hard 
      upon him. "From this place to what is called the First Crossing of the 
      White Mud River is about eighteen miles, all prairie, without house or 
      tree. The day was sharp and the roads heavy, owing to a good deal of 
      drift. I set out with good heart, with pony doing but indifferently. Mr. 
      Matheson thought he would not get through. There were some oak posts set 
      up all along the road within every half mile not long ago, but some 
      miscreant cut down the most of them," this same miscreant not unlikely in 
      desperation for firewood upon this treeless plain. We can hardly 
      blame him. "It is a great pity, 
      for it would be almost impossible to find the road in a storm without 
      them. At last I came to the Crossing. Got dinner—a good one—at Bell’s 
      tavern, and got horse fed and paid eighty-seven and a half cents. Started 
      for the Second Crossing, and not wishing to try the pony’s strength 
      further, concluded to stay there for the night, which I did, at Mr. McR—’s, 
      one of our own people. This is about eight miles from First Crossing. 
      Started next morning and got to Palestine, eight miles farther, but 
      through wrong direction it was at least eleven miles." And no small 
      achievement for a man unused to the plains. For even with oak posts, a 
      drifted trail is easy to lose.
      Thus he installs himself in 
      Palestine to put in as best he can the six weeks’ time till he gets back 
      to the place properly his in the city. They are the six weeks of severest 
      weather in the year, and do what he will, doubtless the time will seem 
      long. Let his weekly home letter tell.
      "Visited,"—visited! The word arrests us with its 
      familiar ring. We shall hear that word frequently from his lips. "1 
      visited the people." Is there a difliculty in a mission station? "I 
      visited the people." Is there a deficit in the missionary’s salary? Is 
      there a new settlement to be explored and organized? It is always the same 
      phrase. "I visited the people." The letter goes on, "visited all the 
      families," note that comprehensive adjective, "at Second Crossing when 
      there—six, and a couple of bachelors. All those do not belong to us. There 
      is a good deal of land owned by our people there, and if the field is 
      looked after things will do well with God’s blessing. Came over then to 
      Pine Creek on Thursday, found a young girl of about fifteen very ill in 
      one house. Doctor over thirty miles away and family not well off." What 
      then will he do? He is a traveller, his journey is 
      imperative, He is a minister. Does he offer spiritual comfort and depart, 
      leaving behind him his benediction? No, not he. This minister is also a 
      man, and so, "I advised the mother to go and see the doctor at once, and 
      not being able to get a horse, gave them mine. They were to be back on 
      Saturday, but the doctor being away, they returned only on Sabbath at four 
      o’clock, just in time for me to go to Pine Creek to preach. Got another 
      person to take me to Palestine." For he must keep his appointment. His 
      main business in this country is to preach the Gospel after all.
      As he visits the settlement with his eyes wide open for 
      everything, the serious social and economic disability under which the 
      country is suffering begins to attract his attention, the deplorable lack, 
      namely, of the softening, humanizing, prophylactic influences of 
      womankind.
      
      " 
Pine Creek settlement," he writes, "is not 
      large, and most of the persons having claims are bachelors. I never knew a 
      better chance for old maids—anything will go here. Women have come here 
      that would never have had an offer in Canada, and they have been picked up 
      in a trice, and that by good-looking, active fellows, one by a man at 
      least ten years younger. I wish I had a boatload here, for they would soon 
      be disposed of and that to their own advantage. He would be a public 
      benefactor who would bring women here—a benefactor to this land and to 
      that left." It is perhaps not unnecessary to explain that though this 
      latter observation may seem to be a joke, the situation in Western Canada 
      at that day was anything but a joke, and the wisdom of the remark a wider 
      experience will only illustrate and emphasize. More than once Robertson 
      refers to this.
      In a later letter he says, "There are quite a number of 
      bachelors here. Many of them are not clean. For this I make no excuse. Can 
      you not get some hopeless cases of old maids coaxed to come here. Good 
      chances wait them. A man with a large family of girls coming here would be 
      considered a public benefactor. The bachelors I have visited would make 
      your heart sore to see them. Some of the men have been here a year or 
      more, and it would not be true to say that a plate, spoon, table, pot, 
      frying-pan or anything else had been washed since. They cook no porridge, 
      but the layers of grease and dirt are indescribable."
      "But," for he is no matrimonial agency, "to return. 
      Called on all the families but two bachelors. Got a Mr. Whaley to take me 
      to Palestine Saturday night. Had a good congregation on Sabbath at all the 
      services and a good deal of interest manifested. Hope they may continue to 
      turn out. Announced school meeting at Pine Creek and was persuaded to 
      remain and help them start a school. Did so, and we got all things 
      arranged to build a house when spring opens. Logs, etc., are to be got out 
      at once and as soon as it is possible the house is to be raised and then 
      by letting it in small jobs it is to be finished." He is to be in the 
      district only a few weeks, yet he seizes the opportunity offering and 
      guides the people in the organizing and directing of the first school 
      building that district has ever seen. "I expect," he continues, "to see a 
      school next winter." Next winter! What of Norwich? Unconsciously the 
      country has claimed him already. "I am going to get one on foot here—I 
      helped to start one at Second Crossing. This will be doing good as well as 
      preaching to the people, I hope." Not a doubt of it, oh, most valiant son 
      of Knox! "There are not many settlers yet, but they expect a good number 
      in the spring and summer. There are quite a number of children here now, 
      for all the families are large, and with those coming in spring, will 
      afford plenty material for a school in each neighbourhood." Yes, schools 
      and plenty of them, with collegiate institutions and university as well, 
      before your day is done!
      He finds Palestine sadly lacking in organization. They 
      had had a minister, but the work had proved too difficult for him and he 
      had resigned. There was little or no organization of the work. Robertson 
      takes hold with firm hand. In a letter to his wife, under date February 
      20th, iS 74, he says:
      "Have been making some arrangements for the 
      organization of congregations here. Called the Palestine congregation 
      together and had $186 subscribed on the spot. We will get at least $225 at 
      Pine Creek, and the Second Crossing of the White Mud, as the river is 
      called, will give $100 more. There must be a station also, at the First 
      Crossing of the White Mud. This White Mud is a river that enters Lake 
      Manitoba, and being very crooked in its course, the road to the 
      Saskatchewan crosses the river three times as the river runs from west to 
      east.
      "Visited about thirty or more families here in the 
      three places, and many more are coming in in the spring. I have got up a 
      petition and want to take it down to Winnipeg to the meeting of Presbytery 
      so as to have them organize at once. We must send here with them a good
      minister, if possible, else the cause will suffer. Should such a 
      minister be here, I am inclined to think our cause would soon be strong 
      and that the church would be self-sustaining. The families are widely 
      scattered just now, but soon the spaces will be filled. Many of the people 
      are poor yet, but a few years must make a change. 
      He sees clearly even now and later years only make his 
      vision the clearer, that the great essential for successful missionary 
      work is permanent organization with a good minister in charge. Oh, if only 
      a good minister, that rara avis, could be 
      discovered and be persuaded to give himself to the cause in such a spot! 
      There is growing up in his heart a sense of responsibility for the country 
      and a loyalty to the cause hitherto unknown to him. In the same letter 
      occurs another word of significance and prophetic import:
      "I wrote a letter to the congregation in Norwich, and 
      so you had better go down at once and get a reading of it or hear it read. 
      It is in connection with mission work here. I wrote one to Mr. B— and also 
      to Mr. D—.. I am going to write to Mr. McK— to-day, and to others. I think 
      I must write a letter to Mr. M— and a few others." He finds time amid his 
      many and pressing activities, to write a formal letter to his congregation 
      as well as some half dozen others to friends, giving pictures of the 
      country, of its needs and its opportunities. This is the beginning of a 
      habit that will grow upon him year by year, a habit fraught with 
      tremendous results both to country and to Church, but a habit that will 
      rob him of many hours of sleep and will do much to rob the Church of years 
      of his service.
      He is greatly impressed with the country, and takes 
      pains to acquaint himself with its resources, the experiences of the 
      settlers, their prospects for the future. He writes:
      "I could wish that all my brothers were settled here on 
      320 or 640 acres of land. I am half in the notion of coming out here 
      myself. It is a much better country for a poor man than Ontario. We could 
      take up land for our children and keep them with us here much better than 
      in (in Canada, note) " and when they would grow up 
      we would be in better circumstances to give them a good education. What do 
      you say? I am anxious to take up some land, at any rate, and wish I 
      could invest a few thousand dollars." He is too much a Scot, 
      too sensible a man and too good a Christian to fail to lay plans whereby 
      he should be able to provide for his own. Ah, if he only could get a few 
      thousand dollars! But so far during the years of his ministry at Norwich, 
      plain in his living as he is, and thrifty as his wife may be, they have 
      been able to save, as he tells us in another place, at the utmost only one 
      thousand dollars. That he could save as much is greatly to his credit. It 
      were well that he should invest this now. His chance will never be better, 
      and in the future there will be too many needy missionaries and missions 
      to permit the accumulation of many thousands. ‘‘ Just now,’’ he continues, 
      ‘‘there is a good chance, but next summer hundreds, yes, thousands, will 
      come in here and get as good claims as they can. There is plenty of open 
      prairie, but for a short time there must be good land along the 
      rivers...... . . . The country is much better 
      than people in Ontario think. If a person can buy a claim along a river 
      where there is a good deal of wood, he is much more com fortable than even 
      in Ontario during winter. I think I never enjoyed a winter better than 
      this one. Grain may, nay, will not, sell at so high a figure as in 
      Ontario, but it will pay as well because you can raise it more easily. 
      Stock, likewise, can be much more easily raised, and hence must pay well. 
      Milk, I am told, is much richer than in Canada. You can make much more 
      butter from a cow than in Ontario. To a poor man this is a much better 
      country. To all sober, industrious men this land will be a boon.
      "I have visited a good many of the people and have 
      inquired about how they like the country, and find almost universal 
      satisfaction. None of those with whom I met would return to Canada. There 
      is no wealth here, but men in a few years will be comfortable. Things 
      must be rude and not very pleasant for a time, but that 
      is always the case in a new country. Time will effect a great change. I 
      have been saying that in two or three years, if spared,
      we must come
      West here, at any rate to see the country. It would be quite a 
      sight to see miles of roses—rose-bushes in bloom—to see the prairie for 
      miles, as far as the eye can reach, sometimes, in bloom. One crop of 
      flowers succeeds another, and it is only the winter’s frost that puts an 
      end to this luxuriant herbage. For ages this has gone on one year after 
      another, and I have often imagined how the land of prairie chickens, geese 
      and ducks and all kinds of fowl, of buffalo and deer, has for ages been 
      kept till man should come and by the plough claim it for his own. The 
      wonderful provision of the Creator in this respect often claims serious 
      thought. Here a hardy race must spring up, a race to play an important 
      part in future."
      Later on he finds opportunities for investing which, 
      with faith in the future of the country, he embraces.
      "I wrote you a note on Saturday which I hope you will 
      receive in due time. I stated there that I had purchased land, one hundred 
      and sixty acres. . . . I purchased now because 
      in this country wood and water are of great importance, and there is for 
      that lot plenty of both. The wood here affords splendid shelter. I paid, 
      as I told you, $155 for the one hundred and sixty acres. I bought a 
      volunteer warrant and put that on the lot and thus saved five dollars. All 
      the volunteers that came up here got a warrant from the Canadian 
      Government entitling them to one hundred and sixty acres of land. They 
      could locate there wherever they liked. Instead of locating them, many 
      sold them for forty or fifty dollars at first. But owing to the greater 
      number of people coming into the country, and the fact that the Government 
      will not sell more than six hundred and forty acres to any one man, these 
      warrants have risen in value. . . . . . . . I 
      have reserved the right of buying from Government at any rate six hundred 
      and forty acres after this if I please.
      "I am going to look about while I am here and try and 
      invest the little I can command for future use. I do not know how much I 
      can command after paying expenses, but think we might invest in all about 
      one thousand dollars.
      There are no municipal taxes or anything of the kind 
      just now, and I do not think there will be much of that kind for years to 
      come. There will, of course, be school tax, but what amount I do not know. 
