Vague Rumors of Nova Scotia--A Fortnight upon Salt Water--Interesting
Sketch of the Atlantic--Halifax!--Determine to stay in the
Province--Province Building and Pictures--Coast Scenery--Liberty in
Language, and Aspirations of the People--Evangeline and Relics of
Acadia--Market-Place--The Encampment at Point Pleasant--Kissing
Bridge--The “Himalaya”--A Sabbath in a Garrison Town--Grand Celebration
of the Peace, and Natal Day of Halifax--And a Hint of a Visit to Chezzetcook.
It is pleasant to visit Nova Scotia
in the month of June. Pack up your flannels and
your fishing tackle, leave behind you your prejudices
and your summer clothing, take your trout-pole in
one hand and a copy of Haliburton in the other, and
step on board a Cunarder at Boston. In thirty-six
hours you are in the loyal little province, and above
you floats the red flag and the cross of St. George.
My word for it, you will not regret the trip.
That the idea of visiting Nova Scotia ever struck
any living person as something peculiarly pleasant
and cheerful, is not within the bounds of probability.
Very rude people are wont to speak of Halifax in connection
with the name of a place never alluded to in polite
society except by clergymen. As for
the rest of the Province, there are certain vague
rumors of extensive and constant fogs, but nothing
more. The land is a sort of terra incognita.
Many take it to be a part of Canada, and others firmly
believe it is somewhere in Newfoundland.
In justice to Nova Scotia, it is proper
to state that the Province is a province by itself;
that it hath its own governor and parliament, and
its own proper and copper currency. How I chanced
to go there was altogether a matter of destiny.
It was a severe illness a gastric disorder
of the most obstinate kind, that cast me upon its balmy
shores. One day, after a protracted relapse,
as I was creeping feebly along Broadway, sunning myself,
like a March fly on a window-pane, whom should I meet
but St. Leger, my friend. “You look pale,”
said St. Leger. To which I replied by giving
him a full, complete, and accurate history of my ailments,
after the manner of valetudinarians. “Why
do you not try change of air?” he asked; and
then briskly added, “You could spare a couple
of weeks or so, could you not, to go to the Springs?”
“I could,” said I, feebly. “Then,”
said St. Leger, “take the two weeks’ time,
but do not go to the Springs. Spend your fortnight
on the salt water get out of sight of land that
is the thing for you.” And so, shaking my
hand warmly, St. Leger passed on, and left me to my
reflections.
A fortnight upon salt water?
Whither? Cape Cod at once loomed up; Nantucket,
and Martha’s Vineyard. “And why not
the Bermudas?” said a voice within me; “the
enchanted Islands of Prospero, and Ariel, and Miranda;
of Shakspeare, and Raleigh, and Irving?” And
echo answered: “Why not?”
It is but a day-and-a-half’s
sail to Halifax; thence, by a steamer, to those neighboring
isles; for the Curlew and the Merlin, British mail-boats,
leave Halifax fortnightly for the Bermudas. A
thousand miles of life-invigorating atmosphere a
week upon salt water, and you are amid the magnificent
scenery of the Tempest! And how often had the
vague desire impressed me how often, indeed,
had I visited, in imagination, those beautiful scenes,
those islands which have made Shakspeare our near
kinsman; which are part and parcel of the romantic
history of Sir Walter Raleigh! For, even if he
do describe them, in his strong old Saxon, as “the
Bermudas, a hellish sea for Thunder, and Lightning,
and Storms,” yet there is a charm even in this
description, for doubtless these very words gave a
title to the great drama of William of Stratford,
and suggested the idea of
“The still-vexed Bermooethes.”
Ah, yes! and who that has read Irving’s
“Three Kings of Bermuda” has not felt
the influence of those Islas Encantadas those
islands of palms and coral, of orange groves and ambergris!
“A fortnight?” said I, quoting St. Leger;
“I will take a month for it.” And
so, in less than a week from the date of his little
prescription, I was bidding farewell to some dear
friends, from the deck of the “Canada,”
at East Boston wharf, as Captain Lang, on the top
of our wheel-house, shouted out, in a very briny voice:
“Let go the starboard bow chain go
slow!”
