the john muir exhibit - writings - a_thousand_mile_walk_to_the_gulf - chapter 5
Chapter 5
Through Florida Swamps and Forests
Of the people of the States that I have now passed, I best like the
Georgians. They have charming manners, and their dwellings are mostly larger
and better than those of adjacent States. However costly or ornamental
their homes or their manners, they do not, like those of the New Englander,
appear as the fruits of intense and painful sacrifice and training, but
are entirely divested of artificial weights and measures, and seem to pervade
and twine about their characters as spontaneous growths with the durability
and charm of living nature.
In particular, Georgians, even the commonest, have a most charmingly
cordial way of saying to strangers, as they proceed on their journey, "I
wish you well, sir." The negroes of Georgia, too, are extremely mannerly
and polite, and appear always to be delighted to find opportunity for obliging
anybody.
Athens contains many beautiful residences. I never before saw so much
about a home that was so evidently done for beauty only, although this
is by no means a universal characteristic of Georgian homes. Nearly all
well-to-do farmers' families in Georgia and Tennessee spin and weave their
own cloth. This work is almost all done by the mothers and daughters and
consumes much of their time.
The traces of war are not only apparent on the broken fields, burnt
fences, mills, and woods ruthlessly slaughtered, but also on the countenances
of the people. A few years after a forest has been burned another generation
of bright and happy trees arises, in purest, freshest vigor; only the old
trees, wholly or half dead, bear marks of the calamity. So with the people
of this war-field. Happy, unscarred, and unclouded youth is growing up
around the aged, half-consumed, and fallen parents, who bear in sad measure
the ineffaceable marks of the farthest-reaching and most infernal of all
civilized calamities.
Since the commencement of my floral pilgrimage I have seen much that
is not only new, but altogether unallied, unacquainted with the plants
of my former life. I have seen magnolias, tupelo, live-oak, Kentucky oak,
tillandsia, long-leafed pine, palmetto, schrankia, and whole forests of
strange trees and vine-tied thickets of blooming shrubs; whole meadowfuls
of magnificent bamboo and lakefuls of lilies, all new to me; yet I still
press eagerly on to Florida as the special home of the tropical plants
I am looking for, and I feel sure I shall not be disappointed.
The same day on which the money arrived I took passage on the steamship
Sylvan Shore for Fernandina, Florida. The daylight part of this sail along
the coast of Florida was full of novelty, and by association awakened memories
of my Scottish days at Dunbar on the Firth of Forth.
On board I had civilized conversation with a Southern planter on topics
that are found floating in the mind of every white man down here
who
has a single thought. I also met a brother Scotchman, who was especially
interesting and had some ideas outside of Southern politics. Altogether
my halfway and night on board the steamer were pleasant, and carried me
past a very sickly, entangled, overflowed, and unwalkable piece of forest.
It is pretty well known that a short geological time ago the ocean covered
the sandy level margin, extending from the foot of the Alleghanies to the
present coast-line, and in receding left many basins for lakes and swamps.
The land is still encroaching on the sea, and it does so not evenly, in
a regular line, but in fringing lagoons and inlets and dotlike coral islands.
It is on the coast strip of isles and peninsulas that sea-island cotton
is grown. Some of these small islands are afloat, anchored only by the
roots of mangroves and rushes. For a few hours our steamer sailed in the
open sea, exposed to its waves, but most of the time she threaded her
way among the lagoons, the
home of alligators and countless ducks
and waders.
October 15.
To-day, at last, I reached Florida, the so-called
"Land of Flowers," that I had so long waited for, wondering if
after all my longings and prayers would be in vain, and I should die without
a glimpse of the flowery Canaan. But here it is, at the distance of a few
yards!--a flat, watery, reedy coast, with clumps of mangrove and forests
of moss-dressed, strange trees appearing low in the distance. The steamer
finds her way among the reedy islands like a duck, and I step on a rickety
wharf. A few steps more take me to a rickety town, Fernandina. I discover
a baker, buy some bread, and without asking a single question, make for
the shady, gloomy groves.
