AN EXPRESS AND ITS RESULTS.
Some weeks after the breaking up of
the ice, as we were standing at the front gate of
Fort Dunregan, we experienced a pleasant surprise at
the sight of an Indian canoe sweeping round the point
above the fort. Two men paddled the canoe, one
in the bow and one in the stern.
It conveyed a message from headquarters
directing that two of the clerks should be sent to
establish an outpost in the regions of the far north,
the very region from which Macnab’s friend Big
Otter had come. One of the two canoe-men was
a clerk sent to undertake, at Dunregan, the work of
those who should be selected for the expedition, and
he said that another clerk was to follow in the spring-brigade
of boats.
“That’s marching orders
for you, Lumley,” said Macnab, who was
beside us when the canoe arrived.
“You cannot tell that,”
returned Lumley. “It may be that our chief
will select Max or Spooner. Did you hear any
mention of names?” he asked of the new clerk,
as we all walked up to the house.
“No, our governor does not tell
us much of his intentions. Perhaps your chief
may be the man.”
“He’s too useful where
he is,” suggested Macnab. “But we
shall know when the letters are opened.”
Having delivered his despatches, the
new arrival returned to us in Batchelors’ Hall,
where we soon began to make the most of him, and were
engaged in a brisk fire of question and reply, when
a message came for Mr Lumley to go to the mess-room.
“I’ve sent for you, Lumley,”
said our chief, “to say that you have been appointed
to fill an honourable and responsible post. It
seems that the governor, with his wonted sagacity,
has perceived that it would be advantageous to the
service to have an outpost established in the lands
lying to the westward of Muskrat House, on the borders
of Lake Wichikagan. As you are aware, the Indian,
Big Otter, has come from that very place, with a request
from his people that such a post should be established,
and you have been selected by the governor to conduct
the expedition.”
As our chief paused, Lumley, with
a modest air, expressed his sense of the honour that
the appointment conferred on him, and his willingness
to do his best for the service.
“I know you will, Lumley,”
returned Mr Strang, “and I must do you the justice
to say that I think the governor has shown his usual
wisdom in the selection. Without wishing to
flatter you, I think you are steady and self-reliant.
You are also strong and big, qualities which are of
some value among rough men and Indians, not because
they enable you to rule with a strong hand, but because
they enable you to rule without the necessity of showing
the strength of your hand. Bullies, if you should
meet with any, will recognise your ability to knock
them down without requiring proof thereof. To
say truth, if you were one of those fellows who are
fond of ruling by the mere strength of their arms,
I should not think you fit for the command of an expedition
like this, which will require much tact in its leader.
At the same time, a large and powerful frame-especially
if united to a peaceable spirit-is exceedingly
useful in a wild country. Without the peaceable
spirit it only renders its possessor a bully and a
nuisance. I am further directed to furnish you
with the needful supplies and men. I will see
to the former being prepared, and the latter you may
select-of course within certain limits.
Now go and make arrangements for a start. The
lakes will soon be sufficiently free of ice, and you
are aware that you will need all your time to reach
your ground and get well established before next winter
sets in.”
“Excuse me, sir,” said
Lumley, turning back as he was about to depart.
“Am I permitted to select the clerk who is to
go with me as well as the men?”
“Certainly.”
“Then I should like to have Mr Maxby.”
Our chief smiled as he replied, “I
thought so. I have observed your mutual friendship.
Well, you may tell him of the prospect before him.”
Need I say that I was overjoyed at
this prospect? I have always felt something
of that disposition which animates, I suppose, the
breast of every explorer. To visit unknown lands
has always been with me almost a passion, and this
desire has extended even to trivial localities, insomuch
that I was in the habit, while at fort Dunregan, of
traversing all the surrounding country-on
snow-shoes in winter and in my hunting canoe in summer-until
I became familiar with all the out-of-the-way and
the seldom-visited nooks and corners of that neighbourhood.
To be appointed, therefore, as second
in command of an expedition to establish a new trading-post
in a little-known region, was of itself a matter of
much self-gratulation; but to have my friend and chum
Jack Lumley as my chief, was a piece of good fortune
so great that on hearing of it I executed an extravagant
pirouette, knocked Spooner off his chair by accident-though
he thought it was done on purpose-and spent
five or ten minutes thereafter in running round the
stove to escape his wrath.
As to my fitness for this appointment,
I must turn aside for a few moments to pay a tribute
of respect to my dear father, as well as to tell the
youthful reader one or two things that have made a
considerable impression on me.
“Punch,” said my father
to me one day-he called me Punch because
in early life I had a squeaky voice and a jerky manner-“Punch,
my boy, get into a habit of looking up, if you can,
as you trot along through this world. If you
keep your head down and your eyes on the ground, you’ll
see nothing of what’s going on around you-consequently
you’ll know nothing; moreover, you’ll
get a bad habit of turning your eyes inward and always
thinking only about yourself and your own affairs,
which means being selfish. Besides, you’ll
run a chance of growing absent-minded, and won’t
see danger approaching; so that you’ll tumble
over things and damage your shins, and tumble into
things and damage your clothes, and tumble off things
and damage your carcase, and get run over by wheels,
and poked in the back by carriage-poles, and killed
by trains, and spiflicated in various ways-all
of which evils are to be avoided by looking up and
looking round, and taking note of what you see, as
you go along the track of life-d’ye
see?”
“Yes, father.”
“And this,” continued
my father, “is the only mode that I know of
getting near to that most blessed state of human felicity,
self-oblivion. You won’t be able to manage
that altogether, Punch, but you’ll come nearest
to it by looking up. Of course there are times
when it is good for a man to look inside and take
stock-self-examination, you know-but
looking out and up is more difficult,
to my mind. And there is a kind of looking up,
too, for guidance and blessing, which is the most
important of all, but I’m not talking to you
on that subject just now. I’m trying to
warn you against that habit which so many people have
of staring at the ground, and seeing and knowing nothing
as they go along through life. I’ve suffered
from it myself, Punch, more than I care to tell, and
that’s why I speak feelingly, and wish to warn
you in time, my boy.
“Now, there’s another
thing,” continued my father. “You’re
fond of rambling, Punch, and of reading books of travel
and adventure, and I have no doubt you think it would
be a grand thing to go some day and try to discover
the North Pole, or the South Pole, or to explore the
unknown interior of Australia.”
“Yes, father,” I replied, in a tone which
made him laugh.
“Well, then, Punch, I won’t
discourage you. Go and discover these places
by all means, if you can; but mark me, you’ll
never discover them if you get into the habit of keeping
your eyes on the ground, and thinking about yourself
and your own affairs. And I would further advise
you to brush up your mathematics, and study navigation,
and learn well how to take an observation for longitude
and latitude, for if you don’t know how to find
out exactly where you are in unknown regions, you’ll
never be a discoverer. Also, Punch, get into
a habit of taking notes, and learn to write a good
hand, for editors and publishers won’t care
to be bothered with you if you don’t, and maybe
the time will come when you won’t be able to
make out your own writing. I’ve known men
of that stamp, whose penmanship suggested the idea
that a drunk fly had dipped its legs in the ink-pud
an’ straggled across his paper.”
These weighty words of my dear father
I laid to heart at the time, and, as a consequence
I believe, have been selected on more than one occasion
to accompany exploring parties in various parts of
the world. One very important accomplishment
which my father did not think of, but which, nevertheless,
I have been so fortunate as to acquire, is, sketching
from Nature, and marking the course of rivers and
trend of coasts. I have thus been able not only
to make accurate maps of the wild regions I have visited,
but have brought home many sketches of interesting
scenes of adventure, which words alone could not have
sufficed to pourtray.
But to return from this long digression.
I set about my preparations without delay, and was
soon ready with a small but very select amount of
baggage. You may be sure also that Lumley was
active in his preparations, and the result was that,
on a fine afternoon in the early spring, we-that
is, Lumley, Macnab, Big Otter, and I-set
out on our expedition in a strong new boat which was
manned by two Indians, two Scotchmen, and a number
of Canadian half-breeds-all picked men.
I must not however, drag my readers
through the details of our arduous voyage, not because
those details are devoid of interest or romance, far
from it, but because I have other matters more interesting
and romantic to relate. I will, therefore, pass
them over in silence, and at once proceed to the remote
region where our lot at that time was to be cast.
One beautiful evening we encamped
on the margin of one of those innumerable lakelets
which gleam like diamonds on the breast of the great
wilderness, through which for many weeks we had been
voyaging. The vast solitudes into which we had
penetrated, although nearly destitute of human inhabitants,
were by no means devoid of life, for aquatic birds
of varied form and voice made sweet music in the air,
as they swept over their grand domains on whirring
wing, or chattered happily in their rich feeding-grounds.
Those pleasant sounds were augmented
by the axes of our men as they busied themselves in
cutting firewood, and preparing our encampment.
The spot chosen was a piece of level
sward overhung by trees and surrounded by bushes,
except on the side next the little lake where an opening
permitted us to see the sheet of water gleaming like
fire as the sun sank behind the opposite trees.
By that time we had traversed hundreds of miles of
wilderness, stemming many rivers and rivulets; crossing
or skirting hundreds of lakes which varied from two
hundred miles to two hundred yards in length; dragging
our boat and carrying our baggage over innumerable
portages, and making our beds each night, in
fair weather and foul, under the trees of the primeval
forest, until we had at last plunged into regions
almost unknown-where, probably, the foot
of a white man had never before rested. On the
way we had passed Muskrat House. There, with
feelings of profound regret, we parted from our genial
Highlander, promising, however, to send him an unusually
long account of all our doings by the packet, which
we purposed sending to headquarters sometime during
the winter.
The particular duty which Lumley and
I undertook on the evening in question was the lighting
of the fire, and putting on of the kettles for supper.
We were aided by our guide, Big Otter, who cut down
and cut up the nearest dead trees, and by Salamander,
who carried them to the camp.
“Three days more, and we shall
reach the scene of our operations,” said Lumley
to me, as we watched the slowly-rising flame which
had just been kindled; “is it not so?”
he asked of Big Otter, who came up at the moment with
a stupendous log on his shoulders and flung it down.
“Waugh?” said the Indian, interrogatively.
“Ask him,” said Lumley
to Salamander, who was interpreter to the expedition,
“if we are far now from the lodges of his people.”
“Three times,” replied
the red-man, pointing to the sun, “will the great
light go down, and then the smoke of Big Otter’s
wigwam shall be seen rising above the trees.”
“Good; I shall be glad when
I see it,” returned Lumley, arranging a rustic
tripod over the fire, “for I long to begin the
building of our house, and getting a supply of fish
and meat for winter use. Now then, Salamander,
fetch the big kettle.”
“Yis, sar,” replied our
little servant, with gleeful activity (he was only
sixteen and an enthusiast) as he ran down to the lake
for water.
“Cut the pemmican up small,
Max. I’ve a notion it mixes better, though
some fellows laugh at the idea and say that hungry
men are not particular.”
“That is true,” said I,
attacking the pemmican with a small hatchet; “yet
have I seen these same scoffers at careful cookery
doing ample and appreciative justice to the mess when
cooked.”
“Just so. I have observed
the same thing-but, I say, what is Big Otter
looking so earnestly at over there?”
“Perhaps he sees a bear,” said I; “or
a moose-deer.”
“No, he never pays so much attention
to the lower animals, except when he wants to shoot
them. He shakes his head, too. Let’s
go see. Come, Salamander, and interpret.”
“Big Otter sees something,”
said Lumley through Salamander as we approached.
“Yes, Big Otter sees signs,” was the reply.
“And what may the signs be?”
“Signs of wind and rain and thunder.”
“Well, I suppose you know best
but no such signs are visible to me. Ask him,
Salamander, if we may expect the storm soon.”
To this the Indian replied that he
could not tell, but advised that preparation should
be made for the worst.
It may be well here to remark that
although Lumley and I, as well as some of our men,
had acquired a smattering of the Indian tongue, our
chief deemed it expedient to give us a regular interpreter
whose knowledge of both languages was sufficiently
extensive. Such an interpreter had been found
in the youth whom we had styled Salamander, and whose
real name I have now forgotten. This lad’s
knowledge of Indian was perfect. He also understood
French well, and spoke it badly, while his comprehension
of English was quite equal to any emergency, though
his power of speaking it was exceedingly limited.
What he spoke could scarcely be styled a broken tongue;
it was rather what we may call thoroughly smashed-up
English! Such as it was, however, it served our
purpose well enough, and as the lad was a willing,
cheery, somewhat humorous fellow, he was justly deemed
an acquisition to our party. While on this subject
I may add that Blondin, who brought the winter packet
to Dunregan, was one of our number-also,
that both our Scotsmen were Highlanders, one being
named Donald Bane, the other James Dougall. Why
the first called the second Shames Tougall, and the
second styled the first Tonal’ Pane is a circumstance
which I cannot explain.
Among the French-Canadian half-breeds
our blacksmith, Marcelle Dumont and our carpenter,
Henri Coppet, were the most noteworthy; the first
being a short but herculean man with a jovial temperament,
the latter a thin, lanky, lugubrious fellow, with
a grave disposition. Both were first-rate workmen,
but indeed the same may be said of nearly all our
men, who had been chosen very much because of their
readiness and ability to turn their hands to anything.
Soon the kettles boiled. In
one we infused tea. In another we prepared that
thick soup so familiar to the Nor’-wester, composed
of pemmican and flour, which is known by the name
of robbiboo. From a frying-pan the same
substances, much thicker, sent up a savoury steam under
the name of richeau.
There was not much conversation among
us at the commencement of the meal, as we sat round
the camp-fire, but when appetite was appeased muttered
remarks were interchanged, and when tobacco-pipes came
out, our tongues, set free from food, began to wag
apace.
“Dere is noting like a good
souper,” remarked Marcelle Dumont, the
blacksmith, extending his burly form on the grass the
more thoroughly to enjoy his pipe.
“Shames Tougall,” said
Donald Bane, in an undertone, and with the deliberate
slowness of his race, “what does he mean by soopy?”
“Tonal’,” replied
Dougall with equal deliberation, “ye’d
petter ask his nainsel’.”
“It be de French for supper,”
said Salamander, who overheard the question.
“Humph!” ejaculated Dougall
and Bane in unison; but they vouchsafed no further
indication of the state of their minds.
“You’re a true prophet,
Big Otter,” said Lumley, as a low rumbling of
distant thunder broke the silence of the night, which
would have been profound but for our voices, the crackling
of the fire, and the tinkle of a neighbouring rill.
Soon afterwards we observed a faint
flash of lightning, which was followed by another
and deeper rumble of heaven’s artillery.
Looking up through the branches we perceived that
the sky had become overcast with heavy clouds.
Suddenly there came a blinding flash
of lightning, as if the sun in noonday strength had
burst through the black sky. It was followed
instantly by thick, almost palpable darkness, and by
a crash so tremendous that I sprang up with a sort
of idea that the end of the world had come.
The crash was prolonged in a series of rolling, bumping
thunders, as though giants were playing bowls with
worlds on the floor of heaven. Gradually the
echoing peals subsided into sullen mutterings and
finally died away.