Huldowget. A Story of the North Pacific Coast. - Bruce Alistair McKelvie - E-Book

Huldowget. A Story of the North Pacific Coast. E-Book

Bruce Alistair McKelvie

0,0
1,49 €

oder
-100%
Sammeln Sie Punkte in unserem Gutscheinprogramm und kaufen Sie E-Books und Hörbücher mit bis zu 100% Rabatt.
Mehr erfahren.
Beschreibung

Prior to the discovery of gold in British Columbia, in 1858, the country was controlled entirely by the Hudson's Bay Company. The servants of the company were the only white men in the great territory west of the Rocky Mountains and north of Old Oregon.
The native population at that time was estimated to be from 100,000 to 150,000, but to-day, after less than threescore years and ten of the white man's occupation and civilisation, there are but 25,000 on Government reservations. The white man's diseases and his fire-water have wiped whole tribes out of existence.

Das E-Book können Sie in Legimi-Apps oder einer beliebigen App lesen, die das folgende Format unterstützen:

EPUB

Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2021

Bewertungen
0,0
0
0
0
0
0
Mehr Informationen
Mehr Informationen
Legimi prüft nicht, ob Rezensionen von Nutzern stammen, die den betreffenden Titel tatsächlich gekauft oder gelesen/gehört haben. Wir entfernen aber gefälschte Rezensionen.


Ähnliche


HULDOWGET

A STORY OF THE NORTH PACIFIC COAST

BY

B. A. McKELVIE

First Editions,1926 © 2021 Librorium Editions

FOREWORD

Prior to the discovery of gold in British Columbia, in 1858, the country was controlled entirely by the Hudson's Bay Company. The servants of the company were the only white men in the great territory west of the Rocky Mountains and north of Old Oregon.

The native population at that time was estimated to be from 100,000 to 150,000, but to-day, after less than threescore years and ten of the white man's occupation and civilisation, there are but 25,000 on Government reservations. The white man's diseases and his fire-water have wiped whole tribes out of existence.

Scattered along the seven thousand miles of tidal waters of Canada's Pacific province are numerous reserves where remnants of once powerful nations have been gathered. Here the Federal Government agents seek to combat the causes which have decimated the aborigines.

In its wisdom the Government has endeavoured to replace ancient customs and tribal rites with the civilisation of the white man. The potlatch—a peculiar banking system—has been banned, and the bartering of coppers has been declared illegal. No longer are the winter ceremonials, with their weird and fantastic dances, held, and no trials of endurance mark the initiation of young braves into the secret organisations of the Coast. The Government frowns on such things.

The authorities may prohibit, but they cannot eliminate from the minds of those who listen in the lodges to the tales of the old men the desire for a return to the exciting times that are no more, when the customs of centuries held sway. Nor can the instruction of teacher and missionary altogether banish the fear that arises at the mention of evil spirits.

"I have seen," says a friend, "young men who had been educated in the schools turn pale and tremble when it was rumoured in the village that some man or woman was invoking the aid of evil spirits. I have known men to die—gradually fade away—when they believed a spell had been cast upon them. It is hard indeed to remove in a few years the superstitions of countless centuries."

The hunting of the huldowget and the trial by the mouse are barbaric customs which a few years ago were common, and which to-day are followed when opportunity offers to do so beyond the scrutiny of the law.

It is only a few months ago that Mounted Police penetrated the trackless Northland to bring to trial those charged with the murder of a boy suspected of exercising an evil influence over others.

Records of different Government agencies reveal dozens of instances of the fight which the authorities and missioners are waging against the return of the shaman, or medicine man.

The story of self-sacrifice and devotion of the missionaries of the Coast is one of great inspiration. In the earlier days of Christianity among the natives of British Columbia and Alaska the lives of these devoted men were in constant danger, but they faced their trials and difficulties without complaint, toiling ceaselessly to help the Indians. Praise is especially due to those splendid women, the wives of the Protestant missionaries, who assisted them in their work.

In the story of Huldowget an effort has been made to picture some of the trials and tribulations, the dangers and disappointments of a missioner and his wife, but no pen can do full justice to the men and women of whom Father David and Mother are types.