It would be presumptuous in me to
speak of the Atlantic, from the limited acquaintance
I had with it. The note-book of an invalid for
two days at sea, with a heavy ground swell, and the
wind in the most favorable quarter, can scarcely be
attractive. As the breeze freshened, and the tars
of old England ran aloft, to strip from the black sails
the wrappers of white canvas that had hid them when
in port; and as these leathern, bat-like pinions spread
out on each side of the funnel, there was a moment’s
glimpse of the picturesque; but it was a glimpse only,
and no more. One does not enjoy the rise and
dip of the bow of a steamer, at first, however graceful
it may be in the abstract. To be sure, there were
some things else interesting. For instance, three
brides aboard! And one of them lovely enough
to awaken interest, on sea or land, in any body but
a Halifax passenger. I hope those fair ladies
will have a pleasant tour, one and all, and that the
view they take of the great world, so early in life,
will make them more contented with that minor world,
henceforth to be within the limits of their dominion.
Lullaby to the young wives! there will be rocking
enough anon!
But we coasted along pleasantly enough
the next day, within sight of the bold headlands of
Maine; the sky and sea clear of vapor, except the long
reek from the steamer’s pipe. And then came
nightfall and the northern stars; and, later at night,
a new luminary on the edge of the horizon Sambro’
light; and then a sudden quenching of stars, and horizon,
lighthouse, ropes, spars, and smoke stack; the sounds
of hoarse voices of command in the obscurity; a trampling
of men; and then down went the anchor in the ooze,
and the Canada was fog-bound in the old harbor of
Chebucto for the night, within a few miles of the city.
But with the early dawn, we awoke
to hear the welcome sounds of the engines in motion,
and when we reached the deck, the mist was drifted
with sunlight, and rose and fell in luminous billows
on water and shore, and then lifted, lingered, and
vanished!
“And this is Halifax?”
said I, as that quaint, mouldy old town poked its
wooden gables through the fog of the second morning.
“This is Halifax? This the capital of Nova
Scotia? This the city that harbored those loyal
heroes of the Revolution, who gallantly and gayly fought,
and bled, and ran for their king? Ah! you brave
old Tories; you staunch upholders of the crown; cavaliers
without ringlets or feathers, russet boots or steeple-crown
hats, it seems as if you were still hovering over this
venerable tabernacle of seven hundred gables, and wreathing
each particular ridge-pole, pigeon-hole, and shingle
with a halo of fog.”
The plank was laid, and the passengers
left the steamer. There were a few vehicles on
the wharf for the accommodation of strangers; square,
black, funereal-like, wheeled sarcophagi, eminently
suggestive of burials and crape. Of course I
did not ride in one, on account of unpleasant associations;
but, placing my trunk in charge of a cart-boy with
a long-tailed dray, and a diminutive pony, I walked
through the silent streets towards “The Waverley.”
It was an inspiriting morning, that
which I met upon the well-docked shores of Halifax,
and although the side-walks of the city were neither
bricked nor paved with flags, and the middle street
was in its original and aboriginal clay, yet there
was novelty in making its acquaintance. Everybody
was asleep in that early fog; and when everybody woke
up, it was done so quietly that the change was scarcely
apparent.
But the “Merlin,” British
mailer, is to sail at noon for the Shakspeare Island,
and breakfast must be discussed, and then once more
I am with you, my anti-bilious ocean. It chanced,
however, I heard at breakfast, that the “Curlew,”
the mate of the “Merlin,” had been lost
a short time before at sea, and as there was but one,
and not two steamers on the route, so that I would
be detained longer with Prospero and Miranda than might
be comfortable in the approaching hot weather, it
came to pass that I had reluctantly to forego the
projected voyage, and anchor my trunk of tropical
clothing in room Number Twenty, Hotel Waverley.
