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<h2> CHAPTER XXV — THE WALK TO DUMMER </h2>
<p>We trod a weary path through silent woods,<br/>
Tangled and dark, unbroken by a sound<br/>
Of cheerful life. The melancholy shriek<br/>
Of hollow winds careering o'er the snow,<br/>
Or tossing into waves the green pine tops,<br/>
Making the ancient forest groan and sigh<br/>
Beneath their mocking voice, awoke alone<br/>
The solitary echoes of the place.<br/></p>
<p>Reader! have you ever heard of a place situated in the forest-depths of
this far western wilderness, called Dummer? Ten years ago, it might not
inaptly have been termed “The last clearing in the world.” Nor to this day
do I know of any in that direction which extends beyond it. Our bush-farm
was situated on the border-line of a neighbouring township, only one
degree less wild, less out of the world, or nearer to the habitations of
civilisation than the far-famed “English Line,” the boast and glory of
this terra incognita.</p>
<p>This place, so named by the emigrants who had pitched their tents in that
solitary wilderness, was a long line of cleared land, extending upon
either side for some miles through the darkest and most interminable
forest. The English Line was inhabited chiefly by Cornish miners, who,
tired of burrowing like moles underground, had determined to emigrate to
Canada, where they could breathe the fresh air of Heaven, and obtain the
necessaries of life upon the bosom of their mother earth. Strange as it
may appear, these men made good farmers, and steady, industrious
colonists, working as well above ground as they had toiled in their early
days beneath it. All our best servants came from Dummer; and although they
spoke a language difficult to be understood, and were uncouth in their
manners and appearance, they were faithful and obedient, performing the
tasks assigned to them with patient perseverance; good food and kind
treatment rendering them always cheerful and contented.</p>
<p>My dear old Jenny, that most faithful and attached of all humble domestic
friends, came from Dummer, and I was wont to regard it with complacency
for her sake. But Jenny was not English; she was a generous, warm-hearted
daughter of the Green Isle—the Emerald gem set in the silver of
ocean. Yes, Jenny was one of the poorest children of that impoverished but
glorious country where wit and talent seem indigenous, springing up
spontaneously in the rudest and most uncultivated minds; showing what the
land could bring forth in its own strength, unaided by education, and
unfettered by the conventional rules of society. Jenny was a striking
instance of the worth, noble self-denial, and devotion which are often met
withand, alas! but too often disregarded—in the poor and ignorant
natives of that deeply-injured, and much abused land. A few words about my
old favourite may not prove uninteresting to my readers.</p>
<p>Jenny Buchanan, or as she called it, Bohanon, was the daughter of a petty
exciseman, of Scotch extraction (hence her industry) who, at the time of
her birth, resided near the old town of Inniskillen. Her mother died a few
months after she was born; and her father, within the twelve months,
married again. In the meanwhile, the poor orphan babe had been adopted by
a kind neighbour, the wife of a small farmer in the vicinity.</p>
<p>In return for coarse food and scanty clothing, the little Jenny became a
servant-of-all-work. She fed the pigs, herded the cattle, assisted in
planting potatoes and digging peat from the bog, and was undisputed
mistress of the poultry-yard. As she grew up to womanhood, the importance
of her labours increased. A better reaper in the harvest-field, or footer
of turf in the bog, could not be found in the district, or a woman more
thoroughly acquainted with the management of cows and the rearing of young
cattle; but here poor Jenny's accomplishments terminated.</p>
<p>Her usefulness was all abroad. Within the house she made more dirt than
she had the inclination or the ability to clear away. She could neither
read, nor knit, nor sew; and although she called herself a Protestant, and
a Church of England woman, she knew no more of religion, as revealed to
man through the Word of God, than the savage who sinks to the grave in
ignorance of a Redeemer. Hence she stoutly resisted all ideas of being a
sinner, or of standing the least chance of receiving hereafter the
condemnation of one.</p>
<p>“Och, sure thin,” she would say, with simple earnestness of look and
manner, almost irresistible. “God will never throuble Himsel' about a
poor, hard-working crathur like me, who never did any harm to the manest
of His makin'.”</p>
<p>One thing was certain, that a benevolent Providence had “throubled
Himsel'” about poor Jenny in times past, for the warm heart of this
neglected child of nature contained a stream of the richest benevolence,
which, situated as she had been, could not have been derived from any
other source. Honest, faithful, and industrious, Jenny became a law unto
herself, and practically illustrated the golden rule of her blessed Lord,
“to do unto others as we would they should do unto us.” She thought it was
impossible that her poor services could ever repay the debt of gratitude
that she owed to the family who had brought her up, although the
obligation must have been entirely on their side. To them she was greatly
attached—for them she toiled unceasingly; and when evil days came,
and they were not able to meet the rent-day, or to occupy the farm, she
determined to accompany them in their emigration to Canada, and formed one
of the stout-hearted band that fixed its location in the lonely and
unexplored wilds now known as the township of Dummer.</p>
<p>During the first year of their settlement, the means of obtaining the
common necessaries of life became so precarious, that, in order to assist
her friends with a little ready money, Jenny determined to hire out into
some wealthy house as a servant. When I use the term wealth as applied to
any bush-settler, it is of course only comparatively; but Jenny was
anxious to obtain a place with settlers who enjoyed a small income
independent of their forest means.</p>
<p>Her first speculation was a complete failure. For five long, hopeless
years she served a master from whom she never received a farthing of her
stipulated wages. Still her attachment to the family was so strong, and
had become so much the necessity of her life, that the poor creature could
not make up her mind to leave them. The children whom she had received
into her arms at their birth, and whom she had nursed with maternal
tenderness, were as dear to her as if they had been her own; she continued
to work for them although her clothes were worn to tatters, and her own
friends were too poor to replace them.</p>
<p>Her master, Captain N——, a handsome, dashing officer, who had
served many years in India, still maintained the carriage and appearance
of a gentleman, in spite of his mental and moral degradation arising from
a constant state of intoxication; he still promised to remunerate at some