In visiting Florida in dreams, of either day or night, I always came
suddenly on a close forest of trees, every one in flower, and bent down
and entangled to network by luxuriant, bright-blooming vines, and over
all a flood of bright sunlight. But such was not the gate
by which
I entered the promised land. Salt marshes, belonging more to the sea than
to the land; with groves here and there, green and unflowered, sunk to
the shoulders in sedges and rushes; with trees farther back, ill defined
in their boundary, and instead of rising in hilly waves and swellings,
stretching inland in low water-like levels.
We were all discharged by the captain of the steamer without breakfast,
and, after meeting and examining the new plants that crowded about me,
I threw down my press and little bag beneath a thicket, where there was
a dry spot on some broken heaps of grass and roots, something like a deserted
muskrat house, and applied myself to my bread breakfast. Everything in
earth and sky had an impression of strangeness; not a mark of friendly
recognition, not a breath, not a spirit whisper of sympathy came from anything
about me, and of course I was lonely. I lay on my elbow eating my bread,
gazing, and listening to the profound strangeness.
While thus engaged I was startled from these gatherings of melancholy
by a rustling sound in the rushes behind me. Had my mind been in health,
and my body not starved, I should only have turned calmly to the noise.
But in this half-starved, unfriended condition I could have no healthy
thought, and I at once believed that the sound came from an alligator.
I fancied I could feel the stroke of his long notched tail and could see
his big jaws and rows of teeth, closing with a springy snap on me, as I
had seen in pictures.
Well, I don't know the exact measure of my fright either in time or
pain, but when I did come to a knowledge of the truth, my man-eating alligator
became a tall white crane, hand-some as a minister from spirit land
-- "only
that." I was ashamed and tried to excuse myself on account of Bonaventure
anxiety and hunger.
Florida is so watery and vine-tied that pathless wanderings are not
easily possible in any direction. I started to cross the State by a gap
hewn for the locomotive, walking sometimes between the rails, stepping
from tie to tie, or walking on the strip of sand at the sides, gazing into
the mysterious forest, Nature's own. It is impossible to write the dimmest
picture of plant grandeur so redundant, unfathomable.
Short was the measure of my walk to-day. A new, canelike grass, or big
lily, or gorgeous flower belonging to tree or vine, would catch my attention,
and I would throw down my bag and press and splash through the coffee-brown
water for specimens. Frequently I sank deeper and deeper until compelled
to turn back and make the attempt in another and still another place. Oftentimes
I was tangled in a labyrinth of armed vines like a fly in a spider-web.
At all times, whether wading or climbing a tree for specimens of fruit,
I was overwhelmed with the vastness and unapproachableness of the great
guarded sea of sunny plants.
Magnolia grandiflora
I had seen in Georgia; but its home, its
better land, is here. Its large dark-green leaves, glossy bright above
and rusty brown beneath, gleam and mirror the sunbeams most gloriously
among countless flower-heaps of the climbing, smothering vines. It is bright
also in fruit and more tropical in form and expression than the orange.
It speaks itself a prince among its fellows.
Occasionally, I came to a little strip of open sand, planted with pine
(Pinus palustris
or
Cubensis).
Even these spots were mostly
wet, though lighted with free sunshine, and adorned with purple liatris,
and orange-colored
Osmunda cinnamomea.
But the grandest discovery
of this great wild day was the palmetto.
I was meeting so many strange plants that I was much excited, making
many stops to get specimens. But I could not force my way far through the
swampy forest, although so tempting and full of promise. Regardless of
water snakes or insects, I endeavored repeatedly to force a way through
the tough vine-tangles, but seldom succeeded in getting farther than a
few hundred yards.
It was while feeling sad to think that I was
only walking on the
edge of the vast wood, that I caught sight of the first palmetto in a grassy
place, standing almost alone. A few magnolias were near it, and bald cypresses,
but it was not shaded by them. They tell us that plants are perishable,
soulless creatures, that only man is immortal, etc.; but this, I think,
is something that we know very nearly nothing about. Anyhow, this palm
was indescribably impressive and told me grander things than I ever got
from human priest.
This vegetable has a plain gray shaft, round as a broom-handle, and
a crown of varnished channeled leaves. It is a plainer plant than the humblest
of Wisconsin oaks; but, whether rocking and rustling in the wind or poised
thoughtful and calm in the sunshine, it has a power of expression not excelled
by any plant high or low that I have met in my whole walk thus far.
This, my first specimen, was not very tall, only about twenty-five feet
high, with fifteen or twenty leaves, arching equally and evenly all around.
