lying, or----'
|
|
|
|
'It was before--oh, a long time before. And as I was saying, he----'
|
|
|
|
'But was this the trip she sunk, or was----'
|
|
|
|
'Oh, no!--months afterward. And so the old man, he----'
|
|
|
|
'Then she made TWO last trips, because you said----'
|
|
|
|
He stepped back from the wheel, swabbing away his perspiration,
|
|
and said--
|
|
|
|
'Here!' (calling me by name), 'YOU take her and lie a while--
|
|
you're handier at it than I am. Trying to play yourself for a stranger
|
|
and an innocent!--why, I knew you before you had spoken seven words;
|
|
and I made up my mind to find out what was your little game.
|
|
It was to DRAW ME OUT. Well, I let you, didn't I?
|
|
Now take the wheel and finish the watch; and next time play fair,
|
|
and you won't have to work your passage.'
|
|
|
|
Thus ended the fictitious-name business. And not six hours out
|
|
from St. Louis! but I had gained a privilege, any way, for I had
|
|
been itching to get my hands on the wheel, from the beginning.
|
|
I seemed to have forgotten the river, but I hadn't forgotten
|
|
how to steer a steamboat, nor how to enjoy it, either.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 25
|
|
From Cairo to Hickman
|
|
|
|
THE scenery, from St. Louis to Cairo--two hundred miles--is varied
|
|
and beautiful. The hills were clothed in the fresh foliage of spring now,
|
|
and were a gracious and worthy setting for the broad river flowing between.
|
|
Our trip began auspiciously, with a perfect day, as to breeze and sunshine,
|
|
and our boat threw the miles out behind her with satisfactory despatch.
|
|
|
|
We found a railway intruding at Chester, Illinois; Chester has
|
|
also a penitentiary now, and is otherwise marching on. At Grand
|
|
Tower, too, there was a railway; and another at Cape Girardeau.
|
|
The former town gets its name from a huge, squat pillar of rock,
|
|
which stands up out of the water on the Missouri side of the river--
|
|
a piece of nature's fanciful handiwork--and is one of the
|
|
most picturesque features of the scenery of that region.
|
|
For nearer or remoter neighbors, the Tower has the Devil's
|
|
Bake Oven--so called, perhaps, because it does not powerfully
|
|
resemble anybody else's bake oven; and the Devil's Tea Table--
|
|
this latter a great smooth-surfaced mass of rock, with diminishing
|
|
wine-glass stem, perched some fifty or sixty feet above the river,
|
|
beside a beflowered and garlanded precipice, and sufficiently
|
|
like a tea-table to answer for anybody, Devil or Christian.
|
|
Away down the river we have the Devil's Elbow and the Devil's
|
|
Race-course, and lots of other property of his which I cannot now
|
|
call to mind.
|
|
|
|
The Town of Grand Tower was evidently a busier place than it
|
|
had been in old times, but it seemed to need some repairs
|
|
here and there, and a new coat of whitewash all over.
|
|
Still, it was pleasant to me to see the old coat once more.
|
|
'Uncle' Mumford, our second officer, said the place had been
|
|
suffering from high water, and consequently was not looking
|
|
its best now. But he said it was not strange that it didn't
|
|
waste white-wash on itself, for more lime was made there,
|
|
and of a better quality, than anywhere in the West;
|
|
and added--'On a dairy farm you never can get any milk
|
|
for your coffee, nor any sugar for it on a sugar plantation;
|
|
and it is against sense to go to a lime town to hunt for white-wash.'
|
|
In my own experience I knew the first two items to be true;
|
|
and also that people who sell candy don't care for candy;
|
|
therefore there was plausibility in Uncle Mumford's final observation
|
|
that 'people who make lime run more to religion than whitewash.'
|
|
Uncle Mumford said, further, that Grand Tower was a great coaling
|
|
center and a prospering place.
|
|
|
|
Cape Girardeau is situated on a hillside, and makes a handsome appearance.
|
|
There is a great Jesuit school for boys at the foot of the town by the river.
|
|
Uncle Mumford said it had as high a reputation for thoroughness as any
|
|
similar institution in Missouri ' There was another college higher up on
|
|
an airy summit--a bright new edifice, picturesquely and peculiarly towered
|
|
and pinnacled--a sort of gigantic casters, with the cruets all complete.
|
|
Uncle Mumford said that Cape Girardeau was the Athens of Missouri,
|
|
and contained several colleges besides those already mentioned; and all of
|
|
them on a religious basis of one kind or another. He directed my attention
|
|
to what he called the 'strong and pervasive religious look of the town,'
|
|
but I could not see that it looked more religious than the other hill
|
|
towns with the same slope and built of the same kind of bricks.
|
|
Partialities often make people see more than really exists.
|
|
|
|
Uncle Mumford has been thirty years a mate on the river.
|
|
He is a man of practical sense and a level head; has observed;
|
|
has had much experience of one sort and another; has opinions;
|
|
has, also, just a perceptible dash of poetry in his composition,
|
|
an easy gift of speech, a thick growl in his voice, and an oath
|
|
or two where he can get at them when the exigencies of his
|
|
office require a spiritual lift. He is a mate of the blessed
|
|
old-time kind; and goes gravely damning around, when there
|
|
is work to the fore, in a way to mellow the ex-steamboatman's
|
|
heart with sweet soft longings for the vanished days that shall
|
|
come no more. 'GIT up there you! Going to be all day?
|
|
Why d'n't you SAY you was petrified in your hind legs,
|
|
before you shipped!'
|
|
|
|
He is a steady man with his crew; kind and just, but firm;
|
|
so they like him, and stay with him. He is still in the slouchy
|
|
garb of the old generation of mates; but next trip the Anchor
|
|
Line will have him in uniform--a natty blue naval uniform,
|
|
with brass buttons, along with all the officers of the line--
|
|
and then he will be a totally different style of scenery from what
|
|
he is now.
|
|
|
|
Uniforms on the Mississippi! It beats all the other changes
|
|
put together, for surprise. Still, there is another surprise--
|
|
that it was not made fifty years ago. It is so manifestly sensible,
|
|
that it might have been thought of earlier, one would suppose.
|
|
During fifty years, out there, the innocent passenger in need
|
|
of help and information, has been mistaking the mate for
|
|
the cook, and the captain for the barber--and being roughly
|
|
entertained for it, too. But his troubles are ended now.
|
|
And the greatly improved aspect of the boat's staff is another
|
|
advantage achieved by the dress-reform period.
|
|
|
|
Steered down the bend below Cape Girardeau. They used to call it
|
|
'Steersman's Bend;' plain sailing and plenty of water in it, always;
|
|
about the only place in the Upper River that a new cub was allowed
|
|
to take a boat through, in low water.
|
|
|
|
Thebes, at the head of the Grand Chain, and Commerce at the foot
|
|
of it, were towns easily rememberable, as they had not undergone
|
|
conspicuous alteration. Nor the Chain, either--in the nature
|
|
of things; for it is a chain of sunken rocks admirably
|
|
arranged to capture and kill steamboats on bad nights.
|
|
A good many steamboat corpses lie buried there, out of sight;
|
|
among the rest my first friend the 'Paul Jones;' she knocked her
|
|
bottom out, and went down like a pot, so the historian told me--
|
|
Uncle Mumford. He said she had a gray mare aboard, and a preacher.
|
|
To me, this sufficiently accounted for the disaster; as it did,
|
|
of course, to Mumford, who added--
|
|
|
|
'But there are many ignorant people who would scoff at such
|
|
a matter, and call it superstition. But you will always notice
|
|
that they are people who have never traveled with a gray mare
|
|
and a preacher. I went down the river once in such company.
|
|
We grounded at Bloody Island; we grounded at Hanging Dog;
|
|
we grounded just below this same Commerce; we jolted Beaver
|
|
Dam Rock; we hit one of the worst breaks in the 'Graveyard'
|
|
behind Goose Island; we had a roustabout killed in a fight;
|
|
we burnt a boiler; broke a shaft; collapsed a flue; and went into
|
|
Cairo with nine feet of water in the hold--may have been more,
|
|
may have been less. I remember it as if it were yesterday.
|
|
The men lost their heads with terror. They painted the mare blue,
|
|
in sight of town, and threw the preacher overboard, or we should
|
|
not have arrived at all. The preacher was fished out and saved.
|
|
He acknowledged, himself, that he had been to blame.
|
|
I remember it all, as if it were yesterday.'
|
|
|
|
That this combination--of preacher and gray mare--should breed calamity,
|
|
seems strange, and at first glance unbelievable; but the fact is fortified
|
|
by so much unassailable proof that to doubt is to dishonor reason.
|
|
I myself remember a case where a captain was warned by numerous friends
|
|
against taking a gray mare and a preacher with him, but persisted in his
|
|
purpose in spite of all that could be said; and the same day--it may have
|
|
been the next, and some say it was, though I think it was the same day--
|
|
he got drunk and fell down the hatchway, and was borne to his home a corpse.
|
|
This is literally true.
|
|
|
|
No vestige of Hat Island is left now; every shred of it is washed away.
|
|
I do not even remember what part of the river it used to be in,
|
|
except that it was between St. Louis and Cairo somewhere.
|
|
It was a bad region--all around and about Hat Island, in early days.
|
|
A farmer who lived on the Illinois shore there, said that twenty-nine
|
|
steamboats had left their bones strung along within sight from his house.
|
|
Between St. Louis and Cairo the steamboat wrecks average one to the mile;--
|
|
two hundred wrecks, altogether.
|
|
|
|
I could recognize big changes from Commerce down. Beaver Dam Rock was
|
|
out in the middle of the river now, and throwing a prodigious 'break;'
|
|
it used to be close to the shore, and boats went down outside of it.
|
|
A big island that used to be away out in mid-river, has retired
|
|
to the Missouri shore, and boats do not go near it any more.
|
|
The island called Jacket Pattern is whittled down to a wedge now,
|
|
and is booked for early destruction. Goose Island is all gone
|
|
but a little dab the size of a steamboat. The perilous 'Graveyard,'
|
|
among whose numberless wrecks we used to pick our way so slowly
|
|
and gingerly, is far away from the channel now, and a terror to nobody.
|
|
One of the islands formerly called the Two Sisters is gone entirely;
|
|
the other, which used to lie close to the Illinois shore, is now on
|
|
the Missouri side, a mile away; it is joined solidly to the shore,
|
|
and it takes a sharp eye to see where the seam is--but it is
|
|
Illinois ground yet, and the people who live on it have to ferry
|
|
themselves over and work the Illinois roads and pay Illinois taxes:
|
|
singular state of things!
|
|
|
|
Near the mouth of the river several islands were missing--washed away.
|
|
Cairo was still there--easily visible across the long, flat point upon
|
|
whose further verge it stands; but we had to steam a long way around
|
|
to get to it. Night fell as we were going out of the 'Upper River'
|
|
and meeting the floods of the Ohio. We dashed along without anxiety;
|
|
for the hidden rock which used to lie right in the way has moved up
|
|
stream a long distance out of the channel; or rather, about one county
|
|
has gone into the river from the Missouri point, and the Cairo point has
|
|
'made down' and added to its long tongue of territory correspondingly.
|
|
The Mississippi is a just and equitable river; it never tumbles one man's farm
|
|
overboard without building a new farm just like it for that man's neighbor.
|
|
This keeps down hard feelings.
|
|
|
|
Going into Cairo, we came near killing a steamboat which paid
|
|
no attention to our whistle and then tried to cross our bows.
|
|
By doing some strong backing, we saved him; which was a great loss,
|
|
for he would have made good literature.
|
|
|
|
Cairo is a brisk town now; and is substantially built, and has a city
|
|
look about it which is in noticeable contrast to its former estate,
|
|
as per Mr. Dickens's portrait of it. However, it was already
|
|
building with bricks when I had seen it last--which was when Colonel
|
|
(now General) Grant was drilling his first command there.
|
|
Uncle Mumford says the libraries and Sunday-schools have
|
|
done a good work in Cairo, as well as the brick masons.
|
|
Cairo has a heavy railroad and river trade, and her situation at
|
|
the junction of the two great rivers is so advantageous that she
|
|
cannot well help prospering.
|
|
|
|
When I turned out, in the morning, we had passed Columbus, Kentucky,
|
|
and were approaching Hickman, a pretty town, perched on a handsome hill.
|
|
Hickman is in a rich tobacco region, and formerly enjoyed a great
|
|
and lucrative trade in that staple, collecting it there in her
|
|
warehouses from a large area of country and shipping it by boat;
|
|
but Uncle Mumford says she built a railway to facilitate this commerce
|
|
a little more, and he thinks it facilitated it the wrong way--
|
|
took the bulk of the trade out of her hands by 'collaring it along
|
|
the line without gathering it at her doors.'
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 26
|
|
Under Fire
|
|
|
|
TALK began to run upon the war now, for we were getting down
|
|
into the upper edge of the former battle-stretch by this time.
|
|
Columbus was just behind us, so there was a good deal said
|
|
about the famous battle of Belmont. Several of the boat's
|
|
officers had seen active service in the Mississippi war-fleet. I
|
|
gathered that they found themselves sadly out of their element
|
|
in that kind of business at first, but afterward got accustomed
|
|
to it, reconciled to it, and more or less at home in it.
|
|
One of our pilots had his first war experience in the Belmont
|
|
fight, as a pilot on a boat in the Confederate service.
|
|
I had often had a curiosity to know how a green hand might feel,
|
|
in his maiden battle, perched all solitary and alone on high
|
|
in a pilot house, a target for Tom, Dick and Harry, and nobody at
|
|
his elbow to shame him from showing the white feather when matters
|
|
grew hot and perilous around him; so, to me his story was valuable--
|
|
it filled a gap for me which all histories had left till
|
|
that time empty.
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE PILOT'S FIRST BATTLE
|
|
|
|
|
|
He said--
|
|
|
|
It was the 7th of November. The fight began at seven in the morning.
|
|
I was on the 'R. H. W. Hill.' Took over a load of troops from Columbus.
|
|
Came back, and took over a battery of artillery. My partner said he was going
|
|
to see the fight; wanted me to go along. I said, no, I wasn't anxious,
|
|
I would look at it from the pilot-house. He said I was a coward, and left.
|
|
|
|
That fight was an awful sight. General Cheatham made his men strip
|
|
their coats off and throw them in a pile, and said, 'Now follow me
|
|
to hell or victory!' I heard him say that from the pilot-house;
|
|
and then he galloped in, at the head of his troops. Old General Pillow,
|
|
with his white hair, mounted on a white horse, sailed in, too, leading his
|
|
troops as lively as a boy. By and by the Federals chased the rebels back,
|
|
and here they came! tearing along, everybody for himself and Devil take
|
|
the hindmost! and down under the bank they scrambled, and took shelter.
|
|
I was sitting with my legs hanging out of the pilot-house window.
|
|
All at once I noticed a whizzing sound passing my ear.
|
|
Judged it was a bullet. I didn't stop to think about anything,
|
|
I just tilted over backwards and landed on the floor, and staid there.
|
|
The balls came booming around. Three cannon-balls went through the chimney;
|
|
one ball took off the corner of the pilot-house; shells were screaming
|
|
and bursting all around. Mighty warm times--I wished I hadn't come.
|
|
I lay there on the pilot-house floor, while the shots came faster and faster.
|
|
I crept in behind the big stove, in the middle of the pilot-house.
|
|
Presently a minie-ball came through the stove, and just grazed my head,
|
|
and cut my hat. I judged it was time to go away from there. The captain
|
|
was on the roof with a red-headed major from Memphis--a fine-looking man.
|
|
I heard him say he wanted to leave here, but 'that pilot is killed.'
|
|
I crept over to the starboard side to pull the bell to set her back;
|
|
raised up and took a look, and I saw about fifteen shot holes
|
|
through the window panes; had come so lively I hadn't noticed them.
|
|
I glanced out on the water, and the spattering shot were like a hailstorm.
|
|
I thought best to get out of that place. I went down the pilot-house guy,
|
|
head first--not feet first but head first--slid down--before I struck
|
|
the deck, the captain said we must leave there. So I climbed up the guy
|
|
and got on the floor again. About that time, they collared my partner
|
|
and were bringing him up to the pilot-house between two soldiers.
|
|
Somebody had said I was killed. He put his head in and saw me on the floor
|
|
reaching for the backing bells. He said, 'Oh, hell, he ain't shot,'
|
|
and jerked away from the men who had him by the collar, and ran below.
|
|
We were there until three o'clock in the afternoon, and then got away all
|
|
right.
|
|
|
|
The next time I saw my partner, I said, 'Now, come out, be honest,
|
|
and tell me the truth. Where did you go when you went to see that battle?'
|
|
He says, 'I went down in the hold.'
|
|
|
|
All through that fight I was scared nearly to death.
|
|
I hardly knew anything, I was so frightened; but you see,
|
|
nobody knew that but me. Next day General Polk sent for me,
|
|
and praised me for my bravery and gallant conduct.
|
|
I never said anything, I let it go at that. I judged it wasn't so,
|
|
but it was not for me to contradict a general officer.
|
|
|
|
Pretty soon after that I was sick, and used up, and had to go
|
|
off to the Hot Springs. When there, I got a good many
|
|
letters from commanders saying they wanted me to come back.
|
|
I declined, because I wasn't well enough or strong enough;
|
|
but I kept still, and kept the reputation I had made.
|
|
|
|
A plain story, straightforwardly told; but Mumford told me
|
|
that that pilot had 'gilded that scare of his, in spots;'
|
|
that his subsequent career in the war was proof of it.
|
|
|
|
We struck down through the chute of Island No. 8, and I went below
|
|
and fell into conversation with a passenger, a handsome man,
|
|
with easy carriage and an intelligent face. We were approaching
|
|
Island No. 10, a place so celebrated during the war.
|
|
This gentleman's home was on the main shore in its neighborhood.
|
|
I had some talk with him about the war times; but presently
|
|
the discourse fell upon 'feuds,' for in no part of the South
|
|
has the vendetta flourished more briskly, or held out longer
|
|
between warring families, than in this particular region.
|
|
This gentleman said--
|
|
|
|
'There's been more than one feud around here, in old times, but I
|
|
reckon the worst one was between the Darnells and the Watsons.
|
|
Nobody don't know now what the first quarrel was about, it's so long ago;
|
|
the Darnells and the Watsons don't know, if there's any of them living,
|
|
which I don't think there is. Some says it was about a horse or a cow--
|
|
anyway, it was a little matter; the money in it wasn't of no consequence--
|
|
none in the world--both families was rich. The thing could have been
|
|
fixed up, easy enough; but no, that wouldn't do. Rough words had been passed;
|
|
and so, nothing but blood could fix it up after that. That horse
|
|
or cow, whichever it was, cost sixty years of killing and crippling!
|
|
Every year or so somebody was shot, on one side or the other; and as fast
|
|
as one generation was laid out, their sons took up the feud and kept
|
|
it a-going. And it's just as I say; they went on shooting each other,
|
|
year in and year out--making a kind of a religion of it, you see--
|
|
till they'd done forgot, long ago, what it was all about. Wherever a
|
|
Darnell caught a Watson, or a Watson caught a Darnell, one of 'em was going
|
|
to get hurt--only question was, which of them got the drop on the other.
|
|
They'd shoot one another down, right in the presence of the family.
|
|
They didn't hunt for each other, but when they happened to meet,
|
|
they puffed and begun. Men would shoot boys, boys would shoot men.
|
|
A man shot a boy twelve years old--happened on him in the woods,
|
|
and didn't give him no chance. If he HAD 'a' given him a chance,
|
|
the boy'd 'a' shot him. Both families belonged to the same church
|
|
(everybody around here is religious); through all this fifty or
|
|
sixty years' fuss, both tribes was there every Sunday, to worship.
|
|
They lived each side of the line, and the church was at a landing
|
|
called Compromise. Half the church and half the aisle was in Kentucky,
|
|
the other half in Tennessee. Sundays you'd see the families drive up,
|
|
all in their Sunday clothes, men, women, and children, and file up the aisle,
|
|
and set down, quiet and orderly, one lot on the Tennessee side of the church
|
|
and the other on the Kentucky side; and the men and boys would lean their guns
|
|
up against the wall, handy, and. then all hands would join in with the prayer
|
|
and praise; though they say the man next the aisle didn't kneel down,
|
|
along with the rest of the family; kind of stood guard. I don't know;
|
|
never was at that church in my life; but I remember that that's what used
|
|
to be said.
|
|
|
|
'Twenty or twenty-five years ago, one of the feud families
|
|
caught a young man of nineteen out and killed him.
|
|
Don't remember whether it was the Darnells and Watsons,
|
|
or one of the other feuds; but anyway, this young man rode up--
|
|
steamboat laying there at the time--and the first thing
|
|
he saw was a whole gang of the enemy. He jumped down behind
|
|
a wood-pile, but they rode around and begun on him, he firing back,
|
|
and they galloping and cavorting and yelling and banging away
|
|
with all their might. Think he wounded a couple of them;
|
|
but they closed in on him and chased him into the river;
|
|
and as he swum along down stream, they followed along the bank
|
|
and kept on shooting at him; and when he struck shore he was dead.
|
|
Windy Marshall told me about it. He saw it. He was captain
|
|
of the boat.
|
|
|
|
'Years ago, the Darnells was so thinned out that the old man
|
|
and his two sons concluded they'd leave the country. They started
|
|
to take steamboat just above No. 10; but the Watsons got wind of it;
|
|
and they arrived just as the two young Darnells was walking up
|
|
the companion-way with their wives on their arms. The fight
|
|
begun then, and they never got no further--both of them killed.
|
|
After that, old Darnell got into trouble with the man that run
|
|
the ferry, and the ferry-man got the worst of it--and died.
|
|
But his friends shot old Darnell through and through--filled him
|
|
full of bullets, and ended him.'
|
|
|
|
The country gentleman who told me these things had been reared
|
|
in ease and comfort, was a man of good parts, and was college bred.
|
|
His loose grammar was the fruit of careless habit, not ignorance.
|
|
This habit among educated men in the West is not universal, but it
|
|
is prevalent--prevalent in the towns, certainly, if not in the cities;
|
|
and to a degree which one cannot help noticing, and marveling at.
|
|
I heard a Westerner who would be accounted a highly educated man
|
|
in any country, say 'never mind, it DON'T MAKE NO DIFFERENCE, anyway.'
|
|
A life-long resident who was present heard it, but it made no impression
|
|
upon her. She was able to recall the fact afterward, when reminded of it;
|
|
but she confessed that the words had not grated upon her ear at the time--
|
|
a confession which suggests that if educated people can hear such
|
|
blasphemous grammar, from such a source, and be unconscious of the deed,
|
|
the crime must be tolerably common--so common that the general ear has
|
|
become dulled by familiarity with it, and is no longer alert, no longer
|
|
sensitive to such affronts.
|
|
|
|
No one in the world speaks blemishless grammar; no one has
|
|
ever written it--NO one, either in the world or out of it
|
|
(taking the Scriptures for evidence on the latter point);
|
|
therefore it would not be fair to exact grammatical perfection
|
|
from the peoples of the Valley; but they and all other peoples
|
|
may justly be required to refrain from KNOWINGLY and PURPOSELY
|
|
debauching their grammar.
|
|
|
|
I found the river greatly changed at Island No. 10.
|
|
The island which I remembered was some three miles long
|
|
and a quarter of a mile wide, heavily timbered, and lay
|
|
near the Kentucky shore--within two hundred yards of it,
|
|
I should say. Now, however, one had to hunt for it with
|
|
a spy-glass. Nothing was left of it but an insignificant
|
|
little tuft, and this was no longer near the Kentucky shore;
|
|
it was clear over against the opposite shore, a mile away.
|
|
In war times the island had been an important place,
|
|
for it commanded the situation; and, being heavily fortified,
|
|
there was no getting by it. It lay between the upper and lower
|
|
divisions of the Union forces, and kept them separate, until a
|
|
junction was finally effected across the Missouri neck of land;
|
|
but the island being itself joined to that neck now, the wide river
|
|
is without obstruction.
|
|
|
|
In this region the river passes from Kentucky into Tennessee,
|
|
back into Missouri, then back into Kentucky, and thence into Tennessee again.
|
|
So a mile or two of Missouri sticks over into Tennessee.
|
|
|
|
The town of New Madrid was looking very unwell;
|
|
but otherwise unchanged from its former condition and aspect.
|
|
Its blocks of frame-houses were still grouped in the same
|
|
old flat plain, and environed by the same old forests.
|
|
It was as tranquil as formerly, and apparently had neither grown
|
|
nor diminished in size. It was said that the recent high water
|
|
had invaded it and damaged its looks. This was surprising news;
|
|
for in low water the river bank is very high there (fifty feet), and
|
|
in my day an overflow had always been considered an impossibility.
|
|
This present flood of 1882 Will doubtless be celebrated
|
|
in the river's history for several generations before a deluge
|
|
of like magnitude shall be seen. It put all the unprotected
|
|
low lands under water, from Cairo to the mouth; it broke down
|
|
the levees in a great many places, on both sides of the river;
|
|
and in some regions south, when the flood was at its highest,
|
|
the Mississippi was SEVENTY MILES wide! a number of lives
|
|
were lost, and the destruction of property was fearful.
|
|
The crops were destroyed, houses washed away, and shelterless men
|
|
and cattle forced to take refuge on scattering elevations here
|
|
and there in field and forest, and wait in peril and suffering
|
|
until the boats put in commission by the national and local
|
|
governments and by newspaper enterprise could come and rescue them.
|
|
The properties of multitudes of people were under water for months,
|
|
and the poorer ones must have starved by the hundred if succor
|
|
had not been promptly afforded.<footnote [For a detailed and
|
|
interesting description of the great flood, written on board
|
|
of the New Orleans TIMES-DEMOCRAT'S relief-boat, see Appendix
|
|
A]> The water had been falling during a considerable time now,
|
|
yet as a rule we found the banks still under water.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 27
|
|
Some Imported Articles
|
|
|
|
WE met two steamboats at New Madrid. Two steamboats in sight
|
|
at once! an infrequent spectacle now in the lonesome Mississippi.
|
|
The loneliness of this solemn, stupendous flood is impressive--
|
|
and depressing. League after league, and still league after league,
|
|
it pours its chocolate tide along, between its solid forest walls,
|
|
its almost untenanted shores, with seldom a sail or a moving
|
|
object of any kind to disturb the surface and break the monotony
|
|
of the blank, watery solitude; and so the day goes, the night comes,
|
|
and again the day--and still the same, night after night
|
|
and day after day--majestic, unchanging sameness of serenity,
|
|
repose, tranquillity, lethargy, vacancy--symbol of eternity,
|
|
realization of the heaven pictured by priest and prophet,
|
|
and longed for by the good and thoughtless!
|
|
|
|
Immediately after the war of 1812, tourists began to come
|
|
to America, from England; scattering ones at first, then a sort
|
|
of procession of them--a procession which kept up its plodding,
|
|
patient march through the land during many, many years.
|
|
Each tourist took notes, and went home and published a book--
|
|
a book which was usually calm, truthful, reasonable, kind;
|
|
but which seemed just the reverse to our tender-footed progenitors.
|
|
A glance at these tourist-books shows us that in certain of its
|
|
aspects the Mississippi has undergone no change since those
|
|
strangers visited it, but remains to-day about as it was then.
|
|
The emotions produced in those foreign breasts by these aspects
|
|
were not all formed on one pattern, of course; they HAD
|
|
to be various, along at first, because the earlier tourists
|
|
were obliged to originate their emotions, whereas in older
|
|
countries one can always borrow emotions from one's predecessors.
|
|
And, mind you, emotions are among the toughest things in
|
|
the world to manufacture out of whole cloth; it is easier to
|
|
manufacture seven facts than one emotion. Captain Basil Hall.
|
|
R.N., writing fifty-five years ago, says--
|
|
|
|
|
|
'Here I caught the first glimpse of the object I had so long wished
|
|
to behold, and felt myself amply repaid at that moment for all
|
|
the trouble I had experienced in coming so far; and stood looking at
|
|
the river flowing past till it was too dark to distinguish anything.
|
|
But it was not till I had visited the same spot a dozen times,
|
|
that I came to a right comprehension of the grandeur of the scene.'
|
|
|
|
|
|
Following are Mrs. Trollope's emotions. She is writing a few months later
|
|
in the same year, 1827, and is coming in at the mouth of the Mississippi--
|
|
|
|
|
|
'The first indication of our approach to land was the appearance
|
|
of this mighty river pouring forth its muddy mass of waters,
|
|
and mingling with the deep blue of the Mexican Gulf. I never beheld
|
|
a scene so utterly desolate as this entrance of the Mississippi.
|
|
Had Dante seen it, he might have drawn images of another Bolgia from
|
|
its horrors. One only object rears itself above the eddying waters;
|
|
this is the mast of a vessel long since wrecked in attempting to cross
|
|
the bar, and it still stands, a dismal witness of the destruction
|
|
that has been, and a boding prophet of that which is to come.'
|
|
|
|
|
|
Emotions of Hon. Charles Augustus Murray (near St. Louis), seven years later--
|
|
|
|
|
|
'It is only when you ascend the mighty current for fifty or a
|
|
hundred miles, and use the eye of imagination as well as that
|
|
of nature, that you begin to understand all his might and majesty.
|
|
You see him fertilizing a boundless valley, bearing along in his course
|
|
the trophies of his thousand victories over the shattered forest--
|
|
here carrying away large masses of soil with all their growth,
|
|
and there forming islands, destined at some future period to be
|
|
the residence of man; and while indulging in this prospect,
|
|
it is then time for reflection to suggest that the current
|
|
before you has flowed through two or three thousand miles, and has
|
|
yet to travel one thousand three hundred more before reaching
|
|
its ocean destination.'
|
|
|
|
|
|
Receive, now, the emotions of Captain Marryat, R.N. author of the sea tales,
|
|
writing in 1837, three years after Mr. Murray--
|
|
|
|
|
|
'Never, perhaps, in the records of nations, was there an instance of a
|
|
century of such unvarying and unmitigated crime as is to be collected
|
|
from the history of the turbulent and blood-stained Mississippi.
|
|
The stream itself appears as if appropriate for the deeds which have
|
|
been committed. It is not like most rivers, beautiful to the sight,
|
|
bestowing fertility in its course; not one that the eye loves
|
|
to dwell upon as it sweeps along, nor can you wander upon
|
|
its banks, or trust yourself without danger to its stream.
|
|
It is a furious, rapid, desolating torrent, loaded with alluvial soil;
|
|
and few of those who are received into its waters ever rise again,
|
|
<footnote [There was a foolish superstition of some little prevalence
|
|
in that day, that the Mississippi would neither buoy up a swimmer,
|
|
nor permit a drowned person's body to rise to the surface.]> or can
|
|
support themselves long upon its surface without assistance from
|
|
some friendly log. It contains the coarsest and most uneatable
|
|
of fish, such as the cat-fish and such genus, and as you descend,
|
|
its banks are occupied with the fetid alligator, while the panther
|
|
basks at its edge in the cane-brakes, almost impervious to man.
|
|
Pouring its impetuous waters through wild tracks covered with
|
|
trees of little value except for firewood, it sweeps down whole
|
|
forests in its course, which disappear in tumultuous confusion,
|
|
whirled away by the stream now loaded with the masses of soil
|
|
which nourished their roots, often blocking up and changing
|
|
for a time the channel of the river, which, as if in anger at its
|
|
being opposed, inundates and devastates the whole country round;
|
|
and as soon as it forces its way through its former channel,
|
|
plants in every direction the uprooted monarchs of the forest
|
|
(upon whose branches the bird will never again perch, or the raccoon,
|
|
the opossum, or the squirrel climb) as traps to the adventurous
|
|
navigators of its waters by steam, who, borne down upon these concealed
|
|
dangers which pierce through the planks, very often have not time
|
|
to steer for and gain the shore before they sink to the bottom.
|
|
There are no pleasing associations connected with the great common sewer
|
|
of the Western America, which pours out its mud into the Mexican Gulf,
|
|
polluting the clear blue sea for many miles beyond its mouth.
|
|
It is a river of desolation; and instead of reminding you,
|
|
like other beautiful rivers, of an angel which has descended
|
|
for the benefit of man, you imagine it a devil, whose energies
|
|
have been only overcome by the wonderful power of steam.'
|
|
|
|
|
|
It is pretty crude literature for a man accustomed to
|
|
handling a pen; still, as a panorama of the emotions sent
|
|
weltering through this noted visitor's breast by the aspect
|
|
and traditions of the 'great common sewer,' it has a value.
|
|
A value, though marred in the matter of statistics by inaccuracies;
|
|
for the catfish is a plenty good enough fish for anybody,
|
|
and there are no panthers that are 'impervious to man.'
|
|
|
|
|
|
Later still comes Alexander Mackay, of the Middle Temple, Barrister at Law,
|
|
with a better digestion, and no catfish dinner aboard, and feels as follows--
|
|
|
|
|
|
'The Mississippi! It was with indescribable emotions that I first felt myself
|
|
afloat upon its waters. How often in my schoolboy dreams, and in my waking
|
|
visions afterwards, had my imagination pictured to itself the lordly stream,
|
|
rolling with tumultuous current through the boundless region to which it
|
|
has given its name, and gathering into itself, in its course to the ocean,
|
|
the tributary waters of almost every latitude in the temperate zone!
|
|
Here it was then in its reality, and I, at length, steaming against its tide.
|
|
I looked upon it with that reverence with which everyone must regard a great
|
|
feature of external nature.'
|
|
|
|
|
|
So much for the emotions. The tourists, one and all, remark upon
|
|
the deep, brooding loneliness and desolation of the vast river.
|
|
Captain Basil Hall, who saw it at flood-stage, says--
|
|
|
|
|
|
'Sometimes we passed along distances of twenty or thirty miles without
|
|
seeing a single habitation. An artist, in search of hints for a painting
|
|
of the deluge, would here have found them in abundance.'
|
|
|
|
|
|
The first shall be last, etc. just two hundred years ago,
|
|
the old original first and gallantest of all the foreign tourists,
|
|
pioneer, head of the procession, ended his weary and tedious
|
|
discovery-voyage down the solemn stretches of the great river--
|
|
La Salle, whose name will last as long as the river itself shall last.
|
|
We quote from Mr. Parkman-
|
|
|
|
|
|
'And now they neared their journey's end. On the sixth
|
|
of April, the river divided itself into three broad channels.
|
|
La Salle followed that of the west, and D'Autray
|
|
that of the east; while Tonty took the middle passage.
|
|
As he drifted down the turbid current, between the low
|
|
and marshy shores, the brackish water changed to brine,
|
|
and the breeze grew fresh with the salt breath of the sea.
|
|
Then the broad bosom of the great Gulf opened on his sight,
|
|
tossing its restless billows, limitless, voiceless, lonely as when
|
|
born of chaos, without a sail, without a sign of life.'
|
|
|
|
|
|
Then, on a spot of solid ground, La Salle reared a column 'bearing
|
|
the arms of France; the Frenchmen were mustered under arms;
|
|
and while the New England Indians and their squaws looked on
|
|
in wondering silence, they chanted the TE DEUM, THE EXAUDIAT,
|
|
and the DOMINE SALVUM FAC REGEM.'
|
|
|
|
Then, whilst the musketry volleyed and rejoicing shouts burst forth,
|
|
the victorious discoverer planted the column, and made proclamation
|
|
in a loud voice, taking formal possession of the river and
|
|
the vast countries watered by it, in the name of the King.
|
|
The column bore this inscription-
|
|
|
|
|
|
LOUIS LE GRAND, ROY DE FRANCE ET DE NAVARRE, REGNE; LE NEUVIEME AVRIL,
|
|
1682.
|
|
|
|
|
|
New Orleans intended to fittingly celebrate, this present year,
|
|
the bicentennial anniversary of this illustrious event;
|
|
but when the time came, all her energies and surplus money were
|
|
required in other directions, for the flood was upon the land then,
|
|
making havoc and devastation everywhere.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 28
|
|
Uncle Mumford Unloads
|
|
|
|
ALL day we swung along down the river, and had the stream almost
|
|
wholly to ourselves. Formerly, at such a stage of the water,
|
|
we should have passed acres of lumber rafts, and dozens of big
|
|
coal barges; also occasional little trading-scows, peddling
|
|
along from farm to farm, with the peddler's family on board;
|
|
possibly, a random scow, bearing a humble Hamlet and Co.
|
|
on an itinerant dramatic trip. But these were all absent.
|
|
Far along in the day, we saw one steamboat; just one, and no more.
|
|
She was lying at rest in the shade, within the wooded mouth
|
|
of the Obion River. The spy-glass revealed the fact that she
|
|
was named for me--or HE was named for me, whichever you prefer.
|
|
As this was the first time I had ever encountered this species
|
|
of honor, it seems excusable to mention it, and at the same time
|
|
call the attention of the authorities to the tardiness of my
|
|
recognition of it.
|
|
|
|
Noted a big change in the river, at Island 21. It was a very large island,
|
|
and used to be out toward mid-stream; but it is joined fast to the main
|
|
shore now, and has retired from business as an island.
|
|
|
|
As we approached famous and formidable Plum Point, darkness fell,
|
|
but that was nothing to shudder about--in these modem times.
|
|
For now the national government has turned the Mississippi
|
|
into a sort of two-thousand-mile torchlight procession.
|
|
In the head of every crossing, and in the foot of every
|
|
crossing, the government has set up a clear-burning lamp.
|
|
You are never entirely in the dark, now; there is always a beacon
|
|
in sight, either before you, or behind you, or abreast.
|
|
One might almost say that lamps have been squandered there.
|
|
Dozens of crossings are lighted which were not shoal
|
|
when they were created, and have never been shoal since;
|
|
crossings so plain, too, and also so straight, that a steamboat
|
|
can take herself through them without any help, after she has been
|
|
through once. Lamps in such places are of course not wasted;
|
|
it is much more convenient and comfortable for a pilot to hold
|
|
on them than on a spread of formless blackness that won't
|
|
stay still; and money is saved to the boat, at the same time,
|
|
for she can of course make more miles with her rudder
|
|
amidships than she can with it squared across her stern and
|
|
holding her back.
|
|
|
|
But this thing has knocked the romance out of piloting, to a large extent.
|
|
It, and some other things together, have knocked all the romance out of it.
|
|
For instance, the peril from snags is not now what it once was.
|
|
The government's snag-boats go patrolling up and down, in these
|
|
matter-of-fact days, pulling the river's teeth; they have rooted out
|
|
all the old clusters which made many localities so formidable; and they
|
|
allow no new ones to collect. Formerly, if your boat got away from you,
|
|
on a black night, and broke for the woods, it was an anxious time with you;
|
|
so was it also, when you were groping your way through solidified
|
|
darkness in a narrow chute; but all that is changed now--you flash out
|
|
your electric light, transform night into day in the twinkling of an eye,
|
|
and your perils and anxieties are at an end. Horace Bixby and George
|
|
Ritchie have charted the crossings and laid out the courses by compass;
|
|
they have invented a lamp to go with the chart, and have patented the whole.
|
|
With these helps, one may run in the fog now, with considerable security,
|
|
and with a confidence unknown in the old days.
|
|
|
|
With these abundant beacons, the banishment of snags, plenty of
|
|
daylight in a box and ready to be turned on whenever needed,
|
|
and a chart and compass to fight the fog with, piloting, at a good
|
|
stage of water, is now nearly as safe and simple as driving stage,
|
|
and is hardly more than three times as romantic.
|
|
|
|
And now in these new days, these days of infinite change, the Anchor
|
|
Line have raised the captain above the pilot by giving him the bigger
|
|
wages of the two. This was going far, but they have not stopped there.
|
|
They have decreed that the pilot shall remain at his post, and stand his
|
|
watch clear through, whether the boat be under way or tied up to the shore.
|
|
We, that were once the aristocrats of the river, can't go to bed now,
|
|
as we used to do, and sleep while a hundred tons of freight are
|
|
lugged aboard; no, we must sit in the pilot-house; and keep awake, too.
|
|
Verily we are being treated like a parcel of mates and engineers.
|
|
The Government has taken away the romance of our calling; the Company has
|
|
taken away its state and dignity.
|
|
|
|
Plum Point looked as it had always looked by night, with the
|
|
exception that now there were beacons to mark the crossings,
|
|
and also a lot of other lights on the Point and along its shore;
|
|
these latter glinting from the fleet of the United States
|
|
River Commission, and from a village which the officials have built
|
|
on the land for offices and for the employes of the service.
|
|
The military engineers of the Commission have taken upon
|
|
their shoulders the job of making the Mississippi over again--
|
|
a job transcended in size by only the original job of creating it.
|
|
They are building wing-dams here and there, to deflect the current;
|
|
and dikes to confine it in narrower bounds; and other dikes to make
|
|
it stay there; and for unnumbered miles along the Mississippi,
|
|
they are felling the timber-front for fifty yards back,
|
|
with the purpose of shaving the bank down to low-water mark
|
|
with the slant of a house roof, and ballasting it with stones;
|
|
and in many places they have protected the wasting shores with rows
|
|
of piles. One who knows the Mississippi will promptly aver--
|
|
not aloud, but to himself--that ten thousand River Commissions,
|
|
with the mines of the world at their back, cannot tame that
|
|
lawless stream, cannot curb it or confine it, cannot say to it,
|
|
Go here, or Go there, and make it obey; cannot save a shore
|
|
which it has sentenced; cannot bar its path with an obstruction
|
|
which it will not tear down, dance over, and laugh at.
|
|
But a discreet man will not put these things into spoken words;
|
|
for the West Point engineers have not their superiors anywhere;
|
|
they know all that can be known of their abstruse science;
|
|
and so, since they conceive that they can fetter and handcuff
|
|
that river and boss him, it is but wisdom for the unscientific man
|
|
to keep still, lie low, and wait till they do it. Captain Eads,
|
|
with his jetties, has done a work at the mouth of the Mississippi
|
|
which seemed clearly impossible; so we do not feel full confidence
|
|
now to prophesy against like impossibilities. Otherwise one would
|
|
pipe out and say the Commission might as well bully the comets
|
|
in their courses and undertake to make them behave, as try to bully
|
|
the Mississippi into right and reasonable conduct.
|
|
|
|
I consulted Uncle Mumford concerning this and cognate matters;
|
|
and I give here the result, stenographically reported, and therefore
|
|
to be relied on as being full and correct; except that I have
|
|
here and there left out remarks which were addressed to the men,
|
|
such as 'where in blazes are you going with that barrel now?'
|
|
and which seemed to me to break the flow of the written statement,
|
|
without compensating by adding to its information or its clearness.
|
|
Not that I have ventured to strike out all such interjections;
|
|
I have removed only those which were obviously irrelevant;
|
|
wherever one occurred which I felt any question about, I have
|
|
judged it safest to let it remain.
|
|
|
|
|
|
UNCLE MUMFORD'S IMPRESSIONS
|
|
|
|
|
|
Uncle Mumford said--
|
|
|
|
'As long as I have been mate of a steamboat--thirty years--
|
|
I have watched this river and studied it. Maybe I could have learnt
|
|
more about it at West Point, but if I believe it I wish I may be WHAT
|
|
ARE YOU SUCKING YOUR FINGERS THERE FOR ?--COLLAR THAT KAG OF NAILS!
|
|
Four years at West Point, and plenty of books and schooling, will learn
|
|
a man a good deal, I reckon, but it won't learn him the river.
|
|
You turn one of those little European rivers over to this Commission,
|
|
with its hard bottom and clear water, and it would just be a holiday
|
|
job for them to wall it, and pile it, and dike it, and tame it down,
|
|
and boss it around, and make it go wherever they wanted it to,
|
|
and stay where they put it, and do just as they said, every time.
|
|
But this ain't that kind of a river. They have started in here
|
|
with big confidence, and the best intentions in the world;
|
|
but they are going to get left. What does Ecclesiastes vii. 13 say?
|
|
Says enough to knock THEIR little game galley-west, don't it?
|
|
Now you look at their methods once. There at Devil's Island,
|
|
in the Upper River, they wanted the water to go one way, the water wanted
|
|
to go another. So they put up a stone wall. But what does the river
|
|
care for a stone wall? When it got ready, it just bulged through it.
|
|
Maybe they can build another that will stay; that is, up there--
|
|
but not down here they can't. Down here in the Lower River, they drive
|
|
some pegs to turn the water away from the shore and stop it from slicing
|
|
off the bank; very well, don't it go straight over and cut somebody
|
|
else's bank? Certainly. Are they going to peg all the banks?
|
|
Why, they could buy ground and build a new Mississippi cheaper.
|
|
They are pegging Bulletin Tow-head now. It won't do any good.
|
|
If the river has got a mortgage on that island, it will foreclose,
|
|
sure, pegs or no pegs. Away down yonder, they have driven two rows
|
|
of piles straight through the middle of a dry bar half a mile long,
|
|
which is forty foot out of the water when the river is low.
|
|
What do you reckon that is for? If I know, I wish I may land
|
|
in-HUMP YOURSELF, YOU SON OF AN UNDERTAKER!--OUT WITH THAT COAL-OIL, NOW,
|
|
LIVELY, LIVELY! And just look at what they are trying to do down
|
|
there at Milliken's Bend. There's been a cut-off in that section,
|
|
and Vicksburg is left out in the cold. It's a country town now.
|
|
The river strikes in below it; and a boat can't go up to the town
|
|
except in high water. Well, they are going to build wing-dams in
|
|
the bend opposite the foot of 103, and throw the water over and cut
|
|
off the foot of the island and plow down into an old ditch where
|
|
the river used to be in ancient times; and they think they can persuade
|
|
the water around that way, and get it to strike in above Vicksburg,
|
|
as it used to do, and fetch the town back into the world again.
|
|
That is, they are going to take this whole Mississippi,
|
|
and twist it around and make it run several miles UP STREAM.
|
|
Well you've got to admire men that deal in ideas of that size and can
|
|
tote them around without crutches; but you haven't got to believe
|
|
they can DO such miracles, have you! And yet you ain't absolutely
|
|
obliged to believe they can't. I reckon the safe way, where a man
|
|
can afford it, is to copper the operation, and at the same time buy
|
|
enough property in Vicksburg to square you up in case they win.
|
|
Government is doing a deal for the Mississippi, now--spending loads
|
|
of money on her. When there used to be four thousand steamboats
|
|
and ten thousand acres of coal-barges, and rafts and trading scows,
|
|
there wasn't a lantern from St. Paul to New Orleans, and the snags
|
|
were thicker than bristles on a hog's back; and now when there's
|
|
three dozen steamboats and nary barge or raft, Government has
|
|
snatched out all the snags, and lit up the shores like Broadway,
|
|
and a boat's as safe on the river as she'd be in heaven.
|
|
And I reckon that by the time there ain't any boats left at all,
|
|
the Commission will have the old thing all reorganized, and dredged out,
|
|
and fenced in, and tidied up, to a degree that will make navigation
|
|
just simply perfect, and absolutely safe and profitable; and all
|
|
the days will be Sundays, and all the mates will be Sunday-school
|
|
su-WHAT-IN-THE-NATION-YOU-FOOLING-AROUND-THERE-FOR, YOU SONS
|
|
OF UNRIGHTEOUSNESS, HEIRS OF PERDITION ! GOING TO BE A YEAR GETTING THAT
|
|
HOGSHEAD ASHORE ?'
|
|
|
|
|
|
During our trip to New Orleans and back, we had many conversations with
|
|
river men, planters, journalists, and officers of the River Commission--
|
|
with conflicting and confusing results. To wit:-
|
|
|
|
1. Some believed in the Commission's scheme to arbitrarily
|
|
and permanently confine (and thus deepen) the channel,
|
|
preserve threatened shores, etc.
|
|
|
|
2. Some believed that the Commission's money ought to be spent
|
|
only on building and repairing the great system of levees.
|
|
|
|
3. Some believed that the higher you build your levee,
|
|
the higher the river's bottom will rise; and that consequently
|
|
the levee system is a mistake.
|
|
|
|
4. Some believed in the scheme to relieve the river, in flood-time,
|
|
by turning its surplus waters off into Lake Borgne, etc.
|
|
|
|
5. Some believed in the scheme of northern lake-reservoirs to replenish
|
|
the Mississippi in low-water seasons.
|
|
|
|
Wherever you find a man down there who believes in one of these
|
|
theories you may turn to the next man and frame your talk upon
|
|
the hypothesis that he does not believe in that theory; and after
|
|
you have had experience, you do not take this course doubtfully,
|
|
or hesitatingly, but with the confidence of a dying murderer--
|
|
converted one, I mean. For you will have come to know, with a deep
|
|
and restful certainty, that you are not going to meet two people
|
|
sick of the same theory, one right after the other. No, there will
|
|
always be one or two with the other diseases along between.
|
|
And as you proceed, you will find out one or two other things.
|
|
You will find out that there is no distemper of the lot but
|
|
is contagious; and you cannot go where it is without catching it.
|
|
You may vaccinate yourself with deterrent facts as much as you please--
|
|
it will do no good; it will seem to 'take,' but it doesn't;
|
|
the moment you rub against any one of those theorists, make up
|
|
your mind that it is time to hang out your yellow flag.
|
|
|
|
Yes, you are his sure victim: yet his work is not all to your hurt--
|
|
only part of it; for he is like your family physician, who comes
|
|
and cures the mumps, and leaves the scarlet-fever behind.
|
|
If your man is a Lake-Borgne-relief theorist, for instance,
|
|
he will exhale a cloud of deadly facts and statistics which will lay
|
|
you out with that disease, sure; but at the same time he will cure
|
|
you of any other of the five theories that may have previously got
|
|
into your system.
|
|
|
|
I have had all the five; and had them 'bad;' but ask me not,
|
|
in mournful numbers, which one racked me hardest, or which
|
|
one numbered the biggest sick list, for I do not know.
|
|
In truth, no one can answer the latter question.
|
|
Mississippi Improvement is a mighty topic, down yonder.
|
|
Every man on the river banks, south of Cairo, talks about it
|
|
every day, during such moments as he is able to spare from
|
|
talking about the war; and each of the several chief theories
|
|
has its host of zealous partisans; but, as I have said,
|
|
it is not possible to determine which cause numbers
|
|
the most recruits.
|
|
|
|
All were agreed upon one point, however: if Congress would make
|
|
a sufficient appropriation, a colossal benefit would result.
|
|
Very well; since then the appropriation has been made--
|
|
possibly a sufficient one, certainly not too large a one.
|
|
Let us hope that the prophecy will be amply fulfilled.
|
|
|
|
One thing will be easily granted by the reader; that an opinion from
|
|
Mr. Edward Atkinson, upon any vast national commercial matter, comes as near
|
|
ranking as authority, as can the opinion of any individual in the Union.
|
|
What he has to say about Mississippi River Improvement will be found
|
|
in the Appendix.<footnote [See Appendix B.]>
|
|
|
|
Sometimes, half a dozen figures will reveal, as with a lightning-flash,
|
|
the importance of a subject which ten thousand labored words,
|
|
with the same purpose in view, had left at last but dim and uncertain.
|
|
Here is a case of the sort--paragraph from the 'Cincinnati Commercial'-
|
|
|
|
|
|
'The towboat "Jos. B. Williams" is on her way to New Orleans with
|
|
a tow of thirty-two barges, containing six hundred thousand bushels
|
|
(seventy-six pounds to the bushel) of coal exclusive of her own fuel,
|
|
being the largest tow ever taken to New Orleans or anywhere else
|
|
in the world. Her freight bill, at 3 cents a bushel, amounts to
|
|
$18,000. It would take eighteen hundred cars, of three hundred and
|
|
thirty-three bushels to the car, to transport this amount of coal.
|
|
At $10 per ton, or $100 per car, which would be a fair price for
|
|
the distance by rail, the freight bill would amount to $180,000,
|
|
or $162,000 more by rail than by river. The tow will be taken
|
|
from Pittsburg to New Orleans in fourteen or fifteen days.
|
|
It would take one hundred trains of eighteen cars to the train
|
|
to transport this one tow of six hundred thousand bushels of coal,
|
|
and even if it made the usual speed of fast freight lines, it would
|
|
take one whole summer to put it through by rail.'
|
|
|
|
|
|
When a river in good condition can enable one to save $162,000 and a whole
|
|
summer's time, on a single cargo, the wisdom of taking measures to keep
|
|
the river in good condition is made plain to even the uncommercial mind.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 29
|
|
A Few Specimen Bricks
|
|
|
|
WE passed through the Plum Point region, turned Craighead's Point,
|
|
and glided unchallenged by what was once the formidable Fort Pillow,
|
|
memorable because of the massacre perpetrated there during the war.
|
|
Massacres are sprinkled with some frequency through the histories
|
|
of several Christian nations, but this is almost the only one
|
|
that can be found in American history; perhaps it is the only one
|
|
which rises to a size correspondent to that huge and somber title.
|
|
We have the 'Boston Massacre,' where two or three people were killed;
|
|
but we must bunch Anglo-Saxon history together to find the fellow
|
|
to the Fort Pillow tragedy; and doubtless even then we must travel
|
|
back to the days and the performances of Coeur de Lion, that fine
|
|
'hero,' before we accomplish it.
|
|
|
|
More of the river's freaks. In times past, the channel used
|
|
to strike above Island 37, by Brandywine Bar, and down towards
|
|
Island 39. Afterward, changed its course and went from
|
|
Brandywine down through Vogelman's chute in the Devil's Elbow,
|
|
to Island 39--part of this course reversing the old order;
|
|
the river running UP four or five miles, instead of down,
|
|
and cutting off, throughout, some fifteen miles of distance.
|
|
This in 1876. All that region is now called Centennial Island.
|
|
|
|
There is a tradition that Island 37 was one of the principal abiding
|
|
places of the once celebrated 'Murel's Gang.' This was a colossal
|
|
combination of robbers, horse-thieves, negro-stealers, and counterfeiters,
|
|
engaged in business along the river some fifty or sixty years ago.
|
|
While our journey across the country towards St. Louis was in
|
|
progress we had had no end of Jesse James and his stirring history;
|
|
for he had just been assassinated by an agent of the Governor of Missouri,
|
|
and was in consequence occupying a good deal of space in the newspapers.
|
|
Cheap histories of him were for sale by train boys. According to these,
|
|
he was the most marvelous creature of his kind that had ever existed.
|
|
It was a mistake. Murel was his equal in boldness; in pluck; in rapacity;
|
|
in cruelty, brutality, heartlessness, treachery, and in general and
|
|
comprehensive vileness and shamelessness; and very much his superior
|
|
in some larger aspects. James was a retail rascal; Murel, wholesale.
|
|
James's modest genius dreamed of no loftier flight than the planning
|
|
of raids upon cars, coaches, and country banks; Murel projected
|
|
negro insurrections and the capture of New Orleans; and furthermore,
|
|
on occasion, this Murel could go into a pulpit and edify the congregation.
|
|
What are James and his half-dozen vulgar rascals compared with this
|
|
stately old-time criminal, with his sermons, his meditated insurrections
|
|
and city-captures, and his majestic following of ten hundred men,
|
|
sworn to do his evil will!
|
|
|
|
Here is a paragraph or two concerning this big operator,
|
|
from a now forgotten book which was published half a century ago--
|
|
|
|
He appears to have been a most dexterous as well as consummate villain.
|
|
When he traveled, his usual disguise was that of an itinerant preacher;
|
|
and it is said that his discourses were very 'soul-moving'--interesting
|
|
the hearers so much that they forgot to look after their horses,
|
|
which were carried away by his confederates while he was preaching.
|
|
But the stealing of horses in one State, and selling them in another,
|
|
was but a small portion of their business; the most lucrative
|
|
was the enticing slaves to run away from their masters, that they
|
|
might sell them in another quarter. This was arranged as follows;
|
|
they would tell a negro that if he would run away from his master,
|
|
and allow them to sell him, he should receive a portion of the money
|
|
paid for him, and that upon his return to them a second time they would
|
|
send him to a free State, where he would be safe. The poor wretches
|
|
complied with this request, hoping to obtain money and freedom;
|
|
they would be sold to another master, and run away again, to their employers;
|
|
sometimes they would be sold in this manner three or four times,
|
|
until they had realized three or four thousand dollars by them;
|
|
but as, after this, there was fear of detection, the usual custom was
|
|
to get rid of the only witness that could be produced against them,
|
|
which was the negro himself, by murdering him, and throwing his body into
|
|
the Mississippi. Even if it was established that they had stolen a negro,
|
|
before he was murdered, they were always prepared to evade punishment;
|
|
for they concealed the negro who had run away, until he was advertised,
|
|
and a reward offered to any man who would catch him. An advertisement
|
|
of this kind warrants the person to take the property, if found.
|
|
And then the negro becomes a property in trust, when, therefore,
|
|
they sold the negro, it only became a breach of trust, not stealing;
|
|
and for a breach of trust, the owner of the property can only have redress
|
|
by a civil action, which was useless, as the damages were never paid.
|
|
It may be inquired, how it was that Murel escaped Lynch law under
|
|
such circumstances This will be easily understood when it is stated
|
|
that he had MORE THAN A THOUSAND SWORN CONFEDERATES, all ready at
|
|
a moment's notice to support any of the gang who might be in trouble.
|
|
The names of all the principal confederates of Murel were obtained
|
|
from himself, in a manner which I shall presently explain.
|
|
The gang was composed of two classes: the Heads or Council, as they
|
|
were called, who planned and concerted, but seldom acted; they amounted
|
|
to about four hundred. The other class were the active agents,
|
|
and were termed strikers, and amounted to about six hundred and fifty.
|
|
These were the tools in the hands of the others; they ran all the risk,
|
|
and received but a small portion of the money; they were in the power
|
|
of the leaders of the gang, who would sacrifice them at any time by handing
|
|
them over to justice, or sinking their bodies in the Mississippi.
|
|
The general rendezvous of this gang of miscreants was on the Arkansas
|
|
side of the river, where they concealed their negroes in the morasses and
|
|
cane-brakes.
|
|
|
|
The depredations of this extensive combination were severely felt;
|
|
but so well were their plans arranged, that although Murel,
|
|
who was always active, was everywhere suspected, there was no proof
|
|
to be obtained. It so happened, however, that a young man of the name
|
|
of Stewart, who was looking after two slaves which Murel had decoyed
|
|
away, fell in with him and obtained his confidence, took the oath,
|
|
and was admitted into the gang as one of the General Council.
|
|
By this means all was discovered; for Stewart turned traitor,
|
|
although he had taken the oath, and having obtained every information,
|
|
exposed the whole concern, the names of all the parties, and finally
|
|
succeeded in bringing home sufficient evidence against Murel,
|
|
to procure his conviction and sentence to the Penitentiary
|
|
(Murel was sentenced to fourteen years' imprisonment); so many
|
|
people who were supposed to be honest, and bore a respectable
|
|
name in the different States, were found to be among the list
|
|
of the Grand Council as published by Stewart, that every attempt
|
|
was made to throw discredit upon his assertions--his character
|
|
was vilified, and more than one attempt was made to assassinate him.
|
|
He was obliged to quit the Southern States in consequence.
|
|
It is, however, now well ascertained to have been all true;
|
|
and although some blame Mr. Stewart for having violated his oath,
|
|
they no longer attempt to deny that his revelations were correct.
|
|
I will quote one or two portions of Murel's confessions to
|
|
Mr. Stewart, made to him when they were journeying together.
|
|
I ought to have observed, that the ultimate intentions of Murel
|
|
and his associates were, by his own account, on a very extended scale;
|
|
having no less an object in view than RAISING THE BLACKS AGAINST
|
|
THE WHITES, TAKING POSSESSION OF, AND PLUNDERING NEW ORLEANS,
|
|
AND MAKING THEMSELVES POSSESSORS OF THE TERRITORY. The following are
|
|
a few extracts:--
|
|
|
|
'I collected all my friends about New Orleans at one of our friends'
|
|
houses in that place, and we sat in council three days before we
|
|
got all our plans to our notion; we then determined to undertake
|
|
the rebellion at every hazard, and make as many friends as we
|
|
could for that purpose. Every man's business being assigned him,
|
|
I started to Natchez on foot, having sold my horse in New Orleans,--
|
|
with the intention of stealing another after I started.
|
|
I walked four days, and no opportunity offered for me to get a horse.
|
|
The fifth day, about twelve, I had become tired, and stopped at a creek
|
|
to get some water and rest a little. While I was sitting on a log,
|
|
looking down the road the way that I had come, a man came in sight
|
|
riding on a good-looking horse. The very moment I saw him, I was
|
|
determined to have his horse, if he was in the garb of a traveler.
|
|
He rode up, and I saw from his equipage that he was a traveler.
|
|
I arose and drew an elegant rifle pistol on him and ordered him to dismount.
|
|
He did so, and I took his horse by the bridle and pointed down the creek,
|
|
and ordered him to walk before me. He went a few hundred yards
|
|
and stopped. I hitched his horse, and then made him undress himself,
|
|
all to his shirt and drawers, and ordered him to turn his back to me.
|
|
He said, 'If you are determined to kill me, let me have time to pray
|
|
before I die,' I told him I had no time to hear him pray. He turned around
|
|
and dropped on his knees, and I shot him through the back of the head.
|
|
I ripped open his belly and took out his entrails, and sunk him in the creek.
|
|
I then searched his pockets, and found four hundred dollars and thirty-seven
|
|
cents, and a number of papers that I did not take time to examine.
|
|
I sunk the pocket-book and papers and his hat, in the creek.
|
|
His boots were brand-new, and fitted me genteelly; and I put
|
|
them on and sunk my old shoes in the creek, to atone for them.
|
|
I rolled up his clothes and put them into his portmanteau, as they were
|
|
brand-new cloth of the best quality. I mounted as fine a horse as ever
|
|
I straddled, and directed my course for Natchez in much better style
|
|
than I had been for the last five days.
|
|
|
|
'Myself and a fellow by the name of Crenshaw gathered four good
|
|
horses and started for Georgia. We got in company with a young
|
|
South Carolinian just before we got to Cumberland Mountain,
|
|
and Crenshaw soon knew all about his business. He had been
|
|
to Tennessee to buy a drove of hogs, but when he got there pork
|
|
was dearer than he calculated, and he declined purchasing.
|
|
We concluded he was a prize. Crenshaw winked at me; I understood
|
|
his idea. Crenshaw had traveled the road before, but I never had;
|
|
we had traveled several miles on the mountain, when he passed
|
|
near a great precipice; just before we passed it Crenshaw asked
|
|
me for my whip, which had a pound of lead in the butt; I handed
|
|
it to him, and he rode up by the side of the South Carolinian,
|
|
and gave him a blow on the side of the head and tumbled him
|
|
from his horse; we lit from our horses and fingered his pockets;
|
|
we got twelve hundred and sixty-two dollars. Crenshaw said
|
|
he knew a place to hide him, and he gathered him under his arms,
|
|
and I by his feet, and conveyed him to a deep crevice in the brow
|
|
of the precipice, and tumbled him into it, and he went out of sight;
|
|
we then tumbled in his saddle, and took his horse with us, which was
|
|
worth two hundred dollars.
|
|
|
|
'We were detained a few days, and during that time our friend went
|
|
to a little village in the neighborhood and saw the negro advertised
|
|
(a negro in our possession), and a description of the two men of whom
|
|
he had been purchased, and giving his suspicions of the men.
|
|
It was rather squally times, but any port in a storm:
|
|
we took the negro that night on the bank of a creek which runs
|
|
by the farm of our friend, and Crenshaw shot him through the head.
|
|
We took out his entrails and sunk him in the creek.
|
|
|
|
'He had sold the other negro the third time on Arkansaw River for upwards
|
|
of five hundred dollars; and then stole him and delivered him into the hand
|
|
of his friend, who conducted him to a swamp, and veiled the tragic scene,
|
|
and got the last gleanings and sacred pledge of secrecy; as a game of that
|
|
kind will not do unless it ends in a mystery to all but the fraternity.
|
|
He sold the negro, first and last, for nearly two thousand dollars,
|
|
and then put him for ever out of the reach of all pursuers; and they can
|
|
never graze him unless they can find the negro; and that they cannot do,
|
|
for his carcass has fed many a tortoise and catfish before this time,
|
|
and the frogs have sung this many a long day to the silent repose
|
|
of his skeleton.'
|
|
|
|
We were approaching Memphis, in front of which city, and witnessed by
|
|
its people, was fought the most famous of the river battles of the Civil War.
|
|
Two men whom I had served under, in my river days, took part in that fight:
|
|
Mr. Bixby, head pilot of the Union fleet, and Montgomery, Commodore of the
|
|
Confederate fleet. Both saw a great deal of active service during the war,
|
|
and achieved high reputations for pluck and capacity.
|
|
|
|
As we neared Memphis, we began to cast about for an excuse to stay
|
|
with the 'Gold Dust' to the end of her course--Vicksburg. We were
|
|
so pleasantly situated, that we did not wish to make a change.
|
|
I had an errand of considerable importance to do at Napoleon, Arkansas,
|
|
but perhaps I could manage it without quitting the 'Gold Dust.'
|
|
I said as much; so we decided to stick to present quarters.
|
|
|
|
The boat was to tarry at Memphis till ten the next morning. It is a
|
|
beautiful city, nobly situated on a commanding bluff overlooking the river.
|
|
The streets are straight and spacious, though not paved in a way to incite
|
|
distempered admiration. No, the admiration must be reserved for the town's
|
|
sewerage system, which is called perfect; a recent reform, however, for it
|
|
was just the other way, up to a few years ago--a reform resulting from
|
|
the lesson taught by a desolating visitation of the yellow-fever. In
|
|
those awful days the people were swept off by hundreds, by thousands;
|
|
and so great was the reduction caused by flight and by death together,
|
|
that the population was diminished three-fourths, and so remained for a time.
|
|
Business stood nearly still, and the streets bore an empty Sunday aspect.
|
|
|
|
Here is a picture of Memphis, at that disastrous time,
|
|
drawn by a German tourist who seems to have been an eye-witness
|
|
of the scenes which he describes. It is from Chapter VII,
|
|
of his book, just published, in Leipzig, 'Mississippi-Fahrten, von
|
|
Ernst von Hesse-Wartegg.'--
|
|
|
|
'In August the yellow-fever had reached its extremest height.
|
|
Daily, hundreds fell a sacrifice to the terrible epidemic.
|
|
The city was become a mighty graveyard, two-thirds of the population
|
|
had deserted the place, and only the poor, the aged and the sick,
|
|
remained behind, a sure prey for the insidious enemy.
|
|
The houses were closed: little lamps burned in front of many--
|
|
a sign that here death had entered. Often, several lay
|
|
dead in a single house; from the windows hung black crape.
|
|
The stores were shut up, for their owners were gone away or dead.
|
|
|
|
'Fearful evil! In the briefest space it struck down and swept away
|
|
even the most vigorous victim. A slight indisposition, then an hour
|
|
of fever, then the hideous delirium, then--the Yellow Death !
|
|
On the street corners, and in the squares, lay sick men, suddenly overtaken
|
|
by the disease; and even corpses, distorted and rigid. Food failed.
|
|
Meat spoiled in a few hours in the fetid and pestiferous air,
|
|
and turned black.
|
|
|
|
'Fearful clamors issue from many houses; then after a season
|
|
they cease, and all is still: noble, self-sacrificing men come
|
|
with the coffin, nail it up, and carry it away, to the graveyard.
|
|
In the night stillness reigns. Only the physicians and the
|
|
hearses hurry through the streets; and out of the distance,
|
|
at intervals, comes the muffled thunder of the railway train,
|
|
which with the speed of the wind, and as if hunted by furies,
|
|
flies by the pest-ridden city without halting.'
|
|
|
|
But there is life enough there now. The population exceeds forty thousand
|
|
and is augmenting, and trade is in a flourishing condition. We drove
|
|
about the city; visited the park and the sociable horde of squirrels there;
|
|
saw the fine residences, rose-clad and in other ways enticing to the eye;
|
|
and got a good breakfast at the hotel.
|
|
|
|
A thriving place is the Good Samaritan City of the Mississippi:
|
|
has a great wholesale jobbing trade; foundries, machine shops;
|
|
and manufactories of wagons, carriages, and cotton-seed oil;
|
|
and is shortly to have cotton mills and elevators.
|
|
|
|
Her cotton receipts reached five hundred thousand bales last year--
|
|
an increase of sixty thousand over the year before. Out from
|
|
her healthy commercial heart issue five trunk lines of railway;
|
|
and a sixth is being added.
|
|
|
|
This is a very different Memphis from the one which the vanished
|
|
and unremembered procession of foreign tourists used to put
|
|
into their books long time ago. In the days of the now
|
|
forgotten but once renowned and vigorously hated Mrs. Trollope,
|
|
Memphis seems to have consisted mainly of one long street of
|
|
log-houses, with some outlying cabins sprinkled around rearward
|
|
toward the woods; and now and then a pig, and no end of mud.
|
|
That was fifty-five years ago. She stopped at the hotel.
|
|
Plainly it was not the one which gave us our breakfast.
|
|
She says--
|
|
|
|
'The table was laid for fifty persons, and was nearly full.
|
|
They ate in perfect silence, and with such astonishing rapidity
|
|
that their dinner was over literally before ours was begun;
|
|
the only sounds heard were those produced by the knives and forks,
|
|
with the unceasing chorus of coughing, ETC.'
|
|
|
|
'Coughing, etc.' The 'etc.' stands for an unpleasant word there,
|
|
a word which she does not always charitably cover up, but sometimes prints.
|
|
You will find it in the following description of a steamboat dinner
|
|
which she ate in company with a lot of aristocratic planters;
|
|
wealthy, well-born, ignorant swells they were, tinselled with the usual
|
|
harmless military and judicial titles of that old day of cheap shams
|
|
and windy pretense--
|
|
|
|
'The total want of all the usual courtesies of the table;
|
|
the voracious rapidity with which the viands were seized
|
|
and devoured; the strange uncouth phrases and pronunciation;
|
|
the loathsome spitting, from the contamination of which it
|
|
was absolutely impossible to protect our dresses; the frightful
|
|
manner of feeding with their knives, till the whole blade
|
|
seemed to enter into the mouth; and the still more frightful
|
|
manner of cleaning the teeth afterward with a pocket knife,
|
|
soon forced us to feel that we were not surrounded
|
|
by the generals, colonels, and majors of the old world;
|
|
and that the dinner hour was to be anything rather than an
|
|
hour of enjoyment.'
