“The morning had shot her bright
streamers on high,
O’er Canada, opening all pale to
the sky;
Still dazzling and white was the robe
that she wore,
Except where the ocean wave lash’d
on the shore.”
Jacobite Song.
THERE lies between the Rice Lake and the Ontario, a deep and fertile valley,
surrounded by lofty wood-crowned hills, the heights of which were clothed
chiefly with groves of oak and pine, though the sides of the hills and the
alluvial bottoms gave a variety of noble timber trees of various kinds, as the
maple, beech, hemlock, and others. This beautiful and highly picturesque valley
is watered by many clear streams of pure refreshing water, from whence the spot
has derived its appropriate appellation of "Cold Springs." At the time my little
history commences, this now highly cultivated spot was an unbroken
wilderness, all tut two small farms, where dwelt the only occupiers of the
soil, which owned no other possessors than the wandering hunting tribes of wild
Indians, to whom the right of the hunting grounds north of Rice Lake
appertained, according to their forest laws.
To those who travel over beaten roads, now partially planted, among
cultivated fields and flowery orchards, and see cleared farms and herds of
cattle and flocks of sheep, the change would be a striking one. I speak of the
time when the neat and flourishing town of Cobourg, now an important port on the
Ontario, was but a village in embryo if it contained even a log-house or a
block-house it was all that it did, and the wild and picturesque ground upon
which the fast increasing village of Port Hope is situated, had not yielded one
forest tree to the axe of the settler. No gallant vessel spread her sails to
waft the abundant produce of grain and Canadian stores along the waters of that
noble sheet of water; no steamer had then furrowed its bosom with her iron
wheels, bearing the stream of emigration towards the wilds of our Northern and
Western forests, there to render a lonely trackless desert a fruitful garden.
What will not time and the industry of man, assisted by the blessing of a
merciful God, effect? To him be the glory and honour; for we are taught, that
"without the Lord build the city, their labour is but lost that build it;
without the Lord keep the city, the watchman waketh but in vain."
But to my tale. And first it will be necessary to introduce to the
acquaintance of my young readers the founders of our little settlement at Cold
Springs.
Duncan Maxwell was a young Highland soldier, a youth of eighteen, at the
famous battle of Quebec, where, though only a private, he received the praise of
his colonel for his brave conduct. At the close of the battle Duncan was
wounded, and as the hospital was full at the time with sick and disabled men, he
was lodged in the house of a poor French Canadian widow in the Quebec suburb;
here, though a foreigner and an enemy, he received much kind attention from his
excellent hostess and her family, which consisted of a young man about his own
age, and a pretty black-eyed lass not more than sixteen. The widow Perron was so
much occupied with other-lodgers for she kept a sort of boarding-house that she
had not much time to give to Duncan, so that he was left a great deal to her son
Pierre, and a little to Catharine, her daughter.
Duncan Maxwell was a fine, open-tempered, frank lad, and he soon won the
regard of Pierre and his little sister. In spite of the prejudices of country,
and the difference of language and national customs, a steady and increasing
friendship grew up between the young Highlander and the children of his hostess;
therefore it was not without feelings of deep regret that they heard the news,
that the corps to which Duncan belonged was ordered for embarkation to England,
and Duncan was so far convalescent as to be pronounced quite well enough to join
them. Alas for poor Catharine! she now found that parting with her patient was a
source of the deepest sorrow to her young and guileless heart; nor was Duncan
less moved at the separation from his gentle nurse. It might be for years, and
it might be for ever, he could not tell; but he could not tear himself away
without telling the object of his affections how dear she was to him, and to
whisper a hope that he might yet return one day to claim her as his bride; and
Catharine, weeping and blushing, promised to wait for that happy day, or to
remain single for his sake, while Pierre promised to watch over his friend's
interests and keep alive Catharine's love; for, said he, artlessly, "la belle
Catrine is pretty and lively, and may have many suitors before she sees you
again, mon ami."
