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HISTORIC WATERWAYS




     HISTORIC WATERWAYS

     SIX HUNDRED MILES OF CANOEING
     DOWN THE ROCK, FOX, AND
     WISCONSIN RIVERS

     BY
     REUBEN GOLD THWAITES
     SECRETARY OF THE STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY OF WISCONSIN

        Other roads do some violence to Nature, and bring the
        traveller to stare at her; but the river steals into the
        scenery it traverses without intrusion, silently creating
        and adorning it, and is free to come and go as the
        zephyr.--THOREAU; _A Week on the Concord and Merrimack
        Rivers._

     CHICAGO
     A. C. MCCLURG AND COMPANY
     1888




     COPYRIGHT
     BY A. C. MCCLURG AND CO.
     A.D. 1888.




     This Little Volume

     IS INSCRIBED BY THE AUTHOR

     TO HIS WIFE,

     HIS MESSMATE UPON TWO OF THE THREE VACATION
     VOYAGES HEREIN RECORDED,
     AND HIS FELLOW-VOYAGER DOWN THE RIVER
     OF TIME.




PREFACE.


There is a generally accepted notion that a brief summer vacation, if
at all obtainable in this busy life of ours, must be spent in a flight
as far afield as time will allow; that the popular resorts in the
mountains, by the seaside, or on the margins of the upper lakes must
be sought for rest and enjoyment; that neighborhood surroundings
should, in the mad rush for change of air and scene, be left behind.
The result is that your average vacationist--if I may be allowed to
coin a needed word--knows less of his own State than of any other, and
is inattentive to the delights of nature which await inspection within
the limits of his horizon.

But let him mount his bicycle, his saddle-horse, or his family
carriage, and start out upon a gypsy tour of a week or two along the
country roads, exploring the hills and plains and valleys of--say his
congressional district; or, better by far, take his canoe, and with
his best friend for a messmate explore the nearest river from source
to mouth, and my word for it he will find novelty and fresh air enough
to satisfy his utmost cravings; and when he comes to return to his
counter, his desk, or his study, he will be conscious of having
discovered charms in his own locality which he has in vain sought in
the accustomed paths of the tourist.

This volume is the record of six hundred miles of canoeing experiences
on historic waterways in Wisconsin and Illinois during the summer of
1887. There has been no attempt at exaggeration, to color its homely
incidents, or to picture charms where none exist. It is intended to be
a simple, truthful narrative of what was seen and done upon a series
of novel outings through the heart of the Northwest. If it may induce
others to undertake similar excursions, and thus increase the little
navy of healthy and self-satisfied canoeists, the object of the
publication will have been attained.

I am under obligations to my friend, the Hon. Levi Alden, for valuable
assistance in the revision of proof-sheets.

     R. G. T.
     MADISON, Wis., December, 1887.




CONTENTS.


                                             PAGE

     INTRODUCTION                              15

     TABLE OF DISTANCES                        26


     The Rock River

       CHAPTER I.

     THE WINDING YAHARA                        31

       CHAPTER II.

     BARBED-WIRE FENCES                        48

       CHAPTER III.

     AN ILLINOIS PRAIRIE HOME                  61

       CHAPTER IV.

     THE HALF-WAY HOUSE                        74

       CHAPTER V.

     GRAND DETOUR FOLKS                        86

       CHAPTER VI.

     AN ANCIENT MARINER                       103

       CHAPTER VII.

     STORM-BOUND AT ERIE                      117

       CHAPTER VIII.

     THE LAST DAY OUT                         129


     The Fox River (of Green Bay).

       FIRST LETTER.

     SMITH'S ISLAND                           143

       SECOND LETTER.

     FROM PACKWAUKEE TO BERLIN                160

       THIRD LETTER.

     THE MASCOUTINS                           174

       FOURTH LETTER.

     THE LAND OF THE WINNEBAGOES              187

       FIFTH LETTER.

     LOCKED THROUGH                           205

       SIXTH LETTER.

     THE BAY SETTLEMENT                       218


     The Wisconsin River.

       CHAPTER I.

     ALONE IN THE WILDERNESS                 237

       CHAPTER II.

     THE LAST OF THE SACS                    248

       CHAPTER III.

     A PANORAMIC VIEW                        262

       CHAPTER IV.

     FLOATING THROUGH FAIRYLAND              275

       CHAPTER V

     THE DISCOVERY OF THE MISSISSIPPI        288


     INDEX                                   295




INTRODUCTION.




HISTORIC WATERWAYS.




INTRODUCTION.


Provided, reader, you have a goodly store of patience, stout muscles,
a practiced fondness for the oars, a keen love of the picturesque and
curious in nature, a capacity for remaining good-humored under the
most adverse circumstances, together with a quiet love for that sort
of gypsy life which we call "roughing it," canoeing may be safely
recommended to you as one of the most delightful and healthful of
outdoor recreations, as well as one of the cheapest.

The canoe need not be of birch-bark or canvas, or of the Rob Roy or
Racine pattern. A plain, substantial, light, open clinker-build was
what we used,--thirteen feet in extreme length, with three-and-a-half
feet beam. It was easily portaged, held two persons comfortably with
seventy-five pounds of baggage, and drew but five inches,--just enough
to let us over the average shallows without bumping. It was
serviceable, and stood the rough carries and innumerable bangs from
sunken rocks and snags along its voyage of six hundred miles, without
injury. It could carry a large sprit-sail, and, with an attachable
keel, run close to the wind; while an awning, decided luxury on hot
days, was readily hoisted on a pair of hoops attached to the gunwale
on either side. But perhaps, where there are no portages necessary, an
ordinary flat-bottomed river punt, built of three boards, would be as
productive of good results, except as to speed,--and what matters
speed upon such a tour of observation?

It is not necessary to go to the Maine lakes for canoeing purposes; or
to skirt the gloomy wastes of Labrador, or descend the angry current
of a mountain stream. Here, in the Mississippi basin, practically
boundless opportunities present themselves, at our very doors, to
glide through the heart of a fertile and picturesque land, to commune
with Nature, to drink in her beauties, to view men and communities
from a novel standpoint, to catch pictures of life and manners that
will always live in one's memory. The traveler by rail has brief and
imperfect glimpses of the landscape. The canoeist, from his lowly seat
near the surface of the flood, sees the country practically as it was
in pioneer days, in a state of unalloyed beauty. Each bend in the
stream brings into view a new vista, and thus the bewitching scene
changes as in a kaleidoscope. The people one meets, the variety of
landscape one encounters, the simple adventures of the day, the
sensation of being an explorer, the fresh air and simple diet,
combined with that spirit of calm contentedness which overcomes the
happy voyager who casts loose from care, are the never-failing
attractions of such a trip.

To those would-be canoeists who are fond of the romantic history of
our great West, as well as of delightful scenery, the Fox (of Green
Bay), the Rock, and the Wisconsin, each with its sharply distinctive
features, will be found among the most interesting of our neighborhood
rivers. And this record of recent voyages upon them is, I think,
fairly representative of what sights and experiences await the boatman
upon any of the streams of similar importance in the vast and
well-watered region of the upper Mississippi valley.

Of the three, the Rock river route, through the great prairies of
Illinois, perhaps presents the greatest variety of life and scenery.
The Rock has practically two heads: the smaller, in a rustic stream
flowing from the north into swamp-girted Lake Koshkonong; the larger,
in the four lakes at Madison, the charming capital of Wisconsin, which
empty their waters into the Avon-like Catfish or Yahara, which in turn
pours into the Rock a short distance below the Koshkonong lake. Our
course was from Madison almost to the mouth of the Rock, near Rock
Island, 267 miles of paddling, as the river winds.

The student of history finds the Rock interesting to him because of
its associations with the Black Hawk war of 1832. When the famous Sac
warrior "invaded" Illinois, his path of progress was up the south bank
of that stream. At Prophetstown lived his evil genius, the crafty
White Cloud, and here the Hawk held council with the Pottawattomies,
who, under good Shaubena's influence, rejected the war pipe. Dixon is
famous as the site of the pioneer ferry over the Rock, on the line of
what was the principal land highway between Chicago and southern
Wisconsin and the Galena mines for a protracted period in each year.
Here, many a notable party of explorers, military officials, miners,
and traders have rendezvoused in the olden time. Here was a
rallying-point in 1832, as well, when Lincoln was a raw-boned
militiaman in a scouting corps, and Robert Anderson, of Fort Sumter
fame, Zachary Taylor, and Jefferson Davis were of the regular army
under bluff old Atkinson. A grove at the mouth of Stillman's Creek, a
Rock River tributary, near Byron, is the scene of the actual outbreak
of the war. The forest where Black Hawk camped with the white-loving
Pottawattomies is practically unchanged, and the open, rolling prairie
to the south--on which Stillman's horsemen acted at first so
treacherously, and afterwards as arrant cowards--is still there, a
broad pasture-land miles in length, along the river. The
contemporaneous descriptions of the "battle" field are readily
recognizable to-day. Above, as far as Lake Koshkonong, the river banks
are fraught with interest; for along them the soldiery followed up the
Sac trail, like bloodhounds, and held many an unsatisfactory parley
with the double-faced Winnebagoes.

Rock River scenery combines the rustic, the romantic, and the
picturesque,--prairies, meadows, ravines, swamps, mountainous bluffs,
eroded palisades, wide stretches of densely wooded bottoms, heavy
upland forests, shallows, spits, and rapids. Birds and flowers, and
uncommon plants and vines, delight the naturalist and the botanist.
The many thriving manufacturing cities,--such as Stoughton,
Janesville, Beloit, Rockford, Rockton, Dixon, Sterling, and
Oregon,--furnish an abundance of sight-seeing. The small
villages--some of them odd, out-of-the-way places, of rare types--are
worthy of study to the curious in economics and human nature. The
farmers are of many types; the fishermen one is thrown into daily
communion with are a class unto themselves; while millers,
bridge-tenders, boat-renters, and others whose callings are
along-shore, present a variety of humanity interesting and
instructive. The twenty-odd mill-dam portages, each having
difficulties and incidents of its own, are well calculated to vary the
monotony of the voyage; there are more or less dangers connected with
some of the mill-races, while the lookout for snags, bowlders and
shallows must be continuous, sharpening the senses of sight and sound;
for a tip-over or the utter demolition of the craft may readily follow
carelessness in this direction. The islands in the Rock are numerous,
many of them being several miles in length, and nearly all heavily
wooded. These frequent divisions of the channel often give rise to
much perplexity; for the ordinary summer stage of water is so low that
a loaded canoe drawing five inches of water is liable to be stranded
in the channel apparently most available.

The Fox and Wisconsin rivers--the former, from Portage to Green Bay,
the latter from Portage to Prairie du Chien--form a water highway that
has been in use by white men for two and a half centuries. In 1634,
Jean Nicolet, the first explorer of the Northwest, passed up the Fox
River, to about Berlin, and then went southward to visit the Illinois.
In the month of June, 1673, Joliet and Marquette made their famous
tour over the interlocked watercourse and discovered the Mississippi
River. After they had shown the way, a tide of travel set in over
these twin streams, between the Great Lakes and the great river,--a
motley procession of Jesuit missionaries, explorers, traders,
trappers, soldiers and pioneers. New England was in its infancy when
the Fox and Wisconsin became an established highway for enterprising
canoeists.

Since the advent of the railway era this historic channel of
communication has fallen into disuse. The general government has spent
an immense sum in endeavoring to render it navigable for the vessels
in vogue to-day, but the result, as a whole, is a failure. There is no
navigation on the Fox worthy of mention, above Berlin, and even that
below is insignificant and intermittent. On the Wisconsin there is
none at all, except for skiffs and an occasional lumber-raft.

The canoeist of to-day, therefore, will find solitude and shallows
enough on either river. But he can float, if historically inclined,
through the dusky shadows of the past, for every turn of the bank has
its story, and there is romance enough to stock a volume.

The upper Fox is rather monotonous. The river twists and turns through
enormous widespreads, grown up with wild rice and flecked with
water-fowl. These widespreads occasionally free themselves of
vegetable growth and become lakes, like the Buffalo, the Puckawa, and
the Poygan. There is, however, much of interest to the student in
natural history; while such towns as Montello, Princeton, Berlin,
Omro, Winneconne, and Oshkosh are worthy of visitation. Lake Winnebago
is a notable inland sea, and the canoeist feels fairly lost, in his
little cockle shell, bobbing about over its great waves. The lower Fox
runs between high, noble banks, and with frequent rapids, past
Neenah, Menasha, Appleton, and other busy manufacturing cities, down
to Green Bay, hoary with age and classic in her shanty ruins.

The Wisconsin River is the most picturesque of the three. Probably the
best route is from the head of the Dells to the mouth; but the run
from Portage to the mouth is the one which has the merit of antiquity,
and is certainly a long enough jaunt to satisfy the average tourist.
It is a wide, gloomy, mountain-girt valley, with great sand-bars and
thickly-wooded morasses. Settlement is slight. Portage, Prairie du
Sac, Sauk City, and Muscoda are the principal towns. The few villages
are generally from a mile to three miles back, at the foot of the
bluffs, out of the way of the flood, and the river appears to be but
little used. It is an ideal sketching-ground. The canoeist with a
camera will find occupation enough in taking views of his
surroundings; perplexity as to what to choose amid such a crowd of
charming scenes, will be his only difficulty.

Some suggestions to those who may wish to undertake these or similar
river trips may be advisable. Traveling alone will be found too
dreary. None but a hermit could enjoy those long stretches of
waterway, where one may float for a day without seeing man or animal
on the forest-bounded shores, and where the oppression of solitude is
felt with such force that it requires but a slight stretch of
imagination to carry one's self back in thought and feeling to the
days when the black-robed members of the Company of Jesus first
penetrated the gloomy wilderness. Upon the size of the party should
depend the character of the preparations. If the plan is to spend the
nights at farmhouses or village taverns, then a party of two will be
as large as can secure comfortable quarters,--especially at a
farmhouse, where but one spare bed can usually be found, while many
are the country inns where the accommodations are equally limited. If
it is intended to tent on the banks, then the party should be larger;
for two persons unused to this experience would find it exceedingly
lonesome after nightfall, when visions of river tramps, dissolute
fishermen, and inquisitive hogs and bulls, pass in review, and the
weakness of the little camp against such formidable odds comes to be
fully recognized. Often, too, the camping-places are few and far
between, and may involve a carry of luggage to higher lands beyond; on
such occasions, the more assistance the merrier. But whatever the
preparations for the night and breakfast, the mess-box must be relied
upon for dinners and suppers, for there is no dining-car to be taken
on along these water highways, and eating-stations are unknown. Unless
there are several towns on the route, of over one thousand
inhabitants, it would be well to carry sufficient provisions of a
simple sort for the entire trip, for supplies are difficult to obtain
at small villages, and the quality is apt to be poor. Farmhouses can
generally be depended on for eggs, butter, and milk,--nothing more.
For drinking-water, obtainable from farm-wells, carry an army canteen,
if you can get one; if not, a stone jug will do. The river water is
useful only for floating the canoe, and the offices of the bath. As to
personal baggage, fly very light, as a draught of over six inches
would at times work an estoppel to your progress on any of the three
streams mentioned. In shipping your boat to any point at which you
wish to embark upon a river, allow two or three days for freight-train
delays.

Be prepared to find canoeing a rough sport. There is plenty of hard
work about it, a good deal of sunburn and blister. You will be obliged
to wear your old clothes, and may not be overpleased to meet critical
friends in the river towns you visit. But if you have the true spirit
of the canoeist, you will win for your pains an abundance of good air,
good scenery, wholesome exercise, sound sleep, and something to
think about all your life.

      TABLE OF DISTANCES.--TOTAL, 607 MILES.

      THE ROCK RIVER.

                                        MILES.

     Madison to Stoughton                 22
     Stoughton to Janesville              40
     Janesville to Beloit                 18
     Beloit to Rockford                   40
     Rockford to Byron                    18
     Byron to Oregon                      15
     Oregon to Dixon                      31
     Dixon to Sterling                    20
     Sterling to Como                      9
     Como to Lyndon                       14
     Lyndon to Prophetstown                5
     Prophetstown to Erie Ferry           10
     Erie Ferry to Coloma                 25
     Coloma to mouth of river             14
     Mouth of river to Rock Island
       (up Mississippi River)              6
                                         ---
     Total                               287

       THE FOX RIVER (OF GREEN BAY).

                                        MILES.

     Portage to Packwaukee                25
     Packwaukee to Montello                7
     Montello to Marquette                11
     Marquette to Princeton               18
     Princeton to Berlin                  20
     Berlin to Omro                       18
     Omro to Oshkosh                      22
     Oshkosh to Neenah                    20
     Neenah to Appleton                    7
     Appleton to Kaukauna                  7
     Kaukauna to Green Bay                20
                                         ---
     Total                               175

       THE WISCONSIN RIVER.

                                        MILES.

     Portage to Merrimac                  20
     Merrimac to Prairie du Sac           10
     Prairie du Sac to Arena Ferry        15
     Arena Ferry to Helena                 8
     Helena to Lone Rock Bridge           14
     Lone Rock Bridge to Muscoda          18
     Muscoda to Port Andrew                9
     Port Andrew to Boscobel              10
     Boscobel to Boydtown                 10
     Boydtown to Wauzeka (on Kickapoo)     7
     Wauzeka to Wright's Ferry            10
     Wright's Ferry to Bridgeport          4
     Bridgeport to mouth of river          7
     Mouth of river to Prairie du Chien
     (up Mississippi River)                5
                                         ---
     Total                               145

NOTE.--The above table of distances by water is based upon the most
reliable local estimates, verified, as far as practicable, by official
surveys.




THE ROCK RIVER.

  [Illustration: MAP OF THE ROCK RIVER to accompany THWAITES'S
  "HISTORIC WATERWAYS"]




THE ROCK RIVER.




CHAPTER I.

THE WINDING YAHARA.


It was a quarter to twelve, Monday morning, the 23d of May, 1887, when
we took seats in our canoe at our own landing-stage on Third Lake, at
Madison, spread an awning over two hoops, as on a Chinese house-boat,
pushed off, waved farewell to a little group of curious friends, and
started on our way to explore the Rock River of Illinois. W----
wielded the paddle astern, while I took the oars amidships. Despite
the one hundred pounds of baggage and the warmth emitted by the
glowing sun,--for the season was unusually advanced,--we made
excellent speed, as we well had need in order to reach the mouth, a
distance of two hundred and eighty miles as the sinuous river runs,
in the seven days we had allotted to the task.

It was a delightful run across the southern arm of the lake. There was
a light breeze aft, which gave a graceful upward curvature to our
low-set awning. The great elms and lindens at charming Lakeside--the
home of the Wisconsin Chautauqua--droop over the bowlder-studded
banks, their masses of greenery almost sweeping the water. Down in the
deep, cool shadows groups of bass and pickerel and perch lazily swish;
swarms of "crazy bugs" ceaselessly swirl around and around, with no
apparent object in life but this rhythmic motion, by which they
wrinkle the mirror-like surface into concentric circles. Through
occasional openings in the dense fringe of pendent boughs, glimpses
can be had of park-like glades, studded with columnar oaks, and
stretching upward to hazel-grown knolls, which rise in irregular
succession beyond the bank. From the thickets comes the fussy chatter
of thrushes and cat-birds, calling to their young or gossiping with
the orioles, the robins, jays, and red-breasted grosbeaks, who warble
and twitter and scream and trill from more lofty heights.

A quarter of an hour sent us spinning across the mouth of Turvill's
Bay. At Ott's Farm, just beyond, the bank rises with sheer ascent, in
layers of crumbly sandstone, a dozen feet above the water's level.
Close-cropped woodlawn pastures gently <DW72> upward to storm-wracked
orchards, and long, dark windbreaks of funereal spruce. Flocks of
sheep, fresh from the shearing, trot along the banks, winding in and
out between the trees, keeping us company on our way,--their bleating
lambs following at a lope,--now and then stopping, in their eager,
fearful curiosity, to view our craft, and assuming picturesque
attitudes, worthy subjects for a painter's art.

A long, hard pull through close-grown patches of reeds and lily-pads,
encumbered by thick masses of green scum, brought us to the outlet of
the lake and the head of that section of the Catfish River which is
the medium through which Third Lake pours its overflow into Second.
The four lakes of Madison are connected by the Catfish, the chief
Wisconsin tributary of the Rock. Upon the map this relationship
reminds one of beads strung upon a thread.

As the result of a protracted drought, the water in the little stream
was low, and great clumps of aquatic weeds came very close to the
surface, threatening, later in the season, an almost complete
stoppage to navigation. But the effect of the current was at once
perceptible. It was as if an additional rower had been taken on. The
river, the open stream of which is some three rods wide at this point,
winds like a serpent between broad marshes, which must at no far
distant period in the past have been wholly submerged, thus prolonging
the three upper lakes into a continuous sheet of water. From a
half-mile to a mile back, on either side, there are low ridges,
doubtless the ancient shores of a narrow lake that was probably thirty
or forty miles in length. In high water, even now, the marshes are
converted into widespreads, where the dense tangle of wild rice,
reeds, and rushes does not wholly prevent canoe navigation; while
little mud-bottomed lakes, a quarter of a mile or so in diameter, are
frequently met with at all stages. In places, the river, during a
drought, has a depth of not over eighteen inches. In such stretches,
the current moves swiftly over hard bottoms strewn with gravel and the
whitened sepulchres of snails and clams. In the widespreads, the
progress is sluggish, the vegetable growth so crowding in upon the
stream as to leave but a narrow and devious channel, requiring skill
to pilot through; for in these labyrinthian turnings one is quite
liable, if not closely watching the lazy flood, to push into some
vexatious cul-de-sac, many rods in length, and be obliged to retrace,
with the danger of mistaking a branch for the main channel.

In the depths of the tall reeds motherly mud-hens are clucking, while
their mates squat in the open water, in meditative groups, rising with
a prolonged splash and a whirr as the canoe approaches within gunshot.
Secluded among the rushes and cat-tails, nestled down in little clumps
of stubble, are hundreds of the cup-shaped nests of the red-winged
blackbird, or American starling; the females, in modest brown, take a
rather pensive view of life, administering to the wants of their
young; while the bright-hued, talkative males, perched on swaying
stalks, fairly make the air hum with their cheery trills.

Water-lilies abound everywhere. The blossoms of the yellow variety
(nuphar advena) are here and there bursting in select groups, but as a
rule the buds are still below the surface. In the mud lakes, the
bottom is seen through the crystal water to be thickly studded with
great rosettes, two and three feet in diameter, of corrugated ovate
leaves, of golden russet shade, out of which are shot upward brilliant
green stalks, some bearing arrow-shaped leaves, and others crowned
with the tight-wrapped buds that will soon open upon the water level
into saffron-hued flowers. The plate-like leaves of the white variety
(nymphaea tuberosa) already dot the surface, but the buds are not yet
visible. Anchored by delicate stems to the creeping root-stalks,
buried in the mud below, the leaves, when first emerging, are of a
rich golden brown, but they are soon frayed by the waves, and soiled
and eaten by myriads of water-bugs, slugs, and spiders, who make their
homes on these floating islands. Pluck a leaf, and the many-legged
spiders, the roving buccaneers of these miniature seas, stalk off at
high speed, while the slugs and leeches, in a spirit of stubborn
patriotism, prefer meeting death upon their native heath to politic
emigration.

By one o'clock we had reached the railway bridge at the head of Second
Lake. Upon the trestlework were perched three boys and a man, fishing.
They had that listless air and unkempt appearance which are so
characteristic of the little groups of humanity often to be found on a
fair day angling from piers, bridges, and railway embankments. Men who
imagine the world is allied against them will loll away a dozen hours
a day, throughout an entire summer season, sitting on the sun-heated
girders of an iron bridge; yet they would strike against any system in
the work-a-day world which compelled them to labor more than eight
hours for ten hours' pay. In going down a long stretch of water
highway, one comes to believe that about one-quarter of the
inhabitants, especially of the villages, spend their time chiefly in
fishing. On a canoe voyage, the bridge fishermen and the birds are the
classes of animated nature most frequently met with, the former
presenting perhaps the most unique and varied specimens. There are
fishermen and fishermen. I never could fancy Izaak Walton dangling his
legs from a railroad bridge, soaking a worm at the end of a length of
store twine, vainly hoping, as the hours went listlessly by, that a
stray sucker or a diminutive catfish would pull the bob under and
score a victory for patience. Now the use of a boat lifts this sort of
thing to the dignity of a sport.

Second Lake is about three miles long by a mile in breadth. The shores
are here and there marshy; but as a rule they are of good, firm land
with occasional rocky bluffs from a dozen to twenty feet high, rising
sheer from a narrow beach of gravel. As we crossed over to gain the
lower Catfish, a calm prevailed for the most part, and the awning was
a decided comfort. Now and then, however, a delightful puff came
ruffling the water astern, swelling our canvas roof and noticeably
helping us along. Light cloudage, blown swiftly before upper aerial
currents, occasionally obscured the sun,--black, gray, and white
cumuli fantastically shaped and commingled, while through jagged and
rapidly shifting gaps was to be seen with vivid effect, the deep blue
ether beyond.

The bluffs and glades are well wooded. The former have escarpments of
yellow clay and grayish sand and gravel; here and there have been
landslides, where great trees have fallen with the debris and maintain
but a slender hold amid their new surroundings, leaning far out over
the water, easy victims for the next tornado. One monarch of the woods
had been thus precipitated into the flood; on one side, its trunk and
giant branches were water-soaked and slimy, while those above were
dead and whitened by storm. As we approached, scores of turtles,
sunning themselves on the unsubmerged portion, suddenly ducked their
heads and slid off their perches amid a general splash, to hidden
grottos below; while a solitary king-fisher from his vantage height
on an upper bough hurriedly rose, and screamed indignance at our rude
entry upon his preserve.

A farmer's lad sitting squat upon his haunches on the beach, and
another, leaning over a pasture-fence, holding his head between his
hands, exhibited lamb-like curiosity at the awning-decked canoe, as it
glided past their bank. Through openings in the forest, we caught
glimpses of rolling upland pastures, with sod close-cropped and smooth
as a well-kept lawn; of gray-blue fields, recently seeded; of
farmhouses, spacious barns, tobacco-curing sheds,--for this is the
heart of the Wisconsin tobacco region,--and those inevitable signs of
rural prosperity, windmills, spinning around by spurts, obedient to
the breath of the intermittent May-day zephyr; while little bays
opened up, on the most distant shore, enchanting vistas of blue-misted
ridges.

At last, after a dreamy pull of two miles from the lake-head, we
rounded a bold headland of some thirty feet in height, and entered
Catfish Bay. Ice-pushed bowlders strew the shore, which is here a
gentle meadow <DW72>, based by a gravel beach. A herd of cattle are
contentedly browsing, their movements attuned to a symphony of
cow-bells dangling from the necks of the leaders. The scene is
pre-eminently peaceful.

The Catfish connecting Second Lake with First, has two entrances, a
small flat willow island dividing them. Through the eastern channel,
which is the deepest, the current goes down with a rush, the
obstruction offered by numerous bowlders churning it into noisy
rapids; but the water tames down within a few rods, and the canoe
comes gayly gliding into the united stream, which now has a placid
current of two miles per hour,--quite fast enough for canoeing
purposes. This section of the Catfish is much more picturesque than
the preceding; the shores are firmer; the parallel ridges sometimes
closely shut it in, and the stream, here four or five rods wide, takes
upon itself the characteristics of the conventional river. The weed
and vine grown banks are oftentimes twenty feet in height, with as
sharp an ascent as can be comfortably climbed; and the swift-rushing
water is sometimes fringed with sumachs, elders, and hazel brush, with
here and there willows, maples, lindens, and oaks. Occasionally the
river apparently ends at the base of a steep, earthy bluff; but when
that is reached there is a sudden swerve to the right or left, with
another vista of banks,--sometimes wood-grown to the water's edge,
again with openings revealing purplish-brown fields, neatly harrowed,
stretching up to some commanding, forest-crowned hill-top. The
blossoms of the wild grape burden the air with sweet scent; on the
deep-shaded banks, amid stones and cool mosses, the red and yellow
columbine gracefully nods; the mandrake, with its glossy green leaves,
grows with tropical luxuriance; more in the open, appears in great
profusion, the old maid's nightcap, in purplish roseate hue; the
sheep-berry shrub is decked in masses of white blossoms; the hawthorn
flower is detected by its sickly-sweet scent, and here and there are
luxuriously-flowered locusts, specimens that have escaped from
cultivation to take up their homes in this botanical wilderness.

There are charming rustic pictures at every turn,--sleek herds of
cattle, droves of fat hogs, flocks of sheep that have but recently
doffed their winter suits, well-tended fields, trim-looking wire
fences, neat farm-houses where rows of milkpans glisten upon sunny
drying-benches, farmers and farmers' boys riding aristocratic-looking
sulky drags and cultivators,--everywhere an air of agricultural
luxuriance, rather emphasized by occasional log-houses, which repose
as honored relics by the side of their pretentious successors,
sharply contrasting the wide differences between pioneer life and that
of to-day.

The marshes are few; and they in this dry season are luxuriant with
coarse, glossy wild grass,--the only hay-crop the farmer will have
this year,--and dotted with clumps of dead willow-trees, which present
a ghostly appearance, waving their white, scarred limbs in the
freshening breeze. The most beautiful spot on this section of the
Catfish is a point some eight miles above Stoughton. The verdure-clad
banks are high and steep. A lanky Norwegian farmer came down an
angling path with a pail-yoke over his shoulders to get washing-water
for his "woman," and told us that when this country was sparsely
settled, a third of a century ago, there was a mill-dam here. That was
the day when the possession of water-power meant more than it does in
this age of steam and rapid transit,--the day when every mill-site was
supposed to be a nucleus around which a prosperous village must
necessarily grow in due time. Nothing now remains as a relic of this
particular fond hope but great hollows in either bank, where the clay
for dam-making purposes has been scooped out, and a few rotten piles,
having a slender hold upon the bottom, against which drift-wood has
lodged, forming a home for turtles and clumps of semi-aquatic grasses.
W---- avers, in a spirit of enthusiasm, that the Catfish between
Second and First Lakes is quite similar in parts to the immortal Avon,
upon which Shakespeare canoed in the long-ago. If she is right, then
indeed are the charms of Avon worthy the praise of the Muses. If the
Catfish of to-day is ever to go down to posterity on the wings of
poesy, however, I would wish that it might be with the more euphonious
title of "Yahara,"--the original Winnebago name. The map-maker who
first dropped the liquid "Yahara" for the rasping "Catfish" had no
soul for music.

Darting under a quaint rustic foot-bridge made of rough poles, which
on its high trestles stalks over a wide expanse of reedy bog like a
giant "stick-bug," we emerged into First Lake. The eastern shore,
which we skirted, is a wide, sandy beach, backed by meadows. The
opposite banks, two or three miles away, present more picturesque
outlines. A stately wild swan kept us company for over a mile, just
out of musket-shot, and finally took advantage of a patch of rushes to
stop and hide. A small sandstone quarry on the southeast shore, with a
lone worker, attracted our attention. There was not a human
habitation in sight, and it seemed odd to see a solitary man engaged
in such labor apparently so far removed from the highways of commerce.
The quarryman stuck his crowbar in a crack horizontally, to serve as a
seat, and filled his pipe as we approached. We hailed him with
inquiries, from the stone pier jutting into the lake at the foot of
the bluff into which he was burrowing. He replied from his lofty
perch, in rich Norsk brogue, that he shipped stone by barge to
Stoughton, and good-humoredly added, as he struck a match and lit his
bowl of weed, that he thought himself altogether too good company to
ever get lonesome. We left the philosopher to enjoy his pipe in peace,
and passed on around the headland.

An iron railway bridge, shut in with high sides, and painted a dullish
red, spans the Lower Catfish at the outlet of First Lake. A country
boy, with face as dirty as it was solemn, stood in artistic rags at
the base of an arch, fishing with a bit of hop-twine tied to the end
of a lath; from a mass of sedge just behind him a hoarse cry arose at
short intervals.

"Hi, Johnny, what's that making the noise?

"Bird!" sententiously responded the stoic youth. He looked as though
he had been bored with a silly question, and kept his eyes on his
task.

"What kind of a bird, Johnny?"

"D'no!" rather raspishly. He evidently thought he was being guyed.

We ran the nose of the canoe into the reeds. There was a splash, a
wild cry of alarm, and up flew a great bittern. Circling about until
we had passed on, it then drifted down to its former location near the
uninquiring lad,--where doubtless it had a nest of young, and had been
disturbed in the midst of a lecture on domestic discipline.

Wide marshes again appear on either side of the stream. There are
great and small bitterns at every view; plovers daintily picking their
way over the open bogs, greedily feeding on countless snails; wild
ducks in plenty, patiently waiting in the secluded bayous for the
development of their young; yellow-headed troopials flitting freely
about, uttering a choking, gulping cry; while the pert little wren,
with his smart cock-tail, views the varied scene from his perch on a
lofty rush, jealously keeping watch and ward over his ball-like
castle, with its secret gate, hung among the reeds below.

But interspersing the marshes there are often stretches of firm bank
and delightfully varied glimpses of hillside and wood. Three miles
above Stoughton, we stopped for supper at the edge of a glade, near a
quaint old bridge. While seated on the smooth sward, beside our little
spread, there came a vigorous rustling among the branches of the trees
that overhang the country road which winds down the opposite <DW72> to
the water's edge to take advantage of the crossing. A gypsy wagon,
with a high, rounded, oil-cloth top soon emerged from the forest, and
was seen to have been the cause of the disturbance. Halting at one
side of the highway, three men and a boy jumped out, unhitched the
horses at the pole and the jockeying stock at the tail-board, and led
them down to water. Two women meanwhile set about getting supper, and
preparations were made for a night camp. We confessed to a touch of
sympathy with our new neighbors on the other shore, for we felt as
though gypsying ourselves. The hoop awning on the canoe certainly had
the general characteristics of a gypsy-wagon top; we knew not and
cared not where night might overtake us; we were dependent on the
country for our provender; were at the mercy of wind, weather, and the
peculiarities of our chosen highway; and had deliberately turned our
backs on home for a season of untrammeled communion with nature.

It was during a golden sunset that, pushing on through a great
widespread, through which the channel doubles and twists like a
scotched snake, we came in sight of the little city of Stoughton.
First, the water-works tower rises above the mass of trees which
embower the settlement. Then, on nearer approach, through rifts in the
woodland we catch glimpses of some of the best outlying residences,
most of them pretty, with well-kept grounds. Then come the
church-spires, the ice-houses, the barge-dock, and with a spurt we
sweep alongside the foundry of Mandt's wagon-works. Depositing our
oars, paddle, blankets, and supplies in the office, the canoe was
pulled up on the grass and padlocked to a stake. The street lamps were
lighting as we registered at the inn.

Stoughton has about two thousand inhabitants. A walk about town in the
evening, revealed a number of bright, busy shops, chiefly kept by
Norwegians, who predominate in this region. Nearly every street
appears to end in one of Mandt's numerous factory yards, and the
wagon-making magnate seems to control pretty much the entire river
front here.




CHAPTER II.

BARBED-WIRE FENCES.


