Ay, your rogue is a
laughing rogue, and not a whit the less dangerous for the smile on his
lip, which comes not from an honest heart, which reflects the light of
the soul through the eye. All is hollow and dark within; and the
contortion of the lip, like the phosphoric glow upon decayed timber,
only serves to point out the rottenness within.
UNCLE JOE! I see him
now before me, with his jolly red face, twinkling black eyes, and
rubicund nose. No thin, weasel-faced Yankee was he, looking as if he had
lived upon ’cute ideas and speculations all his life ; yet Yankee he was
by birth, ay, and in mind, too; for a more knowing fellow at a bargain
never crossed the lakes to abuse British institutions and locate himself
comfortably among the despised Britishers. But, then, he had such a
good-natured, fat face, such a mischievous, mirth-loving smile, and such
a merry, roguish expression in those small, jet-black, glittering eyes,
that you suffered yourself to be taken in by him, without offering the
least resistance to his impositions.
Hence Joe’s father had
been a New England loyalist, and his doubtful attachment to the British
Government had been repaid by a grant of land in the township of H-. He
was the first settler in that township, and chose his location in a
remote spot, for the sake of a beautiful natural spring, which bubbled
up in a small stone basin in the green bank at the back of the house.
“Father might have had
the pick of the township" quoth Uncle Joe; “but the old coon preferred
that sup of good water to the site of a town. Well, I guess it’s seldom
I trouble the spring; and whenever I stop that way to water the horses,
I think what a tarnation fool the old one was, to throw away such a
chance of making his fortune, for such cold lap.”
“Your father was a
temperance man?”
“Temperance!—He had
been fond enough of the whiskey bottle in his day. He drank up a good
farm in the United States, and then he thought he could not do better
than turn loyal, and get one here for nothing. He did not care a cent,
not he, for the King of England. He thought himself as good, any how.
But he found that he would have to work hard here to scratch along, and
he was mightily plagued with the rheumatic”; and some old woman told him
that good spring water was the best cure for that; so he chose this
poor, light, stony land on account of the spring, and took to hard work
and drinking cold water in his old age.”
“How did the change
agree with him?”
“I guess better than
could have been expected. He planted that fine orchard, and cleared his
hundred acres, and we got along slick enough as long as the old fellow
lived.”
“And what happened
after his death, that obliged you to part with your land?”
“Bad times—bad crops,”
said Uncle Joe, lifting his shoulders. “I had not my father’s way of
scraping money together. I made some deuced clever speculations, but
they all failed. I married young, and got a large family; and the women
critters ran up heavy bills at the stores, and the crops did not yield
enough to pay them; and from bad we got to worse, and Mr. B-put in an
exetion, and seized upon the whole concern. He sold it to your man for
double what it cost him; and you got all that my father toiled for
during the last twenty years of his life for less than half the cash he
laid out upon clearing it.”
“And had the whiskey
nothing to do with this change?” said I, looking him in the face
suspiciously.
“Not a bit! When a man
gets into difficulties, it is the only thing to keep him from sinking
outright. When your husband has had as many troubles as I have had, he
will know how to value the whiskey bottle.”
This conversation was
interrupted by a queer-looking urchin of five years old, dressed in a
long-coat and trousers, popping his black shock head in at the door, and
calling out,
“Uncle Joe!—You’re
wanted to hum.”
“Is that your nephew?”
“No! I guess ’tis my
woman’s eldest son,” said Uncle Joe, rising, “but they call me Uncle
Joe. 'Tis a spry chap that—as cunning as a fox. I tell you what it is—
he will make a smart man. Go home, Ammon, and tell your ma that I am
coming.”
“I won’t,” said the
boy; "you may go hum and tell her yourself. She has wanted wood cut this
hour, and you’ll catch it!”
Away ran the dutiful
son, but not before he had applied his forefinger significantly to the
side of his nose, and, with a knowing wink, pointed in the direction of
home.
