Fly this plague-stricken
spot! The hot, foul air
Is rank with pestilence—the crowded marts
And public ways, once populous with life,
Are still and noisome as a churchyard vault;
Aghast and shuddering, Nature holds her breath
In abject fear, and feels at her strong heart
The deadly pangs of death.
OF Montreal I can say
but little. The cholera was at its height, and the fear of infection,
which increased the nearer we approached its shores, cast a gloom over
the scene, and prevented us from exploring its infected streets. That
the feelings of all on board very nearly resembled our own might be read
in the anxious faces of both passengers and crew. Our captain, who had
never before hinted that he entertained any apprehensions on the
subject* now confided to us his conviction that he should never quit the
city alive: “This cursed cholera! Left it in Russia—found it on my
return to Leith—meets me again in Canada. No escape the third time.” If
the captain’s prediction proved true in his case, it was not so in ours.
We left the cholera in England, we met it again in Scotland, and, under
the providence of God, we escaped its fatal visitation in Canada.
Yet the fear and the
dread of it on that first day caused me to throw many an anxious glance
on my husband and my child. I had been very jl during the three weeks
that our vessel was becalmed upon the Banks of Newfoundland, and to this
circumstance I attribute my deliverance from the pestilence. I was weak
and nervous when the vessel arrived at Quebec, but the voyage up the St.
Lawrence, the fresh air and beautiful scenery were rapidly restoring me
to health.
Montreal from the river
wears a pleasing aspect, but it lacks the grandeur, the stern sublimity
of Quebec. The fine mountain that forms the back-ground to the city, the
Island of St. Helens in front, and the junction of the St. Lawrence and
the Ottawa—which run side by side, their respective boundaries only
marked by a long ripple of white foam, and the darker blue tint of the
former river,—constitute the most remarkable features in the landscape.
The town itself was, at
that period, dirty and ill-paved; and the opening of all the sewers, in
order to purify the place, and stop the ravages of the pestilence,
rendered the public thoroughfares almost impassable, and loaded the air
with intolerable effluvia, more likely to produce than stay the course
of the plague, the violence of which had, tn all probability, been
increased by these long-neglected receptacles of uncleanliness.
The dismal stories told
us by the excise-officer who came to inspect the unloading of the
vessel, of the frightful ravages of the cholera, by no means increased
our desire to go on shore.
“It will be a miracle
if you escape,” ho said. “Hundreds of emigrants die daily; and if
Stephen Ayres had not providentially come among us, not a soul would
have been alive at this moment in Montreal.”
“And who is Stephen
Ayres?” said I.
“God only knows,” was
the grave reply. “There was a man sent from heaven, and his name was
John.”
“But I thought this man
was called Stephen?”
“Ay, so he calls
himself; but 'tis certain that he is not of the earth. Flesh and blood
could never do what he has done,—the hand of God is in it. Besides, no
one knows who he is, or whence he comes. When the cholera was at the
worst, and the hearts of all men stood still with fear, and our doctors
could do nothing to stop its progress, this man, or angel, or saint,
suddenly made his appearance in our streets. He came in great humility,
seated in an ox-cart, and drawn by two lean oxen and a rope harness.
Only think of that! Such a man in an old ox-cart, drawn by rope harness!
The thing itself was a miracle. He made no parade about what he could
do, but only fixed up a plain pasteboard notice, informing the public
that he possessed an infallible remedy for the cholera, and would engage
to cure all who sent for him.” “And was he successful?”
“Successful! It beats
all belief; and his remedy so simple! For some days we all took him for
a quack, and would have no faith in him at all, although he performed
some wonderful cures upon poor folks, who could not afford to send for
the doctor. The Indian village was attacked by the disease, and he went
out to them, and restored upwards of a hundred of the Indians to perfect
health. They took the old lean oxen out of the cart, and drew him back
to Montreal in triumph. This ’stablished him at once, and in a few days’
time he made a fortune. The very doctors sent for him to cure them; and
it is to be hoped that, in a few days, he will banish the cholera from
the city.”
