The other side of the Harbor--A Foraging Party--Disappointment--Twilight
at Louisburgh--Long Days and Early Mornings--A Visit and View of an
Interior--A Shark Story--Picton inquires about a Measure--Hospitality and
the Two Brave Boys--Proposals for a Trip overland to Sydney.
To make use of a quaint but expressive
phrase, “it is patent enough,” that travellers
are likely to consume more time in reaching a place
than they are apt to bestow upon it when found.
And, I am ashamed to say, that even Louisburgh was
not an exception to this general truth; although perhaps
certain reasons might be offered in extenuation for
our somewhat speedy departure from the precincts of
the old town. First, then, the uncertainty of
a sailing vessel, for the “Balaklava” was
coquettishly courting any and every wind that could
carry her out of our harbor of refuge. Next, the
desire of seeing more of the surroundings of the ancient
fortress the batteries on the opposite
side, the new town, the lighthouse, and the wild picturesque
coast. Add to these the wish of our captain to
shift his anchorage, to get on the side where he would
have a better opening towards the ocean, “when
the wind came on to blow,” to say
nothing of being in the neighborhood of his old friends,
whose cottages dotted the green hill-sides across
the bay, as you looked over the bows of the jolly little
schooner. And there might have been other inducements such
as the hope of getting a few pounds of white sugar,
a pitcher of milk (delicious, lacteous fluid, for
which we had yearned so often amid the briny waves);
and last, but not least, a hamper of blue-nosed potatoes.
So, when the shades of the second evening were gathering
grandly and gloomily around the dismantled parapets,
and Louisburgh lay in all the lovely and romantic
light of a red and stormy sunset, it seemed but fitting
that the cable-chain of the anchor should clank to
the windlass, and the die-away song of the mariner
should resound above the calm waters, and the canvas
stretch towards the land opposite, that seemed so tempting
and delectable. And presently the “Balaklava”
bore away across the red and purple harbor for the
new town, leaving in her wake the ruined walls of Louisburgh
that rose up higher the further we sailed from them.
The schooner dropped anchor inside
the little cove on the opposite side of the old town,
which the reader will see by referring to the map;
and the old battles of the years ’45 and ’58
were presently forgotten in the new aspects that were
presented. The anchor was scarcely dropped fairly,
before the yawl-boat was under the stroke of the oars,
and Picton and I en route for the store-house;
the general, particular, and only exchange in the
whole district of Louisburgh. It was a small wooden
building with a fair array of tarpaulin hats, oil-skin
garments, shelves of dry-goods and crockery, and boxes
and barrels, such as are usually kept by country traders:
on the beach before it were the customary flake for
drying fish, the brown winged boats, and other implements
of the fisheries.
But alas! the new town, that looked
so pastoral and pleasant, with its tender slopes of
verdure, was not, after all, a Canaan, flowing with
milk and blue-nosed potatoes. Neither was there
white sugar, nor coffee, nor good black tea there;
the cabin of the schooner being as well furnished
with these articles of comfort as the store-house of
McAlpin, towards which we had looked with such longing
eyes. Indeed, I would not have cared so much
about the disappointment myself, but I secretly felt
sorry for Picton, who went rummaging about the barrels
in search of something to eat or to drink. “No
white sugar?” said the traveller. “We
don’t have white sugar in this town,”
was the answer. “Nor coffee?” “No,
Sir.” And the tea had the same flavor of
musty hay, with which we were so well acquainted.
At last Picton stumbled over a prize a bushel-basket
half-filled with potatoes, whereat he raised a bugle-note
of triumph.
It may seem strange that a gentleman
of fine education, a traveller, who had visited the
famous European capitals, London, Paris, Rome, Madrid,
Vienna; who had passed between the Pillars of Hercules,
and voyaged upon the blue Mediterranean, far as the
Greek Archipelago; who had wandered through the galleries
of the Vatican, and mused within the courts of the
Alhambra; who had seen the fire-works on the carnival
dome of St. Peter’s, and the water-works of
Versailles; the temples of Athens, and the Boboli
gardens of Florence; the sculptures of Praxiteles,
and the frescoes of Raphael; should exhibit such emotion
as Picton exhibited, over a bushel-basket only half-filled
with small-sized blue-nosed tubers. But Picton
was only a man, and “Homo sum ”
the rest of the sentence it is needless to quote.
