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<h2> CHAPTER XII. </h2>
<h3> 1612, 1613. </h3>
<p>THE IMPOSTOR VIGNAU.</p>
<p>The arrangements just indicated were a work of time. In the summer of
1612, Champlain was forced to forego his yearly voyage to New France; nor,
even in the following spring, were his labors finished and the rival
interests brought to harmony. Meanwhile, incidents occurred destined to
have no small influence on his movements. Three years before, after his
second fight with the Iroquois, a young man of his company had boldly
volunteered to join the Indians on their homeward journey, and winter
among them. Champlain gladly assented, and in the following summer the
adventurer returned. Another young man, one Nicolas de Vignan, next
offered himself; and he also, embarking in the Algonquin canoes, passed up
the Ottawa, and was seen no more for a twelvemonth. In 1612 he reappeared
in Paris, bringing a tale of wonders; for, says Champlain, "he was the
most impudent liar that has been seen for many a day." He averred that at
the sources of the Ottawa he had found a great lake; that he had crossed
it, and discovered a river flowing northward; that he had descended this
river, and reached the shores of the sea; that here he had seen the wreck
of an English ship, whose crew, escaping to land, had been killed by the
Indians; and that this sea was distant from Montreal only seventeen days
by canoe. The clearness, consistency, and apparent simplicity of his story
deceived Champlain, who had heard of a voyage of the English to the
northern seas, coupled with rumors of wreck and disaster, and was thus
confirmed in his belief of Vignau's honesty. The Marechal de Brissac, the
President Jeannin, and other persons of eminence about the court, greatly
interested by these dexterous fabrications, urged Champlain to follow up
without delay a discovery which promised results so important; while he,
with the Pacific, Japan, China, the Spice Islands, and India stretching in
flattering vista before his fancy, entered with eagerness on the chase of
this illusion. Early in the spring of 1613 the unwearied voyager crossed
the Atlantic, and sailed up the St. Lawrence. On Monday, the
twenty-seventh of May, he left the island of St. Helen, opposite Montreal,
with four Frenchmen, one of whom was Nicolas de Vignau, and one Indian, in
two small canoes. They passed the swift current at St. Ann's, crossed the
Lake of Two Mountains, and advanced up the Ottawa till the rapids of
Carillon and the Long Saut checked their course. So dense and tangled was
the forest, that they were forced to remain in the bed of the river,
trailing their canoes along the bank with cords, or pushing them by main
force up the current. Champlain's foot slipped; he fell in the rapids, two
boulders, against which he braced himself, saving him from being swept
down, while the cord of the canoe, twisted round his hand, nearly severed
it. At length they reached smoother water, and presently met fifteen
canoes of friendly Indians. Champlain gave them the most awkward of his
Frenchmen and took one of their number in return,—an exchange
greatly to his profit.</p>
<p>All day they plied their paddles, and when night came they made their
camp-fire in the forest. He who now, when two centuries and a half are
passed, would see the evening bivouac of Champlain, has but to encamp,
with Indian guides, on the upper waters of this same Ottawa, or on the
borders of some lonely river of New Brunswick or of Maine.</p>
<p>Day dawned. The east glowed with tranquil fire, that pierced with eyes of
flame the fir-trees whose jagged tops stood drawn in black against the
burning heaven. Beneath, the glossy river slept in shadow, or spread far
and wide in sheets of burnished bronze; and the white moon, paling in the
face of day, hung like a disk of silver in the western sky. Now a fervid
light touched the dead top of the hemlock, and creeping downward bathed
the mossy beard of the patriarchal cedar, unstirred in the breathless air;
now a fiercer spark beamed from the east; and now, half risen on the
sight, a dome of crimson fire, the sun blazed with floods of radiance
across the awakened wilderness.</p>
<p>The canoes were launched again, and the voyagers held their course. Soon
the still surface was flecked with spots of foam; islets of froth floated
by, tokens of some great convulsion. Then, on their left, the falling
curtain of the Rideau shone like silver betwixt its bordering woods, and
in front, white as a snowdrift, the cataracts of the Chaudiere barred
their way. They saw the unbridled river careering down its sheeted rocks,
foaming in unfathomed chasms, wearying the solitude with the hoarse outcry
of its agony and rage.</p>
<p>On the brink of the rocky basin where the plunging torrent boiled like a
caldron, and puffs of spray sprang out from its concussion like smoke from
the throat of a cannon, Champlain's two Indians took their stand, and,
with a loud invocation, threw tobacco into the foam,—an offering to
the local spirit, the Manitou of the cataract.</p>
<p>They shouldered their canoes over the rocks, and through the woods; then
launched them again, and, with toil and struggle, made their amphibious
way, pushing dragging, lifting, paddling, shoving with poles; till, when
the evening sun poured its level rays across the quiet Lake of the
