Man of strange race!
stern dweller of the wild!
Nature’s free-born, untamed, and daring child!
THE clouds of the
preceding night, instead of dissolving in snow, brought on a rapid thaw.
A thaw in the middle of winter is the most disagreeable change that can
bo imagined. After several weeks of clear, bright, bracing, frosty
weather, with a serene atmosphere and cloudless sky, you awake one
morning surprised at the change in the temperature; and, upon looking
out of the window, behold the woods obscured by a murky haze— not so
dense as an English November fog, but more black and lowering—and the
heavens shrouded in a uniform covering of leaden-coloured clouds,
deepening into a livid indigo at the edge of the horizon. The snow, no
longer hard andglittering,ha3 become soft and spongy, and the foot slips
into a wet and insidiously-yielding mass at every step. From the roof
pours down a continuous stream of water, and the branches of the trees,
collecting the moisture of the reeking atmosphere, shower it upon the
earth from every dripping twig.
The cheerless and uncomfortable aspect of things without never fails to
produce a corresponding effect upon the minds of those within, and casts
such a damp upon the spirits that it appears to destroy for a time all
sense of enjoyment. Many persons (and myself among the number) are made
aware of the approach of a thunderstorm by an intense pain and weight
about the head; and I have hoard numbers of Canadians complain that a
thaw always made them fool bilious and heavy, and greatly depressed
their animal spirits.
I had a great desire to
visit our new location, but when I looked out upon the cheerless waste,
I gave up the idea, and contented myself with hoping for a better day on
the morrow; but many morrows came and went before a frost again hardened
the road sufficiently for me to make the attempt.
The prospect from the
windows of my sister’s log hut was not very prepossessing. The small
lake in front, which formed such a pretty object in summer, now looked
like an extensive field covered with snow, hemmed in from the rest of
the world by a dark belt of sombre pine-woods. The clearing round the
house was very small, and only just reclaimed from the wilderness, and
the greater part of it covered with piles of brush wood, to be burnt the
first dry days of spring. The charred and blackened stumps on the few
acres that had been cleared during the preceding year were everything
but picturesque; and I concluded, as I turned, disgusted, from the
prospect before me, that there was very little beauty to be found in the
backwoods,
But I came to this
decision during a Canadian thaw, be it remembered, when one is wont to
view every object with jaundiced eyes.
Moodie had only been
able to secure sixty-six acres of his government grant upon the Upper
Katchawanook Lake, which, being interpreted, means in English, the "Lake
of the Waterfalls,'’ a very poetical meaning, which most Indian names
have. He had, however, secured a clergy reserve of two hundred acres
adjoining; and he afterwards purchased a fine lot, which likewise formed
part of the same block, one hundred acres, for £150. This was an
enormously high price for wild land; but the prospect of opening the
Trent and Otoruibee for the navigation of steamboats and other small
craft, was at that period a favorite speculation, and its
practicability, and the great advantages to be derived from it, were so
widely believed as to raise the value of the wild lands along these
remote waters to an enormous price; and settlers in the vicinity were
eager to secure lots, at any sacrifice, along their shores.
Our government grant
was upon the lake shore, and Moodie had chosen for the site of his log
house a bank that sloped gradually from the edge of the water, until it
attained to the dignity of a hill. Along the top of this ridge, the
forest road ran, and midway down the hill, our humble home, already
nearly completed, stood, surrounded by the eternal forest. A few trees
had been cleared in its vicinity, just sufficient to allow the workmen
to proceed, and to prevent the fall of any tree injuring the building,
or the danger of its taking fire during the process of burning the
fallow.
A neighbour had
undertaken to build this rude dwelling by contract, and was to have it
ready for us by the first week in the new year. The want of boards to
make the divisions in the apartments alone hindered him from fulfiling
his contract. These had lately been procured, and the house was to be
ready for our reception in the course of a week. Our trunks and baggage
had already been conveyed thither by Mr. D-; and, in spite of my
sister’s kindness and hospitality, I longed to find myself once more
settled in a home of my own.
The day after our
arrival, I was agreeably surprised by a visit from Monaghan, whom Moodie
had once more taken into his service. The poor fellow was delighted that
his nurse-child, as he always called little Katie, had not forgotten
him, but evinced the most lively satisfaction at the sight of her dark
friend.
Early every morning,
Moodie went off to the house; and the first fine day, my sister
undertook to escort me through the wood to inspect it. The proposal was
joyfully accepted; and although I felt rather timid when I found myself
with only my female companion in the vast forest, I kept my fears to
myself, lest I should be laughed at.
The snow had been so
greatly decreased by the late thaw, that it had been converted into a
coating of ice, which afforded a dangerous and slippery footing. My
sister, who had resided for nearly twelve months in the woods, was
provided for her walk with Indian moccasins, which rendered her quite
independent; but I stumbled at every step. The sun shone brightly, the
air was clear and invigorating, and, in spite of the treacherous ground
and my foolish fears, I greatly enjoyed my first walk in the woods.
Naturally of a cheerful, hopeful disposition, my sister was enthusiastic
in her admiration of the woods. She drew such a lively picture of the
charms of a summer residence in the forest, that I began to feel greatly
interested in her descriptions, and to rejoice that we, too, were to be
her near neighbours and dwellers in the woods; and this circumstance not
a little reconciled me to the change.
Hoping that my husband
would derive an income equal to the one he had parted with from the
investment of the price of his commission in the steam-boat stock, I
felt no dread of want. Our legacy of £700 had afforded us means to
purchase land, build our house, and give out a large portion of land to
be cleared, and, with a considerable sum of money still in hand, our
prospects for the future were in no way discouraging.
When we reached the top
of the ridge that overlooked our cot, my sister stopped, and pointed out
a log-house among the trees. “There, S-,” she said, “is your house. When
that black cedar swamp is cleared away, that now hides the lake from us,
you will have a very pretty view.” My conversation with her had quite
altered the aspect of the country, and predisposed me to view things in
the most favourable light. I found Moodie and Monaghan employed in
piling up heaps of bush near the house, which they intended to burn off
by hand, previous to firing the rest of the fallow, to prevent any risk
to the building from fire. The house was made of cedar logs, and
presented a superior air of comfort to most dwellings of the same kind.
