“Fear not, ye are of more value than many sparrows.”
The sun had risen in all the splendour
of a Canadian summer morning, when the sleepers arose
from their leafy beds. In spite of the novelty
of their situation, they had slept as soundly and tranquilly
as if they had been under the protecting care of their
beloved parents, on their little paliasses of corn
straw; but they had been cared for by Him who neither
slumbereth nor sleepeth, and they waked full of youthful
hope, and in fulness of faith in His mercy into whose
hands they had commended their souls and bodies before
they retired to rest.
While the children slept in peace
and safety, what terrors had filled the minds of their
distracted parents! what a night of anguish and sorrow
had they passed!
When night had closed in without bringing
back the absent children, the two fathers, lighting
torches of fat pine, went forth in search of the wanderers.
How often did they raise their voices in hopes their
loud halloos might reach the hearing of the lost ones!
How often did they check their hurried steps to listen
for some replying call! But the sighing breeze
in the pine tops, or sudden rustling of the leaves
caused by the flight of the birds, startled by the
unusual glare of the torches, and the echoes of their
own voices, were the only sounds that met their anxious
ears. At daybreak they returned, sad and dispirited,
to their homes, to snatch a morsel of food, endeavour
to cheer the drooping hearts of the weeping mothers,
and hurry off, taking different directions. But,
unfortunately, they had little clue to the route which
Hector and Louis had taken, there being many cattle
paths through the woods. Louis’s want of
truthfulness had caused this uncertainty, as he had
left no intimation of the path he purposed taking when
he quitted his mother’s house: he had merely
said he was going with Hector in search of the cattle,
giving no hint of his intention of asking Catharine
to accompany them: he had but told his sick sister,
that he would bring home strawberries and flowers,
and that he would soon return. Alas, poor thoughtless
Louis, how little did you think of the web of woe
you were then weaving for yourself, and all those to
whom you and your giddy companions were so dear!
Children, think twice, ere ye deceive once! Catharine’s
absence would have been quite unaccountable but for
the testimony of Duncan and Kenneth, who had received
her sisterly caresses before she joined Hector at
the barn; and much her mother marvelled what could
have induced her good dutiful Catharine to have left
her work and forsaken her household duties to go rambling
away with the boys, for she never left the house when
her mother was absent from, it, without her express
permission, and now she was gone lost to
them, perhaps for ever. There stood the wheel
she had been turning, there hung the untwisted hanks
of yarn, her morning task, and there they
remained week after week and month after month, untouched,
a melancholy memorial to the hearts of the bereaved
parents of their beloved.
It were indeed a fruitless task to
follow the agonized fathers in their vain search for
their children, or to paint the bitter anguish that
filled their hearts as day passed after day, and still
no tidings of the lost ones. As hope faded, a
deep and settled gloom stole over the sorrowing parents,
and reigned throughout the once cheerful and gladsome
homes. At the end of a week the only idea that
remained was, that one of these three casualties had
befallen the lost children: death, a lingering
death by famine; death, cruel and horrible, by wolves
or bears; or yet more terrible, with tortures by the
hands of the dreaded Indians, who occasionally held
their councils and hunting parties on the hills about
the Rice Lake, which was known only by the elder Perron
as the scene of many bloody encounters between the
rival tribes of the Mohawks and Chippewas: its
localities were scarcely ever visited by our settlers,
lest haply they should fall into the hands of the bloody
Mohawks, whose merciless dispositions made them in
those days a by-word even to the less cruel Chippewas
and other Indian nations.
It was not in the direction of the
Rice Lake that Maxwell and his brother-in-law sought
their lost children; and even if they had done so,
among the deep glens and hill passes of what is now
commonly called the Plains, they would have stood
little chance of discovering the poor wanderers.
After many days of fatigue of body and distress of
mind, the sorrowing parents sadly relinquished the
search as utterly hopeless, and mourned in bitterness
of spirit over the disastrous fate of their first-born
and beloved children. “There was a
voice of woe, and lamentation, and great mourning;
Rachel weeping for her children, and refusing to be
comforted, because they were not.” The miserable
uncertainty that involved the fate of the lost ones
was an aggravation to the sufferings of the mourners:
could they but have been certified of the manner of
their deaths, they fancied they should be more contented;
but, alas! this fearful satisfaction was withheld.
“Oh, were their tale of sorrow known,
’Twere something to the breaking
heart,
The pangs of doubt would then be gone,
And fancy’s endless dreams depart.”
But let us quit the now mournful settlement
of the Cold Springs, and see how it really fared with
the young wanderers.
When they awoke the valley was filled
with a white creamy mist, that arose from the bed
of the stream, (now known as Cold Creek,) and gave
an indistinctness to the whole landscape, investing
it with an appearance perfectly different to that
which it had worn by the bright, clear light of the
moon. No trace of their footsteps remained to
guide them in retracing their path; so hard and dry
was the stony ground that it left no impression on
its surface. It was with some difficulty they
found the creek, which was concealed from sight by
a lofty screen of gigantic hawthorns, high-bush cranberries,
poplars, and birch-trees. The hawthorn was in
blossom, and gave out a sweet perfume, not less fragrant
than the “May” which makes the lanes and
hedgerows of “merrie old England” so sweet
and fair in May and June, as chanted in many a genuine
pastoral of our olden time; but when our simple Catharine
drew down the flowery branches to wreathe about her
hat, she loved the flowers for their own native sweetness
and beauty, not because poets had sung of them; but
young minds have a natural poetry in themselves, unfettered
by rule or rhyme.
At length their path began to grow
more difficult. A tangled mass of cedars, balsams,
birch, black ash, alders, and tamarack (Indian
name for the larch), with a dense thicket of bushes
and shrubs, such as love the cool, damp soil of marshy
ground, warned our travellers that they must quit
the banks of the friendly stream, or they might become
entangled in a trackless swamp. Having taken copious
and refreshing draughts from the bright waters, and
bathed their hands and faces, they ascended the grassy
bank, and again descending, found themselves in one
of those long valleys, enclosed between lofty sloping
banks, clothed with shrubs and oaks, with here and
there a stately pine. Through this second valley
they pursued their way, till emerging into a wider
space, they came among those singularly picturesque
groups of rounded gravel hills, where the Cold Creek
once more met their view, winding its way towards
a grove of evergreens, where it was again lost to the
eye.
This lovely spot is now known as Sackville’s
Mill-dike. The hand of man has curbed the free
course of the wild forest stream, and made it subservient
to his will, but could not destroy the natural beauties
of the scene.
Fearing to entangle themselves in
the swamp, they kept the hilly ground, winding their
way up to the summit of the lofty ridge of the oak
hills, the highest ground they had yet attained; and
here it was that the silver waters of the Rice Lake
in all its beauty burst upon the eyes of the wondering
and delighted travellers. There it lay, a sheet
of liquid silver just emerging from the blue veil
of mist that hung upon its surface, and concealed
its wooded shores on either side. All feeling
of dread and doubt and danger was lost, for the time,
in one rapturous glow of admiration at a scene so
unexpected and so beautiful as that which they now
gazed upon from the elevation they had gained.
