Next day the travellers reached one
of those magnificent lakes of which there are so many
in the wild woods of North America, and which are so
like to the great ocean itself, that it is scarcely
possible to believe them to be bodies of fresh water
until they are tasted.
The largest of these inland seas is
the famous Lake Superior, which is so enormous in
size that ships can sail on its broad bosom for several
days out of sight of land.
It is upwards of three hundred miles long, and about
one hundred and fifty broad. A good idea of its
size may be formed from the fact, that it is large
enough to contain the whole of Scotland, and deep
enough to cover her highest hills!
The lake on which the canoe was now
launched, although not so large as Superior, was,
nevertheless, a respectable body of water, on which
the sun was shining as if on a shield of bright silver.
There were numbers of small islets scattered over
its surface; some thickly wooded to the water’s
edge, others little better than bare rocks. Crossing
this lake they came to the mouth of a pretty large
stream and began to ascend it. The first thing
they saw on rounding a bend in the stream was an Indian
tent, and in front of this tent was an Indian baby,
hanging from the branch of a tree.
Let not the reader be horrified.
The child was not hanging by the neck, but by the
handle of its cradle, which its mother had placed there,
to keep her little one out of the way of the dogs.
The Indian cradle is a very simple contrivance.
A young mother came out of the tent with her child
just as the canoe arrived, and began to pack it in
its cradle. Jasper stopped for a few minutes
to converse with one of the Indians, so that the artist
had a good opportunity of witnessing the whole operation.
The cradle was simply a piece of flat
board, with a bit of scarlet cloth fastened down each
side of it. First of all, the mother laid the
poor infant, which was quite naked, sprawling on the
ground. A dirty-looking dog took advantage of
this to sneak forward and smell at it, whereupon the
mother seized a heavy piece of wood, and hit the dog
such a rap over the nose as sent it away howling.
Then she spread a thick layer of soft moss on the
wooden board. Above this she laid a very neat,
small blanket, about two feet in length. Upon
this she placed the baby, which objected at first
to go to bed, squalled a good deal, and kicked a little.
The mother therefore took it up, turned it over, gave
it one or two hearty slaps, and laid it down again.
This seemed to quiet it, for it afterwards
lay straight out, and perfectly still, with its coal-black
eyes staring out of its fat brown face, as if it were
astonished at receiving such rough treatment.
The mother next spread a little moss over the child,
and above that she placed another small blanket, which
she folded and tucked in very comfortably, keeping
the little one’s arms close to its sides, and
packing it all up, from neck to heels, so tightly that
it looked more like the making up of a parcel than
the wrapping up of a child. This done, she drew
the scarlet cloth over it from each side of the cradle,
and laced it down the front. When all was done,
the infant looked like an Egyptian mummy, nothing
but the head being visible.
The mother then leaned the cradle
against the stem of a tree, and immediately one of
the dogs ran against it, and knocked it over.
Luckily, there was a wooden bar attached to the cradle,
in front of the child’s face, which bar is placed
there on purpose to guard against injury from such
accidents, so that the bar came first to the ground,
and thus prevented the flattening of the child’s
nose, which, to say truth, was flat enough already!
Instead of scolding herself for her
own carelessness, the Indian mother scolded the dog,
and then hung the child on the branch of a tree, to
keep it from further mischief.
The next turn in the river revealed
a large waterfall, up which it was impossible to paddle,
so they prepared to make a portage. Before arriving
at the foot of it, however, Jasper landed Heywood,
to enable him to make a sketch, and then the two men
shoved off, and proceeded to the foot of the fall.
They were lying there in an eddy,
considering where was the best spot to land, when
a loud shout drew their attention towards the rushing
water. Immediately after, a boat was seen to
hover for a moment on the brink of the waterfall.
This fall, although about ten or fifteen feet high,
had such a large body of water rushing over it, that
the river, instead of falling straight down, gushed
over in a steep incline. Down this incline the
boat now darted with the speed of lightning.
It was full of men, two of whom stood erect, the one
in the bow, the other in the stern, to control the
movements of the boat.
For a few seconds there was deep silence.
The men held their breath as the boat leaped along
with the boiling flood. There was a curling white
wave at the foot of the fall. The boat cut through
this like a knife, drenching her crew with spray.
Next moment she swept round into the eddy where the
canoe was floating, and the men gave vent to a loud
cheer of satisfaction at having run the fall in safety.
But this was not the end of that exciting
scene. Scarcely had they gained the land, when
another boat appeared on the crest of the fall.
Again a shout was given and a dash made. For
one moment there was a struggle with the raging flood,
and then a loud cheer as the second boat swept into
the eddy in safety. Then a third and a fourth
boat went through the same operation, and before the
end of a quarter of an hour, six boats ran the fall.
