A TREMENDOUS STORM AND OTHER EXPERIENCES.
It need hardly be said that we all
sprang up when the thunder-clap shook the earth, and
began hastily to make preparation for the coming storm.
The broad flat branches of a majestic pine formed a
roof to our encampment. Dragging our provisions
and blankets as near as possible to the stem of the
tree, we covered them up with one of our oiled-cloths,
which were somewhat similar in appearance and texture
to the tarpaulings of seafaring men, though light
in colour. Then we ran down to the lake, carried
all our goods hastily to the same spot, covered them
up in like manner, and finally dragged our boat as
far up on the beach as possible.
Several blinding flashes and deafening
peals saluted us while we were thus employed, but
as yet not a drop of rain or sigh of wind disturbed
us, and we were congratulating ourselves on having
managed the matter so promptly, when several huge
drops warned us to seek shelter.
“That will do, boys,”
cried Lumley, referring to the boat, “she’s
safe.”
“Voila! vite!”
shouted Marcelle, our volatile son of Vulcan, as the
first big drops of rain descended on him.
He sprang towards the sheltering tree
with wild activity. So, indeed, did we all,
but the rain was too quick for us. Down it came
with the suddenness and fury of a shower-bath, and
most of us were nearly drenched before we reached
our pine. There was a good deal of shouting
and laughter at first, but the tremendous forces of
nature that had been let loose were too overwhelming
to permit of continued levity. In a few minutes
the ground near our tree became seamed with little
glancing rivulets, while the rain continued to descend
like straight heavy rods of crystal which beat on
the earth with a dull persistent roar. Ere long
the saturated soil refused to drink in the superabundance,
and the crystal rods, descending into innumerable
pools, changed the roar into the plash of many waters.
We stood close together for some time,
gazing at this scene in silent solemnity, when a few
trickling streams began to fall upon us, showing that
our leafy canopy, thick though it was, could not protect
us altogether from such a downpour.
“We’d better rig up one
of the oiled-cloths, and get under it,” I suggested.
“Do so,” said our chief.
Scarcely had he spoken when a flash
of lightning, brighter than any that had gone before,
revealed to us the fact that the distant part of the
hitherto placid lake was seething with foam.
“A squall! Look out!”
shouted Lumley, grasping the oiled-cloth we were about
to spread.
Every one shouted and seized hold
of something under the strong conviction that action
of some sort was necessary to avert danger. But
all our voices were silenced in a dreadful roar of
thunder which, as Donald Bane afterwards remarked,
seemed to split the universe from stem to stern.
This was instantly followed by a powerful whirlwind
which caught our oiled-cloth, tore it out of our hands,
and whisked it up into the tree-tops, where it stuck
fast and flapped furiously, while some of our party
were thrown down, and others seemed blown away altogether
as they ran into the thick bush for shelter.
For myself, without any definite intentions,
and scarce knowing what I was about, I seized and
clung to the branches of a small tree with the tenacity
of a drowning man-unable to open my eyes
while sticks and leaves, huge limbs of trees and deluges
of water flew madly past, filling my mind with a vague
impression that the besom of destruction had become
a veritable reality, and that we were all about to
be swept off the face of the earth together.
Strange to say, in this crisis I felt
no fear. I suppose I had not time or power to
think at all, and I have since that day thought that
God perhaps thus mercifully sends relief to His creatures
in their direst extremity-just as He sends
relief to poor human beings, when suffering intolerable
pain, by causing stupor.
The outburst was as short-lived as
it was furious. Suddenly the wind ceased; the
floods of rain changed to slight droppings, and finally
stopped altogether, while the thunder growled itself
into sullen repose in the far distance.
But what a scene of wreck was left
behind! We could not of course, see the full
extent of the mischief, for the night still remained
intensely dark, but enough was revealed in the numerous
uprooted trees which lay all round us within the light
of our rekindled camp-fire. From most of these
we had been protected by the great pine, under which
we had taken shelter, though one or two had fallen
perilously near to us-in one case falling
on and slightly damaging our baggage.
