' ' ''{' " f* **""*;' ;- r /,'-x" , " THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LOS ANGELES HUDSON BAY; OR, EVERYDAY LIFE IN THE WILDS OF NORTH AMERICA. By ROBERT MICHAEL BALLANTYNE. INDIAN VII THOMAS NELSON AND SONS. LONDON, EDINBURGH, AND NEW YORK HUDSON BAY; OK, EVERYDAY LIFE IN THE WILDS OF NORTH AMERICA. DURING six YEARS' RESIDENCE IN THE TERRITORIES OF THE HON. HUDSON BAY COMPANY. EGBERT MICHAEL BALLANTYNE, A.CTHOR OF "THE YOUNG FUR-TRADERS," "THE CORAL ISLAND," "TIIE WORLD OF ICE," " UNOAVA," "TUB LIFEBOAT," "TUB IRON DORSE," ETO. WITH FIFTY ILLUSTRATIONS DESIGNED BY BAYARD AND OTHER ARTISTS FROM SKETCHES BY THE AUTHOR. LONDON: T. NELSON AND SONS, PATERNOSTER ROW EDINBURGH ; AND NEW YORK. 1896 PREFACE. '.N publishing the present work, the Author rests his hopes of its favourable reception chiefly upon the fact that its subject is comparatively new. Although touched upon by other writers in narratives of Arctic Discovery, and in works of general information, the very nature of those publica- tions prohibited a lengthened or minute description of that EVERYDAY LIFE whose delineation is the chief aim of the following pages. Preface to Jfaurih (KMtion. SINCE this book was written, very considerable changes have taken place in the affairs and management of the Hudson Bay Company. The original charter of the Company is now extinct. Red River Settlement has become a much more important colony than it was, and bids fair to become still more important, for railway Vlll PREFACE. communication will doubtless, ere long, connect it with Canada on the one hand and the Pacific seaboard on the other, while the presence of gold in the Saskat- chewan and elsewhere has already made the country much more generally known than it was when the Author sojourned there. Nevertheless, all these changes actual and prospective have only scratched the skirt of the vast wilderness occupied by the fur-traders ; and as these still continue their work at the numerous and distant outposts in much the same style as in days of yore, it has been deemed advisable to reprint the book almost without alteration, but with a few corrections, and with the addition of numerous illustrations designed by the Author chiefly from sketches made by himself on the spot CONTENTS. CHAPTER I. APPOINTMENT TO THE SEKVICE OF THE HUDSON BAY COMPANY THE " PRINCE RUPERT" THE ANNUAL DINNER OF THE "H. B. c." FELLOW-VOYAGERS THREATENING WEATHER A SQUALL ISLAND OP LEWIS 13-26 CHAPTER II. 8TORNOWAY THE BALL AT SEA GO OUT TO TEA ON THE ATLANTIC AMONG THE ICE SIGHTING LAND A SLEEPY NIGHT YORK FACTORY AND BACHE- LORS' HALL 27-50 CHAPTER III. DESCRIPTION OF THE HUDSON BAY COMPANY THEIR FORTS AND ESTABLISH- MENTS FOOD ARTICLES OF TRADE AND MANNER OF TRADING 51-64 CHAPTER IV. NORTH AMERICAN INDIANS THEIR MANNERS AND CUSTOMS COSTUME, DWELL- INGS, IMPLEMENTS, ETC. A TALE OF MURDER AND CANNIBALISM A NIGHT EXCURSION WITH AN INDIAN A DEER HUNT 65-97 CHAPTER V. VOYAGE FROM YORK FACTORY TO RED RIVER VOYAGE BEGUN OUR MANNER OF TRAVELLING ENCAMPING IN THE WOODS PORTAGES AND SHOOTING WILD- FOWL WHISKY-JACKS A STORM LAKE WINNIPEG ARRIVAL AT RED RIVER SETTLEMENT 98-121 CHAPTER VI. RED RIVER SETTLEMENT ORIGIN OF THE COLONY OPPOSITION TIMES AND ANECDOTES THE FLOOD OF 1826 CLIMATE BEINO BROKEN-1N MR. SIMPSON, THE ARCTIC DISCOVERER THE MACKENZIE RIVER BRIGADE. 122-140 CONTENTS. CHAPTER VII. NORWAY HOUSE ADVENTURE WITH A BEAR INDIAN FEAST THE POKTAGB BRIGADE THE CLERKS* HOUSE CATCHING A BUFFALO GOLDEYE FISHING RASPING A ROCK 141-166 CHAPTER VIIL YORK FACTORY WINTER AMUSEMENTS INTENSE COLD THE SEASONS " SKY- LARKING " SPORTING IN THE WOODS AND MARSHES TRADING WITH INDIANS CHRISTMAS DOINGS BJSEAKING-UP OF THE ICE IN SPRING 167-212 CHAPTER IX. VOYAGE FROM YORK FACTORY TO NORWAY HOUSE IN A SMALL INDIAN CANOF DEPARTURE LIFE IN THE WOODS DIFFICULTIES OF CANOE NAVIGATION OUTWIT THE MOSQUITOES "LEVE! LEVE! LEVE!" MUSIC IN THE POT AND ON THE ORGAN 213-248 CHAPTER X. VOYAGE TO CANADA BY THE GREAT LAKES OF THE INTERIOR A BLACK BEAK HARASSING DETENTIONS ANOTHER BEAR MEET DR. RAE, THE ARCTIC DIS- COVERER THE GUIDE'S STORY MEET INDIANS RUNNING THE RAPIDS LAKE SUPERIOR A SQUALL THE OTTAWA CIVILIZED LIFE AGAIN SLEIGHING IN CANADA 249-304 CHAPTER XI. WINTER-TRAVELLING IN CANADA DEPARTURE FROM LACHINE SCENERY ALONG THE ROAD "INCIDENTS" BY THE WAY ARRIVAL I.T TADOUSAC MR. STONE'S ADVENTURE WITH INDIANS CLUBBING SEALS 305-324 CHAPTER XII. A JOURNEY ON SNOW-SHOES EVILS OF SNOW-SHOE TRAVELLING IN SPRING VALUE OF TEA TO A TIRED MAN ENCAMP IN THE SNOW ISLE JEREMIE CANOEING AND BOATING ON THE GULF OF ST. LAWRENCE AMATEUR NA- VIGATING SEVEN ISLANDS A NARROW ESCAPE CONCLUSION 325-367 ot CAUGHT BY A SQUALL, AMONG THE ICE, .. CUTTING FIREWOOD THE TRADING STORE, LEGGINS, MOCCASIN ON FOOT, INDIAN WOMAN'S H MAKING A PORTAGE, INDIAN CHII SNOW-SHOES, STEM AW MEI Fox IN A TRAP, .. STEMAW SHC BEAVERS, DEER-HUNTING, STARTING OF THE F TRACKING ON STEEI NORWAY HOUSE, .. BUFFALO-HUNTING, SMALL HUNTING CANOE, AN UNLUCKY CAST, SNOW-SHOE ON FOOT, SHOOTING PTARMIGAN, ITION (Frontispiece], . . Bayard. JPERT," . . Bayard, 19 HALL, . . Bayard, 21 .. . . Bayard, 37 >D IN WINTER, . . Bayard, 56 ORE, . . Eayard, 62 . . Ballantyne, 67 )T, . . Ballantyne, 68 HEAD-DRESS, . . Ballantyne, 69 GE, . . Ballantyne, 71 ID CRADLE, . . Ballantyne, 72 . . Ballantyne, 73 ES A NIGHT MAROH, . . Bayard, 82 . . Ballantyne, 84 :RS THE WOLF, . . Bayard, 87 91 ,. .. Birket Forster, .. 96 PORTAGE BRIGADE, . . Bayard, 99 :EL RIVEB, . . Bayard, 107 .. . . Bayard, 117 a, . . Birket Forster, . . 156 CANOE, . . Bayard, 160 !T, . . Bayard, 164 )OT, . . Ballantyne, 179 :QAN, . . Bayard, 181 [OLE TRAVELLING, . . Bayard, 189 Xll LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS. ASCENDING THE RIVER, ENCAMPMENT ON HAY RUNNING THE RAPID, A SUDDEN SQUALL, SUPPER IN OUR TENT, VIEW FROM PORTAd! KACKABECKA FALLS, ON LAKE SUPERIOR, A NARROW ESCAPE, CANADIAN SLEIGH, FALLS OF M LUMBERERS, VIEW OF TADOUSAC, ENCAMPED IN THE S A.K AWFUL POSITION, ra BACHELORS' HALL, . . Bayard, 1S8 MARSH, .. . . Bayard, 207 IIVER, . . Bayard, 213 HAYES RIVER, . . Bayard, 220 PID, . . Bayard, 229 ISLAND IN KNEE LAKE, . . Bayard, 238 sr VILLAGE OF ROSSVILLK, .. . . Bayard, 247 MPMENT, . . Bayard, . . 251 L, . . Bayard, 255 ENT, . . Bayard, 262 AGE Du CHTEH .. . . Bayard, . , 283 ,L9, . . Ballantynf, . , 28U 291 299 . . Ballantyne, 304 ORENC1, .. .. 313 316 AC, . . Bayard, 317 E SNOW, .. , . Bayard, 334 'ION, .. Birket Forster, .. 362 ROBERT MICHAEL BALLANTYNE. ONE generally reads a book, especially a famous book, with greater interest when one knows something of the personal history and the character of the writer. There are, however, exceptions to the rule. There are writers whose life story is best told, not in, but by their books ; and R. M. Ballantyne was one of these. Many schoolboys will be content to know him simply as the man who wrote their favourite books Hudson Bay, The Coral Island, Martin Rattler, and a score or two more ; but even these will appreciate his work more highly when they know how much of conscientious devotion and how much of labour and personal risk were involved in his method of doing it. It is in this sense that Ballantyne's stories are to a large extent autobiographical, and it is in this sense that he deserves the title of " Ballantyne the Brave " affectionately given him by his successor as a writer for boys, B. L. Stevenson. ROBERT MICHAEL BALLANTYNE was born at Edinburgh, April 24, 1825. His father, Alexander Ballantyne, was brother and junior partner of John and James Ballantyne, the printers and friends of Sir Walter Scott. His mother was Randall Scott Grant, daughter of a Dr. Grant of Inverness. Of his boyhood there is not much to tell. His sister, Randall Ballantyne, who possessed a good deal of literary ability, used to speak of him as a bright and clever boy, not much given to hard study, but fond of reading and of story-telling, with a decided turn for adventure and romance ; always affectionate and upright. He attended the Edinburgh Academy for some time ; but his regular schooling XIV ROBERT MICHAEL BALLANTYNE. was meagre, and one of the regrets of his life was that he had made so little use of his opportunities in this respect, such as they were. The ease and fluency with which he wrote were mainly the result of practice, and they increased as his years advanced. While Ballantyne was still a boy, the family circumstances made it necessary that he should begin the battle of life on his own account. He tells us in his Personal Reminiscences that his father was one day reading in the newspapers an account of the exploration of the north coast of America by Messrs Dease and Simpson. Dropping his paper and looking over his spectacles, he said to his son, "How would you like to go into the service of the Hudson Bay Company, and discover the North- West Passage ? " Dease and Simpson were officers of the Company when they made their discoveries. " All right, father," said the boy or words indicating acqui- escence. It happened that a relative of the family held a high post in the Company's service, and through him young Ballantyne obtained a clerkship under the Company with a salary of .20 a year. He sailed for Hudson Bay in 1841, when he was sixteen years of age. The appointment was in all respects a fortunate one. The country and the life suited his adventurous disposition, and were the means besides of developing a literary faculty of which he had previously been unconscious. In fact, his sojourn in the wilds of North America was what made him a story-teller and a writer of books for boys. It is unnecessary to describe with any detail the events of the six years spent in the Hudson Bay Territory. Ballantyne has himself told the story of that time in his own charming way in Hudson Bay. He sailed from Gravesend in June 1841 in the Prince Rupert, one of the sailing ships of the Company, and after a rough and stormy voyage he landed at York Factory in August. The posts at which most of his time was spent were York Factory, where he remained for two years at a stretch ; Norway House, near the north end of Lake Winnipeg ; Fort Garry, in the Red River settlement (now Manitoba) ; Tadoussac, at the mouth of the ROBERT MICHAEL BALLANTYNE. XV Saguenay Kiver ; and Seven Islands, on the Gulf of St. Lawrence. He sailed from New York for England in May 1847, almost exactly six years after his departure from Gravesend. Ballantyne himself described his Hudson Bay life as " a hard, rough, healthy life." He and his comrades spent most of their time in trading in furs with the Red Indians. A little office-work had to be done, but much more of canoeing, boating, fishing, shooting, and, he adds, " wishing, and skylarking. It was a ' jolly ' life, no doubt, while it lasted, but not elevating." How then did it make him an author ? The answer is found in the necessity he felt to adopt some occupation to relieve the loneliness of existence. In those days they had a mail only twice in the year one in summer by the Company's ship, and one in winter through the trackless wilderness by sledge and snow-shoe. With a winter of eight months' duration, and a temperature often of 50 below zero, time was apt to hang heavily on his hands. With a view to lighten it a little, he wrote long letters to his mother in Scotland necessarily long because of the interval be- tween the mails. Whenever he felt a touch of home-sickness, he got out his sheets of " imperial " paper and " entered into spiritual intercourse with ' home.' To this long-letter writing," he adds, " I attribute whatever small amount of facility in composition I may have acquired." These letters, however, did not form his book. The idea of a regular and continuous narrative did not occur to him until near the end of his stay in Canada. During the wearisome months he spent at Seven Islands, on the Gulf of St. Lawrence, in 1846, with no companion