<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_141" id="Page_141"></SPAN></span></p>
<h2>II</h2>
<h3>WHICH SHOWS HOW PILOTS ON THE ST. LAWRENCE FIGHT THE ICE-FLOES</h3>
<div class='cap'>NO study of pilot life can be complete without mention
of the river pilot who has to face perils in
the rapids not a whit less real than those faced by
his brother pilot on the sea. I got my first glimpse of
the river pilot, oddly enough, in frozen December time,
when even that great waterway of northern America—I
mean the St. Lawrence—was all but a solid bed of ice,
not quite, however, and to that chance I owed a glimpse
of Canadian boatmen at the hazard of their winter
work, which is none the less interesting for being unfamiliar.</div>
<p>It was fifteen degrees below zero, just pleasant
Christmas weather in Quebec, and the old river of
saintly fame was grinding along with its gorge of ice,
streaming along under a dazzle of sun, steaming up
little clouds of frozen water-vapor, low-hanging and
spreading over it like tumbled fleece in patches of shine
and shadow, quite a balloon effect, I fancied, as I came
down the cliff.</p>
<p>In a tug-boat office at the river's edge, chatting
around a stove, yet bundled thickly as if no stove were
there, I found some half dozen sharp-glancing men,
who might have been actors in New York or noblemen
in Russia (I judge by the fineness of their furs), but
were pilots here, lower-river pilots who, as one of<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_142" id="Page_142"></SPAN></span>
them assured me, are vastly more important than the
upper-river kind.</p>
<p>I learned also from one who wore a coat of yellowish-gray
skins with otter trimmings that they were a
belated company, who would start shortly for Orleans
Island across the ice. That was Orleans Island there
to the left. No, it did not seem far, but I might find
it far enough if I tried to get there. At this they all
laughed.</p>
<p>Meekly I sat down, as was befitting, and listened to
the talk. They conversed in bad French or worse
English, and were most of them, strange to say, Scotchmen
who had never seen Scotland and never would—Douglasses
and Browns and McGregors, who couldn't
pronounce their own names, but could take a liner to
the gulf, day or night, through the reefs of Crane
Island, past the menacing twin Pilgrims, by windings
and dangers, safe down to sea.</p>
<p>I asked the man what they were going to Orleans
Island for, and he explained that they lived there
through the winter months—they and other pilots,
many others. It was a pilot colony, set out in midstream.
Yes, it was cut off from the land, quite cut
off; they liked it so. Sometimes they didn't come
ashore for weeks; it was not exactly fun fighting those
ice-floes. And they all laughed again; well, not exactly!</p>
<p>Meantime several jolly little cutters, no higher than
cradles, had jingled up with more men in furs and one
woman. Also boxes and bundles.</p>
<p>"Pilots?" I asked.</p>
<p>The man nodded.</p>
<p>"And the woman?"</p>
<p>"Dees lady, pilot's wife. She been seek." And he
went on in a jargon that is charming, but not for imitation,<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_143" id="Page_143"></SPAN></span>
to explain that they would lay the sick lady in
the bottom of the boat and pile coats over her and
around her until it was tolerably sure she couldn't
freeze. From the way he spoke one would fancy they
were about to start for the North Pole, but I presently
understood that this two-mile ice journey over the
crackling St. Lawrence—the crackling comes from the
ice-crust breaking as the tide drops under it—is about
as hard a test of men's endurance as any Arctic performance.</p>
<p>They were all gathered now save one, whose cutter
tarried still. He was a good pilot, but overfond of the
convivial glass, and was no doubt this very moment in
some uproarious company, forgetful that the start was
to be sharp on the hour. Well, they would give him
ten minutes more, say fifteen minutes, <i>pauvre garçon</i>.</p>
<p>Then they fell to discussing winter navigation, and
whether it would ever come on the St. Lawrence as it
had on rivers in Russia. A pilot in coon-skins was
sure it would come; they would put on one of these
new-fangled ice-crunching steamers to keep the main
channel open, and, <i>sacré bleu</i>, there you are! That
would save five months every year. But the others
shook their heads; they didn't believe it, and didn't
want it anyway. A pilot, sir, must have a certain time
to smoke his pipe!</p>
<p>Then one man told what the ice did to a sailing-vessel
he was taking down the river late one season.
