O’er memory’s glass I
see his shadow flit,
Though he was gathered to the silent dust
Long years ago. A strange and wayward man,
That shunn’d companionship, and lived apart;
The leafy covert of the dark brown woods,
The gleamy lakes, hid in their gloomy depths,
Whose still, deep waters never knew the stroke
Of cleaving oar, or echoed to the sound
Of social life, contained for him the sum
Of human happiness. With dog and gun
Day after day he track’d the nimble deer
Through all the tangled mazes of the forest.
IT was early day. I was
alone in the old shanty, preparing breakfast, and now and then stirring
the cradle with my foot, when a tall, thin, middle-aged man walked into
the house, followed by two large, strong dogs.
Placing the rifle he
had carried on his shoulder, in a corner of the room, he advanced to the
hearth, and without speaking, or seemingly looking at me, lighted his
pipe and commenced smoking. The dogs, after growling and snapping at the
cat, who had not given the strangers a very courteous reception, sat
down on the hearth-stone on either side of their taciturn master, eyeing
him from time to time, as if long habit had made them understand all his
motions. There was a great contrast between the logs. The one was a
brindled bull-dog of the largest size, a most formidable and powerful
brute; the other a stag-bound, tawny, deep-chested, and strong-limbed. I
regarded the man and his hairy companions with silent curiosity.
He was between forty
and fifty years of age; his head, nearly bald, was studded at the sides
with strong, coarse, black curling hair. His features were high, his
complexion brightly dark, and his eyes, in size, shape, and colour,
greatly resembled the eyes of a hawk. The face itself was sorrowful and
taciturn; and his thin, compressed lips looked as if they were not much
accustomed to smile, or often to unclose to hold social communion with
any one. He stood at the side of the huge hearth, silently smoking, his
eyes bent on the fire, and now and then he patted the heads of his dogs,
reproving their exuberant expressions of attachment, with—"Down, Music;
down, Chance!”
“A cold, clear
morning,” said I, in order to attract his attention and draw him into
conversation.
A nod, without raising
his head, or withdrawing his eyes from the fire, was his only answer;
and, turning from my unsociable guest, I took up the baby, who just then
awoke, sat down on a low stool by the table, and began feeding her.
During this operation, I once or twice caught the stranger’s hawk-eye
fixed upon me and the child, but word spoke ho none; and presently,
after whistling to his dogs, he resumed his gun, and strode out.
When Moodie and
Monaghan came in to breakfast, I told them what a strange visitor I had
had; and Moodie laughed at my vain attempt to induce him to talk.
“He is a strange
being,” I said; “I must find out who and what he is.”
In the afternoon an old
soldier, called Layton, who had served during the American war, and got
a grant of land about a mile in the rear of our location, came in to
trade for a cow. Now, this Layton was a perfect ruffian; a man whom no
one liked, and whom all feared. He was a deep drinker, a great swearer,
in short, a perfect reprobate; who never cultivated his land, but went
jobbing about from farm to farm, trading horses and cattle, and cheating
in a pettifogging way. Uncle Joe had employed him to sell Moodie a young
heifer, and he had brought her over for him to look at. When he came in
to be paid, I described the stranger of the morning; and as I knew that
he was familiar with every one in the neighbourhood, I asked if he knew
him.
“No one should know him
better than myself,” he said; “’tis old Brian B-, the still-hunter, and
a near neighbour of your’n. A sour, morose, queer chap he is, and as mad
as a March hare! He’s from Lancashire, in England,-and came to this
country some twenty years ago, with his wife, who was a pretty young
lass in those days, and slim enough then, though she’s so awfully fleshy
now. He had lots of money, too, and he bought four hundred acres of
land, just at the corner of the concession line, where it meets the main
road. And excellent land it is; and a better farmer, while he stuck to
his business, never went into the bush, for it was all bush here then.
