A Blue-Nosed Pair of the most Cerulean Hue--Prospects of a Hard
Bargain--Case of Necessity--Romantic Lake with an Unromantic Name--The
Discussion concerning Oatmeal--Danger of the Gasterophili--McGibbet
makes a Proposition--Farewell to the “Balaklava”--A Midnight
Journey--Sydney--Boat Excursion to the Mic Macs--Picton takes off his
Mackintosh.
Some learned philosopher has asserted
that when a person has become accustomed to one peculiar
kind of diet, it will be expressed in the lineaments
of his face. How much the constant use of oatmeal
could produce such an effect, was plainly visible
in the countenances of McGibbet and his lady-love.
Both had an unmistakable equine cast; McGibbet, wild,
scraggy, and scrubby, with a tuft on his poll that
would not have been out of place between the ears
of a plough-horse, stared at us, just as such an animal
would naturally over the top of a fence; while his
gentle mate, who had more of the amiable draught-horse
in her aspect, winked at us with both eyes from under
a close-crimped frill, that bore a marvellous resemblance
to a head-stall. The pair had evidently just returned
from kirk. To say nothing of McGibbet’s
hat, and his wife’s shawl, on a chair, and his
best boots on the hearth (for he was walking about
in his stockings), there was a dry preceese
air about them, which plainly betokened they were
newly stiffened up with the moral starch of the conventicle,
and were therefore well prepared to drive a hard bargain
for a horse and wagon to Sydney. But what surprised
me most of all was the imperturbable coolness of Picton.
Without taking a look scarcely at the persons he was
addressing, the traveller stalked in with an “I
say, we want a horse and wagon to Sydney; so look
sharp, will you, and turn out the best thing you have
here?”
The moral starch of the conventicle
stiffened up instantly. Like the blacksmith of
Cairnvreckan, who, as a professor, would drive
a nail for no man on the Sabbath or kirk-fast, unless
in a case of absolute necessity, and then always charged
an extra saxpence for each shoe; so it was plain to
be seen that McGibbet had a conscience which required
to be pricked both with that which knows no law, and
the saxpence extra. He turned to his wife and
addressed her in Gaelic! Then we knew what
was coming.
Mrs. McGibbet opened the subject by saying that they were
both accustomed to the observance of the Sabbath, and that she didnt think it
was right for man to transgress, when the law was so plain
Here McGibbet broke in and said that “He
was free to confess he had commeeted a grreat menny
theengs kwhich were a grreat deal worse than Sabbath-breaking.”
Upon which Mrs. McG. interrupted him in turn with a few
words, which, although in Gaelic, a language we did not understand, conveyed the
impression that she was not addressing her liege lord in the language of
endearment, and again continued in English: That it was held sinful in the
community to wark or do anything o the sort, or to fetch or carry even a sma
bundle
For kwich, said McGibbet, is a fine to be paid to the
meenister, of five shillins currency
Here Picton stopped whistling a bar
of “Bonny Doon,” and observed to me:
“About a dollar of your money. We’ll
pay the fine.”
“Yes,” chimed in McGibbet,
“a dollar” and was again
stopped by his wife, who raised her eyebrows to the
borders of her kirk-frill and brought them down vehemently
over her blue eyes at him.
“Or to travel the road,”
she said, “even on foot, to say nothing of a
wagon and horse.”
“But,” interrupted Picton,
“my dear madam, we must get on, I tell you; I
must be in Sydney to-morrow, to catch the steamer for
St. John’s.”
At this observation of the traveller
the pair fell back upon their Gaelic for a while,
and in the meantime Picton whispered me: “I
see; they want to raise the price on us: but
we won’t give in; they’ll be sharp enough
after the job by and by.”
The pair turned towards us and both
shook their heads. It was plain to be seen the
conference had not ended in our favor.
“Ye see,” said the gude-wife,
“we are accustomed to the observance of the
Sabbath, and would na like to break it, except
“In a case of necessity; you
are perfectly right,” chimed in Picton; “I
agree with you myself. Now this is a case of necessity;
here we are; we must get on, you see; if we don’t
get on we miss the steamer to-morrow for St. John’s she
only runs once a fortnight there it’s
plain enough a clear case of necessity; it’s
like,” continued Picton, evidently trying to
corner some authority in his mind, “it’s
like let me see it’s like a pulling a
sheep out of a ditch a which
they always do on the Sabbath, you know, to a get
us on to Sydney.”