Uncle Joe obeyed the
signal, drily remarking that he could not leave the barn door without
the old hen clucking him back.
At this period we were
still living in Old Satan’s log house, and anxiously looking out for the
first snow to put us in possession of the good substantial log dwelling
occupied by Uncle Joe and his family, which consisted of a brown brood
of seven girls, and the highly-prized boy who rejoiced in the
extraordinary name of Ammon.
Strange names are to be
found in this free country. What think you, gentle reader, of Solomon
Sly, Reynard Fox, Hiram Dolittle, and Prudence Fidget; all veritable
names, and belonging to substantial yeomen? After Ammon and Ichabod, 1
should not be at all surprised to meet with Judas Iscariot, Pilate, and
Herod. And then the female appellations! But the subject i3 a delicate
one, and I will forbear to touch upon it. I have enjoyed many a hearty
laugh over the strange affectations which people designate here very
handsome names. I prefer the old homely Jewish names, such as that which
it pleased my godfather and godmothers to bestow upon me, to one of
those high-sounding Christianities, the Minervas, Cinderellas, and
Almerias of Canada. The love of singular names is here carried to a
marvellous extent. It was only yesterday that, in passing through one
busy village, I stopped in astonishment before a tombstone headed
thus:—“Sacred to the memory of Silence Sharman, the beloved wife of Asa
Sharman.” Was the woman deaf and dumb, or did her friends hope by
bestowing upon hei such an impossible name to still the voice of Nature,
and check, by an admonitory appellative, the active spirit that lives in
the tongue of woman? Truly, Asa Sharman, if thy wife was silent by name
as well as by nature, thou wert a fortunate man!
But to return to Uncle
Joe. He made many fair promises of leaving the residence we had bought,
the moment he had sold his crops and could remove his family. We could
see no interest which could be served by his deceiving us, and therefore
we believed him, striving to make ourselves as comfortable as we could
in the meantime in our present wretched abode. But matters are never so
bad but that they may be worse. One day when we were at dinner, a waggon
drove up to the door, and Mr. - alighted, accompanied by a fine-looking,
middle-aged man, who proved to be Captain S-, who had just arrived from
Demerara with his wife and family.
Mr.-, who had purchased
the farm of Old Satan, had brought Captain S- over to inspect the land,
as he wished to buy a farm, and settle in that neighbourhood. With soma
difficulty I contrived to accommodate the visitors with seats, and
provide them with a tolerable dinner. Fortunately, Moodie had brought in
a brace of fine fat partridges that morning; these the servant
transferred to a pot of boiling water, in which she immersed them for
the space of a minute—a novel but very expeditious way of removing the
feathers, which then come off at the least touch. In less than ten
minutes they were stuffed, trussed, and in the bake-kettle; and before
the gentlemen returned from walking over the farm, the dinner was on the
table.
To our utter
consternation, Captain S- agreed to purchase, and asked if we could give
him possession in a week!
“Good heavens!” cried
I, glancing reproachfully at Mr.-, who was discussing his partridge with
stoical indifference. “What will become of us? Where are we to go?”
“Oh, make yourself
easy; I will force that old witch Joe’s mother to clear out.”
“But ’tis impossible to
stow ourselves into that pig sty.”
“It will only be for a
week or two, at farthest. This is October; Joe will be sure to be off by
the first of sleighing.”
“But if she refuses to
give up the place?”
“Oh, leave her to me.
I’ll talk her over,” said the knowing land speculator. “Let it come to
the worst,” he said, turning to my husband, “she will go out fo'. the
sake of a few dollars. By-the-by, she refused to bar the dower when I
bought the place; we must cajole her out of that. It is a fine
afternoon; suppose we walk over the hill, and try our luck with the old
nigger?”
I felt so anxious about
the result of the negotiation, that, throwing my cloak over my
shoulders, and tying on my bonnet without the assistance of a glass, I
took my husband’s arm, and we walked forth.