He was a dashing, handsome fellow, too, and did not hoard the money
either; he loved his pipe and his pot too well; and at last he left off
farming, and gave himself to them altogether. Many a jolly booze he and
I have had, I can tell you. Brian was an awful passionate man, and, when
the liquor was in, and the wit was out, as savage and as quarrelsome as
a bear. At such times there was no one but Ned Layton dared go near him.
We once had a pitched battle, in which I was conqueror; and ever after
he yielded a sort of sulky obedience to all I said to him. After being
on the spree for a week or two, he would take fits of remorse, and
return home to his wife; would fall down at her knees, and ask her
forgiveness, and cry like a child. At other times he would hide himself
up in the woods, and steal home at night, and get what he wanted out of
the pantry, without speaking a word to any one. He went on with these
pranks for some years, till he took a fit of the blue devils.
“Come away, Ned, to
the-lake, with me,’ said he; I am weary of my life, and I want a
change.’
“Shall we take the
fishing-tackle?’ says I. ‘The black bass are in prime season, and
F--will lend us the old canoe. He’s got some capital rum up from
Kingston. We’ll fish all day, and have a spree at night.’
“‘It’s not to fish I'm
going,’ says he.
“‘To shoot, then? I’ve
bought Kockwood’s new rifle.’“
"It’s neither to fish
nor to shoot, Ned: it’s a new game I’m going to try; so come along.’”
“Well, to the-lake we
went. The day was very hot, and our path lay through the woods, and over
those scorching plains, for eight long miles. I thought I should have
dropped by the way; but during our long walk my companion never opened
his lips. He strode on before me, at a half-run, never once turning his
head.
“The man must be the
devil!’ says I, ‘and accustomed to a warmer place, or he must feel this.
Hollo Brian! Stop there! Do you mean to kill me?’
“‘Take it easy,’ says
he; ‘you’ll see another day arter this—I’ve business on hand and cannot
wait.’
“Well, on we went, at
the same awful rate, and it was mid-day when we got to the little tavern
on the lake shore, kept by one F-, who had a boat for the convenience of
strangers who came to visit the place. Here we got our dinner, and a
glass of rum to wash it down. But Brian was moody, and to all my jokes
he only returned a sort of grunt; and while I was talking with F-, he
steps out and a few minutes arter we saw him crossing the lake in the
old canoe.
“‘What’s the matter
with Brian? says F-; ‘all does not seem right with him, Ned. You had
better take the boat, and look arter him.’
“‘Pooh!’ says I; ‘he’s
often so, and grows so glum now-a-days that I will cut his acquaintance
altogether if he does not improve.’
“‘He drinks awful
hard,’ says F-; ‘may be he’s got a fit of the delirium-tremulous. There
is no telling what he may be up to at this minute.’
“My mind misgave me
too, so I e’en takes the oars, and pushes out, right upon Brian’s track;
and by the Lord Harry ! if I did not find him, upon my landing on the
opposite shore, lying wallowing in his blood, with his throat cut. ‘ Is
that you, Briansays I, giving him a kick with my foot, to see if he was
alive or dead. ‘ What upon enrth tempted you to play me and F- such a
dirty, mean trick, as to go and stick yourself like a pig, bringing such
a discredit upon the house?—and you so far from home and those who
should nurse you.’
“I was so mad with him,
that (saving your presence, ma’am) I swore awfully, and called him names
that would be ondacent to repeat here; but he only answered with groans
and a horrid gurgling in his throat. ‘It’s a choking you are,’ said I;
‘but you shan’t have your own way, and die so easily either, if I can
punish you by keeping you alive.’ So I just turned him upon his stomach,
with his head down the steep bank; but he still kept choking and growing
black in the face.”
Layton then detailed
some particulars of his surgical practice which it is not necessary to
repeat. He continued,
“I bound up his throat
with my handkerchief, and took him neck and heels, and threw him into
the bottom of the boat. Presently he came to himself a little, and sat
up in the boat; and—would you believe it?—made several attempts to throw
himself into the water. ‘This will not do' says I; ‘you’ve done mischief
enough already by cutting your weasand! If you dare to try that again, I
will kill you with the oar.’ I held it up to threaten him; he was
scared, and lay down as quiet as a lamb. I put my foot upon his breast.