We were off in the morning, after an early breakfast at the Stoughton
inn. Our host kindly sent down his porter to help us over the
mill-dam,--our first and easiest portage, and one of the few in which
we received assistance of any kind. Below this, as below all of the
dams on the river, there are broad shallows. The water in the stream,
being at a low stage, is mainly absorbed in the mill-race, and the
apron spreads the slight overflow evenly over the width of the bed, so
that there is left a wide expanse of gravel and rocks below the chute,
which is not covered sufficiently deep for navigating even our little
craft, drawing but five inches when fully loaded. We soon grounded on
the shallows and I was obliged to get out and tow the lightened boat
to the tail of the race, where deeper water was henceforth assured.
This experience became quite familiar before the end of the trip. I
had fortunately brought a pair of rubbers in my satchel, and found
them invaluable as wading-shoes, where the river bottom is strewn with
sharp gravel and slimy round-heads.

Below Stoughton the river winds along in most graceful curves, for the
most part between banks from six to twenty feet high, with occasional
pocket-marshes, in which the skunk-cabbage luxuriates. The stream is
often thickly studded with lily-pads, which the wind, blowing fresh
astern, frequently ruffles so as to give the appearance of rapids
ahead, inducing caution where none is necessary. But every half-mile
or so there are genuine little rapids, some of them requiring care to
successfully shoot; in low water the canoe goes bumping along over the
small moss-grown rocks, and now and then plumps solidly on a big one;
when the stream is turbid,--as often happens below a pasture, where
the cattle stir up the bank mud,--the danger of being overturned by
scarcely submerged bowlders is imminent.

There are some decidedly romantic spots, where little densely-wooded
and grape-tangled glens run off at right angles, leading up to the
bases of commanding hillocks, which they drain; or where the noisy
little river, five or six rods wide, goes swishing around the foot of
a precipitous, bush-grown bluff. It is noticeable that in such
beauty-spots as these are generally to be found poverty-stricken
cabins, the homes of small fishermen and hunters; while the more
generous farm-houses seek the fertile but prosaic openings.

All of a sudden, around a lovely bend, a barbed-wire fence of four
strands savagely disputed the passage. A vigorous back-water stroke
alone saved us from going full tilt into the bayonets of the enemy. We
landed, and there was a council of war. As every stream in Wisconsin
capable of floating a saw-log is "navigable" in the eye of the law, it
is plain that this obstruction is an illegal one. Being an illegal
fence, it follows that any canoeist is entitled to clip the wires, if
he does not care to stop and prosecute the fencers for barring his
way. The object of the structure is to prevent cattle from walking
around through the shallow river into neighboring pastures. Along the
upper Catfish, where boating is more frequently indulged in, farmers
accomplish the same object by fencing in a few feet of the stream
parallel with the shore. But below Stoughton, where canoeing is seldom
practiced, the cattle-owners run their fences directly across the
river as a measure of economy. Taking into consideration the fact that
the lower Catfish is seldom used as a highway, we concluded that we
would be charitable and leave the fences intact, getting under or over
them as best we might. I am afraid that had we known that twenty-one
of these formidable barriers were before us, the council would not
have agreed on so conciliatory a campaign.

Having taken in our awning and disposed of our baggage amidships, so
that nothing remained above the gunwale, W----, kneeling, took the
oars astern, while I knelt in the bow with the paddle borne like a
battering-ram. Pushing off into the channel we bore down on the centre
of the works, which were strong and thickly-posted, with wires drawn
as tight as a drum-string. Catching the lower strand midway between
two posts, on the blade end of the paddle, the speed of the canoe was
checked. Then, seizing that strand with my right hand, so that the
thick-strewn barbs came between my fingers, I forced it up to the
second strand, and held the two rigidly together, thus making a slight
arch. The canoe being crowded down into the water by sheer exercise of
muscle, I crouched low in the bow, at the same time forcing the canoe
under and forward through the arch. When half-way through, W---- was
able similarly to clutch the wires, and perform the same office for
the stern. This operation, ungraceful but effective, was frequently
repeated during the day. When the current is swift and the wind fresh
a special exertion is necessary on the part of the stern oar to keep
the craft at right angles with the fence,--the tendency being, as soon
as the bow is snubbed, to drift alongside and become entangled in the
wires, with the danger of being either badly scratched or upset. It is
with a feeling of no slight relief that a canoeist emerges from a
tussle with a barbed-wire fence; and if hands, clothing, and boat have
escaped without a scratch, he may consider himself fortunate, indeed.
Before the day was through, when our twenty-one fences had been
conquered without any serious accident, it was unanimously voted that
the exercise was not to be recommended to those weak in muscle or
patience.

Eight miles below Stoughton is Dunkirk. There is a neat frame
grist-mill there; and up a gentle <DW72> to the right are four or five
weather-beaten farm-houses, in the corners of the cross-roads. It was
an easy portage at the dam. After pushing through the shallows below
with some difficulty, we ran in under the shadow of a substantial
wagon-bridge, and beached. Going up to the corners, we filled the
canteen with ice-cold water from a moss-grown well, and interviewed
the patriarchal miller, who assured us that "nigh onter a dozen year
ago, Dunkirk had a bigger show for growin' than Stoughton, but the
railroad went 'round us."

A few miles down stream and we come to Stebbinsville. The water is
backset by a mill-dam for two miles, forming a small lake. The course
now changing, the wind came dead ahead, and we rowed down to the dam
in a rolling sea, with much exertion. The river is six rods wide here,
flowing between smooth, well-rounded, grass-grown banks, from fifteen
to thirty feet in height, the fields on either side sloping up to
wood-crowned ridges. There are a mill and two houses at Stebbinsville,
and the country round about has a prosperous appearance. A tall,
pleasant-spoken young miller came across the road-bridge and talked to
us about the crops and the river, while we made a comfortable portage
of five rods, up the grassy bank and through a close-cropped pasture,
down to a sequestered little bay at the tail of an abandoned race,
where the spray of the falls spattered us as we reloaded. We pushed
off, with the joint opinion that Stebbinsville was a charming little
place, with ideal riverside homes, that would be utterly spoiled by
building the city on its site which the young man said his father had
always hoped would be established there. A quarter of a mile below,
around the bend, is a disused mill, thirty feet up, on the right bank.
There is a suspended platform over a ravine, to one side of the
building, and upon its handrail leaned two dusty millers, who had
doubtless hastened across from the upper mill, to watch the progress
down the little rapids here of what was indeed a novel craft to these
waters. They waved their caps and gave us a cheery shout as we quickly
disappeared around another curve; but while it still rung in our ears
we were suddenly confronted by one of the tightest fences on the
course, and had neither time nor disposition to return the salute.

And so we slid along, down rapids, through long stretches of quiet
water and scraping over shallows, plying both oars and paddle, while
now and then "making" a fence and comparing its savagery with that of
the preceding one. Here and there the high vine-clad banks, from
overshadowing us would irregularly recede, leaving little meadows,
full of painted-cups, the wild rose- phlox and saxifrage; or
bits of woodland in the dryer bottoms, radiant, amid the underbrush,
with the daisy, cinque-foil, and puccoon. Kingfishers and blue herons
abound. Great turtles, disturbed by the unwonted splash of oars, slide
down high, sunny banks of sand, where they have been to lay their
eggs, and amid a cloud of dust shuffle off into the water, their
castle of safety. These eggs, so trustfully left to be hatched by the
warmth of the sun, form toothsome food for <DW53>s and skunks, which in
turn fall victims to farmers' lads,--as witness the rows of peltries
stretched inside out on shingles, and tacked up on the sunny sides of
the barns and woodsheds along the river highway.

As we begin to approach the valley of the Rock, the hills grow higher,
groups of red cedar appear, the banks of red clay often attain the
height of fifty or sixty feet, broken by deep, staring gullies and
wooded ravines, through which little brooklets run, the output of
back-country springs; while the pocket-meadows are less frequent,
although more charmingly diversified as to color and background.

We had our mid-day lunch on a pleasant bank, that had been covered
earlier in the season with hepatica, blood-root, and dicentra, and
was now resplendent with Solomon's seal, the dark-purple water-leaf,
and graceful maidenhair ferns, with here and there a dogwood in full
bloom. Behind us were thick woods and an overlooking ridge; opposite,
a meadow-glade on which herds of cattle and black hogs grazed. A bell
cow waded into the water, followed by several other members of the
herd, and the train pensively proceeded in single file diagonally
across the shallow stream to another feeding-ground below. The
leader's bell had a peculiarly mournful note, and the scene strongly
reminded one of an ecclesiastical procession.

In the middle of the afternoon the little village of Fulton was
reached. It is a dead-alive, moss-grown settlement, situated on a
prairie, through which the river has cut a deep channel. There are a
cheese-factory, a grist-mill, a church, a school-house, three or four
stores, and some twenty-five houses, with but a solitary boat in
sight, and that of the punt variety. It was recess at the school as we
rowed past, and boys and girls were chiefly engaged in climbing the
trees which cluster in the little schoolhouse yard. A chorus of shouts
and whistles greeted us from the leafy perches, in which we could
distinguish "Shoot the roof!"--an exclamation called forth by the
awning, which doubtless seemed the chief feature of our outfit, viewed
from the top of the bank.

At the mill-dam, a dozen lazy, shiftless fellows were fishing at the
foot of the chute, and stared at our movements with expressionless
eyes. The portage was somewhat difficult, being over a high bank,
across a rocky road, and down through a stretch of bog. When we had
completed the carry, W---- waited in the canoe while I went up to the
fishermen for information as to the lay of the country.

"How far is it to the mouth of the Catfish, my friend?" I asked the
most intelligent member of the party.

"D'no! Never was thar." He jerked in his bait, to pull off a weed
that had become entangled in it, and from the leer he gave his
comrades it was plain that I had struck the would-be wag of the
village.

"How far do you think it is?" I insisted, curious to see how far he
would carry his obstinacy.

"Don' think nuthin' 'bout 't; don' care t' know."

"Didn't you ever hear any one say how far it is?" and I sat beside him
on the stone pier, as if I had come to stay.

"Nah!"

"Suppose you were placed in a boat here and had to float down to the
Rock, how long do you imagine you'd be?"

"Aint no man goin' t' place me in no boat! No siree!" pugnaciously.

"Don't you ever row?"

"Nah!" contemptuously; "what I want of a boat? Bridge 's good 'nough
fer us fellers, a-fishin'."

"Whose boat is that, over there, on the shore?"

"Schoolmaster's. He's a dood, he is. Bridge isn't rich 'nough fer his
blood. Boats is fer doods." And with this withering remark he relapsed
into so intent an observation of his line that I thought it best to
disturb him no longer.

Below Fulton, the stream is quite swift and the scenery more rugged,
the evidences of disastrous spring overflows and back-water from the
Rock being visible on every hand. At five o'clock, we came to a point
where the river divides into three channels, there being a clump of
four small islands. A barbed-wire fence, the last we were fated to
meet, was stretched across each channel. Selecting the central
mouth,--for this is the delta of the Catfish,--we shot down with a
rush, but were soon lodged on a sandbank. It required wading and much
pushing and twisting and towing before we were again off, but in the
length of a few rods more we swung free into the Rock, which was to be
our highway for over two hundred miles more of canoe travel.

The Rock River is nearly a quarter of a mile wide at this point, and
comes down with a majestic sweep from the north, having its chief
source in the gloomily picturesque Lake Koshkonong. The banks of the
river at and below the mouth of the Catfish, are quite imposing,
rising into a succession of graceful, round-topped mounds, from fifty
to one hundred feet high, and finely wooded except where cleared for
pasture or as the site of farm-buildings. While the immediate edges of
the stream are generally firm and grass-grown, with occasional
gravelly beaches, there are frequent narrow strips of marsh at the
bases of the mounds, especially on the left bank where innumerable
springs send forth trickling rills to feed the river. A stiff wind
up-stream had broken the surface into white caps, and more than
counteracted the force of the lazy current, so that progress now
depended upon vigorous exercise at the oars and paddle.

Three miles above Janesville is Pope's Springs, a pleasant summer
resort, with white tents and gayly painted cottages commingled. It is
situated in a park-like wood, on the right bank, while directly
opposite are some bold, rocky cliffs, or palisades, their feet laved
in the stream. We spread our supper cloth on the edge of a
wheat-field, in view of the pretty scene. The sun was setting behind a
bank of roseate clouds, and shooting up broad, sharply defined bands
of radiance nearly to the zenith. The wind was blowing cold, wraps
were essential, and we were glad to be on our way once more, paddling
along in the dying light, past palisades and fields and meadows,
reaching prosperous Janesville, on her rolling prairie, just as dusk
was thickening into dark.




CHAPTER III.

AN ILLINOIS PRAIRIE HOME.


We had an early start from the hotel next morning. A prospect of the
situation at the upper Janesville dam, from a neighboring bridge,
revealed the fact that the mill-race along the left bank afforded the
easiest portage. Reloading our craft at the boat-renter's staging
where it had passed the night, we darted across the river, under two
low-hung bridges, keeping well out of the overflow current and entered
the race, making our carry over a steep and rocky embankment.

Below, after passing through the centre of the city, the river widens
considerably, as it cuts a deep channel through the fertile prairie,
and taking a sudden bend to the southwest, becomes a lake, formed by
back-water from the lower dam. The wind was now dead ahead again, and
fierce. White caps came savagely rolling up stream. The pull down
brought out the rowing muscles to their fullest tension. The canoe at
times would appear to scarcely creep along, although oars and paddle
would bend to their work.

The race of the carding-mill, which we were now approaching, is by the
left bank, the rest of the broad river--fully a third of a mile wide
here--being stemmed by a ponderous, angling dam, the shorter leg of
which comes dangerously close to the entrance of the race, which it
nearly parallels. Overhead, fifty feet skyward, a great railway bridge
spans the chasm. The disposition of its piers leaves a rowing channel
but two rods wide, next the shore. Through this a deep, swift current
flows, impelling itself for the most part over the short leg of the
chute, with a deafening roar. Its backset, however, is caught in the
yawning mouth of the race. It so happens then that from either side of
an ugly whirling strip of doubting water, parallel with the shorter
chute, the flood bursts forth,--to the left plunging impetuously over
the apron to be dashed to vapor at its foot; to the right madly
rushing into the narrow race, to turn the wheels of the carding-mill
half a mile below. This narrow channel, under the bridge and next the
shore, of which I have spoken, is the only practicable entrance to
the race.

We had landed above and taken a panoramic view of the situation from
the deck of the bridge; afterward had descended to the flood-gates at
the entrance of the race, for detailed inspection and measurements.
One of the set of three gates was partly raised, the bottom being but
three feet above the boiling surface, while the great vertical iron
beams along which the cog-wheels work were not over four feet apart.
It would require steady hands to guide the canoe to the right of the
whirl, where the flood hesitated between two destinations, and finally
to shoot under the uplifted gate, which barely gave room in either
height or breadth for the passage of the boat. But we arrived at the
conclusion that the shoot was far more dangerous in appearance than in
reality, and that it was preferable to a long and exceedingly irksome
portage.

So we determined to make the attempt, and walked back to the canoe.
Disposing our baggage in the centre, as in the barbed-wire experience
of the day before, W---- again took the oars astern and I the paddle
at the bow. A knot of men on the bridge had been watching our
movements with interest, and waved their hats at us as we came
cautiously creeping along the shore. We went under the bridge with a
swoop, waited till we were within three rods of the brink of the
thundering fall, and then strained every muscle in sending the canoe
shooting off at an angle into the waters bound for the race. We went
down to the gate as if shot out of a cannon, but the little craft was
easily controlled, quickly obeying every stroke of the paddle.
Catching a projecting timber, it was easy to guide ourselves to the
opening. We lay down in the bottom of the boat and with uplifted hands
clutched the slimy gate; slowly, hand over hand, we passed through
under the many internal beams and rods of the structure, with the
boiling flood under us, making an echoing roar, amid which we were
obliged to fairly shout our directions to each other. In the last
section the release was given; we were fairly hurled into daylight on
the surface of the mad torrent, and were many a rod down the race
before we could recover our seats. The men on the bridge, joined by
others, now fairly yelled themselves hoarse over the successful close
of what was apparently a hazardous venture, and we waved
acknowledgments with the paddle, as we glided away under the willows
which overhang the long and narrow canal. At the isolated mill, where
there is one of the easiest portages on the route, the hands came
flocking by dozens to the windows to see the craft which had invaded
their quiet domain.

The country toward Beloit becomes more hilly, especially upon the left
bank, along which runs the Chicago and Northwestern railway, all the
way down from Janesville. At the Beloit paper-mill, which was reached
at three o'clock in the afternoon, it was found that owing to the low
stage of water one end of the apron projected above the flood. With
some difficulty as to walking on the slimy incline, we portaged over
the face of the dam and went down stream through the heart of the
pretty little college town, getting more or less picturesque back-door
views of the domestic life of the community.

Beloit being on the State line, we had now entered Illinois. For
several miles the river is placid and shallow, with but a feeble
current. Islands begin to appear, dividing the channel and somewhat
perplexing canoeists, it being often quite difficult to decide which
route is the best; as a rule, one is apt to wish that he had taken
some other than the one selected.

The dam at Rockton was reached in a two hours' pull. It was being
repaired, stone for the purpose being quarried on a neighboring bank
and transported to the scene of action on a flat-boat. We had been
told that we could save several miles by going down the race, which
cuts the base of a long detour. But the boss of the dam-menders
assured us that the race was not safe, and that we would "get in a
trap" if we attempted it. Deeming discretion the better part of valor,
with much difficulty we lifted the canoe over the high, jagged, stone
embankment and through a bit of tangled swamp to the right, and took
the longest way around. It was four or five miles by the bend to the
village of Rockton, whose spires we could see at the dam, rising above
a belt of intervening trees. It being our first detour of note, we
were somewhat discouraged at having had so long a pull for so short a
vantage; but we became well used to such experiences long before our
journey was over. It was not altogether consoling to be informed at
Rockton--which is a smart little manufacturing town of a thousand
souls--that the race was perfectly practicable for canoes, and the
tail portage easy.

Beaching near the base of a fine wagon-bridge which here spans the
Rock, we went up to a cluster of small houses on the bank opposite the
town, to have some tea steeped, our prepared stock being by this time
exhausted. The people were all employed in the paper-mills in the
village, but one good woman chanced to be at home for the afternoon,
and cheerfully responded to our request for service. A young, neat,
and buxom little woman she was, though rather sad-eyed and evidently
overworked in the family struggle for existence. She assured us that
she nowadays never went upon the water in an open boat, for she had
"three times been near drowndid" in her life, which she thought was
"warnin' enough for one body." Inquiry developed that her first
"warnin'" consisted of having been, when she was "a gal down in
Kansis," taken for a row in a leaky boat; the water came in half-way
up to the thwarts, and would have eventually swamped the craft and
drowned its occupants, in perhaps half an hour's time, if her
companion had not luckily bethought himself to run in to shore and
land. Another time, she and her husband were out rowing, when a
stern-wheel river steamer came along, and the swell in her wake washed
the row-boat atop of a log raft, and "she stuck there, ma'am, would ye
believe, and we'd 'a' drowndid sure, with a storm a-comin' up, hadn't
my brother-in-law, that was then a-courtin' of sister Jane, come off
in a dug-out and took us in." Her last and most harrowing experience
was in a boat on the Republican River in Kansas. She and another woman
were out when a storm came up, and white-capped waves tossed the
little craft about at will; but fortunately the blow subsided, and the
women regained pluck enough to take the oars and row home again. The
eyes of the paper-maker's wife were suffused with tears, as, seated in
her rocking-chair by the kitchen stove and giving the teapot an
occasional shake, doubtless to hasten the brew, she related these
thrilling tales of adventure by flood, and called us to witness that
thrice had Providence directly interposed in her behalf. We were
obliged to acknowledge ourselves much impressed with the gravity of
the dangers she had so successfully passed through. Her sympathy with
the perils which we were braving, in what she was pleased to call our
singular journey, was so great that the good woman declined to accept
pay for having steeped our tea in a most excellent manner, and bade us
an affecting God-speed.

We had our supper, graced with the hot tea, on a pretty sward at the
river end of the quiet lane just around the corner; while a dozen
little children in pinafores and short clothes, perched on a
neighboring fence, watched and discussed us as eagerly as though we
were a circus caravan halting by the wayside for refreshment. The
paper-maker's wife also came out, just as we were packing up for the
start, and inspected the canoe in some detail. Her judgment was that
in her giddiest days as an oarswoman, she would certainly never have
dared to set foot in such a shell. She watched us off, just as the sun
was disappearing, and the last Rockton object we saw was our
tenderhearted friend standing on the beach at the end of her lane,
both hands shading her eyes, as she watched us fade away in the
gloaming. I have no doubt she has long ago given us up for lost, for
her last words were, "I've heerd 'em tell it was a riskier river than
any in Kansis, 'tween here an' Missip'; tek care ye don't git
drowndid!"

In the soft evening shadows it was cool enough for heavy wraps. In
fact, for the greater part of the day W---- had worn a light shoulder
cape. We had a beautiful sunset, back of a group of densely timbered
islands. We would have been sorely tempted to camp out on one of
these, but the night was setting in too cold for sleeping in the open
air, and we had no tent with us.

The twilight was nearly spent, and the banks and now frequent islands
were so heavily wooded that on the river it was rapidly becoming too
dark to navigate among the shallows and devious channels. W----
volunteered to get out and look for a farmhouse, for none could be
seen from our hollow way. So she landed and got up into some prairie
wheatfields back away from the bank. After a half-mile's walk parallel
with the river she sighted a prosperous-looking establishment, with a
smart windmill, large barns, and a thrifty orchard, silhouetted
against the fast-fading sunset sky. The signal was given, and the prow
of the canoe was soon resting on a steep, gravely beach at the mouth
of a ravine. Armed with the paddle, for a possible encounter with
dogs, we went up through the orchard and a timothy-field sopping with
dew, scaled the barnyard fence, passed a big black dog that growled
savagely, but was by good chance chained to an old mowing-machine,
walked up to the kitchen door and boldly knocked.

No answer. The stars were coming out, the shadows darkening, night was
fairly upon us, and shelter must be had, if we were obliged to sleep
in the barn. The dog reared on his hind legs, and fairly howled with
rage. A row of well-polished milk-cans on a bench by the windmill
well, and the general air of thrifty neatness impelled us to
persevere. An old German, with kindly face and bushy white hair,
finally came, cautiously peering out beneath a candle which he held
above his head. English he had none, and our German was too fresh from
the books to be reliable in conversation. However, we mustered a few
stereotyped phrases from the "familiar conversations" in the back of
the grammar, which served to make the old man smile, and disappearing
toward the cattle-sheds he soon returned with his daughter and
son-in-law, a cheerful young couple who spoke good English, and
assured us of welcome and a bed. They had been out milking by
lantern-light when interrupted, and soon rejoined us with brimming
pails.

It did not take long to feel quite at home with these simple,
good-hearted folk. They had but recently purchased the farm and were
strangers in the community. The old man lived with his other children
at Freeport, and was there only upon a visit. The young people,
natives of Illinois, were lately married, their wedding-trip having
been made to this house, where they had at once settled down to a
thrifty career, surrounded with quite enough comforts for all
reasonable demands, and a few simple luxuries. W---- declared the
kitchen to be a model of neatness and convenience; and the
sitting-room, where we passed the evening with our modest
entertainers,--who appeared quite well posted on current news of
general importance,--showed evidences of being in daily use. They were
devout Catholics, and I was pleased to find the patriarch drifting
down the river of time with a heartfelt appreciation of the benefits
of democracy, fully cognizant of what American institutions had done
for him and his. Immigrating in the noon-tide of life and settling in
a German neighborhood, he had found no need and had no inclination to
learn our language. But he had prospered from the start, had secured
for his children a good education at the common schools, had imbued
them with the spirit of patriotism, had seen them marry happily and
with a bright future, and at night he never retired without uttering a
bedside prayer of gratitude that God had turned his footsteps to
blessed America. As the old man told me his tale, with his daughter's
hands resting lovingly in his while she served as our interpreter, and
contrasted the hard lot of a German peasant with the independence of
thought and speech and action vouchsafed the German-American farmer,
who can win competence in a state of freedom, I felt a thrill of
patriotism that would have been the making of a Fourth-of-July orator.
I wished that thousands such as he originally was, still dragging out
an existence in the fatherland, could have listened to my aged friend
and followed in his footsteps.




CHAPTER IV.

THE HALF-WAY HOUSE.


The spin down to Roscoe next morning was delightful in every respect.
The air was just sharp enough for vigorous exercise. These were the
pleasantest hours we had yet spent. The blisters that had troubled us
for the first three days were hardening into callosities, and arm and
back muscles, which at first were sore from the unusually heavy strain
upon them, at last were strengthened to their work. Thereafter we felt
no physical inconvenience from our self-imposed task. At night, after
a pull of eleven or twelve hours, relieved only by the time spent in
lunching, in which we hourly alternated at the oars and paddle,
slumber came as a most welcome visitation, while the morning ever
found us as fresh as at the start. Let those afflicted with insomnia
try this sort of life. My word for it, they will not be troubled so
long as the canoeing continues. Every muscle of the body moves
responsive to each pull of the oars or sweep of the paddle; while the
mental faculties are kept continually on the alert, watching for
shallows, snags, and rapids, in which operation a few days' experience
will render one quite expert, though none the less cautious.

As we get farther down into the Illinois country, the herds of
live-stock increase in size and number. Cattle may be seen by hundreds
at one view, dotted all over the neighboring hills and meadows, or
dreamily standing in the cooling stream at sultry noonday. Sheep, in
immense flocks, bleat in deafening unison, the ewes and their young
being particularly demonstrative at our appearance, and sometimes
excitedly following us along the banks. Droves of black hogs and
shoats are ploughing the sward in their search for sweet roots, or
lying half-buried in the wet sand. Horses, in familiar groups, quickly
lift their heads in startled wonder as the canopied canoe glides
silently by,--then suddenly wheel, kick up their heels, sound a snort
of alarm, and dash off at a thundering gallop, clods of turf filling
the air behind them. There are charming groves and parks and treeless
downs, and the river cuts through the alluvial soil to a depth of
eight and ten feet, throwing up broad beaches on either side.

At Roscoe, three or four miles below our morning's starting-point,
there is a collection of three or four neat farm-houses, each with its
spinning windmill.

Latham Station, nine miles below Rockton, was reached at ten o'clock.
The post-office is called Owen. There is a smart little depot on the
Chicago, Milwaukee, and St. Paul railway line, two general stores, and
a half-dozen cottages, with a substantial-looking creamery, where we
obtained buttermilk drawn fresh from one of the mammoth churns. The
concern manufactures from three hundred to nine hundred pounds per
day, according to the season, shipping chiefly to New York city.
Leaning over the hand-rail which fences off the "making" room, and
gossiping with the young man in charge, I conjured up visions of the
days when, as a boy on the farm, I used to spend many weary, almost
tearful hours, pounding an old crock churn, in which the butter would
always act like a balky horse and refuse to "come" until after a long
series of experimental coaxing. Nowadays, rustic youths luxuriously
ride behind the plough, the harrow, the cultivator, the horse-rake,
the hay-loader, and the self-binding harvester, while the
butter-making is farmed out to a factory where the thing is done by
steam. The farmer's boy of the future will live in a world darkened
only by the frown of the district schoolmaster and the intermittent
round of stable chores.

     ______________________________________
     |                                    |
     |            FARE.                   |
     |                                    |
     |  Foot Passengere          10 cts.  |
     |  Man & Horse              15 ct.   |
     |  single Carriage          10 c.    |
     |  double "                 15 c     |
     |  each Passinger            5 c     |
     |                                    |
     |  Night Raites       Double Fare.   |
     |                                    |
     |        All persons                 |
     |        Are cautioned               |
     |        Againts useing              |
     |        this Boat with Out          |
     |        Permistion from             |
     |        the Owners                  |
     |____________________________________|

At Latham Station we encountered the first ferry-boat on our trip,--a
flat-bottomed scow with side-rails, attached by ropes and pulleys to a
suspended wire cable, and working diagonally, with the force of the
current. A sign conspicuously displayed on the craft bore the above
legend.

From the time we had entered Illinois, the large, graceful, white
blossoms of the Pennsylvanian anemone and the pink and white fringe of
the erigeron Canadense had appeared in great abundance upon the river
banks, while the wild prairie rose lent a delicate beauty and
fragrance to the scene. On sandy knolls, where in early spring the
anemone patens and crowfoot violets had thrived in profusion, were now
to be seen the geum triflorum and the showy yellow puccoon; the
long-flowered puccoon, with its delicate pale yellow, crape-like
blossom, was just putting in an appearance; and little white,
star-shaped flowers, which were strangers to us of Wisconsin, fairly
dotted the green hillsides, mingled in striking contrast with dwarf
blue mint. Bevies of great black crows, sitting in the tops of dead
willow-trees or circling around them, rent the air with sepulchral
squawks. Men and boys were cultivating in the cornfields, the
prevalent drought painfully evidenced by the clouds of gray dust which
enveloped them and their teams as they stirred up the brittle earth.

There was now a fine breeze astern, and the awning, abandoned during
the head winds of the day before, was again welcomed as the sun
mounted to the zenith. At 2.30 P. M., we were in busy Rockford, where
the banks are twenty or twenty-five feet high, with rolling prairies
stretching backward to the horizon, except where here and there a
wooded ridge intervenes. Rockford is the metropolis of the valley of
the Rock. It has twenty-two thousand inhabitants, with many elegant
mansions visible from the river, and evidences upon every hand of that
prosperity which usually follows in the train of varied manufacturing
enterprises.

There are numerous mills and factories along both sides of the river,
and a protracted inspection of the portage facilities was necessary
before we could decide on which bank to make our carry. The right was
chosen. The portage was somewhat over two ordinary city blocks in
length, up a steep incline and through a road-way tunnel under a great
flouring mill. We had made nearly half the distance, and were resting
for a moment, when a mill-driver kindly offered the use of his wagon,
which was gratefully accepted. We were soon spinning down the tail of
the race, a half-dozen millers waving a "Chautauqua salute" with as
many dusty flour-bags, and in ten minutes more had left Rockford out
of sight.

Several miles below, there are a half-dozen forested islands in a
bunch, some of them four or five acres in extent, and we puzzled over
which channel to take,--the best of them abounding in shallows. The
one down which the current seemed to set the strongest was selected,
but we had not proceeded over half a mile before the trees on the
banks began to meet in arches overhead, and it was evident that we
were ascending a tributary. It proved to be the Cherry River, emptying
into the main stream from the east. The wind, now almost due-west, had
driven the waves into the mouth of the Cherry, so that we mistook this
surface movement for the current. Coming to a railway bridge, which we
knew from our map did not cross the Rock, our course was retraced, and
after some difficulty with snags and gravel-spits, we were once more
upon our proper highway, trending to the southwest.

Supper was eaten upon the edge of a large island, several miles
farther down stream, in the shade of two wide-spreading locusts.
Opposite are some fine, eroded sandstone palisades, which formation
had been frequently met with during the day,--sometimes on both sides
of the river, but generally on the left bank, which is, as a rule, the
most picturesque along the entire course.

It was still so cold when evening shadows thickened that camping out,
with our meagre preparations for it, seemed impracticable; so we
pushed on and kept a sharp lookout for some friendly farm-house at
which to quarter for the night. The houses in the thickly-wooded
bottoms, however, were generally quite forbidding in appearance, and
the sun had gone down before we sighted a well-built stone dwelling
amid a clump of graceful evergreens. It seemed, from the river, to be
the very embodiment of comfortable neatness; but upon ascending the
gentle <DW72> and fighting off two or three mangy curs which came
snarling at our heels, we found the structure merely a relic of
gentility. There was scarcely a whole pane of glass in the house,
there were eight or ten wretchedly dirty and ragged children, the
parents were repulsive in appearance and manner, and a glimpse of the
interior presented a picture of squalor which would have shocked a
city missionary. The stately stone house was a den of the most abject
and shiftless poverty, the like of which one could seldom see in the
slums of a metropolis. These people were in the midst of a splendid
farming country, had an abundance of pure air and water at command,
and there seemed to be no excuse for their condition. Drink and
laziness were doubtless the besetting sins in this uncanny home.
Making a pretense of inquiring the distance to Byron, the next village
below, we hurried from the accursed spot.

A half-hour later we reached the high bridge of the Chicago, Milwaukee
and St. Paul railway, above Byron, and ran our bow on a little beach
at the base of the left bank, which is here thirty feet high. A
section-man had a little cabin hard by, and his gaunt, talkative wife,
with a chubby little boy by her side, had been keenly watching our
approach from her garden-fence. She greeted us with a shrill but
cheery voice as we clambered up a zigzag path and joined her upon the
edge of the prairie.

"Good ev'nin', folks! Whar'n earth d' ye come from?"

We enlightened her in a few words.

"Don't mean t' say ye come all the way from Weesconsin a' down here in
that thing?" pointing down at the canoe, which certainly looked quite
small, at that depth, in the dim twilight.

"Certainly; why not?"

"Ye'll git drowndid, an' I'm not mistakin, afore ye git to Byron."

"River dangerous, ma'am?"

"Dang'rous ain't no name for 't. There was a young feller drowndid at
this here bridge las' spring. The young feller he worked at the
bridge-mendin', bein' a carpenter,--he called himself a carpenter, but
he warn't no great fist at carpenterin', an' I know it,--and he
boarded up at Byron. A 'nsurance agint kim 'long and got Rollins,--the
young feller his name was Abe Rollins, an' he was a bach,--to promise
to 'sure his life for a thousand dollars, which was to go t' his
sister, what takes in washin', an' her man ran away from her las' year
an' nobody knows where he is,--which I says is good riddance, but she
takes on as though she had los' somebody worth cryin' over: there's no
accountin' for tastes. The agint says to Rollins to go over to the
doctor's of'c' to git 'xamined and Rollins says, 'No, I ain't agoin'
to git 'xamined till I clean off; I'll go down an' take a swim at the
bridge and then come back and strip for the doctor.' An' Rollins he
took his swim and got sucked down inter a hole just yonder down there,
by the openin' of Stillman's Creek, and he was a corpse when they
hauled him out, down off Byron; an' he never hollered once but jist
sunk like a stone with a cramp; an' his folks never got no 'nsurance
money at all, for lackin' the doctor's c'tificate. An' it's heaps o'
folks git drowndid in this river, an' nobody ever hears of 'em agin;
an' I wouldn't no more step foot in that boat nor the biggest ship on
the sea, an' I don't see how you can do it, ma'am!"

No doubt the good woman would have rattled on after this fashion for
half the night, but we felt obliged, owing to the rapidly increasing
darkness, to interrupt her with geographical inquiries. She assured us
that Byron was distant some five or six miles by river, with, so far
as she had heard, many shallows, whirlpools, and snags _en route_;
while by land the village was but a mile and a quarter across the
prairie, from the bridge. We accordingly made fast for the night
where we had landed, placed our heaviest baggage in the tidy
kitchen-sitting-room-parlor of our voluble friend, and trudged off
over the fields to Byron,--a solitary light in a window and the
occasional practice-note of a brass band, borne to us on the light
western breeze, being our only guides.

After a deal of stumbling over a rough and ill-defined path, which we
could distinguish by the sense of feeling alone, we finally reached
the exceedingly quiet little village, and by dint of inquiry from
house to house,--in most of which the denizens seemed preparing to
retire for the night,--found the inn which had been recommended by the
section-man's wife as the best in town. It was the only one. There
were several commercial travelers in the place, and the hostelry was
filled. But the landlord kindly surrendered to us his own
well-appointed chamber, above an empty store where the village band
was tuning up for Decoration Day. It seemed appropriate enough that
there should be music to greet us, for we were now one hundred and
thirty-four miles from Madison, and practically half through our
voyage to the Mississippi.




CHAPTER V.

GRAND DETOUR FOLKS.