It was a bright, clear
afternoon, the first week in October, and the fading woods, not yet
denuded of their gorgeous foliage, glowed in a mellow, golden light. A
soft purple haze rested on the bold outline of the Haldimand hills, and
in the rugged beauty of the wild landscape I soon forgot the purport of
our visit to the old woman’s log hut.
On reaching the ridge
of the hill, the lovely valley in which our future home lay, smiled
peacefully upon us from amidst its fruitful orchards, still loaded with
their rich, ripe fruit.
“What a pretty place it
is!” thought I, for the first time feeling something like a local
interest in the spot springing up in my heart. “ How I wish those odious
people would give us possession of the home which for some time has been
our own!”
The log hut that we
were approaching, and in which the old woman, R-, resided by
herself—having quarrelled years ago with her son’s wife—was of the
smallest dimensions, only containing one room, which served the old dame
for kitchen, and bed-room, and all. The open door and a few glazed
panes, supplied it with light and air; while a huge hearth, on which
crackled two enormous logs—which nre technically termed a front and a
back stick—took up nearly half the domicile; and the old woman’s bed,
which was covered with an unexceptionably clean patched quilt, nearly
the other half, leaving just room lor a small home-made deal table, of
the rudest workmanship, two basswood-bottomed chairs, stained red, one
of which was a rocking-chair, appropriated solely to the old woman’s
use, and a spinning-wheel. Amidst this muddle of things—for small as was
the qua* turn of furniture, it was all crowded into such a tiny space
that you had to squeeze your way through it in the best manner you
could—we found the old woman, with a red cotton hankerchief tied over
her grey locks, hood-fashion, shelling white bush-beans into, a wooden
bowl. Without rising from her seat, she pointed to the only remaining
chair. “I guess, miss, you can sit there; and if the others can’t stand,
they can make a seat of my bed ”
The gentlemen assured
her that they were ok and could dispense with seats. Mr. - then went up
to the old women, and proffering his hand, asked after her health in his
blandest manner.
“I’m none the better
for seeing you, or the like of you,” was the ungracious reply. “You have
cheated my poor boy out of his good farm; and I hope it may prove a bad
bargain to you and yours.”
“Mrs. R-,” returned the
land speculator, nothing ruffled by her unceremonious greeting, “I could
not help your son giving way to drink, and getting into my debt. If
people will be so imprudent, they cannot bo so stupid as to imagine that
others can suffer for their fully.”
“Suffer!” repeated the
old woman, flashing her small, keen black eyes upon him with a glance of
withering scorn. “You suffer! I wonder what the widows and orphans you
have cheated would say to that? My son was a poor, weak, silly fool, to
be sucked in by the like of you. For a debt of eight hundred dollars—the
goods never cost you four hundred—you take from us our good farm; and
these, I s’pose,” pointing to my husband and me, “are the folk you sold
it to. Pray, miss,” turning quickly to me, “what might your man give for
the place?”
“Three hundred pounds
in cash.”
“Poor sufferer!” again
sneered the hag. “Four hundred dollars is a very small profit in as many
weeks. Well, I guess, you beat the Yankees hollow. And pray, what
brought you here to-day, scenting about you like a carrion-crow ? We
have no more land for you to seize from us.” .
Moodie now stepped
forward, and briefly explained our situation, offering the old woman
anything in reason to give up the cottage and reside with her son until
he removed from the premises; which, he added, must be‘ in a very short
time.
The old dame regarded
him with a sarcastic smile. “I guess Joe will take his own time. The
house is not built which is to receive him; and he is not the man to
turn his back upon a warm hearth to camp in the wilderness. You were
green when you bought a farm of that man, without getting along with it
the right of possession.”
“But, Mrs. P--, your
son promised to go out the first of sleighing.”
“Wheugh!” said the old
woman. “Would you have a man give away his hat and leave his own head
bare? It’s neither the first snow nor the last frost that will turn Joe
out of his comfortable home. I tell you all that he will stay here, if
it is only to plague you.”