‘Lie still, now! or you’ll catch it.’ He looked piteously at me; he
could not speak, but his eyes seemed to say, ‘Have pity upon me, Ned;
don’t kill me.’
“Yes, ma’am, this man,
who had just cut his throat, and twice arter that had tried to drown
himself, was afraid that I should knock him on the head and kill him.
Ha! ha! I never shall
forget the work that F---and I had with him arter I got him up to the
house.
“The doctor came and
sewed up his throat; and his wife—poor crittur!—came to nurse him. Bad
as he was, she was mortal fond of him. He lay there, sick and unable to
leave his bed, for three months, and did nothing but pray to God to
forgive him, for he thought the devil would surely have him for cutting
his own throat; and when he got about again, which is now twelve years
ago, he left off drinking entirely, and wanders about the woods with his
dogs, hunting. He seldom speaks to any one, and his wife’s brother
carries on the farm for the family. He is so shy of strangers that ’tis
a wonder he came in here. The old wives are afraid of him; but you need
not heed him—his troubles are to himself, he harms no one.”
Layton departed, and
left me brooding over the sad tale which he had told in such an absurd
and jesting manner. It was evident from the account he had given of
Brian’s attempt at suicide, that the hapless hunter was not wholly
answerable for his conduct—that he was a harmless maniac. '
The next morning, at
the very same hour, Brian again made his appearance; but instead of the
rifle across his shoulder, a large stone jar occupied the place,
suspended by a stout leather thong. Without saying a word, but with a
truly benevolent smile, that flitted slowly over his stem features, and
lighted them up, like a sunbeam breaking from beneath a stormy cloud, he
advanced to the table, and unslinging the jar, set it down before me,
and in a low and gruff, but by no means an unfriendly, voice, said,
“Milk, for the child,” and vanished.
“How good it was of
him! How kind!” I exclaimed, as I poured the precious gift of four
quarts of pure new milk out into a deep pan. I had not asked him—had
never said that the poor weanling wanted milk. It was the courtesy of a
gentleman—of a man of benevolence and refinement.
For weeks did my
strange, silent friend steal in, take up the empty jar, and supply its
place with another replenished with milk. The baby knew his step, and
would hold out her hands to him and cry “Milk!” and Brian would stoop
down and kiss her, and his two great dogs lick her face.
“Have you any children,
Mr. B-?”
“Yes, five; but none
like this,”
“My little girl is
greatly indebted to you for your kindness.”
“She’s welcome, or she
would not get it. You are strangers; but I like you all. You look kind,
and I would like to know more about you.”
Moodie shook hands with
the old hunter, and assured him that we should always be glad to see
him. After this invitation, Brian became a frequent guest. He would sit
and listen with delight to Moodie while he described to him
elephant-hunting at the Cape; grasping his rifle in a determined manner,
and whistling an encouraging air to his dogs. I asked him one evening
what made him so fond of hunting.
“’Tis the excitement,”
he said; “it drowns thought, and I love to be alone. I am sorry for the
creatures, too, for they are free and happy; yet I am led by an instinct
I cannot restrain to kill them. Sometimes the sight of their dying
agonies recalls painful feelings; and then I lay aside the gun, and do
not hunt for days. But ’tis fine to be alone with God in the great
woods—to watch the sunbeams stealing through the thick branches, the
blue sky breaking in upon you in patches, and to know that all is bright
and shiny above you, in spite of the gloom that surrounds you.”
After a long pause, he
continued, with much solemn feeling in his look and tone,
“I lived a life of
folly for years, for I was respectably born and educated, and had seen
something of the world, perhaps more than was good, before I left home
for the woods; and from the teaching I had received from kind relatives
and parents I should have known how to have conducted myself better.