We tramped back to the bridge in high spirits next morning, over the
flower-strewn prairie. The section-man's wife was on hand, with her
entire step-laddered brood of six, to see us off. As we carried down
our traps to the beach and repacked, she kept up a continuous strain
of talk, giving us a most edifying review of her life, and especially
the particulars of how she and her "man" had first romantically met,
while he was a gravel-train hand on a far western railroad, and she
the cook in a portable construction-barracks.

Stillman's Creek opens into the Rock from the east, through a pleasant
glade, a few rods below the bridge. We took a pull up this historic
tributary for a half-mile or more. It is a muddy stream, some two and
a half rods wide, cutting down for a half-dozen feet through the black
soil. The shores are generally well fringed with heavy timber,
especially upon the northern bank, while the land to the south and
southwest stretches upward, in gentle <DW72>s, to a picturesque rolling
prairie, abounding in wooded knolls. It was in the large grove on the
north bank, near its junction with the Rock, that Black Hawk, in the
month of May, 1832, parleyed with the Pottawattomies. It was here that
on the 14th of that month he learned of the treachery of Stillman's
militiamen, and at once made that famous sally with his little band of
forty braves which resulted in the rout of the cowardly whites, who
fled pell-mell over the prairie toward Dixon, asserting that Black
Hawk and two thousand blood-thirsty warriors were sweeping northern
Illinois with the besom of destruction. The country round about
appears to have undergone no appreciable change in the half-century
intervening between that event and to-day. The topographical
descriptions given in contemporaneous accounts of Stillman's flight
will hold good now, and we were readily able to pick out the points of
interest on the old battlefield.

Returning to the Rock, we made excellent progress. The atmosphere was
bracing; and there being a favoring northwest breeze, our awning was
stretched over a hoop for a sail. The banks were now steep inclines of
white sand and gravel. It was like going through a railroad cut. But
in ascending the sides, as we did occasionally, to secure supplies
from farm-houses or refill our canteen with fresh water, there were
found broad expanses of rolling prairie. The farm establishments
increase in number and prosperity. Windmills may be counted by the
scores, the cultivation of enormous cornfields is everywhere in
progress, and cattle are more numerous than ever.

Three or four miles above Oregon the banks rise to the dignity of
hills, which come sweeping down "with verdure clad" to the very
water's edge, and present an inspiring picture, quite resembling some
of the most charming stretches of the Hudson. At the entrance to this
lovely vista we encountered a logy little pleasure-steamer anchored in
the midst of the stream, which is here nearly half of a mile wide, for
the river now perceptibly broadens. The captain, a ponderous old
sea-dog, wearing a cowboy's hat and having the face of an operatic
pirate, with a huge pipe between his black teeth, sat lounging on the
bulwark, watching the force of the current, into which he would
listlessly expectorate. He was at first inclined to be surly, as we
hauled alongside and checked our course; but gradually softened down
as we drew him out in conversation, and confided to us that he had in
earlier days "sailed the salt water," a circumstance of which he
seemed very proud. He also gave us some "pointers on the lay o' the
land," as he called them, for our future guidance down the river,--one
of which was that there were "dandy sceneries" below Oregon, in
comparison with which we had thus far seen nothing worthy of note. As
for himself, he said that his place on the neighboring shore was
connected by telephone with Oregon, and his steamer frequently
transported pleasure parties to points of interest above the dam.

Ganymede Spring is on the southeast bank, at the base of a lofty
sandstone bluff, a mile or so above Oregon. From the top of the bluff,
which is ascended by a succession of steep flights of scaffolding
stairs, a magnificent bird's-eye view is attainable of one of the
finest river and forest landscapes in the Mississippi basin. The
grounds along the riverside at the base are laid out in graceful
carriage drives; and over the head of a neatly hewn basin, into which
gushes the copious spring, is a marble slab thus inscribed:

_______________________________________________
|                                             |
|           GANYMEDE'S SPRINGS,               |
|                                             |
|                 named by                    |
|                                             |
|    MARGERET FULLER (Countess D. Ossoli,)    |
|                                             |
|             who named this bluff            |
|                                             |
|                EAGLE'S NEST,                |
|                                             |
|   & beneath the cedars on its crest wrote   |
|                                             |
|           "Ganymede to his Eagle,"          |
|                                             |
|                 July 4, 1843.               |
|_____________________________________________|

Oregon was reached just before noon. A walk through the business
quarter revealed a thrifty, but oldish-looking town of about two
thousand inhabitants. The portage on the east side, around a
flouring-mill dam, involved a hard pull up the gravelly bank thirty
feet high, and a haul of two blocks' length along a dusty street.

There was a fine stretch of eroded palisades in front of the island on
which we lunched. The color effect was admirable,--patches of gray,
brown, white, and old gold, much corroded with iron. Vines of many
varieties dangle from earth-filled crevices, and swallows by the
hundreds occupy the dimples neatly hollowed by the action of the water
in some ancient period when the stream was far broader and deeper than
now.

But at times, even in our day, the Rock is a raging torrent. The
condition of the trees along the river banks and on the thickly-strewn
island pastures, shows that not many months before it must have been
on a wild rampage, for the great trunks are barked by the ice to the
height of fifteen feet above the present water-level. Everywhere, on
banks and islands, are the evidences of disastrous floods, and the
ponderous ice-breakers above the bridges give one an awesome notion of
the condition of affairs at such a time. Farmers assured us that in
the spring of 1887 the water was at the highest stage ever recorded in
the history of the valley. Many of the railway bridges barely escaped
destruction, while the numerous river ferries and the low country
bridges in the bayous were destroyed by scores. The banks were
overflowed for miles together, and back in the country for long
distances, causing the hasty removal of families and live-stock from
the bottoms; while ice jams, forming at the heads of the islands,
would break, and the shattered floes go sweeping down with terrific
force, crushing the largest trees like reeds, tearing away fences and
buildings, covering islands and meadows with deep deposits of sand and
mud, blazing their way through the forested banks, and creating sad
havoc on every hand. We were amply convinced, by the thousands of
broken trees which littered our route, the snags, the mud-baked
islands, the frequent stretches of sadly demoralized bank that had not
yet had time to reweave its charitable mantle of verdure, that the
Rock, on such a spring "tear," must indeed be a picture of chaos
broken loose. This explained why these hundreds of beautiful and
spacious islands--many of them with charming combinations of forest
and hillock and meadow, and occasionally enclosing pretty ponds
blushing with water-lilies--are none of them inhabited, but devoted to
the pasture of cattle, who swim or ford the intervening channels,
according to the stage of the flood; also why the picturesque bottoms
on the main shore are chiefly occupied by the poorest class of
farmers, who eke out their meagre incomes with the spoils of the gun
and line.

It was a quarter of five when we beached at the upper ferry-landing at
Grand Detour. It is a little, tumble-down village of one or two small
country stores, a church, and a dozen modest cottages; there is also,
on the river front, a short row of deserted shops, their paintless
battlement-fronts in a sadly collapsed condition, while hard by are
the ruins of two or three dismantled mills. The settlement is on a
bit of prairie at the base of the preliminary flourish of the "big
bend" of the Rock,--hence the name, Grand Detour, a reminiscence of
the early French explorers. The foot of the peninsula is but half a
mile across, while the distance around by river to the lower ferry, on
the other side of the village is four miles. Having learned that the
bottoms below here were, for a long distance, peculiarly gloomy and
but sparsely inhabited, we thought it best to pass the night at Grand
Detour. Bespeaking accommodations at the tavern and post-office
combined, we rowed around the bend to the lower landing, through some
lovely stretches of river scenery, in which bold palisades and
delightful little meadows predominated.

The walk back to the village was through a fine park of elms. The
stage was just in from Dixon, with the mail. There was an eager little
knot of villagers in the cheerful sitting-room of our homelike inn,
watching the stout landlady as she distributed it in a checker-board
rank of glass-faced boxes fenced off in front of a sunny window. It
did not appear that many of those who overlooked the distribution of
the mail had been favored by their correspondents. They were chiefly
concerned in seeing who did get letters and papers, and in "passin'
the time o' day," as gossiping is called in rural communities. Seated
in a darkened corner, waiting patiently for supper, the announcement
of which was an hour or more in coming, we were much amused at the
mirror of local events which was unconsciously held up for us by these
loungers of both sexes and all ages, who fairly filled the room, and
oftentimes waxed hot in controversy.

The central theme of conversation was the preparations under way for
Decoration Day, which was soon to arrive. Grand Detour was to be
favored with a speaker from Dixon,--"a reg'lar major from the war,
gents, an' none o' yer m'lish fellers!" an enthusiastic old man with a
crutch persisted in announcing. There were to be services at the
church, and some exercises at the cemetery, where lie buried the
half-dozen honored dead, Grand Detour's sacrifice upon the altar of
the Union. The burning question seemed to be whether the village
preacher would consent to offer prayer upon the occasion, if the
church choir insisted on being accompanied on the brand-new cabinet
organ which the congregation had voted to purchase, but to which the
pastor and one of the leading deacons were said to be bitterly
opposed, as smacking of worldliness and antichrist. Only the evening
before, this deacon, armed with a sledgehammer and rope, had been seen
to go to the sanctuary in company with his "hired man," and enter
through one of the windows, which they pried up for the purpose. A
good gossip, who lived hard by, closely watched such extraordinary
proceedings. There was a great noise within, then some planks were
pitched out of the window, soon followed by the deacon and his man.
The window was shut down, the planks thrown atop of the horse-shed
roof, and the men disappeared. Investigation in the morning by the
witness revealed the fact that the choir-seats and the organ-platform
had been torn down and removed. Here was a pretty how d' do! The wiry,
raspy little woman, with her gray finger-curls and withered, simpering
smile, had, with great forbearance, kept her choice bit of news to
herself till "post-office time." Sitting in a big rocking-chair close
to the delivery window, knitting vigorously on an elongated stocking,
she demurely asserted that she "never wanted to say nothin' 'gin'
nobody, or to hurt nobody's feelin's," and then detailed the entire
circumstance to the patrons of the office as they came in. The
excitement created by the story, which doubtless lost nothing in the
telling, was at fever-heat. We were sorely tempted to remain over till
Decoration Day,--when, it was freely predicted, there "would be some
folks as'd wish they'd never been born,"--and see the outcome of this
tempest in a teapot. But our programme, unfortunately, would not admit
of such a diversion.

Others came and went, but the gossipy little body with the gray curls
rocked on, holding converse with both post-mistress and public,
keeping a keen eye on the character of the mail matter obtained by the
villagers and neighboring farmers, and freely commenting on it all; so
that new-comers were kept quite well-informed as to the correspondence
of those who had just departed.

A sad-eyed little woman in rusty black modestly slipped in, and was
handed out a much-creased and begrimed envelope, which she nervously
clutched. She was hurrying silently away, when the gossip sharply
exclaimed, "Good lands, Cynthi' Prescott! some folks don't know a body
when they meet. 'Spose ye've been hearin' from Jim at last. I'd been
thinkin' 't was about time ye got a letter from his hand, ef he war
ever goin' t' write at all. Tell ye, Cynthi' Prescott, ye're too
indulgent on that man o' yourn! Ef I--"

But Cynthia Prescott, turning her black, deep-sunken eyes to her
inquisitor, with a piteous, tearful look, as though stung to the
quick, sidled out backward through the wire-screen door, which sprung
closed with a vicious bang, and I saw her hurrying down the village
street firmly grasping at her bosom what the mail had brought
her,--probably a brutal demand for more money, from a worthless
husband, who was wrecking his life-craft on some far-away shore.

"Goodness me! but the Gilberts is a-puttin' on style!" ejaculated the
village censor, as a rather smart young horseman went out with a bunch
of letters, and a little packet tied up in red twine. "That there was
vis'tin' keerds from the printer's shop in Dixon, an' cost a dollar;
can't fool me! There's some folks as hev to be leavin' keerds on
folks's centre-tables when they goes makin' calls, for fear folks will
be a-forgettin' their names. When I go a-callin', I go a-visitin' and
take my work along an' stop an' hev a social cup o' tea; an' they
ain't a-goin' to forgit for awhile, that I dropped in on 'em, neither.
This way they hev down in Dixon, what I hear of, of ringin' at a bell
and settin' down with yer bonnet on and sayin', 'How d' do,' an' a
'Pretty well, I thank yer,' and jumpin' up as if the fire bell was
ringin' and goin' on through the whole n'ighberhood as ef ye're on
springs, an' then a-trancin' back home and braggin' how many calls
ye've made,--I ain't got no use for that; it'll do for Dixon folks,
what catch the style from Chicargy, an' they git 't from Paris each
year, I'm told, but I ain't no use for 't. Mebbe ol' man Gilbert is
made o' money,--his women folks act so, with all this a-apein' the
Clays, who's been gettin' visitin' keerds all the way from Chicargy,
which they ordered of a book agint last fall, with gilt letters an'
roses an' sich like in the corners. An' 'twas Clay's brother-in-law as
tol' me he never did see such carryin's-on over at the old house, with
letter-writin' paper sopped in cologne, an' lace curtains in the
bed-room winders. An' ye can't tell me but the Gilberts, too, is
a-goin' to the dogs, with their paper patterns from Dixon, and dress
samples from a big shop in Chicargy, which I seen from the picture on
the envelope was as big as all Grand Detour, an' both ferry-landin's
thrown in. Grand Detour fashi'ns ain't good 'nough for some folks, I
reckon."

And thus the busy-tongued woman discoursed in a vinegary tone upon the
characteristics of Grand Detour folks, as illustrated by the nature
of the evening mail, frequently interspersing her remarks with a
hearty disclaimer of anything malicious in her temperament. At last,
however, the supper-bell rang; the doughty postmistress, who had been
remarkably discreet throughout all this village tirade, having darted
in and out between the kitchen and the office, attending to her dual
duties, locked the postal gate with a snap, and asked her now solitary
patron, "Anything I can do for you, Maria?" The gossip gathered up her
knitting, hastily averred that she had merely dropped in for her
weekly paper, but now remembered that this was not the day for it, and
ambled off, to reload with venom for the next day's mail.

After supper we walked about the peaceful, pretty, grass-grown
village. Shearing was in progress at the barn of the inn, and the
streets were filled with bleating sheep and nodding billy-goats. The
place presented many evidences of former prosperity, and we were told
that a dozen years before it had boasted of a plough factory, two or
three flouring-mills, and a good water-power. But the railroad that it
was expected would come to Grand Detour had touched Dixon instead,
with the result that the village industries had been removed to
Dixon, the dam had fallen in, and now there were less than three
hundred inhabitants between the two ferries.

When one of the store-keepers told me he had practically no country
trade, but that his customers were the villagers alone, I was led to
inquire what supported these three hundred people, who had no
industries among them, no river traffic, owing to customary low water
in summer, and who seemed to live on each other. Many of the
villagers, I found, are laborers who work upon the neighboring farms
and maintain their families here; a few are farmers, the corners of
whose places run down to the village; others there are who either own
or rent or "share" farms in the vicinity, going out to their work each
day, much of their live stock and crops being housed at their village
homes; there are half a dozen retired farmers, who have either sold
out their places or have tenants upon them, and live in the village
for sociability's sake, or to allow their children the benefit of the
excellent local school. Mingled with these people are a shoemaker, a
tailor, a storekeeper, who live upon the necessities of their
neighbors. Two fishermen spend the summer here, in a tent, selling
their daily catch to the villagers and neighboring farmers and
occasionally shipping by the daily mail-stage to Dixon, fourteen miles
away. The preacher and his family are modestly supported; a young
physician wins a scanty subsistence; and for considerably over half
the year the schoolmaster shares with them what honors and sorrows
attach to these positions of rural eminence. Our pleasant-spoken host
was the driver of the Dixon stage, as well as star-route mail
contractor, adding the conduct of a farm to his other duties. With his
wife as postmistress, and a pretty, buxom daughter, who waited on our
table and was worth her weight in gold, Grand Detour folks said that
he was bound to be a millionnaire yet.

As Grand Detour lives, so live thousands of just such little rural
villages all over the country. Viewed from the railway track or river
channel, they appear to have been once larger than they are to-day.
The sight of the unpainted houses, the ruined factory, the empty
stores, the grass and weeds in the street, the lack-lustre eyes of the
idlers, may induce one to imagine that here is the home of hopeless
poverty and despair. But although the railroad which they expected
never came; or the railroad which did come went on and scheduled the
place as a flag station; still, there is a certain inherent vitality
here, an undefined something that holds these people together, a
certain degree of hopefulness which cannot rise to the point of
ambition, a serene satisfaction with the things that are. Grand Detour
folks, and folks like them, are as blissfully content as the denizens
of Chicago.




CHAPTER VI.

AN ANCIENT MARINER.


The clock in a neighboring kitchen was striking six, as we reached the
lower ferry-landing. The grass in the streets and under the old elms
was as wet with dew as though there had been a heavy shower during the
night. The village fishermen were just pulling in to the little pier,
returning from an early morning trip to their "traut-lines" down
stream. In a long wooden cage, which they towed astern, was a
fifty-pound sturgeon, together with several large cat-fish. They
kindly hauled their cage ashore, to show us the monsters, which they
said would probably be shipped, alive, to a Chicago restaurant which
they occasionally furnished with curiosities in their line. These
fishermen were rough-looking fellows in their battered hats and
ragged, dirty overcoats, with faces sadly in need of water and a
shave. They had a sad, pinched-up appearance as well, as though the
dense fog, which was but just now yielding to the influence of the
sun, had penetrated their bones and given them the chills. On engaging
them in friendly conversation about their calling, they exhibited good
manners and some knowledge of the outer world. Their business, they
said, was precarious and, as we could well see, involved much exposure
and hardship. Sometimes it meant a start at midnight, often amid
rainstorms, fogs, or chilling weather, with a hard pull back again
up-stream,--for their lines were all of them below Grand Detour; but
to return with an empty boat, sometimes their luck, was harder yet.
Knocking about in this way, all of the year around,--for their winters
were similarly spent upon the lower waters and bayous of the
Mississippi,--neither of them was ever thoroughly well. One was
consumptively inclined, he told me, and being an old soldier, was
receiving a small pension. A claim agent had him in hand, however, and
his thoughts ran largely upon the prospects of an increase by special
legislation. He seemed to have but little doubt that he would
ultimately succeed. When he came into this looked-for fortune, he
said, he would "quit knockin' 'round an' killin' myself fishin',"
settle down in Grand Detour for the balance of his days, raising his
own "garden sass, pigs, and cow;" and some fine day would make a trip
in his boat to the "old home in Injianny, whar I was raised an'
'listed in the war." His face fairly gleamed with pleasure as he thus
dwelt upon the flowers of fancy which the pension agent had cultivated
within him; and W---- sympathetically exclaimed, when we had swung
into the stream and bidden farewell to these men who followed the
calling of the apostles, that were she a congressman she would
certainly vote for the fisherman's claim, and make happy one more
heart in Grand Detour.

Now commences the Great Bend of the Rock River. The water circuit is
fourteen miles, the distance gained being but six by land. The stream
is broad and shallow, between palisades densely surmounted with trees
and covered thick with vines; great willow islands freely intersperse
the course; everywhere are evidences of ice-floes, which have blazed
the trees and strewn the islands with fallen trunks and driftwood,--a
tornado could not have created more general havoc. The visible houses,
few of them inviting in appearance, are miles apart. As had been
foretold at the village, the outlook for lodgings in this dismal
region is not at all encouraging. It was well that we had stopped at
Grand Detour.

Below the bend, where the country is more open, though the banks are
still deep-cut, the highway to Dixon skirts the river, and for several
miles we kept company with the stage.

Dixon was sighted at 10 o'clock. A circus had pitched its tents upon
the northern bank, just above the dam, near where we landed for the
carry, and a crowd of small boys came swarming down the bank to gaze
upon us, possibly imagining, at first, that our outfit was a part of
the show. They accompanied us, at a respectful distance, as we pulled
the canoe up a grassy incline and down through the vine-clad arches of
a picturesque old ruin of a mill. Below the dam, we rowed over to the
town, about where the famous pioneer ferry used to be. It was in the
spring of 1826 that John Boles opened a trail from Peoria to Galena,
by the way of the present locality of Dixon, thus shortening a trail
which had been started by one Kellogg the year before, but crossed the
Rock a few miles above. The site of Dixon at once sprang into wide
popularity as a crossing-place, Indians being employed to do the
ferrying. Their manner was simple. Lashing two canoes abreast, the
wheels of one side of a wagon were placed in one canoe and the
opposite wheels in the other. The horses were made to swim behind. In
1827 a Peoria man named Begordis erected a small shanty here and had
half finished a ferry-boat when the Indians, not favoring competition,
burned the craft on its stocks and advised Begordis to return to
Peoria; being a wise man, he returned. The next year, Joe Ogie, a
Frenchman, one of a race that the red men loved, and having a squaw
for his wife, was permitted to build a scow, and thenceforth Indians
were no longer needed there as common carriers. By the time of the
Black Hawk war, Dixon, from whom the subsequent settlement was named,
ran the ferry, and the crossing station had henceforth a name in
history. A trail in those early days was quite as important as a
railroad is to-day; settlements sprang up along the improved
"Kellogg's trail," and Dixon was the centre of interest in all
northern Illinois. Indeed, it being for years the only point where the
river could be crossed by ferry, Dixon was as important a landmark to
the settlers of the southern half of Wisconsin who desired to go to
Chicago, as any within their own territory.[1]

The Dixon of to-day shelters four thousand inhabitants and has two or
three busy mills; although it is noticeable that along the water-power
there are some half-dozen mill properties that have been burned, torn
down, or deserted, which does not look well for the manufacturing
prospects of the place. The land along the river banks is a flat
prairie some half-mile in width, with rolling country beyond,
sprinkled with oak groves. The banks are of black, sandy loam, from
twelve to twenty feet high, based with sandy beaches. The shores are
now and then cut with deep ravines, at the mouths of which are fine,
gravelly beaches, sometimes forming considerable spits. These indicate
that the dry, barren gullies, the gutters of the hillocks, while
innocent enough in a drought, sometimes rise to the dignity of
torrents and suddenly pour great volumes of drainage into the rapidly
filling river,--so often described in the journals of early travelers
through this region, as "the dark and raging Rock." This sort of
scenery, varied by occasional limestone palisades,--the interesting
and picturesque feature of the Rock, from which it derived its name at
the hands of the aborigines,--extends down to beyond Sterling.

This city, reached at 3.50 P. M., is a busy place of ten thousand
inhabitants, engaged in miscellaneous manufactures. Our portage was
over the south and dry end of the dam. We were helped by three or four
bright, intelligent boys, who were themselves carrying over a punt,
preparatory to a fishing expedition below. Amid the hundreds of boys
whom we met at our various portages, these well-bred Sterling lads
were the only ones who even offered their assistance. Very likely,
however, the reason may be traced to the fact that this was Saturday,
and a school holiday. The boys at the week-day carries were the
riff-raff, who are allowed to loaf upon the river-banks when they
should be at their school-room desks.

While mechanically pulling a "fisherman's stroke" down stream I was
dreamily reflecting upon the necessity of enforced popular education,
when W----, vigilant at the steersman's post, mischievously broke in
upon the brown study with, "Como's next station! Twenty minutes for
supper!"

And sure enough, it was a quarter past six, and there was Como nestled
upon the edge of the high prairie-bank. I went up into the hamlet to
purchase a quart of milk for supper, and found it a little dead-alive
community of perhaps one hundred and twenty-five people. There is the
brick shell of a fire-gutted factory, with several abandoned stores, a
dozen houses from which the paint had long since scaled, a rather
smart-looking schoolhouse, and two brick dwellings of ancient
pattern,--the homes of well-to-do farmers; while here and there were
grass-grown depressions, which I was told were once the cellars of
houses that had been moved away. On the return to the beach a bevy of
open-mouthed women and children accompanied me, plying questions with
a simplicity so rare that there was no thought of impertinence. W----
was talking with the old gray-haired ferryman, who had been
transporting a team across as we had landed beside his staging. The
old man had stayed behind, avowedly to mend his boat, with a stone for
a hammer, but it was quite apparent that curiosity kept him, rather
than the needs of his scow. He confided to us that Como--which was
indeed prettily situated upon a bend of the river--had once been a
prosperous town. But the railroad went to some rival place, and--the
familiar story--the dam at Como rotted, and the village fell into its
present dilapidated state. It is the fate of many a small but
ambitious town upon a river. Settled originally because of the river
highway, the railroads--that have nearly killed the business of water
transportation--did not care to go there because it was too far out of
the short-cut path selected by the engineers between two more
prominent points. Thus the community is "side-tracked,"--to use a bit
of railway slang; and a side-tracked town becomes in the new
civilization--which cares nothing for the rivers, but clusters along
the iron ways--a town "as dead as a door-nail."

We had luncheon on a high bank just out of sight of Como. By the time
we had reached a point three or four miles below the village it was
growing dark, and time to hunt for shelter. While I walked, or rather
ran, along the north bank looking for a farm-house, W---- guided the
canoe down a particularly rapid current. It was really too dark to
prosecute the search with convenience. I was several times misled by
clumps of trees, and fruitlessly climbed over board or crawled under
barbed-wire fences, and often stumbled along the dusty highway which
at times skirted the bank. It was over a mile before an undoubted
windmill appeared, dimly silhouetted against the blackening sky above
a dense growth of river-timber a quarter of a mile down the stream. A
whistle, and W---- shot the craft into the mouth of a black ravine,
and clambered up the bank, at the serious risk of torn clothing from
the thicket of blackberry-vines and locust saplings which covered it.
Together we emerged upon the highway, determined to seek the windmill
on foot; for it would have been impossible to sight the place from the
river, which was now, from the overhanging trees on both shores and
islands, as dark as a cavern. Just as we stepped upon the narrow
road--which we were only able to distinguish because the dust was
lighter in color than the vegetation--a farm-team came rumbling along
over a neighboring culvert, and rolled into view from behind a fringe
of bushes. The horses jumped and snorted as they suddenly sighted our
dark forms, and began to plunge. The women gave a mild shriek, and
awakened a small child which one of them carried in her arms. I
essayed to snatch the bits of the frightened horses to prevent them
from running away, for the women had dropped the lines, while W----
called out asking if there was a good farm-house where the windmill
was. The team quieted down under a few soothing strokes; but the women
persisted in screaming and uttering incoherent imprecations in German,
while the child fairly roared. So I returned the lines to the woman in
charge, and we bade them "Guten Nacht." As they whipped up their
animals and hurried away, with fearful backward glances, it suddenly
occurred to us that we had been taken for footpads.

We were so much amused at our adventure, as we walked along, almost
groping our way, that we failed to notice a farm-gate on the river
side of the road, until a chorus of dogs, just over the fence,
arrested our attention. A half-dozen human voices were at once heard
calling back the animals. A light shone in thin streaks through a
black fringe of lilac-bushes, and in front of these was the gate.
Opening the creaky structure, we advanced cautiously up what we felt
to be a gravel walk, under an arch of evergreens and lilacs, with the
paddle ready as a club, in case of another dog outbreak. But there was
no need of it, and we soon emerged into a flood of light, which
proceeded from a shadeless lamp within an open window.

It was a spacious white farm-house. Upon the "stoop" of an L were
standing, in attitudes of expectancy, a stout, well-fed, though rather
sinister-expressioned elderly man, with a long gray beard, and his
raw-boned, overworked wife, with two fair but dissatisfied-looking
daughters, and several sons, ranging from twelve to twenty years. A
few moments of explanation dispelled the suspicious look with which
we had been greeted, and it was soon agreed that we should, for a
consideration, be entertained for the night and over Sunday; although
the good woman protested that her house was "topsy-turvy, all torn up"
with house-cleaning,--which excuse, by the way, had become quite
familiar by this time, having been current at every house we had thus
far entered upon our journey.

Bringing our canoe down to the farmer's bank and hauling it up into
the bushes, we returned through the orchard to the house, laden with
baggage. Our host proved to be a famous story-teller. His tales, often
Munchausenese, were inclined to be ghastly, and he had an o'erweening
fondness for inconsequential detail, like some authors of serial
tales, who write against space and tax the patience of their readers
to its utmost endurance. But while one may skip the dreary pages of
the novelist, the circumstantial story-teller must be borne with
patiently, though the hours lag with leaden heels. In earlier days the
old man had been something of a traveler, having journeyed to Illinois
by steamboat on the upper lakes, from "ol' York State;" another time
he went down the Mississippi River to Natchez, working his way as a
deck hand; but the crowning event of his career was his having, as a
driver, accompanied a cattle-train to New York city. A few years ago
he tumbled down a well and was hauled up something of a <DW36>; so
that his occupation chiefly consists in sitting around the house in an
easy-chair, or entertaining the crowd at the cross-roads store with
sturdy tales of his adventures by land and sea, spiced with vigorous
opinions on questions of politics and theology. The garrulity of age,
a powerful imagination, and a boasting disposition are his chief stock
in trade.

Propped up in his great chair, with one leg resting upon a lounge and
the other aiding his iron-ferruled cane in pounding the floor by way
of punctuating his remarks, "that ancient mariner"

     "Held us with his glittering eye;
     We could not choose but hear."

His tales were chiefly of shooting and stabbing scrapes, drownings and
hangings that he claimed to have seen, dwelling upon each incident
with a blood-curdling particularity worthy of the reporter of a
sensational metropolitan journal. The ancient man must have fairly
walked in blood through the greater part of his days; while from the
number of corpses that had been fished out of the river, at the head
of a certain island at the foot of his orchard, and "laid out" in his
best bedroom by the coroner, we began to feel as though we had engaged
quarters at a morgue. It was painfully evident that these recitals
were "chestnuts" in the house of our entertainer. The poor old lady
had a tired-out, unhappy appearance, the dissatisfied-looking
daughters yawned, and the sons talked, _sotto voce_, on farm matters
and neighborhood gossip.

Finally, we tore away, much to the relief of every one but the host,
and were ushered with much ceremony into the ghostly bed-chamber, the
scene of so many coroner's inquests. I must confess to uncanny dreams
that night,--confused visions of Rock River giving up innumerable
corpses, which I was compelled to assist in "laying out" upon the very
bed I occupied.

FOOTNOTE:

[1] See Mrs. Kinzie's "Wau-Bun" for a description of the difficulties
of travel in "the early day," via Dixon's Ferry.




CHAPTER VII.

STORM-BOUND AT ERIE.


We were somewhat jaded by the time Monday morning came, for Sunday
brought not only no relief, but repetitions of many of the most
horrible of these "tales of a wayside inn." It was with no slight
sense of relief that we paid our modest bill and at last broke away
from such ghastly associations. An involuntary shudder overcame me, as
we passed the head of the island at the foot of our host's orchard,
which he had described as a catch-basin for human floaters.

Our course still lay among large, densely wooded islands,--many of
them wholly given up to maples and willows,--and deep cuts through
sun-baked mudbanks, the color of adobe; but occasionally there are
low, gloomy bottoms, heavily forested, and strewn with flood-wood,
while beyond the land rises gradually into prairie stretches. In the
bottoms the trees are filled with flocks of birds,--crows, hawks,
blackbirds, with stately blue herons and agile plovers foraging on the
long gravel-spits which frequently jut far into the stream; ducks are
frequently seen sailing near the shores; while divers silently dart
and plunge ahead of the canoe, safely out of gunshot reach. A head
wind this morning made rowing more difficult, by counteracting the
influence of the current.

We were at Lyndon at eleven o'clock. There is a population of about
two hundred, clustered around a red paper-mill. The latter made a
pretty picture standing out on the bold bank, backed by a number of
huge stacks of golden straw. We met here the first rapids worthy of
record; also an old, abandoned mill-dam, in the last stages of decay,
stretching its whitened skeleton across the stream, a harbor for
driftwood. Near the south bank the framework has been entirely swept
away for a space several rods in width, and through this opening the
pent-up current fiercely sweeps. We went through the centre of the
channel thus made, with a swoop that gave us an impetus which soon
carried our vessel out of sight of Lyndon and its paper-mill and
straw-stacks.

Prophetstown, five miles below, is prettily situated in an oak grove
on the southern bank. Only the gables of a few houses can be seen from
the river, whose banks of yellow clay and brown mud are here
twenty-five feet high. During the first third of the present century,
this place was the site of a Winnebago village, whose chief was White
Cloud, a shrewd, sinister savage, half Winnebago and half Sac, who
claimed to be a prophet. He was Black Hawk's evil genius during the
uprising of 1832, and in many ways was one of the most remarkable
aborigines known to Illinois history. It was at "the prophet's town,"
as White Cloud's village was known in pioneer days, that Black Hawk
rested upon his ill-fated journey up the Rock, and from here, at the
instigation of the wizard, he bade the United States soldiery
defiance.

There are rapids, almost continually, from a mile above Prophetstown
to Erie, ten miles below. The river bed here has a sharper descent
than customary, and is thickly strewn with bowlders; many of them were
visible above the surface, at the low stage of water which we found,
but for the greater part they were covered for two or three inches.
What with these impediments, the snags that had been left as the
legacy of last spring's flood, and the frequent sand-banks and
gravel-spits, navigation was attended by many difficulties and some
dangers.

Four or five miles below Prophetstown, a lone fisherman, engaged in
examining a "traut-line" stretched between one of the numerous gloomy
islands and the mainland, kindly informed us of a mile-long cut-off,
the mouth of which was now in view, that would save us several miles
of rowing. Here, the high banks had receded, with several miles of
heavily wooded, boggy bottoms intervening. Floods had held high
carnival, and the aspect of the country was wild and deserted. The
cut-off was an ugly looking channel; but where our informant had gone
through, with his unwieldy hulk, we considered it safe to venture with
a canoe, so readily responsive to the slightest paddle-stroke. The
current had torn for itself a jagged bed through the heart of a dense
and moss-grown forest. It was a scene of howling desolation, rack and
ruin upon every hand. The muddy torrent, at a velocity of fully eight
miles an hour, went eddying and whirling and darting and roaring among
the gnarled and blackened stumps, the prostrate trees, the twisted
roots, the huge bowlders which studded its course. The stream was not
wide enough for the oars; the paddle was the sole reliance. With eyes
strained for obstructions, we turned and twisted through the
labyrinth, jumping along at a breakneck speed; and, when we finally
rejoined the main river below, were grateful enough, for the run had
been filled with continuous possibilities of a disastrous smash-up,
miles away from any human habitation.

The thunder-storm which had been threatening since early morning, soon
burst upon us with a preliminary wind blast, followed by drenching
rain. Running ashore on the lee bank, we wrapped the canvas awning
around the baggage, and made for a thick clump of trees on the top of
an island mudbank, where we stood buttoned to the neck in rubber
coats. A vigorous "Halloo!" came sounding over the water. Looking up,
we saw for the first time a small tent on the opposite shore, a
quarter of a mile away, in front of which was a man shouting to us and
beckoning us over. It was getting uncomfortably muddy under the trees,
which had not long sufficed as an umbrella, and the rubber coats were
not warranted to withstand a deluge, so we accepted the invitation
with alacrity and paddled over through the pelting storm.