      I think, however, that there will be no such tax as in Canada. For school 
      purposes I am willing to help. . . . . . . . I 
      might say that there are not many settlers here yet. The population of the 
      province, exclusive of Indians, is not more than fifteen thousand. The 
      Canadians are in a few settlements, mostly Sunnyside and Springfield, 
      Rock-wood, Portage la Prairie, Burnside, High Bluff, Palestine, etc. A 
      large number are expected next summer, however, and a good deal of land 
      near us will be taken up. If I wish to sell in five years, I expect, at 
      the least calculation, to double my investment. But as I jokingly told you 
      in my last letter, I think we shall all move out here yet. I have enjoyed 
      myself a good deal this winter, and think that I could live happily here. 
      There is a much better chance for a poor man—and who poorer than a 
      minister—to get along. The only thing wanting is a railway, and that must 
      come before long. It is true people cannot get such a price for wheat 
      here, but they can raise more of it and easier, and that will make up for 
      the price. But I think I must write a few letters for one of your 
      Woodstock papers, and then you can have my views more in detail."
      Like many another investor of that period, he had to 
      wait for many years for the profits from these investments. But before 
      many years have passed he will have forgotten all about investments in 
      land.
      During this Palestine
      pastorate of six weeks he is continually storing up and cataloguing 
      a vast amount of varied information that will serve as fuel for the fires 
      of his own enthusiasm and will serve to kindle those same fires in others 
      as well. Difficulties and privations he meets with, of course, but those 
      disturb him not. His philosophic temper and his quick sense of humour 
      carry him through everything with a shrug and a smile. The following 
      experience will recall to the early missionaries and settlers of the West 
      many of a similar kind.
      "I have had some rough experience. Have been boarding 
      in a place in which there is but one room. It is not easy to rise or go to 
      bed comfortably. Manage to make a screen of my coat and vest on the back 
      of a chair while I get off my pants and go to bed. It is rather amusing, 
      but what can you do? People are up before me in the morning, and I avail 
      myself of the wife going out after water, etc., to spring out of bed and 
      get dressed. They sleep upstairs, but how they keep from coming through 
      the floor is more than I know. They are very kind, and are very much 
      afraid I may take cold in their not very warm house. You would laugh to 
      see the wife coming to stuff the clothes around my back before going to 
      sleep herself, when she thinks I am asleep and not well covered. They are 
      from the ‘Island of Prince Edward,’ as they call it, and are of Celtic 
      origin." In return for which kindness he gives his Highland hostess from 
      the "Island of Prince Edward" some much needed lessons in the art of 
      preparing the roast of beef for the fire and in the cooking of the same. 
      Experiences of another kind he has as well, more exciting than pleasant. 
      "We had considerable trouble at election. Free fight. One man stabbed, but 
      he is getting better. I am sorry to say that our Canadian people arc more 
      to blame than the half-breeds."
      But the time is wearing on. The congregation at 
      Palestine and the other stations are growing rapidly. The services are 
      well attended though held under discouraging circumstances, but these will 
      disappear.
      "The roads between the stations are not good. I have to 
      break a road every Sabbath. There is no teaming that way. The driving, 
      however, does not appear to hurt me in any way. I have never felt better. 
      Our meetings are all held in private 
      houses, and often we can scarcely accommodate those who come. Last Sabbath 
      the people had to go on beds, etc., to make room. Soon schoolhouses will 
      be available for service and churches will be erected."
      He is due in Winnipeg about the middle of March and, 
      consequently, he arranges that his hundred mile drive shall become a 
      missionary tour—his first in the country.
      So:
      "Next Monday I go away to Portage la Prairie. I am 
      going to preach at the First Crossing on Monday night on my way down. I 
      did not hear from Matheson, but expect he will be here the Sabbath 
      following. I go away from the First Crossing on Tuesday morning and go to 
      Rat Creek to Mr. McK—’s. Go from there to 
      the Portage the next day and attend a missionary meeting there and in High 
      Bluff the day following. The Monday following I go away to Winnipeg, which 
      I expect to reach on Tuesday evening or Wednesday morning." A not 
      inconsiderable programme this, for the blizzard season, over trails 
      unmarked for the most part and drifted, and that old nag none too 
      reassuring in his powers of endurance. "On the whole," he concludes, "I am 
      glad I came up here to encourage and get the people to take active 
      measures for organization."
      The superintendent is by no means yet made. But there 
      is a beginning of that in him which will never die and which, through the 
      grace of God working in the heart of him together with the daily 
      experience which will be his, of the needs and opportunities of this new 
      land, will shape him for this high place and for great work.