the john muir exhibit - writings - travels_in_alaska - chapter 16
Travels in Alaska
by John Muir
Chapter XVI
Glacier Bay
While Stickeen and I were away, a Hoona, one of the head men of
the tribe, paid Mr. Young a visit, and presented him with porpoise-meat
and berries and much interesting information. He naturally expected
a return visit, and when we called at his house, a mile or two
down the fiord, he said his wives were out in the rain gathering
fresh berries to complete a feast prepared for us. We remained,
however, only a few minutes, for I was not aware of this arrangement
or of Mr. Young's promise until after leaving the house. Anxiety
to get around Cape Wimbledon was the cause of my haste, fearing
the storm might increase. On account of this ignorance, no apologies
were offered him, and the upshot was that the good Hoona became
very angry. We succeeded, however, in the evening of the same
day, in explaining our haste, and by sincere apologies and presents
made peace.
After a hard struggle we got around stormy Wimbledon and into
the next fiord to the northward (Klunastucksana--Dundas Bay).
A cold, drenching rain was falling, darkening but not altogether
hiding its extraordinary beauty, made up of lovely reaches and
side fiords, feathery headlands and islands, beautiful every one
and charmingly collocated. But how it rained, and how cold it
was, and how weary we were
pulling most of the time against
the wind! The branches of this bay are so deep and so numerous
that, with the rain and low clouds concealing the mountain landmarks,
we could hardly make out the main trends. While groping and gazing
among the islands through the misty rain and clouds, we discovered
wisps of smoke at the foot of a sheltering rock in front of a
mountain, where a choir of cascades were chanting their rain songs.
Gladly we made for this camp, which proved to belong to a rare
old Hoona sub-chief, so tall and wide and dignified in demeanor
he looked grand even in the sloppy weather, and every inch a chief
in spite of his bare legs and the old shirt and draggled, ragged
blanket in which he was dressed. He was given to much handshaking,
gripping hard, holding on and looking you gravely in the face
while most emphatically speaking in Thlinkit, not a word of which
we understood until interpreter John came to our help. He turned
from one to the other of us, declaring, as John interpreted, that
our presence did him good like food and fire, that he would welcome
white men, especially teachers, and that he and all his people
compared to ourselves were only children. When Mr. Young informed
him that a missionary was about to be sent to his people, he said
he would call them all together four times and explain that a
teacher and preacher were coming and that they therefore must
put away all foolishness and prepare their hearts to receive them
and their words. He then introduced his three children, one a
naked lad five or six years old who, as he fondly assured us,
would soon
be a chief, and later to his wife, an intelligent-looking
woman of whom he seemed proud. When we arrived she was out at
the foot of the cascade mountain gathering salmon-berries.
She came in dripping and loaded. A few of the fine berries saved
for the children she presented, proudly and fondly beginning with
the youngest, whose only clothing was a nose ring and a string
of beads. She was lightly appareled in a cotton gown and bit of
blanket, thoroughly bedraggled, but after unloading her berries
she retired with a dry calico gown around the corner of a rock
and soon returned fresh as a daisy and with becoming dignity took
her place by the fireside. Soon two other berry-laden women
came in, seemingly enjoying the rain like the bushes and trees.
They put on little clothing so that they may be the more easily
dried, and as for the children, a thin shirt of sheeting is the
most they encumber themselves with, and get wet and half dry without
seeming to notice it while we shiver with two or three dry coats.
They seem to prefer being naked. The men also wear but little
in wet weather. When they go out for all day they put on a single
blanket, but in choring around camp, getting firewood, cooking,
or looking after their precious canvas, they seldom wear anything,
braving wind and rain in utter nakedness to avoid the bother of
drying clothes. It is a rare sight to see the children bringing
in big chunks of firewood on their shoulders, balancing in crossing
boulders with firmly set bow-legs and bulging back muscles.
We gave Ka-hood-oo-shough, the old chief, some
tobacco and rice and coffee, and pitched our tent near his
hut among tall grass. Soon after our arrival the Taylor Bay sub-chief
came in from the opposite direction from ours, telling us that
he came through a cut-off passage not on our chart. As stated
above, we took pains to conciliate him and soothe his hurt feelings.
