IT is delightful to
observe a feeling of contentment under adverse circumstances. We may
smile at the rude and clumsy attempts of the remote and isolated
backwoodsman to attain something like comfort, but happy he who, with
the buoyant spirits of the light-hearted Irishman, contrives to make
himself happy even when all others would be miserable.
A certain degree of
dissatisfaction with our present circumstances is necessary to stimulate
us to exertion, and thus to enable us to secure future comfort; but
where the delusive prospect of future happiness is too remote for any
reasonable hope of ultimate attainment, then, surely it is true wisdom
to make the most of the present and to cultivate a spirit of happy
contentment with the lot assigned to us by Providence.
“Ould Simpson,” or the
“Ould Dhragoon,” as he was generally called, was a good sample of this
happy character; and I shall proceed to give the reader a sketch of his
history, and a description of his establishment. He was one of that
unfortunate class of discharged soldiers who are tempted to sell their
pensions often far below their true value, for the sake of getting a lot
of land in some remote settlement, whore it is only rendered valuable by
the labour of the settler, and where they will have the unenviable
privilege of expending the last remains of their strength in clearing a
patch of land for the benefit of some grasping storekeeper who has given
them credit while engaged in the work.
The old dragoon had
fixed his abode on the verge of an extensive beaver-meadow, which was
considered a sort of natural curiosity in the neighbourhood; and where
he managed by cutting the rank grass in the summer time, to support
several cows, which afforded the chief subsistence of his family. He had
also managed, with the assistance of his devoted partner, Judy, to clear
a few acres of poor rocky land on the sloping margin of the level
meadow, which he planted year after year with potatoes. Scattered over
this small clearing, here and there, might be seen the but-end of some
half-burnt hemlock tree, which had escaped the general combustion of the
log heaps, and now formed a striking contrast to the white limestone
rocks which showed their rounded surfaces above the meagre soil.
The “ould dhragoon ”
seemed, moreover, to have some taste for the picturesque, and by way of
ornament, had left standing sundry tall pines and hemlocks neatly
girdled to destroy their foliage, the shade of which would have been
detrimental to the “blessed praties” which he designed to grow in his
clearing, but which, in the meantime, like martyrs at the stake,
stretched their naked branches imploringly towards the smiling heavens.
As he was a kind of hermit, from choice, and far removed from other
settlers, whose assistance is so necessary in new settlements, old
Simpson was compelled to resort to the most extraordinary contrivances
while clearing his land. Thus, after felling the trees, instead of
chopping them into lengths, for the purpose of facilitating the
operation of piling them preparatory to burning, which would have cost
him too much labour, he resorted to the practice of “niggeringas it is
called; which is simply laying light pieces of round timber across the
trunks of the trees, and setting fire to them at the point of contact,
by which means the trees are slowly burned through.
It was while busily
engaged in this interesting operation that I first became acquainted
with the subject of this sketch.
Some twenty or thirty
little fires were burning briskly in different parts of the blackened
field, and the old fellow was watching the slow progress of his silent
“niggers,” and replacing them from time to time as they smouldered away.
After threading my way among the uncouth logs, blazing and smoking in
all directions, I encountered the old man, attired in an old hood, or
bonnet, of his wife Judy, with his patched canvas trousers-rolled up to
his knees; one foot bare, and the other furnished with an old boot,
which from its appearance had once belonged to some more aristocratic
foot. His person was long, straight and sinewy, and there was a light
springiness and elasticity in his step which would have suited a younger
man, as he skipped along with a long handspike over his shoulder. He was
singing a stave tune the “Enniskillen Dragoon” when I came up with him.
“With his silver-mounted
pistols, and his long carbine,
Long life to the brave Inniskillen dragoon.”
His face would have
been one of the most lugubrious imaginable, with his long, tangled hair
hanging confusedly over it, in a manner which has been happily compared
to a “bewitched haystack" had it not been for a certain humorous twitch
or convulsive movement, which affected one side of his countenance,
whenever any droll idea passed through his mind. It was with a twitch of
this kind; and a certain indescribable twinkle of his somewhat
melancholy eye, as he seemed intuitively to form a hasty conception of
the oddity of his appearance to a stranger unused to the bush, that he
welcomed me to his clearing. He instantly threw down his handspike, and
leaving his “niggers” to finish their work at their leisure, insisted on
our going to his house to get something to drink.