But, madam, if we associate long with the depraved and ignorant, we
learn to become even worse than they. I felt deeply my degradation —felt
that I had become the slave to low vice ; and, in order to emancipate
myself from the hateful tyranny of evil passions, I did a very rash and
foolish thing. I need not mention the manner in which I transgressed
God's holy laws; all the neighbours know it, and must have told you long
ago. I could have borne reproof, but they turned my sorrow into indecent
jests, and, unable to bear their coarse ridicule, I made companions of
my dogs and gun, and went forth into the wilderness. Hunting became a
habit. I could no longer live without it, and it supplies the stimulant
which I lost when I renounced the cursed whisky-bottle.
“I remember the first
hunting excursion I took alone in the forest. How sad and gloomy I felt!
I thought that there was no creature in the world so miserable as
myself. I was tired and hungry, and I sat down upon a fallen tree to
rest. All was still as death around me, and I was fast sinking to sleep,
when my attention was aroused by a long, wild cry. My dog, for I had not
Chance then, and he’s no hunter, pricked up his ears, but instead of
answering with a bark of defiance, he crouched down, trembling, at my
feet. ‘ What does this mean V I cried, and I cocked my rifle and sprang
upon the log. The sound came nearer upon the wind. It was like the deep
baying of a pack of hounds in full cry. Presently a noble deer rushed
past me, and fast upon his trail—I see them now, like so many black
devils—swept by a pack of ten or fifteen large, fierce wolves, with
fiery eyes and bristling hair, and paws that seemed hardly to touch the
ground in their eager haste. I thought not of danger, for, with their
prey in view, I was safe; but I felt every, nerve within me tremble for
the fate of the poor deer. The wolves gained upon him at every bound. A
close thicket intercepted his path, and, rendered desperate, he turned
at bay. His nostrils were dilated, and his eyes seemed to send forth
long streams of light. It was wonderful to witness the courage of the
beast. How bravely he repelled the attacks of his deadly enemies, how
gallantly he tossed them to the right and left, and spurned them from
beneath his hoofs; yet all his struggles were useless, and he was
quickly overcome and torn to pieces by his ravenous foes. At that moment
he seemed more unfortunate b /en than myself, for I could not see in
what manner he had deserved his fate. All his speed and energy, his
courage and fortitude, had been exerted in vain. I had tried to destroy
myself; but he, with every effort vigorously made for self-preservation,
was doomed to meet the fate he dreaded! Is God just to his creatures?
With this sentence on
his lips, he started abruptly from his seat and left the house.
One day he found me
painting some wild flowers, and was greatly interested in watching the
progress I made in the group. Late in the afternoon of the following day
he brought me a large bunch of splendid spring flowers.
“Draw these,” said he;
“I have been all the way to the-lake plains to find them for you.”
Little Katie, grasping
them one by one, with infantile joy, kissed every lovely blossom.
“These are God’s
pictures,” said the hunter, “and the child, who is all nature,
understands them in a minute. Is it not strange that these beautiful
things are hid away in the wilderness, where no eyes but the birds of
the air? and the wild beasts of the wood, and the insects that live upon
them, ever see them ? Does God provide, for the pleasure of such
creatures, these flowers? Is His benevolence gratified by the admiration
of animals whom we have been taught to consider as having neither
thought nor reflection? When I am alone in the forest, these thoughts
puzzle me.”
Knowing that to argue
with Brian was only to call into action the slumbering fires of his
fatal malady, I turned the conversation by asking him why he called his
favourite dog Chance?
“I found him,” he said,
“forty miles back in the bush. He was a mere skeleton. At first I took
him for a wolf, but the shape of his head undeceived me. I opened my
wallet, and called him to me. He came slowly, stopping and wagging his
tail at every step, and looking me wistfully in the face. I offered him
a bit of dried venison, and he soon became friendly, and followed me
home, and has never left me since. I called him Chance, after the manner
I happened with him; and I would not part with him for twenty dollars.”