“Do you know his famous
remedy?”
“Do I not?—Did he not
cum me when I was at tho last gasp ? Why, he makes no secret of it. It
is all drawn from the maple-tree. First he rubs the patient all over
with an ointment, made of hog’s lard and maple-sugar and ashes- from the
maple-tree; and he gives him a hot draught of maple-sugar and ley, which
throws him into a violent perspiration. In about an hour the cramps
subside; he falls into a quiet sleep, and when he awakes he is perfectly
restored to health.” Such were our first tidings of Stephen Ayres, the
cholera doctor, who is universally believed to have effected some
wonderful cures. He obtained a wide celebrity throughout the colony.*
The day of our arrival
in the port of Montreal was spent in packing and preparing for our long
journey up the country. At sunset I went upon deck to enjoy the
refreshing breeze that swept from the river. The evening was delightful;
the white tents of the soldiers on the Island of St. Helens glittered in
the beams of tho sun, and the bugle-call, wafted over the waters,
sounded so cheery and inspiring, that it banished all fears of the
cholera, and the heavy gloom that had clouded iny mind since we left
Quebec. I could once more hold sweet converse with nature, and enjoy the
soft loveliness of the rich and harmonious scene.
A loud cry from one of
the crew startled me; I turned to the river, and beheld a man struggling
in the water a short distance from our vessel. He was a young sailor,
who had fallen from the bowsprit of a ship near us.
There is something
terribly exciting in beholding a fellow-creature in imminent peril,'
without having the power to help him. To witness his death-struggles,—to
feel in your own person all the dreadful alternations of hope and
fear,—and, finally, to see him die, with scarcely an effort made for his
preservation. This was our case.
At the moment he fell
into the water, a boat with three men was within, few yards of the spot,
and actually sailed over w «5^ot where he sank. Cries of “Shame!” from
the crowd collected upon the bank of the river had no effect in rousing
these people to attempt the rescue of a perishing fellow-creature. The
boat passed on. The drowning man again rose to the surface, the
convulsive motion of his hands and feet, visible above the water, but it
was evident that the struggle would be his last.
44 Is it possible that
they will let a human being perish, and so near tho shore, when an oar
held out would save his life\' was tho agonizing question at my heart,
as I gazed, half-maddened by excitoment, on the fearful spectacle. The
eyes of a multitude were fixed upon tho same object—but not a hand
stirred. Every one seemed to expect from his fellow an effort which he
was incapable of attempting himself.
At this moment—splash!
a sailor plunged into the water from the deck of a neighbouring vessel,
and dived after the drowning man. A deep “Thank God!” burst from my
heart. I drew a freer breath as the bravo fellow’s head appeared above
the water. He called to the men in the boat to throw him an oar, or the
drowning man would be the death of them both. Slowly they put back the
boat,—the oar was handed; but it came too late ! The sailor, whose name
was Cook, had been obliged to shake off the hold of the dying man to
save his own life. He dived again to the bottom, and succeeded in
bringing to shore the body of the unfortunate being he had vainly
endeavored to succor. Shortly after, he came on board our vessel,
foaming with passion at the barbarous indifference manifested by the men
in the boat.
“Had they given me the
oar in time, I could have saved him. I knew him well—he was an excellent
fellow, and a good seaman. He has left a wife and three children in
Liverpool. Poor Jane!—how can I tell her that I could not save her
husband?”
Ho wept bitterly, and
it was impossible for any of us to witness his emotion without joining
in his grief.
From the mate, I
learned that this same young man had saved the lives of three women and
a child when the boat was swamped at Grosso Isle, in attempting to land
tho passengers from the Horsley Hill.
Such acts of heroism
are common in the lower walks of life. Thus, the purest gems are often
encased in the rudest crust; and the finest feelings of the human heart
are fostered in the chilling atmosphere of poverty.
