Steamer Corwin,
St. Lawrence Bay, Siberia, June 6, 1881.
YESTERDAY morning at
half-past one o'clock, when we were within twenty-five miles of Plover Bay,
where we hoped to be able to repair our rudder, we found that the ice-pack
was crowding us closer and closer inshore, and that in our partly disabled
condition it would not be safe to proceed farther. Accordingly we turned
back and put into St. Lawrence Bay, to await some favorable movement in the
ice.
We dropped anchor at
half-past seven in the morning opposite a small Chukchi settlement. In a few
hours the wind began to blow fresh from the north, steadily increasing in
force, until at eight in the evening it was blowing a gale, and we were glad
that we were in a good harbor instead of being out at sea, slashing and
tumbling about with a broken rudder among the wind-driven ice. It also
rained and snowed most of the afternoon, the blue and gray sleet mingling in
grand uproar with the white scud swept from the crests of the waves, making
about as stormy and gloomy an atmosphere as I ever had the fortune to
breathe. Now and then the clouds broke and lifted their ragged edges high
enough to allow the mountains along the sides and around the head of the bay
to be dimly seen, not so dimly, however, as to hide the traces of the heavy
glaciation to which they have been subjected. This long bay, as shown by its
trends, its relation to the ice-fountains at its head and the sculpture of
its walls, is a glacial fiord that only a short time ago was the channel of
a glacier that poured a deep and broad flood into Bering Sea, in company
with a thousand others north and south along the Siberian coast. The more I
see of this region the more I am inclined to believe that all of Bering Sea
and Strait is a glacial excavation.
In a party of natives that
came aboard soon after we had dropped anchor, we discovered the remarkable
Chukchi orator, Jaroochah, whose acquaintance we made at the settlement on
the other side of the bay, during our first visit, and who had so vividly
depicted the condition of the lost whaler Vigilant. To-day, after taking up
a favorable position in the pilot.- house, he far surpassed his previous
efforts, pouring forth Chukchi in overwhelming torrents, utterly oblivious
of the presence of his rival, the howling gale.
During a sudden pause in the
midst of his volcanic eloquence he inquired whether we had rum to trade for
walrus ivory, whereupon we explained, in total abstinence phrase, that rum
was very bad stuff for Chukchis, and by way of illustration related its sad
effects upon the Eskimo natives of St. Lawrence Island. Nearly all the
natives we have thus far met admitted very readily that whiskey was not good
for them. But Jaroochah was not to be so easily silenced, for he at once
began an anti-temperance argument in saloon-and-moderate-drinker style,
explaining with vehement gestures that some whiskey was good, some bad; that
he sometimes drank five cupfuls of the good article in quick succession, the
effect of which was greatly to augment his happiness, while out of a small
bottle of the bad one, a small glass made him sick. And as for whiskey or
rum causing people to die, he knew, he said, that that was a lie, for he had
drunk much himself, and he had a brother who had enjoyed a great deal of
whiskey on board of whalers for many years, and that though now a gray old
man he was still alive and happy.
This speech was warmly
applauded by his listening companions, indicating a public opinion that
offers but little hope of success for the efforts of temperance societies
among the Chukchis. Captain Hooper, the surgeon, and myself undertook to
sketch the orator, who, when he had gravely examined our efforts, laughed
boisterously at one of them, which, in truth, was a slanderous caricature of
even his countenance, villainous as it was.
In trading his ivory for
supplies of some sort, other than alcohol, he tried to extract some trifling
article above what had been agreed on, when the trader threatened to have
nothing further to do with him on account of the trouble he was making. This
set the old chief on his dignity, and he made haste to declare that he was a
good and honorable man, and that in case the trade was stopped he would give
back all he had received and go home, leaving his ivory on the deck heedless
of what became of it. The woman of the party, perhaps eighteen years of age,
merry and good-looking, went among the sailors and danced, sang, and joked
with them.
The gale increased in
violence up to noon to-day, when it began to abate slightly, and this
evening it is still blowing hard. The Corwin commenced to drag her anchor
shortly after midnight, when another that was kept in readiness was let go
with plenty of chain, which held, so that we rode out the gale in safety.
The whalers Francis Palmer and Hidalgo came into the bay last evening from
Bering Strait and anchored near us. This morning the Hidalgo had vanished,
having probably parted her cable.
Last evening a second party
of natives came aboard, having made their way around the head of the bay or
over the ice. Both parties remained on board all night as they were unable
to reach the shore in their light skin boats against the wind. Being curious
to see how they were enduring the cold, I went on deck early. They seemed
scarcely to feel it at all, for I found most of them lying on the deck amid
the sludge and sleeping soundly in the clothes they wore during the day.
Three of them were sleeping on the broken rudder, swept by the icy wind and
sprinkled with snow and fragments of ice that were falling from the rigging,
their heads and necks being nearly bare.
I inquired why their reindeer
parkas were made without hoods, while those of the Eskimos of St. Lawrence
Island had them; observing that they seemed far more comfortable in stormy
weather, because they kept the head and neck warm and dry. They replied that
they had to hunt hard and look quick all about them for a living, therefore
it was necessary to keep their heads free; while the St. Lawrence Eskimos
were lazy, and could indulge in effeminate habits. They gave the same reason
for cutting off most of the hair close to the scalps, while the women wear
the hair long.
One of their number was very
dirty, and Captain Hooper, who is becoming interested in glacial studies,
declared that he had discovered two terminal moraines in his ears. When
asked why he did not wash himself, our interpreter replied, "Because he is
an old fellow, and it is too much work to wash." This was given with an air
of having explained the matter beyond further question. Considering the
necessities of the lives they lead, most of these people seem remarkably
clean and well- dressed and well-behaved.
