<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXII">CHAPTER XXII.</h2></div>
<div class="blockquot inhead medium">
<p>Still westward.—The dangers of the ice.—We enter the main
range.—In the mountains.—A grizzly.—Tho death of the
moose.—Peace River Pass.—Pete Toy.—The Ominica.—“Travellers”
at home.</p>
</div>
<p class="in0"><span class="firstword">We</span> held our way up the river, fighting many a
battle with the current. Round the points the
stream ran strong, and our canoe was a big,
lumbering affair, hollowed out of a single cotton-wood
tree by Jacques, years before on the Fraser
River, and ill-adapted to the ice, which was our
most dangerous enemy. Many a near shave we
had of being crushed under its heavy floes as we
coasted along beneath their impending masses.
When the river breaks up, portions of it stronger
than the rest remain still frozen. At the back of
these the floating ice jams, and the river rises
rapidly behind the barrier thus flung across it.
Then the pack gives way, and the pent-up waters
rapidly lower. But along the shore, on either
side, the huge blocks of ice lie stranded, heaped
one upon another, and the water, still falling,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">264</span>
brushes off from beneath the projecting pieces,
leaving a steep wall of ice, sometimes twenty and
thirty feet, brightly rising above the water. Along
these impending masses we had to steer our canoe,
and hazardous work it was, for every now and
again some huge fragment, many tons in weight,
would slide from its high resting-place, and crash
into the river with a roar of thunder, driving the
billows before it half-way across the wide river,
and making our hearts jump half as much
again.</p>
<p>At one point where the river ran with unusual
velocity we battled long beneath a very high ice-wall.
Once or twice the current carried us against
its sides. We dared not touch it with our poles,
for it hung by a thread, so far did its summit
project over our heads.</p>
<p>Gently we stole our way up from beneath it,
and were still within thirty yards of it when the
great boulder, looming high, crashed into the river.</p>
<p>On the fourth day we got clear of this shore
ice, and drew near the main range of the mountains.
But there was one important question
which experience soon told me there was no cause
for anxiety about—it was the question of food.</p>
<p>Game was abundant; the lower hills were
thickly stocked with blue grouse—a noble bird,
weighing between three and four pounds.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">265</span></p>
<p>The bays of the river held beaver, swimming
through the driftwood, and ere we had reached
the mountain gate a moose had fallen to my
trusty smooth-bore, in one of the grassy glens
between the river and the snowy range. It was
literally a hunter’s paradise. This was the worst
time of the year, except for beaver, but necessity
knows no game law, and the wilderness at all
times must feed its wanderers.</p>
<p>We usually camped a couple of hours before
sun-down, for in this northern land the daylight
was more than long enough to stiffen our
shoulders, and make our arms ache from pole or
paddle. Then came the time to stretch one’s legs
over these great grassy uplands, so steep, yet so
free of rock; so full of projecting point and lofty
promontory, beneath which the river lay in long
silvery reaches, while around on every side the
mountains in masses of rock and snow, lay like
giant sentinels, guarding the great road which
Nature had hewn through their midst.</p>
<p>At the entrance to the main range, the valley of
the river is about two miles wide. The river
itself preserves its general width of 250 to 300
yards with singular uniformity. The reaches are
from one to three miles in length, the banks are
dry, the lower beaches are level and well wooded,
and the current becomes deeper and less rapid.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">266</span></p>
<p>On the 8th of May we reached, early in the
morning, the entrance to the main range. A short
rapid marks it, a rapid easy to run at all stages of
water, and up which we towed our canoe, carrying
the more perishable articles to save them from the
spray—a precaution which was, however, not
necessary, as no water was shipped.</p>
<p>We were now in the mountains. From the low
terrace along the shore they rose in stupendous
masses; their lower ridges clothed in forests of
huge spruce, poplar, and birch; their middle
heights covered in dense thickets of spruce
alone; their summits cut into a thousand varied
peaks, bare of all vegetation, but bearing aloft into
the sunshine 8000 feet above us the glittering
crowns of snow which, when evening stilled the
breezes, shone reflected in the quiet waters, vast
and motionless.</p>
<p>Wonderful things to look at are these white
peaks, perched up so high above our world. They
belong to us, yet they are not of us. The eagle links
them to the earth; the cloud carries to them the
message of the sky; the ocean sends them her
tempest; the air rolls her thunders beneath their
brows, and launches her lightnings from their
sides; the sun sends them his first greeting, and
leaves them his latest kiss. Yet motionless they
keep their crowns of snow, their glacier crests of
jewels, and dwell among the stars heedless of time
or tempest.</p>
<div id="i_266" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 40em;">
<ANTIMG src="images/i_266.jpg" width-obs="2544" height-obs="1582" alt="" />
<div class="caption">MOUNT GARNET WOLSELEY AND THE PEACE RIVER.</div>
</div>
<p>For two days we journeyed through this vast
valley, along a wide, beautiful river, tranquil as a
lake, and bearing on its bosom, at intervals, small
isles of green forest. Now and again a beaver
rippled the placid surface, or a bear appeared upon
a rocky point for a moment, looked at the strange
lonely craft, stretched out his long snout to sniff
the gale, and then vanished in the forest shore.