Threats and
remonstrances were alike useless, the old woman remained inexorable; and
we were just turning to leave the house, when the cunning old fox
exclaimed, “And now, what will you give me to leave my place?”
“Twelve dollars, if you
give us possession next Monday,” said my husband.
“Twelve dollars! I
guess you won’t get me out for that.”
“The rent would not be
worth more than a dollar a month,” said Mr.- pointing with his cane to
the delapidated walls. Mr. Moodie has offered you a year’s rent
for the place.”
“It may not be worth a
cent,” returned the woman; “for it will give everybody the rheumatism
that stays a week in it—but it is worth that to me, and more nor double
that just now to him. But I will not be hard with him" continued she,
rocking herself to and fro. “Say twenty dollars, and I will turn out on
Monday.”
“I dare say you will,”
said Mr.-, “and who do you think would be fool enough to give you such
an exorbitant sum for a ruined old shed like this?”
“Mind your own
business, and make your own bargains,” returned the old woman, tartly.
“The devil himself could not deal with you, for I guess he would have
the worst of it. What do you say, sir?” and she fixed her keen eyes upon
my husband, as if she would read his thoughts. “Will you agree to my
price?”
“It is a very high one,
Mrs. H-; but as I cannot help myself, and you take advantage of that, I
suppose I must give it.”
“’Tis a bargain" cried
the old crone, holding out her hard, bony hand. “Come, cash down!”
“Not until you give me
possession on Monday next; or you might serve me as your son has done.”
“Ha!” said the old
woman, laughing and rubbing her hands together; “you begin to see
daylight, do you? In a few months, with the help of him" pointing to
Mr.-, “you will be able to go alone; but have a care of your teacher,
for it’s no good that you will learn from him. But will you really stand
to your word, mister?” she added, in a coaxing tone, “if I go out on
Monday? To be sure I will; I never break my word.”
“Well, I guess you are
not so clever as our people, for they only keep it as long as it suits
them. You have an honest look; I will trust you but I will not trust
him,” nodding to Mr.-, “he can buy and sell his word as fast as a horse
can trot. So on Monday I will turn out my traps. I have lived here
six-and-thirty years; ’tis a pretty place, and it vexes me to leave it,”
continued the poor creature, as a touch of natural feeling softened and
agitated her world-burdened heart. “There is not an acre in cultivation
but that I helped to clear it, nor a tree in yonder orchard but I held
it while my poor man, who is dead and gone, planted it; and I have
watched the trees bud from year to year, until their boughs overshadowed
the hut, where all my children, but Joe, were born. Yes, I came here
young, and in my prime; and must leave it in age and poverty. My
children and husband are dead, and their bones rest beneath the turf in
the burying-ground on the side of the hill. Of all that once gathered
about my knees, Joe and his young ones alone remain. And it is hard,
very hard, that I must leave their graves to be turned by the plough of
a stranger.”
I felt for the desolate
old creature—the tears rushed to my eyes; but there was no moisture in
hers. No rain from the heart could filter through that iron soil.
“Be assured, Mrs. R-,”
said Moodie, “that the dead will be held sacred; the place will never be
disturbed by me.”
“Perhaps not; but it is
not long that you will remain here. I have seen a good deal in my time;
but I never saw a gentleman from the old country make a good Canadian
farmer. The work is rough and hard, and they get out of humour with it,
and leave it to their hired helps, and then all goes wrong. They are
cheated on all sides, and in despair take to the whiskey bottle, and
that fixes them. I tell you what it is, mister—I give you just three
years to spend your money and ruin yourself; and then you will become a
confirmed drunkard, like the rest.”
The first part of her
prophecy was only too true, Thank God ! the last has never been
fulfilled, and never can be.
Perceiving that the old
woman was not a little elated with her bargain, Mr.-urged upon her the
propriety of barring the dower. At first, she was outrageous, and very
abusive, and rejected all his proposals with contempt; vowing that she
would meet him in a certain place below, before she would sign away her
right to the property.