Each leaf was about ten feet in length,
the blade four feet, the stalk
six The leaves are channeled like half-open clams and are highly polished,
so that they reflect the sunlight like glass. The undeveloped leaves on
the top stand erect, closely folded, all together forming an oval crown
over which the tropic light is poured and reflected from its slanting mirrors
in sparks and splinters and long-rayed stars.
I am now in the hot gardens of the sun, where the palm meets the pine,
longed and prayed for and often visited in dreams, and, though lonely to-night
amid this multitude of strangers, strange plants, strange winds blowing
gently, whispering, cooing, in a language I never learned, and strange
birds also, everything solid or spiritual full of influences that I never
before felt, yet I thank the Lord with all my heart for his goodness in
granting me admission to this magnificent realm.
October 16.
Last evening when I was in the trackless woods, the
great mysterious night be-coming more mysterious in the thickening darkness,
I gave up hope of finding food or a house
bed, and searched only for
a dry spot on which to sleep safely hidden from wild, runaway negroes.
I walked rapidly for hours in the wet, level woods, but not a foot of dry
ground could I find. Hollow-voiced owls were calling with-out intermission.
All manner of night sounds came from strange insects and beasts, one by
one, or crowded together. All had a home but I. Jacob on the dry plains
of Padanaram, with a stone pillow, must have been comparatively happy.
When I came to an open place where pines grew, it was about ten o'clock,
and I thought that now at last I would find dry ground. But even the sandy
barren was wet, and I had to grope in the dark a long time, feeling the
ground with my hands when my feet ceased to plash, before I at last discovered
a little hillock dry enough to lie down on. I ate a piece of bread that
I fortunately had in my bag, drank some of the brown water about my precious
hillock, and lay down. The noisiest of the unseen witnesses around me were
the owls, who pronounced
their gloomy speeches with profound emphasis,
but did not prevent the coming of sleep to heal weariness.
In the morning I was cold and wet with dew, and I set out breakfastless.
Flowers and beauty I had in abundance, but no bread. A serious matter is
this bread which perishes, and, could it be dispensed with, I doubt if
civilization would ever see me again. I walked briskly, watching for a
house, as well as the grand assemblies of novel plants.
Near the middle of the forenoon I came to a shanty where a party of
loggers were getting out long pines for ship spars. They were the wildest
of all the white savages I have met. The long-haired ex-guerrillas of the
mountains of Tennessee and North Carolina are uncivilized fellows; but
for downright barbarism these Florida loggers excel. Nevertheless, they
gave me a portion of their yellow pork and hominy without either apparent
hospitality or a grudge, and I was glad to escape to the forest again.
A few hours later I dined with three men and
three dogs. I was
viciously attacked by the latter, who undertook to undress me with their
teeth. I was nearly dragged down backward, but escaped unbitten. Liver
pie, mixed with sweet potatoes and fat duff, was set before me, and after
I had finished a moderate portion, one of the men, turning to his companion,
remarked: "Wall, I guess that man quit eatin' 'cause he had nothin'
more to eat. I'll get him more potato."
Arrived at a place on the margin of a stagnant pool where an alligator
had been rolling and sunning himself. "See," said a man who lived
here, "see, what a track that is! He must have been a mighty big
fellow. Alligators wallow like hogs and like to lie in the sun. I 'd like
a shot at that fellow." Here followed a long recital of bloody combats
with the scaly enemy, in many of which he had, of course, taken an important
part. Alligators are said to be extremely fond of negroes and dogs, and
naturally the dogs and negroes are afraid of them.
Another man that I met to-day pointed to a
shallow, grassy pond
before his door. "There," said he, "I once had a tough fight
with an alligator. He caught my dog. I heard him howling, and as he was
one of my best hunters I tried hard to save him. The water was only about
knee-deep and I ran up to the alligator It was only a small one about four
feet long, and was having trouble in its efforts to drown the dog in the
shallow water. I scared him and made him let go his hold, but before the
poor crippled dog could reach the shore, he was caught again, and when
I went at the alligator with a knife, it seized my arm. If it had been
a little stronger it might have eaten me instead of my dog."