While this sad event
occupied all our thoughts, and gave rise to many painful reflections, an
exclamation of unqualified delight at once changed the current of our
thoughts, and filled us with surprise and pleasure. Maggie Grant had
fainted in the arms of her husband.
Yes, there was Tam,—her
dear, reckless Tam, after all her tears and lamentations, pressing his
young wife to his heart, and calling her by a thousand endearing pet
names.
He had met with some
countrymen at Quebec, had taken too much whiskey on the joyful occasion,
and lost his passage in the Anne, but had followed a few hours later in
another steam-boat; and he assured the now happy Maggie, as he kissed
the infant Tam, whom she held up to his admiring gaze, that he never
would be guilty of the like again. Perhaps he kept his word; but I much
fear that the first temptation would make the lively laddie forget his
promise.
Our luggage having been
removed to the Custom-house, including our bedding, the captain
collected all the ship’s flags for our accommodation, of which we formed
a tolerably comfortable bed; and if our dreams were of England, could it
be otherwise, with her glorious flag wrapped around us, and our heads
resting upon the Union Jack.
In the morning we were
obliged to visit ~the city to make the necessary arrangements for our
upward journey.
The day was intensely
hot. A bank of thunder-clouds lowered heavily above the mountain, and
the close, dusty streets were silent, and nearly deserted. Here and
there might be seen a group of anxious looking, care-worn, sickly
emigrants, seated against a wall among their packages, and sadly
ruminating upon their future prospects.
The sullen toll of the
death-bell, the exposure of readymade coffins in the undertakers’
windows, and the oft-recurring notice placarded on the walls, of
funerals furnished at such and such a place, at cheapest rate and
shortest notice, painfully reminded us, at every turning of the street,
that death was everywhere—perhaps lurking in our very path; we felt no
desire to examine the beauties of the place. With this ominous feeling
pervading our minds, public buildings possessed few attractions, and we
determined to make our stay as short as possible.
Compared with the
infected city, our ship appeared an ark of safety, and we returned to it
with joy and confidence, too soon to be destroyed. We had scarcely
reentered our cabin, when tidings were brought to us that the cholera
had made its appearance: a brother of the captain had been attacked.
It was advisable that
we should leave the vessel immediately, before the intelligence could
reach the health-offiers. A few minutes sufficed to make the necessary
preparations; and in less than half-an-hour we found ourselves occupying
comfortable apartments in Goodenough's hotel, and our passage taken in
the stage for the following morning.
The transition was like
a dream. The change from the close, rank ship to large, airy,
well-furnished rooms and clean attendants, was a luxury we should have
enjoyed had not the dread of the cholera involved all things around us
in gloom, and apprehension. No one spoke upon the subject; and yet it
was evident that it was uppermost in the thoughts of all. Several
emigrants had died of the terrible disorder during the week, beneath the
very roof that sheltered us, and its ravages, we were told, had extended
up the country as far as Kingston ; so that it was still to be the
phantom of our coming journey, if we were fortunate enough to escape
from its headquarters.
At six o'clock the
following morning, we took our places in the coach for Lachine, and our
fears of the plague greatly diminished as we left the spires of Montreal
in the distance. The journey from Montreal westward has been so well
described by many gifted pens, that I shall say little about it. The
banks of the St. Lawrence are picturesque and beautiful, particularly in
those spots where there is a good view of the American side. The neat
farmhouses looked to me, whose eyes had been so long accustomed to the
watery waste, homes of beauty and happiness; and the splendid orchards,
the trees at that season of the year being loaded with ripening fruit of
all hues, were refreshing and delicious.
My partiality for the
apples was regarded by a fellow-traveller with a species of horror.
“Touch them not, if you value your life.” Every draught of fresh air and
water inspired me with renewed health and spirits, and I disregarded the
well-meant advice; the gentlemen who gave it had just recovered from the
terrible disease. He was a middle-aged man, a farmer from the Upper
Province, Canadian born. Ho had visited Montreal on business for the
first time. “Well, sir,” he said, in answer to some questions put to him
by my husband respecting the disease. “I can tell you what it is; a man
smitten with the cholera staves death right in the face; and the torment
he is suffering is so great that he would gladly die to get rid of it.”