On the way, I explained
to him the object of my visit, which was to mark out, or “blaze,” the
side-lines of a lot of land I had received as part of a military grant,
immediately adjoining the beaver-meadow, and I asked him to accompany
me, as he was well acquainted with the different lots.
“Och! by all manner of
manes, and welcome; the dhevil a foot of the way but I know as well as
my own clearing; but come into the house, and got a dhrink of milk, an’
a bite of bread an’ butther, for sorrow a dhrop of the whiskey has
crossed my teeth for the last month; an’ it’s but poor intertainment for
man or baste I can offer you, but shure you’re heartily welcome.”
The precincts of the
homestead were divided and subdivided into an infinity of enclosures, of
all shapes and sizes. The outer enclosure was a bush fence, formed of
trees felled on each other in a row, and the gaps filled up with
brushwood. There was a large gate, swung with wooden hinges, and a
wooden latch to fasten it; the smaller enclosures were made with round
poles, tied together with bark. The house was of the rudest description
of “shanty,” with hollowed basswood logs, fitting into each other
somewhat in the manner of tiles for a roof, instead of shingles. No iron
was to be seen, in the absence of which there were plenty of leathern
hinges, wooden latches for locks and bark-strings instead of nails.
There was a large fireplace at one end of the shanty, with a chimney,
constructed of split laths, plastered with a mixture of clay and
cow-dung. As for windows, these were luxuries which could well be
dispensed with; the open door was an excellent substitute for them in
the daytime, and at night none were required. When I ventured to object
to this arrangement, that he would have to keep the door shut in the
winter time, the old man replied, in the style so characteristic of his
country, “Shure it will be time enough to think of that when the could
weather sets in.” Every thing about the house wore a Robinson Crusoe
aspect, and though there was not any appearance of original plan or
foresight, there was no lack of ingenious contrivance to meet every want
as it arose.
Judy dropped us a low
curtsey as we entered, which was followed by a similar compliment from a
stout girl of twelve, and two or three more of the children, who all
seemed to share the pleasure of their parents in receiving strangers in
their unpretending tenement. Many were the apologies that poor Judy
offered for the homely cheer she furnished us, and great was her delight
at the notice we took of the “childher.” She set little Biddy, who was
the pride of her heart, to reading the Bible; and she tool down a
curious machine from a sholf, which she had “conthrived out of her own
head,” as she said, for teaching the children to read. This was a flat
box, on frame, filled with sand, which saved paper, pens, and ink. Poor
Judy had evidently seen better days, but, with a humble and contented
spirit, she blessed God for the food and scanty raiment their labour
afforded them. Her only sorrow was the want of idication for the
children.
She would have told us
a long story about her trials and sufferings, before they had attained
their present comparative comfort and independence, but, as we had a
tedious scramble before us, through cedar-swamps, beaver-meadows, and
piny ridges, the “ould dhragoon” cut her short, and we straightway
started on our toilsome journey.
Simpson, in spite of a
certain dash of melancholy in his composition, was one of those happy
follows of the “light heart and thin pair of breeches” school, who, when
they meet with difficulty or misfortune, never stop to measure its
dimensions, but hold in their breath and run lightly over, as in
crossing a bog, where to stand still is to sink.
Off, then, we went,
with the “ould dhragoon” skipping and bounding on before us, over fallen
trees and mossy rocks; now ducking under the low, tangled branches of
the white cedar, then carefully piloting us along rotten logs, covered
with green moss, to save us from the discomfort of wet feet. All this
time he still kept one of his feet safely ensconced in the boot, while
the other seemed to luxuriate in the water, as if there was something
amphibious in his nature.
We soon reached the
beaver-meadow, which extended two or three miles; sometimes contracting
into a narrow gorge, between the wooded heights, then spreading out
again into an ample field of verdure, and presenting everywhere the same
unvarying level surface, surrounded with rising grounds, covered with
the dense unbroken forest, as if its surface had formerly been covered
by the waters of a lake; which in all probability has been the case at
some not very remote period. In many places the meadow was so wet that
it required a very large share of faith to support us in passing over
its surface; but our friend, the dragoon, soon brought us safe through
all dangers to a deep ditch, which he had dug to carry off the
superfluous water from the part of the meadow which he owned. When we
had obtained firm footing on the opposite side, we went down to rest
ourselves before commencing the operation of “blazing,” or marking the
trees with our axes along the side-line of my lot. Here the mystery of
the boot was explained. Simpson very coolly took it off from the
hitherto favoured foot, and drew it on the other.