I never in all my travels saw more than one, though they are said to
be abundant in most of the swamps, and frequently attain a length of nine
or ten feet. It is reported, also, that they are very savage, oftentimes
attacking men in boats. These independent inhabitants of the sluggish waters
of this low coast cannot be called the friends of man, though I heard of
one big fellow that was caught young and was partially civilized and
made to work in harness.
Many good people believe that alligators were created by the Devil,
thus accounting for their all-consuming appetite and ugliness. But doubtless
these creatures are happy and fill the place assigned them by the great
Creator of us all. Fierce and cruel they appear to us, but beautiful in
the eyes of God. They, also, are his children, for He hears their cries,
cares for them tenderly, and provides their daily bread.
The antipathies existing in the Lord's great animal family must be wisely
planned, like balanced repulsion and attraction in the mineral kingdom.
How narrow we selfish, conceited creatures are in our sympathies! how blind
to the rights of all the rest of creation! With what dismal irreverence
we speak of our fellow mortals! Though alligators, snakes, etc., naturally
repel us, they are not mysterious evils. They dwell happily in these flowery
wilds, are part of God's family, unfallen, undepraved, and cared for with
the same species
of tenderness and love as is bestowed on angels in
heaven or saints on earth.
I think that most of the antipathies which haunt and terrify us are
morbid productions of ignorance and weakness. I have better thoughts of
those alligators now that I have seen them at home. Honorable representatives
of the great saurians of an older creation, may you long enjoy your lilies
and rushes, and be blessed now and then with a mouthful of terror-stricken
man by way of dainty!
Found a beautiful lycopodium to-day, and many grasses in the dry sunlit
places called "barrens," "hummocks," "savannas,"
etc. Ferns also are abundant. What a flood of heat and light is daily poured
out on these beautiful openings and intertangled woods! "The land
of the sunny South," we say, but no part of our diversified country
is more shaded and covered from sunshine. Many a sunny sheet of plain and
prairie break the continuity of the forests of the North and West, and
the forests themselves are mostly lighted also,
pierced with direct
ray lances, or [the sunlight] passing to the earth and the lowly plants
in filtered softness through translucent leaves. But in the dense Florida
forests sunlight cannot enter. It falls on the evergreen roof and rebounds
in long silvery lances and flashy spray. In many places there is not light
sufficient to feed a single green leaf on these dark forest floors. All
that the eye can reach is just a maze of tree stems and crooked leafless
vine strings. All the flowers, all the verdure, all the glory is up in
the light.
The streams of Florida are still young, and in many places are untraceable.
I expected to find these streams a little discolored from the vegetable
matter that I knew they must contain, and I was sure that in so flat a
country I should not find any considerable falls or long rapids. The streams
of upper Georgia are almost unapproachable in some places on account of
luxuriant bordering marines, but the banks are nevertheless high and well
defined. Florida streams are not yet possessed of banks
and braes
and definite channels. Their waters in deep places are black as ink, perfectly
opaque, and glossy on the surface as if varnished. It often is difficult
to ascertain which way they are flowing or creeping, so slowly and so widely
do they circulate through the tree-tangles and swamps of the woods. The
flowers here are strangers to me, but not more so than the rivers and lakes.
Most streams appear to travel through a country with thoughts and plans
for something beyond. But those of Florida are at home, do not appear to
be traveling at all, and seem to know nothing of the sea.
October 17.
Found a small, silvery-leafed magnolia, a bush ten
feet high. Passed through a good many miles of open level pine barrens,
as bounteously lighted as the "openings" of Wisconsin. The pines
are rather small, are planted sparsely and pretty evenly on these sandy
flats not long risen from the sea. Scarcely a specimen of any other tree
is to be found associated with the pine. But there are some thickets of
the little saw palmettos and a magnificent
assemblage of tall grasses,
their splendid panicles waving grandly in the warm wind, and making low
tuneful changes in the glistening light that is flashed from their bent
stems.
Not a pine, not a palm, in all this garden excels these stately grass
plants in beauty of wind-waving gestures. Here are panicles that are one
mass of refined purple; others that have flowers as yellow as ripe oranges,
and stems polished and shining like steel wire. Some of the species are
grouped in groves and thickets like trees, while others may be seen waving
without any companions in sight. Some of them have wide-branching panicles
like Kentucky oaks, others with a few tassels of spikelets drooping from
a tall, leafless stem. But all of them are beautiful beyond the reach of
language. I rejoice that God has "so clothed the grass of the field."