Alas, for poor Chance!
he had, unknown to his master, contracted a private liking for fresh
mutton, and one night he killed no less than eight sheep that belonged
to Mr. D-, on the front road; the culprit, who had been long suspected,
was caught in the very act, and this mischance cost him his life. Brian
was sad and gloomy for many weeks after his favourite’s death.
"I would have restored
the sheep fourfold" he said, “if he would but have spared the life of my
dog.”
My recollections of
Brian seem more particularly to concentrate in the adventures of one
night, when I happened to be left alone, for the first time since my
arrival in Canada. I cannot now imagine how I could have been such a
fool as to give way for four-and-twenty hours to such childish fears;
but so it was, and I will not disguise my weakness from my indulgent
reader.
Moodie had bought a
very fine cow of a black man, named Mollineux, for which he was to give
twenty-seven dollars. The man lived twelve miles back in the woods; and
one fine frosty spring day—(don’t smile at the term frosty, thus
connected with the genial season of the year; the term is perfectly
correct when applied to the Canadian spring, which, until the middle of
May, is the most dismal season in the year)—he and John Monaghan took a
rope, and the dog, and sallied forth to fetch the cow home. Moodie said
that they should be back by six o’clock in the evening, and charged me
to have something cooked for supper when they returned, as he doubted
not their long walk in the sharp air would give them a good appetite.
This was during the time that I was without a servant, and living in old
Mrs. -’s shanty.
The day was so bright
and clear, and Katie was so full of frolic and play, rolling upon the
floor, or toddling from chair to chair, that the day passed on without
my feeling remarkably lonely. At length the evening drew nigh, and I
began to expect my husband’s return, and to think of the supper that I
was to prepare for his reception. The red heifer that we had bought of
Layton, came lowing to the door to be milked; but I did not know how to
milk in those days, and, besides this, I was terribly afraid of cattle.
Yet, as I knew that milk would be required for the tea, I ran across the
meadow to Mrs. Joe, and begged that one of her girls would be so kind as
to milk for me. My request was greeted with a rude burst of laughter
from the whole set.
“If you can’t milk,”
said Mrs. Joe, “it’s high time you should learn. My girls are above
being helps.”
“I would not ask you
but as a great favour; I am afraid of cows.”
“Afraid of cows! Lord
bless the woman! A farmer’s wife and afraid of cows!”
Here followed another
laugh at my expense; and, indignant at the refusal of my first and last
request, when they had all borrowed so much from me, I shut the
inhospitable door, and returned home.
After many ineffectual
attempts, I succeeded at last, and bore my half-pail of milk in triumph
to the house. Yes! I felt prouder of that milk than many an author of
the best thing he ever wrote, whether in verse or prose; and it was
doubly sweet when I considered that I had procured it without being
under any obligation to my ill-natured neighbours. I had learned a
useful lesson of independence, to which in after-years 1 had often again
to refer. I fed little Katie and put her to bed, made the hot cakes for
tea, boiled the potatoes, and laid the ham, cut in nice slices, in the
pan, ready to cook the moment I saw the men enter the meadow, and
arranged the little room with scrupulous care and neatness. A glorious
fire was blazing on the hearth, and everything was ready for their
supper; and I began to look out anxiously for their arrival.
The night had closed in
cold and foggy, and I could no longer distinguish any object at more
that a few yards from the door. Bringing in as much wood as I thought
would last me for several hours, I closed the door; and for the first
time in my life, I found myself at night in a house entirely alone. Then
I began to ask myself a thousand torturing questions as to the reason of
their unusual absence. Had they lost their way in the woods 1 Could they
have fallen in with wolves (one of my early bugbears)? Could any fatal
accident have befallen them ? I started up, opened the door, held my
breath, and listened. The little brook lifted up its voice in loud,
hoarse wailing, or mocked, in its babbling to the stones, the sound of
human voices. As it became later, my fears increased in proportion. I
grew too superstitious and nervous to keep the door open. I not only
closed it, but dragged a heavy box in front, for bolt there was none.
