A Romp at Three Fathom Harbor--The Moral Condition of the Acadians--The
Wild Flowers of Nova Scotia--Mrs. Deer’s Wit--No Fish--Picton--The
Balaklava Schooner--And a Voyage to Louisburgh.
Pony is very enterprising. We
are soon at the top of the first long hill, and look
again, for the last time, upon the Acadian village.
How cosily and quietly it is nestled down amid those
graceful green slopes! What a bit of poetry it
is in itself! Jog on, Pony!
The corporate authority of Three Fathom
Harbor has been improving his time during our absence.
As we drive up we find him in high romp with a brace
of buxom, red-cheeked, Nova Scotia girls, who have
just alighted from a wagon. The landlady of Three
Fathom Harbor, in her matronly cap, is smiling over
the little garden gate at her lord, who is pursuing
his Daphnes, and catching, and kissing, and hugging,
first one and then the other, to his heart’s
content. Notwithstanding their screams, and slaps,
and robust struggles, it is very plain to be seen that
the skipper’s attentions are not very unwelcome.
Leaving his fair friends, he catches Pony by the bridle
and stops us with a hospitable “Come
in you must come in; just a glass of ale,
you’ll want it;” and sure enough, we found
when we came to taste the ale, that we did want it,
and many thanks to him, the kind-hearted landlord
of the Three Fathoms.
“It is surprising,” said
I to my companion, as we rolled again over the road,
“that these people, these Acadians, should still
preserve their language and customs, so near to your
principal city, and yet with no more affiliation than
if they were on an island in the South Seas!”
“The reason of that,”
he replied, “is because they stick to their own
settlement; never see anything of the world except
Halifax early in the morning; never marry out of their
own set; never read I do not believe one
of them can read or write and are in fact
so slow, so destitute of enterprise, so much behind the age
I could not avoid smiling. My
companion observed it. “What are you thinking
about?” said he.
The truth is, I was thinking of Halifax,
which was anything but a fast place; but I
simply observed:
“Your settlements here are somewhat
novel to a stranger. That a mere handful of men
should be so near your city, and yet so isolated:
that this village of a few hundred only, should retain
its customs and language, intact, for generation after
generation, within walking distance of Halifax, seems
to me unaccountable. But let me ask you,”
I continued, “what is the moral condition of
the Acadians?”
“As for that,” said he,
“I believe it stands pretty fair. I do not
think an Acadian would cheat, lie, or steal; I know
that the women are virtuous, and if I had a thousand
pounds in my pocket I could sleep with confidence
in any of their houses, although all the doors were
unlocked and everybody in the village knew it.”
“That,” said I, “reminds one of
the poem:
’Neither locks had they
to their doors, nor bars to their windows,
But their dwellings were open
as day and the hearts of their owners;
There the richest was poor,
and the poorest lived in abundance.’”
Poor exiles! You will never see
the Gasperau and the shore of the Basin of Minas,
but if this very feeble life I have holds out, I hope
to visit Grandpre and the broad meadows that gave
a name to the village.
One thing Longfellow has certainly
omitted in “Evangeline” the
wild flowers of Acadia. The roadside is all fringed
and tasselled with white, pink, and purple. The
wild strawberries are in blossom, whitening the turf
all the way from Halifax to Chezzetcook. You see
their starry settlements thick in every bit of turf.
These are the silver mines of poor Cuffee; he has
the monopoly of the berry trade. It is his only
revenue. Then in the swampy grounds there are
long green needles in solitary groups, surmounted
with snowy tufts; and here and there, clusters of light
purple blossoms, called laurel flowers, but not like
our laurels, spring up from the bases of grey rocks
and boulders; sometimes a rich array of blood-red berries
gleams out of a mass of greenery; then again great
floral white radii, tipped with snowy petals, rise
up profuse and lofty; down by the ditches hundreds
of pitcher plants lift their veined and mottled vases,
brimming with water, to the wood-birds who drink and
perch upon their thick rims; May-flowers of delightful
fragrance hide beneath those shining, tropical-looking
leaves, and meadow-sweet, not less fragrant, but less
beautiful, pours its tender aroma into the fresh air;
here again we see the buckthorn in blossom; there,
scattered on the turf, the scarlet partridge berry;
then wild-cherry trees, mere shrubs only, in full bud;
and around all and above all, the evergreens, the murmuring
pines, and the hemlocks; the rampikes the
grey-beards of the primeval forest; the spicy breath
of resinous balsams; the spiry tops, and the serene
heaven. Is this fairy land? No, it is only
poor, old, barren Nova Scotia, and yet I think Felix,
Prince of Salerno, if he were here, might say, and
say truly too, “In all my life I never beheld
a more enchanting place;” but Felix, Prince
of Salerno, must remember this is the month of June,
and summer is not perpetual in the latitude of forty-five.
