<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIX">CHAPTER XIX.</h2></div>
<div class="blockquot inhead medium">
<p>Start from St. John’s.—Crossing the ice.—Batiste La Fleur.—Chimeroo.—The
last wood-buffalo.—A dangerous weapon.—Our
raft collapses.—Across the Half-way River.</p>
</div>
<p class="in0"><span class="firstword">The</span> 22nd of April had come. For some days we
were engaged at St. John’s in preparing supplies
for the ascent of the river, and in catching and
bringing in from the prairie the horses which
were to carry me to the point of embarcation at
the west end of the cañon; the snow had nearly
all disappeared from the level prairie. The river
opposite the fort was partly open, but some
distance below a bridge of ice yet remained, and
on the 20th we moved our horses across this
connecting link to the north shore. The night of
the 20th made a serious change in the river, and
when the 22nd came, it was doubtful whether we
should be able to cross without mishap.</p>
<p>From the fort of St. John’s to the gold mines
on the Ominica River was some twenty or thirty
days’ travel, and as no supplies were obtainable<span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">226</span>
<i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">en route</i>, save such as my gun might afford, it
became necessary to carry a considerable quantity
of moose pemmican and dry meat, the sole
luxuries which St. John’s could boast of.</p>
<p>By the 22nd all preparations were declared
complete, and we began to cross the river over
the doubtful ice-bridge. First went two men
dragging a dog-sled, on which was piled the stores
and provisions for the journey; next came old
Batiste La Fleur, who was to accompany me as
far as the Half-way River, a torrent which we
would have to raft across on the second day of
our journey.</p>
<p>Batiste carried a long pole, with which he
sounded the ice previous to stepping upon it. I
brought up the rear, also carrying a pole, and
leading by a long line the faithful Cerf-vola.
Spanker and his six companions here passed from
my hands, and remained at St. John’s to idle
through the approaching summer, and then to
take their places as Hudson Bay hauling-dogs;
but for Cerf-vola there was to be no more hauling,
his long and faithful service had at length
met its reward, and the untiring Esquimaux was
henceforth to lounge through life collarless and
comfortable.</p>
<p>Coasting down along the shore-ice we reached
the crossing-point, and put out into the mid-river;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">227</span>
once on the dangerous part, there was no time
to think whether it was safe or not. A Salteaux
Indian, dragging the sled, went in, but light and
quick as thought he dragged himself from the
ice and sped along its yielding surface. Below
rumbled the river, and in the open places its dark
waters gurgled up and over the crumbling ice.
Only a narrow tongue of ice spanned the central
current; we crossed it with nothing worse than
wet feet and legs, and to me a dislocated thumb,
and then we breathed freer on the farther side.</p>
<p>Loading the horses with luggage and provisions,
I bade good-bye to my host, and we
turned our faces towards the steep north shore.
The day was gloriously bright. The hill up
which the horses scrambled for a thousand feet
was blue with wild anemones; spring was in the
earth and in the air. Cerf-vola raced in front,
with tail so twisted over his back that it
threatened to dislocate his spine in a frantic
attempt to get in front of his nose. The earth,
bare of snow, gave forth a delicious fragrance,
which one drank with infinite delight after the
long, long scentless winter; and over the white
river below, and the pine forest beyond, summer,
dressed in blue sky and golden sunbeam, came
moving gently up on the wing of the soft south
wind.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">228</span></p>
<p>We reached the summit. Below lay a long
line of frosted river; the little fort, dwarfed by
distance, the opposing ridges, the vast solitude,
and beyond all, snow-white against the western
sky, the peaks and pinnacles of nameless mountains.
Through varied prairie and wooded country,
and across many a rushing brook, deep hidden
in tangled brake and thicket, we held our way on
that bright spring afternoon; and evening found
us on a bare and lofty ridge, overlooking the
valley of the Peace River. Batiste had lived his
life in these solitudes, and knew the name of
creek and prairie, and the history (for even the
wilderness has a history) of each hill or widespread
meadow.</p>
<p>The beautiful prairie which lay beneath our
camping-place was Chimeroo’s prairie, and the
great ridge of rock which frowned above it was
also Chimeroo’s; and away there where the cleft
appeared in the hills to the north, that was where
Chimeroo’s river came out to join the Peace. In
fact, Chimeroo played such a conspicuous part in
the scenery that one naturally asked, Who was
Chimeroo?</p>
<p>“Chimeroo! Oh, he is a Beaver Indian; he
lived here for a long time, and he killed the last
wood-buffalo in yonder valley, just three years ago.”</p>
<p>The last of his race had wandered down from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">229</span>
the banks of the Liard, and Chimeroo had struck
his trail, and followed him to the death.</p>
<p>When twilight fell, that peculiar orange light of
the American wilderness lay long in the west.