He was not a bit
ashamed of his poverty, and candidly owned that this was the only boot
he possessed, and he was desirous of giving each of his feet fair play.
Nearly the whole day
was occupied in completing our job, in which the “dhragoon” assisted us,
with the most hearty good-will, enlivening us with his inexhaustible
fund of good-humour and drollery. It was nearly dark when we got back to
his “shanty,” where the kind-hearted Judy was preparing a huge pot of
potatoes and other “combustibles,” as Simpson called the other eatables,
for our entertainment.
Previous to starting on
our surveying expedition, we had observed Judy very earnestly giving
some important instructions to one of her little boys, on whom she
seemed to be most seriously impressing the necessity of using the utmost
diligence. The happy contentment which now beamed in poor Judy’s still
comely countenance bespoke the success of the messenger. She could not
“call up spirits from the vasty deep” of the cellar, but she had
procured some whiskey from her next-door neighbour-some five or six
miles off; and there it stood somewhat ostentatiously on the table in a
“greybeard,” with a “corn cob,” or ear of Indian corn stripped of its
grain, for a cork, smiling must benevolently on the family circle, and
looking a hundred welcomes to the strangers.
An indescribably
enlivening influence seemed to exude from every j>ore of that homely
earthen vessel, diffusing mirth .and good-humour in all directions. The
old man jumped and danced about on the rough floor of the “shanty;” .and
the children sat giggling and nudging each other in a corner, casting a
timid look, from time to time, at their mother, for fear she might check
them for being “over bould.”
“Is it crazy ye are
intirely, ye ould otnadhawn!” said Judy, whose notions of propriety were
somewhat shocked with the undignified levity of her partner; “the likes
of you I never seed; ye are too foolidge intirely. Have done now wid
your diviltries, and set the stools for the gintlemens, while I get the
supper for yees.”
Our plentiful though
homely meal was soon discussed, for hunger, like a good conscience, can
laugh at luxury ; and the “greybeard” made its appearance, with the
usual accompaniments of hot water and maple sugar, which Judy had
scraped from the cakc, and placed in a saucer on the table before us.
The “ould dhragoon,”
despising his wife’s admonitions, gave way freely to his feelings, and
knew no bounds to his hilarity. He laughed and joked, and sang snatches
of old songs picked up in the course of his service at home and abroad.
At length Judy, who looked on him as a “raal janius,” begged him to
“sing the gintlemens the song he made when he first came to the counthry.
Of course we ardently
seconded the motion, and nothing loth, the old man, throwing himself
back on his stool, and stretching out his long neck, poured forth the
following ditty, with which I shall conclude my hasty sketch of the
“ould dhrnsfoon.”
Och! it’s here I’m
intirely continted,
In the wild woods of swate ’Mcrioay;
God’s blessing on him that invinted
Big ships for our crossing the say!
Here praties grow bigger
nor turnips;
And though cruel hard is our work,
In ould Ireland we'd nothing but praties,
But here we ha\ e praties and pork.
I live on the banks of a
meadov,
Now see that my maning you take;
It bates all the bogs of ould Ireland—
Six months in the year it’s a lake.
Bad luck to the beavers
that dammed it,
I wish them all kilt for their pains;
For 2hure though the craters are clever,
’Tis sartin they’ve drown’d my lomains.
I’ve built a log hut of
the timber
That grows on my charmin’ estate;
And an illigant root-house erected,
Just facing the front of my gate.
And I’ve made me an
illigant pig-sty,
Well litter’d with straw and wid hay;
And it's there, free from noise of the chilther,
I sleep in the heat of the day.
It’s there I’m intirely
at aise, Sir,
And enjoy all the comforts of home;
I stretch out my legs plase, sir,
And dhrame of the pkssures to come.
Shure, it’s pleauaut to
hear the frogs croakin’,
When the sun’s going down in the sky,
And my Judy sits quietly smokin’
While the praties are boil’d till they’re dhvy.
Och ! thin, if you love
indepindence,
And have money your passage to pay,
You must quit the ould counthry intirely,
And start in the middle of May.
J. W. |