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 3O
|
|
Sketches by the Way
|
|
|
|
IT was a big river, below Memphis; banks brimming full, everywhere,
|
|
and very frequently more than full, the waters pouring out over
|
|
the land, flooding the woods and fields for miles into the interior;
|
|
and in places, to a depth of fifteen feet; signs, all about,
|
|
of men's hard work gone to ruin, and all to be done
|
|
over again, with straitened means and a weakened courage.
|
|
A melancholy picture, and a continuous one;--hundreds of miles of it.
|
|
Sometimes the beacon lights stood in water three feet deep,
|
|
in the edge of dense forests which extended for miles without farm,
|
|
wood-yard, clearing, or break of any kind; which meant that
|
|
the keeper of the light must come in a skiff a great distance
|
|
to discharge his trust,--and often in desperate weather.
|
|
Yet I was told that the work is faithfully performed,
|
|
in all weathers; and not always by men, sometimes by women,
|
|
if the man is sick or absent. The Government furnishes oil,
|
|
and pays ten or fifteen dollars a month for the lighting and tending.
|
|
A Government boat distributes oil and pays wages once a month.
|
|
|
|
The Ship Island region was as woodsy and tenantless as ever.
|
|
The island has ceased to be an island; has joined itself compactly
|
|
to the main shore, and wagons travel, now, where the steamboats used
|
|
to navigate. No signs left of the wreck of the 'Pennsylvania.'
|
|
Some farmer will turn up her bones with his plow one day, no doubt,
|
|
and be surprised.
|
|
|
|
We were getting down now into the migrating negro region.
|
|
These poor people could never travel when they were slaves;
|
|
so they make up for the privation now. They stay on a plantation till
|
|
the desire to travel seizes them; then they pack up, hail a steamboat,
|
|
and clear out. Not for any particular place; no, nearly any
|
|
place will answer; they only want to be moving. The amount
|
|
of money on hand will answer the rest of the conundrum for them.
|
|
If it will take them fifty miles, very well; let it be fifty.
|
|
If not, a shorter flight will do.
|
|
|
|
During a couple of days, we frequently answered these hails.
|
|
Sometimes there was a group of high-water-stained, tumble-down cabins,
|
|
populous with colored folk, and no whites visible; with grassless
|
|
patches of dry ground here and there; a few felled trees,
|
|
with skeleton cattle, mules, and horses, eating the leaves and
|
|
gnawing the bark--no other food for them in the flood-wasted land.
|
|
Sometimes there was a single lonely landing-cabin; near it
|
|
the colored family that had hailed us; little and big, old and young,
|
|
roosting on the scant pile of household goods; these consisting
|
|
of a rusty gun, some bed-ticks, chests, tinware, stools, a crippled
|
|
looking-glass, a venerable arm-chair, and six or eight base-born
|
|
and spiritless yellow curs, attached to the family by strings.
|
|
They must have their dogs; can't go without their dogs.
|
|
Yet the dogs are never willing; they always object; so, one after another,
|
|
in ridiculous procession, they are dragged aboard; all four feet
|
|
braced and sliding along the stage, head likely to be pulled off;
|
|
but the tugger marching determinedly forward, bending to his work,
|
|
with the rope over his shoulder for better purchase.
|
|
Sometimes a child is forgotten and left on the bank; but never
|
|
a dog.
|
|
|
|
The usual river-gossip going on in the pilot-house. Island No. 63--
|
|
an island with a lovely 'chute,' or passage, behind it in the former times.
|
|
They said Jesse Jamieson, in the 'Skylark,' had a visiting pilot
|
|
with him one trip--a poor old broken-down, superannuated fellow--
|
|
left him at the wheel, at the foot of 63, to run off the watch.
|
|
The ancient mariner went up through the chute, and down the river outside;
|
|
and up the chute and down the river again; and yet again and again;
|
|
and handed the boat over to the relieving pilot, at the end of three
|
|
hours of honest endeavor, at the same old foot of the island where
|
|
he had originally taken the wheel! A darkey on shore who had observed
|
|
the boat go by, about thirteen times, said, ' 'clar to gracious,
|
|
I wouldn't be s'prised if dey's a whole line o' dem Sk'ylarks! '
|
|
|
|
Anecdote illustrative of influence of reputation in the changing
|
|
of opinion. The 'Eclipse' was renowned for her swiftness.
|
|
One day she passed along; an old darkey on shore, absorbed in
|
|
his own matters, did not notice what steamer it was.
|
|
Presently someone asked--
|
|
|
|
'Any boat gone up?'
|
|
|
|
'Yes, sah.'
|
|
|
|
'Was she going fast?'
|
|
|
|
'Oh, so-so--loafin' along.'
|
|
|
|
'Now, do you know what boat that was?'
|
|
|
|
'No, sah.'
|
|
|
|
'Why, uncle, that was the "Eclipse." '
|
|
|
|
'No! Is dat so? Well, I bet it was--cause she jes' went by here a-SPARKLIN'!'
|
|
|
|
Piece of history illustrative of the violent style of some of the people
|
|
down along here, During the early weeks of high water, A's fence rails
|
|
washed down on B's ground, and B's rails washed up in the eddy and landed
|
|
on A's ground. A said, 'Let the thing remain so; I will use your rails,
|
|
and you use mine.' But B objected--wouldn't have it so. One day,
|
|
A came down on B's ground to get his rails. B said, 'I'll kill you!'
|
|
and proceeded for him with his revolver. A said, 'I'm not armed.'
|
|
So B, who wished to do only what was right, threw down his revolver;
|
|
then pulled a knife, and cut A's throat all around, but gave his
|
|
principal attention to the front, and so failed to sever the jugular.
|
|
Struggling around, A managed to get his hands on the discarded revolver,
|
|
and shot B dead with it--and recovered from his own injuries.
|
|
|
|
Further gossip;--after which, everybody went below to get
|
|
afternoon coffee, and left me at the wheel, alone,
|
|
Something presently reminded me of our last hour in St. Louis,
|
|
part of which I spent on this boat's hurricane deck, aft.
|
|
I was joined there by a stranger, who dropped into conversation
|
|
with me--a brisk young fellow, who said he was born in a town
|
|
in the interior of Wisconsin, and had never seen a steamboat
|
|
until a week before. Also said that on the way down from La
|
|
Crosse he had inspected and examined his boat so diligently
|
|
and with such passionate interest that he had mastered the whole
|
|
thing from stem to rudder-blade. Asked me where I was from.
|
|
I answered, New England. 'Oh, a Yank!' said he; and went
|
|
chatting straight along, without waiting for assent or denial.
|
|
He immediately proposed to take me all over the boat and tell
|
|
me the names of her different parts, and teach me their uses.
|
|
Before I could enter protest or excuse, he was already
|
|
rattling glibly away at his benevolent work; and when I
|
|
perceived that he was misnaming the things, and inhospitably
|
|
amusing himself at the expense of an innocent stranger from
|
|
a far country, I held my peace, and let him have his way.
|
|
He gave me a world of misinformation; and the further he went,
|
|
the wider his imagination expanded, and the more he enjoyed
|
|
his cruel work of deceit. Sometimes, after palming off
|
|
a particularly fantastic and outrageous lie upon me, he was
|
|
so 'full of laugh' that he had to step aside for a minute,
|
|
upon one pretext or another, to keep me from suspecting.
|
|
I staid faithfully by him until his comedy was finished.
|
|
Then he remarked that he had undertaken to 'learn' me
|
|
all about a steamboat, and had done it; but that if he had
|
|
overlooked anything, just ask him and he would supply the lack.
|
|
'Anything about this boat that you don't know the name
|
|
of or the purpose of, you come to me and I'll tell you.'
|
|
I said I would, and took my departure; disappeared, and approached
|
|
him from another quarter, whence he could not see me.
|
|
There he sat, all alone, doubling himself up and writhing
|
|
this way and that, in the throes of unappeasable laughter.
|
|
He must have made himself sick; for he was not publicly visible
|
|
afterward for several days. Meantime, the episode dropped out
|
|
of my mind.
|
|
|
|
The thing that reminded me of it now, when I was alone at the wheel,
|
|
was the spectacle of this young fellow standing in the pilot-house door,
|
|
with the knob in his hand, silently and severely inspecting me.
|
|
I don't know when I have seen anybody look so injured as he did.
|
|
He did not say anything--simply stood there and looked;
|
|
reproachfully looked and pondered. Finally he shut the door,
|
|
and started away; halted on the texas a minute; came slowly back
|
|
and stood in the door again, with that grieved look in his face;
|
|
gazed upon me awhile in meek rebuke, then said--
|
|
|
|
'You let me learn you all about a steamboat, didn't you?'
|
|
|
|
'Yes,' I confessed.
|
|
|
|
'Yes, you did--DIDN'T you?'
|
|
|
|
'Yes.'
|
|
|
|
' You are the feller that--that-- --'
|
|
|
|
Language failed. Pause--impotent struggle for further words--
|
|
then he gave it up, choked out a deep, strong oath, and departed for good.
|
|
Afterward I saw him several times below during the trip; but he was cold--
|
|
would not look at me. Idiot, if he had not been in such a sweat
|
|
to play his witless practical joke upon me, in the beginning,
|
|
I would have persuaded his thoughts into some other direction,
|
|
and saved him from committing that wanton and silly impoliteness.
|
|
|
|
I had myself called with the four o'clock watch, mornings,
|
|
for one cannot see too many summer sunrises on the Mississippi.
|
|
They are enchanting. First, there is the eloquence of silence;
|
|
for a deep hush broods everywhere. Next, there is the haunting
|
|
sense of loneliness, isolation, remoteness from the worry
|
|
and bustle of the world. The dawn creeps in stealthily;
|
|
the solid walls of black forest soften to gray, and vast
|
|
stretches of the river open up and reveal themselves; the water
|
|
is glass-smooth, gives off spectral little wreaths of white mist,
|
|
there is not the faintest breath of wind, nor stir of leaf;
|
|
the tranquillity is profound and infinitely satisfying.
|
|
Then a bird pipes up, another follows, and soon the pipings
|
|
develop into a jubilant riot of music. You see none of the birds;
|
|
you simply move through an atmosphere of song which seems
|
|
to sing itself. When the light has become a little stronger,
|
|
you have one of the fairest and softest pictures imaginable.
|
|
You have the intense green of the massed and crowded foliage
|
|
near by; you see it paling shade by shade in front of you;
|
|
upon the next projecting cape, a mile off or more, the tint
|
|
has lightened to the tender young green of spring; the cape
|
|
beyond that one has almost lost color, and the furthest one,
|
|
miles away under the horizon, sleeps upon the water a mere
|
|
dim vapor, and hardly separable from the sky above it
|
|
and about it. And all this stretch of river is a mirror,
|
|
and you have the shadowy reflections of the leafage and
|
|
the curving shores and the receding capes pictured in it.
|
|
Well, that is all beautiful; soft and rich and beautiful;
|
|
and when the sun gets well up, and distributes a pink flush
|
|
here and a powder of gold yonder and a purple haze where it will
|
|
yield the best effect, you grant that you have seen something
|
|
that is worth remembering.
|
|
|
|
We had the Kentucky Bend country in the early morning--
|
|
scene of a strange and tragic accident in the old times,
|
|
Captain Poe had a small stern-wheel boat, for years the home
|
|
of himself and his wife. One night the boat struck a snag in
|
|
the head of Kentucky Bend, and sank with astonishing suddenness;
|
|
water already well above the cabin floor when the captain got aft.
|
|
So he cut into his wife's state-room from above with an ax;
|
|
she was asleep in the upper berth, the roof a flimsier one than
|
|
was supposed; the first blow crashed down through the rotten
|
|
boards and clove her skull.
|
|
|
|
This bend is all filled up now--result of a cut-off; and the same
|
|
agent has taken the great and once much-frequented Walnut Bend,
|
|
and set it away back in a solitude far from the accustomed track
|
|
of passing steamers.
|
|
|
|
Helena we visited, and also a town I had not heard of before, it being
|
|
of recent birth--Arkansas City. It was born of a railway; the Little Rock,
|
|
Mississippi River and Texas Railroad touches the river there.
|
|
We asked a passenger who belonged there what sort of a place it was.
|
|
'Well,' said he, after considering, and with the air of one who
|
|
wishes to take time and be accurate, 'It's a hell of a place.'
|
|
A description which was photographic for exactness. There were
|
|
several rows and clusters of shabby frame-houses, and a supply of mud
|
|
sufficient to insure the town against a famine in that article
|
|
for a hundred years; for the overflow had but lately subsided.
|
|
There were stagnant ponds in the streets, here and there, and a dozen
|
|
rude scows were scattered about, lying aground wherever they happened
|
|
to have been when the waters drained off and people could do their
|
|
visiting and shopping on foot once more. Still, it is a thriving place,
|
|
with a rich country behind it, an elevator in front of it,
|
|
and also a fine big mill for the manufacture of cotton-seed oil.
|
|
I had never seen this kind of a mill before.
|
|
|
|
Cotton-seed was comparatively valueless in my time; but it
|
|
is worth $12 or $13 a ton now, and none of it is thrown away.
|
|
The oil made from it is colorless, tasteless, and almost if not
|
|
entirely odorless. It is claimed that it can, by proper manipulation,
|
|
be made to resemble and perform the office of any and all oils,
|
|
and be produced at a cheaper rate than the cheapest of the originals.
|
|
Sagacious people shipped it to Italy, doctored it, labeled it,
|
|
and brought it back as olive oil. This trade grew to be so formidable
|
|
that Italy was obliged to put a prohibitory impost upon it to keep it
|
|
from working serious injury to her oil industry.
|
|
|
|
Helena occupies one of the prettiest situations on the Mississippi.
|
|
Her perch is the last, the southernmost group of hills which one sees
|
|
on that side of the river. In its normal condition it is a pretty town;
|
|
but the flood (or possibly the seepage) had lately been ravaging it;
|
|
whole streets of houses had been invaded by the muddy water,
|
|
and the outsides of the buildings were still belted with a broad stain
|
|
extending upwards from the foundations. Stranded and discarded scows lay
|
|
all about; plank sidewalks on stilts four feet high were still standing;
|
|
the board sidewalks on the ground level were loose and ruinous,--
|
|
a couple of men trotting along them could make a blind man think
|
|
a cavalry charge was coming; everywhere the mud was black and deep,
|
|
and in many places malarious pools of stagnant water were standing.
|
|
A Mississippi inundation is the next most wasting and desolating
|
|
infliction to a fire.
|
|
|
|
We had an enjoyable time here, on this sunny Sunday:
|
|
two full hours' liberty ashore while the boat discharged freight.
|
|
In the back streets but few white people were visible,
|
|
but there were plenty of colored folk--mainly women and girls;
|
|
and almost without exception upholstered in bright new clothes
|
|
of swell and elaborate style and cut--a glaring and hilarious
|
|
contrast to the mournful mud and the pensive puddles.
|
|
|
|
Helena is the second town in Arkansas, in point of population--
|
|
which is placed at five thousand. The country about it is
|
|
exceptionally productive. Helena has a good cotton trade;
|
|
handles from forty to sixty thousand bales annually; she has
|
|
a large lumber and grain commerce; has a foundry, oil mills,
|
|
machine shops and wagon factories--in brief has $1,000,000
|
|
invested in manufacturing industries. She has two railways,
|
|
and is the commercial center of a broad and prosperous region.
|
|
Her gross receipts of money, annually, from all sources, are placed by
|
|
the New Orleans 'Times-Democrat' at $4,000,000.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 31
|
|
A Thumb-print and What Came of It
|
|
|
|
WE were approaching Napoleon, Arkansas. So I began to think
|
|
about my errand there. Time, noonday; and bright and sunny.
|
|
This was bad--not best, anyway; for mine was not
|
|
(preferably) a noonday kind of errand. The more I thought,
|
|
the more that fact pushed itself upon me--now in one form,
|
|
now in another. Finally, it took the form of a distinct question:
|
|
is it good common sense to do the errand in daytime, when, by a
|
|
little sacrifice of comfort and inclination, you can have night
|
|
for it, and no inquisitive eyes around. This settled it.
|
|
Plain question and plain answer make the shortest road out
|
|
of most perplexities.
|
|
|
|
I got my friends into my stateroom, and said I was sorry to create
|
|
annoyance and disappointment, but that upon reflection it really
|
|
seemed best that we put our luggage ashore and stop over at Napoleon.
|
|
Their disapproval was prompt and loud; their language mutinous.
|
|
Their main argument was one which has always been the first to come
|
|
to the surface, in such cases, since the beginning of time:
|
|
'But you decided and AGREED to stick to this boat, etc.; as if,
|
|
having determined to do an unwise thing, one is thereby bound to go ahead
|
|
and make TWO unwise things of it, by carrying out that determination.
|
|
|
|
I tried various mollifying tactics upon them, with reasonably good success:
|
|
under which encouragement, I increased my efforts; and, to show them that I
|
|
had not created this annoying errand, and was in no way to blame for it,
|
|
I presently drifted into its history--substantially as follows:
|
|
|
|
Toward the end of last year, I spent a few months in Munich, Bavaria.
|
|
In November I was living in Fraulein Dahlweiner's PENSION,
|
|
1a, Karlstrasse; but my working quarters were a mile from there,
|
|
in the house of a widow who supported herself by taking lodgers.
|
|
She and her two young children used to drop in every morning and talk
|
|
German to me--by request. One day, during a ramble about the city,
|
|
I visited one of the two establishments where the Government keeps and
|
|
watches corpses until the doctors decide that they are permanently dead,
|
|
and not in a trance state. It was a grisly place, that spacious room.
|
|
There were thirty-six corpses of adults in sight, stretched on their
|
|
backs on slightly slanted boards, in three long rows--all of them
|
|
with wax-white, rigid faces, and all of them wrapped in white shrouds.
|
|
Along the sides of the room were deep alcoves, like bay windows;
|
|
and in each of these lay several marble-visaged babes, utterly hidden and
|
|
buried under banks of fresh flowers, all but their faces and crossed hands.
|
|
Around a finger of each of these fifty still forms, both great
|
|
and small, was a ring; and from the ring a wire led to the ceiling,
|
|
and thence to a bell in a watch-room yonder, where, day and night,
|
|
a watchman sits always alert and ready to spring to the aid of any
|
|
of that pallid company who, waking out of death, shall make a movement--
|
|
for any, even the slightest, movement will twitch the wire and ring
|
|
that fearful bell. I imagined myself a death-sentinel drowsing
|
|
there alone, far in the dragging watches of some wailing, gusty night,
|
|
and having in a twinkling all my body stricken to quivering jelly by
|
|
the sudden clamor of that awful summons! So I inquired about this thing;
|
|
asked what resulted usually? if the watchman died, and the restored
|
|
corpse came and did what it could to make his last moments easy.
|
|
But I was rebuked for trying to feed an idle and frivolous curiosity
|
|
in so solemn and so mournful a place; and went my way with
|
|
a humbled crest.
|
|
|
|
Next morning I was telling the widow my adventure, when she exclaimed--
|
|
|
|
'Come with me! I have a lodger who shall tell you all you want to know.
|
|
He has been a night-watchman there.'
|
|
|
|
He was a living man, but he did not look it. He was abed, and had
|
|
his head propped high on pillows; his face was wasted and colorless,
|
|
his deep-sunken eyes were shut; his hand, lying on his breast,
|
|
was talon-like, it was so bony and long-fingered. The widow
|
|
began her introduction of me. The man's eyes opened slowly,
|
|
and glittered wickedly out from the twilight of their caverns;
|
|
he frowned a black frown; he lifted his lean hand and waved us
|
|
peremptorily away. But the widow kept straight on, till she
|
|
had got out the fact that I was a stranger and an American.
|
|
The man's face changed at once; brightened, became even eager--
|
|
and the next moment he and I were alone together.
|
|
|
|
I opened up in cast-iron German; he responded in quite flexible English;
|
|
thereafter we gave the German language a permanent rest.
|
|
|
|
This consumptive and I became good friends. I visited him every day, and we
|
|
talked about everything. At least, about everything but wives and children.
|
|
Let anybody's wife or anybody's child be mentioned, and three things
|
|
always followed: the most gracious and loving and tender light glimmered
|
|
in the man's eyes for a moment; faded out the next, and in its place came
|
|
that deadly look which had flamed there the first time I ever saw his
|
|
lids unclose; thirdly, he ceased from speech, there and then for that day;
|
|
lay silent, abstracted, and absorbed; apparently heard nothing that I said;
|
|
took no notice of my good-byes, and plainly did not know, by either sight
|
|
or hearing, when I left the room.
|
|
|
|
When I had been this Karl Ritter's daily and sole intimate during two months,
|
|
he one day said, abruptly--
|
|
|
|
'I will tell you my story.'
|
|
|
|
A DYING MAN S CONFESSION
|
|
|
|
Then he went on as follows:--
|
|
|
|
I have never given up, until now. But now I have given up.
|
|
I am going to die. I made up my mind last night that it
|
|
must be, and very soon, too. You say you are going to
|
|
revisit your river, by-and-bye, when you find opportunity.
|
|
Very well; that, together with a certain strange experience
|
|
which fell to my lot last night, determines me to tell you
|
|
my history--for you will see Napoleon, Arkansas; and for my
|
|
sake you will stop there, and do a certain thing for me--
|
|
a thing which you will willingly undertake after you shall have
|
|
heard my narrative.
|
|
|
|
Let us shorten the story wherever we can, for it will need it, being long.
|
|
You already know how I came to go to America, and how I came to settle
|
|
in that lonely region in the South. But you do not know that I had a wife.
|
|
My wife was young, beautiful, loving, and oh, so divinely good and
|
|
blameless and gentle! And our little girl was her mother in miniature.
|
|
It was the happiest of happy households.
|
|
|
|
One night--it was toward the close of the war--I woke up
|
|
out of a sodden lethargy, and found myself bound and gagged,
|
|
and the air tainted with chloroform! I saw two men in the room,
|
|
and one was saying to the other, in a hoarse whisper, 'I told
|
|
her I would, if she made a noise, and as for the child--'
|
|
|
|
The other man interrupted in a low, half-crying voice--
|
|
|
|
'You said we'd only gag them and rob them, not hurt them;
|
|
or I wouldn't have come.'
|
|
|
|
'Shut up your whining; had to change the plan when they waked up;
|
|
you done all you could to protect them, now let that satisfy you;
|
|
come, help rummage.'
|
|
|
|
Both men were masked, and wore coarse, ragged 'nigger' clothes;
|
|
they had a bull's-eye lantern, and by its light I noticed
|
|
that the gentler robber had no thumb on his right hand.
|
|
They rummaged around my poor cabin for a moment; the head bandit
|
|
then said, in his stage whisper--
|
|
|
|
'It's a waste of time--he shall tell where it's hid.
|
|
Undo his gag, and revive him up.'
|
|
|
|
The other said--
|
|
|
|
'All right--provided no clubbing.'
|
|
|
|
'No clubbing it is, then--provided he keeps still.'
|
|
|
|
They approached me; just then there was a sound outside;
|
|
a sound of voices and trampling hoofs; the robbers held their
|
|
breath and listened; the sounds came slowly nearer and nearer;
|
|
then came a shout--
|
|
|
|
'HELLO, the house! Show a light, we want water.'
|
|
|
|
'The captain's voice, by G----!' said the stage-whispering ruffian,
|
|
and both robbers fled by the way of the back door, shutting off
|
|
their bull's-eye as they ran.
|
|
|
|
The strangers shouted several times more, then rode by--
|
|
there seemed to be a dozen of the horses--and I heard nothing more.
|
|
|
|
I struggled, but could not free myself from my bonds.
|
|
I tried to speak, but the gag was effective; I could not make a sound.
|
|
I listened for my wife's voice and my child's--listened long and intently,
|
|
but no sound came from the other end of the room where their bed was.
|
|
This silence became more and more awful, more and more ominous,
|
|
every moment. Could you have endured an hour of it, do you think?
|
|
Pity me, then, who had to endure three. Three hours--? it was three ages!
|
|
Whenever the clock struck, it seemed as if years had gone by since I
|
|
had heard it last. All this time I was struggling in my bonds;
|
|
and at last, about dawn, I got myself free, and rose up and stretched
|
|
my stiff limbs. I was able to distinguish details pretty well.
|
|
The floor was littered with things thrown there by the robbers
|
|
during their search for my savings. The first object that caught
|
|
my particular attention was a document of mine which I had seen
|
|
the rougher of the two ruffians glance at and then cast away.
|
|
It had blood on it! I staggered to the other end of the room.
|
|
Oh, poor unoffending, helpless ones, there they lay, their troubles ended,
|
|
mine begun!
|
|
|
|
Did I appeal to the law--I? Does it quench the pauper's thirst if the King
|
|
drink for him? Oh, no, no, no--I wanted no impertinent interference of
|
|
the law. Laws and the gallows could not pay the debt that was owing to me!
|
|
Let the laws leave the matter in my hands, and have no fears: I would
|
|
find the debtor and collect the debt. How accomplish this, do you say?
|
|
How accomplish it, and feel so sure about it, when I had neither seen
|
|
the robbers' faces, nor heard their natural voices, nor had any idea
|
|
who they might be? Nevertheless, I WAS sure--quite sure, quite confident.
|
|
I had a clue--a clue which you would not have valued--a clue which would
|
|
not have greatly helped even a detective, since he would lack the secret
|
|
of how to apply it. I shall come to that, presently--you shall see.
|
|
Let us go on, now, taking things in their due order. There was one
|
|
circumstance which gave me a slant in a definite direction to begin with:
|
|
Those two robbers were manifestly soldiers in tramp disguise; and not
|
|
new to military service, but old in it--regulars, perhaps; they did
|
|
not acquire their soldierly attitude, gestures, carriage, in a day,
|
|
nor a month, nor yet in a year. So I thought, but said nothing.
|
|
And one of them had said, 'the captain's voice, by G----!'--the one whose
|
|
life I would have. Two miles away, several regiments were in camp,
|
|
and two companies of U.S. cavalry. When I learned that Captain Blakely,
|
|
of Company C had passed our way, that night, with an escort, I said nothing,
|
|
but in that company I resolved to seek my man. In conversation I studiously
|
|
and persistently described the robbers as tramps, camp followers;
|
|
and among this class the people made useless search, none suspecting the
|
|
soldiers but me.
|
|
|
|
Working patiently, by night, in my desolated home, I made
|
|
a disguise for myself out of various odds and ends of clothing;
|
|
in the nearest village I bought a pair of blue goggles.
|
|
By-and-bye, when the military camp broke up, and Company C was
|
|
ordered a hundred miles north, to Napoleon, I secreted my small
|
|
hoard of money in my belt, and took my departure in the night.
|
|
When Company C arrived in Napoleon, I was already there.
|
|
Yes, I was there, with a new trade--fortune-teller. Not to seem partial,
|
|
I made friends and told fortunes among all the companies
|
|
garrisoned there; but I gave Company C the great bulk of my attentions.
|
|
I made myself limitlessly obliging to these particular men;
|
|
they could ask me no favor, put upon me no risk, which I would decline.
|
|
I became the willing butt of their jokes; this perfected my popularity;
|
|
I became a favorite.
|
|
|
|
I early found a private who lacked a thumb--what joy it was to me!
|
|
And when I found that he alone, of all the company, had lost
|
|
a thumb, my last misgiving vanished; I was SURE I was on
|
|
the right track. This man's name was Kruger, a German.
|
|
There were nine Germans in the company. I watched, to see who might
|
|
be his intimates; but he seemed to have no especial intimates.
|
|
But I was his intimate; and I took care to make the intimacy grow.
|
|
Sometimes I so hungered for my revenge that I could hardly
|
|
restrain myself from going on my knees and begging him to point
|
|
out the man who had murdered my wife and child; but I managed
|
|
to bridle my tongue. I bided my time, and went on telling fortunes,
|
|
as opportunity offered.
|
|
|
|
My apparatus was simple: a little red paint and a bit of white paper.
|
|
I painted the ball of the client's thumb, took a print of it on the paper,
|
|
studied it that night, and revealed his fortune to him next day.
|
|
What was my idea in this nonsense? It was this: When I was a youth,
|
|
I knew an old Frenchman who had been a prison-keeper for thirty years,
|
|
and he told me that there was one thing about a person which never changed,
|
|
from the cradle to the grave--the lines in the ball of the thumb;
|
|
and he said that these lines were never exactly alike in the thumbs
|
|
of any two human beings. In these days, we photograph the new criminal,
|
|
and hang his picture in the Rogues' Gallery for future reference;
|
|
but that Frenchman, in his day, used to take a print of the ball of a new
|
|
prisoner's thumb and put that away for future reference. He always said
|
|
that pictures were no good--future disguises could make them useless;
|
|
'The thumb's the only sure thing,' said he; 'you can't disguise that.'
|
|
And he used to prove his theory, too, on my friends and acquaintances;
|
|
it always succeeded.
|
|
|
|
I went on telling fortunes. Every night I shut myself in, all alone,
|
|
and studied the day's thumb-prints with a magnifying-glass. Imagine
|
|
the devouring eagerness with which I pored over those mazy red spirals,
|
|
with that document by my side which bore the right-hand thumb-and-finger-marks
|
|
of that unknown murderer, printed with the dearest blood--to me--
|
|
that was ever shed on this earth! And many and many a time I had to repeat
|
|
the same old disappointed remark, 'will they NEVER correspond!'
|
|
|
|
But my reward came at last. It was the print of the thumb of the forty-third
|
|
man of Company C whom I had experimented on--Private Franz Adler.
|
|
An hour before, I did not know the murderer's name, or voice,
|
|
or figure, or face, or nationality; but now I knew all these things!
|
|
I believed I might feel sure; the Frenchman's repeated demonstrations
|
|
being so good a warranty. Still, there was a way to MAKE sure.
|
|
I had an impression of Kruger's left thumb. In the morning I took him aside
|
|
when he was off duty; and when we were out of sight and hearing of witnesses,
|
|
I said, impressively-
|
|
|
|
'A part of your fortune is so grave, that I thought it would be
|
|
better for you if I did not tell it in public. You and another man,
|
|
whose fortune I was studying last night,--Private Adler,--
|
|
have been murdering a woman and a child! You are being dogged:
|
|
within five days both of you will be assassinated.'
|
|
|
|
He dropped on his knees, frightened out of his wits;
|
|
and for five minutes he kept pouring out the same set of words,
|
|
like a demented person, and in the same half-crying way which
|
|
was one of my memories of that murderous night in my cabin--
|
|
|
|
'I didn't do it; upon my soul I didn't do it; and I tried
|
|
to keep HIM from doing it; I did, as God is my witness.
|
|
He did it alone.'
|
|
|
|
This was all I wanted. And I tried to get rid of the fool; but no,
|
|
he clung to me, imploring me to save him from the assassin. He said--
|
|
|
|
'I have money--ten thousand dollars--hid away, the fruit of loot
|
|
and thievery; save me--tell me what to do, and you shall
|
|
have it, every penny. Two-thirds of it is my cousin Adler's;
|
|
but you can take it all. We hid it when we first came here.
|
|
But I hid it in a new place yesterday, and have not told him--
|
|
shall not tell him. I was going to desert, and get away with it all.
|
|
It is gold, and too heavy to carry when one is running and dodging;
|
|
but a woman who has been gone over the river two days to prepare
|
|
my way for me is going to follow me with it; and if I got no chance
|
|
to describe the hiding-place to her I was going to slip my silver
|
|
watch into her hand, or send it to her, and she would understand.
|
|
There's a piece of paper in the back of the case, which tells it all.
|
|
Here, take the watch--tell me what to do!'
|
|
|
|
He was trying to press his watch upon me, and was exposing the paper
|
|
and explaining it to me, when Adler appeared on the scene,
|
|
about a dozen yards away. I said to poor Kruger--
|
|
|
|
'Put up your watch, I don't want it. You shan't come
|
|
to any harm. Go, now; I must tell Adler his fortune.
|
|
Presently I will tell you how to escape the assassin;
|
|
meantime I shall have to examine your thumbmark again.
|
|
Say nothing to Adler about this thing--say nothing to anybody.'
|
|
|
|
He went away filled with fright and gratitude, poor devil.
|
|
I told Adler a long fortune--purposely so long that I could
|
|
not finish it; promised to come to him on guard, that night,
|
|
and tell him the really important part of it--the tragical
|
|
part of it, I said--so must be out of reach of eavesdroppers.
|
|
They always kept a picket-watch outside the town--mere discipline
|
|
and ceremony--no occasion for it, no enemy around.
|
|
|
|
Toward midnight I set out, equipped with the countersign,
|
|
and picked my way toward the lonely region where Adler was
|
|
to keep his watch. It was so dark that I stumbled right on
|
|
a dim figure almost before I could get out a protecting word.
|
|
The sentinel hailed and I answered, both at the same moment.
|
|
I added, 'It's only me--the fortune-teller.' Then I slipped to the poor
|
|
devil's side, and without a word I drove my dirk into his heart!
|
|
YA WOHL, laughed I, it WAS the tragedy part of his fortune, indeed!
|
|
As he fell from his horse, he clutched at me, and my blue goggles
|
|
remained in his hand; and away plunged the beast dragging him,
|
|
with his foot in the stirrup.
|
|
|
|
I fled through the woods, and made good my escape, leaving the accusing
|
|
goggles behind me in that dead man's hand.
|
|
|
|
This was fifteen or sixteen years ago. Since then I have wandered
|
|
aimlessly about the earth, sometimes at work, sometimes idle;
|
|
sometimes with money, sometimes with none; but always tired of life,
|
|
and wishing it was done, for my mission here was finished, with the act
|
|
of that night; and the only pleasure, solace, satisfaction I had,
|
|
in all those tedious years, was in the daily reflection,
|
|
'I have killed him!'
|
|
|
|
Four years ago, my health began to fail. I had wandered into Munich,
|
|
in my purposeless way. Being out of money, I sought work,
|
|
and got it; did my duty faithfully about a year, and was then
|
|
given the berth of night watchman yonder in that dead-house
|
|
which you visited lately. The place suited my mood. I liked it.
|
|
I liked being with the dead--liked being alone with them.
|
|
I used to wander among those rigid corpses, and peer into
|
|
their austere faces, by the hour. The later the time,
|
|
the more impressive it was; I preferred the late time.
|
|
Sometimes I turned the lights low: this gave perspective, you see;
|
|
and the imagination could play; always, the dim receding ranks
|
|
of the dead inspired one with weird and fascinating fancies.
|
|
Two years ago--I had been there a year then--I was sitting all alone
|
|
in the watch-room, one gusty winter's night, chilled, numb, comfortless;
|
|
drowsing gradually into unconsciousness; the sobbing of the wind
|
|
and the slamming of distant shutters falling fainter and fainter
|
|
upon my dulling ear each moment, when sharp and suddenly
|
|
that dead-bell rang out a blood-curdling alarum over my head!
|
|
The shock of it nearly paralyzed me; for it was the first time I had
|
|
ever heard it.
|
|
|
|
I gathered myself together and flew to the corpse-room. About midway
|
|
down the outside rank, a shrouded figure was sitting upright,
|
|
wagging its head slowly from one side to the other--a grisly spectacle!
|
|
Its side was toward me. I hurried to it and peered into its face.
|
|
Heavens, it was Adler!
|
|
|
|
Can you divine what my first thought was? Put into words,
|
|
it was this: 'It seems, then, you escaped me once:
|
|
there will be a different result this time!'
|
|
|
|
Evidently this creature was suffering unimaginable terrors.
|
|
Think what it must have been to wake up in the midst of that
|
|
voiceless hush, and, look out over that grim congregation
|
|
of the dead! What gratitude shone in his skinny white face
|
|
when he saw a living form before him! And how the fervency
|
|
of this mute gratitude was augmented when his eyes fell
|
|
upon the life-giving cordials which I carried in my hands!
|
|
Then imagine the horror which came into this pinched face when I
|
|
put the cordials behind me, and said mockingly--
|
|
|
|
'Speak up, Franz Adler--call upon these dead. Doubtless they will listen
|
|
and have pity; but here there is none else that will.'
|
|
|
|
He tried to speak, but that part of the shroud which bound his jaws,
|
|
held firm and would not let him. He tried to lift imploring hands,
|
|
but they were crossed upon his breast and tied. I said-
|
|
|
|
'Shout, Franz Adler; make the sleepers in the distant
|
|
streets hear you and bring help. Shout--and lose no time,
|
|
for there is little to lose. What, you cannot? That is a pity;
|
|
but it is no matter--it does not always bring help.
|
|
When you and your cousin murdered a helpless woman and child
|
|
in a cabin in Arkansas--my wife, it was, and my child!--
|
|
they shrieked for help, you remember; but it did no good;
|
|
you remember that it did no good, is it not so? Your teeth chatter--
|
|
then why cannot you shout? Loosen the bandages with your hands--
|
|
then you can. Ah, I see--your hands are tied, they cannot aid you.
|
|
How strangely things repeat themselves, after long years;
|
|
for MY hands were tied, that night, you remember? Yes, tied much
|
|
as yours are now--how odd that is. I could not pull free.
|
|
It did not occur to you to untie me; it does not occur
|
|
to me to untie you. Sh----! there's a late footstep.
|
|
It is coming this way. Hark, how near it is! One can count
|
|
the footfalls--one--two--three. There--it is just outside.
|
|
Now is the time! Shout, man, shout!--it is the one sole chance
|
|
between you and eternity! Ah, you see you have delayed too long--
|
|
it is gone by. There--it is dying out. It is gone! Think of it--
|
|
reflect upon it--you have heard a human footstep for the last time.
|
|
How curious it must be, to listen to so common a sound as that,
|
|
and know that one will never hear the fellow to it again.'
|
|
|
|
Oh, my friend, the agony in that shrouded face was ecstasy to see!
|
|
I thought of a new torture, and applied it--assisting myself with a trifle
|
|
of lying invention--
|
|
|
|
'That poor Kruger tried to save my wife and child, and I
|
|
did him a grateful good turn for it when the time came.
|
|
I persuaded him to rob you; and I and a woman helped him to desert,
|
|
and got him away in safety.' A look as of surprise and triumph
|
|
shone out dimly through the anguish in my victim's face.
|
|
I was disturbed, disquieted. I said--
|
|
|
|
'What, then--didn't he escape?'
|
|
|
|
A negative shake of the head.
|
|
|
|
'No? What happened, then?'
|
|
|
|
The satisfaction in the shrouded face was still plainer.
|
|
The man tried to mumble out some words--could not succeed;
|
|
tried to express something with his obstructed hands--failed;
|
|
paused a moment, then feebly tilted his head, in a meaning way,
|
|
toward the corpse that lay nearest him.
|
|
|
|
'Dead?' I asked. 'Failed to escape?--caught in the act and shot?'
|
|
|
|
Negative shake of the head.
|
|
|
|
'How, then?'
|
|
|
|
Again the man tried to do something with his hands. I watched closely,
|
|
but could not guess the intent. I bent over and watched still more intently.
|
|
He had twisted a thumb around and was weakly punching at his breast with it.
|
|
'Ah--stabbed, do you mean?'
|
|
|
|
Affirmative nod, accompanied by a spectral smile of such
|
|
peculiar devilishness, that it struck an awakening light
|
|
through my dull brain, and I cried--
|
|
|
|
'Did I stab him, mistaking him for you?--for that stroke was meant
|
|
for none but you.'
|
|
|
|
The affirmative nod of the re-dying rascal was as joyous as his failing
|
|
strength was able to put into its expression.
|
|
|
|
'O, miserable, miserable me, to slaughter the pitying soul that,
|
|
stood a friend to my darlings when they were helpless, and would
|
|
have saved them if he could! miserable, oh, miserable, miserable me!'
|
|
|
|
I fancied I heard the muffled gurgle of a, mocking laugh.
|
|
I took my face out of my hands, and saw my enemy sinking back upon
|
|
his inclined board.
|
|
|
|
He was a satisfactory long time dying. He had a wonderful vitality,
|
|
an astonishing constitution. Yes, he was a pleasant long time at it.
|
|
I got a chair and a newspaper, and sat down by him and read.
|
|
Occasionally I took a sip of brandy. This was necessary,
|
|
on account of the cold. But I did it partly because I saw,
|
|
that along at first, whenever I reached for the bottle,
|
|
he thought I was going to give him some. I read aloud:
|
|
mainly imaginary accounts of people snatched from the grave's
|
|
threshold and restored to life and vigor by a few spoonsful
|
|
of liquor and a warm bath. Yes, he had a long, hard death of it--
|
|
three hours and six minutes, from the time he rang his bell.
|
|
|
|
It is believed that in all these eighteen years that have elapsed since
|
|
the institution of the corpse-watch, no shrouded occupant of the Bavarian
|
|
dead-houses has ever rung its bell. Well, it is a harmless belief.
|
|
Let it stand at that.
|
|
|
|
The chill of that death-room had penetrated my bones.
|
|
It revived and fastened upon me the disease which had been
|
|
afflicting me, but which, up to that night, had been
|
|
steadily disappearing. That man murdered my wife and my child;
|
|
and in three days hence he will have added me to his list.
|
|
No matter--God! how delicious the memory of it!--I caught him
|
|
escaping from his grave, and thrust him back into it.
|
|
|
|
After that night, I was confined to my bed for a week;
|
|
but as soon as I could get about, I went to the dead-house
|
|
books and got the number of the house which Adler had died in.
|
|
A wretched lodging-house, it was. It was my idea that he would
|
|
naturally have gotten hold of Kruger's effects, being his cousin;
|
|
and I wanted to get Kruger's watch, if I could. But while I was sick,
|
|
Adler's things had been sold and scattered, all except a few old letters,
|
|
and some odds and ends of no value. However, through those letters,
|
|
I traced out a son of Kruger's, the only relative left.
|
|
He is a man of thirty now, a shoemaker by trade, and living at
|
|
No. 14 Konigstrasse, Mannheim--widower, with several small children.
|
|
Without explaining to him why, I have furnished two-thirds of
|
|
his support, ever since.
|
|
|
|
Now, as to that watch--see how strangely things happen!
|
|
I traced it around and about Germany for more than a year,
|
|
at considerable cost in money and vexation; and at last I got it.
|
|
Got it, and was unspeakably glad; opened it, and found nothing
|
|
in it! Why, I might have known that that bit of paper was not
|
|
going to stay there all this time. Of course I gave up that ten
|
|
thousand dollars then; gave it up, and dropped it out of my mind:
|
|
and most sorrowfully, for I had wanted it for Kruger's son.
|
|
|
|
Last night, when I consented at last that I must die, I began to
|
|
make ready. I proceeded to burn all useless papers; and sure enough,
|
|
from a batch of Adler's, not previously examined with thoroughness,
|
|
out dropped that long-desired scrap! I recognized it in a moment.
|
|
Here it is--I will translate it:
|
|
|
|
'Brick livery stable, stone foundation, middle of town, corner of Orleans
|
|
and Market. Corner toward Court-house. Third stone, fourth row.
|
|
Stick notice there, saying how many are to come.'
|
|
|
|
|
|
There--take it, and preserve it. Kruger explained that that stone
|
|
was removable; and that it was in the north wall of the foundation,
|
|
fourth row from the top, and third stone from the west.
|
|
The money is secreted behind it. He said the closing sentence was
|
|
a blind, to mislead in case the paper should fall into wrong hands.
|
|
It probably performed that office for Adler.
|
|
|
|
Now I want to beg that when you make your intended journey down the river,
|
|
you will hunt out that hidden money, and send it to Adam Kruger, care of
|
|
the Mannheim address which I have mentioned. It will make a rich man of him,
|
|
and I shall sleep the sounder in my grave for knowing that I have done
|
|
what I could for the son of the man who tried to save my wife and child--
|
|
albeit my hand ignorantly struck him down, whereas the impulse of my heart
|
|
would have been to shield and serve him.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 32
|
|
The Disposal of a Bonanza
|
|
|
|
'SUCH was Ritter's narrative,' said I to my two friends.
|
|
There was a profound and impressive silence, which lasted
|
|
a considerable time; then both men broke into a fusillade
|
|
of exciting and admiring ejaculations over the strange incidents
|
|
of the tale; and this, along with a rattling fire of questions,
|
|
was kept up until all hands were about out of breath.
|
|
Then my friends began to cool down, and draw off,
|
|
under shelter of occasional volleys, into silence and
|
|
abysmal reverie. For ten minutes now, there was stillness.
|
|
Then Rogers said dreamily--
|
|
|
|
'Ten thousand dollars.'
|
|
|
|
Adding, after a considerable pause--
|
|
|
|
'Ten thousand. It is a heap of money.'
|
|
|
|
Presently the poet inquired--
|
|
|
|
'Are you going to send it to him right away?'
|
|
|
|
'Yes,' I said. 'It is a queer question.'
|
|
|
|
No reply. After a little, Rogers asked, hesitatingly:
|
|
|
|
'ALL of it?--That is--I mean----'
|
|
|
|
'Certainly, all of it.'
|
|
|
|
I was going to say more, but stopped--was stopped by a
|
|
train of thought which started up in me. Thompson spoke,
|
|
but my mind was absent, and I did not catch what he said.
|
|
But I heard Rogers answer--
|
|
|
|
'Yes, it seems so to me. It ought to be quite sufficient;
|
|
for I don't see that he has done anything.'
|
|
|
|
Presently the poet said--
|
|
|
|
'When you come to look at it, it is more than sufficient. Just look at it--
|
|
five thousand dollars! Why, he couldn't spend it in a lifetime!
|
|
And it would injure him, too; perhaps ruin him--you want to look at that.
|
|
In a little while he would throw his last away, shut up his shop, maybe take
|
|
to drinking, maltreat his motherless children, drift into other evil courses,
|
|
go steadily from bad to worse----'
|
|
|
|
'Yes, that's it,' interrupted Rogers, fervently, 'I've seen it
|
|
a hundred times--yes, more than a hundred. You put money into
|
|
the hands of a man like that, if you want to destroy him, that's all;
|
|
just put money into his hands, it's all you've got to do;
|
|
and if it don't pull him down, and take all the usefulness out of him,
|
|
and all the self-respect and everything, then I don't know human nature--
|
|
ain't that so, Thompson? And even if we were to give him a THIRD
|
|
of it; why, in less than six months--'
|
|
|
|
'Less than six WEEKS, you'd better say!' said I, warming up and breaking in.
|
|
'Unless he had that three thousand dollars in safe hands where he couldn't
|
|
touch it, he would no more last you six weeks than---- '
|
|
|
|
'Of COURSE he wouldn't,' said Thompson; 'I've edited books for that
|
|
kind of people; and the moment they get their hands on the royalty--
|
|
maybe it's three thousand, maybe it's two thousand----'
|
|
|
|
'What business has that shoemaker with two thousand dollars,
|
|
I should like to know?' broke in Rogers, earnestly. 'A man perhaps
|
|
perfectly contented now, there in Mannheim, surrounded by his own class,
|
|
eating his bread with the appetite which laborious industry alone
|
|
can give, enjoying his humble life, honest, upright, pure in heart;
|
|
and BLEST!--yes, I say blest! blest above all the myriads that go
|
|
in silk attire and walk the empty artificial round of social folly--
|
|
but just you put that temptation before him once! just you lay fifteen
|
|
hundred dollars before a man like that, and say----'
|
|
|
|
'Fifteen hundred devils!' cried I, 'FIVE hundred would rot his principles,
|
|
paralyze his industry, drag him to the rumshop, thence to the gutter,
|
|
thence to the almshouse, thence to----'
|
|
|
|
'WHY put upon ourselves this crime, gentlemen?' interrupted the poet
|
|
earnestly and appealingly. 'He is happy where he is, and AS he is.
|
|
Every sentiment of honor, every sentiment of charity, every sentiment
|
|
of high and sacred benevolence warns us, beseeches us, commands us to leave
|
|
him undisturbed. That is real friendship, that is true friendship.
|
|
We could follow other courses that would be more showy; but none that would
|
|
be so truly kind and wise, depend upon it.'
|
|
|
|
After some further talk, it became evident that each of us, down in his heart,
|
|
felt some misgivings over this settlement of the matter. It was manifest
|
|
that we all felt that we ought to send the poor shoemaker SOMETHING.
|
|
There was long and thoughtful discussion of this point; and we finally decided
|
|
to send him a chromo.
|
|
|
|
Well, now that everything seemed to be arranged satisfactorily
|
|
to everybody concerned, a new trouble broke out: it transpired that
|
|
these two men were expecting to share equally in the money with me.
|
|
That was not my idea. I said that if they got half of it between them
|
|
they might consider themselves lucky. Rogers said--
|
|
|
|
'Who would have had ANY if it hadn't been for me? I flung out the first hint--
|
|
but for that it would all have gone to the shoemaker.'
|
|
|
|
Thompson said that he was thinking of the thing himself at the very moment
|
|
that Rogers had originally spoken.
|
|
|
|
I retorted that the idea would have occurred to me plenty soon enough,
|
|
and without anybody's help. I was slow about thinking, maybe, but I was sure.
|
|
|
|
This matter warmed up into a quarrel; then into a fight; and each man
|
|
got pretty badly battered. As soon as I had got myself mended up after
|
|
a fashion, I ascended to the hurricane deck in a pretty sour humor.
|
|
I found Captain McCord there, and said, as pleasantly as my humor would permit--
|
|
|
|
'I have come to say good-bye, captain. I wish to go ashore at Napoleon.'
|
|
|
|
'Go ashore where?'
|
|
|
|
'Napoleon.'
|
|
|
|
The captain laughed; but seeing that I was not in a jovial mood,
|
|
stopped that and said--
|
|
|
|
'But are you serious?'
|
|
|
|
'Serious? I certainly am.'
|
|
|
|
The captain glanced up at the pilot-house and said--
|
|
|
|
'He wants to get off at Napoleon!'
|
|
|
|
'Napoleon ?'
|
|
|
|
'That's what he says.'
|
|
|
|
'Great Caesar's ghost!'
|
|
|
|
Uncle Mumford approached along the deck. The captain said--
|
|
|
|
'Uncle, here's a friend of yours wants to get off at Napoleon!'
|
|
|
|
'Well, by ----?'
|
|
|
|
I said--
|
|
|
|
'Come, what is all this about? Can't a man go ashore at Napoleon
|
|
if he wants to?'
|
|
|
|
'Why, hang it, don't you know? There ISN'T any Napoleon any more.
|
|
Hasn't been for years and years. The Arkansas River burst through it,
|
|
tore it all to rags, and emptied it into the Mississippi!'
|
|
|
|
'Carried the WHOLE town away?-banks, churches, jails,
|
|
newspaper-offices, court-house, theater, fire department,
|
|
livery stable EVERYTHING ?'
|
|
|
|
'Everything. just a fifteen-minute job.' or such a matter.
|
|
Didn't leave hide nor hair, shred nor shingle of it, except the
|
|
fag-end of a shanty and one brick chimney. This boat is paddling
|
|
along right now, where the dead-center of that town used to be;
|
|
yonder is the brick chimney-all that's left of Napoleon.
|
|
These dense woods on the right used to be a mile back of the town.
|
|
Take a look behind you--up-stream--now you begin to recognize
|
|
this country, don't you?'
|
|
|
|
'Yes, I do recognize it now. It is the most wonderful thing I ever heard of;
|
|
by a long shot the most wonderful--and unexpected.'
|
|
|
|
Mr. Thompson and Mr. Rogers had arrived, meantime, with satchels
|
|
and umbrellas, and had silently listened to the captain's news.
|
|
Thompson put a half-dollar in my hand and said softly--
|
|
|
|
'For my share of the chromo.'
|
|
|
|
Rogers followed suit.
|
|
|
|
Yes, it was an astonishing thing to see the Mississippi rolling
|
|
between unpeopled shores and straight over the spot where I
|
|
used to see a good big self-complacent town twenty years ago.
|
|
Town that was county-seat of a great and important county; town with
|
|
a big United States marine hospital; town of innumerable fights--
|
|
an inquest every day; town where I had used to know the prettiest girl,
|
|
and the most accomplished in the whole Mississippi Valley;
|
|
town where we were handed the first printed news of the 'Pennsylvania's'
|
|
mournful disaster a quarter of a century ago; a town no more--
|
|
swallowed up, vanished, gone to feed the fishes; nothing left but a
|
|
fragment of a shanty and a crumbling brick chimney!