Our first anxiety, of course, was
our boat, towards which we ran as if by one impulse,
the instant the wind had subsided.
To our horror it was gone!
Only those who know what it is to
traverse hundreds of leagues of an almost tenantless
wilderness, and have tried to push a few miles through
roadless forests that have grown and fallen age after
age in undisturbed entanglement since the morning
of creation, can imagine the state of our minds at
this discovery.
“Search towards the woods, men,”
said Lumley, who, whatever he might have felt, was
the only one amongst us who seemed unexcited.
We could trace no sign of anxiety in the deep tones
of his steady voice.
It was this quality-I may
remark in passing-this calm, equable flow
of self-possession in all circumstances, no matter
how trying, that rendered our young leader so fit
for the work, with which he had been entrusted, and
which caused us all to rely on him with unquestioning
confidence. He never seemed uncertain how to
act even in the most desperate circumstances, and
he never gave way to discontent or depression.
A gentle, good-humoured expression usually played
on his countenance, yet he could look stern enough
at times, and even fierce, as we all knew.
While we were stumbling in the dark
in the direction indicated, we heard the voice of
Salamander shouting:-
“Here it am! De bot-busted
on de bank!”
And “busted” it certainly
was, as we could feel, for it was too dark to see.
“Fetch a blazing stick, one of you,” cried
Lumley.
A light revealed the fact that our
boat, in being rolled bodily up the bank by the gale,
had got several of her planks damaged and two of her
ribs broken.
“Let’s be thankful,”
I said, on further examination, “that no damage
has been done to keel or gun’le.”
“Nor to stem or stern-post,”
added Lumley. “Come, we shan’t be
delayed more than a day after all.”
He was right. The whole of the
day that followed the storm we spent in repairing
the boat, and drying such portions of the goods as
had got wet, as well as our own garments. The
weather turned out to be bright and warm, so that
when we lay down to rest, everything was ready for
a start at the earliest gleam of dawn.
“Lumley,” said I, next
day, as we rested after a good spell at the oars,
“what would have become of us if our boat had
been smashed to pieces, or bodily blown away?”
“Nothing very serious would
have become of us, I think,” he replied with
an amused look.
“But consider,” I said;
“we are now hundreds of miles away from Muskrat
House-our nearest neighbour-with
a dense wilderness and no roads between. Without
a boat we could neither advance nor retreat.
We might, of course, try to crawl along river banks
and lake shores, which would involve the wading or
swimming of hundreds of rivulets and rivers, with
provisions and blankets on our backs, and even then
winter would be down on us, and we should all be frozen
to death before the end of the journey. Besides,
even if we were to escape, how could we ever show
face after leaving all our supply of goods and stores
to rot in the wilderness?”
“Truly,” replied my friend
with a short laugh, “the picture you paint is
not a lively one, but it is I who ought to ask you
to consider. There are many ways in which we
might overcome our supposed difficulties. I
will explain; and let me begin by pointing out that
your first error lies in conceiving an improbability
and an impossibility. In the first place it
is improbable that our boat should get `smashed to
pieces.’ Such an event seldom occurs in
river navigation, except in the case of going over
something like Niagara. In the second place it
is impossible that a boat should be blown bodily away.
But let us suppose that, for the sake of argument,
something of the kind had happened, and that our boat
was damaged beyond repair, or lost; could we not, think
you, fabricate a couple of birch-bark canoes in a
country where such splendid birch-trees grow, and
with these proceed to our destination?”
“Very true,” said I, “that
did not occur to me; but,” I continued, waxing
argumentative, “what if there had been no birch-trees
in this part of the country?”
“Why then, Max, there would
be nothing to prevent our placing most of our goods
en cache, construct a small portable raft for
crossing streams, and start off each man with a small
load for Big Otter’s home, at which we should
arrive in a week or two, and there set about the erection
of huts to shelter us, begin a fishery, and remain
until winter should set fast the lakes and rivers,
cover the land with snow, and thus enable us to go
back for our goods, and bring them forward on sledges,
with aid, perhaps, from the red-men.”
“True, true, Lumley, that might be done.”
“Or,” continued my friend,
“we might stay where the disaster overtook us,
remain till winter, and send Big Otter on to tell his
people that we were coming. When one plan fails,
you know, all you’ve got to do is to try another.
There is only one sort of accident that might cause
us a deal of trouble, and some loss-and
that is, our boat getting smashed and upset in a rapid,
and our goods scattered. Even in that case we
might recover much of what could swim, but lead and
iron would be lost, and powder damaged. However
we won’t anticipate evil. Look! there is
a sight that ought to banish all forebodings from
our minds.”
He pointed as he spoke to an opening
ahead of us, which revealed a beautiful little lake,
whose unruffled surface was studded with picturesque
bush-clad islets. Water-fowl of many kinds were
swimming about on its surface, or skimming swiftly
over it. It seemed so peaceful that I was led
to think of it as a miniature paradise.
“Come, Henri, chante, sing,”
cried Lumley, with a touch of enthusiasm in eye and
tone.
Our carpenter, Coppet, was by general
consent our leading singer. He possessed a sweet
tenor voice, and always responded to a call with a
willingness that went far to counteract the lugubrious
aspect of his visage. On this occasion he at
once struck up the canoe-song, “A la claire
fontaine,” which, besides being plaintive
and beautiful, seemed to me exceedingly appropriate,
for we were at that time crossing a height of land,
and the clear, crystal waters over which we skimmed
formed indeed the fountain-head of some of the great
northern rivers.
The sudden burst of song had a wonderful
effect upon the denizens of Clear Lake, as we named
the sheet of water; for, after a brief momentary pause
in their chatter-as if of incredulity and
blazing surprise-they all arose at once
in such myriads that the noise of their wings was not
unlike what I may style muffled thunder.
Before the song was well finished
we had reached the other end of the lakelet, and found
that a deep river ran out of it in a nor’easterly
direction. The current of the river was powerful,
and we had not proceeded many miles down its course
when we came to a series of turbulent rapids.
As we entered them I could not help
recalling Lumley’s remarks about the risks we
ran in descending rapids; but no thought of actual
danger occurred to me until I saw Blondin, who was
our bowman, draw in his oar, grasp a long pole with
which he had provided himself, and stand up in the
bow, the better to look out inquiringly ahead.
Now, it must be explained that the
bowman’s is the most important post in river
navigation in the Nor’-west-equal,
at all events, to that of steersman. In fact
the two act in concert; the bowman, whose position
commands the best view of rocks and dangers ahead,
giving direction, and the watchful steersman acting
sympathetically with his long oar or sweep, so that
should the bowman with his pole thrust the head of
the boat violently to the right the steersman sweeps
its stern sharply to the left, thus causing the craft
to spin round and shoot aside from the danger, whatever
it may be. Of course the general flow and turmoil
of a rapid indicates pretty clearly to skilled eyes
where the deepest water lies; nevertheless, in spite
of knowledge, skill, and experience, disasters will
happen at times.
“Monsieur,” said Blondin
in French to Lumley, as we gained a smooth piece of
water at the foot of a short rapid, “I know not
the rocks ahead. It may be well to land and
look.”
“Do so, Blondin.”
We ran the boat’s head on shore,
and while the bowman and our leader went to look at
the rapids in advance, most of our men got out their
pipes and began to chat quietly.
Our scouts quickly returned, saying
that the rapids, though rough, were practicable.
Soon we were among them, darting down with what would
have seemed, to any inexperienced eye, perilous velocity.
The river at the place was about a hundred yards
wide, with an unusually rugged channel, but with a
distinctly marked run-deep and tortuous-in
the middle. On both sides of the run, sweeping
and curling surges told of rocks close to the surface,
and in many places these showed black edges above water,
which broke the stream into dazzling foam.