From this ridge they looked down the lake, and the
eye could take in an extent of many miles, with its
verdant wooded islands, which stole into view one by
one as the rays of the morning sun drew up the moving
curtain of mist that enveloped them; and soon both
northern and southern shores became distinctly visible,
with all their bays and capes and swelling oak and
pine-crowned hills.
And now arose the question, “Where
are we? What lake is this? Can it be the
Ontario, or is it the Rice Lake? Can yonder shores
be those of the Americans, or are they the hunting-grounds
of the dreaded Indians?” Hector remembered having
often heard his father say that the Ontario was like
an inland sea, and the opposite shores not visible
unless in some remarkable state of the atmosphere,
when they had been occasionally discerned by the naked
eye, while here they could distinctly see objects
on the other side, the peculiar growth of the trees,
and even flights of wild fowl winging their way among
the rice and low bushes on its margin. The breadth
of the lake from shore to shore could not, they thought,
exceed three or four miles; while its length, in an
easterly direction, seemed far greater beyond what
the eye could take in.
They now quitted the lofty ridge,
and bent their steps towards the lake. Wearied
with their walk, they seated themselves beneath the
shade of a beautiful feathery pine, on a high promontory
that commanded a magnificent view down the lake.
“How pleasant it would be to
have a house on this delightful bank, overlooking
the lake,” said Louis; “only think of the
fish we could take, and the ducks and wild fowl we
could shoot! and it would be no very hard matter to
hollow out a log canoe, such a one as I have heard
my father say he has rowed in across many a lake and
broad river below, when he was lumbering.”
“Yes, it would, indeed, be a
pleasant spot to live upon,” said Hector,
“though I am not quite sure that the land is
as good just here as it is at Cold Springs; but all
these flats and rich valleys would make fine pastures,
and produce plenty of grain, too, if cultivated.”
“You always look to the main
chance, Hec,” said Louis, laughing; “well,
it was worth a few hours’ walking this morning
to look upon so lovely a sheet of water as this.
I would spend two nights in a wigwam, would
not you, ma belle? to enjoy such a sight.”
“Yes, Louis,” replied
his cousin, hesitating as she spoke; “it is very
pretty, and I did not mind sleeping in the little hut;
but then I cannot enjoy myself as much as I should
have done had my father and mother been aware of my
intention of accompanying you. Ah, my dear, dear
parents!” she added, as the thought of the anguish
the absence of her companions and herself would cause
at home came over her. “How I wish I had
remained at home! Selfish Catharine! foolish idle
girl!”
Poor Louis was overwhelmed with grief
at the sight of his cousin’s tears, and as the
kind-hearted but thoughtless boy bent over her to
soothe and console her, his own tears fell upon the
fair locks of the weeping girl, and bedewed the hand
he held between his own.
“If you cry thus, cousin,”
he whispered, “you will break poor Louis’s
heart, already sore enough with thinking of his foolish
conduct.” “Be not cast down, Catharine,”
said her brother, cheeringly: “we may not
be so far from home as you think. As soon as
you are rested we will set out again, and we may find
something to eat; there must be strawberries on these
sunny banks.”
Catharine soon yielded to the voice
of her brother, and drying her eyes, proceeded to
descend the sides of the steep valley that lay to one
side of the high ground where they had been sitting.
Suddenly darting down the bank, she
exclaimed, “Come, Hector; come, Louis:
here indeed is provision to keep us from starving:” for
her eye had caught the bright red strawberries among
the flowers and herbage on the slope; large ripe strawberries,
the very finest she had ever seen.
“There is indeed, ma belle,”
said Louis, stooping as he spoke to gather up, not
the fruit, but a dozen fresh partridge eggs from the
inner shade of a thick tuft of grass and herbs that
grew beside a fallen tree. Catharine’s
voice and sudden movements had startled the partridge
from her nest, and the eggs were soon transferred
to Louis’s straw hat, while a stone flung by
the steady hand of Hector stunned the parent bird.
The boys laughed exultingly as they displayed their
prizes to the astonished Catharine, who, in spite
of hunger, could not help regretting the death of the
mother bird. Girls and women rarely sympathise
with men and boys in their field sports, and Hector
laughed at his sister’s doleful looks as he
handed over the bird to her.
“It was a lucky chance,”
said he, “and the stone was well aimed, but it
is not the first partridge that I have killed in this
way. They are so stupid you may even run them
down at times; I hope to get another before the day
is over. Well, there is no fear of starving to-day,
at all events,” he added, as he inspected the
contents of his cousin’s hat; “twelve
nice fresh eggs, a bird, and plenty of fruit.”
“But how shall we cook the bird
and the eggs? We have no means of getting a fire
made,” said Catharine.
“As to the eggs,” said
Louis, “we can eat them raw; it is not for hungry
wanderers like us to be over nice about our food.”
“They would satisfy us much
better were they boiled, or roasted in the ashes,”
observed Hector.
“True. Well, a fire, I
think, can be got with a little trouble.”
“But how?” asked Hector.
“Oh, there are many ways, but the readiest would
be a flint with the help of my knife.”
“A flint?”
“Yes, if we could get one but
I see nothing but granite, which crumbles and shivers
when struck we could not get a spark.
However, I think it’s very likely that one of
the round pebbles I see on the beach yonder may be
found hard enough for the purpose.”
To the shore they bent their steps
as soon as the little basket had been well filled
with strawberries, and descending the precipitous bank,
fringed with young saplings, birch, ash, and poplars,
they quickly found themselves beside the bright waters
of the lake. A flint was soon found among the
water-worn stones that lay thickly strewn upon the
shore, and a handful of dry sedge, almost as inflammable
as tinder, was collected without trouble; though Louis,
with the recklessness of his nature, had coolly proposed
to tear a strip from his cousin’s apron as a
substitute for tinder, a proposal that
somewhat raised the indignation of the tidy Catharine,
whose ideas of economy and neatness were greatly outraged,
especially as she had no sewing implements to assist
in mending the rent. Louis thought nothing of
that; it was a part of his character to think only
of the present, little of the past, and to let the
future provide for itself. Such was Louis’s
great failing, which had proved a fruitful source
of trouble both to himself and others. In this
respect he bore a striking contrast to his more cautious
companion, who possessed much of the gravity of his
father. Hector was as heedful and steady in his
decisions as Louis was rash and impetuous.
After many futile attempts, and some
skin knocked off their knuckles through awkward handling
of the knife and flint, a good fire was at last kindled,
as there was no lack of dry wood on the shore; Catharine
then triumphantly produced her tin pot, and the eggs
were boiled, greatly to the satisfaction of all parties,
who were by this time sufficiently hungry, having
eaten nothing since the previous evening more substantial
than the strawberries they had taken during the time
they were gathering them in the morning.
Catharine had selected a pretty, cool,
shady recess, a natural bower, under the overhanging
growth of cedars, poplars, and birch, which were wreathed
together by the flexile branches of the vine and bitter-sweet,
which climbed to a height of fifteen feet among the branches of the trees, which it covered
as with a mantle. A pure spring of cold, delicious
water welled out from beneath the twisted roots of
an old hoary-barked cedar, and found its way among
the shingles on the beach to the lake, a humble but
constant tributary to its waters. Some large
blocks of water-worn stone formed convenient seats
and a natural table, on which the little maiden arranged
the forest fare; and never was a meal made with greater
appetite or taken with more thankfulness than that
which our wanderers ate that morning. The eggs
(part of which they reserved for another time) were
declared to be better than those that were daily produced
from the little hen-house at Cold Springs. The
strawberries, set out in little pottles made with the
shining leaves of the oak, ingeniously pinned together
by Catharine with the long spurs of the hawthorn,
were voted delicious, and the pure water most refreshing,
that they drank, for lack of better cups, from a large
mussel-shell which Catharine had picked up among the
weeds and pebbles on the beach.