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 33
|
|
Refreshments and Ethics
|
|
|
|
IN regard to Island 74, which is situated not far from the former Napoleon,
|
|
a freak of the river here has sorely perplexed the laws of men and made
|
|
them a vanity and a jest. When the State of Arkansas was chartered,
|
|
she controlled 'to the center of the river'--a most unstable line. The State
|
|
of Mississippi claimed 'to the channel'--another shifty and unstable line.
|
|
No. 74 belonged to Arkansas. By and by a cut-off threw this big island out
|
|
of Arkansas, and yet not within Mississippi. 'Middle of the river' on one
|
|
side of it, 'channel' on the other. That is as I understand the problem.
|
|
Whether I have got the details right or wrong, this FACT remains:
|
|
that here is this big and exceedingly valuable island of four thousand acres,
|
|
thrust out in the cold, and belonging to neither the one State nor the other;
|
|
paying taxes to neither, owing allegiance to neither. One man owns
|
|
the whole island, and of right is 'the man without a country.'
|
|
|
|
Island 92 belongs to Arkansas. The river moved it over
|
|
and joined it to Mississippi. A chap established a whiskey
|
|
shop there, without a Mississippi license, and enriched
|
|
himself upon Mississippi custom under Arkansas protection
|
|
(where no license was in those days required).
|
|
|
|
We glided steadily down the river in the usual privacy--
|
|
steamboat or other moving thing seldom seen. Scenery as always:
|
|
stretch upon stretch of almost unbroken forest, on both sides
|
|
of the river; soundless solitude. Here and there a cabin or two,
|
|
standing in small openings on the gray and grassless banks--
|
|
cabins which had formerly stood a quarter or half-mile farther
|
|
to the front, and gradually been pulled farther and farther back
|
|
as the shores caved in. As at Pilcher's Point, for instance,
|
|
where the cabins had been moved back three hundred yards
|
|
in three months, so we were told; but the caving banks had
|
|
already caught up with them, and they were being conveyed
|
|
rearward once more.
|
|
|
|
Napoleon had but small opinion of Greenville, Mississippi, in the old times;
|
|
but behold, Napoleon is gone to the cat-fishes, and here is Greenville full
|
|
of life and activity, and making a considerable flourish in the Valley;
|
|
having three thousand inhabitants, it is said, and doing a gross trade of
|
|
$2,500,000 annually. A growing town.
|
|
|
|
There was much talk on the boat about the Calhoun Land Company,
|
|
an enterprise which is expected to work wholesome results.
|
|
Colonel Calhoun, a grandson of the statesman, went to Boston
|
|
and formed a syndicate which purchased a large tract of land on
|
|
the river, in Chicot County, Arkansas--some ten thousand acres--
|
|
for cotton-growing. The purpose is to work on a cash basis:
|
|
buy at first hands, and handle their own product; supply their negro
|
|
laborers with provisions and necessaries at a trifling profit,
|
|
say 8 or 10 per cent.; furnish them comfortable quarters,
|
|
etc., and encourage them to save money and remain on the place.
|
|
If this proves a financial success, as seems quite certain,
|
|
they propose to establish a banking-house in Greenville,
|
|
and lend money at an unburdensome rate of interest--6 per cent.
|
|
is spoken of.
|
|
|
|
The trouble heretofore has been--I am quoting remarks of planters
|
|
and steamboatmen--that the planters, although owning the land,
|
|
were without cash capital; had to hypothecate both land and crop
|
|
to carry on the business. Consequently, the commission dealer
|
|
who furnishes the money takes some risk and demands big interest--
|
|
usually 10 per cent., and 2<half> per cent. for negotiating the loan.
|
|
The planter has also to buy his supplies through the same dealer,
|
|
paying commissions and profits. Then when he ships his crop,
|
|
the dealer adds his commissions, insurance, etc. So, taking it
|
|
by and large, and first and last, the dealer's share of that crop
|
|
is about 25 per cent.'<footnote ['But what can the State do
|
|
where the people are under subjection to rates of interest ranging
|
|
from 18 to 30 per cent., and are also under the necessity of
|
|
purchasing their crops in advance even of planting, at these rates,
|
|
for the privilege of purchasing all their supplies at 100 per cent.
|
|
profit?'--EDWARD ATKINSON.]>
|
|
|
|
A cotton-planter's estimate of the average margin of profit
|
|
on planting, in his section: One man and mule will raise ten
|
|
acres of cotton, giving ten bales cotton, worth, say, $500; cost
|
|
of producing, say $350; net profit, $150, or $15 per acre.
|
|
There is also a profit now from the cotton-seed, which formerly
|
|
had little value--none where much transportation was necessary.
|
|
In sixteen hundred pounds crude cotton four hundred are lint,
|
|
worth, say, ten cents a pound; and twelve hundred pounds of seed,
|
|
worth $12 or $13 per ton. Maybe in future even the stems will
|
|
not be thrown away. Mr. Edward Atkinson says that for each
|
|
bale of cotton there are fifteen hundred pounds of stems,
|
|
and that these are very rich in phosphate of lime and potash;
|
|
that when ground and mixed with ensilage or cotton-seed meal
|
|
(which is too rich for use as fodder in large quantities),
|
|
the stem mixture makes a superior food, rich in all the
|
|
elements needed for the production of milk, meat, and bone.
|
|
Heretofore the stems have been considered a nuisance.
|
|
|
|
Complaint is made that the planter remains grouty toward the former slave,
|
|
since the war; will have nothing but a chill business relation with him,
|
|
no sentiment permitted to intrude, will not keep a 'store' himself,
|
|
and supply the negro's wants and thus protect the negro's pocket
|
|
and make him able and willing to stay on the place and an advantage
|
|
to him to do it, but lets that privilege to some thrifty Israelite,
|
|
who encourages the thoughtless negro and wife to buy all sorts
|
|
of things which they could do without--buy on credit, at big prices,
|
|
month after month, credit based on the negro's share of the growing crop;
|
|
and at the end of the season, the negro's share belongs to the Israelite,'
|
|
the negro is in debt besides, is discouraged, dissatisfied, restless, and both
|
|
he and the planter are injured; for he will take steamboat and migrate,
|
|
and the planter must get a stranger in his place who does not know him,
|
|
does not care for him, will fatten the Israelite a season, and follow his
|
|
predecessor per steamboat.
|
|
|
|
It is hoped that the Calhoun Company will show, by its
|
|
humane and protective treatment of its laborers, that its
|
|
method is the most profitable for both planter and negro;
|
|
and it is believed that a general adoption of that method
|
|
will then follow.
|
|
|
|
And where so many are saying their say, shall not the
|
|
barkeeper testify? He is thoughtful, observant, never drinks;
|
|
endeavors to earn his salary, and WOULD earn it if there
|
|
were custom enough. He says the people along here in
|
|
Mississippi and Louisiana will send up the river to buy
|
|
vegetables rather than raise them, and they will come
|
|
aboard at the landings and buy fruits of the barkeeper.
|
|
Thinks they 'don't know anything but cotton;' believes they
|
|
don't know how to raise vegetables and fruit--'at least the most
|
|
of them.' Says 'a nigger will go to H for a watermelon'
|
|
('H' is all I find in the stenographer's report--
|
|
means Halifax probably, though that seems a good way to go
|
|
for a watermelon). Barkeeper buys watermelons for five cents
|
|
up the river, brings them down and sells them for fifty.
|
|
'Why does he mix such elaborate and picturesque drinks for the
|
|
nigger hands on the boat?' Because they won't have any other.
|
|
'They want a big drink; don't make any difference what
|
|
you make it of, they want the worth of their money.
|
|
You give a nigger a plain gill of half-a-dollar brandy for
|
|
five cents--will he touch it? No. Ain't size enough to it.
|
|
But you put up a pint of all kinds of worthless rubbish, and heave
|
|
in some red stuff to make it beautiful--red's the main thing--
|
|
and he wouldn't put down that glass to go to a circus.'
|
|
All the bars on this Anchor Line are rented and owned
|
|
by one firm. They furnish the liquors from their
|
|
own establishment, and hire the barkeepers 'on salary.'
|
|
Good liquors? Yes, on some of the boats, where there are
|
|
the kind of passengers that want it and can pay for it.
|
|
On the other boats? No. Nobody but the deck hands and firemen
|
|
to drink it. 'Brandy? Yes, I've got brandy, plenty of it;
|
|
but you don't want any of it unless you've made your will.'
|
|
It isn't as it used to be in the old times. Then everybody traveled
|
|
by steamboat, everybody drank, and everybody treated everybody else.
|
|
'Now most everybody goes by railroad, and the rest don't drink.'
|
|
In the old times the barkeeper owned the bar himself, 'and was
|
|
gay and smarty and talky and all jeweled up, and was the toniest
|
|
aristocrat on the boat; used to make $2,000 on a trip.
|
|
A father who left his son a steamboat bar, left him a fortune.
|
|
Now he leaves him board and lodging; yes, and washing,
|
|
if a shirt a trip will do. Yes, indeedy, times are changed.
|
|
Why, do you know, on the principal line of boats on
|
|
the Upper Mississippi, they don't have any bar at all!
|
|
Sounds like poetry, but it's the petrified truth.'
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 34
|
|
Tough Yarns
|
|
|
|
STACK ISLAND. I remembered Stack Island; also Lake Providence,
|
|
Louisiana--which is the first distinctly Southern-looking town
|
|
you come to, downward-bound; lies level and low, shade-trees hung
|
|
with venerable gray beards of Spanish moss; 'restful, pensive,
|
|
Sunday aspect about the place,' comments Uncle Mumford, with feeling--
|
|
also with truth.
|
|
|
|
A Mr. H. furnished some minor details of fact concerning this
|
|
region which I would have hesitated to believe if I had not
|
|
known him to be a steamboat mate. He was a passenger of ours,
|
|
a resident of Arkansas City, and bound to Vicksburg to join his boat,
|
|
a little Sunflower packet. He was an austere man, and had
|
|
the reputation of being singularly unworldly, for a river man.
|
|
Among other things, he said that Arkansas had been injured and kept
|
|
back by generations of exaggerations concerning the mosquitoes here.
|
|
One may smile, said he, and turn the matter off as being a small thing;
|
|
but when you come to look at the effects produced, in the way
|
|
of discouragement of immigration, and diminished values of property,
|
|
it was quite the opposite of a small thing, or thing in any wise
|
|
to be coughed down or sneered at. These mosquitoes had been
|
|
persistently represented as being formidable and lawless;
|
|
whereas 'the truth is, they are feeble, insignificant in size,
|
|
diffident to a fault, sensitive'--and so on, and so on; you would
|
|
have supposed he was talking about his family. But if he was soft
|
|
on the Arkansas mosquitoes, he was hard enough on the mosquitoes
|
|
of Lake Providence to make up for it--'those Lake Providence colossi,'
|
|
as he finely called them. He said that two of them could whip a dog,
|
|
and that four of them could hold a man down; and except help come,
|
|
they would kill him--'butcher him,' as he expressed it.
|
|
Referred in a sort of casual way--and yet significant way--
|
|
to 'the fact that the life policy in its simplest form is unknown
|
|
in Lake Providence--they take out a mosquito policy besides.'
|
|
He told many remarkable things about those lawless insects.
|
|
Among others, said he had seen them try to vote. Noticing that
|
|
this statement seemed to be a good deal of a strain on us,
|
|
he modified it a little: said he might have been mistaken,
|
|
as to that particular, but knew he had seen them around
|
|
the polls 'canvassing.'
|
|
|
|
There was another passenger--friend of H.'s--who backed up the harsh
|
|
evidence against those mosquitoes, and detailed some stirring adventures
|
|
which he had had with them. The stories were pretty sizable,
|
|
merely pretty sizable; yet Mr. H. was continually interrupting with
|
|
a cold, inexorable 'Wait--knock off twenty-five per cent. of that;
|
|
now go on;' or, 'Wait--you are getting that too strong; cut it down,
|
|
cut it down--you get a leetle too much costumery on to your statements:
|
|
always dress a fact in tights, never in an ulster;' or, 'Pardon, once more:
|
|
if you are going to load anything more on to that statement, you want
|
|
to get a couple of lighters and tow the rest, because it's drawing
|
|
all the water there is in the river already; stick to facts--just stick
|
|
to the cold facts; what these gentlemen want for a book is the frozen truth--
|
|
ain't that so, gentlemen?' He explained privately that it was necessary
|
|
to watch this man all the time, and keep him within bounds; it would
|
|
not do to neglect this precaution, as he, Mr. H., 'knew to his sorrow.'
|
|
Said he, 'I will not deceive you; he told me such a monstrous lie once,
|
|
that it swelled my left ear up, and spread it so that I was actually not able
|
|
to see out around it; it remained so for months, and people came miles to see
|
|
me fan myself with it.'
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 35
|
|
Vicksburg During the Trouble
|
|
|
|
WE used to plow past the lofty hill-city, Vicksburg, down-stream;
|
|
but we cannot do that now. A cut-off has made a country town of it,
|
|
like Osceola, St. Genevieve, and several others. There is
|
|
currentless water--also a big island--in front of Vicksburg now.
|
|
You come down the river the other side of the island,
|
|
then turn and come up to the town; that is, in high water:
|
|
in low water you can't come up, but must land some distance below it.
|
|
|
|
Signs and scars still remain, as reminders of Vicksburg's
|
|
tremendous war experiences; earthworks, trees crippled by
|
|
the cannon balls, cave-refuges in the clay precipices, etc.
|
|
The caves did good service during the six weeks'
|
|
bombardment of the city--May 8 to July 4, 1863. They were
|
|
used by the non-combatants--mainly by the women and children;
|
|
not to live in constantly, but to fly to for safety on occasion.
|
|
They were mere holes, tunnels, driven into the perpendicular
|
|
clay bank, then branched Y shape, within the hill.
|
|
Life in Vicksburg, during the six weeks was perhaps--but wait;
|
|
here are some materials out of which to reproduce it:--
|
|
|
|
Population, twenty-seven thousand soldiers and three
|
|
thousand non-combatants; the city utterly cut off from the world--
|
|
walled solidly in, the frontage by gunboats, the rear by soldiers
|
|
and batteries; hence, no buying and selling with the outside;
|
|
no passing to and fro; no God-speeding a parting guest,
|
|
no welcoming a coming one; no printed acres of world-wide news
|
|
to be read at breakfast, mornings--a tedious dull absence of
|
|
such matter, instead; hence, also, no running to see steamboats
|
|
smoking into view in the distance up or down, and plowing toward
|
|
the town--for none came, the river lay vacant and undisturbed;
|
|
no rush and turmoil around the railway station, no struggling
|
|
over bewildered swarms of passengers by noisy mobs of hackmen--
|
|
all quiet there; flour two hundred dollars a barrel, sugar thirty,
|
|
corn ten dollars a bushel, bacon five dollars a pound,
|
|
rum a hundred dollars a gallon; other things in proportion:
|
|
consequently, no roar and racket of drays and carriages tearing
|
|
along the streets; nothing for them to do, among that handful
|
|
of non-combatants of exhausted means; at three o'clock in
|
|
the morning, silence; silence so dead that the measured tramp
|
|
of a sentinel can be heard a seemingly impossible distance; out of
|
|
hearing of this lonely sound, perhaps the stillness is absolute:
|
|
all in a moment come ground-shaking thunder-crashes of artillery,
|
|
the sky is cobwebbed with the crisscrossing red lines streaming
|
|
from soaring bomb-shells, and a rain of iron fragments
|
|
descends upon the city; descends upon the empty streets:
|
|
streets which are not empty a moment later, but mottled with dim
|
|
figures of frantic women and children scurrying from home and bed
|
|
toward the cave dungeons--encouraged by the humorous grim soldiery,
|
|
who shout 'Rats, to your holes!' and laugh.
|
|
|
|
The cannon-thunder rages, shells scream and crash overhead, the iron
|
|
rain pours down, one hour, two hours, three, possibly six, then stops;
|
|
silence follows, but the streets are still empty; the silence continues;
|
|
by-and-bye a head projects from a cave here and there and yonder,
|
|
and reconnoitres, cautiously; the silence still continuing,
|
|
bodies follow heads, and jaded, half smothered creatures group
|
|
themselves about, stretch their cramped limbs, draw in deep draughts
|
|
of the grateful fresh air, gossip with the neighbors from the next cave;
|
|
maybe straggle off home presently, or take a lounge through the town,
|
|
if the stillness continues; and will scurry to the holes again,
|
|
by-and-bye, when the war-tempest breaks forth once more.
|
|
|
|
There being but three thousand of these cave-dwellers--
|
|
merely the population of a village--would they not come
|
|
to know each other, after a week or two, and familiarly;
|
|
insomuch that the fortunate or unfortunate experiences of one
|
|
would be of interest to all?
|
|
|
|
Those are the materials furnished by history. From them might not almost
|
|
anybody reproduce for himself the life of that time in Vicksburg?
|
|
Could you, who did not experience it, come nearer to reproducing it
|
|
to the imagination of another non-participant than could a Vicksburger
|
|
who did experience it? It seems impossible; and yet there are reasons
|
|
why it might not really be. When one makes his first voyage in a ship,
|
|
it is an experience which multitudinously bristles with striking novelties;
|
|
novelties which are in such sharp contrast with all this person's former
|
|
experiences that they take a seemingly deathless grip upon his imagination
|
|
and memory. By tongue or pen he can make a landsman live that strange
|
|
and stirring voyage over with him; make him see it all and feel it all.
|
|
But if he wait? If he make ten voyages in succession--what then?
|
|
Why, the thing has lost color, snap, surprise; and has become commonplace.
|
|
The man would have nothing to tell that would quicken a landsman's pulse.
|
|
|
|
Years ago, I talked with a couple of the Vicksburg non-combatants--
|
|
a man and his wife. Left to tell their story in their own way,
|
|
those people told it without fire, almost without interest.
|
|
|
|
A week of their wonderful life there would have made their tongues eloquent
|
|
for ever perhaps; but they had six weeks of it, and that wore the novelty
|
|
all out; they got used to being bomb-shelled out of home and into the ground;
|
|
the matter became commonplace. After that, the possibility of their
|
|
ever being startlingly interesting in their talks about it was gone.
|
|
What the man said was to this effect:--
|
|
|
|
'It got to be Sunday all the time. Seven Sundays in the week--to us, anyway.
|
|
We hadn't anything to do, and time hung heavy. Seven Sundays, and all
|
|
of them broken up at one time or another, in the day or in the night,
|
|
by a few hours of the awful storm of fire and thunder and iron. At first
|
|
we used to shin for the holes a good deal faster than we did afterwards.
|
|
The first time, I forgot the children, and Maria fetched them both along.
|
|
When she was all safe in the cave she fainted. Two or three weeks afterwards,
|
|
when she was running for the holes, one morning, through a shell-shower, a big
|
|
shell burst near her, and covered her all over with dirt, and a piece of
|
|
the iron carried away her game-bag of false hair from the back of her head.
|
|
Well, she stopped to get that game-bag before she shoved along again!
|
|
Was getting used to things already, you see. We all got so that we could
|
|
tell a good deal about shells; and after that we didn't always go under
|
|
shelter if it was a light shower. Us men would loaf around and talk;
|
|
and a man would say, 'There she goes!' and name the kind of shell it was from
|
|
the sound of it, and go on talking--if there wasn't any danger from it.
|
|
If a shell was bursting close over us, we stopped talking and stood still;--
|
|
uncomfortable, yes, but it wasn't safe to move. When it let go, we went
|
|
on talking again, if nobody hurt--maybe saying, 'That was a ripper!'
|
|
or some such commonplace comment before we resumed; or, maybe, we would
|
|
see a shell poising itself away high in the air overhead. In that case,
|
|
every fellow just whipped out a sudden, 'See you again, gents!' and shoved.
|
|
Often and often I saw gangs of ladies promenading the streets, looking as
|
|
cheerful as you please, and keeping an eye canted up watching the shells;
|
|
and I've seen them stop still when they were uncertain about what a
|
|
shell was going to do, and wait and make certain; and after that they
|
|
sa'ntered along again, or lit out for shelter, according to the verdict.
|
|
Streets in some towns have a litter of pieces of paper, and odds and ends
|
|
of one sort or another lying around. Ours hadn't; they had IRON litter.
|
|
Sometimes a man would gather up all the iron fragments and unbursted
|
|
shells in his neighborhood, and pile them into a kind of monument
|
|
in his front yard--a ton of it, sometimes. No glass left;
|
|
glass couldn't stand such a bombardment; it was all shivered out.
|
|
Windows of the houses vacant--looked like eye-holes in a skull.
|
|
WHOLE panes were as scarce as news.
|
|
|
|
'We had church Sundays. Not many there, along at first; but by-and-bye
|
|
pretty good turnouts. I've seen service stop a minute, and everybody
|
|
sit quiet--no voice heard, pretty funeral-like then--and all the more
|
|
so on account of the awful boom and crash going on outside and overhead;
|
|
and pretty soon, when a body could be heard, service would go on again.
|
|
Organs and church-music mixed up with a bombardment is a powerful
|
|
queer combination--along at first. Coming out of church, one morning,
|
|
we had an accident--the only one that happened around me on a Sunday.
|
|
I was just having a hearty handshake with a friend I hadn't seen for
|
|
a while, and saying, 'Drop into our cave to-night, after bombardment;
|
|
we've got hold of a pint of prime wh--.' Whiskey, I was going to say,
|
|
you know, but a shell interrupted. A chunk of it cut the man's arm off,
|
|
and left it dangling in my hand. And do you know the thing that is
|
|
going to stick the longest in my memory, and outlast everything else,
|
|
little and big, I reckon, is the mean thought I had then? It was 'the
|
|
whiskey IS SAVED.' And yet, don't you know, it was kind of excusable;
|
|
because it was as scarce as diamonds, and we had only just that little;
|
|
never had another taste during the siege.
|
|
|
|
'Sometimes the caves were desperately crowded, and always hot and close.
|
|
Sometimes a cave had twenty or twenty-five people packed into it;
|
|
no turning-room for anybody; air so foul, sometimes, you couldn't have made
|
|
a candle burn in it. A child was born in one of those caves one night,
|
|
Think of that; why, it was like having it born in a trunk.
|
|
|
|
'Twice we had sixteen people in our cave; and a number of times we
|
|
had a dozen. Pretty suffocating in there. We always had eight;
|
|
eight belonged there. Hunger and misery and sickness and fright
|
|
and sorrow, and I don't know what all, got so loaded into them that
|
|
none of them were ever rightly their old selves after the siege.
|
|
They all died but three of us within a couple of years.
|
|
One night a shell burst in front of the hole and caved it in and
|
|
stopped it up. It was lively times, for a while, digging out.
|
|
Some of us came near smothering. After that we made two openings--
|
|
ought to have thought of it at first.
|
|
|
|
'Mule meat. No, we only got down to that the last day or two.
|
|
Of course it was good; anything is good when you are starving.
|
|
|
|
This man had kept a diary during--six weeks? No, only the first six days.
|
|
The first day, eight close pages; the second, five; the third, one--
|
|
loosely written; the fourth, three or four lines; a line or two the fifth
|
|
and sixth days; seventh day, diary abandoned; life in terrific Vicksburg
|
|
having now become commonplace and matter of course.
|
|
|
|
The war history of Vicksburg has more about it to interest the general
|
|
reader than that of any other of the river-towns. It is full of variety,
|
|
full of incident, full of the picturesque. Vicksburg held out longer
|
|
than any other important river-town, and saw warfare in all its phases,
|
|
both land and water--the siege, the mine, the assault, the repulse,
|
|
the bombardment, sickness, captivity, famine.
|
|
|
|
The most beautiful of all the national cemeteries is here.
|
|
Over the great gateway is this inscription:--
|
|
|
|
"HERE REST IN PEACE 16,600 WHO DIED FOR THEIR
|
|
COUNTRY IN THE YEARS 1861 TO 1865"
|
|
|
|
The grounds are nobly situated; being very high and commanding a wide
|
|
prospect of land and river. They are tastefully laid out in broad terraces,
|
|
with winding roads and paths; and there is profuse adornment in the way
|
|
of semi-tropical shrubs and flowers,' and in one part is a piece of native
|
|
wild-wood, left just as it grew, and, therefore, perfect in its charm.
|
|
Everything about this cemetery suggests the hand of the national Government.
|
|
The Government's work is always conspicuous for excellence, solidity,
|
|
thoroughness, neatness. The Government does its work well in the first place,
|
|
and then takes care of it.
|
|
|
|
By winding-roads--which were often cut to so great a depth between
|
|
perpendicular walls that they were mere roofless tunnels--we drove
|
|
out a mile or two and visited the monument which stands upon the scene
|
|
of the surrender of Vicksburg to General Grant by General Pemberton.
|
|
Its metal will preserve it from the hackings and chippings which
|
|
so defaced its predecessor, which was of marble; but the brick
|
|
foundations are crumbling, and it will tumble down by-and-bye. It
|
|
overlooks a picturesque region of wooded hills and ravines; and is
|
|
not unpicturesque itself, being well smothered in flowering weeds.
|
|
The battered remnant of the marble monument has been removed to
|
|
the National Cemetery.
|
|
|
|
On the road, a quarter of a mile townward, an aged colored man showed us,
|
|
with pride, an unexploded bomb-shell which has lain in his yard since the day
|
|
it fell there during the siege.
|
|
|
|
'I was a-stannin' heah, an' de dog was a-stannin' heah; de dog
|
|
he went for de shell, gwine to pick a fuss wid it; but I didn't;
|
|
I says, "Jes' make you'seff at home heah; lay still whah you is,
|
|
or bust up de place, jes' as you's a mind to, but I's got business
|
|
out in de woods, I has!"'
|
|
|
|
Vicksburg is a town of substantial business streets and pleasant residences;
|
|
it commands the commerce of the Yazoo and Sunflower Rivers; is pushing
|
|
railways in several directions, through rich agricultural regions,
|
|
and has a promising future of prosperity and importance.
|
|
|
|
Apparently, nearly all the river towns, big and little, have made
|
|
up their minds that they must look mainly to railroads for wealth
|
|
and upbuilding, henceforth. They are acting upon this idea.
|
|
The signs are, that the next twenty years will bring about some
|
|
noteworthy changes in the Valley, in the direction of increased
|
|
population and wealth, and in the intellectual advancement
|
|
and the liberalizing of opinion which go naturally with these.
|
|
And yet, if one may judge by the past, the river towns will manage to find
|
|
and use a chance, here and there, to cripple and retard their progress.
|
|
They kept themselves back in the days of steamboating supremacy,
|
|
by a system of wharfage-dues so stupidly graded as to prohibit
|
|
what may be called small RETAIL traffic in freights and passengers.
|
|
Boats were charged such heavy wharfage that they could not afford
|
|
to land for one or two passengers or a light lot of freight.
|
|
Instead of encouraging the bringing of trade to their doors, the towns
|
|
diligently and effectively discouraged it. They could have had many
|
|
boats and low rates; but their policy rendered few boats and high
|
|
rates compulsory. It was a policy which extended--and extends--
|
|
from New Orleans to St. Paul.
|
|
|
|
We had a strong desire to make a trip up the Yazoo and the Sunflower--
|
|
an interesting region at any time, but additionally interesting at this time,
|
|
because up there the great inundation was still to be seen in force--
|
|
but we were nearly sure to have to wait a day or more for a New Orleans boat
|
|
on our return; so we were obliged to give up the project.
|
|
|
|
Here is a story which I picked up on board the boat that night.
|
|
I insert it in this place merely because it is a good story,
|
|
not because it belongs here--for it doesn't. It was told by a passenger--
|
|
a college professor--and was called to the surface in the course
|
|
of a general conversation which began with talk about horses,
|
|
drifted into talk about astronomy, then into talk about the lynching
|
|
of the gamblers in Vicksburg half a century ago, then into talk
|
|
about dreams and superstitions; and ended, after midnight,
|
|
in a dispute over free trade and protection.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 36
|
|
The Professor's Yarn
|
|
|
|
IT was in the early days. I was not a college professor then.
|
|
I was a humble-minded young land-surveyor, with the world before me--
|
|
to survey, in case anybody wanted it done. I had a contract to survey
|
|
a route for a great mining-ditch in California, and I was on my way thither,
|
|
by sea--a three or four weeks' voyage. There were a good many passengers,
|
|
but I had very little to say to them; reading and dreaming were my passions,
|
|
and I avoided conversation in order to indulge these appetites.
|
|
There were three professional gamblers on board--rough, repulsive fellows.
|
|
I never had any talk with them, yet I could not help seeing them
|
|
with some frequency, for they gambled in an upper-deck stateroom every
|
|
day and night, and in my promenades I often had glimpses of them
|
|
through their door, which stood a little ajar to let out the surplus
|
|
tobacco smoke and profanity. They were an evil and hateful presence,
|
|
but I had to put up with it, of course,
|
|
|
|
There was one other passenger who fell under my eye a good deal,
|
|
for he seemed determined to be friendly with me, and I could not have
|
|
gotten rid of him without running some chance of hurting his feelings,
|
|
and I was far from wishing to do that. Besides, there was something engaging
|
|
in his countrified simplicity and his beaming good-nature. The first time
|
|
I saw this Mr. John Backus, I guessed, from his clothes and his looks,
|
|
that he was a grazier or farmer from the backwoods of some western State--
|
|
doubtless Ohio--and afterward when he dropped into his personal history
|
|
and I discovered that he WAS a cattle-raiser from interior Ohio,
|
|
I was so pleased with my own penetration that I warmed toward him for
|
|
verifying my instinct.
|
|
|
|
He got to dropping alongside me every day, after breakfast,
|
|
to help me make my promenade; and so, in the course of time,
|
|
his easy-working jaw had told me everything about his business,
|
|
his prospects, his family, his relatives, his politics--
|
|
in fact everything that concerned a Backus, living or dead.
|
|
And meantime I think he had managed to get out of me everything
|
|
I knew about my trade, my tribe, my purposes, my prospects,
|
|
and myself. He was a gentle and persuasive genius, and this thing
|
|
showed it; for I was not given to talking about my matters.
|
|
I said something about triangulation, once; the stately word
|
|
pleased his ear; he inquired what it meant; I explained;
|
|
after that he quietly and inoffensively ignored my name,
|
|
and always called me Triangle.
|
|
|
|
What an enthusiast he was in cattle! At the bare name of a bull or a cow,
|
|
his eye would light and his eloquent tongue would turn itself loose. As long
|
|
as I would walk and listen, he would walk and talk; he knew all breeds,
|
|
he loved all breeds, he caressed them all with his affectionate tongue.
|
|
I tramped along in voiceless misery whilst the cattle question was up;
|
|
when I could endure it no longer, I used to deftly insert a scientific topic
|
|
into the conversation; then my eye fired and his faded; my tongue fluttered,
|
|
his stopped; life was a joy to me, and a sadness to him.
|
|
|
|
One day he said, a little hesitatingly, and with somewhat of diffidence--
|
|
|
|
'Triangle, would you mind coming down to my stateroom a minute,
|
|
and have a little talk on a certain matter?'
|
|
|
|
I went with him at once. Arrived there, he put his head out, glanced up
|
|
and down the saloon warily, then closed the door and locked it.
|
|
He sat down on the sofa, and he said--
|
|
|
|
'I'm a-going to make a little proposition to you, and if it strikes
|
|
you favorable, it'll be a middling good thing for both of us.
|
|
You ain't a-going out to Californy for fun, nuther am I--
|
|
it's business, ain't that so? Well, you can do me a good turn,
|
|
and so can I you, if we see fit. I've raked and scraped and saved,
|
|
a considerable many years, and I've got it all here.'
|
|
He unlocked an old hair trunk, tumbled a chaos of shabby
|
|
clothes aside, and drew a short stout bag into view for a moment,
|
|
then buried it again and relocked the trunk. Dropping his voice
|
|
to a cautious low tone, he continued, 'She's all there--a round
|
|
ten thousand dollars in yellow-boys; now this is my little idea:
|
|
What I don't know about raising cattle, ain't worth knowing.
|
|
There's mints of money in it, in Californy. Well, I know,
|
|
and you know, that all along a line that 's being surveyed,
|
|
there 's little dabs of land that they call "gores," that fall
|
|
to the surveyor free gratis for nothing. All you've got to do,
|
|
on your side, is to survey in such a way that the "gores" will fall
|
|
on good fat land, then you turn 'em over to me, I stock 'em with cattle,
|
|
in rolls the cash, I plank out your share of the dollars regular,
|
|
right along, and--'
|
|
|
|
I was sorry to wither his blooming enthusiasm, but it could not be helped.
|
|
I interrupted, and said severely--
|
|
|
|
'I am not that kind of a surveyor. Let us change the subject, Mr. Backus.'
|
|
|
|
It was pitiful to see his confusion and hear his awkward
|
|
and shamefaced apologies. I was as much distressed as he was--
|
|
especially as he seemed so far from having suspected
|
|
that there was anything improper in his proposition.
|
|
So I hastened to console him and lead him on to forget his
|
|
mishap in a conversational orgy about cattle and butchery.
|
|
We were lying at Acapulco; and, as we went on deck, it happened
|
|
luckily that the crew were just beginning to hoist some beeves
|
|
aboard in slings. Backus's melancholy vanished instantly,
|
|
and with it the memory of his late mistake.
|
|
|
|
'Now only look at that!' cried he; 'My goodness, Triangle, what WOULD they say
|
|
to it in OHIO. Wouldn't their eyes bug out, to see 'em handled like that?--
|
|
wouldn't they, though?'
|
|
|
|
All the passengers were on deck to look--even the gamblers--
|
|
and Backus knew them all, and had afflicted them all with his pet topic.
|
|
As I moved away, I saw one of the gamblers approach and accost him;
|
|
then another of them; then the third. I halted; waited; watched;
|
|
the conversation continued between the four men; it grew earnest;
|
|
Backus drew gradually away; the gamblers followed, and kept at his elbow.
|
|
I was uncomfortable. However, as they passed me presently, I heard
|
|
Backus say, with a tone of persecuted annoyance--
|
|
|
|
'But it ain't any use, gentlemen; I tell you again, as I've
|
|
told you a half a dozen times before, I warn't raised to it,
|
|
and I ain't a-going to resk it.'
|
|
|
|
I felt relieved. 'His level head will be his sufficient protection,'
|
|
I said to myself.
|
|
|
|
During the fortnight's run from Acapulco to San Francisco I
|
|
several times saw the gamblers talking earnestly with Backus,
|
|
and once I threw out a gentle warning to him. He chuckled
|
|
comfortably and said--
|
|
|
|
'Oh, yes! they tag around after me considerable--want me to play
|
|
a little, just for amusement, they say--but laws-a-me, if my folks
|
|
have told me once to look out for that sort of live-stock, they've
|
|
told me a thousand times, I reckon.'
|
|
|
|
By-and-bye, in due course, we were approaching San Francisco.
|
|
It was an ugly black night, with a strong wind blowing, but there
|
|
was not much sea. I was on deck, alone. Toward ten I started below.
|
|
A figure issued from the gamblers' den, and disappeared in the darkness.
|
|
I experienced a shock, for I was sure it was Backus.
|
|
I flew down the companion-way, looked about for him, could not
|
|
find him, then returned to the deck just in time to catch a glimpse
|
|
of him as he re-entered that confounded nest of rascality.
|
|
Had he yielded at last? I feared it. What had he gone below for?--
|
|
His bag of coin? Possibly. I drew near the door, full of bodings.
|
|
It was a-crack, and I glanced in and saw a sight that made
|
|
me bitterly wish I had given my attention to saving my poor
|
|
cattle-friend, instead of reading and dreaming my foolish time away.
|
|
He was gambling. Worse still, he was being plied with champagne,
|
|
and was already showing some effect from it. He praised the 'cider,'
|
|
as he called it, and said now that he had got a taste of it
|
|
he almost believed he would drink it if it was spirits, it was
|
|
so good and so ahead of anything he had ever run across before.
|
|
Surreptitious smiles, at this, passed from one rascal to another,
|
|
and they filled all the glasses, and whilst Backus honestly drained
|
|
his to the bottom they pretended to do the same, but threw the wine
|
|
over their shoulders.
|
|
|
|
I could not bear the scene, so I wandered forward and tried
|
|
to interest myself in the sea and the voices of the wind.
|
|
But no, my uneasy spirit kept dragging me back at
|
|
quarter-hour intervals; and always I saw Backus drinking his wine--
|
|
fairly and squarely, and the others throwing theirs away.
|
|
It was the painfullest night I ever spent.
|
|
|
|
The only hope I had was that we might reach our anchorage
|
|
with speed--that would break up the game. I helped the ship
|
|
along all I could with my prayers. At last we went booming
|
|
through the Golden Gate, and my pulses leaped for joy.
|
|
I hurried back to that door and glanced in. Alas, there was
|
|
small room for hope--Backus's eyes were heavy and bloodshot,
|
|
his sweaty face was crimson, his speech maudlin and thick,
|
|
his body sawed drunkenly about with the weaving motion of the ship.
|
|
He drained another glass to the dregs, whilst the cards
|
|
were being dealt.
|
|
|
|
He took his hand, glanced at it, and his dull eyes lit up for a moment.
|
|
The gamblers observed it, and showed their gratification by
|
|
hardly perceptible signs.
|
|
|
|
'How many cards?'
|
|
|
|
'None! ' said Backus.
|
|
|
|
One villain--named Hank Wiley--discarded one card, the others three each.
|
|
The betting began. Heretofore the bets had been trifling--
|
|
a dollar or two; but Backus started off with an eagle now,
|
|
Wiley hesitated a moment, then 'saw it' and 'went ten dollars better.'
|
|
The other two threw up their hands.
|
|
|
|
Backus went twenty better. Wiley said--
|
|
|
|
'I see that, and go you a hundred better!' then smiled and reached
|
|
for the money.
|
|
|
|
'Let it alone,' said Backus, with drunken gravity.
|
|
|
|
'What! you mean to say you're going to cover it?'
|
|
|
|
'Cover it? Well, I reckon I am--and lay another hundred on top
|
|
of it, too.'
|
|
|
|
He reached down inside his overcoat and produced the required sum.
|
|
|
|
'Oh, that's your little game, is it? I see your raise,
|
|
and raise it five hundred!' said Wiley.
|
|
|
|
'Five hundred better.' said the foolish bull-driver,
|
|
and pulled out the amount and showered it on the pile.
|
|
The three conspirators hardly tried to conceal their exultation.
|
|
|
|
All diplomacy and pretense were dropped now, and the sharp exclamations
|
|
came thick and fast, and the yellow pyramid grew higher and higher.
|
|
At last ten thousand dollars lay in view. Wiley cast a bag of coin on
|
|
the table, and said with mocking gentleness--
|
|
|
|
'Five thousand dollars better, my friend from the rural districts--
|
|
what do you say NOW?'
|
|
|
|
'I CALL you!' said Backus, heaving his golden shot-bag on the pile.
|
|
'What have you got?'
|
|
|
|
'Four kings, you d--d fool!' and Wiley threw down his cards and surrounded
|
|
the stakes with his arms.
|
|
|
|
'Four ACES, you ass!' thundered Backus, covering his man
|
|
with a cocked revolver. 'I'M A PROFESSIONAL GAMBLER MYSELF,
|
|
AND I'VE BEEN LAYING FOR YOU DUFFERS ALL THIS VOYAGE!'
|
|
|
|
Down went the anchor, rumbledy-dum-dum! and the long trip was ended.
|
|
|
|
Well--well, it is a sad world. One of the three gamblers was Backus's 'pal.'
|
|
It was he that dealt the fateful hands. According to an understanding with
|
|
the two victims, he was to have given Backus four queens, but alas, he didn't.
|
|
|
|
A week later, I stumbled upon Backus--arrayed in the height of fashion--
|
|
in Montgomery Street. He said, cheerily, as we were parting--
|
|
|
|
'Ah, by-the-way, you needn't mind about those gores. I don't really
|
|
know anything about cattle, except what I was able to pick up
|
|
in a week's apprenticeship over in Jersey just before we sailed.
|
|
My cattle-culture and cattle-enthusiasm have served their turn--
|
|
I shan't need them any more.'
|
|
|
|
Next day we reluctantly parted from the 'Gold Dust' and her officers,
|
|
hoping to see that boat and all those officers again, some day.
|
|
A thing which the fates were to render tragically impossible!
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 37
|
|
The End of the 'Gold Dust'
|
|
|
|
FOR, three months later, August 8, while I was writing one of these
|
|
foregoing chapters, the New York papers brought this telegram--
|
|
|
|
A TERRIBLE DISASTER.
|
|
|
|
SEVENTEEN PERSONS KILLED BY AN EXPLOSION ON THE STEAMER 'GOLD DUST.'
|
|
|
|
'NASHVILLE, Aug. 7.--A despatch from Hickman, Ky., says--
|
|
|
|
'The steamer "Gold Dust" exploded her boilers at
|
|
three o'clock to-day, just after leaving Hickman.
|
|
Forty-seven persons were scalded and seventeen are missing.
|
|
The boat was landed in the eddy just above the town,
|
|
and through the exertions of the citizens the cabin passengers,
|
|
officers, and part of the crew and deck passengers were
|
|
taken ashore and removed to the hotels and residences.
|
|
Twenty-four of the injured were lying in Holcomb's dry-goods
|
|
store at one time, where they received every attention before
|
|
being removed to more comfortable places.'
|
|
|
|
A list of the names followed, whereby it appeared that of the seventeen dead,
|
|
one was the barkeeper; and among the forty-seven wounded, were the captain,
|
|
chief mate, second mate, and second and third clerks; also Mr. Lem S. Gray,
|
|
pilot, and several members of the crew.
|
|
|
|
In answer to a private telegram, we learned that none of these was
|
|
severely hurt, except Mr. Gray. Letters received afterward confirmed
|
|
this news, and said that Mr. Gray was improving and would get well.
|
|
Later letters spoke less hopefully of his case; and finally came one
|
|
announcing his death. A good man, a most companionable and manly man,
|
|
and worthy of a kindlier fate.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 38
|
|
The House Beautiful
|
|
|
|
WE took passage in a Cincinnati boat for New Orleans; or on a Cincinnati boat--
|
|
either is correct; the former is the eastern form of putting it,
|
|
the latter the western.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Dickens declined to agree that the Mississippi steamboats
|
|
were 'magnificent,' or that they were 'floating palaces,'--
|
|
terms which had always been applied to them; terms which did not
|
|
over-express the admiration with which the people viewed them.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Dickens's position was unassailable, possibly; the people's
|
|
position was certainly unassailable. If Mr. Dickens was
|
|
comparing these boats with the crown jewels; or with the Taj,
|
|
or with the Matterhorn; or with some other priceless or wonderful
|
|
thing which he had seen, they were not magnificent--he was right.
|
|
The people compared them with what they had seen; and, thus measured,
|
|
thus judged, the boats were magnificent--the term was the correct one,
|
|
it was not at all too strong. The people were as right as was
|
|
Mr. Dickens. The steamboats were finer than anything on shore.
|
|
Compared with superior dwelling-houses and first-class hotels in
|
|
the Valley, they were indubitably magnificent, they were 'palaces.'
|
|
To a few people living in New Orleans and St. Louis, they were
|
|
not magnificent, perhaps; not palaces; but to the great majority
|
|
of those populations, and to the entire populations spread over
|
|
both banks between Baton Rouge and St. Louis, they were palaces;
|
|
they tallied with the citizen's dream of what magnificence was,
|
|
and satisfied it.
|
|
|
|
Every town and village along that vast stretch of double
|
|
river-frontage had a best dwelling, finest dwelling, mansion,--
|
|
the home of its wealthiest and most conspicuous citizen.
|
|
It is easy to describe it: large grassy yard, with paling
|
|
fence painted white--in fair repair; brick walk from gate
|
|
to door; big, square, two-story 'frame' house, painted white
|
|
and porticoed like a Grecian temple--with this difference,
|
|
that the imposing fluted columns and Corinthian capitals
|
|
were a pathetic sham, being made of white pine, and painted;
|
|
iron knocker; brass door knob--discolored, for lack
|
|
of polishing. Within, an uncarpeted hall, of planed boards;
|
|
opening out of it, a parlor, fifteen feet by fifteen--
|
|
in some instances five or ten feet larger; ingrain carpet;
|
|
mahogany center-table; lamp on it, with green-paper shade--
|
|
standing on a gridiron, so to speak, made of high-colored yarns,
|
|
by the young ladies of the house, and called a lamp-mat;
|
|
several books, piled and disposed, with cast-iron exactness,
|
|
according to an inherited and unchangeable plan; among them,
|
|
Tupper, much penciled; also, 'Friendship's Offering,'
|
|
and 'Affection's Wreath,' with their sappy inanities illustrated
|
|
in die-away mezzotints; also, Ossian; 'Alonzo and Melissa:'
|
|
maybe 'Ivanhoe:' also 'Album,' full of original 'poetry'
|
|
of the Thou-hast-wounded-the-spirit-that-loved-thee breed;
|
|
two or three goody-goody works--'Shepherd of Salisbury Plain,'
|
|
etc.; current number of the chaste and innocuous Godey's
|
|
'Lady's Book,' with painted fashion-plate of wax-figure
|
|
women with mouths all alike--lips and eyelids the same size--
|
|
each five-foot woman with a two-inch wedge sticking from
|
|
under her dress and letting-on to be half of her foot.
|
|
Polished air-tight stove (new and deadly invention), with
|
|
pipe passing through a board which closes up the discarded
|
|
good old fireplace. On each end of the wooden mantel,
|
|
over the fireplace, a large basket of peaches and other fruits,
|
|
natural size, all done in plaster, rudely, or in wax,
|
|
and painted to resemble the originals--which they don't. Over
|
|
middle of mantel, engraving--Washington Crossing the Delaware;
|
|
on the wall by the door, copy of it done in thunder-and-lightning
|
|
crewels by one of the young ladies--work of art which would
|
|
have made Washington hesitate about crossing, if he could
|
|
have foreseen what advantage was going to be taken of it.
|
|
Piano--kettle in disguise--with music, bound and unbound,
|
|
piled on it, and on a stand near by: Battle of Prague;
|
|
Bird Waltz; Arkansas Traveler; Rosin the Bow; Marseilles Hymn;
|
|
On a Lone Barren Isle (St. Helena); The Last Link is Broken;
|
|
She wore a Wreath of Roses the Night when last we met;
|
|
Go, forget me, Why should Sorrow o'er that Brow a Shadow fling;
|
|
Hours there were to Memory Dearer; Long, Long Ago; Days of Absence;
|
|
A Life on the Ocean Wave, a Home on the Rolling Deep; Bird at Sea;
|
|
and spread open on the rack, where the plaintive singer has left it,
|
|
RO-holl on, silver MOO-hoon, guide the TRAV-el-lerr his WAY, etc.
|
|
Tilted pensively against the piano, a guitar--guitar capable
|
|
of playing the Spanish Fandango by itself, if you give it a start.
|
|
Frantic work of art on the wall--pious motto, done on the premises,
|
|
sometimes in colored yarns, sometimes in faded grasses:
|
|
progenitor of the 'God Bless Our Home' of modern commerce.
|
|
Framed in black moldings on the wall, other works of arts,
|
|
conceived and committed on the premises, by the young ladies;
|
|
being grim black-and-white crayons; landscapes, mostly:
|
|
lake, solitary sail-boat, petrified clouds, pre-geological trees
|
|
on shore, anthracite precipice; name of criminal conspicuous
|
|
in the corner. Lithograph, Napoleon Crossing the Alps.
|
|
Lithograph, The Grave at St. Helena. Steel-plates, Trumbull's
|
|
Battle of Bunker Hill, and the Sally from Gibraltar.
|
|
Copper-plates, Moses Smiting the Rock, and Return of the
|
|
Prodigal Son. In big gilt frame, slander of the family in oil:
|
|
papa holding a book ('Constitution of the United States');
|
|
guitar leaning against mamma, blue ribbons fluttering from its neck;
|
|
the young ladies, as children, in slippers and scalloped pantelettes,
|
|
one embracing toy horse, the other beguiling kitten with ball
|
|
of yarn, and both simpering up at mamma, who simpers back.
|
|
These persons all fresh, raw, and red--apparently skinned.
|
|
Opposite, in gilt frame, grandpa and grandma, at thirty and
|
|
twenty-two, stiff, old-fashioned, high-collared, puff-sleeved,
|
|
glaring pallidly out from a background of solid Egyptian night.
|
|
Under a glass French clock dome, large bouquet of stiff
|
|
flowers done in corpsy-white wax. Pyramidal what-not
|
|
in the corner, the shelves occupied chiefly with bric-a-brac
|
|
of the period, disposed with an eye to best effect:
|
|
shell, with the Lord's Prayer carved on it; another shell--
|
|
of the long-oval sort, narrow, straight orifice, three inches long,
|
|
running from end to end--portrait of Washington carved on it;
|
|
not well done; the shell had Washington's mouth, originally--
|
|
artist should have built to that. These two are memorials of
|
|
the long-ago bridal trip to New Orleans and the French Market.
|
|
Other bric-a-brac: Californian 'specimens'--quartz,
|
|
with gold wart adhering; old Guinea-gold locket, with circlet
|
|
of ancestral hair in it; Indian arrow-heads, of flint;
|
|
pair of bead moccasins, from uncle who crossed the Plains;
|
|
three 'alum' baskets of various colors--being skeleton-frame of wire,
|
|
clothed-on with cubes of crystallized alum in the rock-candy style--
|
|
works of art which were achieved by the young ladies; their doubles
|
|
and duplicates to be found upon all what-nots in the land;
|
|
convention of desiccated bugs and butterflies pinned to a card;
|
|
painted toy-dog, seated upon bellows-attachment--drops its
|
|
under jaw and squeaks when pressed upon; sugar-candy rabbit--
|
|
limbs and features merged together, not strongly defined;
|
|
pewter presidential-campaign medal; miniature card-board wood-sawyer,
|
|
to be attached to the stove-pipe and operated by the heat;
|
|
small Napoleon, done in wax; spread-open daguerreotypes
|
|
of dim children, parents, cousins, aunts, and friends,
|
|
in all attitudes but customary ones; no templed portico at back,
|
|
and manufactured landscape stretching away in the distance--
|
|
that came in later, with the photograph; all these vague figures
|
|
lavishly chained and ringed--metal indicated and secured
|
|
from doubt by stripes and splashes of vivid gold bronze;
|
|
all of them too much combed, too much fixed up; and all of them
|
|
uncomfortable in inflexible Sunday-clothes of a pattern which
|
|
the spectator cannot realize could ever have been in fashion;
|
|
husband and wife generally grouped together--husband sitting,
|
|
wife standing, with hand on his shoulder--and both preserving,
|
|
all these fading years, some traceable effect of the daguerreotypist's
|
|
brisk 'Now smile, if you please!' Bracketed over what-not--
|
|
place of special sacredness--an outrage in water-color, done
|
|
by the young niece that came on a visit long ago, and died.
|
|
Pity, too; for she might have repented of this in time.
|
|
Horse-hair chairs, horse-hair sofa which keeps sliding from
|
|
under you. Window shades, of oil stuff, with milk-maids
|
|
and ruined castles stenciled on them in fierce colors.
|
|
Lambrequins dependent from gaudy boxings of beaten tin, gilded.
|
|
Bedrooms with rag carpets; bedsteads of the 'corded' sort,
|
|
with a sag in the middle, the cords needing tightening;
|
|
snuffy feather-bed--not aired often enough; cane-seat chairs,
|
|
splint-bottomed rocker; looking-glass on wall, school-slate size,
|
|
veneered frame; inherited bureau; wash-bowl and pitcher, possibly--
|
|
but not certainly; brass candlestick, tallow candle, snuffers.
|
|
Nothing else in the room. Not a bathroom in the house;
|
|
and no visitor likely to come along who has ever seen
|
|
one.
|
|
|
|
That was the residence of the principal citizen, all the way from
|
|
the suburbs of New Orleans to the edge of St. Louis. When he stepped
|
|
aboard a big fine steamboat, he entered a new and marvelous world:
|
|
chimney-tops cut to counterfeit a spraying crown of plumes--
|
|
and maybe painted red; pilot-house, hurricane deck, boiler-deck guards,
|
|
all garnished with white wooden filigree work of fanciful patterns;
|
|
gilt acorns topping the derricks; gilt deer-horns over the big bell;
|
|
gaudy symbolical picture on the paddle-box, possibly; big roomy
|
|
boiler-deck, painted blue, and furnished with Windsor armchairs;
|
|
inside, a far-receding snow-white 'cabin;' porcelain knob and oil-picture
|
|
on every stateroom door; curving patterns of filigree-work touched
|
|
up with gilding, stretching overhead all down the converging vista;
|
|
big chandeliers every little way, each an April shower of
|
|
glittering glass-drops; lovely rainbow-light falling everywhere
|
|
from the colored glazing of the skylights; the whole a long-drawn,
|
|
resplendent tunnel, a bewildering and soul-satisfying spectacle!
|
|
In the ladies' cabin a pink and white Wilton carpet, as soft as mush,
|
|
and glorified with a ravishing pattern of gigantic flowers.
|
|
Then the Bridal Chamber--the animal that invented that idea was still
|
|
alive and unhanged, at that day--Bridal Chamber whose pretentious
|
|
flummery was necessarily overawing to the now tottering intellect
|
|
of that hosannahing citizen. Every state-room had its couple
|
|
of cozy clean bunks, and perhaps a looking-glass and a snug closet;
|
|
and sometimes there was even a washbowl and pitcher, and part
|
|
of a towel which could be told from mosquito netting by an expert--
|
|
though generally these things were absent, and the shirt-sleeved
|
|
passengers cleansed themselves at a long row of stationary bowls
|
|
in the barber shop, where were also public towels, public combs,
|
|
and public soap.
|
|
|
|
Take the steamboat which I have just described, and you have her
|
|
in her highest and finest, and most pleasing, and comfortable,
|
|
and satisfactory estate. Now cake her over with a layer
|
|
of ancient and obdurate dirt, and you have the Cincinnati
|
|
steamer awhile ago referred to. Not all over--only inside;
|
|
for she was ably officered in all departments except the steward's.
|
|
|
|
But wash that boat and repaint her, and she would be about the
|
|
counterpart of the most complimented boat of the old flush times:
|
|
for the steamboat architecture of the West has undergone no change;
|
|
neither has steamboat furniture and ornamentation undergone any.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 39
|
|
Manufactures and Miscreants
|
|
|
|
WHERE the river, in the Vicksburg region, used to be corkscrewed,
|
|
it is now comparatively straight--made so by cut-off;
|
|
a former distance of seventy miles is reduced to thirty-five. It
|
|
is a change which threw Vicksburg's neighbor, Delta, Louisiana,
|
|
out into the country and ended its career as a river town.
|
|
Its whole river-frontage is now occupied by a vast sand-bar,
|
|
thickly covered with young trees--a growth which will magnify
|
|
itself into a dense forest by-and-bye, and completely hide
|
|
the exiled town.
|
|
|
|
In due time we passed Grand Gulf and Rodney, of war fame, and reached Natchez,
|
|
the last of the beautiful hill-cities--for Baton Rouge, yet to come,
|
|
is not on a hill, but only on high ground. Famous Natchez-under-the-hill
|
|
has not changed notably in twenty years; in outward aspect--
|
|
judging by the descriptions of the ancient procession of foreign tourists--
|
|
it has not changed in sixty; for it is still small, straggling, and shabby.
|
|
It had a desperate reputation, morally, in the old keel-boating and
|
|
early steamboating times--plenty of drinking, carousing, fisticuffing,
|
|
and killing there, among the riff-raff of the river, in those days.
|
|
But Natchez-on-top-of-the-hill is attractive; has always been attractive.
|
|
Even Mrs. Trollope (1827) had to confess its charms:
|
|
|
|
'At one or two points the wearisome level line is relieved
|
|
by bluffs, as they call the short intervals of high ground.
|
|
The town of Natchez is beautifully situated on one of those high spots.
|
|
The contrast that its bright green hill forms with the dismal line of black
|
|
forest that stretches on every side, the abundant growth of the pawpaw,
|
|
palmetto and orange, the copious variety of sweet-scented flowers
|
|
that flourish there, all make it appear like an oasis in the desert.
|
|
Natchez is the furthest point to the north at which oranges
|
|
ripen in the open air, or endure the winter without shelter.
|
|
With the exception of this sweet spot, I thought all the little towns
|
|
and villages we passed wretched-looking in the extreme.'
|
|
|
|
Natchez, like her near and far river neighbors, has railways now,
|
|
and is adding to them--pushing them hither and thither into all
|
|
rich outlying regions that are naturally tributary to her.
|
|
And like Vicksburg and New Orleans, she has her ice-factory:
|
|
she makes thirty tons of ice a day. In Vicksburg and Natchez,
|
|
in my time, ice was jewelry; none but the rich could wear it.
|
|
But anybody and everybody can have it now. I visited one of
|
|
the ice-factories in New Orleans, to see what the polar regions
|
|
might look like when lugged into the edge of the tropics.
|
|
But there was nothing striking in the aspect of the place.
|
|
It was merely a spacious house, with some innocent steam machinery
|
|
in one end of it and some big porcelain pipes running here and there.
|
|
No, not porcelain--they merely seemed to be; they were iron,
|
|
but the ammonia which was being breathed through them had coated
|
|
them to the thickness of your hand with solid milk-white ice.
|
|
It ought to have melted; for one did not require winter clothing
|
|
in that atmosphere: but it did not melt; the inside of the pipe
|
|
was too cold.
|
|
|
|
Sunk into the floor were numberless tin boxes, a foot square and two
|
|
feet long, and open at the top end. These were full of clear water;
|
|
and around each box, salt and other proper stuff was packed; also, the ammonia
|
|
gases were applied to the water in some way which will always remain
|
|
a secret to me, because I was not able to understand the process.
|
|
While the water in the boxes gradually froze, men gave it a stir or
|
|
two with a stick occasionally--to liberate the air-bubbles, I think.
|
|
Other men were continually lifting out boxes whose contents had become
|
|
hard frozen. They gave the box a single dip into a vat of boiling water,
|
|
to melt the block of ice free from its tin coffin, then they shot
|
|
the block out upon a platform car, and it was ready for market.
|
|
These big blocks were hard, solid, and crystal-clear. In certain of them,
|
|
big bouquets of fresh and brilliant tropical flowers had been frozen-in;
|
|
in others, beautiful silken-clad French dolls, and other pretty objects.
|
|
These blocks were to be set on end in a platter, in the center of
|
|
dinner-tables, to cool the tropical air; and also to be ornamental,
|
|
for the flowers and things imprisoned in them could be seen as through
|
|
plate glass. I was told that this factory could retail its ice, by wagon,
|
|
throughout New Orleans, in the humblest dwelling-house quantities,
|
|
at six or seven dollars a ton, and make a sufficient profit.
|
|
This being the case, there is business for ice-factories in the North;
|
|
for we get ice on no such terms there, if one take less than three hundred
|
|
and fifty pounds at a delivery.
|
|
|
|
The Rosalie Yarn Mill, of Natchez, has a capacity of 6,000 spindles and
|
|
160 looms, and employs 100 hands. The Natchez Cotton Mills Company began
|
|
operations four years ago in a two-story building of 50 x 190 feet, with 4,000
|
|
spindles and 128 looms; capital $105,000, all subscribed in the town.
|
|
Two years later, the same stockholders increased their capital to $225,000;
|
|
added a third story to the mill, increased its length to 317 feet;
|
|
added machinery to increase the capacity to 10,300 spindles and 304 looms.
|
|
The company now employ 250 operatives, many of whom are citizens of Natchez.
|
|
'The mill works 5,000 bales of cotton annually and manufactures
|
|
the best standard quality of brown shirtings and sheetings and drills,
|
|
turning out 5,000,000 yards of these goods per year.'<footnote [New
|
|
Orleans Times-Democrat, 26 Aug, 1882.]> A close corporation--stock held
|
|
at $5,000 per share, but none in the market.
|
|
|
|
The changes in the Mississippi River are great and strange,
|
|
yet were to be expected; but I was not expecting to live to see
|
|
Natchez and these other river towns become manufacturing
|
|
strongholds and railway centers.
|
|
|
|
Speaking of manufactures reminds me of a talk upon that topic
|
|
which I heard--which I overheard--on board the Cincinnati boat.
|
|
I awoke out of a fretted sleep, with a dull confusion of voices in my ears.
|
|
I listened--two men were talking; subject, apparently, the great inundation.
|
|
I looked out through the open transom. The two men were eating
|
|
a late breakfast; sitting opposite each other; nobody else around.
|
|
They closed up the inundation with a few words--having used it,
|
|
evidently, as a mere ice-breaker and acquaintanceship-breeder--
|
|
then they dropped into business. It soon transpired that they
|
|
were drummers--one belonging in Cincinnati, the other in New Orleans.
|
|
Brisk men, energetic of movement and speech; the dollar their god,
|
|
how to get it their religion.
|
|
|
|
'Now as to this article,' said Cincinnati, slashing into the ostensible
|
|
butter and holding forward a slab of it on his knife-blade,
|
|
'it's from our house; look at it--smell of it--taste it.
|
|
Put any test on it you want to. Take your own time--no hurry--
|
|
make it thorough. There now--what do you say? butter, ain't it.
|
|
Not by a thundering sight--it's oleomargarine! Yes, sir, that's what
|
|
it is--oleomargarine. You can't tell it from butter; by George,
|
|
an EXPERT can't. It's from our house. We supply most of the boats
|
|
in the West; there's hardly a pound of butter on one of them.
|
|
We are crawling right along--JUMPING right along is the word.
|
|
We are going to have that entire trade. Yes, and the hotel trade, too.
|
|
You are going to see the day, pretty soon, when you can't find
|
|
an ounce of butter to bless yourself with, in any hotel in
|
|
the Mississippi and Ohio Valleys, outside of the biggest cities.
|
|
Why, we are turning out oleomargarine NOW by the thousands of tons.
|
|
And we can sell it so dirt-cheap that the whole country has
|
|
GOT to take it--can't get around it you see. Butter don't
|
|
stand any show--there ain't any chance for competition.
|
|
Butter's had its DAY--and from this out, butter goes to the wall.
|
|
There's more money in oleomargarine than--why, you can't
|
|
imagine the business we do. I've stopped in every town from
|
|
Cincinnati to Natchez; and I've sent home big orders from every
|
|
one of them.'
|
|
|
|
And so-forth and so-on, for ten minutes longer, in the same fervid strain.
|
|
Then New Orleans piped up and said--
|
|
|
|
Yes, it's a first-rate imitation, that's a certainty;
|
|
but it ain't the only one around that's first-rate. For instance,
|
|
they make olive-oil out of cotton-seed oil, nowadays, so that you
|
|
can't tell them apart.'
|
|
|
|
'Yes, that's so,' responded Cincinnati, 'and it was a tip-top
|
|
business for a while. They sent it over and brought it back from
|
|
France and Italy, with the United States custom-house mark on it
|
|
to indorse it for genuine, and there was no end of cash in it;
|
|
but France and Italy broke up the game--of course they naturally would.
|
|
Cracked on such a rattling impost that cotton-seed olive-oil couldn't
|
|
stand the raise; had to hang up and quit.'
|
|
|
|
'Oh, it DID, did it? You wait here a minute.'
|
|
|
|
Goes to his state-room, brings back a couple of long bottles,
|
|
and takes out the corks--says:
|
|
|
|
'There now, smell them, taste them, examine the bottles, inspect the labels.
|
|
One of 'm's from Europe, the other's never been out of this country.
|
|
One's European olive-oil, the other's American cotton-seed olive-oil.
|
|
Tell 'm apart? 'Course you can't. Nobody can. People that want to,
|
|
can go to the expense and trouble of shipping their oils to Europe and back--
|
|
it's their privilege; but our firm knows a trick worth six of that.
|
|
We turn out the whole thing--clean from the word go--in our factory
|
|
in New Orleans: labels, bottles, oil, everything. Well, no, not labels:
|
|
been buying them abroad--get them dirt-cheap there. You see,
|
|
there's just one little wee speck, essence, or whatever it is,
|
|
in a gallon of cotton-seed oil, that give it a smell, or a flavor,
|
|
or something--get that out, and you're all right--perfectly easy then
|
|
to turn the oil into any kind of oil you want to, and there ain't anybody
|
|
that can detect the true from the false. Well, we know how to get
|
|
that one little particle out--and we're the only firm that does.
|
|
And we turn out an olive-oil that is just simply perfect--undetectable!
|
|
We are doing a ripping trade, too--as I could easily show you by my
|
|
order-book for this trip. Maybe you'll butter everybody's bread pretty soon,
|
|
but we'll cotton-seed his salad for him from the Gulf to Canada, and that's
|
|
a dead-certain thing.'
|
|
|
|
Cincinnati glowed and flashed with admiration.
|
|
The two scoundrels exchanged business-cards, and rose.
|
|
As they left the table, Cincinnati said--
|
|
|
|
'But you have to have custom-house marks, don't you?
|
|
How do you manage that?'
|
|
|
|
I did not catch the answer.
|
|
|
|
We passed Port Hudson, scene of two of the most terrific episodes of the war--
|
|
the night-battle there between Farragut's fleet and the Confederate
|
|
land batteries, April 14th, 1863; and the memorable land battle,
|
|
two months later, which lasted eight hours--eight hours of exceptionally
|
|
fierce and stubborn fighting--and ended, finally, in the repulse
|
|
of the Union forces with great slaughter.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 4O
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Castles and Culture
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BATON ROUGE was clothed in flowers, like a bride--no, much more so;
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like a greenhouse. For we were in the absolute South now--
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no modifications, no compromises, no half-way measures.
