Camping out in the woods at night
is truly a delightful thing, and the pleasantest part
of it, perhaps, is the lighting of the fire.
Light is agreeable to human eyes and cheering to the
human heart. Solomon knew and felt that when
he penned the words, “A pleasant thing it is
for the eyes to behold the sun.” And the
rising of the sun is scarcely more grateful to the
feelings than the lighting of a fire on a dark night.
So our friends thought and felt, when the fire blazed
up, but they were too busy and too hungry at the time
to think about the state of their feelings.
The Indian was hungry. A good
fire had to be made before the venison could be roasted,
so he gave his whole attention to the felling of dry
trees and cutting them up into logs for the fire.
Jasper was also hungry, and a slight shower had wetted
all the moss and withered grass, so he had enough
to do to strike fire with flint and steel, catch a
spark on a little piece of tinder, and then blow and
coax the spark into a flame.
The artist was indeed free to indulge
in a little meditation; but he had stumbled in the
dark on landing, and bruised his shins, so he could
only sit down on a rock and rub them and feel miserable.
But the fire soon caught; branches
were heaped up, great logs were piled on, forked tongues
of flame began to leap up and lick the branches of
the overhanging trees. The green leaves looked
rich and warm; the thick stems looked red and hot;
the faces and clothes of the men seemed as if about
to catch fire as they moved about the encampment preparing
supper. In short, the whole scene was so extremely
comfortable, in reality as well as in appearance,
that Heywood forgot his bruised shins and began to
rub his hands with delight.
In a very short time three juicy venison-steaks
were steaming before the three travellers, and in
a much shorter time they had disappeared altogether
and were replaced by three new ones. The mode
of cooking was very simple. Each steak was fixed
on a piece of stick and set up before the fire to
roast. When one side was ready, the artist, who
seemed to have very little patience, began to cut
off pieces and eat them while the other side was cooking.
To say truth, men out in those regions
have usually such good appetites that they are not
particular as to the cooking of their food. Quantity,
not quality, is what they desire. They generally
feel very much like the Russian, of whom it is said,
that he would be content to eat sawdust if only he
got plenty of it!
The steaks were washed down with tea. There
is no other drink in Rupert’s Land. The
Hudson’s Bay Company found that spirits were
so hurtful to the Indians that they refused to send
them into the country; and at the present day there
is no strong drink to be had for love or money over
the length and breadth of their territories, except
at those places where other fur-traders oppose them,
and oblige them, in self-defence, to sell fire-water,
as the Indians call it.
Tea is the great - the only - drink
in Rupert’s Land! Yes, laugh as ye will,
ye lovers of gin and beer and whisky, one who has tried
it, and has seen it tried by hundreds of stout stalwart
men, tells you that the teetotaller is the best man
for real hard work.
The three travellers drank their tea
and smacked their lips, and grinned at each other
with great satisfaction. They could not have
done more if it had been the best of brandy and they
the jolliest of topers! But the height of their
enjoyment was not reached until the pipes were lighted.
It was quite a sight to see them smoke!
Jasper lay with his huge frame extended in front
of the blaze, puffing clouds of smoke thick enough
to have shamed a small cannon. Arrowhead rested
his back on the stump of a tree, stretched his feet
towards the fire, and allowed the smoke to roll slowly
through his nostrils as well as out at his mouth, so
that it kept curling quietly round his nose, and up
his cheeks, and into his eyes, and through his hair
in a most delightful manner; at least so it would
seem, for his reddish-brown face beamed with happy
contentment.
Young Heywood did not smoke, but he
drew forth his sketch-book and sketched his two companions;
and in the practice of his beloved art, I have no
doubt, he was happier than either.
“I wonder how many trading-posts
the Hudson’s Bay Company has got?” said
Heywood, as he went on with his work.
“Hundreds of ’em,”
said Jasper, pressing the red-hot tobacco into the
bowl of his pipe with the end of his little finger,
as slowly and coolly as if his flesh were fire-proof.
“I don’t know, exactly, how many they’ve
got. I doubt if anybody does, but they have them
all over the country. You’ve seen a little
of the country now, Heywood; well, what you have seen
is very much like what you will see as long as you
choose to travel hereaway. You come to a small
clearing in the forest, with five or six log houses
in it, a stockade round it, and a flagstaff in the
middle of it; five, ten, or fifteen men, and a gentleman
in charge. That’s a Hudson’s Bay
Company’s trading-post. All round it lie
the wild woods. Go through the woods for two
or three hundred miles and you’ll come to another
such post, or fort, as we sometimes call ’em.
That’s how it is all the country over.
Although there are many of them, the country is so
uncommon big that they may be said to be few and far
between. Some are bigger and some are less.
There’s scarcely a settlement in the country
worthy o’ the name of a village except Red River.”
“Ah! Red River,”
exclaimed Heywood, “I’ve heard much of
that settlement - hold steady - I’m
drawing your nose just now - have you
been there, Jasper?”
“That have I, lad, and a fine
place it is, extendin’ fifty miles or more along
the river, with fine fields, and handsome houses, and
churches, and missionaries and schools, and what not;
but the rest of Rupert’s Land is just what you
have seen; no roads, no houses, no cultivated fields - nothing
but lakes, and rivers, and woods, and plains without
end, and a few Indians here and there, with plenty
of wild beasts everywhere. These trading-posts
are scattered here and there, from the Atlantic to
the Pacific, and from Canada to the Frozen Sea, standin’
solitary-like in the midst of the wilderness, as if
they had dropped down from the clouds by mistake and
didn’t know exactly what to do with themselves.”
“How long have de Company lived?”
inquired Arrowhead, turning suddenly to Jasper.
The stout hunter felt a little put
out. “Ahem! I don’t exactly
know; but it must have been a long time, no doubt.”
“Oh, I can tell you that,” cried Heywood.
“You?” said Jasper in surprise.
“Ay; the Company was started
nearly two hundred years ago by Prince Rupert, who
was the first Governor, and that’s the reason
the country came to be called Rupert’s Land.
You know its common name is `the Hudson’s Bay
Territory,’ because it surrounds Hudson’s
Bay.”
“Why, where did you learn that?”
said Jasper, “I thought I knowed a-most everything
about the Company; but I must confess I never knew
that about Prince Rupert before.”
“I learned it from books,” said the artist.
“Books!” exclaimed Jasper,
“I never learned nothin’ from books - more’s
the pity. I git along well enough in the trappin’
and shootin’ way without ’em; but I’m
sorry I never learned to read. Ah! I’ve
a great opinion of books - so I have.”
The worthy hunter shook his head solemnly
as he said this in a low voice, more to himself than
to his companions, and he continued to mutter and
shake his head for some minutes, while he knocked the
ashes out of his pipe. Having refilled and relighted
it, he drew his blanket over his shoulder, laid his
head upon a tuft of grass, and continued to smoke
until he fell asleep, and allowed the pipe to fall
from his lips.
The Indian followed his example, with
this difference, that he laid aside his pipe, and
drew the blanket over his head and under his feet,
and wrapped it round him in such a way that he resembled
a man sewed up in a sack.
Heywood was thus compelled to shut
his sketch-book; so he also wrapped himself in his
blanket, and was soon sound asleep.
The camp-fire gradually sank low.
Once or twice the end of a log fell, sending up a
bright flame and a shower of sparks, which, for a few
seconds, lighted up the scene again and revealed the
three slumbering figures. But at last the fire
died out altogether, and left the encampment in such
thick darkness that the sharpest eye would have failed
to detect the presence of man in that distant part
of the lone wilderness.