Our host was a young fisherman, who helped us and our luggage up the
slimy bank to his canvas quarters, which we found to be dry, although
odorous of fish. While the storm raged without, the young man, who was
a simple-hearted fellow, confided to us the details of his brief
career. He had been married but a year, he said; his little cabin lay
a quarter of a mile back in the woods, and, so as to be convenient to
his lines, he was camping on his own wood-lot; the greater part of his
time was spent in fishing or hunting, according to the season, and
peddling the product in neighboring towns, while upon a few acres of
clearing he raised "garden truck" for his household, which had
recently become enriched by the addition of an infant son. The
phenomenal powers of observation displayed by this first-born youth
were reported with much detail by the fond father, who sat crouched
upon a boat-sail in one corner of the little tent, his head between
his knees, and smoking vile tobacco in a blackened clay pipe. It
seemed that his wife was a ferryman's daughter, and her father had
besought his son-in-law to follow the same steady calling. To be sure,
our host declared, ferries on the Rock River netted their owners from
$400 to $800 a year, which he considered a goodly sum, and his
father-in-law had offered to purchase an established plant for him.
But the young fellow said that ferrying was a dog's life, and "kept a
feller home like barn chores;" he preferred to fish and hunt, earning
far less but retaining independence of movement, so rejected the offer
and settled down, avowedly for life, in his present precarious
occupation. As a result, the indignant old man had forbidden him to
again enter the parental ferry-house until he agreed to accept his
proposals, and there was henceforth to be a standing family quarrel.
The fisherman having appealed to my judgment, I endeavored with mild
caution to argue him out of his position on the score of consideration
for his wife and little one; but he was not to be gainsaid, and
firmly, though with admirable good nature, persisted in defending his
roving tendencies. In the course of our conversation I learned that
the ferrymen, who are more numerous on the lower than on the upper
Rock, pay an annual license fee of five dollars each, in consideration
of which they are guarantied a monopoly of the business at their
stands, no other line being allowed within one mile of an existing
ferry.

Within an hour and a half the storm had apparently passed over, and we
continued our journey. But after supper another shower and a stiff
head wind came up, and we were well bedraggled by the time a
ferry-landing near the little village of Erie was reached. The
bottoms are here a mile or two in width, with occasional openings in
the woods, where small fields are cultivated by the poorer class of
farmers, who were last spring much damaged by the flood which swept
this entire country.

The ferryman, a good-natured young athlete, was landing a farm-wagon
and team as we pulled in upon the muddy roadway. When questioned about
quarters, he smiled and pointing to his little cabin, a few rods off
in the bushes, said,--"We've four people to sleep in two rooms; it's
sure we can't take ye; I'd like to, otherwise. But Erie's only a mile
away."

We assured him that with these muddy swamp roads, and in our wet
condition, nothing but absolute necessity would induce us to take a
mile's tramp. The parley ended in our being directed to a small
farm-house a quarter of a mile inland, where luckless travelers,
belated on the dreary bottoms, were occasionally kept. Making the
canoe fast for the night, we strung our baggage-packs upon the paddle
which we carried between us, and set out along a devious way, through
a driving mist which blackened the twilight into dusk, to find this
place of public entertainment.

It is a little, one-story, dilapidated farm-house, standing a short
distance from the country road, amid a clump of poplar trees. Forcing
our way through the hingeless gate, the violent removal of which
threatened the immediate destruction of several lengths of rickety
fence, we walked up to the open front door and applied for shelter.

"Yes, ma'am; we sometimes keeps tavern, ma'am," replied a large,
greasy-looking, black-haired woman of some forty years, as, her hands
folded within her up-turned apron, she courtesied to W----.

We were at once shown into a frowsy apartment which served as parlor,
sitting-room and parental dormitory. There was huddled together an
odd, slouchy combination of articles of shabby furniture and cheap
decorations, peculiar, in the country, to all three classes of rooms,
the evidences of poverty, shiftlessness, and untasteful
pretentiousness upon every side. A huge, wheezy old cabinet organ was
set diagonally in one corner, and upon this, as we entered, a young
woman was pounding and paddling with much vigor, while giving us
sidelong glances of curiosity. She was a neighbor, on an evening
visit, decked out in a smart jockey-cap, with a green ostrich tip and
bright blue ribbons, and gay in a new calico dress,--a yellow field
thickly planted to purple pineapples. A jaunty, forward creature, in
pimples and curls, she rattled away through a Moody and Sankey
hymn-book, the wheezes and groans of the antique instrument coming in
like mournful ejaculations from the amen corner at a successful
revival. Having exhausted her stock of tunes, she wheeled around upon
her stool, and after declaring to her half-dozen admiring auditors
that her hands were "as tired as after the mornin's milkin'" abruptly
accosted W----: "Ma'am, kin ye play on the orgin?"

W---- confessed her inability, chiefly from lack of practice in the
art of incessantly working the pedals.

"That's the trick o' the hul business, ma'am, is the blowin'. It's all
in gettin' the bellers to work even like. There's a good many what kin
learn the playin' part of it without no teacher; but there has to be
lessons to learn the bellers. Don't ye have no orgin, when ye're at
home?" she asked sharply, as if to guage the social standing of the
new guest.

W---- modestly confessed to never having possessed such an instrument.

"Down in these parts," rejoined the young woman, as she "worked the
bellers" into a strain or two of "Hold the Fort," apparently to show
how easy it came to trained feet, "no house is now considered quite up
to the fashi'n as ain't got a orgin." The rain being now over, she
soon departed, evidently much disgusted at W----'s lack of organic
culture.

The bed-chamber into which we were shown was a marvel. It opened off
the main room and was, doubtless, originally a cupboard. Seven feet
square, with a broad, roped bedstead occupying the entire length, a
bedside space of but two feet wide was left. Much of this being filled
with butter firkins, chains, a trunk, and a miscellaneous riff-raff of
household lumber, the standing-room was restricted to two feet square,
necessitating the use of the bed as a dressing-place, after the
fashion of a sleeping-car bunk. This cubby-hole of a room was also the
wardrobe for the women of the household, the walls above the bed being
hung nearly two feet deep with the oddest collection of calico and
gingham gowns, bustles, hoopskirts, hats, bonnets, and winter
underwear I think I had ever laid eyes on.

Much of this condition of affairs was not known, however, until next
morning; for it was as dark as Egypt within, except for a few faint
rays of light which came straggling through the cracks in the board
partition separating us from the sitting-room candle. We had no
sooner crossed the threshold of our little box than the creaky old
cleat door was gently closed upon us and buttoned by our hostess upon
the outside, as the only means of keeping it shut; and we were left
free to grope about among these mysteries as best we might. We had
hardly recovered from our astonishment at thus being locked into a
dark hole the size of a fashionable lady's trunk, and were quietly
laughing over this odd adventure, when the landlady applied her mouth
to a crack and shouted, as if she would have waked the dead: "Hi,
there! Ye'd better shet the winder to keep the bugs out!" A few
minutes later, returning to the crack, she added, "Ef ye's cold in the
night, jest haul down some o' them clothes atop o' ye which ye'll find
on the wall."

Repressing our mirth, we assured our good hostess that we would have a
due regard for our personal safety. The window, not at first
discernible, proved to be a hole in the wall, some two feet square,
which brought in little enough fresh air, at the best. It was
fortunate that the night was cool, although our hostess's best gowns
were not needed to supplement the horse-blankets under which we slept
the sleep of weary canoeists.




CHAPTER VIII

THE LAST DAY OUT.


The following day opened brightly. We had breakfast in the tavern
kitchen, _en famille_. The husband, whom we had not met before, was a
short, smooth-faced, voluble, overgrown-boy sort of man. The mother
was dumpy, coarse, and good-natured. They had a greasy, easy-tempered
daughter of eighteen, with a frowsy head, and a face like a full moon;
while the heir of the household, somewhat younger, was a gaping,
grinning youth of the Simple Simon order, who shovelled mashed
potatoes into his mouth alternately with knife and fork, and took
bites of bread large enough for a ravenous dog. The old grandmother,
with a face like parchment and one gleaming eye, sat in a low
rocking-chair by the stove, crooning over a corn-cob pipe and using
the wood-box for a cuspadore. She had a vinegary, slangy tongue, and
being somewhat deaf, would break in upon the conversation with
remarks sharper than they were pat.

With our host, a glib and rapid talker in a swaggering tone, one could
not but be much amused, as he exhibited a degree of self-appreciation
that was decidedly refreshing. He had been a veteran in the War of the
Rebellion, he proudly assured us, and pointed with his knife to his
discharge-paper, which was hung up in an old looking-glass frame by
the side of the clock.

"Gemmen,"--he invariably thus addressed us, as though we were a
coterie of checker-players at a village grocery,--"Gemmen, when I seen
how them Johnny Rebs was a usin' our boys in them prison pens down
thar at Andersonville and Libbie and 'roun' thar, I jist says to
myself, says I, 'Joe, my boy, you go now an' do some'n' fer yer
country; a crack shot like you is, Joe,' says I to myself, 'as kin hit
a duck on the wing, every time, an' no mistake, oughtn't ter be a-lyin
'roun' home an' doin' no'hun to put down the rebellion; it's a shame,'
says I, 'when our boys is a-suff'r'n' down thar on Mason 'n' Dixie's
line;' an' so I jined, an' I stuck her out, gemmen, till the thing was
done; they ain't no coward 'bout me, ef I _hev_ the sayin' of it!"

"Were you wounded, sir?" asked W----, sympathetically.

"No, I wa'n't hurt at all,--that is, so to speak, wounded. But thar
were a sort of a doctor feller 'round here las' winter, a-stoppin' at
Erie; an' he called at my place, an' he says, 'No'hun the matter wi'
you, a-growin out o' the war?' says he; an' I says, 'No'hun that I
know'd on,' says I,--'I'm a-eatin' my reg'l'r victuals whin I don't
have the shakes,' says I. 'Ah!' says he, 'you've the shakes?' he says;
'an' don't you know you ketched 'em in the war?' 'I ketched 'em
a-gettin' m'lairy in the bottoms,' says I, 'a-duck-shootin', in which
I kin hit a bird on the wing every time an' no mistake,' says I.
'Now,' he says, 'hold on a minute; you didn't hev shakes afore the
war?' says he. 'Not as much,' I says, not knowin' what the feller was
drivin' at, 'but some; I was a kid then, and kids don't shake much,'
says I. 'Hold up! hold up!' he says, 'you 're wrong, an' ye know it;
ye don't hev no mem'ry goin' back so far about phys'cal conditions,'
says he. Well, gemmen, sure 'nough, when I kem to think things over,
and talk it up with the doctor chap, I 'lowed he was right. Then he
let on he was a claim agint, an' I let him try his hand on workin' up
a pension for me, for he says I wa'n't to pay no'hun 'less the thing
went through. But I hearn tell, down at Erie, that they is a-goin'
agin these private claims nowadays at Washin'ton, an' I don't know
what my show is. But I ought to hev a pension, an' no mistake, gemmen.
They wa'n't no fellers did harder work 'n me in the war, ef I _do_ say
it myself."

W---- ventured to ask what battles our host had been in.

"Well, I wa'n't in no reg'lar battle,--that is, right _in_ one. Thar
was a few of us detailed ter tek keer of gov'ment prop'ty near
C'lumby, South Car'liny, when Wade Hamptin was a-burnin' things down
thar. We was four miles away from the fightin,' an' I was jest
a-achin' to git in thar. What I wanted was to git a bead on ol' Wade
himself,--an' ef I do say it myself, the ol' man would 'a' hunted his
hole, gemmen. When I get a sight on a duck, gemmen, that duck's mine,
an' no mistake. An' ef I'd 'a' sighted Wade Hamptin, then good-by
Wade! I tol' the cap'n what I wanted, but he said as how I was more
use a-takin' keer of the supplies. That cap'n hadn't no enterprise
'bout him. Things would 'a' been different at C'lumby, ef I'd had my
way, an' don't ye forgit it! There was heaps o' blood spilt
unnecessary by us boys, a-fightin' to save the ol' flag,--an' we 're
willin' to do it agin, gemmen, an' no mistake!"

The old woman had been listening eagerly to this narrative, evidently
quite proud of her boy's achievements, but not hearing all that had
been said. She now broke out, in shrill, high notes,--

"Joe ought ter 'a' had a pension, he had, wi' his chills 'tracted in
the war. He wuk'd hard, Joe did, a hul ten months, doin' calvary
service, the last year o' the war; an' he kem nigh onter shootin' ol'
Wade Hamptin, an' a-makin' a name for himself, an' p'r'aps a good
office with a title an' all that; only they kep' him back with the
ammernition wagin, 'count o' the kurnil's jealousy,--for Joe is a dead
shot, ma'am, if I'm his mother as says it, and keeps the family in
ducks half the year 'roun', an' the kurnil know'd Joe was a-bilin'
over to git to the front."

"Ah! you were in the cavalry service, then?" I said to our landlord,
by way of helping along the conversation.

There was a momentary silence, broken by Simple Simon, who wiped his
knife on his tongue, and made a wild attack on the butter dish.

"Pa, he druv a mule team for gov'ment; an' we got a picter in the
album, tuk of him when he were just a-goin' inter battle, with a big
ammernition wagin on behind. Pa, in the picter, is a-ridin' o' one o'
the mules, an' any one'd know him right off."

This sudden revelation of the strength of the veteran's claim to glory
and a pension, put a damper upon his reminiscences of the war; and
giving the innocent Simon a savage leer, he soon contrived to turn the
conversation upon his wonderful exploits in duck-shooting and
fishing--industries in the pursuit of which he, with so many of his
fellow-farmers on the bottoms, appeared to be more eager than in
tilling the soil.

It was quite evident that the breakfast we were eating was a special
spread in honor of probably the only guests the quondam tavern had had
these many months. Canoeists must not be too particular about the fare
set before them; but on this occasion we were able to swallow but a
few mouthfuls of the repast and our lunch-basket was drawn on as soon
as we were once more afloat. It is a great pity that so many farmers'
wives are the wretched cooks they are. With an abundance of good
materials already about them, and rare opportunities for readily
acquiring more, tens of thousands of rural dames do manage to prepare
astonishingly inedible meals,--sour, doughy bread; potatoes which, if
boiled, are but half cooked, and if mashed, are floated with
abominable butter or pastey flour gravy; salt pork either swimming in
a bowl of grease or fried to a leathery chip; tea and coffee extremely
weak or strong enough to kill an ox, as chance may dictate, and
inevitably adulterated beyond recognition; eggs that are spoiled by
being fried to the consistency of rubber, in a pan of fat deep enough
to float doughnuts; while the biscuits are yellow and bitter with
saleratus. This bill of fare, warranted to destroy the best of
appetites, will be recognized by too many of my readers as that to be
found at the average American farm-house, although we all doubtless
know of some magnificent exceptions, which only prove the rule. We
establish public cooking-schools in our cities, and economists like
Edward Atkinson and hygienists like the late Dio Lewis assiduously
explain to the metropolitan poor their processes of making a tempting
meal out of nothing; but our most crying need in this country to-day
is a training-school for rural housewives, where they may be taught to
evolve a respectable and economical spread out of the great abundance
with which they are surrounded. It is no wonder that country boys
drift to the cities, where they can obtain properly cooked food and
live like rational beings.

The river continues to widen as we approach the junction with the
Mississippi,--thirty-nine miles below Erie,--and to assume the
characteristics of the great river into which it pours its flood. The
islands increase in number and in size, some of them being over a mile
in length by a quarter of a mile in breadth; the bottoms frequently
resolve themselves into wide morasses, thickly studded with great
elms, maples, and cotton-woods, among which the spring flood has
wrought direful destruction. The scene becomes peculiarly desolate and
mournful, often giving one the impression of being far removed from
civilization, threading the course of some hitherto unexplored stream.
Penetrate the deep fringe of forest and morass on foot, however, and
smiling prairies are found beyond, stretching to the horizon and cut
up into prosperous farms. The river is here from a half to
three-quarters of a mile broad, but the shallows and snags are as
numerous as ever and navigation is continually attended with some
danger of being either grounded or capsized.

Now and then the banks become firmer, with charming vistas of high,
wooded hills coming down to the water's edge; broad savannas
intervene, decked out with variegated flora, prominent being the
elsewhere rare atragene Americana, the spider-wort, the little blue
lobelia, and the cup-weed. These savannas are apparently overflowed in
times of exceptionally high water; and there are evidences that the
stream has occasionally changed its course, through the sunbaked banks
of ashy-gray mud, in years long past.

At Cleveland, a staid little village on an open plain, which we
reached soon after the dinner-hour, there is an unused mill-dam going
to decay. In the centre, the main current has washed out a breadth of
three or four rods, through which the pent-up stream rushes with a
roar and a hundred whirlpools. It is an ugly crevasse, but a careful
examination showed the passage to be feasible, so we retreated an
eighth of a mile up-stream, took our bearings, and went through with a
speed that nearly took our breath away and appeared to greatly
astonish a half-dozen fishermen idly angling from the dilapidated
apron on either side. It was like going through Cleveland on the fast
mail.

Fourteen miles above the mouth of the Rock, is the Chicago, Burlington
and Quincy railroad bridge, with Carbon Cliff on the north and Coloma
on the south, each one mile from the river. The day had been dark,
with occasional slight showers and a stiff head wind, so that progress
had been slow. We began to deem it worth while to inquire about the
condition of affairs at the mouth. Under the bridge, sitting on a
bowlder at the base of the north abutment, an intelligent-appearing
man in a yellow oiled-cloth suit, accompanied by a bright-eyed lad,
peacefully fished. Stopping to question them, we found them both
well-informed as to the railway time-tables of the vicinity and the
topography of the lower river. They told us that the scenery for the
next fourteen miles was similar, in its dark desolation, to that which
we had passed through during the day; also that owing to the great
number of islands and the labyrinth of channels both in the Rock and
on the east side of the Mississippi, we should find it practically
impossible to know when we had reached the latter; we should doubtless
proceed several miles below the mouth of the Rock before we noticed
that the current was setting persistently south, and then would have
an exceedingly difficult task in retracing our course and pulling
up-stream to our destination, Rock Island, which is six miles north
of the delta of the Rock. They strongly advised our going into Rock
Island by rail. The present landing was the last chance to strike a
railway, except at Milan, twelve miles below. It was now so late that
we could not hope to reach Milan before dark; there were no
stopping-places _en route_, and Milan was farther from Rock Island
than either Carbon Cliff or Coloma, with less frequent railway
service.

For these and other reasons, we decided to accept this advice, and to
ship from Coloma. Taking a final spurt down to a ferry-landing a
quarter of a mile beyond, on the south bank, we beached our canoe at
5.05 P.M., having voyaged two hundred and sixty-seven miles in
somewhat less than seven days and a half. Leaving W---- to gossip with
the ferryman's wife, who came down to the bank with an armful of
smiling twins, to view a craft so strange to her vision, I went up
into the country to engage a team to take our boat upon its last
portage. After having been gruffly refused by a churlish farmer, who
doubtless recognized no difference between a canoeist and a tramp, I
struck a bargain with a <DW64> cultivating a cornfield with a span of
coal-black mules, and in half an hour he was at the ferry-landing with
a wagon. Washing out the canoe and chaining in the oars and paddle,
we lifted it into the wagon-box, piled our baggage on top, and set off
over the hills and fields to Coloma, W---- and I trudging behind the
dray, ankle deep in mud, for the late rains had well moistened the
black prairie soil. It was a unique and picturesque procession.

In less than an hour we were in Rock Island, and our canoe was on its
way by freight to Portage, preparatory to my tour with our friend the
Doctor,--down the Fox River of Green Bay.




THE FOX RIVER (OF GREEN BAY).

  [Illustration: MAP OF THE FOX-WISCONSIN RIVERS to accompany
  THWAITES'S "HISTORIC WATERWAYS"]




THE FOX RIVER (OF GREEN BAY).




FIRST LETTER.

SMITH'S ISLAND.


     PACKWAUKEE, WIS., June 7, 1887.

My dear W----: It was 2.25 P. M. yesterday when the Doctor and I
launched the old canoe upon the tan- water of the government
canal at Portage, and pointed her nose in the direction of the
historic Fox. You will remember that the canal traverses the low sandy
plain which separates the Fox from the Wisconsin on a line very nearly
parallel to where tradition locates Barth's and Lecuyer's
wagon-portage a hundred years ago. It was a profitable business in the
olden days, when the Fox-Wisconsin highway was extensively patronized,
to thus transport river craft over this mile and a half of bog. The
toll[2] collected by these French creoles and their successors down to
the days of Paquette added materially to the cost of goods and
peltries. In times of exceptionally high water the Wisconsin
overflowed into the Fox, which is ordinarily five feet lower than the
former, and canoes could readily cross the portage afloat, quite
independent of the forwarding agents. In this generation the
Wisconsin is kept to her bounds by levees; but the government canal
furnishes a free highway. The railroads have spoiled water-navigation,
however; and the canal, like the most of the Fox and Wisconsin
river-improvement, is fast relapsing into a costly relic. The timbered
sides are rotting, the peat and sand are bulging them in, the locks
are shaky and worm-eaten, and several moss-covered barges and a
stranded old ruin of a steamboat turned out to grass tell a sad story
of official abandonment.

The scenic effects from the canal are not enlivening. There is a wide
expanse of bog, relieved by some grass-grown railway side-tracks and
the forlorn freight-depot of the Wisconsin Central road. A few
battered sheds yet remain of old Fort Winnebago on a lonesome hillock
near where the canal joins the Fox; while beyond to the north as far
as the eye can reach there is a stretch of wild-rice swamp, through
which the government dredges have scooped a narrow channel, about as
picturesque as a cranberry-marsh drain.

Life at Fort Winnebago during the second quarter of this century must
have been lonesome indeed, its nearest neighbors being Forts Crawford
and Howard, each nearly two hundred miles away. A mile or two to the
southwest is a pretty wooded ridge, girting the Wisconsin River, upon
which the city of Portage is now situated. Then it was a forest, and
the camping-ground of Winnebagoes, who hung around the post in the
half-threatening attitude of beggars who might make trouble if not
adequately bribed with gifts. The fort was erected in 1828-29 at the
solicitation of John Jacob Astor (the American Fur Company), to
protect his trade against encroachments from these Winnebago rascals,
who had become quite impudent during the Red Bird disturbance at
Prairie du Chien, in 1827. Jefferson Davis was one of the three
first-lieutenants in the original garrison, in which Harney, of
Mexican war fame, was a captain. Davis was detailed to the charge of a
squad sent to cut timbers for the fort in a Wisconsin River pinery
just above the portage, and thus became one of the pioneer lumbermen
of Wisconsin. It is related, too, that Davis, who was an amateur
cabinet-maker, designed some very odd wardrobes and other pieces of
furniture for the officers' chambers, which were the wonder and
admiration of every occupant for years to come.[3] In 1853, when
Secretary of War, the whilom subaltern issued an order for the sale of
the fort so intimately connected with his army career, and its crazy
buildings henceforth became tenements.

For a dozen miles beyond the Fox River end of the canal the river, as
I have before said, is dredged out through the swamp like a big ditch.
The artificial banks of sand and peat which line it are generally well
grown with mare's-tail, beautiful clumps of wild roses, purple vetch,
great beds of sensitive ferns, and masses of Pennsylvania anemone,
while the pools are decked with water-anemone. Nature is doing her
best to hide the deformities wrought by man. The valley is generally
about a mile in width, ridges of wooded knolls hemming in the broad
expanse of reeds and rice and willow clumps. Occasionally the
engineers have allowed the ditch to swerve in graceful lines and to
hug closely the firmer soil in the lower benches of the knolls, where
the banks of red and yellow clay attain a height of ten or a dozen
feet, crowned with oaks and elms or pleasant glades. A modest
farm-house now and then appears upon such a shore, with the front yard
running down to the water's edge.

The afternoon shadows are lengthening, and farmers' boys are leading
their horses down to drink, after the day's labor in the fields. Black
and yellow collies are gathering in the cows,--some of them soberly
and quickly corral obedient herds, while others yelp and snap at the
heads of the affrighted animals, and in the noise and confusion seem
to make but little progress. Collies have human-like infirmities.

We had supper at seven o'clock, under a tree which overhangs a weedy
bank, with a high pasture back of us, sloping up to a wooded hill, at
the base of which is a cluster of three neatly painted farm-houses,
whose dogs bayed at us from the distance, but did not venture to
approach. A half-hour later, the sun's setting warned us that quarters
for the night must soon be secured. Stopping at the base of a boggy
pasture-wood, we ascended through a sterile field, accursed with
sheep-sorrel, and through gaps in several crazy fences, to what had
seemed to us from the river a comfortable, repose-inviting house,
commandingly situated on a hill-top among the trees. Near approach
revealed a scene of desolation. The barriers were down, two
spare-ribbed horses were nipping a scant supper among the weeds in a
dark corner of an otherwise deserted barn-yard, the window-sashes were
generally paneless, the porch was in a state of collapse, sand-burrs
choked the paths, and to our knock at the kitchen door the only
response was a hollow echo. The deserted house looked uncanny in the
gloaming, and we retired to our boat wondering what evil spell had
been cast over the place, and whether the horses in the barn-yard had
been deliberately left behind to die of starvation.

The river now takes upon itself many devious windings in a great
widespread over two miles broad. The government engineers have here
left it in all its original crookedness, and the twists and turns are
as fantastic and complicated as those of the Teutonic pretzel in its
native land. As the twilight thickened, great swarms of lake-flies
rose from the sedges and beat their way up-stream, the noise of their
multitudinous wings being at times like the roar of a neighboring
waterfall, as they formed a ceaselessly moving canopy over our heads.
It was noticeable that the flies kept very closely to the windings of
the river, as if guided only by the glittering flood beneath them. The
mass of the procession kept its way up the stream, but upon the
outskirts could be seen a few individuals, apparently larger than the
average, flying back and forth as if marshaling the host.

Two miles below the deserted house, we stopped opposite another marshy
bank, where a rude skiff lay tied to a shaky fence projecting far out
into the reeds. Pushing our way in, we beached in the slimy shore-mud
and scrambled upon the land, where the tall grass was now as sloppy
with dew as though it had been rained upon. It was getting quite dark
now, but through a cleft in the hills the moon was seen to be just
rising above a cloud-bathed horizon, and a small house, neat-looking,
though destitute of paint, was sharply silhouetted against the
lightening sky, at the head of a gentle <DW72>. By the time we had
waded through a quarter of a mile of thriving timothy we were wet to
the skin below the knees and dusted all over with pollen.

Seven children, mostly boys, and gently step-laddered down from
fourteen years, greeted us at the summit with a loud "Hello!" in
shrill unison. They stood in a huddle by the woodpile, holding down
and admonishing a very mild-looking collie, which they evidently
imagined was filled with an overweening desire instantly to devour us.
"Hello there! who be ye?" shouted the oldest lad and the spokesman of
the party. He was a tall, spare boy, and by the light of the rising
moon we could see he was sharp-featured, good-natured, and
intelligent.

"Well," said the Doctor, bantering, "that's what we'd like to know.
You tell us who you are, and we'll tell you who we are. Now that's
fair, isn't it?"

"Yes, sir," replied the boy, respectfully, as he touched his rimless
straw hat; "our name's Smith; all 'cept that boy there," pointing to a
sturdy little twelve-year-old, "an' he's a Bixby, he is."

"The Smith family's a big one, I should say," the Doctor remarked, as
he audibly counted the party.

"Oh, this ain't all on 'em, sir; there's two in the house, a-hidin'
'cause o' strangers, besides the baby, which ma and pa has with 'em
inter Packwaukee, a-shoppin'. This is Smith's Island, sir. Didn't ye
ever hear o' Smith's Island?"

We acknowledged our ignorance, up to this time, of the existence of
any such feature in the geography of Wisconsin. But the lad, now
joined by the others, who had by this time vanquished their
bashfulness and all wanted to talk at once, assured us that we were
actually on Smith's Island; that Smith's Island had an area of one
hundred acres, was surrounded on the east by the river, and everywhere
else by either a bayou or a marsh that had to be crossed with a boat
in the spring; that there were three families of Smiths there, and
this group represented but one branch of the clan.

"We're all Smiths, sir, but this boy, who's a Bixby; an' he's our
cousin and only a-visitin'."

After having gained a thorough knowledge of the topography and
population of Smith's Island, we ventured to ask whether it was
presumable that the parental Smiths, when they returned home from the
village, would be willing to entertain us for the night.

"Guess not, sir," replied the spokesman, the idea appearing to strike
him humorously; "there's so many of us now, sir, that we're packed in
pretty close, an' the Bixby boy has to sleep atop o' the orgin. But I
think Uncle Jim might; he kept a tramp over night once, an' give him
his breakfus', too, in the bargain."

The prospect as to Uncle Jim was certainly encouraging, and it was now
too late to go further. It seemed necessary to stop on Smith's Island
for the night, even if we were restricted to quartering in the
corn-crib which the Smith boy kindly put at our disposal in case of
Uncle Jim's refusal,--with the additional inducement that he would
lend us the collie for company and to "keep off rats," which he
intimated were phenomenally numerous on this swamp-girt hill.

The entire troop of urchins accompanied us down to the bank to make
fast for the night, and helped us up with our baggage to the
corn-crib, where we disturbed a large family of hens which were using
the airy structure as a summer dormitory. Then, with the two oldest
boys as pilots, we set off along the ridge to find the domicile of
Uncle Jim, who had established a reputation for hospitality by having
once entertained a way-worn tramp.

The moon had now swung clear of the trees on the edge of the river
basin, and gleamed through a great cleft in the blue-black clouds,
investing the landscape with a luminous glow. Along the eastern
horizon a dark forest-girt ridge hemmed in the reedy widespread,
through which the gleaming Fox twisted and doubled upon itself like a
silvery serpent in agony. The Indians, who have an eye to the
picturesque in Nature, tell us that once a monster snake lay down for
the night in the swamp between the portage and the lake of the
Winnebagoes. The dew accumulated upon it as it lay, and when the
morning came it wriggled and shook the water from its back, and
disappeared down the river which it had thus created in its nocturnal
bed. I had never fully appreciated the aptness of the legend until
last night, when I had that bird's-eye view of the valley of the Fox
from the summit of Smith's Island. To our left, the timothy-field
sloped gracefully down to the sedgy couch of the serpent; to our
right, there were pastures and oak openings, with glimpses of the
moonlit bayou below, across which a dark line led to a forest,--the
narrow roadway leading from Smith's to the outer world. At the edge of
a small wood-lot our guides stopped, telling us to keep on along the
path, over two stiles and through a barn-yard gate, till we saw a
light; the light would be Uncle Jim's.

A cloud was by this time overcasting the moon, and a distant rumble
told us that the night would be stormy. Groping our way through the
copse, we passed the barriers, and, according to promise, the blinding
light of a kerosene lamp standing on the ledge of an open window burst
upon us. Then a door opened, and the form of a tall, stalwart man
stood upon the threshold, a striking silhouette. It was Uncle Jim
peering into the darkness, for he had heard footsteps in the yard. We
were greeted cordially on the porch, and shown into a cosey
sitting-room, where Uncle Jim had been reading his weekly paper, and
Uncle Jim's wife, smiling sweetly amid her curl-papers, was engaged on
a bit of crochet. Charmingly hospitable people they are. They have
been married but a year or two, are without children, and have a
pleasant cottage furnished simply but in excellent taste. Such
delightful little homes are rare in the country, and the Doctor
couldn't help telling Uncle Jim so, whereat the latter was very
properly pleased. Uncle Jim is a fine-looking, manly fellow, six feet
two in his stockings, he told us; and his pretty, blooming wife,
though young, has the fine manners of the olden school. We were
earnestly invited to stop for the night before we had fairly stated
our case, and in five minutes were talking on politics, general news,
and agriculture, as though we had always lived on Smith's Island and
had just dropped in for an evening's chat. I am sure you would have
enjoyed it, W----, it was such a contrast to our night at the Erie
tavern,--only a week ago, though it seems a month. One sees and feels
so much, canoeing, that the days are like weeks of ordinary travel.
Two hundred miles by river are more full of the essence of life than
two thousand by rail.

We had an excellent bed and an appetizing breakfast. The flood-gates
of heaven had been opened during the night, and Smith's Island shaken
to its peaty foundations by great thunder-peals. Uncle Jim was happy,
for the pasturage would be improved, and the corn crop would have a
"show." Uncle Jim's wife said there would now be milk enough to make
butter for market; and the hens would do better, for somehow they
never would lay regularly during the drought we had been experiencing.
And so we talked on while the "clearing showers" lasted. I told Uncle
Jim that I was surprised to see him raising anything at all in what
was apparently sand. He acknowledged that the soil was light, and
inclined to blow away on the slightest aerial provocation, but he
nevertheless managed to get twenty bushels of wheat to the acre, and
the lowlands gave him an abundance of hay and pasturage. He was
decidedly in favor of mixed crops, himself, and was gradually getting
into the stock line, as he wanted a crop that could "walk itself into
market." The Doctor inquired about the health of the neighborhood,
which he found to be excellent. He is much of a gallant, you know; and
Uncle Jim's wife was pleasantly flustered when, in his most winning
tones, the disciple of AEsculapius declared that the climate that could
produce such splendid complexions as hers--and Uncle Jim's--must
indeed be rated as available for a sanitarium.

By a quarter to eight o'clock this morning the storm had ceased, and
the eastern sky brightened. Our kind friends bade us a cheery
farewell, we retraced our steps to the corn-crib, the Smith boys
helped us down with our load, and just as our watches touched eight we
shoved off into the stream, and were once more afloat upon the
serpentine trail.

These great wild-rice widespreads--sloughs, the natives call them--are
doubtless the beds of ancient lakes. In coursing through them, the
bayous, the cul-de-sacs, are so frequent, and the stream switches off
upon such unexpected tangents, that it is sometimes perplexing to
ascertain which body of sluggish water is the main channel. Marquette
found this out when he ascended the Fox in 1673. He says, in his
relation of the voyage, "The way is so cut up by marshes and little
lakes that it is easy to go astray, especially as the river is so
covered with wild oats [wild rice] that you can hardly discover the
channel; hence, we had good need of our two guides."

Little bog-islands, heavily grown with aspens and willows,
occasionally dot the seas of rice. They often fairly hum with the
varied notes of the red-winged blackbird, the rusty grackle, and our
American robin, while whistling plovers are seen upon the mud-spits,
snapping up the choicest of the snails. And such bullfrogs! I have not
heard their like since, when a boy, living on the verge of a New
England pond, I imagined their hollow rumble of a roundelay to bear
the burden of "Paddy, go 'round! Go 'round and 'round!" This in
accordance with a local tradition which says that Paddy, coming home
one night o'erfull of the "craithur," came to the edge of the pond,
which stopped his progress. The friendly frogs, who themselves enjoy a
soaking, advised him to go around the obstruction; and as the wild
refrain kept on, Paddy did indeed "go 'round, and 'round" till morning
and his better-half found him, a foot-sore and a soberer man. They
tell us that on the Fox River the frogs say, "Judge Arndt! Arndt!
Judge Arndt!" Old Judge Arndt was one of the celebrities in the early
day at Green Bay; he was a fur-trader, and accustomed, with his gang
of _voyageurs_, to navigate the Fox and Wisconsin with heavily laden
canoes and Mackinaw boats. A Frenchman, he had a gastronomic affection
for frogs' legs, and many a branch of the house of Rana was cast into
mourning in the neighborhood of his nightly camps. The story goes,
therefore, that unto this time whenever a boat is seen upon the river,
sentinel frogs give out the signal cry of "Judge Arndt!" by way of
deadly warning to their kind. Certain it is that the valley of the
upper Fox, by day or by night, is resonant with the bellow of the
amphibious bull. It is not always "Judge Arndt!" but occasionally, as
if miles and miles away, one hears a sudden twanging note, like that
of the finger-snapped bass string of a violin; whereas the customary
refrain may be likened to the deep reverberations of the bass-viol.
Add the countless chatter and whistle of the birds, the ear-piercing
hum of the cicada, and the muffled chimes from scores of sheep and cow
bells on the hillside pastures, and we have an orchestral
accompaniment upon our voyage that could be fully appreciated only in
a Chinese theatre.