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The magnolia-trees in the Capitol grounds were lovely and fragrant,
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with their dense rich foliage and huge snow-ball blossoms.
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The scent of the flower is very sweet, but you want distance on it,
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because it is so powerful. They are not good bedroom blossoms--
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they might suffocate one in his sleep. We were certainly in the South
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at last; for here the sugar region begins, and the plantations--
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vast green levels, with sugar-mill and negro quarters clustered together
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in the middle distance--were in view. And there was a tropical sun
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overhead and a tropical swelter in the air.
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And at this point, also, begins the pilot's paradise:
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a wide river hence to New Orleans, abundance of water from shore
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to shore, and no bars, snags, sawyers, or wrecks in his road.
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Sir Walter Scott is probably responsible for the Capitol building;
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for it is not conceivable that this little sham castle would
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ever have been built if he had not run the people mad, a couple
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of generations ago, with his medieval romances. The South has
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not yet recovered from the debilitating influence of his books.
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Admiration of his fantastic heroes and their grotesque
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'chivalry' doings and romantic juvenilities still survives here,
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in an atmosphere in which is already perceptible the wholesome
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and practical nineteenth-century smell of cotton-factories
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and locomotives; and traces of its inflated language and other
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windy humbuggeries survive along with it. It is pathetic enough,
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that a whitewashed castle, with turrets and things--materials all
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ungenuine within and without, pretending to be what they are not--
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should ever have been built in this otherwise honorable place;
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but it is much more pathetic to see this architectural falsehood
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undergoing restoration and perpetuation in our day, when it
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would have been so easy to let dynamite finish what a charitable
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fire began, and then devote this restoration-money to the building
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of something genuine.
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Baton Rouge has no patent on imitation castles, however, and no monopoly
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of them. Here is a picture from the advertisement of the 'Female Institute'
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of Columbia; Tennessee. The following remark is from the same advertisement--
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'The Institute building has long been famed as a model of striking
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and beautiful architecture. Visitors are charmed with its resemblance
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to the old castles of song and story, with its towers, turreted walls,
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and ivy-mantled porches.'
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Keeping school in a castle is a romantic thing; as romantic as keeping
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hotel in a castle.
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By itself the imitation castle is doubtless harmless, and well enough;
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but as a symbol and breeder and sustainer of maudlin Middle-Age romanticism
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here in the midst of the plainest and sturdiest and infinitely greatest
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and worthiest of all the centuries the world has seen, it is necessarily
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a hurtful thing and a mistake.
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Here is an extract from the prospectus of a Kentucky 'Female College.'
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Female college sounds well enough; but since the phrasing it in
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that unjustifiable way was done purely in the interest of brevity,
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it seems to me that she-college would have been still better--
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because shorter, and means the same thing: that is, if either phrase
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means anything at all--
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'The president is southern by birth, by rearing, by education,
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and by sentiment; the teachers are all southern in sentiment,
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and with the exception of those born in Europe were born and raised
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in the south. Believing the southern to be the highest type of
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civilization this continent has seen,' the young<footnote (long one)
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[Illustrations of it thoughtlessly omitted by the advertiser:
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KNOXVILLE, Tenn., October 19.--This morning a few minutes
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after ten o'clock, General Joseph A. Mabry, Thomas O'Connor,
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and Joseph A. Mabry, Jr., were killed in a shooting affray.
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The difficulty began yesterday afternoon by General Mabry
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attacking Major O'Connor and threatening to kill him.
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This was at the fair grounds, and O'Connor told Mabry
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that it was not the place to settle their difficulties.
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Mabry then told O'Connor he should not live.
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It seems that Mabry was armed and O'Connor was not.
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The cause of the difficulty was an old feud about the transfer
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of some property from Mabry to O'Connor. Later in the afternoon
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Mabry sent word to O'Connor that he would kill him on sight.
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This morning Major O'Connor was standing in the door of
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the Mechanics' National Bank, of which he was president.
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General Mabry and another gentleman walked down Gay Street on
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the opposite side from the bank. O'Connor stepped into the bank,
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got a shot gun, took deliberate aim at General Mabry and fired.
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Mabry fell dead, being shot in the left side. As he fell
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O'Connor fired again, the shot taking effect in Mabry's thigh.
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O'Connor then reached into the bank and got another shot gun.
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About this time Joseph A. Mabry, Jr., son of General Mabry,
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came rushing down the street, unseen by O'Connor until within
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forty feet, when the young man fired a pistol, the shot taking
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effect in O'Connor's right breast, passing through the body near
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the heart. The instant Mabry shot, O'Connor turned and fired,
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the load taking effect in young Mabry's right breast and side.
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Mabry fell pierced with twenty buckshot, and almost instantly
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O'Connor fell dead without a struggle. Mabry tried to rise,
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but fell back dead. The whole tragedy occurred within
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two minutes, and neither of the three spoke after he was shot.
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General Mabry had about thirty buckshot in his body.
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A bystander was painfully wounded in the thigh with a buckshot,
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and another was wounded in the arm. Four other men had their
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clothing pierced by buckshot. The affair caused great excitement,
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and Gay Street was thronged with thousands of people.
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General Mabry and his son Joe were acquitted only a few
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days ago of the murder of Moses Lusby and Don Lusby,
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father and son, whom they killed a few weeks ago.
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Will Mabry was killed by Don Lusby last Christmas. Major Thomas
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O'Connor was President of the Mechanics' National Bank here,
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and was the wealthiest man in the State.--ASSOCIATED PRESS
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TELEGRAM.
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One day last month, Professor Sharpe, of the Somerville,
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Tenn., Female College, 'a quiet and gentlemanly man,' was told that
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his brother-in-law, a Captain Burton, had threatened to kill him.
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Burton, t seems, had already killed one man and driven his knife
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into another. The Professor armed himself with a double-barreled
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shot gun, started out in search of his brother-in-law, found
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him playing billiards in a saloon, and blew his brains out.
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The 'Memphis Avalanche' reports that the Professor's course met
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with pretty general approval in the community; knowing that the law
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was powerless, in the actual condition of public sentiment,
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to protect him, he protected himself.
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About the same time, two young men in North Carolina quarreled
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about a girl, and 'hostile messages' were exchanged.
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Friends tried to reconcile them, but had their labor for their pains.
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On the 24th the young men met in the public highway.
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One of them had a heavy club in his hand, the other an ax.
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The man with the club fought desperately for his life, but it
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was a hopeless fight from the first. A well-directed blow
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sent his club whirling out of his grasp, and the next moment
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he was a dead man.
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About the same time, two 'highly connected' young Virginians,
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clerks in a hardware store at Charlottesville, while 'skylarking,'
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came to blows. Peter Dick threw pepper in Charles Roads's eyes;
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Roads demanded an apology; Dick refused to give it, and it
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was agreed that a duel was inevitable, but a difficulty arose;
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the parties had no pistols, and it was too late at night
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to procure them. One of them suggested that butcher-knives
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would answer the purpose, and the other accepted the suggestion;
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the result was that Roads fell to the floor with a gash
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in his abdomen that may or may not prove fatal.
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If Dick has been arrested, the news has not reached us.
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He 'expressed deep regret,' and we are told by a Staunton
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correspondent of the PHILADELPHIA PRESS that 'every effort has
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been made to hush the matter up.'--EXTRACTS FROM THE PUBLIC
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JOURNALS.]> ladies are trained according to the southern ideas
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of delicacy, refinement, womanhood, religion, and propriety;
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hence we offer a first-class female college for the south and
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solicit southern patronage.'
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What, warder, ho! the man that can blow so complacent a blast as that,
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probably blows it from a castle.
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From Baton Rouge to New Orleans, the great sugar plantations border
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both sides of the river all the way, and stretch their league-wide
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levels back to the dim forest-walls of bearded cypress in the rear.
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Shores lonely no longer. Plenty of dwellings all the way,
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on both banks--standing so close together, for long distances,
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that the broad river lying between the two rows, becomes a sort
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of spacious street. A most home-like and happy-looking region.
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And now and then you see a pillared and porticoed great manor-house,
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embowered in trees. Here is testimony of one or two of the procession
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of foreign tourists that filed along here half a century ago.
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Mrs. Trollope says--
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'The unbroken flatness of the banks of the Mississippi continued unvaried
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for many miles above New Orleans; but the graceful and luxuriant palmetto,
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the dark and noble ilex, and the bright orange, were everywhere to be seen,
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and it was many days before we were weary of looking at them.'
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Captain Basil Hall--
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'The district of country which lies adjacent to the Mississippi,
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in the lower parts of Louisiana, is everywhere thickly
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peopled by sugar planters, whose showy houses, gay piazzas,
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trig gardens, and numerous slave-villages, all clean and neat,
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gave an exceedingly thriving air to the river scenery.
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All the procession paint the attractive picture in the same way.
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The descriptions of fifty years ago do not need to have a word
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changed in order to exactly describe the same region as it
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appears to-day--except as to the 'trigness' of the houses.
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The whitewash is gone from the negro cabins now; and many,
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possibly most, of the big mansions, once so shining white,
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have worn out their paint and have a decayed, neglected look.
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It is the blight of the war. Twenty-one years ago everything was
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trim and trig and bright along the 'coast,' just as it had been
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in 1827, as described by those tourists.
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Unfortunate tourists! People humbugged them with stupid and silly lies,
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and then laughed at them for believing and printing the same.
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They told Mrs. Trollope that the alligators--or crocodiles, as she calls them--
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were terrible creatures; and backed up the statement with a blood-curdling
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account of how one of these slandered reptiles crept into a squatter
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cabin one night, and ate up a woman and five children. The woman,
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by herself, would have satisfied any ordinarily-impossible alligator;
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but no, these liars must make him gorge the five children besides.
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One would not imagine that jokers of this robust breed would be sensitive--
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but they were. It is difficult, at this day, to understand,
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and impossible to justify, the reception which the book of the grave,
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honest, intelligent, gentle, manly, charitable, well-meaning Capt. Basil
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Hall got. Mrs. Trollope's account of it may perhaps entertain the reader;
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therefore I have put it in the Appendix.<footnote [See Appendix C.]>
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Chapter 41
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The Metropolis of the South
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THE approaches to New Orleans were familiar; general aspects were unchanged.
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When one goes flying through London along a railway propped in the air on
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tall arches, he may inspect miles of upper bedrooms through the open windows,
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but the lower half of the houses is under his level and out of sight.
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Similarly, in high-river stage, in the New Orleans region, the water is up
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to the top of the enclosing levee-rim, the flat country behind it lies low--
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representing the bottom of a dish--and as the boat swims along, high on
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the flood, one looks down upon the houses and into the upper windows.
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There is nothing but that frail breastwork of earth between the people
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and destruction.
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The old brick salt-warehouses clustered at the upper end of the city
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looked as they had always looked; warehouses which had had a kind
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of Aladdin's lamp experience, however, since I had seen them;
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for when the war broke out the proprietor went to bed one night
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leaving them packed with thousands of sacks of vulgar salt,
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worth a couple of dollars a sack, and got up in the morning and found
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his mountain of salt turned into a mountain of gold, so to speak,
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so suddenly and to so dizzy a height had the war news sent up
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the price of the article.
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The vast reach of plank wharves remained unchanged, and there were
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as many ships as ever: but the long array of steamboats had vanished;
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not altogether, of course, but not much of it was left.
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The city itself had not changed--to the eye. It had greatly increased
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in spread and population, but the look of the town was not altered.
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The dust, waste-paper-littered, was still deep in the streets;
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the deep, trough-like gutters alongside the curbstones were still half
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full of reposeful water with a dusty surface; the sidewalks were still--
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in the sugar and bacon region--encumbered by casks and barrels
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and hogsheads; the great blocks of austerely plain commercial houses
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were as dusty-looking as ever.
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Canal Street was finer, and more attractive and stirring than formerly,
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with its drifting crowds of people, its several processions of hurrying
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street-cars, and--toward evening--its broad second-story verandas crowded
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with gentlemen and ladies clothed according to the latest mode.
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Not that there is any 'architecture' in Canal Street: to speak
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in broad, general terms, there is no architecture in New Orleans,
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except in the cemeteries. It seems a strange thing to say of a wealthy,
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far-seeing, and energetic city of a quarter of a million inhabitants,
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but it is true. There is a huge granite U.S. Custom-house--costly enough,
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genuine enough, but as a decoration it is inferior to a gasometer.
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It looks like a state prison. But it was built before the war.
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Architecture in America may be said to have been born since the war.
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New Orleans, I believe, has had the good luck--and in a sense the bad luck--
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to have had no great fire in late years. It must be so. If the opposite
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had been the case, I think one would be able to tell the 'burnt district'
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by the radical improvement in its architecture over the old forms.
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One can do this in Boston and Chicago. The 'burnt district' of Boston
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was commonplace before the fire; but now there is no commercial district
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in any city in the world that can surpass it--or perhaps even rival it--
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in beauty, elegance, and tastefulness.
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However, New Orleans has begun--just this moment, as one may say.
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When completed, the new Cotton Exchange will be a stately and
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beautiful building; massive, substantial, full of architectural graces;
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no shams or false pretenses or uglinesses about it anywhere.
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To the city, it will be worth many times its cost, for it will
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breed its species. What has been lacking hitherto, was a model
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to build toward; something to educate eye and taste; a SUGGESTER,
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so to speak.
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The city is well outfitted with progressive men--thinking, sagacious,
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long-headed men. The contrast between the spirit of the city and
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the city's architecture is like the contrast between waking and sleep.
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Apparently there is a 'boom' in everything but that one dead feature.
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The water in the gutters used to be stagnant and slimy, and a potent
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disease-breeder; but the gutters are flushed now, two or three times a day,
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by powerful machinery; in many of the gutters the water never stands still,
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but has a steady current. Other sanitary improvements have been made;
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and with such effect that New Orleans claims to be (during the long
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intervals between the occasional yellow-fever assaults) one of the
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healthiest cities in the Union. There's plenty of ice now for everybody,
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manufactured in the town. It is a driving place commercially, and has
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a great river, ocean, and railway business. At the date of our visit,
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it was the best lighted city in the Union, electrically speaking.
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The New Orleans electric lights were more numerous than those of New York,
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and very much better. One had this modified noonday not only in Canal
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and some neighboring chief streets, but all along a stretch of five
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miles of river frontage. There are good clubs in the city now--
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several of them but recently organized--and inviting modern-style pleasure
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resorts at West End and Spanish Fort. The telephone is everywhere.
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One of the most notable advances is in journalism. The newspapers,
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as I remember them, were not a striking feature. Now they are.
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Money is spent upon them with a free hand. They get the news, let it cost
|
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what it may. The editorial work is not hack-grinding, but literature.
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As an example of New Orleans journalistic achievement, it may be
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mentioned that the 'Times-Democrat' of August 26, 1882, contained a
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report of the year's business of the towns of the Mississippi Valley,
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from New Orleans all the way to St. Paul--two thousand miles.
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That issue of the paper consisted of forty pages; seven columns to the page;
|
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two hundred and eighty columns in all; fifteen hundred words to the column;
|
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an aggregate of four hundred and twenty thousand words. That is to say,
|
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not much short of three times as many words as there are in this book.
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One may with sorrow contrast this with the architecture of New Orleans.
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I have been speaking of public architecture only. The domestic
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article in New Orleans is reproachless, notwithstanding it
|
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remains as it always was. All the dwellings are of wood--
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in the American part of the town, I mean--and all have a
|
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comfortable look. Those in the wealthy quarter are spacious;
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painted snow-white usually, and generally have wide verandas,
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or double-verandas, supported by ornamental columns.
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These mansions stand in the center of large grounds,
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and rise, garlanded with roses, out of the midst of swelling
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masses of shining green foliage and many-colored blossoms.
|
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No houses could well be in better harmony with their surroundings,
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or more pleasing to the eye, or more home-like and comfortable-looking.
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One even becomes reconciled to the cistern presently; this is a mighty cask,
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painted green, and sometimes a couple of stories high, which is propped
|
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against the house-corner on stilts. There is a mansion-and-brewery
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suggestion about the combination which seems very incongruous at first.
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But the people cannot have wells, and so they take rain-water. Neither
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can they conveniently have cellars, or graves,<footnote [The Israelites
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are buried in graves--by permission, I take it, not requirement;
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but none else, except the destitute, who are buried at public expense.
|
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The graves are but three or four feet deep.]> the town being built upon
|
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'made' ground; so they do without both, and few of the living complain,
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and none of the others.
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Chapter 42
|
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Hygiene and Sentiment
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THEY bury their dead in vaults, above the ground. These vaults
|
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have a resemblance to houses--sometimes to temples; are built
|
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of marble, generally; are architecturally graceful and shapely;
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they face the walks and driveways of the cemetery; and when one
|
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moves through the midst of a thousand or so of them and sees their
|
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white roofs and gables stretching into the distance on every hand,
|
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the phrase 'city of the dead' has all at once a meaning to him.
|
|
Many of the cemeteries are beautiful, and are kept in perfect order.
|
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When one goes from the levee or the business streets near it,
|
|
to a cemetery, he observes to himself that if those people down there
|
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would live as neatly while they are alive as they do after they are dead,
|
|
they would find many advantages in it; and besides, their quarter would
|
|
be the wonder and admiration of the business world. Fresh flowers,
|
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in vases of water, are to be seen at the portals of many of the vaults:
|
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placed there by the pious hands of bereaved parents and children,
|
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husbands and wives, and renewed daily. A milder form of sorrow finds
|
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its inexpensive and lasting remembrancer in the coarse and ugly
|
|
but indestructible 'immortelle'--which is a wreath or cross or some
|
|
such emblem, made of rosettes of black linen, with sometimes a yellow
|
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rosette at the conjunction of the cross's bars--kind of sorrowful
|
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breast-pin, so to say. The immortelle requires no attention:
|
|
you just hang it up, and there you are; just leave it alone, it will take
|
|
care of your grief for you, and keep it in mind better than you can;
|
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stands weather first-rate, and lasts like boiler-iron.
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On sunny days, pretty little chameleons--gracefullest of legged reptiles--
|
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creep along the marble fronts of the vaults, and catch flies. Their changes
|
|
of color--as to variety--are not up to the creature's reputation.
|
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They change color when a person comes along and hangs up an immortelle;
|
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but that is nothing: any right-feeling reptile would do that.
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I will gradually drop this subject of graveyards. I have been
|
|
trying all I could to get down to the sentimental part of it,
|
|
but I cannot accomplish it. I think there is no genuinely
|
|
sentimental part to it. It is all grotesque, ghastly, horrible.
|
|
Graveyards may have been justifiable in the bygone ages,
|
|
when nobody knew that for every dead body put into the ground,
|
|
to glut the earth and the plant-roots, and the air with
|
|
disease-germs, five or fifty, or maybe a hundred persons must die
|
|
before their proper time; but they are hardly justifiable now,
|
|
when even the children know that a dead saint enters upon
|
|
a century-long career of assassination the moment the earth
|
|
closes over his corpse. It is a grim sort of a thought.
|
|
The relics of St. Anne, up in Canada, have now, after nineteen
|
|
hundred years, gone to curing the sick by the dozen.
|
|
But it is merest matter-of-course that these same relics,
|
|
within a generation after St. Anne's death and burial,
|
|
MADE several thousand people sick. Therefore these
|
|
miracle-performances are simply compensation, nothing more.
|
|
St. Anne is somewhat slow pay, for a Saint, it is true;
|
|
but better a debt paid after nineteen hundred years,
|
|
and outlawed by the statute of limitations, than not paid at all;
|
|
and most of the knights of the halo do not pay at all.
|
|
Where you find one that pays--like St. Anne--you find
|
|
a hundred and fifty that take the benefit of the statute.
|
|
And none of them pay any more than the principal of what they owe--
|
|
they pay none of the interest either simple or compound.
|
|
A Saint can never QUITE return the principal, however;
|
|
for his dead body KILLS people, whereas his relics HEAL only--
|
|
they never restore the dead to life. That part of the account is
|
|
always left unsettled.
|
|
|
|
'Dr. F. Julius Le Moyne, after fifty years of medical practice, wrote:
|
|
"The inhumation of human bodies, dead from infectious diseases,
|
|
results in constantly loading the atmosphere, and polluting the waters,
|
|
with not only the germs that rise from simply putrefaction, but also with
|
|
the SPECIFIC germs of the diseases from which death resulted."
|
|
|
|
'The gases (from buried corpses) will rise to the surface
|
|
through eight or ten feet of gravel, just as coal-gas will do,
|
|
and there is practically no limit to their power of escape.
|
|
|
|
'During the epidemic in New Orleans in 1853, Dr. E. H. Barton
|
|
reported that in the Fourth District the mortality was four hundred
|
|
and fifty-two per thousand--more than double that of any other.
|
|
In this district were three large cemeteries, in which during
|
|
the previous year more than three thousand bodies had been buried.
|
|
In other districts the proximity of cemeteries seemed to
|
|
aggravate the disease.
|
|
|
|
'In 1828 Professor Bianchi demonstrated how the fearful reappearance
|
|
of the plague at Modena was caused by excavations in ground where,
|
|
THREE HUNDRED YEARS PREVIOUSLY, the victims of the pestilence had
|
|
been buried. Mr. Cooper, in explaining the causes of some epidemics,
|
|
remarks that the opening of the plague burial-grounds at Eyam resulted
|
|
in an immediate outbreak of disease.'--NORTH AMERICAN REVIEW, NO.
|
|
3, VOL. 135.
|
|
|
|
In an address before the Chicago Medical Society, in advocacy of cremation,
|
|
Dr. Charles W. Purdy made some striking comparisons to show what a burden
|
|
is laid upon society by the burial of the dead:--
|
|
|
|
'One and one-fourth times more money is expended annually in funerals in
|
|
the United States than the Government expends for public-school purposes.
|
|
Funerals cost this country in 1880 enough money to pay the liabilities
|
|
of all the commercial failures in the United States during the same year,
|
|
and give each bankrupt a capital of $8,630 with which to resume business.
|
|
Funerals cost annually more money than the value of the combined
|
|
gold and silver yield of the United States in the year 1880!
|
|
These figures do not include the sums invested in burial-grounds
|
|
and expended in tombs and monuments, nor the loss from depreciation
|
|
of property in the vicinity of cemeteries.'
|
|
|
|
For the rich, cremation would answer as well as burial;
|
|
for the ceremonies connected with it could be made as costly
|
|
and ostentatious as a Hindu suttee; while for the poor,
|
|
cremation would be better than burial, because so cheap<footnote
|
|
[Four or five dollars is the minimum cost.]>--so cheap until
|
|
the poor got to imitating the rich, which they would do
|
|
by-and-bye. The adoption of cremation would relieve us of a muck
|
|
of threadbare burial-witticisms; but, on the other hand,
|
|
it would resurrect a lot of mildewed old cremation-jokes
|
|
that have had a rest for two thousand years.
|
|
|
|
I have a colored acquaintance who earns his living by odd jobs and heavy
|
|
manual labor. He never earns above four hundred dollars in a year,
|
|
and as he has a wife and several young children, the closest scrimping
|
|
is necessary to get him through to the end of the twelve months debtless.
|
|
To such a man a funeral is a colossal financial disaster. While I was
|
|
writing one of the preceding chapters, this man lost a little child.
|
|
He walked the town over with a friend, trying to find a coffin that
|
|
was within his means. He bought the very cheapest one he could find,
|
|
plain wood, stained. It cost him twenty-six dollars. It would have cost
|
|
less than four, probably, if it had been built to put something useful into.
|
|
He and his family will feel that outlay a good many months.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 43
|
|
The Art of Inhumation
|
|
|
|
ABOUT the same time, I encountered a man in the street,
|
|
whom I had not seen for six or seven years; and something
|
|
like this talk followed. I said--
|
|
|
|
'But you used to look sad and oldish; you don't now.
|
|
Where did you get all this youth and bubbling cheerfulness?
|
|
Give me the address.'
|
|
|
|
He chuckled blithely, took off his shining tile, pointed to a notched
|
|
pink circlet of paper pasted into its crown, with something lettered
|
|
on it, and went on chuckling while I read, 'J. B ----, UNDERTAKER.'
|
|
Then he clapped his hat on, gave it an irreverent tilt to leeward,
|
|
and cried out--
|
|
|
|
'That's what's the matter! It used to be rough times with me when you
|
|
knew me--insurance-agency business, you know; mighty irregular.
|
|
Big fire, all right--brisk trade for ten days while people scared;
|
|
after that, dull policy-business till next fire. Town like this don't
|
|
have fires often enough--a fellow strikes so many dull weeks in a row
|
|
that he gets discouraged. But you bet you, this is the business!
|
|
People don't wait for examples to die. No, sir, they drop off
|
|
right along--there ain't any dull spots in the undertaker line.
|
|
I just started in with two or three little old coffins and
|
|
a hired hearse, and now look at the thing! I've worked up
|
|
a business here that would satisfy any man, don't care who he is.
|
|
Five years ago, lodged in an attic; live in a swell house now,
|
|
with a mansard roof, and all the modern inconveniences.'
|
|
|
|
'Does a coffin pay so well. Is there much profit on a coffin?'
|
|
|
|
'Go-way! How you talk!' Then, with a confidential wink, a dropping
|
|
of the voice, and an impressive laying of his hand on my arm;
|
|
'Look here; there's one thing in this world which isn't ever cheap.
|
|
That's a coffin. There's one thing in this world which a person don't
|
|
ever try to jew you down on. That's a coffin. There's one thing
|
|
in this world which a person don't say--"I'll look around a little,
|
|
and if I find I can't do better I'll come back and take it."
|
|
That's a coffin. There's one thing in this world which a person
|
|
won't take in pine if he can go walnut; and won't take in walnut
|
|
if he can go mahogany; and won't take in mahogany if he can go an iron
|
|
casket with silver door-plate and bronze handles. That's a coffin.
|
|
And there's one thing in this world which you don't have to worry
|
|
around after a person to get him to pay for. And that's a coffin.
|
|
Undertaking?--why it's the dead-surest business in Christendom,
|
|
and the nobbiest.
|
|
|
|
'Why, just look at it. A rich man won't have anything but your very best;
|
|
and you can just pile it on, too--pile it on and sock it to him--he won't
|
|
ever holler. And you take in a poor man, and if you work him right he'll
|
|
bust himself on a single lay-out. Or especially a woman. F'r instance:
|
|
Mrs. O'Flaherty comes in--widow--wiping her eyes and kind of moaning.
|
|
Unhandkerchiefs one eye, bats it around tearfully over the stock; says--
|
|
|
|
' "And fhat might ye ask for that wan?"
|
|
|
|
' "Thirty-nine dollars, madam," says I.
|
|
|
|
' "It 's a foine big price, sure, but Pat shall be buried like
|
|
a gintleman, as he was, if I have to work me fingers off for it.
|
|
I'll have that wan, sor."
|
|
|
|
' "Yes, madam," says I, "and it is a very good one, too; not costly,
|
|
to be sure, but in this life we must cut our garment to our clothes,
|
|
as the saying is." And as she starts out, I heave in, kind of casually,
|
|
"This one with the white satin lining is a beauty, but I am afraid--
|
|
well, sixty-five dollars is a rather--rather--but no matter, I felt
|
|
obliged to say to Mrs. O'Shaughnessy--"
|
|
|
|
' "D'ye mane to soy that Bridget O'Shaughnessy bought the mate
|
|
to that joo-ul box to ship that dhrunken divil to Purgatory in?"
|
|
|
|
' "Yes, madam."
|
|
|
|
' "Then Pat shall go to heaven in the twin to it, if it takes
|
|
the last rap the O'Flaherties can raise; and moind you,
|
|
stick on some extras, too, and I'll give ye another dollar."
|
|
|
|
'And as I lay-in with the livery stables, of course I don't forget to mention
|
|
that Mrs. O'Shaughnessy hired fifty-four dollars' worth of hacks and flung
|
|
as much style into Dennis's funeral as if he had been a duke or an assassin.
|
|
And of course she sails in and goes the O'Shaughnessy about four hacks
|
|
and an omnibus better. That used to be, but that's all played now;
|
|
that is, in this particular town. The Irish got to piling up hacks so,
|
|
on their funerals, that a funeral left them ragged and hungry for
|
|
two years afterward; so the priest pitched in and broke it all up.
|
|
He don't allow them to have but two hacks now, and sometimes only one.'
|
|
|
|
'Well,' said I, 'if you are so light-hearted and jolly in ordinary times,
|
|
what must you be in an epidemic?'
|
|
|
|
He shook his head.
|
|
|
|
'No, you're off, there. We don't like to see an epidemic.
|
|
An epidemic don't pay. Well, of course I don't mean that, exactly;
|
|
but it don't pay in proportion to the regular thing.
|
|
Don't it occur to you, why?'
|
|
|
|
No.
|
|
|
|
'Think.'
|
|
|
|
'I can't imagine. What is it?'
|
|
|
|
'It's just two things.'
|
|
|
|
'Well, what are they?'
|
|
|
|
'One's Embamming.'
|
|
|
|
'And what's the other?'
|
|
|
|
'Ice.'
|
|
|
|
'How is that?'
|
|
|
|
'Well, in ordinary times, a person dies, and we lay him up in ice;
|
|
one day two days, maybe three, to wait for friends to come.
|
|
Takes a lot of it--melts fast. We charge jewelry rates for that ice,
|
|
and war-prices for attendance. Well, don't you know, when there's
|
|
an epidemic, they rush 'em to the cemetery the minute the breath's out.
|
|
No market for ice in an epidemic. Same with Embamming.
|
|
You take a family that's able to embam, and you've got a soft thing.
|
|
You can mention sixteen different ways to do it--though there
|
|
AIN'T only one or two ways, when you come down to the bottom facts
|
|
of it--and they'll take the highest-priced way, every time.
|
|
It's human nature--human nature in grief. It don't reason, you see.
|
|
Time being, it don't care a dam. All it wants is physical immortality
|
|
for deceased, and they're willing to pay for it. All you've got
|
|
to do is to just be ca'm and stack it up--they'll stand the racket.
|
|
Why, man, you can take a defunct that you couldn't GIVE away; and get
|
|
your embamming traps around you and go to work; and in a couple of hours
|
|
he is worth a cool six hundred--that's what HE'S worth. There ain't
|
|
anything equal to it but trading rats for di'monds in time of famine.
|
|
Well, don't you see, when there's an epidemic, people don't wait to embam.
|
|
No, indeed they don't; and it hurts the business like hell-th, as we say--
|
|
hurts it like hell-th, HEALTH, see?--Our little joke in the trade.
|
|
Well, I must be going. Give me a call whenever you need any--I mean,
|
|
when you're going by, sometime.'
|
|
|
|
In his joyful high spirits, he did the exaggerating himself,
|
|
if any has been done. I have not enlarged on him.
|
|
|
|
With the above brief references to inhumation, let us leave the subject.
|
|
As for me, I hope to be cremated. I made that remark to my pastor once,
|
|
who said, with what he seemed to think was an impressive manner--
|
|
|
|
'I wouldn't worry about that, if I had your chances.'
|
|
Much he knew about it--the family all so opposed to it.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 44
|
|
City Sights
|
|
|
|
THE old French part of New Orleans--anciently the Spanish part--
|
|
bears no resemblance to the American end of the city:
|
|
the American end which lies beyond the intervening
|
|
brick business-center. The houses are massed in blocks;
|
|
are austerely plain and dignified; uniform of pattern,
|
|
with here and there a departure from it with pleasant effect;
|
|
all are plastered on the outside, and nearly all have long,
|
|
iron-railed verandas running along the several stories.
|
|
Their chief beauty is the deep, warm, varicolored stain
|
|
with which time and the weather have enriched the plaster.
|
|
It harmonizes with all the surroundings, and has as natural
|
|
a look of belonging there as has the flush upon sunset clouds.
|
|
This charming decoration cannot be successfully imitated;
|
|
neither is it to be found elsewhere in America.
|
|
|
|
The iron railings are a specialty, also. The pattern is often
|
|
exceedingly light and dainty, and airy and graceful--with a large
|
|
cipher or monogram in the center, a delicate cobweb of baffling,
|
|
intricate forms, wrought in steel. The ancient railings are hand-made,
|
|
and are now comparatively rare and proportionately valuable.
|
|
They are become BRIC-A-BRAC.
|
|
|
|
The party had the privilege of idling through this ancient
|
|
quarter of New Orleans with the South's finest literary genius,
|
|
the author of 'the Grandissimes.' In him the South has found
|
|
a masterly delineator of its interior life and its history.
|
|
In truth, I find by experience, that the untrained eye and
|
|
vacant mind can inspect it, and learn of it, and judge of it,
|
|
more clearly and profitably in his books than by personal
|
|
contact with it.
|
|
|
|
With Mr. Cable along to see for you, and describe and explain and illuminate,
|
|
a jog through that old quarter is a vivid pleasure. And you have a vivid
|
|
sense as of unseen or dimly seen things--vivid, and yet fitful and darkling;
|
|
you glimpse salient features, but lose the fine shades or catch them
|
|
imperfectly through the vision of the imagination: a case, as it were,
|
|
of ignorant near-sighted stranger traversing the rim of wide vague horizons
|
|
of Alps with an inspired and enlightened long-sighted native.
|
|
|
|
We visited the old St. Louis Hotel, now occupied by municipal offices.
|
|
There is nothing strikingly remarkable about it; but one can say of it
|
|
as of the Academy of Music in New York, that if a broom or a shovel has ever
|
|
been used in it there is no circumstantial evidence to back up the fact.
|
|
It is curious that cabbages and hay and things do not grow in the Academy
|
|
of Music; but no doubt it is on account of the interruption of the light by
|
|
the benches, and the impossibility of hoeing the crop except in the aisles.
|
|
The fact that the ushers grow their buttonhole-bouquets on the premises
|
|
shows what might be done if they had the right kind of an agricultural head
|
|
to the establishment.
|
|
|
|
We visited also the venerable Cathedral, and the pretty square in front of it;
|
|
the one dim with religious light, the other brilliant with the worldly sort,
|
|
and lovely with orange-trees and blossomy shrubs; then we drove in the hot sun
|
|
through the wilderness of houses and out on to the wide dead level beyond,
|
|
where the villas are, and the water wheels to drain the town, and the commons
|
|
populous with cows and children; passing by an old cemetery where we were
|
|
told lie the ashes of an early pirate; but we took him on trust, and did
|
|
not visit him. He was a pirate with a tremendous and sanguinary history;
|
|
and as long as he preserved unspotted, in retirement, the dignity of his
|
|
name and the grandeur of his ancient calling, homage and reverence were his
|
|
from high and low; but when at last he descended into politics and became
|
|
a paltry alderman, the public 'shook' him, and turned aside and wept.
|
|
When he died, they set up a monument over him; and little by little he has
|
|
come into respect again; but it is respect for the pirate, not the alderman.
|
|
To-day the loyal and generous remember only what he was, and charitably forget
|
|
what he became.
|
|
|
|
Thence, we drove a few miles across a swamp, along a raised shell road,
|
|
with a canal on one hand and a dense wood on the other; and here and there,
|
|
in the distance, a ragged and angular-limbed and moss-bearded cypress,
|
|
top standing out, clear cut against the sky, and as quaint of form as the
|
|
apple-trees in Japanese pictures--such was our course and the surroundings
|
|
of it. There was an occasional alligator swimming comfortably along
|
|
in the canal, and an occasional picturesque colored person on the bank,
|
|
flinging his statue-rigid reflection upon the still water and watching
|
|
for a bite.
|
|
|
|
And by-and-bye we reached the West End, a collection of hotels of
|
|
the usual light summer-resort pattern, with broad verandas all around,
|
|
and the waves of the wide and blue Lake Pontchartrain lapping the thresholds.
|
|
We had dinner on a ground-veranda over the water--the chief dish the renowned
|
|
fish called the pompano, delicious as the less criminal forms of sin.
|
|
|
|
Thousands of people come by rail and carriage to West End and
|
|
to Spanish Fort every evening, and dine, listen to the bands,
|
|
take strolls in the open air under the electric lights,
|
|
go sailing on the lake, and entertain themselves in various
|
|
and sundry other ways.
|
|
|
|
We had opportunities on other days and in other places to test the pompano.
|
|
Notably, at an editorial dinner at one of the clubs in the city.
|
|
He was in his last possible perfection there, and justified his fame.
|
|
In his suite was a tall pyramid of scarlet cray-fish--large ones; as large
|
|
as one's thumb--delicate, palatable, appetizing. Also deviled whitebait;
|
|
also shrimps of choice quality; and a platter of small soft-shell crabs
|
|
of a most superior breed. The other dishes were what one might get
|
|
at Delmonico's, or Buckingham Palace; those I have spoken of can be had
|
|
in similar perfection in New Orleans only, I suppose.
|
|
|
|
In the West and South they have a new institution--the Broom Brigade.
|
|
It is composed of young ladies who dress in a uniform costume,
|
|
and go through the infantry drill, with broom in place of musket.
|
|
It is a very pretty sight, on private view. When they perform
|
|
on the stage of a theater, in the blaze of colored fires,
|
|
it must be a fine and fascinating spectacle. I saw them go through
|
|
their complex manual with grace, spirit, and admirable precision.
|
|
I saw them do everything which a human being can possibly do with a broom,
|
|
except sweep. I did not see them sweep. But I know they could learn.
|
|
What they have already learned proves that. And if they ever
|
|
should learn, and should go on the war-path down Tchoupitoulas
|
|
or some of those other streets around there, those thoroughfares
|
|
would bear a greatly improved aspect in a very few minutes.
|
|
But the girls themselves wouldn't; so nothing would be really gained,
|
|
after all.
|
|
|
|
The drill was in the Washington Artillery building.
|
|
In this building we saw many interesting relics of the war.
|
|
Also a fine oil-painting representing Stonewall Jackson's
|
|
last interview with General Lee. Both men are on horseback.
|
|
Jackson has just ridden up, and is accosting Lee.
|
|
The picture is very valuable, on account of the portraits,
|
|
which are authentic. But, like many another historical picture,
|
|
it means nothing without its label. And one label will fit it
|
|
as well as another--
|
|
|
|
First Interview between Lee and Jackson.
|
|
|
|
Last Interview between Lee and Jackson.
|
|
|
|
Jackson Introducing Himself to Lee.
|
|
|
|
Jackson Accepting Lee's Invitation to Dinner.
|
|
|
|
Jackson Declining Lee's Invitation to Dinner--with Thanks.
|
|
|
|
Jackson Apologizing for a Heavy Defeat.
|
|
|
|
Jackson Reporting a Great Victory.
|
|
|
|
Jackson Asking Lee for a Match.
|
|
|
|
It tells ONE story, and a sufficient one; for it says quite
|
|
plainly and satisfactorily, 'Here are Lee and Jackson together.'
|
|
The artist would have made it tell that this is Lee and Jackson's last
|
|
interview if he could have done it. But he couldn't, for there wasn't
|
|
any way to do it. A good legible label is usually worth, for information,
|
|
a ton of significant attitude and expression in a historical picture.
|
|
In Rome, people with fine sympathetic natures stand up and weep in front
|
|
of the celebrated 'Beatrice Cenci the Day before her Execution.'
|
|
It shows what a label can do. If they did not know the picture,
|
|
they would inspect it unmoved, and say, 'Young girl with hay fever;
|
|
young girl with her head in a bag.'
|
|
|
|
I found the half-forgotten Southern intonations and
|
|
elisions as pleasing to my ear as they had formerly been.
|
|
A Southerner talks music. At least it is music to me,
|
|
but then I was born in the South. The educated Southerner
|
|
has no use for an r, except at the beginning of a word.
|
|
He says 'honah,' and 'dinnah,' and 'Gove'nuh,' and 'befo' the waw,'
|
|
and so on. The words may lack charm to the eye, in print,
|
|
but they have it to the ear. When did the r disappear
|
|
from Southern speech, and how did it come to disappear?
|
|
The custom of dropping it was not borrowed from the North,
|
|
nor inherited from England. Many Southerners--most Southerners--
|
|
put a y into occasional words that begin with the k sound.
|
|
For instance, they say Mr. K'yahtah (Carter) and speak
|
|
of playing k'yahds or of riding in the k'yahs. And they
|
|
have the pleasant custom--long ago fallen into decay in
|
|
the North--of frequently employing the respectful 'Sir.'
|
|
Instead of the curt Yes, and the abrupt No, they say 'Yes, Suh',
|
|
'No, Suh.'
|
|
|
|
But there are some infelicities. Such as 'like' for 'as,'
|
|
and the addition of an 'at' where it isn't needed.
|
|
I heard an educated gentleman say, 'Like the flag-officer did.'
|
|
His cook or his butler would have said, 'Like the flag-officer done.'
|
|
You hear gentlemen say, 'Where have you been at?' And here is
|
|
the aggravated form--heard a ragged street Arab say it to a comrade:
|
|
'I was a-ask'n' Tom whah you was a-sett'n' at.' The very elect
|
|
carelessly say 'will' when they mean 'shall'; and many of them say,
|
|
'I didn't go to do it,' meaning 'I didn't mean to do it.'
|
|
The Northern word 'guess'--imported from England, where it
|
|
used to be common, and now regarded by satirical Englishmen
|
|
as a Yankee original--is but little used among Southerners.
|
|
They say 'reckon.' They haven't any 'doesn't' in their language;
|
|
they say 'don't' instead. The unpolished often use 'went' for 'gone.'
|
|
It is nearly as bad as the Northern 'hadn't ought.' This reminds me
|
|
that a remark of a very peculiar nature was made here in my neighborhood
|
|
(in the North) a few days ago: 'He hadn't ought to have went.'
|
|
How is that? Isn't that a good deal of a triumph?
|
|
One knows the orders combined in this half-breed's architecture
|
|
without inquiring: one parent Northern, the other Southern.
|
|
To-day I heard a schoolmistress ask, 'Where is John gone?'
|
|
This form is so common--so nearly universal, in fact--that if she
|
|
had used 'whither' instead of 'where,' I think it would have sounded
|
|
like an affectation.
|
|
|
|
We picked up one excellent word--a word worth traveling to New
|
|
Orleans to get; a nice limber, expressive, handy word--'lagniappe.'
|
|
They pronounce it lanny-yap. It is Spanish--so they said.
|
|
We discovered it at the head of a column of odds and ends in
|
|
the Picayune, the first day; heard twenty people use it the second;
|
|
inquired what it meant the third; adopted it and got facility
|
|
in swinging it the fourth. It has a restricted meaning,
|
|
but I think the people spread it out a little when they choose.
|
|
It is the equivalent of the thirteenth roll in a 'baker's dozen.'
|
|
It is something thrown in, gratis, for good measure.
|
|
The custom originated in the Spanish quarter of the city.
|
|
When a child or a servant buys something in a shop--
|
|
or even the mayor or the governor, for aught I know--he finishes
|
|
the operation by saying--
|
|
|
|
'Give me something for lagniappe.'
|
|
|
|
The shopman always responds; gives the child a bit of licorice-root,
|
|
gives the servant a cheap cigar or a spool of thread, gives the governor--
|
|
I don't know what he gives the governor; support, likely.
|
|
|
|
When you are invited to drink, and this does occur now and then
|
|
in New Orleans--and you say, 'What, again?--no, I've had enough;'
|
|
the other party says, 'But just this one time more--this is for lagniappe.'
|
|
When the beau perceives that he is stacking his compliments a trifle too high,
|
|
and sees by the young lady's countenance that the edifice would have been
|
|
better with the top compliment left off, he puts his 'I beg pardon--
|
|
no harm intended,' into the briefer form of 'Oh, that's for lagniappe.'
|
|
If the waiter in the restaurant stumbles and spills a gill of coffee down
|
|
the back of your neck, he says 'For lagniappe, sah,' and gets you another cup
|
|
without extra charge.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 45
|
|
Southern Sports
|
|
|
|
IN the North one hears the war mentioned, in social conversation,
|
|
once a month; sometimes as often as once a week; but as a distinct
|
|
subject for talk, it has long ago been relieved of duty. There are
|
|
sufficient reasons for this. Given a dinner company of six gentlemen
|
|
to-day, it can easily happen that four of them--and possibly five--
|
|
were not in the field at all. So the chances are four to two,
|
|
or five to one, that the war will at no time during the evening
|
|
become the topic of conversation; and the chances are still greater
|
|
that if it become the topic it will remain so but a little while.
|
|
If you add six ladies to the company, you have added six people
|
|
who saw so little of the dread realities of the war that they ran
|
|
out of talk concerning them years ago, and now would soon weary of
|
|
the war topic if you brought it up.
|
|
|
|
The case is very different in the South. There, every man you
|
|
meet was in the war; and every lady you meet saw the war.
|
|
The war is the great chief topic of conversation. The interest in it
|
|
is vivid and constant; the interest in other topics is fleeting.
|
|
Mention of the war will wake up a dull company and set
|
|
their tongues going, when nearly any other topic would fail.
|
|
In the South, the war is what A.D. is elsewhere: they date from it.
|
|
All day long you hear things 'placed' as having happened since the waw;
|
|
or du'in' the waw; or befo' the waw; or right aftah the waw;
|
|
or 'bout two yeahs or five yeahs or ten yeahs befo' the waw
|
|
or aftah the waw. It shows how intimately every individual
|
|
was visited, in his own person, by that tremendous episode.
|
|
It gives the inexperienced stranger a better idea of what a vast
|
|
and comprehensive calamity invasion is than he can ever get by reading
|
|
books at the fireside.
|
|
|
|
At a club one evening, a gentleman turned to me and said,
|
|
in an aside--
|
|
|
|
'You notice, of course, that we are nearly always talking about the war.
|
|
It isn't because we haven't anything else to talk about, but because nothing
|
|
else has so strong an interest for us. And there is another reason:
|
|
In the war, each of us, in his own person, seems to have sampled
|
|
all the different varieties of human experience; as a consequence,
|
|
you can't mention an outside matter of any sort but it will certainly
|
|
remind some listener of something that happened during the war--
|
|
and out he comes with it. Of course that brings the talk back to the war.
|
|
You may try all you want to, to keep other subjects before the house,
|
|
and we may all join in and help, but there can be but one result:
|
|
the most random topic would load every man up with war reminiscences,
|
|
and shut him up, too; and talk would be likely to stop presently,
|
|
because you can't talk pale inconsequentialities when you've
|
|
got a crimson fact or fancy in your head that you are burning
|
|
to fetch out.'
|
|
|
|
The poet was sitting some little distance away; and presently
|
|
he began to speak--about the moon.
|
|
|
|
The gentleman who had been talking to me remarked in an 'aside:'
|
|
'There, the moon is far enough from the seat of war, but you
|
|
will see that it will suggest something to somebody about the war;
|
|
in ten minutes from now the moon, as a topic, will be shelved.'
|
|
|
|
The poet was saying he had noticed something which was a surprise
|
|
to him; had had the impression that down here, toward the equator,
|
|
the moonlight was much stronger and brighter than up North;
|
|
had had the impression that when he visited New Orleans,
|
|
many years ago, the moon--
|
|
|
|
Interruption from the other end of the room--
|
|
|
|
'Let me explain that. Reminds me of an anecdote.
|
|
Everything is changed since the war, for better or for worse;
|
|
but you'll find people down here born grumblers, who see no
|
|
change except the change for the worse. There was an old negro
|
|
woman of this sort. A young New-Yorker said in her presence,
|
|
"What a wonderful moon you have down here!" She sighed and said,
|
|
"Ah, bless yo' heart, honey, you ought to seen dat moon befo'
|
|
de waw!" '
|
|
|
|
The new topic was dead already. But the poet resurrected it,
|
|
and gave it a new start.
|
|
|
|
A brief dispute followed, as to whether the difference between
|
|
Northern and Southern moonlight really existed or was only imagined.
|
|
Moonlight talk drifted easily into talk about artificial
|
|
methods of dispelling darkness. Then somebody remembered
|
|
that when Farragut advanced upon Port Hudson on a dark night--
|
|
and did not wish to assist the aim of the Confederate gunners--
|
|
he carried no battle-lanterns, but painted the decks of his ships white,
|
|
and thus created a dim but valuable light, which enabled his
|
|
own men to grope their way around with considerable facility.
|
|
At this point the war got the floor again--the ten minutes not
|
|
quite up yet.
|
|
|
|
I was not sorry, for war talk by men who have been in a war
|
|
is always interesting; whereas moon talk by a poet who has
|
|
not been in the moon is likely to be dull.
|
|
|
|
We went to a cockpit in New Orleans on a Saturday afternoon.
|
|
I had never seen a cock-fight before. There were men and boys there
|
|
of all ages and all colors, and of many languages and nationalities.
|
|
But I noticed one quite conspicuous and surprising absence:
|
|
the traditional brutal faces. There were no brutal faces.
|
|
With no cock-fighting going on, you could have played the gathering
|
|
on a stranger for a prayer-meeting; and after it began,
|
|
for a revival--provided you blindfolded your stranger--
|
|
for the shouting was something prodigious.
|
|
|
|
A negro and a white man were in the ring; everybody else outside.
|
|
The cocks were brought in in sacks; and when time was called,
|
|
they were taken out by the two bottle-holders, stroked,
|
|
caressed, poked toward each other, and finally liberated.
|
|
The big black cock plunged instantly at the little gray one and struck
|
|
him on the head with his spur. The gray responded with spirit.
|
|
Then the Babel of many-tongued shoutings broke out, and ceased
|
|
not thenceforth. When the cocks had been fighting some little time,
|
|
I was expecting them momently to drop dead, for both were blind,
|
|
red with blood, and so exhausted that they frequently fell down.
|
|
Yet they would not give up, neither would they die.
|
|
The negro and the white man would pick them up every few seconds,
|
|
wipe them off, blow cold water on them in a fine spray,
|
|
and take their heads in their mouths and hold them there
|
|
a moment--to warm back the perishing life perhaps;
|
|
I do not know. Then, being set down again, the dying
|
|
creatures would totter gropingly about, with dragging wings,
|
|
find each other, strike a guesswork blow or two, and fall
|
|
exhausted once more.
|
|
|
|
I did not see the end of the battle. I forced myself to endure
|
|
it as long as I could, but it was too pitiful a sight;
|
|
so I made frank confession to that effect, and we retired.
|
|
We heard afterward that the black cock died in the ring,
|
|
and fighting to the last.
|
|
|
|
Evidently there is abundant fascination about this 'sport' for such
|
|
as have had a degree of familiarity with it. I never saw people
|
|
enjoy anything more than this gathering enjoyed this fight.
|
|
The case was the same with old gray-heads and with boys of ten.
|
|
They lost themselves in frenzies of delight. The 'cocking-main'
|
|
is an inhuman sort of entertainment, there is no question
|
|
about that; still, it seems a much more respectable and far
|
|
less cruel sport than fox-hunting--for the cocks like it;
|
|
they experience, as well as confer enjoyment; which is not
|
|
the fox's case.
|
|
|
|
We assisted--in the French sense--at a mule race, one day.
|
|
I believe I enjoyed this contest more than any other mule there.
|
|
I enjoyed it more than I remember having enjoyed any other animal
|
|
race I ever saw. The grand-stand was well filled with the beauty
|
|
and the chivalry of New Orleans. That phrase is not original with me.
|
|
It is the Southern reporter's. He has used it for two generations.
|
|
He uses it twenty times a day, or twenty thousand times a day;
|
|
or a million times a day--according to the exigencies.
|
|
He is obliged to use it a million times a day, if he have
|
|
occasion to speak of respectable men and women that often;
|
|
for he has no other phrase for such service except that single one.
|
|
He never tires of it; it always has a fine sound to him.
|
|
There is a kind of swell medieval bulliness and tinsel about it
|
|
that pleases his gaudy barbaric soul. If he had been in Palestine
|
|
in the early times, we should have had no references to 'much people'
|
|
out of him. No, he would have said 'the beauty and the chivalry
|
|
of Galilee' assembled to hear the Sermon on the Mount.
|
|
It is likely that the men and women of the South are sick enough
|
|
of that phrase by this time, and would like a change, but there is no
|
|
immediate prospect of their getting it.
|
|
|
|
The New Orleans editor has a strong, compact, direct, unflowery style;
|
|
wastes no words, and does not gush. Not so with his average correspondent.
|
|
In the Appendix I have quoted a good letter, penned by a trained hand;
|
|
but the average correspondent hurls a style which differs from that.
|
|
For instance--
|
|
|
|
The 'Times-Democrat' sent a relief-steamer up one of the bayous, last April.
|
|
This steamer landed at a village, up there somewhere, and the Captain
|
|
invited some of the ladies of the village to make a short trip with him.
|
|
They accepted and came aboard, and the steamboat shoved out up the creek.
|
|
That was all there was 'to it.' And that is all that the editor
|
|
of the 'Times-Democrat' would have got out of it. There was nothing
|
|
in the thing but statistics, and he would have got nothing else out of it.
|
|
He would probably have even tabulated them, partly to secure
|
|
perfect clearness of statement, and partly to save space.
|
|
But his special correspondent knows other methods of handling statistics.
|
|
He just throws off all restraint and wallows in them--
|
|
|
|
'On Saturday, early in the morning, the beauty of the place graced our cabin,
|
|
and proud of her fair freight the gallant little boat glided up the bayou.'
|
|
|
|
Twenty-two words to say the ladies came aboard and the boat
|
|
shoved out up the creek, is a clean waste of ten good words,
|
|
and is also destructive of compactness of statement.
|
|
|
|
The trouble with the Southern reporter is--Women. They unsettle him;
|
|
they throw him off his balance. He is plain, and sensible,
|
|
and satisfactory, until a woman heaves in sight. Then he goes
|
|
all to pieces; his mind totters, he becomes flowery and idiotic.
|
|
From reading the above extract, you would imagine that this student
|
|
of Sir Walter Scott is an apprentice, and knows next to nothing
|
|
about handling a pen. On the contrary, he furnishes plenty of proofs,
|
|
in his long letter, that he knows well enough how to handle it when
|
|
the women are not around to give him the artificial-flower complaint.
|
|
For instance--
|
|
|
|
'At 4 o'clock ominous clouds began to gather in the south-east, and presently
|
|
from the Gulf there came a blow which increased in severity every moment.
|
|
It was not safe to leave the landing then, and there was a delay.
|
|
The oaks shook off long tresses of their mossy beards to the tugging
|
|
of the wind, and the bayou in its ambition put on miniature waves
|
|
in mocking of much larger bodies of water. A lull permitted a start,
|
|
and homewards we steamed, an inky sky overhead and a heavy wind blowing.
|
|
As darkness crept on, there were few on board who did not wish
|
|
themselves nearer home.'
|
|
|
|
There is nothing the matter with that. It is good description,
|
|
compactly put. Yet there was great temptation, there, to drop
|
|
into lurid writing.
|
|
|
|
But let us return to the mule. Since I left him, I have rummaged
|
|
around and found a full report of the race. In it I find confirmation
|
|
of the theory which I broached just now--namely, that the trouble
|
|
with the Southern reporter is Women: Women, supplemented by Walter
|
|
Scott and his knights and beauty and chivalry, and so on.
|
|
This is an excellent report, as long as the women stay out of it.
|
|
But when they intrude, we have this frantic result--
|
|
|
|
'It will be probably a long time before the ladies'
|
|
stand presents such a sea of foam-like loveliness as it
|
|
did yesterday. The New Orleans women are always charming,
|
|
but never so much so as at this time of the year, when.
|
|
in their dainty spring costumes they bring with them a breath
|
|
of balmy freshness and an odor of sanctity unspeakable.
|
|
The stand was so crowded with them that, walking at their feet
|
|
and seeing no possibility of approach, many a man appreciated
|
|
as he never did before the Peri's feeling at the Gates of Paradise,
|
|
and wondered what was the priceless boon that would admit him
|
|
to their sacred presence. Sparkling on their white-robed
|
|
breasts or shoulders were the colors of their favorite knights,
|
|
and were it not for the fact that the doughty heroes appeared
|
|
on unromantic mules, it would have been easy to imagine one of
|
|
King Arthur's gala-days.'
|
|
|
|
There were thirteen mules in the first heat; all sorts of mules,
|
|
they were; all sorts of complexions, gaits, dispositions, aspects.
|
|
Some were handsome creatures, some were not; some were sleek,
|
|
some hadn't had their fur brushed lately; some were innocently
|
|
gay and frisky; some were full of malice and all unrighteousness;
|
|
guessing from looks, some of them thought the matter on hand was war,
|
|
some thought it was a lark, the rest took it for a religious occasion.
|
|
And each mule acted according to his convictions. The result was an
|
|
absence of harmony well compensated by a conspicuous presence of variety--
|
|
variety of a picturesque and entertaining sort.
|
|
|
|
All the riders were young gentlemen in fashionable society.