“You were fortunate,
C-, to escape,” said a back-wood settler, who occupied the opposite
seat; “many a younger man has died of it.”
“Ay; but I believe I
never should have taken it had it not been for some things they gave me
for supper at the hotel; oysters they called them, oysters ; they were
alive! I was persuaded by a friend to eat them, and I liked them well
enough at the time. But I declare to you that I felt them crawling over
one another in my stomach all night. The next morning I was seized with
cholera.”
“Did you swallow them
whole, C-?” said the former spokesman, who seemed highly tickled by the
evil doings of the oysters.
“To be sure. I tell
you, the creatures are alive. You put them on your tonguo, and I’ll be
bound you’ll be glad to let them slip down as fast as you can.”
“No wonder you had the
cholera,” said the backwoodsman, “you deserved it for your barbarity. If
I had a food plate of oysters here, I’d teach you the way to eat them.”
Our journey during the
first day was performed partly by coach, partly by steam. It was nine
o’clock in the evening when we landed at Cornwall, and took coach for
Prescott. The country through which we passed appeared beautiful in the
clear light of the moon; but the air was cold, and slightly sharpened by
frost. This seemed strange to me in the early part of September, but it
is very common in Canada. Nine passengers were closely packed into our
narrow vehicle, but the sides being of canvas, and the open space
allowed for windows unglazed, I shivered with cold, which amounted to a
state of suffering, when the day broke, and we approached the little
village of Matilda. It was unanimously voted by all hands that we should
stop and breakfast at a small inn by the road-side, and warm ourselves
before proceeding to Prescott.
The people in the
tavern were not stirring, and it was some time before an old
white-headed man unclosed the door, and showed us into a room, redolent
with fumes of tobacco, and darkened by laper blinds. I asked him if he
would allow me to take my infant into a room with a fire.
“I guess it was a
pretty considerable cold night for the like of her,” said he. “Come,
I’ll show you to the kitchen; there’s always a fire there.” I cheerfully
followed, accompanied by our servant.
Our entrance was
unexpected, and by no means agree* able to the persons we found there. A
half-clothed, red haired Irish servant was upon her knees, kindling up
the fire; and a long thin woman, with a sharp face, and an eye like a
black snake, was just emerging from a bed in tho corner. We soon
discovered this apparition to be the mistress of the house.
“The people can’t come
in here!” she called in a shrill voice, darting daggers at the poor old
man.
“Sure there’s a baby,
and the two women critters are perished with cold,” pleaded the good old
man.
“What’s that to me?
They have no business in my kitchen.”
“Now, Almira, do hold
on. It’s the coach has stopped to breakfast with you; and you know we
don’t often get the chance.”
All this time the fair
Almira was dressing as fast as she could, and eyeing her unwelcome
female guests, as we stood shivering over the fire.
“Breakfast!” she
muttered, “what can we give them to eat? They pass our door a thousand
times without any one alighting; and now, when we are out of everything,
they must stop and order breakfast at such an unreasonable hour. How
many are there of you?” turning fiercely to me.
“Nine,” I answered,
laconically, continuing to chafe the cold hands and feet of the child.
“Nine! That bit of beef
will be nothing, cut into steaks for nine. What’s to be dune, Joe?” (to
the old man.)
“Eggs and ham, summat
of that dried venison, and pumpkin pie,” responded the aide-de-camp,
thoughtfully. “I don’t know of any other fixings.”
“Bestir yourself, then,
and lay out the table, for the coach can’t stay long,” cried the virago,
seizing a frying-pan from the wall, and preparing it for the reception
of the eggs and ham. “I must have the fire to myself. People can’t come
crowding here, when I have to fix breakfast for nine; particularly when
there is a good room elsewhere provided for their accommodation.” I took
the hint, and retreated to the parlour, where I found the rest of the
passengers walking to and fro, and impatiently awaiting the advent of
the breakfast.