“Have a care, Blondin,”
said our chief, in a warning voice, as the bowman
made a sudden and desperate shove with his pole.
A side current had swept us too far in the direction
of a forbidding ledge, to touch on which might have
been fatal. But Henri Coppet, who acted as steersman
as well as carpenter, was equal to the occasion.
He bent his lanky form almost double, took a magnificent
sweep with the oar, and seconded Blondin’s shove
so ably that we passed the danger like an arrow, with
nothing but a slight graze.
That danger past we were on the brink
of another, almost before we had time to think.
At the time I remember being deeply impressed, in
a confused way, with the fact that, whatever might
await us below, there was now no possibility of our
returning up stream. We were emphatically “in
for it,” and our only hope lay in the judgment,
boldness, and capacity of the two men who guided our
frail bark-doubly frail, it seemed to me,
when contrasted with the waters that surged around,
and the solid rocks that appeared to bar our way in
all directions. Even some of our men at the
oars, whose only duty was to obey orders promptly,
began to show symptoms of anxiety, if not of fear.
“Smooth water ahead,”
muttered Lumley, pointing to a small lake into which
the turbulent river ran about a quarter of a mile further
down.
“All right soon,” I said,
but just as I spoke the boat lightly touched a rock.
Blondin saw that there was not sufficient depth in
a passage which he had intended to traverse.
With a shout to the steersman he thrust his pole
over the side with all his might. The obedient
craft turned as if on a pivot, and would have gone
straight into a safe stream in another second, if
Blondin’s pole had not stuck fast either in mud
or between two rocks.
In a moment our bowman was whisked
over the side as if he had been a feather. Letting
go the pole he caught the gunwale and held on.
The boat was carried broadside on the rocks, and
the gushing water raised her upper side so high that
she was on the point of rolling over when all of us-I
think instinctively-sprang to that side
and bore her down.
“Over the side, some of you,”
cried Lumley, leaping into the water on the lower
side, followed by six of us, including myself.
Some of us were breast deep; others, on rocks, stood
higher.
“Now-together-shove!-and
hold on!”
There was no need to give us the latter caution.
Our boat shot into deep water and
we all held on for life. Fortunately the more
open part of the rapid had been gained. The steersman
without aid could keep us in deep water, and, before
we had fairly scrambled back into our places, we were
floating safely on the quiet lake into which the river
ran.
You may be sure that we had matter
not only for gratulation but for conversation that
night at supper; for, after discussing our recent
adventure in all its phases, nearly every one of our
party had numerous similar incidents to tell of-either
as having occurred to himself, or to his friends.
But the pleasure of that night’s intercourse
and repose was materially diminished by a pest, with
which for some time previously we had not been much
afflicted.
Who has not heard of mosquitoes?
We may inform those who have never seen or felt them
that they are peculiarly virulent and numerous and
vicious and bloodthirsty in the swampy lands of North
America, and that night we had got into a region of
swamps. It may also, perhaps, be unknown to
some people that mosquitoes do not slumber-unless,
indeed, they do it on a preconcerted plan of relieving
guard. Either there is a “day and night
shift” or they do not rest at all. As a
consequence we did not rest. Groans and
malédictions were the order of the night.
We spent much time in slapping our own faces, and
immolated hundreds of the foe at each slap, but thousands
came on to refill the ranks. We buried our heads
under our blankets, but could not sleep for suffocation.
Some of the men left their faces exposed, went to
sleep in desperate exhaustion, after hours of fruitless
warfare, and awoke with eyes all but shut up, and
cheeks like dumplings. Others lay down to leeward
of the fire and spent the night in a compound experience
of blood-sucking and choking. One ingenious
man-I think it was Salamander-wrapped
his visage in a kerchief, leaving nothing exposed
save the point of his nose for breathing purposes.
In the morning he arose with something like a huge
strawberry on the end of his prominent feature.
Indeed, it was a wearing night to
follow such a trying day!