but his French-Canadian "man Friday" and factotum, and no neighbour nearer than within seventy or eighty miles, he was desperately lonely. He had no books, or news- papers, or magazines, or literature of any kind ; no game to shoot, and no boat to fish from. " But I had pen and ink, and, by great good fortune, was in possession of a blank-paper book fully an inch thick." He knew that his mother would read any amount of his outpourings, and he wrote without stint. Even then he had no idea that his manuscript would ever become a printed book. " It was merely a free-and-easy record of personal adven- XVI ROBERT MICHAEL BALLANTYNE. ture and everyday life, written, like all else that I penned, solely for the uncritical eye of that long-suffering and too indulgent mother." After he had been at home for two or three years, the manu- script book was handed round among relatives and privileged friends. It came under the eye of "a printer-cousin," who offered to print it, and ere long Hudson Bay was published by the Blackwoods, was praised by the press, and turned out a distinct success commercially (1850). His literary consciousness, however, was not yet awakened. He looked on himself as a business man, and accepted a partner- ship in the firm of Thomas Constable and Co., printers in Edin- burgh. After the publication of Hudson Bay he allowed several years to pass without putting pen to paper in the way of literary effort. Even then the effort was not spontaneous : it was the result of a suggestion from the outside. The late Mr. William Nelson had been impressed with the interesting character of Hudson Bay, and with the undoubted literary power it revealed. Happening to meet Ballantyne in 1854, he asked him how he would like the idea of taking to literature as a profession. Ballantyne was taken by surprise, and answered vaguely ; but when the suggestion was promptly followed by " an order " for a story, he agreed to make trial, and the result was The Young Fur-Traders Ballantyne's first story-book for young folks, published by Thomas Nelson and Sons in 1855. The rest of his life was spent in writing similar books, at the rate of one or two a year. He estimated that, besides occasional articles, he had written " something like eighty complete stories." In everything lie undertook, Ballantyne was actuated by earnestness of purpose. "When he resolved to become a literary man, he made literature his business ; but it was a business in which he took the greatest interest, and from which he derived real enjoyment. He settled down quietly, when about thirty years of age, to the busy life of a story-teller in his house at Millerfield Place, near the Meadows, on the south side of Edin- burgh. Besides his regular production of works of fiction, he contributed occasional articles to magazines and newspapers. He ROBERT MICHAEL BALLANTYNE. XV11 was also an accomplished draughtsman, and he painted cleverly in water-colours. Though only an amateur with the brush, his pictures were on several occasions hung on the walls of the Royal Scottish Academy beside those of professional artists. In his earliest stories, The Young Fur-Traders and Ungava: a. Tale of Eskimo Life, he drew upon his own experiences in North America. When that material was exhausted, and he had to resort to fresh fields, he relied partly on authentic books of travel, but more on personal visits to the scenes described. To indicate the kind of books from which he derived information, mention may be made of Ellis's "Polynesian Researches," Olmsted's " Journey through Texas," Scoresby's " Arctic Regions," Kane's " Arctic Regions," and Greely's "Arctic Service." He was always on the watch for travellers who could give him first-hand informa- tion. Much of the material for Ungava was got from an old retired "Nor'-wester" who had lived long in Rupert's Land. He obtained information which he used in Blue Lights ; or, Hot Work in the Soudan, from Miss Robinson, the soldier's friend. Few writers of fiction have been so exact or so conscientious as he was regarding his facts. He made occasional mistakes. He tells with gusto how he blundered in The Coral Island re- garding cocoa-nuts, which he described as growing on the trees without the outer fibrous case, and how months or years passed before any one drew his attention to the error. Considering the number of his books and the wide area of the world they cover, the severest criticism admits that his slips were trifling and remarkably rare. One charge to which he was never fairly liable, and about which he was rather sensitive when it was even hinted, was that of "drawing the longbow." He said that he " had always laboured to be true to fact and to nature, even in my wildest nights of fancy." Testimonies to his accuracy have not been wanting. "With reference to an exciting incident in Blue Lights, a certain colonel wrote to him to say that it was his son who had commanded the gallant band that performed the exploit. The amount of trouble he took in order to secure that kind of realism was extraordinary. Before he wrote The Lifeboat, he XV1H ROBERT MICHAEL BALLANTYNE. went to Ramsgate and spent some time there in close friendship and alliance with the cockswain of the Ramsgate boat. The information for The Lighthouse he gathered during a residence on the Bell Rock Lighthouse for three weeks as the guest of the keepers. To understand The Floating Light, he spent a fortnight aboard the Gull lightship, off the Goodwin Sands, and he wrote in The Scotsman (March 26, 1870) a graphic account of his visit, which attracted a great deal of notice. To gain the knowledge requisite for writing In the Track of the Troops, he spent some weeks with the commander of H.M.S. Thunderer on board of his ship. As a preparation for Fighting the Flames, he obtained permission to join the Salvage Corps of the London Fire Brigade ; and he donned the uniform of the corps, and went careering through the streets of London on fire-engines. For most of his other books he adopted a similar plan, and even took long journeys and voyages to obtain accurate infor- mation, and local colouring and feeling. Thus Deep Down took him to Cornwall ; Erling the Bold, to Norway ; The Pirate City, to Algiers ; The Settler and the Savage, to the Cape ; The Young Trawler^ to the North Sea fishing-ground. As a further means of ensuring accuracy in details, he was careful to submit his proof-sheets to experts when that was possible. Thus the proofs of Fighting the Flames were gone over by the late Captain Shaw, the head of the London Fire Brigade, and those of Post Haste by Sir Arthur Blackwood, Secretaiy to the General Post Office, St. Martin's le Grand. Apart from the general purpose of all his books namely, to describe adventures, and to convey information in a pleasant way many of them were written in support of definite causes and institutions. Thus The Lifeboat was intended to enlist the sympathy of young folk with the work of the " Royal National Lifeboat Institution." In acknowledgment of his valuable ser- vice, the Institution presented him with a beautiful model of a lifeboat, which stood in a glass case in his study, and of which he was very proud. In the Track of the Troops was written to discredit war, though some hasty critics condemned it as having the opposite tendency. Dusty Diamonds was based on the work ROBERT MICHAEL BALLANTYNE. XIX of Miss Macpherson and Dr. Barnardo in the slums of the East of London. The Young Trawler deals almost entirely with the religious mission to the North Sea fishermen. His stories are books of incident rather than books of character. The personalities in them were not finished portraits : they were rather boldly-outlined sketches ; but as far as they went they were consistent and clearly defined. All his books are character- ized by a pure and healthy tone. He wrote no line that he or any one else could desire to blot. Himself an earnestly religious man, Ballantyne was never ashamed of the religious tone that appeared in many of his books. He knew well that some persons thought there was too much of religion in his stories, while others thought there was too little. Believing that it was impossible to please every one in this matter, his rule was to satisfy his own conscience and to exercise his own judgment. "When I write," he said, "on a subject which has religion for a basis, I must not let the feelings of worldly people destroy the religion in my books." * He was a most industrious writer, and he did not restrict himself to certain hours. He generally began work soon after breakfast, and he worked on as long as he felt inclined to con- tinue. He confessed that he often worked too long at a stretch, and that he did not take enough of exercise. Though not en- dowed by nature with a very robust constitution, he enjoyed fairly good health during the greater part of a pretty long life. He worked steadily as long as his work lasted, and he did not object to solitude. Sometimes he retired with his materials to a lonely village where he was unknown, and remained there till his book was finished. Ballantyne was not very fastidious in matters of style. His language was well chosen, and he wrote easily and with directness ; but he did not profess to be a stylist, and he never indulged in fine writing. He seldom re-wrote what he had written, and while he revised carefully he polished or "dressed" his style very little. His English is always simple and business-like. In 1866 Ballantyne married Miss Jane Dickson Grant, daughter * "How I write Boy's Books." The Quiver, April 1893, XX ROBERT MICHAEL BALLANTYNE. of the Rev. William Grant, minister of the parish of Cavers, Roxburghshire. Their family consisted of three sons and three daughters, all of whom survived their father. One of the sons became a soldier, another a sailor, and the third a tea-planter in India. Ballantyne continued to live in Edinburgh till 1873, and after sojourning temporarily in London and elsewhere, he settled down at Harrow-on-the-hill in 1878, and there he remained till the end of his life. He died at Rome, on February 8, 1894. Having been in feeble health for some time, he had accepted an invitation to spend the winter with friends at Tivoli ; and he died on the homeward way. He was buried in the English cemetery at Rome, and a few months later, friends at home placed a white marble monument over his grave, bearing the following inscription : IN LOVING MEMORY OF ROBERT MICHAEL BALLANTYNE, THE BOYS' STORY-WRITER, BORN AT EDINBURGH, APRIL 24, 1825 DIED AT ROME, FEBRUARY 8, 1894, THIS STONE IS ERECTED BY FOUR GENERATIONS OF GRATEFUL FRIENDS IN SCOTLAND AND ENGLAND. " His servants shall serve him, And they shall see his face." HUDSON BAY. CHAPTER L APPOINTMENT TO THE SERVICE OF THE HUDSON BAY COMPANY THE " PRINCE BUPKRT" THE ANNUAL DINNER OF THE " H. B. c." FELLOW-VOYAGERS THREATENING WEATHER A SQUALL ISLAND OF LEWIS. DEADER, I take for granted that you are toler- ably well acquainted with the different modes of life and travelling peculiar to European nations. I also presume that you know some- thing of the inhabitants of the East; and, it may be, a good deal of the Americans in general. But I suspect at least I would fain hope that you have only a vague and indefinite knowledge of life in those wild, uncivilized regions of the northern continent of America that surround the shores of Hudson Bay. I would fain hope this, I say, that I may have the satisfaction of giving you information on the subject, and of showing you that there is a body of civilized men who move, and breathe (pretty cool air, by the way !), and spend their lives in a quarter of the globe as totally different, in most respects, from the part you inhabit, as a beaver, 14 MY APPOINTMENT. roaming among the ponds and marshes of his native home, is from that sagacious animal when converted into a fashionable hat. About the middle of May eighteen hundred and forty- one, I was thrown into a state of ecstatic joy by the arrival of a letter appointing me to the enviable situa- tion of apprentice clerk in the service of the Honourable Hudson Bay Company. To describe the immense ex- tent to which I expanded, both mentally and bodily, upon the receipt of this letter, is impossible ; it is suf- ficient to know, that from that moment I fancied myself a complete man of business, and treated my old com- panions with the condescending suavity of one who knows that he is talking to his inferiors. A few days after, however, my pride was brought very low indeed, as 1 lay tossing about in my berth on the tumbling waves of the German Ocean, eschewing breakfast as a dangerous meal, and looking upon dinner with a species of horror utterly incomprehensible by those who have not experienced an attack of sea-sick- ness. Miseries of this description, fortunately, do not last long. In a couple of days we got into the compara- tively still water of the Thames ; and I, with a host of pale-faced young ladies and cadaverous-looking young gentlemen, emerged for the first time from the interior of the ship, to behold the beauties and wonders of the great metropolis, as we glided slowly up the crowded river. Leave-taking is a disagreeable subject either to reflect upon or to write about, so we will skip that part of the business and proceed at once to Gravesend, where I stood (having parted from all my friends) on the deck A VISIT FROM THE COMMITTEE. 