Chaudiere, they landed, and made their camp on the verge of a woody
island.</p>
<p>Day by day brought a renewal of their toils. Hour by hour, they moved
prosperously up the long windings of the solitary stream; then, in quick
succession, rapid followed rapid, till the bed of the Ottawa seemed a
slope of foam. Now, like a wall bristling at the top with woody islets,
the Falls of the Chats faced them with the sheer plunge of their sixteen
cataracts; now they glided beneath overhanging cliffs, where, seeing but
unseen, the crouched wildcat eyed them from the thicket; now through the
maze of water-girded rocks, which the white cedar and the spruce clasped
with serpent-like roots, or among islands where old hemlocks darkened the
water with deep green shadow. Here, too, the rock-maple reared its verdant
masses, the beech its glistening leaves and clean, smooth stem, and
behind, stiff and sombre, rose the balsam-fir. Here in the tortuous
channels the muskrat swam and plunged, and the splashing wild duck dived
beneath the alders or among the red and matted roots of thirsty water
willows. Aloft, the white-pine towered above a sea of verdure; old
fir-trees, hoary and grim, shaggy with pendent mosses, leaned above the
stream, and beneath, dead and submerged, some fallen oak thrust from the
current its bare, bleached limbs, like the skeleton of a drowned giant. In
the weedy cove stood the moose, neck-deep in water to escape the flies,
wading shoreward, with glistening sides, as the canoes drew near, shaking
his broad antlers and writhing his hideous nostril, as with clumsy trot he
vanished in the woods.</p>
<p>In these ancient wilds, to whose ever verdant antiquity the pyramids are
young and Nineveh a mushroom of yesterday; where the sage wanderer of the
Odyssey, could he have urged his pilgrimage so far, would have surveyed
the same grand and stern monotony, the same dark sweep of melancholy
woods;—here, while New England was a solitude, and the settlers of
Virginia scarcely dared venture inland beyond the sound of a cannon-shot,
Champlain was planting on shores and islands the emblems of his faith. Of
the pioneers of the North American forests, his name stands foremost on
the list. It was he who struck the deepest and boldest strokes into the
heart of their pristine barbarism. At Chantilly, at Fontainebleau, Paris,
in the cabinets of princes and of royalty itself, mingling with the proud
vanities of the court; then lost from sight in the depths of Canada, the
companion of savages, sharer of their toils, privations, and battles, more
hardy, patient, and bold than they;—such, for successive years, were
the alternations of this man's life.</p>
<p>To follow on his trail once more. His Indians said that the rapids of the
river above were impassable. Nicolas de Vignan affirmed the contrary; but,
from the first, Vignau had been found always in the wrong. His aim seems
to have been to involve his leader in difficulties, and disgust him with a
journey which must soon result in exposing the imposture which had
occasioned it. Champlain took counsel of the Indians. The party left the
river, and entered the forest.</p>
<p>"We had a hard march," says Champlain. "I carried for my share of the
luggage three arquebuses, three paddles, my overcoat, and a few
bagatelles. My men carried a little more than I did, and suffered more
from the mosquitoes than from their loads. After we had passed four small
ponds and advanced two leagues and a half, we were so tired that we could
go no farther, having eaten nothing but a little roasted fish for nearly
twenty-four hours. So we stopped in a pleasant place enough by the edge of
a pond, and lighted a fire to drive off the mosquitoes, which plagued us
beyond all description; and at the same time we set our nets to catch a
few fish."</p>
<p>On the next day they fared still worse, for their way was through a pine
forest where a tornado had passed, tearing up the trees and piling them
one upon another in a vast "windfall," where boughs, roots, and trunks
were mixed in confusion. Sometimes they climbed over and sometimes crawled
through these formidable barricades, till, after an exhausting march, they
reached the banks of Muskrat Lake, by the edge of which was an Indian
settlement.</p>
<p>This neighborhood was the seat of the principal Indian population of the
river, and, as the canoes advanced, unwonted signs of human life could be
seen on the borders of the lake. Here was a rough clearing. The trees had
been burned; there was a rude and desolate gap in the sombre green of the
pine forest. Dead trunks, blasted and black with fire, stood grimly
upright amid the charred stumps and prostrate bodies of comrades half
consumed. In the intervening spaces, the soil had been feebly scratched
with hoes of wood or bone, and a crop of maize was growing, now some four
inches high. The dwellings of these slovenly farmers, framed of poles
covered with sheets of bark, were scattered here and there, singly or in
groups, while their tenants were running to the shore in amazement. The
chief, Nibachis, offered the calumet, then harangued the crowd: "These
white men must have fallen from the clouds. How else could they have
reached us through the woods and rapids which even we find it hard to
pass? The French chief can do anything. All that we have heard of him must
he true." And they hastened to regale the hungry visitors with a repast of