“Listen to reason, Mrs.
R-,” said the land speculator. “If you will sign the papers before the
proper authorities, the next time that your son drives you to C---, I
will give you a silk gown."
“Pshaw! Buy a shroud
for yourself; you will need it before I want a silk gown,” was the
ungracious reply.
“Consider, woman; a
black silk of the best quality.”
“To mourn in for my
sins, or for the loss of the farm.”
“Twelve yards,”
continued Mr.-, without noticing her rejoinder, “at a dollar a yard.
Think what a nice church-going gown it will make.”
“To the devil with you!
I never go to church.”
“I thought as much,”
said Mr. -, winking to us.
“Well, my dear madam,
what will satisfy you?”
“I’ll do it for twenty
dollars,” returned the old woman, rocking herself to and fro in her
chair; her eyes twinkling, and her hands moving convulsively, as if she
already grasped the money so dear to her soul.
“Agreed,” said the land
speculator. “When will you be in town?”
“On Tuesday, if I be
alive. But, remember, I’ll not sign till I have my hand on the money.”
“Never fear,” said
Mr.-, as we quitted the house; then, turning to me, he added, with a
peculiar smile, “That’s a devilish smart woman. She would have made a
clever lawyer.”
Monday came, and with
it all the bustle of moving, and, as is generally the case on such
occasions, it turned out a very wet day. I left Old Satan’s hut without
regret, glad, at any rate, to be in a place of my own, however humble.
Our new habitation, though small, had a decided advantage over the one
we were leaving. It stood on a gentle slope; and a narrow but lovely
stream, full of speckled trout, ran murmuring under the little window;
the house, also, was surrounded by fine fruit-trees.
I know not how it was,
but the sound of that tinkling brook, forever rolling by, filled my
heart with a strange melancholy, which for many nights deprived me of
rest. I loved it, too. The voice of waters, in the stillness of night,
always, had an extraordinary effect upon my mind. Their ceaseless motion
and perpetual sound convey to me the idea of life—eternal life; and
looking upon them, glancing and flashing on, now in sunshine, now in
shade, now hoarsely chiding with the opposing rock, now leaping
triumphantly over it,—creates within me a feeling of mysterious awe of
which I never could wholly divest myself.
A portion of my own
spirit seemed to pass into that little stream. In its deep wailings and
fretful sighs, I fancied myself lamenting for the land I had left for
ever; and its restless and impetuous rushings against the stones which
choked its passage, were mournful types of my own mental struggles
against the strange destiny which hemmed me in. Through the day the
stream moaned and travelled on,—but, engaged in my novel and distasteful
occupations, I heard it not; but whenever my winged thoughts Hew
homeward, then the voice of the brook spoke deeply and sadly to my
heart, and my tears flowed unchecked to its plaintive and harmonious
music.
In a few hours I had my
new abode more comfortably arranged than the old one, although its
dimensions were much smaller. The location was beautiful, and I was
greatly consoled by this circumstance. The aspect of Nature ever did,
and I hope ever will continue,
“To shoot marvellous
strength into my house.”
As long as we remain
true to the Divine Mother, so long will she remain faithful to her
suffering children.
At that period my love
for Canada was a feeling very nearly allied to that which the condemned
criminal entertains for his cell—his only hope of escape being through
the portals of the grave.
The fall rains had
commenced. In a few days the cold wintry showers swept all the gorgeous
crimson from the trees; and a bleak and desolate waste presented itself
to the shuddering spectator. But, in spite of wind and rain, my little
tenement was never free from the intrusion of Uncle Joe’s wife and
children. Their house stood about a stone’s-throw from the hut we
occupied, in the same meadow, and they seemed to look upon it still as
their own, although we had literally paid for it twice over. Fine
strapping girls they were, from five years old to fourteen, but rude and
unnurtured as so many bears. They would come in without the least
ceremony, and, young as they were, ask me a thousand impertinent
questions ; and when I civilly requested them to leave the room, they
would range themselves upon the door-step, watching my motions, with
their black eyes gleaming upon me through their tangled, uncombed locks.