future day her faithful services; and although all his neighbours well
knew that his means were exhausted, and that that day would never come,
yet Jenny, in the simplicity of her faith, still toiled on, in the hope
that the better day he spoke of would soon arrive.</p>
<p>And now a few words respecting this master, which I trust may serve as a
warning to others. Allured by the bait that has been the ruin of so many
of his class, the offer of a large grant of land, Captain N——
had been induced to form a settlement in this remote and untried township;
laying out much, if not all, of his available means in building a log
house, and clearing a large extent of barren and stony land. To this
uninviting home he conveyed a beautiful young wife, and a small and
increasing family. The result may be easily anticipated. The want of
society—a dreadful want to a man of his previous habits—the
absence of all the comforts and decencies of life, produced inaction,
apathy, and at last, despondency, which was only alleviated by a constant
and immoderate use of ardent spirits. As long as Captain N——
retained his half-pay, he contrived to exist. In an evil hour he parted
with this, and quickly trod the downhill path to ruin.</p>
<p>And here I would remark that it is always a rash and hazardous step for
any officer to part with his half-pay; although it is almost every day
done, and generally followed by the same disastrous results. A certain
income, however small, in a country where money is so hard to be procured,
and where labour cannot be obtained but at a very high pecuniary
remuneration, is invaluable to a gentleman unaccustomed to agricultural
employment; who, without this reserve to pay his people, during the brief
but expensive seasons of seed-time and harvest, must either work himself
or starve. I have known no instance in which such sale has been attended
with ultimate advantage; but, alas! too many in which it has terminated in
the most distressing destitution. These government grants of land, to
half-pay officers, have induced numbers of this class to emigrate to the
backwoods of Canada, who are totally unfit for pioneers; but, tempted by
the offer of finding themselves landholders of what, on paper, appear to
them fine estates, they resign a certainty, to waste their energies, and
die half-starved and broken-hearted in the depths of the pitiless wild.</p>
<p>If a gentleman so situated would give up all idea of settling on his
grant, but hire a good farm in a favourable situation—that is, not
too far from a market—and with his half-pay hire efficient
labourers, of which plenty are now to be had, to cultivate the land, with
common prudence and economy, he would soon obtain a comfortable
subsistence for his family. And if the males were brought up to share the
burthen and heat of the day, the expense of hired labour, as it yearly
diminished, would add to the general means and well-being of the whole,
until the hired farm became the real property of the industrious tenants.
But the love of show, the vain boast of appearing richer and
better-dressed than our neighbours, too often involves the emigrant's
family in debt, from which they are seldom able to extricate themselves
without sacrificing the means which would have secured their independence.</p>
<p>This, although a long digression, will not, I hope, be without its use;
and if this book is regarded not as a work of amusement but one of
practical experience, written for the benefit of others, it will not fail
to convey some useful hints to those who have contemplated emigration to
Canada: the best country in the world for the industrious and
well-principled man, who really comes out to work, and to better his
condition by the labour of his hands; but a gulf of ruin to the vain and
idle, who only set foot upon these shores to accelerate their ruin.</p>
<p>But to return to Captain N——. It was at this disastrous period
that Jenny entered his service. Had her master adapted his habits and
expenditure to his altered circumstances, much misery might have been
spared, both to himself and his family. But he was a proud man—too
proud to work, or to receive with kindness the offers of service tendered
to him by his half-civilised, but well-meaning neighbours.</p>
<p>“Hang him!” cried an indignant English settler (Captain N——
was an Irishman), whose offer of drawing wood had been rejected with
unmerited contempt. “Wait a few years, and we shall see what his pride
will do for him. I <i>am</i> sorry for his poor wife and children; but for
himself, I have no pity for him.”</p>
<p>This man had been uselessly insulted, at the very moment when he was
anxious to perform a kind and benevolent action; when, like a true
Englishman, his heart was softened by witnessing the sufferings of a
young, delicate female and her infant family. Deeply affronted by the
captain's foolish conduct, he now took a malignant pleasure in watching
his arrogant neighbour's progress to ruin.</p>
<p>The year after the sale of his commission, Captain N—— found
himself considerably in debt, “Never mind, Ella,” he said to his anxious
wife; “the crops will pay all.”</p>
<p>The crops were a failure that year. Creditors pressed hard; the captain
had no money to pay his workmen, and he would not work himself. Disgusted
with his location, but unable to change it for a better; without friends
in his own class (for he was the only gentleman then resident in the new
township), to relieve the monotony of his existence with their society, or
to afford him advice or assistance in his difficulties, the fatal
whiskey-bottle became his refuge from gloomy thoughts.</p>
<p>His wife, an amiable and devoted creature, well-born, well-educated, and
deserving of a better lot, did all in her power to wean him from the
growing vice. But, alas! the pleadings of an angel, in such circumstances,
would have had little effect upon the mind of such a man. He loved her as
well as he could love anything, and he fancied that he loved his children,
while he was daily reducing them, by his favourite vice, to beggary.</p>
<p>For awhile, he confined his excesses to his own fireside, but this was
only for as long a period as the sale of his stock and land would supply
him with the means of criminal indulgence. After a time, all these
resources failed, and his large grant of eight hundred acres of land had
been converted into whiskey, except the one hundred acres on which his
house and barn stood, embracing the small clearing from which the family
derived their scanty supply of wheat and potatoes. For the sake of peace,
his wife gave up all her ornaments and household plate, and the best
articles of a once handsome and ample wardrobe, in the hope of hiding her
sorrows from the world, and keeping her husband at home.</p>
<p>The pride, that had rendered him so obnoxious to his humbler neighbours,
yielded at length to the inordinate craving for drink; the man who had
held himself so high above his honest and industrious fellow-settlers,
could now unblushingly enter their cabins and beg for a drop of whiskey.