fish.</p>
<p>Champlain asked for guidance to the settlements above. It was readily
granted. Escorted by his friendly hosts, he advanced beyond the foot of
Muskrat Lake, and, landing, saw the unaccustomed sight of pathways through
the forest. They led to the clearings and cabins of a chief named
Tessonat, who, amazed at the apparition of the white strangers, exclaimed
that he must be in a dream. Next, the voyagers crossed to the neighboring
island, then deeply wooded with pine, elm, and oak. Here were more
desolate clearings, more rude cornfields and bark-built cabins. Here, too,
was a cemetery, which excited the wonder of Champlain, for the dead were
better cared for than the living. Each grave was covered with a double row
of pieces of wood, inclined like a roof till they crossed at the ridge, a
long which was laid a thick tablet of wood, meant apparently either to
bind the whole together or protect it from rain. At one end stood an
upright tablet, or flattened post, rudely carved with an intended
representation of the features of the deceased. If a chief, the head was
adorned with a plume. If a warrior, there were figures near it of a
shield, a lance, a war-club, and a bow and arrows; if a boy, of a small
bow and one arrow; and if a woman or a girl, of a kettle, an earthen pot,
a wooden spoon, and a paddle. The whole was decorated with red and yellow
paint; and beneath slept the departed, wrapped in a robe of skins, his
earthly treasures about him, ready for use in the land of souls.</p>
<p>Tessouat was to give a tabagie, or solemn feast, in honor of Champlain,
and the chiefs and elders of the island were invited. Runners were sent to
summon the guests from neighboring hamlets; and, on the morrow, Tessonat's
squaws swept his cabin for the festivity. Then Champlain and his Frenchmen
were seated on skins in the place of honor, and the naked guests appeared
in quick succession, each with his wooden dish and spoon, and each
ejaculating his guttural salute as he stooped at the low door. The
spacious cabin was full. The congregated wisdom and prowess of the nation
sat expectant on the bare earth. Each long, bare arm thrust forth its dish
in turn as the host served out the banquet, in which, as courtesy
enjoined, he himself was to have no share. First, a mess of pounded maize,
in which were boiled, without salt, morsels of fish and dark scraps of
meat; then, fish and flesh broiled on the embers, with a kettle of cold
water from the river. Champlain, in wise distrust of Ottawa cookery,
confined himself to the simpler and less doubtful viands. A few minutes,
and all alike had vanished. The kettles were empty. Then pipes were filled
and touched with fire brought in by the squaws, while the young men who
had stood thronged about the entrance now modestly withdrew, and the door
was closed for counsel.</p>
<p>First, the pipes were passed to Champlain. Then, for full half an hour,
the assembly smoked in silence. At length, when the fitting time was come,
he addressed them in a speech in which he declared, that, moved by
affection for them, he visited their country to see its richness and its
beauty, and to aid them in their wars; and he now begged them to furnish
him with four canoes and eight men, to convey him to the country of the
Nipissings, a tribe dwelling northward on the lake which bears their name.</p>
<p>His audience looked grave, for they were but cold and jealous friends of
the Nipissings. For a time they discoursed in murmuring tones among
themselves, all smoking meanwhile with redoubled vigor. Then Tessouat,
chief of these forest republicans, rose and spoke in behalf of all:—"We
always knew you for our best friend among the Frenchmen. We love you like
our own children. But why did you break your word with us last year when
we all went down to meet you at Montreal, to give you presents and go with
you to war? You were not there, but other Frenchmen were there who abused
us. We will never go again. As for the four canoes, you shall have them if
you insist upon it; but it grieves us to think of the hardships you must
endure. The Nipissings have weak hearts. They are good for nothing in war,
but they kill us with charms, and they poison us. Therefore we are on bad
terms with them. They will kill you, too."</p>
<p>Such was the pith of Tessouat's discourse, and at each clause the conclave
responded in unison with an approving grunt.</p>
<p>Champlain urged his petition; sought to relieve their tender scruples in
his behalf; assured them that he was charm-proof, and that he feared no
hardships. At length he gained his point. The canoes and the men were
promised, and, seeing himself as he thought on the highway to his phantom
Northern Sea, he left his entertainers to their pipes, and with a light
heart issued from the close and smoky den to breathe the fresh air of the
afternoon. He visited the Indian fields, with their young crops of
pumpkins, beans, and French peas,—the last a novelty obtained from
the traders. Here, Thomas, the interpreter, soon joined him with a
countenance of ill news. In the absence of Champlain, the assembly had
reconsidered their assent. The canoes were denied.</p>
<p>With a troubled mind he hastened again to the hall of council, and
addressed the naked senate in terms better suited to his exigencies than
to their dignity:</p>