Many children would have wandered
about weeping and disconsolate, lamenting their sad
fate, or have embittered the time by useless repining,
or, perhaps, by venting their uneasiness in reviling
the principal author of their calamity poor,
thoughtless Louis; but such were not the dispositions
of our young Canadians. Early accustomed to the
hardships incidental to the lives of the settlers in
the bush, these young people had learned to bear with
patience and cheerfulness privations that would have
crushed the spirits of children more delicately nurtured.
They had known every degree of hunger and nakedness;
during the first few years of their lives they had
often been compelled to subsist for days and weeks
upon roots and herbs, wild fruits, and game which
their fathers had learned to entrap, to decoy, and
to shoot. Thus Louis and Hector had early been
initiated into the mysteries of the chase. They
could make deadfalls, and pits, and traps, and snares, they
were as expert as Indians in the use of the bow, they
could pitch a stone, or fling a wooden dart at partridge,
hare, and squirrel, with almost unerring aim; and
were as swift of foot as young fawns. Now it
was that they learned to value in its fullest extent
this useful and practical knowledge, which enabled
them to face with fortitude the privations of a life
so precarious as that to which they were now exposed.
It was one of the elder Maxwell’s
maxims, Never let difficulties overcome
you, but rather strive to conquer them; let the head
direct the hand, and the hand, like a well-disciplined
soldier, obey the head as chief. When his children
expressed any doubts of not being able to accomplish
any work they had begun, he would say, “Have
you not hands, have you not a head, have you not eyes
to see, and reason to guide you? As for impossibilities,
they do not belong to the trade of a soldier, he
dare not see them.” Thus were energy and
perseverance early instilled into the minds of his
children; they were now called upon to give practical
proofs of the precepts that had been taught them in
childhood. Hector trusted to his axe, and Louis
to his couteau-de-châsse and pocket-knife;
the latter was a present from an old forest friend
of his father’s, who had visited them the previous
winter, and which, by good luck, Louis had in his pocket a
capacious pouch, in which were stored many precious
things, such as coils of twine and string, strips
of leather, with odds and ends of various kinds; nails,
bits of iron, leather, and such miscellaneous articles
as find their way most mysteriously into boys’
pockets in general, and Louis Perron’s in particular,
who was a wonderful collector of such small matters.
The children were not easily daunted
by the prospect of passing a few days abroad on so
charming a spot, and at such a lovely season, where
fruits were so abundant; and when they had finished
their morning meal, so providentially placed within
their reach, they gratefully acknowledged the mercy
of God in this thing.
Having refreshed themselves by bathing
their hands and faces in the lake, they cheerfully
renewed their wanderings, though something both to
leave the cool shade and the spring for an untrodden
path among the hills and deep ravines that furrow
the shores of the Rice Lake in so remarkable a manner;
and often did our weary wanderers pause to look upon
the wild glens and precipitous hills, where the fawn
and the shy deer found safe retreats, unharmed by
the rifle of the hunter, where the osprey
and white-headed eagle built their nests, unheeding
and unharmed. Twice that day, misled by following
the track of the deer, had they returned to the same
spot, a deep and lovely glen, which had
once been a water-course, but now a green and shady
valley. This they named the Valley of the Rock,
from a remarkable block of red granite that occupied
a central position in the narrow defile; and here they
prepared to pass the second night on the Plains.
A few boughs cut down and interlaced with the shrubs
round a small space cleared with Hector’s axe,
formed shelter, and leaves and grass, strewed on the
ground, formed a bed, though not so smooth, perhaps,
as the bark and cedar-boughs that the Indians spread
within their summer wigwams for carpets and couches,
or the fresh heather that the Highlanders gather on
the wild Scottish hills.
While Hector and Louis were preparing
the sleeping-chamber, Catharine busied herself in
preparing the partridge for their supper. Having
collected some thin peelings from the ragged bark of
a birch-tree, that grew on the side of the steep bank
to which she gave the appropriate name of the “Birken
shaw,” she dried it in her bosom, and then beat
it fine upon a big stone, till it resembled the finest
white paper. This proved excellent tinder, the
aromatic oil contained in the bark of the birch being
highly inflammable, Hector had prudently retained the
flint that they had used in the morning, and a fire
was now lighted in front of the rocky stone, and a
forked stick, stuck in the ground, and bent over the
coals, served as a spit, on which, gipsy-fashion, the
partridge was suspended, a scanty meal,
but thankfully partaken of, though they knew not how
they should breakfast next morning, The children felt
they were pensioners on God’s providence not
less than the wild denizens of the wilderness around
them.
When Hector who by nature
was less sanguine than his sister or cousin expressed
some anxiety for their provisions for the morrow,
Catharine, who had early listened with trusting piety
of heart to the teaching of her father, when he read
portions from the holy word of God, gently laid her
hand upon her brother’s head, which rested on
her knees, as he sat upon the grass beside her, and
said, in a low and earnest tone, “’Consider
the fowls of the air; they sow not, neither do they
reap, nor gather into barns, yet your heavenly Father
feedeth them. Are ye not much better than they?’
Surely, my brother, God careth for us as much as for
the wild creatures, that have no sense to praise and
glorify his holy name. God cares for the creatures
He has made, and supplies them with knowledge where
they shall find food when they hunger and thirst.
So I have heard my father say; and surely our father
knows, for is he not a wise man, Hector?”
“I remember,” said Louis,
thoughtfully, “hearing my mother repeat the
words of a good old man she knew when she lived in
Quebec; ’When you are in trouble,
Mathilde,’ he used to say to her, ’kneel
down, and ask God’s help, nothing doubting but
that He has the power as well as the will to serve
you, if it be for your good; for He is able to bring
all things to pass. It is our own want of faith
that prevents our prayers from being heard. And,
truly, I think the wise old man was right,” he
added.
It was strange to hear grave words
like these from the lips of the giddy Louis.
Possibly they had the greater weight on that account.
And Hector, looking up with a serious air, replied,
“Your mother’s friend was a good man,
Louis. Our want of trust in God’s power
must displease Him. And when we think of all
the great and glorious things He has made, that
blue sky, those sparkling stars, the beautiful moon
that is now shining down upon us, and the hills and
waters, the mighty forest, and little creeping plants
and flowers that grow at our feet, it must,
indeed, seem foolish in his eyes that we should doubt
his power to help us, who not only made all these
things, but ourselves also.”
“True,” said Catharine;
“but then, Hector, we are not as God made us;
for the wicked one cast bad seed in the field where
God had sown the good.”
“Let us, however, consider what
we shall do for food; for, you know, God helps those
that help themselves,” said Louis. “Let
us consider a little. There must be plenty of
fish in the lake, both small and great.”