The feeling of shame once subdued, there was no end to his audacious
mendacity. His whole time was spent in wandering about the country,
calling upon every new settler, in the hope of being asked to partake of
the coveted poison. He was even known to enter by the window of an
emigrant's cabin, during the absence of the owner, and remain drinking in
the house while a drop of spirits could be found in the cupboard. When
driven forth by the angry owner of the hut, he wandered on to the distant
town of P——, and lived there in a low tavern, while his wife
and children were starving at home.</p>
<p>“He is the filthiest beast in the township,” said the afore-mentioned
neighbour to me; “it would be a good thing for his wife and children if
his worthless neck were broken in one of his drunken sprees.”</p>
<p>This might be the melancholy fact, but it was not the less dreadful on
that account. The husband of an affectionate wife—the father of a
lovely family—and his death to be a matter of rejoicing!—a
blessing, instead of being an affliction!—an agony not to be thought
upon without the deepest sorrow.</p>
<p>It was at this melancholy period of her sad history that Mrs. N——
found, in Jenny Buchanan, a help in her hour of need. The heart of the
faithful creature bled for the misery which involved the wife of her
degraded master, and the children she so dearly loved. Their want and
destitution called all the sympathies of her ardent nature into active
operation; they were long indebted to her labour for every morsel of food
which they consumed. For them, she sowed, she planted, she reaped. Every
block of wood which shed a cheering warmth around their desolate home was
cut from the forest by her own hands, and brought up a steep hill to the
house upon her back. For them, she coaxed the neighbours, with whom she
was a general favourite, out of many a mess of eggs for their especial
benefit; while with her cheerful songs, and hearty, hopeful disposition,
she dispelled much of the cramping despair which chilled the heart of the
unhappy mother in her deserted home.</p>
<p>For several years did this great, poor woman keep the wolf from the door
of her beloved mistress, toiling for her with the strength and energy of a
man. When was man ever so devoted, so devoid of all selfishness, so
attached to employers, yet poorer than herself, as this uneducated
Irishwoman?</p>
<p>A period was at length put to her unrequited services. In a fit of
intoxication her master beat her severely with the iron ramrod of his gun,
and turned her, with abusive language, from his doors. Oh, hard return for
all her unpaid labours of love! She forgave this outrage for the sake of
the helpless beings who depended upon her care. He repeated the injury,
and the poor creature returned almost heart-broken to her former home.</p>
<p>Thinking that his spite would subside in a few days, Jenny made a third
effort to enter his house in her usual capacity; but Mrs. N——
told her, with many tears, that her presence would only enrage her
husband, who had threatened herself with the most cruel treatment if she
allowed the faithful servant again to enter the house. Thus ended her five
years' service to this ungrateful master. Such was her reward!</p>
<p>I heard of Jenny's worth and kindness from the Englishman who had been so
grievously affronted by Captain N——, and sent for her to come
to me. She instantly accepted my offer, and returned with my messenger.
She had scarcely a garment to cover her. I was obliged to find her a suit
of clothes before I could set her to work. The smiles and dimples of my
curly-headed, rosy little Donald, then a baby-boy of fifteen months,
consoled the old woman for her separation from Ellie N——; and
the good-will with which all the children (now four in number) regarded
the kind old body, soon endeared to her the new home which Providence had
assigned to her.</p>
<p>Her accounts of Mrs. N——, and her family, soon deeply
interested me in her fate; and Jenny never went to visit her friends in
Dummer without an interchange of good wishes passing between us.</p>
<p>The year of the Canadian rebellion came, and brought with it sorrow into
many a bush dwelling. Old Jenny and I were left alone with the little
children, in the depths of the dark forest, to help ourselves in the best
way we could. Men could not be procured in that thinly-settled spot for
love nor money, and I now fully realised the extent of Jenny's usefulness.
Daily she yoked the oxen, and brought down from the bush fuel to maintain
our fires, which she felled and chopped up with her own hands. She fed the
cattle, and kept all things snug about the doors; not forgetting to load
her master's two guns, “in case,” as she said, “the ribels should attack
us in our retrate.”</p>
<p>The months of November and December of 1838 had been unnaturally mild for
this iron climate; but the opening of the ensuing January brought a short
but severe spell of frost and snow. We felt very lonely in our solitary
dwelling, crouching round the blazing fire, that scarcely chased the cold
from our miserable log-tenement, until this dreary period was suddenly
cheered by the unexpected presence of my beloved friend, Emilia, who came
to spend a week with me in my forest home.</p>
<p>She brought her own baby-boy with her, and an ample supply of buffalo
robes, not forgetting a treat of baker's bread, and “sweeties” for the
children. Oh, dear Emilia! best and kindest of women, though absent in
your native land, long, long shall my heart cherish with affectionate
gratitude all your visits of love, and turn to you as to a sister, tried,
and found most faithful, in the dark hour of adversity, and, amidst the
almost total neglect of those from whom nature claimed a tenderer and
holier sympathy.</p>
<p>Great was the joy of Jenny at this accession to our family party; and
after Mrs. S—— was well warmed, and had partaken of tea—the
only refreshment we could offer her—we began to talk over the news
of the place.</p>
<p>“By-the-bye, Jenny,” said she, turning to the old servant, who was
undressing the little boy by the fire, “have you heard lately from poor
Mrs. N——? We have been told that she and the family are in a
dreadful state of destitution. That worthless man has left them for the
States, and it is supposed that he has joined Mackenzie's band of ruffians
on Navy Island; but whether this be true or false, he has deserted his
wife and children, taking his eldest son along with him (who might have
been of some service at home), and leaving them without money or food.”</p>
<p>“The good Lord! What will become of the crathurs?” responded Jenny, wiping
her wrinkled cheek with the back of her hard, brown hand. “An' thin they
have not a sowl to chop and draw them firewood; an' the weather so
oncommon savare. Och, hone! what has not that <i>baste</i> of a man to
answer for?”</p>
<p>“I heard,” continued Mrs. S——, “that they have tasted no food
but potatoes for the last nine months, and scarcely enough of them to keep
soul and body together; that they have sold their last cow; and the poor
young lady and her second brother, a lad of only twelve years old, bring
all the wood for the fire from the bush on a hand sleigh.”</p>
<p>“Oh, dear!—oh, dear!” sobbed Jenny; “an' I not there to hilp them!