An endeavour has also been made to portray in a slight measure the confusion that often arises in the mind of the native when asked to accept new doctrines in place of those held by his forefathers. Not long ago an Indian woman asked me to explain why the stories she told were bad and those the missioner related were good. Her spiritual adviser had told her to discard her practice of story-telling. "He said," she explained, "it was bad for me to tell how the eagle talked. Then he tells me about Balaam's ass. Why, if my story is bad, is his story good?" I could not answer.

B.A.M.

CONTENTS

CHAP.        Foreword I.    An Evil Omen II.    An Unexpected Passenger III.    Old Superstitions IV.    The Face at the Fort V.    The Medicine Maker VI.    The Evil Spirit VII.    Uncanny Happenings VIII.    The Canoe-Maker's Trail IX.    The Mesahchie Box X.    Disturbing Doctrines XI.    A Night of Horrors XII.    Voices at Dawn XIII.    Hunting the Huldowget XIV.    The Fight XV.    Trial by the Mouse XVI.    The Creeping Shadow XVII.    The Fire Needles XVI.    The Greater Service

HULDOWGET

CHAPTER I

AN EVIL OMEN

"I wonder, David, if the Mission Board will send the nurse. It seems too bad to have to ask for help, but I really cannot go on much longer unaided—and it is not for myself I ask for assistance, but for the sake of the work."

"I know, my dear," affectionately answered the big, grey-bearded medical missionary. "It has been a long, trying service—forty years in this place. But," he continued more cheerfully, "I am sure that the answer to our letter will come——"

"What is that? Listen!" interrupted his wife.

From the village came the sounds of song, the plaintive wailing of Indians chanting; now slow and mournful, now quickening in crescendo to an abrupt termination, only to be repeated again and again.

The old couple sat looking at each other without speaking, the face of each expressing a dread that neither would voice, for it had been many years since they had heard a similar air in the village that clustered about the ruins of the abandoned trading-post of Fort Oliver, and neither wished to recall to the other the memory of those early days.

At last the missioner broke silence. "It must be those Alaskan Indians," he said. "They came to-day for the oolichan fishing. They have no right here."

Further comment was cut short by a rapping at the door of the Mission House. Dr. Mainwaring responded to admit to the hallway a crippled native, whose agitation suggested that he was the bearer of news of some importance.

"Come in, Paul," invited the priest. "What is it?"

The young man remained standing in the hallway. "No, Father David," he answered, in fairly good English, "I just come to tell you something."

"What?"

"The people make prayer to Nexnox to send plenty oolichans."

"Who?"

"The Alaska people."

"And our people, what are they doing?"

"They watch. I come to tell you. I must go"; and the Indian opened the door and disappeared into the failing light of the early spring afternoon.

"Who was it? What is the matter, David?"

"It was Paul," answered the doctor, re-entering the room. "He says those Alaskans are making mischief. They are praying to their heathen god, Nexnox, and are making the oolichan fishing sacrifices. I must go at once. Where are my boots?"

Father David was soon striding towards one of the larger houses set aside for the use of the strangers on their arrival that morning from the North. As he neared the place the chanting ceased and gave way to the united supplication of many voices, punctuated by the blowing of spirit whistles.

The missionary recognised the prayer. It was an appeal to the supernatural helper of the Being in the sky to favour them in their fishing.

On entering the narrow doorway, he stood for a moment surveying the scene, unobserved by the actors in the strange rite or by those of his own flock who viewed the ceremony with fascination.

On the earthen floor a great fire was blazing, the flames leaping up until they almost licked the cedar-log rafters and scorched the hideous carved face of Nexnox, suspended below the smoke-hole in the roof. The lurid, dancing light cast grotesque shadows through the weaving smoke on the circle of faces about the blaze. Men and women passed slowly around the fire, shouting in the guttural language of their race:

"Nexnox, Nexnox, be good to us. Give us lots of oolichans or we will die. See, Great Chief, we give you something. It is all we have."

