1628, 1629.
The English at
Quebec.
The first care of the new Company
was to succor Quebec, whose inmates were on the verge
of starvation. Four armed vessels, with a fleet
of transports commanded by Roquemont, one of the associates,
sailed from Dieppe with colonists and supplies in
April, 1628; but nearly at the same time another squadron,
destined also for Quebec, was sailing from an English
port. War had at length broken out in France.
The Huguenot revolt had come to a head. Rochelle
was in arms against the King; and Richelieu, with
his royal ward, was beleaguering it with the whole
strength of the kingdom. Charles the First of
England, urged by the heated passions of Buckingham,
had declared himself for the rebels, and sent a fleet
to their aid. At home, Charles detested the followers
of Calvin as dangerous to his own authority; abroad,
he befriended them as dangerous to the authority of
a rival. In France, Richelieu crushed Protestantism
as a curb to the house of Bourbon; in Germany, he nursed
and strengthened it as a curb to the house of Austria.
The attempts of Sir William Alexander
to colonize Acadia had of late turned attention in
England towards the New World; and on the breaking
out of the war an expedition was set on foot, under
the auspices of that singular personage, to seize
on the French possessions in North America. It
was a private enterprise, undertaken by London merchants,
prominent among whom was Gervase Kirke, an Englishman
of Derbyshire, who had long lived at Dieppe, and had
there married a Frenchwoman. Gervase Kirke and
his associates fitted out three small armed ships,
commanded respectively by his sons David, Lewis, and
Thomas. Letters of marque were obtained from
the King, and the adventurers were authorized to drive
out the French from Acadia and Canada. Many Huguenot
refugees were among the crews. Having been expelled
from New France as settlers, the persecuted sect were
returning as enemies. One Captain Michel, who
had been in the service of the Caens, “a furious
Calvinist,” is said to have instigated the attempt,
acting, it is affirmed, under the influence of one
of his former employers.
Meanwhile the famished tenants of
Quebec were eagerly waiting the expected succor.
Daily they gazed beyond Point Levi and along the channels
of Orleans, in the vain hope of seeing the approaching
sails. At length, on the ninth of July, two men,
worn with struggling through forests and over torrents,
crossed the St. Charles and mounted the rock.
They were from Cape Tourmente, where Champlain
had some time before established an outpost, and they
brought news that, according to the report of Indians,
six large vessels lay in the harbor of Tadoussac.
The friar Le Caron was at Quebec, and, with a brother
Récollet, he went in a canoe to gain further
intelligence. As the missionary scouts were paddling
along the borders of the Island of Orleans, they met
two canoes advancing in hot haste, manned by Indians,
who with shouts and gestures warned them to turn back.
The friars, however, waited till the
canoes came up, when they saw a man lying disabled
at the bottom of one of them, his moustaches burned
by the flash of the musket which had wounded him.
He proved to be Foucher, who commanded at Cape
Tourmente. On that morning, such
was the story of the fugitives, twenty
men had landed at that post from a small fishing-vessel.
Being to all appearance French, they were hospitably
received; but no sooner had they entered the houses
than they began to pillage and burn all before them,
killing the cattle, wounding the commandant, and making
several prisoners.
The character of the fleet at Tadoussac
was now sufficiently clear. Quebec was incapable
of defence. Only fifty pounds of gunpowder were
left in the magazine; and the fort, owing to the neglect
and ill-will of the Caens, was so wretchedly constructed,
that, a few days before, two towers of the main building
had fallen. Champlain, however, assigned to each
man his post, and waited the result. On the next
afternoon, a boat was seen issuing from behind the
Point of Orleans and hovering hesitatingly about the
mouth of the St. Charles. On being challenged,
the men on board proved to be Basque fishermen, lately
captured by the English, and now sent by Kirke unwilling
messengers to Champlain. Climbing the steep pathway
to the fort, they delivered their letter, a
summons, couched in terms of great courtesy, to surrender
Quebec. There was no hope but in courage.
A bold front must supply the lack of batteries and
ramparts; and Champlain dismissed the Basques with
a reply, in which, with equal courtesy, he expressed
his determination to hold his position to the last.
All now stood on the watch, hourly
expecting the enemy; when, instead of the hostile
squadron, a small boat crept into sight, and one Desdames,
with ten Frenchmen, landed at the storehouses.
He brought stirring news. The French commander,
Roquemont, had despatched him to tell Champlain that
the ships of the Hundred Associates were ascending
the St. Lawrence, with reinforcements and supplies
of all kinds. But on his way Desdames had seen
an ominous sight, the English squadron standing
under full sail out of Tadoussac, and steering downwards
as if to intercept the advancing succor. He had
only escaped them by dragging his boat up the beach
and hiding it; and scarcely were they out of sight
when the booming of cannon told him that the fight
was begun.
