<SPAN name="chap07"></SPAN>
<h2 align="center">Chapter VII</h2>
<h2 align="center">Glenora Peak</h2>
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<p>On the trail to the steamboat-landing at the foot of Dease Lake, I
met a Douglas squirrel, nearly as red and rusty in color as his
Eastern relative the chickaree. Except in color he differs but little
from the California Douglas squirrel. In voice, language, gestures,
temperament, he is the same fiery, indomitable little king of the
woods. Another darker and probably younger specimen met near the
Caribou House, barked, chirruped, and showed off in fine style on a
tree within a few feet of us.</p>
<p>“What does the little rascal mean?” said my companion,
a man I had fallen in with on the trail. “What is he making such
a fuss about? I cannot frighten him.”</p>
<p>“Never mind,” I replied; “just wait until I
whistle ‘Old Hundred’ and you will see him fly in
disgust.” And so he did, just as his California brethren do.
Strange that no squirrel or spermophile I yet have found ever seemed
to have anything like enough of Scotch religion to enjoy this grand
old tune.</p>
<p>The taverns along the Cassiar gold trail were the worst I had ever
seen, rough shacks with dirt floors, dirt roofs, and rough meals. The
meals are all alike--a potato, a slice of something like bacon, some
gray stuff called bread, and a cup of muddy, semi-liquid coffee like
that which the California miners call <!-- Page 88 -->
“slickers” or “slumgullion.” The bread was
terrible and sinful. How the Lord's good wheat could be made into
stuff so mysteriously bad is past finding out. The very de'il, it
would seem, in wicked anger and ingenuity, had been the baker.</p>
<p>On our walk from Dease Lake to Telegraph Creek we had one of these
rough luncheons at three o'clock in the afternoon of the first day,
then walked on five miles to Ward's, where we were solemnly assured
that we could not have a single bite of either supper or breakfast,
but as a great favor we might sleep on his best gray bunk. We replied
that, as we had lunched at the lake, supper would not be greatly
missed, and as for breakfast we would start early and walk eight miles
to the next road-house. We set out at half-past four, glad to escape
into the fresh air, and reached the breakfast place at eight o'clock.
The landlord was still abed, and when at length he came to the door,
he scowled savagely at us as if our request for breakfast was
preposterous and criminal beyond anything ever heard of in all goldful
Alaska. A good many in those days were returning from the mines dead
broke, and he probably regarded us as belonging to that disreputable
class. Anyhow, we got nothing and had to tramp on.</p>
<p>As we approached the next house, three miles ahead, we saw the
tavern-keeper keenly surveying us, and, as we afterwards learned,
taking me for a certain judge whom for some cause he wished to avoid,
he hurriedly locked his door and fled. Half a mile farther on we
discovered him in a thicket a little way off the <!-- Page 89 -->
trail, explained our wants, marched him back to his house, and at
length obtained a little sour bread, sour milk, and old salmon, our
only lonely meal between the Lake and Telegraph Creek.</p>
<p>We arrived at Telegraph Creek, the end of my two-hundred-mile walk,
about noon. After luncheon I went on down the river to Glenora in a
fine canoe owned and manned by Kitty, a stout, intelligent-looking
Indian woman, who charged her passengers a dollar for the fifteen-mile
trip. Her crew was four Indian paddlers. In the rapids she also plied
the paddle, with stout, telling strokes, and a keen-eyed old man,
probably her husband, sat high in the stern and steered. All seemed
exhilarated as we shot down through the narrow gorge on the rushing,
roaring, throttled river, paddling all the more vigorously the faster
the speed of the stream, to hold good steering way. The canoe danced
lightly amid gray surges and spray as if alive and enthusiastically
enjoying the adventure. Some of the passengers were pretty thoroughly
drenched. In unskillful hands the frail dugout would surely have been
wrecked or upset. Most of the season goods for the Cassiar gold camps
were carried from Glenora to Telegraph Creek in canoes, the steamers
not being able to overcome the rapids except during high water. Even
then they had usually to line two of the rapids--that is, take a line
ashore, make it fast to a tree on the bank, and pull up on the
capstan. The freight canoes carried about three or four tons, for
which fifteen dollars per ton was charged. Slow progress was made by
poling along <!-- Page 90 --> the bank out of the swiftest part of the
current. In the rapids a tow line was taken ashore, only one of the
crew remaining aboard to steer. The trip took a day unless a favoring
wind was blowing, which often happened.</p>
<p>Next morning I set out from Glenora to climb Glenora Peak for the
general view of the great Coast Range that I failed to obtain on my
first ascent on account of the accident that befell Mr. Young when we
were within a minute or two of the top. It is hard to fail in reaching
a mountain-top that one starts for, let the cause be what it may. This
time I had no companion to care for, but the sky was threatening. I
was assured by the local weather-prophets that the day would be rainy
or snowy because the peaks in sight were muffled in clouds that seemed