They say the course of true love never did run smooth; but, with the
exception of this great sorrow, the sorrow of separation, the love of our young
Highland soldier and his betrothed knew no other interruption, for absence
served only to strengthen the affection which was founded on gratitude and
esteem.
Two long years passed, however, and the prospect of re-union was yet distant,
when an accident, which disabled Duncan from serving his country, enabled him to
retire with the usual little pension, and return to Quebec to seek his
affianced. Some changes had taken place during that short period: the widow
Perron was dead; Pierre, the gay, lively-hearted Pierre, was married to the
daughter of a lumberer; and Catharine, who had no relatives in Quebec, had gone
up the country with her brother and his wife, and was living in some little
settlement above Montreal with them.
Thither Duncan, with the constancy of his nature, followed, and shortly
afterwards was married to his faithful Catharine. On one point they had never
differed, both being of the same religion. Pierre had seen a good deal of the
fine country on the shores of the Ontario; he had been hunting with some
friendly Indians between the great waters and the Rice Lake, and he now thought
if Duncan and himself could make up their minds to a quiet life in the woods,
there was not a better spot than the hill pass between the plains and the big
lake to fix themselves upon. Duncan was of the same opinion when he saw the
spot. It was not rugged and bare like his own Highlands, but softer in
character, yet his heart yearned for the hill country. In those days there was
no obstacle to taking possession of any tract of land in the unsurveyed forests,
therefore Duncan agreed with his brother-in-law to pioneer the way with him, get
a dwelling put up and some ground prepared and "seeded down," and then to,
return for their wives and settle themselves down at once as farmers. Others had
succeeded, had formed little colonies, and become the heads of villages in due
time; why should not they? And now behold our two backwoodsmen fairly commencing
their arduous life; but it was nothing, after all, to Pierre, by previous
occupation a hardy lumberer, or the Scottish soldier, accustomed to brave all
sorts of hardships in a wild country, himself a mountaineer, inured to a stormy
climate, and scanty fare, from his earliest youth. But it is not my intention to
dwell upon the trials and difficulties courageously met and battled with by our
settlers and their young wives.
There was in those days a spirit of resistance among the first settlers on
the soil, a spirit to do and bear, that is less commonly met with now. The
spirit of civilization is now so widely diffused, that her comforts are felt
even in the depths of the forest, so that the newly come emigrant feels
comparatively few of the physical evils that were endured by the older
inhabitants.
The first seed-wheat that was cast into the ground by Duncan and Pierre, was
brought with infinite trouble a distance of fifty miles in a little skiff,
navigated along the shores of the Ontario by the adventurous Pierre, and from
the nearest landing-place transported on the shoulders of himself and Duncan to
their homestead: a day of great labour but great joy it was when they deposited
their precious freight in safety on the shanty floor. They were obliged to make
two journeys for the contents of the little craft. What toil, what privation
they endured for the first two years! and now the fruits of it began slowly to
appear. No two creatures could be more unlike than Pierre and Duncan. The
Highlander, stern, steady, persevering, cautious, always giving ample reasons
for his doing or his not doing. The Canadian, hopeful, lively, fertile in
expedients, and gay as a lark; if one scheme failed another was sure to present
itself. Pierre and Duncan were admirably suited to be friends and neighbours.
The steady perseverance of the Scot helped to temper the volatile temperament of
the Frenchman. They generally contrived to compass the same end by different
means, as two streams descending from opposite hills will meet in one broad
river in the same valley.