<p>"I thought you were men; I thought you would hold fast to your word: but I
find you children, without truth. You call yourselves my friends, yet you
break faith with me. Still I would not incommode you; and if you cannot
give me four canoes, two will Serve."</p>
<p>The burden of the reply was, rapids, rocks, cataracts, and the wickedness
of the Nipissings. "We will not give you the canoes, because we are afraid
of losing you," they said.</p>
<p>"This young man," rejoined Champlain, pointing to Vignau, who sat by his
side, "has been to their country, and did not find the road or the people
so bad as you have said."</p>
<p>"Nicolas," demanded Tessouat, "did you say that you had been to the
Nipissings?"</p>
<p>The impostor sat mute for a time, and then replied, "Yes, I have been
there."</p>
<p>Hereupon an outcry broke from the assembly, and they turned their eyes on
him askance, "as if," says Champlain, "they would have torn and eaten
him."</p>
<p>"You are a liar," returned the unceremonious host; "you know very well
that you slept here among my children every night, and got up again every
morning; and if you ever went to the Nipissings, it must have been when
you were asleep. How can you be so impudent as to lie to your chief, and
so wicked as to risk his life among so many dangers? He ought to kill you
with tortures worse than those with which we kill our enemies."</p>
<p>Champlain urged him to reply, but he sat motionless and dumb. Then he led
him from the cabin, and conjured him to declare if in truth he had seen
this sea of the north. Vignan, with oaths, affirmed that all he had said
was true. Returning to the council, Champlain repeated the impostor's
story—how he had seen the sea, the wreck of an English ship, the
heads of eighty Englishmen, and an English boy, prisoner among the
Indians.</p>
<p>At this, an outcry rose louder than before, and the Indians turned in ire
upon Vignan.</p>
<p>"You are a liar." "Which way did you go?" "By what rivers?" "By what
lakes?" "Who went with you?"</p>
<p>Vignan had made a map of his travels, which Champlain now produced,
desiring him to explain it to his questioners; but his assurance failed
him, and he could not utter a word.</p>
<p>Champlain was greatly agitated. His heart was in the enterprise, his
reputation was in a measure at stake; and now, when he thought his triumph
so near, he shrank from believing himself the sport of an impudent
impostor. The council broke up,—the Indians displeased and moody,
and he, on his part, full of anxieties and doubts.</p>
<p>"I called Vignau to me in presence of his companions," he says. "I told
him that the time for deceiving me was ended; that he must tell me whether
or not he had really seen the things he had told of; that I had forgotten
the past, but that, if he continued to mislead me, I would have him hanged
without mercy."</p>
<p>Vignau pondered for a moment; then fell on his knees, owned his treachery,
and begged forgiveness. Champlain broke into a rage, and, unable, as he
says, to endure the sight of him, ordered him from his presence, and sent
the interpreter after him to make further examination. Vanity, the love of
notoriety, and the hope of reward, seem to have been his inducements; for
he had in fact spent a quiet winter in Tessonat's cabin, his nearest
approach to the northern sea; and he had flattered himself that he might
escape the necessity of guiding his commander to this pretended discovery.
The Indians were somewhat exultant.</p>
<p>"Why did you not listen to chiefs and warriors, instead of believing the
lies of this fellow?" And they counselled Champlain to have him killed at
once, adding, "Give him to us, and we promise you that he shall never lie
again."</p>
<p>No motive remaining for farther advance, the party set out on their
return, attended by a fleet of forty canoes bound to Montreal for trade.
They passed the perilous rapids of the Calumet, and were one night
encamped on an island, when an Indian, slumbering in an uneasy posture,
was visited with a nightmare. He leaped up with a yell, screamed, that
somebody was killing him, and ran for refuge into the river. Instantly all
his companions sprang to their feet, and, hearing in fancy the Iroquois
war-whoop, took to the water, splashing, diving, and wading up to their
necks, in the blindness of their fright. Champlain and his Frenchmen,
roused at the noise, snatched their weapons and looked in vain for an
enemy. The panic-stricken warriors, reassured at length, waded crestfallen
ashore, and the whole ended in a laugh.</p>
<p>At the Chaudiere, a contribution of tobacco was collected on a wooden
platter, and, after a solemn harangue, was thrown to the guardian Manitou.
On the seventeenth of June they approached Montreal, where the assembled
traders greeted them with discharges of small arms and cannon. Here, among
the rest, was Champlain's lieutenant, Du Parc, with his men, who had
amused their leisure with hunting, and were revelling in a sylvan
abundance, while their baffled chief, with worry of mind, fatigue of body,
and a Lenten diet of half-cooked fish, was grievously fallen away in flesh
and strength. He kept his word with DeVignau, left the scoundrel
unpunished, bade farewell to the Indians, and, promising to rejoin then
the next year, embarked in one of the trading-ships for France.</p>
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