The bay at the foot of it, which had been so quiet
and solitary when Jasper and his friends arrived, became
the scene of the wildest confusion and noise, as the
men ran about with tremendous activity, making preparations
to spend the night there.
Some hauled might and main at the
boats; some carried up the provisions, frying-pans,
and kettles; others cut down dry trees with their axes,
and cut them up into logs from five to six feet long,
and as thick as a man’s thigh. These were
intended for six great fires, each boat’s crew
requiring a fire to themselves.
While this was going on, the principal
guides and steersmen crowded round our three travellers,
and plied them with questions; for it was so unusual
to meet with strangers in that far-off wilderness,
that a chance meeting of this kind was regarded as
quite an important event.
“You’re bound for York
Fort, no doubt,” said Jasper, addressing a tall
handsome man of between forty and fifty, who was the
principal guide.
“Ay, that’s the end of
our journey. You see we’re taking our furs
down to the coast. Have you come from York Fort,
friend!”
“No, I’ve come all the
way from Canada,” said Jasper, who thereupon
gave them a short account of his voyage.
“Well, Jasper, you’ll
spend the night with us, won’t you?” said
the guide.
“That will I, right gladly.”
“Come, then, I see the fires
are beginning to burn. We may as well have a
pipe and a chat while supper is getting ready.”
The night was now closing in, and
the scene in the forest, when the camp-fires began
to blaze, was one of the most stirring and romantic
sights that could be witnessed in that land.
The men of the brigade were some of them French-Canadians,
some natives of the Orkney Islands, who had been hired
and sent out there by the Hudson’s Bay Company,
others were half-breeds, and a few were pure Indians.
They were all dressed in what is called voyageur
costume-coats or capotes of blue or grey cloth,
with hoods to come over their heads at night, and fastened
round their waists with scarlet worsted belts; corduroy
or grey trousers, gartered outside at the knees, moccasins,
and caps. But most of them threw off their coats,
and appeared in blue and red striped cotton shirts,
which were open at the throat, exposing their broad,
sun-burned, hairy chests. There was variety,
too, in the caps - some had Scotch bonnets,
others red nightcaps, a few had tall hats, ornamented
with gold and silver cords and tassels, and a good
many wore no covering at all except their own thickly-matted
hair. Their faces were burned to every shade
of red, brown, and black, from constant exposure, and
they were strong as lions, wild as zebras, and frolicksome
as kittens.
It was no wonder, then, that Heywood
got into an extraordinary state of excitement and
delight as he beheld these wild, fine-looking men smoking
their pipes and cooking their suppers, sitting, lying,
and standing, talking and singing, and laughing, with
teeth glistening and eyes glittering in the red blaze
of the fires - each of which fires was big
enough to have roasted a whole ox!
The young artist certainly made good
use of his opportunity. He went about from fire
to fire, sketch-book in hand, sketching all the best-looking
men in every possible attitude, sometimes singly, and
sometimes in groups of five or six. He then went
to the farthest end of the encampment, and, in the
light of the last fire, made a picture of all the
rest.
The kettles were soon steaming.
These hung from tripods erected over the fires.
Their contents were flour and pemmican, made into
a thick soup called Rubbiboo.
As pemmican is a kind of food but
little known in this country, I may as well describe
how it is made. In the first place, it consists
of buffalo meat. The great plains, or prairies,
of America, which are like huge downs or commons hundreds
of miles in extent, afford grass sufficient to support
countless herds of deer, wild horses, and bisons.
The bisons are called by the people there buffaloes.
The buffalo is somewhat like an enormous ox, but
its hind-quarters are smaller and its fore-quarters
much larger than those of the ox. Its hair is
long and shaggy, particularly about the neck and shoulders,
where it becomes almost a mane. Its horns are
thick and short, and its look is very ferocious, but
it is in reality a timid creature, and will only turn
to attack a man when it is hard pressed and cannot
escape. Its flesh is first-rate for food, even
better than beef, and there is a large hump on its
shoulder, which is considered the best part of the
animal.
Such is the bison, or buffalo, from
which pemmican is made.
When a man wishes to make a bag of
pemmican, he first of all kills the buffalo - not
an easy thing to do by any means, for the buffalo runs
well. Having killed him, he skins him and cuts
up the meat - also a difficult thing to do,
especially if one is not used to that sort of work.
Then he cuts the meat into thin layers, and hangs
it up to dry. Dried meat will keep for a long
time. It is packed up in bales and sent about
that country to be used as food. The next thing
to be done is to make a bag of the raw hide of the
buffalo. This is done with a glover’s
needle, the raw sinews of the animal being used instead
of thread. The bag is usually about three feet
long, and eighteen inches broad, and the hair is left
on the outside of it. A huge pot is now put on
the fire, and the fat of the buffalo is melted down.