Both McGibbet and his wife smiled
at Picton’s ingenuity, but straightway put on
the equine look again. “It might be so;
but it was clean contrary to their preenciples.”
“I’ll be hanged,”
whispered Picton, “if I offer more than the usual
price, which I heard at Louisburgh was one pound ten,
to Sydney, and the fine extra. I see what they
are after.”
There was an awkward pause in the
negotiations. McGibbet scratched his poll, and
looked wistfully at his wife, but the kirk-frill was
stiffened up with the moral starch, as aforesaid.
Suddenly, Picton looked out of the
window. “By Jove!” said he, “I
think the wind is changed! After all, we may
get around in the ‘Balaklava.’”
McGibbet looked somewhat anxiously
out of the window also, and grunted out a little more
Gaelic to his love. The kirk-frill relented a
trifle.
“Perhaps the gentlemen wad like
a glass of milk after thae long walk? and Robert”
(which she pronounced Robbut), “a bit o’
the corn-cake.”
Upon which Robbut, with great alacrity,
turned towards the bed-room, from whence he brought
forth a great white disk, that resembled the head of
a flour-barrel, but which proved to be a full-grown
griddle cake of corn-meal. This, with the pure
milk, from the cleanest of scoured pans, was acceptable
enough after the long walk.
We had observed some beautiful streams,
and blue glimpses of lakes on the road to McGibbet’s,
and just beyond his house was a larger lake, several
miles in extent, with picturesque hills on either side,
indented-with coves, and studded with islands, sometimes
stretching away to distant slopes of green turf, and
sometimes reflecting masses of precipitous rock, crowned
with the spiry tops of spruces and firs. Indeed,
all the country around, both meadow and upland, was
very pleasing to the sight. A low range of hills
skirted the northern part of what seemed to be a spacious,
natural amphitheatre, while on the south side a diversity
of highlands and water added to the whole the charm
of variety.
“You have a fine country about you, Mr. McGibbet,”
said I.
“Ay,” he replied.
“And what is it called here?”
“We ca’ it Get-Along!”
said Robbut, with an intensely Scotch accent on the
“Get.”
“And yonder beautiful lake what
is the name of that?” said I, in hopes of taking
refuge behind something more euphonious.
“Oh! ay,” replied he,
“that’s just Get-Along, too. We doan’t
usually speak of it, but whan we do, we just
ca’ it Get-Along Lake, and it’s not
good for much.”
I thought it best to change the subject.
“Do you like this as well as the oat-cake?”
said I, with my mouth full of the dry, husky provender.
“Nae,” said McGibbet,
with an equine shake of the head, “it’s
not sae fellin.”
Not so filling! Think of that,
ye pampered minions of luxury, who live only upon
delicate viands; who prize food, not as it useful,
but as it is tasteful; who can even encourage a depraved,
sensual appetite so far as to appreciate flavor; who
enjoy meats, fish, and poultry, only as they minister
to your palates; who flirt with spring-chickens and
trifle with sweet-breads in wanton indolence, without
a thought of your cubic capacity; without a reflection
that you can live just as well upon so many square
inches of oatmeal a day as you can upon the most elaborate
French kickshaws; nay, that you can be elevated to
the level of a scientific problem, and work out your
fillings, with nothing to guide you but a slate and
pencil!
“Then you like oatmeal better
than this?” said Picton, soothing down a husky
lump, with a cup of milk.
“Ay,” responded McGibbet.
“And you always eat it, whenever
you can get it, I suppose?” continued Picton,
with a most innocent air.
“Ay,” responded McGibbet.
“I should think some of you
Scotchmen would be afraid of contracting a disease
that is engendered in the system by the use of this
sort of grain. I hope, Mr. McGibbet,” said
Picton, with imperturbable coolness, “you keep
clear of the bots, and that sort of thing, you know?”
“Kwat?” said Robbut, with
the most startled, horse-like look he had yet put
on.
“The gasterophili,” replied
Picton, “which I would advise you to steer clear
of, if you want to live long.”
