Now, Fortune, do thy
worst! For many years,
Thou, with relentless and unsparing hand,
Hast sternly pour’d on our devoted heads
The poison’d phials of thy fiercest wrath.
THE early part of
the winter of 1837, a year never to be forgotten in the annals of
Canadian history, was very severe. During the month of February, the
thermometer often ranged from eighteen to twenty-seven degrees below
zero. Speaking of the coldness of one particular day, a genuine
brother Jonathan remarked, with charming simplicity, that it was
thirty degrees below zero that morning, and it would have been much
colder if the thermometer had been longer.
The morning of the
seventh was so intensely cold that everything liquid froze in the
house. The wood that had been drawn for the fire was green, and it
ignited too slowly to satisfy the shivering impatience of women and
children; I vented mine in audibly grumbling over the wretched fire,
at which I in vain endeavoured to thaw frozen bread, and to dress
crying children.
It so happened that an
old friend, the maiden lady before alluded to, had been staying with us
for a few days. She had left us for a 1 writ to my sister, and as some
relatives of hers were about to return to Britain, by the way of New
York, and had offered to convey letters to friends at home, I had been
busy all the day before preparing a packet for England.
It was my intention to
walk to my sister’s with this packet, directly the important affair of
breakfast had been discussed; but the extreme cold of the morning had
occasioned such delay, that it was late before the breakfast-things were
cleared away.
After dressing, I found
the air so keen-that I could not venture out without some risk to my
nose, and my husband kindly volunteered to go in my stead.
I had hired a young
Irish girl the day before. Her friends were only just located in our
vicinity, and she had never seen a stove until she came to our house.
After Moodie left, I suffered the fire to die away in the Franklin stove
in the parlour, and went into the kitchen to prepare bread for the oven.
The girl, who was a
good-natured creature, had heard me complain bitterly of the cold, and
the impossibility of getting the green wood to burn, and she thought
that she would see if she could not make a good fire for me and the
children, against my work was done. Without saying one word about her
intention, she slipped out through a door that opened from the parlour
into the garden, ran round to the wood-yard, filled her lap with cedar
chips, and, not knowing the nature of the stove, filled it entirely with
the light wood.
Before I had the least
idea of my danger, I was aroused from the completion of my task by the
crackling and roaring of a large fire, and a suffocating smell of
burning soot. I looked up at the kitchen cooking-stove. All was right
there. I knew 1 had left no fire in the parlour stove; but not being
able to account for the smoke and smell of burning, I opened the door,
and, to my dismay, found the stove red-hot, from the front plate to the
topmost pipe that let out the smoke through the roof.
My first impulse was to
plunge a blanket, snatched from the servant’s bed, which stood in the
kitchen, into cold water. This I thrust into the stove, and upon it I
threw water, until all was cool below. I then ran up to the loft, and,
by exhausting all the water in the house, even to that contained in the
boilers upon the fire, contrived to cool down the pipes which passed
through the loft. I then sent the girl out of doors to look at the roof,
which, as a very deep fall of snow had taken place the day before, I
hoped would be completely covered, and safe from all danger of fire.
She quickly returned,
stamping, and tearing her hair, and making a variety of uncouth
outcries, from which I gathered that the roof was in flames.
This was terrible news,
with my husband absent, no man in the house, and a mile and a quarter
from any other habitation. I ran out to ascertain the extent of the
misfortune, and found a large fire burning in the roof between the two
stove pipes. The heat of the tires had melted off all the snow, and a
spark from the burning pipe had already ignited the shingles. A ladder
which, for several months had stood against the house, had been moved
two days before to the barn, which was at the top of the hill, near the
road; there was no reaching the fire through that source.. I got out the
dining-table, and tried to throw water upon the roof, by standing on a
chair placed upon it, but I only expended the little water that remained
in the boiler, without reaching the fire. The girl still continued
weeping and lamenting.
“You must go for help,”
I said. “Run as fast as you can to my sister’s, and fetch your master.”
“And lave you, ma’arm,
and the childher alone wid the burnin’ house?”
“Yes, yes! Don’t stay
one moment.”
“I have no shoes,
ma’arm, and the snow is so deep.”
“Put on your master’s
boots; make haste, or we shall be lost before help comes.”