The dimensions were thirty-six feet in length, and thirty-two feet in
breadth, which gave us a nice parlour, a kitchen, and two small
bed-rooms, which were divided by plank partitions. Pantry or store-room
there was none; some rough shelves in the kitchen, and a deal cupboard
in a corner of the parlour, being the extent of our accommodations in
that way.
Our servant, Mary Tate,
was busy scrubbing out the parlour and bed-room; but the kitchen, and
the sleeping room off it, were still knee-deep in chips, and filled with
the carpenter’s bench and tools, and all our luggage. Such as it was, it
was a palace when compared to Old Satan’s log hut, or the miserable
cabin we had wintered in during the severe winter of 1833, and I
regarded it with complacency as my future home,
While we were standing
outside the building, conversing with my husband, a young gentleman, of
the name of Morgan, who had lately purchased land in that vicinity, went
into the kitchen to light his pipe at the stove, and, with true backwood
carelessness, let the hot cinder fall among the dry chips that strewed
the floor. A few minutes after, the whole mass was in a blaze, and it
was not without great difficulty that Moodie and Mr. R- succeeded in
putting out the fire. Thus were we nearly deprived of our home before we
had taken up our abode in it. The indifference to the danger of fire in
a country where most of the dwellings are composed of inflammable
materials is truly astonishing. Accustomed to see enormous fires blazing
on every hearth-stone, and to sleep in front of these fires, his bedding
often riddled with holes made by hot particles of wood flying out during
the night, and igniting beneath his very nose, the sturdy backwoodsman
never dreads an enemy in the element that he is used to regard as hip
best friend. Yet what awful accidents, what ruinous calamities arise out
of this criminal negligence, both to himself and others!
A few days after this
adventure, we bade adieu to my sister, and took possession of our new
dwelling, and commenced “a life in the woods.”
The first spring we
spent in comparative ease and idleness. Our cows had been left upon our
old place during the winter. The ground had to be cleared before it
could receive a, crop of any kind, and I had little to do but to wander
by the lake shore, or among the woods, and amuse myself.
These were the halcyon
days of the bush. My husband had purchased a very light cedar canoe, to
which he attached a keel and a sail; and most of our leisure hours,
directly the snows melted, were spent upon the water.
These fishing and
shooting excursions were delightful. The pure beauty of the Canadian
water, the sombre but august grandeur of the vast forest that hemmed us
in on every side and shut us out from the rest of the world, soon cast a
magic spell upon our spirits, and we began to feel charmed with the
freedom and solitude around us. Every object was new to us. We felt as
if we were the first discoverers of every beautiful flower and stately
tree that attracted our attention, and we gave names to fantastic rocks
and fairy isles, and raised imaginary houses and bridges on every
picturesque spot which we floated past during our aquatic excursions. I
learned the use of the paddle, and became quite a proficient in the
gentle craft.
It was not long before
we received visits from the Indians, a people whose beauty, talents, and
good qualities have been somewhat overrated, and invested with a
poetical interest which they scarcely deserve. Their honesty and love of
truth are the finest traits in characters otherwise dark and unlovely.
But these are two God-like attributes, and from them spring all that is
generous and ennobling about them.
There never was a
people more sensible of kindness, or more grateful for any little act of
benevolence exercised towards them. We met them with confidence; our
dealings with them were conducted with the strictest integrity; and they
became attached to our persons, and in no single instance ever destroyed
the good opinion we entertained of them.
The tribes that occupy
the shores of all these inland waters, back of the great lakes, belong
to the Chippewa or Missasagua Indians, perhaps the least attractive of
all these wild people, both with regard to their physical and mental
endowments.
The men of this tribe
are generally small of stature, with very coarse and repulsive features.
The forehead is low and retreating, the observing faculties large, the
intellectual ones scarcely developed; the ears large, and standing off
from the face; the eyes looking towards the temples, keen, snake-like,
and far apart; the cheek bones prominent; the nose long and flat, the
nostrils very round; the jawbone projecting, massy, and brutal; the
mouth expressing ferocity and sullen determination; the teeth large,
even, and dazzlingly white. The mouth of the female differs widely in
expression from that of the male; the lips are fuller, the jaw less
projecting, and the smile is simple and agreeable. The women are a
merry, light-hearted set, and their constant laugh and incessant prattle
form a strange contrast to the iron taciturnity of their grim lords.
Now I am upon the
subject, I will recapitulate a few traits and sketches of these people,
as they came under my own immediate observation.
A dry cedar-swamp, not
far from the house, by the lake shore, had been their usual place of
encampment for many years. The whole block of land was almost entirely
covered with maple trees, and had originally been an Indian sugar-bush.
Although the favourite spot had now passed into the hands of strangers,
they still frequented the place, to make canoes and baskets, to fish and
shoot and occasionally to follow their old occupation.
Scarcely a week passed
away without my being visited by the dark strangers; and, as my husband
never allowed them to eat with the servants (who viewed them with the
same horror that Mrs.--did black Mollineux), but brought them to his own
table, they soon grew friendly and communicative, and would point to
every object that attracted their attention, asking a thousand questions
as to its use, the material of which it was made, and if we were
inclined to exchange it for their commodities?
With a large map of
Canada they were infinitely delighted. In a moment they recognized every
bay and headland in Ontario, and almost screamed with delight when,
following the course of the Trent with their fingers, they came to their
own lake.
How eagerly each
pointed out the spot to his fellows; how intently their black heads were
bent down and their dark eyes fixed upon the map! What strange uncouth
exclamations of surprise burst from their lips as they rapidly repeated
the Indian names for every lake and river on this wonderful piece of
paper!
The old chief Peter
Nogan begged hard for the coveted treasure. He would give “Canoe,
venison, duck, fish, for it; and more by-and-by.”
I felt sorry that I was
unable to gratify his wishes; but the map had cost upwards of six
dollars, and was daily consulted by my husband, in reference to the
names and situations of localities in the neighbourhood.
I had in my possession
a curious Japanese sword, which had been given to me by an uncle of Tom
Wilson’s—a strange gift to a young lady; but it was on account of its
curiosity, and had no reference to my warlike propensities. The sword
was broad, and three-sided in the blade, and in shape resembled a moving
snake. The hilt was formed of a hideous carved image of one of their war
gods; and a more villanous-looking wretch was never conceived by the
most distorted imagination. He was represented in a sitting attitude,
the eagle’s claws, that formed his hands, resting upon his knees; his
legs terminated in lion’s paws; and his face was a strange compound of
beast am1 bird—the upper part of his person being covered with feathers,
the lower with long, shaggy hair. The case of this awful weapon was made
of wood, and, in spite of its serpentine form, fitted it exactly. No
trace of a join could be found in the scabbard, which was of hard wood,
and highly polished.