|
|
If the reader has been wondering why it is that the ladies of New Orleans
|
|
attend so humble an orgy as a mule-race, the thing is explained now.
|
|
It is a fashion-freak; all connected with it are people of fashion.
|
|
|
|
It is great fun, and cordially liked. The mule-race is one of the marked
|
|
occasions of the year. It has brought some pretty fast mules to the front.
|
|
One of these had to be ruled out, because he was so fast that he turned
|
|
the thing into a one-mule contest, and robbed it of one of its
|
|
best features--variety. But every now and then somebody disguises him
|
|
with a new name and a new complexion, and rings him in again.
|
|
|
|
The riders dress in full jockey costumes of bright-colored silks,
|
|
satins, and velvets.
|
|
|
|
The thirteen mules got away in a body, after a couple
|
|
of false starts, and scampered off with prodigious spirit.
|
|
As each mule and each rider had a distinct opinion of his own
|
|
as to how the race ought to be run, and which side of the track
|
|
was best in certain circumstances, and how often the track ought
|
|
to be crossed, and when a collision ought to be accomplished,
|
|
and when it ought to be avoided, these twenty-six conflicting
|
|
opinions created a most fantastic and picturesque confusion,
|
|
and the resulting spectacle was killingly comical.
|
|
|
|
Mile heat; time 2:22. Eight of the thirteen mules distanced.
|
|
I had a bet on a mule which would have won if the procession
|
|
had been reversed. The second heat was good fun; and so was
|
|
the 'consolation race for beaten mules,' which followed later;
|
|
but the first heat was the best in that respect.
|
|
|
|
I think that much the most enjoyable of all races is
|
|
a steamboat race; but, next to that, I prefer the gay
|
|
and joyous mule-rush. Two red-hot steamboats raging along,
|
|
neck-and-neck, straining every nerve--that is to say,
|
|
every rivet in the boilers--quaking and shaking and groaning
|
|
from stem to stern, spouting white steam from the pipes,
|
|
pouring black smoke from the chimneys, raining down sparks,
|
|
parting the river into long breaks of hissing foam--this is
|
|
sport that makes a body's very liver curl with enjoyment.
|
|
A horse-race is pretty tame and colorless in comparison.
|
|
Still, a horse-race might be well enough, in its way,
|
|
perhaps, if it were not for the tiresome false starts.
|
|
But then, nobody is ever killed. At least, nobody was ever killed
|
|
when I was at a horse-race. They have been crippled, it is true;
|
|
but this is little to the purpose.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 46
|
|
Enchantments and Enchanters
|
|
|
|
THE largest annual event in New Orleans is a something which we
|
|
arrived too late to sample--the Mardi-Gras festivities.
|
|
I saw the procession of the Mystic Crew of Comus there,
|
|
twenty-four years ago--with knights and nobles and so on,
|
|
clothed in silken and golden Paris-made gorgeousnesses,
|
|
planned and bought for that single night's use; and in their
|
|
train all manner of giants, dwarfs, monstrosities, and other
|
|
diverting grotesquerie--a startling and wonderful sort of show,
|
|
as it filed solemnly and silently down the street in the light
|
|
of its smoking and flickering torches; but it is said that
|
|
in these latter days the spectacle is mightily augmented,
|
|
as to cost, splendor, and variety. There is a chief personage--'Rex;'
|
|
and if I remember rightly, neither this king nor any of his
|
|
great following of subordinates is known to any outsider.
|
|
All these people are gentlemen of position and consequence;
|
|
and it is a proud thing to belong to the organization; so the mystery
|
|
in which they hide their personality is merely for romance's sake,
|
|
and not on account of the police.
|
|
|
|
Mardi-Gras is of course a relic of the French and Spanish occupation; but I
|
|
judge that the religious feature has been pretty well knocked out of it now.
|
|
Sir Walter has got the advantage of the gentlemen of the cowl and rosary,
|
|
and he will stay. His medieval business, supplemented by the monsters and
|
|
the oddities, and the pleasant creatures from fairy-land, is finer to look
|
|
at than the poor fantastic inventions and performances of the reveling rabble
|
|
of the priest's day, and serves quite as well, perhaps, to emphasize the day
|
|
and admonish men that the grace-line between the worldly season and the holy
|
|
one is reached.
|
|
|
|
This Mardi-Gras pageant was the exclusive possession of New
|
|
Orleans until recently. But now it has spread to Memphis and
|
|
St. Louis and Baltimore. It has probably reached its limit.
|
|
It is a thing which could hardly exist in the practical North;
|
|
would certainly last but a very brief time; as brief a time
|
|
as it would last in London. For the soul of it is the romantic,
|
|
not the funny and the grotesque. Take away the romantic
|
|
mysteries, the kings and knights and big-sounding titles,
|
|
and Mardi-Gras would die, down there in the South.
|
|
The very feature that keeps it alive in the South--
|
|
girly-girly romance--would kill it in the North or in London.
|
|
Puck and Punch, and the press universal, would fall upon it
|
|
and make merciless fun of it, and its first exhibition would be
|
|
also its last.
|
|
|
|
Against the crimes of the French Revolution and of Bonaparte
|
|
may be set two compensating benefactions: the Revolution
|
|
broke the chains of the ANCIEN REGIME and of the Church,
|
|
and made of a nation of abject slaves a nation of freemen;
|
|
and Bonaparte instituted the setting of merit above birth,
|
|
and also so completely stripped the divinity from royalty,
|
|
that whereas crowned heads in Europe were gods before,
|
|
they are only men, since, and can never be gods again,
|
|
but only figureheads, and answerable for their acts like common clay.
|
|
Such benefactions as these compensate the temporary harm which
|
|
Bonaparte and the Revolution did, and leave the world in debt
|
|
to them for these great and permanent services to liberty,
|
|
humanity, and progress.
|
|
|
|
Then comes Sir Walter Scott with his enchantments, and by his
|
|
single might checks this wave of progress, and even turns it back;
|
|
sets the world in love with dreams and phantoms; with decayed and swinish
|
|
forms of religion; with decayed and degraded systems of government;
|
|
with the sillinesses and emptinesses, sham grandeurs, sham gauds,
|
|
and sham chivalries of a brainless and worthless long-vanished society.
|
|
He did measureless harm; more real and lasting harm, perhaps, than any
|
|
other individual that ever wrote. Most of the world has now
|
|
outlived good part of these harms, though by no means all of them;
|
|
but in our South they flourish pretty forcefully still. Not so
|
|
forcefully as half a generation ago, perhaps, but still forcefully.
|
|
There, the genuine and wholesome civilization of the nineteenth
|
|
century is curiously confused and commingled with the Walter
|
|
Scott Middle-Age sham civilization; and so you have practical,
|
|
common-sense, progressive ideas, and progressive works; mixed up
|
|
with the duel, the inflated speech, and the jejune romanticism of an
|
|
absurd past that is dead, and out of charity ought to be buried.
|
|
But for the Sir Walter disease, the character of the Southerner--
|
|
or Southron, according to Sir Walter's starchier way of phrasing it--
|
|
would be wholly modern, in place of modern and medieval mixed,
|
|
and the South would be fully a generation further advanced than it is.
|
|
It was Sir Walter that made every gentleman in the South a Major
|
|
or a Colonel, or a General or a Judge, before the war; and it
|
|
was he, also, that made these gentlemen value these bogus decorations.
|
|
For it was he that created rank and caste down there, and also
|
|
reverence for rank and caste, and pride and pleasure in them.
|
|
Enough is laid on slavery, without fathering upon it these creations and
|
|
contributions of Sir Walter.
|
|
|
|
Sir Walter had so large a hand in making Southern character, as it existed
|
|
before the war, that he is in great measure responsible for the war.
|
|
It seems a little harsh toward a dead man to say that we never should have had
|
|
any war but for Sir Walter; and yet something of a plausible argument might,
|
|
perhaps, be made in support of that wild proposition. The Southerner of
|
|
the American Revolution owned slaves; so did the Southerner of the Civil War:
|
|
but the former resembles the latter as an Englishman resembles a Frenchman.
|
|
The change of character can be traced rather more easily to Sir Walter's
|
|
influence than to that of any other thing or person.
|
|
|
|
One may observe, by one or two signs, how deeply
|
|
that influence penetrated, and how strongly it holds.
|
|
If one take up a Northern or Southern literary periodical
|
|
of forty or fifty years ago, he will find it filled with wordy,
|
|
windy, flowery 'eloquence,' romanticism, sentimentality--
|
|
all imitated from Sir Walter, and sufficiently badly done, too--
|
|
innocent travesties of his style and methods, in fact.
|
|
This sort of literature being the fashion in both sections of
|
|
the country, there was opportunity for the fairest competition;
|
|
and as a consequence, the South was able to show as many
|
|
well-known literary names, proportioned to population,
|
|
as the North could.
|
|
|
|
But a change has come, and there is no opportunity
|
|
now for a fair competition between North and South.
|
|
For the North has thrown out that old inflated style,
|
|
whereas the Southern writer still clings to it--clings to it
|
|
and has a restricted market for his wares, as a consequence.
|
|
There is as much literary talent in the South, now, as ever
|
|
there was, of course; but its work can gain but slight currency
|
|
under present conditions; the authors write for the past,
|
|
not the present; they use obsolete forms, and a dead language.
|
|
But when a Southerner of genius writes modern English,
|
|
his book goes upon crutches no longer, but upon wings;
|
|
and they carry it swiftly all about America and England,
|
|
and through the great English reprint publishing houses of Germany--
|
|
as witness the experience of Mr. Cable and Uncle Remus, two of the
|
|
very few Southern authors who do not write in the Southern style.
|
|
Instead of three or four widely-known literary names, the South
|
|
ought to have a dozen or two--and will have them when Sir Walter's
|
|
time is out.
|
|
|
|
A curious exemplification of the power of a single book for
|
|
good or harm is shown in the effects wrought by 'Don Quixote'
|
|
and those wrought by 'Ivanhoe.' The first swept the world's
|
|
admiration for the medieval chivalry-silliness out of existence;
|
|
and the other restored it. As far as our South is concerned,
|
|
the good work done by Cervantes is pretty nearly a dead letter,
|
|
so effectually has Scott's pernicious work undermined it.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 47
|
|
Uncle Remus and Mr. Cable
|
|
|
|
MR. JOEL CHANDLER HARRIS ('Uncle Remus') was to arrive from Atlanta
|
|
at seven o'clock Sunday morning; so we got up and received him.
|
|
We were able to detect him among the crowd of arrivals at
|
|
the hotel-counter by his correspondence with a description
|
|
of him which had been furnished us from a trustworthy source.
|
|
He was said to be undersized, red-haired, and somewhat freckled.
|
|
He was the only man in the party whose outside tallied with this
|
|
bill of particulars. He was said to be very shy. He is a shy man.
|
|
Of this there is no doubt. It may not show on the surface,
|
|
but the shyness is there. After days of intimacy one wonders
|
|
to see that it is still in about as strong force as ever.
|
|
There is a fine and beautiful nature hidden behind it, as all know
|
|
who have read the Uncle Remus book; and a fine genius, too, as all know
|
|
by the same sign. I seem to be talking quite freely about this neighbor;
|
|
but in talking to the public I am but talking to his personal friends,
|
|
and these things are permissible among friends.
|
|
|
|
He deeply disappointed a number of children who had flocked
|
|
eagerly to Mr. Cable's house to get a glimpse of the illustrious
|
|
sage and oracle of the nation's nurseries. They said--
|
|
|
|
'Why, he 's white! '
|
|
|
|
They were grieved about it. So, to console them, the book was brought,
|
|
that they might hear Uncle Remus's Tar-Baby story from the lips of Uncle
|
|
Remus himself--or what, in their outraged eyes, was left of him.
|
|
But it turned out that he had never read aloud to people, and was too shy
|
|
to venture the attempt now. Mr. Cable and I read from books of ours,
|
|
to show him what an easy trick it was; but his immortal shyness was
|
|
proof against even this sagacious strategy, so we had to read about
|
|
Brer Rabbit ourselves.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Harris ought to be able to read the negro dialect better
|
|
than anybody else, for in the matter of writing it he is the only
|
|
master the country has produced. Mr. Cable is the only master
|
|
in the writing of French dialects that the country has produced;
|
|
and he reads them in perfection. It was a great treat to hear him
|
|
read about Jean-ah Poquelin, and about Innerarity and his famous
|
|
'pigshoo' representing 'Louisihanna RIF-fusing to Hanter the Union,'
|
|
along with passages of nicely-shaded German dialect from a novel
|
|
which was still in manuscript.
|
|
|
|
It came out in conversation, that in two different instances
|
|
Mr. Cable got into grotesque trouble by using, in his books,
|
|
next-to-impossible French names which nevertheless happened
|
|
to be borne by living and sensitive citizens of New Orleans.
|
|
His names were either inventions or were borrowed from
|
|
the ancient and obsolete past, I do not now remember which;
|
|
but at any rate living bearers of them turned up, and were
|
|
a good deal hurt at having attention directed to themselves
|
|
and their affairs in so excessively public a manner.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Warner and I had an experience of the same sort when we wrote the book
|
|
called 'The Gilded Age.' There is a character in it called 'Sellers.'
|
|
I do not remember what his first name was, in the beginning;
|
|
but anyway, Mr. Warner did not like it, and wanted it improved.
|
|
He asked me if I was able to imagine a person named 'Eschol Sellers.'
|
|
Of course I said I could not, without stimulants. He said that away
|
|
out West, once, he had met, and contemplated, and actually shaken
|
|
hands with a man bearing that impossible name--'Eschol Sellers.'
|
|
He added--
|
|
|
|
'It was twenty years ago; his name has probably carried him off
|
|
before this; and if it hasn't, he will never see the book anyhow.
|
|
We will confiscate his name. The name you are using is common,
|
|
and therefore dangerous; there are probably a thousand Sellerses
|
|
bearing it, and the whole horde will come after us; but Eschol
|
|
Sellers is a safe name--it is a rock.'
|
|
|
|
So we borrowed that name; and when the book had been out about a week,
|
|
one of the stateliest and handsomest and most aristocratic looking
|
|
white men that ever lived, called around, with the most formidable
|
|
libel suit in his pocket that ever--well, in brief, we got his
|
|
permission to suppress an edition of ten million<footnote [Figures
|
|
taken from memory, and probably incorrect. Think it was more.]>
|
|
copies of the book and change that name to 'Mulberry Sellers'
|
|
in future editions.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 48
|
|
Sugar and Postage
|
|
|
|
ONE day, on the street, I encountered the man whom, of all men,
|
|
I most wished to see--Horace Bixby; formerly pilot under me--
|
|
or rather, over me--now captain of the great steamer 'City of
|
|
Baton Rouge,' the latest and swiftest addition to the Anchor Line.
|
|
The same slender figure, the same tight curls, the same springy step,
|
|
the same alertness, the same decision of eye and answering decision
|
|
of hand, the same erect military bearing; not an inch gained or lost
|
|
in girth, not an ounce gained or lost in weight, not a hair turned.
|
|
It is a curious thing, to leave a man thirty-five years old, and come
|
|
back at the end of twenty-one years and find him still only thirty-five.
|
|
I have not had an experience of this kind before, I believe.
|
|
There were some crow's-feet, but they counted for next to nothing,
|
|
since they were inconspicuous.
|
|
|
|
His boat was just in. I had been waiting several days for her,
|
|
purposing to return to St. Louis in her. The captain and I
|
|
joined a party of ladies and gentlemen, guests of Major Wood,
|
|
and went down the river fifty-four miles, in a swift tug,
|
|
to ex-Governor Warmouth's sugar plantation. Strung along below
|
|
the city, were a number of decayed, ram-shackly, superannuated
|
|
old steamboats, not one of which had I ever seen before.
|
|
They had all been built, and worn out, and thrown aside,
|
|
since I was here last. This gives one a realizing sense
|
|
of the frailness of a Mississippi boat and the briefness
|
|
of its life.
|
|
|
|
Six miles below town a fat and battered brick chimney, sticking above
|
|
the magnolias and live-oaks, was pointed out as the monument erected
|
|
by an appreciative nation to celebrate the battle of New Orleans--
|
|
Jackson's victory over the British, January 8, 1815. The war had ended,
|
|
the two nations were at peace, but the news had not yet reached New Orleans.
|
|
If we had had the cable telegraph in those days, this blood would
|
|
not have been spilt, those lives would not have been wasted;
|
|
and better still, Jackson would probably never have been president.
|
|
We have gotten over the harms done us by the war of 1812, but not over some
|
|
of those done us by Jackson's presidency.
|
|
|
|
The Warmouth plantation covers a vast deal of ground, and the hospitality
|
|
of the Warmouth mansion is graduated to the same large scale.
|
|
We saw steam-plows at work, here, for the first time. The traction engine
|
|
travels about on its own wheels, till it reaches the required spot;
|
|
then it stands still and by means of a wire rope pulls the huge plow toward
|
|
itself two or three hundred yards across the field, between the rows of cane.
|
|
The thing cuts down into the black mold a foot and a half deep.
|
|
The plow looks like a fore-and-aft brace of a Hudson river steamer, inverted.
|
|
When the negro steersman sits on one end of it, that end tilts down near
|
|
the ground, while the other sticks up high in air. This great see-saw goes
|
|
rolling and pitching like a ship at sea, and it is not every circus rider
|
|
that could stay on it.
|
|
|
|
The plantation contains two thousand six hundred acres;
|
|
six hundred and fifty are in cane; and there is a fruitful
|
|
orange grove of five thousand trees. The cane is
|
|
cultivated after a modern and intricate scientific fashion,
|
|
too elaborate and complex for me to attempt to describe;
|
|
but it lost $40,000 last year. I forget the other details.
|
|
However, this year's crop will reach ten or twelve hundred
|
|
tons of sugar, consequently last year's loss will not matter.
|
|
These troublesome and expensive scientific methods achieve a yield
|
|
of a ton and a half and from that to two tons, to the acre;
|
|
which is three or four times what the yield of an acre was
|
|
in my time.
|
|
|
|
The drainage-ditches were everywhere alive with
|
|
little crabs--'fiddlers.' One saw them scampering sidewise
|
|
in every direction whenever they heard a disturbing noise.
|
|
Expensive pests, these crabs; for they bore into the levees,
|
|
and ruin them.
|
|
|
|
The great sugar-house was a wilderness of tubs and tanks
|
|
and vats and filters, pumps, pipes, and machinery.
|
|
The process of making sugar is exceedingly interesting.
|
|
First, you heave your cane into the centrifugals and grind out
|
|
the juice; then run it through the evaporating pan to extract
|
|
the fiber; then through the bone-filter to remove the alcohol;
|
|
then through the clarifying tanks to discharge the molasses;
|
|
then through the granulating pipe to condense it; then through
|
|
the vacuum pan to extract the vacuum. It is now ready for market.
|
|
I have jotted these particulars down from memory.
|
|
The thing looks simple and easy. Do not deceive yourself.
|
|
To make sugar is really one of the most difficult things
|
|
in the world. And to make it right, is next to impossible.
|
|
If you will examine your own supply every now and then
|
|
for a term of years, and tabulate the result, you will find
|
|
that not two men in twenty can make sugar without getting sand
|
|
into it.
|
|
|
|
We could have gone down to the mouth of the river and visited Captain Eads'
|
|
great work, the 'jetties,' where the river has been compressed between walls,
|
|
and thus deepened to twenty-six feet; but it was voted useless to go,
|
|
since at this stage of the water everything would be covered up and invisible.
|
|
|
|
We could have visited that ancient and singular burg,
|
|
'Pilot-town,' which stands on stilts in the water--so they say;
|
|
where nearly all communication is by skiff and canoe, even to
|
|
the attending of weddings and funerals; and where the littlest
|
|
boys and girls are as handy with the oar as unamphibious
|
|
children are with the velocipede.
|
|
|
|
We could have done a number of other things; but on account of limited time,
|
|
we went back home. The sail up the breezy and sparkling river was
|
|
a charming experience, and would have been satisfyingly sentimental
|
|
and romantic but for the interruptions of the tug's pet parrot,
|
|
whose tireless comments upon the scenery and the guests were always
|
|
this-worldly, and often profane. He had also a superabundance
|
|
of the discordant, ear-splitting, metallic laugh common to his breed--
|
|
a machine-made laugh, a Frankenstein laugh, with the soul left out of it.
|
|
He applied it to every sentimental remark, and to every pathetic song.
|
|
He cackled it out with hideous energy after 'Home again, home again
|
|
from a foreign shore,' and said he 'wouldn't give a damn for a tug-load
|
|
of such rot.' Romance and sentiment cannot long survive this sort
|
|
of discouragement; so the singing and talking presently ceased; which so
|
|
delighted the parrot that he cursed himself hoarse for joy.
|
|
|
|
Then the male members of the party moved to the forecastle,
|
|
to smoke and gossip. There were several old steamboatmen along,
|
|
and I learned from them a great deal of what had been
|
|
happening to my former river friends during my long absence.
|
|
I learned that a pilot whom I used to steer for is become
|
|
a spiritualist, and for more than fifteen years has been
|
|
receiving a letter every week from a deceased relative,
|
|
through a New York spiritualist medium named Manchester--
|
|
postage graduated by distance: from the local post-office
|
|
in Paradise to New York, five dollars; from New York to
|
|
St. Louis, three cents. I remember Mr. Manchester very well.
|
|
I called on him once, ten years ago, with a couple of friends,
|
|
one of whom wished to inquire after a deceased uncle.
|
|
This uncle had lost his life in a peculiarly violent and
|
|
unusual way, half a dozen years before: a cyclone blew him
|
|
some three miles and knocked a tree down with him which was
|
|
four feet through at the butt and sixty-five feet high.
|
|
He did not survive this triumph. At the </s<e acute>ance/>
|
|
just referred to, my friend questioned his late uncle,
|
|
through Mr. Manchester, and the late uncle wrote down his replies,
|
|
using Mr. Manchester's hand and pencil for that purpose.
|
|
The following is a fair example of the questions asked,
|
|
and also of the sloppy twaddle in the way of answers, furnished by
|
|
Manchester under the pretense that it came from the specter.
|
|
If this man is not the paltriest fraud that lives, I owe him an
|
|
apology--
|
|
|
|
QUESTION. Where are you?
|
|
|
|
ANSWER. In the spirit world.
|
|
|
|
Q. Are you happy?
|
|
|
|
A. Very happy. Perfectly happy.
|
|
|
|
Q. How do you amuse yourself?
|
|
|
|
A. Conversation with friends, and other spirits.
|
|
|
|
Q. What else?
|
|
|
|
A. Nothing else. Nothing else is necessary.
|
|
|
|
Q. What do you talk about?
|
|
|
|
A. About how happy we are; and about friends left behind in the earth,
|
|
and how to influence them for their good.
|
|
|
|
Q. When your friends in the earth all get to the spirit land,
|
|
what shall you have to talk about then?--nothing but about
|
|
how happy you all are?
|
|
|
|
No reply. It is explained that spirits will not answer frivolous questions.
|
|
|
|
Q. How is it that spirits that are content to spend an eternity
|
|
in frivolous employments, and accept it as happiness,
|
|
are so fastidious about frivolous questions upon the subject?
|
|
|
|
No reply.
|
|
|
|
Q. Would you like to come back?
|
|
|
|
A. No.
|
|
|
|
Q. Would you say that under oath?
|
|
|
|
A. Yes.
|
|
|
|
Q. What do you eat there?
|
|
|
|
A. We do not eat.
|
|
|
|
Q. What do you drink?
|
|
|
|
A. We do not drink.
|
|
|
|
Q. What do you smoke?
|
|
|
|
A. We do not smoke.
|
|
|
|
Q. What do you read?
|
|
|
|
A. We do not read.
|
|
|
|
Q. Do all the good people go to your place?
|
|
|
|
A. Yes.
|
|
|
|
Q. You know my present way of life. Can you suggest any additions to it,
|
|
in the way of crime, that will reasonably insure my going to some other place.
|
|
|
|
A. No reply.
|
|
|
|
Q. When did you die?
|
|
|
|
A. I did not die, I passed away.
|
|
|
|
Q. Very well, then, when did you pass away? How long have you
|
|
been in the spirit land?
|
|
|
|
A. We have no measurements of time here.
|
|
|
|
Q. Though you may be indifferent and uncertain as to dates
|
|
and times in your present condition and environment,
|
|
this has nothing to do with your former condition.
|
|
You had dates then. One of these is what I ask for.
|
|
You departed on a certain day in a certain year.
|
|
Is not this true?
|
|
|
|
A. Yes.
|
|
|
|
Q. Then name the day of the month.
|
|
|
|
(Much fumbling with pencil, on the part of the medium, accompanied by
|
|
violent spasmodic jerkings of his head and body, for some little time.
|
|
Finally, explanation to the effect that spirits often forget dates,
|
|
such things being without importance to them.)
|
|
|
|
Q. Then this one has actually forgotten the date of its translation
|
|
to the spirit land?
|
|
|
|
This was granted to be the case.
|
|
|
|
Q. This is very curious. Well, then, what year was it?
|
|
|
|
(More fumbling, jerking, idiotic spasms, on the part of the medium.
|
|
Finally, explanation to the effect that the spirit has forgotten the year.)
|
|
|
|
Q. This is indeed stupendous. Let me put one more question,
|
|
one last question, to you, before we part to meet no more;--
|
|
for even if I fail to avoid your asylum, a meeting there will go
|
|
for nothing as a meeting, since by that time you will easily
|
|
have forgotten me and my name: did you die a natural death,
|
|
or were you cut off by a catastrophe?
|
|
|
|
A. (After long hesitation and many throes and spasms.) NATURAL DEATH.
|
|
|
|
This ended the interview. My friend told the medium that when his relative
|
|
was in this poor world, he was endowed with an extraordinary intellect
|
|
and an absolutely defectless memory, and it seemed a great pity that he had
|
|
not been allowed to keep some shred of these for his amusement in the realms
|
|
of everlasting contentment, and for the amazement and admiration of the rest
|
|
of the population there.
|
|
|
|
This man had plenty of clients--has plenty yet. He receives
|
|
letters from spirits located in every part of the spirit world,
|
|
and delivers them all over this country through the United States mail.
|
|
These letters are filled with advice--advice from 'spirits' who don't
|
|
know as much as a tadpole--and this advice is religiously followed
|
|
by the receivers. One of these clients was a man whom the spirits
|
|
(if one may thus plurally describe the ingenious Manchester)
|
|
were teaching how to contrive an improved railway car-wheel. It
|
|
is coarse employment for a spirit, but it is higher and wholesomer
|
|
activity than talking for ever about 'how happy we are.'
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 49
|
|
Episodes in Pilot Life
|
|
|
|
IN the course of the tug-boat gossip, it came out that out
|
|
of every five of my former friends who had quitted the river,
|
|
four had chosen farming as an occupation. Of course this was not
|
|
because they were peculiarly gifted, agriculturally, and thus
|
|
more likely to succeed as farmers than in other industries:
|
|
the reason for their choice must be traced to some other source.
|
|
Doubtless they chose farming because that life is private
|
|
and secluded from irruptions of undesirable strangers--
|
|
like the pilot-house hermitage. And doubtless they also chose
|
|
it because on a thousand nights of black storm and danger
|
|
they had noted the twinkling lights of solitary farm-houses,
|
|
as the boat swung by, and pictured to themselves the serenity
|
|
and security and coziness of such refuges at such times,
|
|
and so had by-and-bye come to dream of that retired and peaceful
|
|
life as the one desirable thing to long for, anticipate, earn, and
|
|
at last enjoy.
|
|
|
|
But I did not learn that any of these pilot-farmers had astonished anybody
|
|
with their successes. Their farms do not support them: they support
|
|
their farms. The pilot-farmer disappears from the river annually,
|
|
about the breaking of spring, and is seen no more till next frost.
|
|
Then he appears again, in damaged homespun, combs the hayseed
|
|
out of his hair, and takes a pilot-house berth for the winter.
|
|
In this way he pays the debts which his farming has achieved during
|
|
the agricultural season. So his river bondage is but half broken;
|
|
he is still the river's slave the hardest half of the year.
|
|
|
|
One of these men bought a farm, but did not retire to it.
|
|
He knew a trick worth two of that. He did not propose to pauperize
|
|
his farm by applying his personal ignorance to working it.
|
|
No, he put the farm into the hands of an agricultural
|
|
expert to be worked on shares--out of every three loads
|
|
of corn the expert to have two and the pilot the third.
|
|
But at the end of the season the pilot received no corn.
|
|
The expert explained that his share was not reached. The farm
|
|
produced only two loads.
|
|
|
|
Some of the pilots whom I had known had had adventures--
|
|
the outcome fortunate, sometimes, but not in all cases.
|
|
Captain Montgomery, whom I had steered for when he was a pilot,
|
|
commanded the Confederate fleet in the great battle before Memphis;
|
|
when his vessel went down, he swam ashore, fought his way through
|
|
a squad of soldiers, and made a gallant and narrow escape.
|
|
He was always a cool man; nothing could disturb his serenity.
|
|
Once when he was captain of the 'Crescent City,' I was bringing
|
|
the boat into port at New Orleans, and momently expecting orders
|
|
from the hurricane deck, but received none. I had stopped
|
|
the wheels, and there my authority and responsibility ceased.
|
|
It was evening--dim twilight--the captain's hat was perched upon
|
|
the big bell, and I supposed the intellectual end of the captain
|
|
was in it, but such was not the case. The captain was very strict;
|
|
therefore I knew better than to touch a bell without orders.
|
|
My duty was to hold the boat steadily on her calamitous course,
|
|
and leave the consequences to take care of themselves--which I did.
|
|
So we went plowing past the sterns of steamboats and getting closer
|
|
and closer--the crash was bound to come very soon--and still that hat
|
|
never budged; for alas, the captain was napping in the texas....
|
|
Things were becoming exceedingly nervous and uncomfortable.
|
|
It seemed to me that the captain was not going to appear in time
|
|
to see the entertainment. But he did. Just as we were walking
|
|
into the stern of a steamboat, he stepped out on deck, and said,
|
|
with heavenly serenity, 'Set her back on both'--which I did;
|
|
but a trifle late, however, for the next moment we went smashing through
|
|
that other boat's flimsy outer works with a most prodigious racket.
|
|
The captain never said a word to me about the matter afterwards,
|
|
except to remark that I had done right, and that he hoped I would not
|
|
hesitate to act in the same way again in like circumstances.
|
|
|
|
One of the pilots whom I had known when I was on the river
|
|
had died a very honorable death. His boat caught fire,
|
|
and he remained at the wheel until he got her safe to land.
|
|
Then he went out over the breast-board with his clothing
|
|
in flames, and was the last person to get ashore.
|
|
He died from his injuries in the course of two or three hours,
|
|
and his was the only life lost.
|
|
|
|
The history of Mississippi piloting affords six or seven instances of this
|
|
sort of martyrdom, and half a hundred instances of escapes from a like fate
|
|
which came within a second or two of being fatally too late; BUT THERE
|
|
IS NO INSTANCE OF A PILOT DESERTING HIS POST TO SAVE HIS LIFE WHILE BY
|
|
REMAINING AND SACRIFICING IT HE MIGHT SECURE OTHER LIVES FROM DESTRUCTION.
|
|
It is well worth while to set down this noble fact, and well worth while to
|
|
put it in italics, too.
|
|
|
|
The 'cub' pilot is early admonished to despise all perils
|
|
connected with a pilot's calling, and to prefer any sort
|
|
of death to the deep dishonor of deserting his post
|
|
while there is any possibility of his being useful in it.
|
|
And so effectively are these admonitions inculcated,
|
|
that even young and but half-tried pilots can be depended upon
|
|
to stick to the wheel, and die there when occasion requires.
|
|
In a Memphis graveyard is buried a young fellow who perished
|
|
at the wheel a great many years ago, in White River, to save
|
|
the lives of other men. He said to the captain that if the fire
|
|
would give him time to reach a sand bar, some distance away,
|
|
all could be saved, but that to land against the bluff bank
|
|
of the river would be to insure the loss of many lives.
|
|
He reached the bar and grounded the boat in shallow water;
|
|
but by that time the flames had closed around him,
|
|
and in escaping through them he was fatally burned.
|
|
He had been urged to fly sooner, but had replied as became
|
|
a pilot to reply--
|
|
|
|
'I will not go. If I go, nobody will be saved; if I stay,
|
|
no one will be lost but me. I will stay.'
|
|
|
|
There were two hundred persons on board, and no life was lost but the pilot's.
|
|
There used to be a monument to this young fellow, in that Memphis graveyard.
|
|
While we tarried in Memphis on our down trip, I started out to look for it,
|
|
but our time was so brief that I was obliged to turn back before my
|
|
object was accomplished.
|
|
|
|
The tug-boat gossip informed me that Dick Kennet was dead--
|
|
blown up, near Memphis, and killed; that several others whom
|
|
I had known had fallen in the war--one or two of them shot
|
|
down at the wheel; that another and very particular friend,
|
|
whom I had steered many trips for, had stepped out of his house
|
|
in New Orleans, one night years ago, to collect some money
|
|
in a remote part of the city, and had never been seen again--
|
|
was murdered and thrown into the river, it was thought; that Ben
|
|
Thornburgh was dead long ago; also his wild 'cub' whom I used
|
|
to quarrel with, all through every daylight watch. A heedless,
|
|
reckless creature he was, and always in hot water, always in mischief.
|
|
An Arkansas passenger brought an enormous bear aboard, one day,
|
|
and chained him to a life-boat on the hurricane deck.
|
|
Thornburgh's 'cub' could not rest till he had gone there and unchained
|
|
the bear, to 'see what he would do.' He was promptly gratified.
|
|
The bear chased him around and around the deck, for miles and miles,
|
|
with two hundred eager faces grinning through the railings
|
|
for audience, and finally snatched off the lad's coat-tail
|
|
and went into the texas to chew it. The off-watch turned
|
|
out with alacrity, and left the bear in sole possession.
|
|
He presently grew lonesome, and started out for recreation.
|
|
He ranged the whole boat--visited every part of it, with an
|
|
advance guard of fleeing people in front of him and a voiceless
|
|
vacancy behind him; and when his owner captured him at last,
|
|
those two were the only visible beings anywhere; everybody else
|
|
was in hiding, and the boat was a solitude.
|
|
|
|
I was told that one of my pilot friends fell dead at the wheel,
|
|
from heart disease, in 1869. The captain was on the roof at the time.
|
|
He saw the boat breaking for the shore; shouted, and got no answer;
|
|
ran up, and found the pilot lying dead on the floor.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Bixby had been blown up, in Madrid bend; was not injured,
|
|
but the other pilot was lost.
|
|
|
|
George Ritchie had been blown up near Memphis--blown into
|
|
the river from the wheel, and disabled. The water was
|
|
very cold; he clung to a cotton bale--mainly with his teeth--
|
|
and floated until nearly exhausted, when he was rescued
|
|
by some deck hands who were on a piece of the wreck.
|
|
They tore open the bale and packed him in the cotton,
|
|
and warmed the life back into him, and got him safe to Memphis.
|
|
He is one of Bixby's pilots on the 'Baton Rouge' now.
|
|
|
|
Into the life of a steamboat clerk, now dead, had dropped a bit
|
|
of romance--somewhat grotesque romance, but romance nevertheless.
|
|
When I knew him he was a shiftless young spendthrift, boisterous,
|
|
goodhearted, full of careless generosities, and pretty conspicuously
|
|
promising to fool his possibilities away early, and come to nothing.
|
|
In a Western city lived a rich and childless old foreigner and his wife;
|
|
and in their family was a comely young girl--sort of friend, sort of servant.
|
|
The young clerk of whom I have been speaking--whose name was not
|
|
George Johnson, but who shall be called George Johnson for the purposes
|
|
of this narrative--got acquainted with this young girl, and they sinned;
|
|
and the old foreigner found them out, and rebuked them. Being ashamed,
|
|
they lied, and said they were married; that they had been privately married.
|
|
Then the old foreigner's hurt was healed, and he forgave and blessed them.
|
|
After that, they were able to continue their sin without concealment.
|
|
By-and-bye the foreigner's wife died; and presently he followed after her.
|
|
Friends of the family assembled to mourn; and among the mourners
|
|
sat the two young sinners. The will was opened and solemnly read.
|
|
It bequeathed every penny of that old man's great wealth to MRS.
|
|
GEORGE JOHNSON!
|
|
|
|
And there was no such person. The young sinners fled forth then,
|
|
and did a very foolish thing: married themselves before an
|
|
obscure Justice of the Peace, and got him to antedate the thing.
|
|
That did no sort of good. The distant relatives flocked in and exposed
|
|
the fraudful date with extreme suddenness and surprising ease,
|
|
and carried off the fortune, leaving the Johnsons very legitimately,
|
|
and legally, and irrevocably chained together in honorable marriage,
|
|
but with not so much as a penny to bless themselves withal.
|
|
Such are the actual facts; and not all novels have for a base so
|
|
telling a situation.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 50
|
|
The 'Original Jacobs'
|
|
|
|
WE had some talk about Captain Isaiah Sellers, now many years dead.
|
|
He was a fine man, a high-minded man, and greatly respected both ashore and on
|
|
the river. He was very tall, well built, and handsome; and in his old age--
|
|
as I remember him--his hair was as black as an Indian's, and his eye
|
|
and hand were as strong and steady and his nerve and judgment as firm
|
|
and clear as anybody's, young or old, among the fraternity of pilots.
|
|
He was the patriarch of the craft; he had been a keelboat pilot before the day
|
|
of steamboats; and a steamboat pilot before any other steamboat pilot,
|
|
still surviving at the time I speak of, had ever turned a wheel.
|
|
Consequently his brethren held him in the sort of awe in which illustrious
|
|
survivors of a bygone age are always held by their associates.
|
|
He knew how he was regarded, and perhaps this fact added some trifle
|
|
of stiffening to his natural dignity, which had been sufficiently stiff
|
|
in its original state.
|
|
|
|
He left a diary behind him; but apparently it did not date back
|
|
to his first steamboat trip, which was said to be 1811, the year
|
|
the first steamboat disturbed the waters of the Mississippi.
|
|
At the time of his death a correspondent of the 'St. Louis Republican'
|
|
culled the following items from the diary--
|
|
|
|
'In February, 1825, he shipped on board the steamer "Rambler," at Florence,
|
|
Ala., and made during that year three trips to New Orleans and back--
|
|
this on the "Gen. Carrol," between Nashville and New Orleans. It was during
|
|
his stay on this boat that Captain Sellers introduced the tap of the bell
|
|
as a signal to heave the lead, previous to which time it was the custom
|
|
for the pilot to speak to the men below when soundings were wanted.
|
|
The proximity of the forecastle to the pilot-house, no doubt, rendered this
|
|
an easy matter; but how different on one of our palaces of the present day.
|
|
|
|
'In 1827 we find him on board the "President," a boat of two
|
|
hundred and eighty-five tons burden, and plying between Smithland
|
|
and New Orleans. Thence he joined the "Jubilee" in 1828,
|
|
and on this boat he did his first piloting in the St. Louis trade;
|
|
his first watch extending from Herculaneum to St. Genevieve.
|
|
On May 26, 1836, he completed and left Pittsburgh in charge
|
|
of the steamer "Prairie," a boat of four hundred tons, and the
|
|
first steamer with a STATE-ROOM CABIN ever seen at St. Louis.
|
|
In 1857 he introduced the signal for meeting boats, and which has,
|
|
with some slight change, been the universal custom of this day;
|
|
in fact, is rendered obligatory by act of Congress.
|
|
|
|
'As general items of river history, we quote the following marginal
|
|
notes from his general log--
|
|
|
|
'In March, 1825, Gen. Lafayette left New Orleans for St. Louis
|
|
on the low-pressure steamer "Natchez."
|
|
|
|
'In January, 1828, twenty-one steamers left the New Orleans wharf
|
|
to celebrate the occasion of Gen. Jackson's visit to that city.
|
|
|
|
'In 1830 the "North American" made the run from New Orleans
|
|
to Memphis in six days--best time on record to that date.
|
|
It has since been made in two days and ten hours.
|
|
|
|
'In 1831 the Red River cut-off formed.
|
|
|
|
'In 1832 steamer "Hudson" made the run from White River
|
|
to Helena, a distance of seventy-five miles, in twelve hours.
|
|
This was the source of much talk and speculation among
|
|
parties directly interested.
|
|
|
|
'In 1839 Great Horseshoe cut-off formed.
|
|
|
|
'Up to the present time, a term of thirty-five years, we ascertain,
|
|
by reference to the diary, he has made four hundred and sixty round
|
|
trips to New Orleans, which gives a distance of one million one hundred
|
|
and four thousand miles, or an average of eighty-six miles a day.'
|
|
|
|
Whenever Captain Sellers approached a body of gossiping pilots,
|
|
a chill fell there, and talking ceased. For this reason:
|
|
whenever six pilots were gathered together, there would always
|
|
be one or two newly fledged ones in the lot, and the elder
|
|
ones would be always 'showing off' before these poor fellows;
|
|
making them sorrowfully feel how callow they were, how recent
|
|
their nobility, and how humble their degree, by talking
|
|
largely and vaporously of old-time experiences on the river;
|
|
always making it a point to date everything back as far as they could,
|
|
so as to make the new men feel their newness to the sharpest
|
|
degree possible, and envy the old stagers in the like degree.
|
|
And how these complacent baldheads WOULD swell, and brag, and lie,
|
|
and date back--ten, fifteen, twenty years,--and how they did enjoy
|
|
the effect produced upon the marveling and envying youngsters!
|
|
|
|
And perhaps just at this happy stage of the proceedings,
|
|
the stately figure of Captain Isaiah Sellers, that real and only
|
|
genuine Son of Antiquity, would drift solemnly into the midst.
|
|
Imagine the size of the silence that would result on the instant.
|
|
And imagine the feelings of those bald-heads, and the exultation
|
|
of their recent audience when the ancient captain would begin
|
|
to drop casual and indifferent remarks of a reminiscent nature--
|
|
about islands that had disappeared, and cutoffs that had been made,
|
|
a generation before the oldest bald-head in the company had ever set
|
|
his foot in a pilot-house!
|
|
|
|
Many and many a time did this ancient mariner appear on the scene
|
|
in the above fashion, and spread disaster and humiliation around him.
|
|
If one might believe the pilots, he always dated his islands back to
|
|
the misty dawn of river history; and he never used the same island twice;
|
|
and never did he employ an island that still existed, or give one
|
|
a name which anybody present was old enough to have heard of before.
|
|
If you might believe the pilots, he was always conscientiously particular
|
|
about little details; never spoke of 'the State of Mississippi,'
|
|
for instance--no, he would say, 'When the State of Mississippi was
|
|
where Arkansas now is," and would never speak of Louisiana or Missouri
|
|
in a general way, and leave an incorrect impression on your mind--
|
|
no, he would say, 'When Louisiana was up the river farther,' or 'When
|
|
Missouri was on the Illinois side.'
|
|
|
|
The old gentleman was not of literary turn or capacity, but he used to jot
|
|
down brief paragraphs of plain practical information about the river,
|
|
and sign them 'MARK TWAIN,' and give them to the 'New Orleans Picayune.'
|
|
They related to the stage and condition of the river, and were
|
|
accurate and valuable; and thus far, they contained no poison.
|
|
But in speaking of the stage of the river to-day, at a given point,
|
|
the captain was pretty apt to drop in a little remark about this
|
|
being the first time he had seen the water so high or so low at
|
|
that particular point for forty-nine years; and now and then he would
|
|
mention Island So-and-so, and follow it, in parentheses, with some
|
|
such observation as 'disappeared in 1807, if I remember rightly.'
|
|
In these antique interjections lay poison and bitterness for
|
|
the other old pilots, and they used to chaff the 'Mark Twain'
|
|
paragraphs with unsparing mockery.
|
|
|
|
It so chanced that one of these paragraphs<footnote [The original MS.
|
|
of it, in the captain's own hand, has been sent to me from New Orleans.
|
|
It reads as follows--
|
|
|
|
VICKSBURG May 4, 1859.
|
|
|
|
'My opinion for the benefit of the citizens of New Orleans:
|
|
The water is higher this far up than it has been since 8.
|
|
My opinion is that the water will be feet deep in Canal street
|
|
before the first of next June. Mrs. Turner's plantation at
|
|
the head of Big Black Island is all under water, and it has not
|
|
been since 1815.
|
|
|
|
'I. Sellers.']>
|
|
|
|
became the text for my first newspaper article. I burlesqued
|
|
it broadly, very broadly, stringing my fantastics out to the extent
|
|
of eight hundred or a thousand words. I was a 'cub' at the time.
|
|
I showed my performance to some pilots, and they eagerly rushed it into
|
|
print in the 'New Orleans True Delta.' It was a great pity; for it did
|
|
nobody any worthy service, and it sent a pang deep into a good man's heart.
|
|
There was no malice in my rubbish; but it laughed at the captain.
|
|
It laughed at a man to whom such a thing was new and strange and dreadful.
|
|
I did not know then, though I do now, that there is no suffering comparable
|
|
with that which a private person feels when he is for the first time
|
|
pilloried in print.
|
|
|
|
Captain Sellers did me the honor to profoundly detest me from that day forth.
|
|
When I say he did me the honor, I am not using empty words.
|
|
It was a very real honor to be in the thoughts of so great a man as
|
|
Captain Sellers, and I had wit enough to appreciate it and be proud of it.
|
|
It was distinction to be loved by such a man; but it was a much greater
|
|
distinction to be hated by him, because he loved scores of people;
|
|
but he didn't sit up nights to hate anybody but me.
|
|
|
|
He never printed another paragraph while he lived, and he never again
|
|
signed 'Mark Twain' to anything. At the time that the telegraph
|
|
brought the news of his death, I was on the Pacific coast.
|
|
I was a fresh new journalist, and needed a nom de guerre;
|
|
so I confiscated the ancient mariner's discarded one,
|
|
and have done my best to make it remain what it was in his hands--
|
|
a sign and symbol and warrant that whatever is found in its
|
|
company may be gambled on as being the petrified truth; how I
|
|
have succeeded, it would not be modest in me to say.
|
|
|
|
The captain had an honorable pride in his profession
|
|
and an abiding love for it. He ordered his monument
|
|
before he died, and kept it near him until he did die.
|
|
It stands over his grave now, in Bellefontaine cemetery, St. Louis.
|
|
It is his image, in marble, standing on duty at the pilot wheel;
|
|
and worthy to stand and confront criticism, for it represents a man
|
|
who in life would have stayed there till he burned to a cinder,
|
|
if duty required it.
|
|
|
|
The finest thing we saw on our whole Mississippi trip, we saw as we approached
|
|
New Orleans in the steam-tug. This was the curving frontage of the crescent
|
|
city lit up with the white glare of five miles of electric lights.
|
|
It was a wonderful sight, and very beautiful.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 51
|
|
Reminiscences
|
|
|
|
WE left for St. Louis in the 'City of Baton Rouge,' on a delightfully
|
|
hot day, but with the main purpose of my visit but lamely accomplished.
|
|
I had hoped to hunt up and talk with a hundred steamboatmen,
|
|
but got so pleasantly involved in the social life of the town that I
|
|
got nothing more than mere five-minute talks with a couple of dozen
|
|
of the craft.
|
|
|
|
I was on the bench of the pilot-house when we backed out and
|
|
'straightened up' for the start--the boat pausing for a 'good ready,'
|
|
in the old-fashioned way, and the black smoke piling out of the chimneys
|
|
equally in the old-fashioned way. Then we began to gather momentum,
|
|
and presently were fairly under way and booming along.
|
|
It was all as natural and familiar--and so were the shoreward sights--
|
|
as if there had been no break in my river life. There was a 'cub,'
|
|
and I judged that he would take the wheel now; and he did.
|
|
Captain Bixby stepped into the pilot-house. Presently the cub
|
|
closed up on the rank of steamships. He made me nervous,
|
|
for he allowed too much water to show between our boat and the ships.
|
|
I knew quite well what was going to happen, because I could date
|
|
back in my own life and inspect the record. The captain looked on,
|
|
during a silent half-minute, then took the wheel himself,
|
|
and crowded the boat in, till she went scraping along within
|
|
a band-breadth of the ships. It was exactly the favor which he had
|
|
done me, about a quarter of a century before, in that same spot,
|
|
the first time I ever steamed out of the port of New Orleans.
|
|
It was a very great and sincere pleasure to me to see the thing repeated--
|
|
with somebody else as victim.
|
|
|
|
We made Natchez (three hundred miles) in twenty-two hours and a half--
|
|
much the swiftest passage I have ever made over that piece of water.
|
|
|
|
The next morning I came on with the four o'clock watch, and saw Ritchie
|
|
successfully run half a dozen crossings in a fog, using for his
|
|
guidance the marked chart devised and patented by Bixby and himself.
|
|
This sufficiently evidenced the great value of the chart.
|
|
|
|
By and by, when the fog began to clear off, I noticed that the reflection
|
|
of a tree in the smooth water of an overflowed bank, six hundred
|
|
yards away, was stronger and blacker than the ghostly tree itself.
|
|
The faint spectral trees, dimly glimpsed through the shredding fog,
|
|
were very pretty things to see.
|
|
|
|
We had a heavy thunder-storm at Natchez, another at Vicksburg,
|
|
and still another about fifty miles below Memphis. They had
|
|
an old-fashioned energy which had long been unfamiliar to me.
|
|
This third storm was accompanied by a raging wind. We tied up to the bank
|
|
when we saw the tempest coming, and everybody left the pilot-house but me.
|
|
The wind bent the young trees down, exposing the pale underside
|
|
of the leaves; and gust after gust followed, in quick succession,
|
|
thrashing the branches violently up and down, and to this side and that,
|
|
and creating swift waves of alternating green and white according
|
|
to the side of the leaf that was exposed, and these waves raced
|
|
after each other as do their kind over a wind-tossed field of oats.
|
|
No color that was visible anywhere was quite natural--all tints
|
|
were charged with a leaden tinge from the solid cloud-bank overhead.
|
|
The river was leaden; all distances the same; and even the far-reaching
|
|
ranks of combing white-caps were dully shaded by the dark,
|
|
rich atmosphere through which their swarming legions marched.
|
|
The thunder-peals were constant and deafening; explosion followed explosion
|
|
with but inconsequential intervals between, and the reports grew steadily
|
|
sharper and higher-keyed, and more trying to the ear; the lightning
|
|
was as diligent as the thunder, and produced effects which enchanted
|
|
the eye and sent electric ecstasies of mixed delight and apprehension
|
|
shivering along every nerve in the body in unintermittent procession.
|
|
The rain poured down in amazing volume; the ear-splitting thunder-peals
|
|
broke nearer and nearer; the wind increased in fury and began to wrench
|
|
off boughs and tree-tops and send them sailing away through space;
|
|
the pilot-house fell to rocking and straining and cracking and surging,
|
|
and I went down in the hold to see what time it was.
|
|
|
|
People boast a good deal about Alpine thunderstorms;
|
|
but the storms which I have had the luck to see in the Alps were not
|
|
the equals of some which I have seen in the Mississippi Valley.
|
|
I may not have seen the Alps do their best, of course,
|
|
and if they can beat the Mississippi, I don't wish to.
|
|
|
|
On this up trip I saw a little towhead (infant island) half a
|
|
mile long, which had been formed during the past nineteen years.
|
|
Since there was so much time to spare that nineteen years
|
|
of it could be devoted to the construction of a mere towhead,
|
|
where was the use, originally, in rushing this whole globe through
|
|
in six days? It is likely that if more time had been taken,
|
|
in the first place, the world would have been made right, and this
|
|
ceaseless improving and repairing would not be necessary now.
|
|
But if you hurry a world or a house, you are nearly sure to find
|
|
out by and by that you have left out a towhead, or a broom-closet,
|
|
or some other little convenience, here and there, which has
|
|
got to be supplied, no matter how much expense and vexation
|
|
it may cost.
|
|
|
|
We had a succession of black nights, going up the river, and it was observable
|
|
that whenever we landed, and suddenly inundated the trees with the intense
|
|
sunburst of the electric light, a certain curious effect was always produced:
|
|
hundreds of birds flocked instantly out from the masses of shining
|
|
green foliage, and went careering hither and thither through the white rays,
|
|
and often a song-bird tuned up and fell to singing. We judged that
|
|
they mistook this superb artificial day for the genuine article.
|
|
We had a delightful trip in that thoroughly well-ordered steamer,
|
|
and regretted that it was accomplished so speedily. By means of diligence
|
|
and activity, we managed to hunt out nearly all the old friends.
|
|
One was missing, however; he went to his reward, whatever it was,
|
|
two years ago. But I found out all about him. His case helped me
|
|
to realize how lasting can be the effect of a very trifling occurrence.
|
|
When he was an apprentice-blacksmith in our village, and I a schoolboy,
|
|
a couple of young Englishmen came to the town and sojourned a while;
|
|
and one day they got themselves up in cheap royal finery and did
|
|
the Richard III swordfight with maniac energy and prodigious powwow,
|
|
in the presence of the village boys. This blacksmith cub was there,
|
|
and the histrionic poison entered his bones. This vast, lumbering, ignorant,
|
|
dull-witted lout was stage-struck, and irrecoverably. He disappeared,
|
|
and presently turned up in St. Louis. I ran across him there, by and by.
|
|
He was standing musing on a street corner, with his left hand on his hip,
|
|
the thumb of his right supporting his chin, face bowed and frowning,
|
|
slouch hat pulled down over his forehead--imagining himself to be Othello
|
|
or some such character, and imagining that the passing crowd marked his
|
|
tragic bearing and were awestruck.
|
|
|
|
I joined him, and tried to get him down out of the clouds,
|
|
but did not succeed. However, he casually informed me, presently,
|
|
that he was a member of the Walnut Street theater company--
|
|
and he tried to say it with indifference, but the indifference
|
|
was thin, and a mighty exultation showed through it.
|
|
He said he was cast for a part in Julius Caesar, for that night,
|
|
and if I should come I would see him. IF I should come!
|
|
I said I wouldn't miss it if I were dead.
|
|
|
|
I went away stupefied with astonishment, and saying to myself,
|
|
'How strange it is! WE always thought this fellow a fool;
|
|
yet the moment he comes to a great city, where intelligence
|
|
and appreciation abound, the talent concealed in this shabby
|
|
napkin is at once discovered, and promptly welcomed and honored.'
|
|
|
|
But I came away from the theater that night disappointed and offended;
|
|
for I had had no glimpse of my hero, and his name was not in the bills.
|
|
I met him on the street the next morning, and before I could speak, he asked--
|
|
|
|
'Did you see me?'
|
|
|
|
'No, you weren't there.'
|
|
|
|
He looked surprised and disappointed. He said--
|
|
|
|
'Yes, I was. Indeed I was. I was a Roman soldier.'
|
|
|
|
'Which one?'
|
|
|
|
'Why didn't you see them Roman soldiers that stood back there in a rank,
|
|
and sometimes marched in procession around the stage?'
|
|
|
|
'Do you mean the Roman army?--those six sandaled roustabouts
|
|
in nightshirts, with tin shields and helmets, that marched around
|
|
treading on each other's heels, in charge of a spider-legged
|
|
consumptive dressed like themselves? '
|
|
|
|
'That's it! that's it! I was one of them Roman soldiers.
|
|
I was the next to the last one. A half a year ago I used to always
|
|
be the last one; but I've been promoted.'
|
|
|
|
Well, they told me that that poor fellow remained a Roman soldier to the last--
|
|
a matter of thirty-four years. Sometimes they cast him for a 'speaking part,'
|
|
but not an elaborate one. He could be trusted to go and say, 'My lord,
|
|
the carriage waits,' but if they ventured to add a sentence or two to this,
|
|
his memory felt the strain and he was likely to miss fire. Yet, poor devil,
|
|
he had been patiently studying the part of Hamlet for more than thirty years,
|
|
and he lived and died in the belief that some day he would be invited
|
|
to play it!
|
|
|
|
And this is what came of that fleeting visit of those young
|
|
Englishmen to our village such ages and ages ago! What noble
|
|
horseshoes this man might have made, but for those Englishmen;
|
|
and what an inadequate Roman soldier he DID make!
|
|
|
|
A day or two after we reached St. Louis, I was walking along Fourth
|
|
Street when a grizzly-headed man gave a sort of start as he passed me,
|
|
then stopped, came back, inspected me narrowly, with a clouding brow,
|
|
and finally said with deep asperity--
|
|
|
|
'Look here, HAVE YOU GOT THAT DRINK YET?'
|
|
|
|
A maniac, I judged, at first. But all in a flash I recognized him.
|
|
I made an effort to blush that strained every muscle in me,
|
|
and answered as sweetly and winningly as ever I knew how--
|
|
|
|
'Been a little slow, but am just this minute closing in on the place
|
|
where they keep it. Come in and help.'
|
|
|
|
He softened, and said make it a bottle of champagne and he was agreeable.
|
|
He said he had seen my name in the papers, and had put all his affairs
|
|
aside and turned out, resolved to find me or die; and make me answer
|
|
that question satisfactorily, or kill me; though the most of his late
|
|
asperity had been rather counterfeit than otherwise.
|
|
|
|
This meeting brought back to me the St. Louis riots of about
|
|
thirty years ago. I spent a week there, at that time,
|
|
in a boarding-house, and had this young fellow for a neighbor
|
|
across the hall. We saw some of the fightings and killings;
|
|
and by and by we went one night to an armory where two
|
|
hundred young men had met, upon call, to be armed and go
|
|
forth against the rioters, under command of a military man.
|
|
We drilled till about ten o'clock at night; then news came
|
|
that the mob were in great force in the lower end of the town,
|
|
and were sweeping everything before them. Our column moved at once.
|
|
It was a very hot night, and my musket was very heavy.
|
|
We marched and marched; and the nearer we approached the seat
|
|
of war, the hotter I grew and the thirstier I got. I was behind
|
|
my friend; so, finally, I asked him to hold my musket while I
|
|
dropped out and got a drink. Then I branched off and went home.
|
|
I was not feeling any solicitude about him of course,
|
|
because I knew he was so well armed, now, that he could take
|
|
care of himself without any trouble. If I had had any doubts
|
|
about that, I would have borrowed another musket for him.
|
|
I left the city pretty early the next morning, and if this
|
|
grizzled man had not happened to encounter my name in the papers
|
|
the other day in St. Louis, and felt moved to seek me out,
|
|
I should have carried to my grave a heart-torturing uncertainty
|
|
as to whether he ever got out of the riots all right or not.
|
|
I ought to have inquired, thirty years ago; I know that.
|
|
And I would have inquired, if I had had the muskets; but, in the
|
|
circumstances, he seemed better fixed to conduct the investigations
|
|
than I was.
|
|
|
|
One Monday, near the time of our visit to St. Louis,
|
|
the 'Globe-Democrat' came out with a couple of pages of Sunday
|
|
statistics, whereby it appeared that 119,448 St. Louis people
|
|
attended the morning and evening church services the day before,
|
|
and 23,102 children attended Sunday-school. Thus 142,550 persons,
|
|
out of the city's total of 400,000 population, respected the day
|
|
religious-wise. I found these statistics, in a condensed form,
|
|
in a telegram of the Associated Press, and preserved them.
|
|
They made it apparent that St. Louis was in a higher state
|
|
of grace than she could have claimed to be in my time.
|
|
But now that I canvass the figures narrowly, I suspect
|
|
that the telegraph mutilated them. It cannot be that there
|
|
are more than 150,000 Catholics in the town; the other 250,000
|
|
must be classified as Protestants. Out of these 250,000,
|
|
according to this questionable telegram, only 26,362 attended
|
|
church and Sunday-school, while out of the 150,000 Catholics,
|
|
116,188 went to church and Sunday-school.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 52
|
|
A Burning Brand
|
|
|
|
ALL at once the thought came into my mind, 'I have not sought
|
|
out Mr. Brown.'
|
|
|
|
Upon that text I desire to depart from the direct line of my subject,
|
|
and make a little excursion. I wish to reveal a secret which I have
|
|
carried with me nine years, and which has become burdensome.
|
|
|
|
Upon a certain occasion, nine years ago, I had said, with strong feeling,
|
|
'If ever I see St. Louis again, I will seek out Mr. Brown, the great
|
|
grain merchant, and ask of him the privilege of shaking him by the hand.'
|
|
|
|
The occasion and the circumstances were as follows.
|
|
A friend of mine, a clergyman, came one evening and said--
|
|
|
|
'I have a most remarkable letter here, which I want to read to you,
|
|
if I can do it without breaking down. I must preface it with
|
|
some explanations, however. The letter is written by an ex-thief
|
|
and ex-vagabond of the lowest origin and basest rearing, a man
|
|
all stained with crime and steeped in ignorance; but, thank God,
|
|
with a mine of pure gold hidden away in him, as you shall see.
|
|
His letter is written to a burglar named Williams, who is serving
|
|
a nine-year term in a certain State prison, for burglary.
|
|
Williams was a particularly daring burglar, and plied
|
|
that trade during a number of years; but he was caught
|
|
at last and jailed, to await trial in a town where he had
|
|
broken into a house at night, pistol in hand, and forced
|
|
the owner to hand over to him $8,000 in government bonds.
