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<h2> CHAPTER XIV — A JOURNEY TO THE WOODS </h2>
<p>'Tis well for us poor denizens of earth<br/>
That God conceals the future from our gaze;<br/>
Or Hope, the blessed watcher on Life's tower,<br/>
Would fold her wings, and on the dreary waste<br/>
Close the bright eye that through the murky clouds<br/>
Of blank Despair still sees the glorious sun.<br/></p>
<p>It was a bright frosty morning when I bade adieu to the farm, the
birthplace of my little Agnes, who, nestled beneath my cloak, was sweetly
sleeping on my knee, unconscious of the long journey before us into the
wilderness. The sun had not as yet risen. Anxious to get to our place of
destination before dark, we started as early as we could. Our own fine
team had been sold the day before for forty pounds; and one of our
neighbours, a Mr. D——, was to convey us and our household
goods to Douro for the sum of twenty dollars. During the week he had made
several journeys, with furniture and stores; and all that now remained was
to be conveyed to the woods in two large lumber sleighs, one driven by
himself, the other by a younger brother.</p>
<p>It was not without regret that I left Melsetter, for so my husband had
called the place, after his father's estate in Orkney. It was a beautiful,
picturesque spot; and, in spite of the evil neighbourhood, I had learned
to love it; indeed, it was much against my wish that it was sold. I had a
great dislike to removing, which involves a necessary loss, and is apt to
give to the emigrant roving and unsettled habits. But all regrets were now
useless; and happily unconscious of the life of toil and anxiety that
awaited us in those dreadful woods, I tried my best to be cheerful, and to
regard the future with a hopeful eye.</p>
<p>Our driver was a shrewd, clever man, for his opportunities. He took charge
of the living cargo, which consisted of my husband, our maid-servant, the
two little children, and myself—besides a large hamper, full of
poultry, a dog, and a cat. The lordly sultan of the imprisoned seraglio
thought fit to conduct himself in a very eccentric manner, for at every
barn-yard we happened to pass, he clapped his wings, and crowed so long
and loud that it afforded great amusement to the whole party, and
doubtless was very edifying to the poor hens, who lay huddled together as
mute as mice.</p>
<p>“That 'ere rooster thinks he's on the top of the heap,” said our driver,
laughing. “I guess he's not used to travelling in a close conveyance.
Listen! How all the crowers in the neighbourhood give him back a note of
defiance! But he knows that he's safe enough at the bottom of the basket.”</p>
<p>The day was so bright for the time of year (the first week in February),
that we suffered no inconvenience from the cold. Little Katie was
enchanted with the jingling of the sleigh-bells, and, nestled among the
packages, kept singing or talking to the horses in her baby lingo.
Trifling as these little incidents were, before we had proceeded ten miles
on our long journey, they revived my drooping spirits, and I began to feel
a lively interest in the scenes through which we were passing.</p>
<p>The first twenty miles of the way was over a hilly and well-cleared
country; and as in winter the deep snow fills up the inequalities, and
makes all roads alike, we glided as swiftly and steadily along as if they
had been the best highways in the world. Anon, the clearings began to
diminish, and tall woods arose on either side of the path; their solemn
aspect, and the deep silence that brooded over their vast solitudes,
inspiring the mind with a strange awe. Not a breath of wind stirred the
leafless branches, whose huge shadows reflected upon the dazzling white
covering of snow, lay so perfectly still, that it seemed as if Nature had
suspended her operations, that life and motion had ceased, and that she
was sleeping in her winding-sheet, upon the bier of death.</p>
<p>“I guess you will find the woods pretty lonesome,” said our driver, whose
thoughts had been evidently employed on the same subject as our own. “We
were once in the woods, but emigration has stepped ahead of us, and made
our'n a cleared part of the country. When I was a boy, all this country,
for thirty miles on every side of us, was bush land. As to Peterborough,
the place was unknown; not a settler had ever passed through the great
swamp, and some of them believed that it was the end of the world.”</p>
<p>“What swamp is that?” asked I.</p>
<p>“Oh, the great Cavan swamp. We are just two miles from it; and I tell you
that the horses will need a good rest, and ourselves a good dinner, by the
time we are through it. Ah, Mrs. Moodie, if ever you travel that way in
summer, you will know something about corduroy roads. I was 'most jolted
to death last fall; I thought it would have been no bad notion to have
insured my teeth before I left C——. I really expected that
they would have been shook out of my head before we had done manoeuvring
over the big logs.”</p>
<p>“How will my crockery stand it in the next sleigh?” quoth I. “If the road
is such as you describe, I am afraid that I shall not bring a whole plate
to Douro.”</p>
<p>“Oh, the snow is a great leveller—it makes all rough places smooth.