Racked with suspense, the starving
tenants of Quebec waited the result; but they waited
in vain. No white sail moved athwart the green
solitudes of Orleans. Neither friend nor foe
appeared; and it was not till long afterward that
Indians brought them the tidings that Roquemont’s
crowded transports had been overpowered, and all the
supplies destined to relieve their miseries sunk in
the St. Lawrence or seized by the victorious English.
Kirke, however, deceived by the bold attitude of Champlain,
had been too discreet to attack Quebec, and after his
victory employed himself in cruising for French fishing-vessels
along the borders of the Gulf.
Meanwhile, the suffering at Quebec
increased daily. Somewhat less than a hundred
men, women, and children were cooped up in the fort,
subsisting on a meagre pittance of pease and Indian
corn. The garden of the Heberts, the only thrifty
settlers, was ransacked for every root or seed that
could afford nutriment. Months wore on, and in
the spring the distress had risen to such a pitch
that Champlain had wellnigh resolved to leave to the
women, children, and sick the little food that remained,
and with the able-bodied men invade the Iroquois, seize
one of their villages, fortify himself in it, and
sustain his followers on the buried stores of maize
with which the strongholds of these provident savages
were always furnished.
Seven ounces of pounded pease were
now the daily food of each; and, at the end of May,
even this failed. Men, women, and children betook
themselves to the woods, gathering acorns and grubbing
up roots. Those of the plant called Solomon’s
seal were most in request. Some joined the Hurons
or the Algonquins; some wandered towards the Abenakis
of Maine; some descended in a boat to Gaspe, trusting
to meet a French fishing-vessel. There was scarcely
one who would not have hailed the English as deliverers.
But the English had sailed home with their booty,
and the season was so late that there was little prospect
of their return. Forgotten alike by friends and
foes, Quebec was on the verge of extinction.
On the morning of the nineteenth of
July, an Indian, renowned as a fisher of eels, who
had built his hut on the St. Charles, hard by the
new dwelling of the Jesuits, came, with his usual imperturbability
of visage, to Champlain. He had just discovered
three ships sailing up the south channel of Orleans.
Champlain was alone. All his followers were absent,
fishing or searching for roots. At about ten o’clock
his servant appeared with four small bags of roots,
and the tidings that he had seen the three ships a
league off, behind Point Levi. As man after man
hastened in, Champlain ordered the starved and ragged
band, sixteen in all, to their posts, whence with
hungry eyes, they watched the English vessels anchoring
in the basin below, and a boat with a white flag moving
towards the shore. A young officer landed with
a summons to surrender. The terms of capitulation
were at length settled. The French were to be
conveyed to their own country, and each soldier was
allowed to take with him his clothes, and, in addition,
a coat of beaver-skin. On this some murmuring
rose, several of those who had gone to the Hurons
having lately returned with peltry of no small value.
Their complaints were vain; and on the twentieth of
July, amid the roar of cannon from the ships, Lewis
Kirke, the Admiral’s brother, landed at the head
of his soldiers, and planted the cross of St. George
where the followers of Wolfe again planted it a hundred
and thirty years later. After inspecting the
worthless fort, he repaired to the houses of the Récollets
and Jesuits on the St. Charles. He treated the
former with great courtesy, but displayed against
the latter a violent aversion, expressing his regret
that he could not have begun his operations by battering
their house about their ears. The inhabitants
had no cause to complain of him. He urged the
widow and family of the settler Hebert, the patriarch,
as he has been styled, of New France, to remain and
enjoy the fruits of their industry under English allegiance;
and, as beggary in France was the alternative, his
offer was accepted.
Champlain, bereft of his command,
grew restless, and begged to be sent to Tadoussac,
where the Admiral, David Kirke, lay with his main
squadron, having sent his brothers Lewis and Thomas
to seize Quebec. Accordingly, Champlain, with
the Jesuits, embarking with Thomas Kirke, descended
the river. Off Mal Bay a strange sail was seen.
As she approached, she proved to be a French ship,
in fact, she was on her way to Quebec with supplies,
which, if earlier sent, would have saved the place.
She had passed the Admiral’s squadron in a fog;
but here her good fortune ceased. Thomas Kirke
bore down on her, and the cannonade began. The
fight was hot and doubtful; but at length the French
struck, and Kirke sailed into Tadoussac with his prize.
Here lay his brother, the Admiral, with five armed
ships.
