Read Hold the Enlightenment Online
Authors: Tim Cahill
Castle reached its peak in 1891, the year it was incorporated. It had nine stores, one bank, two barbershops, two butcher shops, two livery stables, two hotels, a photo gallery, a dance hall, a schoolhouse, fourteen saloons, one church, and seven brothels. Aside from the vigilant postmaster, there was a deputy sheriff, a justice of the peace, a chapter of the Women’s Christian Temperance Union, and four newspapers. There was a permanent population of 1,500 folks. By day, the main street was jammed with outbound ore wagons pulled by teams of horses and inbound teams
pulling produce, with buggies, with men on horseback, with coaches and pedestrians. People arrived daily on stagecoaches, among them prostitutes ready to work at the local “sporting houses.”
The main street was now a gravel road leading up into the national forest land, high above in the Castle Mountains. All the buildings that had once lined the street were gone. To the west was the three-story skeleton of a major boardinghouse, and south of that were several weathered buildings with large bay windows looking out at the mountains above. They must have seemed graceful and luxurious in their time.
To the east, across the gravel road, was what had been the disreputable part of town. Most of the saloons and brothels had been located there, and the remains of Minnie’s Sporting House lay dreaming in a high meadow.
My dog found a dead ground squirrel to roll in, and she lay on her back, paws in the air, wiggling about in what appeared to be an ecstasy of putrescence. She’s a bird dog, and I believe she wants to disguise her odor. Somewhere, deep in her demented hunter’s brain, she must imagine that sage hens and ruffled grouse, upon being presented with a creature streaking up on them from a distance, barking hysterically, must think: Hey, nothing to worry about here, it’s just a dead squirrel.
The issue of disguise and birds was on my mind. The women who worked the brothels, such as Minnie’s Sporting House, were euphemistically called “soiled doves.” They arrived in the booming town carrying a trunk and, folded neatly at the bottom of each of these trunks, almost without exception, was an elaborate white wedding dress. It is true that sometimes whores married miners or shopkeepers, but more often the wedding dress was funereal garb. The soiled doves were most often buried in these gowns, and so they went into that dark night as virginal brides.
The year after Castle was incorporated, production of silver began to dwindle. There was a financial panic in 1893, as well, and President Grover Cleveland was convinced that the government’s
mandatory silver purchase program was the cause of the depression. He called a special session of Congress that summer to repeal the Sherman Silver Purchase Act. Silver prices plummeted and, in Castle, the Cumberland mine closed down immediately.
The Cumberland boardinghouse had served 135 meals the last night the mines operated. Three days later, it served 6 men, who remained to dismantle machinery. The town literally emptied out in seventy-two hours. A few families remained, but for all practical purposes, Castle was dead.
By 1936, only two people lived in the old town: the seventy-five-year-old self-appointed mayor, Joe Kidd, and the seventy-year-old constable, Joe Martino. The snows came early the winter of 1936–37, and winds drifted the snow in the coulees to forty feet or more, so that sometimes deer fell through the crusts of snow and could be found, after the thaw, starved and frozen in the tops of cottonwood trees.
There was one blizzard after another that year. Supplies were running low and Mayor Kidd hitched up a team of horses to a cutter, a light sleigh, and set out for the small ranching town of Lennep, seven miles down the canyon. He made three miles the first night, and stayed with some shepherds at their camp. At Lennep the next day, he picked up the mail, stayed the night at a local ranch, and headed back the next morning. A mile from Castle, the horses gave out and Kidd walked to Martino’s house, arriving at 9
P.M
. He had a cup of hot coffee and left for his own house. It was only five hundred yards away, but the mayor collapsed and died in the snow.
Martino was unable to carry the body, so he skied down to the sheep camp, and the shepherds got word to the nearest big town, White Sulphur Springs. The sheriff and coroner skied into Castle and carried Kidd’s body out on a toboggan. Leaving Joe Martino as the last full-time resident of Castle. And then the rodents took over.