One of my Indian
friends found this sword lying upon the bookshelf, and he hurried to
communicate the important discovery to his companions. Moodie was
absent, and they brought it to me to demand an explanation of the figure
that formed the hilt.
I told them that it was
a weapon that belonged to a very fierce people who lived in the East,
far over the Great Salt Lake; that they were not Christians as we were,
but said their prayers to images made of silver, and gold, and ivory,
and wood, and that this was one of them; that before they went into
battle they said their prayers to that hideous thing, which they had
made with their own hands.
The Indians were highly
amused by this relation and passed the sword from one to the other,
exclaiming, "A god!—Owgh—A god! ”
But, in spite of these
outward demonstrations of contempt, I was sorry to perceive that this
circumstance gave the weapon a great value in their eyes, and they
regarded it with a sort of mysterious awe.
For several days they
continued to visit the house, bringing along with them some fresh
companion to look at Mrs. Moodie’s god!—until, vexed and annoyed by the
delight they manifested at the sight of the eagle-beaked monster, I
refused to gratify their curiosity, by not producing him again.
The manufacture of the
sheath, which had caused me much perplexity, was explained by old Peter
in a minute. “’Tis burnt out,” he said. “Instrument made like sword
—heat red hot—burnt through—polished outside.”
Had I demanded a whole
fleet of canoes for my Japanese sword, I am certain they would have
agreed to the bargain.
The Indian possesses
great taste, which is displayed in the carving of his paddles, in the
shape of his canoes, in the elegance and symmetry of his bows, in the
cut of his leggings and moccasins, the sheath of his hunting knife, and
in all the little ornaments in which he delights. It is almost
impossible for a settler to imitate to perfection an Indian’s
cherry-wood paddle. My husband made very creditable attempts, but still
there was something wanting —the elegance of the Indian finish was not
there. If you show them a good print, they invariably point out the most
natural, and the best executed figures in the group. They are
particularly delighted with pictures, examine them and carefully, and
seem to feel an artist-like pleasure in observing the effect produced by
light and shade.
I had been showing John
Nogan, the eldest son of old Peter, some beautiful coloured engravings
of celebrated females; and, to my astonishment, he pounced upon the
best, and grunted out his admiration in the most approved Indian
fashion. After having looked for a long time at all the pictures very
attentively, he took his dog Sancho upon his knee, and showed him the
pictures, with as much gravity as if the animal really could have shared
in his pleasure. .
The vanity of these
grave men is highly amusing. They seem perfectly unconscious of it
themselves, and it is exhibited in the most child-like manner.
Peter and his son John
were taking tea with us, when we were joined by my brother, Mr. S-. The
latter was giving us an account of the marriage of Peter Jones, the
celebrated Indian preacher.
I cannot think,”
he said, “how any lady of property and education could marry such a man
as Jones. Why, he’s as ugly as Peter here.”
This was said, not with
any idea of insulting the redskin on the score of his beauty, of which
he possessed not the smallest particle, but in total forgetfulness that
our guest understood English. Never shall I forget the red flash of that
fierce dark eye, as it glared upon my unconscious brother. I would not
have received such a fiery glance for all the wealth that Peter Jones
obtained with his Saxon bride. John Nogan was highly amused by his
father’s indignation. He hid his face behind the chief; and, though he
kept perfectly still, his whole frame was convulsed with suppressed
laughter.
A plainer human being
than poor Peter could scarcely be imagined; yet he certainly doomed
himself handsome. I am inclined to think that their ideas of personal
beauty differ very widely from ours.
Tom Nogan, the chief’s
brother, had a very largo, fat ugly squaw for his wife. She was a
mountain of tawny flesh; and, but for the innocent, good-natured
expression which, like a bright sunbeam penetrating a swarthy cloud
spread all around a kindly glow, she might have been termed hideous.
This woman they
considered very handsome, calling her “a fine squaw—clever squaw—a much
good woman;” though in what her superiority consisted, I never could
discover, often as I visited the wigwam. She was very dirty, and
appeared quite indifferent to the claims of common decency (in the
disposal of the few filthy rags that covered her). She was, however,
very expert in all Indian craft. No Jew could drive a better bargain
than Mrs. Tom; and her urchins, of whom she was the happy mother of five
or six, were as cunning and avaricious as herself.
One day she visited me,
bringing along with her a very pretty covered basket for sale. I asked
her what she wanted for it, but could obtain from her no satisfactory
answer. I showed her a small piece of silver. She shook her head. I
tempted her with pork and flour, but she required neither. I had just
given up the idea of dealing with her, in despair, when she suddenly
seized upon me, and, lifting up my gown, pointed exultingly to my
quilted petticoat, clapping her hands, and laughing immoderately.
Another time she led mo
all over the house, to show mo what she wanted in exchange for basket.
My patience was well nigh exhausted in following her from place to
place, in her attempt to discover the coveted article, when hanging upon
a peg in my chamber, she espied a pair of trousers belonging to my
husband’s logging-suit. The riddle was solved. With a joyful cry she
pointed to them, exclaiming “Take basket. Give them!” It was with no
small difficulty that I rescued the indispensables from her grasp.
From this woman I
learned a story of Indian coolness and courage which made a deep
impression on my mind. One of their squaws, a near relation of her own,
had accompanied her husband on a hunting expedition into the forest. He
had been very successful, and having killed more deer than they could
well carry home, he went to the house of a white man to dispose of some
of it, leaving the squaw to take care of the rest until his return. She
sat carelessly upon the log with his hunting-knife in her hand, when she
heard the breaking of branches near her, and, turning round, beheld a
great bear only a few paces from her.
It was too late to
retreat; and seeing that the animal was very hungry, and determined to
come to close quarters, she rose, and placed her back against a small
tree, holding her knife close to her breast, and in a straight line with
the bear. The shaggy monster came on. She remained motionless, her eyes
steadily fixed upon her enemy, and, as his huge arms closed around her,
she slowly drove the knife into his heart. The bear uttered a hideous
cry, and sank dead at her feet. When the Indian returned, he found the
courageous woman taking the skin from the carcass of the formidable
brute. What iron nerves these people must possess, when even a woman
could dare and do a deed like this !