The girl put on the
boots and started, shrieking “Fire!” the whole way. This was utterly'
useless, and only impeded her progress by exhausting her strength. After
she had vanished from the head of the clearing into the wood, and I was
left quite alone, with the house burning over my head, I paused one
moment to reflect what had best be done.
The house was built of
cedar logs; in all probability it would be consumed before any help
could arrive. There was a brisk breeze blowing up from the frozen lake,
and the thermometer stood at eighteen degrees below zero. We were placed
between the two extremes of heat and cold, and there was as much danger
to be apprehended from the one as the other. In the bewilderment of the
moment, the direful extent of the calamity never struck me; we wanted
but this to put the finishing stroke to our misfortunes, to be thrown
naked, houseless and penniless, upon the world. “What shall I save
first?" was the thought just then uppermost in my mind. Bedding and
clothing appeared the most essentially necessary, and, without another
moment’s pause, I set to work with a right govxl will to drag all that I
could from my burning home.
While little Agnes,
Dunbar, and baby Donald filled the the air with their cries, Katie, as
if fully conscious of the importance of exertion, assisted me in
carrying out sheets and blankets, and draging trunks and boxes some way
up the hill, to be out of the way of the burning brands when the roof
should fall in.
How many anxious looks
I gave to the head of the clearing as the fire increased, and large
pieces of burning pine began to fall through the boarded ceiling, about
the lower rooms where we were at work. The children I had kept under a
large dresser in the kitchen, but it now appeared absolutely necessary
to remove them to a place of safety. To expose the young, tender things
to the direful cold, was almost as bad as leaving them to the mercy of
the fire. At la3t I hit upon a plan to keep them from freezing. I
emptied all the clothes out of a large, deep chest of drawers, and
dragged the empty drawers up the hill; these I lined with blankets, and
placed a child in each drawer, covering it well over with the bedding,
giving to little Agnes the charge of the baby to hold between her knees,
and keep well covered until help should arrive. Ah, how long it seemed
coming!
The roof was now
burning like a brush-heap, and, unconsciously, the child and I were
working under a shelf, upon which were deposited several pounds of
gunpowder, which had been procured for blasting a well, as all our water
had to be brought up hill from the lake. This gunpowder was in a stone
jar, secured by a paper stopper ; the shelf upon which it stood was on
fire, but it was utterly forgotten by me at the time; and even
afterwards, when my husband was working on the burning loft over it.
I found that I should
not be able to take many more trips for goods. As I passed out of the
parlour for the last time, Katie looked up at her father’s flute, which
was suspended upon two brackets, and said,
“Oh, dear mamma! do
save papa’s flute; he will be so sorry to lose it.”
God bless the dear
child for the thought! the flute was saved; and, as I succeeded in
dragging out a heavy chest of clothes, and looked up once more
despairingly to the road, I saw a man running at full speed. It was my
husband. Help was at hand, and my heart uttered a deep thanksgiving as
another and another figure came upon the scene.
I had not felt the
intense- cold, although without cup, or bonnet, or shawl; with my hands
bare and exposed to the bitter biting air. The intense excitement, the
anxiety to save all I could, had so totally diverted my thoughts from
myself, that I had felt nothing of the danger to which I had been
exposed; but now that help was near, my knees trembled under me, I felt
giddy and faint, and dark shadows seemed dancing before my eyes.
The moment my husband
and brother-in-law entered the house, the latter exclaimed,
“Moodie, the house is
gone; save what you can of your winter stores and furniture.”
Moodie thought
differently. Prompt and energetic in danger, and possessing admirable
presence of mind and coolness when others yield to agitation and
despair, he sprang upon the burning loft and called for water. Alas,
there was none!
“Snow, snow; hand me up
pailfuls of snow!”
Oh! it was bitter work
filling those pails with frozen snow: but Mr. T-and I worked at it as
fast as we were able.
The violence of the
fire was greatly checked by covering the boards of the loft with this
snow. More help had now arrived. Young B-and S-had brought the ladder
down with them from the barn, and were already cutting away the burning
roof, and flinging the flaming brands into the deep snow.
“Mrs. Moodie, have you
any pickled meat?”
“We have just killed
one of our cows, and salted it for winter stores.”
“Well, then, fling the
beef into the snow, and let us have the brine.”