At each repetition of the prayer the Indians threw upon the burning pile wooden dishes containing food, cedar baskets, articles of clothing and fragments of a fine canoe that had been splintered for the purpose. At the first sign of the flames dying down beneath the weight of slow combustibles, a big, broad-shouldered man, naked to the waist, ladled fish grease from a large box on the fire and again it flamed brightly.

When his eyes had become accustomed to the sting of the smoke, Father David advanced to the outer fringe of spectators and, in a powerful voice that rang out above the shouting of the worshippers, thundered:

"Stop this idolatry! What means all this?"

The circling chain of men and women halted and broke. Had the wooden mask given answer to his petitioners, greater consternation could not have resulted, and indeed several, worked to a state of religious frenzy, collapsed to the floor, calling, as they grovelled in the dirt, "Nexnox has spoken!"

"Away with you, worshippers of Baal!" exclaimed the missioner, pushing his way towards the fire. The crowd melted before him. Members of the Fort Oliver band slipped out of the building and disappeared, while the strangers ran from him, gathering on the farther side of the burning pile for mutual protection. As he moved towards them, berating them in their own tongue, they edged away, keeping the flames between them and this scolding giant in black.

"When the sun comes, you go," he ordered, when he ended his tirade.

Murmurs, and then shouts of defiance, answered him.

Lifting his voice, he thundered: "When the sun comes, you go."

He turned and started for the door. Hardly had he taken half a dozen steps when a savage sprang after him, and a knife-blade flashed in the light of the fire. Quick as was the native, the priest was quicker; he stepped aside, half-turned and caught the descending arm in a powerful grasp. He gave a quick twist: there was a sickening sound of splintering bone and a cry of pain broke from the Indian.

Father David did not release his hold, but, turning to the natives, who were too astonished to move, he said, "I will fix this man's arm," and he left the building, dragging his assailant after him.

In the dispensary of his little hospital the doctor set the fractured bone. Then, having followed the age-old custom of making a present of goodwill, he permitted the man to go to his friends.

"You had someone in the dispensary; I did not want to bother you," observed his wife when, a few moments later, Father David sat down to his evening meal. "Who was it?"

"Oh, one of the strangers had a broken arm, that was all."

"And the trouble in the village, dear?" she ventured.

"They were praying to Nexnox, but they stopped when I appeared. They are going away in the morning, so there is nothing for you to worry about," he assured her.

Mother did not question him further, although she knew that he had found cause for anxiety. She was not surprised, therefore, when he announced, a little later, that he was going out.

He had not gone far before he became aware that something was causing a stir in the village. No men were in sight about the Indian shacks and the squaws he encountered hurried by without speaking.

"What is it, Martha?" he asked one woman. "What is the matter? Come, tell me," he pressed, as she hesitated to answer.

"The men are meeting," was the reply.

"About what?"

"About you sending the people from the North away."

"Well, well, I must see about it. Where are they?"

"In Chief John Peter's house. Don't say I told you."

"No, Martha, I won't. Good night!"

Surprise showed on every face when Father David entered the house where the council was being held. The chief was speaking, but he stopped and looked at the intruder in blank amazement.

"Go on, chief," urged the missionary. "You were talking about me?"

There was a sullen whispering, and then a voice: "Yes, go on, chief. Tell him what we think."

"The people say——" and he stopped.

"Yes?" encouraged the priest.

"They say," went on the chief, "you did bad. You make us 'shamed——"

Exclamations of assent encouraged him, and John Peter went on more boldly: "You do bad to send our friends away. They go now. No stop for sun. You do bad for us. The people say you must send for our friends and tell them to come back. That is what the people say; that is what I say. I have spoken."

All eyes turned to the missionary. He looked down upon them from his superior height and noted the angry expression on every countenance.

"Children, children!" he exclaimed tenderly. "I will make answer to your chief, but first let us sing"; and he broke into one of the favourite hymns of his congregation. He knew these simple folk better than they did themselves, and in a moment they were lustily following him in a song of praise.

"Now, children," he said, when the singing ceased, "I will make answer to you.

"I have lived with you forty snows. When Mother and I came here our hair was black like the raven; now it is white like the swan. You have known me, chief, since you were a little boy. Did you ever know my words to be bad? Did you ever know the words of Mother to be bad? Did you, chief?"