But with regard to this swamp, I have something to tell you. About ten
years ago, no one had ever seen the other side of it; and if pigs or
cattle strayed away into it, they fell a prey to the wolves and bears, and
were seldom recovered.</p>
<p>“An old Scotch emigrant, who had located himself on this side of it, so
often lost his beasts that he determined during the summer season to try
and explore the place, and see if there were any end to it. So he takes an
axe on his shoulder, and a bag of provisions for a week, not forgetting a
flask of whiskey, and off he starts all alone, and tells his wife that if
he never returned, she and little Jock must try and carry on the farm
without him; but he was determined to see the end of the swamp, even if it
led to the other world. He fell upon a fresh cattle-track, which he
followed all that day; and towards night he found himself in the heart of
a tangled wilderness of bushes, and himself half eaten up with mosquitoes
and black-flies. He was more than tempted to give in, and return home by
the first glimpse of light.</p>
<p>“The Scotch are a tough people; they are not easily daunted—a few
difficulties only seem to make them more eager to get on; and he felt
ashamed the next moment, as he told me, of giving up. So he finds out a
large thick cedar-tree for his bed, climbs up, and coiling himself among
the branches like a bear, he was soon fast asleep.</p>
<p>“The next morning, by daylight, he continued his journey, not forgetting
to blaze with his axe the trees to the right and left as he went along.
The ground was so spongy and wet that at every step he plunged up to his
knees in water, but he seemed no nearer the end of the swamp than he had
been the day before. He saw several deer, a raccoon, and a ground-hog,
during his walk, but was unmolested by bears or wolves. Having passed
through several creeks, and killed a great many snakes, he felt so weary
towards the close of the second day that he determined to go home the next
morning. But just as he began to think his search was fruitless he
observed that the cedars and tamaracks which had obstructed his path
became less numerous, and were succeeded by bass and soft maple. The
ground, also, became less moist, and he was soon ascending a rising slope,
covered with oak and beech, which shaded land of the very best quality.
The old man was now fully convinced that he had cleared the great swamp;
and that, instead of leading to the other world, it had conducted him to a
country that would yield the very best returns for cultivation. His
favourable report led to the formation of the road that we are about to
cross, and to the settlement of Peterborough, which is one of the most
promising new settlements in this district, and is surrounded by a
splendid back country.”</p>
<p>We were descending a very steep hill, and encountered an ox-sleigh, which
was crawling slowly up it in a contrary direction. Three people were
seated at the bottom of the vehicle upon straw, which made a cheap
substitute for buffalo-robes. Perched, as we were, upon the crown of the
height, we looked completely down into the sleigh, and during the whole
course of my life I never saw three uglier mortals collected into such a
narrow space. The man was blear-eyed, with a hare-lip, through which
protruded two dreadful yellow teeth that resembled the tusks of a boar.