An' poor Miss Mary, the tinder thing! Oh, 'tis hard, terribly hard upon
the crathurs, an' they not used to the like.”</p>
<p>“Can nothing be done for them?” said I.</p>
<p>“That is what we want to know,” returned Emilia, “and that was one of my
reasons for coming up to D——. I wanted to consult you and
Jenny upon the subject. You, who are an officer's wife, and I, who am both
an officer's wife and daughter, ought to devise some plan of rescuing this
poor, unfortunate lady and her family from her present forlorn situation.”</p>
<p>The tears sprang to my eyes, and I thought, in the bitterness of my heart,
upon my own galling poverty, that my pockets did not contain even a single
copper, and that I had scarcely garments enough to shield me from the
inclemency of the weather. By unflinching industry, and taking my part in
the toil of the field, I had bread for myself and family, and this was
more than poor Mrs. N—— possessed; but it appeared impossible
for me to be of any assistance to the unhappy sufferer, and the thought of
my incapacity gave me severe pain. It was only in moments like the present
that I felt the curse of poverty.</p>
<p>“Well,” continued my friend, “you see, Mrs. Moodie, that the ladies of P——
are all anxious to do what they can for her; but they first want to learn
if the miserable circumstances in which she is said to be placed are true.
In short, my dear friend, they want you and me to make a pilgrimage to
Dummer, to see the poor lady herself; and then they will be guided by our
report.”</p>
<p>“Then let us lose no time in going upon our own mission of mercy.”</p>
<p>“Och, my dear heart, you will be lost in the woods!” said old Jenny. “It
is nine long miles to the first clearing, and that through a lonely,
blazed path. After you are through the beaver-meadow, there is not a
single hut for you to rest or warm yourselves. It is too much for the both
of yees; you will be frozen to death on the road.”</p>
<p>“No fear,” said my benevolent friend; “God will take care of us, Jenny. It
is on His errand we go; to carry a message of hope to one about to
perish.”</p>
<p>“The Lord bless you for a darlint,” cried the old woman, devoutly kissing
the velvet cheek of the little fellow sleeping upon her lap. “May your own
purty child never know the want and sorrow that is around her.”</p>
<p>Emilia and I talked over the Dummer scheme until we fell asleep. Many were
the plans we proposed for the immediate relief of the unfortunate family.
Early the next morning, my brother-in-law, Mr. T——, called
upon my friend. The subject next to our heart was immediately introduced,
and he was called into the general council. His feelings, like our own,
were deeply interested; and he proposed that we should each provide
something from our own small stores to satisfy the pressing wants of the
distressed family; while he promised to bring his cutter the next morning,
and take us through the beaver-meadow, and to the edge of the great swamp,
which would shorten four miles, at least, of our long and hazardous
journey.</p>
<p>We joyfully acceded to his proposal, and set cheerfully to work to provide
for the morrow. Jenny baked a batch of her very best bread, and boiled a
large piece of beef; and Mr. T—— brought with him, the next
day, a fine cooked ham, in a sack, into the bottom of which he stowed the
beef and loaves, besides some sugar and tea, which his own kind wife, the
author of “the Backwoods of Canada,” had sent. I had some misgivings as to
the manner in which these good things could be introduced to the poor
lady, who, I had heard, was reserved and proud.</p>
<p>“Oh, Jenny,” I said, “how shall I be able to ask her to accept provisions
from strangers? I am afraid of wounding her feelings.”</p>
<p>“Oh, darlint, never fear that! She is proud, I know; but 'tis not a stiff
pride, but jist enough to consale her disthress from her ignorant English
neighbours, who think so manely of poor folk like her who were once rich.
She will be very thankful to you for your kindness, for she has not
experienced much of it from the Dummer people in her throuble, though she
may have no words to tell you so. Say that old Jenny sent the bread to
dear wee Ellie, 'cause she knew she would like a loaf of Jenny's bakin'.”</p>
<p>“But the meat.”</p>
<p>“Och, the mate, is it? May be, you'll think of some excuse for the mate
when you get there.”</p>
<p>“I hope so; but I'm a sad coward with strangers, and I have lived so long
out of the world that I am at a great loss what to do. I will try and put
a good face on the matter. Your name, Jenny, will be no small help to me.”</p>
<p>All was now ready. Kissing our little bairns, who crowded around us with
eager and inquiring looks, and charging Jenny for the hundredth time to
take especial care of them during our absence, we mounted the cutter, and
set off, under the care and protection of Mr. T——, who
determined to accompany us on the journey.</p>
<p>It was a black, cold day; no sun visible in the grey, dark sky; a keen
wind, and hard frost. We crouched close to each other.</p>
<p>“Good heavens, how cold it is!” whispered Emilia. “What a day for such a
journey!”</p>
<p>She had scarcely ceased speaking, when the cutter went upon a stump which
lay concealed under the drifted snow; and we, together with the ruins of
our conveyance, were scattered around.</p>
<p>“A bad beginning,” said my brother-in-law, with a rueful aspect, as he
surveyed the wreck of the cutter from which we had promised ourselves so
much benefit. “There is no help for it but to return home.”</p>
<p>“Oh, no,” said Mrs. S——; “bad beginnings make good endings,
you know. Let us go on; it will be far better walking than riding such a
dreadful day. My feet are half-frozen already with sitting still.”</p>
<p>“But, my dear madam,” expostulated Mr. T——, “consider the
distance, the road, the dark, dull day, and our imperfect knowledge of the
path. I will get the cutter mended to-morrow; and the day after we may be
able to proceed.”</p>
<p>“Delays are dangerous,” said the pertinacious Emilia, who, woman-like, was
determined to have her own way. “Now, or never. While we wait for the
broken cutter, the broken-hearted Mrs. N—— may starve. We can
stop at Colonel C——'s and warm ourselves, and you can leave
the cutter at his house until our return.”</p>
<p>“It was upon your account that I proposed the delay,” said the good Mr. T——,
taking the sack, which was no inconsiderable weight, upon his shoulder,
and driving his horse before him into neighbour W——'s stable.
