Truro--On the Road to Halifax--Drive to the Left--A Member of the Foreign
Legion--Irish Wit at Government Expense--The first Battle of the
Legion--Ten Pounds Reward--Sir John Gaspard’s Revenge--The Shubenacadie
Lakes--Dartmouth Ferry, and the Hotel Waverley.
Pleasant Truro! At last we regain
the territories of civility and civilization!
Here is the honest little English inn, with its cheerful
dining-room, its clean spread, its abundant dishes,
its glass of ripe ale, its pleased alacrity of service.
After our long ride from West River, we enjoy the
best inn’s best room, the ease, the comfort,
and the fair aspect of one of the prettiest towns
in the province. Truro is situated on the head
waters of the Basin of Minas, or Cobequid Bay, as it
is denominated on the map, between the Shubenacadie
and Salmon rivers. Here we are within fifty miles
of the idyllic land, the pastoral meadows of Grand-Pre!
But, alas! there is yet a long ride before us; the
path from Truro to Grand-Pre being in the shape of
an acute angle, of which Halifax is the apex.
As yet there is no direct road from place to place,
but by the shores of the Basin of Minas. Let
us look, however, at pleasant Truro.
One of the striking features of this
part of the country is the peculiarity of the rivers;
these are full or empty, with every flux and reflux
of the tide; for instance, when we crossed the Salmon,
we saw only a high, broad, muddy ditch, drained to
the very bottom. This is owing to the ocean tides,
which, sweeping up the Bay of Fundy, pour into the
Basin of Minas, and fill all its tributary streams;
then, with prodigal reaction, sweeping forth again,
leave only the vacant channels of the rivers if
they may be called by that name. This peculiar
feature of hydrography is of course local limited
to this section of the province indeed
if it be not to this corner of the world. The
country surrounding the village is well cultivated,
diversified with rolling hill and dale, and although
I had not the opportunity of seeing much of it, yet
the mere description of its natural scenery was sufficiently
tempting. Here, too, I saw something that reminded
me of home a clump of cedar-trees!
These of course were exotics, brought, not without
expense, from the States, planted in the courtyard
of a little aristocratic cottage, and protected in
winter by warm over-coats of wheat straw. So we
go! Here they grub up larches and spruces to plant
cedars.
The mail coach was soon at the door
of our inn, and after taking leave of my fellow-traveller
with the big hat, I engaged a seat on the stage-box
beside Jeangros, a French Canadian, or Canuck one
of the best whips on the line. Jeangros is not
a great portly fellow, as his name would seem to indicate,
but a spare, small man nevertheless with
an air of great courage and command. Jeangros
touched up the leaders, the mail-coach rattled through
the street of the town, and off we trotted from Truro
into the pleasant road that leads to Halifax.
One thing I observed in the province
especially worthy of imitation the old
English practice of turning to the left in driving,
instead of to the right, as we do. Let
me exhibit the merits of the respective systems by
a brief diagram. By the English system they drive
thus:
The arrows represent the drivers,
as well as the directions of the vehicles; of course
when two vehicles, coming in opposite directions,
pass each other on the road, each driver is nearest
the point of contact, and can see readily, and provide
against accidents. Now contrast our system with
the former:
no wonder we have so many collisions.
“The rule of the road
is a paradox quite,
In driving your
carriage along,
If you keep to the left, you
are sure to go right,
If you keep to
the right, you go wrong.”
It would be a good thing if our present
senseless laws were reversed in this matter, and a
few lives saved, and a few broken limbs prevented.
When I took leave of my native country
for a short sojourn in this province, the great question
then before the public was the invasion of international
law, by the British minister and a whole solar system
of British consuls. I had the pleasure of being
a fellow exile on the Canada with Mr. Crampton, Mr.
Barclay, and Mr. , Her British Majesty’s
representatives, and of course felt no little interest
to know the fate of the Foreign Legion.
Before I left Halifax, I learned some
particulars of that famous flock of jail birds.
All that we knew, at home, was that a number of recruits
for the Crimea had been picked up in the streets and
alleys of Columbia, and carried, at an enormous expense,
to Halifax, there to be enrolled. And also, that
as a mere cover to this infraction of the law of Neutrality,
the men were engaged as laborers, to work upon the
public improvements of Nova Scotia. The sequel
of that enterprise remained to be told. A majority
of these recruits were Irishmen some of
them not wanting in the mother wit of the race.
So when they were gathered in the great province building
at Halifax, and Sir John Gaspard le Marchant,
in chapeau, feather and sword, came down to review
his levies, with great spirit and military pomp, “Well,
my men,” said he, “you are here to enlist,
eh, and serve Her Majesty?” To which the spokesman
of the Foreign Legion, fully understanding the beauty
of his position, replied, with a sly twinkle of the
eye, “We didn’t engage to ’list at
all, at all, but to wurruk on the railroad.”
Upon which Sir John Gaspard, seeing that Her Majesty
had been imposed upon, politely told the legion to
go to Dante’s Inferno.
Now whether the place to which the
Foreign Legion was consigned by Sir John Gaspard,
possessed even less attractions than Halifax, or from
whatever reason soever, it chanced that the jolly boys,
raked from our alleys and jails, never stirred a foot
out of the province; and while the peace of the whole
world was endangered by their abduction, as that of
Greece and Troy had been by the rape of Helen, they
were quietly enlisting in less warlike expeditions in
fact, engaging themselves to work upon that great
railroad, of which mention has been made heretofore.
Now we have seen something of the
clannish propensities of the people of the colonies,
and the contractors knew what sort of material they
had to deal with. And, inasmuch as there was
a pretty large group of five-shilling Highlandmen,
grading, levelling, and filling in one end of a section
of the road, the gang of Irishmen was placed at the
opposite end, as far from them as possible, which
no doubt would have preserved peaceful relations between
the two, but for the fact, that as the work progressed
the hostile forces naturally approached each other.
It was towards the close of a summer evening, that
the ground was broken by the gentlemen of the shamrock,
within sight of the shanties decorated with the honorable
order of the thistle. A lovely evening in the
month of June! Not with spumy cannon and prickly
bayonets, but with peaceful spade and mattock, advanced
the sons of St. Patrick towards the children of a sister
isle. Then did Roderick Dhu step forth from his
shanty, and inquire, in choice Gaelic, if a person
named Brian Borheime was in the ranks of the approaching
forces. Then then did Brian Borheime advance,
spade in hand, and with a single spat of his implement
level Roderick, as though he had been a piece of turf.
Then was Brian flattened out by the spade of Vich
Ian Vohr; and Vich Ian Vohr, by the spade of Captain
Rock. Then fell Captain Rock by the spade of
Rob Roy; and Rob Roy smelt the earth under the spade
of Handy Andy. In a word, the fight became general the
bagpipe blew to arms Celt joined Celt,
there was the tug of war; but the sun set upon the
lowered standard of the thistle, and victory proclaimed
Shamrock the conqueror. Several of the natives
were left for dead upon the field of battle, the triumphant
Irish ran away, to a man, to avoid the consequences,
and I blush to say it, as I do to record any act of
heartless ingratitude, handbills were speedily posted
up by the order of government, offering a reward of
ten pounds apiece for the capture of certain members
of the Foreign Legion, who had been the ringleaders
in the riot, which handbill was not only signed by
that seducer of soldiers, Sir John Gaspard le
Marchant, but also ornamented with the horn of the
unicorn and the claws of the British lion.
But there is a Nemesis even in Nova
Scotia, for this riot produced effects, unwonted and
unlooked for. One of the prominent leaders in
the Nova Scotia Parliament, a gentleman distinguished
both as an orator and as a poet the Hon.
Joseph Howe, who had signalized himself as an advocate
of the right of Her Majesty to recruit for the Crimea
in the streets of Columbia, and was ready to pit the
British Lion against the American Eagle in support
of that right, fell by the very legion he had been
so zealous to create. The Hon. Joseph Howe, M.
P., by the support of the Irish population, could
always command a popular majority and keep his
seat in the house, so long as he maintained his loyalty
to this votive class of citizens. But, unfortunately,
Hon. Joseph Howe, in alluding to the riot, took the
Scotch side of the broil. This was sufficient.
At the election following he was a defeated candidate,
and politely advised to retire to private life.
Thus was the Hon. J. H. “hoist by his own petard,”
the first man to fall by this expensive military company.
An adventure upon the Shubenacadie
brought one of these heroes into prominent relief.
After we had parted from pleasant Truro, at every nook
and corner of the road, there seemed to be a passenger
waiting for the Halifax coach. So that the top
of the vehicle was soon filled with dusty fellow-travellers,
and Jeangros was getting to be a little impatient.
Just as we turned into the densest part of the forest,
where the evening sun was most obscured by the close
foliage, we saw two men, one decorated with a pair
of handcuffs, and the other armed with a brace of pistols.
The latter hailed the coach.
“What d’ye want?”
quoth Jeangros, drawing up by the roadside.
“Government prisoner,” said the man with
the pistols.
“What the is government
prisoner to me?” quoth Jeangros.
“I want to take him to Dartmouth,” said
the tall policeman.
“Then take him there,” said our jolly
driver, shaking up the leaders.
“Hold up,” shouted out the tall policeman,
“I will pay his fare.”
“Why didn’t you say so,
then?” replied Jeangros, full of the dignity
of his position as driver of H. B. M. Mail-coach,
before whose tin horn everything must get out of the
way.
There was a doubt which was the drunkenest,
the officer or the prisoner. We found out afterwards
that the officer had conciliated his captive with
drink, partly to keep him friendly in case of an attempted
rescue, and partly to get him in such a state that
running away would be impracticable. And, indeed,
there would have been a great race if the prisoner
had attempted to escape. The prisoner too drunk
to run the officer too drunk to pursue.
The pair had scarcely crawled up among
the luggage upon the stage-top, before there was an
outcry from the passengers on the box in front “Uncock
your pistols! uncock your pistols!” for the officer
had dropped his fire-arms, cocked and capped, upon
the top of our coach, with the muzzles pointed towards
us. And indeed I may affirm here, that I never
saw metallic cylinders with more menacing aspect, than
those which lay quietly behind us, ready to explode unconscious
instruments as they were and carry any
of the party into the next world upon the slightest
lurch of the stage-coach.
“Uncock your pistols,” said the passengers.
But the officer, in the mellifluous
dialect of his mother country, replied that “He’d
be if he would. Me prishner,”
said he, “me prishner might escape; or, the
divil knows but there might be a rescue come to him,
for there’s a good many of the same hereabouts.”
It struck me that no person upon the
top of the stage-coach was so particularly interested
in this dispute as the member of the Foreign Legion,
who was on his way either to the gallows or a perpetual
prison. I observed that he nervously twitched
at his handcuffs, perhaps as I thought to
prepare for escape in case of an explosion; or else
to be ready for the rescue; or else to take advantage
of his captor, the tall policeman jump
from the stage, and run for dear life and liberty.
Never was I more mistaken. True to his race,
and to tradition, Pat was only striving to free himself
from the leather shackles, in order to fight any man
who was an enemy to his friend the policeman, and the
pistols, that were cocked to shoot himself. But
had not poor Paddy made such blunders in all times?
The hubbub increased, a terrific contest was impending;
the travellers below poked their heads out of the
windows; there was every prospect of a catastrophe
of some kind, when suddenly Jeangros rose to his feet,
and said, in a voice clear and sharp through the tumult
as an electric flash through a storm, “Uncock
those pistols, or I will throw you from the top of
the coach!”
There was a pause instantly, and we
heard the sharp click of the cocks, as they were lowered
in obedience to the little stage-driver. It had
a wonderful power of command, that voice soft
and clear, but brief, decisive, authoritative.
It is quite interesting to ride fellow-passenger
with a person who has played a part in the national
drama, but more villainous face I never saw.
Mr. Crampton, with whom I sailed on the Canada, had
a much more amiable expression; indeed I think we
should all be obliged to him for ridding us of at
least a portion of his fellow-countrymen.
But now we ride by the Shubenacadie
lakes, a chain a bracelet binding
the province from the Basin of Minas to the seaboard.
The eye never tires of this lovely feature of Acadia.
Lake above lake the division, the isthmus
between, not wider than the breadth of your India shawl,
my lady! I must declare that, all in all, the
scenery of the province is surpassingly beautiful.
As you ride by these sparkling waters, through the
flowery, bowery, woods, you feel as if you like to
pitch tent here at least for the summer.
And now we approach a rustic inn by
the roadside, rich in shrubbery before it, and green
moss from ridge-pole to low drooping eaves, where we
change horses. And as we rest here upon the wooden
inn-porch, dismounted from our high perch on the stage-coach,
we see right above us against the clear evening sky,
Her Majesty’s ci-devant partisan, now
prisoner by merit raised to that bad eminence.
The officer hands him a glass of brandy, to keep up
his spirits. The prisoner takes it, and, lifting
the glass high in air, shouts out with the exultation
of a fiend:
“Here’s to the
hinges of liberty may they never want oil,
Nor an Orangeman’s bones
in a pot for to boil.”
Once more upon the stage to Dartmouth,
where we deposit our precious fellow-travellers, and
then to the ferry, and look you! across the harbor,
the twinkling lights of dear old mouldy Halifax.
And now we are crossing Chebucto, and the cab carries
us again to our former quarters in the Hotel Waverley.