The wolf they hold in
great contempt, and scarcely deign to consider him as an enemy. Peter
Nogan assured me that he never was near enough to one in his life to
shoot it; that, except in large companies, and when greatly pressed by
hunger, they rarely attack men. They hold the lynx, or wolverine, in
much dread, aa they often spring from trees upon their prey, fastening
upon the throat with their sharp teeth and claws, from which a person in
the dark could scarcely free himself without first receiving a dangerous
wound. The cry of this animal is very terrifying, resembling the shrieks
of a human creature in mortal agony.
My husband was anxious
to collect some of the native Indian airs, as they all sing well, and
have a fine ear for music, but all his efforts proved abortive. “ John,”
he said to young Nogan (who played very creditably on the flute, and had
just concluded the popular air of “Sweet Home”), “cannot you play me one
of your own songs?
“Yes,—but no good.”
“Leave me to be the
judge of that. Cannot you give me a war song?”
“Yes,—but no good,”
with an ominous shake of the head.
“A hunting-song?”
“No fit for white
man,”—with an air of contempt. “No good, no good!”
“Do, John, sing us a
love-song,” said I, laughing, “if you have such a thing in your
language.”
“Oh! much
love-song—very much—bad—bad—no good for Christian man. Indian song no
good for white ears.” This was very tantalising, as their songs sounded
very sweetly from the lips of their squaws, and I had a great desire and
curiosity to get some of them rendered into English.
To my husband they gave
the name of “the musician,” but I have forgotten the Indian word. It
signified the maker of sweet sounds. They listened with intense delight
to the notes of his flute, maintaining a breathless silence during the
performance; their dark eyes flashing into fierce light at a martial
strain, or softening with the plaintive and tender.
The cunning which they
display in their contests with their enemies, and their hunting, and in
making bargains with the whites (who are too apt to impose on their
ignorance), seems to spring more from a law of necessity, forced upon
them by their isolated position and precarious mode of life, than from
any innate wish to betray. The Indian’s face, after all, is a perfect
index of his mind. The eye changes its expression with every impulse and
passion, and shows what is passing within as clearly as the lightning in
a dark night betrays the course of the stream. I cannot think that
deceit forms any prominent trait in the Indian’s character. They
invariably act with the strictest honour towards those who never attempt
to impose upon them. It is natural for a deceitful person to take
advantage of the credulity of others. The genuine Indian never utters a
falsehood, and never employs flattery (that powerful weapon in the hands
of the insidious) in his communications with the whites.
His worst traits are
those which he has in common with the wild animals of the forest, and
which his intercourse with the lowest order of civilised men (who, in
point of moral worth, are greatly his inferiors), and the pernicious
effects of strong drink, have greatly tended to inflame and debase.
It is a melancholy
truth, and deeply to be lamented, that the vicinity of European settlers
has always produced a very demoralising effect upon the Indians. As a
proof of this, I will relate a simple anecdote.
John, of Rice Lake, a
very sensible, middle-aged Indian, was conversing with me about their
language, and the difficulty he found in understanding the books written
in Indian for their use. Among other things, I asked him if his people
ever swore, or used profane language towards the Deity.
The man regarded me
with a sort of stem horror, as he replied, "Indian, till after he knew
your people, never swore—no bad word in Indian. Indian must learn your
words to swear and take God’s name in vain.”
Oh, what a reproof to
Christian men! I felt abashed, and degraded in the eyes of this poor
savage—who, ignorant as he was in many respects, yet possessed that
first great attribute of the soul, a deep reverence for the Supreme
Being. How inferior were thousands of my countrymen to him in this
important point!
The affection of Indian
parents to their children, and the deference which they pay to the aged,
is another beautiful and touching trait in their character.
One extremely cold,
wintry day, as I was huddled with my little ones over the stove, the
door softly unclosed, and the moccasined foot of an Indian crossed the
floor, I raised my head, for I was too much accustomed to their sudden
appearance at any hour to feel alarmed, and perceived a tall woman
standing silently and respectfully before me, wrapped in a large
blanket. The moment she caught my eye she dropped the folds of her
covering from around her, and laid at my feet the attenuated figure of a
boy, about twelve years of age, who was in the last stage of
consumption.
“Papoose die,” she
said, mournfully clasping her hands against her breast and looking down
upon the suffering lad with the most heartfelt expression of maternal
love, while large tears trickled down her dark face. “Moodie’s squaw
save papoose — poor Indian woman much glad.”
Her child was beyond
all human aid. I looked anxiously upon him, and knew, by the pinched-up
features and purple hue of his wasted cheek, that he had not many hours
to live. I could only answer with tears her agonising appeal to my
skill.
“Try and save him! All
die but him.” (She held up five of her fingers.) “Brought him all the
way from Mutta Lake* upon my back, for white squw to cure.”
“I cannot cure him, my
poor friend. He is in God’s care; in a few hours he will be with Him.”
The child was seized
with a dreadful fit of coughing, which I expected every moment would
terminate his frail existence. I gave him a teaspoonful of currant
jelly, which he took with avidity,-but could not retain a moment on his
stomach.
“Papoose die,” murmured
the poor woman; ‘alone —alone! No papoose; the mother all alone.”
She began re-adjusting
the poor sufferer in her blanket. I got her some food, and begged her to
stay and rest herself; but she was too much distressed to eat, and too
restless to remain. She said little, but her face expressed the keenest
anguish; she took up her mournful load, pressed for a moment his wasted,
burning hand in hers, and left the room.
My heart followed her a
long way on her melancholy journey. Think what this woman’s love must
have been for that dying son, when she had carried a lad of his age six
miles, through the deep snow, upon her back, on such a day, in the hope
of my being able to do him some good. Poor heart-broken mother! I
learned from Joe Muskrat’s squaw some days after that the boy died a few
minutes after Elizabeth Iron, his mother, got home.
