"Yes;" and Arthur reddened slightly. "Impossible to avoid that, when you"re thrown among fellows that speak nothing else. But I wanted to tell you, that coming back we hailed a boat from one of those outward-bound ships lying yonder at anchor: the mate says their wood and water is half a pretence. They are smuggling skins, in addition to their regular freight of lumber."
"Smuggling skins!"
"For the skippers" private benefit, you understand: furs, such as sable, marten, and squirrel; they send old ship"s stores ash.o.r.e to trade with vagrant Indians, and then sew up the skins in their clothes, between the lining and the stuff, so as to pa.s.s the Custom-house officers at home.
Bob! I"m longing to be ash.o.r.e for good. You don"t know what it is to feel firm ground under one"s feet after six weeks" unsteady footing. I"m longing to get out of this floating prison, and begin our life among the pines."
Robert shook his head a little sorrowfully. Now that they were nearing the end of the voyage, many cares pressed upon him, which to the volatile nature of Arthur seemed only theme for adventure. Whither to bend their steps in the first instance, was a matter for grave deliberation. They had letters of introduction to a gentleman near Carillon on the Ottawa, and others to a family at Toronto. Former friends had settled beside the lonely Lake Simcoe, midway between Huron and Ontario. Many an hour of the becalmed days he spent over the maps and guide-books they had brought, trying to study out a result. Jay came up to him one afternoon, as he leaned his head on his hand perplexedly.
"What ails you? have you a headache?"
"No, I am only puzzled."
Her own small elbow rested on the taffrail, and her little fingers dented the fair round cheek, in unwitting imitation of his posture.
"Is it about a lesson? But you don"t have to get lessons."
"No; it is about what is best for me to do when I land."
"Edith asks G.o.d always; and He shows her what is best," said the child, looking at him wistfully. Again he thought of his pious prayerful mother. She might have spoken through the childish lips. He closed his books, remarking that they were stupid. Jay gave him her hand to walk up and down the deck. He had never made it a custom to consult G.o.d, or refer to Him in matters of daily life, though theoretically he acknowledged His pervading sovereignty. To procure the guidance of Infinite Wisdom would be well worth a prayer. Something strong as a chain held him back--the pride of his consciously unrenewed heart.
When the weather became favourable, they pa.s.sed up the river rapidly; and a succession of the n.o.blest views opened around them. No panorama of the choice spots of earth could be lovelier. Lofty granite islets, such as Kamouraska, which attains an alt.i.tude of five hundred feet; bold promontories and deep basin bays; magnificent ranges of bald blue mountains inland; and, as they neared Grosse Isle and the quarantine ground, the soft beauties of civilisation were superadded. Many ships of all nations lay at anchor; the sh.o.r.e was dotted with white farmhouses, and neat villages cl.u.s.tered each round the glittering spire of a church.
"How very French that is, eh?" said Captain Armytage, referring to those shining metal roofs. "Tinsel is charming to the eyes of a _habitan_. You know, I"ve been in these parts before with my regiment: so I am well acquainted with the ground. We have the parish of St. Thomas to our left now, thickly spotted with white cottages: St. Joachim is on the opposite bank. The nomenclature all about here smacks of the prevailing faith and of the old masters."
""Tis a pity they didn"t hold by the musical Indian names," said Robert Wynn.
"Well, yes, when the music don"t amount to seventeen syllables a-piece, eh?" Captain Armytage had a habit of saying "eh" at every available point in his sentences. Likewise had he the most gentleman-like manners that could be, set off by the most gentleman-like personal appearance; yet, an inexplicable something about him prevented a thorough liking.
Perhaps it was the intrinsic selfishness, and want of sincerity of nature, which one instinctively felt after a little intercourse had worn off the dazzle of his engaging demeanour. Perhaps Robert had detected the odour of rum, ineffectually concealed by the fragrance of a smoking pill, more frequently than merely after dinner, and seen the sad shadow on his daughter"s face, following. But that did not prevent Captain Armytage"s being a very agreeable and well-informed companion nevertheless.
"Granted that "Canada" is a pretty name," said he; "but it"s Spanish more than native. "Aca nada," nothing here,--said the old Castilian voyagers, when they saw no trace of gold mines or other wealth along the coast. That"s the story, at all events. But I hold to it that our British John Cabot was the first who ever visited this continent, unless there"s truth in the old Scandinavian tales, which I don"t believe."