As this was a word with too many gable-ends
for Robbut’s comprehension, he only responded
by giving such a smile as a man might be expected to
give who had his mouth full of aloes, and as the conversation
was wandering off from the main point, addressed himself
to Mrs. McG. in the vernacular again.
“We would like to obleege ye,”
said the lady, “if it was not for the transgression;
and we do na like to break the Sabbath for ony
man.”
“Although,” interposed
Robbut, “I am free to confess that I have done
a great many things worse than breakin’ the
Sabbath.”
“But if to-morrow would do as
well,” resumed his wife, “Robbut would
take ye to Sydney.”
To this Picton shook his head. “Too late
for the steamer.”
“Or to-night; I wad na
mind that,” said the pious Robbut, “if
it was after dark, and that will bring ye to Sydney
before the morn.”
“That will do,” said Picton,
slapping his thigh. “Lend us your horse
and wagon to go down to the schooner and get our luggage;
we will be back this evening, and then go on to Sydney,
eh? That will do; a ride by moonlight;”
and the traveller jumped up from his seat, walked with
great strides towards the fire-place, turned his back
to the blaze, hung a coat-tail over each arm, and
whistled “Annie Laurie” at Mrs. McGibbet.
The suggestion of Picton meeting the
views of all concerned, the diplomacy ended.
Robbut put himself in his Sunday boots, and hitched
up a spare rib of a horse before a box-wagon without
springs, which he brought before the door with great
complacency. The traveller and I were soon on
the ground-floor of the vehicle, seated upon a log
of wood by way of cushion; and with a chirrup from
McGibbet, off we went. At the foot of the first
hill, our horse stopped; in vain Picton jerked at the
rein, and shouted at him: not a step further
would he go, until Robbut himself came down to the
rescue. “Get along, Boab!” said his
master; and Bob, with a mute, pitiful appeal in his
countenance, turned his face towards salt-water.
At the foot of the next hill he stopped again, when
the irascible Picton jumped out, and with one powerful
twitch of the bridle, gave Boab such a hint to “get
on,” that it nearly jerked his head off.
And Boab did get on, only to stop at the ascent of
the next hill. Then we began to understand the
tactics of the animal. Boab had been the only
conveyance between Louisburgh and Sydney for many
years, and, as he was usually over-burdened, made
a point to stop at the up side of every hill on the
road, to let part of his freight get out and walk to
the top of the acclivity with him. So, by way
of compromise, we made a feint of getting out at every
rise of ground, and Boab, who always turned his head
around at each stopping-place, seemed to be satisfied
with the observance of the ceremony, and trotted gaily
forward. At last we came to a place we had named
Sebastopol in the morning a great sharp
edge of rock as high as a man’s waist, that
cut the road in half, over which we lifted the wagon,
and were soon in view of the bright little harbor and
the “Balaklava” at anchor. Mr. McAlpin
kindly gave quarters to our steed in his out-house,
and offered to raise a signal for the schooner to send
a boat ashore. As he was Deputy United States
Consul, and as I was tired of the red-cross of St.
George, I asked him to hoist his consular flag.
Up to the flag-staff truck rose the roll of white
and red worsted, then uncoiled, blew out, and the
blessed stars and stripes were waving over me.
It is surprising to think how transported one can
be sometimes with a little bit of bunting!
And now the labor of packing commenced,
of which Picton had the greatest share by far; the
little cabin of the schooner was pretty well spread
out with his traps on every side; and this being ended,
Picton got out his travelling-organ and blazed away
in a finale of great tunes and small, sometimes
fast, sometimes slow, as the humor took him. After
all, we parted from the jolly little craft with regret:
our trunks were lowered over the side; we shook hands
with all on board; and were rowed in silence to the
land.
I have had some experience in travelling,
and have learned to bear with ordinary firmness and
philosophy the incidental discomforts one is certain
to meet with on the road; but I must say, the discipline
already acquired had not prepared me for the unexpected
appearance of our wagon after Picton’s luggage
was placed in it. First, two solid English trunks
of sole-leather filled the bottom of the vehicle;
then the traveller’s Minie-rifle, life-preserver,
strapped-up blankets, and hand-bag were stuffed in
the sides: over these again were piled my trunk
and the traveller’s valise (itself a monster
of straps and sole-leather); then again his portable-secretary
and the hand-organ in a box. These made such
a pyramid of luggage, that riding ourselves was out
of the question. What with the trunks and the
cordage to keep them staid, our wagon looked like
a ship of the desert. To crown all, it began to
rain steadily. “Now, then,” said
Picton, climbing up on his confounded travelling equipage,
“let’s get on.” With some difficulty
I made a half-seat on the corner of my own trunk;
Picton shouted out at Boab; the Newfoundland sailors
who had brought us ashore, put their shoulders to
the wheels, and away we went, waving our hats in answer
to the hearty cheers of the sailors. It was down
hill from McAlpin’s to the first bridge, and
so far we had nothing to care for, except to keep
a look-out we were not shaken off our high perch.
But at the foot of the first hill Boab stopped!
In vain Picton shouted at him to get on; in vain he
shook rein and made a feint of getting down from the
wagon. Boab was not intractable, but he was sagacious;
he had been fed on that sort of chaff too long.
Picton and I were obliged to humor his prejudices,
and dismount in the mud, and after one or two feeble
attempts at a ride, gave it up, walked down hill and
up, lifted the wagon by inches over Sebastopol, and
finally arrived at McGibbet’s, wet, tired, and
hungry. That Sabbath-broker received us with a
grim smile of satisfaction, put on the half-extinguished
fire the smallest bit of wood he could find in the
pile beside the hearth, and then went away with Boab
to the stable. “Gloomy prospects ahead,
Picton!” The traveller said never a word.
Now I wish to record here this, that
there is no place, no habitation of man, however humble,
that cannot be lighted up with a smile of welcome,
and the good right-hand of hospitality, and made cheerful
as a palace hung with the lamps of Aladdin!
McGibbet, after leading his beast
to the stable, returned, and warming his wet hands
at the fire, grunted out; “It rains the nigcht.”
“Yes,” answered Picton,
hastily, “rains like blue blazes: I say,
get us a drop of whisky, will you?”
To this the equine replied by folding
his hands one over the other with a saintly look.
“I never keep thae thing in the hoose.”
“Picton,” said I, “if
we could only unlash our luggage, I have a bottle of
capital old brandy in my trunk, but it’s too
much trouble.”
“Oh! na,” quoth Robbut
with a most accommodating look, “it will be nae
trooble to get to it.”
“Well, then,” said Picton,
“look sharp, will you?” and our host, with
great swiftness, moved off to the wagon, and very soon
returned with the trunk on his shoulder, according
to directions.
“But,” said I, taking
out the bottle of precious fluid, “here it is,
corked up tight, and what is to be done for a cork-screw?”
“I’ve got one,” said the saint.
“I thought it was likely,” quoth Picton,
drily; “look sharp, will you?”
And Robbut did look sharp, and produced
the identical instrument before Picton and I had exchanged
smiles. Then Robbut spread out three green tumblers
on the table, and following Picton’s lead, poured
out a stout half-glass, at which I shouted out, “Hold
up!” for I thought he was filling the tumbler
for my benefit. It proved to be a mistake; Robbut
stopped for a moment, but instantly recovering himself,
covered the tumbler with his four fingers, and, to
use a Western phrase, “got outside of the contents
quicker than lightning.” Then he brought
from his bed-room a coarse sort of worsted horse-blanket,
and with a “Ye’ll may-be like to sleep
an hour or twa?” threw down his family-quilt
and retired to the arms of Mrs. McG. Picton gave
a great crunching blow with his boot-heel at the back-stick,
and laid on a good supply of fuel. We were wet
through and through, but we wrapped ourselves in our
travelling-blankets like a brace of clansmen in their
plaids, put our feet towards the niggardly blaze, and
were soon bound and clasped with sleep.
At two o’clock our host roused
us from our hard bed, and after a stretch, to get
the stiffness out of joints and muscles, we took leave
of the Presbyterian quarters. The day was just
dawning: at this early hour, lake and hill-side,
tree and thicket, were barely visible in the grey twilight.