We reach at last Deer’s Castle.
Pony, under the hands of Bill, seems remarkably cheerful
and fresh after his long travel up hill and down.
When he pops out of his harness, with his knock-knees
and sturdy, stocky little frame, he looks very like
an animated saw-buck, clothed in seal-skin; and with
a jump, and snort, and flourish of tail, he escorts
Bill to the stable, as if twenty miles over a rough
road was a trifle not worth consideration.
A savory odor of frying bacon and
eggs stole forth from the door as we sat, in the calm
summer air, upon the stone fence. William Deer,
Jr., was wandering about in front of the castle, endeavoring
to get control of his under lip and keep his exuberant
mirth within the limits of decorum; but every instant,
to use a military figure, it would flash in the pan.
Up on the bare rocks were the wretched, woe-begone,
patched, and ragged log huts of poor Cuffee.
The hour and the season were suggestive of philosophizing,
of theories, and questions.
“Mrs. Deer,” said I, “is
that your husband’s portrait on the back of the
sign?” (there was a picture of a stag with antlers
on the reverse of the poetical swing-board, either
intended as a pictographic pun upon the name of “Deer,”
or as a hint to sportsmen of good game hereabouts).
“Why,” replied Mrs. Deer,
an old tidy wench, of fifty, pretty well bent by rheumatism,
and so square in the lower half of her figure, and
so spare in the upper, that she appeared to have been
carved out of her own hips: “why, as to
dat, he ain’t good-looking to brag on, but I
don’t think he looks quite like a beast neither.”
At this unexpected retort, Bill flashed
off so many pans at once that he seemed to be a platoon
of militia. My companion also enjoyed it immensely.
Being an invalid, I could not participate in the general
mirth.
“Mrs. Deer,” said I, “how long have
you lived here?”
“Oh, sah! a good many
years; I cum here afore I had Bill dar.”
(Here William flashed in the pan twice.)
“Where did you reside before you came to Nova
Scotia?”
“Sah?”
“Where did you live?”
“Oh, sah! I is from Maryland.”
(William at it again.)
“Did you run away?”
“Yes, sah; I left when
I was young. Bill, what you laughing at? I
was young once.”
“Were you married then when you run
away?”
“Oh yes, sah!” (a glance at Bill,
who was off again).
“And left your husband behind in Maryland?”
“Yes, sah; but he didn’t
stay long dar after I left. He was after
me putty sharp, soon as I travelled;” (here
Mrs. Deer and William interchanged glances, and indulged
freely in mirth).
“And which place do you like the best this
or Maryland?”
“Why, I never had no such work
to do at home as I have to do here, grubbin’
up old stumps and stones; dem isn’t women’s
work. When I was home, I had only to wait on
misses, and work was light and easy.” (William
quiet.)
“But which place do you like the best Nova
Scotia or Maryland?”
“Oh! de work here is awful,
grubbin’ up old stones and stumps; ’tain’t
fit for women.” (William much impressed with
the cogency of this repetition.)
“But which place do you like the best?”
“And de winter here, oh! it’s
wonderful tryin.” (William utters an affirmative
flash.)
“But which place do you like the best?”
“And den dere’s de rheumatiz.”
“But which place do you like the best, Mrs.
Deer?”
“Well,” said Mrs. Deer,
glancing at Bill, “I like Nova Scotia best.”
(Whatever visions of Maryland were gleaming in William’s
mind, seemed to be entirely quenched by this remark.)
“But why,” said I, “do
you prefer Nova Scotia to Maryland? Here you have
to work so much harder, to suffer so much from the
cold and the rheumatism, and get so little for it;”
for I could not help looking over the green patch
of stony grass that has been rescued by the labor of
a quarter century.