“But how are we to get them
out of it?” rejoined Catharine. “I
doubt the fish will swim at their ease there, while
we go hungry.”
“Do not interrupt me, ma
chère. Then, we see the track of deer, and
the holes of the wood-chuck; we hear the cry of squirrels
and chipmunks, and there are plenty of partridges,
and ducks, and quails, and snipes; of course, we have
to contrive some way to kill them. Fruits there
are in abundance, and plenty of nuts of different
kinds. At present we have plenty of fine strawberries,
and huckleberries will be ripe soon in profusion,
and bilberries too, and you know how pleasant they
are; as for raspberries, I see none; but by-and-by
there will be May-apples I see great quantities
of them in the low grounds, grapes, high-bush-cranberries,
haws as large as cherries, and sweet too; squaw-berries,
wild plums, choke-cherries, and bird-cherries.
As to sweet acorns, there will be bushels and bushels
of them for the roasting, as good as chestnuts, to
my taste; and butter-nuts, and hickory-nuts, with
many other good things.” And here Louis
stopped for want of breath to continue his catalogue
of forest dainties.
“Yes; and there are bears, and
wolves, and racoons, too, that will eat us for want
of better food,” interrupted Hector, slyly.
“Nay, Katty, do not shudder, as if you were
already in the clutches of a big bear. Neither
bear nor wolf shall make mincemeat of thee, my girl,
while Louis and thy brother are near, to wield an
axe or a knife in thy defence.”
“Nor catamount spring upon thee,
ma belle cousine,” added Louis,
gallantly, “while thy bold cousin Louis can scare
him away.”
“Well, now that we know our
resources, the next thing is to consider how we are
to obtain them, my dears,” said Catharine.
“For fishing, you know, we must have a hook
and line, a rod, or a net. Now, where are these
to be met with?”
Louis nodded his head sagaciously.
“The line I think I can provide; the hook is
more difficult, but I do not despair even of that.
As to the rod, it can be cut from any slender sapling
on the shore. A net, ma chère, I could
make with very little trouble, if I had but a piece
of cloth to sew over a hoop.”
Catharine laughed. “You
are very ingenious, no doubt, Monsieur Louis, but
where are you to get the cloth and the hoop, and the
means of sewing it on?”
Lords took up the corner of his cousin’s
apron with a provoking look.
“My apron, sir, is not to be
appropriated for any such purpose. You seem to
covet it for everything.”
“Indeed, ma petite, I think
it very unbecoming and very ugly, and never could
see any good reason why you and Mamma and Mathilde
should wear such frightful things.”
“It is to keep our gowns clean,
Louis, when we are milking and scrubbing, and doing
all sorts of household duties,” said Catharine.
“Well, ma belle, you have neither
cows to milk, nor house to clean,” replied the
annoying boy; “so there can be little want of
the apron. I could turn it to fifty useful purposes.”
“Pooh, nonsense,” said
Hector, impatiently, “let the child alone, and
do not tease her about her apron.”
“Well, then, there is another
good thing I did not think of before, water mussels.
I have heard my father and old Jacob the lumberer say,
that, roasted in their shells in the ashes, with a
seasoning of salt and pepper, they are good eating
when nothing better is to be got.”
“No doubt, if the seasoning
can be procured,” said Hector, “but, alas
for the salt and the pepper!”
“Well, we can eat them with
the best of all sauces hunger; and then,
no doubt, there are crayfish in the gravel under the
stones, but we must not mind a pinch to our fingers
in taking them.”
“To-morrow then let us breakfast
on fish,” said Hector. “You and I
will try our luck, while Kate gathers strawberries;
and if our line should break, we can easily cut those
long locks from Catharine’s head, and twist
them into lines,” and Hector laid
his hands upon the long fair hair that hung in shining
curls about his sister’s neck.
“Cut my curls! This is
even worse than cousin Louis’s proposal of making
tinder and fishing-nets of my apron,” said Catharine,
shaking back the bright tresses, which, escaping from
the snood that bound them, fell in golden waves over
her shoulders.
“In truth, Hec, it were a sin
and a shame to cut her pretty curls, that become her
so well,” said Louis. “But we have
no scissors, ma belle, so you need fear no injury
to your precious locks.”
“For the matter of that, Louis,
we could cut them with your couteau-de-châsse.
I could tell you a story that my father told me, not
long since, of Charles Stuart, the second king of that
name in England. You know he was the grand-uncle
of the young Chevalier Charles Edward, that my father
talks of, and loves so much.”
“I know all about him,”
said Catharine, nodding sagaciously; “let us
hear the story of his grand-uncle. But I should
like to know what my hair and Louis’s knife
can have to do with King Charles.”
“Wait a bit, Kate, and you shall
hear, that is, if you have patience,” said her
brother. “Well then, you must know, that
after some great battle, the name of which I forget, in which the
King and his handful of brave soldiers were defeated
by the forces of the Parliament, (the Roundheads,
as they were called,) the poor young king was hunted
like a partridge upon the mountains; a large price
was set on his head, to be given to any traitor who
should slay him, or bring him prisoner to Oliver Cromwell.
He was obliged to dress himself in all sorts of queer
clothes, and hide in all manner of strange, out of
the way places, and keep company with rude and humble
men, the better to hide his real rank from the cruel
enemies that sought his life. Once he hid along
with a gallant gentleman,
one of his own brave officers, in the branches of a
great oak. Once he was hid in a mill; and another
time he was in the house of one Pendril, a woodman.
The soldiers of the Parliament, who were always prowling
about, and popping in unawares wherever they suspected
the poor king to be hidden, were, at one time, in
the very room where he was standing beside the fire.”
“Oh!” exclaimed Catharine,
“that was frightful. And did they take him
prisoner?”
“No; for the wise woodman and
his brothers, fearing lest the soldiers should discover
that he was a cavalier and a gentleman, by the long
curls that the king’s men all wore in those days,
and called lovelocks, begged of his majesty
to let his hair be cropped close to his head.”
“That was very hard, to lose his nice curls.”
“I dare say the voting king
thought so too, but it was better to lose his hair
than his head. So, I suppose, the men told him,
for he suffered them to cut it all close to his head,
laying down his head on a rough deal table, or a chopping-block,
while his faithful friends with a large knife trimmed
off the curls.”
“I wonder if the young king
thought at that minute of his poor father, who, you
know, was forced by wicked men to lay down his head
upon a block to have it cut from his shoulders, because
Cromwell, and others as hard-hearted as himself, willed
that he should die.” “Poor king!”
said Catharine, sighing, “I see that it is better
to be poor children, wandering on these plains under
God’s own care, than to be kings and princes
at the mercy of bad and sinful men.”
“Who told your father all these things, Hec?”
said Louis.
“It was the son of his brave
colonel, who knew a great deal about the history of
the Stuart kings, for our colonel had been with Prince
Charles, the young chevalier, and fought by his side
when he was in Scotland; he loved him dearly, and,
after the battle of Culloden, where the Prince lost
all, and was driven from place to place, and had not
where to lay his head, he went abroad in hopes of better
times; (but those times did not come for the poor
Prince; and our colonel) after a while, through the
friendship of General Wolfe, got a commission in the
army that was embarking for Quebec, and, at last, commanded
the regiment to which my father belonged. He
was a kind man, and my father loved both him and his
son, and grieved not a little when he parted from him.”
