Stern Disappointment, in
thy iron grasp
The soul lies stricken. So the timid deer,
Who feels the foul
fangs of the felon wolf Clench’d in his throat, grown desperate for
life, Turns on hi3 foes, and battles with the fate That hems him in—and
only yields in death.
THE summer of ’35 was
very wet; a circumstance so unusual in Canada that I have seen no season
like it during my sojourn in the country. Oar wheat crop promised to be
both excellent and abundant; and the clear ng and seeding sixteen acres,
one way or another, had cost us more than fifty pounds; still we hoped
to to realise something handsome by the sale of the produce; and, as far
as appearances went, all looked fair. The rain commenced about a week
before the crop was fit for the sickle, and from that time until nearly
the end of September was a mere succession of thunder showers; days of
intense heat, succeeded by floods of rain. Our fine crop shared the fate
of all other fine crops in the country; it was totally spoiled; the
wheat grew in the sheaf, and we could scarcely save enough to supply us
with bad sickly bread; the rest was exchanged at the distillery for
whiskey, which was the only produce which could be obtained for it. The
storekeepers would not look at it, or give cither money or goods for
such a damaged article.
My husband and I had
worked hard in the field; it was the first time I had ever tried my hand
at field-labour, but our ready money was exhausted, and the steamboat
stock had not paid us one farthing; we could not hire, and there was no
help for it. I had a hard struggle with my pr de before I would consent
to render the least assistance on the farm, but reflection convinced me
that I was wrong—that Providence had placed me in a situation where I
was called upon to work—that it was not only my duty to obey that call,
but to exert myself to the utmost to assist my husband, and help to
maintain my family.
Ah, poverty ! thou art
a hard taskmaster, but in thy soul-ennoblng school I have received more
godlike lessons, have learned more sublime truths, than ever I acquired
in the smooth highways of the world!
The independent in soul
can rise above the seeming disgrace of poverty, and hold fast their
integrity, in defiance of the world and its selfish and useless maxims.
To them, no labour is too great, no trial too severe; they will
unflinchingly exert every faculty of mind and body, before they will
submit to become a burden to others.
The misfortunes that
now crowded upon us were the result of no misconduct or extravagance on
our part, but arose out of circumstances which we could not avert nor
control. Finding too late the error into which we had fallen, in
suffering ourselves to be cajoled and plundered out of our property by
interested speculators, we braced our minds to bear the worst, and
determined to meet our difficulties calmly and firmly, nor suffer our
spirits to sink under calamities which energy and industry might
eventually repair. Having once come to this resolution, we cheerfully
shared together the labours of the field. One in heart and purpose, we
dared remain true to ourselves, true to our high destiny as immortal
creatures, in our conflict with temporal and physical wants.
We found that manual
toil, however distasteful to those unaccustomed to it, was not after all
such a dreadful hardship; that the wilderness was not without its rose,
the hard face of poverty without its smile. If we occasionally suffered
severe pain, we as often experienced great pleasure, and I have
contemplated a well-hoed ridge of potatoes on that bush farm, with as
much delight as in years long past I had experienced in examining a fine
painting in some well-appointed drawing-room.
I can now look back
with calm thankfulness on that long period of trial and exertion—with
thankfulness that the dark clouds that hung over us, threatening to blot
us from existence, when they did burst upon us, were full of blessings.
When our situation appeared perfectly desperate, then were we on the
threshold of a new state of things, which was born out of that very
distress.
In order more fully to
illustrate the necessity of a perfect and child-like reliance upon the
mercies of God— who, I most firmly believe, never deserts those who have
placed their trust in Him—I will give a brief sketch of our lives during
the. years 1836 and 1837.
Still confidently
expecting to realise an income, however small, from the steam-boat
stock, we had involved ourselves considerably in debt, in order to pay
our servants and obtain the common necessaries of life; and we owed a
large sum to two Englishmen in Dummer, for clearing ten more acres upon
the farm. Our utter inability to meet these demands weighed very heavily
upon my husband’s mind. All superfluities in the way of groceries were
now given up, and we were compelled to rest satisfied upon the produce
of the farm. Milk, bread, and potatoes during the summer became our
chief, and often, for months, our only fare. As to tea and sugar, they
were luxuries we would not think of, although I missed the tea very
much; we rang the changes upon peppermint and sage, taking the one herb
at our breakfast, the other at our tea, until I found an excellent
substitute for both in the root of the dandelion.