This was an admirable
plan. Wherever the brine wetted the shingles, the fire turned from it,
and concentrated into one spot.
But I had not time to
watch the brave workers on the roof. I was fast yielding to the effects
of over excitement and fatigue, when my brother’s team dashed down the
clearing, bringing my excellent old friend, Miss B-, and the
servant-girl.
My brother sprang out,
carried me back into the house, and wrapped me up in one of the large
blankets scattered about. In a few minutes I was seated with the dear
children in the sleigh, and on the way to a place of warmth and safety.
Katie alone suffered
from the intense cold. The dear little creature’s feet were severely
frozen, but were fortunately restored by her uncle discovering the fact
before she approached the fire, and rubbing them well with snow.
In the meanwhile, the
friends, we had left so actively employed at the house, succeeded in
getting the fire under before it had destroyed the walls. The only
accident that occurred was to a poor dog, that Moodie had called
Snarleyowe. He was struck by a burning brand thrown from the house, and
crept under the bam and died.
Beyond the damage done
to the building, the loss of our potatoes and two sacks of flour, we had
escaped in a manner almost miraculous. This fact shows how much can be
done by persons working in union, without bustle and confusion, or
running in each others way. Here were six men, who, without the aid of
water, succeeded in saving a building, which, at first sight, almost all
of them had deemed past hope. In after-years, when entirely burnt out in
a disastrous fire that consumed almost all we were worth in the world,
some four hundred persons were present, with a fire-engine to second
their endeavours, yet all was lost. Every person seemed in the way; and
though the fire was discovered immediately after it took place, nothing
was done beyond saving some of the furniture.
Our party was too large
to be billetted upon one family, Mrs. T-took compassion upon Moodie,
myself, and the baby, while their uncle received the three children to
his hospitable home.
It was some weeks
before Moodie succeeded in repairing the roof, the intense cold
preventing any one from working in such an exposed situation.
The news of our fire
travelled far and wide. I was reported to have done prodigies and to
have saved the greater part of our household goods before help arrived.
Reduced to plain prose, these prodigies shrink into the simple, and by
no means marvellous fact, that during the excitement I dragged out
chests which, under ordinary circumstances, I could not have moved; and
that I was unconscious, both of the cold and the danger to which I was
exposed while working under a burning roof, which, had it fallen, would
have buried both the children and myself under its ruins.
These circumstances
appeared far more alarming, as .all real danger does, after they were
past. The fright and over-exertion gave my health a shock from which I
did not recover for several months, and made me so fearful of fire, that
from that hour it haunts me like a nightmare. Let the night be ever so
serene, all stoves must be shut up, and the hot embers covered with
ashes, before I dare retire to rest; and the sight of a burning edifice,
so common a spectacle hi large towns in this country, makes me really
ill. This feeling was greatly increased after a second fire, when, for
some torturing minutes, a lovely boy, since drowned, was supposed to
have perished in the burning house.
Our present fire led to
a new train of circumstances, for it was the means of introducing to
Moodie a young Irish gentleman, who was staying at my brother’s house.
John E-was one of the
best and gentlest of human beings. His father, a captain in the army,
had died while his family were quite young, and had left his widow with
scarcely any means beyond the pension she received at her husband’s
death, to bring up and educate a family of five children. A handsome,
showy woman, Mrs. E- soon married again; and the poor lads were thrown
upon the world. The eldest, who had been educated for the Church, first
came to Canada in the hope of getting some professorship in the college,
or of opening a classical school.
He was a handsome,
gentlemanly, well-educated young man, but constitutionally indolent—a
natural defect which seemed common to all the males of the family, and
which was sufficiently indicated by their soft, silky, fair hair and
milky complexions. R- had the good sense to perceive that Canada was not
the country for him. He spent a week under our roof, and we were much
pleased with his elegant tastes and pursuits, ’our my husband strongly
advised him to try and get a situation as a tutor in some family at
home. This he afterwards obtained. He became tutor and travelling
companion to the young Lord M-; and has since got an excellent living.
John, who had followed
his brother to Canada without the means of transporting himself back
again, was forced to remain, and was working with Mr. S-for his board.
He proposed to Moodie
working his farm upon shares; and, as we were unable to hire a man,
Moodie gladly closed with his offer; and, during the time he remained
with us, we had every reason to be pleased with the arrangement.