Our words and gifts, he said, had warmed his sore heart and made
him glad and comfortable.
The view down the bay among the islands was, I thought, the finest
of this kind of scenery that I had yet observed.
The weather continued cold and rainy. Nevertheless Mr. Young and
I and our crew, together with one of the Hoonas, an old man who
acted as guide, left camp to explore one of the upper arms of
the bay, where we were told there was a large glacier. We managed
to push the canoe several miles up the stream that drains the
glacier to a point where the swift current was divided among rocks
and the banks were overhung with alders and willows. I left the
canoe and pushed up the right bank past a magnificent waterfall
some twelve hundred feet high, and over the shoulder of a mountain,
until I secured a good view of the lower part of the glacier.
It is probably a lobe of the Taylor Bay or Brady Glacier.
On our return to camp, thoroughly drenched and cold, the old chief
came to visit us, apparently as wet and cold as ourselves.
"I have been thinking of you all day," he said, "and
pitying you, knowing how miserable you were, and as soon as I
saw your canoe coming back I was
ashamed to think that I
had been sitting warm and dry at my fire while you were out in
the storm; there fore I made haste to strip off my dry clothing
and put on these wet rags to share your misery and show how much
I love you."
I had another long talk with Ka-hood-oo-shough the next day.
"I am not able," he said, "to tell you how much
good your words have done me. Your words are good, and they are
strong words. Some of my people are foolish, and when they make
their salmon-traps they do not take care to tie the poles
firmly together, and when the big rain-floods come the traps
break and are washed away because the people who made them are
foolish people. But your words are strong words and when storms
come to try them they will stand the storms."
There was much hand shaking as we took our leave and assurances
of eternal friendship. The grand old man stood on the shore watching
us and waving farewell until we were out of sight.
We now steered for the Muir Glacier and arrived at the front on
the east side the evening of the third, and camped on the end
of the moraine, where there was a small stream. Captain Tyeen
was inclined to keep at a safe distance from the tremendous threatening
cliffs of the discharging wall. After a good deal of urging he
ventured within half a mile of them, on the east side of the fiord,
where with Mr. Young I went ashore to seek a camp-ground
on the moraine, leaving the Indians in the canoe. In a few minutes
after we landed a huge berg sprung aloft with awful commotion,
and the frightened Indians incontinently fled down the fiord,
plying their paddles with admirable energy in the tossing waves
until a safe harbor was reached around the south end of the moraine.
I found a good place for a camp in a slight hollow where a few
spruce stumps afforded firewood. But all efforts to get Tyeen
out of his harbor failed. "Nobody knew," he said, "how
far the angry ice mountain could throw waves to break his canoe."
Therefore I had my bedding and some provisions carried to my stump
camp, where I could watch the bergs as they were discharged and
get night views of the brow of the glacier and its sheer jagged
face all the way across from side to side of the channel. One
night the water was luminous and the surge from discharging icebergs
churned the water into silver fire, a glorious sight in the darkness.
I also went back up the east side of the glacier five or six miles
and ascended a mountain between its first two eastern tributaries,
which, though covered with grass near the top, was exceedingly
steep and difficult. A bulging ridge near the top I discovered
was formed of ice, a remnant of the glacier when it stood at this
elevation which had been preserved by moraine material and later
by a thatch of dwarf bushes and grass.