I saw at a glance that the potatoes were cut in halves
for planting; but Picton was filled with the divine
idea of a feast.
“I say, we want a peck of potatoes.”
“A peck?” was the answer.
“Why, man, I wouldn’t sell ye my seed-potatoes
at a guinea apiece.”
Here was a sudden let-down; a string
of the human violin snapped, just as it was keyed
up to tuning point. Slowly and sorrowfully we
regained the yawl after that brief and bitter experience,
and a few strokes of the oars carried us to the side
of the “Balaklava.”
It may seem absurd and trifling to
dwell upon such slight particulars in this itinerary
of a month among the Blue Noses (as our brothers of
Nova Scotia are called); but to give a correct idea
of this rarely-visited part of the world, one must
notice the salient points that present themselves
in the course of the survey. Louisburgh would
speedly become rich from its fisheries, if there were
sufficient capital invested there and properly used.
Halifax is now the only point of contact between it
and the outside world; Halifax supplies it with all
the necessary articles of life, and Halifax buys all
the produce of its fisheries. Therefore, Halifax
reaps all the profits on either side, both of buying
and selling, in all not amounting to much as
the matter now stands. But insomuch as the sluggish
blood of the colonies will never move without some
quickening impulse from exterior sources, and as Louisburgh
is only ten days’ sail, under canvas, from New
York, and as the fisheries there would rapidly grow
by kindly nurture into importance, it does seem as
if a moderate amount of capital diverted in that direction,
would be a fortunate investment, both for the investor
and hardy fishermen of the old French town.
I have alluded before to the long
Acadian twilights, the tender and loving leave-takings
between the day and his earth; just as two fond and
foolish young people separate sometimes, or as the
quaint old poet in Britannia’s Pastorals
describes it:
“Look as a lover, with a lingering
kiss, About to part with the best half that’s
his: Fain would he stay, but that he fears
to do it, And curseth time for so fast hastening
to it: Now takes his leave, and yet begins
anew To make less vows than are esteemed true:
Then says, he must be gone, and then doth find
Something he should have spoke that’s out
of mind: And while he stands to look for’t
in her eyes, Their sad, sweet glance so ties his
faculties To think from what he parts that he
is now As far from leaving her, or knowing how,
As when he came; begins his former strain,
To kiss, to vow, and take his leave again; Then
turns, comes back, sighs, pants, and yet doth go,
Fain to retire, and loth to leave her so.”
Even so these fond and foolish old
institutions part company in northern regions, and,
at the early hour of two o’clock in the morning,
the amorous twilight reappears in his foggy mantle,
to look at the fair face of his ancient sweetheart
in the month of June.
Tea being over, the “cluck”
of the row-locks woke the echoes of the twilight bay,
as our little yawl put off again for the new town,
with a gay evening party, consisting of the captain,
his lady, the baby, Picton and myself, with a brace
of Newfoundland oarsmen. If our galley was not
a stately one, it was at least a cheerful vessel,
and as the keel grated on the snow-white pebbles of
the beach, Picton and I sprang ashore, with all the
gallantry of a couple of Sir Walter Raleighs, to assist
the queen of the “Balaklava” upon terra
firma. Her majesty being landed, we made a
royal procession to the largest hutch on the green
slope before us, the captain carrying the insignia
of his marital office (the baby) with great pomp and
awkward ceremony, in front, while his lady, Picton
and I, loitered in the rear. We had barely crossed
the sill of the hutch-door, before we felt quite at
home and welcome. The same cheery fire in the
chimney-place, the spotless floor, the tidy rush-bottomed
chairs, and a whole nest of little white-heads and
twinkling eyes, just on the border of a bright patchwork
quilt, was invitation enough, even if we had not been
met at the threshold by the master himself, who stretched
out his great arms with a kind, “Come-in-and-how-are-ye-all.”
And what a wonderful evening we passed
in that other hutch, before the blazing hearth-fire!
What stories of wrecks and rescues, of icebergs and
whales, of fogs and fisheries, of domestic lobsters
that brought up their little families, in the mouths
of the sunken cannon of the French frigates; of the
great sharks that were sometimes caught in the meshes
of the set-nets! “There was one shark,”
said our host, another old fisherman, who, by the
way, wore a red skull-cap like a cardinal, and had
a habit of bobbing his head as he spoke, so as to
put one continually in mind of a gigantic woodpecker “there
was one shark I mind particular. My two boys
and me was hauling in the net, and soon as I felt it,
says I, ’Boys, here’s something more than
common.’ So we all hauled away, and O my!
didn’t the water boil when he come up? Such
a time! Fortnatly, he come up tail first.