It was always a
humiliating feeling to our proud minds, that hirelings should witness
our dreadful struggles with poverty, and the strange shifts we were
forced to make in order to obtain even food. But John E--had known and
experienced all that we had suffered, in his own person, and was willing
to share our home with all its privations. Warm-hearted, sincere, and
truly affectionate—a gentleman in word, thought, and deed—we found his
society and cheerful help a great comfort. Our odd meals became a
subject of merriment, and the peppermint and sage tea drank with a
better flavour when we had one who sympathized in all our trials, and
shared all our toils, to partake of it with us.
The whole family soon
became attached to our young friend; and after the work of the day was
over, greatly we enjoyed an hour’s fishing on the lake. John E- said
that we had no right to murmur, as long as we had health, a happy home,
and plenty of fresh fish, milk, and potatoes. Early in May, we received
an old Irishwoman into our service, who for four years proved a most
faithful and industrious creature. And what with John E- to assist my
husband on the farm, and old Jenny to help me to nurse the children, and
manage the house, our affairs, if they were no better in a pecuniary
point of view, at least presented a more pleasing aspect at home. We
were always cheerful, and sometimes contented and even happy.
How great was the
contrast between the character of our new inmate and that of Mr.
Malcolm! The sufferings of the past year had been greatly increased by
the intolerable nuisance of his company, while many additional debts had
been contracted in order to obtain luxuries for him which wc never
dreamed of purchasing for ourselves. Instead of increasing my domestic
toils, John did all in his power to lessen them; and it always grieved
him to see me iron a shirt, or wash the least article of clothing for
him. “ You have too much to do already; I cannot bear to give you the
least additional work,” he would say.
And he generally
expressed the greatest satisfaction at my method of managing the house,
and preparing our simple fare. The little ones he treated with the most
affectionate kindness, and gathered the whole flock about his knees the
moment he came in to his meals.
On a wet day, when no
work could be done abroad, Moodie took up his flute, or read aloud to
us, while John and I sat down to work. The young emigrant, early cast
upon the world and his own resources, was an excellent hand at the
needle. He would make or mend a shirt with the greatest precision and
neatness, and cut out and manufacture his canvass trousers and loose
summer-coats with as much adroitness as the most experienced tailor;
darn his socks, and mend his boots and shoes, and often volunteered to
assist me in knitting the coarse yarn of the country into socks for the
children, while he made them moccasins from the dressed deer-skins that
we obtained from the Indians.
Scrupulously neat and
clean in his person, the only thing which seemed to ruffle his calm
temper was the dirty work of logging; he hated to come in from the field
with his person and clothes begrimed with charcoal and smoke. Old Jenny
used to laugh at him for not being able to eat his meals without first
washing his hands and face.
“Och! my dear heart,
yer too particular intirely; we’ve no time in the woods to be clane.”
She would say to him in answer to his request for soap and a towel, “An’
is it soap yer a wantin’? I tell yer that that same is not to the fore
bating the throuble of maltin’, it’s little scap that the misthress can
get to wash the clothes for us and the childher, widout yer wastin’ it
in makin’ yer purty skin as white as a leddy’s. Do, darlint, go down to
the ’ lake and wash there; that basin is big enough, any how.” And John
would laugh, and go down to the lake to wash, in order to appease the
wrath of the old woman. John had a great dislike to rats, and even
regarded with an evil eye, our old pet cat, Peppermint, who had taken a
great fancy to share his bed and board.
“If I tolerate our own
cat,” he would say, “I will not put up with such a nuisance as your
friend Emilia sends us in the shape of her ugly Tom. Why, where in the
world do you think I found that beast sleeping last night? ”
I expressed my
ignorance.
“In our potato-pot.
Now, you will agree with me that potatoes dressed with cat’s hair is not
a very nice dish.— The next time I catch Master Tom in the potato-pot, I
will kill him.”
“John, you are not in
earnest. Mrs.-would never forgive any injury done to Tom, who is a great
favourite.” “Let her keep him at home, then. Think of the brute coming a
mile through the woods to steal from us all he can and, and then
sleeping off the effects of his depredations in the potato-pot.”
I could not help
laughing, but I begged John by no means to annoy Emilia by hurting her
cat.