For the rest all was stillness; forest, isle, river
and mountain—all seemed to sleep in unending
loneliness; and our poles grating against the
rocky shore, or a shot at some quick-diving beaver,
alone broke the silence; while the echo, dying away
in the vast mountain cañons, made the relapsing
silence seem more intense.</p>
<p>Thus we journeyed on. On the evening of the
8th of May we emerged from the pass, and saw
beyond the extremity of a long reach of river a
mountain range running north and south, distant
about thirty miles from us. To the right and left
the Rocky Mountains opened out, leaving the river
to follow its course through a long forest valley of
considerable width.</p>
<p>We had passed the Rocky Mountains, and the
range before us was the central mountain system
of North British Columbia.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_268">268</span></p>
<p>It was a very beautiful evening; the tops of the
birch-trees were already showing their light green
leaves amidst the dark foliage of the spruce and
firs.</p>
<p>Along the shore, where we landed, the tracks of
a very large grizzly bear were imprinted freshly
in the sand. I put a couple of bullets into my
gun and started up the river, with Cerf-vola for
a companion. I had got about a mile from the
camp when, a few hundred yards ahead, a large
dark animal emerged from the forest, and made
his way through some lower brushwood towards
the river. Could it be the grizzly? I lay down
on the sand-bank, and pulled the dog down beside
me. The large black animal walked out upon the
sand-bar two or three hundred yards above me.
He proved to be a moose on his way to swim the
river to the south shore. I lay still until he had got
so far on his way that return to the forest would
have been impracticable; then I sprang to my feet
and ran towards him. What a spring he gave
across the sand and down into the water! Making
an allowance for the force of the current, I ran
towards the shore. It was a couple of hundred
yards from me, and when I gained it the moose
was already three-parts across the river, almost
abreast where I stood, swimming for his very life,
with his huge unshapen head thrust out along the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_269">269</span>
surface, the ears thrown forward, while the large
ripples rolled from before his chest as he clove his
way through the water.</p>
<p>It was a long shot for a rifle, doubly so for a
smooth-bore; but old experience in many lands,
where the smooth-bore holds its own despite all
other weapons, had told me that when you do get
a gun to throw a bullet well, you may rely upon it
for distances supposed to be far beyond the possibilities
of such a weapon; so, in a tenth of the
time it has taken me to say all this, I gave the
moose the right barrel, aiming just about his long
ears. There was a single plunge in the water;
the giant head went down, and all was quiet. And
now to secure the quarry. Away down stream he
floated, showing only one small black speck above
the surface; he was near the far side, too. Running
down shore I came within calling-distance of
the camp, from which the smoke of Kalder’s fire
was already curling above the tree-tops. Out came
Kalder, Jacques, and A——. Of course it was a
grizzly, and all the broken flint-guns of the party
were suddenly called into requisition. If it had been
a grizzly, and that I had been retiring before him
in skirmishing order, gods! what a support I was
falling back upon! A——‘s gun is already familiar
to the reader; Kalder’s beaver-gun went off about
one shot in three; and Jacques possessed a weapon<span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">270</span>
(it had been discarded by an Indian, and Jacques
had resuscitated it out of the store of all trades
which he possessed an inkling of) the most extraordinary
I had ever seen. Jacques always spoke of
it in the feminine gender. “She was a good gun,
except that a trifle too much of the powder came
out the wrong way. He would back her to shoot
‘plum’ if she would only go off after a reasonable
lapse of time, but it was tiring to him to keep her
to the shoulder for a couple of minutes after he
had pulled her trigger, and then to have her go off
when he was thinking of pulling the gun-coat over
her again.” When she was put away in the canoe,
it was always a matter of some moment to place
her so that in the event of any sudden explosion
of her pent-up wrath, she might discharge herself
harmlessly along the river, and on this account
she generally lay like a stern-chaser projecting
from behind Jacques, and endangering only his
paddle.</p>
<p>All these maimed and mutilated weapons were
now brought forth, and such a loading and priming
and hammering began, that, had it really been
a grizzly, he must have been utterly scared out of
all semblance of attack.</p>
<p>Kalder now mastered the position of affairs, and
like an arrow he and Jacques were into the canoe,
and out after the dead moose. They soon overhauled<span class="pagenum" id="Page_271">271</span>
him, and, slipping a line over the young
antlers, towed him to the shore. We were unable
to lift him altogether out of the water, so we cut