In the pockets and the sloughs, we find thousands of yellow and white
water-lilies, and sometimes progress is impeded by masses of creeping
root-stalks which have been torn from their muddy bed by the upheaval
of the ice, and now float about in great rafts, firmly anchored by the
few whose extremities are still imbedded in the ooze.

Fishing-boats were also occasionally met with this morning, occupied
by Packwaukee people; for in the widespreads just above this village,
the pickerel thrives mightily off the swarms of perch who love these
reedy seas; and the weighty sturgeon often swallows a hook and gives
his captor many a frenzied tug before he consents to enter the
"live-box" which floats behind each craft.

FOOTNOTES:

[2] Ten dollars per boat, and fifty cents per 100 lbs. of goods.

[3] Described in Mrs. Kinzie's "Wau-Bun," which gives many interesting
reminiscences of life at the old post.




SECOND LETTER.

FROM PACKWAUKEE TO BERLIN.


     BERLIN, WIS., June 8, 1887.

My dear W----: Packwaukee is twenty-five miles by river below Portage,
and at the head of Buffalo Lake. It is a tumble-down little place,
with about one hundred inhabitants, half of whom appeared to be
engaged in fishing. A branch of the Wisconsin Central Railway, running
south from Stevens Point to Portage, passes through the town, with a
spur track running along the north shore of the lake to Montello,
seven miles east. Regular trains stop at Packwaukee, while the engine
draws a pony train out to Montello to pick up the custom of that
thriving village. Packwaukee apparently had great pretensions once,
with her battlement-fronts and verandaed inn; but that day has long
passed, and a picturesque float-bridge, mossy and decayed, remains the
sole point of artistic interest. A dozen boys were angling from its
battered hand-rail, as we painfully crept with our craft through a
small tunnel where the abutment had been washed out by the stream. We
emerged covered with cobwebs and sawdust, to be met by boys eagerly
soliciting us to purchase their fish. The Doctor, somewhat annoyed by
their pertinacity as he vigorously dusted himself with his
handkerchief, declared, in the vernacular of the river, that we were
"clean busted;" and I have no doubt the lads believed his mild fib,
for we looked just then as though we had seen hard times in our day.

Our general course had hitherto been northward, but was now eastward
for a few miles and afterward southeastward as far as Marquette.
Buffalo Lake is seven miles long by from a third to three quarters of
a mile broad. The banks are for the most part sandy, and from five to
fifty feet high. The river here merely fills its bed; being deeper,
the wild rice and reeds do not grow upon its skirts. Were there a
half-dozen more feet of water, the Fox would be a chain of lakes from
Portage to Oshkosh. As it is, we have Buffalo, Puckawa, and Grand
Butte des Morts, which are among the prettiest of the inland seas of
Wisconsin. The knolls about Buffalo Lake are pleasant, round-topped
elevations, for the most part wooded, and between them are little
prairies, generally sandy, but occasionally covered with dark loam.

The day had, by noon, developed into one of the hottest of the season.
The run down Buffalo Lake was a torrid experience long to be
remembered. The air was motionless, the sky without clouds; we had
good need of our awning. The Doctor, who is always experimenting,
picked up a flat stone on the beach, so warm as to burn his fingers,
and tried to fry an egg upon it by simple solar heat, but the venture
failed and a burning-glass was needed to complete the operation.

Montello occupies a position at the foot of the lake, commanding the
entire sheet of water. The knoll upon which the village is for the
most part built is nearly one hundred feet high, and the simple spire
of an old white church pitched upon the summit is a landmark readily
discernible in Packwaukee, seven miles distant. There is a government
lock at Montello, and a small water-power. A levee protects from
overflow a portion of the town which is situated somewhat below the
lake level. The government pays the lock-keepers thirty dollars per
month for about eight months in the year, and house-rent the year
round. Tollage is no longer required, and the keepers are obliged by
the regulations of the engineering department to open the gates for
all comers, even a saw-log. But the services of the keepers are so
seldom required in these days that we find they are not to be easily
roused from their slumbers, and it is easier and quicker to make the
portage at the average up-river lock. Our carry at Montello was two
and a half rods, over a sandy bank, where a solitary small boy, who
had been catching crayfish with a dip-net, carefully examined our
outfit and propounded the inquiry, "Be you fellers on the guv'ment
job?"

Below the lock for three or four miles, the river is again a mere
canal, but the rigid banks of dredge-trash are for the most part
covered with a thrifty vegetation, and have assumed charms of their
own. This stage passed, and the river resumes a natural appearance,--a
placid stream, with now and then a slough, or perhaps banks of peat
and sand, ten feet high and fairly well hung with trees and shrubs.

As we approach the head of Lake Puckawa, the widespreads broaden, with
rows of hills two or three miles back, on either side,--the river
mowing a narrow swath through the expanse of reeds and flags and rice
which unites their bases. Where the widespread becomes a pond, and
the lake commences, there is a sandbar, the dregs of the upper
channel. A government dredge-machine was at work, cutting out a
water-way through the obstruction,--or, rather, had been at work, for
it was seven o'clock by this time, the men had finished their supper,
and were enjoying themselves upon the neat deck of the boarding-house
barge, in a neighboring bayou, smoking their pipes and reading
newspapers. It was a comfortable picture.

A stern-wheel freight steamer, big and cumbersome, came slowly into
the mouth of the channel as we left it, bound up, for Montello. As we
glided along her side, a safe distance from the great wheelbarrow
paddle, she loomed above us, dark and awesome, like a whale
overlooking a minnow. It was the "T. S. Chittenden," wood-laden. The
"Chittenden" and the "Ellen Hardy" are the only boats navigating the
upper Fox this season, above Berlin. Their trips are supposed to be
semi-weekly, but as a matter of fact they dodge around, all the way
from Winneconne to Montello, picking up what freight they can and
making a through trip perhaps once a week. It is poor picking, I am
told, and the profits but barely pay for maintaining the service.

There now being no place to land, without the great labor of poling
the canoe through the dense reed swamp to the sides, we had supper on
board,--the Doctor deftly spreading a bit of canvas on the bottom
between us, for a cloth, and attractively displaying our lunch to the
best advantage. I leisurely paddled meanwhile, occasionally resting to
take a mouthful or to sip of the lemonade, in the preparation of which
the Doctor is such an adept. And thus we drifted down Lake Puckawa,
amid the delightful sunset glow and the long twilight which
followed,--the Doctor, cake in one hand and a glass of lemonade in the
other, becoming quite animated in a detailed description of a patient
he had seen in a Vienna hospital, whose food was introduced through a
slit in his throat. The Doctor is an enthusiast in his profession, and
would stop to advise St. Peter, at the gate, to try his method for
treating locksmith-palsy.

We noticed a great number of black terns as we progressed, perched
upon snags at the head of the lake. They are fearless birds, and would
allow us to drift within paddle's length before they would rise and,
slowly wheeling around our heads, settle again upon their roosts, as
soon as we had passed on.

Lake Puckawa is eight miles long by perhaps two miles wide, running
west and east. Five miles down the eastern shore, the quaint little
village of Marquette is situated on a pleasant <DW72> which overlooks
the lake from end to end. Marquette is on the site of an Indian
fur-trading camp, this lake being for many years a favorite resort of
the Winnebagoes. There are about three hundred inhabitants there, and
it is something of a mystery as to how they all scratch a living; for
the town is dying, if not already dead,--about the only bit of life
noticeable there being a rather pretty club-house owned by a party of
Chicago gentlemen, who come to Lake Puckawa twice a year to shoot
ducks, it being one of the best sporting-grounds in the State. That is
to say, they have heretofore come twice a year, but the villagers were
bewailing the passage by the legislature, last winter, of a bill
prohibiting spring shooting, thus cutting off the business of
Marquette by one half. Marquette, like so many other dead river-towns,
appears to have been at one time a community of some importance. There
are two deserted saw-mills and two or three abandoned warehouses, all
boarded up and falling into decay, while nearly every store-building
in the place has shutters nailed over the windows, and a once
substantial sidewalk has become such a rotten snare that the natives
use the grass-grown street for a footpath. The good people are so
tenacious of the rights of visiting sportsmen that there is no
angling, I was told, except by visitors, and we inquired in vain for
fish at the dilapidated little hotel where we slept and breakfasted.
At the hostlery we were welcomed with open arms, and the landlady's
boy, who officiated as clerk, porter, and chambermaid, assured us that
the village schoolmaster had been the only guest for six weeks past.

It is certainly a quiet spot. The Doctor, who knows all about these
things, diagnosed the lake and declared it to be a fine field for
fly-fishing. He had waxed so enthusiastic over the numbers of nesting
ducks which we disturbed as we came down through the reeds, in the
early evening, that I had all I could do to keep him from breaking the
new game law, although he stoutly declared that revolvers didn't
count. The postmaster--a pleasant old gentleman in spectacles, who
also keeps the drug store, deals in ammunition, groceries, and shoes,
and is an agent for agricultural machinery--got very friendly with the
Doctor, and confided to him the fact that if the latter would come
next fall to Markesan, ten miles distant, over the sands, and
telephone up that he was there, a team would be sent down for him;
then, with the postmaster for a guide, fish and fowl would soon be
obliged to seek cover. It is needless to add that the Doctor struck a
bargain with the postmaster and promised to be on hand without fail. I
never saw our good friend so wild with delight, and the postmaster
became as happy as if he had just concluded a cash contract for a
car-load of ammunition.

The schoolmaster, a very accommodating young man, helped us down to
the beach this morning with our load. Anticipating numerous lakes and
widespreads, where we might gain advantage of the wind, we had brought
a sprit sail along, together with a temporary keel. The sail helped us
frequently yesterday, especially in Buffalo Lake, but the wind had
died down after we passed Montello. This morning, however, there was a
good breeze again, but quartering, and the keel became essential. This
we now attached to our craft, and it was nearly seven o'clock before
we were off, although we had had breakfast at 5.30.

The "Ellen Hardy" was at the dock, loading with wheat for Princeton.
She is a trimmer, faster craft than the "Chittenden." The engineer
told us that the present stage of water was but two and a half feet in
the upper Fox, this year and last being the driest on record. He
informed us that the freight business was "having the spots knocked
off it" by the railroads, and there was hardly enough to make it worth
while getting up steam.

Three miles down is the mouth of the lake. There being two outlets
around a large marsh, we were somewhat confused in trying to find the
proper channel. We ascertained, after going a mile and a half out of
our way to the south, that the northern extremity of the marsh is the
one to steer for. The river continues to wind along between marshy
shores, although occasionally hugging a high bank of red clay or
skirting a knoll of shifting sand; now and then these knolls rise to
the dignity of hills, red with sorrel and sparsely covered with
scrubby pines and oaks.

It was noon when we reached the lock above Princeton. The lock-keeper,
a remarkably round-shouldered German, is a pleasant, gossipy fellow,
fond of his long pipe and his very fat frau. Upon invitation, we made
ourselves quite at home in the lock-house, a pleasant little brick
structure in a plot of made land, the entire establishment having that
rather stiffly neat, ship-shape appearance peculiar to life-saving
stations, navy-yards, and military barracks. The good frau steeped
for us a pot of tea, and in other ways helped us to grace our dinner,
which we spread on a bench under a grape arbor, by the side of the
yawning stone basin of the lock.

The "Ellen Hardy," which had left Marquette nearly an hour later than
we, came along while we were at dinner, waking the echoes with three
prolonged steam groans. We took advantage of the circumstance to lock
through in her company. This was our first experience of the sort, so
we were naturally rather timid as we brushed her great paddle, going
in, and stole along under her overhanging deck, for she quite filled
the lock. The captain kindly allowed the liliputian to glide through
in advance of his steamer, however, when the gates were once more
opened, and we felt, as we shot out, as though we had emerged from
under the belly of a monster.

Beaching again, below the lock, we returned to finish our dinner. The
keeper asked for a ride to Princeton village, three miles below, and
we admitted him to our circle,--pipe, market-basket and all, though it
caused the canoe to sink uncomfortably near to the gunwale. Going
down, our voluble friend talked very freely about his affairs. He said
that his pay of $30 per month ran from about the middle of April to
the first of December, and averaged him, the year round, about $20
and house-rent. He had but little to do, and got along very
comfortably on the twenty-five acres of marsh-land which the
government owned, by raising pigs and cows, a few vegetables, and hay
enough for his stock. He admitted that this was "a heap better" than
he could do in the fatherland.

"I shoost dell you, mine frient," he said to me, as he grinned and
refilled his pipe, "dot Shermany vos a nice guntry, and Bismarck he
vos a grade feller, und I vos brout I vos a Sherman; but I dells mine
vooman vot I dells you,--I mooch rahder read aboud 'em in mine Sherman
newsbaper, dan vot I voot leef dere myself, already. I roon avay vrom
dem conscrip' fellers, und I shoost never seed de time vot I voot go
back again. In dot ol' guntry, I vos nuttings boot a beasant feller;
unt in dis guntry I vos a goov'ment off'cer, vich makes grade
diff'rence, already."

He chuckled a good deal to himself when asked what he thought about
the Fox-Wisconsin river-improvement, but finally said that government
must spend its surplus some way,--if not in this, it would in
another,--and he could not object to a scheme which gave him his bread
and butter. He said that the improvement operations scattered a good
deal of money throughout the valley, for labor and supplies, but
expressed his doubts as to the ultimate national value of the work,
unless the shifting Wisconsin River, thus far unnavigable for
steamers, should be canalled from the portage to its mouth. He is an
honest fellow, and appears to utilize his abundance of leisure in
reading the newspapers.

At Princeton village,--a thriving country town on a steep bank, with
unkempt backyards running down to and defiling the river,--we again
came across the "Ellen Hardy." She was unloading her light cargo of
wheat as we arrived, and left Princeton an eighth of a mile behind us.
We now had a pleasant little race to White River lock, seven miles
below. With sail set, and paddles to help, we led her easily as far as
the lock. But we thought to gain time by portaging over the dam, and
she gained a lead of at least a mile, although we frequently caught
sight of her towering white hull across the widespreads, by dint of
standing on the thwarts and peering over the tall walls of wild rice
which shut us in as closely as though we had been canoeing in a
railroad cut.

It had been fair and cloudy by turns to-day, but delightfully cool,--a
wonderful improvement on yesterday, when we fairly sweltered, coming
down Buffalo Lake. In the middle of the afternoon, below White River,
a thunder-storm overtook us in a widespread several miles in extent.
Seeking a willow island which abutted on the channel, we made a tent
of the sail and stood the brief storm quite comfortably. We then
pushed on, and, rubber-coated, weathered the few clearing showers in
the boat, for we were anxious to reach Berlin by evening.

At Berlin lock, twelve miles below White River, we portaged the dam,
and, getting into a two-mile current, ate our supper on board. The
river now begins to have firmer banks, and to approach the ridges upon
the southern rim of its basin.

We reached Berlin in the twilight, the landscape of hill and meadow
being softened in the golden glow. The better portion of this
beautiful little city of forty-five hundred inhabitants is situated on
a ridge, closely skirted by the river, with the poorer quarters on the
flats spreading away on either side. There are many charming homes and
the main business street has an air of active prosperity.

We went into dock alongside of the "Ellen Hardy."




THIRD LETTER

THE MASCOUTINS.


     OSHKOSH, WIS., June 9, 1887.

My Dear W----: As we passed out of Berlin this morning, a government
dredger was at work by the river-side. We paused on our paddles for
some time, to watch the workings of the ingenious mechanism. There was
something demoniac in the action of the monster, as it craned its
jointed neck amid a quick chorus of jerky puffs from the engine and an
accompaniment of rattling chains. Reaching far out over the bubbling
water, it would open its great iron jaws with a savage clank and,
pausing a moment to gather its energies, dive swiftly into the roily
depth; after swaying to and fro as if struggling with its prey, it
soon reappeared, bearing in its filthy maw a ton or two of blue-black
ooze, the water escaping through its teeth in a score of hissing
torrents; then, turning aside to the heap of dredge-trash, suddenly
vomited forth the foul-smelling mess, and returned for another charge.
It was a singularly fascinating sight, though wofully uncanny.

From Berlin down to Omro, pleasant prairie <DW72>s come down at
intervals to the water's edge, on the south bank; the feature of the
north side being wide expanses of bog, the home of the cranberry, for
which this region is famous. The best marshes, however, are the
pockets, back among the ridges; from these, great drainage-ditches,
with flooding gates, come furrowing through the peat, in dark lines as
straight as an arrow, and empty into the river. It was somewhere about
here, nearer Berlin than Omro,--but exactly where, no man now
knoweth,--that the ancient Indian "nation" of the Mascoutins was
located over two centuries ago; their neighbors, if not their village
comrades, being the Miamis and the Kickapoos. Champlain, the intrepid
founder of Quebec, had heard of their warring disposition as early as
1615. In 1634 Jean Nicolet, the first white man known to have set foot
upon territory now included in the State of Wisconsin, came in a bark
canoe as far up the Fox River as the Mascoutins, and after stopping a
time with them, journeyed southward to the country of the
Illinois.[4] Allouez and his companions also came hither in 1670, and
the good father, in the official report of his adventurous canoeing
trip, says the fort of these people was located a French league (2.4
English miles) "over beautiful prairies" to the south of the river.
Joliet and Marquette, on their way to discover the Mississippi River,
arrived at the fort of the Mascoutins on June 7, 1673, and the latter
gives this graceful sketch of the oak openings hereabouts, which have
not meanwhile perceptibly changed their characteristics: "I felt no
little pleasure in beholding the position of this town; the view is
beautiful and very picturesque, for from the eminence on which it is
perched, the eye discovers on every side prairies spreading away
beyond its reach, interspersed with thickets or groves of lofty
trees."

The Mascoutins are now a lost tribe. As the result of warring habits,
they in turn were crowded to the wall, and a generation after
Marquette's visit the banks of their river knew them no more; the
Foxes, from whom the stream ultimately took its name, were then
predominant, and long continued the masters of the highway.

Sacramento--"as dead as a door-nail, sir"--lies sprawled out over a
pleasant riverside <DW72> to the south. There is the customary air of
fallen grandeur at Sacramento,--big hopes gone to decay;
battlement-fronts, houseless cellars, a universal lack of paint. The
railroads, the real highways of our present civilization, have killed
these little river towns that are away from the track, and they will
never be resurrected. The day of inland water navigation, except for
canoeists, is nearing its close. Settlement clings to the neighborhood
of the rails, and generally avoids rivers as an obstruction to free
transit. The towns that have to be reached by a country ferry are
rotting,--they are off the line of progress. Sacramento boasts a
spouting well by the river-bank, a mammoth village ash-leach, and fond
memories of the day when it was "a bigger town than Berlin." As we
stood in the spray of the fountain, filling our canteen with the
purest and coldest of water, I speculated upon the strong probability
of Sacramento being on the identical bank where the Jesuits beached
their canoes to walk across country to the old Indian village. And the
Doctor, apt to be irreverent as to aboriginal lore, suggested that the
defunct Sacramento should have written over its gate this motto:
"Gone to join the Mascoutins!"

Eureka, a few miles farther down, is also paintless, and her
river-front is artistic with the crumbling ruins of two or three
long-deserted saw-mills. A new Eureka appears, however, to be slowly
building up, to one side of the dead little hamlet,--for there are
smart steam flouring-mill and a model little cheese-factory in full
swing here. The cheese man, an accommodating young fellow who appeared
quite up to the times, and is a direct shipper to the London market,
took a just pride in showing us over his establishment, and stocked
our mess-box with samples of his best brands.

Omro spreads over a sandy plain, upon both sides of the river,--an
excellent wagon-bridge crossing the stream near that of the Chicago,
Milwaukee, and St. Paul railway. Omro, which is the headquarters of
the Wisconsin Spiritualists, who have quite a settlement hereabouts,
is growing somewhat, after a long period of stagnation, having at
present a population of fifteen hundred.

The "Ellen Hardy," which had now caught up with us, after chasing the
canoe from Berlin down, went through the draw in our company. As the
crew rolled off a small consignment of freight, the captain--a
raw-boned, red-faced, and thoroughly good-humored man--leaned out of
the pilot-house window and pleasantly chaffed us about our lowly
conveyance. The conversation ended by his offering to give us a "lift"
through the great Winneconne widespread, to the point where the Wolf
joins the Fox, nine or ten miles below. The "Ellen" was bound for
Winneconne and other points up the Wolf, so could help us no farther.
Of course we accepted the kindly offer, and fastening our painter to a
belaying-pin on the "Ellen's" port, scrambled up to the freight-deck
just as the pilot-bell rang "Forward!" in the smoky little engine-room
far aft.

While I went aloft to enjoy the bird's-eye view obtainable from the
pilot-house, the Doctor discussed fishing with the engineer, whom he
found on closer acquaintance to be a rare, though much-begrimed
philosopher. This engineer is a wizened-up little man, with a face
like a prematurely dried apple, but his eyes gleam with a kindly
light, and he is an inveterate angler. We had noticed him at every
stopping stage,--his head, shoulders, and arms reaching out of the
abbreviated rear window of his caboose,--dangling a line astern. The
Doctor learned that this was his invariable habit. He kept the cook's
galley in fish, and utilized each leisure half-hour in the pursuit of
his favorite amusement. The engineer, good man, had fished, he said,
in nearly every known sea, and the Doctor declared that he "could many
a wondrous fish-tale unfold." In fact, the Doctor declared him to be
the most interesting character he had ever met with, outside of a
hospital, and said he should surely report to his favorite medical
journal this remarkable case of abnormal persistency in an art, amid
the most discouraging physical surroundings. He thought the man's
brain should be dissected, in the cause of science.

The Wolf, which has its rise 150 miles nor'-nor'west of Green Bay, in
a Forest-county lakelet, and takes generous, south-trending curves
away down to Lake Poygan, is properly the noble stream which pours
into Lake Winnebago from the northwest, and then, with a mighty rush,
forces its way northeastward to the Great Lakes, along the base of the
watershed which parallels the western coast of Lake Michigan and
terminates in the sands of the Sturgeon-Bay country. The Jesuit
fathers, in seeking the Mississippi, traced this river above Lake
Winnebago, and on reaching the great widespread at the head of the
Grand Butte des Morts, where the tributary flowing from the southwest
empties its lazy flood into the rushing Fox, pursued that tributary to
the portage and erroneously called their highway by one name, from
Green Bay to the carry. Thus the long-unexplored main river, above the
junction, came to be treated on the maps as a tributary, and to be
dubbed the Wolf. This geographical mistake has been so long persisted
in that correction becomes impracticable, and we must continue to
style the branch the trunk.

This has been a delightful day; the heavens were clear and blue, and a
gentle northeaster fanned our faces in the pilot-house, from which
vantage-point, nearly thirty feet above the river-level, there was
obtainable a bird's-eye view well worthy of canvas. The wild-rice bog,
through which the Fox, here not over thirty yards wide, twists like
the snapper of a whip, is from ten to fifteen miles wide,--a sea of
living green, across which the breeze sends a regular succession of
waves, losing themselves upon the far-distant shores. Upon the
northwestern horizon, the Wolf comes stealing down at the base of a
range of wooded hills. To the west, a flashing line tells where Lake
Poygan "holds her mirror to the sun." The tall smoke-stacks of the
Winneconne saw-mills occupy the middle ground westward. To the east,
in the centre of the picture, one catches glimpses of the consolidated
stream, as its goodly flood quickly glides southeasterly, on a short
spurt toward the Grand Butte des Morts, at the head of which is the
old fur-trading village of the same name. Far southeastward, below the
lake, there is just discernible the great brick chimney of a mammoth
planing-mill,--an Algoma landmark,--and just behind that the black
cloud resting above the Oshkosh factories. It is a broad, bounteous
sweep of level landscape,--monotonous, of course, but imposing from
mere immensity.

At the union of the rivers we bade farewell to our friend the captain;
and the Doctor secured a promise from the engineer to send in his
photograph to the hospital with which the former is connected. The
"Ellen Hardy" stopped her engine as we cast off. In another minute,
the great stern-wheel began to splash again, and we were bobbing up
and down on the bubbly swell, waving farewell to our fellow-travelers
and turning our prow to the southeast, while the roving "Ellen" shaped
her course to Winneconne, where a lot of laths, destined for
Princeton, awaited her arrival.

The low ridge which forms the eastern bank of the Wolf, down to the
junction, soon <DW72>s off to the northeast, in the direction of
Appleton, leaving a broad, level plain, of great fertility, between it
and Lakes Grand Butte des Morts and Winnebago. On this plain are built
the cities of Oshkosh, Neenah, and Menasha. Across it, the
northeaster, freshening to a lively breeze, had full sweep, and
stirred up the Grand Butte des Morts into a wild display of opposition
to our progress. Serried ranks of white-caps came sweeping across the
lake, beating on our port bow, and the little sail, almost bursting
with fulness, careened the canoe to the gunwale, as it swept gayly
along through the foam. The paddles were necessary to keep her well
abreast of the tide, and there was exercise enough in the operation to
prevent drowsiness. The spray flew like a drizzling summer shower, but
our baggage and stores were well covered down, and the weather was too
warm for a body dampener to be uncomfortable.

We passed the dark, gloomy, tumbled-down, but picturesque village of
Butte des Morts, just before entering the lake. Of the twenty-five or
so houses in the place, all but two or three are guiltless of paint.
There is a quaintness about the simple architecture, which gives
Butte des Morts a distinctive appearance. To the initiated, it
betokens the remains of an old fur-trading post; and this was the
genesis of Butte des Morts. It was in 1818 that Augustin Grignon and
James Porlier, men intimately connected with the history of the
French-Indian fur-trade in Wisconsin, set up their shanty dwellings
and warehouses on a little lakeside knoll a mile below the present
village, which was founded by their _voyageurs_ on the site of an old
Menomonee town and cemetery. Some of these post-buildings, together
with the remains of the watch-tower, from which the traders obtained
long advance notice of the approach of travelers, red or white, are
still standing. As we sped by, I pointed out to the Doctor the
location of these venerable relics, which I had, with proper
enthusiasm, carefully inspected fully a dozen summers before, and he
suggested that the knowledge of the approach of a possible customer,
by means of the tower, gave the traders an excellent opportunity to
mark up the goods.

James Porlier's son and successor, Louis B. Porlier, now an aged man,
is the present occupant of the establishment, which is one of the
oldest landmarks in Wisconsin; and there, also, died the famous
Augustin Grignon, historian of his clan. Butte des Morts, in the
early day of the northwest, was something more than a trading-post.
Situated near the union of the upper Fox and the Wolf, it was the
rallying-point for both valleys,--long before Appleton, Neenah,
Menasha or Oshkosh were known, or any of the towns on the upper Fox.
It was the only white man's stopping-place between the portage and
Kaukauna. The mail trail between Green Bay and the portage crossed
here,--for strange to say, the great south-stretching widespread,
which lies like a map before the village, was in those days firm
enough for a horse to traverse with safety; while to-day a boat can be
pushed anywhere between the rushes and rice, and it is _par
excellence_ the great breeding-ground of this section for muskrats and
water-fowl. A scow-ferry was maintained in pioneer times for the
benefit of the mail-carrier and other travelers. Butte des Morts is
mentioned in most of the journals left us by travelers over the
Fox-Wisconsin watercourse, previous to 1835, and here several
important Indian treaties were consummated by government
commissioners.

It is somewhat over fifteen miles from the mouth of the Wolf to
Oshkosh. The run down the lake seemed unusually protracted, for the
city was clearly in sight the entire way, and the distance, over the
flat expanse, was deceptive. Algoma, now a portion of Oshkosh, was
something of a settlement long before the lower town began to grow.
But the latter finally overtook and swallowed the original hamlet.
Algoma is now chiefly devoted to the homes of the employees in the
great planing and saw-milling establishments of Philetus Sawyer,
Wisconsin's senior United States senator, and the wealthy Paine
Brothers. The residences of these lumber kings are on a <DW72> to the
north of the iron wagon-bridge, under which we swept as the booming
whistles of the busy locality, in unison with a noisy chorus of
steam-gongs farther down the river, sounded the hour of six. Through
the gantlet of the mills, with their outlying rafts, their lines of
piling, and their great yards of newly sawn lumber, we sped quickly
on. A half-hour later, we were turning up into a peaceful little dock
alongside the south approach to the St. Paul railway-bridge, the
canoe's quarters for the night. The sun was just plunging below the
clear-cut prairie horizon, as we walked across the fields to the home
of our expectant friends.

FOOTNOTE:

[4] Butterfield's "Discovery of the Northwest" (Cincinnati, 1861).




FOURTH LETTER.

THE LAND OF THE WINNEBAGOES.


     APPLETON, WIS., June 10, 1887.

My dear W----: We had a late start to-day from Oshkosh. It was
half-past nine o'clock by the time we had reloaded our traps, pushed
off from the railway embankment, and received the God-speed of M----,
who had come down to see us off. The busy town, with its twenty-two
thousand thrifty people, was all astir. The factories and the mills
were resonant with the clang and rattle of industry, and across the
two wagon-bridges of the city proper there were continual streams of
traffic.

I suppose that Oshkosh is, in its way, as widely known throughout this
country as almost any city in it. The name is strikingly outlandish,
being equaled only by Kalamazoo, and furnishes the butt of many a
newspaper joke and comic rhyme. Old chief Oshkosh, whose cognomen
signifies "brave" in Menomonee speech, was the head man of his dusky
tribe, a half-century ago. He was a doughty, wrinkled hero, o'er fond
of fire-water, and wore a battered silk hat for a crown. About 1840,
when the settlement here was four years old, the Government offered to
establish a post-office if the inhabitants would unite on a name for
the place. The whites favored Athens, but the Indians, half-breeds,
and traders round about Butte des Morts, wanted their friend Oshkosh
immortalized, so they came down to the new settlement in force, and
the election being a free-for-all, carried the day. It is said that
the Grignons were so anxious in behalf of the Menomonee sachem that
they had a number of squaws array themselves in trousers and cast
ballots like the bucks. And it was fortunate, as events proved, that
the election turned out as it did, for the oddity of the name has been
a permanent advertisement for a very bright community. Oshkosh, as
hackneyed "Athens," would have been lost to fame. Nobody would think
of going to "Athens" to "have fun with the boys."

The morning air was as clear as a bell,--a pleasant northeast zephyr,
coming in off the body of the lake, slightly ruffling the surface and
reducing the temperature to a delightful tone. The wind not being
fair, the sail was useless, so we paddled along through the broad
river, into the lake and northward past a fishermen's colony, rows of
great ice-houses, the water-works park, and beautiful lake-shore
residences, to Garlic Island. It was half-past twelve, P.M., when we
tied up at the crazy pier which projects from this islet of the
loud-smelling vegetable. A half-century ago Garlic Island was the home
of Iowatuk, the beautiful aboriginal relict of a French
fur-trader,--an Indian princess, the old settlers called her; at all
events, she is reputed to have been a most exemplary person,
well-possessed of this world's goods, as well as a large family of
half-breed children. The island is charmingly situated, a half-mile or
more out from the main land, opposite the Northern Insane Hospital; it
is a forest of ancient elms, surrounded by a bowlder-strewn beach of
some three quarters of a mile in length, and occupied by a
summer-hotel establishment. The name "Garlic Island" does not sound
very well for a fashionable resort, so the insular territory has been
dubbed "Island Park" of late; but "Garlic" has good staying qualities,
and I doubt if they can ever efface the objectionable pioneer title.

We had our dinner on the sward near the pier, convenient to a pump,
and were entertained by watching the approach of a little
steam-launch, loaded with a party of "resorters" who had doubtless
been shopping in Oshkosh, the smoke from whose chimneys rose above the
tree-tops, five miles to the southwest. There were some of the usual
types,--the languid Southern woman, with her two pouting boys in
charge of a rather savage-looking  nurse, who dragged the
little fellows out over the gang-plank, one in each hand, as though
they had been bags of flour; a fashionable dame, from some northern
metropolis, all ribbons and furbelows, starch and whalebones,
accompanied by her willowy daughter of twenty, almost her counterpart
as to dress, with a pert young miss of fourteen, in abbreviated gown
and overgrown hat, bringing up the rear with the family pug; a
dawdling young Anglo-maniac sucked the handle of his cane and looked
sweetly on the society girl, whose papa, apparently a tired-out
broker, in a well made business costume and a wretched straw hat,
stayed behind to treat the skipper to a prime cigar and arrange for a
fishing excursion.

There is a fine view from the island. The hills and cliffs of Calumet
County, a dozen miles to the east, are dimly visible. Toward Fond du
Lac, on the south, the horizon is the lake. South-southwestward, Black
Wolf Point runs out, just over the verge, and the tops of the tall
trees upon it peep up into view, like shadowy pile-work. Westward are
the well-kept hospital grounds, fringed with stately elms overhanging
the firm, gravelly beach, studded with ice-heaved bowlders, which
extends northward to Neenah. The view to the north and northeast is
delightfully hazy, being now dark with delicate fringes of forest
which cap the occasional limestone promontories, and again losing
itself in a watery sky-line.

We had two pleasant hours at this island-home of the lovely Iowatuk,
walking around it on the bowldered beach, and reveling in the shade of
the grand old elms. By the time we were ready to resume our voyage,
the wind had died down, the lake was as smooth as a marble slab, and
the sun's rays reflected from it converted the atmosphere to the
temperature of a bake-oven. No sooner had we pushed out beyond the
deep shadows of the trees than it seemed as though we had at one
paddle-stroke shot into the waters of a tropic sea. The awning was at
once raised, and served to somewhat mitigate our sufferings, but the
dazzling reflection was there still, to the great discomfort of our
eyes.

After two miles of distress, a bank of light but sharply broken clouds
appeared on the northeastern horizon, and soon a gentle breeze brought
blessed relief. In a few minutes more, ripples danced upon our
starboard quarter, and then the awning had to come down, for it filled
like a fixed sail and counteracted the effect of the paddles. The
Doctor, who, you know full well, never paddles when he can sail,
insisted on running up into the wind and spreading the canvas. He was
just in time, for a squall struck us as he was adjusting the boom
sprit, and nearly sent him overboard while attempting to regain his
seat. Little black squalls now rapidly succeeded each other, the wind
freshening between the gusts; and the Doctor, who was the
sailing-master, had to exercise rare vigilance, for the breeze was
rapidly developing into a young gale, and the ripples had now grown to
be by far the largest waves our little craft had yet encountered. The
situation began to be somewhat serious, as the clouds thickened and
the white-caps broke upon the west beach with a sullen roar. We
therefore deemed it advisable to run into a little harbor to the lee
of a wooded spit, and hold council.

It was a wild, storm-tossed headland, two thirds of the distance down
from the island, and the spit was but one of its many points. We
landed and made an extended exploration, deeming it possible that we
might be obliged to pass the night here; but the result of our
discoveries was to discourage any such project. For a half-mile back
or more the forest proved to be a tangled swamp, filled with fallen
timber and sink-holes, while quicksands lined the harbor where the
canoe peacefully rested behind an outlying fringe of gnarled elms. We
wandered up and down the gravelly beach, in the spray of the breakers,
scrambling over great bowlders and overhanging trunks whose
foundations had been sapped by storm-driven floods; but everywhere was
the same hard, forbidding scene of desolation, with the angry surface
of the lake and the canopy of wind-clouds filling out a picture which,
the Doctor suggested, could have only been satisfactorily executed in
water-colors.