How strangely we are blinded to beauty and color, form and motion, by comparative
size! For example, we measure grasses by our own stature and by the height
and bulkiness
of trees. But what is the size of the greatest man,
or the tallest tree that ever overtopped a grass! Compared with other things
in God's creation the difference is nothing. We all are only microscopic
animalcula.
October 18.
Am walking on land that is almost dry. The dead levels
are interrupted here and there by sandy waves a few feet in height. It
is said that not a point in all Florida is more than three hundred feet
above sea-level
-- a country where but little grading is required for roads,
but much bridging and boring of many tunnels through forests.
Before reaching this open ground, in a lonely, swampy place in the woods,
I met a large, muscular, brawny young negro, who eyed me with glaring,
wistful curiosity. I was very thirsty at the time, and inquired of the
man if there were any houses or springs near by where I could get a drink.
"Oh, yes," he replied, still eagerly searching me with his wild
eyes. Then he inquired where I came from, where I was going, and what brought
me to such a wild
country, where I was liable to be robbed, and perhaps
killed.
"Oh, I am not afraid of any one robbing me," I said, "for
I don't carry anything worth stealing." "Yes," said he,
"but you can't travel without money." I started to walk on, but
he blocked my way. Then I noticed that he was trembling, and it flashed
upon me all at once that he was thinking of knocking me down in order to
rob me. After glaring at my pockets as if searching for weapons, he stammered
in a quavering voice, "Do you carry shooting-irons?" His motives,
which I ought to have noted sooner, now were apparent to me. Though I had
no pistol, I instinctively threw my hand back to my pistol pocket and,
with my eyes fled on his, I marched up close to him and said, "I allow
people to find out if I am armed or not." Then he quailed, stepped
aside, and allowed me to pass, for fear of being shot. This was evidently
a narrow escape.
A few miles farther on I came to a cotton-field, to patches of sugar
cane carefully fenced,
and some respectable-looking houses with gardens.
These little fenced fields look as if they were intended to be for plants
what cages are for birds. Discovered a large, treelike cactus in a dooryard;
a small species was abundant on the sand-hillocks. Reached Gainesville
late in the night.
When within three or four miles of the town I noticed a light off in
the pine woods. As I was very thirsty, I thought I would venture toward
it with the hope of obtaining water. In creeping cautiously and noiselessly
through the grass to discover whether or no it was a camp of robber negroes,
I came suddenly in full view of the best-lighted and most primitive of
all the domestic establishments I have yet seen in town or grove. There
was, first of all, a big, glowing log fire, illuminating the overleaning
bushes and trees, bringing out leaf and spray with more than noonday distinctness,
and making still darker the surrounding wood. In the center of this globe
of light sat two negroes. I could see their ivory gleaming from the great
lips, and their smooth cheeks flashing off light as if made of glass.
Seen anywhere but in the South, the glossy pair would have been taken for
twin devils, but here it was only a negro and his wife at their supper.
I ventured forward to the radiant presence of the black pair, and, after
being stared at with that desperate fixedness which is said to subdue the
lion, I was handed water in a gourd from somewhere out of the darkness.
I was standing for a moment beside the big fire, looking at the unsurpassable
simplicity of the establishment, and asking questions about the road to
Gainesville, when my attention was called to a black lump of something
lying in the ashes of the fire. It seemed to be made of rubber; but ere
I had time for much speculation, the woman bent wooingly over the black
object and said with motherly kindness, "Come, honey, eat yo' hominy."
At the sound of "hominy" the rubber gave strong manifestations
of vitality and proved to be a burly little negro boy, rising from the
earth
naked as to the earth he came. Had he emerged from the black
muck of a marsh, we might easily have believed that the Lord had manufactured
him like Adam direct from the earth.
Surely, thought I, as I started for Gainesville, surely I am now coming
to the tropics, where the inhabitants wear nothing but their own skins.
This fashion is sufficiently simple,
"no troublesome disguises," as Milton calls clothing,
-- but
it certainly is not quite in harmony with Nature. Birds make nests and
nearly all beasts make some kind of bed for their young; but these negroes
allow their younglings to lie nestless and naked in the dirt.