Years passed on; the farm, carefully cultivated, began to yield its increase,
and food and warm clothing were not wanted in the homesteads. Catharine had
become, in course of time, the happy mother of four healthy children; her
sister-in-law had even exceeded her in these welcome contributions to the
population of a new colony. Between the children of Pierre and Catharine the
most charming harmony prevailed; they grew up as one family, a pattern of
affection and early friendship. Though different in tempers and dispositions,
Hector Maxwell, the eldest son of the Scottish soldier, and his cousin, young
Louis Perron, were greatly attached; they, with the young Catharine and
Mathilde, formed a little coterie of inseparables; their amusements, tastes,
pursuits, occupations, all blended and harmonized delightfully; there were none
of those little envyings and bickerings among them that pave the way to strife
and disunion in after life.
Catharine Maxwell and her cousin Louis were more like brother and sister than
Hector and Catharine, but Mathilde was gentle and dove-like, and formed a
contrast to the gravity of Hector and the vivacity of Louis and Catharine.
Hector and Louis were fourteen strong, vigorous, industrious and hardy, both
in constitution and habits. The girls were turned of twelve. It is not with
Mathilde that our story is connected, but with the two lads and Catharine. With
the gaiety and navet of the Frenchwoman, Catharine possessed, when occasion
called it into action, a thoughtful and well-regulated mind, abilities which
would well have repaid the care of mental cultivation; but of book-learning she
knew nothing beyond a little reading, and that but imperfectly, acquired from
her father's teaching. It was an accomplishment which he had gained when in the
army, having been taught by his colonel's son, a lad of twelve years of age, who
had taken a great fancy to him, and had at parting given him a few of his
school-books, among which was a Testament, without cover or title-page. At
parting, the young gentleman recommended its daily perusal to Duncan. Had the
gift been a Bible, perhaps the soldier's obedience to his priest might have
rendered it a dead letter to him, but as it fortunately happened, he was
unconscious of any prohibition to deter him from becoming acquainted with the
truths of the Gospel. He communicated the power of perusing his books to his
children Hector and Catharine, Duncan and Kenneth, in succession, with a feeling
of intense reverence; even the labour of teaching was regarded as a holy duty in
itself, and was not undertaken without deeply impressing the obligation he was
conferring upon them whenever they were brought to the task. It was indeed a
precious boon, and the children learned to consider it as the pearl beyond all
price in the trials that awaited them in their eventful career. To her knowledge
of religious truths young Catharine added an intimate acquaintance with the
songs and legends of her father's romantic country, which was to her even as
fairyland; often would her plaintive ballads and old tales, related in the hut
or the wigwam to her attentive auditors, wile away heavy thoughts; Louis and
Mathilde, her cousins, sometimes wondered how Catharine had acquired such a
store of ballads and wild tales as she could tell.
It was a lovely sunny day in the flowery month of June; Canada had not only
doffed that "dazzling white robe" mentioned in the songs of her Jacobite
emigrants, but had assumed the beauties of her loveliest season, the last week
in May and the first three of June being parallel to the English May, full of
buds and flowers and fair promise of ripening fruits. The high sloping hills
surrounding the fertile vale of Cold Springs were clothed with the blossoms of
the gorgeous scarlet enchroma, or painted-cup; the large pure white blossoms of
the lily-like trillium; the delicate and fragile lilac geranium, whose graceful
flowers woo the hand of the flower-gatherer only to fade almost within his
grasp; the golden cyprepedium, or mocassin flower, so singular, so lovely in its
colour and formation, waved heavily its yellow blossoms as the breeze shook the
stems; and there, mingling with a thousand various floral beauties, the azure
lupine claimed its place, shedding almost a heavenly tint upon the earth.
Thousands of roses were blooming on the more level ground, sending forth their
rich fragrance, mixed with the delicate scent of the feathery ceanothus, (New
Jersey tea.) The vivid greenness of the young leaves of the forest, the tender
tint of the springing corn, were contrasted with the deep dark fringe of waving
pines on the hills, and the yet darker shade of the spruce and balsams on the
borders of the creeks, for so our Canadian forest rills are universally termed.
The bright glancing wings of the summer red-bird, the crimson-headed woodpecker,
the gay blue-bird, and noisy but splendid plumed jay, might be seen among the
branches; the air was filled with beauteous sights and soft murmuring melodies.