It was a great disappointment, to be sure, after such
brilliant anticipations but what is life
without philosophy? When we cannot get what we
wish, let us take what we may. Let the “Merlin”
sail! I will visit, instead of those Islas Encantadas,
“The Acadian land on the shore of the Basin of
Minas.” Let the “Merlin” sail!
I will see the ruined walls of Louisburgh, and the
harbors that once sheltered the Venetian sailor, Cabot.
“Let her sail!” said I, and when the morn
passed I saw her slender thread of smoke far off on
the glassy ocean, without a sigh of regret, and resolutely
turned my face from the promised palms to welcome
the sturdy pines of the province.
The city hill of Halifax rises proudly
from its wharves and shipping in a multitude of mouse-colored
wooden houses, until it is crowned by the citadel.
As it is a garrison town, as well as a naval station,
you meet in the streets red-coats and blue-jackets
without number; yonder, with a brilliant staff, rides
the Governor, Sir John Gaspard le Marchant, and
here, in a carriage, is Admiral Fanshawe, C.B., of
the “Boscawen” Flag-ship. Every thing
is suggestive of impending hostilities; war, in burnished
trappings, encounters you at the street corners, and
the air vibrates from time to time with bugles, fifes,
and drums. But oh! what a slow place it is!
Even two Crimean regiments with medals and decorations
could not wake it up. The little old houses seem
to look with wondrous apathy as these pass by, as
though they had given each other a quiet nudge with
their quaint old gables, and whispered: “Keep
still!”
I wandered up and down those old streets
in search of something picturesque, but in vain; there
was scarcely any thing remarkable to arrest or interest
a stranger. Such, too, might have been the appearance
of other places I wot of, if those staunch old loyalists
had had their way in the days gone by!
But the Province House, which is built
of a sort of yellow sand-stone, with pillars in front,
and trees around it, is a well-proportioned building,
with an air of great solidity and respectability.
There are in it very fine full-lengths of King George
II. and Queen Caroline, and two full-lengths of King
George iii. and Queen Charlotte; a full-length
of Chief-Justice Haliburton, and another full-length,
by Benjamin West, of another chief-justice, in a red
robe and a formidable wig. Of these portraits,
the two first-named are the most attractive; there
is something so gay and festive in the appearance
of King George II. and Queen Caroline, so courtly
and sprightly, so graceful and amiable, that one is
tempted to exclaim: “Bless the painter!
what a genius he had!”
And now, after taking a look at Dalhousie
College with the parade in front, and the square town-clock,
built by his graceless Highness the Duke of Kent,
let us climb Citadel Hill, and see the formidable protector
of town and harbor. Lively enough it is, this
great stone fortress, with its soldiers, swarming
in and out like bees, and the glimpses of country and
harbor are surpassingly beautiful; but just at the
margin of this slope below us, is the street, and
that dark fringe of tenements skirting the edge of
this green glacis is, I fear me, filled with vicious
inmates. Yonder, where the blackened ruins of
three houses are visible, a sailor was killed and
thrown out of a window not long since, and his shipmates
burned the houses down in consequence; there is something
strikingly suggestive in looking upon this picture
and on that.
But if you cast your eyes over yonder
magnificent bay, where vessels bearing flags of all
nations are at anchor, and then let your vision sweep
past and over the islands to the outlets beyond, where
the quiet ocean lies, bordered with fog-banks that
loom ominously at the boundary-line of the horizon,
you will see a picture of marvellous beauty; for the
coast scenery here transcends our own sea-shores,
both in color and outline. And behind us again
stretch large green plains, dotted with cottages, and
bounded with undulating hills, with now and then glimpses
of blue water; and as we walk down Citadel Hill, we
feel half-reconciled to Halifax, its queer little
streets, its quaint, mouldy old gables, its soldiers
and sailors, its fogs, cabs, penny and half-penny
tokens, and all its little, odd, outlandish peculiarities.
Peace be with it! after all, it has a quiet charm
for an invalid!
The inhabitants of Halifax exhibit
no trifling degree of freedom in language for a loyal
people; they call themselves “Halligonians.”