"No," was the grudging answer.

"That is good. All the time we worked to help the people; to tell them of God's way. All the time we to tried to help the people when they were sick, and to teach the boys and girls. Are my words good words? Are they true?"

"Yes," agreed several.

"Did the Alaska people ever do as much for you? Do you want us to go away and the Alaska people to come?"

"No, no."

"You know the Nexnox way is not God's way; that it is the old way, the bad way. Do you want that way or God's way?"

"No," shouted a dozen voices, "we want the good way."

"That is good; for if you want the Nexnox way, then I will not stay. If you want us to stay we will be glad, but I will not send for the Alaska people. It is for you to say."

"We want you," stammered the chief. "You must not go."

"Then we will stay. We want to help you all. We are both getting old, and, when we are gone, we want the people to be cared for when they are sick. Mother is getting tired, and she must have help, so we may have another one here to help her, and perhaps to nurse the sick people. You will be good to the new nurse when she comes? I have spoken."

There was silence for a moment and then a babel of voices. The thought of losing Father David and Mother had never entered their minds, while the very suggestion of another white resident at Fort Oliver was itself sufficient to agitate the assembly.

The chief arose and motioned for silence. "Father David," he began, using the form of address that the priest had encouraged because of the difficulty that pronunciation of his surname presented, and by reason of the paternal care he sought to exercise over his flock—"Father David, we have heard your words, and they are good. We want you to stay. We are sorry for our black hearts to you.

"You are like good canoe, we all know. We ride with you when lots of storm come and nobody gets lost. Perhaps other canoe like Alaska people. He look nice, but we not know him well. Big storm come; canoe break and all men are lost.

"What you tell us about another woman come, we not know. We wait and see what this new klootchmans like. Maybe we like her, maybe not. We like Mother. We like you. We want for you to stay."

Then the Indians crowded around him, endeavouring like children who have been detected in some prank to ingratiate themselves with a parent who has corrected them. They shook him by the hand, told him of their love for him, and belittled their late guests who had been the cause of the trouble.

It was late when Father David reached home. Mother had retired, and he threw himself down in his easy-chair before the fireplace and stirred the embers into flame. He wanted to think, for he was puzzled. He could not understand why his people had permitted the heathen ceremony. It worried him, for there had been several happenings of late that evidenced a sinister influence at work among the natives.

Try as he would, he could not focus his mind on the problem, and his thoughts went back to the early years of his ministry, when he brought his wife, as a bride, from the East to the North Pacific Coast.

Their first home had been in one of the buildings of the old trading-post, where the privacy of their abode was continually invaded by threatening shamans in fantastic garb, beating drums, shaking rattles and blowing horns to call down destructive spirits upon them.

The smoke-filled interior of the old hall, with its leaking roof and windows covered with cotton to mitigate the intensity of the winter winds, was pictured in all its wealth of cruel detail in his memory. He recalled their first attempts to eat the dried fish and unpalatable oolichan grease, regarded by the natives as a great delicacy.

They had nearly perished when, on an errand of mercy to the bedside of one of their friends who could not altogether free himself from his old superstitious beliefs, and was gradually succumbing to the machinations of the medicine men, their blankets had been stolen. All night long they crouched over the smoking fire that burned slowly on the hearth, while outside the gale drove sleet and hail through the chinks between the logs of their dwelling. Illness followed, and it was only the providential arrival of another missionary on his way to Metlakatla that prevented the shamans from forcing their way into the building to practise their gruesome rites over them in their helplessness.

There rose before him a scene which recalled the horror with which he had viewed it in the second year of their life among the Indians. News had been brought of the killing of a party from Fort Oliver by the warriors of another tribe, sixty miles to the north. Instantly there was wild tumult in the village. The howlings of the medicine men, the wailing of the women and the bloodthirsty whoopings of the braves, the firing of muskets and the pounding of drums, made the night hideous.