Gainesville is rather attractive
-- an oasis in the desert, compared with
other villages. Its gets its life from the few plantations located about
it on dry ground that rises islandlike a few feet above the swamps. Obtained
food and lodging at a sort of tavern.
October 19.
Day land nearly all day. Encountered limestone, flint,
coral, shells, etc. Passed several thrifty cotton plantations with comfortable
residences, contrasting sharply with the squalid hovels of my first
days in Florida. Found a single specimen of a handsome little plant, which
at once, in some mysterious way, brought to mind a young friend in Indiana.
How wonderfully our thoughts and impressions are stored! There is that
in the glance of a flower which may at times control the greatest of creation's
braggart lords.
The magnolia is much more abundant here. It forms groves and almost
exclusively forests the edges of ponds and the banks of streams. The easy,
dignified simplicity of this noble tree, its plain leaf endowed with superb
richness of color and form, its open branches festooned with graceful vines
and tillandsia, its showy crimson fruit, and its magnificent fragrant white
flowers make
Magnolia grandiflora
the most lovable of Florida trees.
Discovered a great many beautiful polygonums, petalostemons, and yellow
leguminous vines. Passed over fine sunny areas of the long-leafed and Cuban
pines, which were everywhere
where accompanied by fine grasses and
solidagoes. Wild orange groves are said to be rather common here, but I
have seen only limes growing wild in the woods.
Came to a hut about noon, and, being weary and hungry, asked if I could
have dinner. After serious consultation I was told to wait, that dinner
would soon be ready. I saw only the man and his wife. If they had children,
they may have been hidden in the weeds on account of nakedness. Both were
suffering from malarial fever, and were very dirty. But they did not appear
to have any realizing sense of discomfort from either the one or the other
of these misfortunes. The dirt which encircled the countenances of these
people did not, like the common dirt of the North, stick on the skin in
bold union like plaster or paint, but appeared to stand out a little on
contact like a hazy, misty, half-aerial mud envelope, the most diseased
and incurable dirt that I ever saw, evidently desperately chronic and hereditary
It seems impossible that children from such
parents could ever be
clean. Dirt and disease are dreadful enough when separate, but combined
are inconceivably horrible. The neat cottage with a fragrant circumference
of thyme and honeysuckle is almost unknown here. I have seen dirt on garments
regularly stratified, the various strata no doubt indicating different
periods of life. Some of them, perhaps, were annual layers, furnishing,
like those of trees, a means of determining the age. Man and other civilized
animals are the only creatures that ever become dirty.
Slept in the barrens at the side of a log. Suffered from cold and was
drenched with dew. What a comfort a companion would be in the dark loneliness
of such nights! Did not dare to make a fire for fear of discovery by robber
negroes, who, I was warned, would kill a man for a dollar or two. Had a
long walk after night-fall, hoping to discover a house. Became very thirsty
and often was compelled to drink from slimy pools groped for in the grass,
with the fear of alligators before my eyes.
October 20.
Swamp very dense during this day's journey. Almost
one continuous sheet of water covered with aquatic trees and vines. No
stream that I crossed to-day appeared to have the least idea where it was
going. Saw an alligator plash into the sedgy brown water by the roadside
from an old log.
Arrived at night at the house of Captain Simmons, one of the very few
scholarly, intelligent men that I have met in Florida. He had been an officer
in the Confederate army in the war and was, of course, prejudiced against
the North, but polite and kind to me, nevertheless. Our conversation, as
we sat by the light of the fire, was on the one great question, slavery
and its concomitants. I managed, however, to switch off to something more
congenial occasionally
-- the birds of the neighborhood, the animals, the
climate, and what spring, summer, and winter are like in these parts.
About the climate, I could not get much information, as he had always
lived in the South and, of course, saw nothing extraordinary in
weather
to which he had always been accustomed. But in speaking of animals, he
at once became enthusiastic and told many stories of hairbreadth escapes,
in the woods about his house, from bears, hungry alligators, wounded deer,
etc. "And now," said he, forgetting in his kindness that I was
from the hated North, "you must stay with me a few days. Deer are
abundant. I will lend you a rifle and we'll go hunting. I hunt whenever
I wish venison, and I can get it about as easily from the woods near by
as a shepherd can get mutton out of his flock. And perhaps we will see
a bear, for they are far from scarce here, and there are some big gray
wolves, too."