The big houses that so impressed the Chinese are, for the most part, trophy homes built by out-of-staters and occupied sometimes for as little as one or two weeks a year. They are springing up
all throughout the West like a plague of poison mushrooms. I believe that the twenty-year bull market—what is called the wealth effect—has allowed people to build these trophies. In America, I should have told the Chinese, wealth is sometimes measured by the amount of land a person is able to post “No Trespassing” signs on.
No one knows how long the bull market will last, least of all me, but all good things come to an end. [Note: And the bull market did shortly after I wrote this.] Ask the dinosaurs. One geological moment they’re standing in some fern glade of redwoods, bellowing brainlessly, masters of the earth. We were there: the mammals, or protomammals, small rat- and weasel-like creatures with sharp teeth and shining eyes. And when the dinosaurs died—when their life cycle went bust—we moved out of the shadows and took over the earth. We are the most fearsome predator the earth has ever spawned, and those creatures that know us, fear us.
Walking through the ruins of Castle, I had a sense of man as the dinosaur of this particular geological moment. There were shining eyes, watching from the shadows of ramshackle buildings. The others were there. I could hear them scurrying about when I looked in the windows where soiled doves once plied their trade.
There were others of their kind: eyes in the woodlands, under the aspens, and these eyes are watching the big trophy homes that have begun to dominate the Western landscape. There will be a bust to the boom, sooner or later, because that has always been the way. The big homes, too expensive for local folks, will fall into disrepair. The paint will peel from the walls, and the bare boards will bleach out, like bones under a desert sun. And then the watchers in the wood will move into the tumble-down buildings. The castles built by the wealth effect will lie broken and still under a merciless blue sky. And in the shadows under the shattered windows, the new inhabitants will scurry this way and that, their eyes shining, masters of all they survey.
I
looked down at the quivering, white, gelatinous globules on my plate, and glanced over to the table where the Chinese were sitting. There were three of them, two men and a woman, scientists and scientific technicians: bone workers on their first full day in Livingston, Montana. They were in my hometown to help disassemble a display of Chinese dinosaurs at the Natural History Exhibit Hall here, and I had run into them at the Seattle airport the previous day. They had flown in direct from Beijing.
The only one of these distinguished visitors who spoke English asked me to call him “Brian,” which, he said, sounded a bit like his actual name but was easier for Americans to pronounce. And now, after an uneventful flight, Brian and the other two Chinese folks were sitting at a long table in the basement of the local Lutheran church staring at heaping plates of lutefisk, a traditional Norwegian Christmas dinner.
Lutefisk, a fishlike substance, seems, at first glance, a revolting, jellied putrescence. Consumption is a matter of some courage. I found it necessary to sit before my plate and center myself, breathing deeply and consciously, staring at the plate as I would at a meditation mandala. Steam rose like an offering, like the soul’s longing for oneness. Lutefisk, I proposed to myself, is consciousness made tangible, in the form of fish, and when I eat it, I partake of the Universal. Thus fortified, spiritually and morally—and with my courage on the ascent—I finally allowed my eyes to refocus on the plate
before me and see lutefisk for what it truly was: a revolting, jellied putrescence.
Traditionally, in the ranching and farming communities of the West and Midwest, lutefisk dinners are served in Lutheran churches during the winter, just before Christmas. These are fund-raising events, and it is said that some eat lutefisk to show their devotion to Lutheran doctrine, rather in the manner of medieval saints flogging themselves bloody with whips.
The word “lutefisk” means “lyefish,” which refers to the ancient Viking manufacturing process of drying fish and soaking it in lye. Lutefisk, a staple on long voyages, fueled the Viking conquest of much of Europe. This is because any person forced to eat lutefisk two nights in a row is certain to become a savage warrior.
Lutefisk won’t actually kill you, though there is a rumor that, in the tiny rural town of Wilsall, about fifty miles from where I live, lye-soaked scraps were left out in back of the church—the fish is sometimes boiled in tents outside, so that the odor doesn’t permeate the building for the rest of the year—and that cows from a nearby field got through the fence, ate the fish, and died.