Under the shade of the luxuriant hop-vines, that covered the rustic porch in
front of the little dwelling, the light step of Catharine Maxwell might be heard
mixed with the drowsy whirring of the big wheel, as she passed to and fro
guiding the thread of yarn in its course: and now she sang snatches of old
mountain songs, such as she had learned from her father; and now, with livelier
air, hummed some gay French tune to the household melody of her spinning wheel,
as she advanced and retreated with her thread, unconscious of the laughing black
eye that was watching her movements from among the embowering foliage that
shielded her from the morning sun.
"Come, ma belle cousine," for so Louis delighted to call her. "Hector and I
are waiting for you to go with us to the 'Beaver Meadow.' The cattle have
strayed, and we think we shall find them there. The day is delicious, the very
flowers look as if they wanted to be admired and plucked, and we shall find
early strawberries on the old Indian clearing."
Catharine cast a longing look abroad, but said, "I fear, Louis, I cannot go
to-day, for see, I have all these rolls of wool to spin up, and my yarn to wind
off the reel and twist; and then, my mother is away."
"Yes, I left her with mamma." replied Louis, "and she said she would be home
shortly, so her absence need not stay you. She said you could take a basket and
try and bring home some berries for sick Louise. Hector is sure he knows a spot
where we shall get some fine ones, ripe and red." As he spoke Louis whisked away
the big wheel to one end of the porch, gathered up the hanks of yarn and tossed
them into the open wicker basket, and the next minute the large, coarse, flapped
straw hat, that hung upon the peg in the porch, was stuck not very gracefully on
the top of Catharine's head and tied beneath her chin, with a merry rattling
laugh, which drowned effectually the small lecture that Catharine began to
utter, by way of reproving the light-hearted boy.
"But where is Mathilde?"
"Sitting like a dear good girl, as she is, with sick Louise's head on her
lap, and would not disturb the poor sick thing for all the fruit and flowers in
Canada. Marie cried sadly to go with us, but I promised her and petite Louise
lots of flowers and berries if we get them, and the dear children were as happy
as queens when I left them."
"But stay, cousin, you are sure my mother gave her consent to my going? We
shall be away chief part of the day. You know it is a long walk to the Beaver
Meadow and back again," said Catharine, hesitating as Louis took her hand to
lead her out from the porch.
"Yes, yes, ma belle," said the giddy boy, quickly; "so come along, for Hector
is waiting at the barn; but stay, we shall be hungry before we return, so let us
have some cakes and butter, and do not forget a tin-cup for water."
Nothing doubting, Catharine, with buoyant spirits, set about her little
preparations, which were soon completed; but just as she was leaving the little
garden enclosure, she ran back to kiss Kenneth and Duncan, her young brothers.
In the farm yard she found Hector with his axe on his shoulder. "What are you
taking the axe for, Hector? you will find it heavy to carry," said his sister.
"In the first place, I have to cut a stick of blue-beech to make a broom for
sweeping the house, sister of mine; and that is for your use, Miss Kate; and in
the next place, I have to find, if possible, a piece of rock elm or hiccory for
axe handles; so now you have the reason why I take the axe with me."
The children now left the clearing, and struck into one of the deep defiles
that lay between the hills, and cheerfully they laughed and sung and chattered,
as they sped on their pleasant path; nor were they both to exchange the glowing
sunshine for the sober gloom of the forest shade. What handfuls of flowers of
all hues, red, blue, yellow and white, were gathered only to be gazed at,
carried for a while, then cast aside for others fresher and fairer. And now they
came to cool rills that flowed, softly murmuring, among mossy limestone, or
blocks of red or grey granite, wending their way beneath twisted roots and
fallen trees; and often Catharine lingered to watch the eddying dimples of the
clear water, to note the tiny bright fragments of quartz or crystallized
limestone that formed a shining pavement below the stream; and often she paused
to watch the angry movements of the red squirrel, as, with feathery tail erect,
and sharp scolding note, he crossed their woodland path, and swiftly darting up
the rugged bark of some neighbouring pine or hemlock, bade the intruders on his
quiet haunts defiance; yet so bold in his indignation, he scarcely condescended
to ascend beyond their reach.