They never forgot any
little act of kindness. One cold night late in the fall, my hospitality
was demanded by six squaws, and puzzled I was how to accommodate them
all. I at last determined to give them the use of the parlour floor
during the night. Among these women there was one very old, whose hair
was as white as snow. She was the only grey-haired Indian I ever saw,
and on that account I regarded her with peculiar interest. I knew that
she was the wife of a chief, by the scarlet embroidered leggings, which
only the wives and daughters of chiefs are allowed to wear. The old
squaw had a very pleasing countenance, but I tried in vain to draw her
into conversation. She evidently did not understand me; and the Muskrat
squaw and Betty Cow were laughing at my attempts to draw her out. I
administered supper to them with my own hands, and, after I had
satisfied their wants (which is no very easy task, for they have great
appetites), I told our servant to bring in several spare mattresses and
blankets for their use. “Now mind, Jenny, and give the old squaw the
best bed,” I said; “the others are young, and can put up with a little
inconvenience.”
The old Indian glanced
at me with her keen, bright eye; but I had no idea that she comprehended
what I said.
Some weeks after this,
as I was sweeping over my parlour floor, a slight tap drew me to the
door. On opening it I perceived the old squaw, who immediately slipped
into my hand a set of beautifully-embroidered bark trays, fitting one
within the other, and exhibiting the very best sample of the porcupine
quill-work. While I stood wondering what this might mean, the good old
creature fell upon my neck, and kissing me, exclaimed, “You remember old
squaw—make her comfortable! Old squaw no forget you. Keep them for her
sake,” and before I could detain her she ran down the hill with a
swiftness which seemed to bid defiance to years. I never saw this
interesting Indian again, and I concluded that she died during the
winter, for she must have been of a great age.
My dear reader, I am
afraid I shall tire you with my Indian stories; but you must bear with
me patiently whilst I give you a few more. The real character of a
people can be more truly gathered from such seemingly trifling incidents
than from any ideas we may form of them from the great facts in their
history, and this is my reason for detailing events which might
otherwise appear insignificant and unimportant.
A friend was staying
with us, who wished much to obtain a likeness of Old Peter. I promised
to try and make a sketch of the old man the next time he paid us a
visit. That very afternoon he brought us some ducks in exchange for
pork, and Moodie asked him to stay and take a glass of whiskey with him
and his friend Mr. K—. The old man had arrayed himself in a new
blanket-coat, bound with red, and the seams all decorated with the same
gay material. His leggings and moccasins were new, and elaborately
fringed; and to cap the climax of the whole, he had a blue cloth conical
cap upon his head, ornamented, with a deer’s tail dyed blue, and several
cock’s feathers.
He was evidently very
much taken up with the magnificence of his own appearance, for he often
glanced at himself in a small shaving glass that hung opposite, with a
look of grave satisfaction. Sitting apart, that I might not attract his
observation, I got a tolerably faithful likeness of the old man, which,
after slightly colouring, to show more plainly his Indian finery, I
quietly handed over to Mr. K-. Sly as I thought myself, my occupation
and the object of it had not escaped the keen eye of the old man. He
rose, came behind Mr. K-’s chair and regarded the picture with a most
affectionate eye. I was afraid that he would be angry at the liberty I
had taken. No such thing! He was as pleased as Punch.
“That Peter?” he
grunted. “Give me—put up in wigwam—make dog too! Owgh! owgh!” and he
rubbed his hands together, and chuckled with delight. Mr. K-had some
difficulty in coaxing the picture from the old chief; so pleased was he
with this rude representation of himself. He pointed to every particular
article of his dress, and dwelt with peculiar glee on the cap and blue
deer’s tail.
A few days after this,
I was painting a beautiful little snow-bird, that our man had shot out
of a large flock that alighted near the door. I was so intent upon my
task, to which I was putting the finishing strokes, that I did not
observe the stealthy entrance (for they all walk like cats) of a
stern-looking red man, till a slender, dark hand was extended over my
paper to grasp the dead bird from which I was copying, and which as
rapidly transferred it to the side of the painted one, accompanying the
act with the deep guttural note of approbation, the unmusical, savage
“Owgh.”
My guest then seated
himself with the utmost gravity in a rocking-chair, directly fronting
me, and made the modest demand that I should paint a likeness of him,
after the following quaint fashion.
“Moodie’s squaw know
much — make Peter Nogan toder day on papare—make Jacob to-day—Jacob
young — great hunter — give much duck — venison — to squaw.”
Although I felt rather
afraid of my fierce-looking visitor, I could scarcely keep my gravity;
there was such an air of pompous self-approbation about the Indian, such
a sublime look of conceit in his grave vanity.
“Moodie’s squaw cannot
do everything; she cannot paint young men,” said I, rising, and putting
away my drawing-materials, upon which he kept his eye intently fixed,
with a hungry, avaricious expression. I thought it best to place the
coveted objects beyond his reach. After sitting for some time, and
watching all my movements, he withdrew, with a sullen, disappointed air.
This man was handsome,
but his expression was vile. Though he often came to the house, I never
could reconcile myself to his countenance.
Late one very dark,
stormy night, three Indians begged to be allowed to sleep by the kitchen
stove. The maid was frightened out of her wits at the sight of these
strangers, who were Mohawks from the Indian woods upon the Bay of Quints,
and they brought along with them a horse and cutter. The night was so
stormy, that, after consulting our man—Jacob Faithful, as we usually
called him—I consented to grant their petition, although they were quite
strangers, and taller and fiercer-looking than our friends the
Missasaguas.
I was putting my
children to bed, when the girl came rushing in, out of breath. “The Lord
preserve us, madam, if one of these wild men has not pulled off his
trousers, and is a-sitting mending them behind the stove! and what shall
I do?”
“Do ?—why, stay with
me, and leave the poor fellow to finish his work.”
The simple girl had
never once thought of this plan of pacifying her outraged sense of
propriety.
Their sense of hearing
is so acute that they can distinguish sounds at an incredible distance,
which cannot be detected by a European at all. I myself witnessed a
singular exemplification of this fact. It was mid-winter; the Indians
had pitched their tent, or wigwam, as usual, in our swamp. All the males
were absent on a hunting expedition up the country, and had left two
women behind to take care of the camp and its contents, Mrs. Tom Nogan
and her children, and Susan Moore, a young girl of fifteen, and the only
truly beautiful squaw I ever saw. There was something interesting about
this girl’s history, as well as her appearance. Her father had been
drowned during a sudden hurricane, which swamped his canoe on Stony
Lake; and the mother, who witnessed the accident from the shore, and was
near her confinement with this child, boldly swam out to his assistance.