“Well,” said Catharine,
“as you have told me such a nice story, Mister
Hec, I shall forgive the affront about my curls.”
“Well, then, to-morrow we are
to try our luck at fishing, and if we fail, we will
make us bows and arrows to kill deer or small game;
I fancy we shall not be over particular as to its
of quality. Why should not we be able to find
subsistence as well as the wild Indians?”
“True,” said Hector, “the
wild men of the wilderness, and the animals and birds,
all are fed by the things that He provideth; then,
wherefore should His white children fear?”
“I have often heard my father
tell of the privations of the lumberers, when they
have fallen short of provisions, and of the contrivances
of himself and old Jacob Morelle, when they were lost
for several days, nay, weeks I believe it was.
Like the Indians, they made themselves bows and arrows,
using the sinews of the deer, or fresh thongs of leather,
for bow-strings; and when they could not get game to
eat, they boiled the inner bark of the slippery elm
to jelly, or birch bark, and drank the sap of the
sugar maple when they could get no water but melted
snow only, which is unwholesome; at last, they even
boiled their own mocassins.”
“Indeed, Louis, that must have
been a very unsavoury dish,” said Catharine.
“That old buckskin vest would
have made a famous pot of soup of itself,” added
Hector, “or the deer-skin hunting shirt.”
“Well, they might have been reduced even to
that,” said Louis, laughing, “but for the
good fortune that befel them in the way of a half-roasted
bear.”
“Nonsense, cousin Louis, bears
do not run about ready roasted in the forest, like
the lambs in the old nursery tale.”
“Well now, Kate, this was a
fact; at least, it was told as one by old Jacob, and
my father did not deny it; shall I tell you about it?
After passing several hungry days with no better food
to keep them alive than the scrapings of the inner
bark of the poplars and elms, which was not very substantial
for hearty men, they encamped one night in a thick
dark swamp, not the sort of place they would
have chosen, but that they could not help themselves,
having been enticed into it by the tracks of a deer
or a moose, and night came upon them unawares,
so they set to work to kindle up a fire with spunk,
and a flint and knife; rifle they had none, or maybe
they would have had game to eat. Old Jacob fixed
upon a huge hollow pine, that lay across their path,
against which he soon piled a glorious heap of boughs
and arms of trees, and whatever wood he could collect,
and lighted up a fine fire. You know what a noble
hand old Jacob used to be at making up a roaring fire;
he thought, I suppose, if he could not have warmth
within, he would have plenty of it without. The
wood was dry pine and cedar and birch, and it blazed
away, and crackled and burnt like a pine-torch.
By-and-by they heard a most awful growling close to
them. ‘That’s a big bear, as I live,’
said old Jacob, looking all about, thinking to see
one come out from the thick bush; but Bruin was nearer
to him than he thought, for presently a great black
bear burst out from the but-end of the great burning
log, and made towards Jacob; just then the wind blew
the flame outward, and it caught the bear’s
thick coat, and he was all in a blaze in a moment.
No doubt the heat of the fire had penetrated to the
hollow of the log, where he had lain himself snugly
up for the winter, and wakened him; but Jacob seeing
the huge black brute all in a flame of fire, began
to think it was Satan’s own self come to carry
him off, and he roared with fright, and the bear roared
with pain and rage, and my father roared with laughing
to see Jacob’s terror; but he did not let the
bear laugh at him, for he seized a thick pole that
he had used for closing in the brands and logs, and
soon demolished the bear, who was so blinded with
the fire and smoke that he made no fight; and they
feasted on roast bear’s flesh for many days,
and got a capital skin to cover them beside.”
“What, Louis, after the fur
was all singed?” said Catharine.
“Kate, you are too particular,”
said Louis; “a story never loses, you know.”
Hector laughed heartily at the adventure,
and enjoyed the dilemma of the bear in his winter
quarter; but Catharine was somewhat shocked at the
levity displayed by her cousin and brother, when recounting
the terror of old Jacob and the sufferings of the
poor bear.
“You boys are always so unfeeling,” she
said, gravely.
“Indeed, Kate,” said her
brother, “the day may come when the sight of
a good piece of roast bear’s flesh, will be
no unwelcome sight. If we do not find our way
back to Cold Springs before the winter sets in, we
may be reduced to as bad a state as poor Jacob and
my uncle were in the pine swamps, on the banks of
the St. John.”
“Ah!” said Catharine,
trembling, “that would be too bad to happen.”
“Courage, ma belle, let us not
despair for the morrow. Let us see what to-morrow
will do for us; meantime, we will not neglect the blessings
we still possess; see, our partridge is ready, let
us eat our supper, and be thankful; and for grace
let us say, ’Sufficient unto the day is the
evil thereof.’”
Long exposure to the air had sharpened
their appetites the hungry wanderers needed
no further invitation, the scanty meal, equally divided,
was soon despatched.
It is a common saying, but excellent
to be remembered by any wanderers in our forest wilds,
that those who travel by the sun travel in a circle,
and usually find themselves at night in the same place
from whence they started in the morning; so it was
with our wanderers. At sunset, they found themselves
once more in the ravine, beside the big stone, in
which they had rested at noon. They had imagined
themselves miles and miles distant from it; they were
grievously disappointed. They had encouraged
each other with the confident hope that they were drawing
near to the end of their bewildering journey; they
were as far from their home as ever, without the slightest
clue to guide them to the right path. Despair
is not a feeling which takes deep root in the youthful
breast. The young are always hopeful; so confident
in their own wisdom and skill in averting or conquering
danger; so trusting; so willing to believe that there
is a peculiar Providence watching over them.
Poor children! they had indeed need of such a belief
to strengthen their minds and encourage them to fresh
exertions, for new trials were at hand.
The broad moonlight had already flooded
the recesses of the glen with light, and all looked
fresh and lovely in the dew, which glittered on tree
and leaf, on herb and flower. Catharine, who,
though weary with her fatiguing wanderings, could
not sleep, left the little hut of boughs which her
companions had put up near the granite rock in the
valley for her accommodation, and ascended the western
bank, where the last jutting spur of its steep side
formed a lofty clifflike promontory, at the extreme
verge of which the roots of one tall spreading oak
formed a most inviting seat, from whence the traveller
looked down into a level track, which stretched away
to the edge of the lake. This flat had been the
estuary of the mountain stream, which had once rushed
down between the hills, forming a narrow gorge; but
now, all was changed; the water had ceased to flow,
the granite bed was overgrown, and carpeted with deer-grass
and flowers of many hues, wild fruits and bushes, below;
while majestic oaks and pines towered above. A
sea of glittering foliage lay beneath Catharine’s
feet; in the distance the eye of the young girl rested
on a belt of shining waters, which girt in the shores
like a silver zone; beyond, yet more remote to the
northward, stretched the illimitable forest.
Never had Catharine looked upon a
scene so still or so fair to the eye; a holy calm
seemed to shed its influence over her young mind, and
peaceful tears stole down her cheeks. Not a sound
was there abroad, scarcely a leaf stirred; she could
have stayed for hours there gazing on the calm beauty
of nature, and communing with her own heart, when
suddenly a stirring rustling sound caught her car;
it came from a hollow channel on one side of the promontory,
which was thickly overgrown with the shrubby dogwood,
wild roses and bilberry bushes. Imagine the terror
which seized the poor girl, on perceiving a grisly
beast breaking through the covert of the bushes.