He hoped never to take another down so late. He
had got out of his course one night in the dangerous
ways off Crane Island, and finally dropped anchor to
hold her against the crush of ice. But the anchor chain
snapped like shoe-string under the ice pressure, and
they were borne along on a glacier-field until they
struck on a reef—just what he had feared. Now, the<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_144" id="Page_144"></SPAN></span>
ice could neither break the reef nor drive them over
it, but it ground its way right through the schooner's
stern, ripping her wide open, so that the river poured
in, and down they went until the yard-arms touched
the hummocks, with pilot and crew left to scramble
over the floe as best they could in the darkness, and
wait for daylight on the frozen rocks.</p>
<p>At this the others, taking up the cue of thrilling happenings,
told stories of dangers on the river one after
another until the tardy pilot, who had jingled up meanwhile
unnoticed, was in his turn forced to wait for
them.</p>
<p>"I was just putting off one night," began a tall man,
who spoke better English than the rest, "just putting
off from this very place—"</p>
<p>"Thash nothing," interrupted the later comer, "I
shaw sh-sword fish clashe a wh-whale once off Saguenay
River, an wh-whale—an sh-sword fish—" then he
mumbled to himself and dozed by the stove.</p>
<p>The tall man went on with his tale, which described
how, on the night in question, he was about to board a
down-coming steamer of the Leyland line (he was to
take the place of the Montreal pilot), when she crashed
into a tramp steamer coming up in a head-on collision,
and two sailors sleeping in their bunks were instantly
killed. He described the panic that ensued, and told
what they did, and wound up with a queer theory
(which he declared perfectly sound, and the others
agreed with him) that the growth of cities along the
river is every year increasing the danger of such night
collisions through the dazzle of lights.</p>
<p>Presently we started for the boats. A burly line,
with caps reaching down, and collars reaching up,
until everything was covered—ears, forehead, chin,
everything but a peeping place for nose and eyes. I<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_145" id="Page_145"></SPAN></span>
can still hear the squeak and crunch of snow under
foot, and see the glare of it. We passed a snow-field,
where the river-buoys are left through winter, spar-buoys,
gas-buoys, and bell-buoys ranged along now
like great red tops numbed by the cold to sleep.</p>
<div class="figright"> <ANTIMG src="images/illus31.jpg" width-obs="400" height-obs="322" alt="RIVER-BUOYS ON THE BANK FOR THE WINTER." title="" /> <span class="caption">RIVER-BUOYS ON THE BANK FOR THE WINTER.</span></div>
<p>Then they put off in the boats—three open boats—that
are sleds as well, with runners on the flat bottoms
and ends turned up in an easy slant, so that when the
broken ice gets too thick for paddling they may be
hauled up to slide over it. This queer method of transit
is practised on the St. Lawrence, by those who dare,
during certain weeks of winter when the river is no
longer open nor yet frozen into a solid ice-bridge, but
partly open and partly solid. So it was now.</p>
<p>The first rule of the boats is that every man lay hand<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_146" id="Page_146"></SPAN></span>
to paddle and work. There are no passengers here but
the sick, and they are rarely taken. Not that the pilots
would mind paddling other men across, but the other
men would almost certainly freeze if they sat still.
There is no safety against the blasts that sweep this
river, when the glass says twenty below, but in vigorous,
ceaseless exertion.</p>
<p>So there they go through the ice-choked river, swinging
their paddles lustily, every pilot of them, heads
nodding under black astrakhan caps, shoulders heaving,
off for home. Now they strike the first solid place,
and the men forward climb out carefully and heave up
the boat's nose a couple of feet to see if the ice will
hold her. Then all climb out, and with dragging and
pushing get ahead for a hundred feet or so. See, now
they stop and swing their arms! Already the pitiless
wind is biting through their furs. And think of that
poor woman!</p>
<p>Presently they reach an open spot some dozen yards
across, and all but one take places in the boat, the stern
man standing behind on the ice to push off, and then,
with nicely judged effort, spring aboard as he gives the
last impulse that shoots her into the river.</p>
<p>From the open space they paddle into a jam of grinding
ice-blocks that hold hard against them, but are
scarce solid enough to bear the sledges. They must
work through somehow, poling and fending, to yonder
heaped-up ledge, where up they go again on a great
rough raft of ice that will test their muscles and their
skill before they get across, and drift them a quarter
of a mile or so up-stream while they are doing it.</p>
<p>Up-stream, did I say? Yes, for there is this odd
thing about the St. Lawrence, even at Quebec, that its
current streams up and down, up and down, as the tide
changes. For seven hours the river conquers the tide,<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_147" id="Page_147"></SPAN></span>
and the water runs down to sea. Then for five hours
the tide conquers the river, and the water runs up from
the sea. So now, after all their toiling, they are actually
further from home than when they started. They
should have set out just before the turn of tide (that
was their plan), but they waited until just after the
turn, and will pay for the delay and their yarn spinning
with an hour more of this ice-fighting than they
need have had—and an hour out there is a long, long
time.</p>
<p>Even here, on the bank, much less than an hour is
enough of time. The cold grows piercing. The day
is drawing to a close. The sky is dull. The river
grinds on with its grayish burden. On the heights of
Levis, opposite, some lights of early evening break out.
There also pilots live, Indians come from an Indian village
down the river, where they make the peerless birch
canoes. All along this grand St. Lawrence live men
whose business it is to face unusual perils, whose nerve
fails them not, whether paddling some frail bark
through furious rapids or guiding a steamboat down a
raging torrent, with many lives in their keeping.</p>
<p>We must see more of these men, and watch them at
their work. We must see the Iroquois pilots at their
reservation near Montreal, the lads Lord Wolseley took
with him up the Nile to brave its cataracts, when the
English set out, in 1884, to bring relief to Gordon. We
must see "Big John," famous now for years as wheelsman
of the great excursion boats that shoot the rage
of waters at Lachine. We must see the raftsmen, too,
and—ah, but it is cold here!—let us climb the cliff
again and find some shelter.</p>
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