I expressed a wish to see some large alligators. "Oh, well,"
said he, "I can take you where you will see plenty of those fellows,
but they are not much to look at. I once got a good look at an alligator
that was lying at the bottom of still, transparent water, and I think that
his eyes were the most impressively cold and cruel of any animal I have
seen. Many alligators go
out to sea among the keys. These sea alligators
are the largest and most ferocious, and sometimes attack people by trying
to strike them with their tails when they are out fishing in boats.
"Another thing I wish you to see," he continued, "is
a palmetto grove on a rich hummock a few miles from here. The grove is
about seven miles in length by three in breadth. The ground is covered
with long grass, uninterrupted with bushes or other trees. It is the finest
grove of palmettos I have ever seen and I have oftentimes thought that
it would make a fine subject for an artist."
I concluded to stop
-- more to see this wonderful palmetto hummock than
to hunt. Be-sides, I was weary and the prospect of getting a little rest
was a tempting consideration after so many restless nights and long, hard
walks by day.
October 21.
Having outlived the sanguinary hunters' tales of
my loquacious host, and breakfasted sumptuously on fresh venison and
"caller" fish from the sea, I set out for the grand palm grove.
I had seen these dazzling sun-children in every day of my walk through
Florida, but they were usually standing solitary, or in groups of three
or four; but to-day I was to see them by the mile. The captain led me a
short distance through his corn field and showed me a trail which would
conduct me to the palmy hummock. He pointed out the general direction,
which I noted upon my compass.
"Now," said he, "at the other side of my farthest field
you will come to a jungle of cat-briers, but will be able to pass them
if you manage to keep the trail. You will find that the way is not by any
means well marked, for in passing through a broad swamp, the trail makes
a good many abrupt turns to avoid deep water, fallen trees, or impenetrable
thickets. You will have to wade a good deal, and in passing the water-covered
places you will have to watch for the point where the trail comes out on
the opposite side."
I made my way through the briers, which in strength and ferocity equaled
those of Tennessee, followed the path through all of its dim waverings,
waded the many opposing pools, and, emerging suddenly from the leafy darkness
of the swamp forest, at last stood free and unshaded on the border of the
sun-drenched palm garden. It was a level area of grasses and sedges, smooth
as a prairie, well starred with flowers, and bounded like a clearing by
a wall of vine-laden trees.
The palms had full possession and appeared to enjoy their sunny home.
There was no jostling, no apparent effort to outgrow each other. Abundance
of sunlight was there for every crown, and plenty to fall between. I walked
enchanted in their midst. What a landscape! Only palms as far as the eye
could reach! Smooth pillars rising from the grass, each capped with a
sphere of leaves, shining in the sun as bright as a star. The silence and
calm were as deep as ever I found in the dark, solemn pine woods of Canada,
and that contentment
which is an attribute of the best of God's plant
people was as impressively felt in this alligator wilderness as in the
homes of the happy, healthy people of the North.
The admirable Linnaeus calls palms "the princes of the vegetable
world." I know that there is grandeur and nobility in their character,
and that there are palms nobler far than these. But in rank they appear
to me to stand below both the oak and the pine. The motions of the palms,
their gestures, are not very graceful. They appear to best advantage when
perfectly motionless in the noontide calm and intensity of light. But they
rustle and rock in the evening wind. I have seen grasses waving with far
more dignity. And when our northern pines are waving and blowing in sign
of worship with the winter storm-winds where is the prince of palms that
could have the conscience to demand their homage!
Members of this palm congregation were of all sizes with respect to
their stems; but their glorious crowns were all alike. In development
there is only the terminal bud to consider. The young pawn of this species
emerges from the ground in full strength, one cluster of leaves arched
every way, making a sphere about ten or twelve feet in diameter. The outside
lower leaves gradually become yellow, wither, and break off, the petiole
snapping squarely across, a few inches from the stem. New leaves develop
with wonderful rapidity. They stand erect at first, but gradually arch
outward as they expand their blades and lengthen their petioles.
New leaves arise constantly from the center of the grand bud, while
old ones break away from the outside. The splendid crowns are thus kept
about the same size, perhaps a little larger than in youth while they are
yet on the ground. As the development of the central axis goes on, the
crown is gradually raised on a stem of about six to twelve inches in diameter.