This title, however, is sometimes pronounced “’Alligonians,”
by the more rigid, as a mark of respect to the old
country. But innovation has been at work even
here, for the majority of Her Majesty’s subjects
aspirate the letter H. Alas for innovation! who knows
to what results this trifling error may lead?
When Mirabeau went to the French court without buckles
in his shoes, the barriers of etiquette were broken
down, and the Swiss Guards fought in vain.
There is one virtue in humanity peculiarly
grateful to an invalid; to him most valuable, by him
most appreciated, namely, hospitality. And that
the ’Alligonians are a kind and good people,
abundant in hospitality, let me attest. One can
scarcely visit a city occupied by those whose grandsires
would have hung your rebel grandfathers (if they had
caught them), without some misgivings. But I
found the old Tory blood of three Halifax generations,
yet warm and vital, happy to accept again a rebellious
kinsman, a real live Yankee, in spite of Sam Slick
and the Revolution.
Let us take a stroll through these
quiet streets. This is the Province House with
its Ionic porch, and within it are the halls of Parliament,
and offices of government. You see there is a
red-coat with his sentry-box at either corner.
Behind the house again are two other sentries on duty,
all glittering with polished brass, and belted, gloved,
and bayoneted, in splendid style. Of what use
are these satellites, except to watch the building
and keep it from running away? On the street behind
the Province House is Fuller’s American Book-store,
which we will step into, and now among these books,
fresh from the teeming presses of the States, we feel
once more at home. Fuller preserves his equanimity
in spite of the blandishments of royalty, and once
a year, on the Fourth of July, hoists the “stars
and stripes,” and bravely takes dinner with the
United States Consul, in the midst of lions and unicorns.
Many pleasant hours I passed with Fuller, both in
town and country. Near by, on the next corner,
is the print-store of our old friends the Wetmores,
and here one can see costly engravings of Landseer’s
fine pictures, and indeed whole portfolios of English
art. But of all the pictures there was one, the
most touching, the most suggestive! The presiding
genius of the place, the unsceptred Queen of this
little realm was before me Faed’s
Evangeline! And this reminded me that I was in
the Acadian land! This reminded me of Longfellow’s
beautiful pastoral, a poem that has spread a glory
over Nova Scotia, a romantic interest, which our own
land has not yet inspired! I knew that I was
in Acadia; the historic scroll unrolled and stretched
its long perspective to earlier days; it recalled
De Monts, and the la Tours; Vice Admiral Destournelle,
who ran upon his own sword, hard by, at Bedford Basin;
and the brave Baron Castine.
The largest settlement of the Acadians
is in the neighborhood of Halifax. In the early
mornings, you sometimes see a few of these people in
the streets, or at the market, selling a dozen or
so of fresh eggs, or a pair or two of woollen socks,
almost the only articles of their simple commerce.
But you must needs be early to see them; after eight
o’clock, they will have all vanished. Chezzetcook,
or, as it is pronounced by the ’Alligonians,
“Chizzencook,” is twenty-two miles from
Halifax, and as the Acadian peasant has neither horse
nor mule, he or she must be off betimes to reach home
before mid-day nuncheon. A score of miles on foot
is no trifle, in all weathers, but Gabriel and Evangeline
perform it cheerfully; and when the knitting-needle
and the poultry shall have replenished their slender
stock, off again they will start on their midnight
pilgrimage, that they may reach the great city of
Halifax before day-break.
We must see Chezzetcook anon, gentle reader.
Let us visit the market-place.
Here is Masaniello, with his fish in great profusion.
Codfish, three-pence or four-pence each; lobsters,
a penny; and salmon of immense size at six-pence a
pound (currency), equal to a dime of our money.
If you prefer trout, you must buy them of these Micmac
squaws in traditional blankets, a shilling a
bunch; and you may also buy baskets of rainbow tints
from these copper ladies for a mere trifle; and as
every race has a separate vocation here, only of the
negroes can you purchase berries. “This
is a busy town,” one would say, drawing his conclusion
from the market-place; for the shifting crowd, in
all costumes and in all colors, Indians, negroes,
soldiers, sailors, civilians, and Chizzincookers,
make up a pageant of no little theatrical effect and
bustle. Again: if you are still strong in
limb, and ready for a longer walk, which I, leaning
upon my staff, am not, we will visit the encampment
at Point Pleasant. The Seventy-sixth Regiment
has pitched its tents here among the evergreens.