The first year we came
to this country, I met with an account of dandelion coffee, published in
the New York Albion, given by a Dr. Harrison, of Edinburgh, who
earnestly recommended it as an article of general use.
“It possesses,” he
says, “all the fine flavour and exhilarating properties of coffee,
without any of its deleterious effects. The plant being of a soporific
nature, the coffee Y- made from it when drunk at night produces a
tendency to sleep, instead of exciting wakefulness, and may be safely
used as a cheap and wholesome substitute for the Arabian berry, being
equal in substance and flavour to the best Mocha coffee.”
I was much struck with
this paragraph at the time, and for several years felt a great
inclination to try the Doctor’s coffee; but something or other always
came in the way and it was put off till another opportunity. During the
fall of ’35, I was assisting my husband in taking up a crop of potatoes
in the field, and observing a vast number of fine dandelion roots among
the potatoes, it brought the dandelion coffee back to my memory, and I
determined to try some for our supper. Without saying anything to my
husband, I threw aside some of the roots, and when we left work,
collecting a sufficient quantity for the experiment, I carefully washed
the roots quite clean, without depriving them of the fine brown skin
which covers them, and which contains the aromatic flavour, which so
nearly resembles coffee that it is difficult to distinguish it from it
while roasting.
I cut my roots into
small pieces, the size of a kidney-bean, and roasted them on an iron
baking-pan in the stove-oven, until they were as brown and crisp as
coffee. I then ground and transferred a small cupful of the powder to
the coffee-pot, pouring upon it scalding water, and boiling it for a few
minutes briskly over the fire. The result was beyond my expectations.
The coffee proved excellent—far superior to the common coffee we
procured at the stores.
To persons residing in
the bush, and to whom tea and coffee are very expensive articles of
luxury, the knowledge of this valuable property in a plant scattered so
abundantly through their fields, would prove highly beneficial. For
years we used no other article; and my Indian friends who frequented the
house gladly adopted the root, and made me show them the whole process
of manufacturing it into coffee.
Experience taught me
that the root of the dandelion is not so good when applied to this
purpose in the spring as it is in the fall. I tried it in the spring,
but the juice of the plant, having contributed to the production of
leaves and flowers, was weak, and destitute of the fine bitter flavour
so peculiar to coffee. The time of gathering in the potato crop is the
best suited for collecting and drying the roots of the dandelion; and as
they always abound in the same hills, both may be accomplished at the
same time. Those who want to keep a quantity for winter use may wash and
cut up the roots, and dry them on boards in the sun. They will keep for
years, and can be roasted when required.
Few of our colonists
are acquainted with the many uses to which this neglected but most
valuable plant may be applied. I will point out a few which have come
under my own observation, convinced as I am that the time will come when
this hardy weed, with its golden flowers and curious seed-vessels, which
form a constant plaything to the little children rolling about and
luxuriating among the grass, in the sunny month of May, will be
transplanted into our gardens, and tended with due care.
The dandelion planted
in trenches, and blanched to a beautiful cream-colour with straw, makes
an excellent salad, quite equal to endive, and is more hardy and
requires less care.
In many parts of the
United States, particularly in new districts where vegetables are
scarce, it is used early in the spring, and boiled with pork as a
substitute for cabbage. During our residence in the bush we found it, in
the early part of May, a great addition to the dinner-table. In the
township of Dummer, the settlers boil the tops, and add hops to the
liquor, which they ferment, and from which they obtain excellent beer. I
have never tasted this simple beverage, but I have been told by those
who use it that it is equal to the table-beer used at home.
Necessity has truly
been termed the mother of invention, for I contrived to manufacture a
variety of dishes almost out of nothing, while living in her school.
When entirely destitute of animal food, the different varieties of
squirrels supplied us with pies, stews, and roasts. Our barn stood' at
the top of the hill near the bush, and in a trap set for such “small
deer,” we often caught from ten to twelve a day.
The flesh of the black
squirrel is equal to that of the rabbit, and the red, and even the
little chipmunk, is palatable when nicely cooked. But from the lake,
during the summer, we derived the larger portion of our food. The
children called this piece of water “ Mamma’s pantry and many a good
meal has the munificent Father given to his poor dependent children from
its well-stored depths. Moodie and I used to rise by daybreak, and fish
for an hour after sunrise, when we returned, he to the field, and I to
dress the little ones, clean up the house, assist with the milk, and
prepare the breakfast.
