Stickeen eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 29 pages of information about Stickeen.

Stickeen eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 29 pages of information about Stickeen.
he was apparently as cold as a glacier and about as impervious to fun, I tried hard to make his acquaintance, guessing there must be something worth while hidden beneath so much courage, endurance, and love of wild-weathery adventure.  No superannuated mastiff or bulldog grown old in office surpassed this fluffy midget in stoic dignity.  He sometimes reminded me of a small, squat, unshakable desert cactus.  For he never displayed a single trace of the merry, tricksy, elfish fun of the terriers and collies that we all know, nor of their touching affection and devotion.  Like children, most small dogs beg to be loved and allowed to love; but Stickeen seemed a very Diogenes, asking only to be let alone:  a true child of the wilderness, holding the even tenor of his hidden life with the silence and serenity of nature.  His strength of character lay in his eyes.  They looked as old as the hills, and as young, and as wild.  I never tired of looking into them:  it was like looking into a landscape; but they were small and rather deep-set, and had no explaining lines around them to give out particulars.  I was accustomed to look into the faces of plants and animals, and I watched the little sphinx more and more keenly as an interesting study.  But there is no estimating the wit and wisdom concealed and latent in our lower fellow mortals until made manifest by profound experiences; for it is through suffering that dogs as well as saints are developed and made perfect.

After exploring the Sumdum and Tahkoo fiords and their glaciers, we sailed through Stephen’s Passage into Lynn Canal and thence through Icy Strait into Cross Sound, searching for unexplored inlets leading toward the great fountain ice-fields of the Fairweather Range.  Here, while the tide was in our favor, we were accompanied by a fleet of icebergs drifting out to the ocean from Glacier Bay.  Slowly we paddled around Vancouver’s Point, Wimbledon, our frail canoe tossed like a feather on the massive heaving swells coming in past Cape Spenser.  For miles the sound is bounded by precipitous mural cliffs, which, lashed with wave-spray and their heads hidden in clouds, looked terribly threatening and stern.  Had our canoe been crushed or upset we could have made no landing here, for the cliffs, as high as those of Yosemite, sink sheer into deep water.  Eagerly we scanned the wall on the north side for the first sign of an opening fiord or harbor, all of us anxious except Stickeen, who dozed in peace or gazed dreamily at the tremendous precipices when he heard us talking about them.  At length we made the joyful discovery of the mouth of the inlet now called “Taylor Bay,” and about five o’clock reached the head of it and encamped in a spruce grove near the front of a large glacier.

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Stickeen from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.