The next day while
sitting in the parlour at work, I heard a dreadful squall, and rushed to
the rescue. John was standing, with a flushed cheek, grasping a large
stick in his hand, and Tom was lying dead at his feet.
“Oh, the poor cat!”
“Yes, I have killed
him; but I am sorry for it now.
What will Mrs.- say?”
“She must not know it.
I have told you the story of the pig that Jacob killed. You had better
bury it with the pig.”
John was really sorry
for having yielded, in a fit of passion, to do so cruel a thing; yet a
few days alter he got into a fresh scrape with Mrs.-’s animals.
The hens were laying up
at the barn. John was very fond of fresh eggs, but some strange dog came
daily and sucked the eggs. John had vowed to kill the first dog he found
in the act. Mr. - had a very fine bull-dog,
which he valued very
highly; but with Emilia, Chowder was an especial favourite. B’iterly had
she bemoaned the fate of Tom, and many were the inquiries she made of us
as to his sudden disappearance.
One afternoon John ran
into the room. “My dear Mrs. Moodie, what is Mrs.-’s dog like!”
“A large bull dog,
brindled black and white.”
*Then, by Jove, I’ve
shot him!”
“John, John! you mean
me to quarrel in earnest with my friend. How could you do it?”
“Why, how the deuce
should I know her dog from another? I caught the big thief in the very
act of devouring the eggs from under your sitting hen, and I shot him
dead without another thought. But I will bury him, and she will never
find it out a bit more than she did who killed the cat.”
Some time after this,
Emilia returned from a visit at P-. The first thing she told me was the
loss of the dog. She was so vexed at it, she had had him advertised,
offering a reward for his recovery.
I, of course, was
called upon to sympathize with her, which I did with a very bad grace.
“I did not like the beast,” I said; “he was cross and fierce, and I was
afraid to go up to her house while he was there.”
“Yes; but to lose it
so. It is so provoking; and him such a valuable animal. I could not tell
how deeply she felt the loss. She would give four dollars to find out
who had stolen him."
How near she came to
making the grand discovery the sequel will show.
Instead of burying him
with the murdered pig and cat, John had scratched a shallow grave in the
garden, and concealed the dead brute.
After tea, Emilia
requested to look at the garden; and I, perfectly unconscious that it
contained the remains of the murdered Chowder, led the way. Mrs.-,
whilst gathering a handful of fine green-peas, suddenly stooped, and
looking earnestly at the ground, called to me,
“Come here, Susanna,
and tell me what has been buried here. It looks like the tail of a dog.”
She might have added,
“Of my dog.” Murder, it seems, will out. By some strange chance, the
grave that covered the mortal remains of Chowder had been disturbed, and
the black tail of the dog was sticking out.
“What can it be?” said
I, with an air of perfect innocence. “Shall I call Jenny, and dig it
up?”
“Oh, no, my dear; it
has a shocking smell, but it does look very much like Chowder’s tail.”
“Impossible! How could
it come among my peas?” “True. Besides, I saw Chowder, with my own eyes,
yesterday, following a team; and George C-hopes to recover him for me.”
“Indeed! I am glad to
hear it. How thest musquitoes sting. Shall we go back to the house?”
While we returned to
the house, John, who had overheard the whole conversation, hastily
disinterred the body of Chowder, and placed him in the same mysterious
grave with Tom and the pig.
Moodie and his friend
finished logging-up the eight acres which the former had cleared the
previous winter; besides putting in a crop of peas and potatoes, and an
acre of Indian corn, reserving the fallow for fall wheat, while we had
the promise of a splendid crop of hay off the sixteen acres that had
been cleared in 1834. We were all in high spirits, and everything
promised fail’, until a very trifling circumstance again occasioned us
much anxiety and trouble, and was the cause of our losing most of our
crop.
Moodie was asked to
attend a bee, which was called to construct a corduroy-bridge over a
very bad piece of road. He and J. E-were obliged to go that morning with
wheat to the mill, but Moodie lent his yoke of oxen for the work.
The driver selected for
them at the bee was the brutal M-y, a man noted for his ill-treatment of
cattle, especially if the animals did not belong to him. He gave one of
the oxen such a severe blow over the loins with a handspike that the
creature came home perfectly disabled, just as we wanted his services in
the hay-field and harvest.