This stem is of equal thickness at the top and at the bottom and when young
is roughened with the broken petioles. But these petiole-stumps
fall
off and disappear as they become old, and the trunk becomes smooth as if
turned in a lathe.
After some hours in this charming forest I started on the return journey
before night, on account of the difficulties of the swamp and the brier
patch. On leaving the palmettos and entering the vine-tangled, half-submerged
forest I sought long and carefully, but in vain, for the trail, for I had
drifted about too incautiously in search of plants. But, recollecting the
direction that I had followed in the morning, I took a compass bearing
and started to penetrate the swamp in a direct line.
Of course I lead a sore weary time, pushing through the tanglement of
falling, standing, and half-fallen trees and bushes, to say nothing of
knotted vines as remarkable for their efficient army of interlocking and
lancing prickers as for their length and the number of their blossoms.
But these were not my greatest obstacles, nor yet the pools and lagoons
full of dead leaves and alligators. It was the army of cat-briers
that I most dreaded. I knew that I would have to find the narrow slit of
a lane before dark or spend the night with mosquitoes and alligators, without
food or fire. The entire distance was not great, but a traveler in open
woods can form no idea of the crooked and strange difficulties of pathless
locomotion in these thorny, watery Southern tangles, especially in pitch
darkness. I struggled hard and kept my course, leaving the general direction
only when drawn aside by a plant of extraordinary promise, that I wanted
for a specimen, or when I had to make the half-circuit of a pile of trees,
or of a deep lagoon or pond.
In wading I never attempted to keep my clothes dry, because the water
was too deep, and the necessary care would consume too much time. Had the
water that I was forced to wade been transparent it would have lost much
of its difficulty. But as it was, I constantly expected to plant my feet
on an alligator, and therefore proceeded with strained caution. The opacity
of the water caused uneasiness also on account
of my inability to
determine its depth. In many places I was compelled to turn back, after
wading forty or fifty yards, and to try again a score of times before I
succeeded in getting across a single lagoon.
At length, after miles of wading and wallowing, I arrived at the grand
cat-brier encampment which guarded the whole forest in solid phalanx, unmeasured
miles up and down across my way. Alas! the trail by which I had crossed
in the morning was not to be found, and night was near. In vain I scrambled
back and forth in search of an opening. There was not even a strip of dry
ground on which to rest. Every where the long briers arched over to the
vines and bushes of the watery swamp, leaving no standing-ground between
them. I began to think of building some sort of a scaffold in a tree to
rest on through the night, but concluded to make one more desperate effort
to find the narrow track.
After calm, concentrated recollection of my course, I made a long exploration
toward the
left down the brier line, and after scrambling a mile
or so, perspiring and bleeding, I discovered the blessed trail and escaped
to dry land and the light. Reached the captain at sun-down. Dined on milk
and johnny-cake and fresh venison. Was congratulated on my singular good
fortune and woodcraft, and soon after supper was sleeping the deep sleep
of the weary and the safe.
October 22.
This morning I was easily prevailed upon by the captain
and an ex-judge, who was rusticating here, to join in a deer hunt. Had
a delightful ramble in the long grass and flowery barrens. Started one
deer but did not draw a single shot. The captain, the judge, and myself
stood at different stations where the deer was expected to pass, while
a brother of the captain entered the woods to arouse the game from cover.
The one deer that he started took a direction different from any which
this particular old buck had ever been known to take in times past, and
in so doing was cordially cursed as being the "d-----dest deer that
ever
ran unshot." To me it appeared as "d-----dest"
work to slaughter God's cattle for sport. "They were made for us,"
say these self-approving preachers; "for our food, our recreation,
or other uses not yet discovered." As truthfully we might say on behalf
of a bear, when he deals successfully with an unfortunate hunter, "Men
and other bipeds were made for bears, and thanks be to God for claws and
teeth so long."
Let a Christian hunter go to the Lord's woods and kill his well-kept
beasts, or wild Indians, and it is well; but let an enterprising specimen
of these proper, predestined victims go to houses and fields and kill the
most worthless person of the vertical godlike killers,
-- oh! that is horribly
unorthodox, and on the part of the Indians atrocious murder! Well, I have
precious little sympathy for the selfish propriety of civilized man, and
if a war of races should occur between the wild beasts and Lord Man, I
would be tempted to sympathize with the bears.
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