The woman was long-faced, high cheek-boned, red-haired, and freckled all
over like a toad. The boy resembled his hideous mother, but with the
addition of a villanous obliquity of vision which rendered him the most
disgusting object in this singular trio.</p>
<p>As we passed them, our driver gave a knowing nod to my husband, directing,
at the same time, the most quizzical glance towards the strangers, as he
exclaimed, “We are in luck, sir! I think that 'ere sleigh may be called
Beauty's egg-basket!”</p>
<p>We made ourselves very merry at the poor people's expense, and Mr. D——,
with his odd stories and Yankeefied expressions, amused the tedium of our
progress through the great swamp, which in summer presents for several
miles one uniform bridge of rough and unequal logs, all laid loosely
across huge sleepers, so that they jump up and down, when pressed by the
wheels, like the keys of a piano. The rough motion and jolting occasioned
by this collision is so distressing that it never fails to entail upon the
traveller sore bones and an aching head for the rest of the day. The path
is so narrow over these logs that two waggons cannot pass without great
difficulty, which is rendered more dangerous by the deep natural ditches
on either side of the bridge, formed by broad creeks that flow out of the
swamp, and often terminate in mud-holes of very ominous dimensions. The
snow, however, hid from us all the ugly features of the road, and Mr. D——
steered us through in perfect safety, and landed us at the door of a
little log house which crowned the steep hill on the other side of the
swamp, and which he dignified with the name of a tavern.</p>
<p>It was now two o'clock. We had been on the road since seven; and men,
women, and children were all ready for the good dinner that Mr. D——
had promised us at this splendid house of entertainment, where we were
destined to stay for two hours, to refresh ourselves and rest the horses.</p>
<p>“Well, Mrs. J——, what have you got for our dinner?” said our
driver, after he had seen to the accommodation of his teams.</p>
<p>“Pritters(1) and pork, sir. Nothing else to be had in the woods. Thank
God, we have enough of that!”</p>
<p>(1) Vulgar Canadian for potatoes.</p>
<p>D—— shrugged up his shoulders, and looked at us. “We've plenty
of that same at home. But hunger's good sauce. Come, be spry, widow, and
see about it, for I am very hungry.”</p>
<p>I inquired for a private room for myself and the children, but there were
no private rooms in the house. The apartment we occupied was like the
cobbler's stall in the old song, and I was obliged to attend upon them in
public.</p>
<p>“You have much to learn, ma'am, if you are going to the woods,” said Mrs.
J——.</p>
<p>“To unlearn, you mean,” said Mr. D——. “To tell you the truth,
Mrs. Moodie, ladies and gentlemen have no business in the woods.
Eddication spoils man or woman for that location. So, widow (turning to
our hostess), you are not tired of living alone yet?”</p>
<p>“No, sir; I have no wish for a second husband. I had enough of the first.
I like to have my own way—to lie down mistress, and get up master.”</p>
<p>“You don't like to be put out of your old way,” returned he, with a
mischievous glance.</p>
<p>She coloured very red; but it might be the heat of the fire over which she
was frying the pork for our dinner.</p>
<p>I was very hungry, but I felt no appetite for the dish she was preparing
for us. It proved salt, hard, and unsavoury.</p>
<p>D—— pronounced it very bad, and the whiskey still worse, with
which he washed it down.</p>
<p>I asked for a cup of tea and a slice of bread. But they were out of tea,
and the hop-rising had failed, and there was no bread in the house. For
this disgusting meal we paid at the rate of a quarter of a dollar a-head.</p>
<p>I was glad when the horses being again put to, we escaped from the rank
odour of the fried pork, and were once more in the fresh air.</p>
<p>“Well, mister; did not you grudge your money for that bad meat?” said D——,
when we were once more seated in the sleigh. “But in these parts, the
worse the fare the higher the charge.”</p>
<p>“I would not have cared,” said I, “if I could have got a cup of tea.”</p>
<p>“Tea! it's poor trash. I never could drink tea in my life. But I like
coffee, when 'tis boiled till it's quite black. But coffee is not good
without plenty of trimmings.”</p>
<p>“What do you mean by trimmings?”</p>
<p>He laughed. “Good sugar, and sweet cream. Coffee is not worth drinking
without trimmings.”</p>
<p>Often in after years have I recalled the coffee trimmings, when
endeavouring to drink the vile stuff which goes by the name of coffee in
the houses of entertainment in the country.</p>
<p>We had now passed through the narrow strip of clearing which surrounded
the tavern, and again entered upon the woods. It was near sunset, and we
were rapidly descending a steep hill, when one of the traces that held our
sleigh suddenly broke. D—— pulled up in order to repair the
damage. His brother's team was close behind, and our unexpected
stand-still brought the horses upon us before J. D—— could
stop them. I received so violent a blow from the head of one of them, just
in the back of the neck, that for a few minutes I was stunned and
insensible. When I recovered, I was supported in the arms of my husband,
over whose knees I was leaning, and D—— was rubbing my hands
and temples with snow.</p>
<p>“There, Mr. Moodie, she's coming to. I thought she was killed. I have seen
a man before now killed by a blow from a horse's head in the like manner.”