Moodie had no money to
purchase, or even to hire, a mate for the other ox; but he and John
hoped that by careful attendance upon the injured animal he might be
restored to health in a few days. They conveyed him to a deserted
clearing, a. short distance from the farm, where he would be safe from
injury from the rest of the cattle; and early every morning we went in
the canoe to carry poor Duke a warm mash, and to watch the progress of
his recovery.
Ah! ye who revel in
this world’s wealth, how little can you realize the importance which we,
in our poverty, attached to the life of this valuable animal! Yes, it
even became the subject of prayer, for the bread for ourselves and our
little ones depended greatly upon his recovery.— We were doomed to
disappointment. After nursing him with the greatest attention and care
for some weeks, the animal grew daily worse, and suffered such intense
agony, as he lay groaning upon the ground, unable to rise, that John
shot him to put him out of pain.
Here, then, were we
left without oxen to draw in our hay, or secure our other crops. A
neighbour, who had an odd ox, kindly lent us the use of him, when he was
not employed on his own farm; and John and Moodie gave their own work
for the occasional loan of a yoke of oxen for a day. But with all these
drawbacks, and in spite of the assistance of old Jenny and myself in the
field, a great deal of the produce was damaged before it could be
secured. The whole summer we had to labour under this disadvantage. Our
neighbours were all too busy to give us any help, and their own terms
were employed in saving their crops. Fortunately, the few acres of wheat
we had to reap were close to the barn, and we carried the sheaves
thither by hand; old Jenny proving an invaluable help, both in the
harvest and hay-field.
Still, with all these
misfortunes, Providence watched over us in a signal manner. We were
never left entirely without food. Like the widow's cruise of oil, our
means, though small, were never suffered to cease entirely. We had been
for some days without meat, when Moodie came running in for his gun. A
great she-bear was in the wheat field at the edge of the wood, very
busily employed in helping to harvest the crop. There was but one
bullet, and a charge or two of buckshot, in the house; but Moodie
started to the wood with the single bullet in his gun, followed by a
little terrier dog that belonged to John E-.
Old Jenny vas busy at
the wash-tub, but the moment she saw her master running up the clearing
and knew the cause, she left her work, and snatching up the
carving-knife, ran after him, that, in ca, e the bear should have the
best of the fight, she would be there to help “the masther.” Finding her
shoes incommode her, she flung them off, in order to run faster. A few
minutes after came the report of the gun, and I heard Moodie halloo to
E-, who was cutting stakes for a fence in the wood. I hardly thought it
possible that he could have killed the bear, but I ran to the door to
listen. The children were all excitement, which the sight of the black
monster, borne down the clearing upon two poles, increased to the
wildest demonstrations of joy. Moodie and John were carrying the prize,
and old Jenny, brandishing her carving-knife, followed in the rear.
The rest of the evening
was spent in skinning, and cuting up, and salting the ugly creature,
whose flesh filled a barrel with excellent meat, in flavour resembling
beef, while the short grain and juicy nature of the flesh gave to it the
tenderness of mutton. This was quite a Godsend, and lasted us until we
were able to kill two large fat hogs, in the fall.
A few nights after,
Moodie and I encountered the mate of Mrs. Bruin, while returning from a
visit to Emilin in the very depth of the wood.
We had been invited to
meet our friend’s father and mother, who had come up on a short visit to
the woods; and the evening passed away so pleasantly that it was near
midnight before the little party of friends separated. The moon was
down. The wood, through which we had to return, was very dark; the
ground being low and swampy, and the trees thick and tall. There was in
particular, one very ugly spot, where a small creek crossed the road.
This creek could only be passed by foot-passengers scrambling over a
fallen tree, which, in a dark night, was not very easy to find.
I begged a torch of
Mr.-; but no torch could be found. Emilia laughed at my fears; still,
knowing what a coward I was in the bush of a night, she found up about
an inch of candle, which was all that remained from the evening’s
entertainment. This she put into an old lanthorn.
“It will not last you
long; but it will carry you over the creek.”
This was something
gained, and off we set.
It was so dark in the
bush, that our dim candle looked like a solitary red spark in the
intense surrounding darkness, and scarcely served to show us the path.