15 of the good ship Prince Rupert, contemplating the boats and crowds of shipping that passed continually before me, and thinking how soon I was to leave the scenes to which I had been so long accustomed, for a far-distant land. I was a boy, however; and this, I think, is equivalent to saying that I did not sorrow long. My future companion and fellow-clerk, Mr. Wise- acre, was pacing the deck near me. This turned my thoughts into another channel, and set me speculating upon his probable temper, qualities, and age ; whether or not he was strong enough to thrash me, and if we were likely to be good friends. The captain, too, was chatting and laughing with the doctor as carelessly as if he had not the great responsibility of taking a huge ship across a boundless waste of waters, and through fields and islands of ice, to a distant country some three thousand miles to the north-west of England. Thus encouraged, my spirits began to rise, and when the cry arose on deck that the steamer containing the committee of the Honourable Hudson Bay Company was in sight, I sprang up the companion-ladder in a state of mind, if not happy, at least as nearly so as under the circum- stances could be expected. Upon gaining the deck, I beheld a small steamboat passing close under our stern, filled with a number of elderly-looking gentlemen, who eyed us with a very critical expression of countenance. I had a pretty good guess who these gentlemen were; but had I been entirely ignorant, I should soon have been enlightened by the remark of a sailor, who whispered to his com- rade, " I say, Bill, them's the great guns ! " 16 OUR INVITATION. I suppose the fact of their being so had a sympathetic effect upon the guns of the Company's three ships, the Prince Rupert, Prince Albert, and Prince of Wales, for they all three fired a salute of blank cartridge at the steamer as she passed them in succession. The steamer then ranged alongside of us, and the elderly gentlemen came on board and shook hands with the captain and officers, smiling blandly as they observed the neat, trim appearance of the three fine vessels, which, with everything in readiness for setting sail on the following morning, strained at their cables, as if anxious to commence their struggle with the waves. It is a custom of the directors of the Hudson Bay Company to give a public dinner annually to the officers of their ships upon the eve of their departure from Gravesend. Accordingly, one of the gentlemen of the committee, before leaving the vessel, invited the captain and officers to attend; and, to my astonishment and delight, also begged me to honour them with my com- pany. I accepted the invitation with extreme polite- ness; and, from inability to express my joy in any other way, winked to my friend Wiseacre, with whom I had become, by this time, pretty familiar. He, being also invited, winked in return to me ; and having dis- posed of this piece of juvenile freemasonry to our satis- faction, we assisted the crew in giving three hearty cheers, as the little steamer darted from the side and proceeded to the shore. The dinner, like all other public dinners, was as good and substantial as a lavish expenditure of cash could make it; but really my recollections of it are very AT THE DINNER. 17 indistinct. The ceaseless din of plates, glasses, knives, forks, and tongues was tremendous ; and this, together with the novelty of the scene, the heat of the room, and excellence of the viands, tended to render me oblivious of much that took place. Almost all the faces present were strange to me. Who were, and who were not, the gentlemen of the committee, was to me matter of the most perfect indifference; and as no one took the trouble to address me in particular, I confined myself to the interesting occupation of trying to make sense of a conversation held by upwards of fifty pairs of lungs at one and the same time. Nothing intelligible, how- ever, was to be heard, except when a sudden lull in the noise gave a bald-headed old gentleman near the head of the table an opportunity of drinking the health of a red-faced old gentleman near the foot, upon whom he bestowed an amount of flattery perfectly bewildering; and after making the unfortunate red-faced gentleman writhe for half an hour in a fever of modesty, sat down amid thunders of applause. Whether the applause, by the way, was intended for the speaker or the speakee, I do not know ; but being quite indifferent, I clapped my hands with the rest. The red-faced gentleman, now purple with excitement, then rose, and during a solemn silence delivered himself of a speech, to the effect that the day then passing was certainly the happiest in his mortal career, that he could not find words adequately to express the varied feelings which swelled his throb- bing bosom, and that he felt quite faint with the mighty load of honour just thrown upon his delighted shoulders by his bald-headed friend. The red-faced gentleman (510) 2 18 ON OUR WAY. then sat down to the national air of rat-tat-tat, played in full chorus with knives, forks, spoons, nut-crackers, and knuckles on the polished surface of the mahogany table. We left the dinner- table at a late hour, and after I, in company with some other youngsters, had done as much mischief as we conveniently could without risking our detention by the strong arm of the law, we went down to the beach and embarked in a boat with the captain for the ship. How the sailors ever found her in the impenetrable darkness which prevailed all around, is a mystery to me to this day. Find her, however, they did ; and in half an hour I was in the land of Nod. The sun was blazing high in the heavens next morn- ing when I awoke, and gazed around for a few moments to discover where I was ; but the rattling of ropes and blocks, the stamping of feet overhead, the shouts of gruff voices, and, above all, a certain strange and dis- agreeable motion in my dormitory, soon enlightened me on that point. We were going rapidly down the Thames with a fair breeze, and had actually set sail for the distant shores of Hudson Bay. What took place during the next five or six days I know not. The demon of sea-sickness had completely prostrated my faculties, bodily and mental. Some faint recollections I have of stormy weather, horrible noises, and hurried dinners ; but the greater part of that period is a miserable blank in my memory. Towards the sixth day, however, the savoury flavour of a splendid salmon- trout floated past my dried-up nostrils like "Afric's spicy gale," and caused my collapsed stomach to yearn SOME DAYS AFTER. 19 with strong emotion. The ship, too, was going more quietly through the water; and a broad stream of sun- shine shot through the small window of my berth, penetrated my breast, and went down into the centre of my heart, filling it with a calm, complacent pleasure, THE PRINCE RUPERT.' quite indescribable. Sounds, however, of an attack upon the trout roused me, and with a mighty effort I tumbled out of bed, donned my clothes, and seated myself for the first time at the cabin table. Our party consisted of the captain ; Mr. Carles, a chief factor in the Company's service ; the doctor ; young Mr. Wiseacre, afore-mentioned ; the first and second mates ; 20 MY CABIN COMPANIONS. and myself. The captain was a thin, middle-sized, off- hand man ; thoroughly acquainted with his profession ; good-humoured and gruff by turns ; and he always spoke with the air of an oracle. Mr. Carles was a mild, good-natured man, of about fifty-five, with a smooth, bald head, encircled by a growth of long, thin hair. He was stoutly built, and possessed of that truly amiable and captivating disposition which enters earnestly and kindly into the affairs of others, and totally repudiates self. From early manhood he had roughed life in the very roughest and wildest scenes of the wilderness, and was now returning to those scenes after a short visit to his native land. The doctor was a nondescript ; a com- pound of gravity, fun, seriousness, and humbug the latter predominating. He had been everywhere (at least, so he said), had seen everything, knew everybody, and played the fiddle It cannot be said, I fear, that he played it well ; but, amid the various vicissitudes of his chequered life, the doctor had frequently found him- self in company where his violin was almost idolized and himself deified ; especially when the place chanced to be the American backwoods, where violins are scarce, the auditors semi-barbarous Highlanders, and the music Scotch reels. Mr. Wiseacre was nothing ! He never spoke except when compelled to do so ; never read, and never cared for anything or anybody ; wore very long hair, which almost hid his face, owing to a habit which he had of holding his head always down ; and apparently lived but to eat, drink, and sleep. Sometimes, though very rarely, he became so far facetious as to indulge in a wink and a low giggle ; but beyond this he seldom TABLE TALK. 21 soared. The two mates were simply mates. Those who know the population of the sea will understand the description sufficiently ; those who don't, will never, I fear, be made to understand by description. They worked the ship, hove the log, changed the watch, turned out and tumbled in, with the callous indifference and stern regularity of clock-work ; inhabited tarpaulin dreadnoughts and sou'- westers; came down to meals with modest diffidence, and walked the deck with bantam- cock-like assurance. Nevertheless, they were warm- hearted fellows, both of them, although the heat didn't often come to the surface. The first mate was a broad Scotchman, in every sense of the term; the second was a burly little Englishman. " How's the wind, Collins ?" said the captain, as the second mate sat down at the dinner- table, and brushed the spray from his face with the back of his brown hand. " Changed a point to the s'uthard o' sou'- west, sir," he answered, " and looks as if it would blow hard." " Humph !" ejaculated the captain, while he proceeded to help the fish. " I hope it '11 only keep quiet till we get into blue water, and then it may blow like blazes for all I care. Take some trout, doctor? It's the last you'll put your teeth through for six weeks to come, / know ; so make the most of it. I wish I were only through the Pentland Firth, and scudding under full sail for the ice I do." And the captain looked fiercely at the compass which hung over his head, as if he had said something worthy of being recorded in history, and began to eat. After a pause of five minutes or so during which 22 CONCERNING SQUALLS. time the knives and forks had been clattering pretty vigorously, and the trout had become a miserable skele- ton the captain resumed his discourse. " I tell you what it is now, gentlemen ; if there's not going to be a change of some sort or other, I'm no sailor." " It does look very threatening," said Mr. Carles, peer- ing through the stern window. " I don't much like the look of these clouds behind us. Look there, doctor !" he continued, pointing towards the window. " What do you think of that ?" " Nothing !" replied the doctor, through a mouthful of duff and potatoes. "A squall, I fancy; wish it'd only wait till after dinner." " It never does," said the captain. " I've been to sea these fifteen years, and I always find that squalls come on at breakfast or dinner, like an unwelcome visitor. They've got a thorough contempt for tea seem to know it's but swipes, and not worth pitching into one's lap ; but dinner's sure to bring 'em on, if they're in the neighbourhood, and make 'em bu'st their cheeks at you. Remember once, when I was cruising, in the Mediter- ranean, in Lord P 's yacht, we'd been stewing on deck under an awning the whole forenoon, scarce able to breathe, when the bell rang for dinner. Well, down we all tumbled about ten ladies and fifteen gentlemen, or thereabouts and seated ourselves round the table. There was no end of grub of every kind. Lord P was eccentric in that way, and was always at some new dodge or other in the way of cookery. At this time he had invented a new dumpling. Its jacket was much THE CAPTAIN S ANECDOTE. 