“Where you go, I am ready to follow.”</p>
<p>When we arrived, Colonel C——'s family were at breakfast, of
which they made us partake; and after vainly endeavouring to dissuade us
from what appeared to them our Quixotic expedition, Mrs. C——
added a dozen fine white fish to the contents of the sack, and sent her
youngest son to help Mr. T—— along with his burthen, and to
bear us company on our desolate road.</p>
<p>Leaving the colonel's hospitable house on our left, we again plunged into
the woods, and after a few minutes' brisk walking, found ourselves upon
the brow of a steep bank that overlooked the beaver-meadow, containing
within its area several hundred acres.</p>
<p>There is no scenery in the bush that presents such a novel appearance as
those meadows, or openings, surrounded as they invariably are, by dark,
intricate forests; their high, rugged banks covered with the light, airy
tamarack and silver birch. In summer they look like a lake of soft, rich
verdure, hidden in the bosom of the barren and howling waste. Lakes they
certainly have been, from which the waters have receded, “ages, ages long
ago”; and still the whole length of these curious level valleys is
traversed by a stream, of no inconsiderable dimensions.</p>
<p>The waters of the narrow, rapid creek, which flowed through the meadow we
were about to cross, were of sparkling brightness, and icy cold. The
frost-king had no power to check their swift, dancing movements, or stop
their perpetual song. On they leaped, sparkling and flashing beneath their
ice-crowned banks, rejoicing as they revelled on in their lonely course.
In the prime of the year, this is a wild and lovely spot, the grass is of
the richest green, and the flowers of the most gorgeous dyes. The gayest
butterflies float above them upon painted wings; and the whip-poor-will
pours forth from the neighbouring woods, at close of dewy eve, his strange
but sadly plaintive cry. Winter was now upon the earth, and the once green
meadow looked like a small forest lake covered with snow.</p>
<p>The first step we made into it plunged us up to the knees in the snow,
which was drifted to a great height in the open space. Mr. T——
and our young friend C—— walked on ahead of us, in order to
break a track through the untrodden snow. We soon reached the cold creek;
but here a new difficulty presented itself. It was too wide to jump
across, and we could see no other way of passing to the other side.</p>
<p>“There must be some sort of a bridge here about,” said young C——,
“or how can the people from Dummer pass constantly during the winter to
and fro. I will go along the bank, and halloo to you if I find one.”</p>
<p>In a few minutes he gave the desired signal, and on reaching the spot, we
found a round, slippery log flung across the stream by way of bridge. With
some trouble, and after various slips, we got safely on the other side. To
wet our feet would have been to ensure their being frozen; and as it was,
we were not without serious apprehension on that score. After crossing the
bleak, snowy plain, we scrambled over another brook, and entered the great
swamp, which occupied two miles of our dreary road.</p>
<p>It would be vain to attempt giving any description of this tangled maze of
closely-interwoven cedars, fallen trees, and loose-scattered masses of
rock. It seemed the fitting abode of wolves and bears, and every other
unclean beast. The fire had run through it during the summer, making the
confusion doubly confused. Now we stooped, half-doubled, to crawl under
fallen branches that hung over our path, then again we had to clamber over
prostrate trees of great bulk, descending from which we plumped down into
holes in the snow, sinking mid-leg into the rotten trunk of some
treacherous, decayed pine-tree. Before we were half through the great
swamp, we began to think ourselves sad fools, and to wish that we were
safe again by our own firesides. But, then, a great object was in view,—the
relief of a distressed fellow-creature, and like the “full of hope,
misnamed forlorn,” we determined to overcome every difficulty, and toil
on.</p>
<p>It took us an hour at least to clear the great swamp, from which we
emerged into a fine wood, composed chiefly of maple-trees. The sun had,
during our immersion in the dark shades of the swamp, burst through his
leaden shroud, and cast a cheery gleam along the rugged boles of the lofty
trees. The squirrel and chipmunk occasionally bounded across our path; the
dazzling snow which covered it reflected the branches above us in an
endless variety of dancing shadows. Our spirits rose in proportion. Young
C—— burst out singing, and Emilia and I laughed and chatted as
we bounded along our narrow road. On, on for hours, the same interminable
forest stretched away to the right and left, before and behind us.</p>
<p>“It is past twelve,” said my brother T—— thoughtfully; “if we
do not soon come to a clearing, we may chance to spend the night in the
forest.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I am dying with hunger,” cried Emilia. “Do C——, give us
one or two of the cakes your mother put into the bag for us to eat upon
the road.”</p>
<p>The ginger-cakes were instantly produced. But where were the teeth to be
found that could masticate them? The cakes were frozen as hard as stones;
this was a great disappointment to us tired and hungry wights; but it only
produced a hearty laugh. Over the logs we went again; for it was a
perpetual stepping up and down, crossing the fallen trees that obstructed
our path. At last we came to a spot where two distinct blazed roads
diverged.</p>
<p>“What are we to do now?” said Mr. T——.</p>
<p>We stopped, and a general consultation was held, and without one
dissenting voice we took the branch to the right, which, after pursuing
for about half a mile, led us to a log hut of the rudest description.</p>
<p>“Is this the road to Dummer?” we asked a man, who was chopping wood
outside the fence.</p>
<p>“I guess you are in Dummer,” was the answer.</p>
<p>My heart leaped for joy, for I was dreadfully fatigued.</p>
<p>“Does this road lead through the English Line?”</p>
<p>“That's another thing,” returned the woodman. “No, you turned off from the
right path when you came up here.” We all looked very blank at each other.