We went chatting along,
talking over the news of the evening, Hector running on before us, when
I saw a pair of eyes glare upon us from the edge of the swamp, with the
green, bright light emitted by the eyes of a cat.
“Did you see those
terrible eyes, Moodie?” and I clung, trembling, to his arm.
“What eyes?" said he,
feigning ignorance. “It's too dark to see anything. The light is nearly
gone, and, if you don’t quicken your pace, and cross the tree before it
goes out, you will, perhaps get your feet wet by falling into the
creek.”
“Good Heavens! I saw
them again; and do just look at the dog.”
Hector stopped
suddenly, and, stretching himself along the ground, his nose resting
between his forepaws, began to whine and tremble. Presently he ran back
to us, and crept under our feet. The cracking of branches, and the heavy
tread of some large animal, sounded close beside us.
Moodie turned the open
lauthorn in the direction from whence the sounds came, and shouted as
loud as he could, at the same time endeavouring to urge forward the
fear-stricken dog, whose cowardice was only equalled by my own.
Just at that critical
moment the wick of the candle flickered a moment in the socket, and
expired. We were left, in perfect darkness, alone with the bear—for such
we supposed the animal to be.
My heart beat audibly;
a cold perspiration was streaming down my face, but I neither shrieked
nor attempted to run. I don’t know how Moodie got me over the creek. One
of my feet slipped into the water, but expecting, as I did every moment,
to be devoured by master Bruin, that was a thing of no consequence. My
husband was laughing at my fears, and every now and then he turned
towards our companion, who continued following us at no great distance,
and gave him an encouraging shout. Glad enough was I when I saw the
gleam of the light from our little cabin window shine out among the
trees; and, the moment I got within the clearing I ran, without stopping
until I was safely within the house. John was sitting up for us, nursing
Donald. He listened with great interest to our adventure with the hear,
and thought that Bruin was very good to let uh escape without one
affectionate hug.
“Perhaps it would have
been otherwise had he known, Moodie, that you had not only killed his
good lady, but were dining sumptuously off her carcass every day.”
The bear was determined
to have something in return for the loss of his wife. Several nights
after this, our slumbers were disturbed, about midnight, by an awful
yell, and old Jenny shook violently at our chamber door.
“Masther, masther,
dear!—Get up wid you this monent, or the bear will desthroy the cattle
intirely.”
Half asleep, Moodie
sprang from his bed, seized his gun, and ran out. I threw my large cloak
round me, struck a light, and followed him to the door. The moment the
latter was unclosed, some calves that we were rearing rushed into the
kitchen, closely followed by the larger beasts, who came bellowing
headlong down the hill, pursued by the bear.
It was a laughable
scene, as shown by that paltry tallow-candle. Moodie, in his
night-shirt, taking aim at something in the darkness, surrounded by the
terrified animals; old Jenny, with a large knife in her hand, holding on
to the white cloak of her master’s garment, making outcry loud enough to
frighten away all the wild beasts in the bush—herself almost in a state
of nudity.
“Och, masther, dear!
don’t timpt the ill-conditioned orathur wid charging too near; think of
the wife and the childher. Lot mo come sit tho rampaging baste, M stick
the knife into the heart of him.”
Moodio tired. The boar
retreated up the clearing, with a low growl. Moodie and Jenny pursued
him some way, but it was too dark to discern any object at a distance.
I, for my part, stood at the open door, laughing until the tears ran
down my cheeks, at the glaring eyes of the oxen, their ears erect, and
their tails carried gracefully on a level with their backs, as they
stared at me and the light, in blank astonishment. The noise of the gun
had just roused John K--from his slumbers. He was no loss amused than
myself, until lie saw that a fine yearling heifer was bleeding, and
found, upon examination, that the poor animal, having been in the claws
of the bear, was dangerously, if not mortally hurt.
“1 hope,” he cried,
“that the brute has not touched my foal!” I pointed to the black face of
the filly peeping over the back of an elderly cow.
“You see, John, that
Bruin preferred veal; there’s your horsey,’ as Dunbar calls her, safe,
and laughing at you.'
Moodie and Jenny now
returned from the pursuit of the bear. E- fastened all the cattle into
the back yard, close to the house. By daylight he and Moodio started in
chase of Bruin, whom they tracked by his blood some way into the bush;
but hero he entirely escaped their search,
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