She reached the spot where he sank, and even succeeded in recovering the
body; but it was too late; the man was dead.
The soul of an Indian
that has been drowned is reckoned accursed, and he is never permitted to
join his tribe on the happy hunting-grounds, but his spirit haunts the
lake or river in which he lost his life. His body is buried on some
lonely island, which the Indians never pass without leaving a small
portion of food, tobacco, or ammunition, to supply his wants; but he is
never interred with the rest of his people.
His children are
considered unlucky, and few willingly unite themselves to the females of
the family, lest a portion of the father’s curse should be visited on
them.
The orphan Indian girl
generally kept aloof from the rest, and seemed so lonely and
companionless, that she soon attracted my attention and sympathy, and a
hearty feeling of good-will sprang up between us. Her features were
small and regular, her face oval, and her large, dark, loving eyes were
full of tenderness .and sensibility, but as bright and shy as those of
the deer. A rich vermilion glow burnt upon her olive cheek and lips, and
set off the dazzling whiteness of her even and pearly teeth. She was
small of stature, with delicate little hands and feet, and her figure
was elastic and graceful. She was a beautiful child of nature, and her
Indian name signified "the voice of angry waters.” Poor girl, she had
been a child of grief and tears from her birth! Her mother was a Mohawk,
from whom she, in all probability, derived her superior personal
attractions; for they are very far before the Missasaguas in this
respect.
My friend and neighbour,
Emilia S-, the wife of a naval officer, who lived about a mile distant
from me, through the bush, had come to spend the day with me; and
hearing that the Indians were in the swamp, and the men away, we
determined to take a few trifles to the camp, in the way of presents,
and spend an hour in chatting with the squaws.
What a beautiful
moonlight night it was, as light as day!—the great forest sleeping
tranquilly beneath the cloudless heavens—not a sound to disturb the deep
repose of nature but the whispering of the breeze, which, during the
most profound calm, creeps through the lofty pine tops. We bounded down
the steep bank to the lake shore. Life is a blessing, a precious boon
indeed, in such an hour, and we felt happy in the mere consciousness of
existence—the glorious privilege of pouring out the silent adoration of
the heart to the Great Father in his universal temple.
On entering the wigwam,
which stood within a few yards of the clearing, in the middle of a thick
group of cedars, we found Mrs. Tom, alone with her elfish children,
seated before the great fire that burned in the centre of the camp; she
was. busy boiling some bark in an iron spider. The little boys, in red
flannel shirts, which were their only covering, were tormenting a puppy,
which seemed to take their pinching and pommelling in good part, for it
neither attempted to bark nor to bite, but, like the eels in the story,
submitted to the infliction because it was used to it. Tom greeted us
with a grin of pleasure and motioned to us to sit down upon a
buffalo-skin, which, with a courtesy so natural to the Indians, she had
placed near her for our accommodation.
“You are all alone/’
said I, glancing round the camp.
“Ye’es; Indian away
hunting—Upper Lakes. Come home with much deer.”
“And Susan, where is
she?”
“By-and-by,” (meaning
that she was coming). “Gone to fetch water—ice thick—chop with axe—take
long time."
As she ceased speaking,
the old blanket that formed the door of the tent was withdrawn, and the
girl, bearing two pails of water, stood in the open space, in the white
moon light. The glow of the fire streamed upon her dark, floating locks,
danced in the black, glistening eye, and gave deeper blush to the olive
cheek! She would have made a beautiful picture; Sir Joshua Reynolds
would have rejoiced in such a model—so simply graceful and unaffected
the very beauty of savage life and unadorned nature. A smile of
recognition passed between us. She put down her burden beside Mrs. Tom,
and noiselessly glided to her seat.
We had scarcely
exchanged a few words with our favourite, when the old squaw, placing
her hand against her ear, exclaimed, “Whist! whist!”
“What is it?" cried
Emilia and I, starting to our feet. "Is there any danger?’
“A deer—a deer—in
bush!” whispered the squaw, seizing a rifle that stood in a corner. “I
hear sticks crack —a great way off. Stay here!”
A great way off the
animal must have been, for though Emilia and I listened at the open
door, an advantage which the squaw did not enjoy, we could not hear the
least sound: all seemed still as death. The squaw whistled to an old
hound, and went out.
“Did you hear anything,
Susan?”
She smiled, and nodded.
“Listen; the dog has
found the track."
The next moment the
discharge of a rifle, and the deep baying of the dog, woke up the
sleeping echoes of the woods; and the girl started oft to help the old
squaw to bring in the game that she had shot.
The Indians are great
imitators, and possess a nice tacit in adopting the customs and manners
of those with whom they associate. An Indian is Nature’s gentleman—never
familiar, coarse, or vulgar. If lie take a meal with you, he waits to
see how you make use of the implements on the table, and the manner in
which you eat, which he imitates with a grave decorum, as if he had been
accustomed to the same usages from childhood. He never attempts to help
himself, or demand more food, but waits patiently until you perceive
what he requires. I was perfectly astonished at this innate politeness,
for it seems natural to all the Indians with whom I have had any
dealings.
There was one old
Indian, who belonged to a distant settlement, and only visited our lakes
occasionally on hunting parties. He was a strange, eccentric, merry old
fellow, with a skin like red mahogany, and a wiry, sinewy frame, that
looked as if it could bid defiance to every change of temperature.
Old Snow-storm, for
such was his significant name, was rather too fond of the
whiskey-bottle, and when he had taken a drop too much, he became an
unmanageable wild beast. He had a great fancy for my husband, and never
visited the other Indians without extending the same favour to us. Once
upon a time, he broke the nipple of his gun; and Moodie repaired the
injury for him by fixing a new one in its place, which little kindness
quite won the heart of the old man, and he never came to see us without
bringing an offering of fish, ducks, partridges, or venison, to show his
gratitude.
One warm September day,
he made his appearance bare-headed, as usual, .and carrying in his hand
a great checked bundle.
“Fond of grapes?" said
he, putting the said bundle into my hands. “Fine grapes—brought them
from island for my friends squaw and papouses.
Glad of the donation,
which I considered quite a prize, I hastened into the kitchen to untie
the grapes and put them into a dish. But imagine my disappointment, when
I found them wrapped up in a soiled shirt, only recently taken from the
back of the owner. I called Moodie, and begged him to return Snow-storm
his garment, and to thank him for the grapes.