LORD, if he’d a come up head first he’d
a bit the boat in two at one bite! He was all
hooked in, and twisted up with the net. I s’pose
he had forty hooks in him; and when he got his head
above water, he was took sick, and such a time as
he had! He must a’ vomited up about two
barrels of bait true as I set here.
Well, as soon as he got over that, then he tried to
get his head around to bite! LORD, if he’d
got his head round, he’d a bit the boat in two,
and we had it right full of fish, for we’d been
out all day with hand-lines. He had a nose in
front of his gills just like a duck, only it was nigh
upon six feet long.”
“It must have been a shovel-nose shark,”
said Picton.
“That’s what a captain
of a coaster told me,” replied Red-Cap; “he
said it must a been a shovel-nose. If he’d
only got that shovel-nose turned around, he’d
a shovelled us into eternity, fish and all.”
“What prevented him getting his head around?”
said Picton.
“Why, sir, I took two half-hitches
round his tail, soon as I see him come up. And
I tell ye when I make two half-hitches, they hold;
ask captain there, if I can’t make hitches as
will hold. What say, captain?”
Captain assented with a confirmatory nod.
“What did you do then?” said Picton.
“Did you get him ashore?”
“Get him ashore?” muttered
Red-Cap, covering his mouth with one broad brown hand
to muffle a contemptuous laugh; “get him ashore!
why, we was pretty well off shore for such a sail.”
“You might have rowed him ashore,” said
Picton.
“Rowed him ashore?” echoed
Red-Cap, with another contemptuous smile under the
brown hand; “rowed him ashore?”
The traveller, finding he was in deep
water, answered: “Yes; that is, if you
were not too far out.”
“A little too far out,”
replied Red-Cap; “why if I had been a hundred
yards only from shore, it would ha’ been too
far to row, or sail in, with that shovel-nose, without
counting the set-nets.”
“And what did you do?” said Picton, a
little nettled.
“Why,” said Red-Cap, “I
had to let him go, but first I cut out his liver,
and that I did bring ashore, although it filled my
boat pretty well full. You can judge how big
it was: after I brought it ashore I lay it out
on the beach and we measured it, Mr. McAlpin and me,
and he’ll tell you so too; we laid it out on
the beach, that ere liver, and it measured seventeen
feet, and then we didn’t measure all of it.”
“Why the devil,” said
Picton, “didn’t you measure all of it?”
“Well,” replied Red-Cap,
“because we hadn’t a measure long enough.”
Meantime the good lady of the hutch
was busy arranging some tumblers on the table, and
to our great surprise and delight a huge yellow pitcher
of milk soon made its appearance, and immediately
after an old-fashioned iron bake-pan, with an upper
crust of live embers and ashes, was lifted off the
chimney trammel, and when it was opened, the fragrance
of hot ginger-bread filled the apartment. Then
Red-Cap bobbed away at a corner cupboard, until he
extracted therefrom a small keg or runlet of St. Croix
rum of most ripe age and choice flavor, some of which,
by an adroit and experienced crook of the elbow, he
managed to insinuate into the milk, which, with a little
brown sugar, he stirred up carefully and deliberately
with a large spoon, Picton and I watching the proceedings
with intense interest. Then the punch was poured
out and handed around; while the good wife made little
trips from guest to guest with a huge platter filled
with the brown and fragrant pieces of the cake, fresh
from the bake-pan. And so the baby having subsided
(our baby of the “Balaklava"), and the twilight
having given place to a grand moonlight on the bay,
and the fire sending out its beams of warmth and happiness,
glittering on the utensils of the dresser, and tenderly
touching with rosy light the cheeks of the small,
white-headed fishermen on the margin of the patchwork
quilt; while there was no lack of punch and hospitality
in the yellow pitcher, who shall say that we were
not as well off in the fisherman’s hutch as in
a grand saloon, surrounded with frescoes and flunkeys,
and served with thin lemonade upon trays of silver?
I do not know why it is, but there
always has been something very attractive to me in
the faces of children; I love to read the physiognomy
of posterity, and so get a history of the future world
in miniature, before the book itself is fairly printed.