“You will have to go back, and keep the other road, and that will lead you
straight to the English Line.”</p>
<p>“How many miles is it to Mrs. N——'s?”</p>
<p>“Some four, or thereabouts,” was the cheering rejoinder. “'Tis one of the
last clearings on the line. If you are going back to Douro to-night, you
must look sharp.”</p>
<p>Sadly and dejectedly we retraced our steps. There are few trifling
failures more bitter in our journey through life than that of a tired
traveller mistaking his road. What effect must that tremendous failure
produce upon the human mind, when at the end of life's unretraceable
journey, the traveller finds that he has fallen upon the wrong track
through every stage, and instead of arriving at a land of blissful
promise, sinks for ever into the gulf of despair!</p>
<p>The distance we had trodden in the wrong path, while led on by hope and
anticipation, now seemed to double in length, as with painful steps we
toiled on to reach the right road. This object once attained, soon led us
to the dwellings of men.</p>
<p>Neat, comfortable log houses, surrounded by well-fenced patches of
clearing, arose on either side of the forest road; dogs flew out and
barked at us, and children ran shouting indoors to tell their respective
owners that strangers were passing their gates; a most unusual
circumstance, I should think, in that location.</p>
<p>A servant who had hired two years with my brother-in-law, we knew must
live somewhere in this neighbourhood, at whose fireside we hoped not only
to rest and warm ourselves, but to obtain something to eat. On going up to
one of the cabins to inquire for Hannah J——, we fortunately
happened to light upon the very person we sought. With many exclamations
of surprise, she ushered us into her neat and comfortable log dwelling.</p>
<p>A blazing fire, composed of two huge logs, was roaring up the wide
chimney, and the savoury smell that issued from a large pot of pea-soup
was very agreeable to our cold and hungry stomachs. But, alas, the
refreshment went no further! Hannah most politely begged us to take seats
by the fire, and warm and rest ourselves; she even knelt down and assisted
in rubbing our half-frozen hands; but she never once made mention of the
hot soup, or of the tea, which was drawing in a tin teapot upon the
hearth-stone, or of a glass of whiskey, which would have been thankfully
accepted by our male pilgrims.</p>
<p>Hannah was not an Irishwoman, no, nor a Scotch lassie, or her very first
request would have been for us to take “a pickle of soup,” or “a sup of
thae warm broths.” The soup was no doubt cooking for Hannah's husband and
two neighbours, who were chopping for him in the bush; and whose want of
punctuality she feelingly lamented.</p>
<p>As we left her cottage, and jogged on, Emilia whispered, laughing, “I hope
you are satisfied with your good dinner? Was not the pea-soup excellent?—and
that cup of nice hot tea!—I never relished anything more in my life.
I think we should never pass that house without giving Hannah a call, and
testifying our gratitude for her good cheer.”</p>
<p>Many times did we stop to inquire the way to Mrs. N——'s,
before we ascended the steep, bleak hill upon which her house stood. At
the door, Mr. T—— deposited the sack of provisions, and he and
young C—— went across the road to the house of an English
settler (who, fortunately for them, proved more hospitable than Hannah J——),
to wait until our errand was executed.</p>
<p>The house before which Emilia and I were standing had once been a
tolerably comfortable log dwelling. It was larger than such buildings
generally are, and was surrounded by dilapidated barns and stables, which
were not cheered by a solitary head of cattle. A black pine-forest
stretched away to the north of the house, and terminated in a dismal,
tangled cedar-swamp, the entrance to the house not having been constructed
to face the road.</p>
<p>The spirit that had borne me up during the journey died within me. I was
fearful that my visit would be deemed an impertinent intrusion. I knew not
in what manner to introduce myself, and my embarrassment had been greatly
increased by Mrs. S—— declaring that I must break the ice, for
she had not courage to go in. I remonstrated, but she was firm. To hold
any longer parley was impossible. We were standing on the top of a bleak
hill, with the thermometer many degrees below zero, and exposed to the
fiercest biting of the bitter, cutting blast. With a heavy sigh, I knocked
slowly but decidedly at the crazy door. I saw the curly head of a boy
glance for a moment against the broken window. There was a stir within,
but no one answered our summons. Emilia was rubbing her hands together,
and beating a rapid tattoo with her feet upon the hard and glittering
snow, to keep them from freezing.</p>
<p>Again I appealed to the inhospitable door, with a vehemence which seemed
to say, “We are freezing, good people; in mercy let us in!”</p>
<p>Again there was a stir, and a whispered sound of voices, as if in
consultation, from within; and after waiting a few minutes longer—which,
cold as we were, seemed an age—the door was cautiously opened by a
handsome, dark-eyed lad of twelve years of age, who was evidently the
owner of the curly head that had been sent to reconnoitre us through the
window. Carefully closing the door after him, he stepped out upon the
snow, and asked us coldly but respectfully what we wanted. I told him that
we were two ladies, who had walked all the way from Douro to see his
mamma, and that we wished very much to speak to her. The lad answered us,
with the ease and courtesy of a gentleman, that he did not know whether
his mamma could be seen by strangers, but he would go in and see. So
saying he abruptly left us, leaving behind him an ugly skeleton of a dog,
who, after expressing his disapprobation at our presence in the most
disagreeable and unequivocal manner, pounced like a famished wolf upon the
sack of good things which lay at Emilia's feet; and our united efforts
could scarcely keep him off.</p>
<p>“A cold, doubtful reception this!” said my friend, turning her back to the
wind, and hiding her face in her muff. “This is worse than Hannah's
liberality, and the long, weary walk.”</p>
<p>I thought so too, and began to apprehend that our walk had been in vain,
when the lad again appeared, and said that we might walk in, for his
mother was dressed.</p>
<p>Emilia, true to her determination, went no farther than the passage. In
vain were all my entreating looks and mute appeals to her benevolence and
friendship; I was forced to enter alone the apartment that contained the
distressed family.</p>
<p>I felt that I was treading upon sacred ground, for a pitying angel hovers
over the abode of suffering virtue, and hallows all its woes. On a rude
bench, before the fire, sat a lady, between thirty and forty years of age,
dressed in a thin, coloured muslin gown, the most inappropriate garment
for the rigour of the season, but, in all probability, the only decent one
that she retained. A subdued melancholy looked forth from her large, dark,
pensive eyes. She appeared like one who, having discovered the full extent
of her misery, had proudly steeled her heart to bear it. Her countenance
was very pleasing, and, in early life (but she was still young), she must
have been eminently handsome. Near her, with her head bent down, and
shaded by her thin, slender hand, her slight figure scarcely covered by
her scanty clothing, sat her eldest daughter, a gentle, sweet-looking
girl, who held in her arms a baby brother, whose destitution she
endeavoured to conceal. It was a touching sight; that suffering girl, just
stepping into womanhood, hiding against her young bosom the nakedness of
the little creature she loved. Another fine boy, whose neatly-patched
clothes had not one piece of the original stuff apparently left in them,
stood behind his mother, with dark, glistening eyes fastened upon me, as
if amused, and wondering who I was, and what business I could have there.