As soon as we could, we resumed our places in the sleigh; but all
enjoyment of our journey, had it been otherwise possible, was gone.</p>
<p>When we reached Peterborough, Moodie wished us to remain at the inn all
night, as we had still eleven miles of our journey to perform, and that
through a blazed forest-road, little travelled, and very much impeded by
fallen trees and other obstacles; but D—— was anxious to get
back as soon as possible to his own home, and he urged us very
pathetically to proceed.</p>
<p>The moon arose during our stay at the inn, and gleamed upon the straggling
frame-houses which then formed the now populous and thriving town of
Peterborough. We crossed the wild, rushing, beautiful Otonabee river by a
rude bridge, and soon found ourselves journeying over the plains or level
heights beyond the village, which were thinly wooded with picturesque
groups of oak and pine, and very much resembled a gentleman's park at
home.</p>
<p>Far below, to our right (for we were upon the Smith-town side) we heard
the rushing of the river, whose rapid waters never receive curb from the
iron chain of winter. Even while the rocky banks are coated with ice, and
the frost-king suspends from every twig and branch the most beautiful and
fantastic crystals, the black waters rush foaming along, a thick steam
rising constantly above the rapids, as from a boiling pot. The shores
vibrate and tremble beneath the force of the impetuous flood, as it whirls
round cedar-crowned islands and opposing rocks, and hurries on to pour its
tribute into the Rice Lake, to swell the calm, majestic grandeur of the
Trent, till its waters are lost in the beautiful bay of Quinte, and
finally merged in the blue ocean of Ontario.</p>
<p>The most renowned of our English rivers dwindle into little muddy rills
when compared with the sublimity of the Canadian waters. No language can
adequately express the solemn grandeur of her lake and river scenery; the
glorious islands that float, like visions from fairy land, upon the bosom
of these azure mirrors of her cloudless skies. No dreary breadth of
marshes, covered with flags, hide from our gaze the expanse of
heaven-tinted waters; no foul mud-banks spread their unwholesome
exhalations around. The rocky shores are crowned with the cedar, the
birch, the alder, and soft maple, that dip their long tresses in the pure
stream; from every crevice in the limestone the hare-bell and Canadian
rose wave their graceful blossoms.</p>
<p>The fiercest droughts of summer may diminish the volume and power of these
romantic streams, but it never leaves their rocky channels bare, nor
checks the mournful music of their dancing waves.</p>
<p>Through the openings in the forest, we now and then caught the silver
gleam of the river tumbling on in moonlight splendour, while the hoarse
chiding of the wind in the lofty pines above us gave a fitting response to
the melancholy cadence of the waters.</p>
<p>The children had fallen asleep. A deep silence pervaded the party. Night
was above us with her mysterious stars. The ancient forest stretched
around us on every side, and a foreboding sadness sunk upon my heart.
Memory was busy with the events of many years. I retraced step by step the
pilgrimage of my past life, until arriving at that passage in its sombre
history, I gazed through tears upon the singularly savage scene around me,
and secretly marvelled, “What brought me here?”</p>
<p>“Providence,” was the answer which the soul gave. “Not for your own
welfare, perhaps, but for the welfare of your children, the unerring hand
of the Great Father has led you here. You form a connecting link in the
destinies of many. It is impossible for any human creature to live for
himself alone. It may be your lot to suffer, but others will reap a
benefit from your trials. Look up with confidence to Heaven, and the sun
of hope will yet shed a cheering beam through the forbidding depths of
this tangled wilderness.”</p>
<p>The road now became so bad that Mr. D—— was obliged to
dismount, and lead his horses through the more intricate passages. The
animals themselves, weary with their long journey and heavy load,
proceeded at foot-fall. The moon, too, had deserted us, and the only light
we had to guide us through the dim arches of the forest was from the snow
and the stars, which now peered down upon us, through the leafless
branches of the trees, with uncommon brilliancy.</p>
<p>“It will be past midnight before we reach your brother's clearing” (where
we expected to spend the night), said D——. “I wish, Mr.