23 the same as usual inch-thick duff; but its contents were beyond anything I ever saw, except the inaw of an old shark. Well, just as the steward took off the cover, hiss-s went the wind overhead, and one of those horrible squalls that come rattling down without a moment's warning in those parts, struck the ship, and gave her a heel over that sent the salt-cellars chasing the tumblers like all-possessed ; and the great dumpling gave a heavy lurch to leeward, rolled fairly over on its beam-ends, and began to course straight down the table quite sedate and quiet-like. Several dives were made at it by the gentlemen as it passed, but they all missed ; and finally, just as a youngster made a grab at it with both hands that bid fair to be successful, another howl of the squall changed its course, and sent it like a cannon-shot straight into the face of the steward, where it split its sides, and scattered its contents right and left. I don't know how it ended, for I bolted up the companion, and saw the squall splitting away to lee- ward, shrieking as it went, just as if it were rejoicing at the mischief it had done." The laugh which greeted the captain's anecdote had scarce subsided when the tough sides of the good Prince Rupert gave a gentle creak, and the angle at which the active steward perambulated the cabin became absurdly acute. Just then the doctor cast his eye up at the compass suspended above the captain's head. " Hallo !" said he . But before he could give utterance to the sentiments to which "hallo" was the preface, the hoarse voice of the first mate came rolling down the companion-hatch, 24 A SCENE OF GRANDEUR. " A squalJ, sir ! scoorin' doon like mad ! Wund 's veered richt roond to the nor'-east." The captain and second mate sprang hastily to their feet and rushed upon deck, where the rest of us joined them as speedily as possible. CAUOHT BY A SQUALL. On gaining the quarter-deck, the scene that presented itself was truly grand. Thick black clouds rolled heavily overhead, and cast a gloom upon the sea which caused it to look like ink. Not a breath of wind swelled the sails, which the men were actively engaged in taking in. Far away on our weather-quarter the clouds were A. STEADY BREEZE. 2 thicker and darker ; and just where they met the sea there was seen a bright streak of white, which rapidly grew broader and brighter, until we could perceive that it was the sea lashed into a seething foam by the gale which was sweeping over it. " Mind your helm !" shouted the captain. " Ay, ay, sir !" sang out the man at the wheel. And in another moment the squall burst upon us with all its fury, laying the huge vessel over on its side as if it had been a feather on the wave, and causing her to fly through the black water like a dolphin. In a few minutes the first violence of the squall passed away, and was succeeded by a steady breeze, which bore us merrily along over the swelling billows. " A stiff one, that," said the captain, turning to the doctor, who, with imperturbable nonchalance, was stand- ing near him, holding on to a stancheon with one hand, while the other reposed in his breeches pocket. " I hope it will last," replied the doctor. " If it does, we'll not be long of reaching the blue water you long so much for." Young Wiseacre, who during the squall had been clutching the weather-shrouds with the tenacity of a drowning man, opened his eyes very wide on hearing this, to him, insane wish, and said to me in an under- tone, " I say, do you think the doctor is quite right in his mind?" " I have no doubt of it," replied I. " Why do you ask?" " Because I heard him say to the captain, he wished that this would last." 26 THE ISLAND OF LEWIS. " Is that all ?" said I, while a very vile spirit of vanity took possession of me, inducing me to speak in a tone which indicated a tranquillity of mind that I certainly did not enjoy. " Oh, this is nothing at all ! I see you've never been on salt-water before. Just wait a bit, old fellow !" And having given utterance to this somewhat dark and mysterious expression, I staggered across the deck, and amused myself in watching the thick volumes of spray that flew at every plunge from the sides of the bounding vessel. The doctor's wish was granted. The breeze continued steady and strong, sending us through the Pentland Firth in grand style, and carrying us in a short time to the island of Lewis, where we hove-to for a pilot. After a little signalizing we obtained one, who steered our good ship in safety through the narrow entrance to the bay of Stornoway, into whose quiet waters we finally dropped our anchor. CHAPTER II. STORNOWAY THE BALL AT SEA GO OUT TO TEA ON THE ATLANTIC AMONG THE ICE SIGHTING LAND A SLEEPY NIGHT YORK FACTORY AND BACHE- LORS* HALL. t iJHE harbour of Stornoway is surrounded by high hills, except at the entrance, where a passage not more, I should think, than three hundred 3 r ards wide admits vessels of any tonnage into its sheltering bosom. Stornoway, a pretty, modest-looking town, apparently pleased with its lot, and contented to be far away from the busy and bust- ling world, lies snugly at the bottom of the bay. Here we remained upwards of a week, engaging men for the wild Nor'- West, and cultivating the acquaintance of the people, who were extremely kind and very hospitable. Occasionally Wiseacre and I amused ourselves with fishing excursions to the middle of the bay in small boats ; in which excursions we were usually accom- panied by two or three very ragged little boys from the town. Our sport was generally good, and rendered extremely interesting by our uncertainty as to which of the monsters of the deep would first attack our hooks. Rock-codlings and flounders appeared the most 28 A BALL ON BOARD. voracious, and occasionally a skate or long-legged crab came struggling to the surface. Just before leaving this peaceful little spot, our cap- tain gave a grand ball on board, to which were invited the tlite of Stornoway. Great preparations were made for the occasion. The quarter-deck was well washed and scrubbed; an awning was spread over it, which formed a capital ceiling ; and representatives of almost every flag that waves formed the walls of the large and airy apartment. Oil lamps, placed upon the sky-lights, companion, and capstan, shed a mellow light upon the scene, the romantic effect of which was greatly height- ened by a few flickering rays of the moon, which shot through various openings in the drapery, and disported playfully upon the deck. At an early and very un- fashionable hour on the evening of the appointed night the guests arrived in detachments; and while the gentle- men scrambled up the side of the vessel, the ladies, amid a good deal of blushing and hesitation, were hoisted on board in a chair. Tea was served on deck ; and after half an hour's laughing and chatting, during which time our violin-player was endeavouring to coax his first string to the proper pitch without breaking, the ball opened with a Scotch reel. Every one knows what Scotch reels are, but every one does not know how the belles of the Western Isles can dance them. " Just look at that slip of thread-paper," said the doctor to the captain, pointing to a thin, flat young lady, still in her teens. " I've watched her from the first. She's been up at six successive rounds, flinging her shanks about worse than a teething baby ; and she's THE CAPTAIN'S PARTNER. 29 up again for another, just as cool and serene as a night in the latter end of October. I wonder what she's made of." "Leather, p'r'aps, or gutta percha," suggested the cap- tain, who had himself been "flinging his legs" about pretty violently during the previous half-hour. " I wish that she had been my partner instead of the heavy fair one that you see over there leaning against the inizzen belaying-pins." " Which ?" inquired the doctor. " The old lady with the stu'n-sails set on her shoulders ?" "No, no," replied the captain "the young lady; fat very fat fair, and twenty, with the big blue eyes like signal-lamps on a locomotive. She twisted me round just as if I'd been a fathom of pump- water, shouting and laughing all the time in my face, like a sou'- west gale, and never looking a bit where she was going till she pitched head-foremost into the union-jack, carrying it and me along with her off' the quarter-deck and half- way down the companion. It's a blessing she fell under- most, else I should have been spread all over the deck like a capsized pail of slops." " Hallo !" exclaimed the doctor; "what's wrong with the old lady over there ? She's making very uncommon faces." " She's sea-sick, I do believe," cried the captain, rush- ing across the deck towards her. And, without doubt, the old lady in question was showing symptoms of that terrible malady, although the bay was as smooth as a mill-pond, and the Prince Rupert reposed on its quiet bosom without the slightest 30 AN ABRUPT TERMINATION perceptible motion. With impressive nautical polite- ness the captain handed her below, and in the sudden sympathy of his heart proposed as a remedy a stiff glass of brandy and water. " Or a pipe of cavendish," suggested the second mate, who met them on the ladder as they descended, and could not refrain from a facetious remark, even although he knew it would, as it did, call forth a thundering command from his superior to go on deck and mind his own business. " Isn't it jolly," said a young Stornowite, coming up to Wiseacre, with a face blazing with glee " isn't it jolly, Mr. Wiseacre ?" " Oh, very !" replied Wiseacre, in a voice of such dismal melancholy that the young Stornowite 's counte- nance instantly went out, and he wheeled suddenly round to light it again at the visage of some more sympathizing companion. Just at this point of the revelry the fiddler's first string, which had endured with a dogged tenacity that was wonderful even for catgut, gave way with a loud bang, causing an abrupt termination to the uproar, and producing a dead silence. A few minutes, however, soon rectified this mischance. The discordant tones of the violin, as the new string was tortured into tune, once more opened the safety-valve, and the ball began de novo. Great was the fun, and numerous were the ludicrous incidents, that happened during that eventful night; and loud were the noise and merriment of the dancers as they went with vigorous energy through the bewilder- SUPPER UNDER DIFFICULTIES. 81 ing evolutions of country-dance and reel. Immense was the delight of the company when the funniest old gentle- man there volunteered a song ; and ecstatic the joy when he followed it up by a speech upon every subject that an ordinary mind could possibly embrace in a quarter of an hour. But who can describe the scene that ensued when supper was reported ready in the cabin ! a cabin that was very small indeed, with a stair leading down to it so steep that those who were pretty high up could have easily stepped upon the shoulders of those who were near the foot ; and the un- pleasant idea was painfully suggested that if any one of the heavy ladies (there were several of them) was to slip her foot on commencing the descent, she would infallibly sweep them all down in a mass, and cram them into the cook's pantry, the door of which stood wickedly open at the foot of the stair, as if it antici- pated some such catastrophe. Such pushing, squeezing, laughing, shrieking, and joking, in the vain attempt made to get upwards of thirty people crammed into a room of twelve feet by ten ! Such droll and cutting remarks as were made when they were at last requested to sup in detachments ! All this, however, was nothing to what ensued after supper, when the fiddler became more energetic, and the dancers more vigorous than ever. But enough. The first gray streaks of morning glimmered in the east ere the joyous party " tumbled down the sides" and departed to their homes. There is a sweet yet melancholy pleasure, when far away from friends and home, in thinking over happy days gone by, and dwelling on the scenes and pleasures 82 AGAIN AT SEA. that have passed away, perhaps for ever. So I thought and felt, as I recalled to mind the fun and frolic of the Stornoway ball, and the graver mirth of the Gravesend dinner, until memory traced my course backward, step by step, to the peaceful time when I dwelt in Scotland, surrounded by the gentle inmates of my happy home. We had left the shores and the green water behind us, and were now ploughing through the blue waves of the wide Atlantic ; and when I turned my straining eyes towards the faint blue line of the lessening hills, " a tear unbidden trembled" as the thought arose that I looked perhaps for the last time upon my dear native land. The sea has ever been an inexhaustible subject for the pens of most classes of writers. The poet, the traveller, and the novelist has each devoted a portion of his time and talents to the mighty ocean ; but that part of it which it has fallen to my lot to describe is very different from those portions about which poets have sung with rapture. Here, none of the many wonders of the tropical latitudes beguile the tedium of the voyage; no glittering dolphins force the winged in- habitants of the deep to seek shelter on the vessel's deck ; no ravenous sharks follow in our wake to eat us if we chance to fall overboard, or amuse us by swal- lowing our baited hook; no passing vessel cheers us with the knowledge that there are others besides our- selves roaming over the interminable waste of waters. All was dreary and monotonous ; the same unvarying expanse of sky and water met our gaze each morning as we ascended to the deck, to walk for half an hour before breakfast, except when the topsails of the other two HUDSON STRAITS. 38 vessels fluttered for a moment on the distant horizon. Occasionally we approached closer to eacli other, and once or twice hailed with the trumpet ; but these breaks in the solitude of our existence were few and far between. Towards the end of July we approached Hudson Straits, having seen nothing on the way worth men- tioning, except one whale, which passed close under the stern of the ship. This was a great novelty to me, being the first that 1 had ever seen, and it gave me something to talk of and think about for the next four days. The ships now began to close in, as we neared the entrance of the straits, and we had the pleasure of sailing in company for a few days. The shores of the straits became visible occasionally, and soon we passed with perfect confidence and security among those nar- row channels and mountains of ice that damped the ardour and retarded the progress of Hudson, Button, Gibbons, and other navigators in days of yore. One day, during a dead calm, our ship and the Prince of Wales lay close to each other, rolling in the swell of the glassy ocean. There seemed to be no prospect of a breeze ; so the captain ordered his gig to be launched, and invited the doctor, Mr. Carles, and myself, to go on board the Prince of Wales with him. We accepted his offer, and were soon alongside. Old Captain Kyle, a veteran in the Company's service, received us kindly, and insisted on our staying to tea. The passengers on board were, a chief factor,* who had been home on * The chief factorship is the highest rank attainable in tho service the chief trader being next. (510) 3 34 A PLEASANT EVENING. leave of absence, and was returning to end his days, perhaps, in the North- West; and Mr. John Leagues, a young apprentice clerk, going, like myself, to try his fortune in Hudson Bay. He was a fine, candid young fellow, full of spirit, with a kind, engaging disposition. From the first moment I saw him I formed a friend- ship for him, which was destined to ripen into a lasting one many years after. I sighed on parting from him that evening, thinking that we should never meet again; but about six years from the time I bade him farewell in Hudson Straits, I again grasped his hand on the shores of the mighty St. Lawrence, and renewed a friendship which afforded me the greatest pleasure I enjoyed in the country, and which, I trust, neither time nor distance will ever lessen or destroy. We spent the evening delightfully, the more so that we were not likely to have such an opportunity again, as the Prince of Wales would shortly part company from us, and direct her course to Moose Factory, in James Bay, while we should proceed across Hudson Bay to York Factory. We left the ship just as a few cat's-paws on the surface of the water gave indications of a coming breeze. Ice now began to surround us in all directions; and soon after this I saw, for the first time, that monster of the Polar Seas, an iceberg. It was a noble sight. We passed quite close, and had a fine opportunity of ob- serving it. Though not so large as they are frequently seen, it was beautifully and fantastically formed. High peaks rose from it on various places, and down its sides streams of water and miniature cataracts flowed in SCENES BEAUTIFUL AND ROMANTIC. 35 torrents. The whole mass was of a delicate greenish- white colour, and its lofty pinnacles sparkled in the moonbeams as it floated past, bending majestically in the swell of the ocean. About this time, too, we met numerous fields and floes of ice, to get through which we often experienced considerable difficulty. My favourite amusement, as we thus threaded our way through the ice, was to ascend to the royal-yard, and there to sit and cogitate whilst gazing on the most beautiful and romantic scenes. It is impossible to convey a correct idea of the beauty, the magnificence, of some of the scenes through which we passed. Sometimes thousands of the most grotesque, fanciful, and beautiful icebergs and icefields surrounded us on all sides, intersected by numerous serpentine canals, which glittered in the sun (for the weather was fine nearly all the time we were in the straits), like threads of silver twining round ruined palaces of crystal. The masses assumed every variety of form and size ; and many of them bore such a striking resemblance to cathedrals, churches, columns, arches, and spires, that I could almost fancy we had been transported to one of the floating cities of Fairyland. The rapid motion, too, of our ship, in what appeared a dead calm, added much to the magical effect of the scene. A light but steady breeze urged her 1 along with considerable velocity through a maze of ponds and canals, which, from the immense quantity of ice that surrounded them, were calm and unruffled as the surface of a mill-pond. Not a sound disturbed the delightful stillness of nature, save the gentle rippling of the vessel's bow as 86 SETTLING A DOUBT. she sped on her way, or the occasional puffing of a lazy whale, awakened from a nap by our unceremonious in- trusion on his domains. Now and then, however, my reveries were interrupted by the ship coming into sud- den contact with huge lumps of ice. This happened occasionally when we arrived at the termination of one of those natural canals through which we passed, and found it necessary to force our way into the next. These concussions were occasionally very severe so much so, at times, as to make the ship's bell ring ; but we heeded this little, as the vessel was provided with huge blocks of timber on her bows, called ice-pieces, and was, besides, built expressly for sailing in the northern seas. It only became annoying at meal-times, when a spoonful of soup would sometimes make a little private excursion of its own over the shoulder of the owner instead of into his mouth. As we proceeded, the ice became more closely packed, and at last compelled us to bore through it. The ship, however, was never altogether arrested, though often much retarded. I recollect, while thus surrounded, tilling a bucket with water from a pool on the ice, to see whether it was fresh or not, as I had been rather sceptical upon this point. It was excellent, and might almost compete with the water from the famous spring of Crawley. In a few days we got out of the ice alto- gether; and in this, as the ships are frequently detained for weeks in the straits, we considered ourselves very fortunate. We all experienced at this time a severe disappoint- ment in the non-appearance of the Esquimaux from the A DISAPPOINTMENT. 39 coast. The captain said they would be sure to come off to us, as they had always been in the habit of doing so, for the purpose of exchanging ivory and oil for saws, files, needles, &c., a large chestful of which is put on board annually for this purpose. The ivory usually procured from them is walrus tusks. These are not very large, and are of inferior quality. As we approached the shores of the straits, we shortened sail and fired three or four guns, but no noisy " chimo " floated across the water in answer to our salute ; still we lingered for a while, but, as there was no sign of the natives on shore, the captain concluded they had gone off to the interior, and he steered out to sea again. I was very much disappointed at this, as it was wholly unexpected, and Wiseacre and I had pro- mised ourselves much pleasure in trading with them ; for which purpose all the buttons of our old waistcoats had been amputated. It was useless, however, to repine, so I contented myself with the hope that they would yet visit us in some other part of the straits. We afterwards learned that our guns had attracted them to the coast in time to board the Prince Albert (which was out of sight astern), though too late for us. The passage across Hudson Bay was stormy, but no one on board cared for this, all having become accus- tomed to rough weather. For my part, I had become quite a sailor, and could ascend and descend easily to the truck without creeping through the lubber's hole. I shall not forget the first time I attempted this : our youngest apprentice had challenged me to try it, so up we went together he on the fore and I on the main 40 ASCENDING TO THE TRUCK. inast. The tops were gained easily, and we even made two or three steps up the top-mast shrouds with affected indifference ; but, alas ! our courage was failing at least mine was very fast. However, we gained the cross-trees pretty well, and then sat down for a little to recover breath. The top-gallant-mast still reared its taper form higli a,bove me, and the worst was yet to come. The top-gallant shrouds had no rattlins on them, so I was obliged to shin up; and, as I worked myself up the two small ropes, the tenacity with which I grasped them was fearful. At last I reached the top, and with my feet on the small collar tliat fastens the ropes to the mast, and my arms circling the mast itself for nothing but a bare pole, crossed by the royal-yard, now rose above me I glanced upwards. After taking a long breath, and screwing up my courage, I slowly shinned up the slender pole, and, standing on the royal- yard, laid my hand upon the truck. After a time I became accustomed to it, and thought nothing of taking an airing on the royal-yard after breakfast. About the 5th or 6th of August, the captain said we must be near the land. The deep-sea lead was rigged, and a sharp look-out kept, but no land appeared. At last, one fine day, while at the mast-head, I saw some- thing like land on the horizon, and told them so on deck. They saw it too, but gave me no answer. Soon a hurried order to "Dowse top-gallant-sails and reef top-sails " made me slide down rather hastily from my elevated position. I had scarcely gained the deck, when a squall, the severest we had yet encountered, struck the ship, laying her almost on her beam-ends, IN " FIVE FATHOM HOLE." 41 and the soa,, which had been nearly calm a low minutes before, foamed and hissed like a seething caldron, and became white as snow. This, I believe, was what sailors call a white squall. It was as short as it was severe, and great was our relief when the ship regained her natural position in the water. Next day we saw land in earnest, and in the afternoon anchored in " Five Fathom Hole," after passing in safety a sand-bar, which renders the entrance into this roadstead rather diffi- cult. Here, then, for the first time I beheld the shores of Hudson Bay ; and truly their appearance was anything but prepossessing. Though only at the distance of two miles, so low and flat was the land, that it appeared ten miles off, and scarcely a tree was to be seen. We could just see the tops of one or two houses in York Factory, the principal depot of the country, which was seven miles up the river at the mouth of which we lay. In a short time the sails of a small schooner came in sight, and in half an hour more the Frances (named after the amiable lady of the governor, Sir George Simpson) was riding alongside. The skipper came on board, and immediately there commenced between him and the captain a sharp fire of questions and answers, which roused me from a slumber in which I had been indulging, and hurried me on deck. Here the face of things had changed. The hatches were off, and bales of goods were scattered about in all direc- tions. Another small schooner had arrived, and the process of discharging the vessel was going rapidly for- ward. A boat was then despatched to the factory with 42 ON BOARD THE " FRANCES." the packet-box and letter-bag, and soon after tlio Frances stood in for the shore. The Prince Albert had arrived almost at the same moment with the Prince Rupert, and was now visited by the second schooner, which soon returned to our ship to take the passengers on shore. The passengers who came out in the Prince Albert were on board namely, the Rev. Mr. Gowley, a clergyman of the Church of England, and his lady; and Mr. Rob, a sort of cate- chist, or semi-clerical schoolmaster. They were mis- sionaries bound for Red River Colony; and as I had some prospect of going there myself, I was delighted to have the probable chance of travelling with companions who, from the short survey I had of them while they conversed with the captain and Mr. Carles, seemed good-natured and agreeable. Mr. Carles, Mr. Wiseacre, and I, now bade adieu to the good ship which had been our home for such a length of time (but I must say I did not regret the parting), and followed our baggage on boa.rd the schooner, expecting to reach the factory before dusk. " There's many a slip 'twixt the cup and the lip," is a proverb well authenticated and often quoted, and on the present occasion its truth was verified. We had not been long under weigh before the ebb tide began to run so strong against us as to preclude the possibility of our reaching the shore that night. There was no help for it, however ; so down went the anchor to the bottom, and down went I to the cabin. Such a cabin ! A good-sized trunk, with a small table in it, and the lid shut down, had about as much A SLEEPY NIGHT. 48 right to the name. It was awfully small even / could not stand upright in it, though at the time I had scarcely attained to the altitude of five feet ; yet here were we destined to pass the night and a wretched night we did pass. We got over the first part tolerably, but as it grew late our eyes grew heavy. We yawned, fidgeted, and made superhuman efforts to keep awake and seem happy; but it would not do. There were only two berths in the cabin ; and, as so many gentle- men were present, Mrs. Gowley would not get into either of them, but declared she would sit up all night. The gentlemen, on the other hand, could not be so un- gallanj; as to go to sleep while the only lady present sat up. The case was desperate, and so I went off to the hold, intending to lie down on a bale, if I could find one. In my search I tumbled over something soft, which gave vent to a frightful howl, and proved to be no less a personage than Mr. Wiseacre, who had an- ticipated me, and found a convenient place whereon to lie. My search, however, was less successful. Not a corner big enough for a cat to sleep in was to be found, all the goods having been flung hastily into the hold, so that it was a chaos of box corners, stove legs, edges of kegs and casks, which presented a surface that put to flight all hope of horizontal repose ; so I was obliged to return to the cabin, where I found the unhappy inmates winking and blinking at each other like owls in the sunshine. " You had better make use of one of these berths, my young friend," said Mr. Gowley, with a bland smile, as I entered; "you seem very much overcome with sleep, and we have resolved to sit up all night." 44 A SLEEPY NIGHT. "Do got in," urged Mrs. Gowley, who was a sweet, gentle creature, and seemed much too delicate and fra- gile to stand the rough life that was likely to be the lot of the wife of a misssionary to the Red men of the Far North; "I do not intend to lie down to-night; and besides, it will soon be morning." A sweet but very sleepy smile flitted across her face as she spoke. Of course, I protested against this with great vehe- mence, assuring them that I could not think of anything so ungallaiit, and that I meant to sit it out manfully with the rest. Mr. Rob, who was a comical little Welshman, of about thirty years of age, with a sharp, snub nose, which was decorated with spectacles, sat huddled up in a corner, immersed in sleepiness to such an extent that he would not have smiled for worlds, and spent the weary hours in vain efforts to keep his head on his shoulders an object, apparently, of some difficulty, seeing that it swayed backwards and for- wards and round about like that of a Chinese mandarin! For a few minutes I sat gazing steadfastly at the re- volving object before me, when my own head became similarly affected, and fell suddenly back against the bulk-head with a tremendous crash, wakening them all up, and causing Mr. Rob to stare at me with an ex- pression of vacant gravity, mingled with surprise, which slowly and gradually faded away again as sleep re- asserted its irresistible power. Flesh and blood could not stand this. I would have lain down on the table, but poor Mrs. Gowley's head already covered the greater part of that; or on the floor, but, alas ! it was too small. At last I began to HOW WE PASSED THE NIGHT. 45 reason thus with myself: "Here are two capital beds, with nobody in them ; it is the height of folly to per- mit them to remain empty ; but then, what a selfish- looking thing to leave Mrs. Gowley sitting up ! After all, she won't go to bed. Oh dear ! what is to be done ?" (Bang went the head again.) " You'd better turn in," said Mr. Gowley. Again I protested that I could not think of it ; but my eyes would not keep open to look him in the face. At last my scruples I blush to say it were overcome, and I allowed myself to be half forced into the berth ; while Mr. Rob, whose self-denial could endure no longer, took advantage of the confusion thus occasioned, and vanished into the other like a harlequin. Poor Mr. and Mrs. Gowley laid their inno- cent heads side by side upon the table, and snored in concert. How long I slept I know not, but long before day a tremendous thumping awoke me, and after I had col- lected my faculties enough to understand it, I found that the schooner was grounding as the tide receded. "Oh!" thought I; and, being utterly incapable of thinking more, I fell back on the pillow again, sound asleep, and did not awake till long after daybreak. Next morning was beautiful ; but we were still aground, and, from what the skipper said, there ap- peared to be no prospect of getting ashore till the after- noon. Our patience, however, was not tried so long; for, early in the day, a boat came off from the factory to take us ashore : but the missionaries preferred re- maining in the schooner. Mr. Carles, young Wiseacre, and I, gladly availed ourselves of the opportunity, and 46 APPEARANCE OF THE LAND. were soon sailing with a fair breeze up Hayes River. We approached to within a few yards of the shore ; and I formed, at first sight, a very poor opinion of the country which, two years later, I was destined to tra- verse full many a mile in search of the feathered inhabi- tants of the marshes. The Point of Marsh, which was the first land we made, was quite low only a few feet above the sea and studded here and there with thick willows, but not a single tree. Long lank grass covered it in every place, affording ducks and geese shelter, in the autumn and spring. In the centre of it stood the ship-beacon a tall, ungainly-looking pile, which rose upwards like a monster out of the water. Altogether, a more deso- late prospect could not well be imagined. The banks of Hayes River are formed of clay, and they improved a little in verdure as we ascended ; but still, wherever the eye turned, the same universal flat- ness met the gaze. The river was here about two miles wide, and filled with shallows and sandbanks, which render the navigation difficult for vessels above fifty tons. As we proceeded, a small bark canoe, with an Indian and his wife in it, glided swiftly past us ; and this was the first Indian, and the first of these slender craft, I had seen. Afterwards, I became more intimately ac- quainted with them than watt altogether agreeable. In a short time we reached the wooden wharf, which, owing to the smallness of everything else in the vici- nity, had rather an imposing look, and projected a long way into the water ; but our boat passed this and made YORK FACTORY. 47 for a small slip, ori which two or three gentlemen waited to receive us. My voyage was ended. The boat's keel grated harshly on the gravel; the next moment my feet once more pressed terra, firma, and I stood at last on the shores of the New World, a stranger in a strange land. I do not intend to give a minute description of York Factory here, as a full account of it will be found in a succeeding chapter, and shall, therefore, confine myself to a slight sketch of the establishment, and our pro- ceedings there during a stay of about three weeks. York Factory is the principal depot of the Northern department, from whence all the supplies for the trade are issued, and where all the furs of the district are col- lected and shipped for England. As may be supposed, then, the establishment is a large one. There are always between thirty and forty men resident at the post,* sum- mer and winter; generally four or five clerks, a post- master, and a skipper for the small schooners. The whole is under the direction and superintendence of a chief factor, or chief trader. As the winter is very long (nearly eight months), and the summer very short, all the transport of goods to, and returns from, the interior, must .necessarily be effected as quickly as possible. The consequence is, that great numbers of men and boats are constantly arriving from the inland posts, and departing again, during the summer ; and as each brigade is commanded by a chief factor, trader, or clerk, there is a constant * The word "post," used here and elsewhere throughout the book, signifies an establishment of any kind, small or great, and has no reference whatever to the "post" of epistolary notoriety. 43 YOEK FACTORY. succession of new faces, which, after a long and dreary winter, during which the inhabitants never see a stranger, renders the summer at York Factory the most agreeable part of the year. The arrival of the ship from England, too, delights these inhabitants of the wilderness with letters from home, which can only be received twice a-year namely, at the time now alluded to, by the ship; and again in December, when letters and accounts are conveyed throughout the interior by means of sledges drawn by men. The fort (as all establishments in the Indian country, whether small or great, are sometimes called) is a large square, I should think about six or seven acres, enclosed within high stockades, and planted on the banks of Hayes River, nearly five miles from its mouth. The houses are all of wood, and, of course, have no pretension to architectural beauty ; but their clean white appearance and regularity have a pleasing effect on the eye. Before the front gate stand four large brass field-pieces; but these warlike instruments are only used for the purpose of saluting the ship with blank cartridge on her arrival and departure, the decayed state of the carriages ren- dering it dangerous to load the guns with a full charge. The country, as I said before, is flat and swampy, and the only objects that rise very prominently above the rest, and catch the wandering eye, are a lofty " outlook," or scaffolding of wood, painted black, from which to watch for the arrival oi the ship ; and a flag-staff, from whose peak, on Sundays, the snowy folds of St. George's flag flutter in the breeze. Such was York Factory in 1841 ; and as this descrip- BACHELORS' HALL. 49 tion is sufficient to give a general idea of the place, 1 shall conclude it, and proceed with my narrative. Mr. Grave, the chief factor then in charge, received us very kindly, and introduced us to some of the gentle- men standing beside him on the wharf. Mr. Carles, being also a chief factor, was taken by him to the com- missioned gentlemen's house; while Wiseacre and I, being apprentice clerks, were shown the young gentle- men's house or, as the young gentlemen themselves called it, Bachelors' Hall and were told to make our- selves at home. To Bachelors' Hall, then, we proceeded, and introduced ourselves. The persons assembled there were, the accountant, five clerks, the postmaster, and one or two others. Some of them were smoking,, and some talking; and a pretty considerable noise they made. Bachelors' Hall, indeed, was worthy of its name, being a place that would have killed any woman, so full was it of smoke, noise, and confusion. After having made ourselves acquainted with every- body, I thought it time to present a letter of introduc- tion I had to Mrs. Grave, the wife of the gentleman in charge, who received me very kindly. I was much in- debted to this lady for supplying me with several pairs of moccasins for my further voyage, and much useful information, without which I should have been badly off indeed. Had it not been for her kindness, I should in all probability have been allowed to depart very ill provided for the journey to Red River, for which I was desired to hold myself in readiness. Young Wiseacre, on the other hand, learned that he was to remain at York Factory that winter, and was placed in the office (610) 4 50 AT WORK. the day after our arrival, where he commenced work for the first time. We had a long and sage conversa- tion upon the subject the same evening, and I well re- member congratulating him, with an extremely grave face, upon his having now begun to do for himself. Poor fellow ! his subsequent travels in the country were long and perilous. But let us pause here a while. The reader has been landed in a new country, and it may be well, before describing our voyage to Red River, to make him ac- quainted with the peculiarities of the service, and the people with whom he will in imagination have to asso- ciate. CHAPTER III. DESCRIPTION OF THE HUDSON BAY COMPANY THEIR TORTS AND ESTABLISH- MENTS FOOD ARTICLES OF TRADE AND MANNER OF TRADING. the year 1669, a Company was formed in Lon- don, under the direction of Prince Rupert, for the purpose of prosecuting the fur-trade in the regions surrounding Hudson Bay. This Com- pany obtained a charter from Charles II., grant- ing to them and their successors, under the name of " The Governor and Company of Adventurers trading into Hudson's Bay," the sole right of trading in all the country watered by rivers flowing into Hudson Bay. The charter also authorized them to build and fit out men-of-war, establish forts, prevent any other company from carrying on trade with the natives in their terri- tories, and required that they should do all in their power to promote Discovery. Armed with these powers, then, the Hudson Bay Company established a fort near the head of James Bay. Soon afterwards, several others were built in different parts of the country; and before long the Company spread and grew wealthy, and eventually extended their trade far beyond the chartered limits. With the internal economy of the Company under 62 THE COMPANY'S TERRITORIES. the superintendence of Prince Rupert, however, I am not acquainted; but as it will be necessary to the reader's forming a correct idea of the peculiarities of the country and service, that he should know something of its character under the direction of Sir George Simp- son, I shall give a brief outline of its arrangements. Reader, you will materially assist me in my descrip- tion if you will endeavour to draw the following land- scape on the retina of your mind's eye. Imagine an immense extent of country, many hun- dred miles broad and many hundred miles long, covered with dense forests, expanded lakes, broad rivers, wide prairies, swamps, and mighty mountains ; and all in a state of primeval simplicity undefaced by the axe of civilized man, and untenanted by aught save a few roving hordes of Red Indians and myriads of wild ani- mals. Imagine amid this wilderness a number of small squares, each enclosing half-a-dozen wooden houses and about a dozen men, and between each of these estab- lishments a space of forest varying from fifty to three hundred miles in length ; and you will have a pretty correct idea of the Hudson Bay Company's territories, and of the number of and distance between their forts. The idea, however, may be still more correctly obtained by imagining populous Great Britain converted into a wilderness and planted in the middle of Rupert's Land. The Company, in that case, would build three forts in it one at the Land's End, one in Wales, and one in the Highlands ; so that in Britain there would be but three hamlets, with a population of some thirty men, half-a- dozen women, and a few children ! The Company'n THE FEMALE POPULATION. 53 posts extend, with these intervals between, from the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean, and from within the Arctic Circle to the northern boundaries of the United States. Throughout this immense country there are probably not more ladies than would suffice to form half-a-dozen quadrilles ; and these poor banished creatures ! are chiefly the wives of the principal gentlemen connected with the fur-trade. The rest of the female population consists chiefly of half-breeds and Indians; the latter entirely devoid of education, and the former as much enlightened as can be expected from those whose life is spent in such a country. Even these are not very numerous ; and yet without them the men would be in a sad condition, for they are the only tailors and washer- women in the country, and make all the mittens, moc- casins, fur caps, deer-skin coats, &c., &c., worn in the land. There are one or two favoured spots, however, into which a missionary or two have penetrated; and in Red River settlement (the only colony in the Company's ter- ritories) there are several churches and clergymen, both Protestant and Roman Catholic. The country is divided into four large departments. The Northern department, which includes all the estab- lishments in the far north and frozen regions; the Southern department, including those to the south and east of this, the post at the head of James Bay, and along the shores of Lake Superior; the Montreal depart- ment, including the country in the neighbourhood of Montreal, up the Ottawa River, and along the north 54 DEPARTMENTS AND FORTS. shore of the Gulf of St. Lawrence and Esquimaux Bay j and the Columbia department, which comprehends an immense extent of country to the west of the Rocky Mountains, including the Oregon territory, which, al- though the Hudson Bay Company still trade in it, now belongs to the Americans. These departments are divided into a number of dis- tricts, each under the direction of an influential officer ; and these again are subdivided into numerous establish- ments, forts, posts, and outposts. The name of fort, as already remarked, is given to all the posts in the country ; but some of them certainly do not merit the name indeed, few of them do. The only two in the country that are real, bond fide forts, are Fort Garry and the Stone Fort in the colony of Red River, which are surrounded by stone walls with bas- tions at the corners. The others are merely defended by wooden pickets or stockades ; and a few, where the Indians are quiet and harmless, are entirely destitute of defence of any kind. Some of the chief posts have a complement of about thirty or forty men ; but most of them have only ten, five, four, and even two, besides the gentleman in charge. As in most instances these posts are planted in a wilderness far from men, and the inhabitants have only the society of each other, some idea may be formed of the solitary life led by many of the Company's servants. The following is a list of the forts in the four dif- ferent departments, as correctly given as possible ; but, owing to the great number in the country, the constant abandoning of old and establishing of new forts, it is LIST OF FORTS. 