In order to make some of the allusions
in these letters clear I will set down briefly the
circumstances which explain them, and supply a narrative
link where it may be required.
I have already mentioned the Military
Camp at Petewawa, on the Ottawa river. The Camp
is situated about seven miles from Pembroke. The
Ottawa river is at this point a beautiful lake.
Immediately opposite the Camp is a little summer hotel
of the simplest description. It was at this hotel
that my wife, my daughter, and myself stayed in the
early days of July, 1916.
The hotel was full of the wives of
the officers stationed in the Camp. During the
daytime I was the only man among the guests. About
five o’clock in the afternoon the officers from
the Camp began to arrive on a primitive motor ferryboat.
My son came over each day, and we often visited him
at the Camp. His long training at Kingston had
been very severe. It included besides the various
classes which he attended a great deal of hard exercise,
long rides or foot marches over frozen roads before
breakfast, and so forth. After this strenuous
winter the Camp at Petewawa was a delightful change.
His tent stood on a bluff, commanding an exquisite
view of the broad stretch of water, diversified by
many small islands. We had a great deal of swimming
in the lake, and several motor-boat excursions to
its beautiful upper reaches. One afternoon when
we went over in our launch to meet him at the Camp
wharf, he told us that that day a General had come
from Ottawa to ask for twenty-five picked officers
to supply the casualties among the Canadian Field
Artillery at the front. He had immediately volunteered
and been accepted.
At this time my two younger sons,
who had joined us at Petewawa in order to see their
brother, enrolled themselves in the Royal Naval Motor
Patrol Service, and had to return to Nelson, British
Columbia, to settle their affairs. Near Nelson,
on the Kootenay Lake, we have a large fruit ranch,
managed by my second son, Reginald. My youngest
son, Eric, was with a law-firm in Nelson, and had
just passed his final examinations as solicitor and
barrister.
This ranch had played a great part
in our lives. The scenery is among the finest
in British Columbia. We usually spent our summers
there, finding not only continual interest in the
development of our orchards, but a great deal of pleasure
in riding, swimming, and boating. We had often
talked of building a modern house there, but had never
done so. The original “little shack”
was the work of Reginald’s own hands, in the
days when most of the ranch was primeval forest.
It had been added to, but was still of the simplest
description. One reason why we had not built
a modern house was that this “little shack”
had become much endeared to us by association and
memory. We were all together there more than
once, and Coningsby had written a great deal there.
We built later on a sort of summer library a
big room on the edge of a beautiful ravine to
which reference is made in later letters. Some
of the happiest days of our lives were spent in these
lovely surroundings, and the memory of those blue
summer days, amid the fragrance of miles of pine-forest,
often recurs to Coningsby as he writes from the mud-wastes
of the Somme.
We left Petewawa to go to the ranch
before Coningsby sailed for England, that we might
get our other two sons ready for their journey to England.
They left us on August 21st, and the ranch was sub-let
to Chinamen in the end of September, when we returned
to Newark, New Jersey.