The wagon, with its pyramid of luggage, moved off in
the rain, McGibbet walking beside Boab, and Picton
and I following after, with all the gravity of chief
mourners at a funeral. To give some idea of the
road we were upon, let it be understood, it had once
been an old French military road, which, after
the destruction of the fortress of Louisburgh, had
been abandoned to the British Government and the elements.
As a consequence, it was embroidered with the ruts
and gullies of a century, the washing of rains, and
the tracks of wagons; howbeit, the only traverse upon
it in later years were the wagon of McGibbet and the
saddle-horse of the post-rider. “Get-Along”
had a population of seven hundred Scotch Presbyters,
and therefore it will be easy to understand the condition
of its turnpike.
Up hill and down hill, through slough
and over rock, we trudged, for mile after mile.
Sometimes beside Get-Along Lake, with its grey, spectral
islands and woodlands; sometimes by rushing brooks
and dreary farm-fields; now in paths close set with
evergreens; now in more open grounds, skirted with
hills and dotted with silent, two-penny cottages.
Sometimes Picton mounted his pyramid of trunk-leather
for a mile or so of nods; sometimes I essayed the
high perch, and holding on by a cord, dropped off in
a moment’s forgetfulness, with the constant
fear of waking up in a mud-hole, or under the wagon-wheels.
But even these respites were brief. It is not
easy to ride up hill and down by rock and rut, under
such conditions. We were very soon convinced
it was best to leave the wagon to its load of sole-leather,
and walk through the mud to Sydney.
After mouldy Halifax, and war-worn
Louisburgh, the little town of Sydney is a pleasant
rural picture. Everybody has heard of the Sydney
coal-mines: we expected to find the miner’s
finger-marks everywhere; but instead of the smoky,
sulphurous atmosphere, and the black road, and the
sulky, grimy, brick tenements, we were surprised with
clean, white, picket-fences; and green lawns, and
clever, little cottages, nestled in shrubbery and
clover. The mines are over the bay, five miles
from South Sydney. Slowly we dragged on, until
we came to a sleepy little one-story inn, with supernatural
dormer windows rising out of the roof, before which
Boab stopped. We paid McGibbet’s
kirk-fine, wagon-fare, and his unconscionable charge
for his conscience, without parleying with him; we
were too sleepy to indulge in the luxury of a monetary
skirmish. A pretty, red-cheeked chambermaid,
with lovely drooping eyes, showed us to our rooms;
it was yet very early in the morning; we were almost
ashamed to get into bed with such dazzling white sheets
after the dark-brown accommodations of the “Balaklava;”
but we did get in, and slept; oh! how sweetly! until
breakfast at one!
“Twenty-four miles of such foot-travel
will do pretty well for an invalid, eh, Picton?”
“All serene?” quoth the traveller, interrogatively.
“Feel as well as ever I did in my life,”
said I, with great satisfaction.
“Then let’s have a bath,”
and, at Picton’s summons, the chambermaid brought
up in our rooms two little tubs of fair water, and
a small pile of fat, white napkins. The bathing
over, and the outer men new clad, “from top
to toe,” down we went to the cosy parlor to breakfast;
and such a breakfast!
I tell you, my kind and gentle friend;
you, who are now reading this paragraph, that
here, as in all other parts of the world, there are
a great many kinds of people; only that here, in Nova
Scotia, the difference is in spots, not in individuals.
And I will venture to say to those philanthropists
who are eternally preaching “of the masses,”
and “to the masses,” that here “masses”
can be found concrete “masses,”
not yet individualized: as ready to jump after
a leader as a flock of sheep after a bell-wether;
only that at every interval of five or ten miles between
place and place in Nova Scotia, they are apt to jump
in contrary directions. There are Scotch Nova
Scotiaites even in Sydney. Otherwise the place
is marvellously pleasant.
I must confess that I had a romantic
sort of idea in visiting Sydney; a desire to return
by way of the Bras d’Or lake, the “arm
of gold,” the inland sea of Cape Breton, that
makes the island itself only a border for the water
in its interior. And as the navigation is frequently
performed by the Micmac Indians, in their birch-bark
canoes, I determined to be a voyageur for the
nonce, and engage a couple of Micmacs to paddle
me homewards, at least one day’s journey.