In the course of our wanderings, which were sadly destructive to
clothes and shoe-leather, we had some comical adventures. The Doctor
hasn't got over laughing about one of them yet. We came to an
apparently shallow lagoon, perhaps three rods wide and a dozen long,
beyond which we desired to penetrate. It was bedded with sand and
covered with green slime. The Doctor had, just before, divested
himself of shoes and stockings and rolled his trousers above his
knees, in an enthusiastic hunt for a particularly ponderous frog,
which he desired to pickle in the cause of science. He playfully
offered to carry me across the pool on his back, and thus save me the
trouble of imitating his style of undress. With some misgivings as to
the result, I finally mounted. We progressed favorably as far as the
centre, when suddenly I felt my transport sinking; he gave a desperate
lunge as the water suddenly reached his waist, I sprang forward over
his head, and losing my balance, sprawled out flat upon the slimy
water. I hardly know how we reached firm ground again, but when we
did, we were a sorry-looking pair, as you can well imagine. The Doctor
thought it high sport, as he wrung out his clothes and spread them
upon a bowlder to dry, and I tried hard to join in his boisterous
hilarity; but somehow, as I scraped the gluey slime from my only
canoeing suit, with a bit of old drift shingle, and contemplated the
soppy condition of my wardrobe, I know there must have been a tinge of
sadness in my gaze. It was too much like being shipwrecked on a desert
island.

As we sat, clad in rubber coats, sunning ourselves on the lee side of
a fallen tree and waiting for our garments to again become wearable,
the Doctor read to me an article from his medical journal, describing
a novel surgical operation on somebody's splintered backbone,
copiously illustrating the selection with vivid reports of his own
hospital observations in that direction. This sort of thing was well
calculated to send the shivers down one's spinal column, but the
Doctor certainly made the theme quite interesting and the half-hour
necessary to the drying process soon passed.

By this time it was plain to be seen that the velocity of the wind was
not going to increase before sundown, although it had not slacked. We
determined to try the sea again, and pushed out through the breakers,
with sail close-hauled and baggage canvased. Taking a bold offing into
the teeth of the gale, we ran out well into the lower lake, and then,
on a port tack, had a fine run down to Doty's Island, which divides
the lower Fox into two channels. The city of Neenah, noted for its
flouring and paper mills, is built upon both sides of the southern
channel, or Neenah River; Menasha, with several factories, but
apparently less prosperous than the other, guards the north
channel,--the twin cities dividing the island between them. The
government lock is at Menasha, while at Neenah there is a fine
water-power, with a fall of twelve or fifteen feet,--the "Winnebago
Rapids" of olden time.

It was into Neenah channel that we came flying so gayly, before the
wind. There is a fine park on the mainland shore, with a smartly
painted summer hotel and half a dozen pretty cottages that would do
credit to a seaside resort. To the right the island is studded with
picturesque old elms, shading a closely cropped turf, upon which
cattle peacefully graze, while here and there among the trees are
old-fashioned white cottages, with green blinds, quite after the style
of a sleepy New-England village,--a charming scene of semi-rustic
life; while to seaward Lake Winnebago tosses and rolls, almost to the
horizon.

Doty's is an historic landmark. The rapids here necessitated a
portage, and from the earliest times there have been Indian villages
on the island, more or less permanent in character,--Menomonee, Fox,
and Winnebago in turn. As white traffic over the Fox-Wisconsin
watercourse grew, so grew the importance of this village, whatever the
tribe of its inhabitants; for the bucks found employment in helping
the empty boats over the rapids and in "toting" the goods over the
portage-trail. The Foxes overreached themselves by setting up as
toll-gatherers. It is related--but historians are somewhat misty as to
the details--that in the winter of 1706-7 a French captain, Marin by
name, was sent out by the governor of New France to chastise the
blackmailers. At the head of a large party of French creoles and
half-breeds, he ascended the lower Fox on snowshoes, surprising the
aborigines in their principal village, here at Winnebago Rapids, and
slaughtering them by the hundreds. Afterward, this same Marin
conducted a summer expedition against the Foxes. His boats were filled
with armed men and covered down with oilcloth, as traders were wont to
treat their goods _en voyage_, to escape a wetting. Only two men were
visible in each boat, paddling and steering. Nearly fifteen hundred
dusky tax-gatherers were discovered squatting on the beach at the foot
of the rapids, awaiting the arrival of the flotilla. The canoes were
ranged along the shore. Upon a signal being given, the coverings were
thrown off and volley after volley of hot lead poured into the mob of
unsuspecting savages, a swivel-gun in Marin's boat aiding in the
slaughter. Tradition has it that over a thousand Foxes fell in that
brutal assault. In 1716 another captain of New France, named De
Louvigny, is reported to have stormed the audacious Foxes. They had
not, it seems, been exterminated by previous massacres, for five
hundred warriors and three thousand squaws are alleged to have been
collected within a palisaded fort, somewhere in the neighborhood of
these rapids. De Louvigny is credited with having captured the fort
after a three days' siege, but granted the enemy the honors of war.
Twelve years later the Foxes had again become so troublesome as to
need chastisement. This time the agent chosen to command the
expedition was De Lignery, among whose lieutenants was the noted
Charles de Langlade, Wisconsin's first white settler. But the redskins
had become wise, after their fashion, and fled before the Frenchmen,
who found the villages on the Fox, lower and upper, deserted. The
invaders burned every wigwam and cornfield in sight, from Green Bay to
the portage. This expedition appears to have been followed by others,
until the Foxes, with the allied Sacs, fled the valley, never to
return. Much of this is traditionary.

The widening of the Fox below Doty's Island was called Lac Petit
Butte des Morts,--"Lake Little Hill of the Dead," to distinguish it
from the "Great Hill of the Dead," above Oshkosh.

It has long been claimed that the thousands of Foxes who at various
times fell victims to these massacres in behalf of the French
fur-trade were buried in great pits at Petit Butte des Morts,--near
Winnebago Rapids. But modern investigators lean to the opinion that
the "little hill of the dead" was merely an ordinary Indian cemetery,
and the mound or mounds there are prehistoric tumuli, common enough in
the neighborhood of Wisconsin lakes. A like conclusion, also, has been
arrived at in regard to the Grand Butte des Morts. However, this is
something that the archaeological committee must settle among
themselves.

The Winnebagoes succeeded the Foxes, and Doty's Island became the seat
of their power. The master spirit among them for a quarter of a
century previous to the fall of New France was a French fur-trader
named De Korra or De Cora, who had a Winnebago "princess" for a squaw.
They had a numerous progeny, which De Korra left to his wife's charge
when called to serve under Montcalm in the defence of Quebec. He was
killed in a sortie, and Madame De Korra and her brood relapsed into
barbarism. One half of the Winnebagoes now living are descendants,
more or less direct, of this sturdy old fur-trader, and bear his name,
which is also perpetuated, with varied orthography, in many a
northwestern stream and hamlet. During the first third of the present
century Hoo-Tschope, or Four Legs, was the dusky magnate at this
Winnebago capital.[5] Four Legs was a cunning rascal, well known to
the earliest pioneers, but he at last fell a victim to his greatest
enemy, the bottle. Last month I was visiting among the Winnebagoes
around Black River Falls. Desiring to have a "talk" with Walking
Cloud, a wizened-faced redskin of some seventy-two years, I went out
with my interpreters over the hills and through the valley of the
Black, nearly a dozen miles, before I found him and his squatting in
their wigwams at the base of a bold bluff, fronted by a lovely bit of
vale. Cloud's decrepit squaw, blind in one eye and wofully garrulous,
hobbled up to us, and sinking to her knees in front of me, held out a
dirty, bony hand, with nails like the claws of a bird, murmuring,
"Give! Give!" I dropped a coin into the outstretched palm; she
grinned and chattered like an animated skeleton, and crawled away on
her witch-like crutch. This was the once far-famed and beautiful
princess of the Winnebagoes, the winsome Champche Keriwinke, or Flash
of Lightning, eldest daughter of Hoo-Tschope. How are the mighty
fallen!

We portaged around the island end of the Neenah dam and met the
customary shallows below the obstruction. But soon finding a narrow,
rock-imbedded channel, we glided swiftly down the stream, through the
thrifty town, past the mills and under the bridges, just as the six
o'clock bells had sounded and the factory hands were thronging
homeward, their tin dinner-pails glistening in the sun. Scores of them
stopped to lean over the bridge-rails, and curiously watched us as we
threaded the shallows; for canoes long ago ceased to be a daily
spectacle at Winnebago Rapids.

Little Lake Butte des Morts, just below, is where the river spreads to
a full mile in breadth, the average width of the stream being less
than one half that. The wind was fair, and we came swooping down into
the lake, which is two or three miles long. A half-hour before sunset
we hauled up at a high mossy glade on the north shore, and had
delightful down-stream glimpses of deep vine-clad, naturally terraced
banks, the <DW72>s and summits being generally well wooded. A party of
young men and women were having a camp near us. The woods echoed with
their laughing shouts. A number, with their chaperone, a lovely and
lively old lady, in a white cap with satin ribbons, came down to the
shore to inspect our little vessel and question us as to our unusual
voyage. We returned the call and played lawn tennis with fair
partners, until the fact that we must reach Appleton to-night suddenly
dawned upon us, and we bade a hasty farewell to our joyous wayside
friends.

It was a charming run down to Appleton, between the park-like banks,
which rise to an altitude of fifty feet or more. Every now and then a
pretty summer residence stands prominently out upon a bluff-head, an
architectural gem in a setting of oaks and luxurious pines. At their
bases flows the deep flood of the Lower Fox, black as Erebus in the
shadows, but smiling brightly in the patchy sunlight, and thickly
decked with great bubbles which fairly leap along the course, eager to
reach their far-off ocean goal. But swifter by far than the bubbles
went our canoe as we set the paddles deeply and bent to our work, for
the waters were strange to us, the night was setting in, and Appleton
must be made. It will not do to traverse these rivers after dark
unless well acquainted with the currents, the snags, and the dams, for
disaster may readily overtake the unwary.

Cautiously we now crept along, for in the fast-fading twilight we
could just discern the outlines of the Appleton paper-mills and a
labyrinth of railway bridges, while the air fairly trembled with the
mingled roar of water and of mighty gearing. Across the rapid stream
shot piercing rays from the windows of the electric works, whose
dynamos furnish light for the town and power for the street railway. A
fisherman, tugging against the current, shouted to us to keep hard on
the eastern bank, and in a few minutes more we glided by the stone
pier which buttresses the upper dam, and pulled up in a little
dead-water cove at the base of the Milwaukee and Northern railway
bridge. The bridge-tender's children came down to meet us; the man
himself soon followed; we were permitted to chain up for the night at
his pier, and to deposit our bulky baggage in his kitchen; he
accompanied us over the long bridge which spans the noisy apron and
the rushing race. A misstep between the ties would send one on a
short cut to the hereafter, but we safely crossed, ascended two or
three steep flights of stairs to the top of the bank, and in a minute
or two more were speeding up town to our hotel, aboard an electric
street railway car.

FOOTNOTE:

[5] See Mrs. Kinzie's "Wau-Bun" for reminiscences of Four Legs.




FIFTH LETTER.

LOCKED THROUGH.


     LITTLE KAUKAUNA, WIS., June 11, 1887.

My Dear W----: We took an extended stroll around Appleton after
breakfast. It is a beautiful city,--the gem of the Lower Fox. The
banks are nearly one hundred feet high above the river level. They are
deeply cut with ravines. Hillside torrents, quickly formed by heavy
rains, as quickly empty into the stream, draining the plateau of its
superfluous surface water, and in the operation carving these great
gulches through the soft clay. And so there are many steep inclines in
the Appleton highways, and the ravines are frequently bridged by dizzy
trestle-works; but the greater part of the city is on a high, level
plain, the wealthy dwellers courting the summits of the river banks,
where the valley view is panoramic. The little Methodist college, with
its high-sounding title of Lawrence University, is an excellent
institution, and said to be growing; it gives a certain scholastic
tinge to Appleton society, which might otherwise be given up to the
worship of Mammon, for there is much wealth among the manufacturers
who rule the city, and prosperity attends their reign.

There is a good natural water-power here, but the Fox-Wisconsin
improvement has made it one of the finest in the world. If the
improvement scheme is a flat failure elsewhere, as is beginning to be
generally believed, it certainly has been the making of this valley of
the Lower Fox. From Lake Winnebago down to the mouth, the rapids are
frequent, the chief being at Neenah, Appleton, Kaukauna, Little
Kaukauna, and Depere. Of the twenty-six locks from Portage down,
seventeen are below our stopping-point of last night; the fall at
each, at this stage of water being about twelve feet on the average.
Each of these locks involves a dam; and when the stream is thus
stemmed and all repairs maintained, at the expense of the general
government, it is a simple matter to tap the reservoir, carry a race
along the bank, and have water-power _ad libitum_. Not half the
water-power in sight, not a tenth of that possible is used. There is
enough here, experts declare, to turn the machinery of the world. No
wonder the beautiful valley of the Lower Fox is rich, and growing
richer.

It was no holiday excursion to portage around the Appleton locks this
morning. At none of them could we find the tenders, for the Menasha
lock being broken, there is no through navigation from Oshkosh to
Green Bay this week, and way traffic is slight. We had neglected to
furnish ourselves with a tin horn, and the vigorous use of lung power
failed to achieve the desired result. The banks being steep and
covered with rock chips left by the stone-cutters employed on the
work, we had some awkward carries, and felt, as we finally passed the
cordon and set out on the straight eastward stretch for Kaukauna, that
we were earning our daily bread.

Kaukauna, the Grand Kackalin of the Jesuits and early French traders,
is ten miles below Appleton. Here are the most formidable rapids on
the river, the fall being sixty feet, down an irregular series of
jagged limestone stairs some half mile in extent. Indians, in their
light bark canoes and practically without baggage, can, in high water,
make the passage, up or down, by closely hugging the deeper and
stiller water on the north bank; but the French traders invariably
portaged their goods, allowing the voyageurs to carry over the empty
boats, the men walking in the water by the side, pushing, hauling, and
balancing, amid a stream of oaths from their bourgeois, or master, who
remained at his post. I had had an idea that in our little craft we
might safely make the venture of a shoot down the stairs, by
exercising caution and following the Indian channel. But this was
previous to arrival. Leaving the Doctor to guard the canoe from a
crowd of Kaukauna urchins, who were disposed to be over-familiar with
our property, I went down through a boggy field to view the situation.
It is a grand sight, looking up from the bottom of the rapids. The
water is low, and at every few rods masses of rock project above the
seething flood, specimens of what line the channel. The torrent comes
down with a mighty roar, lashing itself into a fury of spray and foam
as it leaps around and over the obstructions, and takes great lunges
from step to step. There are several curves in the basin of the
cataract, which add to its artistic effect, while it is deeply fringed
by stunted pines and scrub oaks, having but a slender footing in the
shallow turf which covers the underlying stratum of limestone.
Whatever may be the condition of the falls at Kaukauna in high water,
it is certain that at this stage a canoe would be dashed to splinters
quite early in the attempt to scale them.

But a portage of half a mile was not to our taste in the torrid
temperature we have been experiencing to-day, and we determined to
maintain the rights of free navigators by obliging the tenders to put
us through the five great locks, which are here necessary to lower
vessels from the upper to the lower level. These tenders receive ample
compensation, and many of them are notoriously lazy. It is but seldom
that they are compelled to exercise their muscles on the gates; for
navigation on the Fox is spasmodic and unimportant. As I have said in
one of my previous letters, even a saw-log has the right of way; and
government paid a goodly sum to the speculators from whom it purchased
this improvement, that free tollage might be established here for all
time. And so it was that, perhaps soured a little by our Appleton
experience, we determined at last to test the matter and assert the
privileges of American citizens on a national highway.

On regaining my messmate, we took a general view of Kaukauna,--which
spreads over the banks and a prairie bottom on both sides of the
river, and is a growing, bustling, freshly built little factory
town,--and then re-embarked to try our fortune at the lock-gates.
Heretofore we had considerately portaged every one of these
obstructions, except at Princeton, where we went through under the
"Ellen Hardy's" wing.

A stalwart Irishman, in his shirt-sleeves, and smoking a clay pipe
with that air of dogged indifference peculiar to so many government
officials, leaned over a capstan at the upper lock, and dreamily
stared at the approaching canoe. The lock was full, the last boat
having passed up a day or two before. The upper gates being open, we
pushed in, and took up our station in the centre of the basin, to
avoid the "suck" during the emptying process. The Doctor took out of
the locker a copy of his medical journal and I a novel, and we settled
down as though we had come to stay. The Irishman's face was at first a
picture of dumb astonishment, and then he sullenly picked up his coat
from the grass, and began to walk off in the direction of the town.

"Hi, my friend!" shouted the Doctor, good-naturedly. "We are waiting
to get locked through."

The tender returned a step, his eyes opened wide, his brows knit, and
in his wrath he stuttered, "Ph-h-a-t! Locked through in that theer
s-s-k-i-ff? Ye're cr-razy, mon!"

"Oh, not at all. We understand our rights, and wish you to lock us
through. And, if you please, we're in something of a hurry." As I said
this I consulted my watch, and after returning it to my pocket resumed
a vacant gaze upon the outspread leaves of the novel.

The tender--for we had guessed rightly; it was the tender--advanced to
the edge of the basin, and looked with inexpressible scorn upon our
Liliputian craft. "Now, look here, gints," he said, somewhat more
conciliatory, "I've been here for twinty years, an' know the law; an'
the law don't admit no skiffs, ye mind y'ur eye. An' the divil a bit
of lockage will ye git here, an' mind that!" And then he walked away.

We were very patient. The rim of the lock became lined with small boys
and smaller girls, for this is Saturday, and a school holiday; and
there was great wonderment at the men in the canoe, who "were having a
bloody old row with Barney, the lock-tinder," as one boy vigorously
expressed the situation to a bevy of new-comers. By and by Barney
returned to see if we were still there. We were, and were so
abstracted that we did not heed his presence.

"Will, ye ain't gone yit, I see?" said Barney.

The Doctor roused himself, and pulling out his watch, appeared to be
greatly surprised. "I do declare," he ejaculated, "if we haven't been
waiting here nearly half an hour! I say, my man, this sort of delay is
inexcusable. It will read badly in a report to the Engineering Bureau.
What is your number, sir?" And with a stern expression he produced his
tablets, prepared to jot down the numeral.

Barney was clearly weakening. His return to see if the "bluff" had
worked was an evidence of that. The Doctor's severe official manner,
and our quiet persistence appeared to convince Barney that he had made
a grave mistake. So he hurried off to the lower capstans, growling
something about being "oft'n fooled with fish'n' parties." When we
were through we left Barney a cigar on the curbing, and gently
admonished him never again to be so rude to canoeists, or some day he
would get reported. As we pushed off he bade us an affectionate
farewell, and said he had sent his "lad" ahead to see that we had no
trouble at the four lower locks. We did not see the lad; but certain
it is that the other tenders were prompt and courteous, and we felt
that the cigars which we distributed along the Kaukauna Canal were not
illy bestowed.

Progress was slow to-day, owing to the delays in locking. Ordinarily,
we make from thirty to forty miles,--on the Rock, you remember, we
averaged forty. But it was nearly sunset when we passed under the old
wagon bridge at Wrightstown, only seventeen miles below our
starting-point of this morning. We paused for a minute or two, to talk
with a peaceably disposed lad, who was the sole patron of the bridge
and lay sprawled across the board foot-walk, with his head under the
railing, fishing as contentedly as though he lay on a grassy bank,
after the manner of the gentle Izaak. When old Mr. Wright was around,
Wrightstown may have been quite a place. But it is now going the way
of so many river towns. There is a small, rickety saw-mill in
operation, to which farmers from the back country haul in pine logs,
of which there are some hundreds neatly piled in an adjoining field.
Another saw-mill shell is hard by, the home of owls and bats,--a
deserted skeleton, whose spirit, in the shape of machinery, has
departed to Ashland, a more modern paradise of the buzz-saw. The
village, dressed in that tone of pearly gray with which kind Nature
decks those habitations left paintless by neglectful man,--is
prettily situated on the high banks which uniformly hedge in the Lower
Fox. On the highest knoll of all is a modest little frame church whose
spire--white, after a fashion--is a prominent landmark to river
travelers. There are the remains of once well-kept gardens, upon the
upper terraces; of somewhat elaborate fences, now swaying to and fro
and weak in the knees; of sidewalks which have become pitfalls; of
impenetrable thickets of lilacs, hedging lonely spots that once were
homes. On the village street, only a few idlers were seen, gathered in
knots of two or three in front of the barber shop and the saloons; the
smith at his forge was working late, shoeing a country team; and two
angular dames, in rusty sun-bonnets, were gossiping over a barn-yard
gate. That was all we saw of Wrightstown, as we drifted northward in
company with the reeling bubbles, down through the deepening shadow
cast by the western bank.

Here and there, where the land chances to <DW72> gently to the water's
edge, are small piles of logs, drawn on farm sleds during the winter
season from depleted pineries, all the way from three to ten miles
back. When wanted at the saw-mills down the river, or just above, at
Wrightstown, they are loosely made up into small rafts and poled to
market. Along the stream there are but few pines left, and they
generally crown some rocky ledge, not easily accessible. A few small
clumps are preserved, however, relics of the forest's former state, to
adorn private grounds or enhance the gloomy tone of little hillside
cemeteries. There must have been an impressive grandeur about the
scenery of the Lower Fox in the early day, before the woodman's axe
leveled the great pines which then swept down in solid rank to the
river beach, closely hedging in the dark and rapid flood.

We lunched upon a stone terrace, above which swayed in the evening
breeze the dense, solemn branches of a giant native, one of the last
of his fated race. The channel curved below, and the range of vision
was short, between the stately banks, heavily fringed as they are with
aspen and scrub-oak. As we sat in the gathering gloom and gayly
chatted over the simple adventures which are making up this week of
ideal vacation life, there came up from the depths below the steady
swish and pant of a river steamboat,--rare object upon our lonesome
journey. As the bulky craft came slowly around the bend, the pant
became a subdued roar, awakening a dull echo from the wooded <DW72>s. A
small knot of passengers lolled around the pilot-house, on which we
were just able to discern the name "Evalyn, of Oshkosh," in burnished
gilt; on the freight deck there were bales and boxes of merchandise,
and heaps of lumber; two stokers were feeding cord-wood to the furnace
flames, which lit the scene with lurid glare, after the fashion of
theatric fires; the roustabouts were fastening night lanterns to the
rails. The V-shaped wake of her wheelbarrow stern broke upon the
shores like a tidal wave, and the canoe, luckily well fastened to the
roots of a stranded tree, bobbed up and down as would a chip tossed on
the billows.

Four miles below Wrightstown is Little Kaukauna. There are three or
four cottages here, well up on the pleasant western bank, overlooking
a deserted saw-mill property; while just beyond, a government lock
does duty whenever needed, and the rest of the now broadened stream is
stemmed by a magnificent dam, from the foot of which arises a dense
cloud of vapor, such is the force of the torrent which pours with a
mighty sweep over the great chute. As we stole down upon the hamlet,
the moon, a day or two past full, was just rising over the opposite
hillocks; a tall pine standing out boldly from its lesser fellows,
was weirdly silhouetted across her beaming face, and in the cottage
windows lights gleamed a homely welcome.

We were cordially received at the house of the patriarch of the
settlement. We made our craft secure for the night, "toted" our
baggage up the bank, and paused upon the broad porch of our new-found
friend to contemplate a most charming moonlit view of river and forest
and glade and cataract; the cloud of mist rising high above the
roaring declivity seemed as an incense offering to the goddess of the
night.




SIXTH LETTER.

THE BAY SETTLEMENT.


     GREEN BAY, WIS., June 13, 1887.

My Dear W----: We had a quiet Sunday at Little Kaukauna. Being a
delightful day, we went with our entertainers to the country church, a
mile or two back across the fields, and whiled away the rest of the
time in strolling through the woods and gossiping with the farmers
about the crops and the government improvement,--fertile themes. It
appears that this diminutive hamlet of four or five houses anticipates
a "boom," and there is some feverish anxiety as to how much village
lots ought to bring as a "starter" when the rush actually opens. A
syndicate has purchased the long-abandoned water-power, and it is
whispered that paper-mills are to be erected, with cottages for
operatives, and all that sort of thing. Then, the church and the depot
will have to be brought into town; the proprietor of the cross-roads
grocery, now out on the "country road," will be erecting a brick
"block" by the river side; somebody will be starting a daily paper,
printed from stereotype plates imported from Oshkosh or Chicago; and a
summer resort hotel with a magnetic spring, will doubtless cap the
climax of village greatness. I shall look with interest on reports
from the Little Kaukauna boom.

It was nine o'clock this morning before we dipped paddle and bore down
to the lock gates. The good-natured tender "dropped" us through with
much alacrity. The river gradually widens, and here and there the high
rolling banks recede for some distance, and marshes and bayous,
excellent hunting-grounds, border the stream. A half mile below the
lock we noticed a roughly built hut, open at front, such as would
quarter a pig in the shanty outskirts of a great city. It looked
lonesome, on the edge of a wide bog, with no other sign of habitation,
either human or animal, in the watery landscape. Curiosity impelled us
to stop. Crossing a plank, which rested one end on a snag and the
other on a stone in front of the three-sided structure, we peered in.
A bundle of rags lay in one corner of the floor of loosely laid
boards; in another was a heap of clamshells, the contents of which
had doubtless been cooked over a little fire which still smouldered in
a neighboring clump of reeds. The odors were noisome, and a foot rise
of water would have swamped out the dweller in this strange abode. We
at once took it for granted that this was either the home of an Indian
or a tramp. Just as we were leaving, however, a frowsy, dirty, but
apparently good-tempered fisherman came rowing up and claimed the
cabin as his home. He said that he spent the greater part of the year
in this filthy hole, hunting or fishing according to the season; in
the winter, he boarded up the front, leaving a hole to crawl out of,
and banked the hut about with reeds and muck. Wrightstown was his
market; and he "managed to scratch," he said, by being economical. I
asked him how much it cost him in cash to exist in this state, which
was but slightly removed from the condition of our ancestral
cave-dwellers. He thought that with twenty-five dollars in cash, he
could "manage to scratch finely" for an entire year, and have besides
"a week off with the boys,"--in other words, one prolonged drinking
bout,--at Wrightstown. He complained, however, that he seldom received
money, being mainly put off with barter. The poor fellow, evidently
something of a simpleton, is probably the victim of sharp practice
occasionally. As we paddled away from this singular character, the
Doctor said that he had a novel-writing friend, given to the
sensational, to whom he would like to introduce The Wild Fisherman of
Little Kaukauna; he thought there was material for a romance here,
particularly if it could be proved, as was quite possible, that the
hut man was the lost heir of a British dukedom.

But the site of another and a stranger romance is but half a mile
farther down. The river there suddenly broadens into a basin, fully
half a mile in width. To the east, the banks are quite abrupt. The
westward shore is a gentle, grass-grown <DW72>, stretching up beyond a
charming little bay formed by a spit of meadow. Near the sandy beach
of this bay a country highway passes, winding in and out and up and
down, as it follows the river and the bases of the knolls. Above this
and commanding delightful glimpses of forest and stream and bayou and
prairie, a goodly hillock is crowned, some seventy-five feet above the
water's edge, with a dark, unpainted, time-worn, moss-grown house,
part log and part frame, set in a deep tangle of lilacs and crabs.
The quaint old structure is of the simple pioneer pattern,--a story
and a half, with gables on the north and south ends of the main part;
and a small transverse wing to the rear, with connecting rooms. The
ancient picket gate creaks on its one rusty hinge. The front door has
the appearance of being nailed up, and across its frame a dozen fat
spiders, most successful of fly fishers, have stretched their gluey
nets. The path, once leading thither, is now o'ergrown with grass and
lilacs, while in the surrounding snarl of weeds and poplar suckers are
seen the blossoming remnants of peonies, and a few old-fashioned
garden shrubs.

The ground is historic. The house is an ancient landmark. It was the
old home of Eleazar Williams, in his day Episcopal missionary and
pretender to the throne of France. Williams was the reputed son of a
mixed-blood couple of the Mohawk band of Indians; in early life, he
claimed to have been born in the vicinity of Montreal, in 1792. A
bright youth, he was educated for the ministry of the Protestant
Episcopal church and sent as a missionary in 1816-1817 to the Oneida
Indians, then located in Oneida county, New York. During the war of
1812, he had been employed as a spy by the American authorities to
trace the movements of British troops in Canada. Williams, from the
first, became engaged in intrigues among the New York Indians, and was
the originator of the movement which resulted, in 1822, in the
purchase by the war department of a large strip of land from the
Menomonees and Winnebagoes, along the Lower Fox River, and the removal
hither of several of the New York bands, accompanied by the scheming
priest. But the result was jealousy between the newcomers and the
original tribes, with sixteen years of confusion and turmoil, during
which Congress was frequently engaged in settling the squabbles that
arose. Williams's original idea was said, by those who knew him best,
to be the "total subjugation of the whole [Green Bay] country and the
establishment of an Indian government, of which he was to be sole
dictator."[6]

But his purpose failed. He came to be recognized as an unscrupulous
fellow, and the majority of the whites and Indians on the Lower Fox,
as well as his clerical brethren, regarded him with contempt. In 1853,
Williams, baffled in every other field of notoriety which he had
worked, suddenly posed before the American public as Louis XVII.,
hereditary sovereign of France. Upon the downfall of the Bourbons in
1792, you will remember that Louis XVI. and his queen, Marie
Antoinette, were beheaded, while their son, the dauphin Louis, an
imbecile child of eight, was cast into the temple tower by the
revolutionists. It is officially recorded that after an imprisonment
of two years the dauphin died in the tower and was buried. But the
story was started and popularly believed, that the real dauphin had
been abducted by the royalists and another child cunningly substituted
to die there in the dauphin's place. The story went that the dauphin
had been sent to America and all traces of him lost, thus giving any
adventurer of the requisite age and sufficiently obscure birth,
opportunity to seek such honor as might be gained in claiming identity
with the escaped prisoner. Williams was too young by eight years to be
the dauphin; he was clearly of Indian extraction,--a fair type of the
half-breed, in color, form, and feature. But he succeeded in deceiving
a number of good people, including several leading doctors in his
church; while an Episcopal clergyman named John H. Hanson attempted,
in two articles in "Putnam's Magazine," in 1853, and afterwards in an
elaborate book, "The Lost Prince," to prove conclusively to the world
that Williams was indeed the son of the executed monarch. While those
who really knew Williams treated his claims as fraudulent, and his
dusky father and mother protested under oath that Eleazar was their
son, and every allegation of Williams, in the premises, had been often
exposed as false, there were still many who believed in him. The
excitement attracted attention in France. One or two royalists came
over to see Williams, but left disappointed; and Louis Philippe sent
him a present of some finely bound books, believing him to be the
innocent victim of a delusion. Williams died in 1858, keeping up his
absurd pretensions to the last.

It was in this house near Little Kaukauna that Williams lived for so
many years, managing and preaching to his scattered flock of immigrant
Indians, and forever seeking some sort of especially profitable
employment, such as accompanying tribal delegations to Washington, or
acting as special commissioner at government payments. In the earliest
days, the house was situated on the spit of meadow I have previously
spoken of; but when the dam at Depere raised the water, the frame was
carried to this higher position.

Williams's wife, an octoroon, whose portrait shows her to have been a
thick-set, stolid sort of woman, died here, a year ago, and is buried
hard by. The present occupants of the house are Mary Garritty, an
Indian woman of sixty-five years, and her half-breed daughter,
Josephine Penney, who in turn has an infant child of two. Mary was
reared by the Williamses, and told us many a curious story of life at
the "agency," as she called it, during the time when "Mr. Williams and
Ma" were alive. Josephine, who confided to me that she was thirty
years old, was regularly adopted by Mrs. Williams, for whose memory
both women seem to have a very strong respect. What little personal
property was left by the old woman goes to her grandchildren,
intelligent and well-educated Oshkosh citizens, but Josephine has the
sandy farm of sixty-five acres. She took me into the attic to exhibit
such relics of the alleged dauphin as had not been disposed of by the
administrator of the estate. There were a hundred or two mice-eaten
volumes, mainly theological and school text-books; several old volumes
of sermons,--for Eleazar is said to have considered it better taste in
him to copy a discourse from an approved authority than to endeavor to
compose one that would not satisfy him half as well; a boxful of
manuscript odds and ends, chiefly letters, Indian glossaries and
copied sermons; two or three leather-bound trunks, a copper tea-kettle
used by him upon his long boat journeys, and a pair of antiquated
brass candlesticks.

Then we descended to the old orchard. Mary pointed out the spot, a rod
or two south of the dwelling, where Williams had his library and
mission-office in a log-house that has long since been removed for
firewood. In this cabin, which had floor dimensions of fifteen by
twenty feet, Williams met his Indian friends and transacted business
with them. Mary, in her querulous tone, said that in those days the
place abounded with Indians, night and day, and as they always
expected to be fed, she had her hands full attending to their wants.
"There wa'n't no peace at all, sir, so long as Mr. Williams were here;
when he were gone there wa'n't so many of them, an' we got a rest,
which I were mighty thankful for." Garrulous Mary, in her moccasins
and blanket skirt, with a complexion like brown parchment and as
wrinkled,--almost a full-blood herself,--has lived so long apart from
her people that she appears to have forgotten her race, and inveighed
right vigorously against the unthrifty and beggarly habits of the
aborigines. "I hate them pesky Indians," she cried in a burst of
righteous indignation, and then turned to croon over Josephine's
baby, as veritable a "little Indian boy" as I ever met with in a
forest wigwam. "He's a fine feller, isn't he?" she cried, as she
chucked her grandson under the chin; "some says as he looks like Mr.
Williams, sir." The Doctor, who is a judge of babies, declared, in a
professional tone that did not admit of contradiction, that the infant
was, indeed, a fine specimen of humanity.

And thus we left the two women in a most contented frame of mind, and
descended to the beach, bearing with us Josephine's parting salute,
shouted from the garden gate,--"Call agin, whene'er ye pass this way!"

Depere is five miles below. The banks are bold as far as there; but
beyond, they flatten out into gently sloping meadows, varied here and
there by the re-approach of a high ridge on the eastern shore,--the
western getting to be quite marshy by the time Fort Howard is reached.

At Depere are the first rapids of the Fox, the fall being about twelve
feet. From the earliest period recorded by the French explorers, there
was a polyglot Indian settlement upon the portage-trail, and in
December, 1669, the Jesuit missionary Allouez established St. Francis
Xavier mission here, the locality being henceforth styled "Rapide des
Peres." It was from this station that Allouez, Dablon, Joliet, and
Marquette started upon their memorable canoe voyages up the Fox, in
search of benighted heathen and the Mississippi River. For over a
century Rapide des Peres was a prominent landmark in Northwestern
history. The Depere of to-day is a solid-looking town, with an iron
furnace, saw-mills, and other industries; and after a long period of
stagnation is experiencing a healthy business revival.

Unable to find the tender at this the last lock on our course, we
portaged after the manner of old-time canoeists, and set out upon the
home stretch of six miles. Green Bay, upon the eastern bank and Fort
Howard upon the western, were well in view; and, it being not past two
o'clock in the afternoon of a cool and somewhat cloudy day, we allowed
the current to be our chief propeller, only now and then using the
paddles to keep our bark well in the main current.