Moodie, we had followed your advice, and staid at Peterborough. How fares
it with you, Mrs. Moodie, and the young ones? It is growing very cold.”</p>
<p>We were now in the heart of a dark cedar-swamp, and my mind was haunted
with visions of wolves and bears; but beyond the long, wild howl of a
solitary wolf, no other sound awoke the sepulchral silence of that
dismal-looking wood.</p>
<p>“What a gloomy spot!” said I to my husband. “In the old country,
superstition would people it with ghosts.”</p>
<p>“Ghosts! There are no ghosts in Canada!” said Mr. D——. “The
country is too new for ghosts. No Canadian is afear'd of ghosts. It is
only in old countries, like your'n, that are full of sin and wickedness,
that people believe in such nonsense. No human habitation has ever been
erected in this wood through which you are passing. Until a very few years
ago, few white persons had ever passed through it; and the Red Man would
not pitch his tent in such a place as this. Now, ghosts, as I understand
the word, are the spirits of bad men that are not allowed by Providence to
rest in their graves but, for a punishment, are made to haunt the spots
where their worst deeds were committed. I don't believe in all this; but,
supposing it to be true, bad men must have died here before their spirits
could haunt the place. Now, it is more than probable that no person ever
ended his days in this forest, so that it would be folly to think of
seeing his ghost.”</p>
<p>This theory of Mr. D——'s had the merit of originality, and it
is not improbable that the utter disbelief in supernatural appearances
which is common to most native-born Canadians, is the result of the same
very reasonable mode of arguing. The unpeopled wastes of Canada must
present the same aspect to the new settler that the world did to our first
parents after their expulsion from the Garden of Eden; all the sin which
could defile the spot, or haunt it with the association of departed evil,
is concentrated in their own persons. Bad spirits cannot be supposed to
linger near a place where crime has never been committed. The belief in
ghosts, so prevalent in old countries, must first have had its foundation
in the consciousness of guilt.</p>
<p>After clearing this low, swampy portion of the wood, with much difficulty,
and the frequent application of the axe, to cut away the fallen timber
that impeded our progress, our ears were assailed by a low, roaring,
rushing sound, as of the falling of waters.</p>
<p>“That is Herriot's Falls,” said our guide. “We are within two miles of our
destination.”</p>
<p>Oh, welcome sound! But those two miles appeared more lengthy than the
whole journey. Thick clouds, that threatened a snow-storm, had blotted out
the stars, and we continued to grope our way through a narrow, rocky path,
upon the edge of the river, in almost total darkness. I now felt the
chillness of the midnight hour, and the fatigue of the long journey, with
double force, and envied the servant and children, who had been sleeping
ever since we left Peterborough. We now descended the steep bank, and
prepared to cross the rapids.</p>
<p>Dark as it was, I looked with a feeling of dread upon the foaming waters
as they tumbled over their bed of rocks, their white crests flashing,
life-like, amid the darkness of the night.</p>
<p>“This is an ugly bridge over such a dangerous place,” said D——,
as he stood up in the sleigh and urged his tired team across the
miserable, insecure log bridge, where darkness and death raged below, and
one false step of his jaded horses would have plunged us into both. I must
confess I drew a freer breath when the bridge was crossed, and D——
congratulated us on our safe arrival in Douro.</p>
<p>We now continued our journey along the left bank of the river, but when in
sight of Mr. S——'s clearing, a large pine-tree, which had
newly fallen across the narrow path, brought the teams to a standstill.</p>
<p>The mighty trunk which had lately formed one of the stately pillars in the
sylvan temple of Nature, was of too large dimensions to chop in two with
axes; and after about half an hour's labour, which to me, poor, cold,
weary wight! seemed an age, the males of the party abandoned the task in
despair. To go round it was impossible; its roots were concealed in an
impenetrable wall of cedar-jungle on the right-hand side of the road, and
its huge branches hung over the precipitous bank of the river.</p>
<p>“We must try and make the horses jump over it,” said D——. “We
may get an upset, but there is no help for it; we must either make the
experiment, or stay here all night, and I am too cold and hungry for that—so
here goes.” He urged his horses to leap the log; restraining their ardour
for a moment as the sleigh rested on the top of the formidable barrier,
but so nicely balanced, that the difference of a straw would almost have
overturned the heavily-laden vehicle and its helpless inmates. We,
however, cleared it in safety. He now stopped, and gave directions to his
brother to follow the same plan that he had adopted; but whether the young
man had less coolness, or the horses in his team were more difficult to
manage, I cannot tell: the sleigh, as it hung poised upon the top of the
log, was overturned with a loud crash, and all my household goods and
chattels were scattered over the road.</p>
<p>Alas, for my crockery and stone china! scarcely one article remained
unbroken.</p>
<p>“Never fret about the china,” said Moodie; “thank God the man and the
horses are uninjured.”</p>
<p>I should have felt more thankful had the crocks been spared too; for, like
most of my sex, I had a tender regard for china, and I knew that no fresh
supply could be obtained in this part of the world. Leaving his brother to
collect the scattered fragments, D—— proceeded on his journey.