But the gallant officer"s want of credence does not render it the less a fact, that, about the year 1001, Biorn Heriolson, an Icelander, was driven south from Greenland by tempestuous weather, and discovered Labrador. Subsequently, a colony was established for trading purposes on some part of the coast named Vinland; but after a few Icelanders had made fortunes of the peltries, and many had perished among the Esquimaux, all record of the settlement is blotted out, and Canada fades from the world"s map till restored by the exploration of the Cabots and Jacques Cartier. The two former examined the seaboard, and the latter first entered the grand estuary of the St. Lawrence, which he named from the saint"s day of its discovery; and he also was the earliest white man to gaze down from the mighty precipice of Quebec, and p.r.o.nounce the obscure Indian name which was hereafter to suggest a world-famed capital. Then, the dwellings and navies of nations and generations yet unborn were growing all around in hundreds of leagues of forest; a dread magnificence of shade darkened the face of the earth, amid which the red man reigned supreme. Now, as the pa.s.sengers of the good brig Ocean Queen gazed upon it three centuries subsequently, the slow axe had chopped away those forests of pine, and the land was smiling with homesteads, and mapped out in fields of rich farm produce: the encroachments of the irresistible white man had metamorphosed the country, and almost blotted out its olden masters. Robert Wynn began to realize the force of Hiram Holt"s patriotic declaration, "It"s the finest country in the world!"
"And the loveliest!" he could have added, without even a saving clause for his own old Emerald Isle, when they pa.s.sed the western point of the high wooded island of Orleans, and came in view of the superb Falls of Montmorenci; two hundred and fifty feet of sheer precipice, leaped by a broad full torrent, eager to reach the great river flowing beyond, and which seemed placidly to await the turbulent onset. As Robert gazed, the fascination of a great waterfall came over him like a spell. Who has not felt this beside Lodore, or Foyers, or Torc? Who has not found his eye mesmerized by the falling sheet of dark polished waters, merging into snowy spray and crowned with rainbow crest, most changeable, yet most unchanged?
Thousands of years has this been going on; you may read it in the worn limestone layers that have been eaten through, inches in centuries, by the impetuous stream. Thus, also, has the St. Lawrence carved out its mile-wide bed beneath the Heights of Abraham--the stepping-stone to Wolfe"s fame and Canadian freedom.
CHAPTER IV.
WOODEN-NESS.
Piled on the summit of Cape Diamond, and duplicated in shadow upon the deep waters at its base, three hundred feet below, stands the fortress of Quebec. Edinburgh and Ehrenbreitstein have been used as old-world symbols to suggest its beauty and strength; but the girdle of mighty river is wanting to the former, and the latter is a trifling miniature of the Canadian city-queen. Robert Wynn knew of no such comparisons; he only felt how beautiful was that ma.s.s of interwoven rock, and wood, and town, reflected and rooted in the flood; he scarcely heard Captain Armytage at his left reminding him for the tenth time that he had been here before with his regiment.
"There"s Point Levi to the south, a mile away, in front of the mountains.
Something unpleasant once befell me in crossing there. I and another sub. hired a boat for a spree, just because the hummocks of ice were knocking about on the tide, and all prudent people stayed ash.o.r.e; but we went out in great dreadnought boots, and bearskin caps over our ears, and amused ourselves with pulling about for a while among the floes. I suppose the grinding of the ice deafened us, and the hummocks hid us from view of the people on board; at all events, down came one of the river steamers slap on us. I saw the red paddles laden with ice at every revolution, and the next instant was sinking, with my boots dragging me down like a cannon-ball at my feet. I don"t know how I kicked them off, and rose: Gilpin, the other sub., had got astride on the capsized boat; a rope flung from the steamer struck me, and you may believe I grasped it pretty tightly. D"ye see here?" and he showed Robert a front tooth broken short: "I caught with my hands first, and they were so numb, and the ice forming so fast on the dripping rope, that it slipped till I held by my teeth; and another noose being thrown around me la.s.so-wise, I was dragged in. A narrow escape, eh?"
"Very narrow," echoed Robert. He noticed the slight shiver that ran through the daughter"s figure, as she leaned on her father"s arm. His handsome face looked down at her carelessly.
"Edith shudders," said he; "I suppose thinking that so wonderful an escape ought to be remembered as more than a mere adventure." To which he received no answer, save an appealing look from her soft eyes. He turned away with a short laugh.
"Well, at all events, it cured me of boating among the ice. Ugh! to be sucked in and smothered under a floe would be frightful."
Mr. Wynn wishing to say something that would prove he was not thinking of the little aside-scene between father and daughter, asked if the St.