“Oh!” replied Mrs. Deer,
“de difference is, dat when I work here, I work
for myself, and when I was working at home, I was working
for other people.” (At this, William broke forth
again in such a series of platoon flashes, that we
all joined in with infinite merriment.)
“Mrs. Deer,” said I, recovering
my gravity, “I want to ask you one more question.”
“Well, sah,” said
the lady Deer, cocking her head on one side, expressive
of being able to answer any number of questions in
a twinkling.
“You have, no doubt, still many
relatives left in Maryland?”
“Oh! yes,” replied Mrs. Deer, “all
of dem are dar.”
“And suppose you had a chance
to advise them in regard to this matter, would you
tell them to run away, and take their part with you
in Nova Scotia, or would you advise them to stay where
they are?”
Mrs. Deer, at this, looked a long
time at William, and William looked earnestly at his
parent. Then she cocked her head on the other
side, to take a new view of the question. Then
she gathered up mouth and eyebrows, in a puzzle, and
again broadened out upon Bill in an odd kind of smile;
at last she doubled up one fist, put it against her
cheek, glanced at Bill, and out came the answer:
“Well, sah, I’d let ’em take
dere own heads for dat!” I must confess
the philosophy of this remark awakened in me a train
of very grave reflections; but my companion burst into
a most obstreperous laugh. As for Mrs. Deer,
she shook her old hips as long as she could stand,
and then sat down and continued, until she wiped the
tears out of her eyes with the corner of her apron.
William cast himself down upon a strawberry bank,
and gave way to the most flagrant mirth, kicking up
his old shoes in the air, and fairly wallowing in
laughter and blossoms. I endeavored to change
the subject. “Bill, did you catch any trout?”
It was some time before William could control himself
enough to say, “Not a single one, sah;”
and then he rolled over on his back, put his black
paws up to his eyes, and twitched and jingled to his
heart’s content. I did not ask Mrs. Deer
any more questions; but there is a moral in the story,
enough for a day.
As we rattled over the road, after
our brief dinner at Deer’s Castle, I could not
avoid a pervading feeling of gloom and disappointment,
in spite of the balmy air and pretty landscape.
The old ragged abodes of wretchedness seemed to be
too clearly defined to stand out too intrusively
against the bright blue sky. But why should I
feel so much for Cuffee? Has he not enlisted
in his behalf every philanthropist in England?
Is he not within ten miles of either the British flag
or Acadia? Does not the Duchess of Sutherland
entertain the authoress of Uncle Tom’s Cabin,
and the Black Swan? Why should I sorrow for Cuffee,
when he is in the midst of his best friends?
Why should I pretend to say that this appears to be
the raggedest, the meanest, the worst condition of
humanity, when the papers are constantly lauding British
philanthropy, and holding it up as a great example,
which we must “bow down and worship?” For
my own part, although the pleasant fiction of seeing
Cuffee clothed, educated, and Christianized, seemed
to be somewhat obscured in this glimpse of his real
condition, yet I hope he will do well under his new
owners; at the very least, I trust his berry crop
will be good, and that a benevolent British blanket
or two may enable him to shiver out the winter safely,
if not comfortably. Poor William Deer, Sen’r,
of Deer’s Castle, was suffering with rheumatism
in the next apartment, while we were at his eggs and
bacon in the banquet hall; but Deer of Deer’s
Castle is a prince to his neighbors. I shall
not easily forget the brightening eye, the swift glance
of intelligence in the face of another old negro, an
hostler, in Nova Scotia. He was from Virginia,
and adopting the sweet, mellifluous language of his
own home, I asked him whether he liked best to stay
where he was, or go back to “Old Virginny?”
“O massa!” said he, with such a
look, “you must know dat I has de warmest
side for my own country!”
We rattled soberly into Dartmouth,
and took the ferry-boat across the bay to the city.
At the hotel there was no little questioning about
Chezzetcook, for some of the Halifax merchants are
at the Waverley. “GOED bless ye, what took
ye to Chizzencook?” said one, “I never
was there een in my life; ther’s no bizz’ness
ther, noathing to be seen: aï doant think
there is a maen in Halifax scairsly, ’as ever
seen the place.”