We left the road, and were winding our way over a steep hill, covered with
heaps of brush and fallen timber, and as we reached the top, a light
gleamed cheerily from the windows of a log house, and the next moment we
were at my brother-in-law's door.</p>
<p>I thought my journey was at an end; but here I was doomed to fresh
disappointment. His wife was absent on a visit to her friends, and it had
been arranged that we were to stay with my sister, Mrs. T——,
and her husband. With all this I was unacquainted; and I was about to quit
the sleigh and seek the warmth of the fire when I was told that I had yet
further to go. Its cheerful glow was to shed no warmth on me, and, tired
as I was, I actually buried my face and wept upon the neck of a hound
which Moodie had given to Mr. S——, and which sprang up upon
the sleigh to lick my face and hands. This was my first halt in that weary
wilderness, where I endured so many bitter years of toil and sorrow. My
brother-in-law and his family had retired to rest, but they instantly rose
to receive the way-worn travellers; and I never enjoyed more heartily a
warm welcome after a long day of intense fatigue, than I did that night of
my first sojourn in the backwoods.</p>
<h3> THE OTONABEE </h3>
<p>Dark, rushing, foaming river!<br/>
I love the solemn sound<br/>
That shakes thy shores around,<br/>
And hoarsely murmurs, ever,<br/>
As thy waters onward bound,<br/>
Like a rash, unbridled steed<br/>
Flying madly on its course;<br/>
That shakes with thundering force<br/>
The vale and trembling mead.<br/>
So thy billows downward sweep,<br/>
Nor rock nor tree can stay<br/>
Their fierce, impetuous way;<br/>
Now in eddies whirling deep,<br/>
Now in rapids white with spray.<br/>
<br/>
I love thee, lonely river!<br/>
Thy hollow restless roar,<br/>
Thy cedar-girded shore;<br/>
The rocky isles that sever,<br/>
The waves that round them pour.<br/>
Katchawanook(1) basks in light,<br/>
But thy currents woo the shade<br/>
By the lofty pine-trees made,<br/>
That cast a gloom like night,<br/>
Ere day's last glories fade.<br/>
Thy solitary voice<br/>
The same bold anthem sung<br/>
When Nature's frame was young.<br/>
No longer shall rejoice<br/>
The woods where erst it rung!<br/>
<br/>
Lament, lament, wild river!<br/>
A hand is on thy mane(2)<br/>
That will bind thee in a chain<br/>
No force of thine can sever.<br/>
Thy furious headlong tide,<br/>
In murmurs soft and low,<br/>
Is destined yet to glide<br/>
To meet the lake below;<br/>
And many a bark shall ride<br/>
Securely on thy breast,<br/>
To waft across the main<br/>
Rich stores of golden grain<br/>
From the valleys of the West.<br/></p>
<p>(1) The Indian name for one of the many expansions of this beautiful
river.</p>
<p>(2) Alluding to the projected improvements on the Trent, of which the
Otonabee is a continuation. Fifteen years have passed away since this
little poem was written; but the Otonabee still rushes on in its own wild
strength. Some idea of the rapidity of this river may be formed from the
fact that heavy rafts of timber are floated down from Herriot's Falls, a
distance of nine miles from Peterborough, in less than an hour. The shores
are bold and rocky, and abound in beautiful and picturesque views.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
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