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<h2> Chapter 28 </h2>
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<h3> Uncle Mumford Unloads </h3>
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<p>ALL day we swung along down the river, and had the stream almost wholly to
ourselves. Formerly, at such a stage of the water, we should have passed
acres of lumber rafts, and dozens of big coal barges; also occasional
little trading-scows, peddling along from farm to farm, with the peddler's
family on board; possibly, a random scow, bearing a humble Hamlet and Co.
on an itinerant dramatic trip. But these were all absent. Far along in the
day, we saw one steamboat; just one, and no more. She was lying at rest in
the shade, within the wooded mouth of the Obion River. The spy-glass
revealed the fact that she was named for me—or <i>he</i> was named for me,
whichever you prefer. As this was the first time I had ever encountered
this species of honor, it seems excusable to mention it, and at the same
time call the attention of the authorities to the tardiness of my
recognition of it.</p>
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<p>Noted a big change in the river, at Island 21. It was a very large island,
and used to be out toward mid-stream; but it is joined fast to the main
shore now, and has retired from business as an island.</p>
<p>As we approached famous and formidable Plum Point, darkness fell, but that
was nothing to shudder about—in these modern times. For now the
national government has turned the Mississippi into a sort of
two-thousand-mile torchlight procession. In the head of every crossing,
and in the foot of every crossing, the government has set up a
clear-burning lamp. You are never entirely in the dark, now; there is
always a beacon in sight, either before you, or behind you, or abreast.
One might almost say that lamps have been squandered there. Dozens of
crossings are lighted which were not shoal when they were created, and
have never been shoal since; crossings so plain, too, and also so
straight, that a steamboat can take herself through them without any help,
after she has been through once. Lamps in such places are of course not
wasted; it is much more convenient and comfortable for a pilot to hold on
them than on a spread of formless blackness that won't stay still; and
money is saved to the boat, at the same time, for she can of course make
more miles with her rudder amidships than she can with it squared across
her stern and holding her back.</p>
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<p>But this thing has knocked the romance out of piloting, to a large extent.
It, and some other things together, have knocked all the romance out of
it. For instance, the peril from snags is not now what it once was. The
government's snag-boats go patrolling up and down, in these matter-of-fact
days, pulling the river's teeth; they have rooted out all the old clusters
which made many localities so formidable; and they allow no new ones to
collect. Formerly, if your boat got away from you, on a black night, and
broke for the woods, it was an anxious time with you; so was it also, when
you were groping your way through solidified darkness in a narrow chute;
but all that is changed now—you flash out your electric light,
transform night into day in the twinkling of an eye, and your perils and
anxieties are at an end. Horace Bixby and George Ritchie have charted the
crossings and laid out the courses by compass; they have invented a lamp
to go with the chart, and have patented the whole. With these helps, one
may run in the fog now, with considerable security, and with a confidence
unknown in the old days.</p>
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<p>With these abundant beacons, the banishment of snags, plenty of daylight
in a box and ready to be turned on whenever needed, and a chart and
compass to fight the fog with, piloting, at a good stage of water, is now
nearly as safe and simple as driving stage, and is hardly more than three
times as romantic.</p>
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<p>And now in these new days, these days of infinite change, the Anchor Line
have raised the captain above the pilot by giving him the bigger wages of
the two. This was going far, but they have not stopped there. They have
decreed that the pilot shall remain at his post, and stand his watch clear
through, whether the boat be under way or tied up to the shore. We, that
were once the aristocrats of the river, can't go to bed now, as we used to
do, and sleep while a hundred tons of freight are lugged aboard; no, we
must sit in the pilot-house; and keep awake, too. Verily we are being
treated like a parcel of mates and engineers. The Government has taken
away the romance of our calling; the Company has taken away its state and
dignity.</p>
<p>Plum Point looked as it had always looked by night, with the exception
that now there were beacons to mark the crossings, and also a lot of other
lights on the Point and along its shore; these latter glinting from the
fleet of the United States River Commission, and from a village which the
officials have built on the land for offices and for the employees of the
service. The military engineers of the Commission have taken upon their
shoulders the job of making the Mississippi over again—a job