The long-continued hollow tapping of the large red-headed woodpecker, or the
singular subterranean sound caused by the drumming of the partridge, striking
his wings upon his breast to woo his gentle mate, and the soft whispering note
of the little tree-creeper, as it flitted from one hemlock to another,
collecting its food between the fissures of the bark, were among the few sounds
that broke the noontide stillness of the woods; but to all such sights and
sounds the lively Catharine and her cousin were not indifferent. And often they
wondered, that Hector gravely pursued his onward way, and seldom lingered as
they did to mark the bright colours of the flowers, or the bright sparkling of
the forest rill.
"What makes Hec so grave?" said Catharine to her companion, as they seated
themselves upon a mossy trunk, to await his coming up, for they had giddily
chased each other till they had far outrun him.
"Hector, sweet coz, is thinking perhaps of how many bushels of corn or wheat
this land would grow if cleared, or he may be examining the soil or the trees,
or is looking for his stick of blue-beech for your broom, or the hiccory for his
axe handle, and never heeding such nonsense as woodpeckers and squirrels, and
lilies and moss and ferns, for Hector is not a giddy thing like his cousin
Louis, or "
"His sister Kate," interrupted Catharine, merrily; "but when shall we come to
the Beaver Meadow?"
"Patience, ma belle, all in good time. Hark, was not that the ox-bell? No;
Hector whistling." And soon they heard the heavy stroke of his axe ringing among
the trees, for he had found the blue-beech, and was cutting it to leave on the
path, that he might take it home on their return; he had also marked some
hiccory of a nice size for his axe handles, to bring home at some future time.
The children had walked several miles, and were not sorry to sit down and
rest till Hector joined them. He was well pleased with his success, and declared
he felt no fatigue. "As soon as we reach the old Indian clearing, we shall find
strawberries," he said, "and a fresh cold spring, and then we will have our
dinners."
"Come, Hector, come, Louis," said Catharine, jumping up, "I long to be
gathering the strawberries; and see, my flowers are faded, so I will throw them
away, and the basket shall be filled with fresh fruit instead, and we must not
forget petite Marie and sick Louise, or dear Mathilde. Ah, how I wish she were
here at this minute! But here is the opening to the Beaver Meadow."
And the sunlight was seen streaming through the opening trees as they
approached the cleared space, which some called the "Indian clearing," but is
now more generally known as the little Beaver Meadow. It was a pleasant spot,
green, and surrounded with light bowery trees and flowering shrubs, of a
different growth from those that belong to the dense forest. Here the children
found, on the hilly ground above, fine ripe strawberries, the earliest they had
seen that year, and soon all weariness was forgotten while pursuing the
delightful occupation of gathering the tempting fruit; and when they had
refreshed themselves, and filled the basket with leaves and fruit, they slaked
their thirst from the stream, which wound its way among the bushes. Catharine
neglected not to reach down flowery bunches of the fragrant white-thorn and of
the high-bush cranberry, then radiant with nodding umbels of snowy blossoms, or
to wreath the handle of the little basket with the graceful trailing runners of
the lovely twin-flowered plant, the Linna borealis, which she always said
reminded her of the twins, Louise and Marie, her little cousins. And now the day
began to wear away, for they had lingered long in the little clearing; they had
wandered from the path by which they entered it; and had neglected, in their
eagerness to look for the strawberries, to notice any particular mark by which
they might regain it. Just when they began to think of returning, Louis noticed
a beaten path, where there seemed recent prints of cattle hoofs on a soft spongy
soil beyond the creek.