Against this vivid colour, Chimeroo’s hill stood
out in inky profile the perfect image of a colossal
face. Forehead, nose, lips, and chin seemed cut
in the huge rock, and, like a monstrous sphinx,
looked blankly over the solitude.</p>
<p>“It is the head of Chimeroo,” I said to Batiste;
“see, he looks over his dominions.” We were
perched upon a bare hill-top, many hundred feet
above the river. The face rose between us and
the west, some three miles distant; the head,
thrown slightly back, seemed to look vacantly out
on the waste of night and wilderness, while a
long beard (the lower part of the ridge) descended
into the darkness. Gradually day drew off his
orange curtain from the horizon, and ere the darkness
had blotted out the huge features of Chimeroo,
we slept upon our lonely hill-top.</p>
<p>Pursuing our journey on the morrow, we descended
to the river, and held our way over
Chimeroo’s prairie, passing beneath the lofty
ridge, whose outline had assumed the image of a
human face.</p>
<p>About mid-day we reached the banks of
Chimeroo’s river, which, being flooded, we forded,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">230</span>
and, climbing its steep north shore, halted for
dinner. It would not be easy to exaggerate the
beauty of the country through which the trail
had carried us, or the sensation of rest which
came to one as, looking out over the landscape,
the fair spring scene stole insensibly on the
mind. Everywhere the blue anemone, like a huge
primrose, looked up to the bluer sky; butterflies
fluttered in the clear, pure air; partridges
drummed in the budding thickets. The birch-trees
and willows were putting forth their flowers,
precursors of the leaves so soon to follow. The
long-hushed rippling of the streams fell on the
ear like music heard after lapse of time; and
from the blue depths of sky at times fell the cry
of the wild goose, as with scarce-moving wing
he held his way in long waving <em>w</em>‘s to his summer
home. Chimeroo’s prairie was golden with the
long grass of the old year. Chimeroo’s hill glistened
in the bright sun of the new spring; and
winter, driven from the lower earth, had taken
refuge in the mountains, where his snow-white
flag of surrender floated out from crag and cliff,
high above the realm of pines. Such a scene as
this, might the first man have beheld when he
looked over the virgin earth. It was far too fine
a day to work: we would rest. Batiste La Fleur
knew of a lake not far off, and we would go to it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">231</span>
and spend the evening in hunting beaver and
wild ducks; so we put the saddles on and journeyed
slowly to Batiste’s paradise.</p>
<p>Through many a devious path and tortuous way
did Batiste guide us, until his hunting-ground was
gained. On a knoll we made our camp; and
while Kalder remained to look after it, Batiste and
I sallied forth to hunt.</p>
<p>Batiste’s gun was an excellent weapon, were it
not for a tendency to burst about the left barrel.
This was made observable by two or more ominous
bulges towards the centre of the piece; but
Batiste appeared to have unlimited confidence in
the integrity of his weapon, and explained that
these blemishes were only the result of his having
on two or three occasions placed a bullet over a
charge of shot, and then directed the united volley
against the person of a beaver. When loading
this gun, Batiste had a risky method of leaning it
against his chest while drawing a charge of shot
from his shot-bag. I pointed out to him that this
was not a safe method of loading, as it was quite
possible the other barrel might explode while the
gun thus rested against his side. It was true, he
said, for only last year the gun under similar
treatment had exploded, carrying away the brim
of his hat, and causing no slight alarm to the rest
of his person.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">232</span></p>
<p>Our success that afternoon was not great;
ducks and geese but lately arrived from the
peopled south were yet wild and wary, and had
not learned to look on man in any light save that
of an enemy; and altogether Batiste’s hunter’s
paradise did not justify his glowing accounts of it.