The mischievous
creature was highly diverted with the circumstance, and laughed
immoderately.
“Snow-storm,” said he,
“Mrs. Moodie and the children are obliged to you for your kindness in
bringing them the grapes; but how came you to tie thorn up in a dirty
shirt?”
“Dirty!” cried the old
man, astonished that we should object to the fruit on that score. “It
ought to be clean; it has been washed often enough. Owgh! You see,
Moodie,” he continued, "I have no hat—never wear hat— want no shade to
my eyes—love the sun—see all around me—up and down—much better widout
hit. Could not put grapes in hat—blanket coat too large, crush fruit,
juice run out. I had noting but my shirt, so I takes off shirt, and
brings grape safe over the water on my back. Papouse no care for dirty
shirt; their leetel bellies have no eyes”
In spite of this
eloquent harangue, I could not bring myself to use the grapes, ripe and
tempting as they looked, or give them to the children. Mr. W-and his
wife happening to step in at that moment fell into such an ecstacy at
the sight of the grapes, that, as they were perfectly unacquainted with
the circumstanee of the shirt, I very generously gratified their wishes
by presenting them with the contents of the large dish; and they never
ate a bit less sweet for the novel mode in which they were conveyed to
me!
The Indians, under
their quiet exterior, possess a deal of humour. They have significant
names for everything, and a nickname for every one, and some of the
latter are laughably appropriate. A fat, pompous, ostentatious settler
in our neighbourhood they called Muckakee, “the bull frog.” Another,
rather a fine young man, but with a very red face, they named Segoskee,
“the rising sun.” Mr. Wood, who had a farm above ours, was a remarkably
slender young man, and to him they give the appellation of Metig, “thin
stick.” A woman, that occasionally worked for me, had a disagreeable
squint; she was known in Indian by the name of Sachabd, “cross-eye.” A
gentleman with a very large nose was Choojas, “big, or ugly nose.” My
little Addie, who was a fair, lovely creature, they viewed with great
approbation, and called Annoonlc, “a star;” while the rosy Katie was
Nogesigod; “the northern lights.” As to me, I was Nonocosiqui, a
“humming-bird;” a ridiculous name for a tall woman, but it had reference
to the delight I took in pointing birds.— My friend, Emilia, was “blue
cloud;” my little Donald, “frozen face;” young C-, “the red-headed
wood-pecker,” from the colour of his hair; my brother, Chippewa, and
“the bald-headed eagle.” He was an especial favourite among them.
The Indians are often
made a prey of and cheated by the unprincipled settlers, who think it no
crime to overreach a red-skin. One ancedote will fully illustrate this
fact. A young squaw, who was near becoming a mother, stopped at a
Smith-town settler’s house to rest herself. The woman of the house, who
was Irish, was peeling for dinner one large white turnips, which her
husband had grown in their garden. The Indian had never seen a turnip
before, and the appearance of the firm, white, juicy root gave her such
a keen craving to taste it that she very earnestly begged for a small
piece to eat. She had purchased at Peterborough a large stone-china
bowl, of a very handsome pattern (or, perhaps, got it at the store in
exchange for basket), the worth of which might be half-a-dollar. If the
poor squaw longed for the turnip, the value of which could scarcely
reach a copper, the covetous European had fixed as longing a glance upon
the china bowl, and she was determined to gratify her avaricious desire
and obtain it on the most easy terms. She told the squaw, with some
disdain, that her man did not grow turnips to give away to “Injuns,” but
she would sell her one. The squaw offered her four coppers, all the
change she had about her. This the woman refused with contempt. She then
proffered a basket; but that was not sufficient; nothing would satisfy
her but the bowl. The Indian demurred; but opposition had only increased
her craving for the turnip in a tenfold degree; and, after a short
mental struggle, in which the animal propensity overcame the warnings of
prudence, the squaw gave up the bowl, and received in return one turnip!
The daughter of this woman told me this ancedote of her mother as a very
clever thing. What ideas some people have of moral justice!
I have said before that
the Indian never forgets a kindness. We had a thousand proofs of this,
when overtaken by misfortune, and withering beneath the iron grasp of
poverty, we could scarcely obtain bread for ourselves and our little
ones; then it was that the truth of the Eastern proverb was brought home
to our hearts, and the goodness of God fully manifested towards us,
“Cast thy bread upon the waters, and thou shalt find it after many
days.”
During better times we
had treated these poor savages with kindness and liberality, and they
never forsook us. For many a good meal I have been indebted to them,
when I had nothing to give in return, when the pantry was empty, and
“the hearth-stone growing cold," as they term the want of provisions to
cook at it. And their delicacy in conferring these favours was not the
least admirable part of their conduct. John Nogan, who was much attached
to us, would bring a fine bunch of ducks, and drop them at my feet “for
the papouse,” or leave a large maskinonge on the sill of the door, or
place a quarter of venison just within it, and slip away without saying
a word, thinking that receiving a present from a poor Indian might hurt
our feelings, and he would spare us the mortification of returning
thanks.
Often have I grieved
that people with such generous impulses should be degraded and corrupted
by civilized men; that a mysterious destiny involves and hangs over
them, pressing them back into the wilderness, and slowly and surely
sweeping them from the earth.
Their ideas of
Christianity appeared to me vague and unsatisfactory. They will tell you
that Christ died for men, and that He is the Saviour of the World, but
they do not seem to comprehend the spiritual character of Christianity,
nor the full extent of the requirements and application of the law of
Christian love. These imperfect views may not be entertained by all
Christian Indians, but they were very common amongst those with whom I
conversed. Their ignorance upon theological, as well as upon other
subjects, is, of course, extreme. One Indian asked me very innocently if
I came from the land where Christ was born, and if I had ever seen
Jesus. They always mention the name of the Persons in the Trinity with
great reverence.
They are a highly
imaginative people. The practical meaning of their names, and their
intense admiration for the beauties of nature, are proof of this.
Nothing escapes their observing eyes. There is not a flower that blooms
in the wilderness, a bird that cuts the air with its wings, a beast that
roams the wood, a fish that stems the water, or the most minute insect
that sports in the sunbeams, but it has an Indian name to illustrate its
peculiar habits and qualities. Some of their words convey the direct
meaning of the thing implied—thus, charm, “to sneeze,” is the very sound
of that act; tod-me-duh, “to churn,” gives the noise made by the dashing
of the cream from side to side; and many others.