The Admiral’s two voyages to
Canada were private ventures; and though he had captured
nineteen fishing-vessels, besides Roquemont’s
eighteen transports and other prizes, the result had
not answered his hopes. His mood, therefore,
was far from benign, especially as he feared, that,
owing to the declaration of peace, he would be forced
to disgorge a part of his booty; yet, excepting the
Jesuits, he treated his captives with courtesy, and
often amused himself with shooting larks on shore in
company with Champlain. The Huguenots, however,
of whom there were many in his ships, showed an exceeding
bitterness against the Catholics. Chief among
them was Michel, who had instigated and conducted the
enterprise, the merchant admiral being but an indifferent
seaman. Michel, whose skill was great, held a
high command and the title of Rear-Admiral. He
was a man of a sensitive temperament, easily piqued
on the point of honor. His morbid and irritable
nerves were wrought to the pitch of frenzy by the
reproaches of treachery and perfidy with which the
French prisoners assailed him, while, on the other
hand, he was in a state of continual rage at the fancied
neglect and contumely of his English associates.
He raved against Kirke, who, as he declared, treated
him with an insupportable arrogance. “I
have left my country,” he exclaimed, “for
the service of foreigners; and they give me nothing
but ingratitude and scorn.” His fevered
mind, acting on his diseased body, often excited him
to transports of fury, in which he cursed indiscriminately
the people of St. Malo, against whom he had a grudge,
and the Jesuits, whom he detested. On one occasion,
Kirke was conversing with some of the latter.
“Gentlemen,” he said,
“your business in Canada was to enjoy what belonged
to M. de Caen, whom you dispossessed.”
“Pardon me, sir,” answered
Brebeuf, “we came purely for the glory of God,
and exposed ourselves to every kind of danger to convert
the Indians.”
Here Michel broke in: “Ay,
ay, convert the Indians! You mean, convert the
beaver!”
“That is false!” retorted Brebeuf.
Michel raised his fist, exclaiming,
“But for the respect I owe the General, I would
strike you for giving me the lie.”
Brebeuf, a man of powerful frame and
vehement passions, nevertheless regained his practised
self-command, and replied: “You must excuse
me. I did not mean to give you the lie.
I should be very sorry to do so. The words I
used are those we use in the schools when a doubtful
question is advanced, and they mean no offence.
Therefore I ask you to pardon me.”
Despite the apology, Michel’s
frenzied brain harped the presumed insult, and he
raved about it without ceasing.
“Bon Dieu!” said Champlain,
“you swear well for a Reformer!”
“I know it,” returned
Michel; “I should be content if I had but struck
that Jesuit who gave me the lie before my General.”
At length, one of his transports of
rage ended in a lethargy from which he never awoke.
His funeral was conducted with a pomp suited to his
rank; and, amid discharges of cannon whose dreary roar
was echoed from the yawning gulf of the Saguenay,
his body was borne to its rest under the rocks of
Tadoussac. Good Catholics and good Frenchmen saw
in his fate the immediate finger of Providence.
“I do not doubt that his soul is in perdition,”
remarks Champlain, who, however, had endeavored to
befriend the unfortunate man during the access of his
frenzy.
Having finished their carousings,
which were profuse, and their trade with the Indians,
which was not lucrative, the English steered down
the St. Lawrence. Kirke feared greatly a meeting
with Razilly, a naval officer of distinction, who
was to have sailed from France with a strong force
to succor Quebec; but, peace having been proclaimed,
the expedition had been limited to two ships under
Captain Daniel. Thus Kirke, wilfully ignoring
the treaty of peace, was left to pursue his depredations
unmolested. Daniel, however, though too weak to
cope with him, achieved a signal exploit. On
the island of Cape Breton, near the site of Louisburg,
he found an English fort, built two months before,
under the auspices, doubtless, of Sir William Alexander.
Daniel, regarding it as a bold encroachment on French
territory, stormed it at the head of his pike-men,
entered sword in hand, and took it with all its defenders.
Meanwhile, Kirke with his prisoners
was crossing the Atlantic. His squadron at length
reached Plymouth, whence Champlain set out for London.
Here he had an interview with the French ambassador,
who, at his instance, gained from the King a promise,
that, in pursuance of the terms of the treaty concluded
in the previous April, New France should be restored
to the French Crown.
It long remained a mystery why Charles
consented to a stipulation which pledged him to resign
so important a conquest. The mystery is explained
by the recent discovery of a letter from the King to
Sir Isaac Wake, his ambassador at Paris. The
promised dowry of Queen Henrietta Maria, amounting
to eight hundred thousand crowns, had been but half
paid by the French government, and Charles, then at
issue with his Parliament, and in desperate need of
money, instructs his ambassador, that, when he receives
the balance due, and not before, he is to give up to
the French both Quebec and Port Royal, which had also
been captured by Kirke. The letter was accompanied
by “solemn instruments under our hand and seal”
to make good the transfer on fulfillment of the condition.
It was for a sum equal to about two hundred and forty
thousand dollars that Charles entailed on Great Britain
and her colonies a century of bloody wars. The
Kirkes and their associates, who had made the conquest
at their own cost, under the royal authority, were
never reimbursed, though David Kirke received the
honor of knighthood, which cost the King nothing.