With a scream and a bound, which the most deadly fear
alone could have inspired, Catharine sprung from the
supporting trunk of the oak, dashed, down the precipitous
side of the ravine; now clinging to the bending sprays
of the flexile dogwood now to some fragile
birch or poplar now trusting to the yielding
heads of the sweet-scented ceanothus, or filling
her hands with sharp thorns from the roses that clothed
the bank; flowers, grass, all were alike clutched
at in her rapid and fearful descent. A loose fragment
of granite on which she had unwittingly placed her
foot rolled from under her; unable to regain her balance
she fell forwards, and was precipitated through the
bushes into the ravine below, conscious only of unspeakable
terror and an agonising pain in one of her ancles,
which rendered her quite powerless. The noise
of the stones she had dislodged in her fall and her
piteous cries, brought Louis and Hector to her side,
and they bore her in their arms to the hut of boughs
and laid her down upon her bed of leaves and grass
and young pine boughs. When Catharine was able
to speak, she related to Louis and Hector the cause
of her fright. She was sure it must have been
a wolf by his sharp teeth, long jaws, and grisly coat.
The last glance she had had of him had filled her
with terror, he was standing on a fallen tree with
his eyes fixed upon her she could tell
them no more that happened, she never felt the ground
she was on, so great was her fright.
Hector was half disposed to scold
his sister for rambling over the hills alone, but
Louis was full of tender compassion for la belle
cousine, and would not suffer her to be chidden.
Fortunately, no bones had been fractured, though the
sinews of her ankle were severely sprained; but the
pain was intense, and after a sleepless night, the
boys found to their grief and dismay, that Catharine
was unable to put her foot to the ground. This
was an unlooked-for aggravation of their misfortunes;
to pursue their wandering was for the present impossible;
rest was their only remedy, excepting the application
of such cooling medicaments as circumstances would
supply them with. Cold water constantly applied
to the swollen joint, was the first thing that was
suggested; but, simple as was the lotion, it was not
easy to obtain it in sufficient quantities. They
were a full quarter of a mile from the lake shore,
and the cold springs near it were yet further off;
and then the only vessel they had was the tin-pot,
which hardly contained a pint; at the same time the
thirst of the fevered sufferer was intolerable, and
had also to be provided for. Poor Catharine,
what unexpected misery she now endured!
The valley and its neighbouring hills
abounded in strawberries; they were now ripening in
abundance; the ground was scarlet in places with this
delicious fruit; they proved a blessed relief to the
poor sufferer’s burning thirst. Hector
and Louis were unwearied in supplying her with them.
Louis, ever fertile in expedients,
crushed the cooling fruit and applied them to the
sprained foot; rendering the application still more
grateful by spreading them upon the large smooth leaves
of the sapling oak; these he bound on with strips
of the leathery bark of the moose-wood,_ which he had found growing in great abundance
near the entrance of the ravine. Hector, in the
meantime, was not idle. After having collected
a good supply of ripe strawberries, he climbed the
hills in search of birds’ eggs and small game.
About noon he returned with the good news of having
discovered a spring of fine water in an adjoining
ravine, beneath a clump of bass-wood and black cherry-trees;
he had also been so fortunate as to kill a woodchuck,
having met with many of their burrows in the gravelly
sides of the hills. The woodchuck seems to be
a link between the rabbit and badger; its colour is
that of a leveret; it climbs like the racoon and burrows
like the rabbit; its eyes are large, full, and dark,
the lip cleft, the soles of the feet naked, claws
sharp, ears short; it feeds on grasses, grain, fruit,
and berries. The flesh is white, oily, and, in
the summer, rank, but is eaten in the fall by the
Indians and woodsmen; the skin is not much valued.
They are easily killed by dogs, though, being expert
climbers, they often baffle their enemies, clinging
to the bark beyond their reach; a stone or stick well-aimed
soon kills them, but they often bite sharply.
The woodchuck proved a providential
supply, and Hector cheered his companions with the
assurance that they could not starve, as there were
plenty of these creatures to be found. They had
seen one or two about the Cold Springs, but they are
less common in the deep forest lands than on the drier,
more open plains.
“It is a great pity we have
no larger vessel to bring our water from the spring
in,” said Hector, looking at the tin-pot, “one
is so apt to stumble among stones and tangled underwood.
If we had only one of our old bark dishes we could
get a good supply at once.”
“There is a fallen birch not
far from this,” said Louis; “I have here
my trusty knife; what is there to hinder us from manufacturing
a vessel capable of holding water, a gallon if you
like?”
“How can you sew it together,
cousin?” asked Catharine; “you have neither
deer sinews, nor war-tap.” [The Indian name
for the flexible roots of the tamarack, or swamp larch,
which they make use of in manufacturing the birch
baskets and canoes.] “I have a substitute
at hand, ma belle,” and Louis pointed to the
strips of leatherwood that he had collected for binding
the dressings on his cousin’s foot.
When an idea once struck Louis, he
never rested till he worked it out in some way.
In a few minutes he was busily employed, stripping
sheets of the ever-useful birch-bark from the trunk
that had fallen at the foot of the “Wolf’s
Crag,” for so the children had named the memorable
spot where poor Catharine’s accident had occurred.
The rough outside coatings of the
bark, which are of silvery whiteness, but are ragged
from exposure to the action of the weather in the larger
and older trees, he peeled off, and then cutting the
bark so that the sides lapped well over, and the corners
were secured from cracks, he proceeded to pierce holes
opposite to each other, and with some trouble managed
to stitch them tightly together, by drawing strips
of the moose or leather-wood through and through.
The first attempt, of course, was but rude and ill-shaped,
but it answered the purpose, and only leaked a little
at the corners for want of a sort of flap, which he
had forgotten to allow in cutting out the bark; this
flap in the Indian baskets and dishes turns up, and
keeps all tight and close. The defect he remedied
in his subsequent attempts. In spite of its deficiencies,
Louis’s water-jar was looked upon with great
admiration, and highly commended by Catharine, who
almost forgot her sufferings while watching
her cousin’s proceedings.
Louis was elated by his own successful
ingenuity, and was for running off directly to the
spring. “Catharine shall now have cold water
to bathe her poor ancle with, and to quench her thirst,”
he said, joyfully springing to his feet, ready for
a start up the steep bank: but Hector quietly
restrained his lively cousin, by suggesting the possibility
of his not finding the “fountain in the wilderness,”
as Louis termed the spring, or losing himself altogether.
“Let us both go together, then.”
cried Louis. Catharine cast on her cousin an
imploring glance.
“Do not leave me, dear Louis;
Hector, do not let me be left alone.” Her
sorrowful appeal stayed the steps of the volatile Louis.
“Go you, Hector, as you know
the way: I will not leave you, Kate, since I
was the cause of all you have suffered; I will abide
by you in joy or in sorrow till I see you once more
safe in your own dear mother’s arms.”
Comforted by this assurance, Catharine
quickly dashed away the gathering tears from her checks,
and chid her own foolish fears.