At the supper-table, while we were
discussing, over the cheese and ale, the Chezzetcook
and negro settlements, and exhibiting with no little
vainglory a gorgeous bunch of wild flowers (half of
which vanity my compagnon de voyage is accountable
for), there was a young English-Irish gentleman, well
built, well featured, well educated: by name I
shall call him Picton.
Picton took much interest in Deer’s
Castle and Chezzetcook, but slily and satirically.
I do not think this the best way for a young man to
begin with; but nevertheless, Picton managed so well
to keep his sarcasms within the bounds of good humor,
that before eleven o’clock we had become pretty
well acquainted. At eleven o’clock the gas
is turned off at Hotel Waverley. We went to bed,
and renewed the acquaintance at breakfast. Picton
had travelled overland from Montreal to take the “Canada”
for Liverpool, and had arrived too late. Picton
had nearly a fortnight before him in which to anticipate
the next steamer. Picton was terribly bored with
Halifax. Picton wanted to go somewhere where? “he
did not care where.” The consequence was
a consultation upon the best disposal of a fortnight
of waste time, a general survey of the maritime craft
of Halifax, the selection of the schooner “Balaklava,”
bound for Sydney in ballast, and an understanding
with the captain, that the old French town of Louisburgh
was the point we wished to arrive at, into which harbor
we expected to be put safely three hundred
and odd miles from Halifax, and this side of Sydney
about sixty-two miles by sea. To all this did
captain Capstan “seriously incline,” and
the result was, two berths in the “Balaklava,”
several cans of preserved meats and soups, a hamper
of ale, two bottles of Scotch whisky, a ramshackle,
Halifax van for the luggage, a general shaking of
hands at departure, and another set of white sails
among the many white sails in the blue harbor of Chebucto.
The “Balaklava” glimmered
out of the harbor. Slowly and gently we swept
past the islands and great ships; there on the shore
is Point Pleasant in full uniform, its red soldiers
and yellow tents in the thick of the pines and spruces;
yonder is the admiralty, and the “Boscawen”
seventy-four, the receiving-ship, a French war-steamer,
and merchantmen of all flags. Slowly and gently
we swept out past the round fort and long barracks,
past the lighthouse and beaches, out upon the tranquil
ocean, with its ominous fog-banks on the skirts of
the horizon; out upon the evening sea, with the summer
air fanning our faces, and a large white Acadian moon,
faintly defined overhead.
Picton was a traveller; anybody could
see that he was a traveller, and if he had then been
in any part of the habitable globe, in Scotland or
Tartary, Peru or Pennsylvania, there would not have
been the least doubt about the fact that he was a
traveller travelling on his travels. He looked
like a traveller, and was dressed like a traveller.
He had a travelling-cap, a travelling-coat, a portable-desk,
a life-preserver, a water-proof blanket, a travelling-shirt,
a travelling green leather satchel strapped across
his shoulder, a Minie-rifle, several trunks adorned
with geographical railway labels of all colors and
languages, cork-soled boots, a pocket-compass, and
a hand-organ. As for the hand-organ, that was
an accident in his outfit. The hand-organ was
a present for a little boy on the other side of the
ocean; but nevertheless, it played its part very pleasantly
in the cabin of the “Balaklava.” And
now let me observe here, that when we left Halifax
in the schooner, I was scarcely less feeble than when
I left New York. I mention it to show how speedily
“roughing it” on the salt water will bring
one’s stomach to its senses.
The “Balaklava” was a
fore-and-aft schooner in ballast, and very little
ballast at that; easily handled; painted black outside,
and pink inside; as staunch a craft as ever shook
sail; very obedient to the rudder; of some seventy
or eighty tons burden; clean and neat everywhere, except
in the cabin. As for her commander, he was a
fine gentleman; true, honest, brave, modest, prudent
and courteous. Sincerely polite, for if politeness
be only kindness mixed with refinement, then Captain
Capstan was polite, as we understand it. The
mate of the schooner was a cannie Scot; by name, Robert,
Fitzjames, Buchanan, Wallace, Burns, Bruce; and Bruce
was as jolly a first-mate as ever sailed under the
cross-bones of the British flag. The crew was
composed of four Newfoundland sailor men; and the cook,
whose h’eighth letter of the h’alphabet
smacked somewhat strongly of H’albion.