Their company was a great annoyance, for it obliged me to put a painful
restraint upon the truthfulness in which it was so delightful to me to
indulge. Their visits were not visits of love, but of mere idle
curiosity, not unmingled with malicious pleasure at my awkward attempts
at Canadian housewiferies.
For a week I was alone,
my good Scotch girl having left me to visit her father. Some small
baby-articles were needed to be washed, and after making a great
preparation, I determined to try my unskilled hand upon the operation.
The fact is, I knew nothing about the task I had imposed upon myself,
and in a few minutes rubbed the skin off my wrists without getting’ the
clothes clean.
The door was open, as
it generally was, even during the coldest winter days, in order to lot
in more light, and let out the smoke, which otherwise would have
enveloped us like a cloud. I was so busy that I did not perceive that I
was watched by the cold, heavy, dark eyes of Mrs. Joe, who, with a
sneering laugh, exclaimed,
“Well! I am glad to see
you brought to work at last. I hope you may have to work as hard as I
have. I don’t see, not I, why you, who are no better than me, should sit
still all day, like a lady!”
“R-said I, not a little
annoyed at her presence, “what concern is it of yours whether I work or
sit still ? I never interfere with you. If you took it into your head to
lie in bed all day, I should never trouble myself about it.”
“Ah, I guess you don’t
look upon us as fellow-critters, you are so proud and grand. I s’pose
you Britishers are not made of flesh and blood, like us. You don’t
choose to sit down at meat with your helps. Now, I calculate, we think
them a great deal better nor you.”
“Of course,” said I,
“they are more suited to you than we are; they are uneducated, and so
are you. This is no fault in either; but it might teach you to pay a
little more respect to those who are possessed of superior advantages.
But, R-, my helps, as you call them, are civil and obliging, and never
make unprovoked and malicious speeches. If they could so far forget
themselves, I should order them to leave the house.”
"Oh, I see what you are
up to,” replied the insolent dame; “you mean to say that if I were your
help, you Would turn me out of your house; but I’m a free-born American,
and I won’t go at your bidding. Don’t think I come here out of regard to
you. No, I hate you all; and I rejoice to see you at the wash-tub, and I
wish that you may be brought down upon your knees to scrub the floors.”
This speech only caused
a smile, and yet I felt hurt and astonished that a woman whom I had
never done anything to offend should be so gratuitously spiteful.
In the evening she sent
two of her brood over to borrow my “long iron,” as she called an Italian
iron. I was just getting my baby to sleep, sitting upon a low stool by
the fire. I pointed to the iron upon the shelf, and told the girl to
take it. She did so, but stood beside me, holding it carelessly in her
hand, and staring at the baby, who had just sunk to sleep upon my lap.
The next moment the
heavy iron fell from her relaxed grasp, giving me a severe blow upon my
knee and foot; and glanced so near the child’s head that it drew from me
a cry of terror.
“I guess that was nigh
braining the child,” quoth Miss Amanda, with the greatest coolness, and
without making the least apology. Master Ammon burst into a loud laugh.
“If it had, Mandy, I guess we’d have catched it” Provoked at their
insolence, I told them to leave the house. The tears were in my eyes,
for I felt certain that had they injured the child, it would not have
caused them the least regret.
The next day, as we
were standing at the door, my husband was greatly amused by seeing fat
Uncle Joe chasing the rebellious Ammon over the meadow in front of the
house. Joe was out of breath, panting and puffing like a steam-engine,
and his face flushed to deep red with excitement and passion. “You-young
scoundrel!” he cried, half choked with fury, “if I catch up to you, I’ll
take the skin off you!”
“You —-— old scoundrel,
you may have my skin if you can get at me" retorted the precocious
child, as lie jumped up upon the top of the high fence, and doubled his
fiat in a menacing manner at his father.