him up as he lay, stranded like a whale.</p>
<div id="i_271" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 26em;">
<ANTIMG src="images/i_271.jpg" width-obs="1644" height-obs="2538" alt="" />
<div class="caption">CUTTING UP THE MOOSE.</div>
</div>
<p>Directly opposite a huge cone mountain rose up
some eight or nine thousand feet above us, and
just ere evening fell over the scene, his topmost
peak, glowing white in the sunlight, became
mirror’d in most faithful semblance in the clear
quiet river, while the life-stream of the moose
flowed out over the tranquil surface, dyeing the
nearer waters into brilliant crimson.</p>
<p>If some painter in the exuberance of his genius
had put upon canvas such a strange contrast
of colours, people would have said it is not true
to nature; but nature has many truths, and it
takes many a long day, and not a few years’ toil,
to catch a tenth of them. And, my dear friend
with the eye-glass—you who know all about
nature in a gallery and with a catalogue—you may
take my word for it.</p>
<p>And now, ere quitting, probably for ever, this
grand Peace River Pass—this immense valley
which receives in its bosom so many other valleys,
into whose depths I only caught a moment’s
glimpse as we floated by their outlets—let me say
one other word about it.</p>
<p>Since I left the Wild North Land, it has been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_272">272</span>
my lot to visit the chief points of interest in
Oregon, California, the Vale of Shasta, and the
Yosemite. Shasta is a loftier mountain than any
that frown above the Peace River Pass. Yosemite
can boast its half-dozen waterfalls, trickling
down their thousand feet of rock; but for wild
beauty, for the singular spectacle of a great river
flowing tranquilly through a stupendous mountain
range,—these mountains presenting at every reach
a hundred varied aspects,—not the dizzy glory of
Shasta nor the rampart precipices of Yosemite
can vie with that lonely gorge far away on the
great Unchagah.</p>
<p>On the 9th of May we reached the Forks of the
river, where the two main streams of the Parsnip
and the Findlay came together. A couple of
miles from their junction a second small rapid
occurs; but, like the first one, it can be run without
difficulty.</p>
<p>Around the point of junction the country is low
and marshy, and when we turned into the Findlay,
it was easy to perceive from the colour of the
water that the river was rising rapidly.</p>
<p>Some miles above the Forks there is a solitary
hut on the south bank of the river. In this hut
dwelt Pete Toy, a miner of vast repute in the
northern mining country.</p>
<p>Some ten years ago Pete had paddled his canoe<span class="pagenum" id="Page_273">273</span>
into these lonely waters. As he went, he prospected
the various bars. Suddenly he struck
one of surpassing richness. It yielded one dollar
to the bucket, or one hundred dollars a day to a
man’s work. Pete was astonished; he laid up
his canoe, built this hut, and claimed the bar as
his property. For a long time it yielded a steady
return; but even gold has a limit—the bar became
exhausted. Where had all his gold come from?</p>
<p>Ah, that is the question! Even to-day, though
the bank has been washed year after year, “it is
still rich in colour;” but the “pay-dirt” lies too
far from the water’s edge, hence the labour is too
great.</p>
<p>Well, Pete, the Cornish miner, built his hut
and took out his gold; but that did not satisfy
him. What miner ever yet was satisfied? Pete
went in for fifty things; he traded with the
Indians, he trapped, he took an Indian wife; yet,
through all, he maintained a character for being
as honest and as straightforward a miner as ever
found “a colour” from Mexico to Cariboo.</p>
<p>My little friend Jacques expected to meet his
old brother miner Pete at his hut; but, as we
came within five miles of it, a beaver swam across
the river. We all fired at him, and when the
smoke had vanished, I heard Jacques mutter,
“Pete’s not hereabouts, or that fellow wouldn’t<span class="pagenum" id="Page_274">274</span>
be there.” He was right, for, when we reached
the hut an hour later, we found a notice on the
door, saying that Pete and two friends had departed
for the Ominica just six days earlier, being
totally out of all food, and having only their guns
to rely upon. Now this fact of Pete’s absence
rendered necessary new arrangements, for here
the two courses I have already alluded to lay
open—either to turn south, along the Parsnip; or
north and west, along the Findlay and Ominica.</p>
<p>The current of the Parsnip is regular; that of
the Ominica is wild and rapid. But the Parsnip
was already rising, and at its spring level it is
almost an impossibility to ascend it, owing to its
great depth; while the Ominica, though difficult
and dangerous in its cañons, is nevertheless possible
of ascent, even in its worst stage of water.</p>
<p>I talked the matter over with Jacques, as we sat
camped on the gold-bar opposite Pete Toy’s house.
Fortunately we had ample supplies of meat; but
some luxuries, such as tea and sugar, were getting
dangerously low, and flour was almost exhausted.