Men blackened their faces with the sombre paint of war. The shamans worked themselves into a frenzy as they led the dance of death about the great fire on the beach. Then, screaming and yelping like a pack of hounds on the scent, they dashed away from the circle of light to return, dragging by the hair of her head, a terrified woman who had married into the tribe from among the people against whom they were about to make war.

Before Father David could intervene, perhaps to his own destruction, she had been beaten to death and her body had been torn limb from limb by the fiends.

He could see once more the return of the defeated warriors, and could almost hear again the grievings of the squaws as the toll of battle was recited. It was from that moment that he dated his own slow success, for he had seized upon the opportunity to denounce the medicine men who had predicted the destruction of their enemies as false prophets, and the natives had listened.

Then came the ceremonies of peace, with the exchange of goods in reparation for the losses. Their late enemies came to Fort Oliver in state to accept tribute, and a great feast was prepared for them. He had been a witness of the scattering of the swans' down over guest and host alike. His knowledge of the language was such by this time that he was able to address the gathering, and he likened the message of Holy Love that he bore to the gentle falling of the white feathers that signified eternal friendship.

There had followed no rush of converts to his teachings, but one by one, slowly and with diffidence, they had come, until after a time, such was the number that had banded together, there was less open hostility towards him and Mother, and less derision expressed of those who embraced the faith.

The medicine sect had not relinquished its efforts to combat the growing influence of the priest, and at every opportunity attempted to undo his work. Time and time again did the shamans seek to win back their waning power.

The first chapel which had been erected, a crudely constructed edifice, the medicine men destroyed by fire and sought to resurrect from its ashes their former dominion. It had been a blow to Father David and Mother, for it had been consumed before it could be consecrated by a service within its walls.

Undaunted, they immediately set to work to rebuild on a larger scale, and by example and precept succeeded, not only in holding together their little band of worshippers, but obtained additions to their congregation.

Year after year the grim fight continued, until at last, to all appearances, shamanism was dead, but this, Father David suspected, was not true. Among the older men and women who had known and feared the influences of the medicine men, there were some who still held, in secret, to their first beliefs.

He recollected the last open defiance of the shaman cult. A powerful man, one of the medicine men from Alaska, had appeared at Fort Oliver. He was almost as tall as Father David himself, and stood head and shoulders above the natives of the vicinity. He had attempted to sow seeds of dissension in the village. The priest warned him away, but the stranger replied by slapping the face of the big white doctor.

Father David turned pale. He clenched his hands, but made no effort to retaliate. Instead, he turned his head, presenting the other cheek, and the shaman, mistaking the action for one of cowardice, repeated the blow.

"Father, I have obeyed Thy command," exclaimed the missionary, and, with an unholy joy in his heart, he flew at the stranger.

With a single blow he knocked him down, and when the Indian arose he planted his great fist full on the painted face. The shaman dropped like a stunned bullock. Reaching down, Father David picked him up and, lifting him above his head, carried the inert form down to the water's edge and cast it into the sea.

The shock revived the necromancer, whose bedraggled appearance, as he struggled to his feet in the shallow water, was seized upon by the priest as an illustration of the futility and wickedness of heathenism.

Since that time there had been no open parading of shamanism, but of late an insidious propaganda was being spread among the villages of the Coast, and he believed that the Nexnox dance had been inspired by a necromancer of more than ordinary cunning, who carefully concealed his identity. The thought troubled him.

CHAPTER II

AN UNEXPECTED PASSENGER

"This is a hell o' a country," declared the watchman at Sliam cannery, as he spat spitefully at the oily, rain-splashed swells that slopped about the piling of the wharf.

"What's the matter now, Bill?" good-naturedly queried the young man who was tinkering with the engine of the raised-deck motor-boat, looking up from his work to his guest, who was perched half in and half out of the cabin. "The lonely life gettin' you?"

"Uh huh," grunted the other, adding as he filled his pipe: "Too blasted much rain, rain, rain; too much mist an' not enough sunshine fer me. I'm sick o' it."

"Go on, Bill," chided the other. "I'm surprised, t' hear an old sourdough like you talk that way. Now, if it had been some chechako, I could savvy it, but you—why, you've been in this North country since they planted the first trees."

"Yes, I know, but this is my las' season, I'm tellin' you. I'm through, Collishaw, I'm through."

"Uh huh," agreed the other placidly, as he screwed an oil-cup down on the engine. "Uh huh, heard you say the same thing last year."

"Maybe, but this time I'm tellin' you; I'm fed up on it."

"Yep?"

"Sure thing."

"Until next winter, and then I'll find you here as handsome and as crabbed as ever," predicted the younger man.

"Th' hell you will"; and again he expectorated to emphasise his statement.

"Why don't you get married, Bill?"

"Why don't I what?"

"Get yourself a wife. There are lots of nice girls who'd be glad t' get you."

"Nuthin' doing; I ain't no squaw man—not yet," exploded Bill.

"Don't need to marry a squaw. There's heaps of pretty nice-looking half-breeds on the Coast."

"Why don't you get one yerself?" countered Bill.

"Me? Oh, I will, maybe, sometime, when I'm as old as you, but not just now. I'm not the marryin' kind."

"Uh huh!" grunted the watchman, and then, returning to his grievance "But on the square, now, ain't this a hell o' a country?"

"No, Bill, it is not"; and there was a note of seriousness in the voice of the speaker. "The North is getting me, Bill."

"How? come."

"I can't just tell you what I mean, in a way that you'd understand it. I'd have to use highbrow language to describe it, and that lingo would be out of place here, wouldn't it?"

"Kinda, I wouldn't get you at all; but all the same, tell me what you mean, 'the North's gettin' you.'"

"Well, let's see how I can explain it," answered the boatman, as he pushed his sou'wester back on his head and ran his fingers through his wavy brown hair. "I don't see just how I can get it across to you—and it should not be necessary, for if ever there was a man in the thrall of the North, it's you——"

"In the what? That sounds like a fightin' word," exclaimed the watchman belligerently.

"Keep your shirt on, Bill," grinned Collishaw. "The thrall means the service—the hold of the North. The North is cruel to its friends. It beats them and freezes them; it fights them for everything they get, and lets go its wealth like a miser. Sometimes it smiles, but mostly it frowns—but still men stay. They desert the easy ways of the cities and the comforts of civilisation to come back to the hardships and the struggles they know they will face—and they like it."

"That's highbrow stuff, but I get you all right," assented Bill, after a pause. "I get you."

"Well, when men are like that, the North has got 'em."

"Guess ye're right! Just like squaws we be—the more we're licked, the better we seem t' like it. We must be married to the damn' country.

"I mind once," went on Bill, "when I went out with quite a wad o' money—went out cursin' the country; I was sure glad t' get back again.

"Say," he added, "them people in the cities take awful chances, with their street cars and autos an' everythin'. I'd sure hate t' be shut up like they are. Believe me, I nearly smothered in those big hotels; an' the streets—they was jus' like walkin' along the bottom o' a big canyon—you know, Jack, buildin's shut you in—there ain't no room to spread yourself like. Yes, I guess ye're right—this ain't such a hell o' a country after all—but I sure do wish it'd quit rainin' fer a spell."

Suddenly out of the mist sounded the deep note of a steamer's whistle.

Bill jumped to his feet. "What the blue blazes d'yu know about that! A steamer!" he exclaimed, as he swung himself over to the loading-slip. "Say, Collishaw, better get yer boat outa th' way—an' do it quick."

Already the boat owner had his engine spinning, and as Bill cast off the headline, the launch backed slowly away from the approaching steamer, now showing a big black mass against the lighter shade of the rain mist.

At half-speed the vessel approached, taking the shape of a rusty, sea-battered, snub-nosed freighter—not one of those boats pictured in colours on attractive pamphlets advertising summer cruises, but of the class of slow-moving, storm-battling drudges of commerce that make possible the gradual development of the serried coast-line of the North Pacific.

When within hailing distance, Bill was ready with his favourite prefix to a query, "What th'——" but he was arrested in the completion of his question by the strange antics of the captain, who waved his arms, shook his fist, and after pointing with a huge forefinger to the deck below, placed his hand over his mouth, which Bill rightly concluded enjoined silence.