transcended in size by only the original job of creating it. They are
building wing-dams here and there, to deflect the current; and dikes to
confine it in narrower bounds; and other dikes to make it stay there; and
for unnumbered miles along the Mississippi, they are felling the
timber-front for fifty yards back, with the purpose of shaving the bank
down to low-water mark with the slant of a house roof, and ballasting it
with stones; and in many places they have protected the wasting shores
with rows of piles. One who knows the Mississippi will promptly aver—not
aloud, but to himself—that ten thousand River Commissions, with the
mines of the world at their back, cannot tame that lawless stream, cannot
curb it or confine it, cannot say to it, Go here, or Go there, and make it
obey; cannot save a shore which it has sentenced; cannot bar its path with
an obstruction which it will not tear down, dance over, and laugh at. But
a discreet man will not put these things into spoken words; for the West
Point engineers have not their superiors anywhere; they know all that can
be known of their abstruse science; and so, since they conceive that they
can fetter and handcuff that river and boss him, it is but wisdom for the
unscientific man to keep still, lie low, and wait till they do it. Captain
Eads, with his jetties, has done a work at the mouth of the Mississippi
which seemed clearly impossible; so we do not feel full confidence now to
prophesy against like impossibilities. Otherwise one would pipe out and
say the Commission might as well bully the comets in their courses and
undertake to make them behave, as try to bully the Mississippi into right
and reasonable conduct.</p>
<p>I consulted Uncle Mumford concerning this and cognate matters; and I give
here the result, stenographically reported, and therefore to be relied on
as being full and correct; except that I have here and there left out
remarks which were addressed to the men, such as 'where in blazes are you
going with that barrel now?' and which seemed to me to break the flow of
the written statement, without compensating by adding to its information
or its clearness. Not that I have ventured to strike out all such
interjections; I have removed only those which were obviously irrelevant;
wherever one occurred which I felt any question about, I have judged it
safest to let it remain.</p>
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<p>UNCLE MUMFORD'S IMPRESSIONS</p>
<p>Uncle Mumford said—</p>
<p>'As long as I have been mate of a steamboat—thirty years—I
have watched this river and studied it. Maybe I could have learnt more
about it at West Point, but if I believe it I wish I may be <i>what are you
sucking your fingers there for ?—collar that kag of nails!</i> Four
years at West Point, and plenty of books and schooling, will learn a man a
good deal, I reckon, but it won't learn him the river. You turn one of
those little European rivers over to this Commission, with its hard bottom
and clear water, and it would just be a holiday job for them to wall it,
and pile it, and dike it, and tame it down, and boss it around, and make
it go wherever they wanted it to, and stay where they put it, and do just
as they said, every time. But this ain't that kind of a river. They have
started in here with big confidence, and the best intentions in the world;
but they are going to get left. What does Ecclesiastes vii. 13 say? Says
enough to knock <i>their </i>little game galley-west, don't it? Now you look at
their methods once. There at Devil's Island, in the Upper River, they
wanted the water to go one way, the water wanted to go another. So they
put up a stone wall. But what does the river care for a stone wall? When
it got ready, it just bulged through it. Maybe they can build another that
will stay; that is, up there—but not down here they can't. Down here
in the Lower River, they drive some pegs to turn the water away from the
shore and stop it from slicing off the bank; very well, don't it go
straight over and cut somebody else's bank? Certainly. Are they going to
peg all the banks? Why, they could buy ground and build a new Mississippi
cheaper. They are pegging Bulletin Tow-head now. It won't do any good. If
the river has got a mortgage on that island, it will foreclose, sure, pegs
or no pegs. Away down yonder, they have driven two rows of piles straight
through the middle of a dry bar half a mile long, which is forty foot out
of the water when the river is low. What do you reckon that is for? If I
know, I wish I may land in—<i>hump yourself, you son of an undertaker!—out
with that coal-oil, now, lively, lively!</i> And just look at what they are
trying to do down there at Milliken's Bend. There's been a cut-off in that
section, and Vicksburg is left out in the cold. It's a country town now.
The river strikes in below it; and a boat can't go up to the town except
in high water. Well, they are going to build wing-dams in the bend
opposite the foot of 103, and throw the water over and cut off the foot of
the island and plow down into an old ditch where the river used to be in
ancient times; and they think they can persuade the water around that way,
and get it to strike in above Vicksburg, as it used to do, and fetch the
town back into the world again. That is, they are going to take this whole
Mississippi, and twist it around and make it run several miles <i>up stream</i>.