The old orator poured forth
his noisy eloquence late and early, like a perennial mountain spring, some
of his deep chest tones sounding in the storm like the roar of a lion. He
rolled his wolfish eyes and tossed his brown skinny limbs in a frantic storm
of gestures, now suddenly foreshortening himself to less than half his
height, then shooting aloft with jack-in-the-box rapidity, while his people
looked on and listened, apparently half in fear, half in admiration. We
directed the interpreter to tell him that we thought him a good man, and
were, therefore, concerned lest some accident might befall him from so much
hard speaking. The Chukchis, as well as the Eskimos we have seen, are keenly
sensitive to ridicule, and this suggestion disconcerted him for a moment and
made a sudden pause. However, he quickly recovered and got under way again,
like a wave withdrawing on a shelving shore, only to advance and break again
with gathered force.
The chief man of the second
party from the other side of the bay is owner of a herd of reindeer, which
he said were now feeding among the mountains at a distance of one sleep - a
day's journey - from the head of a bay to the south of here. He readily
indicated the position on a map that we spread before him, and offered to
take us to see them on a sled drawn by reindeer, and to sell us as many
skins and as much meat a we cared to buy. When we asked how many reindeer he
had, all who heard the question laughed at the idea of counting so many.
"They cover a big mountain," he said proudly, "and nobody can count them."
He brought a lot of ivory to trade for tobacco, but said nothing about it
until the afternoon. Then he signified his readiness for business after
awakening from a sound sleep on the wet icy deck.
Shortly after we had
breakfasted, the reindeer chief having intimated that he and his friends
were hungry, the Captain ordered a large pot of tea, with hardtack, sugar
and molasses, to be served to them in the pilothouse. They ate with
dignified deliberation, showing no unseemly haste, but eating rather like
people accustomed to abundance. Jaroochah, who could hardly stem his
eloquence even while eating, was particular about having his son invited in
to share the meal; also, two boys about eight years old, giving as a reason,
"they are little ones." We also called in a young woman, perhaps about
eighteen years old, but none of the men present seemed to care whether she
shared with them or not, and when we inquired the cause of this neglect,
telling them that white men always served the ladies first, Jaroochah said
that while girls were "little fellows" their parents looked after them, but
when they grew big they went away from their parents with "some other
fellow," and were of no more use to them and could look out for themselves.
Those who were not invited to
this meal did not seem to mind it much, for they had brought with them
plenty of what the whalers call "black skin" - the skin of the right whale -
which is about an inch thick, and usually has from half an inch to an inch
of blubber attached. This I saw them eating raw with hearty relish, snow and
sludge the only sauce, cutting off angular blocks of it with butcher-
knives, while one end of the tough black rubber-like mass was being held in
the left hand, the other between their teeth. Long practice enables them to
cut off mouthfuls in this way without cutting their lips, although they saw
their long knives back and forth, close to their faces, as if playing the
violin. They get the whale skin from the whalers, excepting the little they
procure themselves. They hunt the whale now with lances and gear of every
kind bought from the whalers, and sometimes succeed in killing a good many.
They eat the carcass, and save the bone to trade to the whalers, who are
eager to get it.
After the old orator left the
steamer, the reindeer man accused him of being "a bad fellow, like a dog."
He evidently was afraid that we were being fooled by his overwhelming
eloquence into believing that be was a great man, while the precious truth
to be impressed upon us was, that he, the reindeer man, whose herd covers a
big mountain, was the true chief. I asked his son, who speaks a little
English, why he did not make a trip to San Francisco, to see the white man's
big town. He replied, as many a civilized man does under similar
circumstances, that he had a little boy, too little to be left, and too
little to leave home, but that soon he would be a big fellow, so high,
indicating the hoped-for stature with his hand, then he would go to San
Francisco on some whale-ship, to see where all the big ships and good
whiskey came from.
These [Chukchis] also had
heard the story of the Vigilant. The reindeer man's son is going with us to
Plover Bay to look after some of his father's debtors. He has been supplying
them with tobacco and other goods on credit, and he thought it time they
were paying up. His little boy, he told us, was sick - had a hot, sore head
that throbbed, showing with his hand how it beat in aching pulses, and asked
for medicine, which the surgeon gave him with necessary directions, greatly
to his relief of mind, it seemed.
Around the shore opposite our
anchorage the ground is rather low, where the ancient glacier that filled
the bay swept over in smooth curves, breaking off near the shore [at] an
abrupt wall from seventy to a hundred feet high. Against this wall the
prevailing north winds have piled heavy drifts of snow that curve over the
bluff at the top and slope out over the fixed ice along the shore from the
base. The gale has been loosening and driving out past the vessel, without
doing us any harm, large masses of the ice, capped with the edge of the
drift. One large piece drifted close past the steamer and immediately in
front of a large skin canoe capable of carrying thirty men. The canoe, which
was tied to the stern of the ship, we thought was doomed to be carried away.
The owners looked wistfully over the stern, watching her fate, while the
sailors seemed glad of the bit of, excitement caused by the hope of an
accident that would cost them nothing. Greatly to our surprise, however,
when the berg, rough and craggy, ten or twelve feet high, struck her bow,
she climbed up over the top of it, and, dipping on the other side, glided
down with a graceful, launching swoop into the water, like a living thing,
wholly uninjured. The sealskin buffer, fixed in front and inflated like a
bladder, no doubt greatly facilitated her rise. She was tied by a line of
walrus hide.
Now that the wind is abating,
we hope to get away from here to-morrow morning, and expect to find most of
the ice that stopped our progress yesterday broken up and driven southward
far enough to enable us to reach Plover Bay without further difficulty. |