really meant to say that human beings lived and breathed like fish in
Lake Bigler, he declared without any hesitation that such was the fact;
that he had often seen them; and went on to describe a terrific combat
he witnessed a great many years ago, between a Pol-i-wog chief and _a
man of the water_. On my expressing some doubt as to the veracity of the
statement, he proffered to show us the very spot where it occurred; and
at the same time expressed a belief that by manufacturing a whistle from
the bark of the mountain chinquapin, and blowing it as the Pol-i-wogs
did, we might entice some of their old enemies from the depths of the
lake. My curiosity now being raised tip-toe, I proceeded to interrogate
Juan more closely, and in answer I succeeded in obtaining the following
curious particulars:
The tribe of border Indians called the Pol-i-wogs were a sort of
amphibious race, and a hybrid between the Pi-Utes and the mermaids of
the lake. They were of a much lighter color than their progenitors, and
were distinguished by a great many peculiar characteristics. Exceedingly
few in number, and quarrelsome in the extreme, they resented every
intrusion upon the waters of the lake as a personal affront, and made
perpetual war upon neighboring tribes. Hence, as Juan remarked, they
soon became extinct after the invasion of the Washoes. The last of them
disappeared about twenty-five years ago. The most noted of their
peculiarities were the following:
First. Their heads were broad and extremely flat; the eyes protuberant,
and the ears scarcely perceptible--being a small opening closed by a
movable valve shaped like the scale of a salmon. Their mouths were very
large, extending entirely across the cheeks, and bounded by a hard rim
of bone, instead of the common lip. In appearance, therefore, the head
did not look unlike an immense catfish head, except there were no fins
about the jaws, and no feelers, as we call them.
Second. Their necks were short, stout, and chubby, and they possessed
the power of inflating them at will, and thus distending them to two or
three times their ordinary size.
Third. Their bodies were long, round, and flexible. When wet, they
glistened in the sun like the back of an eel, and seemed to possess much
greater buoyancy than those of common men. But the greatest wonder of
all was a kind of loose membrane, that extended from beneath their
shoulders all the way down their sides, and connected itself with
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