"Come, Hector," said he gaily, "this is lucky; we are on the cattle path; no
fear but it will lead us directly home, and that by a nearer track."
Hector was undecided about following it, he fancied it bent too much towards
the setting sun; but his cousin overruled his objection. "And is not this our
own creek?" he said: "I have often heard my father say it had its rise somewhere
about this old clearing."
Hector now thought Louis might be right, and they boldly followed the path
among the poplars and thorns and bushes that clothed its banks, surprised to see
how open the ground became, and how swift and clear the stream swept onward.
"Oh, this dear creek," cried the delighted Catharine, "how pretty it is! I
shall often follow its course after this; no doubt it has its source from our
own Cold Springs."
And so they cheerfully pursued their way, till the sun, sinking behind the
range of westerly hills, soon left them in gloom; but they anxiously hurried
forward when the stream wound its noisy way among steep stony banks, clothed
scantily with pines and a few scattered silver-barked poplars. And now they
became bewildered by two paths leading in opposite directions; one upward among
the rocky hills, the other through the opening gorge of a deep ravine.
Here, overcome with fatigue, Catharine seated herself on a large block of
granite, near a great bushy pine that grew beside the path by the ravine, unable
to proceed, and Hector, with a grave and troubled countenance, stood beside her,
looking round with an air of great perplexity. Louis, seating himself at
Catharine's feet, surveyed the deep gloomy valley before them, and sighed
heavily. The conviction had now forcibly struck him that they had mistaken the
path altogether. The very aspect of the country was different; the growth of the
trees, the flow of the stream, all indicated a change of soil and scene.
Darkness was fast drawing its impenetrable veil around them; a few stars were
stealing out, and gleaming down as if with pitying glance upon the young
wanderers; but they could not light up their pathway, or point their homeward
track. The only sound, save the lulling murmur of the rippling stream below, was
the plaintive note of the whip-poor-will, from a gnarled oak that grew near
them, and the harsh grating scream of the night hawk, darting about in the
higher regions of the air, pursuing its noisy congeners, or swooping down with
that peculiar hollow rushing sound, as of a person blowing into some empty
vessel, when it seizes with wide-extended bill its insect prey.
Hector was the first to break the silence. "Cousin Louis, we were wrong in
following the course of the stream; I fear we shall never find our way back
to-night."
Louis made no reply; his sad and subdued air failed not to attract the
attention of his cousins. "Why, Louis, how is this? you are not used to be cast
down by difficulties," said Hector, as he marked something like tears glistening
in the dark eyes of his cousin.
Louis's heart was full, he did not reply, but cast a troubled glance upon the
weary Catharine, who leaned heavily against the tree beneath which she sat.
"It is not," resumed Hector, "that I mind passing a summer's night under such
a sky as this, and with such a dry grassy bed below me; but I do not think it is
good for Catharine to sleep on the bare ground in the night dews, and then they
will be so anxious at home about our absence."
Louis burst into tears, and sobbed out, "And it is all my doing that she came
out with us; I deceived her, and my aunt will be angry and much alarmed, for she
did not know of her going at all. Dear Catharine, good cousin Hector, pray
forgive me!" But Catharine was weeping too much to reply to his passionate
entreaties, and Hector, who never swerved from the truth, for which he had
almost a stern reverence, hardly repressed his indignation at what appeared to
him a most culpable act of deceit on the part of Louis.
The sight of her cousin's grief and self-abasement touched the tender heart
of Catharine, for she was kind and dove-like in her disposition, and loved
Louis, with all his faults. Had it not been for the painful consciousness of the
grief their unusual absence would occasion at home, Catharine would have thought
nothing of their present adventure; but she could not endure the idea of her
high-principled father taxing her with deceiving her kind indulgent mother and
him: it was this humiliating thought which wounded the proud heart of Hector,
causing him to upbraid his cousin in somewhat harsh terms for his want of
truthfulness, and steeled him against the bitter grief that wrung the heart of
the penitent Louis, who, leaning his wet cheek on the shoulder of the kinder
Catharine, sobbed as if his heart would break, heedless of her soothing words
and affectionate endeavours to console him.
