THE KNIGHT OF THE SPIKE-SOLE BOOTS

They had told me to’ware of the “Hulling

Machine,”

But a tenderfoot is a fool!

Though the man that’s new to a birch canoe

Believes that he knows, as a rule.

They had told me to carry a mile above

Where the broad deadwater slips

Into fret and shoal to tumble and roll

In the welter of Schoodic rips;

But knowing it all, as a green man does,

And lazy, as green men are,

I hated to pack on my aching back

My duffle and gear so far.

So, as down the rapids there stretched a strip

With a most encouraging sheen,

I settled the blade of my paddle and made

For the head of the “Hulling Machine.”

It wasn’t because I hadn’t been warned

That I rode full tilt at Death—

It was simply the plan of an indolent man

To save his back and his breath.

For I reckoned I’d slice for the left-hand shore

When the roar of the falls drew near,

And I braced my knees and took my ease—

There was nothing to do but steer.

(There are many savage cataracts, slavering

for prey,

Twixt Abol-jackamcgus and the lower Brass-

u-a,

But of all the yowling demons that are wicked

and accurst,

The demon of the Hulling Place is ugliest and

worst.)

Now the strip in that river like burnished steel

Looked comfortable and slow,

But my birch canoe went shooting through

Like an arrow out of a bow.

And the way was hedged by ledges that

grinned

As they shredded the yeasty tide

And hissed and laughed at my racing craft

As it drove on its headlong ride.

I sagged on the paddle and drove it deep,

But it snapped like a pudding-stick,

Then I staked my soul on my steel-shod pole,

And the pole smashed just as quick.

There was nothing to do but to clutch the

thwarts

And crouch in that birchen shell,

And grit my teeth as I viewed beneath

The boil of that watery hell.

I may have cursed—I don’t know now—

I may have prayed or wept,

But I yelled halloo to Connor’s crew

As past their camp I swept.

I yelled halloo and I waved adieu

With a braggart’s shamming mien,

Then over the edge of the foaming ledge

I dropped in the “Hulling Machine.”

(A driver hates a coward as he hates diluted

rye;

Stiff upper-lip for living, stiff backbone when

you die!

They cheered me whcn I passed them; they

followed me with cheers,

That, as bracers for a dying man, are better far

than tears.)

The “Hulling Place” spits a spin of spume

Steaming from brink to brink,

And it seemed that my soul was cuffed in a

bowl

Where a giant was mixing his drink.

And ’twas only by luck or freak or fate,

Or because I’m reserved to be hung,

That I found myself on a boulder shelf

Where I flattened and gasped and clung.

To left the devilment roared and boiled,

To right it boiled and roared;

On either side the furious tide

Denied all hope of ford.

So I clutched at the face of the dripping ledge

And crouched from the lashing rain,

While the thunderous sound of the tumult

ground

Its iron into my brain.

I stared at the sun as he blinked above

Through whorls of the rolling mists,

And I said good-by and prepared to die

As the current wrenched my wrists.

But just as I loosened my dragging clutch,

Out of the spume and fogs

A chap drove through—one o’ Connor’s crew—

Riding two hemlock logs.

He was holding his pick-pole couched at Death

As though it were lance in rest,

And his spike-sole boots, as firm as roots,

In the splintered bark were pressed.

If this be sacrilege, pardon me, pray;

But a robe such as angels wear

Seemed his old red shirt with its smears of dirt,

And a halo his mop of hair;

And never a knight in a tournament

Rode lists with a jauntier mien

Than he of the drive who came alive

Through the hell of the “Hulling Ma-

chine.”

He dragged me aboard with a giant swing,

And he guided the rushing raft

Serenely cool to the foam-flecked pool

Where the dimpling shallows laughed.

And he drawled as he poled to the nearest

shore,

While I stuttered my gratitude:

“I jest came through to show that crew

I’m a match for a sportsman dude.”

There are only two who have raced those falls

And by lucky chance were spared:

Myself dragged there in a fool’s despair

And he, the man who dared!

I make no boast, as you’ll understand,

And there’s never a boast from him;

And even his name is lost to fame—

I simply know’twas “Jim.”

If Jim was a fool, as I hear you say

With a sneer beneath your breath,

So were knights of old who in tourneys bold

Lunged blithesomely down at Death.

And if I who was snatched from the jaws of

hell

Am to name a knight to you,

Here’s the Knight of the Firs, of the Spike-

S’ole Spurs,

That man from Connor’s crew!