“That boy is growing
too bad,” said Uncle Joe, coming up to us out of breath, the
perspiration streaming down his face. “It is time to break him in, or
he’ll get the master of us all.”
“You should have begun
that before,” said Moodie. “He seems a hopeful pupil.”
“Oh, as to that, a
little swearing is manly,” returned the father; “I swear myself, I know,
and as the old cock crows, so crows the young one. It is not his
swearing that I care a pin for, but he will not do a thing I tell him
to.”
“Swearing is a dreadful
vice,” said I, “and, wicked as it is in the mouth of a grown-up person,
it is perfectly shocking in a child; it painfully tells he has been
brought up without the fear of God.”
“Pooh! pooh! that’s all
cant; there is no harm in a few oaths, and I cannot drive oxen and
horses without swearing. I dare say that you can swear, too, when you
are riled, but you are too cunning to let us hear you."
I could not help
laughing outright at this supposition, but replied very quietly, “Those
whopyractise such iniquities never take any pains to conceal them. The
concealment would infer a feeling of shame; and when people are
conscious of their guilt, they are in the road to improvement.” The man
walked whistling away, and the wicked child returned unpunished to his
home.
The next minute the old
woman came in. “I guess you can give me a piece of silk for a hood,”
said she, “the weather is growing considerable cold.”
“Surely it cannot well
be colder than it is at present,” said I, giving her the rocking-chair
by the fire.
“Wait a while; you know
nothing of a Canadian winter. This is only November; after the Christmas
thaw, you’ll know something about cold. It is seven-and-thirty years ago
since I and my man left the U-ni-ted States. It was called the year of
the great winter. I tell you, woman, that the snow lay so deep on the
earth,, that it blocked up all the roads, and we could drive a sleigh
whither we ploughed, right over the snake fences. All the cleared land
was one wide white level plain; it was a year of scarcity, and we were
half starved; but the severe cold was far worse nor the want of
provisions. A long and bitter journey we had of it; but I was young
then, and pretty well used to trouble and fatigue; my man stuck to the
British government. More fool he! I was an American born, and my heart
was with the true cause.
But his father was
English, and, Hays he, "I’ll live and die under their flag/ So ho
dragged me from my comfortable fireside to seek a home in the far
Canadian wilderness. Trouble! I guess you think you have your troubles;
but what are they to mine ?” She paused, took a pinch of snuff, offered
me the box, sighed painfully, pushed the red handkerchief from her high,
narrow, wrinkled brow, and continued:—“Joe was a baby then, and I had
another helpless critter in my lap—an adopted child. My sister had died
from it, and I was nursing it at the same breast with my boy. Well, we
had to perform a journey of four hundred miles in an ox-cart, which
carried, besides me and the children, all our household stuff. Our way
lay chiefly through the forest, and we made but slow progress. Oh! what
a bitter cold night it was when we reached the swampy woods where the
city of Rochester now stands. The oxen were covered with icicles, and
their breath sent up clouds of steam. ‘Nathan,’ says I to my man, ‘you
must stop and kindle a fire; I am dead with cold, and I fear the babes
will be frozen.’ We began looking about for a good spot to camp in, when
I spied a light through the trees. It was a lone shanty, occupied by two
French lumberers. The men were kind; they rubbed our frozen limbs with
snow, and shared with us their supper and buffalo-skins. On that very
spot where we camped that night, where we heard nothing but the wind
soughing amongst the trees, and the rushing of the river, now stands the
great city of Rochester. I went there two years ago, to the funeral of a
brother. It seemed to me like a dream. Where we foddered our beasts by
the shanty fire, now stands the largest hotel in the city; and my
husband left this fine growing country to starve here.”
I was so much
interested in the old woman’s narrative —for she was really possessed of
no ordinary capacity, and, though rude and uneducated, might have been a
very superior person under different circumstances—that I rummaged among
my stores, and soon found a piece of black silk, which I gave her for
the hood she required.