The wigwams of the tribe were pitched about a
mile from the town, and I proposed a visit to their
camp as an afternoon’s amusement. Picton
readily assented, and down we went to the wharf, where
the landlady assured us we would find some of the tribe.
These Indians, often expert coopers, are employed to
barrel up fish; the busy wharf was covered with laborers,
hard at work, heading and hooping ship loads of salt
mackerel; and among the workmen were some with the
unmistakable lozenge eyes, high cheek-bones, and rhubarb
complexion of the native American. Upon inquiry,
we were introduced to one of the Rhubarbarians.
He was a little fellow, not in leggings and quill-embroidered
hunting-shirt, with belt of wampum and buckskin moccasins;
armed with bow and arrow, tomahawk and scalping-knife;
such as one would expect to navigate a wild, romantic
lake with, in birch-bark canoe; but a pinched-up specimen
of a man, in a seedy black suit, out of which rose
a broad, flat face, like the orb of a sun-flower, bearing
one side the aboriginal black eye, and on the other
the civilized, surrounded with the blue and purple
halo of battle. We had barely opened our business
with the Indian, when a bonny Scotchman, a fellow-cooper
of salt mackerel, introduced himself:
“Oh, ye visit the Micmacs the day?”
No answer.
“De’il a canoe has he
to tak ye there” (the Indian slunk away), “but
I’ll tak ye tull ’em for one and saxpence,
in a gude boat.”
The fellow had such an honest face,
and the offer was so fair and earnest, that Picton’s
and my own trifling prejudices were soon overcome,
and we directed Malcolm, for that was his name, to
bring his boat under the inn-windows after the dinner-hour.
I regret to say that we found Malcolm tolerably drunk
after dinner, with a leaky boat, under the inn-windows.
And farther, I am pained to state the national characteristic
was developed in Malcolm drunk, from which there was
no appeal to Malcolm sober, for he insisted upon double
fare, and time was pressing. To this we assented,
after a brief review of former prejudices. We
got in the boat and put off. We had barely floated
away into the beautiful landscape when a fog swept
over us, and Malcolm’s nationality again woke
up. He would have four times as much as he had
charged in the first instance, or “he’d
tak us over, and land us on the ither side of the bay.”
Then Picton’s nationality woke
up, and he unbuttoned his mackintosh. “Now,
sir,” said he to Malcolm, as he rose from his
seat in the boat, his head gracefully inclined towards
his starboard shirt-collar, and his two tolerably
large fists arrayed in order of battle within a few
brief inches of the delinquent’s features, “did
I understand you to say that you had some idea of
taking this gentleman and myself to the other side
of the bay?”
There was a boy in our boat a
fair-haired, blue-eyed representative of Nova Scotia;
a sea-boy, with a dash of salt-water in his ruddy cheeks,
who had modestly refrained from taking part in the
dispute.
“Come, now,” said he to
Malcolm, “pull away, and let us get the gentlemen
up to the camp,” and he knit his boy brow with
determination, as if he meant to have it settled according
to contract.
Yes, said Picton, nodding at the boy, and if he dont
“I’m pullin’ an’t
I?” quoth the descendant of King Duncan, a little
frightened, and suiting the action to the word; “I’m
a-pewlin,” and here his oar missed the water,
and over he tumbled with a great splash in the bottom
of the boat. “I’m a-pewlin,”
he whined, as he regained his seat and the oar, “and
all I want is to hae my honest airnins.”
“Then pull away,” said
Picton, as he resumed his seat in the stern-sheets.
“Ay,” quoth the Scotchman,
“I know the Micmacs weel, and thae squaws
too; deil a one o em but knows Malcolm
“Pull away,” said the boy.
“They are guid-lookin’,
thae squaws, and I’m a bachelter; and I
tell ye when I tak ye tull em for I know
the hail o’ em if ye are gentlemen, ye’ll pay me my honest airnins.”
“And I tell you,” answered
Picton, his fist clenched, his eye flashing again,
and his indignant nostrils expressing a degree of anger
language could not express; “I tell you, if
you do not carry us to the Micmac camp without further
words, I’ll pay you your honest earnings before
you get there: I’ll punch that Scotch head
of yours till it looks like a photograph!”