|
|
Williams was not a common sort of person, by any means; he was
|
|
a graduate of Harvard College, and came of good New England stock.
|
|
His father was a clergyman. While lying in jail, his health
|
|
began to fail, and he was threatened with consumption.
|
|
This fact, together with the opportunity for reflection afforded
|
|
by solitary confinement, had its effect--its natural effect.
|
|
He fell into serious thought; his early training asserted itself with
|
|
power, and wrought with strong influence upon his mind and heart.
|
|
He put his old life behind him, and became an earnest Christian.
|
|
Some ladies in the town heard of this, visited him,
|
|
and by their encouraging words supported him in his good
|
|
resolutions and strengthened him to continue in his new life.
|
|
The trial ended in his conviction and sentence to the State
|
|
prison for the term of nine years, as I have before said.
|
|
In the prison he became acquainted with the poor wretch
|
|
referred to in the beginning of my talk, Jack Hunt,
|
|
the writer of the letter which I am going to read.
|
|
You will see that the acquaintanceship bore fruit for Hunt.
|
|
When Hunt's time was out, he wandered to St. Louis;
|
|
and from that place he wrote his letter to Williams.
|
|
The letter got no further than the office of the prison warden,
|
|
of course; prisoners are not often allowed to receive letters
|
|
from outside. The prison authorities read this letter,
|
|
but did not destroy it. They had not the heart to do it.
|
|
They read it to several persons, and eventually it fell
|
|
into the hands of those ladies of whom I spoke a while ago.
|
|
The other day I came across an old friend of mine--
|
|
a clergyman--who had seen this letter, and was full of it.
|
|
The mere remembrance of it so moved him that he could
|
|
not talk of it without his voice breaking. He promised
|
|
to get a copy of it for me; and here it is--an exact copy,
|
|
with all the imperfections of the original preserved.
|
|
It has many slang expressions in it--thieves' argot--but their
|
|
meaning has been interlined, in parentheses, by the prison
|
|
authorities'--
|
|
|
|
St. Louis, June 9th 1872.
|
|
|
|
Mr. W---- friend Charlie if i may call you so: i no you are surprised
|
|
to get a letter from me, but i hope you won't be mad at my writing to you.
|
|
i want to tell you my thanks for the way you talked to me when i was
|
|
in prison--it has led me to try and be a better man; i guess you thought
|
|
i did not cair for what you said, & at the first go off I didn't, but i
|
|
noed you was a man who had don big work with good men & want no sucker,
|
|
nor want gasing & all the boys knod it.
|
|
|
|
I used to think at nite what you said, & for it i nocked off swearing months
|
|
before my time was up, for i saw it want no good, nohow--the day my time
|
|
was up you told me if i would shake the cross (QUIT STEALING) & live on
|
|
the square for months, it would be the best job i ever done in my life.
|
|
The state agent give me a ticket to here, & on the car i thought more of
|
|
what you said to me, but didn't make up my mind. When we got to Chicago
|
|
on the cars from there to here, I pulled off an old woman's leather;
|
|
(ROBBED HER OF HER POCKETBOOK) i hadn't no more than got it off when i
|
|
wished i hadn't done it, for awhile before that i made up my mind
|
|
to be a square bloke, for months on your word, but forgot it when i saw
|
|
the leather was a grip (EASY TO GET)--but i kept clos to her & when she
|
|
got out of the cars at a way place i said, marm have you lost anything.
|
|
& she tumbled (DISCOVERED) her leather was off (GONE)--is this it says i,
|
|
giving it to her--well if you aint honest, says she, but i hadn't got
|
|
cheak enough to stand that sort of talk, so i left her in a hurry.
|
|
When i got here i had $1 and 25 cents left & i didn't get no work for 3
|
|
days as i aint strong enough for roust about on a steam bote (FOR A
|
|
DECK HAND)--The afternoon of the 3rd day I spent my last 10 cts for moons
|
|
(LARGE, ROUND SEA-BISCUIT) & cheese & i felt pretty rough & was thinking
|
|
i would have to go on the dipe (PICKING POCKETS) again, when i thought
|
|
of what you once said about a fellows calling on the Lord when he was
|
|
in hard luck, & i thought i would try it once anyhow, but when i tryed
|
|
it i got stuck on the start, & all i could get off wos, Lord give a poor
|
|
fellow a chance to square it for 3 months for Christ's sake, amen; & i
|
|
kept a thinking, of it over and over as i went along--about an hour after
|
|
that i was in 4th St. & this is what happened & is the cause of my being
|
|
where i am now & about which i will tell you before i get done writing.
|
|
As i was walking along herd a big noise & saw a horse running away with a
|
|
carriage with 2 children in it, & I grabed up a peace of box cover from
|
|
the side walk & run in the middle of the street, & when the horse came up i
|
|
smashed him over the head as hard as i could drive--the bord split to peces
|
|
& the horse checked up a little & I grabbed the reigns & pulled his head
|
|
down until he stopped--the gentleman what owned him came running up & soon
|
|
as he saw the children were all rite, he shook hands with me and gave
|
|
me a $50 green back, & my asking the Lord to help me come into my head,
|
|
& i was so thunderstruck i couldn't drop the reigns nor say nothing--
|
|
he saw something was up, & coming back to me said, my boy are you hurt?
|
|
& the thought come into my head just then to ask him for work; & i asked
|
|
him to take back the bill and give me a job--says he, jump in here &
|
|
lets talk about it, but keep the money--he asked me if i could take care
|
|
of horses & i said yes, for i used to hang round livery stables & often
|
|
would help clean & drive horses, he told me he wanted a man for that work,
|
|
& would give me $16 a month & bord me. You bet i took that chance at once.
|
|
that nite in my little room over the stable i sat a long time thinking
|
|
over my past life & of what had just happened & i just got down on
|
|
my nees & thanked the Lord for the job & to help me to square it,
|
|
& to bless you for putting me up to it, & the next morning i done it
|
|
again & got me some new togs (CLOTHES) & a bible for i made up my mind
|
|
after what the Lord had done for me i would read the bible every nite
|
|
and morning, & ask him to keep an eye on me. When I had been there
|
|
about a week Mr. Brown (that's his name) came in my room one nite and saw
|
|
me reading the bible--he asked me if i was a Christian & i told him no--
|
|
he asked me how it was i read the bible instead of papers & books--
|
|
Well Charlie i thought i had better give him a square deal in the start,
|
|
so i told him all about my being in prison & about you, & how i had almost
|
|
done give up looking for work & how the Lord got me the job when I asked him;
|
|
& the only way i had to pay him back was to read the bible & square it,
|
|
& i asked him to give me a chance for 3 months--he talked to me like a father
|
|
for a long time, & told me i could stay & then i felt better than ever
|
|
i had done in my life, for i had given Mr. Brown a fair start with me &
|
|
now i didn't fear no one giving me a back cap (EXPOSING HIS PAST LIFE)
|
|
& running me off the job--the next morning he called me into the library
|
|
& gave me another square talk, & advised me to study some every day,
|
|
& he would help me one or 2 hours every nite, & he gave me a Arithmetic,
|
|
a spelling book, a Geography & a writing book, & he hers me every nite--
|
|
he lets me come into the house to prayers every morning, & got me put in a
|
|
bible class in the Sunday School which i likes very much for it helps me
|
|
to understand my bible better.
|
|
|
|
Now, Charlie the 3 months on the square are up 2 months ago,
|
|
& as you said, it is the best job i ever did in my life,
|
|
& i commenced another of the same sort right away, only it
|
|
is to God helping me to last a lifetime Charlie--i wrote
|
|
this letter to tell you I do think God has forgiven my sins
|
|
& herd your prayers, for you told me you should pray for me--
|
|
i no i love to read his word & tell him all my troubles &
|
|
he helps me i know for i have plenty of chances to steal
|
|
but i don't feel to as i once did & now i take more pleasure
|
|
in going to church than to the theater & that wasnt so once--
|
|
our minister and others often talk with me & a month ago
|
|
they wanted me to join the church, but I said no, not now,
|
|
i may be mistaken in my feelings, i will wait awhile,
|
|
but now i feel that God has called me & on the first Sunday
|
|
in July i will join the church--dear friend i wish i could
|
|
write to you as i feel, but i cant do it yet--you no i learned
|
|
to read and write while prisons & i aint got well enough along
|
|
to write as i would talk; i no i aint spelled all the words rite
|
|
in this & lots of other mistakes but you will excuse it i no,
|
|
for you no i was brought up in a poor house until i run away,
|
|
& that i never new who my father and mother was & i dont
|
|
no my right name, & i hope you wont be mad at me, but i have
|
|
as much rite to one name as another & i have taken your name,
|
|
for you wont use it when you get out i no, & you are the man
|
|
i think most of in the world; so i hope you wont be mad--
|
|
I am doing well, i put $10 a month in bank with $25 of the $50--
|
|
if you ever want any or all of it let me know, & it is yours.
|
|
i wish you would let me send you some now. I send you with this
|
|
a receipt for a year of Littles Living Age, i didn't know
|
|
what you would like & i told Mr. Brown & he said he thought you
|
|
would like it--i wish i was nere you so i could send you chuck
|
|
(REFRESHMENTS) on holidays; it would spoil this weather
|
|
from here, but i will send you a box next thanksgiving any way--
|
|
next week Mr. Brown takes me into his store as lite
|
|
porter & will advance me as soon as i know a little more--
|
|
he keeps a big granary store, wholesale--i forgot to tell
|
|
you of my mission school, sunday school class--the school
|
|
is in the sunday afternoon, i went out two sunday afternoons,
|
|
and picked up seven kids (LITTLE BOYS) & got them to come in.
|
|
two of them new as much as i did & i had them put in a class
|
|
where they could learn something. i dont no much myself,
|
|
but as these kids cant read i get on nicely with them.
|
|
i make sure of them by going after them every Sunday
|
|
hour before school time, I also got 4 girls to come.
|
|
tell Mack and Harry about me, if they will come out here
|
|
when their time is up i will get them jobs at once.
|
|
i hope you will excuse this long letter & all mistakes,
|
|
i wish i could see you for i cant write as i would talk--
|
|
i hope the warm weather is doing your lungs good--
|
|
i was afraid when you was bleeding you would die--
|
|
give my respects to all the boys and tell them how i am doing--
|
|
i am doing well and every one here treats me as kind as they can--
|
|
Mr. Brown is going to write to you sometime--i hope some day
|
|
you will write to me, this letter is from your very true
|
|
friend
|
|
|
|
C----W----
|
|
|
|
who you know as Jack Hunt.
|
|
|
|
I send you Mr. Brown's card. Send my letter to him.
|
|
|
|
Here was true eloquence; irresistible eloquence;
|
|
and without a single grace or ornament to help it out.
|
|
I have seldom been so deeply stirred by any piece of writing.
|
|
The reader of it halted, all the way through, on a lame and broken voice;
|
|
yet he had tried to fortify his feelings by several private
|
|
readings of the letter before venturing into company with it.
|
|
He was practising upon me to see if there was any hope of his
|
|
being able to read the document to his prayer-meeting with
|
|
anything like a decent command over his feelings. The result
|
|
was not promising. However, he determined to risk it; and did.
|
|
He got through tolerably well; but his audience broke down early,
|
|
and stayed in that condition to the end.
|
|
|
|
The fame of the letter spread through the town. A brother
|
|
minister came and borrowed the manuscript, put it bodily into
|
|
a sermon, preached the sermon to twelve hundred people on a
|
|
Sunday morning, and the letter drowned them in their own tears.
|
|
Then my friend put it into a sermon and went before his Sunday
|
|
morning congregation with it. It scored another triumph.
|
|
The house wept as one individual.
|
|
|
|
My friend went on summer vacation up into the fishing regions
|
|
of our northern British neighbors, and carried this sermon
|
|
with him, since he might possibly chance to need a sermon.
|
|
He was asked to preach, one day. The little church was full.
|
|
Among the people present were the late Dr. J. G. Holland,
|
|
the late Mr. Seymour of the 'New York Times,' Mr. Page,
|
|
the philanthropist and temperance advocate, and, I think,
|
|
Senator Frye, of Maine. The marvelous letter did its wonted work;
|
|
all the people were moved, all the people wept; the tears
|
|
flowed in a steady stream down Dr. Holland's cheeks, and nearly
|
|
the same can be said with regard to all who were there.
|
|
Mr. Page was so full of enthusiasm over the letter that he said
|
|
he would not rest until he made pilgrimage to that prison,
|
|
and had speech with the man who had been able to inspire a
|
|
fellow-unfortunate to write so priceless a tract.
|
|
|
|
Ah, that unlucky Page!--and another man. If they had only been in Jericho,
|
|
that letter would have rung through the world and stirred all the hearts of
|
|
all the nations for a thousand years to come, and nobody might ever have found
|
|
out that it was the confoundedest, brazenest, ingeniousest piece of fraud
|
|
and humbuggery that was ever concocted to fool poor confiding mortals with!
|
|
|
|
The letter was a pure swindle, and that is the truth.
|
|
And take it by and large, it was without a compeer among swindles.
|
|
It was perfect, it was rounded, symmetrical, complete, colossal!
|
|
|
|
The reader learns it at this point; but we didn't learn it
|
|
till some miles and weeks beyond this stage of the affair.
|
|
My friend came back from the woods, and he and other clergymen
|
|
and lay missionaries began once more to inundate audiences
|
|
with their tears and the tears of said audiences; I begged hard
|
|
for permission to print the letter in a magazine and tell the watery
|
|
story of its triumphs; numbers of people got copies of the letter,
|
|
with permission to circulate them in writing, but not in print;
|
|
copies were sent to the Sandwich Islands and other far regions.
|
|
|
|
Charles Dudley Warner was at church, one day, when the worn letter was read
|
|
and wept over. At the church door, afterward, he dropped a peculiarly cold
|
|
iceberg down the clergyman's back with the question--
|
|
|
|
'Do you know that letter to be genuine?'
|
|
|
|
It was the first suspicion that had ever been voiced;
|
|
but it had that sickening effect which first-uttered suspicions
|
|
against one's idol always have. Some talk followed--
|
|
|
|
'Why--what should make you suspect that it isn't genuine?'
|
|
|
|
'Nothing that I know of, except that it is too neat, and compact, and fluent,
|
|
and nicely put together for an ignorant person, an unpractised hand.
|
|
I think it was done by an educated man.'
|
|
|
|
The literary artist had detected the literary machinery.
|
|
If you will look at the letter now, you will detect it yourself--
|
|
it is observable in every line.
|
|
|
|
Straightway the clergyman went off, with this seed of suspicion
|
|
sprouting in him, and wrote to a minister residing in that town
|
|
where Williams had been jailed and converted; asked for light;
|
|
and also asked if a person in the literary line (meaning me)
|
|
might be allowed to print the letter and tell its history.
|
|
He presently received this answer--
|
|
|
|
Rev. -----
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR FRIEND,--In regard to that 'convict's letter' there can be
|
|
no doubt as to its genuineness. 'Williams,' to whom it was written,
|
|
lay in our jail and professed to have been converted, and Rev. Mr.----,
|
|
the chaplain, had great faith in the genuineness of the change--
|
|
as much as one can have in any such case.
|
|
|
|
The letter was sent to one of our ladies, who is a Sunday-school teacher,--
|
|
sent either by Williams himself, or the chaplain of the State's
|
|
prison, probably. She has been greatly annoyed in having so much publicity,
|
|
lest it might seem a breach of confidence, or be an injury to Williams.
|
|
In regard to its publication, I can give no permission; though if the names
|
|
and places were omitted, and especially if sent out of the country,
|
|
I think you might take the responsibility and do it.
|
|
|
|
It is a wonderful letter, which no Christian genius, much less
|
|
one unsanctified, could ever have written. As showing the work
|
|
of grace in a human heart, and in a very degraded and wicked one,
|
|
it proves its own origin and reproves our weak faith in its power
|
|
to cope with any form of wickedness.
|
|
|
|
'Mr. Brown' of St. Louis, some one said, was a Hartford man.
|
|
Do all whom you send from Hartford serve their Master as well?
|
|
|
|
P.S.--Williams is still in the State's prison, serving out a
|
|
long sentence--of nine years, I think. He has been sick and threatened
|
|
with consumption, but I have not inquired after him lately.
|
|
This lady that I speak of corresponds with him, I presume,
|
|
and will be quite sure to look after him.
|
|
|
|
This letter arrived a few days after it was written--and up went
|
|
Mr. Williams's stock again. Mr. Warner's low-down suspicion
|
|
was laid in the cold, cold grave, where it apparently belonged.
|
|
It was a suspicion based upon mere internal evidence, anyway;
|
|
and when you come to internal evidence, it's a big field and a game
|
|
that two can play at: as witness this other internal evidence,
|
|
discovered by the writer of the note above quoted, that 'it
|
|
is a wonderful letter--which no Christian genius, much less
|
|
one unsanctified, could ever have written.'
|
|
|
|
I had permission now to print--provided I suppressed names
|
|
and places and sent my narrative out of the country.
|
|
So I chose an Australian magazine for vehicle, as being far
|
|
enough out of the country, and set myself to work on my article.
|
|
And the ministers set the pumps going again, with the letter to
|
|
work the handles.
|
|
|
|
But meantime Brother Page had been agitating.
|
|
He had not visited the penitentiary, but he had sent a copy
|
|
of the illustrious letter to the chaplain of that institution,
|
|
and accompanied it with--apparently inquiries. He got an answer,
|
|
dated four days later than that other Brother's reassuring epistle;
|
|
and before my article was complete, it wandered into my hands.
|
|
The original is before me, now, and I here append it.
|
|
It is pretty well loaded with internal evidence of the most
|
|
solid description--
|
|
|
|
STATE'S PRISON, CHAPLAIN'S OFFICE, July 11, 1873.
|
|
|
|
DEAR BRO. PAGE,--Herewith please find the letter kindly loaned me.
|
|
I am afraid its genuineness cannot be established.
|
|
It purports to be addressed to some prisoner here. No such letter
|
|
ever came to a prisoner here. All letters received are carefully
|
|
read by officers of the prison before they go into the hands
|
|
of the convicts, and any such letter could not be forgotten.
|
|
Again, Charles Williams is not a Christian man, but a dissolute,
|
|
cunning prodigal, whose father is a minister of the gospel.
|
|
His name is an assumed one. I am glad to have made your acquaintance.
|
|
I am preparing a lecture upon life seen through prison bars,
|
|
and should like to deliver the same in your vicinity.
|
|
|
|
And so ended that little drama. My poor article went into the fire;
|
|
for whereas the materials for it were now more abundant and
|
|
infinitely richer than they had previously been, there were parties
|
|
all around me, who, although longing for the publication before,
|
|
were a unit for suppression at this stage and complexion of the game.
|
|
They said: 'Wait--the wound is too fresh, yet.' All the copies
|
|
of the famous letter except mine disappeared suddenly; and from that
|
|
time onward, the aforetime same old drought set in in the churches.
|
|
As a rule, the town was on a spacious grin for a while, but there
|
|
were places in it where the grin did not appear, and where it was
|
|
dangerous to refer to the ex-convict's letter.
|
|
|
|
A word of explanation. 'Jack Hunt,' the professed writer of the letter,
|
|
was an imaginary person. The burglar Williams--Harvard graduate,
|
|
son of a minister--wrote the letter himself, to himself: got it smuggled
|
|
out of the prison; got it conveyed to persons who had supported and
|
|
encouraged him in his conversion--where he knew two things would happen:
|
|
the genuineness of the letter would not be doubted or inquired into;
|
|
and the nub of it would be noticed, and would have valuable effect--
|
|
the effect, indeed, of starting a movement to get Mr. Williams pardoned
|
|
out of prison.
|
|
|
|
That 'nub' is so ingeniously, so casually, flung in, and immediately
|
|
left there in the tail of the letter, undwelt upon, that an indifferent
|
|
reader would never suspect that it was the heart and core of the epistle,
|
|
if he even took note of it at all, This is the 'nub'--
|
|
|
|
'i hope the warm weather is doing your lungs good--I WAS AFRAID
|
|
WHEN YOU WAS BLEEDING YOU WOULD DIE--give my respects,' etc.
|
|
|
|
That is all there is of it--simply touch and go--no dwelling upon it.
|
|
Nevertheless it was intended for an eye that would be swift to see it;
|
|
and it was meant to move a kind heart to try to effect the liberation of a
|
|
poor reformed and purified fellow lying in the fell grip of consumption.
|
|
|
|
When I for the first time heard that letter read, nine years ago,
|
|
I felt that it was the most remarkable one I had ever encountered.
|
|
And it so warmed me toward Mr. Brown of St. Louis that I said that if ever
|
|
I visited that city again, I would seek out that excellent man and kiss
|
|
the hem of his garment if it was a new one. Well, I visited St. Louis,
|
|
but I did not hunt for Mr. Brown; for, alas! the investigations
|
|
of long ago had proved that the benevolent Brown, like 'Jack Hunt,'
|
|
was not a real person, but a sheer invention of that gifted rascal,
|
|
Williams--burglar, Harvard graduate, son of a clergyman.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 53
|
|
My Boyhood's Home
|
|
|
|
WE took passage in one of the fast boats of the St. Louis and St. Paul
|
|
Packet Company, and started up the river.
|
|
|
|
When I, as a boy, first saw the mouth of the Missouri River, it was twenty-two
|
|
or twenty-three miles above St. Louis, according to the estimate of pilots;
|
|
the wear and tear of the banks have moved it down eight miles since then;
|
|
and the pilots say that within five years the river will cut through and
|
|
move the mouth down five miles more, which will bring it within ten miles
|
|
of St. Louis.
|
|
|
|
About nightfall we passed the large and flourishing town
|
|
of Alton, Illinois; and before daylight next morning the town
|
|
of Louisiana, Missouri, a sleepy village in my day, but a brisk
|
|
railway center now; however, all the towns out there are
|
|
railway centers now. I could not clearly recognize the place.
|
|
This seemed odd to me, for when I retired from the rebel army
|
|
in '61 I retired upon Louisiana in good order; at least in good
|
|
enough order for a person who had not yet learned how to retreat
|
|
according to the rules of war, and had to trust to native genius.
|
|
It seemed to me that for a first attempt at a retreat it was
|
|
not badly done. I had done no advancing in all that campaign
|
|
that was at all equal to it.
|
|
|
|
There was a railway bridge across the river here well sprinkled
|
|
with glowing lights, and a very beautiful sight it was.
|
|
|
|
At seven in the morning we reached Hannibal, Missouri, where my boyhood
|
|
was spent. I had had a glimpse of it fifteen years ago, and another glimpse
|
|
six years earlier, but both were so brief that they hardly counted.
|
|
The only notion of the town that remained in my mind was the memory
|
|
of it as I had known it when I first quitted it twenty-nine years ago.
|
|
That picture of it was still as clear and vivid to me as a photograph.
|
|
I stepped ashore with the feeling of one who returns out of a
|
|
dead-and-gone generation. I had a sort of realizing sense of what
|
|
the Bastille prisoners must have felt when they used to come out
|
|
and look upon Paris after years of captivity, and note how curiously
|
|
the familiar and the strange were mixed together before them.
|
|
I saw the new houses--saw them plainly enough--but they did not
|
|
affect the older picture in my mind, for through their solid bricks
|
|
and mortar I saw the vanished houses, which had formerly stood there,
|
|
with perfect distinctness.
|
|
|
|
It was Sunday morning, and everybody was abed yet. So I passed
|
|
through the vacant streets, still seeing the town as it was,
|
|
and not as it is, and recognizing and metaphorically shaking
|
|
hands with a hundred familiar objects which no longer exist;
|
|
and finally climbed Holiday's Hill to get a comprehensive view.
|
|
The whole town lay spread out below me then, and I could mark and fix
|
|
every locality, every detail. Naturally, I was a good deal moved.
|
|
I said, 'Many of the people I once knew in this tranquil refuge of my
|
|
childhood are now in heaven; some, I trust, are in the other place.'
|
|
The things about me and before me made me feel like a boy again--
|
|
convinced me that I was a boy again, and that I had simply been
|
|
dreaming an unusually long dream; but my reflections spoiled all that;
|
|
for they forced me to say, 'I see fifty old houses down yonder,
|
|
into each of which I could enter and find either a man or a woman
|
|
who was a baby or unborn when I noticed those houses last, or a
|
|
grandmother who was a plump young bride at that time.'
|
|
|
|
From this vantage ground the extensive view up and down the river,
|
|
and wide over the wooded expanses of Illinois, is very beautiful--
|
|
one of the most beautiful on the Mississippi, I think; which is
|
|
a hazardous remark to make, for the eight hundred miles of river
|
|
between St. Louis and St. Paul afford an unbroken succession
|
|
of lovely pictures. It may be that my affection for the one in
|
|
question biases my judgment in its favor; I cannot say as to that.
|
|
No matter, it was satisfyingly beautiful to me, and it had this
|
|
advantage over all the other friends whom I was about to greet again:
|
|
it had suffered no change; it was as young and fresh and comely and gracious
|
|
as ever it had been; whereas, the faces of the others would be old,
|
|
and scarred with the campaigns of life, and marked with their griefs
|
|
and defeats, and would give me no upliftings of spirit.
|
|
|
|
An old gentleman, out on an early morning walk, came along, and we
|
|
discussed the weather, and then drifted into other matters. I could not
|
|
remember his face. He said he had been living here twenty-eight years.
|
|
So he had come after my time, and I had never seen him before.
|
|
I asked him various questions; first about a mate of mine in Sunday school--
|
|
what became of him?
|
|
|
|
'He graduated with honor in an Eastern college, wandered off into
|
|
the world somewhere, succeeded at nothing, passed out of knowledge
|
|
and memory years ago, and is supposed to have gone to the dogs.'
|
|
|
|
'He was bright, and promised well when he was a boy.'
|
|
|
|
'Yes, but the thing that happened is what became of it all.'
|
|
|
|
I asked after another lad, altogether the brightest in our village
|
|
school when I was a boy.
|
|
|
|
'He, too, was graduated with honors, from an Eastern college;
|
|
but life whipped him in every battle, straight along, and he died
|
|
in one of the Territories, years ago, a defeated man.'
|
|
|
|
I asked after another of the bright boys.
|
|
|
|
'He is a success, always has been, always will be, I think.'
|
|
|
|
I inquired after a young fellow who came to the town to study
|
|
for one of the professions when I was a boy.
|
|
|
|
'He went at something else before he got through--went from medicine
|
|
to law, or from law to medicine--then to some other new thing;
|
|
went away for a year, came back with a young wife; fell to drinking,
|
|
then to gambling behind the door; finally took his wife and two young
|
|
children to her father's, and went off to Mexico; went from bad
|
|
to worse, and finally died there, without a cent to buy a shroud,
|
|
and without a friend to attend the funeral.'
|
|
|
|
'Pity, for he was the best-natured, and most cheery and hopeful
|
|
young fellow that ever was.'
|
|
|
|
I named another boy.
|
|
|
|
'Oh, he is all right. Lives here yet; has a wife and children,
|
|
and is prospering.'
|
|
|
|
Same verdict concerning other boys.
|
|
|
|
I named three school-girls.
|
|
|
|
'The first two live here, are married and have children;
|
|
the other is long ago dead--never married.'
|
|
|
|
I named, with emotion, one of my early sweethearts.
|
|
|
|
'She is all right. Been married three times; buried two husbands,
|
|
divorced from the third, and I hear she is getting ready to marry
|
|
an old fellow out in Colorado somewhere. She's got children scattered
|
|
around here and there, most everywheres.'
|
|
|
|
The answer to several other inquiries was brief and simple--
|
|
|
|
'Killed in the war.'
|
|
|
|
I named another boy.
|
|
|
|
'Well, now, his case is curious! There wasn't a human being
|
|
in this town but knew that that boy was a perfect chucklehead;
|
|
perfect dummy; just a stupid ass, as you may say.
|
|
Everybody knew it, and everybody said it. Well, if that very
|
|
boy isn't the first lawyer in the State of Missouri to-day,
|
|
I'm a Democrat!'
|
|
|
|
'Is that so?'
|
|
|
|
'It's actually so. I'm telling you the truth.'
|
|
|
|
'How do you account for it?'
|
|
|
|
'Account for it? There ain't any accounting for it,
|
|
except that if you send a damned fool to St. Louis, and you
|
|
don't tell them he's a damned fool they'll never find it out.
|
|
There's one thing sure--if I had a damned fool I should know
|
|
what to do with him: ship him to St. Louis--it's the noblest
|
|
market in the world for that kind of property. Well, when you
|
|
come to look at it all around, and chew at it and think it over,
|
|
don't it just bang anything you ever heard of?'
|
|
|
|
'Well, yes, it does seem to. But don't you think maybe it
|
|
was the Hannibal people who were mistaken about the boy,
|
|
and not the St. Louis people'
|
|
|
|
'Oh, nonsense! The people here have known him from the very cradle--
|
|
they knew him a hundred times better than the St. Louis idiots could
|
|
have known him. No, if you have got any damned fools that you want
|
|
to realize on, take my advice--send them to St. Louis.'
|
|
|
|
I mentioned a great number of people whom I had formerly known.
|
|
Some were dead, some were gone away, some had prospered,
|
|
some had come to naught; but as regarded a dozen or so of the lot,
|
|
the answer was comforting:
|
|
|
|
'Prosperous--live here yet--town littered with their children.'
|
|
|
|
I asked about Miss ----
|
|
|
|
Died in the insane asylum three or four years ago--never was out of it
|
|
from the time she went in; and was always suffering, too; never got
|
|
a shred of her mind back.'
|
|
|
|
If he spoke the truth, here was a heavy tragedy, indeed.
|
|
Thirty-six years in a madhouse, that some young fools might have some fun!
|
|
I was a small boy, at the time; and I saw those giddy young ladies come
|
|
tiptoeing into the room where Miss ---- sat reading at midnight by a lamp.
|
|
The girl at the head of the file wore a shroud and a doughface,
|
|
she crept behind the victim, touched her on the shoulder,
|
|
and she looked up and screamed, and then fell into convulsions.
|
|
She did not recover from the fright, but went mad. In these days it
|
|
seems incredible that people believed in ghosts so short a time ago.
|
|
But they did.
|
|
|
|
After asking after such other folk as I could call to mind,
|
|
I finally inquired about MYSELF:
|
|
|
|
'Oh, he succeeded well enough--another case of damned fool.
|
|
If they'd sent him to St. Louis, he'd have succeeded sooner.'
|
|
|
|
It was with much satisfaction that I recognized the wisdom
|
|
of having told this candid gentleman, in the beginning,
|
|
that my name was Smith.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 54
|
|
Past and Present
|
|
|
|
Being left to myself, up there, I went on picking out old houses in the
|
|
distant town, and calling back their former inmates out of the moldy past.
|
|
Among them I presently recognized the house of the father of Lem Hackett
|
|
(fictitious name). It carried me back more than a generation in a moment,
|
|
and landed me in the midst of a time when the happenings of life were not
|
|
the natural and logical results of great general laws, but of special orders,
|
|
and were freighted with very precise and distinct purposes--partly punitive
|
|
in intent, partly admonitory; and usually local in application.
|
|
|
|
When I was a small boy, Lem Hackett was drowned--on a Sunday.
|
|
He fell out of an empty flat-boat, where he was playing.
|
|
Being loaded with sin, he went to the bottom like an anvil.
|
|
He was the only boy in the village who slept that night.
|
|
We others all lay awake, repenting. We had not needed the information,
|
|
delivered from the pulpit that evening, that Lem's was a case
|
|
of special judgment--we knew that, already. There was a ferocious
|
|
thunder-storm, that night, and it raged continuously until near dawn.
|
|
The winds blew, the windows rattled, the rain swept along the roof
|
|
in pelting sheets, and at the briefest of intervals the inky blackness
|
|
of the night vanished, the houses over the way glared out white
|
|
and blinding for a quivering instant, then the solid darkness shut
|
|
down again and a splitting peal of thunder followed, which seemed
|
|
to rend everything in the neighborhood to shreds and splinters.
|
|
I sat up in bed quaking and shuddering, waiting for the destruction
|
|
of the world, and expecting it. To me there was nothing strange
|
|
or incongruous in heaven's making such an uproar about Lem Hackett.
|
|
Apparently it was the right and proper thing to do.
|
|
Not a doubt entered my mind that all the angels were grouped together,
|
|
discussing this boy's case and observing the awful bombardment
|
|
of our beggarly little village with satisfaction and approval.
|
|
There was one thing which disturbed me in the most serious way;
|
|
that was the thought that this centering of the celestial interest
|
|
on our village could not fail to attract the attention of the observers
|
|
to people among us who might otherwise have escaped notice for years.
|
|
I felt that I was not only one of those people, but the very one most
|
|
likely to be discovered. That discovery could have but one result:
|
|
I should be in the fire with Lem before the chill of the river
|
|
had been fairly warmed out of him. I knew that this would be
|
|
only just and fair. I was increasing the chances against myself
|
|
all the time, by feeling a secret bitterness against Lem for having
|
|
attracted this fatal attention to me, but I could not help it--
|
|
this sinful thought persisted in infesting my breast in spite of me.
|
|
Every time the lightning glared I caught my breath, and judged I was gone.
|
|
In my terror and misery, I meanly began to suggest other boys,
|
|
and mention acts of theirs which were wickeder than mine, and peculiarly
|
|
needed punishment--and I tried to pretend to myself that I was simply
|
|
doing this in a casual way, and without intent to divert the heavenly
|
|
attention to them for the purpose of getting rid of it myself.
|
|
With deep sagacity I put these mentions into the form of sorrowing
|
|
recollections and left-handed sham-supplications that the sins of those
|
|
boys might be allowed to pass unnoticed--'Possibly they may repent.'
|
|
'It is true that Jim Smith broke a window and lied about it--
|
|
but maybe he did not mean any harm. And although Tom Holmes
|
|
says more bad words than any other boy in the village,
|
|
he probably intends to repent--though he has never said he would.
|
|
And whilst it is a fact that John Jones did fish a little
|
|
on Sunday, once, he didn't really catch anything but only just one
|
|
small useless mud-cat; and maybe that wouldn't have been so awful
|
|
if he had thrown it back--as he says he did, but he didn't. Pity
|
|
but they would repent of these dreadful things--and maybe they will
|
|
yet.'
|
|
|
|
But while I was shamefully trying to draw attention to these poor chaps--
|
|
who were doubtless directing the celestial attention to me at the same moment,
|
|
though I never once suspected that--I had heedlessly left my candle burning.
|
|
It was not a time to neglect even trifling precautions. There was no occasion
|
|
to add anything to the facilities for attracting notice to me--so I put
|
|
the light out.
|
|
|
|
It was a long night to me, and perhaps the most distressful one I ever spent.
|
|
I endured agonies of remorse for sins which I knew I had committed,
|
|
and for others which I was not certain about, yet was sure that they had
|
|
been set down against me in a book by an angel who was wiser than I and did
|
|
not trust such important matters to memory. It struck me, by and by,
|
|
that I had been making a most foolish and calamitous mistake, in one respect:
|
|
doubtless I had not only made my own destruction sure by directing attention
|
|
to those other boys, but had already accomplished theirs!--Doubtless the
|
|
lightning had stretched them all dead in their beds by this time!
|
|
The anguish and the fright which this thought gave me made my previous
|
|
sufferings seem trifling by comparison.
|
|
|
|
Things had become truly serious. I resolved to turn over
|
|
a new leaf instantly; I also resolved to connect myself
|
|
with the church the next day, if I survived to see its
|
|
sun appear. I resolved to cease from sin in all its forms,
|
|
and to lead a high and blameless life for ever after.
|
|
I would be punctual at church and Sunday-school; visit the sick;
|
|
carry baskets of victuals to the poor (simply to fulfil
|
|
the regulation conditions, although I knew we had none among us
|
|
so poor but they would smash the basket over my head for my pains);
|
|
I would instruct other boys in right ways, and take the resulting
|
|
trouncings meekly; I would subsist entirely on tracts;
|
|
I would invade the rum shop and warn the drunkard--and finally,
|
|
if I escaped the fate of those who early become too good to live,
|
|
I would go for a missionary.
|
|
|
|
The storm subsided toward daybreak, and I dozed gradually to sleep
|
|
with a sense of obligation to Lem Hackett for going to eternal suffering
|
|
in that abrupt way, and thus preventing a far more dreadful disaster--
|
|
my own loss.
|
|
|
|
But when I rose refreshed, by and by, and found that those other boys
|
|
were still alive, I had a dim sense that perhaps the whole thing
|
|
was a false alarm; that the entire turmoil had been on Lem's account
|
|
and nobody's else. The world looked so bright and safe that there
|
|
did not seem to be any real occasion to turn over a new leaf.
|
|
I was a little subdued, during that day, and perhaps the next;
|
|
after that, my purpose of reforming slowly dropped out of my mind,
|
|
and I had a peaceful, comfortable time again, until the next storm.
|
|
|
|
That storm came about three weeks later; and it was the most
|
|
unaccountable one, to me, that I had ever experienced;
|
|
for on the afternoon of that day, 'Dutchy' was drowned.
|
|
Dutchy belonged to our Sunday-school. He was a German
|
|
lad who did not know enough to come in out of the rain;
|
|
but he was exasperatingly good, and had a prodigious memory.
|
|
One Sunday he made himself the envy of all the youth and the talk
|
|
of all the admiring village, by reciting three thousand verses of
|
|
Scripture without missing a word; then he went off the very next day
|
|
and got drowned.
|
|
|
|
Circumstances gave to his death a peculiar impressiveness.
|
|
We were all bathing in a muddy creek which had a deep hole
|
|
in it, and in this hole the coopers had sunk a pile of green
|
|
hickory hoop poles to soak, some twelve feet under water.
|
|
We were diving and 'seeing who could stay under longest.'
|
|
We managed to remain down by holding on to the hoop poles.
|
|
Dutchy made such a poor success of it that he was hailed with
|
|
laughter and derision every time his head appeared above water.
|
|
At last he seemed hurt with the taunts, and begged us
|
|
to stand still on the bank and be fair with him and give him
|
|
an honest count--'be friendly and kind just this once, and not
|
|
miscount for the sake of having the fun of laughing at him.'
|
|
Treacherous winks were exchanged, and all said 'All right, Dutchy--
|
|
go ahead, we'll play fair.'
|
|
|
|
Dutchy plunged in, but the boys, instead of beginning to count,
|
|
followed the lead of one of their number and scampered
|
|
to a range of blackberry bushes close by and hid behind it.
|
|
They imagined Dutchy's humiliation, when he should rise after
|
|
a superhuman effort and find the place silent and vacant,
|
|
nobody there to applaud. They were 'so full of laugh' with the idea,
|
|
that they were continually exploding into muffled cackles.
|
|
Time swept on, and presently one who was peeping through the briers,
|
|
said, with surprise--
|
|
|
|
'Why, he hasn't come up, yet!'
|
|
|
|
The laughing stopped.
|
|
|
|
'Boys, it 's a splendid dive,' said one.
|
|
|
|
'Never mind that,' said another, 'the joke on him is all the better for it.'
|
|
|
|
There was a remark or two more, and then a pause.
|
|
Talking ceased, and all began to peer through the vines.
|
|
Before long, the boys' faces began to look uneasy, then anxious,
|
|
then terrified. Still there was no movement of the placid water.
|
|
Hearts began to beat fast, and faces to turn pale.
|
|
We all glided out, silently, and stood on the bank, our horrified
|
|
eyes wandering back and forth from each other's countenances
|
|
to the water.
|
|
|
|
'Somebody must go down and see!'
|
|
|
|
Yes, that was plain; but nobody wanted that grisly task.
|
|
|
|
'Draw straws!'
|
|
|
|
So we did--with hands which shook so, that we hardly knew
|
|
what we were about. The lot fell to me, and I went down.
|
|
The water was so muddy I could not see anything, but I felt around
|
|
among the hoop poles, and presently grasped a limp wrist which
|
|
gave me no response--and if it had I should not have known it,
|
|
I let it go with such a frightened suddenness.
|
|
|
|
The boy had been caught among the hoop poles and entangled
|
|
there, helplessly. I fled to the surface and told the awful news.
|
|
Some of us knew that if the boy were dragged out at once he might
|
|
possibly be resuscitated, but we never thought of that. We did not
|
|
think of anything; we did not know what to do, so we did nothing--
|
|
except that the smaller lads cried, piteously, and we all struggled
|
|
frantically into our clothes, putting on anybody's that came handy,
|
|
and getting them wrong-side-out and upside-down, as a rule.
|
|
Then we scurried away and gave the alarm, but none of us went back to see
|
|
the end of the tragedy. We had a more important thing to attend to:
|
|
we all flew home, and lost not a moment in getting ready to lead
|
|
a better life.
|
|
|
|
The night presently closed down. Then came on that tremendous
|
|
and utterly unaccountable storm. I was perfectly dazed; I could
|
|
not understand it. It seemed to me that there must be some mistake.
|
|
The elements were turned loose, and they rattled and banged and blazed
|
|
away in the most blind and frantic manner. All heart and hope went
|
|
out of me, and the dismal thought kept floating through my brain,
|
|
'If a boy who knows three thousand verses by heart is not satisfactory,
|
|
what chance is there for anybody else?'
|
|
|
|
Of course I never questioned for a moment that the storm was
|
|
on Dutchy's account, or that he or any other inconsequential
|
|
animal was worthy of such a majestic demonstration from on high;
|
|
the lesson of it was the only thing that troubled me;
|
|
for it convinced me that if Dutchy, with all his perfections,
|
|
was not a delight, it would be vain for me to turn over a new leaf,
|
|
for I must infallibly fall hopelessly short of that boy,
|
|
no matter how hard I might try. Nevertheless I did turn it over--
|
|
a highly educated fear compelled me to do that--but succeeding
|
|
days of cheerfulness and sunshine came bothering around,
|
|
and within a month I had so drifted backward that again I
|
|
was as lost and comfortable as ever.
|
|
|
|
Breakfast time approached while I mused these musings and called
|
|
these ancient happenings back to mind; so I got me back into
|
|
the present and went down the hill.
|
|
|
|
On my way through town to the hotel, I saw the house which was
|
|
my home when I was a boy. At present rates, the people who now
|
|
occupy it are of no more value than I am; but in my time they
|
|
would have been worth not less than five hundred dollars apiece.
|
|
They are colored folk.
|
|
|
|
After breakfast, I went out alone again, intending to hunt up some
|
|
of the Sunday-schools and see how this generation of pupils might
|
|
compare with their progenitors who had sat with me in those places
|
|
and had probably taken me as a model--though I do not remember
|
|
as to that now. By the public square there had been in my day
|
|
a shabby little brick church called the 'Old Ship of Zion,'
|
|
which I had attended as a Sunday-school scholar; and I found
|
|
the locality easily enough, but not the old church; it was gone,
|
|
and a trig and rather hilarious new edifice was in its place.
|
|
The pupils were better dressed and better looking than were those
|
|
of my time; consequently they did not resemble their ancestors;
|
|
and consequently there was nothing familiar to me in their faces.
|
|
Still, I contemplated them with a deep interest and a yearning wistfulness,
|
|
and if I had been a girl I would have cried; for they were the offspring,
|
|
and represented, and occupied the places, of boys and girls some
|
|
of whom I had loved to love, and some of whom I had loved to hate,
|
|
but all of whom were dear to me for the one reason or the other,
|
|
so many years gone by--and, Lord, where be they now!
|
|
|
|
I was mightily stirred, and would have been grateful to be allowed
|
|
to remain unmolested and look my fill; but a bald-summited superintendent
|
|
who had been a tow-headed Sunday-school mate of mine on that spot
|
|
in the early ages, recognized me, and I talked a flutter of wild
|
|
nonsense to those children to hide the thoughts which were in me,
|
|
and which could not have been spoken without a betrayal of feeling
|
|
that would have been recognized as out of character with me.
|
|
|
|
Making speeches without preparation is no gift of mine;
|
|
and I was resolved to shirk any new opportunity, but in
|
|
the next and larger Sunday-school I found myself in the rear
|
|
of the assemblage; so I was very willing to go on the platform
|
|
a moment for the sake of getting a good look at the scholars.
|
|
On the spur of the moment I could not recall any of the old idiotic
|
|
talks which visitors used to insult me with when I was a pupil there;
|
|
and I was sorry for this, since it would have given me time
|
|
and excuse to dawdle there and take a long and satisfying look
|
|
at what I feel at liberty to say was an array of fresh young
|
|
comeliness not matchable in another Sunday-school of the same size.
|
|
As I talked merely to get a chance to inspect; and as I strung
|
|
out the random rubbish solely to prolong the inspection,
|
|
I judged it but decent to confess these low motives,
|
|
and I did so.
|
|
|
|
If the Model Boy was in either of these Sunday-schools, I did not see him.
|
|
The Model Boy of my time--we never had but the one--was perfect:
|
|
perfect in manners, perfect in dress, perfect in conduct, perfect in
|
|
filial piety, perfect in exterior godliness; but at bottom he was a
|
|
prig; and as for the contents of his skull, they could have changed
|
|
place with the contents of a pie and nobody would have been the worse off
|
|
for it but the pie. This fellow's reproachlessness was a standing
|
|
reproach to every lad in the village. He was the admiration of all the
|
|
mothers, and the detestation of all their sons. I was told what became
|
|
of him, but as it was a disappointment to me, I will not enter into
|
|
details. He succeeded in life.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 55
|
|
A Vendetta and Other Things
|
|
|
|
DURING my three days' stay in the town, I woke up every morning
|
|
with the impression that I was a boy--for in my dreams the faces
|
|
were all young again, and looked as they had looked in the old times--
|
|
but I went to bed a hundred years old, every night--for meantime I
|
|
had been seeing those faces as they are now.
|
|
|
|
Of course I suffered some surprises, along at first,
|
|
before I had become adjusted to the changed state of things.
|
|
I met young ladies who did not seem to have changed at all;
|
|
but they turned out to be the daughters of the young ladies
|
|
I had in mind--sometimes their grand-daughters. When you
|
|
are told that a stranger of fifty is a grandmother, there is
|
|
nothing surprising about it; but if, on the contrary, she is
|
|
a person whom you knew as a little girl, it seems impossible.
|
|
You say to yourself, 'How can a little girl be a grandmother.'
|
|
It takes some little time to accept and realize the fact that while you
|
|
have been growing old, your friends have not been standing still,
|
|
in that matter.
|
|
|
|
I noticed that the greatest changes observable were with the women,
|
|
not the men. I saw men whom thirty years had changed but slightly;
|
|
but their wives had grown old. These were good women; it is very wearing
|
|
to be good.
|
|
|
|
There was a saddler whom I wished to see; but he was gone.
|
|
Dead, these many years, they said. Once or twice a day,
|
|
the saddler used to go tearing down the street, putting on his
|
|
coat as he went; and then everybody knew a steamboat was coming.
|
|
Everybody knew, also, that John Stavely was not expecting anybody
|
|
by the boat--or any freight, either; and Stavely must have known
|
|
that everybody knew this, still it made no difference to him;
|
|
he liked to seem to himself to be expecting a hundred thousand
|
|
tons of saddles by this boat, and so he went on all his life,
|
|
enjoying being faithfully on hand to receive and receipt
|
|
for those saddles, in case by any miracle they should come.
|
|
A malicious Quincy paper used always to refer to this town, in derision
|
|
as 'Stavely's Landing.' Stavely was one of my earliest admirations;
|
|
I envied him his rush of imaginary business, and the display
|
|
he was able to make of it, before strangers, as he went flying
|
|
down the street struggling with his fluttering coat.
|
|
|
|
But there was a carpenter who was my chiefest hero. He was a mighty liar,
|
|
but I did not know that; I believed everything he said. He was a romantic,
|
|
sentimental, melodramatic fraud, and his bearing impressed me with awe.
|
|
I vividly remember the first time he took me into his confidence. He was
|
|
planing a board, and every now and then he would pause and heave a deep sigh;
|
|
and occasionally mutter broken sentences--confused and not intelligible--
|
|
but out of their midst an ejaculation sometimes escaped which made me shiver
|
|
and did me good: one was, 'O God, it is his blood!' I sat on the tool-chest
|
|
and humbly and shudderingly admired him; for I judged he was full of crime.
|
|
At last he said in a low voice--
|
|
|
|
'My little friend, can you keep a secret?'
|
|
|
|
I eagerly said I could.
|
|
|
|
'A dark and dreadful one?'
|
|
|
|
I satisfied him on that point.
|
|
|
|
'Then I will tell you some passages in my history; for oh,
|
|
I MUST relieve my burdened soul, or I shall die! '
|
|
|
|
He cautioned me once more to be 'as silent as the grave;'
|
|
then he told me he was a 'red-handed murderer.'
|
|
He put down his plane, held his hands out before him,
|
|
contemplated them sadly, and said--
|
|
|
|
'Look--with these hands I have taken the lives of thirty human beings!'
|
|
|
|
The effect which this had upon me was an inspiration to him,
|
|
and he turned himself loose upon his subject with interest and energy.
|
|
He left generalizing, and went into details,--began with his first murder;
|
|
described it, told what measures he had taken to avert suspicion;
|
|
then passed to his second homicide, his third, his fourth, and so on.
|
|
He had always done his murders with a bowie-knife, and he made all my
|
|
hairs rise by suddenly snatching it out and showing it to me.
|
|
|
|
At the end of this first seance I went home with six of his
|
|
fearful secrets among my freightage, and found them a great
|
|
help to my dreams, which had been sluggish for a while back.
|
|
I sought him again and again, on my Saturday holidays; in fact I
|
|
spent the summer with him--all of it which was valuable to me.
|
|
His fascinations never diminished, for he threw something fresh
|
|
and stirring, in the way of horror, into each successive murder.
|
|
He always gave names, dates, places--everything. This by and by enabled
|
|
me to note two things: that he had killed his victims in every
|
|
quarter of the globe, and that these victims were always named Lynch.
|
|
The destruction of the Lynches went serenely on, Saturday after Saturday,
|
|
until the original thirty had multiplied to sixty--and more to be
|
|
heard from yet; then my curiosity got the better of my timidity,
|
|
and I asked how it happened that these justly punished persons all bore
|
|
the same name.
|
|
|
|
My hero said he had never divulged that dark secret to any
|
|
living being; but felt that he could trust me, and therefore
|
|
he would lay bare before me the story of his sad and blighted life.
|
|
He had loved one 'too fair for earth,' and she had reciprocated
|
|
'with all the sweet affection of her pure and noble nature.'
|
|
But he had a rival, a 'base hireling' named Archibald Lynch,
|
|
who said the girl should be his, or he would 'dye his hands
|
|
in her heart's best blood.' The carpenter, 'innocent and
|
|
happy in love's young dream,' gave no weight to the threat,
|
|
but led his 'golden-haired darling to the altar,' and there,
|
|
the two were made one; there also, just as the minister's hands
|
|
were stretched in blessing over their heads, the fell deed was done--
|
|
with a knife--and the bride fell a corpse at her husband's feet.
|
|
And what did the husband do? He plucked forth that knife,
|
|
and kneeling by the body of his lost one, swore to 'consecrate
|
|
his life to the extermination of all the human scum that bear
|
|
the hated name of Lynch.'
|
|
|
|
That was it. He had been hunting down the Lynches and slaughtering them,
|
|
from that day to this--twenty years. He had always used that same
|
|
consecrated knife; with it he had murdered his long array of Lynches,
|
|
and with it he had left upon the forehead of each victim a peculiar mark--
|
|
a cross, deeply incised. Said he--
|
|
|
|
'The cross of the Mysterious Avenger is known in Europe, in America,
|
|
in China, in Siam, in the Tropics, in the Polar Seas, in the deserts of Asia,
|
|
in all the earth. Wherever in the uttermost parts of the globe, a Lynch
|
|
has penetrated, there has the Mysterious Cross been seen, and those who
|
|
have seen it have shuddered and said, "It is his mark, he has been here."
|
|
You have heard of the Mysterious Avenger--look upon him, for before you
|
|
stands no less a person! But beware--breathe not a word to any soul.
|
|
Be silent, and wait. Some morning this town will flock aghast to view
|
|
a gory corpse; on its brow will be seen the awful sign, and men will tremble
|
|
and whisper, "He has been here--it is the Mysterious Avenger's mark!"
|
|
You will come here, but I shall have vanished; you will see me no more.'
|
|
|
|
This ass had been reading the 'Jibbenainosay,' no doubt,
|
|
and had had his poor romantic head turned by it; but as I had
|
|
not yet seen the book then, I took his inventions for truth,
|
|
and did not suspect that he was a plagiarist.
|
|
|
|
However, we had a Lynch living in the town; and the more I
|
|
reflected upon his impending doom, the more I could not sleep.
|
|
It seemed my plain duty to save him, and a still plainer
|
|
and more important duty to get some sleep for myself,
|
|
so at last I ventured to go to Mr. Lynch and tell him
|
|
what was about to happen to him--under strict secrecy.
|
|
I advised him to 'fly,' and certainly expected him to do it.
|
|
But he laughed at me; and he did not stop there; he led me
|
|
down to the carpenter's shop, gave the carpenter a jeering and
|
|
scornful lecture upon his silly pretensions, slapped his face,
|
|
made him get down on his knees and beg--then went off and
|
|
left me to contemplate the cheap and pitiful ruin of what,
|
|
in my eyes, had so lately been a majestic and incomparable hero.
|
|
The carpenter blustered, flourished his knife, and doomed this
|
|
Lynch in his usual volcanic style, the size of his fateful
|
|
words undiminished; but it was all wasted upon me; he was a hero
|
|
to me no longer, but only a poor, foolish, exposed humbug.
|
|
I was ashamed of him, and ashamed of myself; I took no further
|
|
interest in him, and never went to his shop any more. He was a
|
|
heavy loss to me, for he was the greatest hero I had ever known.
|
|
The fellow must have had some talent; for some of his imaginary
|
|
murders were so vividly and dramatically described that I remember all
|
|
their details yet.
|
|
|
|
The people of Hannibal are not more changed than is the town.
|
|
It is no longer a village; it is a city, with a mayor, and a council,
|
|
and water-works, and probably a debt. It has fifteen thousand people,
|
|
is a thriving and energetic place, and is paved like the rest
|
|
of the west and south--where a well-paved street and a good sidewalk
|
|
are things so seldom seen, that one doubts them when he does see them.
|
|
The customary half-dozen railways center in Hannibal now,
|
|
and there is a new depot which cost a hundred thousand dollars.
|
|
In my time the town had no specialty, and no commercial grandeur;
|
|
the daily packet usually landed a passenger and bought a catfish,
|
|
and took away another passenger and a hatful of freight; but now a huge
|
|
commerce in lumber has grown up and a large miscellaneous commerce
|
|
is one of the results. A deal of money changes hands there now.
|
|
|
|
Bear Creek--so called, perhaps, because it was always so particularly
|
|
bare of bears--is hidden out of sight now, under islands and
|
|
continents of piled lumber, and nobody but an expert can find it.
|
|
I used to get drowned in it every summer regularly, and be
|
|
drained out, and inflated and set going again by some chance enemy;
|
|
but not enough of it is unoccupied now to drown a person in.
|
|
It was a famous breeder of chills and fever in its day.
|
|
I remember one summer when everybody in town had this
|
|
disease at once. Many chimneys were shaken down, and all
|
|
the houses were so racked that the town had to be rebuilt.
|
|
The chasm or gorge between Lover's Leap and the hill west of it
|
|
is supposed by scientists to have been caused by glacial action.
|
|
This is a mistake.
|
|
|
|
There is an interesting cave a mile or two below Hannibal, among the bluffs.
|
|
I would have liked to revisit it, but had not time. In my time the person
|
|
who then owned it turned it into a mausoleum for his daughter, aged fourteen.
|
|
The body of this poor child was put into a copper cylinder filled with
|
|
alcohol, and this was suspended in one of the dismal avenues of the cave.
|
|
The top of the cylinder was removable; and it was said to be a common thing
|
|
for the baser order of tourists to drag the dead face into view and examine it
|
|
and comment upon it.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 56
|
|
A Question of Law
|
|
|
|
THE slaughter-house is gone from the mouth of Bear Creek and so is
|
|
the small jail (or 'calaboose') which once stood in its neighborhood.
|
|
A citizen asked, 'Do you remember when Jimmy Finn, the town drunkard,
|
|
was burned to death in the calaboose?'
|
|
|
|
Observe, now, how history becomes defiled, through lapse of time
|
|
and the help of the bad memories of men. Jimmy Finn was not
|
|
burned in the calaboose, but died a natural death in a tan vat,
|
|
of a combination of delirium tremens and spontaneous combustion.
|
|
When I say natural death, I mean it was a natural death for
|
|
Jimmy Finn to die. The calaboose victim was not a citizen;
|
|
he was a poor stranger, a harmless whiskey-sodden tramp.
|
|
I know more about his case than anybody else; I knew too much of it,
|
|
in that bygone day, to relish speaking of it. That tramp was wandering
|
|
about the streets one chilly evening, with a pipe in his mouth,
|
|
and begging for a match; he got neither matches nor courtesy;
|
|
on the contrary, a troop of bad little boys followed him
|
|
around and amused themselves with nagging and annoying him.
|
|
I assisted; but at last, some appeal which the wayfarer made
|
|
for forbearance, accompanying it with a pathetic reference to his
|
|
forlorn and friendless condition, touched such sense of shame
|
|
and remnant of right feeling as were left in me, and I went away
|
|
and got him some matches, and then hied me home and to bed,
|
|
heavily weighted as to conscience, and unbuoyant in spirit.
|
|
An hour or two afterward, the man was arrested and locked up
|
|
in the calaboose by the marshal--large name for a constable,
|
|
but that was his title. At two in the morning, the church bells rang
|
|
for fire, and everybody turned out, of course--I with the rest.
|
|
The tramp had used his matches disastrously: he had set his straw
|
|
bed on fire, and the oaken sheathing of the room had caught.
|
|
When I reached the ground, two hundred men, women, and children
|
|
stood massed together, transfixed with horror, and staring
|
|
at the grated windows of the jail. Behind the iron bars,
|
|
and tugging frantically at them, and screaming for help,
|
|
stood the tramp; he seemed like a black object set against
|
|
a sun, so white and intense was the light at his back.
|
|
That marshal could not be found, and he had the only key.
|
|
A battering-ram was quickly improvised, and the thunder of its
|
|
blows upon the door had so encouraging a sound that the spectators
|
|
broke into wild cheering, and believed the merciful battle won.
|
|
But it was not so. The timbers were too strong; they did not yield.
|
|
It was said that the man's death-grip still held fast to the bars
|
|
after he was dead; and that in this position the fires wrapped him
|
|
about and consumed him. As to this, I do not know. What was seen
|
|
after I recognized the face that was pleading through the bars
|
|
was seen by others, not by me.
|
|
|
|
I saw that face, so situated, every night for a long time afterward;
|
|
and I believed myself as guilty of the man's death as if I had given
|
|
him the matches purposely that he might burn himself up with them.
|
|
I had not a doubt that I should be hanged if my connection with
|
|
this tragedy were found out. The happenings and the impressions
|
|
of that time are burnt into my memory, and the study of them
|
|
entertains me as much now as they themselves distressed me then.
|
|
If anybody spoke of that grisly matter, I was all ears in a moment,
|
|
and alert to hear what might be said, for I was always dreading
|
|
and expecting to find out that I was suspected; and so fine
|
|
and so delicate was the perception of my guilty conscience,
|
|
that it often detected suspicion in the most purposeless remarks,
|
|
and in looks, gestures, glances of the eye which had no significance,
|
|
but which sent me shivering away in a panic of fright, just the same.
|
|
And how sick it made me when somebody dropped, howsoever carelessly
|
|
and barren of intent, the remark that 'murder will out!'
|
|
For a boy of ten years, I was carrying a pretty weighty cargo.
|
|
|
|
All this time I was blessedly forgetting one thing--
|
|
the fact that I was an inveterate talker in my sleep.
|
|
But one night I awoke and found my bed-mate--my younger brother--
|
|
sitting up in bed and contemplating me by the light of the moon.
|
|
I said--
|
|
|
|
'What is the matter?'
|
|
|
|
'You talk so much I can't sleep.'
|
|
|
|
I came to a sitting posture in an instant, with my kidneys in my throat
|
|
and my hair on end.
|
|
|
|
'What did I say. Quick--out with it--what did I say?'
|
|
|
|
'Nothing much.'
|
|
|
|
'It's a lie--you know everything.'
|
|
|
|
'Everything about what?'
|
|
|
|
'You know well enough. About THAT.'
|
|
|
|
'About WHAT?--I don't know what you are talking about.
|
|
I think you are sick or crazy or something. But anyway,
|
|
you're awake, and I'll get to sleep while I've got a chance.'
|
|
|
|
He fell asleep and I lay there in a cold sweat, turning this
|
|
new terror over in the whirling chaos which did duty as my mind.
|
|
The burden of my thought was, How much did I divulge?
|
|
How much does he know?--what a distress is this uncertainty!
|
|
But by and by I evolved an idea--I would wake my brother and probe him
|
|
with a supposititious case. I shook him up, and said--
|
|
|
|
'Suppose a man should come to you drunk--'
|
|
|
|
'This is foolish--I never get drunk.'