Yonder you see the soldiers, looking like masses of
red fruit amidst the spicy verdure of the spruces.
Row upon row of tents, and file upon file of men standing
at ease, each one before his knapsack, his little
leather household, with its shoes, socks, shirts, brushes,
razors, and other furniture open for inspection.
And there is Sir John Gaspard le Marchant, with
a brilliant staff, engaged in the pleasant duty of
picking a personal quarrel with each medal-decorated
hero, and marking down every hole in his socks, and
every gap in his comb, for the honor of the service.
And this Point Pleasant is a lovely place, too, with
a broad look-out in front, for yonder lies the blue
harbor and the ocean deeps. Just back of the
tents is the cookery of the camp, huge mounds of loose
stones, with grooves at the top, very like the architecture
of a cranberry-pie; and if the simile be an homely
one, it is the best that comes to mind to convey an
idea of those regimental stoves, with their seams
and channels of fire, over which potatoes bubble, and
roast and boiled scud forth a savory odor. And
here and there, wistfully regarding this active scene,
amid the green shrubbery, stands a sentinel before
his sentry-box, built of spruce boughs, wrought into
a mimic military temple, and fanciful enough, too,
for a garden of roses. And look you now!
If here be not Die Vernon, with “habit, hat,
and feather,” cantering gayly down the road
between the tents, and behind her a stately groom in
gold-lace band, top-boots, and buck-skins. A
word in your ear that pleasant half-English
face is the face of the Governor’s daughter.
The road to Point Pleasant is a favorite
promenade in the long Acadian twilights. Mid-way
between the city and the Point lies “Kissing
Bridge,” which the Halifax maidens sometimes
pass over. Who gathers toll nobody knows, but
I thought there was a mischievous glance in the blue
eyes of those passing damsels that said plainly they
could tell, “an’ they would.”
I love to look upon those happy, healthy English faces;
those ruddy cheeks, flushed with exercise, and those
well-developed forms, not less attractive because
of the sober-colored dresses and brown flat hats, in
which, o’ summer evenings, they glide towards
the mysterious precincts of “The Bridge.”
What a tale those old arches could tell? _?Quien
sabe?_ Who knows?
But next to “Kissing Bridge,”
the prominent object of interest, now, to Halifax
ladies, is the great steamer that lies at the Admiralty,
the Oriental screw-steamer Himalaya the
transport ship of two regiments of the heroes of Balaklava,
and Alma, and Inkerman, and Sebastopol. A vast
specimen of naval architecture; an unusual sight in
these waters; a marine vehicle to carry twenty-five
hundred men! Think of this moving town; this
portable village of royal belligerents covered with
glory and medals, breasting the billows! Is there
not something glorious in such a spectacle? And
yet I was told by a brave officer, who wore the decorations
of the four great battles on his breast, that of his
regiment, the Sixty-third, but thirty men were now
living, and of the thirty, seventeen only were able
to attend drill. That regiment numbered a thousand
at Alma!
No gun broke the silence of the Sabbath
morning, as the giant ship moved from the Admiralty,
on the day following our visit to Point Pleasant, and
silently furrowed her path oceanward on her return
to Gibraltar. A long line of thick bituminous
smoke, above the low house-tops, was the only hint
of her departure, to the citizens. It was a grand
sight to see her vast bulk moving among the islands
in the harbor, almost as large as they.
And now, being Sunday, after looking
in at the Cathedral, which does not represent the
usual pomp of the Romish Church, we will visit the
Garrison Chapel. A bugle-call from barracks,
or Citadel Hill, salutes us as we stroll towards the
chapel; otherwise, Halifax is quiet, as becomes the
day. Presently we see the long scarlet lines approaching,
and presently the men, with orderly step, file from
the street through the porch into the gallery and
pews. Then the officers of field and line, of
ordnance and commissary departments, take their allotted
seats below. Then the chimes cease, and the service
begins. Most devoutly we prayed for the Queen,
and omitted the President of the United States.