to be getting ready for work. I determined to go ahead, however, for
storms of any kind are well worth while, and if driven back I could
wait and try again.</p>
<p>With crackers in my pocket and a light rubber coat that a kind
Hebrew passenger on the steamer Gertrude loaned me, I was ready for
anything that might offer, my hopes for the grand view rising and
falling as the clouds rose and fell. Anxiously I watched them as they
trailed their draggled skirts across the glaciers and fountain peaks
as if thoughtfully looking for the places where they could do the most
good. From Glenora there is first a terrace two hundred feet above the
river covered mostly with bushes, yellow apocynum on the open spaces,
together with carpets of dwarf manzanita, bunch-grass, and a few of
the compositæ, <!-- Page 91 -->
galiums, etc. Then comes a flat stretch a mile wide, extending to the
foothills, covered with birch, spruce, fir, and poplar, now mostly
killed by fire and the ground strewn with charred trunks. From this
black forest the mountain rises in rather steep slopes covered with a
luxuriant growth of bushes, grass, flowers, and a few trees, chiefly
spruce and fir, the firs gradually dwarfing into a beautiful
chaparral, the most beautiful, I think, I have ever seen, the flat
fan-shaped plumes thickly foliaged and imbricated by snow pressure,
forming a smooth, handsome thatch which bears cones and thrives as if
this repressed condition were its very best. It extends up to an
elevation of about fifty-five hundred feet. Only a few trees more than
a foot in diameter and more than fifty feet high are found higher than
four thousand feet above the sea. A few poplars and willows occur on
moist places, gradually dwarfing like the conifers. Alder is the most
generally distributed of the chaparral bushes, growing nearly
everywhere; its crinkled stems an inch or two thick form a troublesome
tangle to the mountaineer. The blue geranium, with leaves red and
showy at this time of the year, is perhaps the most telling of the
flowering plants. It grows up to five thousand feet or more. Larkspurs
are common, with epilobium, senecio, erigeron, and a few solidagos.
The harebell appears at about four thousand feet and extends to the
summit, dwarfing in stature but maintaining the size of its handsome
bells until they seem to be lying loose and detached on the ground as
if like snow flowers they had fallen from the sky; and, though
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frail and delicate-looking, none of its companions is more enduring or
rings out the praises of beauty-loving Nature in tones more
appreciable to mortals, not forgetting even Cassiope, who also is
here, and her companion, Bryanthus, the loveliest and most widely
distributed of the alpine shrubs. Then come crowberry, and two species
of huckleberry, one of them from about six inches to a foot high with
delicious berries, the other a most lavishly prolific and
contented-looking dwarf, few of the bushes being more than two inches
high, counting to the topmost leaf, yet each bearing from ten to
twenty or more large berries. Perhaps more than half the bulk of the
whole plant is fruit, the largest and finest-flavored of all the
huckleberries or blueberries I ever tasted, spreading fine feasts for
the grouse and ptarmigan and many others of Nature's mountain people.
I noticed three species of dwarf willows, one with narrow leaves,
growing at the very summit of the mountain in cracks of the rocks, as
well as on patches of soil, another with large, smooth leaves now
turning yellow. The third species grows between the others as to
elevation; its leaves, then orange-colored, are strikingly pitted and
reticulated. Another alpine shrub, a species of sericocarpus, covered
with handsome heads of feathery achenia, beautiful dwarf echiverias
with flocks of purple flowers pricked into their bright grass-green,
cushion-like bosses of moss-like foliage, and a fine forget-me-not
reach to the summit. I may also mention a large mertensia, a fine
anemone, a veratrum, six feet high, a large blue daisy,
<!-- Page 93 --> growing up to three to four thousand feet, and at the
summit a dwarf species, with dusky, hairy involucres, and a few ferns,
aspidium, gymnogramma, and small rock cheilanthes, leaving scarce a
foot of ground bare, though the mountain looks bald and brown in the
distance like those of the desert ranges of the Great Basin in Utah
and Nevada.</p>
<p>Charmed with these plant people, I had almost forgotten to watch
the sky until I reached the top of the highest peak, when one of the
greatest and most impressively sublime of all the mountain views I
have ever enjoyed came full in sight--more than three hundred miles of
closely packed peaks of the great Coast Range, sculptured in the
boldest manner imaginable, their naked tops and dividing ridges dark
in color, their sides and the cañons, gorges, and valleys
between them loaded with glaciers and snow. From this standpoint I
counted upwards of two hundred glaciers, while dark-centred luminous
clouds with fringed edges hovered and crawled over them, now slowly
descending, casting transparent shadows on the ice and snow, now
rising high above them, lingering like loving angels guarding the
crystal gifts they had bestowed. Although the range as seen from this
Glenora mountain-top seems regular in its trend, as if the main axis
were simple and continuous, it is, on the contrary, far from simple.