|
|
|
|
'I don't mean you, idiot--I mean the man. Suppose a MAN
|
|
should come to you drunk, and borrow a knife, or a tomahawk,
|
|
or a pistol, and you forgot to tell him it was loaded, and--'
|
|
|
|
'How could you load a tomahawk?'
|
|
|
|
'I don't mean the tomahawk, and I didn't say the tomahawk; I said the pistol.
|
|
Now don't you keep breaking in that way, because this is serious.
|
|
There's been a man killed.'
|
|
|
|
'What! in this town?'
|
|
|
|
'Yes, in this town.'
|
|
|
|
'Well, go on--I won't say a single word.'
|
|
|
|
'Well, then, suppose you forgot to tell him to be careful with it,
|
|
because it was loaded, and he went off and shot himself with that pistol--
|
|
fooling with it, you know, and probably doing it by accident, being drunk.
|
|
Well, would it be murder?'
|
|
|
|
'No--suicide.'
|
|
|
|
'No, no. I don't mean HIS act, I mean yours: would you be a murderer
|
|
for letting him have that pistol?'
|
|
|
|
After deep thought came this answer--
|
|
|
|
'Well, I should think I was guilty of something--maybe murder--
|
|
yes, probably murder, but I don't quite know.'
|
|
|
|
This made me very uncomfortable. However, it was not a decisive verdict.
|
|
I should have to set out the real case--there seemed to be no other way.
|
|
But I would do it cautiously, and keep a watch out for suspicious effects.
|
|
I said--
|
|
|
|
'I was supposing a case, but I am coming to the real one now.
|
|
Do you know how the man came to be burned up in the calaboose?'
|
|
|
|
'No.'
|
|
|
|
'Haven't you the least idea?'
|
|
|
|
'Not the least.'
|
|
|
|
'Wish you may die in your tracks if you have?'
|
|
|
|
'Yes, wish I may die in my tracks.'
|
|
|
|
'Well, the way of it was this. The man wanted some matches to light
|
|
his pipe. A boy got him some. The man set fire to the calaboose
|
|
with those very matches, and burnt himself up.'
|
|
|
|
'Is that so?'
|
|
|
|
'Yes, it is. Now, is that boy a murderer, do you think?'
|
|
|
|
'Let me see. The man was drunk?'
|
|
|
|
'Yes, he was drunk.'
|
|
|
|
'Very drunk?'
|
|
|
|
'Yes.'
|
|
|
|
'And the boy knew it?'
|
|
|
|
'Yes, he knew it.'
|
|
|
|
There was a long pause. Then came this heavy verdict--
|
|
|
|
'If the man was drunk, and the boy knew it, the boy murdered that man.
|
|
This is certain.'
|
|
|
|
Faint, sickening sensations crept along all the fibers of my body,
|
|
and I seemed to know how a person feels who hears his death sentence
|
|
pronounced from the bench. I waited to hear what my brother would say next.
|
|
I believed I knew what it would be, and I was right. He said--
|
|
|
|
'I know the boy.'
|
|
|
|
I had nothing to say; so I said nothing. I simply shuddered.
|
|
Then he added--
|
|
|
|
'Yes, before you got half through telling about the thing,
|
|
I knew perfectly well who the boy was; it was Ben Coontz! '
|
|
|
|
I came out of my collapse as one who rises from the dead.
|
|
I said, with admiration--
|
|
|
|
'Why, how in the world did you ever guess it?'
|
|
|
|
'You told it in your sleep.'
|
|
|
|
I said to myself, 'How splendid that is! This is a habit
|
|
which must be cultivated.'
|
|
|
|
My brother rattled innocently on--
|
|
|
|
'When you were talking in your sleep, you kept mumbling something
|
|
about "matches," which I couldn't make anything out of; but just now,
|
|
when you began to tell me about the man and the calaboose and the matches,
|
|
I remembered that in your sleep you mentioned Ben Coontz two or three times;
|
|
so I put this and that together, you see, and right away I knew it was Ben
|
|
that burnt that man up.'
|
|
|
|
I praised his sagacity effusively. Presently he asked--
|
|
|
|
'Are you going to give him up to the law?'
|
|
|
|
'No,' I said; 'I believe that this will be a lesson to him.
|
|
I shall keep an eye on him, of course, for that is but right;
|
|
but if he stops where he is and reforms, it shall never be said that
|
|
I betrayed him.'
|
|
|
|
'How good you are!'
|
|
|
|
'Well, I try to be. It is all a person can do in a world like this.'
|
|
|
|
And now, my burden being shifted to other shoulders, my terrors
|
|
soon faded away.
|
|
|
|
The day before we left Hannibal, a curious thing fell under my notice--
|
|
the surprising spread which longitudinal time undergoes there.
|
|
I learned it from one of the most unostentatious of men--the colored
|
|
coachman of a friend of mine, who lives three miles from town.
|
|
He was to call for me at the Park Hotel at 7.30 P.M., and drive me out.
|
|
But he missed it considerably--did not arrive till ten. He excused
|
|
himself by saying--
|
|
|
|
'De time is mos' an hour en a half slower in de country en
|
|
what it is in de town; you'll be in plenty time, boss.
|
|
Sometimes we shoves out early for church, Sunday, en fetches up
|
|
dah right plum in de middle er de sermon. Diffunce in de time.
|
|
A body can't make no calculations 'bout it.'
|
|
|
|
I had lost two hours and a half; but I had learned a fact worth four.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 57
|
|
An Archangel
|
|
|
|
FROM St. Louis northward there are all the enlivening signs of
|
|
the presence of active, energetic, intelligent, prosperous, practical
|
|
nineteenth-century populations. The people don't dream, they work.
|
|
The happy result is manifest all around in the substantial outside
|
|
aspect of things, and the suggestions of wholesome life and comfort
|
|
that everywhere appear.
|
|
|
|
Quincy is a notable example--a brisk, handsome, well-ordered city;
|
|
and now, as formerly, interested in art, letters, and other high things.
|
|
|
|
But Marion City is an exception. Marion City has gone backwards
|
|
in a most unaccountable way. This metropolis promised
|
|
so well that the projectors tacked 'city' to its name in the
|
|
very beginning, with full confidence; but it was bad prophecy.
|
|
When I first saw Marion City, thirty-five years ago,
|
|
it contained one street, and nearly or quite six houses.
|
|
It contains but one house now, and this one, in a state of ruin,
|
|
is getting ready to follow the former five into the river.
|
|
Doubtless Marion City was too near to Quincy. It had
|
|
another disadvantage: it was situated in a flat mud bottom,
|
|
below high-water mark, whereas Quincy stands high up on the slope
|
|
of a hill.
|
|
|
|
In the beginning Quincy had the aspect and ways of a model New England town:
|
|
and these she has yet: broad, clean streets, trim, neat dwellings
|
|
and lawns, fine mansions, stately blocks of commercial buildings.
|
|
And there are ample fair-grounds, a well kept park, and many
|
|
attractive drives; library, reading-rooms, a couple of colleges,
|
|
some handsome and costly churches, and a grand court-house, with grounds
|
|
which occupy a square. The population of the city is thirty thousand.
|
|
There are some large factories here, and manufacturing, of many sorts,
|
|
is done on a great scale.
|
|
|
|
La Grange and Canton are growing towns, but I missed Alexandria;
|
|
was told it was under water, but would come up to blow in the summer.
|
|
|
|
Keokuk was easily recognizable. I lived there in 1857--an extraordinary
|
|
year there in real-estate matters. The 'boom' was something wonderful.
|
|
Everybody bought, everybody sold--except widows and preachers;
|
|
they always hold on; and when the tide ebbs, they get left.
|
|
Anything in the semblance of a town lot, no matter how situated,
|
|
was salable, and at a figure which would still have been high if the ground
|
|
had been sodded with greenbacks.
|
|
|
|
The town has a population of fifteen thousand now, and is progressing with
|
|
a healthy growth. It was night, and we could not see details, for which we
|
|
were sorry, for Keokuk has the reputation of being a beautiful city.
|
|
It was a pleasant one to live in long ago, and doubtless has advanced,
|
|
not retrograded, in that respect.
|
|
|
|
A mighty work which was in progress there in my day is finished now.
|
|
This is the canal over the Rapids. It is eight miles long,
|
|
three hundred feet wide, and is in no place less than six feet deep.
|
|
Its masonry is of the majestic kind which the War Department
|
|
usually deals in, and will endure like a Roman aqueduct.
|
|
The work cost four or five millions.
|
|
|
|
After an hour or two spent with former friends, we started up
|
|
the river again. Keokuk, a long time ago, was an occasional
|
|
loafing-place of that erratic genius, Henry Clay Dean.
|
|
I believe I never saw him but once; but he was much talked of
|
|
when I lived there. This is what was said of him--
|
|
|
|
He began life poor and without education. But he educated himself--
|
|
on the curbstones of Keokuk. He would sit down on a curbstone
|
|
with his book, careless or unconscious of the clatter of commerce
|
|
and the tramp of the passing crowds, and bury himself in his
|
|
studies by the hour, never changing his position except to draw
|
|
in his knees now and then to let a dray pass unobstructed;
|
|
and when his book was finished, its contents, however abstruse,
|
|
had been burnt into his memory, and were his permanent possession.
|
|
In this way he acquired a vast hoard of all sorts of learning,
|
|
and had it pigeon-holed in his head where he could put his intellectual
|
|
hand on it whenever it was wanted.
|
|
|
|
His clothes differed in no respect from a 'wharf-rat's,' except that
|
|
they were raggeder, more ill-assorted and inharmonious (and therefore
|
|
more extravagantly picturesque), and several layers dirtier.
|
|
Nobody could infer the master-mind in the top of that edifice from
|
|
the edifice itself.
|
|
|
|
He was an orator--by nature in the first place, and later by the training
|
|
of experience and practice. When he was out on a canvass, his name was
|
|
a lodestone which drew the farmers to his stump from fifty miles around.
|
|
His theme was always politics. He used no notes, for a volcano does
|
|
not need notes. In 1862, a son of Keokuk's late distinguished citizen,
|
|
Mr. Claggett, gave me this incident concerning Dean--
|
|
|
|
The war feeling was running high in Keokuk (in '61), and a great
|
|
mass meeting was to be held on a certain day in the new Athenaeum.
|
|
A distinguished stranger was to address the house.
|
|
After the building had been packed to its utmost capacity with
|
|
sweltering folk of both sexes, the stage still remained vacant--
|
|
the distinguished stranger had failed to connect.
|
|
The crowd grew impatient, and by and by indignant and rebellious.
|
|
About this time a distressed manager discovered Dean on a curb-stone,
|
|
explained the dilemma to him, took his book away from him,
|
|
rushed him into the building the back way, and told him to make
|
|
for the stage and save his country.
|
|
|
|
Presently a sudden silence fell upon the grumbling audience, and everybody's
|
|
eyes sought a single point--the wide, empty, carpetless stage. A figure
|
|
appeared there whose aspect was familiar to hardly a dozen persons present.
|
|
It was the scarecrow Dean--in foxy shoes, down at the heels; socks of
|
|
odd colors, also 'down;' damaged trousers, relics of antiquity, and a world
|
|
too short, exposing some inches of naked ankle; an unbuttoned vest,
|
|
also too short, and exposing a zone of soiled and wrinkled linen
|
|
between it and the waistband; shirt bosom open; long black handkerchief,
|
|
wound round and round the neck like a bandage; bob-tailed blue coat,
|
|
reaching down to the small of the back, with sleeves which left four
|
|
inches of forearm unprotected; small, stiff-brimmed soldier-cap hung on
|
|
a corner of the bump of--whichever bump it was. This figure moved gravely
|
|
out upon the stage and, with sedate and measured step, down to the front,
|
|
where it paused, and dreamily inspected the house, saying no word.
|
|
The silence of surprise held its own for a moment, then was broken by a just
|
|
audible ripple of merriment which swept the sea of faces like the wash
|
|
of a wave. The figure remained as before, thoughtfully inspecting.
|
|
Another wave started--laughter, this time. It was followed by another,
|
|
then a third--this last one boisterous.
|
|
|
|
And now the stranger stepped back one pace, took off his soldier-cap,
|
|
tossed it into the wing, and began to speak, with deliberation,
|
|
nobody listening, everybody laughing and whispering.
|
|
The speaker talked on unembarrassed, and presently delivered
|
|
a shot which went home, and silence and attention resulted.
|
|
He followed it quick and fast, with other telling things; warmed to
|
|
his work and began to pour his words out, instead of dripping them;
|
|
grew hotter and hotter, and fell to discharging lightnings
|
|
and thunder--and now the house began to break into applause,
|
|
to which the speaker gave no heed, but went hammering straight on;
|
|
unwound his black bandage and cast it away, still thundering;
|
|
presently discarded the bob tailed coat and flung it aside,
|
|
firing up higher and higher all the time; finally flung the vest
|
|
after the coat; and then for an untimed period stood there,
|
|
like another Vesuvius, spouting smoke and flame, lava and ashes,
|
|
raining pumice-stone and cinders, shaking the moral earth with
|
|
intellectual crash upon crash, explosion upon explosion, while the mad
|
|
multitude stood upon their feet in a solid body, answering back
|
|
with a ceaseless hurricane of cheers, through a thrashing snowstorm
|
|
of waving handkerchiefs.
|
|
|
|
'When Dean came,' said Claggett, 'the people thought
|
|
he was an escaped lunatic; but when he went, they thought
|
|
he was an escaped archangel.'
|
|
|
|
Burlington, home of the sparkling Burdette, is another hill city;
|
|
and also a beautiful one; unquestionably so; a fine and flourishing city,
|
|
with a population of twenty-five thousand, and belted with busy factories
|
|
of nearly every imaginable description. It was a very sober city, too--
|
|
for the moment--for a most sobering bill was pending; a bill to forbid
|
|
the manufacture, exportation, importation, purchase, sale, borrowing,
|
|
lending, stealing, drinking, smelling, or possession, by conquest,
|
|
inheritance, intent, accident, or otherwise, in the State of Iowa, of each
|
|
and every deleterious beverage known to the human race, except water.
|
|
This measure was approved by all the rational people in the State;
|
|
but not by the bench of Judges.
|
|
|
|
Burlington has the progressive modern city's full equipment of devices
|
|
for right and intelligent government; including a paid fire department,
|
|
a thing which the great city of New Orleans is without, but still employs
|
|
that relic of antiquity, the independent system.
|
|
|
|
In Burlington, as in all these Upper-River towns, one breathes
|
|
a go-ahead atmosphere which tastes good in the nostrils.
|
|
An opera-house has lately been built there which is in strong
|
|
contrast with the shabby dens which usually do duty as theaters
|
|
in cities of Burlington's size.
|
|
|
|
We had not time to go ashore in Muscatine, but had a daylight
|
|
view of it from the boat. I lived there awhile, many years ago,
|
|
but the place, now, had a rather unfamiliar look; so I
|
|
suppose it has clear outgrown the town which I used to know.
|
|
In fact, I know it has; for I remember it as a small place--
|
|
which it isn't now. But I remember it best for a lunatic
|
|
who caught me out in the fields, one Sunday, and extracted
|
|
a butcher-knife from his boot and proposed to carve me up with it,
|
|
unless I acknowledged him to be the only son of the Devil.
|
|
I tried to compromise on an acknowledgment that he was the only
|
|
member of the family I had met; but that did not satisfy him;
|
|
he wouldn't have any half-measures; I must say he was the sole
|
|
and only son of the Devil--he whetted his knife on his boot.
|
|
It did not seem worth while to make trouble about a little thing
|
|
like that; so I swung round to his view of the matter and saved
|
|
my skin whole. Shortly afterward, he went to visit his father;
|
|
and as he has not turned up since, I trust he is there yet.
|
|
|
|
And I remember Muscatine--still more pleasantly--for its summer sunsets.
|
|
I have never seen any, on either side of the ocean, that equaled them.
|
|
They used the broad smooth river as a canvas, and painted on it every
|
|
imaginable dream of color, from the mottled daintinesses and delicacies
|
|
of the opal, all the way up, through cumulative intensities, to blinding
|
|
purple and crimson conflagrations which were enchanting to the eye,
|
|
but sharply tried it at the same time. All the Upper Mississippi
|
|
region has these extraordinary sunsets as a familiar spectacle.
|
|
It is the true Sunset Land: I am sure no other country can show so good
|
|
a right to the name. The sunrises are also said to be exceedingly fine.
|
|
I do not know.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 58
|
|
On the Upper River
|
|
|
|
THE big towns drop in, thick and fast, now: and between stretch
|
|
processions of thrifty farms, not desolate solitude. Hour by hour,
|
|
the boat plows deeper and deeper into the great and populous North-west;
|
|
and with each successive section of it which is revealed,
|
|
one's surprise and respect gather emphasis and increase.
|
|
Such a people, and such achievements as theirs, compel homage.
|
|
This is an independent race who think for themselves, and who are
|
|
competent to do it, because they are educated and enlightened;
|
|
they read, they keep abreast of the best and newest thought,
|
|
they fortify every weak place in their land with a school,
|
|
a college, a library, and a newspaper; and they live under law.
|
|
Solicitude for the future of a race like this is not in order.
|
|
|
|
This region is new; so new that it may be said to be still in its babyhood.
|
|
By what it has accomplished while still teething, one may forecast
|
|
what marvels it will do in the strength of its maturity. It is so new
|
|
that the foreign tourist has not heard of it yet; and has not visited it.
|
|
For sixty years, the foreign tourist has steamed up and down the river
|
|
between St. Louis and New Orleans, and then gone home and written his book,
|
|
believing he had seen all of the river that was worth seeing or that
|
|
had anything to see. In not six of all these books is there mention
|
|
of these Upper River towns--for the reason that the five or six tourists
|
|
who penetrated this region did it before these towns were projected.
|
|
The latest tourist of them all (1878) made the same old regulation trip--
|
|
he had not heard that there was anything north of St. Louis.
|
|
|
|
Yet there was. There was this amazing region, bristling with great towns,
|
|
projected day before yesterday, so to speak, and built next morning.
|
|
A score of them number from fifteen hundred to five thousand people.
|
|
Then we have Muscatine, ten thousand; Winona, ten thousand; Moline,
|
|
ten thousand; Rock Island, twelve thousand; La Crosse, twelve thousand;
|
|
Burlington, twenty-five thousand; Dubuque, twenty-five thousand;
|
|
Davenport, thirty thousand; St. Paul, fifty-eight thousand, Minneapolis,
|
|
sixty thousand and upward.
|
|
|
|
The foreign tourist has never heard of these; there is no note of them
|
|
in his books. They have sprung up in the night, while he slept.
|
|
So new is this region, that I, who am comparatively young,
|
|
am yet older than it is. When I was born, St. Paul had a population
|
|
of three persons, Minneapolis had just a third as many.
|
|
The then population of Minneapolis died two years ago; and when
|
|
he died he had seen himself undergo an increase, in forty years,
|
|
of fifty-nine thousand nine hundred and ninety-nine persons.
|
|
He had a frog's fertility.
|
|
|
|
I must explain that the figures set down above, as the population of St. Paul
|
|
and Minneapolis, are several months old. These towns are far larger now.
|
|
In fact, I have just seen a newspaper estimate which gives the former
|
|
seventy-one thousand, and the latter seventy-eight thousand.
|
|
This book will not reach the public for six or seven months yet;
|
|
none of the figures will be worth much then.
|
|
|
|
We had a glimpse of Davenport, which is another beautiful city,
|
|
crowning a hill--a phrase which applies to all these towns; for they
|
|
are all comely, all well built, clean, orderly, pleasant to the eye,
|
|
and cheering to the spirit; and they are all situated upon hills.
|
|
Therefore we will give that phrase a rest. The Indians have a tradition
|
|
that Marquette and Joliet camped where Davenport now stands, in 1673.
|
|
The next white man who camped there, did it about a hundred and seventy
|
|
years later--in 1834. Davenport has gathered its thirty thousand
|
|
people within the past thirty years. She sends more children to her
|
|
schools now, than her whole population numbered twenty-three years ago.
|
|
She has the usual Upper River quota of factories, newspapers,
|
|
and institutions of learning; she has telephones, local telegraphs,
|
|
an electric alarm, and an admirable paid fire department,
|
|
consisting of six hook and ladder companies, four steam fire engines,
|
|
and thirty churches. Davenport is the official residence of two bishops--
|
|
Episcopal and Catholic.
|
|
|
|
Opposite Davenport is the flourishing town of Rock Island,
|
|
which lies at the foot of the Upper Rapids. A great railroad
|
|
bridge connects the two towns--one of the thirteen which fret
|
|
the Mississippi and the pilots, between St. Louis and St. Paul.
|
|
|
|
The charming island of Rock Island, three miles long and half
|
|
a mile wide, belongs to the United States, and the Government has
|
|
turned it into a wonderful park, enhancing its natural attractions
|
|
by art, and threading its fine forests with many miles of drives.
|
|
Near the center of the island one catches glimpses, through the trees,
|
|
of ten vast stone four-story buildings, each of which covers an acre
|
|
of ground. These are the Government workshops; for the Rock Island
|
|
establishment is a national armory and arsenal.
|
|
|
|
We move up the river--always through enchanting scenery,
|
|
there being no other kind on the Upper Mississippi--
|
|
and pass Moline, a center of vast manufacturing industries;
|
|
and Clinton and Lyons, great lumber centers; and presently
|
|
reach Dubuque, which is situated in a rich mineral region.
|
|
The lead mines are very productive, and of wide extent.
|
|
Dubuque has a great number of manufacturing establishments; among them
|
|
a plow factory which has for customers all Christendom in general.
|
|
At least so I was told by an agent of the concern who was on
|
|
the boat. He said--
|
|
|
|
'You show me any country under the sun where they really know how to plow,
|
|
and if I don't show you our mark on the plow they use, I'll eat that plow;
|
|
and I won't ask for any Woostershyre sauce to flavor it up with, either.'
|
|
|
|
All this part of the river is rich in Indian history and traditions.
|
|
Black Hawk's was once a puissant name hereabouts; as was Keokuk's,
|
|
further down. A few miles below Dubuque is the Tete de Mort--
|
|
Death's-head rock, or bluff--to the top of which the French drove
|
|
a band of Indians, in early times, and cooped them up there,
|
|
with death for a certainty, and only the manner of it matter
|
|
of choice--to starve, or jump off and kill themselves.
|
|
Black Hawk adopted the ways of the white people, toward the end
|
|
of his life; and when he died he was buried, near Des Moines,
|
|
in Christian fashion, modified by Indian custom; that is to say,
|
|
clothed in a Christian military uniform, and with a Christian cane
|
|
in his hand, but deposited in the grave in a sitting posture.
|
|
Formerly, a horse had always been buried with a chief.
|
|
The substitution of the cane shows that Black Hawk's haughty nature
|
|
was really humbled, and he expected to walk when he got over.
|
|
|
|
We noticed that above Dubuque the water of the Mississippi was
|
|
olive-green--rich and beautiful and semi-transparent, with the sun on it.
|
|
Of course the water was nowhere as clear or of as fine a complexion as it
|
|
is in some other seasons of the year; for now it was at flood stage,
|
|
and therefore dimmed and blurred by the mud manufactured from caving banks.
|
|
|
|
The majestic bluffs that overlook the river, along through this region,
|
|
charm one with the grace and variety of their forms, and the soft
|
|
beauty of their adornment. The steep verdant slope, whose base
|
|
is at the water's edge is topped by a lofty rampart of broken,
|
|
turreted rocks, which are exquisitely rich and mellow in color--
|
|
mainly dark browns and dull greens, but splashed with other tints.
|
|
And then you have the shining river, winding here and there and yonder,
|
|
its sweep interrupted at intervals by clusters of wooded islands
|
|
threaded by silver channels; and you have glimpses of distant villages,
|
|
asleep upon capes; and of stealthy rafts slipping along in the shade
|
|
of the forest walls; and of white steamers vanishing around remote points.
|
|
And it is all as tranquil and reposeful as dreamland, and has nothing
|
|
this-worldly about it--nothing to hang a fret or a worry upon.
|
|
|
|
Until the unholy train comes tearing along--which it presently does,
|
|
ripping the sacred solitude to rags and tatters with its devil's
|
|
warwhoop and the roar and thunder of its rushing wheels--and straightway
|
|
you are back in this world, and with one of its frets ready to hand
|
|
for your entertainment: for you remember that this is the very road
|
|
whose stock always goes down after you buy it, and always goes up
|
|
again as soon as you sell it. It makes me shudder to this day,
|
|
to remember that I once came near not getting rid of my stock at all.
|
|
It must be an awful thing to have a railroad left on your hands.
|
|
|
|
The locomotive is in sight from the deck of the steamboat almost
|
|
the whole way from St. Louis to St. Paul--eight hundred miles.
|
|
These railroads have made havoc with the steamboat commerce.
|
|
The clerk of our boat was a steamboat clerk before these roads
|
|
were built. In that day the influx of population was so great,
|
|
and the freight business so heavy, that the boats were not able
|
|
to keep up with the demands made upon their carrying capacity;
|
|
consequently the captains were very independent and airy--
|
|
pretty 'biggity,' as Uncle Remus would say. The clerk nut-shelled the
|
|
contrast between the former time and the present, thus--
|
|
|
|
'Boat used to land--captain on hurricane roof--mighty stiff and straight--
|
|
iron ramrod for a spine--kid gloves, plug tile, hair parted behind--
|
|
man on shore takes off hat and says--
|
|
|
|
' "Got twenty-eight tons of wheat, cap'n--be great favor if you
|
|
can take them."
|
|
|
|
'Captain says--
|
|
|
|
' " 'll take two of them"--and don't even condescend to look at him.
|
|
|
|
'But nowadays the captain takes off his old slouch, and smiles
|
|
all the way around to the back of his ears, and gets off a bow
|
|
which he hasn't got any ramrod to interfere with, and says--
|
|
|
|
' "Glad to see you, Smith, glad to see you--you're looking well--
|
|
haven't seen you looking so well for years--what you got for us?"
|
|
|
|
' "Nuth'n", says Smith; and keeps his hat on, and just turns
|
|
his back and goes to talking with somebody else.
|
|
|
|
'Oh, yes, eight years ago, the captain was on top; but it's Smith's turn now.
|
|
Eight years ago a boat used to go up the river with every stateroom full,
|
|
and people piled five and six deep on the cabin floor; and a solid
|
|
deck-load of immigrants and harvesters down below, into the bargain.
|
|
To get a first-class stateroom, you'd got to prove sixteen quarterings
|
|
of nobility and four hundred years of descent, or be personally
|
|
acquainted with the nigger that blacked the captain's boots.
|
|
But it's all changed now; plenty staterooms above, no harvesters below--
|
|
there's a patent self-binder now, and they don't have harvesters
|
|
any more; they've gone where the woodbine twineth--and they didn't go
|
|
by steamboat, either; went by the train.'
|
|
|
|
Up in this region we met massed acres of lumber rafts coming down--
|
|
but not floating leisurely along, in the old-fashioned way,
|
|
manned with joyous and reckless crews of fiddling,
|
|
song-singing, whiskey-drinking, breakdown-dancing rapscallions;
|
|
no, the whole thing was shoved swiftly along by a powerful
|
|
stern-wheeler, modern fashion, and the small crews were quiet,
|
|
orderly men, of a sedate business aspect, with not a suggestion
|
|
of romance about them anywhere.
|
|
|
|
Along here, somewhere, on a black night, we ran some exceedingly
|
|
narrow and intricate island-chutes by aid of the electric light.
|
|
Behind was solid blackness--a crackless bank of it; ahead, a narrow
|
|
elbow of water, curving between dense walls of foliage that almost
|
|
touched our bows on both sides; and here every individual leaf,
|
|
and every individual ripple stood out in its natural color,
|
|
and flooded with a glare as of noonday intensified.
|
|
The effect was strange, and fine, and very striking.
|
|
|
|
We passed Prairie du Chien, another of Father Marquette's camping-places;
|
|
and after some hours of progress through varied and beautiful scenery,
|
|
reached La Crosse. Here is a town of twelve or thirteen thousand population,
|
|
with electric lighted streets, and with blocks of buildings which are stately
|
|
enough, and also architecturally fine enough, to command respect in any city.
|
|
It is a choice town, and we made satisfactory use of the hour allowed us,
|
|
in roaming it over, though the weather was rainier than necessary.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 59
|
|
Legends and Scenery
|
|
|
|
WE added several passengers to our list, at La Crosse; among others
|
|
an old gentleman who had come to this north-western region
|
|
with the early settlers, and was familiar with every part of it.
|
|
Pardonably proud of it, too. He said--
|
|
|
|
'You'll find scenery between here and St. Paul that can give
|
|
the Hudson points. You'll have the Queen's Bluff--seven hundred
|
|
feet high, and just as imposing a spectacle as you can find anywheres;
|
|
and Trempeleau Island, which isn't like any other island in America,
|
|
I believe, for it is a gigantic mountain, with precipitous sides,
|
|
and is full of Indian traditions, and used to be full of rattlesnakes;
|
|
if you catch the sun just right there, you will have a picture that
|
|
will stay with you. And above Winona you'll have lovely prairies;
|
|
and then come the Thousand Islands, too beautiful for anything;
|
|
green? why you never saw foliage so green, nor packed so thick;
|
|
it's like a thousand plush cushions afloat on a looking-glass--
|
|
when the water 's still; and then the monstrous bluffs on both sides of
|
|
the river--ragged, rugged, dark-complected--just the frame that's wanted;
|
|
you always want a strong frame, you know, to throw up the nice points
|
|
of a delicate picture and make them stand out.'
|
|
|
|
The old gentleman also told us a touching Indian legend or two--
|
|
but not very powerful ones.
|
|
|
|
After this excursion into history, he came back to the scenery,
|
|
and described it, detail by detail, from the Thousand Islands
|
|
to St. Paul; naming its names with such facility, tripping along
|
|
his theme with such nimble and confident ease, slamming in a
|
|
three-ton word, here and there, with such a complacent air of 't
|
|
isn't-anything,-I-can-do-it-any-time-I-want-to, and letting off
|
|
fine surprises of lurid eloquence at such judicious intervals,
|
|
that I presently began to suspect--
|
|
|
|
But no matter what I began to suspect. Hear him--
|
|
|
|
'Ten miles above Winona we come to Fountain City, nestling sweetly at the feet
|
|
of cliffs that lift their awful fronts, Jovelike, toward the blue depths
|
|
of heaven, bathing them in virgin atmospheres that have known no other contact
|
|
save that of angels' wings.
|
|
|
|
'And next we glide through silver waters, amid lovely and stupendous
|
|
aspects of nature that attune our hearts to adoring admiration,
|
|
about twelve miles, and strike Mount Vernon, six hundred feet high,
|
|
with romantic ruins of a once first-class hotel perched
|
|
far among the cloud shadows that mottle its dizzy heights--
|
|
sole remnant of once-flourishing Mount Vernon, town of early days,
|
|
now desolate and utterly deserted.
|
|
|
|
'And so we move on. Past Chimney Rock we fly--noble shaft of six
|
|
hundred feet; then just before landing at Minnieska our attention is
|
|
attracted by a most striking promontory rising over five hundred feet--
|
|
the ideal mountain pyramid. Its conic shape--thickly-wooded surface
|
|
girding its sides, and its apex like that of a cone, cause the spectator
|
|
to wonder at nature's workings. From its dizzy heights superb views
|
|
of the forests, streams, bluffs, hills and dales below and beyond
|
|
for miles are brought within its focus. What grander river scenery
|
|
can be conceived, as we gaze upon this enchanting landscape,
|
|
from the uppermost point of these bluffs upon the valleys below?
|
|
The primeval wildness and awful loneliness of these sublime creations
|
|
of nature and nature's God, excite feelings of unbounded admiration,
|
|
and the recollection of which can never be effaced from the memory,
|
|
as we view them in any direction.
|
|
|
|
'Next we have the Lion's Head and the Lioness's Head, carved by
|
|
nature's hand, to adorn and dominate the beauteous stream;
|
|
and then anon the river widens, and a most charming and magnificent
|
|
view of the valley before us suddenly bursts upon our vision;
|
|
rugged hills, clad with verdant forests from summit to base,
|
|
level prairie lands, holding in their lap the beautiful Wabasha,
|
|
City of the Healing Waters, puissant foe of Bright's disease,
|
|
and that grandest conception of nature's works, incomparable Lake Pepin--
|
|
these constitute a picture whereon the tourist's eye may gaze
|
|
uncounted hours, with rapture unappeased and unappeasable.
|
|
|
|
'And so we glide along; in due time encountering those majestic domes,
|
|
the mighty Sugar Loaf, and the sublime Maiden's Rock--which latter,
|
|
romantic superstition has invested with a voice; and oft-times
|
|
as the birch canoe glides near, at twilight, the dusky paddler
|
|
fancies he hears the soft sweet music of the long-departed Winona,
|
|
darling of Indian song and story.
|
|
|
|
'Then Frontenac looms upon our vision, delightful resort of jaded
|
|
summer tourists; then progressive Red Wing; and Diamond Bluff, impressive and
|
|
preponderous in its lone sublimity; then Prescott and the St. Croix;
|
|
and anon we see bursting upon us the domes and steeples of St. Paul,
|
|
giant young chief of the North, marching with seven-league stride in
|
|
the van of progress, banner-bearer of the highest and newest civilization,
|
|
carving his beneficent way with the tomahawk of commercial enterprise,
|
|
sounding the warwhoop of Christian culture, tearing off the reeking scalp
|
|
of sloth and superstition to plant there the steam-plow and the school-house--
|
|
ever in his front stretch arid lawlessness, ignorance, crime, despair;
|
|
ever in his wake bloom the jail, the gallows, and the pulpit; and ever----'
|
|
|
|
'Have you ever traveled with a panorama?'
|
|
|
|
'I have formerly served in that capacity.'
|
|
|
|
My suspicion was confirmed.
|
|
|
|
'Do you still travel with it?'
|
|
|
|
'No, she is laid up till the fall season opens. I am helping now to work up
|
|
the materials for a Tourist's Guide which the St. Louis and St. Paul Packet
|
|
Company are going to issue this summer for the benefit of travelers who go
|
|
by that line.'
|
|
|
|
'When you were talking of Maiden's Rock, you spoke of
|
|
the long-departed Winona, darling of Indian song and story.
|
|
Is she the maiden of the rock?--and are the two connected by legend?'
|
|
|
|
'Yes, and a very tragic and painful one. Perhaps the most celebrated,
|
|
as well as the most pathetic, of all the legends of the Mississippi.'
|
|
|
|
We asked him to tell it. He dropped out of his conversational
|
|
vein and back into his lecture-gait without an effort,
|
|
and rolled on as follows--
|
|
|
|
'A little distance above Lake City is a famous point known
|
|
as Maiden's Rock, which is not only a picturesque spot, but is
|
|
full of romantic interest from the event which gave it its name,
|
|
Not many years ago this locality was a favorite resort for the Sioux
|
|
Indians on account of the fine fishing and hunting to be had there,
|
|
and large numbers of them were always to be found in this locality.
|
|
Among the families which used to resort here, was one belonging
|
|
to the tribe of Wabasha. We-no-na (first-born) was the name
|
|
of a maiden who had plighted her troth to a lover belonging
|
|
to the same band. But her stern parents had promised her hand
|
|
to another, a famous warrior, and insisted on her wedding him.
|
|
The day was fixed by her parents, to her great grief.
|
|
She appeared to accede to the proposal and accompany them to
|
|
the rock, for the purpose of gathering flowers for the feast.
|
|
On reaching the rock, We-no-na ran to its summit and standing on
|
|
its edge upbraided her parents who were below, for their cruelty,
|
|
and then singing a death-dirge, threw herself from the precipice and
|
|
dashed them in pieces on the rock below.'
|
|
|
|
'Dashed who in pieces--her parents?'
|
|
|
|
'Yes.'
|
|
|
|
'Well, it certainly was a tragic business, as you say.
|
|
And moreover, there is a startling kind of dramatic surprise
|
|
about it which I was not looking for. It is a distinct
|
|
improvement upon the threadbare form of Indian legend.
|
|
There are fifty Lover's Leaps along the Mississippi from whose
|
|
summit disappointed Indian girls have jumped, but this is the only
|
|
jump in the lot hat turned out in the right and satisfactory way.
|
|
What became of Winona?'
|
|
|
|
'She was a good deal jarred up and jolted: but she got herself
|
|
together and disappeared before the coroner reached the fatal spot;
|
|
and 'tis said she sought and married her true love, and wandered
|
|
with him to some distant clime, where she lived happy ever after,
|
|
her gentle spirit mellowed and chastened by the romantic incident
|
|
which had so early deprived her of the sweet guidance of a mother's
|
|
love and a father's protecting arm, and thrown her, all unfriended,
|
|
upon the cold charity of a censorious world.'
|
|
|
|
I was glad to hear the lecturer's description of the scenery,
|
|
for it assisted my appreciation of what I saw of it, and enabled
|
|
me to imagine such of it as we lost by the intrusion of night.
|
|
|
|
As the lecturer remarked, this whole region is blanketed with Indian
|
|
tales and traditions. But I reminded him that people usually merely
|
|
mention this fact--doing it in a way to make a body's mouth water--
|
|
and judiciously stopped there. Why? Because the impression left,
|
|
was that these tales were full of incident and imagination--a pleasant
|
|
impression which would be promptly dissipated if the tales were told.
|
|
I showed him a lot of this sort of literature which I had been collecting,
|
|
and he confessed that it was poor stuff, exceedingly sorry rubbish;
|
|
and I ventured to add that the legends which he had himself told us
|
|
were of this character, with the single exception of the admirable
|
|
story of Winona. He granted these facts, but said that if I would
|
|
hunt up Mr. Schoolcraft's book, published near fifty years ago,
|
|
and now doubtless out of print, I would find some Indian inventions
|
|
in it that were very far from being barren of incident and imagination;
|
|
that the tales in Hiawatha were of this sort, and they came from
|
|
Schoolcraft's book; and that there were others in the same book
|
|
which Mr. Longfellow could have turned into verse with good effect.
|
|
For instance, there was the legend of 'The Undying Head.'
|
|
He could not tell it, for many of the details had grown dim
|
|
in his memory; but he would recommend me to find it and enlarge
|
|
my respect for the Indian imagination. He said that this tale,
|
|
and most of the others in the book, were current among the Indians
|
|
along this part of the Mississippi when he first came here;
|
|
and that the contributors to Schoolcraft's book had got them directly
|
|
from Indian lips, and had written them down with strict exactness,
|
|
and without embellishments of their own.
|
|
|
|
I have found the book. The lecturer was right. There are several
|
|
legends in it which confirm what he said. I will offer two of them--'The
|
|
Undying Head,' and 'Peboan and Seegwun, an Allegory of the Seasons.'
|
|
The latter is used in Hiawatha; but it is worth reading in the original form,
|
|
if only that one may see how effective a genuine poem can be without
|
|
the helps and graces of poetic measure and rhythm--
|
|
|
|
PEBOAN AND SEEGWUN.
|
|
|
|
An old man was sitting alone in his lodge, by the side
|
|
of a frozen stream. It was the close of winter, and his fire
|
|
was almost out, He appeared very old and very desolate.
|
|
His locks were white with age, and he trembled in every joint.
|
|
Day after day passed in solitude, and he heard nothing but the sound
|
|
of the tempest, sweeping before it the new-fallen snow.
|
|
|
|
One day, as his fire was just dying, a handsome young man approached
|
|
and entered his dwelling. His cheeks were red with the blood of youth,
|
|
his eyes sparkled with animation, and a smile played upon his lips.
|
|
He walked with a light and quick step. His forehead was bound
|
|
with a wreath of sweet grass, in place of a warrior's frontlet,
|
|
and he carried a bunch of flowers in his hand.
|
|
|
|
'Ah, my son,' said the old man, 'I am happy to see you.
|
|
Come in. Come and tell me of your adventures, and what strange
|
|
lands you have been to see. Let us pass the night together.
|
|
I will tell you of my prowess and exploits, and what I can perform.
|
|
You shall do the same, and we will amuse ourselves.'
|
|
|
|
He then drew from his sack a curiously wrought antique pipe,
|
|
and having filled it with tobacco, rendered mild by a mixture
|
|
of certain leaves, handed it to his guest. When this ceremony
|
|
was concluded they began to speak.
|
|
|
|
'I blow my breath,' said the old man, 'and the stream stands still.
|
|
The water becomes stiff and hard as clear stone.'
|
|
|
|
'I breathe,' said the young man, 'and flowers spring up over the plain.'
|
|
|
|
'I shake my locks,' retorted the old man, 'and snow covers the land.
|
|
The leaves fall from the trees at my command, and my breath blows them away.
|
|
The birds get up from the water, and fly to a distant land.
|
|
The animals hide themselves from my breath, and the very ground becomes as
|
|
hard as flint.'
|
|
|
|
'I shake my ringlets,' rejoined the young man, 'and warm showers
|
|
of soft rain fall upon the earth. The plants lift up their heads
|
|
out of the earth, like the eyes of children glistening with delight.
|
|
My voice recalls the birds. The warmth of my breath unlocks the streams.
|
|
Music fills the groves wherever I walk, and all nature rejoices.'
|
|
|
|
At length the sun began to rise. A gentle warmth came
|
|
over the place. The tongue of the old man became silent.
|
|
The robin and bluebird began to sing on the top of the lodge.
|
|
The stream began to murmur by the door, and the fragrance of growing
|
|
herbs and flowers came softly on the vernal breeze.
|
|
|
|
Daylight fully revealed to the young man the character of his entertainer.
|
|
When he looked upon him, he had the icy visage of Peboan.<footnote
|
|
[Winter.]> Streams began to flow from his eyes. As the sun increased,
|
|
he grew less and less in stature, and anon had melted completely away.
|
|
Nothing remained on the place of his lodge-fire but the miskodeed,<footnote
|
|
[The trailing arbutus.]> a small white flower, with a pink border, which is
|
|
one of the earliest species of northern plants.
|
|
|
|
'The Undying Head' is a rather long tale, but it makes up in weird conceits,
|
|
fairy-tale prodigies, variety of incident, and energy of movement,
|
|
for what it lacks in brevity.<footnote [See appendix D.]>
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter 60
|
|
Speculations and Conclusions
|
|
|
|
WE reached St. Paul, at the head of navigation of the Mississippi,
|
|
and there our voyage of two thousand miles from New Orleans ended. It is
|
|
about a ten-day trip by steamer. It can probably be done quicker by rail.
|
|
I judge so because I know that one may go by rail from St. Louis to Hannibal--
|
|
a distance of at least a hundred and twenty miles--in seven hours.
|
|
This is better than walking; unless one is in a hurry.
|
|
|
|
The season being far advanced when we were in New Orleans, the roses
|
|
and magnolia blossoms were falling; but here in St. Paul it was the snow,
|
|
In New Orleans we had caught an occasional withering breath from over
|
|
a crater, apparently; here in St. Paul we caught a frequent benumbing
|
|
one from over a glacier, apparently.
|
|
|
|
|
|
But I wander from my theme. St. Paul is a wonderful town.
|
|
It is put together in solid blocks of honest brick and stone,
|
|
and has the air of intending to stay. Its post-office was established
|
|
thirty-six years ago; and by and by, when the postmaster received
|
|
a letter, he carried it to Washington, horseback, to inquire what
|
|
was to be done with it. Such is the legend. Two frame houses were
|
|
built that year, and several persons were added to the population.
|
|
A recent number of the leading St. Paul paper, the 'Pioneer Press,'
|
|
gives some statistics which furnish a vivid contrast to that old
|
|
state of things, to wit: Population, autumn of the present year
|
|
(1882), 71,000; number of letters handled, first half of
|
|
the year, 1,209,387; number of houses built during three-quarters
|
|
of the year, 989; their cost, $3,186,000. The increase of letters
|
|
over the corresponding six months of last year was fifty per cent.
|
|
Last year the new buildings added to the city cost above $4,500,000.
|
|
St. Paul's strength lies in her commerce--I mean his commerce.
|
|
He is a manufacturing city, of course--all the cities of that
|
|
region are--but he is peculiarly strong in the matter of commerce.
|
|
Last year his jobbing trade amounted to upwards of $52,000,000.
|
|
|
|
He has a custom-house, and is building a costly capitol to replace
|
|
the one recently burned--for he is the capital of the State.
|
|
He has churches without end; and not the cheap poor kind,
|
|
but the kind that the rich Protestant puts up, the kind that
|
|
the poor Irish 'hired-girl' delights to erect. What a passion
|
|
for building majestic churches the Irish hired-girl has.
|
|
It is a fine thing for our architecture but too often we enjoy
|
|
her stately fanes without giving her a grateful thought.
|
|
In fact, instead of reflecting that 'every brick and every stone
|
|
in this beautiful edifice represents an ache or a pain, and a handful
|
|
of sweat, and hours of heavy fatigue, contributed by the back
|
|
and forehead and bones of poverty,' it is our habit to forget
|
|
these things entirely, and merely glorify the mighty temple itself,
|
|
without vouchsafing one praiseful thought to its humble builder,
|
|
whose rich heart and withered purse it symbolizes.
|
|
|
|
This is a land of libraries and schools. St. Paul has three public libraries,
|
|
and they contain, in the aggregate, some forty thousand books.
|
|
He has one hundred and sixteen school-houses, and pays out more than
|
|
seventy thousand dollars a year in teachers' salaries.
|
|
|
|
There is an unusually fine railway station; so large is it,
|
|
in fact, that it seemed somewhat overdone, in the matter
|
|
of size, at first; but at the end of a few months it was
|
|
perceived that the mistake was distinctly the other way.
|
|
The error is to be corrected.
|
|
|
|
The town stands on high ground; it is about seven hundred feet
|
|
above the sea level. It is so high that a wide view of river
|
|
and lowland is offered from its streets.
|
|
|
|
It is a very wonderful town indeed, and is not finished yet.
|
|
All the streets are obstructed with building material,
|
|
and this is being compacted into houses as fast as possible,
|
|
to make room for more--for other people are anxious to build,
|
|
as soon as they can get the use of the streets to pile up their bricks
|
|
and stuff in.
|
|
|
|
How solemn and beautiful is the thought, that the earliest pioneer
|
|
of civilization, the van-leader of civilization, is never the steamboat,
|
|
never the railroad, never the newspaper, never the Sabbath-school,
|
|
never the missionary--but always whiskey! Such is the case.
|
|
Look history over; you will see. The missionary comes after the whiskey--
|
|
I mean he arrives after the whiskey has arrived; next comes
|
|
the poor immigrant, with ax and hoe and rifle; next, the trader;
|
|
next, the miscellaneous rush; next, the gambler, the desperado,
|
|
the highwayman, and all their kindred in sin of both sexes; and next,
|
|
the smart chap who has bought up an old grant that covers all the land;
|
|
this brings the lawyer tribe; the vigilance committee brings the undertaker.
|
|
All these interests bring the newspaper; the newspaper starts up politics
|
|
and a railroad; all hands turn to and build a church and a jail--
|
|
and behold, civilization is established for ever in the land.
|
|
But whiskey, you see, was the van-leader in this beneficent work.
|
|
It always is. It was like a foreigner--and excusable in a foreigner--
|
|
to be ignorant of this great truth, and wander off into astronomy
|
|
to borrow a symbol. But if he had been conversant with the facts,
|
|
he would have said--
|
|
|
|
Westward the Jug of Empire takes its way.
|
|
|
|
This great van-leader arrived upon the ground which St. Paul now occupies,
|
|
in June 1837. Yes, at that date, Pierre Parrant, a Canadian, built the
|
|
first cabin, uncorked his jug, and began to sell whiskey to the Indians.
|
|
The result is before us.
|
|
|
|
All that I have said of the newness, briskness, swift progress,
|
|
wealth, intelligence, fine and substantial architecture,
|
|
and general slash and go, and energy of St. Paul, will apply
|
|
to his near neighbor, Minneapolis--with the addition
|
|
that the latter is the bigger of the two cities.
|
|
|
|
These extraordinary towns were ten miles apart, a few months ago,
|
|
but were growing so fast that they may possibly be joined now,
|
|
and getting along under a single mayor. At any rate, within five years
|
|
from now there will be at least such a substantial ligament of buildings
|
|
stretching between them and uniting them that a stranger will not be able
|
|
to tell where the one Siamese twin leaves off and the other begins.
|
|
Combined, they will then number a population of two hundred and
|
|
fifty thousand, if they continue to grow as they are now growing.
|
|
Thus, this center of population at the head of Mississippi navigation,
|
|
will then begin a rivalry as to numbers, with that center of population
|
|
at the foot of it--New Orleans.
|
|
|
|
Minneapolis is situated at the falls of St. Anthony, which stretch across
|
|
the river, fifteen hundred feet, and have a fall of eighty-two feet--
|
|
a waterpower which, by art, has been made of inestimable value,
|
|
business-wise, though somewhat to the damage of the Falls as a spectacle,
|
|
or as a background against which to get your photograph taken.
|
|
|
|
Thirty flouring-mills turn out two million barrels of the very
|
|
choicest of flour every year; twenty sawmills produce two hundred
|
|
million feet of lumber annually; then there are woolen mills,
|
|
cotton mills, paper and oil mills; and sash, nail, furniture,
|
|
barrel, and other factories, without number, so to speak.
|
|
The great flouring-mills here and at St. Paul use the 'new process'
|
|
and mash the wheat by rolling, instead of grinding it.
|
|
|
|
Sixteen railroads meet in Minneapolis, and sixty-five passenger trains arrive
|
|
and depart daily. In this place, as in St. Paul, journalism thrives.
|
|
Here there are three great dailies, ten weeklies, and three monthlies.
|
|
|
|
There is a university, with four hundred students--and, better still,
|
|
its good efforts are not confined to enlightening the one sex.
|
|
There are sixteen public schools, with buildings which cost $500,000;
|
|
there are six thousand pupils and one hundred and twenty-eight teachers.
|
|
There are also seventy churches existing, and a lot more projected.
|
|
The banks aggregate a capital of $3,000,000, and the wholesale jobbing trade
|
|
of the town amounts to $50,000,000 a year.
|
|
|
|
Near St. Paul and Minneapolis are several points of interest--
|
|
Fort Snelling, a fortress occupying a river-bluff a hundred
|
|
feet high; the falls of Minnehaha, White-bear Lake, and so forth.
|
|
The beautiful falls of Minnehaha are sufficiently celebrated--
|
|
they do not need a lift from me, in that direction.
|
|
The White-bear Lake is less known. It is a lovely sheet of water,
|
|
and is being utilized as a summer resort by the wealth and fashion
|
|
of the State. It has its club-house, and its hotel, with the modern
|
|
improvements and conveniences; its fine summer residences;
|
|
and plenty of fishing, hunting, and pleasant drives.
|
|
There are a dozen minor summer resorts around about St. Paul
|
|
and Minneapolis, but the White-bear Lake is the resort.
|
|
Connected with White-bear Lake is a most idiotic Indian legend.
|
|
I would resist the temptation to print it here, if I could,
|
|
but the task is beyond my strength. The guide-book names the preserver
|
|
of the legend, and compliments his 'facile pen.' Without further
|
|
comment or delay then, let us turn the said facile pen loose
|
|
upon the reader--
|
|
|
|
A LEGEND OF WHITE-BEAR LAKE.
|
|
|
|
Every spring, for perhaps a century, or as long as there has been a nation
|
|
of red men, an island in the middle of White-bear Lake has been visited
|
|
by a band of Indians for the purpose of making maple sugar.
|
|
|
|
Tradition says that many springs ago, while upon this island,
|
|
a young warrior loved and wooed the daughter of his chief,
|
|
and it is said, also, the maiden loved the warrior.
|
|
He had again and again been refused her hand by her parents,
|
|
the old chief alleging that he was no brave, and his old consort
|
|
called him a woman!
|
|
|
|
The sun had again set upon the 'sugar-bush,' and the bright moon rose
|
|
high in the bright blue heavens, when the young warrior took down his
|
|
flute and went out alone, once more to sing the story of his love,
|
|
the mild breeze gently moved the two gay feathers in his head-dress,
|
|
and as he mounted on the trunk of a leaning tree, the damp snow fell
|
|
from his feet heavily. As he raised his flute to his lips, his blanket
|
|
slipped from his well-formed shoulders, and lay partly on the snow beneath.
|
|
He began his weird, wild love-song, but soon felt that he was cold,
|
|
and as he reached back for his blanket, some unseen hand laid it gently
|
|
on his shoulders; it was the hand of his love, his guardian angel.
|
|
She took her place beside him, and for the present they were happy;
|
|
for the Indian has a heart to love, and in this pride he is as noble
|
|
as in his own freedom, which makes him the child of the forest.
|
|
As the legend runs, a large white-bear, thinking, perhaps, that polar snows
|
|
and dismal winter weather extended everywhere, took up his journey southward.
|
|
He at length approached the northern shore of the lake which now bears
|
|
his name, walked down the bank and made his way noiselessly through
|
|
the deep heavy snow toward the island. It was the same spring ensuing
|
|
that the lovers met. They had left their first retreat, and were now
|
|
seated among the branches of a large elm which hung far over the lake.
|
|
(The same tree is still standing, and excites universal curiosity
|
|
and interest.) For fear of being detected, they talked almost in a whisper,
|
|
and now, that they might get back to camp in good time and thereby
|
|
avoid suspicion, they were just rising to return, when the maiden uttered
|
|
a shriek which was heard at the camp, and bounding toward the young brave,
|
|
she caught his blanket, but missed the direction of her foot and fell,
|
|
bearing the blanket with her into the great arms of the ferocious monster.
|
|
Instantly every man, woman, and child of the band were upon the bank,
|
|
but all unarmed. Cries and wailings went up from every mouth.
|
|
What was to be done'? In the meantime this white and savage beast held
|
|
the breathless maiden in his huge grasp, and fondled with his precious
|
|
prey as if he were used to scenes like this. One deafening yell from
|
|
the lover warrior is heard above the cries of hundreds of his tribe,
|
|
and dashing away to his wigwam he grasps his faithful knife,
|
|
returns almost at a single bound to the scene of fear and fright,
|
|
rushes out along the leaning tree to the spot where his treasure fell,
|
|
and springing with the fury of a mad panther, pounced upon his prey.
|
|
The animal turned, and with one stroke of his huge paw brought
|
|
the lovers heart to heart, but the next moment the warrior, with one
|
|
plunge of the blade of his knife, opened the crimson sluices of death,
|
|
and the dying bear relaxed his hold.
|
|
|
|
That night there was no more sleep for the band or the lovers,
|
|
and as the young and the old danced about the carcass of the dead monster,
|
|
the gallant warrior was presented with another plume, and ere
|
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another moon had set he had a living treasure added to his heart.
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Their children for many years played upon the skin of the white-bear--
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|
from which the lake derives its name--and the maiden and the brave
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|
remembered long the fearful scene and rescue that made them one,
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|
for Kis-se-me-pa and Ka-go-ka could never forget their fearful
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|
encounter with the huge monster that came so near sending them to
|
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the happy hunting-ground.
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It is a perplexing business. First, she fell down out of the tree--
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|
she and the blanket; and the bear caught her and fondled her--
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|
her and the blanket; then she fell up into the tree again--
|
|
leaving the blanket; meantime the lover goes war-whooping
|
|
home and comes back 'heeled,' climbs the tree, jumps down on
|
|
the bear, the girl jumps down after him--apparently, for she
|
|
was up the tree--resumes her place in the bear's arms along
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with the blanket, the lover rams his knife into the bear,
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|
and saves--whom, the blanket? No--nothing of the sort.
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|
You get yourself all worked up and excited about that blanket,
|
|
and then all of a sudden, just when a happy climax seems
|
|
imminent you are let down flat--nothing saved but the girl.
|
|
Whereas, one is not interested in the girl; she is not
|
|
the prominent feature of the legend. Nevertheless, there you
|
|
are left, and there you must remain; for if you live
|
|
a thousand years you will never know who got the blanket.
|
|
A dead man could get up a better legend than this one.
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I don't mean a fresh dead man either; I mean a man that's been dead
|
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weeks and weeks.
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We struck the home-trail now, and in a few hours were in that
|
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astonishing Chicago--a city where they are always rubbing the lamp,
|
|
and fetching up the genii, and contriving and achieving new impossibilities.
|
|
It is hopeless for the occasional visitor to try to keep up with Chicago--
|
|
she outgrows his prophecies faster than he can make them.
|
|
She is always a novelty; for she is never the Chicago you saw when you
|
|
passed through the last time. The Pennsylvania road rushed us to New
|
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York without missing schedule time ten minutes anywhere on the route;
|
|
and there ended one of the most enjoyable five-thousand-mile journeys I have
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ever had the good fortune to make.
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APPENDIX A
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(FROM THE NEW ORLEANS TIMES DEMOCRAT OF MARCH 29, 1882.)
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VOYAGE OF THE TIMES-DEMOCRAT'S RELIEF BOAT THROUGH THE INUNDATED
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REGIONS
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IT was nine o'clock Thursday morning when the 'Susie'
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|
left the Mississippi and entered Old River, or what is
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|
now called the mouth of the Red. Ascending on the left,
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a flood was pouring in through and over the levees on
|
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the Chandler plantation, the most northern point in Pointe
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Coupee parish. The water completely covered the place,
|
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although the levees had given way but a short time before.
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The stock had been gathered in a large flat-boat, where,
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without food, as we passed, the animals were huddled together,
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|
waiting for a boat to tow them off. On the right-hand side
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|
of the river is Turnbull's Island, and on it is a large plantation
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|
which formerly was pronounced one of the most fertile in the State.
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The water has hitherto allowed it to go scot-free in usual floods,
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but now broad sheets of water told only where fields were.
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The top of the protecting levee could be seen here and there,
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but nearly all of it was submerged.
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The trees have put on a greener foliage since the water has poured in,
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and the woods look bright and fresh, but this pleasant aspect to the eye
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is neutralized by the interminable waste of water. We pass mile after mile,
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and it is nothing but trees standing up to their branches in water.
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A water-turkey now and again rises and flies ahead into the long avenue
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of silence. A pirogue sometimes flits from the bushes and crosses
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the Red River on its way out to the Mississippi, but the sad-faced
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paddlers never turn their heads to look at our boat. The puffing
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of the boat is music in this gloom, which affects one most curiously.
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It is not the gloom of deep forests or dark caverns, but a peculiar kind of
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solemn silence and impressive awe that holds one perforce to its recognition.
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We passed two negro families on a raft tied up in the willows this morning.
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They were evidently of the well-to-do class, as they had a supply of meal
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and three or four hogs with them. Their rafts were about twenty feet square,
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and in front of an improvised shelter earth had been placed, on which they
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built their fire.
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The current running down the Atchafalaya was very swift,
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the Mississippi showing a predilection in that direction,
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which needs only to be seen to enforce the opinion of that
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river's desperate endeavors to find a short way to the Gulf.
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Small boats, skiffs, pirogues, etc., are in great demand,
|
|
and many have been stolen by piratical negroes,
|
|
who take them where they will bring the greatest price.
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From what was told me by Mr. C. P. Ferguson, a planter
|
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near Red River Landing, whose place has just gone under,
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|
there is much suffering in the rear of that place.
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The negroes had given up all thoughts of a crevasse there,
|
|
as the upper levee had stood so long, and when it did
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come they were at its mercy. On Thursday a number were
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taken out of trees and off of cabin roofs and brought in,
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many yet remaining.
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One does not appreciate the sight of earth until he has traveled
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through a flood. At sea one does not expect or look for it,
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but here, with fluttering leaves, shadowy forest aisles, house-tops
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barely visible, it is expected. In fact a grave-yard, if the mounds
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were above water, would be appreciated. The river here is known
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|
only because there is an opening in the trees, and that is all.
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It is in width, from Fort Adams on the left bank of the Mississippi
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to the bank of Rapides Parish, a distance of about sixty miles.
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A large portion of this was under cultivation, particularly along
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the Mississippi and back of the Red. When Red River proper
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was entered, a strong current was running directly across it,
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pursuing the same direction as that of the Mississippi.
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After a run of some hours, Black River was reached.
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Hardly was it entered before signs of suffering became visible.
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All the willows along the banks were stripped of their leaves.
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One man, whom your correspondent spoke to, said that he had had one
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hundred and fifty head of cattle and one hundred head of hogs.
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At the first appearance of water he had started to drive
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them to the high lands of Avoyelles, thirty-five miles off,
|
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but he lost fifty head of the beef cattle and sixty hogs.
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Black River is quite picturesque, even if its shores are under water.
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A dense growth of ash, oak, gum, and hickory make the shores
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almost impenetrable, and where one can get a view down some
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avenue in the trees, only the dim outlines of distant trunks
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can be barely distinguished in the gloom.
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A few miles up this river, the depth of water on the banks
|
|
was fully eight feet, and on all sides could be seen,
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still holding against the strong current, the tops of cabins.
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Here and there one overturned was surrounded by drift-wood, forming
|
|
the nucleus of possibly some future island.
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In order to save coal, as it was impossible to get that fuel at any point
|
|
to be touched during the expedition, a look-out was kept for a wood-pile.
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On rounding a point a pirogue, skilfully paddled by a youth, shot out,
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and in its bow was a girl of fifteen, of fair face, beautiful black eyes,
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and demure manners. The boy asked for a paper, which was thrown to him,
|
|
and the couple pushed their tiny craft out into the swell of the boat.