Oh, how I enjoyed these
excursions on the lake; the very idea of our dinner depending upon our
success added double zest to our sport!
One morning we started
as usual before sunrise; a thick mist still hung like a fine veil upon
the water when we pushed off, and anchored at our accustomed place-Just
as tho sun rose, and the haze parted and drew up like a golden sheet of
transparent gauze, through which the dark woods loomed out like giants,
a noble buck dashed into the water, followed by four Indian hounds.
We then discovered a
canoe, full of Indians, just below the rapids, and another not many
yards from us, that had been concealed by the fog. It was a noble sight,
that gallant deer exerting all his energy, and stemming the water with
such matchless grace, his branching horns held proudly aloft, his broad
nostrils distended, and his fine eye fixed intently upon the opposite
shore. Several rifle-balls whizzed past him, the dogs followed hard upon
his track, but my very heart leaped for joy when, in spite of all his
foes, his glassy hoofs spurned the opposite bank and he plunged headlong
into the forest.
My beloved partner was
most skilful in trolling for bass and maskinoned. His line he generally
fastened to the paddle, and the motion of the oar gave a life-like
vibration to the queer looking mice and dragon-flies I used to
manufacture from squirrel fur, or scarlet and white cloth, to tempt the
finny wanderers of the wave.
When too busy himself
to fish for our meals, little Katie and I ventured out alone in the
canoe, which we anchored in any promising fishing spot, by fastening a
harrow tooth to a piece of rope, and letting it drop from the side of
the little vessel. By the time she was five years old, my little mermaid
could both steer and paddle the light vessel, and catch small fish,
which were useful for soup.
During the winter of
’86, we experienced many privations. The ruffian squatter P-, from Clear
Lake, drove from the barn a fine young bull we were rearing, and for
several weeks all trace of the animal was lost. We had almost forgotten
the existence of poor Whiskey, when a neighbour called and told Moodie
that his yearling was at P-’s, and that he would advise him to get it
back as soon as possible.
Moodie had to take some
wheat to Y-’s mill, and as the squatter lived only a mile further, he
called at his house; and there, sure enough, he found the lost animal.
With the greatest difficulty he succeeded in regaining his property, but
not without many threats of vengeance from the parties who had stolen
it. To these he paid no regard; but a few days after, six fat hogs, on
which we depended for all our winter store of animal food, were driven
into the lake, and destroyed.
The death of these
animals deprived us of three barrels of pork, and half-starved us
through the winter. That winter of ’36, how heavily it wore away! The
grown flour, frosted potatoes, and scant quantity of animal food
rendered us all weak, and the children suffered much from the ague.
One day, just before
the snow fell, Moodie had gone to Peterborough for letters; our servant
was sick in bed with the ague, and I was nursing my little boy, Dunbar,
who was shaking with the cold fit of his miserable fever, when Jacob put
his honest, round, rosy face in at the door.
“Give me the master’s
gun, ma’am; there’s a big buck feeding on the rice-bed near the island.”
I took down the gun,
saying, "Jacob, you have no chance; there is but one charge of buck-shot
in the house.”
“One chance is better
nor none,” said Jacob, as he commenced loading the gun. “Who knows what
may happen to one? Mayhap oie may chance to kill ’un; and you and the
measter and the wee bairns may have zummut zavory for zupper yet.”
Away walked Jacob with
Moodie’s “Manton” over his shoulder. A few minutes after, I heard the
report of the gun, but never expected to see anything of the game; when
Jacob suddenly bounced into the room, half-wild with delight.
“Thae beast iz dead az
a door-nail. Zure how the measter will laugh when he hogs the fine buck
that oie a’zhot.”
“And have you really
shot him?”
“Come and zee! ’Tis
worth your while to walk down to the landing to look at ’un.”
Jacob got a rope, and I
followed him to the landing, where, sure enough, lay a fine buck,
fastened in tow of the canoe. Jacob soon secured him by the hind legs to
the rope he had brought; and, with our united efforts, we at last
succeeded in dragging our prize home. All the time he was engaged in
taking off the skin, Jacob was anticipating the feast that we were to
have; and the good fellow chuckled with delight when he hung the carcass
quite close to the kitchen door, that his “measter’ might run against it
when he came home at night. This event actually took place. When Moodie
opened the door, he struck his head against the dead deer.