“But you know, dear cousin,”
she said, “I am so helpless, and then the dread
of that horrible wolf makes a coward of me.”
After some little time had elapsed,
Hector returned; the bark vessel had done its duty
to admiration, it only wanted a very little improvement
to make it complete. The water was cold and pure.
Hector had spent a little time in deepening the mouth
of the spring, and placing some stones about it.
He described the ravine as being much deeper and wider,
and more gloomy than the one they occupied. The
sides and bottom were clothed with magnificent oaks.
It was a grand sight, he said, to stand on the jutting
spurs of this great ravine, and look down upon the
tops of the trees that lay below, tossing their rounded
heads like the waves of a big sea. There were
many lovely flowers, vetches of several kinds, blue,
white, and pencilled, twining among the grass.
A beautiful white-belled flower, that was like the
“Morning glory,” (Convolvulus major,)
and scarlet-cups_ in abundance, with roses in profusion.
The bottom of this ravine was strewed in places with
huge blocks of black granite, cushioned with thick
green moss; it opened out into a wide flat, similar
to the one at the mouth of the valley of the Big Stone.
These children were not insensible
to the beauties of nature, and both Hector and his
sister had insensibly imbibed a love of the grand and
the picturesque, by listening with untiring interest
to their father’s animated and enthusiastic
descriptions of his Highland home, and the wild mountainous
scenery that surrounded it. Though brought up
in solitude and uneducated, yet there was nothing
vulgar or rude in the minds or manners of these young
people. Simple and untaught they were, but they
were guileless, earnest, and unsophisticated; and if
they lacked the knowledge that is learned from books,
they possessed much that was useful and practical,
which had been taught by experience and observation
in the school of necessity.
For several days the pain and fever
arising from her sprain rendered any attempt at removing
Catharine from the valley of the “Big Stone”
impracticable. The ripe fruit began to grow less
abundant in their immediate vicinity, and neither
woodchuck, partridge, nor squirrel had been killed;
and our poor wanderers now endured the agonising pains
of hunger. Continual exposure to the air by night
and by day contributed not a little to increase the
desire for food. It is true, there was the yet
untried lake, “bright, boundless, and free,”
gleaming in silvery splendour, but in practice they
knew nothing of the fisher’s craft, though,
as a matter of report, they were well acquainted with
all the mysteries of it, and had often listened with
delight to the feats performed by their respective
fathers in the art of angling, spearing and netting.
“I have heard my father say,
that so bold and numerous were the fish in the lakes
and rivers he was used to fish in, that they could
be taken by the hand, with a crooked pin and coarse
thread, or wooden spear; but that was in the lower
province; and oh, what glorious tales I have heard
him tell of spearing fish by torchlight!”
“The fish may be wiser or not
so numerous in this lake,” said Hector; “however,
if Kate can bear to be moved, we will go down to the
shore and try our luck; but what can we do? we have
neither hook nor line provided.”
Louis nodded his head, and sitting
down on a projecting root of a scrub oak, produced
from the depths of his capacious pocket a bit of tin,
which he carefully selected from among a miscellaneous
hoard of treasures. “Here.” said
he, holding it up to the view as he spoke; “here
is the slide of an old powder-flask, which I picked
up from among some rubbish that my sister had thrown
out the other day.”
“I fear you will make nothing
of that,” said Hector, “a bit of bone
would be better. If you had a file now you might
do something.”
“Stay a moment, Monsieur Hec.,
what do you call this?” and Louis triumphantly
handed out of his pocket the very instrument in question,
a few inches of a broken, rusty file; very rusty, indeed,
it was, but still it might be made to answer in such
ingenious hands as those of our young French Canadian.
“I well remember, Katty, how you and Mathilde
laughed at me for treasuring up this old thing months
ago. Ah, Louis. Louis, you little knew the
use it was to be put to then,” he added thoughtfully,
apostrophising himself; “how little do we know
what is to befall us in our young days!” “God
knows it all,” said Hector, gravely, “we
are under His good guidance.”
“You are right, Hec., let us
trust in His mercy and He will take good care of us.
Come, let us go to the lake,” Catharine added,
and sprung to her feet, but as quickly sunk down upon
the grass, and regarded her companions with a piteous
look, saying, “I cannot walk one step; alas,
alas! what is to become of me; I am only a useless
burden to you. If you leave me here, I shall
fall a prey to some savage beast, and you cannot carry
me with you in your search for food.”
“Dry your tears, sweet cousin,
you shall go with us. Do you think that Hector
or Louis would abandon you in your helpless state,
to die of hunger or thirst, or to be torn by wolves
or bears? We will carry you by turns; the distance
to the lake is nothing, and you are not so very heavy,
ma belle cousine; see, I could dance
with you in my arms, you are so light a burden,” and
Louis gaily caught the suffering girl up in his arms,
and with rapid steps struck into the deer path that
wound through the ravine towards the lake, but when
they reached a pretty rounded knoll, (where Wolf Tower now stands,) Louis was fain
to place his cousin on a flat stone beneath a big
oak that grew beside the bank, and fling himself on
the flowery ground at her feet, while he drew a long
breath, and gathered the fruit that grew among the
long grass to refresh himself after his fatigue; and
then, while resting on the “Elfin Knowe,”
as Catharine called the hill, he employed himself
with manufacturing a rude sort of fish-hook with the
aid of his knife, the bit of tin, and the rusty file;
a bit of twine was next produced, boys have
always a bit of string in their pockets, and Louis,
as I have before hinted, was a provident hoarder of
such small matters. The string was soon attached
to the hook, and Hector was not long in cutting a sapling
that answered well the purpose of a fishing-rod, and
thus equipped they proceeded to the lake shore, Hector
and Louis carrying the crippled Catharine by turns.
When there, they selected a sheltered spot beneath
a grove of over-hanging cedars and birches, festooned
with wild vines, which, closely woven, formed a natural
bower, quite impervious to the rays of the sun.
A clear spring flowing from the upper part of the bank
among the hanging network of loose fibres and twisted
roots, fell tinkling over a mossy log at her feet,
and quietly spread itself among the round shingly
pebbles that formed the beach of the lake. Beneath
this pleasant bower Catharine could repose, and watch
her companions at their novel employment, or bathe
her feet and infirm ancle in the cool streamlet that
rippled in tiny wavelets over its stony bed.
If the amusement of fishing prove
pleasant and exciting when pursued for pastime only,
it may readily be conceived that its interest must
be greatly heightened when its object is satisfying
a craving degree of hunger. Among the sunny spots
on the shore, innumerable swarms of the flying grasshopper
or field crickets were sporting, and one of these
proved an attractive bait. The line was no sooner
cast into the water, than the hook was seized, and
many were the brilliant specimens of sun-fish that
our eager fishermen cast at Catharine’s feet,
all gleaming with gold and azure scales. Nor
was there any lack of perch, or that delicate fish
commonly known in these waters as the pink roach.
Tired at last with their easy sport,
the hungry boys next proceeded to the grateful task
of scaling and dressing their fish, and this they did
very expeditiously, as soon as the more difficult part,
that of kindling up a fire on the beach, had been
accomplished with the help of the flint, knife, and
dried rushes. The fish were then suspended, Indian
fashion, on forked sticks stuck in the ground and inclined
at a suitable angle towards the glowing embers, a
few minutes sufficed to cook them.