Several ill-looking men had, dicing the day, asked their way to Toronto.
I felt alarmed lest such rude wayfarers should come to-night and demand
a lodging, and find me alone and unprotected. Once I thought of running
across to Mrs. Joe, and asking her to let one of the girls stay with me
until Moodie returned; but the way in which I had been repulsed in the
evening prevented me from making a second appeal to their charity.
Hour after hour wore
away, and the crowing of the cocks proclaimed midnight, and yet they
came not. I had burnt out all my wood, and I dared not open the door to
fetch in more. The candle was expiring in the socket, and I had not
courage to go up into the loft and procure another before it went
finally out. Cold, heart-weary, and faint, I sat and cried. Every now
and then the furious barking of the dogs at the neighbouring farms, and
the loud cackling of the geese upon our own, made me hope that they were
coming; and then I listened till the beating of my own heart excluded
all other sounds. Oh, that unwearied brook! how it sobbed and moaned
like a fretful child;—what unreal terrors and fanciful illusions my too
active mind conjured up, whilst listening to its mysterious tones !
Just as the moon rose,
the howling of a pack of wolves, from the great swamp in our rear,
filled the whole air.
Their yells were
answered by the barking of all the dogs in the vicinity, and the geese,
unwilling to be behindhand in the general confusion, set up the most
discordant screams. I had often heard, and even been amused, during the
winter, particularly on thaw' rights, with hearing the howls of these
formidable wild beasts; but I had never before heard them alone, and
when one dear to me was abroad amid their haunts. They were directly in
the track that Moodie and Monaghan must have taken; and I now made no
doubt that they had been attacked and killed on their return through the
woods with the cow, and I wept and sobbed until the cold grey dawn
peered in upon me through the small dim window. I have passed many a
long cheerless night, when my dear husband was away from me during the
rebellion and I was left in my forest home with five little child in I
only an old Irish woman to draw and cut wood for my fire, and attend to
the wants of the family, but that was the saddest and longest night I
ever remember.
Just as the day broke
my friends the wolves set up a parting benediction, so loud, and wild,
and near to the horse, that I was afraid lest they should break through
the frail window, or come down the low, wide chimney, and rob mo of my
child. But their detestable howls died away in the distance, and the
bright sun rose up and dispersed the wild horrors of the night, and I
looked once more timidly around me. The sight of the table spread, and
the uneaten supper, renewed my grief, for I could not divest myself of
the idea that Moodie was dead. I opened the door, and stepped forth into
the pure air of the early day. A solemn and beautiful repose still hung
like a veil over the face of Nature. The mists of night still rested
upon the majestic woods, and not a sound but the flowing of the waters
went up in the vast stillness. The earth had not yet raised her matin
hymn to the throne of the Creator. Sad at heart, and weary and worn in
spirit, I went down to the spring and washed my face and head, and drank
a deep draught of its icy waters. On returning to the house, I met, near
the door, old Brian the hunter, with a large fox dangling across his
shoulder, and the dogs following at his heels.
“Why! Mrs. Moodie, what
is the matter? You are early abroad this morning, and look dreadful ill.
Is anything wrong at home? Is the baby or your husband sick?“ Oh!” I
cried, bursting into tears, “I fear he is killed by the wolves.”
The man stared at me,
as if he doubted the evidence of his senses, and well he might; but this
one idea had taken such strong possession of my mind that I could admit
no other. I then told him, as well as I could find words, the cause of
my alarm, to which he listened very kindly and patiently.
“Set your heart at
rest; your husband is safe. It is a long journey on foot to Mollineux,
to one unacquainted with a blazed path in a bush road. They have staid
all night at the black man’s shanty, and you will see them back at
noon.”
I shook my head, and
continued to weep.
“Well, now, in order to
satisfy you, I will saddle my mare, and ride over to the nigger’s, and
bring you word as fast as I can.”