“What have you got
here?”
“A fine buck, zur,”
said Jacob, bringing forward the light, and holding it up in such a
manner that all the merits of the prize could be seen at a glance.
“A fine one, indeed!
How did we come by it?”
“It was zhot by oie,”
said Jacob, rubbing his hands in a sort of ecstasy. “Thae beast iz the
first oie ever zhot in my life. He! he! he!”
“You shot that fine
deer, Jacob?—and there was only one charge in the gun! Well done; you
must have taken a good aim.”
“Why, zur, oie took no
aim at ali. Oie just pointed the gun at the deer, and zhut my oeys and
let fly at ’un-Twas Providence kill’d ’un, not oie.”
“I bulieve you,” said
Moodie; “Providenco has hitherto watched over us and kept is from actual
starvation.”
The flesh of the deer,
and the good broth that I was able to obtain from it, greatly assisted
in restoring our sick to health; but long before that severe winter
terminated we were again out of food. Mrs. - had given to Katie, in the
fall, a very pretty little pig, which she had named Spot. The animal was
a great favourite with Jacob and the children, and he always received
his food from their hands at the door, and followed them all over the
place like a dog. We had a noble hound called Hector, between whom and
the pet pig there existed the most tender friendship. Spot always shared
with Hector the hollow log which served him for a kennel, and we often
laughed to see Hector lead Spot round the clearing by his ear. After
bearing the want of animal food until our souls sickened at the bad
potatoes and grown flour bread, we began—that is, the elders of the
family—to cast very hungry eyes upon Spot; but no one liked to propose
having him killed. At last Jacob spoke his mind upon the subject.
“Oi’ve heard, zur, that
the Jews never eat pork; but we Christians dooz, and are right glad ov
the chance. Now, zur, oi’ve been thinking that ’tis no manner ov use our
keeping that beast Spot. If he wor a zow, now there might be zome zenze
in the thing; and we all feel weak for a morzel of meat. S’poze I kill
him? He won’t make a bad piece of pork.”
Moodie seconded the
move; and, in spite of the tears and prayers of Katie, her uncouth pet
was sacrificed to the general wants of the family; but there were two
members of the house who disdained to eat a morsel of the victim; poor
Katie and the dog Hector. At the selfdenial of the first I did not at
all wonder, for she was a child full of sensibility and warm affections,
but the attachment of the brute creature to his old playmate filled us
all with surprise. Jacob first drew our attention to the strange fact.
“That dog,” he said, as
we were passing through the kitchen while he was at dinner, “do teach uz
Christians a lesson how to treat our friends. Why, zur, he’ll not eat a
morzel of Spot. Oie have tried and tempted him in all manner ov ways,
and he only do zneer and turn up his nose when oie hould him a bit to
taste.” He offered the animal a rib of the fresh pork as he finished
speaking, and the dog turned away with an expression of aversion, and,
on a repetition of the act, walked from the table.
Human affection could
scarcely have surpassed the love felt by this poor animal for his play
fellow. His attachment to Spot, that could overcome the pangs of hunger—
for, like the rest of us, he was half-starved—must have been strong
indeed.
Jacob’s attachment to
us, in its simplicity and fidelity, greatly resembled that of the dog;
and sometimes, like the dog, he would push himself in where he was not
wanted, and gratuitously give his advice, and make remarks which were
not required.
Mr. K-, from Cork, was
asking Moodie many questions about the partridges of the country; and,
among other things, he wanted to know by what token you were able to
discover their favourite haunts. Before Moodie could answer this last
query a voice responded, through a large crack in the boarded wall which
separated us from the kitchen, “They always bides where they’s drum.”
This announcement was received with a burst of laughter that greatly
disconcerted the natural philosopher in the kitchen.
On the 21st of May of
this year, my second son, Donald was born. The poor fellow came in hard
times. The cows had not calved, and our bill of fare, now minus the deer
and Spot, only consisted of bad potatoes and still worse bread. I was
rendered so weak by want of proper nourishment that my dear husband, for
my sake, overcame his aversion to borrowing, and procured a quarter of
mutton from a friend. This, with kindly presents from neighbours—often
as badly off as ourselves—a loin of a young bear, and a basket
containing a loaf of bread, some tea, some fresh butter, and oatmeal,
went far to save my life.