They believe in
supernatural appearances—in spirits of the earth, the air, the waters.
The latter they consider evil, and propitiate before undertaking a long
voyage, by throwing small portions of bread, meat, tobacco, and
gunpowder into the water.
When an Indian loses
one of his children, he must keep a strict fast for three days,
abstaining from food of any kind. A hunter of the name of Young, told me
a curious story of their rigid observance of this strange rite.
“They had a chief,” he
said, "a few years ago, whom they called ‘Handsome Jack,’—whether in
derision, I cannot tell, for he was one of the ugliest Indians I ever
saw. The scarlet fever got into the camp—a terrible disease in this
country, and doubly terrible to those poor creatures who don’t know how
to treat it. His eldest daughter died. The chief had fasted two days
when I met him in the bush. I did not know what had happened, but I
opened my wallet, for I was on a hunting expedition, and offered him
some bread and dried venison. He looked at me reproachfully.
‘Do white men eat bread
the first night their papoose is laid in the earth?’
“I then knew the cause
of his depression, and left him.” On the night of the second day of his
fast another child died of the fever. He had now to accomplish three
more days without tasting food. It was too much even for an Indian. On
the evening of the fourth, he was so pressed by ravenous hunger, that he
stole into the woods, caught a bull-frog, and devoured it alive. He
imagined himself alone; but one of his people, suspecting his intention,
had followed him, unperceived, to the bush. The act he had just
committed was a hideous crime in their eyes, and in a few minutes the
camp was in an uproar. The chief fled for protection to Young’s house.
When the hunter demanded the cause of his alarm, he gave for answer,
“There are plenty of flies at my house. To avoid their stings I come to
you.”
It required all the
eloquence of Mr. Young, who enjoyed much popularity among them, to
reconcile the rebellious tribe to their chief.
They are very skilful
in their treatment of wounds and many diseases. Their knowledge of the
medicinal qualities of their plants and herbs is very great. They make
excellent poultices from the bark of the bass and the slippery elm. They
use several native plants in their dyeing of baskets and porcupine
quills. The inner bark of the swamp-alder, simply boiled in water, makes
a beautiful red. From the root the black briony they obtain a fine salve
for sores, and extract a rich yellow dye. The inner bark of the root of
the sumach, roasted, and reduced to powder, is a good remedy for the
ague; a tea-spoonful given between the hot and cold fit. They scrape the
fine white powder from the large fungus that grows upon the bark of the
pine, into whiskey, and take it for violent pains in the stomach. The
taste of this powder strongly reminded me of quinine.
I have read much of the
excellence of Indian cookery, out I never could bring myself to taste
anything prepared in their dirty wigwams. I remember being highly amused
in watching the preparation of a mess, which might have been called the
Indian hotch-potch. It consisted of a strange mixture of fish, flesh,
and fowl, all boiled together in the same vessel. Ducks, partridges,
aask nonge, venison, and muskrats, formed a part of this delectable
compound. These were literally smothered in onions, potatoes, and
turnips, which they had procured from me. They very hospitably offered
me a dishful of the odious mixture, which the odour of the muskrat
rendered every thing but savoury; but I declined, simply stating that I
was not hungry. My little boy tasted it, but quickly left the camp to
conceal the effect it produced upon him.
Their method of
broiling fish, however, is excellent. They take a fish, just fresh out
of the water, cut out the entrails, and without removing the scales,
wash it clean, dry it in a cloth, or in the grass, and cover it all over
with clear hot ashes. When the flesh will part from the bone, they draw
it out of the ashes, strip off the skin, and it is fit for the table of
the most fastidious epicure.
The deplorable want of
chastity that exists among the Indian women of this tribe seems to have
been more the result of their intercourse with the settlers in the
country, than from any previous disposition to this vice. The jealousy
of their husbands has often been exercised in a terrible manner against
the offending squaws; but thi8 has not happened of late years. The men
wink at these derelictions in their wives, and share with them the price
of their shame.
The mixture of European
blood adds greatly to the physical beauty of the half-race, but produces
a sad falling-off from the original integrity of the Indian character.—
The half-caste is generally a lying, vicious rogue, possessing the worst
qualities of both parents in an eminent degree. We have many of these
half-Indians in the penitentiary, for crimes of the blackest dye.
The skill of the Indian
in procuring his game, either by land or water, has been too well
described by better writers than I could ever hope to be, to need any
illustration from my pen, and I will close this long chapter with a
droll anecdote which is told of a gentleman in this neighbourhood.
The early loss of his
hair obliged Mr.-to procure the substitute of a Wig. This was such a
good imitation of nature, that none but his intimate friends and
neighbours were aware of the fact.
It happened that he had
had some quarrel with an Indian, which had to be settled in one of the
petty courts.
The case was decided in
favour of Mr. -, which so aggrieved the savage, who considered himself
the injured party, that he sprang upon him with a furious yell, tomahawk
in hand, with the intention of depriving him of his scalp. He twisted
his hand in the locks which adorned the cranium of his adversary,
when—horror of horrors!— the treacherous wig came off in his hand,
“Owgh! owgh!” exclaimed the affrighted savage, flinging it from him, and
rushing from the court as if he had been bitten by a rattlesnake. His
sudden exit was followed by peals of laughter from the crowd, while Mr.-
coolly picked up his wig, and drily remarked that it had saved his head.
THE INDIAN FISHERMAN’S
LIGHT
The air is still, the
night is dark,
No ripple breaks the dusky tide;
From isle to isle the fisher’s bark
Like fay meteor seems to glide;
Now lost in shade—now flashing bright
On sleeping wave and forest tree;
We hail with joy the ruddy light,
Which far into the darksome night
Shines red and cheerily!
With spear high poised, and steady hand,
The centre of that fiery ray,
Behold the Indian fisher stand
Prepared to strike the finny ray,
Hurrah! the shaft has sped below—
Transfix’d the shining prize I see;
On swiftly darts the birch canoe;
Yon black rock shrouding from my dew
Its red light gleaming cheerily!
Around yon bluff, whose pine crest hides
The noisy rapids from our sight,
Another bark—another glides—
Red meteors of the murky night.
The bosom of the silent stream
With mimic stars is dotted free;
The waves reflect the double gleam,
The tall woods lighten in the beam,
Through darkness shining cheerily! |