I thanked him sincerely
for his kindness, and returned, in somewhat better spirits, to the
house. At ten o’clock my good messenger returned with the glad tidings
that all was well.
The day before, when
half the journey had been accomplished, John Monaghan let go the rope by
which he led the cow, and she had broken away through the woods, and
returned to her old master; and when they again reached his place, night
had set in, and they were obliged to wait until the return of day,
Moodie laughed heartily at all my fears; but indeed I found them no
joke.
Brian’s eldest son, a
lad of fourteen, was not exactly an idiot, but what, in the old country,
is very expressively termed by the poor people a “natural.” He could
feed and assist himself, had been taught imperfectly to read and write,
and could go to and from the town on errands, and carry a message from
one farm house to another; but he was a strange, wayward creature, and
evidently inherited, in no small degree, his father’s malady.
During the summer
months he lived entirely in the woods, near his father’s dwelling, only
returning to obtain food, which was generally left for him in an
outhouse. In the winter, driven home by the severity of the weather, he
would sit for days together moping in the chimney-corner, without taking
the least notice of what was passing around him. Brian never mentioned
this boy—who had a strong, active figure, a handsome, but very,
inexpressive face—without a deep sigh; and I feel certain that half his
own dejection was occasioned by the mental aberration of his child.
One day he sent the lad
with a note to our house, to know if Moodie would purchase the half of
an ox that he was going to kill. There happened to stand in the comer of
the room an open wood box, into which several bushels of fine apples had
been thrown; and, while Moodie was writing an answer to the note, the
eyes of the idiot were fastened, as if by some magnetic influence, upon
the apples. Knowing that Brian had a very fine orchard, I did not offer
the boy any of the fruit. When the note was finished, 1 handed it to
him. The lad grasped it mechanically, without removing his fixed gaze
from the apples.
“Give that to your
father, Tom.”
The boy answered
not—his ears, his eyes, his whole soul, were concentrated in the apples.
Ten minutes elapsed, but he stood motionless, like a pointer at a dead
set.
“My good boy, you can
go.”
He did not stir.
“Is there anything you
want?"
“I want,” said the lad,
without moving his eyes from the objects of his intense desire, and
speaking in a slow, pointed manner, which ought to have been heard to be
fully appreciated, “ I want apples!”
“Oh, if that’s all,
take what you like.”
The permission once
obtained, the boy flung himself upon the box with the rapacity of a hawk
upon its prey, after being long poised in the air to fix its certain
aim; thrusting his hands to the right and left, in order to secure the
finest specimens of the devoted fruit, scarcely allowing himself time to
breathe until he had filled his old straw hat and all his pockets with
apples. To help laughing was impossible; while this new Tom o’ Bedlam
darted from the house, and scampered across the field for dear life, as
if afraid that we should pursue him to rob him of his prize.
It was during this
winter that our friend Brian was left a fortune of three hundred pounds
per annum; but it was necessary for him to return to his native country,
in order to take possession of the property. This he. positively refused
to do; and when we remonstrated with him on the apparent imbecility of
this resolution, he declared that he would not risk his life, in
crossing the Atlantic twice, for twenty times that sum. What strange
inconsistency was this, in a being who had three times attempted to take
away that which he dreaded so much to lose accidentally!
I was much amused with
an account which he gave me, in his quaint way, of an excursion he went
upon with a botanist, to collect specimens of the plants and flowers of
Upper Canada.
“It was a fine spring
day, some ten years ago, and I was yoking my oxen to drag in some oats I
had just sown, when a little, fat, punchy man, with a broad, red,
good-natured face, and carrying a small black leathern wallet across his
shoulder, called to me over the fence, and asked me if my name was Brian
B-? I said ‘ Yes; what of that?"
“‘Only you are the man
I want to see. They tell me that you are better acquainted with the
woods than any person in these parts; and I will pay you anything in
reason if you will be my guide for a few days.’
“‘Where do you want to
go? said I.