The old woman examined
it carefully over, smiled to herself, but, like all her people, was too
proud to return a word of thanks. One gift to the family always involved
another.
“Have you any
cotton-batting, or black sewing-silk. to give me, to quilt it with?”
“No.”
“Humph!” returned the
old dame, in a tone which seemed to contradict my assertion. She then
settled herself in her chair, and, after shaking her foot awhile, and
fixing her piercing eyes upon me for some minutes, she commenced the
following list of interrogatories:—
“Is your father alive?”
“No; he died many years
ago, when I was a young girl.”
“Is your mother alive?”
"Yes”
“What is her name?” I
satisfied her on this point.
“Did she ever marry
again?”
“She might have done
so, but she loved her husband too well, and preferred living single.”
“Humph! We have no such
notions here. What was your father?
“A gentleman, who lived
upon his own estate.”
“Did he die rich?”
“He left the greater
part of his property from being surety for another,'’
“That’s a foolish
business. My man burnt his fingers with that. And what broughtt you out
to this poor country—you, who are no more fit for it than I am to be a
line lady."
The promise of a
large grant of land, and the false statements we heard regarding it.”
“Do you like the
country?“
"No; and I fear I never
shall.”
“I thought not; for the
drop is always on your cheek, the children tell me; and those young ones
have keen eyes. Now, take my advice: return while your money lasts; the
longer you remain in Canada the less you will like it; and when your
money is all spent, you will be like a bird in a cage; you may beat your
wings against the bars, but you can’t get out.” There was a long pause.
I hoped that my guest had sufficiently gratified her curiosity, when she
again commenced :—
“How do you get your
money? Do you draw it from the old country, or have you it with you in
cash?” Provoked by her pertinacity, and seeing no end to her
cross-questioning, I replied, very impatiently, “Mrs. R-, is it the
custom in your country to catechise strangers whenever you meet with
them?”
“What do you mean?" she
said, colouring, I believe, for the first time in her life.
“I mean,” quoth I,
an evil habit of asking impertinent questions.”
The old woman got up,
and left the house without speaking another word.
THE SLEIGH-BELLS.
Many versions have been
given of this song, and it has been set to music in the States. I here
give the original copy, written whilst leaning on the open door of my
shanty, and watching for the return of my husband.
’Tis merry to hear, at
evening time,
By the blazing hearth the sleigh-bells chime;
To know the bounding steeds bring near
The loved one to our bosoms dear.
Ah, lightly we spring the fire to raise,
Till the rafter?, glow with the ruddy blaze;
Those merry sleigh-bells, our hearts keep time
Responsive to their fairy chime.
Ding-dong, ding-dong, o’er vale and hill,
Their welcome notes are trembling still.
’Tis he, and blithely
the gay bells sound,
As his sleigh glides over the frozen ground;
Hark! he has pass’d the dark pine wood,
He crosses now the ice-bound flood,
And hails the light at the open door
That tells his toilsome journey’s o’er.
The merry sleigh-bells! My fond heart swells
And throbs to hear the welcome bells;
Ding-dong, ding-dong, o’er ice and snow,
A voice of gladness, on they go.
Our hut is small, and
rude our cheer,
But love has spread the banquet here;
And childhood springs to be caress’d
By our beloved and welcome guest.
With a smiling brow his tale he tells,
The urchins ring the merry sleigh-bells;
The merry sleigh-bells, with shout and song
They drag the noisy string along:
Ding-dong ding-dong, the father’s come
The gay bells ring his welcome home.
From the cedar swamp the
gaunt wolves howl,
From the oak loud whoops the felon owl;
The snow-storm sweeps in thunder past,
The forest creaks beneath the blast;
No more I list, with boding fear,
The sleigh-bolls distant chime to hear.
The merry sleigh-bells with soothing power
Shed gladness on the evening hour.
Ding-dong, ding-dong, what rapture swells
The music of those joyous bells! |