The many pretty residences of South Green Bay, including the ruins of
Navarino, Astor, and Shanty Town, are situated well up on an
attractive sloping ridge; but the land soon drops to an almost swampy
level, upon which the greater portion of the business quarter is
built. Opposite, Fort Howard with her mills and coal-docks skirts a
wide-spreading bog, much of the flat, sleepy old town being built
on a foundation of saw-mill offal. Historically, both sides of the
river may be practically treated as the old "Bay Settlement" for two
and a half centuries one of the most conspicuous outposts of
American civilization. Here came savage-trained Nicolet, exploring
agent of Champlain, in 1634, when Plymouth colony was still in
swaddling-clothes. It was the day when the China Sea was supposed to
be somewhere in the neighborhood of the Great Lakes. Nicolet had heard
that at Green Bay he would meet a strange people, who had come from
beyond "a great water" to the west. He was therefore prepared to meet
here a colony of Chinamen or Japanese, if indeed Green Bay were not
the Orient itself. His mistake was a natural one. The "strange people"
were Winnebago Indians. A branch of the Dakotahs, or Sioux, a distinct
race from the Algonquins, they forced themselves across the
Mississippi River, up the Wisconsin, and down the Fox, to Green Bay,
entering the Algonquin territory like a wedge, and forever after
maintaining their foothold upon this interlocked water highway. "The
great water," supposed by Nicolet to mean the China Sea, was the
Mississippi River, beyond which barrier the Dakotah race held full
sway. As he approached, one of his Huron guides was sent forward to
herald his coming. Landing near the mouth of the river, he attired
himself in a gorgeous damask gown, decorated with gayly  birds
and flowers, expecting to meet mandarins who would be similarly
dressed. A horde of four or five thousand naked savages greeted him.
He advanced, discharging the pistols which he held in either hand, and
women and children fled in terror from the manitou who carried with
him lightning and thunder.

The mouth of the Fox was always a favorite rallying-point for the
savages of this section of the Northwest, and many a notable council
has been held here between tribes of painted red men and Jesuits,
traders, explorers, and military officers. Being the gateway of one of
the two great routes to the Mississippi, many notable exploring and
military expeditions have rested here; and French, English, and
Americans in turn have maintained forts to protect the interests of
territorial possession and the fur-trade.

Here it was that a white man first set foot on Wisconsin soil; and
here, also, in 1745, the De Langlades, first permanent settlers of
the Badger State, reared their log cabins and initiated a semblance of
white man's civilization. Green Bay, now hoary with age, has had an
eventful, though not stirring history. For a hundred years she was a
distributing-point for the fur-trade.

The descendants of the De Langlades, the Grignons and other colonists
of nearly a century and a half standing, are still on the spot; and
the gossip of the hour among the _voyageurs_ and old traders still
left among us is of John Jacob Astor, Ramsay Crooks, Robert Stuart,
Major Twiggs, and other characters of the early years of our century,
whose names are well known to frontier history. The creole quarter of
this ancient town, shiftless and improvident to-day as it always has
been, lives in an atmosphere hazy with poetic glamour, reveling in the
recollection of a once festive, half-savage life, when the _courier de
bois_ and the _engage_ were in the ascendency at this forest outpost,
and the fur-trade the be-all and end-all of commercial enterprise.
Your _voyageur_, scratching a painful living for a hybrid brood from
his meager potato patch, bemoans the day when Yankee progressiveness
dammed the Fox for Yankee saw-mills, into whose insatiable maws were
swept the forests of his youth, and remembers nought but the sweets
of his early calling among his boon companions, the denizens of the
wilderness.

In Shanty Town, Astor, and Navarino there yet remain many dwellings
and trading warehouses of the olden time,--unpainted, gaunt,
poverty-stricken, but with their hand-hewed skeletons of oak still
intact beneath the rags of a century's decay. A hundred years is a
period quite long enough in our land to warrant the brand of
antiquity, although a mere nothing in the prolonged career of the Old
World. In the rapidly developing West, a hundred years and less mark
the gap between a primeval wilderness and a complete civilization.
Time, like space, is, after all, but comparative. In these hundred
years the Northwest has developed from nothing to everything. It is as
great a period, judging by results, as ten centuries in
Europe,--perhaps fifteen. America is said to have no history. On the
contrary, it has the most romantic of histories; but it has lived
faster and crowded more and greater deeds into the past hundred years
than slow-going Europe in the last ten hundred. The American
centenarian of to-day is older by far than the fabled Methuselah.

Green Bay, classic in her shanty ruins, has been somewhat halting in
her advance, for the creoles hamper progressiveness. But as the
_voyageurs_ and their immediate progeny gradually pass away, the
community creeps out from the shadow of the past and asserts itself.
The ancient town appears to be taking on a new and healthy growth, in
strange contrast to the severe and battered architecture of frontier
times. Socially, Green Bay is delightful. There are many old families,
whose founders were engaged in superintending the fur-trade and
transportation lines, or holding government office, civil or military,
at the wilderness post. This element, well educated and reared in
comfort, gives a tone of dignified, old-school hospitality to the best
society,--it is the Knickerbocker Colony of the Bay Settlement.

At four o'clock we pushed into a canal in front of the Fort Howard
railway depot, and half an hour later had crossed the bridge and were
registered at a Green Bay hotel. The Doctor, called home to resume the
humdrum of his hospital life, will leave for the South to-morrow noon.
I shall remain here for a week, reposing in the shades of antiquity.

FOOTNOTE:

[6] Wis. Hist. Colls., vol. ii. p. 425.




THE WISCONSIN RIVER.




THE WISCONSIN RIVER.




CHAPTER I.

ALONE IN THE WILDERNESS.


Our watches, for a wonder, coincided on Monday afternoon, Aug. 22,
1887. This phenomenon is so rare that W---- made a note in her diary
to the effect that for once in its long career my time-piece was
right. It was five minutes past two. The place was the beach at
Portage, just below the old red wagon-bridge which here spans the
gloomy Wisconsin. A teamster had hauled us, our canoe, and our baggage
from the depot to the verge of a sand-bank; and we had dragged our
faithful craft down through a tangle of sand-burrs and tin cans to the
water's edge, and packed the locker for its third and final voyage of
the season. A German housewife, with red kerchief, cap, and tucked-up
skirt, stood out in the water on the edge of a gravel-spit, engaged in
her weekly wrestle with the family wash,--a picturesque,
foreign-looking scene. On the summit of a sandy promontory to our
left, two other German housewives leaned over a pig-yard fence and
gazed intently down at these strange preparations. Back of us were the
wooded sand-drifts of Portage, once a famous camping-ground of the
Winnebagoes; before us, the dark, treacherous river, with its shallows
and its mysterious depths; beyond that, great stretches of sand-fields
thick-strewn with willow forests and, three or four miles away, the
forbidding range of the Baraboo Bluffs, veiled in the heavy mist which
was rapidly closing upon the valley.

We feared that we were booked for a stormy trip, as we pushed out into
the bubble-strewn current and found that a cold east wind was blowing
over the flats and rowing-jackets were essential.

Portage City, a town of twenty-five hundred inhabitants, occupies the
southeastern bank for a mile down. Like Green Bay and Prairie du
Chien, it was an outgrowth of the necessities of the early fur-trade.
Upon the death of that trade it languished and for a generation or
two was utterly stagnant. As a rural trading centre it has since grown
into a state of fair prosperity, although the presence of many of the
old-time buildings of the Indian traders and transporters gives to
much of the town a sadly decayed appearance. For two or three miles we
had Portage in view, down a straight course, until at last the
thickening mist hid the time-worn houses from view, and we were fairly
on our way down the historic Wisconsin, in the wake of Joliet and
Marquette, who first traversed this highway to the Mississippi, two
hundred and fourteen years ago.

Marquette, in the journal of his memorable voyage, says of the
Wisconsin, "It is very broad, with a sandy bottom, forming many
shallows, which render navigation very difficult." The river has been
frequently described in the journals of later voyagers, and government
engineers have written long reports upon its condition, but they have
not bettered Marquette's comprehensive phrase.

The general government has spent enormous sums in an endeavor to make
the Fox-Wisconsin water highway practicable for the passage of large
steam-vessels between the Great Lakes and the Mississippi River. It
was of great service, in its natural state, for the passage into the
heart of the continent of that motley procession of priests,
explorers, cavaliers, soldiers, trappers, and traders who paddled
their canoes through here for nearly two hundred years, the pioneers
of French, English, and American civilization in turn. It is still a
tempting scheme, to tap the main artery of America, and allow modern
vessels of burden to make the circuit between the lakes and the gulf.
The Fox River is reasonably tractable, although this season the stage
of water above Berlin has been hardly high enough to float a
flat-boat. But the Wisconsin remains, despite the hundreds of
wing-dams which line her shores, a fickle jade upon whom no reliance
whatever can be placed. The current and the sand-banks shift about at
their sweet will over a broad valley, and the pilot of one season
would scarcely recognize the stream another. Navigation for crafts
drawing over a foot of water is practically impossible in seasons of
drought, and uncertain in all. A noted engineer has playfully said
that the Wisconsin can never be regulated, "until the bottom is lathed
and plastered;" and another officially reported, over fifteen years
ago, that nothing short of a continuous canal along the bank, from
Portage to Prairie du Chien, will suffice to meet the expectations of
those who favor the government improvement of this impossible highway.

In the neighborhood of Portage, the wing-dams,--composed of mattresses
of willow boughs, weighted with stone,--are in a reasonable degree of
preservation and in places appear to be of some avail in contracting
the channel. But elsewhere down the river, they are generally mere
hindrances to canoeing. The current, as it caroms from shore to shore,
pays but little heed to these obstructions and we often found it
swiftest over the places where black lines of willow twigs bob and
sway above the surface of the rushing water; while the channel staked
out by the engineers was the site of a sand-field, studded with
aspen-brush.

It is a lonely run of an hour and a half down to the mouth of the
Baraboo River, through the mazes of the wing-dams, surrounded by
desolate bottom lands of sand and wooded bog. The east wind had
brought a smart shower by the time we had arrived off the mouth of
this northern tributary and we hauled up at a low, forested bank just
below the junction, where rubber coats were brought out and canvas
spread over the stores. The rain soon settled into a mere drizzle,
and W----, ever eager in her botanical researches, wandered about
regardless of wet feet, investigating the flora of the locality. The
yellow sneeze-weed and purple iron-weed predominate in great clumps
upon the verge of the bank, and lend a cheerful tone to what would
otherwise be a desolate landscape.

The drizzle finally ceasing, we were again afloat, and after shooting
by scores of wing-dams that had been "snowed under" by shifting sand,
and floating over others that were in the heart of the present
channel, we came to Dekorra, some seven miles below Portage. Dekorra
is a quaint little hamlet, with just five weather-worn houses and a
blacksmith-shop in sight, nestled in a hollow at the base of a bluff
on the southern bank. The river courses at its feet, and from the top
of a naked cliff a ferry-wire stretches high above the stream and
loses itself among the trees on the opposite bottoms. The east wind
whistled a pretty note as it was split by the swaying thread, and the
anvil by the smith's forge rang out in unison, clear as a well-toned
bell. A crude cemetery, apparently containing far more graves than
Dekorra's present census would show inhabitants, flanks the faded-out
settlement on the shoulder of an adjoining hill. The road to the
tattered ferry-boat, rotting on the beach, gave but little evidence
of recent use, for Dekorra is a relic.

The valley of the Wisconsin is from three to five miles broad, flanked
on either side, below the Portage, by an undulating range of imposing
bluffs, from one hundred and fifty to three hundred and fifty feet in
height. They are heavily wooded, as a rule, although there is much
variety,--pleasant grass-grown <DW72>s; naked, water-washed
escarpments, rising sheer above the stream; terraced hills, with
eroded faces, ascending in a regular succession of benches to the
cliff-like tops; steep uplands, either covered with a dense and
regular growth of forest, or shattered by fire or tornado. The ravines
and pocket-fields between the bluffs are often of exceeding beauty,
especially when occupied by a modest little village,--or better, by
some small settler, whose outlet to the country beyond the edge of his
mountain basin may be seen threading the woodlands which tower above
him, or zigzagging through a neighboring pass, worn deep by some
impatient spring torrent in a hurry to reach the river level.

Between these ranges stretches a wide expanse of bottoms, either bog
or sand plain, over all of which the river flows at high water, and
through which the swift current twists and bounds like a serpent in
agony, constantly cutting out new channels and filling up the old,
obeying laws of its own, ever defying the calculations of pilots and
engineers. As it thus sweeps along, wherever its fancy listeth, here
to-day and there to-morrow, it forms innumerable islands which greatly
add to the picturesqueness of the view. Now and then there are two or
three parallel channels, running along for miles before they join,
perplexing the traveler with a labyrinth of water paths. These islands
are often mere sandbars, sometimes as barren as Sahara, again
thick-grown with willows and seedling aspens; but for the most part
they are well-wooded, their banks gay with the season's flowers, and
luxuriant vines hanging in deep festoons from the trees which overhang
the flood. At their heads, often high up among the branches of the
elms, are great masses of driftwood, the remains of shattered
lumber-rafts or saw-mill offal from the great northern pineries,
evidencing the height of the spring flood which so often converts the
Wisconsin into an Amazon.

Because of this spreading habit of the stream, the few villages along
the way are planted on the higher land at the base of the bluffs, or
on an occasional sandy pocket-plateau which the river, as in ages
past it has worn its bed to lower levels, has left high and dry above
present overflows. Some of these towns, in their fear of floods, are
situated two or three miles back from the water highway; others, where
the channel chances to closely hug a line of bluffs, are directly
abutting the river, which is crossed at such points by either a ferry
or a toll-bridge.

Desolate as is the prospect from Dekorra's front door, we found the
limestone cliff there, a mine of attractiveness. The river has worn
miniature caves and grottoes in its base; at the mouths of several of
these there are little rocky beaches, whose overhanging walls are
flecked with ferns, lichens, and graceful columbines.

At six o'clock that evening, in the midst of a dispiriting Scotch
mist, we disembarked upon the northern bank, at the foot of a wooded
bluff, and prepared to settle for the night. Fortunately, we had
advance knowledge of the sparseness of settlement along the river, and
had come with a tent and a cooking outfit, prepared for camping in
case of need. Upon a rocky bench, fifty feet up from the water, we
stretched a rope between two trees, to serve in lieu of a ridge-pole,
and pitched our canvas domicile. It was a lonesome spot which we had
chosen for our night's halt. Owing to the configuration of the bluffs,
it was unlikely that any person dwelt within a mile of us on our
shore. Across the valley, we looked over several miles of bottom
woods, while far up on the opposite <DW72>s could just be discerned the
gables of two white farm-houses, peering out from a wilderness of
trees stretching far and wide, till its limits were lost in the
gathering fog.

It was pitchy dark by the time we had completed our camping
arrangements, and W---- announced that the coffee was boiling over. I
fancy we two must have presented a rather forlorn appearance, as we
crouched at our evening meal around the sputtering little fire, clad
in heavy jackets and rubber coats, for the atmosphere was raw and
clammy. The wood was wet, and the shifting gusts would persist in
blowing the smoke in our eyes, whichever position we took. Every
falling bough, or rustle of a water-laden sapling, was suggestive of
tramps or of inquisitive hogs or cattle, for we knew not what
neighbors we had; many a time we paused, and peering out into the
black night, listened intently for further developments. And then the
strange noises from the river, unnoticed during daylight, were not
conducive to mental ease, when we nervously associated them with
roving fishermen, or perhaps tramps, attracted by our light from the
opposite shore. Sometimes we felt positive that we heard the muffled
creak of oars, fast approaching; then would come loud splashes and
gurgles, and ever and anon it would seem as if some one were slapping
the water with a board. Now near, now far away, approaching and
receding by turns, these mysterious sounds continued through the
night, occasionally relieved by moments of absolute silence. We
afterward discovered that these were the customary refrains sung by
the gay tide, as it washed over the wing-dams, swished around the
sandbanks, and dashed against great snags and island heads.

But we did not know this then, and a certain uneasy lonesomeness
overcame us as strangers to the scene; and I must confess that,
despite our philosophizing, there was but little sleep for us that
first camp out. A neglect to procure straw to soften our rocky
couches, and a woful insufficiency of bed-clothing for a phenomenally
cold August night, added to our manifold discomforts.




CHAPTER II.

THE LAST OF THE SACS.


Dawn came at five, and none too soon. But after thawing out over the
breakfast fire and draining the coffee-pot dry, we were wondrously
rejuvenated; and as we struck camp, were right merry between ourselves
over the foolish nervousness of the night. There was still a raw
northwest wind, but the clouds soon broke, and when, at half-past six,
we again pushed out into the swift-flowing stream, it was evident that
the day would be bright and comfortably cool.

We had some splendid vistas of bluff-girt scenery this morning,
especially near Merrimac, where some of the elevations are the highest
along the river. There are a score of houses at Merrimac, which is the
point where the Chicago and Northwestern railway crosses, over an
immense iron bridge 1736 feet long, spanning two broad channels and
the sand island which divides them. The village is on a rolling
plateau some fifty feet above the water level, on the northern side.
Climbing up to the bridge-tender's house, that one-armed veteran of
the spans, whose service here is as old as the bridge, told me that it
was seldom indeed the river highway was used in these days. "The
railroads kill this here water business," he said.

I found the tender to be something of a philosopher. Most
bridge-tenders and fishermen, and others who pursue lonely occupations
and have much spare time on their hands, are philosophers. That their
speculations are sometimes cloudy does not detract from their local
reputation of being deep thinkers. The Merrimac tender was given to
geology, I found, and some of his ideas concerning the origin of the
bluffs and the glacial streaks, and all that sort of thing, would
create marked attention in any scientific journal. He had some
original notions, too, about the habits of the stream above which he
had almost hourly walked, day and night, the seasons round, for
sixteen long years. The ice invariably commenced to form on the bottom
of the river, he stoutly claimed, and then rose to the surface,--the
ingenious reason given for this remarkable phenomenon being that the
underlying sand was colder than the water. These and other novel
results of his observation, our philosophical friend good-humoredly
communicated, together with scraps of local tradition regarding the
Black Hawk War, and lurid tales of the old lumber-raft days. At last,
however, his hour came for walking the spans, and we descended to our
boat. As we shot into the main channel, far above us a red flag
fluttered from the draw, and we knew it to be the parting salute of
the grizzled sentinel.

At the head of an island half a mile below, it is said there are the
remains of an Indian fort. We landed with some difficulty, for the
current sweeps by its wooded shore with particular zest. Our
examination of the locality, however, revealed no other earth lines
than might have been formed by a rushing flood. But as a reward for
our endeavors, we found the lobelia cardinalis in wonderful profusion,
mingled in striking contrast of color with the iron and sneeze weeds,
and the common spurge. The prickly ash, with its little scarlet berry,
was common upon this as upon other islands, and the elms were of
remarkable size.

We were struck, as we passed along where the river chanced to wash the
feet of steepy <DW72>s, with the peculiar ridging of the turf. The
water having undermined these banks, the friable soil upon their
shoulders had slid, regularly breaking the sod into long horizontal
strips a foot or two wide, the white sand gleaming between the rows of
rusty green. Sometimes the shores were thus striped with zebra-like
regularity for miles together, presenting a very singular and
artificial appearance.

Prominent features of the morning's voyage, also, were deep
bowlder-strewn and often heavily wooded ravines running down from the
bluffs. Although perfectly dry at this season, it can be seen that
they are the beds of angry torrents in the spring, and many a poor
farmer's field is deeply cut with such gulches, which rapidly grow in
this light soil as the years go on. We stopped at one such farm, and
walked up the great breach to very near the house, up to which we
clambered, over rocks and through sand-burrs and thickets, being met
at the gate by a noisy dog, that appeared to be suspicious of
strangers who approached his master's castle by means of the covered
way. The farmer's wife, as she supplied us with exquisite dairy
products, said that the metes and bounds of their little domain were
continually changing; four acres of their best meadow had been washed
out within two years, their wood-lot was being gradually undermined,
and the ravine was eating into their ploughed land with the
persistence of a cancer. On the other hand, her sister's acres, down
the river a mile or two, on the other bank, were growing in extent.
However, she thought their "luck would change one of these seasons,"
and the river swish off upon another tangent.

Upon returning by the gully, we found that its sunny, sloping walls,
where not wooded with willows and oak saplings, were resplendent with
floral treasures, chief among them being the gerardia, golden-rod in
several varieties, tall white asters, a blue lobelia, and vervain,
while the seeds of the Oswego tea, prairie clover, bed-straw, and wild
roses were in all the glory of ripeness. There was a broad, pebbly
beach at the base of the torrent's bed, thick-grown with yearling
willows. A stranded pine-log, white with age and worn smooth by a
generation of storms, lay firmly imbedded among the shingle. The
temperature was still low enough to induce us to court the sunshine,
and, leaning against this hoary castaway from the far North, we sat
for a while and basked in the radiant smiles of Sol.

Prairie du Sac, thirty miles below Portage, is historically noted as
the site for several generations of the chief village of the Sac
Indians. Some of the earliest canoeists over this water-route, in the
seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, describe the aboriginal
community in some detail. The dilapidated white village of to-day
numbers but four hundred and fifty inhabitants,--about one-fourth of
the population assigned to the old red-skin town. The "prairie" is an
oak-opening plateau, more or less fertile, at the base of the northern
range of bluffs, which here takes a sudden sweep inland for three or
four miles.

The Sacs had deserted this basin plain by the close of the eighteenth
century, and taken up their chief quarters in the neighborhood of Rock
Island, near the mouth of Rock River, in close proximity to their
allies, the Foxes, who now kept watch and ward over the west bank of
the Mississippi.

By a strange fatality it chanced that in the last days of July, 1832,
the deluded Sac leader, Black Hawk, flying from the wrath of the
Illinois and Wisconsin militiamen, under Henry and Dodge, chose this
seat of the ancient power of his tribe to be one of the scenes of that
fearful tragedy which proved the death-blow to Sac ambition. Black
Hawk, after long hiding in the morasses of the Rock above Lake
Koshkonong, suddenly flew from cover, hoping to cross the Wisconsin
River at Prairie du Sac, and by plunging across the mountainous
country over a trail known to the Winnebagoes, who played fast and
loose with him as with the whites, to get beyond the Mississippi in
quiet, as he had been originally ordered to do. His retreat was
discovered when but a day old; and the militiamen hurried on through
the Jefferson swamps and the forests of the Four Lake country,
harrying the fugitives in the rear. At the summit of the Wisconsin
Heights, on the south bank, overlooking this old Sac plain on the
north, Black Hawk and his rear-guard stood firm, to allow the women
and children and the majority of his band of two thousand to cross the
intervening bottoms and the island-strewn river. The unfortunate
leader sat upon a white horse on the summit of the peak now called by
his name, and shouted directions to his handful of braves. The
movements of the latter were well executed, and Black Hawk showed good
generalship; but the militiamen were also well handled, and had
superior supplies of ammunition, so when darkness fell the fated
ravine and the wooded bottoms below were strewn with Indian bodies,
and victory was with the whites. During the night the surviving
fugitives, now ragged, foot-sore, and starving, crossed the river by
swimming. A party of fifty or so, chiefly non-combatants, made a raft,
and floated down the Wisconsin, to be slaughtered near its mouth by a
detail of regulars and Winnebagoes from Prairie du Chien; but the mass
of the party flying westward in hot haste over the prairie of the
Sacs, headed for the Mississippi. They lined their rugged path with
the dead and dying victims of starvation and despair, and a sorry lot
these people were when the Bad Axe was finally reached, and the united
army of regulars and militiamen under Atkinson, Henry, and Dodge,
overtook them. The "battle" there was a slaughter of weaklings. But
few escaped across the great river, and the bloodthirsty Sioux
despatched nearly all of those.

Black Hawk was surrendered by the servile Winnebagoes, and after being
exhibited in the Eastern cities, he was turned over to the besotted
Keokuk for safe-keeping. He died, this last of the Sacs, poor, foolish
old man, a few years later; and his bones, stolen for an Iowa museum,
were cremated twenty years after in a fire which destroyed that
institution. A sad history is that of this once famous people. We
glory over the stately progress of the white man's civilization, but
if we venture to examine with care the paths of that progress, we find
our imperial chariot to be as the car of Juggernaut.

The view from the house verandas which overhang the high bank at
Prairie du Sac, is superb. Eastward a half mile away, the grand,
corrugated bluffs of Black Hawk and the Sugar Loaf tower to a height
of over three hundred feet above the river level; while their lesser
companions, heavily forested, continue the range, north and south, as
far as the eye can reach. The river crosses the foreground with a
majestic sweep, while for several miles to the west and southwest
stretches the wooded plain, backed by a curved line of gloomy hills
which complete the rim of the basin.

A mile below, on the same plain, is Sauk City, a shabby town of about
a thousand inhabitants. A spur track of the Chicago, Milwaukee, and
St. Paul railway runs up here from Mazomanie, crossing the river,
which is nearly half a mile wide, on an iron bridge. A large and
prosperous brewery appears to be the chief industry of the place.
Slaughter-houses abut upon the stream, in the very centre of the
village. These and the squalid back-door yards which run down to the
bank do not make up an attractive picture to the canoeist. River
towns differ very much in this respect. Some of them present a neat
front to the water thoroughfare, with flower-gardens and well-kept
yards and street-ends, while others regard the river as a sewer and
the banks as a common dumping ground, giving the traveler by boat a
view of filth, disorder, and general unsightliness which is highly
repulsive. I have often found, on landing at some villages of this
latter class, that the dwellings and business blocks which, riverward,
are sad spectacles of foulness and unthrift, have quite pretentious
fronts along the land highway which the townsfolk patronize. It is as
if some fair dame, who prided herself on her manners and costume, had
rags beneath her fine silks, and unwashed hands within her dainty
gloves. This coming in at the back door of river towns reveals many a
secret of sham.

It was a fine run down to Arena ferry, thirteen miles below Sauk City.
The skies had become leaden and the atmosphere gray, and the sparse,
gnarled poplars on some of the storm-swept bluffs had a ghostly
effect. Here and there, fires had blasted the mountainous <DW72>s, and
a light aspen growth was hastening to garb with vivid green the
blackened ruins. But the general impression was that of dark, gloomy
forests of oak, linden, maple, and elms, on both upland and bottom;
with now and then a noble pine cresting a shattered cliff.

There were fitful gleams of sunshine, during which the temperature was
as high as could be comfortably tolerated; but the northwest wind
swept sharply down through the ravines, and whenever the heavens
became overcast, jackets were at once essential.

The islands became more frequent, as we progressed. Many of them are
singularly beautiful. The swirling current gradually undermines their
bases, causing the trees to topple toward the flood, with many
graceful effects of outline, particularly when viewed above the island
head. And the colors, too, at this season, are charmingly variegated.
The sapping of a tree's foundations brings early decay; and the
maples, especially, are thus early in the season gay with the autumnal
tints of gold and wine and purple, objects of striking beauty for
miles away. Under the arches of the toppling trees, and inside the
lines of snags which mark the islet's former limits, the current goes
swishing through, white with bubbles and dancing foam. Crouching low,
to escape the twigs, one can have enchanting rides beneath these
bowers, and catch rare glimpses of the insulated flora on the
swift-passing banks. The stately spikes of the cardinal lobelia fairly
dazzle the eye with their gleaming color; and great masses of
brilliant yellow sneeze-weed and the deep purple of the iron-weed
present a symphony which would delight a disciple of Whistler. Thus
are the islands ever being destroyed and new ones formed. Those bottom
lands, over there, where great forests are rooted, will have their
turn yet, and the buffeted sand-bars of to-day given a restful chance
to become bottoms. The game of shuttlecock and battledoor has been
going on in this dark and awesome gorge since Heaven knows when. Man's
attempt to control its movements seem puny indeed.

At six o'clock that evening we had arrived at the St. Paul railway
bridge at Helena. The tender and his wife are a hospitable couple, and
we engaged quarters in their cosy home at the southern end of the
bridge. Mrs. P---- has a delightful flower-garden, which looks like an
oasis in the wilderness of sand and bog thereabout. Twenty-three years
ago, when these worthy people first took charge of the bridge, the
earth for this walled-in beauty spot was imported by rail from a more
fertile valley than the Wisconsin; and here the choicest of bulbs and
plants are grown with rare floricultural skill, and the trainmen all
along the division are resplendent in button-hole bouquets, the year
round, products of the bridge-house bower at Helena. W---- and Mrs.
P---- at once struck up an enthusiastic botanical friendship.

Bridge houses are generally most forlorn specimens of railway
architecture, and have a barricaded look, as though tramps were
altogether too frequent along the route, and occasionally made trouble
for the watchers of the ties. This one, originally forbidding enough,
has been transformed into a winsome vine-clad home, gay with ivies,
Madeira vines, and passion, moon, and trumpet flowers, covering from
view the professional dull green affected by "the company's" boss
painter. The made garden, to one side, was choking with a wealth of
bedding plants and greenhouse rarities of every hue and shape of
blossom and leaf.

A dozen feet below the railroad level, spread wide morasses and sand
patches, thick grown with swamp elms and willows. Down the track, a
half mile to the south, Helena's fifty inhabitants are grouped in a
dozen faded dwellings. Three miles westward, across the river, is the
pretty and flourishing village of Spring Green.

It is needless to say that in the isolated home of these lovers of
flowers, we had comfortable quarters. W---- said that it was very much
like putting up at Rudder Grange.




CHAPTER III.

A PANORAMIC VIEW.


The fog on the river was so thick, next morning, that objects four
rods away were not visible. To navigate among the snags and shallows
under such conditions was impossible. But W---- closely investigated
the garden while waiting for the mist to rise, and Mr. P----
entertained me with intelligent reminiscences of his long experience
here. It had been four years, he said, since he last swung the draw
for a river craft. That was a small steamboat attempting to make the
passage, on what was considered a good stage of water, from Portage to
the mouth. She spent two weeks in passing from Arena to Lone Rock, a
distance of twenty-two miles, and was finally abandoned on a sand-bank
for the season. He doubted whether he would have occasion again to
swing the great span. As for lumber rafts, but three or four small
ones had passed down this year, for the railroads were transporting
the product of the great mills on the Upper Wisconsin, about as cheap
as it could be driven down river and with far less risk of disaster.
The days of river traffic were numbered, he declared, and the little
towns that had so long been supported by the raftsmen, on their long
and weary journey from the northern pineries to the Hannibal and St.
Louis markets, were dying of starvation.

I questioned our host as to his opinion of the value of the
Fox-Wisconsin river improvement. He was cautious at first, and claimed
that the money appropriated had "done a great deal of good to the poor
people along the line." Closer inquiry developed the fact that these
poor people had been employed in building the wing dams, for which
local contracts had been let. When his opinion of the value of these
dams was sought, Mr. P---- admitted that the general opinion along the
river was, that they were "all nonsense," as he put it. Contracts had
been let to Tom, Dick, and Harry, in the river villages, who had made
a show of work, in the absence of inspectors, by sinking bundles of
twigs and covering them with sand. Stone that had been hauled to the
banks, to weight the mattresses, had remained unused for so long that
popular judgment awarded it to any man who was enterprising enough to
cart it away; thus was many a barn foundation hereabouts built out of
government material. Sand-ballasted wing-dams built one season were
washed out the next; and so government money has been recklessly
frittered away. Such sort of management is responsible for the loose
morality of the public concerning anything the general government has
in hand. A man may steal from government with impunity, who would be
socially ostracized for cheating his neighbor. There exists a popular
sentiment along this river, as upon its twin, the Fox, that government
is bound to squander about so much money every year in one way or
another, and that the denizens of these two valleys are entitled to
their share of the plunder. One honest captain on the Fox said to me,
"If it wa'n't for this here appropriation, Wisconsin wouldn't get her
proportion of the public money what each State is regularly entitled
to; so I think it's necessary to keep this here scheme a-goin', for to
get our dues; of course the thing ain't much good, so far as what is
claimed for it goes, but it keeps money movin' in these valleys and
makes times easier,--and that's what guvment's for." The honest
skipper would have been shocked, probably, if I had called him a
socialist, for a few minutes after he was declaiming right vigorously
against Herr Most and the Chicago anarchists.

It was half-past nine before the warmth of the sun's rays had
dissipated the vapor, and we ventured to set forth. It proved to be an
enchanting day in every respect.

A mile or so below the bridge we came to the charming site, on the
southern bank, at the base of a splendid limestone bluff, of the
village of Old Helena, now a nameless clump of battered dwellings.
There is a ferry here and a wooden toll-bridge in process of erection.
The naked cliff, rising sheer above the rapid current, was, early in
this century, utilized as a shot tower. There are lead mines some
fifteen miles south, that were worked nearly fifty years before
Wisconsin became even a Territory; and hither the pigs were, as late
as 1830, laboriously drawn by wagons, to be precipitated down a rude
stone shaft built against this cliff, and thus converted into shot.
Much of the lead used by the Indians and white trappers of the region
came from the Helena tower, and its product was in great demand during
the Black Hawk War in 1832. The remains of the shaft are still to be
seen, although much overgrown with vines and trees.

Old Helena, in the earlier shot-tower days, was one of the "boom"
towns of "the howling West." But the boom soon collapsed, and it was a
deserted village even at the time of the Black Hawk disturbance. After
the battle of Wisconsin Heights, opposite Prairie du Sac, the white
army, now out of supplies, retired southwest to Blue Mound, the
nearest lead diggings, for recuperation. Spending a few days there,
they marched northwest to Helena. The logs and slabs which had been
used in constructing the shanties here were converted into rafts, and
upon them the Wisconsin was crossed, the operation consuming two days.
A few miles north, Black Hawk's trail, trending westward to the Bad
Axe, was reached, and soon after that came the final struggle.

We found many groups of pines, this morning, in the amphitheater
between the bluffs, and under them the wintergreen berries in rich
profusion. Some of the little pocket farms in these depressions are
delightful bits of rugged landscape. In the fields of corn, now neatly
shocked, the golden pumpkins seemed as if in imminent danger of
rolling down hill. There are curious effects in architecture, where
the barns and other outbuildings far overtop the dwellings, and have
to be reached by flights of steps or angling paths. Yet here and there
are pleasant, gently rolling fields, nearer the bank, and smooth,
sugar-loaf mounds upon which cattle peacefully graze. The buckwheat
patches are white with blossom. Now and then can just be distinguished
the forms of men and women husking maize upon some fertile upland
bench. And so goes on the day. Now, with pretty glimpses of rural
life, often reminding one of Rhineland views, without the castles;
then, swishing off through the heart of the bottoms for miles, shut in
except from distant views of the hill-tops, and as excluded from
humanity, in these vistas of sand and morass, as though traversing a
wilderness; anon, darting past deserted rocky <DW72>s or through the
dark shadow of beetling cliffs, and the gloomy forests which crown
them.

Lone Rock ferry is nearly fourteen miles below Helena bridge. As we
came in view, the boat was landing a doctor's gig at the foot of a
bold, naked bluff, on the southern bank. The doctor and the ferryman
gave civil answers to our queries about distances, and expressed great
astonishment when answered, in turn, that we were bound for the
mouth of the river. "Mighty dull business," the doctor remarked,
"traveling in that little cockle-shell; I should think you'd feel
afraid, ma'am, on this big, lonesome river; my wife don't dare look at
a boat, and I always feel skittish coming over on the ferry." I
assured him that canoeing was far from being a dull business, and
W---- good-humoredly added that she had as yet seen nothing to be
afraid of. The doctor laughed and said something, as he clicked up his
bony nag, about "tastes differing, anyhow." And, the ferryman trudging
behind,--the smoke from his cabin chimney was rising above the
tree-tops in a neighboring ravine,--the little cortege wound its way
up the rough, angling roadway fashioned out of the face of the bluff,
and soon vanished around a corner. Lone Rock village is a mile and a
half inland to the south.

