<p>Beginning, not immediately above the sunken end of the bridge, but a little to one
side, I cut a deep hollow on the brink for my knees to rest in. Then, leaning over,
with my short-handled axe I cut a step sixteen or eighteen inches below, which on
account of the sheerness of the wall was necessarily shallow. That step, however, was
well made; its floor sloped slightly inward and formed a good hold for my heels.
Then, slipping cautiously upon it, and crouching as low as possible, with my left
side toward the wall, I steadied myself against the wind with my left hand in a
slight notch, while with the right I cut other similar steps and notches in
succession, guarding against losing balance by glinting of the axe, or by wind-gusts,
for life and death were in every stroke and in the niceness of finish of every
foothold.</p>
<p>After the end of the bridge was reached I chipped it down until I had made a level
platform six or eight inches wide, and it was a trying thing to poise on this little
slippery platform while bending over to get safely astride of the sliver. Crossing
was then comparatively easy by chipping off the sharp edge with short, careful
strokes, and hitching forward an inch or two at a time, keeping my balance with my
knees pressed against the sides. The tremendous abyss on either hand I studiously
ignored. To me the edge of that blue sliver was then all the world. But the most
trying part of the adventure, after working my way across inch by inch and chipping
another small platform, was to rise from the safe position astride and to cut a
step-ladder in the nearly vertical face of the wall,—chipping, climbing,
holding on with feet and fingers in mere notches. At such times one's whole body is
eye, and common skill and fortitude are replaced by power beyond our call or
knowledge. Never before had I been so long under deadly strain. How I got up that
cliff I never could tell. The thing seemed to have been done by somebody else. I
never have held death in contempt, though in the course of my explorations I have
oftentimes felt that to meet one's fate on a noble mountain, or in the heart of a
glacier, would be blessed as compared with death from disease, or from some shabby
lowland accident. But the best death, quick and crystal-pure, set so glaringly open
before us, is hard enough to face, even though we feel gratefully sure that we have
already had happiness enough for a dozen lives.</p>
<p>But poor Stickeen, the wee, hairy, sleekit beastie, think of him! When I had
decided to dare the bridge, and while I was on my knees chipping a hollow on the
rounded brow above it, he came behind me, pushed his head past my shoulder, looked
down and across, scanned the sliver and its approaches with his mysterious eyes, then
looked me in the face with a startled air of surprise and concern, and began to
mutter and whine; saying as plainly as if speaking with words, "Surely, you are not
going into that awful place." This was the first time I had seen him gaze
deliberately into a crevasse, or into my face with an eager, speaking, troubled look.
That he should have recognized and appreciated the danger at the first glance showed
wonderful sagacity. Never before had the daring midget seemed to know that ice was
slippery or that there was any such thing as danger anywhere. His looks and tones of
voice when he began to complain and speak his fears were so human that I
unconsciously talked to him in sympathy as I would to a frightened boy, and in trying
to calm his fears perhaps in some measure moderated my own. "Hush your fears, my
boy," I said, "we will get across safe, though it is not going to be easy. No right
way is easy in this rough world. We must risk our lives to save them. At the worst we
can only slip, and then how grand a grave we will have, and by and by our nice bones
will do good in the terminal moraine."</p>
<p>But my sermon was far from reassuring him: he began to cry, and after taking
another piercing look at the tremendous gulf, ran away in desperate excitement,
seeking some other crossing. By the time he got back, baffled of course, I had made a
step or two. I dared not look back, but he made himself heard; and when he saw that I
was certainly bent on crossing he cried aloud in despair. The danger was enough to
daunt anybody, but it seems wonderful that he should have been able to weigh and
appreciate it so justly. No mountaineer could have seen it more quickly or judged it
more wisely, discriminating between real and apparent peril.</p>
<p>When I gained the other side, he screamed louder than ever, and after running back
and forth in vain search for a way of escape, he would return to the brink of the
crevasse above the bridge, moaning and wailing as if in the bitterness of death.
Could this be the silent, philosophic Stickeen? I shouted encouragement, telling him
the bridge was not so bad as it looked, that I had left it flat and safe for his
feet, and he could walk it easily. But he was afraid to try. Strange so small an
animal should be capable of such big, wise fears. I called again and again in a
reassuring tone to come on and fear nothing; that he could come if he would only try.