I decided upon trying the Ominica.</p>
<p>About noon, on the 10th of May, we set out
for the Ominica, with high hopes of finding the
river still low enough to allow us to ascend it.</p>
<p>Ten miles above Toy’s hut the Ominica enters
the Peace River from the south-west. We<span class="pagenum" id="Page_275">275</span>
reached its mouth on the morning of the 11th,
and found it high and rapid. There was hard
work in store for us, and the difficulties of passing
the Great Cañon loomed ominously big. We
pushed on, however, and that night reached a
spot where the river issued from a large gap in a
high wall of dark rock. Above, on the summit
of this rock, pine-trees projected over the river.
We were at the door of the Ominica cañon. The
warm weather of last week had done its work,
and the water rushed from the gate of the cañon
in a wild and impetuous torrent. We looked a
moment at the grim gate which we had to storm
on the morrow, and then put in to the north
shore, where, under broad and lofty pines, we
made our beds for the night.</p>
<p>The Findlay River, as it is called, after the fur-trader,
who first ascended it, has many large
tributaries. It is something like a huge right
hand spread out over the country, of which the
middle finger would be the main river, and the
thumb the Ominica. There is the North Fork,
which closely hugs the main Rocky Mountain
range. There is the Findlay itself, a magnificent
river, flowing from a vast labyrinth of mountains,
and being unchanged in size or apparent volume,
120 miles above the Forks we had lately left. At
that distance it issues from a cañon similar to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_276">276</span>
that at whose mouth we are now camped; and
there is the second South Fork, a river something
smaller than the Ominica, from whose mouth it is
distant about a hundred miles.</p>
<p>Of these rivers nothing is known. These few
items are the result of chance information picked
up from the solitary miner who penetrated to
this cañon’s mouth, and from the reports which a
wandering band of Sickanies give of the vast
unknown interior of the region of the Stickeen.
And yet it is all British territory. It abounds with
game; its scenery is as wild as mountain peak and
gloomy cañon can make it; it is free from fever or
malaria. In it Nature has locked up some of her
richest treasures—treasures which are open to
any strong, stout heart who will venture to grasp
them.</p>
<p>I know not how it is, but sometimes it seems to
me that this England of ours is living on a bygone
reputation; the sinew is there without the
soul!</p>
<p>It is so easy to be a traveller in an easy chair—to
lay out a map and run one’s finger over it and
say, “This river is the true source of the Hunky-dorum,
and that lake finds its outlet in the
Rumtifoozle;” and it is equally easy, particularly
after our comfortable dinner at the club, to stroll
over to the meeting of the Society for the Preservation<span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">277</span>
of Sticklebacks in Tahitian Seas, and to
prove to the fashionable audience there assembled,
that a stickleback was the original progenitor of
the human race.</p>
<p>Our modern Briton can be a traveller without
any trouble. He is a member of “the Club,”
and on the strength of his membership he can
criticize “that fellow Burton,” or “that queer fish
Palgrave,” and prove to you how, if that “poor
devil” Hayward had tried the Chittral Pass instead
of the Palmirsteppe, “he would never have
come to grief, you know.”</p>
<p>I know one or two excellent idiots, who fancy
they are wits because they belong to the Garrick.
It is quite as easy to be a traveller by simply
belonging to a Travellers’ Club.</p>
<p>Now all this would be a very harmless pastime,
if something more serious did not lie behind it;
just as the mania to dress ourselves in uniform
and carry a rifle through the streets, would also
be a very harmless, if a very useless, pastime, if a
graver question did not again lie hidden beneath
“our noble Volunteers;” but the club traveller
and the club soldier are not content with the <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">rôle</i>
of lounging mediocrity for which nature destined
them. They must needs stand between the spirit of
England’s better genius, and England’s real toilers
of the wilds. They must supervise and criticize<span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">278</span>
and catechize, and generally play the part of Fuz-buz
to the detriment of everything which redounds
to the true spirit of England’s honour in the fair
field of travel and discovery.</p>
<p>Let there be no mistake in this matter. To those
veterans who still stand above the waves of time,
living monuments of England’s heroism, in Arctic
ice or Africa’s sun, we owe all honour and love
and veneration. They are the old soldiers of
an army, passed from the world, and when Time
sums up the record of their service here below,
it will be but to hand up the roll to the Tribunal
of the Future.</p>
<p>But it is of the younger race of whom we would
speak—that race who buy with gold the right to
determine what England shall do, and shall not
do, in the wide field of geographical research; who
are responsible for the wretched exploratory
failures of the past few years; who have allowed the
palm of discovery and enterprise to pass away to
other nations, or to alien sons. But if we were
to say all we think about this matter, we might
only tire the reader, and stop until doomsday at
the mouth of this Black Cañon of the Ominica.</p>
<hr />
<div id="toclink_279" class="chapter">
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">279</span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />