Bedford Basin--Legend of the two French Admirals--An Invitation to the
Queen--Visit to the Prince’s Lodge--A Touch of Old England--The Ruins.
The harbor of Chebucto, after stretching
inland far enough to make a commodious and beautiful
site for the great city of Halifax, true to the fine
artistic taste peculiar to all bodies of water in the
province, penetrates still further in the landscape,
and broadens out into a superb land-locked lake, called
Bedford Basin. The entrance to this basin is very
narrow, and it has no other outlet. Oral tradition
maintains that about a century ago a certain French
fleet, lying in the harbor, surprised by the approach
of a superior body of English men-of-war in the offing,
weighed anchor and sailed up through this narrow estuary
into the basin itself, deceived by seeing so much
water there, and believing it to be but a twin harbor
through which they could escape again to the open sea.
And further, that the French Admiral finding himself
caught in this net with no chance of escape, drew
his sword, and placing the hilt upon the deck of his
vessel, fell upon the point of the weapon, and so died.
This tradition is based partly upon
fact; its epoch is one of the most interesting in
the history of this province, and probably the turning
point in the affairs of the whole northern continent.
The suicide was an officer high in rank, the Duke
d’Anville, who in 1746, after the first capture
of Louisburgh, sailed from Brest with the most formidable
fleet that had ever crossed the Atlantic, to re-take
this famous fortress; then to re-take Annapolis, next
to destroy Boston, and finally to visit the
West Indies. But his squadron being dispersed
by tempestuous weather, he arrived in Chebucto harbor
with but a few ships, and not finding any of the rest
of his fleet there, was so affected by this and other
disasters on the voyage, that he destroyed himself.
So says the London Chronicle of August 24th,
1758, from which I take this account. The French
say he died of apoplexy, the English by poison.
At all events, he was buried in a little island in
the harbor, after a defeat by the elements of as great
an armament as that of the Spanish Armada. Some
idea of the disasters of this voyage may be formed
from one fact, that from the time of the sailing of
the expedition from Brest until its arrival at Chebucto,
no less than 1,270 men died on the way from the plague.
Many of the ships arriving after this sad occurrence,
Vice-Admiral Destournelle endeavored to fulfill the
object of the mission, and even with his crippled forces
essay to restore the glory of France in the western
hemisphere. But he being overruled by a council
of war, plucked out his sword, and followed his commander,
the Duke d’Anville. What might have come
of it, had either admiral again planted the fleur
de lis upon the bastions of Louisburgh?
But to return to the to-day of to-day.
Bedford Basin is now rapidly growing in importance.
The great Nova Scotia railway skirts the margin of
its storied waters, and already suburban villas for
Haligonian Sparrowgrasses, are being erected upon
its banks.
I was much amused one morning, upon
opening one of the Halifax papers, to find in its
columns a most warm and hearty invitation from the
editor to her majesty, Queen Victoria, soliciting
her to visit the province, which, according to the
editorial phraseology, would be, no doubt, as interesting
as it was endeared to her, as the former residence
of her gracious father, the Duke of Kent.
In the year 1798, just twenty years
before her present majesty was born, the young Prince
Edward was appointed Commander-in-Chief of the forces
in British North America. Loyalty, then as now,
was rampant in Nova Scotia, and upon the arrival of
his Royal Highness, among other marks of compliment,
an adjacent island, that at present rejoices in a governor
and parliament of its own, was re-christened with
the name it now bears, namely Prince Edward’s
Island. But I am afraid Prince Edward was a sad
reprobate in those days at least, such is
the record of tradition.
The article in the newspaper reminded
me that somewhere upon Bedford Basin were the remains
of the “Prince’s Lodge;” so one afternoon,
accompanied by a dear old friend, I paid this royal
bower by Bendemeer’s stream, a visit. Rattling
through the unpaved streets of Halifax in a one horse
vehicle, called, for obvious reasons, a “jumper,”
we were soon on the high-road towards the basin.
Water of the intensest blue hill-slopes,
now cultivated, and anon patched with evergreens that
look as black as squares upon a chess board, between
the open, broken grounds a fine road a
summer sky an atmosphere spicy with whiffs
of resinous odors, and no fog, these are
the features of our ride. Yonder is a red building,
reflected in the water like the prison of Chillon,
where some of our citizens were imprisoned during
the war of 1812 ship captives doubtless!
And here is the customary little English inn, where
we stop our steed to let him cool, while the stout
landlord, girt with a clean white apron, brings out
to his thirsty travellers a brace of foaming, creamy
glasses of “right h’English h’ale.”
Then remounting the jumper, we skirt the edge of the
basin again, until a stately dome rises up before us
on the road, which, as we approach, we see is supported
by columns, and based upon a gentle promontory overhanging
the water. This is the “Music House,”
where the Prince’s band were wont to play in
days “lang syne.” Here we stop,
and leaving our jumper in charge of a farmer, stroll
over the grounds.
That peculiar arrangement of lofty
trees, sweeping lawns, and graceful management of
water, which forms the prevailing feature of English
landscape gardening, was at once apparent. Although
there were no trim walks, green hedges, or beds of
flowers; although the whole place was ruined and neglected,
yet the magic touch of art was not less visible to
the practised eye. The art that concealed art,
seemed to lend a charm to the sweet seclusion, without
intruding upon or disturbing the intentions of nature.
Proceeding up the gentle slope that
led from the gate, a number of columbines and rose-bushes
scattered in wild profusion, indicated where once
had been the Prince’s garden. These, although
now in bloom and teeming with flowers, have a vagrant,
neglected air, like beauties that had ran astray,
never to be reclaimed. A little further we come
upon the ruins of a spacious mansion, and beyond these
the remains of the library, with its tumbled-down
bricks and timbers, choking up the stream that wound
through the vice-regal domains: and here the bowling-green,
yet fresh with verdure; here the fishing pavilion,
leaning over an artificial lake, with an artificial
island in the midst; and here are willows, and deciduous
trees, planted by the Prince; and other rose-bushes
and columbines scattered in wild profusion. I
could not but admire the elegance and grace, which,
even now, were so apparent, amid the ruins of the lodge,
nor could I help recalling those earlier days, when
the red-coats clustered around the gates, and the
grounds were sparkling with lamps at night; when the
band from the music-house woke the echoes with the
clash of martial instruments, and the young Prince,
with his gay gallants, and his powdered, patched,
and painted Jezebels, held his brilliant court, with
banner, music, and flotilla; with the array of soldiery,
and the pageantry of ships-of-war, on Bedford Basin.
I stood by the ruins of a little stone
bridge, which had once spanned the sparkling brook,
and led to the Prince’s library; I saw, far and
near, the flaunting flowers of the now abandoned garden,
and the distant columns of the silent music house,
and I felt sad amid the desolation, although I knew
not why. For wherefore should any one feel sad
to see the temples of dissipation laid in the dust?
For my own part, I am a poor casuist, but nevertheless,
I do not think my conscience will suffer from this
feeling. There is a touch of humanity in it,
and always some germ of sympathy will bourgeon and
bloom around the once populous abodes of men, whether
they were tenanted by the pure or by the impure.