To do Almira justice,
she prepared from her scanty materials a very substantial breakfast in
an incredibly short time, for which she charged us a quarter of a dollar
per head.
At Prescott we embarked
on board a fine new steam-boat, William IV., crowded with Irish
immigrants, proceeding to Cobourg and Toronto.
While pacing the deck,
my husband was greatly struck by the appearance of a middle-aged man and
his wife, who sat apart from the rest, and seemed struggling with
intense grief, which, in spite of all their efforts at concealment, was
strongly impressed upon their features. Some time after, I fell into
conversation with the woman, from whom I learned their little history.
The husband was factor to a Scotch gentleman, of large landed property,
who had employed him to visit Canada, and report the capabilities of the
country, prior to his investing a largo sum of money in wild lands. The
expenses of their voyage had been paid, and everything up to that
monying had prospered with them. They had been blessed with a speedy
passage, and were greatly pleased with the country and the people; but
of what avail was all this? Their only son, a fine lad of fourteen, had
died that day of the cholera, and all their hopes for the future were
buried in his grave. For his sake they had sought a home in this far
land; and here, at the very onset of their new career, the fell disease
had taken him from them for ever. —here, where, in such a crowd, the
poor heart-broken mother could not even indulge her natural grief!
“Ah, for a place where
I might greet!” she said; “it would relieve the burning weight at my
heart. But with sae many strange eyes glowering upon me, I tak’ shame to
mysel’ to greet.”
“Ah, Jeannie, my puir
woman,” said the husband, grasping her hand, “yo maun bear up; 'tis
God’s will; an sinfu’ creatures like us mauna repine. But oh, madam,”
turning to me, “we have sair hearts the day!”
Poor bereaved
creatures, how deeply I commiserated their grief,—how I respected the
poor father, in the stem efforts he made to conceal from indifferent
spectators the anguish that weighed upon his mind! Tears are the best
balm that can be applied to the anguish of the heart. Religion teaches
man to bear his sorrows with becoming fortitude, but tears contribute
largely both to soften and to heal the wounds from whence they flow.
At Brockville we took
in a party of ladies, which somewhat relieved the monotony of the cabin,
and I was amused by listening to their lively prattle, and the little
gossip with which they strove to wile away the tedium of the voyage. The
day was too stormy to go upon deck, —thunder and lightning, accompanied
with torrents of rain. Amid the confusion of the elements, I tried to
get a peep at the Lake of the Thousand Isles; but the driving storm
blended all objects into one, and I returned wet and disappointed to my
berth. We passed Kingston at midnight, and lost all our lady passengers
but two. The gale continued until daybreak, and noise and confusion
prevailed all night, which was greatly increased by the uproarious
conduct of a wild Irish emigrant, who thought tit to make his bed upon
the mat before the cabin door. He sang, he shouted, he harangued his
countrymen on the political state of the Emerald Isle, in a style which
has loud if not eloquent. Sleep was impossible, whilst his stentorian
lungs continued to pour forth torrents of unmeaning sound.
Our Dutch stewardess
was highly enraged. His conduct, she said, “was perfectly ondacent.” She
opened the door, and, bestowing upon him several kicks, bade him get.
away “out of that,” or she would complain to the captain.
In answer to this
remonstrance, he caught her by the foot, and pulled her down. Then
waving the tattered remains of his straw hat in the air, he shouted with
an air of triumph, “Git out wid you, you ould witch! Shure the ladies,
the purty darlins, never sent you wid that ugly message to Pat who loves
them so intirely, that he means to kape watch over them through the
blessed night.” Then making us a ludicrous bow, he continued, “Ladies,
I’m at yer sarvice; I only wish I could get a dispensation from the
Pope, and I’d marry yeas all.” The stewardess bolted the door, and the
mad fellow kept up such a racket, that we all wished him at the bottom
of the Ontario.
The following day was
wet and gloomy. The storm had protracted the length of our voyage for
several hours, and it was midnight when we landed at Cobourg. |