Next morning at daybreak I pushed eagerly back over the comparatively
smooth eastern margin of the glacier to see as much as possible
of the upper fountain region. About five miles back from the front
I climbed a mountain twenty-five hundred feet high,
from the flowery summit of which, the day being clear, the vast
glacier and its principal branches were displayed in one magnificent
view. Instead of a stream of ice winding down a mountain-walled
valley like the largest of the Swiss glaciers, the Muir looks
like a broad undulating prairie streaked with medial moraines
and gashed with crevasses, surrounded by numberless mountains
from which flow its many tributary glaciers. There are seven main
tributaries from ten to twenty miles long and from two to six
miles wide where they enter the trunk, each of them fed by many
secondary tributaries; so that the whole number of branches, great
and small, pouring from the mountain fountains perhaps number
upward of two hundred, not counting the smallest. The area drained
by this one grand glacier can hardly be less than seven or eight
hundred miles, and probably contains as much ice as all the eleven
hundred Swiss glaciers combined. Its length from the frontal wall
back to the head of its farthest fountain seemed to be about forty
or fifty miles, and the width just below the confluence of the
main tributaries about twenty-five miles. Though apparently motionless
as the mountains, it flows on forever, the speed varying in every
part with the seasons, but mostly with the depth of the current,
and the declivity, smoothness and directness of the different
portions of the basin. The flow of the central cascading portion
near the front, as determined by Professor Reid, is at the rate
of from two and a half to five inches an hour, or from five to
ten feet a day. A strip of the main trunk about
a mile in
width, extending along the eastern margin about fourteen miles
to a lake filled with bergs, has so little motion and is so little
interrupted by crevasses, a hundred horsemen might ride abreast
over it without encountering very much difficulty.
But far the greater portion of the vast expanse looking smooth
in the distance is torn and crumpled into a bewildering network
of hummocky ridges and blades, separated by yawning gulfs and
crevasses, so that the explorer, crossing it from shore to shore,
must always have a hard time. In hollow spots here and there in
the heart of the icy wilderness are small lakelets fed by swift-glancing
streams that flow without friction in blue shining channels, making
delightful melody, singing and ringing in silvery tones of peculiar
sweetness, radiant crystals like flowers ineffably fine growing
in dazzling beauty along their banks. Few, however, will be likely
to enjoy them. Fortunately to most travelers the thundering ice-wall,
while comfortably accessible, is also the most strikingly interesting
portion of the glacier.
The mountains about the great glacier were also seen from this
standpoint in exceedingly grand and telling views, ranged and
grouped in glorious array. Along the valleys of the main tributaries
to the northwestward I saw far into their shadowy depths, one
noble peak in its snowy robes appearing beyond another in fine
perspective. One of the most remarkable of them, fashioned like
a superb crown with delicately fluted sides, stands in the middle
of the second main tributary, counting from left to right. To
the
westward the magnificent Fairweather Range is displayed
in all its glory, lifting its peaks and glaciers into the blue
sky. Mt. Fairweather, though not the highest, is the noblest and
most majestic in port and architecture of all the sky-dwelling
company. La Pérouse
, at the south end of the range, is also a
magnificent mountain, symmetrically peaked and sculptured, and
wears its robes of snow and glaciers in noble style. Lituya, as
seen from here, is an immense tower, severely plain and massive.
It makes a fine and terrible and lonely impression. Crillon, though
the loftiest of all (being nearly sixteen thousand feet high),
presents no well-marked features. Its ponderous glaciers
have ground it away into long, curling ridges until, from this
point of view, it resembles a huge twisted shell. The lower summits
about the Muir Glacier, like this one, the first that I climbed,
are richly adorned and enlivened with flowers, though they make
but a faint show in general views. Lines and dashes of bright
green appear on the lower slopes as one approaches them from the
glacier, and a fainter green tinge may be noticed on the subordinate
summits at a height of two thousand or three thousand feet. The
lower are mostly alder bushes and the topmost a lavish profusion
of flowering plants, chiefly cassiope, vaccinium, pyrola, erigeron,
gentiana, campanula, anemone, larkspur, and columbine, with a
few grasses and ferns. Of these cassiope is at once the commonest
and the most beautiful and influential. In some places its delicate
stems make mattresses more than a foot thick over several acres,
while the
bloom is so abundant that a single handful plucked
at random contains hundreds of its pale pink bells. The very thought
of this Alaska garden is a joyful exhilaration. Though the storm-beaten
ground it is growing on is nearly half a mile high, the glacier
centuries ago flowed over it as a river flows over a boulder;
but out of all the cold darkness and glacial crushing and grinding
comes this warm, abounding beauty and life to teach us that what
we in our faithless ignorance and fear call destruction is creation
finer and finer.