And insomuch as Nova Scotia and Newfoundland are said
to be the nurseries of England’s seamen, it was
with no little interest that I caught a glimpse of
two boys, one thirteen, the other eleven years old,
the eldest children of our friend Red-Cap.
They came in just as we entered the
hutch, and quietly seated themselves together by the
corner of the fire-place, after modestly shaking hands
with all the guests. They were dressed in plain
home-spun clothes, with something of a sailor rig,
especially the neat check shirts, and old-fashioned,
little, low-quartered, round-toed shoes, such as are
always a feature in the melo-drama where Jack
plays a part. It is not usual, too, to see such
stocky, robust frames as these fisher-boys presented;
and in all three, in the father and his two sons,
was one general, pervading idea of cleanliness and
housewifery. And then, to notice the physiognomy
again, each small face, though modest as that of no
girl which I could recall at the moment, had its own
tale of hardihood to tell; there was a something that
recalled the open sea, written in either countenance;
courage and endurance; faith and self-reliance; the
compass and the rudder; speaking plainly out under
each little thatch of white hair. And indeed,
as we found out afterwards, those young countenances
told the truth; those fisher-boys were Red-Cap’s
only boat-crew. In all weathers, in all seasons,
by night and by day, the three were together, the parent
and his two children, upon the perilous deep.
“If I were the father of those
boys,” I whispered to Red-Cap, “I would
be proud of them.”
“Would ye?” said he, with
a proud, fatherly glance towards them; “well,
I thought so once mysel’; it was when a schooner
got ashore out there on the rocks; and we could see
her, just under the lights of the lighthouse, pounding
away; and by reason of the ice, nobody would venture;
so my boys said, says they, ‘Father, we can
go, any way.’ So I wouldn’t stop when
they said that, and so we laid beside the schooner
and took off all her crew pretty soon, and they mostly
dead with the cold; but it was an awful bad night,
what with the darkness and the ice. Yes,”
he added, after a pause, “they are good boys
now; but they won’t be with me many years.”
“And why not?” I inquired,
for I could not see that the young Red-Caps exhibited
any migratory signs of their species to justify the
remark.
“Because all our boys go to
the States just as soon as they get old enough.”
“To the States!” I echoed
with no little surprise; “why, I thought they
all entered the British Navy, or something of that
kind.”
“Lord bless ye,” said
Red-Cap, “not one of them. Enter the British
Navy! Why, man, you get the whole of our young
people. What would they want to enter the British
Navy for, when they can enter the United States of
America?”
“The air of Cape Breton is certainly
favorable to health,” said I, in a whisper,
to Picton; “look, for example, at the mistress
of the hutch!” and so surely as I have a love
of womanity, so surely I intended to convey a sentiment
of admiration in the brief words spoken to Picton.
The wife of Bonnet Rouge was at least not young,
but her cheek was smooth, and flushed with the glow
of health; her eyes liquid and bright; her hair brown,
and abundant; her step light and elastic. Although
neither Picton, captain, or anybody else in the hutch
would remind one of the Angel Raphael, yet Mrs. Red-Cap,
as
“With
dispatchful looks, in haste
She turned, on hospitable
thoughts intent,”
was somewhat suggestive of Eve; her
movements were grand and simple; there was a welcome
in her face that dimpled in and out with every current
topic; a Miltonic grandeur in her air, whether she
walked or waited. I could not help but admire
her, as I do everything else noble and easily understood.
Mrs. Red-Cap was a splendid woman; the wife of a fisherman,
with an unaffected grace beyond the reach of art, and
poor old Louisburgh was something to speak of.
Picton expressed his admiration in stronger and profaner
language.
We were not the only guests at Red-Cap’s.
The lighthouse keeper, Mr. Kavanagh, a bachelor and
scholar, with his sister, had come down to take a
moonlight walk over the heather; for in new Scotland
as in old Scotland, the bonny heather blooms, although
not so much familiarized there by song and story.
But we shall visit lighthouse Point anon, and spend
some hours with the two Kavanaghs. Forthright,
into the teeth of the harbor, the wind is blowing:
“The wind bloweth where it listeth, and thou
nearest the sound therof, but canst not tell whence
it cometh, and whither it goeth.” How long
the “Balaklava” may stay here is yet uncertain.