“Truly,” said Catharine,
when the plentiful repast was set before her, “God
hath, indeed, spread a table for us here in the wilderness;”
so miraculous did this ample supply of delicious food
seem in the eyes of this simple child of nature.
They had often heard tell of the facility
with which the fish could be caught, but they had
known nothing of it from their own experience, as
the streams and creeks about Cold Springs afforded
them but little opportunity for exercising their skill
as anglers; so that, with the rude implements with
which they were furnished, the result of their morning
success seemed little short of divine interference
in their behalf. Happy and contented in the belief
that they were not forgotten by their heavenly Father,
these poor “children in the wood” looked
up with gratitude to that beneficent Being who suffereth
not even a sparrow to fall unheeded.
Upon Catharine, in particular, these
things made a deep impression, and there as she sat
in the green shade, soothed by the lulling sound of
the flowing waters, and the soft murmuring of the
many-coloured insects that hovered among the fragrant
leaves which thatched her sylvan bower, her young
heart was raised in humble and holy aspirations to
the great Creator of all things living. A peaceful
calm diffused itself over her mind, as with hands
meekly folded across her breast, the young girl prayed
with the guileless fervour of a trusting and faithful
heart.
The sun was just sinking in a flood
of glory behind the dark pine-woods at the head of
the lake, when Hector and Louis, who had been carefully
providing fish for the morrow, (which was the Sabbath,)
came loaded with their finny prey carefully strung
upon a willow wand, and found Catharine sleeping in
her bower. Louis was loth to break her tranquil
slumbers, but her careful brother reminded him of the
danger to which she was exposed, sleeping in the dew
by the water side; “Moreover,” he added,
“we have some distance to go, and we have left
the precious axe and the birch-bark vessel in the
valley.”
These things were too valuable to
be lost, and so they roused the sleeper, and slowly
recommenced their toilsome way, following the same
path that they had made in the morning. Fortunately,
Hector had taken the precaution to bend down the flexile
branches of the dogwood and break the tops of the
young trees that they had passed between on their
route to the lake, and by this clue they were enabled
with tolerable certainty to retrace their way, nothing
doubting of arriving in time at the wigwam of boughs
by the rock in the valley.
Their progress was, however, slow,
burdened with the care of the lame girl, and heavily
laden with the fish. The purple shades of twilight
soon clouded the scene, deepened by the heavy masses
of foliage, which cast a greater degree of obscurity
upon their narrow path; for they had now left the
oak-flat and entered the gorge of the valley.
The utter loneliness of the path, the grotesque shadows
of the trees, that stretched in long array across
the steep banks on either side, taking, now this,
now that wild and fanciful shape, awakened strange
feelings of dread in the mind of these poor forlorn
wanderers; like most persons bred up in solitude,
their imaginations were strongly tinctured with superstitious
fears. Here then, in the lonely wilderness, far
from their beloved parents and social hearth, with
no visible arm to protect them from danger, none to
encourage or to cheer them, can it be matter of surprise
if they started with terror-blanched cheeks at every
fitful breeze that rustled the leaves or waved the
branches above them? The gay and lively Louis,
blithe as any wild bird in the bright sunlight, was
the most easily oppressed by this strange superstitious
fear, when the shades of evening were closing round,
and he would start with ill-disguised terror at every
sound or shape that met his ear or eye, though the
next minute he was the first to laugh at his own weakness.
In Hector, the feeling was of a graver, more solemn
cast, recalling to his mind all the wild and wondrous
tales with which his father was wont to entertain
the children, as they crouched round the huge log-fire
of an evening. It is strange the charm these
marvellous tales possess for the youthful mind, no
matter how improbable, or how often told; year after
year they will be listened to with the same ardour,
with an interest that appears to grow with repetition.
And still, as they slowly wandered along, Hector would
repeat to his breathless auditors those Highland legends
that were as familiar to their ears as household words,
and still they listened with fear and wonder, and
deep awe, till at each pause he made, the deep-drawn
breath and half-repressed shudder might be heard.
And now the little party paused irresolutely, fearing
to proceed, they had omitted to notice
some land-mark in their progress; the moon had not
long been up, and her light was as yet indistinct;
so they sat them down on a little grassy spot on the
bank, and rested till the moon should lighten their
path.
Louis was confident they were not
far from “the bigstone,” but careful Hector
had his doubts, and Catharine was weary. The children
had already conceived a sort of home feeling for the
valley and the mass of stone that had sheltered them
for so many nights, and soon the dark mass came in
sight, as the broad full light of the now risen moon
fell upon its rugged sides; they were nearer to it
than they had imagined. “Forward for ‘the
big stone’ and the wigwam,” cried Louis.
“Hush!” said Catharine,
“look there,” raising her hand with a warning
gesture.
“Where? what?”
“The wolf! the wolf!”
gasped out the terrified girl. There indeed, upon
the summit of the block, in the attitude of a sentinel
or watcher, stood the gaunt-figured animal, and as
she spoke, a long wild cry, the sound of which seemed
as if it came midway between the earth and the tops
of the tall pines on the lofty ridge above them, struck
terror into their hearts, as with speechless horror
they gazed upon the dark outline of the terrible beast.
There it stood, with its head raised, its neck stretched
outward, and ears erect, as if to catch the echo that
gave back those dismal sounds; another minute and
he was gone, and the crushing of branches and the
rush of many feet on the high bank above, was followed
by the prolonged cry of some poor fugitive animal, a
doe, or fawn, perhaps, in the very climax
of mortal agony; and then the lonely recesses of the
forest took up that fearful death-cry, the far-off
shores of the lake and the distant islands prolonged
it, and the terrified children clung together in fear
and trembling.
A few minutes over, and all was still.
The chase had turned across the hills to some distant
ravine; the wolves were all gone not even
the watcher was left, and the little valley lay once
more in silence, with all its dewy roses and sweet
blossoms glittering in the moonlight; but though around
them all was peace and loveliness, it was long ere
confidence was restored to the hearts of the panic-stricken
and trembling children. They beheld a savage
enemy in every mass of leafy shade, and every rustling
bough struck fresh terrors into their excited minds.
They might have exclaimed with the patriarch Jacob,
“How dreadful is this place!”
With hand clasped in hand, they sat
them down among the thick covert of the bushes, for
now they feared to move forward, lest the wolves should
return; sleep was long a stranger to their watchful
eyes, each fearing to be the only one left awake,
and long and painful was their vigil. Yet nature,
overtasked, at length gave way, and sleep came down
upon their eyelids; deep, unbroken sleep, which lasted
till the broad sunlight breaking through the leafy
curtains of their forest-bed, and the sound of waving
boughs and twittering birds, once more wakened them
to life and light; recalling them from happy dreams
of home and friends, to an aching sense of loneliness
and desolation. This day they did not wander
far from the valley, but took the precaution, as evening
drew on, to light a large fire, the blaze of which
they thought would keep away any beast of prey.
They had no want of food, as the fish they had caught
the day before proved an ample supply. The huckle-berries
were ripening too, and soon afforded them a never-failing
source of food; there were also an abundance of bilberries,
the sweet rich berries of which proved a great treat,
besides being very nourishing.