In front of the highest ranks of peaks are others of the same form
with their own glaciers, and lower peaks before these, and yet lower
ones with their ridges and cañons, valleys and foothills. Alps
rise beyond alps as far as the eye can <!-- Page 94 --> reach, and
clusters of higher peaks here and there closely crowded together;
clusters, too, of needles and pinnacles innumerable like trees in
groves. Everywhere the peaks seem comparatively slender and closely
packed, as if Nature had here been trying to see how many noble
well-dressed mountains could be crowded into one grand range.</p>
<p>The black rocks, too steep for snow to lie upon, were brought into
sharp relief by white clouds and snow and glaciers, and these again
were outlined and made tellingly plain by the rocks. The glaciers so
grandly displayed are of every form, some crawling through gorge and
valley like monster glittering serpents; others like broad cataracts
pouring over cliffs into shadowy gulfs; others, with their main trunks
winding through narrow cañons, display long, white finger-like
tributaries descending from the summits of pinnacled ridges. Others
lie back in fountain cirques walled in all around save at the lower
edge over which they pour in blue cascades. Snow, too, lay in folds
and patches of every form on blunt, rounded ridges in curves, arrowy
lines, dashes, and narrow ornamental flutings among the summit peaks
and in broad radiating wings on smooth slopes. And on many a bulging
headland and lower ridge there lay heavy, over-curling copings and
smooth, white domes where wind-driven snow was pressed and wreathed
and packed into every form and in every possible place and condition.
I never before had seen so richly sculptured a range or so many
awe-inspiring inaccessible mountains crowded together. If a line were
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drawn east and west from the peak on which I stood, and extended both
ways to the horizon, cutting the whole round landscape in two equal
parts, then all of the south half would be bounded by these icy peaks,
which would seem to curve around half the horizon and about twenty
degrees more, though extending in a general straight, or but
moderately curved, line. The deepest and thickest and highest of all
this wilderness of peaks lie to the southwest. They are probably from
about nine to twelve thousand feet high, springing to this elevation
from near the sea-level. The peak on which these observations were
made is somewhere about seven thousand feet high, and from here I
estimated the height of the range. The highest peak of all, or that
seemed so to me, lies to the westward at an estimated distance of
about one hundred and fifty or two hundred miles. Only its solid white
summit was visible. Possibly it may be the topmost peak of St. Elias.
Now look northward around the other half of the horizon, and instead
of countless peaks crowding into the sky, you see a low brown region,
heaving and swelling in gentle curves, apparently scarcely more waved
than a rolling prairie. The so-called cañons of several forks
of the upper Stickeen are visible, but even where best seen in the
foreground and middle ground of the picture, they are like mere sunken
gorges, making scarce perceptible marks on the landscape, while the
tops of the highest mountain-swells show only small patches of snow
and no glaciers.</p>
<p>Glenora Peak, on which I stood, is the highest <!-- Page 96 -->
point of a spur that puts out from the main range in a northerly
direction. It seems to have been a rounded, broad-backed ridge which
has been sculptured into its present irregular form by short residual
glaciers, some of which, a mile or two long, are still at work.</p>
<p>As I lingered, gazing on the vast show, luminous shadowy clouds
seemed to increase in glory of color and motion, now fondling the
highest peaks with infinite tenderness of touch, now hovering above
them like eagles over their nests.</p>
<p>When night was drawing near, I ran down the flowery slopes
exhilarated, thanking God for the gift of this great day. The setting
sun fired the clouds. All the world seemed new-born. Every thing, even
the commonest, was seen in new light and was looked at with new
interest as if never seen before. The plant people seemed glad, as if
rejoicing with me, the little ones as well as the trees, while every
feature of the peak and its traveled boulders seemed to know what I
had been about and the depth of my joy, as if they could read
faces.</p>
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