Lawrence was generally so full of ice in winter.
It was difficult to believe now in the balmy atmosphere of the Indian summer, with a dreamy sunshine warming and gladdening all things,--the very apotheosis of autumn,--that wintry blasts would howl along this placid river, surging fierce ice-waves together, before two months should pa.s.s.
"There"s rarely a bridge quite across," replied Captain Armytage; "except in the north channel, above the isle of Orleans, where the tide has less force than in the southern, because it is narrower; but in the widest place the hummocks of ice are frequently crushed into heaps fifteen or twenty feet high, which makes navigation uncomfortably exciting."
"I should think so," rejoined Robert drily.
"Ah, you have yet to feel what a Canadian winter is like, my young friend;" and Captain Armytage nodded in that mysterious manner which is intended to impress a "griffin" with the cheering conviction that unknown horrors are before him.
"I wonder what is that tall church, whose roof glitters so intensely?"
"The cathedral, under its tin dome and spires. The metal is said to hinder the lodging and help the thawing of the snow, which might otherwise lie so heavy as to endanger the roof."
"Oh, that is the reason!" e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed Robert, suddenly enlightened as to the needs-be of all the surface glitter.
"Rather a pretty effect, eh? and absolutely unique, except in Canadian cities. It suggests an infinitude of greenhouses reflecting sunbeams at a variety of angles of incidence."
"I presume this is the lower town, lying along the quays?" said Robert.
"Yes, like our Scottish Edinburgh, the old city, being built in dangerous times, lies huddled close together under protection of its guardian rock," said the Captain. "But within, you could fancy yourself suddenly transported into an old Normandy town, among narrow crooked streets and high-gabled houses: nor will the degree of cleanliness undeceive you. For, unlike most other American cities, Quebec has a Past as well as a Present: there is the French Past, narrow, dark, crowded, hiding under a fortification; and there is the English Present, embodied in the handsome upper town, and the suburb of St. John"s, broad, well-built, airy. The line of distinction is very marked between the pushing Anglo-Saxon"s premises and the tumble-down concerns of the stand-still _habitan_."
Perhaps, also, something is due to the difference between Protestant enterprise and Roman Catholic supineness.
"There"s a boat boarding us already," said Robert.
It proved to be the Custom-house officers; and when their domiciliary visit was over, Robert and Arthur went ash.o.r.e. Navigating through a desert expanse of lumber rafts and a labyrinth of hundreds of hulls, they stepped at last on the ugly wooden wharves which line the water"s edge, and were crowded with the usual traffic of a port; yet singularly noiseless, from the boarded pavement beneath the wheels.
Though the brothers had never been in any part of France, the peculiarly French aspect of the lower town struck them immediately. The old-fashioned dwellings, with steep lofty roofs, acc.u.mulated in narrow alleys, seemed to date back to an age long anterior to Montcalm"s final struggle with Wolfe on the heights; even back, perchance, to the brave enthusiast Champlain"s first settlement under the superb headland, replacing the Indian village of Stadacona. To perpetuate his fame, a street alongside the river is called after him; and though his "New France" has long since joined the dead names of extinct colonies, the practical effects of his early toil and struggle remain in this American Gibraltar which he originated.
Andy Callaghan had begged leave to accompany his young masters ash.o.r.e, and marched at a respectful distance behind them, along that very Champlain Street, looking about him with unfeigned astonishment. "I suppose the quarries is all used up in these parts, for the houses is wood, an" the churches is wood, and the sthreets has wooden stones ondher our feet," he soliloquized, half audibly. "It"s a mighty quare counthry intirely: between the people making a land on top of the wather for "emselves by thim big rafts, an" buildin" houses on "em, and kindlin" fires"----
Here his meditation was rudely broken into by the sudden somerset of a child from a doorstep he was pa.s.sing; but it had scarcely touched the ground when Andy, with an exclamation in Irish, swung it aloft in his arms.
"_Mono mush thig thu_! you crathur, is it trying which yer head or the road is the hardest, ye are? Whisht now, don"t cry, me fine boy, and maybe I"d sing a song for ye."
"Wisha then, cead mille failthe a thousand times, Irishman, whoever ye are!" said the mother, seizing Andy"s hand. "And my heart warms to the tongue of the old counthry! Won"t you come in, honest man, an" rest awhile, an" it"s himself will be glad to see ye?"
"And who"s himself?" inquired Andy, dandling the child.
"The carpenter, Pat M"Donagh of Ballinoge"--