To do him justice, however, it must be stated that
the wet ground was literally ploughed up with
moose-tracks; and the golden willows lay broken
down and bruised by the many animals which had
browsed upon them during the winter.</p>
<p>It was mid-day on the 24th of April when we
reached the banks of the Half-way River, whose
current, swollen by the melting snow, rolled swiftly
from the north, between banks piled high with
ice-floe. This was the first serious obstacle to the
journey, and as soon as dinner was over we set to
work to overcome it. From a neighbouring grove
of pines Kalder and Batiste got dry trees; half
a dozen of these lashed together formed the
groundwork of a raft. Three other pine-trees
tied on top completed the craft, and with a long
pole and a rough paddle, all fashioned by the axe,
the preparations were declared finished. This
craft was put together in a sheltered part of the
river; and when all was completed, the goods and
chattels were placed upon it. But one more piece
of work remained to be accomplished ere we set<span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">233</span>
sail upon our raft—the horses had to be crossed.
By dint of driving and shouting we forced them
across the boulders of ice into the water. It was
cold as ice, and they stood knee-deep, afraid to
venture farther. But Kalder was a very demon
when work had to be done. In an instant he was
across the ice-floe, and upon the back of one of the
horses; then with knees and hands and voice and
heels he urged the brute into the flood. The
horse reared and snorted and plunged, but Kalder
sat him like the half-breed that he was, and in
another second, horse and rider plunged wildly
into the torrent. Down they went out of sight,
and when they reappeared the horse was striking
out for the far shore, and Kalder was grappling
with the projecting ice. The other horses soon
followed their leader, and all four went swimming
down the current. Gradually the back eddy near
the farther shore caught them, and, touching
ground, they disappeared in the forest. Now
came our turn to cross. We towed the crazy raft
up the bordering ice, and, mooring her for a
moment in an eddy, took our places on the upper
logs. Scarcely had we put out from the shore
than the fastening gave way, and the whole fabric
threatened instant collapse. We got her back to
the eddy, repaired the damage, and once more put
out. Our weight and baggage sunk us down, so<span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">234</span>
that the body of the raft was quite submerged, and
only the three trees on top showed above the
water; upon these we crouched. Old Batiste waved
a good-bye. Kalder was at the bow with a pole.
I worked a paddle on the stern. Once out of the
sheltering eddy, the current smote our unwieldy
platform, and away we went. Another instant
and the pole failed to reach the bottom. With
might and main I worked the paddle; down we
shot, and across; but ten yards down to every one
across. Would we save the eddy? that was the
question; for if we missed it, there was nought to
stay our wild career. Far as eye could reach, the
current ran wild and red. For an anxious minute
we rushed down the stream, and then the eddy
caught us, and we spun round like a teetotum.
“The other side!” roared Kalder; and to the other
side went the paddle to keep us in the eddy. Then
we headed for the shore; and, ere the current
could catch us again, Kalder was breast-deep in
the water, holding on with might and main to the
raft.</p>
<p>We were across the Half-way River. To unload
the raft, build a fire, to dry our wet garments,
and shout good-bye to old Batiste, who stood on
an ice boulder, anxiously watching our fortunes
from the shore we had quitted, took us but a short
time.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">235</span></p>
<p>The horses were captured and saddled, and,
ascending through tangled forest into a terraced
land of rich-rolling prairies, we pushed on briskly
towards the west.</p>
<p>Thus, trotting through a park-like land of wood
and glade and meadow, where the jumping deer
glanced through the dry grass and trees, we
gradually drew near the Rocky Mountains. At
times the trail led up the steep face of the outer
hill to the plateau above, and then a rich view
would lie beneath—a view so vast with the
glories of the snowy range, and so filled with
nearer river and diamond-shaped island, that
many a time I drew rein upon some lofty standpoint
to look, as one looks upon things which we
would fain carry away into the memory of an after-time.</p>
<p>About the middle of the afternoon of the 25th
of April we emerged from a wood of cypress upon
an open space, beneath which ran the Peace
River. At the opposite side a solitary wooden
house gave token of life in the wilderness. The
greater part of the river was still fast frozen, but
along the nearer shore ran a current of open
water. The solitary house was the Hope of
Hudson!</p>
<hr />
<div id="toclink_236" class="chapter">
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">236</span></p>
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