A pale and attenuated, but very pretty, delicately-featured little girl
was seated on a low stool before the fire. This was old Jenny's darling,
Ellie, or Eloise. A rude bedstead, of home manufacture, in a corner of the
room, covered with a coarse woollen quilt, contained two little boys, who
had crept into it to conceal their wants from the eyes of the stranger. On
the table lay a dozen peeled potatoes, and a small pot was boiling on the
fire, to receive their scanty and only daily meal. There was such an air
of patient and enduring suffering to the whole group, that, as I gazed
heart-stricken upon it, my fortitude quite gave way, and I burst into
tears.</p>
<p>Mrs. N—— first broke the painful silence, and, rather proudly,
asked me to whom she had the pleasure of speaking. I made a desperate
effort to regain my composure, and told her, but with much embarrassment,
my name; adding that I was so well acquainted with her and her children,
through Jenny, that I could not consider her as a stranger; that I hoped
that, as I was the wife of an officer, and like her, a resident in the
bush, and well acquainted with all its trials and privations, she would
look upon me as a friend.</p>
<p>She seemed surprised and annoyed, and I found no small difficulty in
introducing the object of my visit; but the day was rapidly declining, and
I knew that not a moment was to be lost. At first she coldly rejected all
offers of service, and said that she was contented, and wanted for
nothing.</p>
<p>I appealed to the situation in which I beheld herself and her children,
and implored her, for their sakes, not to refuse help from friends who
felt for her distress. Her maternal feelings triumphed over her assumed
indifference, and when she saw me weeping, for I could no longer restrain
my tears, her pride yielded, and for some minutes not a word was spoken. I
heard the large tears, as they slowly fell from her daughter's eyes, drop
one by one upon her garments.</p>
<p>At last the poor girl sobbed out, “Dear mamma, why conceal the truth? You
know that we are nearly naked, and starving.”</p>
<p>Then came the sad tale of domestic woes:—the absence of the husband
and eldest son; the uncertainty as to where they were, or in what engaged;
the utter want of means to procure the common necessaries of life; the
sale of the only remaining cow that used to provide the children with
food. It had been sold for twelve dollars, part to be paid in cash, part
in potatoes; the potatoes were nearly exhausted, and they were allowanced
to so many a day. But the six dollars she had retained as their last
resource. Alas! she had sent the eldest boy the day before to P——,
to get a letter out of the post-office, which she hoped contained some
tidings of her husband and son. She was all anxiety and expectation, but
the child returned late at night without the letter which they had longed
for with such feverish impatience. The six dollars upon which they had
depended for a supply of food were in notes of the Farmer's Bank, which at
that time would not pass for money, and which the roguish purchaser of the
cow had passed off upon this distressed family.</p>
<p>Oh! imagine, ye who revel in riches—who can daily throw away a large
sum upon the merest toy—the cruel disappointment, the bitter agony
of this poor mother's heart, when she received this calamitous news, in
the midst of her starving children. For the last nine weeks they had lived
upon a scanty supply of potatoes; they had not tasted raised bread or
animal food for eighteen months.</p>
<p>“Ellie,” said I, anxious to introduce the sack, which had lain like a
nightmare upon my mind, “I have something for you; Jenny baked some loaves
last night, and sent them to you with her best love.”</p>
<p>The eyes of all the children grew bright. “You will find the sack with the
bread in the passage,” said I to one of the boys. He rushed joyfully out,
and returned with Mrs. —— and the sack. Her bland and
affectionate greeting restored us all to tranquillity.</p>
<p>The delighted boy opened the sack. The first thing he produced was the
ham.</p>
<p>“Oh,” said I, “that is a ham that my sister sent to Mrs. N——;
'tis of her own curing, and she thought that it might be acceptable.”</p>
<p>Then came the white fish, nicely packed in a clean cloth. “Mrs. C——
thought fish might be a treat to Mrs. N——, as she lived so far
from the great lakes.” Then came Jenny's bread, which had already been
introduced. The beef, and tea, and sugar, fell upon the floor without any
comment. The first scruples had been overcome, and the day was ours.</p>
<p>“And now, ladies,” said Mrs. N——, with true hospitality,
“since you have brought refreshments with you, permit me to cook something
for your dinner.”</p>
<p>The scene I had just witnessed had produced such a choking sensation that
all my hunger had vanished. Before we could accept or refuse Mrs. N——'s
kind offer, Mr. T—— arrived, to hurry us off.</p>
<p>It was two o'clock when we descended the hill in front of the house, that
led by a side-path round to the road, and commenced our homeward route. I
thought the four miles of clearings would never be passed; and the English
Line appeared to have no end. At length we entered once more the dark
forest.</p>
<p>The setting sun gleamed along the ground; the necessity of exerting our
utmost speed, and getting through the great swamp before darkness
surrounded us, was apparent to all. The men strode vigorously forward, for
they had been refreshed with a substantial dinner of potatoes and pork,
washed down with a glass of whiskey, at the cottage in which they had
waited for us; but poor Emilia and I, faint, hungry, and foot-sore, it was