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Presently a little girl, not certainly over twelve years, paddled out
|
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in the smallest little canoe and handled it with all the deftness
|
|
of an old voyageur. The little one looked more like an Indian
|
|
than a white child, and laughed when asked if she were afraid.
|
|
She had been raised in a pirogue and could go anywhere.
|
|
She was bound out to pick willow leaves for the stock, and she pointed
|
|
to a house near by with water three inches deep on the floors.
|
|
At its back door was moored a raft about thirty feet square,
|
|
with a sort of fence built upon it, and inside of this some sixteen
|
|
cows and twenty hogs were standing. The family did not complain,
|
|
except on account of losing their stock, and promptly brought a
|
|
supply of wood in a flat.
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From this point to the Mississippi River, fifteen miles, there is not a spot
|
|
of earth above water, and to the westward for thirty-five miles there
|
|
is nothing but the river's flood. Black River had risen during Thursday,
|
|
the 23rd, 1<three-quarters> inches, and was going up at night still.
|
|
As we progress up the river habitations become more frequent,
|
|
but are yet still miles apart. Nearly all of them are deserted,
|
|
and the out-houses floated off. To add to the gloom, almost every
|
|
living thing seems to have departed, and not a whistle of a bird
|
|
nor the bark of the squirrel can be heard in this solitude.
|
|
Sometimes a morose gar will throw his tail aloft and disappear in the river,
|
|
but beyond this everything is quiet--the quiet of dissolution.
|
|
Down the river floats now a neatly whitewashed hen-house, then
|
|
a cluster of neatly split fence-rails, or a door and a bloated carcass,
|
|
solemnly guarded by a pair of buzzards, the only bird to be seen,
|
|
which feast on the carcass as it bears them along. A picture-frame
|
|
in which there was a cheap lithograph of a soldier on horseback,
|
|
as it floated on told of some hearth invaded by the water and despoiled
|
|
of this ornament.
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At dark, as it was not prudent to run, a place alongside the woods was hunted
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and to a tall gum-tree the boat was made fast for the night.
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A pretty quarter of the moon threw a pleasant light over forest and river,
|
|
making a picture that would be a delightful piece of landscape study,
|
|
could an artist only hold it down to his canvas. The motion of
|
|
the engines had ceased, the puffing of the escaping steam was stilled,
|
|
and the enveloping silence closed upon us, and such silence it was!
|
|
Usually in a forest at night one can hear the piping of frogs,
|
|
the hum of insects, or the dropping of limbs; but here nature was dumb.
|
|
The dark recesses, those aisles into this cathedral, gave forth no sound,
|
|
and even the ripplings of the current die away.
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|
At daylight Friday morning all hands were up, and up the Black we started.
|
|
The morning was a beautiful one, and the river, which is remarkably
|
|
straight, put on its loveliest garb. The blossoms of the haw perfumed
|
|
the air deliciously, and a few birds whistled blithely along the banks.
|
|
The trees were larger, and the forest seemed of older growth than below.
|
|
More fields were passed than nearer the mouth, but the same scene
|
|
presented itself--smoke-houses drifting out in the pastures, negro quarters
|
|
anchored in confusion against some oak, and the modest residence just
|
|
showing its eaves above water. The sun came up in a glory of carmine,
|
|
and the trees were brilliant in their varied shades of green.
|
|
Not a foot of soil is to be seen anywhere, and the water is apparently growing
|
|
deeper and deeper, for it reaches up to the branches of the largest trees.
|
|
All along, the bordering willows have been denuded of leaves, showing how long
|
|
the people have been at work gathering this fodder for their animals. An old
|
|
man in a pirogue was asked how the willow leaves agreed with his cattle.
|
|
He stopped in his work, and with an ominous shake of his head replied:
|
|
'Well, sir, it 's enough to keep warmth in their bodies and that's
|
|
all we expect, but it's hard on the hogs, particularly the small ones.
|
|
They is dropping off powerful fast. But what can you do? It 's
|
|
all we've got.'
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|
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|
At thirty miles above the mouth of Black River the water
|
|
extends from Natchez on the Mississippi across to the pine
|
|
hills of Louisiana, a distance of seventy-three miles,
|
|
and there is hardly a spot that is not ten feet under it.
|
|
The tendency of the current up the Black is toward the west.
|
|
In fact, so much is this the case, the waters of Red River
|
|
have been driven down from toward the Calcasieu country,
|
|
and the waters of the Black enter the Red some fifteen miles
|
|
above the mouth of the former, a thing never before seen by even
|
|
the oldest steamboatmen. The water now in sight of us is entirely
|
|
from the Mississippi.
|
|
|
|
Up to Trinity, or rather Troy, which is but a short
|
|
distance below, the people have nearly all moved out,
|
|
those remaining having enough for their present personal needs.
|
|
Their cattle, though, are suffering and dying off quite fast,
|
|
as the confinement on rafts and the food they get breeds disease.
|
|
|
|
After a short stop we started, and soon came to a section where
|
|
there were many open fields and cabins thickly scattered about.
|
|
Here were seen more pictures of distress. On the inside of the houses
|
|
the inmates had built on boxes a scaffold on which they placed
|
|
the furniture. The bed-posts were sawed off on top, as the ceiling
|
|
was not more than four feet from the improvised floor. The buildings
|
|
looked very insecure, and threatened every moment to float off.
|
|
Near the houses were cattle standing breast high in the water,
|
|
perfectly impassive. They did not move in their places, but stood
|
|
patiently waiting for help to come. The sight was a distressing one,
|
|
and the poor creatures will be sure to die unless speedily rescued.
|
|
Cattle differ from horses in this peculiar quality. A horse,
|
|
after finding no relief comes, will swim off in search of food,
|
|
whereas a beef will stand in its tracks until with exhaustion it drops in
|
|
the water and drowns.
|
|
|
|
At half-past twelve o'clock a hail was given from a flat-boat
|
|
inside the line of the bank. Rounding to we ran alongside,
|
|
and General York stepped aboard. He was just then engaged
|
|
in getting off stock, and welcomed the 'Times-Democrat'
|
|
boat heartily, as he said there was much need for her.
|
|
He said that the distress was not exaggerated in the least.
|
|
People were in a condition it was difficult even for one to imagine.
|
|
The water was so high there was great danger of their houses
|
|
being swept away. It had already risen so high that it was
|
|
approaching the eaves, and when it reaches this point there is
|
|
always imminent risk of their being swept away. If this occurs,
|
|
there will be great loss of life. The General spoke of the gallant
|
|
work of many of the people in their attempts to save their stock,
|
|
but thought that fully twenty-five per cent. had perished.
|
|
Already twenty-five hundred people had received rations from Troy,
|
|
on Black River, and he had towed out a great many cattle,
|
|
but a very great quantity remained and were in dire need.
|
|
The water was now eighteen inches higher than in 1874, and there was
|
|
no land between Vidalia and the hills of Catahoula.
|
|
|
|
At two o'clock the 'Susie' reached Troy, sixty-five miles above
|
|
the mouth of Black River. Here on the left comes in Little River;
|
|
just beyond that the Ouachita, and on the right the Tensas.
|
|
These three rivers form the Black River. Troy, or a portion
|
|
of it, is situated on and around three large Indian mounds,
|
|
circular in shape, which rise above the present water
|
|
about twelve feet. They are about one hundred and fifty
|
|
feet in diameter, and are about two hundred yards apart.
|
|
The houses are all built between these mounds, and hence are all
|
|
flooded to a depth of eighteen inches on their floors.
|
|
|
|
These elevations, built by the aborigines, hundreds of years ago,
|
|
are the only points of refuge for miles. When we arrived we found them
|
|
crowded with stock, all of which was thin and hardly able to stand up.
|
|
They were mixed together, sheep, hogs, horses, mules, and cattle.
|
|
One of these mounds has been used for many years as the grave-yard,
|
|
and to-day we saw attenuated cows lying against the marble tomb-stones,
|
|
chewing their cud in contentment, after a meal of corn furnished
|
|
by General York. Here, as below, the remarkable skill of the women
|
|
and girls in the management of the smaller pirogues was noticed.
|
|
Children were paddling about in these most ticklish crafts with all the
|
|
nonchalance of adepts.
|
|
|
|
General York has put into operation a perfect system in regard
|
|
to furnishing relief. He makes a personal inspection of the place
|
|
where it is asked, sees what is necessary to be done, and then,
|
|
having two boats chartered, with flats, sends them promptly
|
|
to the place, when the cattle are loaded and towed to the pine
|
|
hills and uplands of Catahoula. He has made Troy his headquarters,
|
|
and to this point boats come for their supply of feed for cattle.
|
|
On the opposite side of Little River, which branches to the left
|
|
out of Black, and between it and the Ouachita, is situated
|
|
the town of Trinity, which is hourly threatened with destruction.
|
|
It is much lower than Troy, and the water is eight and nine
|
|
feet deep in the houses. A strong current sweeps through it,
|
|
and it is remarkable that all of its houses have not gone before.
|
|
The residents of both Troy and Trinity have been cared for, yet some
|
|
of their stock have to be furnished with food.
|
|
|
|
As soon as the 'Susie' reached Troy, she was turned over to General York,
|
|
and placed at his disposition to carry out the work of relief more rapidly.
|
|
Nearly all her supplies were landed on one of the mounds to lighten her,
|
|
and she was headed down stream to relieve those below. At Tom Hooper's place,
|
|
a few miles from Troy, a large flat, with about fifty head of stock on board,
|
|
was taken in tow. The animals were fed, and soon regained some strength.
|
|
To-day we go on Little River, where the suffering is greatest.
|
|
|
|
DOWN BLACK RIVER
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|
|
|
Saturday Evening, March 25.
|
|
|
|
We started down Black River quite early, under the direction of General York,
|
|
to bring out what stock could be reached. Going down river a flat
|
|
in tow was left in a central locality, and from there men poled her back
|
|
in the rear of plantations, picking up the animals wherever found.
|
|
In the loft of a gin-house there were seventeen head found, and after
|
|
a gangway was built they were led down into the flat without difficulty.
|
|
Taking a skiff with the General, your reporter was pulled up to a little
|
|
house of two rooms, in which the water was standing two feet on the floors.
|
|
In one of the large rooms were huddled the horses and cows of the place,
|
|
while in the other the Widow Taylor and her son were seated on a scaffold
|
|
raised on the floor. One or two dug-outs were drifting about in the roam
|
|
ready to be put in service at any time. When the flat was brought up,
|
|
the side of the house was cut away as the only means of getting
|
|
the animals out, and the cattle were driven on board the boat.
|
|
General York, in this as in every case, inquired if the family desired
|
|
to leave, informing them that Major Burke, of 'The Times-Democrat,'
|
|
has sent the 'Susie' up for that purpose. Mrs. Taylor said she thanked
|
|
Major Burke, but she would try and hold out. The remarkable tenacity
|
|
of the people here to their homes is beyond all comprehension. Just below,
|
|
at a point sixteen miles from Troy, information was received that the house
|
|
of Mr. Tom Ellis was in danger, and his family were all in it. We steamed
|
|
there immediately, and a sad picture was presented. Looking out of the half
|
|
of the window left above water, was Mrs. Ellis, who is in feeble health,
|
|
whilst at the door were her seven children, the oldest not fourteen years.
|
|
One side of the house was given up to the work animals, some twelve head,
|
|
besides hogs. In the next room the family lived, the water coming within two
|
|
inches of the bed-rail. The stove was below water, and the cooking was done
|
|
on a fire on top of it. The house threatened to give way at any moment:
|
|
one end of it was sinking, and, in fact, the building looked a mere shell.
|
|
As the boat rounded to, Mr. Ellis came out in a dug-out, and General
|
|
York told him that he had come to his relief; that 'The Times-Democrat'
|
|
boat was at his service, and would remove his family at once to the hills,
|
|
and on Monday a flat would take out his stock, as, until that time,
|
|
they would be busy. Notwithstanding the deplorable situation himself
|
|
and family were in, Mr. Ellis did not want to leave. He said he thought
|
|
he would wait until Monday, and take the risk of his house falling.
|
|
The children around the door looked perfectly contented, seeming to care
|
|
little for the danger they were in. These are but two instances of the many.
|
|
After weeks of privation and suffering, people still cling to their houses
|
|
and leave only when there is not room between the water and the ceiling
|
|
to build a scaffold on which to stand. It seemed to be incomprehensible,
|
|
yet the love for the old place was stronger than that for safety.
|
|
|
|
After leaving the Ellis place, the next spot touched at
|
|
was the Oswald place. Here the flat was towed alongside
|
|
the gin-house where there were fifteen head standing in water;
|
|
and yet, as they stood on scaffolds, their heads were above
|
|
the top of the entrance. It was found impossible to get
|
|
them out without cutting away a portion of the front;
|
|
and so axes were brought into requisition and a gap made.
|
|
After much labor the horses and mules were securely placed
|
|
on the flat.
|
|
|
|
At each place we stop there are always three, four, or more dug-outs
|
|
arriving, bringing information of stock in other places in need.
|
|
Notwithstanding the fact that a great many had driven a part of their
|
|
stock to the hills some time ago, there yet remains a large quantity,
|
|
which General York, who is working with indomitable energy, will get
|
|
landed in the pine hills by Tuesday.
|
|
|
|
All along Black River the 'Susie' has been visited by scores
|
|
of planters, whose tales are the repetition of those already
|
|
heard of suffering and loss. An old planter, who has lived on
|
|
the river since 1844, said there never was such a rise, and he was
|
|
satisfied more than one quarter of the stock has been lost.
|
|
Luckily the people cared first for their work stock, and when they
|
|
could find it horses and mules were housed in a place of safety.
|
|
The rise which still continues, and was two inches last night,
|
|
compels them to get them out to the hills; hence it is
|
|
that the work of General York is of such a great value.
|
|
From daylight to late at night he is going this way and that,
|
|
cheering by his kindly words and directing with calm judgment
|
|
what is to be done. One unpleasant story, of a certain
|
|
merchant in New Orleans, is told all along the river.
|
|
It appears for some years past the planters have been dealing
|
|
with this individual, and many of them had balances in his hands.
|
|
When the overflow came they wrote for coffee, for meal, and,
|
|
in fact, for such little necessities as were required.
|
|
No response to these letters came, and others were written,
|
|
and yet these old customers, with plantations under water,
|
|
were refused even what was necessary to sustain life. It is needless
|
|
to say he is not popular now on Back River.
|
|
|
|
The hills spoken of as the place of refuge for the people and stock on Black
|
|
River are in Catahoula parish, twenty-four miles from Black River.
|
|
|
|
After filling the flat with cattle we took on board the family
|
|
of T. S. Hooper, seven in number, who could not longer remain
|
|
in their dwelling, and we are now taking them up Little River
|
|
to the hills.
|
|
|
|
THE FLOOD STILL RISING
|
|
|
|
Troy: March 27, 1882, noon.
|
|
|
|
The flood here is rising about three and a half inches every
|
|
twenty-four hours, and rains have set in which will increase this.
|
|
General York feels now that our efforts ought to be directed towards
|
|
saving life, as the increase of the water has jeopardized many houses.
|
|
We intend to go up the Tensas in a few minutes, and then we
|
|
will return and go down Black River to take off families.
|
|
There is a lack of steam transportation here to meet the emergency.
|
|
The General has three boats chartered, with flats in tow,
|
|
but the demand for these to tow out stock is greater than they
|
|
can meet with promptness. All are working night and day,
|
|
and the 'Susie' hardly stops for more than an hour anywhere.
|
|
The rise has placed Trinity in a dangerous plight, and momentarily
|
|
it is expected that some of the houses will float off.
|
|
Troy is a little higher, yet all are in the water.
|
|
Reports have come in that a woman and child have been
|
|
washed away below here, and two cabins floated off.
|
|
Their occupants are the same who refused to come off day
|
|
before yesterday. One would not believe the utter passiveness
|
|
of the people.
|
|
|
|
As yet no news has been received of the steamer 'Delia,' which is
|
|
supposed to be the one sunk in yesterday's storm on Lake Catahoula.
|
|
She is due here now, but has not arrived. Even the mail here is
|
|
most uncertain, and this I send by skiff to Natchez to get it to you.
|
|
It is impossible to get accurate data as to past crops, etc., as
|
|
those who know much about the matter have gone, and those who remain
|
|
are not well versed in the production of this section.
|
|
|
|
General York desires me to say that the amount of rations
|
|
formerly sent should be duplicated and sent at once.
|
|
It is impossible to make any estimate, for the people are fleeing
|
|
to the hills, so rapid is the rise. The residents here are
|
|
in a state of commotion that can only be appreciated when seen,
|
|
and complete demoralization has set in,
|
|
|
|
If rations are drawn for any particular section hereabouts, they would
|
|
not be certain to be distributed, so everything should be sent to Troy
|
|
as a center, and the General will have it properly disposed of.
|
|
He has sent for one hundred tents, and, if all go to the hills who are
|
|
in motion now, two hundred will be required.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
APPENDIX B
|
|
|
|
THE MISSISSIPPI RIVER COMMISSION
|
|
|
|
THE condition of this rich valley of the Lower Mississippi,
|
|
immediately after and since the war, constituted one
|
|
of the disastrous effects of war most to be deplored.
|
|
Fictitious property in slaves was not only righteously destroyed,
|
|
but very much of the work which had depended upon the slave labor
|
|
was also destroyed or greatly impaired, especially the levee system.
|
|
|
|
It might have been expected by those who have not investigated the subject,
|
|
that such important improvements as the construction and maintenance
|
|
of the levees would have been assumed at once by the several States.
|
|
But what can the State do where the people are under subjection to
|
|
rates of interest ranging from 18 to 30 per cent., and are also under
|
|
the necessity of pledging their crops in advance even of planting,
|
|
at these rates, for the privilege of purchasing all of their supplies at 100
|
|
per cent. profit?
|
|
|
|
It has needed but little attention to make it perfectly obvious
|
|
that the control of the Mississippi River, if undertaken at all,
|
|
must be undertaken by the national government, and cannot
|
|
be compassed by States. The river must be treated as a unit;
|
|
its control cannot be compassed under a divided or separate
|
|
system of administration.
|
|
|
|
Neither are the States especially interested competent
|
|
to combine among themselves for the necessary operations.
|
|
The work must begin far up the river; at least as far as Cairo,
|
|
if not beyond; and must be conducted upon a consistent general plan
|
|
throughout the course of the river.
|
|
|
|
It does not need technical or scientific knowledge to comprehend the elements
|
|
of the case if one will give a little time and attention to the subject,
|
|
and when a Mississippi River commission has been constituted, as the existing
|
|
commission is, of thoroughly able men of different walks in life,
|
|
may it not be suggested that their verdict in the case should be accepted
|
|
as conclusive, so far as any a priori theory of construction or control
|
|
can be considered conclusive?
|
|
|
|
It should be remembered that upon this board are General Gilmore,
|
|
General Comstock, and General Suter, of the United States Engineers;
|
|
Professor Henry Mitchell (the most competent authority on the question
|
|
of hydrography), of the United States Coast Survey; B. B. Harrod,
|
|
the State Engineer of Louisiana; Jas. B. Eads, whose success
|
|
with the jetties at New Orleans is a warrant of his competency,
|
|
and Judge Taylor, of Indiana.
|
|
|
|
It would be presumption on the part of any single man, however skilled,
|
|
to contest the judgment of such a board as this.
|
|
|
|
The method of improvement proposed by the commission is at
|
|
once in accord with the results of engineering experience
|
|
and with observations of nature where meeting our wants.
|
|
As in nature the growth of trees and their proneness where undermined
|
|
to fall across the slope and support the bank secures at some
|
|
points a fair depth of channel and some degree of permanence,
|
|
so in the project of the engineer the use of timber and brush
|
|
and the encouragement of forest growth are the main features.
|
|
It is proposed to reduce the width where excessive by brushwood dykes,
|
|
at first low, but raised higher and higher as the mud of the river
|
|
settles under their shelter, and finally slope them back at
|
|
the angle upon which willows will grow freely. In this work there
|
|
are many details connected with the forms of these shelter dykes,
|
|
their arrangements so as to present a series of settling basins,
|
|
etc., a description of which would only complicate the conception.
|
|
Through the larger part of the river works of contraction
|
|
will not be required, but nearly all the banks on the concave
|
|
side of the beds must be held against the wear of the stream,
|
|
and much of the opposite banks defended at critical points.
|
|
The works having in view this conservative object may be
|
|
generally designated works of revetment; and these also
|
|
will be largely of brushwood, woven in continuous carpets,
|
|
or twined into wire-netting. This veneering process has been
|
|
successfully employed on the Missouri River; and in some cases
|
|
they have so covered themselves with sediments, and have become
|
|
so overgrown with willows, that they may be regarded as permanent.
|
|
In securing these mats rubble-stone is to be used in small quantities,
|
|
and in some instances the dressed slope between high and low river
|
|
will have to be more or less paved with stone.
|
|
|
|
Any one who has been on the Rhine will have observed operations not unlike
|
|
those to which we have just referred; and, indeed, most of the rivers
|
|
of Europe flowing among their own alluvia have required similar treatment
|
|
in the interest of navigation and agriculture.
|
|
|
|
The levee is the crowning work of bank revetment, although not necessarily
|
|
in immediate connection. It may be set back a short distance from
|
|
the revetted bank; but it is, in effect, the requisite parapet.
|
|
The flood river and the low river cannot be brought into register,
|
|
and compelled to unite in the excavation of a single permanent channel,
|
|
without a complete control of all the stages; and even the abnormal
|
|
rise must be provided against, because this would endanger the levee,
|
|
and once in force behind the works of revetment would tear them also away.
|
|
|
|
Under the general principle that the local slope of a river
|
|
is the result and measure of the resistance of its bed, it is
|
|
evident that a narrow and deep stream should have less slope,
|
|
because it has less frictional surface in proportion to capacity;
|
|
i.e., less perimeter in proportion to area of cross section.
|
|
The ultimate effect of levees and revetments confining
|
|
the floods and bringing all the stages of the river into
|
|
register is to deepen the channel and let down the slope.
|
|
The first effect of the levees is to raise the surface;
|
|
but this, by inducing greater velocity of flow, inevitably
|
|
causes an enlargement of section, and if this enlargement
|
|
is prevented from being made at the expense of the banks,
|
|
the bottom must give way and the form of the waterway
|
|
be so improved as to admit this flow with less rise.
|
|
The actual experience with levees upon the Mississippi River,
|
|
with no attempt to hold the banks, has been favorable,
|
|
and no one can doubt, upon the evidence furnished in the reports
|
|
of the commission, that if the earliest levees had been
|
|
accompanied by revetment of banks, and made complete,
|
|
we should have to-day a river navigable at low water,
|
|
and an adjacent country safe from inundation.
|
|
|
|
Of course it would be illogical to conclude that the constrained river
|
|
can ever lower its flood slope so as to make levees unnecessary,
|
|
but it is believed that, by this lateral constraint, the river
|
|
as a conduit may be so improved in form that even those rare
|
|
floods which result from the coincident rising of many tributaries
|
|
will find vent without destroying levees of ordinary height.
|
|
That the actual capacity of a channel through alluvium depends
|
|
upon its service during floods has been often shown, but this
|
|
capacity does not include anomalous, but recurrent, floods.
|
|
|
|
It is hardly worth while to consider the projects for relieving
|
|
the Mississippi River floods by creating new outlets,
|
|
since these sensational propositions have commended themselves
|
|
only to unthinking minds, and have no support among engineers.
|
|
Were the river bed cast-iron, a resort to openings for surplus
|
|
waters might be a necessity; but as the bottom is yielding,
|
|
and the best form of outlet is a single deep channel,
|
|
as realizing the least ratio of perimeter to area of cross section,
|
|
there could not well be a more unphilosophical method of treatment
|
|
than the multiplication of avenues of escape.
|
|
|
|
In the foregoing statement the attempt has been made to condense
|
|
in as limited a space as the importance of the subject would permit,
|
|
the general elements of the problem, and the general features
|
|
of the proposed method of improvement which has been adopted
|
|
by the Mississippi River Commission.
|
|
|
|
The writer cannot help feeling that it is somewhat presumptuous on
|
|
his part to attempt to present the facts relating to an enterprise
|
|
which calls for the highest scientific skill; but it is a matter
|
|
which interests every citizen of the United States, and is one
|
|
of the methods of reconstruction which ought to be approved.
|
|
It is a war claim which implies no private gain, and no compensation
|
|
except for one of the cases of destruction incident to war,
|
|
which may well be repaired by the people of the whole country.
|
|
|
|
EDWARD ATKINSON.
|
|
|
|
Boston: April 14, 1882.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
APPENDIX C
|
|
|
|
RECEPTION OF CAPTAIN BASIL HALL'S BOOK IN THE UNITED STATES
|
|
|
|
HAVING now arrived nearly at the end of our travels,
|
|
I am induced, ere I conclude, again to mention what I consider
|
|
as one of the most remarkable traits in the national character
|
|
of the Americans; namely, their exquisite sensitiveness and
|
|
soreness respecting everything said or written concerning them.
|
|
Of this, perhaps, the most remarkable example I can give is
|
|
the effect produced on nearly every class of readers by the
|
|
appearance of Captain Basil Hall's 'Travels in North America.'
|
|
In fact, it was a sort of moral earthquake, and the vibration it
|
|
occasioned through the nerves of the republic, from one corner
|
|
of the Union to the other, was by no means over when I left
|
|
the country in July 1831, a couple of years after the shock.
|
|
|
|
I was in Cincinnati when these volumes came out, but it
|
|
was not till July 1830, that I procured a copy of them.
|
|
One bookseller to whom I applied told me that he had had a few
|
|
copies before he understood the nature of the work, but that,
|
|
after becoming acquainted with it, nothing should induce
|
|
him to sell another. Other persons of his profession must,
|
|
however, have been less scrupulous; for the book was read
|
|
in city, town, village, and hamlet, steamboat, and stage-coach,
|
|
and a sort of war-whoop was sent forth perfectly unprecedented
|
|
in my recollection upon any occasion whatever.
|
|
|
|
An ardent desire for approbation, and a delicate sensitiveness under censure,
|
|
have always, I believe, been considered as amiable traits of character;
|
|
but the condition into which the appearance of Captain Hall's work threw
|
|
the republic shows plainly that these feelings, if carried to excess,
|
|
produce a weakness which amounts to imbecility.
|
|
|
|
It was perfectly astonishing to hear men who, on other subjects,
|
|
were of some judgment, utter their opinions upon this.
|
|
I never heard of any instance in which the commonsense generally
|
|
found in national criticism was so overthrown by passion.
|
|
I do not speak of the want of justice, and of fair and
|
|
liberal interpretation: these, perhaps, were hardly to be expected.
|
|
Other nations have been called thin-skinned, but the citizens
|
|
of the Union have, apparently, no skins at all; they wince if a
|
|
breeze blows over them, unless it be tempered with adulation.
|
|
It was not, therefore, very surprising that the acute and forcible
|
|
observations of a traveler they knew would be listened to should be
|
|
received testily. The extraordinary features of the business were,
|
|
first, the excess of the rage into which they lashed themselves;
|
|
and, secondly, the puerility of the inventions by which they
|
|
attempted to account for the severity with which they fancied they
|
|
had been treated.
|
|
|
|
Not content with declaring that the volumes contained no word of truth,
|
|
from beginning to end (which is an assertion I heard made very nearly
|
|
as often as they were mentioned), the whole country set to work
|
|
to discover the causes why Captain Hall had visited the United States,
|
|
and why he had published his book.
|
|
|
|
I have heard it said with as much precision and gravity
|
|
as if the statement had been conveyed by an official report,
|
|
that Captain Hall had been sent out by the British Government
|
|
expressly for the purpose of checking the growing admiration
|
|
of England for the Government of the United States,--
|
|
that it was by a commission from the treasury he had come,
|
|
and that it was only in obedience to orders that he had found
|
|
anything to object to.
|
|
|
|
I do not give this as the gossip of a coterie; I am persuaded that it
|
|
is the belief of a very considerable portion of the country.
|
|
So deep is the conviction of this singular people that they cannot
|
|
be seen without being admired, that they will not admit the possibility
|
|
that any one should honestly and sincerely find aught to disapprove
|
|
in them or their country.
|
|
|
|
The American Reviews are, many of them, I believe, well known in England;
|
|
I need not, therefore, quote them here, but I sometimes wondered
|
|
that they, none of them, ever thought of translating Obadiah's
|
|
curse into classic American; if they had done so, on placing
|
|
(he, Basil Hall) between brackets, instead of (he, Obadiah)
|
|
it would have saved them a world of trouble.
|
|
|
|
I can hardly describe the curiosity with which I sat down at length
|
|
to peruse these tremendous volumes; still less can I do justice to my
|
|
surprise at their contents. To say that I found not one exaggerated
|
|
statement throughout the work is by no means saying enough.
|
|
It is impossible for any one who knows the country not to see that
|
|
Captain Hall earnestly sought out things to admire and commend.
|
|
When he praises, it is with evident pleasure; and when he finds fault,
|
|
it is with evident reluctance and restraint, excepting where motives
|
|
purely patriotic urge him to state roundly what it is for the benefit
|
|
of his country should be known.
|
|
|
|
In fact, Captain Hall saw the country to the greatest possible advantage.
|
|
Furnished, of course, with letters of introduction to the most
|
|
distinguished individuals, and with the still more influential
|
|
recommendation of his own reputation, he was received in full
|
|
drawing-room style and state from one end of the Union to the other.
|
|
He saw the country in full dress, and had little or no opportunity
|
|
of judging of it unhouselled, unanointed, unannealed, with all its
|
|
imperfections on its head, as I and my family too often had.
|
|
|
|
Captain Hall had certainly excellent opportunities of making
|
|
himself acquainted with the form of the government and the laws;
|
|
and of receiving, moreover, the best oral commentary upon them,
|
|
in conversation with the most distinguished citizens.
|
|
Of these opportunities he made excellent use; nothing important met
|
|
his eye which did not receive that sort of analytical attention
|
|
which an experienced and philosophical traveler alone can give.
|
|
This has made his volumes highly interesting and valuable;
|
|
but I am deeply persuaded, that were a man of equal penetration
|
|
to visit the United States with no other means of becoming
|
|
acquainted with the national character than the ordinary working-day
|
|
intercourse of life, he would conceive an infinitely lower idea
|
|
of the moral atmosphere of the country than Captain Hall appears
|
|
to have done; and the internal conviction on my mind is strong,
|
|
that if Captain Hall had not placed a firm restraint on himself,
|
|
he must have given expression to far deeper indignation than any he has
|
|
uttered against many points in the American character, with which
|
|
he shows from other circumstances that he was well acquainted.
|
|
His rule appears to have been to state just so much of the truth
|
|
as would leave on the mind of his readers a correct impression,
|
|
at the least cost of pain to the sensitive folks he was writing about.
|
|
He states his own opinions and feelings, and leaves it to be
|
|
inferred that he has good grounds for adopting them; but he spares
|
|
the Americans the bitterness which a detail of the circumstances
|
|
would have produced.
|
|
|
|
If any one chooses to say that some wicked antipathy to twelve
|
|
millions of strangers is the origin of my opinion, I must
|
|
bear it; and were the question one of mere idle speculation,
|
|
I certainly would not court the abuse I must meet for stating it.
|
|
But it is not so.
|
|
|
|
. . . . . . .
|
|
|
|
The candor which he expresses, and evidently feels, they mistake for irony,
|
|
or totally distrust; his unwillingness to give pain to persons from
|
|
whom he has received kindness, they scornfully reject as affectation,
|
|
and although they must know right well, in their own secret hearts,
|
|
how infinitely more they lay at his mercy than he has chosen to betray;
|
|
they pretend, even to themselves, that he has exaggerated the bad points
|
|
of their character and institutions; whereas, the truth is, that he has
|
|
let them off with a degree of tenderness which may be quite suitable
|
|
for him to exercise, however little merited; while, at the same time,
|
|
he has most industriously magnified their merits, whenever he could possibly
|
|
find anything favorable.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
APPENDIX D
|
|
|
|
THE UNDYING HEAD
|
|
|
|
IN a remote part of the North lived a man and his sister,
|
|
who had never seen a human being. Seldom, if ever, had the man
|
|
any cause to go from home; for, as his wants demanded food,
|
|
he had only to go a little distance from the lodge, and there,
|
|
in some particular spot, place his arrows, with their barbs
|
|
in the ground. Telling his sister where they had been placed,
|
|
every morning she would go in search, and never fail of
|
|
finding each stuck through the heart of a deer. She had then
|
|
only to drag them into the lodge and prepare their food.
|
|
Thus she lived till she attained womanhood, when one day
|
|
her brother, whose name was Iamo, said to her: 'Sister, the time
|
|
is at hand when you will be ill. Listen to my advice.
|
|
If you do not, it will probably be the cause of my death.
|
|
Take the implements with which we kindle our fires.
|
|
Go some distance from our lodge and build a separate fire.
|
|
When you are in want of food, I will tell you where to find it.
|
|
You must cook for yourself, and I will for myself.
|
|
When you are ill, do not attempt to come near the lodge,
|
|
or bring any of the utensils you use. Be sure always
|
|
to fasten to your belt the implements you need, for you
|
|
do not know when the time will come. As for myself, I must
|
|
do the best I can.' His sister promised to obey him in all
|
|
he had said.
|
|
|
|
Shortly after, her brother had cause to go from home.
|
|
She was alone in her lodge, combing her hair. She had just untied
|
|
the belt to which the implements were fastened, when suddenly
|
|
the event, to which her brother had alluded, occurred.
|
|
She ran out of the lodge, but in her haste forgot the belt.
|
|
Afraid to return, she stood for some time thinking.
|
|
Finally, she decided to enter the lodge and get it.
|
|
For, thought she, my brother is not at home, and I will
|
|
stay but a moment to catch hold of it. She went back.
|
|
Running in suddenly, she caught hold of it, and was coming out
|
|
when her brother came in sight. He knew what was the matter.
|
|
'Oh,' he said, 'did I not tell you to take care.
|
|
But now you have killed me.' She was going on her way,
|
|
but her brother said to her, 'What can you do there now.
|
|
The accident has happened. Go in, and stay where you
|
|
have always stayed. And what will become of you?
|
|
You have killed me.'
|
|
|
|
He then laid aside his hunting-dress and accoutrements, and soon
|
|
after both his feet began to turn black, so that he could not move.
|
|
Still he directed his sister where to place the arrows,
|
|
that she might always have food. The inflammation continued
|
|
to increase, and had now reached his first rib; and he said:
|
|
'Sister, my end is near. You must do as I tell you.
|
|
You see my medicine-sack, and my war-club tied to it. It contains
|
|
all my medicines, and my war-plumes, and my paints of all colors.
|
|
As soon as the inflammation reaches my breast, you will take
|
|
my war-club. It has a sharp point, and you will cut off my head.
|
|
When it is free from my body, take it, place its neck in the sack,
|
|
which you must open at one end. Then hang it up in its former place.
|
|
Do not forget my bow and arrows. One of the last you
|
|
will take to procure food. The remainder, tie in my sack,
|
|
and then hang it up, so that I can look towards the door.
|
|
Now and then I will speak to you, but not often.' His sister again
|
|
promised to obey.
|
|
|
|
In a little time his breast was affected. 'Now,' said he,
|
|
'take the club and strike off my head.' She was afraid, but he told
|
|
her to muster courage. 'Strike,' said he, and a smile was on his face.
|
|
Mustering all her courage, she gave the blow and cut off the head.
|
|
'Now,' said the head, 'place me where I told you.'
|
|
And fearfully she obeyed it in all its commands.
|
|
Retaining its animation, it looked around the lodge as usual,
|
|
and it would command its sister to go in such places as it thought
|
|
would procure for her the flesh of different animals she needed.
|
|
One day the head said: 'The time is not distant when I shall be freed
|
|
from this situation, and I shall have to undergo many sore evils.
|
|
So the superior manito decrees, and I must bear all patiently.'
|
|
In this situation we must leave the head.
|
|
|
|
In a certain part of the country was a village inhabited by a
|
|
numerous and warlike band of Indians. In this village was a family
|
|
of ten young men--brothers. It was in the spring of the year
|
|
that the youngest of these blackened his face and fasted.
|
|
His dreams were propitious. Having ended his fast, he went
|
|
secretly for his brothers at night, so that none in the village
|
|
could overhear or find out the direction they intended to go.
|
|
Though their drum was heard, yet that was a common occurrence.
|
|
Having ended the usual formalities, he told how favorable
|
|
his dreams were, and that he had called them together
|
|
to know if they would accompany him in a war excursion.
|
|
They all answered they would. The third brother from the eldest,
|
|
noted for his oddities, coming up with his war-club when his brother
|
|
had ceased speaking, jumped up. 'Yes,' said he, 'I will go,
|
|
and this will be the way I will treat those I am going to fight;'
|
|
and he struck the post in the center of the lodge, and gave a yell.
|
|
The others spoke to him, saying: 'Slow, slow, Mudjikewis, when you
|
|
are in other people's lodges.' So he sat down. Then, in turn,
|
|
they took the drum, and sang their songs, and closed with a feast.
|
|
The youngest told them not to whisper their intention
|
|
to their wives, but secretly to prepare for their journey.
|
|
They all promised obedience, and Mudjikewis was the first
|
|
to say so.
|
|
|
|
The time for their departure drew near. Word was given to
|
|
assemble on a certain night, when they would depart immediately.
|
|
Mudjikewis was loud in his demands for his moccasins.
|
|
Several times his wife asked him the reason. 'Besides,' said she,
|
|
'you have a good pair on.' 'Quick, quick,' said he, 'since you
|
|
must know, we are going on a war excursion; so be quick.'
|
|
He thus revealed the secret. That night they met and started.
|
|
The snow was on the ground, and they traveled all night, lest others
|
|
should follow them. When it was daylight, the leader took snow
|
|
and made a ball of it, then tossing it into the air, he said:
|
|
'It was in this way I saw snow fall in a dream, so that I could not
|
|
be tracked.' And he told them to keep close to each other for fear
|
|
of losing themselves, as the snow began to fall in very large flakes.
|
|
Near as they walked, it was with difficulty they could see each other.
|
|
The snow continued falling all that day and the following night,
|
|
so it was impossible to track them.
|
|
|
|
They had now walked for several days, and Mudjikewis was
|
|
always in the rear. One day, running suddenly forward,
|
|
he gave the SAW-SAW-QUAN, <footnote [War-whoop.]> and struck
|
|
a tree with his war-club, and it broke into pieces as if struck
|
|
with lightning. 'Brothers,' said he, 'this will be the way I
|
|
will serve those we are going to fight.' The leader answered,
|
|
'Slow, slow, Mudjikewis, the one I lead you to is not to be thought
|
|
of so lightly.' Again he fell back and thought to himself:
|
|
'What! what! who can this be he is leading us to?'
|
|
He felt fearful and was silent. Day after day they traveled on,
|
|
till they came to an extensive plain, on the borders of which
|
|
human bones were bleaching in the sun. The leader spoke:
|
|
'They are the bones of those who have gone before us.
|
|
None has ever yet returned to tell the sad tale of their fate.'
|
|
Again Mudjikewis became restless, and, running forward,
|
|
gave the accustomed yell. Advancing to a large rock which
|
|
stood above the ground, he struck it, and it fell to pieces.
|
|
'See, brothers,' said he, 'thus will I treat those whom we are
|
|
going to fight.' 'Still, still,' once more said the leader;
|
|
'he to whom I am leading you is not to be compared
|
|
to the rock.'
|
|
|
|
Mudjikewis fell back thoughtful, saying to himself: 'I wonder
|
|
who this can be that he is going to attack;' and he was afraid.
|
|
Still they continued to see the remains of former warriors,
|
|
who had been to the place where they were now going,
|
|
some of whom had retreated as far back as the place where they
|
|
first saw the bones, beyond which no one had ever escaped.
|
|
At last they came to a piece of rising ground, from which they
|
|
plainly distinguished, sleeping on a distant mountain,
|
|
a mammoth bear.
|
|
|
|
The distance between them was very great, but the size of the animal
|
|
caused him to be plainly seen. 'There,' said the leader,
|
|
'it is he to whom I am leading you; here our troubles will commence,
|
|
for he is a mishemokwa and a manito. It is he who has that we
|
|
prize so dearly (i.e. wampum), to obtain which, the warriors whose
|
|
bones we saw, sacrificed their lives. You must not be fearful:
|
|
be manly. We shall find him asleep.' Then the leader went
|
|
forward and touched the belt around the animal's neck.
|
|
'This,' said he, 'is what we must get. It contains the wampum.'
|
|
Then they requested the eldest to try and slip the belt over
|
|
the bear's head, who appeared to be fast asleep, as he was not
|
|
in the least disturbed by the attempt to obtain the belt.
|
|
All their efforts were in vain, till it came to the one
|
|
next the youngest. He tried, and the belt moved nearly
|
|
over the monster's head, but he could get it no farther.
|
|
Then the youngest one, and the leader, made his attempt, and succeeded.
|
|
Placing it on the back of the oldest, he said, 'Now we must run,'
|
|
and off they started. When one became fatigued with its weight,
|
|
another would relieve him. Thus they ran till they had passed
|
|
the bones of all former warriors, and were some distance beyond,
|
|
when looking back, they saw the monster slowly rising.
|
|
He stood some time before he missed his wampum. Soon they heard his
|
|
tremendous howl, like distant thunder, slowly filling all the sky;
|
|
and then they heard him speak and say, 'Who can it be that has
|
|
dared to steal my wampum? earth is not so large but that I
|
|
can find them;' and he descended from the hill in pursuit.
|
|
As if convulsed, the earth shook with every jump he made.
|
|
Very soon he approached the party. They, however, kept the belt,
|
|
exchanging it from one to another, and encouraging each other;
|
|
but he gained on them fast. 'Brothers,' said the leader,
|
|
'has never any one of you, when fasting, dreamed of some friendly
|
|
spirit who would aid you as a guardian?' A dead silence followed.
|
|
'Well,' said he, 'fasting, I dreamed of being in danger
|
|
of instant death, when I saw a small lodge, with smoke curling
|
|
from its top. An old man lived in it, and I dreamed he helped me;
|
|
and may it be verified soon,' he said, running forward and
|
|
giving the peculiar yell, and a howl as if the sounds came
|
|
from the depths of his stomach, and what is called CHECAUDUM.
|
|
Getting upon a piece of rising ground, behold! a lodge, with smoke
|
|
curling from its top, appeared. This gave them all new strength,
|
|
and they ran forward and entered it. The leader spoke to
|
|
the old man who sat in the lodge, saying, 'Nemesho, help us;
|
|
we claim your protection, for the great bear will kill us.'
|
|
'Sit down and eat, my grandchildren,' said the old man.
|
|
'Who is a great manito?' said he. 'There is none but me;
|
|
but let me look,' and he opened the door of the lodge, when,
|
|
lo! at a little distance he saw the enraged animal coming on,
|
|
with slow but powerful leaps. He closed the door.
|
|
'Yes,' said he, 'he is indeed a great manito: my grandchildren,
|
|
you will be the cause of my losing my life; you asked my protection,
|
|
and I granted it; so now, come what may, I will protect you.
|
|
When the bear arrives at the door, you must run out of the other
|
|
door of the lodge.' Then putting his hand to the side of
|
|
the lodge where he sat, he brought out a bag which he opened.
|
|
Taking out two small black dogs, he placed them before him.
|
|
'These are the ones I use when I fight,' said he; and he commenced
|
|
patting with both hands the sides of one of them, and he began
|
|
to swell out, so that he soon filled the lodge by his bulk;
|
|
and he had great strong teeth. When he attained his full
|
|
size he growled, and from that moment, as from instinct,
|
|
he jumped out at the door and met the bear, who in another leap
|
|
would have reached the lodge. A terrible combat ensued.
|
|
The skies rang with the howls of the fierce monsters.
|
|
The remaining dog soon took the field. The brothers, at the onset,
|
|
took the advice of the old man, and escaped through the opposite
|
|
side of the lodge. They had not proceeded far before they heard
|
|
the dying cry of one of the dogs, and soon after of the other.
|
|
'Well,' said the leader, 'the old man will share their fate:
|
|
so run; he will soon be after us.' They started with fresh vigor,
|
|
for they had received food from the old man: but very soon the bear
|
|
came in sight, and again was fast gaining upon them. Again the leader
|
|
asked the brothers if they could do nothing for their safety.
|
|
All were silent. The leader, running forward, did as before.
|
|
'I dreamed,' he cried, 'that, being in great trouble, an old
|
|
man helped me who was a manito; we shall soon see his lodge.'
|
|
Taking courage, they still went on. After going a short distance
|
|
they saw the lodge of the old manito. They entered immediately
|
|
and claimed his protection, telling him a manito was after them.
|
|
The old man, setting meat before them, said: 'Eat! who is a
|
|
manito? there is no manito but me; there is none whom I fear;'
|
|
and the earth trembled as the monster advanced. The old man
|
|
opened the door and saw him coming. He shut it slowly, and said:
|
|
'Yes, my grandchildren, you have brought trouble upon me.'
|
|
Procuring his medicine-sack, he took out his small war-clubs of
|
|
black stone, and told the young men to run through the other side
|
|
of the lodge. As he handled the clubs, they became very large,
|
|
and the old man stepped out just as the bear reached the door.
|
|
Then striking him with one of the clubs, it broke in pieces;
|
|
the bear stumbled. Renewing the attempt with the other
|
|
war-club, that also was broken, but the bear fell senseless.
|
|
Each blow the old man gave him sounded like a clap of thunder,
|
|
and the howls of the bear ran along till they filled the
|
|
heavens.
|
|
|
|
The young men had now run some distance, when they looked back.
|
|
They could see that the bear was recovering from the blows.
|
|
First he moved his paws, and soon they saw him rise
|
|
on his feet. The old man shared the fate of the first,
|
|
for they now heard his cries as he was torn in pieces.
|
|
Again the monster was in pursuit, and fast overtaking them.
|
|
Not yet discouraged, the young men kept on their way;
|
|
but the bear was now so close, that the leader once more applied
|
|
to his brothers, but they could do nothing. 'Well,' said he,
|
|
'my dreams will soon be exhausted; after this I have but one more.'
|
|
He advanced, invoking his guardian spirit to aid him.
|
|
'Once,' said he, 'I dreamed that, being sorely pressed, I came to a
|
|
large lake, on the shore of which was a canoe, partly out of water,
|
|
having ten paddles all in readiness. Do not fear,' he cried,
|
|
'we shall soon get it.' And so it was, even as he had said.
|
|
Coming to the lake, they saw the canoe with ten paddles,
|
|
and immediately they embarked. Scarcely had they reached the center
|
|
of the lake, when they saw the bear arrive at its borders.
|
|
Lifting himself on his hind legs, he looked all around.
|
|
Then he waded into the water; then losing his footing he turned back,
|
|
and commenced making the circuit of the lake. Meantime the party
|
|
remained stationary in the center to watch his movements.
|
|
He traveled all around, till at last he came to the place from
|
|
whence he started. Then he commenced drinking up the water,
|
|
and they saw the current fast setting in towards his open mouth.
|
|
The leader encouraged them to paddle hard for the opposite shore.
|
|
When only a short distance from land, the current had increased
|
|
so much, that they were drawn back by it, and all their efforts
|
|
to reach it were in vain.
|
|
|
|
Then the leader again spoke, telling them to meet their fates manfully.
|
|
'Now is the time, Mudjikewis,' said he, 'to show your prowess.
|
|
Take courage and sit at the bow of the canoe; and when it approaches
|
|
his mouth, try what effect your club will have on his head.'
|
|
He obeyed, and stood ready to give the blow; while the leader,
|
|
who steered, directed the canoe for the open mouth of the monster.
|
|
|
|
Rapidly advancing, they were just about to enter his mouth, when Mudjikewis
|
|
struck him a tremendous blow on the head, and gave the SAW-SAW-QUAN.
|
|
The bear's limbs doubled under him, and he fell, stunned by the blow.
|
|
But before Mudjikewis could renew it, the monster disgorged all
|
|
the water he had drank, with a force which sent the canoe with great
|
|
velocity to the opposite shore. Instantly leaving the canoe,
|
|
again they fled, and on they went till they were completely exhausted.
|
|
The earth again shook, and soon they saw the monster hard
|
|
after them. Their spirits drooped, and they felt discouraged.
|
|
The leader exerted himself, by actions and words, to cheer them up;
|
|
and once more he asked them if they thought of nothing, or could
|
|
do nothing for their rescue; and, as before, all were silent.
|
|
'Then,' he said, 'this is the last time I can apply to my guardian spirit.
|
|
Now, if we do not succeed, our fates are decided.' He ran forward,
|
|
invoking his spirit with great earnestness, and gave the yell.
|
|
'We shall soon arrive,' said he to his brothers, 'at the place where
|
|
my last guardian spirit dwells. In him I place great confidence.
|
|
Do not, do not be afraid, or your limbs will be fear-bound. We shall
|
|
soon reach his lodge. Run, run,' he cried.
|
|
|
|
Returning now to Iamo, he had passed all the time in the same
|
|
condition we had left him, the head directing his sister,
|
|
in order to procure food, where to place the magic arrows,
|
|
and speaking at long intervals. One day the sister saw the eyes
|
|
of the head brighten, as if with pleasure. At last it spoke.
|
|
'Oh, sister,' it said, 'in what a pitiful situation you
|
|
have been the cause of placing me! Soon, very soon, a party
|
|
of young men will arrive and apply to me for aid; but alas!
|
|
How can I give what I would have done with so much pleasure?
|
|
Nevertheless, take two arrows, and place them where you have
|
|
been in the habit of placing the others, and have meat prepared
|
|
and cooked before they arrive. When you hear them coming
|
|
and calling on my name, go out and say, "Alas! it is long
|
|
ago that an accident befell him. I was the cause of it."
|
|
If they still come near, ask them in, and set meat before them.
|
|
And now you must follow my directions strictly. When the bear
|
|
is near, go out and meet him. You will take my medicine-sack, bows
|
|
and arrows, and my head. You must then untie the sack, and spread
|
|
out before you my paints of all colors, my war-eagle feathers,
|
|
my tufts of dried hair, and whatever else it contains.
|
|
As the bear approaches, you will take all these articles,
|
|
one by one, and say to him, "This is my deceased brother's paint,"
|
|
and so on with all the other articles, throwing each of them
|
|
as far as you can. The virtues contained in them will cause
|
|
him to totter; and, to complete his destruction, you will take
|
|
my head, and that too you will cast as far off as you can,
|
|
crying aloud, "See, this is my deceased brother's head."
|
|
He will then fall senseless. By this time the young men
|
|
will have eaten, and you will call them to your assistance.
|
|
You must then cut the carcass into pieces, yes, into small pieces,
|
|
and scatter them to the four winds; for, unless you do this,
|
|
he will again revive.' She promised that all should be
|
|
done as he said. She had only time to prepare the meat,
|
|
when the voice of the leader was heard calling upon Iamo for aid.
|
|
The woman went out and said as her brother had directed.
|
|
But the war party being closely pursued, came up to the lodge.
|
|
She invited them in, and placed the meat before them.
|
|
While they were eating, they heard the bear approaching.
|
|
Untying the medicine-sack and taking the head, she had all
|
|
in readiness for his approach. When he came up she did
|
|
as she had been told; and, before she had expended the paints
|
|
and feathers, the bear began to totter, but, still advancing,
|
|
came close to the woman. Saying as she was commanded, she then
|
|
took the head, and cast it as far from her as she could.
|
|
As it rolled along the ground, the blood, excited by the feelings
|
|
of the head in this terrible scene, gushed from the nose and mouth.
|
|
The bear, tottering, soon fell with a tremendous noise.
|
|
Then she cried for help, and the young men came
|
|
rushing out, having partially regained their strength and
|
|
spirits.
|
|
|
|
Mudjikewis, stepping up, gave a yell and struck him a blow upon
|
|
the head. This he repeated, till it seemed like a mass of brains,
|
|
while the others, as quick as possible, cut him into very small pieces,
|
|
which they then scattered in every direction. While thus employed,
|
|
happening to look around where they had thrown the meat,
|
|
wonderful to behold, they saw starting up and turning off in every
|
|
direction small black bears, such as are seen at the present day.
|
|
The country was soon overspread with these black animals.
|
|
And it was from this monster that the present race of bears
|
|
derived their origin.
|
|
|
|
Having thus overcome their pursuer, they returned to the lodge.
|
|
In the meantime, the woman, gathering the implements she had used,
|
|
and the head, placed them again in the sack. But the head did not
|
|
speak again, probably from its great exertion to overcome the monster.
|
|
|
|
Having spent so much time and traversed so vast a country in their flight,
|
|
the young men gave up the idea of ever returning to their own country,
|
|
and game being plenty, they determined to remain where they now were.
|
|
One day they moved off some distance from the lodge for the
|
|
purpose of hunting, having left the wampum with the woman.
|
|
They were very successful, and amused themselves, as all young
|
|
men do when alone, by talking and jesting with each other.
|
|
One of them spoke and said, 'We have all this sport to ourselves;
|
|
let us go and ask our sister if she will not let us bring the head
|
|
to this place, as it is still alive. It may be pleased to hear us talk,
|
|
and be in our company. In the meantime take food to our sister.'
|
|
They went and requested the head. She told them to take it,
|
|
and they took it to their hunting-grounds, and tried to amuse it,
|
|
but only at times did they see its eyes beam with pleasure.
|
|
One day, while busy in their encampment, they were unexpectedly attacked
|
|
by unknown Indians. The skirmish was long contested and bloody;
|
|
many of their foes were slain, but still they were thirty to one.
|
|
The young men fought desperately till they were all killed.
|
|
The attacking party then retreated to a height of ground,
|
|
to muster their men, and to count the number of missing and slain.
|
|
One of their young men had stayed away, and, in endeavoring
|
|
to overtake them, came to the place where the head was hung up.
|
|
Seeing that alone retain animation, he eyed it for some time
|
|
with fear and surprise. However, he took it down and opened
|
|
the sack, and was much pleased to see the beautiful feathers,
|
|
one of which he placed on his head.
|
|
|
|
Starting off, it waved gracefully over him till he reached his party,
|
|
when he threw down the head and sack, and told them how he had
|
|
found it, and that the sack was full of paints and feathers.
|
|
They all looked at the head and made sport of it.
|
|
Numbers of the young men took the paint and painted themselves,
|
|
and one of the party took the head by the hair and said--
|
|
|
|
'Look, you ugly thing, and see your paints on the faces of warriors.'
|
|
|
|
But the feathers were so beautiful, that numbers of them
|
|
also placed them on their heads. Then again they used all
|
|
kinds of indignity to the head, for which they were in turn
|
|
repaid by the death of those who had used the feathers.
|
|
Then the chief commanded them to throw away all except the head.
|
|
'We will see,' said he, 'when we get home, what we can do with it.
|
|
We will try to make it shut its eyes.'
|
|
|
|
When they reached their homes they took it to the council-lodge,
|
|
and hung it up before the fire, fastening it with raw hide soaked,
|
|
which would shrink and become tightened by the action of the fire.
|
|
'We will then see,' they said, 'if we cannot make it shut its eyes.'
|
|
|
|
Meantime, for several days, the sister had been waiting for the young
|
|
men to bring back the head; till, at last, getting impatient,
|
|
she went in search of it. The young men she found lying within
|
|
short distances of each other, dead, and covered with wounds.
|
|
Various other bodies lay scattered in different directions around them.
|
|
She searched for the head and sack, but they were nowhere to be found.
|
|
She raised her voice and wept, and blackened her face. Then she
|
|
walked in different directions, till she came to the place from whence
|
|
the head had been taken. Then she found the magic bow and arrows,
|
|
where the young men, ignorant of their qualities, had left them.
|
|
She thought to herself that she would find her brother's head, and came
|
|
to a piece of rising ground, and there saw some of his paints and feathers.
|
|
These she carefully put up, and hung upon the branch of a tree till
|
|
her return.
|
|
|
|
At dusk she arrived at the first lodge of a very extensive village.
|
|
Here she used a charm, common among Indians when they wish to meet
|
|
with a kind reception. On applying to the old man and woman
|
|
of the lodge, she was kindly received. She made known her errand.
|
|
The old man promised to aid her, and told her the head was hung up before
|
|
the council-fire, and that the chiefs of the village, with their young men,
|
|
kept watch over it continually. The former are considered as manitoes.
|
|
She said she only wished to see it, and would be satisfied if she could only
|
|
get to the door of the lodge. She knew she had not sufficient power to take
|
|
it by force. 'Come with me,' said the Indian, 'I will take you there.'
|
|
They went, and they took their seats near the door. The council-lodge
|
|
was filled with warriors, amusing themselves with games, and constantly
|
|
keeping up a fire to smoke the head, as they said, to make dry meat.
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They saw the head move, and not knowing what to make of it, one spoke
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and said: 'Ha! ha! It is beginning to feel the effects of the smoke.'
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The sister looked up from the door, and her eyes met those of her brother,
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and tears rolled down the cheeks of the head. 'Well,' said the chief,
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'I thought we would make you do something at last. Look! look at it--
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shedding tears,' said he to those around him; and they all laughed and passed
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their jokes upon it. The chief, looking around, and observing the woman,
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after some time said to the man who came with her: 'Who have you got there?
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I have never seen that woman before in our village.' 'Yes,' replied the man,
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'you have seen her; she is a relation of mine, and seldom goes out. She stays
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at my lodge, and asked me to allow her to come with me to this place.'
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In the center of the lodge sat one of those young men who are always forward,
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and fond of boasting and displaying themselves before others.
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'Why,' said he, 'I have seen her often, and it is to this lodge I go almost
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every night to court her.' All the others laughed and continued their games.
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The young man did not know he was telling a lie to the woman's advantage,
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who by that means escaped.
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She returned to the man's lodge, and immediately set out for her
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own country. Coming to the spot where the bodies of her adopted
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brothers lay, she placed them together, their feet toward the east.
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Then taking an ax which she had, she cast it up into the air,
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crying out, 'Brothers, get up from under it, or it will fall on you.'
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This she repeated three times, and the third time the brothers all arose
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and stood on their feet.
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Mudjikewis commenced rubbing his eyes and stretching himself.
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'Why,' said he, 'I have overslept myself.' 'No, indeed,'
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said one of the others, 'do you not know we were all killed,
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and that it is our sister who has brought us to life?'
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The young men took the bodies of their enemies and burned them.
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Soon after, the woman went to procure wives for them,
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in a distant country, they knew not where; but she returned
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with ten young women, which she gave to the ten young men,
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beginning with the eldest. Mudjikewis stepped to and fro,
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uneasy lest he should not get the one he liked.
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But he was not disappointed, for she fell to his lot.
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And they were well matched, for she was a female magician.
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They then all moved into a very large lodge, and their sister
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told them that the women must now take turns in going
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to her brother's head every night, trying to untie it.
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They all said they would do so with pleasure. The eldest
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made the first attempt, and with a rushing noise she fled
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through the air.
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Toward daylight she returned. She had been unsuccessful, as she succeeded
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in untying only one of the knots. All took their turns regularly,
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and each one succeeded in untying only one knot each time.
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But when the youngest went, she commenced the work as soon
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as she reached the lodge; although it had always been occupied,
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still the Indians never could see any one. For ten nights now,
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the smoke had not ascended, but filled the lodge and drove them out.
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This last night they were all driven out, and the young woman carried
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off the head.
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The young people and the sister heard the young woman
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coming high through the air, and they heard her saying:
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'Prepare the body of our brother.' And as soon as they heard it,
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they went to a small lodge where the black body of Iamo lay.
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His sister commenced cutting the neck part, from which the neck
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had been severed. She cut so deep as to cause it to bleed;
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and the others who were present, by rubbing the body and
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applying medicines, expelled the blackness. In the meantime,
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the one who brought it, by cutting the neck of the head, caused that
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also to bleed.
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As soon as she arrived, they placed that close to the body,
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and, by aid of medicines and various other means, succeeded in
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restoring Iamo to all his former beauty and manliness.
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All rejoiced in the happy termination of their troubles,
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and they had spent some time joyfully together, when Iamo said:
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'Now I will divide the wampum,' and getting the belt which contained
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it, he commenced with the eldest, giving it in equal portions.
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But the youngest got the most splendid and beautiful,
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as the bottom of the belt held the richest and rarest.
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They were told that, since they had all once died, and were
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restored to life, they were no longer mortal, but spirits,
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and they were assigned different stations in the invisible world.
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Only Mudjikewis's place was, however, named. He was to direct
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the west wind, hence generally called Kebeyun, there to remain for ever.
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They were commanded, as they had it in their power, to do good
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to the inhabitants of the earth, and, forgetting their sufferings
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in procuring the wampum, to give all things with a liberal hand.
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And they were also commanded that it should also be held by them sacred;
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those grains or shells of the pale hue to be emblematic of peace,
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while those of the darker hue would lead to evil and war.
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The spirits then, amid songs and shouts, took their flight to their
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respective abodes on high; while Iamo, with his sister Iamoqua,
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descended into the depths below.
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End of the Project Gutenberg Edition of `Life on the Mississippi'.
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