He would hush for a moment, look down again at the bridge, and shout his unshakable
conviction that he could never, never come that way; then lie back in despair, as if
howling, "O-o-oh! what a place! No-o-o, I can never go-o-o down there!" His natural
composure and courage had vanished utterly in a tumultuous storm of fear. Had the
danger been less, his distress would have seemed ridiculous. But in this dismal,
merciless abyss lay the shadow of death, and his heartrending cries might well have
called Heaven to his help. Perhaps they did. So hidden before, he was now
transparent, and one could see the workings of his heart and mind like the movements
of a clock out of its case. His voice and gestures, hopes and fears, were so
perfectly human that none could mistake them; while he seemed to understand every
word of mine. I was troubled at the thought of having to leave him out all night, and
of the danger of not finding him in the morning. It seemed impossible to get him to
venture. To compel him to try through fear of being abandoned, I started off as if
leaving him to his fate, and disappeared back of a hummock; but this did no good; he
only lay down and moaned in utter hopeless misery. So, after hiding a few minutes, I
went back to the brink of the crevasse and in a severe tone of voice shouted across
to him that now I must certainly leave him, I could wait no longer, and that, if he
would not come, all I could promise was that I would return to seek him next day. I
warned him that if he went back to the woods the wolves would kill him, and finished
by urging him once more by words and gestures to come on, come on.</p>
<p>He knew very well what I meant, and at last, with the courage of despair, hushed
and breathless, he crouched down on the brink in the hollow I had made for my knees,
pressed his body against the ice as if trying to get the advantage of the friction of
every hair, gazed into the first step, put his little feet together and slid them
slowly, slowly over the edge and down into it, bunching all four in it and almost
standing on his head. Then, without lifting his feet, as well as I could see through
the snow, he slowly worked them over the edge of the step and down into the next and
the next in succession in the same way, and gained the end of the bridge. Then,
lifting his feet with the regularity and slowness of the vibrations of a seconds
pendulum, as if counting and measuring <em>one-two-three</em>, holding himself steady
against the gusty wind, and giving separate attention to each little step, he gained
the foot of the cliff, while I was on my knees leaning over to give him a lift should
he succeed in getting within reach of my arm. Here he halted in dead silence, and it
was here I feared he might fail, for dogs are poor climbers. I had no cord. If I had
had one, I would have dropped a noose over his head and hauled him up. But while I
was thinking whether an available cord might be made out of clothing, he was looking
keenly into the series of notched steps and finger-holds I had made, as if counting
them, and fixing the position of each one of them in his mind. Then suddenly up he
came in a springy rush, hooking his paws into the steps and notches so quickly that I
could not see how it was done, and whizzed past my head, safe at last!</p>
<p>And now came a scene! "Well done, well done, little boy! Brave boy!" I cried,
trying to catch and caress him; but he would not be caught. Never before or since
have I seen anything like so passionate a revulsion from the depths of despair to
exultant, triumphant, uncontrollable joy. He flashed and darted hither and thither as
if fairly demented, screaming and shouting, swirling round and round in giddy loops
and circles like a leaf in a whirlwind, lying down, and rolling over and over,
sidewise and heels over head, and pouring forth a tumultuous flood of hysterical
cries and sobs and gasping mutterings. When I ran up to him to shake him, fearing he
might die of joy, he flashed off two or three hundred yards, his feet in a mist of
motion; then, turning suddenly, came back in a wild rush and launched himself at my
face, almost knocking me down, all the time screeching and screaming and shouting as
if saying, "Saved! saved! saved!" Then away again, dropping suddenly at times with
his feet in the air, trembling and fairly sobbing. Such passionate emotion was enough
to kill him. Moses' stately song of triumph after escaping the Egyptians and the Red
Sea was nothing to it. Who could have guessed the capacity of the dull, enduring
little fellow for all that most stirs this mortal frame? Nobody could have helped
crying with him!</p>
<p>But there is nothing like work for toning down excessive fear or joy. So I ran
ahead, calling him in as gruff a voice as I could command to come on and stop his
nonsense, for we had far to go and it would soon be dark. Neither of us feared
another trial like this. Heaven would surely count one enough for a lifetime. The ice
ahead was gashed by thousands of crevasses, but they were common ones. The joy of
deliverance burned in us like fire, and we ran without fatigue, every muscle with
immense rebound glorying in its strength. Stickeen flew across everything in his way,
and not till dark did he settle into his normal fox-like trot. At last the cloudy
mountains came in sight, and we soon felt the solid rock beneath our feet, and were
safe. Then came weakness. Danger had vanished, and so had our strength. We tottered
down the lateral moraine in the dark, over boulders and tree trunks, through the
bushes and devil-club thickets of the grove where we had sheltered ourselves in the
morning, and across the level mud-slope of the terminal moraine. We reached camp
about ten o'clock, and found a big fire and a big supper. A party of Hoona Indians
had visited Mr. Young, bringing a gift of porpoise meat and wild strawberries, and
Hunter Joe had brought in a wild goat. But we lay down, too tired to eat much, and
soon fell into a troubled sleep. The man who said, "The harder the toil, the sweeter
the rest," never was profoundly tired. Stickeen kept springing up and muttering in
his sleep, no doubt dreaming that he was still on the brink of the crevasse; and so
did I, that night and many others long afterward, when I was overtired.</p>
<p>Thereafter Stickeen was a changed dog. During the rest of the trip, instead of
holding aloof, he always lay by my side, tried to keep me constantly in sight, and
would hardly accept a morsel of food, however tempting, from any hand but mine. At
night, when all was quiet about the camp-fire, he would come to me and rest his head
on my knee with a look of devotion as if I were his god. And often as he caught my
eye he seemed to be trying to say, "Wasn't that an awful time we had together on the
glacier?"</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p>Nothing in after years has dimmed that Alaska storm-day. As I write it all comes
rushing and roaring to mind as if I were again in the heart of it. Again I see the
gray flying clouds with their rain-floods and snow, the ice-cliffs towering above the
shrinking forest, the majestic ice-cascade, the vast glacier outspread before its
white mountain fountains, and in the heart of it the tremendous
crevasse,—emblem of the valley of the shadow of death,—low clouds
trailing over it, the snow falling into it; and on its brink I see little Stickeen,
and I hear his cries for help and his shouts of joy. I have known many dogs, and many
a story I could tell of their wisdom and devotion; but to none do I owe so much as to
Stickeen. At first the least promising and least known of my dog-friends, he suddenly
became the best known of them all. Our storm-battle for life brought him to light,
and through him as through a window I have ever since been looking with deeper
sympathy into all my fellow mortals.</p>
<p>None of Stickeen's friends knows what finally became of him. After my work for the
season was done I departed for California, and I never saw the dear little fellow
again. In reply to anxious inquiries his master wrote me that in the summer of 1883
he was stolen by a tourist at Fort Wrangel and taken away on a steamer. His fate is
wrapped in mystery. Doubtless he has left this world—crossed the last
crevasse—and gone to another. But he will not be forgotten. To me Stickeen is
immortal.</p>
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