56 difficult to get at a perfectly correct knowledge of their number and names : NORTHERN DEPARTMENT. York Fort (the dep6t). Churchill Severn. Oxford House. Trout Lake House. Norway House. Nelson River House. Berens River House. Red River Colony. Fort Garry. Stone Fort. Manitoba House. Fort Pelly. Cumberland House. Carlton House. Fort Pitt. Edmonton. Rocky Mountain House. Fort Assinaboine. Jasper's House. Henry's House. Fort Chipewyan. Fort Vermilion. SOUTHERN DEPARTMENT. Fort Dunvegan. Fort Simpson. Fort Norman. Fort Good Hope. Fort Halkett. Fort Resolution. Peel's River. Fort Alexander. Rat Portage House. Fort Frances. Isle a la Crosse. Moose Factory (the de- New Brunswick. Pic House. pot). Abitibi. Michipicoton. Rupert's House. Temiscamingue. Bachiwino. Fort George. Grand Lac. Nepigon. Michiskan. Trout Lake. Washwonaby. Albany. Matarva. Pike Lake. Lac SeuL Canasicomica. Temagamy. Kinogomousse. Lacloche. Green Lake. Matawagamingue. Sault de Ste. Maria. Missisague. Kuckatoosh. Fort William. Lachine (the dep&t). Riviere du Moine. Lac des Allumettes. Fort Coulonge. Riviere Desert. Lac des Sables. Lake of Two Moun- tains. Kikandatch. Weym ontachingue. Rat River. MONTREAL DEPARTMENT. Ashabmoushwan. Chicoutimie. Lake St. John's. Tadousac. Isle JeVemie. Port Neuf. Goodbout. Trinity River. Seven Islands. Mingan. Nabisippi. Natosquene. Musquarro. Fort Nascopie. Mainewan Lake. Sandy Banks. Gull Islands. North-west River. Rigolet. Kiboksk. Eyelick. COLUMBIA DEPARTMENT. Fort Vancouver (the Nez Perce". Colville. Fort George, [depdt). Ockanagan. Fort HalL 56 GRADES IN THE SERVICE. Thompson's River. Nisqually. Fort Langley. Alexandria. Cootanies. Fort Chilcotin. Flat-head Post. Fort James. Fort Fluz Cuz. Babine Lake. And an agency in the Sandwich Islands. There are seven different grades in the service. First, the labourer, who is ready to turn his hand to any- thing; to become a trapper, fisherman, or rough carpen- CUTTING 1'IllkWOUIJ IN WINTER. ter at the shortest notice. He is generally employed in cutting firewood for the consumption of the establish- ment at which he is stationed, shovelling snow from before the doors, mending all sorts of damages to all sorts of things, and, 'during the summer months, in transporting furs and goods between his post and the GRADES IN THE SERVICE. 57 nearest depot. Next in rank is the interpreter. He is, for the most part, an intelligent labourer, of pretty long standing in the service, who, having picked up a smat- tering of Indian, is consequently very useful in trading with the natives. After the interpreter comes the post- master ; usually a promoted labourer, who, for good be- haviour or valuable services, has been put upon a footing with the gentlemen of the service, in the same manner that a private soldier in the army is sometimes raised to the rank of a commissioned officer. At whatever station a postmaster may happen to be placed, he is generally the most useful and active man there. He is often placed in charge of one of the many small sta- tions, or outposts, throughout the country. Next are the apprentice clerks raw lads, who come out fresh from school, with their mouths agape at the wonders they behold in Hudson Bay. They generally, for the purpose of appearing manly, acquire all the bad habits of the country as quickly as possible, and are stuffed full of what they call fun, with a strong spice of mis- chief. They become more sensible and sedate before they get through the first five years of their apprentice- ship, after which they attain to the rank of clerks. The clerk, after a number of years' service (averaging from thirteen to twenty), becomes a chief trader (or half-shareholder), and in a few years more he attains the highest rank to which any one can rise in the service, that of chief factor (or shareholder). It is a strange fact that three-fourths of the Com- pany's servants are Scotch Highlanders and Orkney- men. There are very few Irishmen, and still fewer 58 FOOD OF THE FUR-TRADERS. English. A great number, however, are half-breeds and French Canadians, especially among the labourers and voyageurs. From the great extent, and variety of feature, in the country occupied by the fur-traders, they subsist, as may be supposed, on widely different kinds of food. In the prairie, or plain countries, animal food is chiefly used, as there thousands of deer and bisons wander about, while the woods are stocked with game and wild-fowl. In other places, however, where deer are scarce and game not so abundant, fish of various kinds are caught in the rivers and lakes ; and in other parts of the country they live partly upon fish and partly upon animal food. Vegetables are very scarce in the more northern posts, owing to the severity of the win- ter, and consequent shortness of summer. As the Com- pany's servants are liable, on the shortest notice, to be sent from one end of the continent to another, they are quite accustomed to change of diet ; one year rejoicing in buffalo-humps and marrow-bones, in the prairies of the Saskatchewan, and the next devouring hung white- fish and scarce venison, in the sterile regions of Mac- kenzie River, or varying the meal with a little of that delectable substance often spoken of by Franklin, Back, and Richardson as their only dish, namely, tripe-de- roche, a lichen or moss which grows on the most barren rocks, and is only used as food in the absence of all other provisions. During the first years of the Company, they were much censured for not carrying out the provision con- tained in the royal charter, that they should prosecute ARTICLES OF TRADE. 69 Discovery as much as possible ; and it was even alleged that they endeavoured to prevent adventurers, not con- nected with themselves, from advancing in their re- searches. There is every reason to believe, however, that this censure was undeserved. A new company, recently formed in a wild country, could not at first be expected to have time or funds to advance the arduous and expensive cause of Discovery. With regard to their having impeded the attempts of others, it is doubtful whether any one in the service ever did so; but even had such been the case, the unauthorized and dishon- ourable conduct of one or two of their servants does not sanction the condemnation of the whole Company. Be- sides, the cause of Discovery was effectively advanced in former days by Herne, and in later years by Dease and Simpson, Dr. Rae, and others ; so that, whatever might have been the case at first, there can be no doubt that the Company have done much for the cause of late years. The trade carried on by the Company is in peltries of all sorts, oil, dried and salted fish, feathers, quills, &c. A list of some of their principal articles of commerce is subjoined : Beaver-skins. Badger-skins. Deer-skins, Moose or Bear-skins, Black. Buffalo or Bison Elk. Bear-skins, Brown. Robes.* Deer-skins, parchment Bear-skins, White or Castorum.f Feathers of all kinds. Polar. Deer-Skins, Rein. Fisher-skins. Bear-skins, Grizzly. Deer-skins, Red. Fox-skins, Black. * The hide of the bison or, as it is called by the fur-traders, the buffalo when dressed on one side and the hair left on the other, is called a robe. Great numbers are sent to Canada, where they are used for sleigh wrappers in winter. In the Indian country they are often used instead of blanket*. t A substance procured from the body of the beaver. 60 VARIETIES OF FURS. Fox-skins, Silver. Ivory (tusks of the Oil, Whak. Fox-skins, Cross. Lynx-skins. [Walrus). Swan-skins. Fox-skins, Red. Marten-skins. Salmon, salted. Fox-skins, White. Musquash-skins. Seal-skins. Fox-skins, Blue. Otter-skins. Wo If -skins. Goose-skins. Oil, Seal Wolverine-skins. The most valuable of the furs mentioned in the above list is that of the black fox. This beautiful animal re- sembles in shape the common fox of England, but it is much larger, and jet-black, with the exception of one or two white hairs along the back-bone and a pure white tuft on the end of the tail. A single skin sometimes brings from twenty -five to thirty guineas in the British market ; but, unfortunately, they are very scarce. The silver fox differs from the black fox only in the number of white hairs with which its fur is sprinkled ; and the more numerous the white hairs, the less valuable does it become. The cross fox is a cross between the black or silver and the red fox. The red fox bears a much inferior fur to the other kinds ; yet it is a good article of trade, as this species is very numerous. These four kinds of foxes are sometimes produced in the same litter, the mother being a red fox. The white fox is of less value than the red, and is also very numerous, par- ticularly on the shores of Hudson Bay. The variety termed the blue fox is neither numerous nor valuable. It is of a dirty bluish-gray colour, and seldom makes its appearance at the Company's posts. Beaver, in days of yore, was the staple fur of the country ; but, alas ! the silk hat has given it its death- blow, and the star of the beaver has now probably set for ever that is to say, with regard to men ; probably MANNER OF TRADING. 61 the animals themselves fancy that their lucky star has just risen. The most profitable fur in the country is that of the marten. It somewhat resembles the Russian sable, and generally maintains a steady price. These animals, moreover, are very numerous throughout most part of the Company's territories, particularly in Mac- kenzie River, whence great numbers are annually sent to England. All the above animals and a few others are caught in steel and wooden traps by the natives ; while deer, buf- faloes, &c., are run down, shot, and snared in various ways, the details of which will be found in another part of this volume. Trade is carried on with the natives by means of a standard valuation, called in some parts of the country a castor. This is to obviate the necessity of circulating money, of which there is little or none, excepting in the colony of Red River. Thus, an Indian arrives at a fort with a bundle of furs, with which he proceeds to the Indian trading-room. There the trader separates the furs into different lots, and, valuing each at the stan- dard valuation, adds the amount together, and tells the Indian (who has looked on the while with great inter- est and anxiety) that he has got fifty or sixty castors ; at the same time he hands the Indian fifty or sixty little bits of wood in lieu of cash, so that the latter may know, by returning these in payment of the goods for which he really exchanges his skins, how fast his funds decrease. The Indian then looks round upon the bales of cloth, powder-horns, guns, blankets, knives, &c., with which the shop is filled, and after a good 62 THE TRADING-STORE. while makes up his mind to have a small blanket. This being given him, the trader tells him that the price is six castors ; the purchaser hands back six of his little THE TRADING-STOKE. bits of wood, and selects something else. In this way he goes on till all his wooden cash is expended ; and then, packing up his goods, departs to show his trea- sures to his wife, and another Indian takes his place. AN ACTIVE HUNTER. 63 The value of a castor is from one to two shillings. The natives generally visit the establishments of the Com- pany twice a year once in October, when they bring in the produce of their autumn hunts; and again in March, when they come in with that of the great winter hunt. The number of castors that an Indian makes in a winter hunt varies from fifty to two hundred, according to his perseverance and activity, and the part of the country in which he hunts. The largest amount I ever heard of was made by a man called Piaquata-Kiscum, who brought in furs on one occasion to the value of two hundred and sixty castors. The poor fellow was soon afterwards poisoned by his relatives, who were jealous of his superior abilities as a hunter, and envious of the favour shown him by the white men. After the furs are collected in spring at all the dif- ferent outposts, they are packed in conveniently-sized bales, and forwarded, by means of boats and canoes, to the three chief depots on the sea-coast namely, Fort Vancouver, at the mouth of the Columbia River, on the shores of the Pacific ; York Fort, on the shores of Hud- son Bay ; and Moose Factory, on the shores of James Bay, whence they are transported in the Company's ships to England. The whole country in summer is, consequently, in commotion with the passing and re- passing of brigades of boats laden with bales of mer- chandise and furs; the still waters of the lakes and rivers are rippled by the paddle and the oar ; and the long-silent echoes which have slumbered in the icy em- brace of a dreary winter, are now once more awakened