Just below, the cliff overhangs the stream, its base having been worn
into by centuries of ceaseless washing. On a narrow beach beneath, a
group of cows were chewing their cuds in an atmosphere of refreshing
coolness. From the rocky roof above them hung ferns in many
varieties,--maidenhair, the wood, the sensitive, and the bladder;
while in clefts and grottos, or amid great heaps of rock debris, hard
by, there were generous masses of king fern, lobelia cardinalis, iron
and sneeze weed, golden-rod, daisies, closed gentian, and eupatorium,
in startling contrasts of vivid color. It being high noon, we stopped
and landed at this bit of fairy land, ate our dinner, and botanized.
There was a tinge of triumphant scorn in W----'s voice, when, emerging
from a spring-head grotto, bearing in one arm a brilliant bouquet of
wild flowers and in the other a mass of fern fronds, she cried, "To
think of his calling canoeing a dull business!"

Richland City, on the northern bank, five miles down, is a hamlet of
fifteen or twenty houses, some of them quite neat in appearance.
Nestled in a grove of timber on a plain at the base of the bluffs, the
village presents a quaint old-country appearance for a long distance
up-stream. The St. Paul railway, which skirts the northern bank after
crossing the Helena bridge, sends out a spur northward from Richland
City, to Richland Center, the chief town in Richland county.

Two miles below Richland City, we landed at the foot of an imposing
bluff, which rises sharply for three hundred feet or more from the
water's edge. It is practically treeless on the river side. We
ascended it through a steep gorge washed by a spring torrent. Strewn
with bowlders and hung with bushes and an occasional thicket of elms
and oaks, the path was rough but sure. From the heights above, the
dark valley lay spread before us like a map. Ten miles away, to our
left, a splash of white in a great field of green marked the location
of Lone Rock village; five miles to the right, a spire or two rising
above the trees indicated where Muscoda lay far back from the river
reaches; while in front, two miles away, peaceful little Avoca was
sunning its gray roofs on a gently rising ground. Between these
settlements and the parallel ranges which hemmed in the panoramic
view, lay a wide expanse of willow-grown sand-fields, forested
morasses, and island meadows through which the many-channeled river
cut its devious way. In the middle foreground, far below us, some
cattle were being driven through a bushy marsh by boys and dogs. The
cows looked the size of kittens to us at our great elevation, but such
was the purity of the atmosphere that the shouts and yelps of the
drivers rose with wonderful clearness, and the rustling of the brush
was as if in an adjoining lot. The noise seemed so disproportioned to
the size of the objects occasioning it, that this acoustic effect was
at first rather startling.

The whitewashed cabin of a squatter and his few log outbuildings
occupy a little basin to one side of the bluff. His cattle were
ranging over the hillsides, attended by a colly. The family were
rather neatly dressed, but there did not appear to be over an acre of
land level enough for cultivation, and that was entirely devoted to
Indian corn. It was something of a mystery how this man could earn a
living in his cooped-up mountain home. But the honest-looking fellow
seemed quite contented, sitting in the shade of his woodpile smoking a
corncob pipe, surrounded by a half dozen children. He cheerfully
responded to my few queries, as we stopped at his well on the return
to our boat. The good wife, a buxom woman with pretty blue eyes set in
a smiling face, was peeling a pan of potatoes on the porch, near by,
while one foot rocked a rude cradle ingeniously formed out of a barrel
head and a lemon box. She seemed mightily pleased as W---- stroked the
face of the chubby infant within, and made inquiries as to the ages of
the step-laddered brood; and the father, too, fairly beamed with
satisfaction as he placed his hands on the golden curls of his two
oldest misses and proudly exhibited their little tricks of precocity.
There can be no poverty under such a roof. Millionnaires might well
envy the peaceful contentment of these hillside squatters.

Down to Muscoda we followed the rocky and wood-crowned northern bank,
along which the country highway is cut out. The swift current closely
hugs it, and there was needed but slight exertion with the paddles to
lead a sewing-machine agent, whom we found to be urging his horse into
a vain attempt to distance the canoe. As he seemed to court a race, we
had determined not to be outdone, and were not.

Orion, on the northern side, just above Muscoda, is a deserted town.
It must have been a pretentious place at one time. There are a dozen
empty business buildings, now tenanted by bats and spiders. On one
shop front, a rotting sign displays the legend, "World's Exchange;"
there is also a "Globe Hotel," and the remains of a bank or two.
Alders, lilacs, and gnarled apple-trees in many deserted clumps, tell
where the houses once were; and the presence, among these ruins, of a
family or two of squalid children only emphasizes the dreary
loneliness. Orion was once a "boom" town, they tell us,--an expressive
epitaph.

A thin, outcropping substratum of sandstone is noticeable in this
section of the river. It underlies the sandy plains which abut the
Wisconsin in the Muscoda region, and lines the bed of the stream; near
the banks, where there is but a slight depth of water, rapids are
sometimes noticeable, the rocky bottom being now and then scaled off
into a stairlike form, for the fall is here much sharper than
customary.

Because of an outlying shelf of this sandstone, bordered by rapids,
but covered with only a few inches of dead water, we had some
difficulty in landing at Muscoda beach, on the southern shore. Some
stout poling and lifting were essential before reaching land. Muscoda
was originally situated on the bank, which rises gently from the
water; but as the river trade fell off, the village drifted up nearer
the bluff, a mile south over the plain, in order to avoid the spring
floods. There is a toll-bridge here and a large brewery, with
extensive cattle-sheds strung along the shore. A few scattering houses
connect these establishments with the sleepy but neat little hamlet of
some five hundred inhabitants. After a brisk walk up town, in the
fading sunlight, which cast a dazzling glimmer on the whitened dunes
and heightened the size of the dwarfed herbage, we returned to the
canoe, and cast off to seek camping quarters for the night,
down-stream.

A mile below, on the opposite bank, a large straw-stack by the side of
a small farmhouse attracted our attention. We stopped to investigate.
There was a good growth of trees upon a gentle <DW72>, a few rods from
shore, and a beach well strewn with drift-wood. The farmer who greeted
us was pleasant-spoken, and readily gave us permission to pitch our
tent in the copse and partake freely of his straw.

Now more accustomed to the river's ways, we keenly enjoyed our supper,
seated around our little camp-fire in the early dark. We had
occasional glimpses of the lights in Muscoda, through the swaying
trees on the bottoms to the south; an owl, on a neighboring island,
incessantly barked like a terrier; the whippoorwills were sounding
their mournful notes from over the gliding river, and now and then a
hoarse grunt or querulous squeal in the wood-lot behind us gave notice
that we were quartered in a hog pasture. Soon the moon came out and
brilliantly lit the opens,--the glistening river, the stretches of
white sand, the farmer's fields,--and intensified the sepulchral
shadows of the lofty bluffs which overhang the scene.




CHAPTER IV.

FLOATING THROUGH FAIRYLAND.


Undisturbed by hogs or river tramps, we slept soundly until seven, the
following morning. There was a heavy fog again, but by the time we had
leisurely eaten our breakfast, struck camp, and had a pleasant chat
with our farmer host and his "hired man," who had come down to the
bank to make us a call, the mists had rolled away before the advances
of the sun.

At half past ten we were at Port Andrew, eight miles below camp on the
north shore. The Port, or what is left of it, lies stretched along a
narrow bench of sand, based with rock, some forty feet above the
water, with a high, naked bluff backing it to the north. There is
barely room for the buildings, on either side of its one avenue
paralleling the river; this street is the country road, which skirts
the bank, connecting the village with the sparse settlements, east
and west. In the old rafting days, the Port was a stopping-place for
the lumber pilots. There being neither rafts nor pilots, nowadays,
there is no business for the Port, except what few dollars may be
picked up from the hunters who frequent this place each fall,
searching for woodcock. But even the woodcocking industry has been
overdone here, and two sportsmen whom we met on the beach declared
that there were not enough birds remaining to pay for the trouble of
getting here. For, indeed, Port Andrew is quite off the paths of
modern civilization. There is practically no communication with the
country over the bluffs, northward; and Blue River, the nearest
railway station, to which there is a tri-weekly mail, is four miles
southward, over the bottoms, with an uncertain ferryage between. There
are less than fifty human beings in Port Andrew now, but double that
number of dogs, the latter mostly of the pointer breed, kept for the
benefit of huntsmen.

We climbed the bank and went over to the post-office and general
store. It seems to be the only business establishment left alive in
the hamlet; although there are a dozen deserted buildings which were
stores in the long ago, but are now ghostly wrecks, open to wind and
weather on every side, and, with sunken ridge-poles, waiting for the
first good wind-storm to furnish an excuse for a general collapse. A
sleepy, greasy-looking lad, whose originally white shirt-front was
sadly stained with water-melon juice, had charge of the meager
concern. He said that the farmers north of the bluffs traded in towns
more accessible than this, and that south of the stream, Blue River,
being a railroad place, was "knockin' the spots off'n the Port." Ten
years ago, he had heard his "pa" say the Port was "a likely place,"
but it "ain't much shakes now."

But there is a certain quaintness about these ruins of Port Andrew
that is quite attractive. A deep ravine, cut through the shale-rock,
comes winding down from a pass among the bluffs, severing the hamlet
in twain. Over it there is sprung a high-arched, rough stone bridge,
with crenelled walls, quite as artistic in its way as may be found in
pictures of ancient English brook-crossings. On the summit of a
rising-ground beyond, stands the solitary, whitened skeleton of a once
spacious inn, a broad double-decked veranda stretching across its
river front, and hitching-posts and drinking-trough now almost lost to
view in a jungle of docks and sand-burrs. The cracks in the rotten
veranda floors are lined with grass; the once broad highway is now
reduced to an unfrequented trail through the yielding sand, which is
elsewhere hid under a flowery mantle made up of delicate, fringed
blossoms of pinkish purple, called by the natives "Pike's weed," and
the rich yellow and pale gold of the familiar "butter and eggs." The
peculiar effect of color, outline, and perspective, that hazy August
day, was indeed charming. But we were called from our rapt
contemplation of the picture, by the assemblage around us of half the
population of Port Andrew, led by the young postmaster and accompanied
by a drove of playful hounds. The impression had somehow got abroad
that we had come to prospect for an iron mine, in the bed of the old
ravine, and there was a general desire to see how the thing was done.
The popular disappointment was evidently great, when we descended from
our perch on the old bridge wall, and returned to the little vessel on
the beach, which had meanwhile been closely overhauled by a knot of
inquisitive urchins. A part of the crowd followed us down, plying
innocent questions by the score, while on the summit of the bank above
stood a watchful group of women and girls, some in huge sun-bonnets,
others with aprons thrown over their heads. There was a general
waving of hats and aprons from the shore, as we shot off into the
current again, and our "Good-by!" was answered by a cheery chorus. It
is evident that Port Andrew does not have many exciting episodes in
her aimless, far-away life.

Flocks of crows were seen to-day, winging their funereal flight from
shore to shore, and uttering dismal croaks. The islands presented a
more luxurious flora than we had yet seen; the marsh grass upon them
was rank and tall, the overhanging trees sumptuously vine-clad, the
autumn tints deeper and richer than before, the banks glowing with
cardinal and yellow and purple; while on the sandy shores we saw
loosestrife, white asters, the sensitive plant, golden-rod, and
button-bush. Blue herons drifted through the air on their wide-spread
wings, heads curved back upon their shoulders, and legs hanging
straight down, to settle at last upon barren sand-spits, and stand in
silent contemplation of some pool of dead water where perhaps a stray
fish might reward their watchfulness. Solitary kingfishers kept their
vigils on the numerous snags. Now and then a turtle shuffled from his
perch and went tumbling with a loud splash into his favorite
watering-place.

Although yet too early for Indian summer, the day became, by noon,
very like those which are the delight of a protracted northwestern
autumn. A golden haze threw a mystic veil over the landscape; distant
shore lines were obliterated, sand and sky and water at times merged
in an indistinct blur, and distances were deceptive. Now and then the
vistas of white sand-fields would apparently stretch on to infinity.
Again, the river would seem wholly girt with cliffs and we in the
bottom of a huge mountain basin, from which egress was impossible; or
the stream would for a time appear a boundless lake. The islands ahead
were as if floating in space, and there were weird reflections of
far-away objects in the waters near us. While these singular effects
lasted we trimmed our bark to the swift-gliding current, and floated
along through fairy-land, unwilling to break the charm by disturbing
the mirrored surface of the flood.

Soon after the dinner hour we came in sight of the Boscobel
toll-bridge,--an ugly, clumsy structure, housed-in like a tunnel, and
as dark as a pocket. I was never quite able to understand why some
bridge-makers should cover their structures in this fashion, and
others, in the same locality, leave them open to wind and weather. So
far as my unexpert observation goes, covered bridges are no more
durable than the open, and they are certainly less cheerful and
comely. A chill always comes over me as I enter one of these damp and
gloomy hollow-ways; and the thought of how well adapted they are to
the purposes of the thug or the footpad is not a particularly pleasant
one for the lonely traveler by night. A dead little river hamlet, now
in abject ruins,--Manhattan by name,--occupies the rugged bank at the
north end of the long bridge; while southward, Boscobel is out of
sight, a mile and a half inland, across the bottoms. The bluff
overtopping Manhattan is a quarry of excellent hard sandstone, and a
half dozen men were dressing blocks for shipment, on the rocky shore
above us. They and their families constitute Manhattan.

Eight miles down river, also on the north bank, is Boydtown. There are
two houses there, in a sandy glen at the base of a group of heavily
wooded foot-hills. At one of the dwellings--a neat, slate-
cottage--we found a cheery, black-eyed woman sitting on the porch with
a brood of five happy children playing about her. As she hurried away
to get the butter and milk which we had asked for, she apologized for
being seen to enjoy this unwonted leisure, apparently not desirous
that we should suppose her to be any other than the hard-working
little body which her hands and driving manner proclaimed her to be.
When she returned with our supplies she said that they had "got
through thrashin'," the day before, and she was enjoying the luxury of
a rest preparatory to an accumulated churning. I looked incredulously
at the sandy waste in which this little home was planted, and the good
woman explained that their farm lay farther back, on fair soil,
although the present dry season had not been the best for crops.

Her brown-faced boy of ten and two little girls of about eight--the
laughing faces and crow-black curls of the latter hid under immense
flapping sun-bonnets--accompanied us to the bayou by which we had
approached Boydtown. They had a gay, unrestrained manner that was
quite captivating, and we were glad to have them row alongside of us
for a way down-stream in the unwieldy family punt, the lad handling
the crude oars and the girls huddled together on the stern seat,
covered by their great sun-bonnet flaps, as with a cape. They were
"goin' grapein'," they said; and at an island where the vines hung
dark with purple clusters, they piped "Good-by, you uns!" in tittering
unison.

By this time, the weather had changed. The haze had lifted. The sky
had quickly become overcast with leaden rainclouds, and an occasional
big drop gave warning of an approaching storm. A few miles below
Boydtown, we stopped to replenish our canteen at the St. Paul
railway's fine iron bridge, the last crossing on that line between
Milwaukee and Prairie du Chien. On the southern end of the bridge is
Woodman; on the northern bank, the tender's house. As we were in the
northern channel, it was impracticable to reach the village, separated
from us by wide islands and long stretches of swamp and forest, except
by walking the bridge and the mile or two of trestle-work approaches
to the south. As for the bridge-house, there chanced to be no spare
quarters for us there. So we voted to trust to fortune and push on,
although the tender's wife, a pleasant, English-faced woman, with
black, sparkling eyes and a hospitable smile, was much exercised in
spirit, and thought we were running some hazard of a wetting.

The skies lightened for a time, and then there came rolling up from
over the range to the southwest great jagged rifts of black clouds,
ugly "thunder heads," which seemed to presage a deluge. Below them,
veiling the tallest peaks, tossed and sped the light-footed couriers
of the wind, and we saw the dark-green bosom of the upper forests
heave with the emotions of the air, while the rushing stream below
flowed on unruffled. The river is here united in one broad channel. At
the first evidence of a blow, we hurried across to the windward bank.
We were landing at the swampy, timber-strewn base of a precipitous
cliff as the wind passed over the valley, and had just completed our
preparations for shelter when the rain began to come in blinding
sheets.

The possibility of having to spend the night under the sepulchral
arches of this forested morass was not pleasant to contemplate. The
storm abated, however, within half an hour, and we were then able to
distinguish a large white house apparently set back in an open field a
half mile or more from the opposite shore.

Re-embarking, we headed that way, and found a wood-fringed stream
several rods wide, pouring a vigorous flood into the Wisconsin, from
the north. Our map showed it to be the Kickapoo, an old-time logging
river, and the house must be an outlying member of the small railroad
village of Wauzeka. A consultation was held on board, at the mouth of
the Kickapoo. On the Wisconsin not a house was to be seen, as far as
the eye could reach, and wide stretches of swamp and wooded bog
appeared to line both its banks. The prospect of paddling up the mad
little Kickapoo for a mile to Wauzeka was dispiriting, but we decided
to do it; for night was coming on, our tent, even could we find a good
camping ground in this marshy wilderness, was disposed to be leaky,
and a steady drizzle continued to sound a muffled tattoo on our rubber
coats. A voluble fisherman, caught out in the rain like ourselves,
came swinging into the tributary, with his cranky punt, just as we
were setting our paddles for a vigorous pull up-stream. We had his
company, side by side, till we reached the St. Paul railway trestle,
and beached at the foot of a deserted stave mill, in whose innermost
recesses we deposited our traps. Guided by the village shoemaker's
boy, who had been playing by the river side, we started up the track
to find the hotel, nearly a half mile away.

It is a quiet, comfortable, old-fashioned little inn, this hostelry at
Wauzeka. The landlord greeted his storm-bound guests with polite
urbanity, and with none of that inquisitiveness so common in rural
hosts. At supper, we met the village philosopher, a quaint, lone old
man who has an opinion of his own upon most human subjects, and more
than dares to voice it,--insists, in fact, on having it known of all
men. A young commercial traveler, the only other patron of the
establishment, sadly guyed our philosophical messmate by securing his
verdict on a wide range of topics, from the latest league game to
abstruse questions of theology. The philosopher bit, and the drummer
was in high feather as he crinkled the corners of his mouth behind his
huge moustache, and looked slyly around for encouragement that was not
offered.

Wauzeka is, in one respect, like too many other country villages.
Three saloons disfigure the main street, and in front of them are
little knots of noisy loafers, in the evening, filling up the rickety,
variously graded sidewalk to the gutter, and necessitating the running
of a loathsome gauntlet to those who may wish to pass that way. The
boy who can grow up in such an atmosphere, unpolluted, must be of rare
material, or his parents exceptionally judicious. There are few large
cities where one can see the liquor traffic carried on with such
disgusting boldness as in hamlets like this, where screenless,
open-doored saloons of a vile character jostle trading shops and
dwellings, and monopolize the footway, making of the business street a
place which women may abhor at any hour, and must necessarily avoid
after sunset. With a local-option law, that but awaits a majority vote
to be operative in such communities, it is a strange commentary on the
quality of our nineteenth-century civilization that the dissolute few
should still, as of old, be able to persistently hold the whip-hand
over the virtuous but timid many.

Elsewhere in Wauzeka, there are many pretty grass-grown lanes; some
substantial cottages; a prosperous creamery, employing the service of
the especial pride of the village, a six-inch spouting well, driven
for three hundred feet to the underlying stratum of lime-rock; a
saw-mill or two, which are worked spasmodically, according to the
log-driving stage in the Kickapoo, and some pleasant, accommodating
people, who appear to be quite contented with their lot in life.




CHAPTER V.

THE DISCOVERY OF THE MISSISSIPPI.


There was fog on the river in the morning. Across the broad expanse of
field and ledge which separates Wauzeka from the Wisconsin, we could
see the great white mass of vapor, fifty feet thick, resting on the
broad channel like a dense coverlid of down. Soon after seven o'clock,
the cloud lifted by degrees, and then broke into ragged segments,
which settled sluggishly for a while on the tops of the southern line
of bluffs and screened their dark amphitheaters from view, till at
last dissipated into thin air.

We were off at eight o'clock, fifteen or twenty men coming down to the
railway-bridge to watch the operation. One of them helped us
materially with our bundles, while the rest sat in a row along the
trestle, dangling their feet through the spaces between the stringers,
and gazing at us as though we were a circus company on the move. A
drizzle set in, just as we pushed from the bank, and we descended the
Kickapoo under much the same conditions of atmosphere as those we had
experienced in pulling against its swirling tide the evening before.

But by nine o'clock the storm was over, and we had, for a time, a
calm, quiet journey, a gray light which harmonized well with the
wildly picturesque scenery, and a fresh west breeze which helped us on
our way. We were now but twenty miles from the mouth. The parallel
ranges of bluff come nearer together, until they are not much over a
mile apart, and the stream, now broader, swifter, and deeper, is less
encumbered with islands. Upon the peaty banks are the tall white
spikes of the curious turtlehead, occasional masses of balsam-apple
vines, the gleaming lobelia cardinalis, yellow honeysuckles just going
out of blossom, and acres of the golden sneeze-weed, which deserves a
better name.

At Wright's Ferry, ten miles below, there are domiciled two German
families, and on the shore is a saw-mill which is operated in the
spring, to work up the logs which farmers bring down from the gloomy
mountains which back the scene.

Bridgeport, four miles farther,--still on the northern side,--is
chiefly a clump of little red railway buildings set up on a high bench
carved from the face of the bluff, their fronts resting on the
road-bed and their rears on high scaffolding. A few big bowlders
rolling down from the cliffs would topple Bridgeport over into the
river. There is a covered country toll-bridge here, and the industrial
interest of the Liliputian community is quarrying. It is the last
hamlet on the river.

A mist again formed, casting a blue tinge over the peaks and giving
them a far distant aspect; dark clouds now and then lowered and rolled
through the upper ravines, reflecting their inky hue upon the surface
of the deep, gliding river. The bluffs, which had for many miles
closely abutted the stream, at last gradually swept away to the north
and south, to become part of the great wall which forms the eastern
bulwark of the Upper Mississippi. At their base spreads a broad, flat
plain, fringed with boggy woods and sandy meadows, the delta of the
Wisconsin, which, below the Lowertown bridge of the Burlington and
Northern railway, is cut up into flood-washed willow islands, flanked
by a wide stretch of shifting sand-bars black with tangled roots and
stranded logs, the debris of many a spring-time freshet.

It was about half-past twelve o'clock when we came to the junction of
the Wisconsin and the Mississippi. Upon a willow-grown sand-reef
edging the swamp, which extends northward for five miles to the
quaint, ancient little city of Prairie du Chien, a large barge lies
stranded. A lone fisherman sat upon its bulwark rail, which overhangs
the rushing waters as they here commingle. We landed with something
akin to reverence, for this must have been about the place where
Joliet and Marquette, two hundred and fourteen years ago, gazed with
rapture upon the mighty Mississippi, which they had at last
discovered, after so many thousands of miles of arduous journeying
through a savage-haunted wilderness. And indeed it is an imposing
sight. To the west, two miles away, rise the wooded peaks on the Iowa
side of the great river. Northward there are pretty glimpses of cliffs
and rocky beaches through openings in the heavy growth which covers
the islands of the upper stream. Southward is a long vista of curving
hills and glinting water shut in by the converging ranges. Eastward
stretches the green delta of the Wisconsin, flanked by those imposing
bluffs, between whose bases for two centuries has flowed a curious
throng of humanity, savage and civilized, on errands sacred and
profane, representing many clashing nationalities.

The rain descended in a gentle shower as I was lighting a fire on
which to cook our last canoeing meal of the season; and W---- held an
umbrella over the already damp kindling in order to give it a chance.
We no doubt made a comical picture as we crouched together beneath
this shelter, jointly trying to fan the sparks into a flame, for the
fisherman, who had been heretofore speechless, and apparently rapt in
his occupation, burst out into a hearty laugh. When we turned to look
at him he hid his face under his upturned coat-collar, and giggled to
himself like a schoolgirl. He was a jolly dog, this fisherman, and
after we had presented him with a cup of coffee and what solids we
could spare from our now meager store, he warmed into a very
communicative mood, and gave us much detailed, though rather highly
, information about the locality, especially as to its natural
features.

The rain had ceased by the time dinner was over; so we bade farewell
to the happy fisherman and the presiding deities of the Wisconsin, and
pulled up the giant Mississippi to Prairie du Chien, stopping on our
way to visit an out-of-the-way bayou, botanically famous, where
flourishes the rare nelumbium luteum--America's nearest approach to
the lotus of the Nile.

And thus was accomplished the season's stint of six hundred miles of
canoeing upon the Historic Waterways of Illinois and Wisconsin.




INDEX.


     Algoma, 182, 186.

     Allouez, Father Claude, 176, 228, 229.

     American Fur Co., 145.

     Anderson, Maj. Robert, U.S.A., 19.

     Antoinette, Marie, Queen of France, 224.

     Appleton, Wis., 23, 27, 185, 202-207, 209.

     Arena Ferry, Wis., 27, 257, 262.

     Arndt, Judge John P., 158.

     Astor, John Jacob, 145, 232.

     Atkinson, Gen. Henry, U. S. A., 19, 255.

     Avoca, Wis., 270.


     Bad Axe, battle of, 255, 266.

     Baraboo River, 241.

     Barth, Laurent, 143.

     Beloit, Wis., 20, 26, 65.

     Berlin, Wis., 21, 22, 27, 164, 173-175, 177, 240.

     Black Hawk War, 18, 19, 87, 119, 250, 253-255, 266.

     Black Hawk Mountain, 256.

     Black River Falls, Wis., 200.

     Black Wolf Point, Lake Winnebago, 191.

     Blue Mound, Wis., 266.

     Blue River Village, Wis., 276.

     Boscobel, Wis., 27, 280, 281.

     "Bourbon, The American." _See_ Williams, Eleazar.

     Boydtown, Wis., 27, 281, 282.

     Bridgeport, Wis., 27, 289, 290.

     Buffalo Lake, 22, 160-162, 168, 173.

     Butte des Morts, Lake Grand, 161, 181-183, 199.

     Butte des Morts, Lake Petit, 199, 201, 202.

     Butte des Morts Village, 183-185, 188.

     Butterfield, Consul W., _cited_, 176.

     Byron, Ill., 19, 26, 82-85.


     Canoeing, pleasures of, 15, 16.

     Canoeists, suggestions to, 23-26.

     Canoes, styles of, 15, 16.

     Carbon Cliff, Ill., 138, 139.

     Catfish River, Wis., 18, 31-59.

     Champche Keriwinke, Winnebago princess, 200, 201.

     Champlain, Governor of Quebec, 175, 230.

     Cherry River, 80.

     Chicago, Burlington, and Northern Ry., 290.

     Chicago, Burlington, and Quincy Ry., 137-139.

     Chicago, Milwaukee, and St. Paul Ry., 76, 82, 178, 186, 256,
       259-265, 269, 283, 285.

     Chicago and Northwestern Ry., 65, 248-250.

     Cleveland, Ill., 137.

     Coloma, Ill., 26, 138-140.

     Como, Ill. 26, 109-111.

     Crooks, Ramsay, 232.


     Dablon, Father Claude, 229.

     Dakotah Indians. _See_ Sioux and Winnebagoes.

     Davis, Jefferson, 19, 145, 146.

     Dekorra, Wis., 242-245.

     De Korra, early fur trader, 199, 200.

     Depere, Wis., 206, 225, 228, 229.

     Dixon, Ill., 18, 20, 26, 87, 93, 94, 97-101, 106-108.

     Dodge, Maj. Henry, 253, 255.

     Doty's Island, Wis., 195-201.

     Dunkirk, Wis., 52, 53.


     Erie, Ill., 26, 124-136.

     Eureka, Wis., 178.


     First Lake, 40, 43-45.

     Fond du Lac, Wis., 191.

     Fort Crawford (Prairie du Chien, Wis.), 145.

     Fort Howard, Wis., 145, 228-234.

     Fort Winnebago (Portage, Wis.), 144-146.

     Four Lake country, Wis., 18, 33, 254.

     Four Legs, Winnebago chief, 200, 201.

     Fox Indians (_see_, also, Sacs), 176, 196-199.

     Fox River, Wis., 17, 21-23, 26, 141-234, 239, 240, 255.

     Fulton, Wis., 56-58.

     Fur trade in Wisconsin, 189, 196-200, 207, 208, 231, 234.


     Ganymede Springs, Ill., 89, 90.

     Garlic Island, Lake Winnebago, 189-191.

     Garritty, Mary, 226-228.

     Grand Detour, Ill., 92-106.

     Great Bend of Rock River, 105-106.

     Green Bay, Wis., 23, 27, 180, 181, 185, 198, 207, 229-234, 238.

     Grignon, Augustin, 184, 185, 188, 232.


     Hanson, John H., _cited_, 224, 225.

     Harney, Gen. William S., U. S. A., 145.

     Helena Village, Wis., 27, 259-265.

     Helena, Wis., Old, 265, 266.

     Henry, Maj. James D., 253, 255.

     Hoo-Tschope. _See_ Four Legs.


     Illinois Indians, 21, 176.

     Iowatuk, Winnebago princess, 189, 191.


     Janesville, Wis., 20, 26, 60-65.

     Jesuit missionaries, 21, 24, 176, 177, 180, 181, 228, 229, 231.

     Joliet, Sieur de, 21, 176, 229, 239.


     Kackalin, Grand. _See_ Kaukauna.

     Kaukauna, Wis., 27, 185, 206-213.

     Kellogg's trail, 106, 107.

     Keokuk, Fox chief, 255.

     Kickapoo Indians, 175.

     Kickapoo River, Wis., 27, 284, 285, 287, 288.

     Kinzie, Mrs. John H., _cited_, 146, 200.

     Koshkonong, Lake, 18, 19, 59, 254.


     Lakeside, Third Lake, 32.

     Langlade, Charles de, 198, 232.

     Latham Station, Ill., 76, 77.

     Lawrence University, 205, 206.

     Lead mines at Galena, 18.

     Lecuyer, Jean B., 143, 144.

     Lignery, Sieur Marchand de, 198.

     Lincoln, Abraham, 19.

     Little Kaukauna, Wis., 206, 216-219, 221, 225.

     Lone Rock, Wis., 27, 262, 267-270.

     Louis XVI., King of France, 223-225.

     Louis XVII., Dauphin of France, 223-225.

     Louvigny, Sieur de, 198.

     Lyndon, Ill., 26, 118.


     Madison, Wis., 18, 26.

     Manhattan, Wis., 281.

     Marin, Sieur de, 197, 198.

     Marquette, Father James, 21, 157, 176, 229, 239.

     Marquette Village, Wis., 26, 161, 166-170.

     Mascoutin Indians, 175-178.

     Mazomanie, Wis., 256.

     Menasha, Wis., 23, 183, 185, 195, 196, 207.

     Menomonee Indians, 187, 188, 196, 197, 223.

     Merrimac, Wis., 27, 248-250.

     Miami Indians, 175.

     Milan, Ill., 139.

     Milwaukee and Northern Ry., 203, 204.

     Mississippi River, 21, 26, 27, 136, 138, 180, 229-231, 239,
       253-255, 290-293.

     Mohawk Indians, 222.

     Montello, Wis., 22, 26, 160, 162-164, 168.

     Muscoda, Wis., 23, 27, 270, 272-274.


     Neenah, Wis., 22, 27, 183, 185, 191, 195-201, 206.

     New York Indians. _See_ Oneidas.

     Nicolet, Jean, 21, 175, 176, 230, 231.

     Northern Insane Hospital, Wis., 189-191.


     Omro, Wis., 22, 27, 175, 178, 179.

     Oneida Indians, 222-228.

     Oregon, Ill., 20, 26, 88-90.

     Orion, Wis., 272.

     Oshkosh, Menomonee chief, 187, 188.

     Oshkosh, Wis., 27, 161, 182, 183, 185-188, 190, 207.

     Ott's Farm, Madison, Wis., 33.

     Owen, Ill. _See_ Latham Station.


     Packwaukee, Wis., 26, 150, 159-161, 163.

     Paine Bros., 186.

     Paquette, Pierre, 144.

     Penney, Josephine, 226-228.

     Philippe, Louis, King of France, 225.

     Pope's Springs, Wis., 60.

     Porlier, James, 184, 185.

     Porlier, Louis B., 184, 185.

     Portage, Wis., 21, 23, 26, 27, 143-146, 160, 161, 185, 198, 206,
       237-242.

     Port Andrew, Wis., 27, 275-279.

     Pottawattomie Indians, 18, 19, 87.

     Poygan Lake, 22, 180, 181.

     Prairie du Chien, Wis., 21, 27, 145, 238, 240, 255, 291-293.

     Prairie du Sac, Wis., 23, 27, 252-256, 266.

     Princeton, Wis., 22, 27, 168-172, 210.

     Prophetstown, Ill., 18, 26, 118-120.

     Puckawa Lake, 22, 161, 163-169.


     Red Bird, Winnebago chief, 145.

     Richland Center, Wis., 269.

     Richland City, Wis., 269.

     Rockford, Ill., 20, 26, 79.

     Rock Island, Ill., 18, 26, 139, 140, 253.

     Rock River, 17-21, 29-140, 213, 253.

     Rockton, Ill., 20.

     Roscoe, Ill., 74, 76.


     Sac Indians, 18, 19, 119, 198, 253-256.

     Sacramento, Wis., 177, 178.

     Sauk City, Wis., 23, 256, 257.

     Sawyer, Philetus, 186.

     Second Lake, 33, 36-39, 43.

     Shaubena, Pottawattomie chief, 18.

     Sioux Indians, 230, 231, 255.

     Smith's Island, Wis., 149-156.

     Spring Green, Wis., 261.

     Stebbinsville, Wis., 53, 54.

     Sterling, Ill., 20, 26, 108, 109.

     Stillman's Creek, 19, 83, 86, 87.

     Stillman's defeat, 19, 87.

     Stoughton, Wis., 20, 26, 42, 44, 46-50, 52.

     Stuart, Robert, 232.


     Taylor, Zachary, 19.

     Third Lake, 31, 33.

     Turvill's Bay, Third Lake, 32, 33.

     Twiggs, Maj. David, 232.


     Walking Cloud, a Winnebago, 200.

     Wauzeka, Wis., 27, 285-288.

     White Cloud, Indian prophet, 18, 119.

     White River lock, 172, 173.

     Williams, Eleazar, 222-228.

     Williams, Mrs. Eleazar, 225, 226.

     Winnebago Indians, 19, 119, 145, 166, 189, 196, 197, 199-201,
       223, 230, 231, 238, 254, 255.

     Winnebago Lake, 22, 180, 183, 189-196, 206.

     Winnebago prophet. _See_ White Cloud.

     Winnebago Rapids, 196-201.

     Winneconne, 22, 164, 179-182.

     Wisconsin Central Ry., 144, 160.

     Wisconsin Heights, battle of, 254, 266.

     Wisconsin River, 17, 21-23, 27, 143-146, 230, 231, 237-293.

     Wisconsin River Dells, 23.

     Wolf River, 179-183, 185.

     Woodman, Wis., 283.

     Wright's Ferry, Wis., 27, 289.

     Wrightstown, Wis., 213, 214, 220.


     Yahara River. _See_ Catfish.






End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Historic Waterways--Six Hundred Miles
of Canoeing Down the Rock, Fox, and Wisconsin Rivers, by Reuben Gold Thwaites

*** 