When night was approaching I scrambled down out of my blessed
garden to the glacier, and returned to my lonely camp, and, getting
some coffee and bread, again went up the moraine to the east end
of the great ice-wall. It is about three miles long, but
the length of the jagged, berg-producing portion that stretches
across the fiord from side to side like a huge green-and-blue
barrier is only about two miles and rises above the water to a
height of from two hundred and fifty to three hundred feet. Soundings
made by Captain Carroll show that seven hundred and twenty feet
of the wall is below the surface, and a third unmeasured portion
is buried beneath the moraine detritus deposited at the foot of
it. Therefore, were the water and rocky detritus cleared away,
a sheer precipice of ice would be presented nearly two miles long
and more than a thousand feet high. Seen from a distance, as you
come up the fiord, it seems comparatively regular in form, but
it is far otherwise; bold, jagged capes jut forward into the fiord,
alternating
with deep reentering angles and craggy hollows
with plain bastions, while the top is roughened with innumerable
spires and pyramids and sharp hacked blades leaning and toppling
or cutting straight into the sky.
The number of bergs given off varies somewhat with the weather
and the tides, the average being about one every five or six minutes,
counting only those that roar loud enough to make themselves heard
at a distance of two or three miles. The very largest, however,
may under favorable conditions be heard ten miles or even farther.
When a large mass sinks from the upper fissured portion of the
wall, there is first a keen, prolonged, thundering roar, which
slowly subsides into a low muttering growl, followed by numerous
smaller grating clashing sounds from the agitated bergs that dance
in the waves about the newcomer as if in welcome; and these again
are followed by the swash and roar of the waves that are raised
and hurled up the beach against the moraines. But the largest
and most beautiful of the bergs, instead of thus falling from
the upper weathered portion of the wall, rise from the submerged
portion with a still grander commotion, springing with tremendous
voice and gestures nearly to the top of the wall, tons of water
streaming like hair down their sides, plunging and rising again
and again before they finally settle in perfect poise, free at
last, after having formed part of the slow-crawling glacier
for centuries. And as we contemplate their history, as they sail
calmly away down the fiord to the sea, how wonderful
it
seems that ice formed from pressed snow on the far-off mountains
two or three hundred years ago should still be pure and lovely
in color after all its travel and toil in the rough mountain quarries,
grinding and fashioning the features of predestined landscapes.
When sunshine is sifting through the midst of the multitude of
icebergs that fill the fiord and through the jets of radiant spray
ever rising from the tremendous dashing and splashing of the falling
and upspringing bergs, the effect is indescribably glorious. Glorious,
too, are the shows they make in the night when the moon and stars
are shining. The berg-thunder seems far louder than by day,
and the projecting buttresses seem higher as they stand forward
in the pale light, relieved by gloomy hollows, while the new-born
bergs are dimly seen, crowned with faint lunar rainbows in the
up-dashing spray. But it is in the darkest nights when storms
are blowing and the waves are phosphorescent that the most impressive
displays are made. I'hen the long range of ice-bluffs is
plainly seen stretching through the gloom in weird, unearthly
splendor, luminous wave foam dashing against every bluff and drifting
berg; and ever and anon amid all this wild auroral splendor some
huge new-born berg dashes the living water into yet brighter
foam, and the streaming torrents pouring from its sides are worn
as robes of light, while they roar in awful accord with the winds
and waves, deep calling unto deep, glacier to glacier, from fiord
to fiord over all the wonderful bay.
After spending a few days here, we struck across to the main Hoona
village on the south side of Icy Strait, thence by a long cut-off
with one short portage to Chatham Strait, and thence down through
Peril Strait, sailing all night, hoping to catch the mail steamer
at Sitka. We arrived at the head of the strait about daybreak.
The tide was falling, and rushing clown with the swift current
as if descending a majestic cataract was a memorable experience.
We reached Sitka the same night, and there I paid and discharged
my crew, making allowance for a couple of days or so for the journey
back home to Fort Wrangell, while I boarded the steamer for Portland
and thus ended my explorations for this season.
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