Shortly after my
recovery, Jacob—the faithful, good Jacob—was obliged to leave us, for we
could no longer afford to pay wages. What was owing to him had to be
settled by sacrificing our best cow, and a great many valuablo articles
of clothing from my husband’s wardrobe. Nothing is more distressing than
being obliged to part with articles of dress which you know that you
cannot replace. Almost all my clothes had been appropriated to the
payment of wages, or to obtain garments for the children, excepting my
wedding dress, and the beautiful baby-linen which had been made by the
hands of dear and affectionate friends for my first-born. These were now
exchanged for coarse, warm flannels, to shield her from the cold.
Moodie and Jacob had
chopped eight acres during the winter, but these had to be burnt off and
logged up before we could put in a crop of wheat for the ensuing fall.
Had we been able to retain this industrious, kindly English lad, this
would have been soon accomplished; but his wages, at the rate of thirty
pounds per annum, were now utterly beyond our means.
Jacob had formed an
attachment to my pretty maid, Mary Pine, and before going to the
Southern States, to join an uncle who resided in Louisville, an opulent
tradesman, who had promised to teach him his business, Jacob thought it
as well to declare himself. The declaration took place on a log of wood
near the back door, and from my chamber window, I could both hear and
see the parties, without being myself observed. Mary was seated very
demurely at one end of the log, twisting the strings of her checked
apron, and the loving Jacob was busily whittling the other extremity of
their rustic seat. There was a long silence. Mary stole a look at Jacob,
and he heaved a tremendous sigh, something between a yawn and a groan.
“Meary,” he said, “I must go.”
“I know that afore,”
returned the girl.
“I had zummat to zay to
you, Meary. Do you think you will miss oie?” (looking very
affectionately, and twitching nearer.)
“What put that into
your head, Jacob?’ This was said very demurely.
“Oie thowt, may be,
Meary, that your feelings might be zummat loike niy own. I feel zore
about the heart, Meary, and it’s all com’ of parting with you. Don’t you
feel queerish, too ?”
“Can’t say that I do,
Jacob. I shall soon see you again,” (pulling violently at her
apron-string.)
“Meary, oi’m afear’d
you don’t feel loike oie.”
“P’r’aps not—women
can’t feel like men. I’m sorry that you are going, Jacob, for you have
been very kind and obliging, and I wish you well.”
“Meary,” cried Jacob,
growing desperate at her coyness, and getting quite close up to her,
“will you marry oie? Say yeez or noa?”
This was coming close
to the point. Mary drew farther from him, and turned her head away.
“Meary,” said Jacob,
seizing upon the hand that held the apron-string. “Do you think you can
better your-sel’? If not—why, oie’m your man. Now, do just turn about
your head and answer oie.”
The girl turned round,
and gave him a quick, shy glance, then burst out into a simpering laugh.
“Meary, will you wed
oie?” (jogging her elbow,)
“1 will!" cried the
girl, jumping up from the log and running into the house.
“Well, that bargain’s
made" said the lover, rubbing his hands; "and now, oie’ll go and bid
meastor and missus good-buy.”
The poor fellow's eyes
were full of tears, for the children, who loved him very much, clung,
crying, about his knees. “God bless yeas all,” sobbed the kind-hearted
creature. “Doan’t forget Jacob, for he’ll neaver forgot you. Good-buy!”
Then turning to Mary,
he threw his arms round her neck, and bestowed upon her fair cheek the
most audible kiss I ever heard.
“And doan’t you forget
me, Meary. In two years oie will be back to marry you; and may be oie
may come knek a rich man.”
Mary, who was an
exceedingly pretty girl, shed some teal's at the parting; but in a few
days she was as gay as ever, and listening with great attention to the
praises bestowed upon her beauty by an old bachelor, who was her senior
by five-and-twenty years. But then he had ft good farm, a saddle mare,
and plenty of stock, and was reputed to havo saved money. The saddle
mare seemed to have great weight in old Ralph T-h’s wooing; and
I used laughingly to
remind Mary of her absent lover, and beg her not to marry Ralph T-h’s
mare. |