Then the dried meat is pounded between two stones,
until it is torn and broken up into shreds, after
which it is put into the bag, the melted fat is poured
over it, and the whole is well mixed. The last
operation is to sew up the mouth of the bag and leave
it to cool, after which the pemmican is ready for
use.
In this state a bag of pemmican will
keep fresh and good for years. When the search
was going on in the polar regions for the lost ships
of Sir John Franklin, one of the parties hid some
pemmican in the ground, intending to return and take
it up. They returned home, however, another
way. Five years later some travellers discovered
this pemmican, and it was found, at that time, to
be fit for food. Pemmican is extensively used
throughout Rupert’s Land, especially during summer,
for at that season the brigades of boats start from
hundreds of inland trading-posts to take the furs
to the coast for shipment to England, and pemmican
is found to be not only the best of food for these
hard-working men, but exceedingly convenient to carry.
Supper finished, the wild-looking
fellows of this brigade took to their pipes, and threw
fresh logs on the fires, which roared, and crackled,
and shot up their forked tongues of flame, as if they
wished to devour the forest. Then the song and
the story went round, and men told of terrible fights
with the red-men of the prairies, and desperate encounters
with grizzly bears in the Rocky Mountains, and narrow
escapes among the rapids and falls, until the night
was half spent. Then, one by one, each man wrapped
himself in his blanket, stretched himself on the ground
with his feet towards the fire and his head pillowed
on a coat or a heap of brush-wood, and went to sleep.
Ere long they were all down, except
one or two long-winded story tellers, who went on
muttering to their pipes after their comrades were
asleep. Even these became tired at last of the
sound of their own voices, and gradually every noise
in the camp was hushed, except the crackling of the
fires as they sank by degrees and went out, leaving
the place in dead silence and total darkness.
With the first peep of dawn the guide
arose. In ten minutes after his first shout
the whole camp was astir. The men yawned a good
deal at first and grumbled a little, and stretched
themselves violently, and yawned again. But
soon they shook off laziness and sprang to their work.
Pots, pans, kettles, and pemmican bags were tossed
into the boats, and in the course of half-an-hour
they were ready to continue the voyage.
Jasper stood beside the guide looking
on at the busy scene.
“Heard you any news from the
Saskatchewan of late,” said he.
“Not much,” replied the
guide; “there’s little stirring there just
now, except among the Indians, who have been killing
and scalping each other as usual. But, by the
way, that reminds me there has been a sort of row
between the Indians and the Company’s people
at Fort Erie.”
“Fort Erie,” said Jasper with a start.
“Ay, that’s the name o’
the fort, if I remember right,” returned the
guide. “It seems that one o’ the
men there, I think they call him Laroche - but
what makes you start, friend Jasper? Do you know
anything of this man.”
“Yes, he’s a friend of
mine. Go on, let me hear about it.”
“Well, there’s not much
to tell,” resumed the guide. “This
Laroche, it would appear, has got into hot water.
He has a daughter, a good lookin’ wench I’m
told, and, better than that, a well-behaved one.
One o’ the Indians had been impertinent to
the girl, so old Laroche, who seems to be a fiery
fellow, up fist, hit him on the nose, and knocked the
savage flat on his back. A tremendous howl was
set up, and knives and hatchets were flourished; but
Mr Pemberton, who is in charge of Fort Erie, ran in
and pacified them. The Indian that was floored
vows he’ll have the hair of old Laroche’s
head.”
This taking the hair off people’s
heads, or scalping, as it is called, is a common practice
among the North American Indians. When a savage
kills his enemy he runs his scalping knife round the
dead man’s head, seizes the hair with his left
hand and tears the scalp off. Indeed this dreadful
cruelty is sometimes practised before death has occurred.
The scalp with its lock of hair is taken home by
the victor, and hung up in his tent as a trophy of
war. The man who can show the greatest number
of scalps is considered the greatest warrior.
The dresses of Indian warriors are usually fringed
with human scalp-locks.
“That’s a bad business,”
said Jasper, who was concerned to hear such news of
his intended father-in-law. “Do ye know
the name o’ this red-skinned rascal?”
“I heard it mentioned,”
said the guide, “but I can’t remember it
at this moment.”
“The boats are ready to start,”
said one of the steersmen, coming up just then.
“Very good, let the men embark.
Now, Jasper, we must part. Give us a shake
o’ your hand. A pleasant trip to you.”
“The same to you, friend,”
said Jasper, returning the guide’s squeeze.
In another minute the boats were away.
“Now, friends, we shall start,”
said Jasper, breaking the deep silence which followed
the departure of the brigade.
“Good,” said Arrowhead.
“I’m ready,” said Heywood.
The canoe was soon in the water, and
the men in their places; but they started that morning
without a song. Arrowhead was never inclined
to be noisy, Heywood was sleepy, and Jasper was rendered
anxious by what he had heard of his friends at Fort
Erie, so they paddled away in silence.