As the Crimeans ebbed from the church,
and, floating off in the distance, wound slowly up
Citadel Hill against the quiet clear summer sky, I
could not but think of these lines from Thomas Miller’s
“Summer Morning:”
“A troop
of soldiers pass with stately pace,
Their
early music wakes the village street:
Through yon turned
blinds peeps many a lovely face,
Smiling
perchance unconsciously how sweet!
One does the carpet
press with blue-veined feet,
Not
thinking how her fair neck she exposes,
But with white
foot timing the drum’s deep beat;
And
when again she on her pillow dozes,
Dreams how she’ll
dance that tune ’mong summer’s sweetest
roses
“So let
her dream, even as beauty should!
Let
the while plumes athwart her slumbers away!
Why should I steep
their swaling snows in blood,
Or
bid her think of battle’s grim array?
Truth will too
soon her blinding star display,
And
like a fearful comet meet her eyes.
And yet how peaceful
they pass on their way!
How
grand the sight as up the hill they rise!
I will not
think of cities reddening in the skies.”
It was my fate to see next day a great
celebration. It was the celebration of peace
between England and Russia. Peace having been
proclaimed, all Halifax was in arms! Loyalty
threw out her bunting to the breeze, and fired her
crackers. The civic authorities presented an address
to the royal representative of Her Majesty, requesting
His Excellency to transmit the same to the foot of
the throne. Militia-men shot off municipal cannon;
bells echoed from the belfries; the shipping fluttered
with signals; and Citadel Hill telegraph, in a multitude
of flags, announced that ships, brigs, schooners,
and steamers, in vast quantities, “were below.”
Nor was the peace alone the great feature of the holiday.
The eighth of June, the natal day of Halifax, was
to be celebrated also. For Halifax was founded,
so says the Chronicle, on the eighth of June, 1749,
by the Hon. Edward Cornwallis (not our Cornwallis),
and the ’Alligonians in consequence made a specialty
of that fact once a year. And to add to the attraction,
the Board of Works had decided to lay the corner-stone
of a Lunatic Asylum in the afternoon; so there was
no end to the festivities. And, to crown all,
an immense fog settled upon the city.
Leaning upon my friend Robert’s
arm and my staff, I went forth to see the grand review.
When we arrived upon the ground, in the rear of Citadel
Hill, we saw the outline of something glimmering through
the fog, which Robert said were shrubs, and which
I said were soldiers. A few minutes’ walking
proved my position to be correct; we found ourselves
in the centre of a three-sided square of three regiments,
within which the civic authorities were loyally boring
Sir John Gaspard le Merchant and staff, to the
verge of insanity, with the Address which was to be
laid at the foot of the throne. Notwithstanding
the despairing air with which His Excellency essayed
to reply to this formidable paper, I could not help
enjoying the scene; and I also noted, when the reply
was over, and the few ragamuffins near His Excellency
cheered bravely, and the band struck up the national
anthem, how gravely and discreetly the rest of the
’Alligonians, in the circumambient fog, echoed
the sentiment by a silence, that, under other circumstances,
would have been disheartening. What a quiet people
it is! As I said before, to make the festivities
complete, in the afternoon there was a procession to
lay the corner-stone of a Lunatic Asylum. But
oh! how the jolly old rain poured down upon the luckless
pilgrimage! There were the “Virgins”
of Masonic Lodge No. , the Army Masons,
in scarlet; the African Masons, in ivory and black;
the Scotch-piper Mason, with his legs in enormous
plaid trowsers, defiant of Shakspeare’s theory
about the sensitiveness of some men, when the bag-pipe
sings i’ the nose; the Clerical Mason in shovel
hat; the municipal artillery; the Sons of Temperance,
and the band. Away they marched, with drum and
banner, key and compasses, Bible and sword, to
Dartmouth, in great feather, for the eyes of Halifax
were upon them.