In fact, I called the distributor of the lutefisk used there and in many other communities throughout America. The Olsen Fish Company of Minnesota sells about half a million pounds of lutefisk a year. A representative of the firm assured me that the dried fish is not “luted” in lye but in caustic soda, or sodium hydroxide, a kind of bleach used in laundry products as well as in the manufacture of explosives. Caustic soda’s main virtue, in regard to dried cod, is that it breaks down fats to form soaps. Which is why lutefisk is a sort of jellied fish.
The Olsen Fish Company buys its dried cod direct from Norway, lutes it, then sends it through several rinses. When the consumer receives a shipment, it is free of toxicity, ready to boil and eat. So the rumor of the cows dying from eating lye is entirely false. They died from eating lutefisk.
I’m kidding. Lutefisk is something you kid about, anyway. I eat it and enjoy it precisely twice a year: once at the Lutheran church in
Livingston, and once at the church in Wilsall, where you have to climb over piles of dead cows to get in the door.
In Livingston, I watched the Chinese as they regarded their plates of lutefisk. We had gotten there late, which is to say, somewhere around six-thirty. Latecomers don’t get large gelatinous portions of fish, but only small, quivering bites, the size of marbles, which are difficult to manipulate with a fork. It is, in the words of the late poet Richard Brautigan, like trying to load mercury with a pitchfork.
The Chinese hadn’t yet tried a bite. Instead, they were speaking urgently among themselves.
I could sympathize with the Chinese, but there was another emotion tugging at me. As a travel writer, I’m usually the guest sitting at the table, staring at the food before me and wondering: Are they making fun of me here?
In northern Australia, I was served baked turtle lung, which tastes a great deal worse than it sounds. In the Peruvian Andes, I wondered what to do with the rooster’s head floating in the soup, and whether I was really supposed to eat the little, stringy portions of guinea pig I’d been proudly served. My hosts in Irian Jaya treated me to a plate full of fried sago-beetle grubs, corpse-white, wormy-looking little guys about the size of my index finger from the second knuckle up. They were pretty good and tasted rather like creamy snail.
Western travelers often discuss various bizarre foods they’ve consumed either out of politeness or curiosity. In fact, two of my favorite recent books chronicle bizarre gustatory adventures.
Man Eating Bugs
by Peter Menzel and Faith D’Aluisio (with a foreword by Tim Cahill) concerns itself with the human consumption of insects from Uganda to Indonesia, from Australia to Cambodia. Peter had also sampled sago grubs in Irian Jaya and describes them as tasting “bacony.” We get together to argue about this about once a year.
Strange Foods
by Jerry Hopkins, who has eaten with local folks on six continents, features descriptions and pictures of pig ear cartilage in garlic sauce, worm-meal shakes, and five-penis wine. Jerry’s thesis?
“What is repulsive in one part of the world, in another is simply lunch.”
Or dinner, in the case of lutefisk. Perhaps the Chinese were wondering if the mess on their plates was an elaborate joke. The tables, I thought smugly, have turned. Consider, for instance, my last dinner in Beijing.
I had arrived in Beijing carrying a pair of rifles: one .30-06, and one .22. They were for my Mongolian guides, and I had a two-day layover in Beijing before the flight to Ulan Bator. Carrying rifles out of the United States, into Canada, through Beijing, and into Mongolia was a nightmare of bureaucratic paperwork. They were expecting me at the Beijing airport, where I walked down a long corridor with armed guards in front of me and behind me. We stopped at a large room, with two couches, where a man in a Western suit asked me if I would like tea. The proper papers were signed, the guns were put into a locked safe. I was given a receipt. Then we all drank tea, with nothing much to say to one another.
I didn’t want to tell them that the airline had lost one of my bags, the heavy one, containing several thousand rounds of ammunition for the rifles.
We began talking about food and the man in the suit said that, while I was in China, I absolutely had to have a traditional snake dinner. It was a man’s dinner, for real men, and, as such, was manly in a vigorous, masculine manner. I gathered snake was one of those foods thought to put lead in the old pencil. Chinese men, apparently, dined on snake in large groups, all of them becoming more virile and potent with each bite. In America, the same process is associated with beer. Which, as I discovered, was not too far off the point.
I was traveling with an American named Michael Abbot and we had to make do with a two-man reptile feed. The restaurant in our hotel, as it turned out, was famous for its snake.