"Dear Hector," she said, turning her soft, pleading eyes on the stem face of
her brother, "you must not be so very angry with poor Louis; remember it was to
please me, and give me the enjoyment of a day of liberty with you and himself in
the woods, among the flowers and trees and birds, that he committed this fault."
"Catharine, Louis spoke an untruth and acted deceitfully, and look at the
consequences, we shall have forfeited our parents' confidence, and may have some
days of painful privation to endure before we regain our home, if we ever do
find our way back to Cold Springs," replied Hector.
"It is the grief and anxiety our dear parents will endure this night,"
answered Catharine, "that distresses my mind; but," she added in more cheerful
tones, "let us not despair, no doubt to-morrow we shall be able to retrace our
steps."
With the young there is ever a magical spell in that little word to-morrow, it
is a point which they pursue as fast as it recedes from them; sad indeed is the
young heart that does not look forward with hope to the morrow!
The cloud still hung on Hector's brow, till Catharine gaily exclaimed, "Come,
Hector! come, Louis! we must not stand idling thus; we must think of providing
some shelter for the night; it is not good to rest upon the bare ground exposed
to the night dews. See, here is a nice hut, half made," pointing to a large
upturned root which some fierce whirlwind had hurled from the lofty bank into
the gorge of the dark glen.
"Now you must make haste, and lop off a few pine boughs, and stick them into
the ground, or even lean them against the roots of this old oak, and there, you
see, will be a capital house to shelter us. To work, to work, you idle boys, or
poor wee Katty must turn squaw and build her own wigwam," she playfully added,
taking up the axe which rested against the feathery pine beneath which Hector
was leaning. Now, Catharine cared as little as her brother and cousin about
passing a warm summer's night under the shade of the forest trees, for she was
both hardy and healthy; but her woman's heart taught her that the surest means
of reconciling the cousins would be by mutually interesting them in the same
object, and she was right. In endeavouring to provide for the comfort of their
dear companion, all angry feelings were forgotten by Hector, while active
employment chased away Louis's melancholy.
Unlike the tall, straight, naked trunks of the pines of the forest, those of
the plains are adorned with branches often to the very ground, varying in form
and height, and often presenting most picturesque groups, or rising singly among
scattered groves of the silver-barked poplar or graceful birch-trees; the dark,
mossy greenness of the stately pine contrasting finely with the light waving
foliage of its slender graceful companions.
Hector, with his axe, soon lopped boughs from one of the adjacent pines,
which Louis sharpened with his knife, and with Catharine's assistance drove into
the ground, arranging them in such a way as to make the upturned oak, with its
roots and the earth which adhered to them, form the back part of the hut, which,
when completed, formed by no means a contemptible shelter. Catharine then cut
fern and deer grass with Louis's couteau-de-chasse, which he always
carried in a sheath at his girdle, and spread two beds, one, parted off by dry
boughs and bark, for herself in the interior of the wigwam, and one for her
brother and cousin nearer the entrance. When all was finished to her
satisfaction, she called the two boys, and, according to the custom of her
parents, joined them in the lifting up of their hands as an evening sacrifice of
praise and thanksgiving. Nor were these simple-hearted children backward in
imploring help and protection from the Most High. They earnestly prayed that no
dangerous creature might come near to molest them during the hours of darkness
and helplessness, no evil spirit visit them, no unholy or wicked thoughts
intrude into their minds; but that holy angels and heavenly thoughts might hover
over them, and fill their hearts with the peace of God which passeth all
understanding. And the prayer of the poor wanderers was heard, for they slept
that night in peace, unharmed in the vast solitude. So passed their first night
on the Plains.