“‘Nowhere in
particular/ says he. ‘I want to go here and there, in all directions, to
collect plants and flowers.’“ That is still-hunting with a vengeance,”
thought I. ‘To-day I must drag in my oats. If to-morrow will suit, we
will be off.’
"‘And your charge?"
said he. *I like to be certain of that.’
“‘A dollar a day. My
time and labour upon my farm at this busy season, is worth more than tha?"
“'True" said he. ‘Well,
I’ll give you what you ask. At what time will you be ready to start?“
*By daybreak, if you wish it.’
“Away he went; and by
daylight next morning he was at my door, mounted upon a stout French
pony. ‘What are you going to do with that beast?’ said I. ‘Horses are of
no use on the road that you and I are to travel. You had better leave
him in my stable.'
“'I want him to carry
my traps' said he; it may be some days that we shall be absent.’
“I assured him that he
must be his own beast of burthen, and carr his axe, and blanket, and
wallet of food upon his own back. The little body did not much relish
this arrangement; but as there was no help for it, he very
good-naturedly complied. Off we set, and soon climbed the steep ridge at
the back of your farm, and got upon lake plains. The woods were flush
with flowers, and the little man grew into such an ecstasy, that at
every fresh specimen he uttered a yell of joy, cut a caper in the air,
and flung himself down upon them, as if he was drunk with delight. *Oh,
what treasures! what treasures!’ he cried. ‘I. shall make my fortune!’
“It is seldom I laugh,”
quoth Brian, “but I could not help laughing at this odd little man; for
it was not the beautiful blossoms, such as you delight to paint, that
drew forth these exclamations, but the queer little plants which he had
rummaged for at the roots of old trees, among the moss and long grass.
He sat upon a decayed trunk, which lay in our path, I do believe for a
long hour, making an oration over some greyish things, spotted with red,
that grew upon it, which looked more like mould than plants, declaring
himself repaid for all the trouble and expense he had been at, if it
were only to obtain a sight of them.
I gathered him a
beautiful blossom of the lady’s slipper; but he pushed it back when I
presented it to him, saying,
*Yes, yes; ’tis very
fine. I have seen that often before; but these lichens are splendid.’
“The man had so little
taste that I thought him a fool, and so I left him to talk to his dear
plants, while I shot partridges for our supper. We spent six days in the
woods, and the little man filled his tin case with all sorts of rubbish,
as if he wilfully shut his eyes to the beautiful flowers, and chose only
to admire ugly, insignificant plants that everybody else passes by
without noticing, and which, often as I had been in the woods, I never
had observed before. I never pursued a deer with such earnestness as he
continued his hunt for what he called ‘specimens.*
“When we came to the
Cold Creek, which is pretty deep in places, he was in such a hurry to
get at some plants that grew under the water, that in reaching after
them he lost his balance, and fell head over heels into the stream. He
got a thorough ducking, and was in a terrible fright; but he held on to
the flowers, which had caused the trouble, and thanked his stars that he
had saved them, as well as his life. Well, he was an innocent man’
continued Brian; “a very little made him happy, and at night he would
sing and amuse himself like a child. He gave me ten dollars for my
trouble, and I never saw him again; but I often think of him, when
hunting in the woods that we wandered through together, and I pluck the
wee plants that he used to admire, and wonder why he preferred them to
the fine flowers.”
When our resolution was
formed to sell our farm, and take up our grant of land in the backwoods,
no one was so earnest in trying to persuade us to give up this ruinous
scheme as our friend Brian B-, who became quite eloquent in his
description of the trials and sorrows that awaited us. During the last
week of our stay in the township of H-, he visited us every evening, and
never bade us good-night without a tear moistening his cheek. We parted
with the hunter as with an old friend; and we never met again. His fate
was a sad one. After we left that part of the country, he fell into a
moping melancholy, which ended in self-destruction. But a kinder or
warmer-hearted man, while he enjoyed the light of reason, has seldom
crossed our path. |