Well you've got to admire men that deal in ideas of that size and can tote
them around without crutches; but you haven't got to believe they can <i>do</i>
such miracles, have you! And yet you ain't absolutely obliged to believe
they can't. I reckon the safe way, where a man can afford it, is to copper
the operation, and at the same time buy enough property in Vicksburg to
square you up in case they win. Government is doing a deal for the
Mississippi, now—spending loads of money on her. When there used to
be four thousand steamboats and ten thousand acres of coal-barges, and
rafts and trading scows, there wasn't a lantern from St. Paul to New
Orleans, and the snags were thicker than bristles on a hog's back; and now
when there's three dozen steamboats and nary barge or raft, Government has
snatched out all the snags, and lit up the shores like Broadway, and a
boat's as safe on the river as she'd be in heaven. And I reckon that by
the time there ain't any boats left at all, the Commission will have the
old thing all reorganized, and dredged out, and fenced in, and tidied up,
to a degree that will make navigation just simply perfect, and absolutely
safe and profitable; and all the days will be Sundays, and all the mates
will be Sunday-school su——<i>what-in-the-nation-you-fooling-around-there-for,
you sons of unrighteousness, heirs of perdition! going to be a year
getting that hogshead ashore?'</i></p>
<p>During our trip to New Orleans and back, we had many conversations with
river men, planters, journalists, and officers of the River Commission—with
conflicting and confusing results. To wit:—</p>
<p>1. Some believed in the Commission's scheme to arbitrarily and permanently
confine (and thus deepen) the channel, preserve threatened shores, etc.</p>
<p>2. Some believed that the Commission's money ought to be spent only on
building and repairing the great system of levees.</p>
<p>3. Some believed that the higher you build your levee, the higher the
river's bottom will rise; and that consequently the levee system is a
mistake.</p>
<p>4. Some believed in the scheme to relieve the river, in flood-time, by
turning its surplus waters off into Lake Borgne, etc.</p>
<p>5. Some believed in the scheme of northern lake-reservoirs to replenish
the Mississippi in low-water seasons.</p>
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<p>Wherever you find a man down there who believes in one of these theories
you may turn to the next man and frame your talk upon the hypothesis that
he does not believe in that theory; and after you have had experience, you
do not take this course doubtfully, or hesitatingly, but with the
confidence of a dying murderer—converted one, I mean. For you will
have come to know, with a deep and restful certainty, that you are not
going to meet two people sick of the same theory, one right after the
other. No, there will always be one or two with the other diseases along
between. And as you proceed, you will find out one or two other things.
You will find out that there is no distemper of the lot but is contagious;
and you cannot go where it is without catching it. You may vaccinate
yourself with deterrent facts as much as you please—it will do no
good; it will seem to 'take,' but it doesn't; the moment you rub against
any one of those theorists, make up your mind that it is time to hang out
your yellow flag.</p>
<p>Yes, you are his sure victim: yet his work is not all to your hurt—only
part of it; for he is like your family physician, who comes and cures the
mumps, and leaves the scarlet-fever behind. If your man is a
Lake-Borgne-relief theorist, for instance, he will exhale a cloud of
deadly facts and statistics which will lay you out with that disease,
sure; but at the same time he will cure you of any other of the five
theories that may have previously got into your system.</p>
<p>I have had all the five; and had them 'bad;' but ask me not, in mournful
numbers, which one racked me hardest, or which one numbered the biggest
sick list, for I do not know. In truth, no one can answer the latter
question. Mississippi Improvement is a mighty topic, down yonder. Every
man on the river banks, south of Cairo, talks about it every day, during
such moments as he is able to spare from talking about the war; and each
of the several chief theories has its host of zealous partisans; but, as I
have said, it is not possible to determine which cause numbers the most
recruits.</p>
<p>All were agreed upon one point, however: if Congress would make a
sufficient appropriation, a colossal benefit would result. Very well;
since then the appropriation has been made—possibly a sufficient
one, certainly not too large a one. Let us hope that the prophecy will be
amply fulfilled.</p>
<p>One thing will be easily granted by the reader; that an opinion from Mr.
Edward Atkinson, upon any vast national commercial matter, comes as near
ranking as authority, as can the opinion of any individual in the Union.
What he has to say about Mississippi River Improvement will be found in
the Appendix.{footnote [See Appendix B.]}</p>
<p>Sometimes, half a dozen figures will reveal, as with a lightning-flash,
the importance of a subject which ten thousand labored words, with the
same purpose in view, had left at last but dim and uncertain. Here is a
case of the sort—paragraph from the 'Cincinnati Commercial'—</p>
<p>'The towboat "Jos. B. Williams" is on her way to New Orleans with a tow of
thirty-two barges, containing six hundred thousand bushels (seventy-six
pounds to the bushel) of coal exclusive of her own fuel, being the largest
tow ever taken to New Orleans or anywhere else in the world. Her freight
bill, at 3 cents a bushel, amounts to $18,000. It would take eighteen
hundred cars, of three hundred and thirty-three bushels to the car, to
transport this amount of coal. At $10 per ton, or $100 per car, which
would be a fair price for the distance by rail, the freight bill would
amount to $180,000, or $162,000 more by rail than by river. The tow will
be taken from Pittsburg to New Orleans in fourteen or fifteen days. It
would take one hundred trains of eighteen cars to the train to transport
this one tow of six hundred thousand bushels of coal, and even if it made
the usual speed of fast freight lines, it would take one whole summer to
put it through by rail.'</p>
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<p>When a river in good condition can enable one to save $162,000 and a whole
summer's time, on a single cargo, the wisdom of taking measures to keep
the river in good condition is made plain to even the uncommercial mind.</p>
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