So, with a good-night to the Red-Caps and their guests,
we once more bear away for the cabin of the schooner
and another night’s discomfort.
As I have said before in other words,
this province is nothing more than a piece of patchwork,
intersected with petty boundary lines, so that every
nation is stitched in and quilted in spots, without
any harmony, or coherence, or general design.
The people of Louisburgh are a kind, hospitable, pleasant
people, tolerably well informed for the inhabitants
of so isolated a corner of the world; but a few miles
further off we come upon a totally different race:
a canting, covenanting, oat-eating, money-griping,
tribe of second-hand Scotch Presbyterians: a transplanted,
degenerate, barren patch of high cheek-bones and red
hair, with nothing cleaving to them of the original
stock, except covetousness and that peculiar cutaneous
eruption for which the mother country is celebrated.
But we shall soon have enough of these Scotsmen, good
reader. Our present visit is to Lighthouse Point,
to look out upon the broad Atlantic, the rocky coast,
and the island battery, which a century since gave
so much trouble to our filibustering fathers of New
England. As we walked towards the lighthouse
over the pebbly beach that borders the green turf,
Picton suddenly starts off and begins a series of
great jumps on the turf, giving with every grasshopper-leap
a sort of interjectional “Whuh! whuh!”
as though the feat was not confined to the leg-muscles
only, but included also a necessary exercise of the
lungs. And although we shouted at the traveller,
he kept on towards the lighthouse, uttering with every
jump, “Heather, heather.” At last
he came to, beside a group of evergreens, and grew
rational. The springy, elastic sod, the heather
of old Scotland, reproduced in new Scotland, had reminded
him of reels and strathspeys, “for,” said
he, “nobody can walk upon this sort of thing
without feeling a desire to dance upon it. Thunder
and turf! if we only had the pipes now!”
And sure enough here was the heather;
the soft, springy turf, which has made even Scotchmen
affectionate. I do not wonder at it; it answers
to the foot-step like an echo, as the string of an
instrument answers its concord; as love answers love
in unison. I do not wonder that Scotchmen love
the heather; I am only surprised that so much heather
should be wasted on Scotchmen.
We had anticipated a fine marine view
from the lighthouse, but in place of it we could only
see a sort of semi-luminous vapor, usually called a
fog, which enveloped ocean, island, and picturesque
coast. We could not discover the Island Battery
opposite, which had bothered Sir William in the siege
of ’45; but nevertheless, we could judge of the
difficulty of reaching it with a hostile force, screened
as it was by its waves and vapors. The lighthouse
is striped with black and white bars, like a zebra,
and we entered it. One cannot help but admire
such order and neatness, for the lighthouse is a marvel
of purity. We were everywhere in the
bed-rooms, in the great lantern with its glittering
lamps, in the hall, the parlor, the kitchen; and found
in all the same pervading virtue; as fresh and sweet
as a bride was that old zebra-striped lighthouse.
The Kavanaghs, brother and sister, live here entirely
alone; what with books and music, the ocean, the ships,
and the sky, they have company enough. One could
not help liking them, they have such cheerful faces,
and are so kind and hospitable. Good bye, good
friends, and peace be with you always! On our
route schooner-ward we danced back over the heather,
Picton with great joy carrying a small basket filled
with his national fruit a present from
the Kavanaghs. What a feast we shall have, fresh
fish, lobster, and above all potatoes!
It is a novel sight to see the firs
and spruces on this stormy sea-coast. They grow
out, and not up; an old tree spreading over an area
of perhaps twenty feet in diameter, with the inevitable
spike of green in its centre, and that not above a
foot and a half from the ground. The trees in
this region are possessed of extraordinary sagacity;
they know how hard the wind blows at times, and therefore
put forth their branches in full squat, just like
country girls at a pic-nic.
On Sunday the wind is still ahead,
and Picton and I determine to abandon the “Balaklava.”
How long she may yet remain in harbor is a matter of
fate; so, with brave, resolute hearts, we start off
for a five-mile walk, to McGibbet’s, the only
owner of a horse and wagon in the vicinity of Louisburgh.
Squirrels, robins, and rabbits appear and disappear
in the road as we march forwards. The country
is wild, and in its pristine state; nature everywhere.
Now a brook, now a tiny lake, and “the murmuring
pines and the hemlocks.” At last we arrive
at the house of McGibbet, and encounter new Scotland
in all its original brimstone and oatmeal.