As for the rest, there was Mrs. Captain Capstan, Captain
and Mrs. Captain Capstan’s baby; Picton and
myself. It is cruel to speak of a baby, except
in terms of endearment and affection, and therefore
I could not but condemn Picton, who would sometimes,
in his position as a traveller, allude to baby in
language of most emphatic character. The fact
is, Picton swore at that baby! Baby was
in feeble health and would sometimes bewail its fate
as if the cabin of the “Balaklava” were
four times the size of baby’s misfortunes.
So Picton got to be very nervous and uncharitable,
and slept on deck after the first night.
“How do you like this?”
said Picton, as we leaned over the side of the “Balaklava,”
looking down at the millions of gelatinous quarls in
the clear waters.
“Oh! very much; this lazy life
will soon bring me up; how exhilarating the air is how
fresh and free!
“’A life on the
ocean wave,
A home on the rolling deep.’”
Just then the schooner gave a lurch and shook her feathers
alow and aloft by way of chorus. I like this kind of life very much; how
gracefully this vessel moves; what a beautiful union of strength, proportion,
lightness, in the taper masts, the slender ropes and stays, the full spread and
sweep of her sails! Then how expansive the view, the calm ocean in its solitude,
the receding land, the twinkling lighthouse, the
“Ever been sea-sick?” said Picton, drily.
“Not often. By the way,
my appetite is improving; I think Cookey is getting
tea ready, by the smoke and the smell.”
“Likely,” replied Picton;
“let us take a squint at the galley.”
To the galley we went, where we saw
Cookey in great distress; for the wind would blow
in at the wrong end of his stove-pipe, so as to reverse
the draft, and his stove was smoking at every seam.
Poor Cookey’s eyes were full of tears.
“Why don’t you turn the
elbow of the pipe the other way?” said Picton.
“Hi av tried that,”
said Cookey, “but the helbow is so ’eavy
the ’ole thing comes h’off.”
“Then, take off the elbow,” said Picton.
So Cookey did, and very soon tea was
ready. Imagine a cabin, not much larger than
a good-sized omnibus, and far less steady in its motion,
choked up with trunks, and a table about the size of
a wash-stand; imagine two stools and a locker to sit
on: a canvas table-cloth in full blotch; three
chipped yellow mugs by way of cups; as many plates,
but of great variety of gap, crack, and pattern; pewter
spoons; a blacking-bottle of milk; an earthen piggin
of brown sugar, embroidered with a lively gang of
great, fat, black pismires; hard bread, old as Nineveh;
and butter of a most forbidding aspect. Imagine
this array set before an invalid, with an appetite
of the most Miss Nancyish kind!
“One misses the comforts here
at sea,” said the captain’s lady, a pretty
young woman, with a sweet Milesian accent.
“Yes, ma’am,” said I, glancing again
at the banquet.
“I don’t rightly know,”
she continued, “how I forgot the rocking-chair;”
and she gave baby an affectionate squeeze.
“And that,” said the captain,
“is as bad as me forgetting the potatoes.”
Pic and I sat down, but we could neither
eat nor drink; we were very soon on deck again, sucking
away dolefully at two precious cigars. At last
he broke out:
“By gad, to think of it!”
“What is the matter?” said I.
“Not a potato on board the ‘Balaklava!’”
So we pulled away dolefully at our segars, in solemn
silence.
“Picton,” said I, “did you ever
hear ‘Annie Laurie?’”
“Yes,” replied Picton, “about as
many times as I want to hear it.”
“Don’t be impolite, Picton,”
said I; “it is not my intention to sing it this
evening. Indeed, I never heard it before I heard
it in Halifax. I had the good fortune to make
one of a very pleasant company, at the house of an
old friend in the city, and I must say that song touched
me, both the song and the singing of it.
You know it was the song in the Crimea?”
“Yes,” said Picton, smoking vigorously.
“I asked Major ,”
said I, “if ‘Annie Laurie’ was sung
by the soldiers in the Crimea; and he replied ’they
did not sing anything else; they sang it,’ said
he, ‘by thousands at a time.’ How
does it go, Picton? Come now!”
So Picton held forth under the moon, and sang Annie Laurie
on the Balaklava. And long after we turned in, the music kept singing on
“Her voice is low and
sweet,
And she’s
all the world to me;
And for bonnie Annie Laurie
I’d lay
me down and dee.”