with the greatest difficulty we could keep up. I thought of Rosalind, as
our march up and down the fallen logs recommenced, and often exclaimed
with her, “Oh, Jupiter! how weary are my legs!”</p>
<p>Night closed in just as we reached the beaver-meadow. Here our ears were
greeted with the sound of well-known voices. James and Henry C——
had brought the ox-sleigh to meet us at the edge of the bush. Never was
splendid equipage greeted with such delight. Emilia and I, now fairly
exhausted with fatigue, scrambled into it, and lying down on the straw
which covered the bottom of the rude vehicle, we drew the buffalo robes
over our faces, and actually slept soundly until we reached Colonel C——'s
hospitable door.</p>
<p>An excellent supper of hot fish and fried venison was smoking on the
table, with other good cheer, to which we did ample justice. I, for one,
never was so hungry in my life. We had fasted for twelve hours, and that
on an intensely cold day, and had walked during that period upwards of
twenty miles. Never, never shall I forget that weary walk to Dummer; but a
blessing followed it.</p>
<p>It was midnight when Emilia and I reached my humble home; our good friends
the oxen being again put in requisition to carry us there. Emilia went
immediately to bed, from which she was unable to rise for several days. In
the meanwhile I wrote to Moodie an account of the scene I had witnessed,
and he raised a subscription among the officers of the regiment for the
poor lady and her children, which amounted to forty dollars. Emilia lost
no time in making a full report to her friends at P——; and
before a week passed away, Mrs. N—— and her family were
removed thither by several benevolent individuals in the place. A neat
cottage was hired for her; and, to the honour of Canada be it spoken, all
who could afford a donation gave cheerfully. Farmers left at her door,
pork, beef, flour, and potatoes; the storekeepers sent groceries and goods
to make clothes for the children; the shoemakers contributed boots for the
boys; while the ladies did all in their power to assist and comfort the
gentle creature thus thrown by Providence upon their bounty.</p>
<p>While Mrs. N—— remained at P—— she did not want
for any comfort. Her children were clothed and her rent paid by her
benevolent friends, and her house supplied with food and many comforts
from the same source. Respected and beloved by all who knew her, it would
have been well had she never left the quiet asylum where for several years
she enjoyed tranquillity and a respectable competence from her school; but
in an evil hour she followed her worthless husband to the Southern States,
and again suffered all the woes which drunkenness inflicts upon the wives
and children of its degraded victims.</p>
<h3> THE CONVICT'S WIFE </h3>
<p>Pale matron! I see thee in agony steep<br/>
The pillow on which thy young innocents sleep;<br/>
Their slumbers are tranquil, unbroken their rest,<br/>
They know not the grief that convulses thy breast;<br/>
They mark not the glance of that red, swollen eye,<br/>
That must weep till the fountain of sorrow is dry;<br/>
They guess not thy thoughts in this moment of dread,<br/>
Thou desolate widow, but not of the dead!<br/>
<br/>
Ah, what are thy feelings, whilst gazing on those,<br/>
Who unconsciously smile in their balmy repose,—<br/>
The pangs which thy grief-stricken bosom must prove<br/>
Whilst gazing through tears on those pledges of love,<br/>
Who murmur in slumber the dear, cherish'd name<br/>
Of that sire who has cover'd his offspring with shame,—<br/>
Of that husband whom justice has wrench'd from thy side<br/>
Of the wretch, who the laws of his country defied?<br/>
<br/>
Poor, heart-broken mourner! thy tears faster flow,<br/>
Time can bring no oblivion to banish thy woe;<br/>
The sorrows of others are soften'd by years.<br/>
Ah, what now remains for thy portion but tears?<br/>
Anxieties ceaseless, renew'd day by day,<br/>
While thy heart yearns for one who is ever away.<br/>
No hope speeds thy thoughts as they traverse the wave<br/>
To the far-distant land of the exile and slave.<br/>
<br/>
And those children, whose birth with such rapture was hail'd,<br/>
When the holiest feelings of nature prevail'd,<br/>
And the bright drops that moisten'd the father's glad cheek<br/>
Could alone the deep transport of happiness speak;<br/>
When he turn'd from his first-born with glances of pride,<br/>
In grateful devotion to gaze on his bride,<br/>
The loved and the loving, who, silent with joy,<br/>
Alternately gazed from the sire to his boy.<br/>
<br/>
Ah! what could induce the young husband to fling<br/>
Love's garland away in life's beautiful spring,<br/>
To scatter the roses Hope wreath'd for her brow<br/>
In the dust, and abandon his partner to woe?<br/>
The wine-cup can answer. The Bacchanal's bowl<br/>
Corrupted life's chalice, and poison'd his soul.<br/>
It chill'd the warm heart, added fire to the brain,<br/>
Gave to pleasure and passion unbridled the rein;<br/>
Till the gentle endearments of children and wife<br/>
Only roused the fell demon to anger and strife.<br/>
<br/>
By conscience deserted, by law unrestrain'd,<br/>
A felon, convicted, unblushing, and chain'd;<br/>
Too late from the dark dream of ruin he woke<br/>
To remember the wife whose fond heart he had broke;<br/>
The children abandon'd to sorrow and shame,<br/>
Their deepest misfortune the brand of his name.<br/>
Oh, dire was the curse he invoked on his soul,<br/>
Then gave his last mite for a draught of the bowl!<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
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